Fountainhead, March 16, 1976


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





8,500 Circulation
VOL. 51, NO. 42
16 MARCH 1976
Fountainhead
Serving the East Carolina Community for over fifty years
This Issue- 20 Pages
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
'Support for the Overpass' resolution passes
By TOM TOZER
Managing Editor
A resolution introduced to the
Student Government Association (SGA)
Legislature by Ray Hudson, chairman of
Student Welfare and Student Affairs
committee, entitled "Support for the
Overpass" was passed by the SGA
Monday night.
The overpass, if constructed, would
allow students to cross over Tenth St. at
the bottom of College Hill Drive without
entering traffic.
Although the overpass was not
approved in the N.C. Department of
Transportation's annual Highway Im-
provement Plan this year, it is still a
feasible project, according to Jim
Greenhill, project engineer for the N.C.
Department of Planning and Research.
"The Tenth St. overpass is still a
candidate project said Greenhill. "Each
year the Department of Transportation
considers which projects have priority for
the annual Highway Improvement Plan.
"The last two years the report has
come out in October and if past trends
continue the report will be released again
this October said Greenhill. "Projects
are considered several months prior to
the report's publication.
"It is one of the most justified
pedestrian structures we (Department of
Planning and Research) have examined in
a long time because of the large number
of pedestrians funneling into close
quarters. We reel that the overpass would
be used even though students would
have to walk out of their way to use it
According to Greenhill, in 1963, 7,000
automobiles passed the Tenth St.
intersection everyday. This figure
increased to 10,000 automobiles per day
in 1975.
The proposed overpass would cost
$200,000, and ECU would donate the
right of way, according to Greenhill.
"It would not hurt if the Board of
Trustees passed a resolution asking the
Department of Transportation to push the
overpass higher on its list of priorities
said Clifford Moore, vice-chancellor of
Business Affairs. "The state does not
have the money to approve all of its
proposed projects every year just like the
State does not always approve al' ECU's
capital improvements. It is not a dead
issue
SGA proposes student foreign language option
by KENNETH CAMPBELL
Assistant News Editor
The Legislature of the Student
Government Association (SGA), recently
accepted a resolution which
states that the ECU student body would
like the University to drop or offer an
alternative to the foreign language
requirement in the Bachelor of Arts
degree.
NATIONAL TREND
The action of the Legislature in
passing the resolution reflects what
appears to be a current national trend.
According to an article, "Needed: A
Cure for Provincialism by S. Frederick
Starr in the March 8 issue of "The
Chronicle of High Education the
number of undergraduates studying
foreign language has declined by 15 per
cent in the past five years.
Only one in 20 undergraduates enrolls
in courses that consider foreign peoples
and cultures in any way, Starr stated.
However, the study of some foreign
languages and cultures - includig
political systems - such as Africa, China,
and the Soviet Union, are on the
upswing, according to Starr.
"A survey in 1973 indicated that only
five per cent of those studying in
teacher-education programs received any
foreign area training Starr continued.
The Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) degree at
ECU is a nonteaching liberal arts degree.
ECU's teaching degree is the
Bachelor of Science (B.S.).
Only a few departments require
completion of a foreign language
sequence to obtain the B.S. degree.
"The purpose of the resolution is to
show the support of the student body for
the need of flexibility in the curriculum
said Ricky Price, Speaker of the
Legislature.
Price, who also helped write the
resolution, said the resolution also
shows student opposition to the single
according to McLeod.
"The resolution is not directed at
eliminating foreign language from the
B.A. curriculum said McLeod, who is a
vice presidential candidate in this year's
SGA elections.
"The resolution supports that stu-
dents be offered options in the B.A.
today,
require
��
SUSAN J. McOANIEL
ASSISTANT PROVOST
requirement of foreign language.
"Out in the business world
there are not many jobs that
foreign language according to legislator
Tim McLeod, who sponsored the
resolution.
"Computer science and other courses
can be substituted to better round the
student's education
The purpose of the resolution is not
to oppose foreign language as such,
RICHARD CAPWELL
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCE DEAN
program, rather than having io take the
current requirements.
"If a foreign language would help a
student to further his career, then let him
take it explained McLeod. "But if it
would help him to take other course
rather than foreign languages then e
should have the option of taking the
other courses
Copies of the resolution are going to
be sent to various university officials
including those officials who will
ultimately have to act on the legislation,
if it is put into bill form and passed by
the legislature.
According to Susan J. McDaniel,
Assistant Provost, these officials include
the different department chairmen,
faculty senates, the board of trustees,
and ECU Chancellor Leo W. Jenkins.
However, because of a moratorium on
curriculum proposals issued by the
University of North Carolina Board of
Governors, ECU can not present a
proposal for a curriculum change until
the middle of next year, according to
McDaniel.
Regardless of the moratorium, and
other elements which might delay action
on the matter, the co-writers of the
resolution, Price and McLeod, plan to
immediately put the resolution in bill
form, according to McLeod.
Whereas the resolution has no force
of law, a bill will require some type of
action by university officials.
Mrs. Marguerite A. Perry, chairman of
the Foreign Languages department
expressed general acceptance of the
principle of offering students options in
the B.A. degree program.
However, simultaneously she expressed
two very serious consequences that
might occur if the foreign language
requirement is dropped from the B.A.
program.
"Dropping the foreign language
requirement could have a dehumanizing
effect said Perry. "I am also concerned
that this could cause provirealization of
our society
See Language, page 6.
Ford, Carter win ECU presidential preference survey
By TOM TOZER
Managing Editor
In a recent presidential preference
survey of over 100 people in the ECU
community conducted by FOUNTAIN-
HEAD, Republican Gerald Ford and
Democrat Jimmy Carter were selected as
their party's best presidential candidate.
The preference poll was a spot-check
survey of 116 people on the ECU
campus. The survey included both
announced and unannounced candidates
for the Republican and Democratic
nomination.
President Ford out-polled his closest
opponent, Ronald Reagan, almost two to
one. Ford received 59 preference votes to
Reagan's 20.
Howard Baker, Senator from Tenn
received the highest number of votes
among the unannounced candidates for
the Republican Party's presidential
nomination. Baker polled 12 preference
votes.
Other unannounced Republican cand-
idates receiving votes were: Nelson
Rockefeller-seven; Elliot Richardson-
seven; Barry Goldwater-six; Pete
McCloskey-two; and one vote each for
Edward Brooke, Charles Percy, and
Richard Nixon.
In the Democratic preference poll the
battle among announced candidates for
the preside itial nomination was between
Jimmy Carter, former governor of Ga
and George Wallace, governor of Ala.
Carter edged Wallace by twelve votes, 32
to 20.
Henry 'Scoop' Jackson, came in third
among the announced candidates with
nine votes, followed by Birch Bayh with
seven, Morris Udall with seven, Fred
Harris-four, and Milton Shapp-one.
Sargent Shriver was the sole
announced candidate who did not receive
votes.
Ted Kennedy led the field of
unannounced candidates with 21 votes
beating Wallace by one vote. Kennedy
was followed by Hubert Humphrey with
eight votes, Jerry Brown with four, and
Ed Muskie with three.
Lloyd Bentsen, a former candidate for
the nomination, and Frank Church did
not receive votes.
The N.C. presidential preference
primary will be held March 23.






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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
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EdilorialsConnmenlary
More deadlines
Remember the assurance by certain ECU officials that this
university would admit first-year med school students by Fall of
1976?
Well, those same people now are retreating back to January,
1977, as the earliest date that those first students can enroll in
the ECU Med School.
We wonder now when the January target date will be pushed
back to June of 1977?
Ever since the four-year Med School was funded last year a
next to impossible deadline of September, 1976, was set up by
certain high officials at the university. Every time the Med
School was mentioned this impossible deadline was cited.
Now, as most thought, the impossible deadline of
September, 1976, will not be met.
But, instead of not setting any deadlines or starting dates
this time around those same ECU officials insist on putting
a time limit on the proposed enrollment.
You have to wonder why some officials at the university
insist on using the calendar so much when talking about
enrollment at the new school.
So far the Med School has failed to meet the much
publicized deadline of September, 1976. And, more than likely
the new one of January, 1977, will be missed as well in view of
all the work that remains to be done on the new school.
Med school officials admit that there is much faculty
recruitment that must be done. Then there are facilities both on
campus and at the site of the new Pitt Memorial Hospital that
must be completed.
But, still we persist on setting impossible time tables. Each
time one of these time tables falls, a little of the credibility of
the officials who worked so hard to get the new school fal's
also.
To set that September, 1976 deadline, in view of all the work
that had to be done last summer was ridiculous. But, apparently
to lessen the howls of critics who saw the med school as a
long-range big budget item that would not be operational for
some time, the early date was established.
So, in Spring of 1975, it was easy to predict that by Fall of
1976 that if the budget for the school was approved, that the
first students could be admitted and that first class of students
could be graduated by 1981.
Now, we are rapidly approaching that September 1976
deadline and the med school is still milps from being
completed. Much progress has been done since .he budget was
approved last year. But, still there is much to be done.
It will not be many months before the new deadline of
January, 1977 will be here, and we wonder then what the next
time table will be?
And, each time the schedule is setback, the critics who
howled the loudest about the med school to begin with, are
simply given new ammunition.
Setting deadlines is nice if you can meet them. But, if you
fail to meet them then people start to wonder about one's ability
to administrate competently.
When another deadline falls even the strongest supporters of
the med school will have to begin to wonder about the
administrative act that some officials are trying to pull off.
"Ware it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without
newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment (o
prefer the latter
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor tw�. i��,
c - J Thomas Jr rferson
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant
Production Manager-Jimmy Williams
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson
News Editor-Jim Elliott
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Use
Features Editor-Pat Coyle
Sports Editor-John Evans
Fountainheaa is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by
the Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday
during the school year.
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C.27834
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 758-6309
Subscriptions $10.00 annually for non students.
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Bond important
The casual observer may think that the $43.2 million bond
Issue that North Carolina voters will vote on March 23rd Is not
all that Important to ECU.
After all, there are no funds in the bond Issue that will go to
ECU. The money will be used on other campuses in the
16-member Consolidated University system.
But, that casual appearance is in fact far wrong. The passage
of the bond issue is most important to ECU for two reasons.
To begin with, the bond money is important for construction
of needed classroom and other facilities on the other university
campuses. To keep pace with growing enrollments new
construction is needed, along with the usual construction to
replace old facilities.
Normally there would have been some capital improvement
money in the new budget approved last year by the General
Assembly, except for the fact that the budget for the year was a
tight one to begin with and then there was the huge
appropriation to ECU for the med school.
So, money that would have gone to others was sent to
Greenville. And, the rest of the system went lacking as far as
capital improvements go.
Now, the other campuses have a chance to get some capital
improvement funds, if the bond issue is approved by the voter.
And, if the bond issue is not approved then more than a few
will see the med school as the main drain on the capital
improvement money.
The money is needed to do construction work on other
campuses. And, while they probably will not admit it, ECU
officials know that the passage of the bond would help take the
heat off them and the med school some.

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FOUNTAINHEADVOL51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
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3
TheForum
Student voting
problems noted
To Fountalnhead:
How many students are there in this
town? Quite a few. How many can vote?
Not too many. The resident students of
Greenville are the only students who can
vote, but those who want to vote here,
can't.
I recently went to the Board of
Elections and found out I couldn't
register to vote. Many reasons were
given: I was a student, my parents
supported me, the car I own wasn't
registered in Pitt County, etc. My
intention was clear to me and to the
Board: I wanted to register, but couldn't.
Since I live in Edenton and go to
Review
cited
To Fountalnhead:
Was elated to see John Evans take
such an understanding view of the other
night's Joe Cocker concert at Minges.
Those of us who stayed to the end of the
show out of respect for the down-and-out
superstar were rewarded by a fine effort
from old Joe that more than made up for
the initial disappointment caused by his
drunken state. Yeah, you're right; he got
by "with a little help from his friends
Kudos to the entertainment committee
for their late excellent work in securing
some fine concerts.
Steve Keeter
Word limit
Letters to the Forum supporting a
candidate for office must be less than
275 words. There are currently several
letters on file in the office that will not
be printed until they conform to that
standard.
school five days a week, it was rather
difficult to register in Edenton once I
decided to register because the Board
isn't open on weekends.
I know certain guidelines are
necessary to determine the status of
voters, but when they affect me that is
another question entirely. When I was
given the right to vote sometime in the
past and I can't register where I choose,
because of the rules, something has to
change. The most important part of the
democratic process is voting, especially
in a participatory democracy and I can't
vote in Greenville, the town I choose to
cast my vote. But then neither can you.
I'm sure there are many of you in this
situation. The point is that we have been
denied one of our rights, whether
God-given or otherwise, the right to elect
our representatives, the people making
decisions affecting this university in
particular.
As students we spend most of our
time in Greenville, not our hometowns.
Any decision other than voting where we
choose becomes an unnecessary burden
to us. If we accept our situation we
rapidly loose faith, loose faith with
administrators, with the rules and with
the democratic process. Many of us may
not be able to vote at all.
I have talked with a representative of
the American Civil Liberties Union in
Greenville. He suggested that I come to
the next meeting, April 7, bringing all
interested people denied their rights, to
discuss the possibility of a lawsuit.
A lawsuit is the only legal recourse
we have to regain our right to vote
wherever we choose. I hope you, the
student, are interested enough to see
your rights back, if this is possible in a
democracy. In any case everyone will
know that we tried.
The ACLU meeting April 7 will begin
at 8 p.m. in the Methodist Student
Center. Please attend if you feel the way
I do and want your name included in the
lawsuit.
Mike Taylor Patrick M. Flynn
FRANKLY SPEAKING by phil frank
"VX) SHALL BE yHEEONQ WGREOTEr
CHALLENGE AS MEMBERS OF THE
WiuppRNESS-SURVIVAL &PEmOH-
TWO WEEKS HTOUtVm NEW YORK
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�COLLEGE MEDIA SERVICES-BOX 9411-BERKELcY CA 94709
Hales draws support
To Fountalnhead:
With the date for SGA elections
rapidly rising, the qualifications for each
candidate must be carefully weighed. In
my opinion as a legislator, this year one
of the hardest working members I have
seen is Craig Hales, who is a candidate
for the position of SGA Treasurer.
Last year Craig was freshman class
vice-president and during that year he
served on the Appropriations Committee.
This year the same class returned and
voted him in as Sophomore Class
President where he has served as
Chairman of Appropriations. In his two
years with Appropriations, Craig has had
considerable experience with budgets
and he is familiar with the demands of
the many groups needing money on the
budget. This plus being a business
major, is invaluable experience to carry
into the position of SGA Treasurer.
As Chairman of Appropriations, Craig
has also taken a stand on many
controversial issues, regardless of the
criticism he has had to face. I saw this
especially with the treasury budget error.
Hales, unlike many, saw SGA lose
credibility over the error - so he called for
an outside audit of the treasury and a
stronger screening for the position of
Treasurer. Not all the Legislators agreed,
however, the students wanted to see
someone try to correct the situation and
Craig worked very hard to do this.
Craig Hales is an experienced
Praise for paper
To Fountalnhead:
This Is a fan letter.
I think you and your staff are doing
an excellent job wtth the Fountalnhead.
My first degree was in journalism and
while this does not make me an expert, I
have always bean interested In
newspapers.
Cordially,
University Book Exchange
I.J. Edwards, Jr.
hardworker who is most familiar with
budget problems that arise throughout
the year in SGA. As I have watched him
work this past year in Appropriations and
on the Legislator floor, I feel that it
would be to the advantage of all the
students to have Craig in the office of
SGA Treasurer.
Jenni Harrison
Pingston
supported
To Fountainhead:
SGA elections are approaching and I
would like to enlighten everyone on a
candidate I am supporting for the office
of Vice President - Greg Pingston. Greg
has been active in the SGA legislature
and has served on the Student Welfare
Committee. His interest and potential
leadership ability in my mind make Greg
the most qualified for the job of Vice
President. I urge everyone to vote for
Greg Pingston for SGA Vice President.
Cathy Gentry
Forum policy
All letters to the Editor must be
accompanied by an address along with
the writer's name. However, only the
name will be printed with letters
published in the Forum.
The letter writer's address will be kept
on file in the Fountainhead office and
will be available, upon request, to any
student.
FOUNTAINHEAD WILL, UPON PER-
SONAL REQUEST FROM A LETTER
WRITER, WITHHOLD A NAME FROM
PUBLICATION. BUT, THE NAME OF THE
WRITER WILL BE ON RLE IN THE
EDITOR'S OFFICE AND AVAILABLE
UPON REQUEST TO ANY STUDENT. ALL
REQUESTS FOR WITHHOLDING A
NAME MUST BE MADE IN PERSON TO
THE EDITOR.
Any letter received without this
information' will be held until the letter
writer complies with the new policy.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51. NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
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Wake Professor Oleck explains law job market
By KENNETH CAMPBELL
Assistant News Editor
To say the job market for law school
graduates is tight is misleading because
lawyers go into a wide variety of fields,
according to Howard L. deck, professor
at Wake Forest University.
Oleck is a leading authority in the
field of non-profit corporations.
Speaking to the ECU Law Soceity,
Thursday night, March 11, Oleck said
lawyers are the best trained people for
any type of job
"To say the job placement market is
tight is misleading because the field
offers wide opportunities said Oleck.
"Law students are taught to find the
crucial factor on which everything turns.
This is what makes legal training the
most superb training for any type of job.
"Only 35 per cent of law school
graduates practice law
Oleck said North Carolina has the
smallest percentage of lawyers per
person of all the states in the Union.
Currently, the best opportunities for
lawyers are in small towns, said the 65
year-old professor who has published 32
books.
There is no reason to stand in line at
a big law school, continued Oleck.
Clients do not care about which law
school the lawyer went to. What the
client wants to know is, "do you win?"
In preparing for law school, Oleck
suggested that taking a cram course on
how to take the LSAT is better than
taking the LSAT a second time.
"When taking the LSAT, some
students spend much of their time
determining how to take the test said
Oleck. "This uses up valuable time
"The cram courses on how to take the
LSAT are better than taking the LSAT a
second time because most schools
discredit the second LSAT score.
In law school, at least three hours are
spent studying for each hour a student is
in class, according to Oleck.
Although a tremendous amount of
studying is required each year in law
school, "you've never had more fun in
your life than in these years he said.
"Most law school professors are
howling egotists
"In class, law school professors cut
you into little pieces and leave you on
the floor to bleed to death. We feel it is
better to bleed in the law school room
rather than in the courtroom in defeat
Law schools are more or less bidding
for minority students, said Oleck. Law
schools are only 5 per cent black.
Law school enrollment leveling off according to ABA
Students Jockeying for a seat in law
school may find the competition has
eased up this year. Law school
enrollments, which have more than
doubled in the last decade, appear to be
leveling off, according to statistics
gathered by the American Bar Associa-
tion (A.B.A.).
For (he first time since 1968, the size
of first-year law classes declined last fall,
according to James P. White, professor
of law at Indiana University and the
A.B.As consultant on legal education.
The number of first-year students
dropped from 38,074 to 37,892 in the 156
law schools that are accredited by the
A.B.A. from fall 1974 to fall 1975. The
increase in total enrollment was only
3,764 students, or 3.3 percent.
Except for a slight drop in 1968, law
school enrollments increased steadily
over the last ten years, even when enroll-
ments in other fields were leveling off or
failing at many universities. Recently,
however, some lawyers have expressed
concern that the schools may be
producing more lawyers than there are
Jobs.
In addition to the general drop in
enrollments, law schools may also be
experiencing a decline in the quality of
the applicants. In 1973-1974, the mean
test score for both men and women
taking the Law School Admissions Test
was 527. In 1974-1975, it was 518 for men
and 523 for women.
"Many law schools experienced a
decrease in the total number of
applicants who met the given admission
criteria in each law school White said.
"Additionally, a number of law schools
experienced a greater number of 'no
shows' in their first choice of admittees
Even so, only one law school reported
any unfilled seats in its 1975 entering
class.
The number of women enrolled in law
schools continued to increase, although
not as fast as in recent years. Enrollment
of women increased from 21,788 to
26,737, a rise of 22 percent.
Women made up more than one fifth
of the entering class at 70 schools, more
than 30 percent at 49 schools and more
than half at three schools: the Antioch
School of Law, the University of
California at Davis and Northeastern
University.
In contrast, there were 607 fewer men
enrolled in schools that were approved by
the A.B.A. this year as compared to last
year.
Minority group enrollments in taw
schools continued to rise, but not as fast
as those of women. The total enrollment
of persons from minority groups
increased from 8,333 to 8,676, or 4
percent, compared with 10 percent last
(This article was revised with permission
from an article appearing in The
Chronicle of Higher Education.)
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Expert Alteration
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Charles St.
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Open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
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We're looking for
one political activist
on this campus.
That's right� just one individual committed to liberty
should be reading this ad. Could it be you?
We're the Young Libertarian Alliance �the college af-
filiates of the rapidly-growing national Libertarian Party.
We're organizing YLA chapters on every major campus,
and we need a coordinator right here.
Are you qualified for the job? The YLA coordinator
must be someone who's dedicated to achieving a free
society through political action. He �or she �will be re-
sponsible for establishing a YI.A chapter, organizing
meetings, rallies and demonstrations, and publicizing lib
ertarianism.
The Libertarian Party, though less than five years old.
is now organized in all 50 states. Our platform calls for a
strict respect for civil liberties, a non-interventionist for-
eign policy, and a free-market economy.
Roger MacBride, our presidential candidate, is a non-
politician who recognizes that the Republican and Demo-
cratic Parties are entrenched, establishment institutions
whose only goal is the perpetuation of their own power.
The Libertarian Party is a new alternative �a young
and dynamic political iorce that's committed to indi-
vidual freedom and opposed to government oppression in
every form.
If you think you've got what it takes to be a YLA co-
ordinator, write or call us collect. We've got a campus in-
formation kit that will get you started. And we'll give you
all the help and advice we can.
One final word: As a WA campus coordinator, you'll
do a lot of hard work. And the salary is zilch. But there is
one small compensation: You'll be helping to achieve
Freedom in Our Time.
YOUNG LIBERTARIAN ALLIANCE
1516 "P" Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20005
(202) 232-2089
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
5
SGA V.P. candidates define their platforms
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By CINDY BROOME
Staff Writer
Five people filed applications for the
SGA office of Vice-President, and two
people filed for SGA office of Graduate
President. Those who filed for SGA Vice-
President are: Terry Lucas, Tim McLeod,
Dalton Nicholson, Greg Pingston, and
Bob Seraiva. Those who filed for SGA
Graduate President are Jimmy Adams
and Roger Dubey.
Terry Lucas: Senior, majoring In
Industrial Technology and Business
Administration; hometown is Asheboro,
N.C.
Qualifications are: former Secretary
of Pi Lambda Phi Fraternity; Chairman of
Big Brothers Committee.
"I feel that the bus transportation
could be more fully utilized Lucas
stated. "I'd also like to see an overpass
built over 10th Street for the benefit of
the students who live on 'the hill I had a
friend who was hit by a car once at that
intersection, and I feel that an overpass
should be built
"I think that the money should be
used to the fullest for the benefit of the
students Lucas added.
Tim McLeod: Junior, majoring In
history; hometown is Charlotte, N.C.
Qualifications are: former Freshman
Class President; President-Chairperson
of Symposium Committee; member of
Rules Judiciary Committee; member of
Constitution Committee; member of the
Elections Rules Revision Committee.
"I'd like to see an investigation of the
Publications Board going independent. If
not, I'd like to see old revenues returned
to the Pub Board rather than returned to
general funds McLeod stated.
"I'd also like to see better
transportation, more parking lots, and
tighter security around campus
"I think I could work with any of the
candidates who are on the ballot
McLeod added.
Dalton Nicholson: Senior, majoring in
Science Education; hometown is
Winterville, N.C.
Qualifications are: Vice-President of
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity; former
Freshman Class President; SGA secre-
tary of Internal and Minority Affairs.
"If I'm elected, I'll work along with the
President on the major issues that
concern the students Nicholson stated.
"If there is an issue that would benefit
the students, then I'll be willing to help
Greg Pingston: Junior, majoring in
Political Science; hometown is Cape
Kennedy, Florida.
Qualifications are: member of SGA
Legislature; Chairman of the Easter
Seals Basketball Game; member of
Student Parking Committee; member of
See SGA. osoe 6.
K
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Automatic constant, independent mem-
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SR-50A and
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The SR-50A solves
complex scientific cal-
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simple arithmetic. Alge-
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sum-of-products capability.
The SR-50A performs all
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powers, reciprocals, factorials, common
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trigonometric (sin, cos, tan) and hyper-
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1976 Texas Instruments Incorporated
Texas Instruments
INCORPORATED
mm





I.
6
FOUNTAINH6ADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
m
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Non-credit course to be offered
By DIANE TAYLOR
Staff Writer
Career determination is the topic of a
new non-credit course being offered here
by the Division of Continuing Education,
March 23-May 25.
The course is designed to help
participants evaluate their interests and
plans for obtaining jobs that lead to
careers in those areas of interest.
"This is the kind of information that
high school juniors and seniors should
have had said Rich Morin, assistant
director of non-credit programs. "Guid-
ance Counselors at all schools ought to
have this knowledge
Ninety per cent of the course will be
spent in actual work on the participant's
chosen vocational interests.
Titled, Career Determination, the
evening course will be open to all ECU
students and alumni.
Interested persons should register at
the Division of Continuing Education
Business Office, Erwin Hall. The fee is
$25.00 which includes all course
materials. Class size is limited to 20
persons.
SGA
Continued from page 5.
Student Welfare Committee.
"I'd like to see a renovation and
expansion of the transportation system
Pingston stated, "and also an in-depth
study of the parking situation.
"I'd like to work to make the campus
safer from assaults by installing more
lighting on campus and starting a
rotation escort system
Bob Seraiva: Junior, majoring in
Business Administration; hometown is
Wilmington, Delaware. Seraiva could not
be reached for comment.
SGA GRADUATE PRESIDENT
CANDIDATES
Jimmy Adams: majoring in Vocation-
al Rehabilitation Counseling; hometown
is Wilson, N.C.
Qualifications are: former Freshman
Class President; former Senator of
Sophomore Class; former Vice-President
of the SGA; former President of the
SGA.
Roger Dubey: majoring in Science
Education, specializing in Biology;
hometown is Manteo, N.C.
Qualifications are: historian of Alpha
Epsilon Delta; historian of Chi Beta Phi;
officer of the American Chemical
Association; officer for the ECU Ski
Club; member of the Graduate Advisory
Council; Sponsor of the bill in the
Graduate Advisory Council for the
requirements for this election; working
with a committee of the Graduate
Advisory Council for improving the
financial assistance to graduate students.
"I'd like first to redefine the status of
the graduate student Dubey stated.
"I'd also like to represent graduate
students in the SGA better than they
have been represented
Elections for all SGA offices will be
held Wednesday, March 24.
LANGUAGE
Continued from page 1.
Perry also suggested that students
enter the B.A. program because they
want a liberal arts education. If students
want another type of education, she said,
they should enter a different degree
program.
Most ECU departments offer the B.S.
degree which does not require a foreign
language.
Political Science recently had a new
degree approved which allows cognate
courses rather than a Foreign Language
requirement according to Richard
Capwell, dean of the College of Arts and
Sciences.
Also, biology and geology has
recently changed its curriculum so that
optional or cognate courses may be
taken in place of foreign language,
according to McDaniel.
As does Perry, Capwell also believes
students enter the B.A. program to
receive a liberal arts education of which
foreign language is a part.
"I personally hate to see the growing
lack of interest in Foreign Language
said Capwell. "It seems that some
knowledge of another language and
culture is necessary for the well-educated
person.
"At the same time, I'm in sympathy
with the emphasis today on studying
disciplines the students feel are of more
immediate practical value
Assistant provost McDaniel explained
that one of the basic differences in the
B.S. and the B.A. degrees is the foreign
language requirement.
Also, she continued, the B.S. is more
vocational oriented.
"Foreign language values are subtle
enough that one can easily ignore the
use of them according to McDaniel.
"This effect leads some students to say
that a foreign language is irrelevant to
their education.
"What is relevant today may not be
relevant tomorrow she continued. "If
students don't learn a broad field, their
education will be timed out of existence.
And, regardless of what actions are
taken by the SGA and university officials,
the foreign language requirement will
continue to exist where it currently does
until the change is printed in a new
catalog, according to McDaniel.
ciioni $
HOUAS-
ham- Jlaw
BIKE REPAIR - can do quickly &
inexpensively. Inquire at 1212 S. Evans or
phone Tommy at 756-7838.
MALE ROOMMATE wanted to share
furnished apt. for summer. Prefer honest,
reasonably quiet & clean person.
$30month plus utilities. Call 752-4043
between 9-11 p.m.
NEEDED - Stter tor 1 child (age 5) on
Mon. and Wed. nights, 7:15 until-usually
not later than 12 - average time 11 p.m.
Need own transportation. Salary to be
discussed. Job will begin in April.
'References needed. Must be dependa-
able. Call 758-0497.
ILKCPI
fare
l�W W1
800-325-4867
(& UnsTravel Charters
FURNISHED - Efficienct apt. for 2,
utilities included. Across from college.
758-2585.
VOTE Bob Braxton for SGA Treasurer.
FOUND - Set of keys in Rawl Bldg. Call
758-6055 or come by Rawl 222.
TYPING SERVICE-please call 756-5167
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752 5133.
HELP WANTED -Set your own hrs. Part-
time. For info call 752-2095, March 11
between 7 & 9 p.m.
FOR SALE: 1971 Honda CB350 with 2
helmets. Good condition, excellent
mechanicallly, recent tune-up. $495.
752-2059.
$100 DOLLAR REWARD for the finding of
a black miniature poodle puppy
answering to the name of Nookie, lost
around 1200 S. Evans St. area. Phone
756-7838 or bring by 1212 S. Evans St.
752-0385.
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 line 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 for first insertion
.25 plus .25 equals .50 each for second and third insertion.
Therefore total cost is 1.75. No charge for lost and found classifieds
PAYMENT: Classified payable in advance. Send check or money order along wad to:
Fountainhead, Classified Ad Dept Old South Bldg ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
DEADLINES: Fountainhead publishes Tues. & Thurs. All classifieds & payments must
be received 2 days prior to requested insertion date.
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 advertiser.
CooH'c. Material and
OddU �d Workmanship
ShoepX�
ShOD 113 Grande Ave.
758-1228
to
USE I
: CLASSIFIEDS :








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211 Eatt Fifth St
Downtown Groonvill

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817 Dickinson Ave.
(next to Diener's Bakery)
758-0650
Art Supplies- If we don't
have it - we can get It!
. . Hang your Art
Art classes �
MonTues. 7-9 Oil-Acrylics-Drawinpfr
Wed. 1-3 Sculpture
7-9 Watercolor J
$8 a month - 2 hr. class �.
I
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'DAIRYMAID'
SKIRT
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1978
7
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HARMONY
HOUSE
SOUTH
Once A Year
Save Up To
50
Hurry! Limited Quantities � Fst Com � First
Serve. All items subject to prior sale.
Thursday, March 11th, 10 to 9
Friday, March 12th, 10 to 9
Saturday, March 13th, 10 to 6
All the demos and used equipment on the floor have been greatly
reduced for our only store wide sale. We're featuring such name brands
as Sony, Pioneer, Teoc, JVC and Base
�:
Turntables and Tapedecks
JVC 1696 Reel lo reel
Sony 2350 Turntable
JVC - JLB -31 Direct Orive Turntable
Teac A 400 Cassette Deck
Sony 5520 Turntable
JVC 1656 Cassette Deck
fisher 220 Turntable
JVC VL-5 Turntable
Pioieer 5151 Cassette Oeck
BSD 610 Turntable
Teac 2050 Auto Reverse Reel (used
Sony 5550 Turntable
Used Compact Systems
Zenith Compact -AMFM, cassettesBro�
1 Panasonic Compact-AM FM. cass
System Spe
1 Sanyo 1800K Receiver
1 Garrard Turntable (us
1 Pair Of Altec 887'
Turntable 'W
2
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m
5
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Sale Price
Early Bird Specials
1 Milevac Receiver (used)$4000
1 Portable Cassette (used)500
1 Concord MK 9 Cassette Deck JjJn 7000
500
Used) $1000
40oo
Si. Turntable (used) W
4 V
1 Souid Design Jik
1 BSR Je&Jlt (used)
Xaund Design Speakers (�sedu� $20
�lafayelie Amp (ised) wS
1 Pilet 240 lap (isvVC $1500
00
00
�:�:�
I
Receivers A
i Sony 7055 Receiv.
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mps
I Morontz 4140
1 JVC 555�
annel amp
V-eceiver
1 Pain Bose 901$
1 Pair Pioneer R-500
1 Pair Altec 887 A
1 Pair BK 4s ktf
1 Pair Bose Inter Audio 7'd�S
1 Pair Scientific Acoi
1 Pair JBL-MOO's
1 Pair Bose r01
1 Pair Er RoOO's
1 Pai.jljw Inter Audio 4000 m
1 Pair Voricon 15" Swayk
1 Pair KLH 32s .lO
1 Pair Rectilinear evT'Owboy)
1 Pair Bo
1 Pair JVC
1 Pair Bose Inter Audio 3000s
fAi r Receiver
M4000
400��
l3300c
,299��
�30000
l5600'
tVC 5535 Receiver l26500
I Pioneer 636 Receiver
1 Fisher 190B Receiver
1 Sanyo 1800 K Receiver
1 Pioneer 646 4 channel Receiver
1 JVC 5565 Receiver
?310"
�199"
�170"
'300"
340"

Miscellaneous Items
1 Sony 2050 4 channel Decoder
1 Sansui R 500 Reverb (used)
1 Teac AN 60 Dolly Unit (used)
1 Realistic 4 channel Decoder used
1 Sayno Add on 4 channel amp and decoder
t Dynaco Pat 3 Pre amp used
1 Lafayette 250 Tuner (used)
1 Pilot 211 Tuner
$25.00
$50.00
$50.00
$10.00
$70.00
$35.00
$40.00
$140.00
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH
On The Mall Downtown Greenville
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8
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, N 0. 4316 MARCH 1976
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FEATURES
Would you believe
By PAT COYUE
Features Editor
As the sun sets over Killamey, and the moss sets on the Blarney Stone, and my
Uncle Patrick O'Malley sits on his favorite stool at Kelly's Bar, I realize that Saint
Patrick's Day is here once again.
Granted, Saint Paddy's Day might not have much meaning for most of you (POOR
HEATHENS THAT YE ARE!), but for those of us of the Irish Catholic persuasion, well
'tis quite a big day.
Some of my strongest childhood memories involve my family's celebration of the
blessed day. In the first place, St. Pat's Day comes in Lent. It's a Catholic tradition to
give-up something highly valued during Lent; like candy or bubble gum or (Heaven
Forbid!) alcohol.
St. Patrick's Day has always been a "day off" from Lenten abstinence. The candy,
bubble gum, and, of course, liquor always flows on March 17.
How well I remember lying crouched in the corner on St. Patrick's night, the milk
chocolate melting in my mouth, not in my hands; belly pooched out, feeling total
satisfaction with St. Patrick, chocolate candy, and the world in general.
As I enjoyed my personal world of bliss, the older members of the family would
sit around, beer in hand, singing chorus after chorus of "My Wild Irish Rose Stories
of the "old country" abounded, which was pretty unusual considering the fact that
everybody in the group was bom in Philadelphia.
Time passed, and I am now forced to spend my St. Paddy's Days at good ole EZU
(where the only green things are GREENville, and the freshmen).
I've tried to maintain some semblance of tradition, really I have. I once borrowed
my father's clay pipe, and passed it around at a party. It really went over well, until
my friends realized it was filled with Tobaccoland Brown instead of Acapulco Gold.
I tried singing a tear-jerking rendition of "My Wild Irish Rose" to an old boyfriend,
but his only reaction was "Who could hustle to THAT???"
I haven't given up hope, though. Surely there are other Irishmen out there, or at
least a few who wouldn't mind being Irish for a day, who would enjoy sharing a
cultural experience involving singing, being friendly, and, uh, partaking of joyous
spirits.
As for the non-Irish faction, I repeat that you will be a welcome addition to the St.
Paddy's Day festivities. As for all of you out there who go by such names as
O'Malley, and Kelly and Ryan and Flynn, you'd best learn to take pride in your
heritage. You may not realize it, but there IS an Irish Mafia
Dutton, nursery school
break sexual barriers
By CINDY BROOME
Staff Writer
If you are in the Nursing-Home Ec
building one day and happen to find
yourself in the Nursery School
Department, you might see a young man
teaching a group of pre-school children.
A common reaction might be one of
surprise. Tradition has it that just women
teach nursery school. However, with
women taking professions that were once
considered just for men, why shouldn't
men take a profession that was once
considered just for women?
Terry Dutton, a graduate student of
Child Development and Family Relations,
is presently teaching pre-school children
in the ECU Nursery School.
As an undergraduate, Terry was
majoring in psychology He became
especially interested in child psychology
and developmental psychology. He
realized that he wanted to work with
young children, but he could not find the
specific department that he wanted.
Eventually, he found what he was looking
for - Child Development. Child Develop-
ment is a program in the Home Ec
Department.
At first, Terry was planning to work
with therapy for the emotionally
disturbed children. Now, he plans to
direct a pre-school nursery.
"I'd like to be a director for a
pre-school program for socially deprived
children Terry stated.
Working with young children pro-
duces many rewards, and Terry stated,
"Everyday, there are things that happen
that are rewarding.
"The most rewarding thing to me is to
see children learn something new
Another reward was to see the social
reactions - to see children become
friends.
Terry stated that he preferred to work
with five-year-olds rather than three-year-
olds because their vocabulary was more
extensive.
"I like being able to converse with the
children Terry added.
There are two branches of the nursery
- a department for the three-year-olds and
a department for the four and five-year-
olds. Terry works with four-year-old
children.
When Terry first began teaching the
children, he worried that the parents
might object to his being a man, and not
a woman. However, the parents readily
accepted Terry and thought that it was
great that a man was teaching nursery
school.
One mother told Terry that she was
glad that he was teaching her son
because her son had begun to have a
negative attitude towards men; he had
begun to think that men were gruff and
uninterested in children. However, the
chance for him to be taught by Terry
made him realize that all men were not
uninterested and cold.
Out of 45 graduate students in the
Child Development and Family Relations
department, only six are men. If more
men became pre-school and elementary
teachers, children would have a chance
to be around men almost as much as
they are around women.
For children without fathers due to
Jeath or divorce and pre-school children
See Nursery, page 9.
Continuing education
offers night life
By DIANE TAYLOR
Staff Writer
If you are one of those rare
individuals who think there's more to
college life than Accounting 210,
Composition 3 or Music Appreciation-has
night life got a little more to offer you!
In fact, it you re the free-spirited type
who prefers learning just for the sake of
learning, here's an opportunity to get
away from the grade book, ID number
classroom structure and take a course
aimed at learning rather than a QP
average.
Every year the ECU Division of
Continuing Education offers numerous
non-credit courses. Most courses are
taught in the evening.
The seventeen courses offered this
spring range from Scruggs-Style Banjo
Pickin to Baseball Officiating, to Basic
Scuba Certification, to Fundamentals of
Real Estate. Courses are also offered in
Gourmet Food Preparation, Written
Communications, Oral Communications
and Preparation for Parenthood.
The list goes on with Advanced Scuba
Certification, Beginning Bridge, Begin-
ning Russian, Pia-o for Beginners, Basic
Guitar, French Language and Culture,
and How To Get The Most From A
Meeting.
Perhaps the most unusual and
intriguing course is Adventures in
Attitudes. It is designed to help people
reach a greater level of happiness and
achievement in their work and home life
by stimulating self-awareness, personal
growth and positive attitudes.
These courses do not run on the
quarter system. Although a few have
already begun, most of them will begin
within the next two weeks and end before
spring quarter is over.
"People take these courses strictly
because they want to said Rich Morin,
Assistant Director of non-credit pro-
grams. They are not fulfilling course
requirements or adding electives
Because of the extreme interest and
usually small classes, participants are
able to benefit from more personal
instruction.
Morin said most courses are taught
by ECU faculty and staff but that is not
always the case.
"Sometimes people from the (Green-
ville) community come to us with ideas
and qualifications to teach a course he
said.
The courses are open to anyone
interested.
"Our main target is the adult
community around Greenville but we
more than welcome students said
Morin. Some of our courses are 90
percent ECU students
Tuition fees for each courses varies
according to the expense involved in the
course. Since the non-credit programs
are not a part of the state supported
university curriculum they must be
self-supporting. All tuition fees for such
courses are paid directly to the Business
Office of the Division of Continuing
Education in Erwin Hall.
Registration for each course ends the
day before the class begins. Persons may
sign up in room 319, Erwin. The office is
open 8 am. to 5 p m. MonFri.
Most of the courses offered this
spring will be repeated next year,
according to Morin.
So if you're frustrated with the load of
boring required courses and "crip
electives, do yourself a favor and enjoy
taking something you really want to. But
sign up right away, some courses begin
tomorrow
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
9
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More than spirits and song
What does St. Pat's Day mean?
By JACKSON HARRILL
Staff Writer
As we progress along the course of a
typical year, we encounter certain days
which have been designated holidays in
observance of historical figures, in
recognition of their contributions. George
Washington and Abraham Lincoln both
receive annual birthday parties, although
lately we have been celebrating on
Mondays, whether or not it is their
proper day of birth
March 17 is a celebration day. also.
St. Patrick is customarily recognised on
this date, but for what? It is a generally
well-known fact in this country that he
was Irish, and green is the color of the
day Other than that, it might take a true
Irishman to fill you in on the details.
Unlike Washington and Lincoln, the
celebration date is not St. Patrick's date
of birth: it is the day on which he died.
But let us start at the beginning.
St. Patrick was born in 372 or 384
AD. in one of three countries: France,
England or Scotland, all three hold claim
to him At the age of sixteen he was
carried off by pirates and sold into
slavery in Ireland. There he was
employed by his master as a swineherd
on the mountain of Sleamish, in the
county of Antrim He lived there seven
years, during which time he learned the
Irish language, and customs and habits
of the people.
He escaped captivity, and eventually
reached the Continent There he was
successively ordained Deacon, priest and
bishop With the authority of Pope
Celestine he returned to Ireland once
more to preach the Gospel to its
inhabitants
Patrick found enemies in the Druidical
priests of the more ancient faith in the
country They were great magicians, but
found their powers useless against
Patrick. Their antagonism of the bishop
was so great that he was compelled to
curse their fertile lands, so that they
became dreary bogs: to curse their rivers
so that no fish lived there; to curse their
kettles so that nothinq could ever be
made to boil in them; and lastly, to
curse the Druids themselves, so that the
earth opened and swallowed them up.
One legend associated with the saint
and his followers holds that one cold
morning they found themselves on a
mountain, without a fire to cook their
breakfast, or warm themselves. Patrick
instructed his followers to gather a pile
of ice and snowballs: after this was
done, he breathed upon it, and it
immediately became a fire.
His greatest miracle, however, was
that of driving the snakes from Ireland,
and causing the soil of the country to kill
any serpents that touched it. It has been
said that Patrick accomplished the f�at
by bqating a drum, which he struck so
hard that he knocked a hole in it,
endangering the success of the miracle.
An angel appeared, though, and mended
the drum, which was long exhibited as a
holy relic.
In 445 he commanded his disciples to
abstain from drink in the daytime, until
the bell rang for vespers in the evening
One man, while working in his fields,
obeyed this commandment quite literally.
Even though he was exhausted with heat.
fatigue and thirst, he refused to drink
even one drop of water during the day. At
last, when the bell rang for vespers, the
man dropped dead-a martyr to thirst.
St Patrick died on March 17, 493. He
is recognised throughout Ireland as the
country's patron saint, a Christian
missionary and as a founder of schools
and churches.
The shamrock is associated with the
umber's t
Family
Favorites
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saint because he used it as a teaching
instrument to illustrate the Holy
Trinity-God the Father, God the Son and
God the Holy Ghost-represented by each
of the three green leaves.
In Dublin. Ireland the day is
celebrated with a march down O'Connell
Street. At 150 feet, it is one of the widest
avenues in Europe. Monuments of men
famous in Irish history stand in the
street's center.
In America the day is observed by the
wearing of green and a parade in New
York City.
NURSERY
Continued from page 8.
who are with their mothers daily while
the fathers work, a man teacher could
help them develop a more well-rounded
view of their environment.
Terry Dutton is one of few men who
teacn pre-school children. In the future,
you may find yourself taking your child
to a nursery school where there are as
many men teachers as there are women.
Got any bright ideas?
Come to feature writers meeting
Thursday, 5:30
Writers and
interested parties
invited
MARCH
r
16 Tues. - SUITERS GOL
fc 17 Wed. - ROCKFISH
18 Thur- ROCKFISH
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10
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
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ENTERTAINMENT
Greenwich Village comes to life
By BRANDON USE
Entertainment Editor
Is 1953 a good time for leaving home?
Larry Lapinsky thinks it is. He is leaving
the Brownsville section of Brooklyn for
Greenwich Village and an acting career.
Greenwich Village, Bohemian capital
of the United States, Manhattan's version
of the Left Bank, spot where thousands
have gone to pursue artistic careers of
one sort or another throughout the years,
is the setting for the movie. Even though
the film was shot on location in
Greenwich Village and Brooklyn, director
Paul Mazursky best succeeds in
feel of Greenwich Village until we come
to terms with the potpourri of the
characters and their lives.
Lenny Baker and Ellen Greene as the
two young lovers, Larry Lapinsky and
Sarah, both portray young, middle class
Jewish kids from Brooklyn who are
hoping to find something in Greenwich
Village. Likewise Christopher Walken as
Robert, a young poet, Dori Brenner as
Connie, an artist, and Antonio Fargas as
Bernstein, a gay Black man, all seem to
be seeking something in the Village.
The trouble is no one except Larry
Lapinsky seems to really know what they
are seeking. Larry always has a firm goal
LENNY BAKER, Ellen Greene, Antonio Fargas, Dori Brenner and Christopher Walken
are denizens of Greenwich Village in the early 19508 in Paul Mazurskys "Next Stop
Greenwich Village
ELLEN GREENE and Lenny Baker are lovers In the Greenwich Village of the early
195Cs in Paul Mazursky's "Next Stop, Greenwich Village
realistically re-creating the people of
Greenwich Village on screen rather than
loading us down with heavy physical
re-creation. Mazursky, who coincidentally
was bom in Brooklyn and left it around
1953 for Greenwich Village and an
acting career, nevertheless insists that
the movie Is only influenced by his life�
but not an autobiography.
Though Packards and Hudsons line
the streets of Sheridan Square and
MacDougal Street, and newsstands
display Modem Screen Magazine with the
cover story, "Wolves I Have Known" by
Marilyn Monroe, we don't get the true
in mind; to be an actor. All the others
are simply existing in the Village for its
Mecca-like qualities We see Larry in his
everyday struggles to make himself
known as an actor but all the rest of his
friends are only viewed in coffeehouses,
parties, or in their apartments. None of
the others have ambition to make
something of their lives beyond the
Village but Larry who sees the Village
merely as a stepping stone to stardom.
We find, as Larry does in the course
of the film, that many of his "friends" in
Greenwich Village are shells of people;
facades covered by more facades. Larry
sums it ud beautifully when he finds out
that Sarah, his girlfriend, has been
seduced by Robert. Cornering him in a
bar, Larry cooly remarks: "Underneath
thatpose, there is nothing but pose
Bernstein, who after his boyfriend has
left him won't come out from underneath
bedcovers, finally confesses to sym-
pathetic Larry and Co. that his name
really isn't Bernstein, he came from
Georgia instead of New York, he has no
idea who his father was, and almost
everything he has told them was made
up. "The only real thing is the gay part,
so please go away. I don't want to come
out from under the covers
Indeed the Village has that carnival
facade where among other things Larry
and friends dance in conga lines down
the streets to prevent weekly suicide
attempts from Anita, one of the wasted
Villagers.
Larry's struggles to be an actor are
juxtaposed with struggles from his
mother (Shelly Winters) who plays the
classic Jewish mother who doesn't want
to give up her little boy; even if he is 22!
His attempts at living in the grownup
world are always being threatened by his
mother vho means well, but just can't let
go. She constantly interferes with Larry's
life, walking in on his parties and his life
with Sarah.
Lenny Baker as Larry Lapinsky, the
only one of the Villagers who seems to
have a last name, brings his part to life
with a true New York vitality and
awareness. Unlike naive Dustin Hoffman
in THE GRADUATE, Larry is not
confused by the world, only frustrated by
it. He is not having harsh reality
unwillingly thrust upon him, to the
contrary, he actively seeks the challenge
of the real world and seems rather adult
throughout the film even though it is a
film partially about growing up. I suggest
that it is more about trying to make
dreams become reality than about
growing up, for Larry Lapinsky seems on
his way by the end of the film to
becoming somebody.
NEXT STOP GREENWICH VILLAGE is
wry humor-drama done very well through
the sympathetic directing of a Village
veteran, Paul Mazursky. It works because
reality is not glossed over by nostalgia;
but most importantly -it works.
This film playing through tonight at the
Park Theater. Their cooperation is
gratefully appreciated.
Murray Perahia gives sensitive performance
By MARY GROVER
Murray Perahia's performance in
MendenhaJI Student Center last Wednes-
day night was both sensitive and
inspired. Perahia's playing exhibited
technical mastery and spiritual insight.
Mr. Perahia's performance seemed
stronger in the poetic sense than in the
powerful. He played two sets of
variations on his program. The first,
Haydn's "F-Minor Variations" lent itself
well to Perahia's style. Its themes were
beautifully conveyed throughout the
entire piece. But in Brahm's "25
Va lations and Fugue on a Theme of
Handel a set of variations much larger
mm
in scope than the one. Of Hayden's,
Perahia seemed to have some trouble
tying the whole piece together. Each
variation is, in its own right, a complete
entity. But more so, it is a link in a
stream of musical events, culminating, in
this set, in a grand fugue whose
demands Perahia seemed just shy of
satisfying.
Bartok's "Out of Doors' Suite" was
second on the program. The five-piece
composition encompassing a varied
range of sounds and moods was
completely played. But again, especially
in "The Chase the final piece of the
suite, a bigger or heavier 3ound wa��
needed to meet its driving and rhythmic
specifications.
"Papillons" by Schumann, like the
Haydn Variations, exhibited Perahia's
forte, tonal and textural control. His
playing was refined, capturing all the
subtleties and nuances of the composi-
tion. "Papillons" is an example of the
"character" piece of trie 19th century.
Each of the twelve sections Involves its
own individual mood or character which
Mr. Perahia was most successful in
relaying.
The recital was enjoyable because of
its varied program, but more importantly
because of Murray Perahia's meaningful
and dedicated performance of these
pieces.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
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ENTERTAINMENT
Kottke is superb
By KENT JOHNSON
Staff Writer
The Leo Kottke concert last Thursday
night at Wright Auditorium was a concert
that should not have been missed.
Artists of Kottke's caliber do not come to
ECU often enough.
To say that Kottke was proficient with
his Martin twelve string guitar wojld be
an understatement. A proficient guitar
player in a solo performance could not
control and impress an audience the
way Kottke did.
Throughout the concert you could
hear the claps, yells and sighs of the
members of the audience who were
unwilling to wait until the end of the
song to show their appreciation. This
reporter's jaw dropped more than once in
appreciation of a Kottke melody line.
Some guitarists seem to say to the
audience: "Look what I can make this
guitar do Leo Kottke says: "Look at
this amazing instrument and what it can
do It is this subtle difference that puts
Kottke ahead of other guitarists. Only an
artist true to form could have produced a
show of the quality and style of
Thursday's performance.
Kottke wears five finger picks on his
right hand, and a glass slide on his little
finger of his left hand. To watch him
play, you would think it was the most
natural and easiest way to play guitar. All
of his movements were graceful and
precise.
Kottke is a solo performer, but
listening to him it is hard to think that
there is no backup. He plays the rhythm
with his thumb and forefinger on the
lower strings while picking the lead on
the higher strings. Without missing a
boat he may play a short lead with the
slide that is on his little finger. He
occasionally retunes his guitar to an
open chord.
When Kottke appears on stage in blue
jeans and a pullover shirt, with short hair
by today's standards, he reminds you of
your older cousin who you do not see
too often. You think that he might have
just gotten out of the Navy. In fact
Kottke was in the Navy for quite some
years.
But Kottke is surprising. This
cousin's voice wasn't nearly so low as
Kottke's. It is not a rasping voice, but a
low melodic voice. And besides the way
he talks, what he is saying is also
surprising, you can't believe a word the
man says.
During the concert Kottke would
pause between songs and explain what
inspired him to write the next song, or
simply give the name of the song. The
name of one instrumental was "A Bus
Boy's Baroque Seen Through the Eyes of
the Suburb A very sad sounding blues
See Kottka. oaoe 12.
"To say that Kottke was proficient on hisguitar would be an understatement.
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12
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 M'RCH 1976
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ENTERTAINMENT
KOTTKE
Continued from page 11
melody was inspired by a 13 year old
New Jersey youth who discovered he was
growing pubic hair and killod himself.
He thought he was becoming a werewolf.
Kottke attributes this tragedy to
television.
Kottke was never serious in his
monologues. He discussed everything
from death to cottage cheese in Raleigh,
NIC. and treated all of the subjects with
equally amusing sarcasm.
Kottke worked as hard at amusing
himself as he did to amuse the audience.
While he played the guitar his eyes were
closed most of the time. At times, it
seemed that the audience was
hypnotised, but Kottke would not allow
that for long, he was intent on having a
good time.
ECU audiences yell, clap and stomp
feet. This audience attitude made Kottke
happy. Kottke enjoyed answering the
lower members of the audience, and
smiled modestly with the applause.
The concert began with a lively
instrumental. The second song was a
song that is probably most often
associated with Leo Kottke. "I Guess I
Owe It All To Pamela Brown" is a Kottke
song in which he attributes his success
and "Tod times to a woman that left him
for u ,nan that drives a pick-up truck. If
she had not left him he thinks that today
he would be driving kids to school.
Other notable songs Kottke performed
were the very sensitive "Yesterday is
Gone the wilder Procol Harum song
"Power Failure and probably the
highlight of the show "Louise
Kottke said of his song "Louise that
it was a "song about agony, despair and
generally the things that make the world
go around I asked him about the song
after the show and he claimed he did not
write it. His albums credit him with
writing "Louise You can't believe a
word the man says.
"I'm trying to progress, to mature, but
I find it hard because I delight in the
ordinary Kottke said. It is easy to see
that Kottke enjoys his music, which is
far from ordinary. So, again I have to
say, you can't believe a word the man
says.
The concert was brought to ECU by
the Student Union Special Concerts
Committee, chaired by Daniel Prevatte.
Special recognition should be given them
for organizing such a fine show.
Louise is a "song about agony, despair, and generally the things that make the world
go around
Ftggai Shot Repair Shep
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FOUNTAINHEAOVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
mmmmm
13
Female law school enrollment increase cited
By RAY TYLER
Staff Writer
More and more women are getting
into law school and are doing well there,
according to Mrs. Nelson Crisp, a
Greenville attorney.
"Women are scoring seven percent
higher than men on the LSAT (Law
Scholastic Aptitude Test) and the grade
point average of women in law school
exceeds the male average said Mrs.
Crisp.
Mrs. Crisp made the comments in a
speech before the ECU Law Society, Feb.
12.
The Law Society is an organization for
students interested in pursuing legal
careers. It obtains information from law
schools for its 46 members and
maintains a library on law schools,
according to Walter Clark, president of
the society.
Mrs. Crisp, a native of Greenville,
started her own practice here in 1968.
"I figured that in eastern North
Carolina, nobody would have me said
Mrs. Crisp. "So I went in on my own and
I went into the hole my first year
Mrs. Crisp, who said she has never
experienced any sex discrimination
amo.o peers, hears comments about her
sex.
"Some judges like to say 'you are the
prettiest lawyer I have ever seen' and that
gets old after awhile.
"When I went to law school in 1964
there were only five women and three did
not continue said Mrs. Crisp. "I had a
constitutional law professor who pegged'
me and called on me more often but I
think that helped me learn better
Mrs. Crisp, who did her undergrad-
uate work at Duke and attended the
University of North Carolina Law School
cited one area of law in need of
immediate reform.
"When child support cases are
appealed, it can leave a mother without
any income and that's not right said
Mrs. Crisp. "But we have a fair system of
equal rights that asks who the supporting
person is and who is the dependent
Mrs. Crisp said the recent move
toward allowing lawyers to advertise
is dangerous.
"I think we have a very good system
now she said. "If we had advertising we
would have people undercutting others
and that's not healthy.
"But we still have attomeys who
engage in ambulance chasing and
attomeys that are buddy-buddy with real
estate men so maybe we should try
advertising and see what happens said
Mrs. Crisp.
The ECU Law Society sponsors four
lectures each year, and Mrs. Crisp was
the second in this year's series. Mrs.
Crisp is retained as an attorney for
students by the Student Government
Association.
Spring ECU graduates face grim U.S. job market
By FRANCEINE PERRY
ECU News Bureau
The job market for this spring's crop
of college graduates looks pretty grim,
but ECU senior Michael Kincer doesn't
worry about his employment prospects.
Already he has had encouraging
on-campus interviews with a variety of
employers�a well-known automobile
manufacturer, a Richmond Tobacco
company, a cosmetic distributor, an
office equipment firm, a large bank and
the regional office of a camera
manufacturer.
And the local car dealership which
employed Kincer part-time during his
student years has urged him to consider
permanent employment.
The jobs Kincer is considering include
management, data processing and
marketing positions, which would enable
him to apply his campus studies as a
business and mathematics major.
Some of the potential employers have
offered to pay his travel expenses for
further interviews.
Why is Mike Kincer so fortunate in
locating job prospects?
"He has a positive attitude toward
job-hunting sayd ECU Placement
Service Director Fumey James. "Mike has
not simply read the unemployment
statistics and given up in despair, as
many students have.
"He knows he has a good deal to
offer an employer, and this confidence is
communicated to the company represent-
atives who interview him
James's office arranges for graduating
seniors to meet with visiting interviewers
from businesses, industries, school
systems and other companies and
institutions interested in hiring new
employees.
Problems resulting from the current
recession-unemployment, inflation, ,ow
revenues and resulting cutbacks-have
caused numbers of students to panic,
and fail to register for interviews at all,
believing that the situation is hopeless,
James says.
"That is why Mike is in such a
favorable position
Mike Kincer himself attributes his
success to the fact that he does not feel
"pressured
"Graduate school is always an
option he said. "As an Air Force
veteran, I still have two more years of the
Gl Bill. My wife is employed, so I am not
desperate for a job.
Job-hunting has not been altogether
easy for Kincer; the first job applications
he sent away were accepted with thanks
but with polite replies that no position
was available.
"This is why so many students are
turned off. You just have to keep trying
he said.
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PHONE IN ORDERS FOR PICK-UP
OPEN- MonThurs. 10:00 to 1:00 a.m.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
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Mandatory student fees battle rages in U.S.
From the cold marble halls of the US
Supreme Court to the frozen streets of
Madison, Wisconsin, the continuing saga
of whose hot little hands get to control
student fees rages on.
Should University of North Carolina
students fork over funds to a liberal
student paper that regularly dumps on
Spiro Agnew and foes of abortion?
Should University of Wisconsin students
help pay trial costs of a man accused of
bombing that school's math building six
years ago where a professor lost his life?
Should students at the State University
of New York at Buffalo pop for the
financing of a student corporation like
the Schussmeisters Ski Club?
These are just some of the current
campus battles being waged over
mandatory student fees. The fees,
usually included in or added on to
student tuition, run from $1 to $50
depending on the school, and go towards
financing such things as athletic
programs, student newspapers, student
governments, and various other student-
orientated programs and organizations.
The use and control of such funds
has long been a hot campus issue. At
most schools, the student government
has the last say as to which student
groups receive how much. Groups which
receive the money are usually recognized
campus organizations, but the process of
dishing out the cash is fraught with
problems.
Critics point out that student
governments, whether liberal or conserva-
tive, are usually elected by small
percentages of the student population
and therefore do not accurately reflect
the wishes of the students as to where
their money should go.
When a student government gives
$700 to the local Trotskyite cabal to
finance a semester worth of leaflets,
students of a somewhat conservative
bent unleash a howl. When liberal
students, on the other hand, see their
hard-earned tuition money going to a
fraternity to pay for a beer bash, they
send up a cry of protest. And when
students of all ideological shades see
student governments abusing their
money by taking needless junkets or
sometimes, by outright stealing it,
everyone yells.
The Daily Tar Heel, the student paper
at the University of North Carolina which
receives $22,000 in student funds, was
recently let off the hook by the US
Supreme Court when it refused to hear a
case brought by several disgruntled
students. The students said they didn't
like their mandatory fees supporting a
paper whose views did not jive with
theirs.
The court's refusal left standing a
district court ruling which said neither
the paper nor the university "imposes or
attempts to impose an orthodoxy or point
of view concerning religious, moral,
philosophical, ideological and political
ideas on any individual
The students, whose fees range from
$7 to $9 out of a tuition of $453 per
semester, objected to the paper's line on
such topics as Agnew, abortion, Richard
Nixon, Hubert Humphrey, bussing and1 the
death penalty. They argued that since
they couldn't graduate unless their fees
were paid, the newspaper policy resulted
in state-sanctioned opinion, a violation of
their First Amendment rights.
University of Wisconsin students
however, who objected to their student
association's donation to alleged bomber
David Fine, were more successful in a
similar incident in late February.
Fine, 23, the youngest man ever
named to the FBI's 10 Most Wanted list,
was captured in California January 7 and
returned to Wisconsin for trial. When the
Wisconsin Student Association (WSA)
voted to give $2,000 to his defense team
many Wisconsin students were not
pleased.
A group calling itself "Students for
Students" was formed, and in several
days collected 5,000 signatures on a
petition, enough to place the donation
question on a campus referendum
scheduled for April. Faced with the
opposition, the WSA, which receives
$63,000 each year in student fees,
rescinded the offer, saying the publicity
would have hurt Fine's chances for
acquital.
Students at the State University of
New York (SUNY) at Buffalo, where
controversy over student fees has been
brewing since the protest days of 1970,
may be able to use funds to form student
"organizations or corporations" if a
recently-passed report is okayed by the
SUNY Chancellor and Board of Trustees.
Some of the student corporations
which might qualify for funding In
addition to the Schussmeisters Ski Club
are the New York Public Research Group
and the Buffalo campus paper, The
Spectrum, both non-profit outfits.
Although the report recommends that
student fees also be permitted for use in
activities involving "advocacy or expres-
sions of views or opinions, whether or
not the SUNY Chancellor and Trustees
will go along with the report is another
question.
As usual, the issue is what
constitutes a "student" group and where
does "personal" opinion enter into a
group's realm.
An aide to a high SUNY official, said
to reflect the views of other SUNY
officials, was no' leased with the report.
Using mandatory student fees to support
a group's personal view is a "blatant
misuse of the fee" he said.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
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15
'Mercy killing'gaining support in the U.S.
By FRANCEINE PERRY
ECU News Bureau
Euthanasia, or "mercy-killing is not
yet accepted fully by the majority of
persons in our society, but it is
significantly gaining approval, says an
ECU sociologist.
Dr. Donald Stewart, an aooociate
professor of sociology at ECU who has
studied attitudes toward euthanasia,
discussed his findings at a recent Alpha
Kappa Delta research symposium in
Richmond, Va.
"A dictionary definition of euthanasia
is 'the act of putting to death painlessly
a person suffering from a painful and
incurabie disease said Stewart.
Euthanasia and other types of
"putting to death" has been openly
practiced by many societies, he said.
"Infanticide has existed as a means of
population control in many cultures. In
some pre-literate migratory groups, the
aged were abandoned or killed outright,
and this was expected, if not approved,
by the elderly
Even in modem western nations,
euthanasia is widely practiced upon aged
patients, as reported by Simone de
Beauvoir in "The Coming of Age he
said.
Even in modern western nations,
Dr. Stewart pointed out a complex
ambivalence toward euthanasia in the
U.S while it is illegal, it is not
infrequently carried out by medical
personnel with the consent of the patient
or the patient's family. Most euthanasia
of this type is unreported, but
occasionally a "mercy killer" is arrested.
However, court action usually results in
acquittal or a light sentence, unlike other
forms of homicide
Euthanasia is often made possible by
the fact that a bedridden patient may
contract pneumonia, and if the hospital
staff purposely neglects to treat the
pneumonia, the patient dies sooner, he
said. This is "negative" or "passive"
euthanasia, the term applied to a failure
by medical personnel to take "heroic
measures" to prolong life, thus allowing
death to occur naturally. "Active"
euthanasia is the deliberate termination
of life.
Dr. Stewart believes many seriously
deformed infants are euthanized soon
after birth.
"The number of such cases cannot be
known, but the evidence indicates that
this number is considerable he said.
He quoted a Washington, D.C.
gynecologist who estimates that at least
once a week in his city's hospitals, a
mentally or physically deformed infant
patient who will not live a "meaningful"
life dies when medical treatment is
terminated. A Maryland medical center
ends treatment to about 20 cases each
year of serious and presumably fatal
injuries, frequently involving a severed
spinal column.
"One rationalization is that the
amount of medical equipment and the
number of qualified medical personnel
are limited, and the hopeless terminal
patient may be utilizing facilities that
might be more effectively used by a
patient with a prospect for recovery
said Stewart.
Dr. Stewart recently directed a survey
of a cross-section of North Carolinians
regarding their thoughts on euthanasia as
a means to end the lives of three chief
categories of hopelessly ill persons:
deformed infants, the seriously injured of
any age, and the elderly who suffer from
terminal illness.
Forty-one per cent agreed that
euthanasia should be practiced in allthree
cases, 32 per cent disagreed with all
three, and 27 per cent disagree with one
or two of the categories, most often
drawing the line at euthanizing deformed
infants.
"Infanticide appeared to be the most
unpopular form of euthanasia Stewart
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says. "Data from the interviews indicated
that at least some persons had the idea
that medical technology might someday
develop remedies for the deformed
infant
Age was noted as an important
characteristic of each opinion group.
Pro-euthanasia people represented a
median age of 35 years, and the "anti"
group's median age was 54. Forty-eight
was the median age for the mixed group.
Those most likely to be anti-
euthanasia were not only older, but less
educated and professed strong religious
beliefs, particularly Roman Catholic. The
sex of the individuals surveyed did not
seem to influence opinion on euthanasia.
He believes that most governments
will eventually permit the practice of
euthanasia but that new legislation is not
the most workable means of legalization.
In Britain's House of Lords, bills
favoring euthanasia have failed three
times, though the minority endorsing
euthanasia has increased with each
ballot. Five U.S. states have also voted
down pro-euthanasia bills.
"In this nation, a Supreme Court
decision, such as the 1973 ruling which
effectively legalized abortion, is the
easiest way to legalize euthanasia said
Stewart. "Public opinion is rising in its
favor, according to national and regional
polls taken during the past 15 years. A
decisive court ruling will one day reflect
this increasing approval
Organizations such as the Euthanasia
Educational Foundation, a lobbying and
educational group, and the Death with
Dignity movement have grown rapidly.
Increased media coverage, including
popular television programs on the
subject, have expanded public accept-
ance of euthanasia, he said.
"Thousands of 'Living Wills' stating a
person's wishes to be allowed to die
rather than be kept alive by artificial
means, have been signed, even though
the actual legality of these documents is
in doubt
Euthanasia has become a major issue
only since the invention of complex
life-support machines and other techno-
logical advances which can keep a
comatose patient alive indefinitely Yet
one of the most well-known recorded
cases of euthanasia was the 1939 death
of Sigmund Freud, noted Stewart.
After more than 30 unsuccessful
operations for a slow, deadly cancer of
the cheek and jaw, Freud was tormented
by pain and aware that he had no chance
of recovery.
His physician treated the pain with
large doses of morpria, and at Freud's
request, placed a fatal dosage by his
bed, the ultimate cure for suffering wnich
had become unbearable. On Sept. 21,
1939, Freud quietly swallowed the drug
and fell into his last sleep, ending his
pain forever.
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16
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
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Sports
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Swimmers take secondplace in Regionals
By STEVE WHEELER
Staff Writer
The East Carolina swim team traveled
to University Park, Pa. last weekend and
came back with the second place trophy
in the Easterns Swimming Champion-
ship. Pitt won the meet with 443 points,
while the Pirates mounted up 299.
Syracuse placed third with 265, and
Maryland picked up fourth with 229.
Twelve teams competed in the
Championship.
The Pirates broke eight varsity records
and four frosh marks in the three day
event that saw East Carolina qualify one
relay team and one individual for the
national championships in two weeks.
John McCauley, Keith Wade and John
Tudor were the major assaulters on the
record books. McCauley broke the 50
freestyle mark and was in on the relay
teams that broke the 400 and 800
freestyle records. His time in the 50
freestyle was the fourth best in the
nation this year and qualified him for the
nationals. He also qualified in the 100
freestyle for the nationals.
McCauley was one of three double
winners and he took it one step further
by also swimming on a winning relay
team to give him three victories. His time
in the 50 freestyle of : 20.83 broke every
mark it could. The time was .24 of a
second belter than his previous best. In
the 100 freestyle, McCauley barely
missed the varsity record but timed out
in : 46.30 to qualify him for the nationals.
McCauley teamed up with Ross
Bohlken, Billy Thome, and John Tudor
to break both relay marks. In the 800
freestyle relay, the quartet swam to a
varsity mark of 6:59.55 to break the old
mark by three seconds. This time,
however, failed to send them to the
nationals.
In the 400 freestyle relay, the same
quartet swam to a 3:06.17. This mark
broke the varsity mark by three seconds
and qualified them for the nationals.
Keith Wade had three records, two of
which were varsity and frosh marks and
one that was just a freshman record. In
the 200 individual medley, Wade barely
missed breaking two minutes when he
timed out in 2:00.01 to set a new
freshman record. In his specialty, the
butterfly, Wade replaced Mike Bretting in
the record books as the leader of these
events. In the 100 fly, Wade won the
consolation round with a time of :52.56
to break Bretting's mark by .47 of a
second. In the 200 fly, Wade broke
Bretting's mark by .43 of a second. His
time was 1.57.41.
John Tudor set a new record in the
500 freestyle. His time of 4:43.98
bettered his old mark by about two
seconds. He also swam on both relay
teams that set marks.
The only other record broken was in
the 400 individual medley where Tomas
Palmgren came out of his slump to break
his old record by more than four
seconds. His time of 4:15.12 was good
enough to place him in second place for
the event but did not qualify him
nationally.
Doug Brindley also had fine races in
the 500 and 1650 freestyles. His time of
4:46.37 was good enough for fifth place
in the 500. In the 1650 freestyle, Brindley
won the consolation with a time of
16:45.60, just off his record for the
event.
Stewart Mann had some good times
at the Easterns even though he was sick
for the first couple of days. In the 200
backstroke, Mann finished second with a
time of 1:59.36. He also placed in both
individual medley events. In the 400 IM
Mann finished sixth with a time of
4:17.01. In the 100 IM Mann had a
2:00.51 to place tenth.
Junior Steve Ruedlinger placed fourth
and sixth in the 200 and 100 butterflies,
respectively, with times of 1:58.15 and
: 53.05.
Ross Bohlken placed third in the 200
freestyle and ninth in the 100 freestyle.
His time of 1:44.56 in the 200 free was
just off his record for the event.
Billy Thome, in addition to swimming
on both relay teams, placed fourth in the
50 free, seventh in the 100 free, and fifth
in the 200 free. His placing in these
events gave the Pirates added depth they
needed to finish second in the meet. His
times of :21.67 in the 50 and 1:44.97 in
the 200 were his best ever.
Coach Ray Scharf had much praise
for his tankers after coming in second in
this big of an event.
"We really swam well in this meet.
I'm really proud of the boys. We could
have done better in certain places, like
the 800 free relay but overall I can't
complain. This is the best we've ever
done here. We had finished fifth, but
never higher
The next meet for tankers will be Mar.
25-27 when McCauley and the 400 free
relay team travel to Providence, R.I. for
the NCAA Division I National Champion-
ships.
Ridge leads linksters in impressive showing
ECU'S golf team opened its 1976
season last week by finishing tenth out
of 18 schools in the Pinehurst Invitational
golf tournament in Pinehurst, N.C.
The team was paced by junior Steve
Ridge, who finished tenth individually
with a three-round total of 223. Ridge's
final tally was seven strokes behind the
individual medalist. Johnny Elam, of
North Carolina.
Elam fired a two-under par 70 on the
tournament's final day to beat Wake
Forest's Jay Haas by two strokes. Wake
Forest finished as the team champion as
they outdistanced the second-place Tar
Heels by 30 strokes. 1099 to 1129. Wake
finished with three of the top four golfers
and four of the top six finishers to pull
off the runaway victory
For ECU. the tournament was a
positive showing, according to coach
Mac McLendon In evaluating the team's
performance. McLendon said that
although their were some disappointing
individual performances, the team's
finish as a whole was promisma.
My goal before the tournament was
to finish in the top eight, and we missed
that by six strokes, but I think we proved
that we have a good golf team "
The tournament was held on the
championship Pinehurst number two
course, ore of the nation's premier
courses, and McLendon noted that this,
as much as anything, was worth
competinq in the tournament.
"When you play the Pinehurst number
two course you have played one of the
best courses in the country. It can't help
but improve your game You would be
hardpressed to find better competition
than in the Pinehurst tournament and a.
better course than the number two
course
The field at Pinehurst included all the
Atlantic Coast Conference schools, two
t0Mmmmmtt i m � n m �
of which ECU finished ahead of, and
several of the better schools in the
southeastern United States
The team opened the tournament
ranked next to last in the 18-team filed,
but they were in seventh after the
first-round of play. A poor second day of
play, though, hurt the team and
prevented it from placing hiqher.
During the second day, the team
battled the rain and fell off its first day
totals by 28 strokes and to tenth overall.
On that second day, only two ECU
golfers broke 80. Ridge and Rob Welton
with 78's.
But the remainder of the tournament
the Pirate golfers did well. Ridge finished
with a 72 to finish at 223, which
outdistanced his nearest ECU teammate
by 11 strokes. That was Welton. who put
together rounds of 79, 78, and 77 to
finish with a 234 total The remainder of
the ECU golfers finished in this fashion:
Mike Buckmaster 235, Trip Boinest 237,
Keith Hiller 239 and Fred Acker 252. In
determining the tea:n totals the top five
individual scores were used each day
Steve Ridge played like a true
champion said McLendon. "He played
against some of the top players in the
country on one of the toughest courses
there is. and he held his own.
The showing by the rest of the team
was good, but not up to their potential or
capabilities. Fortunately, we have a
second chance at some of the teams that
beat us and it is my belief that we will be
able to improve on our position in
regards to some of the teams which beat
us this time around
The ECU golfers performance was a
good start towards qualifying for the
NCAA tournament, but with the tough
schedule ECU has this year that will take
a lot of work To qualify for the NCAA, a
team must.not only win its conference,
but play well in the tournaments it
enters
ECUs next tournament play will be
this coming weekend. March 19-21. in
the Camp Lejeune tournament Last year,
the Pirates finished in fourth place in the
tournament
Pirates steal way past WCU, 5-1
By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
Geoff Beaston tied an ECU career
record for stolen bases by stealing
second in the sixth inning of yesterday's
game with Western Carolina University.
Moments later, Beaston scored on a
single by Steve Bryant to put ECU up,
2-1. Charlie Stevens followed with
another single to score Bryant and ECU
went on to down the Catamounts, 5-1, at
Harrington Field.
ECU set or tied a bevy of records,
both individually and collectively, during
the game. As a team, ECU set records
for times walked in a game, 10, and
stolen bases in a game, seven.
Individually, four Pirates set or tied
records. Beaston tied the career record
for stolen bases with his sixth-inning
steal, after setting the career record for
hits against Furman on Saturday.
Joe Roenker walked three times in the
game to tie another single game coord;
and Glenn Card and Bryant each stole
two bases to tie a single-game record.
Bryant, Roenker and Stevens were the
hitting stars for the Pirates at the plate.
Bryant went 3-for-5 at the plate and
scored three runs; Stevens was 2-for-4
with two runs batted in; and Roenker
went two-for-two in the game, raising his
season average to .500.
Pete Conaty started for the Pirates
and picked up his first win of the year in
his first appearance.
Conaty lasted six innings before
giving way to freshman Keith Kurdewan
with two on and none out in the seventh.
Kurdewan retired the side with no
damage in the seventh and set down the
Cats in order in the eighth and ninth to
preserve the win for the Pirates and
m

mm
��
dm ueWeese opened on the mount
for Western, but was knocked out by the
Pirates in the seventh. DeWeese was
never effective, walking nine batters, but
survived until the seventh because the
Pirates could not score the runners. For
the game ECU stranded 14 baserunners.
DeWeese allowed four runs and was
relieved by Rick Cherry, who gave up the
final ECU run in the eighth.
Western broke a scoreless tie in the
fourth when David Idol singled and
scored on a one out double by Bob
Gil more, giving the Cats a 1-0 lead. In
every inning from the fifth through the
seventh the Cats threatened, but could
not score against Conaty, stranding two
runners each frame. In the seventh, the
Cats put men on second and third with
no one out, but Kurdewan came in to
stop the Cats for the inning and the
game
See Baseball, page 17.
!���� nniii ii mm n i �'i �
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51. NO.
4316 MARCH 1976
17
ECU runners fail to place
ECU'S three national qualifers in
indoor track failed to qualify for the
NCAA championship heats this weekend,
but turned in respectable performances
nonetheless.
Carter Suggs, who qualified for the 60
yard sprint, advanced to the quarterfinals
with a time of 6.3 on the electric timer in
each of his first two heats (the electric
timer generally times the events .15 of a
second slower than normal).
In his third heat, Suggs finished third
with another 6.3 clocking. In his heat, he
was beaten out for the two qualifying
spots by Harvey Glance of Auburn and
Reggie Jones of Tennesse. In the finals,
Glance wound up winning the 60 yard
competition and Jones placed third, so
Suggs was beat out by some fine
sprinters.
The Pirates other 60 yard qualifer,
Donnie Mack, also advanced through
three races, placing third in the third race
with a 6.3 time (equivalent to 6.15), with
only the top two being taken to the
finals.
In the 60 yard high hurdles, Marvin
Rankins was ousted in the quarterfinals,
after running 7.4 in each of the first two
races. In the third race, Rankins clocked
7.3, but was nosed out by James Walker
of Auburn, who finished second in the
finals, and another hurdler.
So despite the fact that they failed to
score any points, the ECU runners
performance in the NCAA was not a
complete disappointment.
U.S. golfers visit Japan
Winning in athletics is no doubt a
preferred goal, but for eight NCAA
golfers and two coaches, it took a
backseat to more important issues at the
first United States-Japan Collegiate Golf
Tournament.
According to golf tabulations, the
final score read: U.S. 26, Japan 14. Only
a deeper glance will show the contest
resulted in a winning tie, based on the
closer relations established between the
two nations.
An NCAA First
Besides setting precedent as the
NCAA's first international competition,
the golf tournament opened doors to
perhaps further participation in collegiate
athletics between the NCAA and Japan.
Already, there is talk about a second golf
matchup and, perhaps, a long term
agreement for continuing the competi-
tion. There's also the possibility of
expanding the competition to other
sports.
Co-sponsoring the event on the
Japanese side was the Sports Nippon
Press, a daily sports and recreation
newspaper in Tokyo, in cooperation with
the Japan Student Golf Association.
Working in close contact with the NCAA,
all three organizations showed how
intercollegiate athletics can be used as a
diplomatic tool to bring nations closer
together.
Jay Haas, 1975 individual NCAA
medalist from Wake Forest captained the
squad. Other members included Wake
Forest teammates Curtis Strange and
Bob Byman; Oklahoma State University's
Lindy Miller and Tom Jones; Phil
Hancock from the University of Florida;
University of Oregon's Pete Jacobsen;
and Mike Brannan, Brigham Young
University.
Strange Medalist
Strange, 1974 NCAA champ, captured
individual honors at the tournament by
posting an eight under par 208 (72-67-69)
during the three-day affair, while Haas
placed fourth with a 214 total.
One common feeling seemed to run
among the entire U.S. contingent. The
tournament Aas virtually flawless and
was perhaps the most exciting
experience of their lives.
"I don't know of adequate words and
phrases in the English language to
properly do justice to any type of
summary of this tournament said
Wimberly. "Great, tremendous, extraordi-
nary don't seem to be enough
Excellent Organization
indeed it was flawless, from the
original orientation session in Los
Angeles prior to the Japan visit, to a
mmmmemimmjmmmmm
tearful departure in Tokyo after perhaps
one of the most progressive weeks in
U.SJapanese relations.
Wimberly, reflecting back on what
could be improved to make a second
meeting more organized, could think of
nothing.
"We found the Japanese people to be
the most gracious, selfless individuals
we've ever met Wimberly said. "I've
never been associated with a more
efficiently run tournament and it
produced an incredible bridge of
goodwill
It all started when NCAA Director of
Events Jerry Miles proposed the
competition to Matsujiro Kawana, head
of Sports Nippon's Los Angeles office.
Things really got rolling when Chikao
Kano, chairman of Sports Nippon, visited
with Miles during his trip to the U.S.
The NCAA Golf Committee was
informed of the possibility of conducting
the competition and with the endorse-
ment of the Committee, the Executive
Committee, and the U.S. Golf Associa-
tion, Miles went to Tokyo to finalize
arrangements.
The NCAA prepared a "Handbook for
Coaches and Participants" and directed
the arrangements for the Association's
first international competition.
Arriving in Japan, the U.S. entourage
found themselves confronted by televi-
sion cameras, popping flashbulbs and
everything surrounding the color of being
celebrities. And celebrities they were as
the Japanese rolled out the red carpet
treatment from excellent accomodations
to Tokyo's Imperial Hotel to incompar-
able food, sightseeing and warm
companionship.
Throughout the entire week, mo-
mentos were exchanged between the two
teams and close friendships were
established. And to the surprise of the
Americans, Japanese collegiate golfers
are competive.
Suburon Fujiki finished second with a
210 total and Masahiro Kuramoto was
third at 211.
"The Japanese really wanted to
learn said Oklahomo State's Jones.
"They had about 200 million cameras and
were always studying our swings. They
watched everything we did. It was a great
trip I'll never forget
"The trip to Japan was the greatest
thing I have ever been involved in
Brannan related.
"I felt very honored to be part of this
new competition between our two
countries Byman noted. "I hope it will
continue so that others can have the
opportunity to experience what all of us
did
mmmm
BASEBALL
Continued from page 16.
ECU tied the game in the fifth on an
infield hit and a stolen base by Bryant
and Sonny Wooten's single to right. ECU
loaded the bases later in the inning, but
Card hit into a double play.
In the sixth, ECU scored two runs and
the Pirates added a run in the seventh
without a hit, when Card walked, moved
up on an error, stole third and scored on
a passed ball.
Bryant scored the final ECU run in the
eighth, beating out an infield hit, stealing
second and scoring on a hit by Stevens.
The Pirates wereJo meet Western for
another game this afternoon, before
traveling to Raleigh on Thursday for a
1 30 doubieheader with the N.C. State
Wolfpack
Western Carolina 000 100 000 - 1 5 2
East Carolina 000 012 11x - 5 9 0
Conety, Kurdswan 7 and McCullough;
DsWesM, Cherry 7 and Qrlndetaff.
WP-Conaty (1-�1 LP-DsWaase 0-1.
Furman takes two, zonking
ECU in doubieheader action
By WILLIE PATRICK
Staff Writer
GREENVILLE, S.C-What a difference
a day makes.
After ail, since it rained from 3:30
p.m. Friday until after all good little
coaches and players were asleep, who
would have thought that the Pirates
would be able to get in their
doubieheader with the Furman Paladins.
Furman did, and the Pirates
accomodated the hosts nicely by blowing
both ends of a doubieheader, 4-3 and
12-6.
The losses evened the Pirates' record
at 2-2 overall and dropped them to 0-2 in
Southern Conference play.
The Paladins scored the first run of
the day when Craig Reisinger reached
first on an error, moved to third on a pair
of infield groundouts and scored when a
relay throw went astray.
Macon Moye put the Pirates in front
in the next inning, though, by pounding
a 3-2 pitch 360 feet over the leftfield
fence to score himself and Joe Roenker,
who had singled.
The Paladins tied the count again in
the fourth with a run and then, after the
Pirates scored in the sixth, tied it again
in the bottom of the seventh. An
unearned run in the eighth proved to be
the Pirates' undoing, though.
In the second game, Furman again
scored in the first inning. Roenker, who
finished with five hits for the day,
unloaded a 400-foot shot high atop a
bank beyond the leftfield fence to know
the count.
This apparently unnerved Chris
Mensing, the Paladin starter, who
walked Moye and then served up singles
to Glenn Card and a run-scoring single to
Rick Koryda, which scored Move for the
go ahead run.
Run-scoring by Roenker and Koryda
put the Pirates up 4-1 at the end of the
third and a sacrifice fly and another
single by Roenker put the count at ECU
6, Furman 1 at the end of the top of the
fourth.
But the Paladins weren't dead. They
nicked Pirate starter Terry Durham for
three runs in the fourth, before he retired
in favor of Bob Feeney. The Paladins
then climbed on Feeney for two more in
the fifth to tie the score at 6-6.
The climax of the day came in the
sixth. The Paladins betted Feeney for
three more runs and relievers Larry
Daughtridge and Keith Kurdewan for
three more to end the onslaught.
The Pirate half of the seventh was
purely academic, as were the other
innings throughout the game when the
score was close. For the day the Pirates
left 19 runners stranded and committed
six errors.
First Game
East Carolina 020 001 00 - 3 6 3
Furman 100 100 11 - 4 5 0
Reavis and McCullough; Fadem,
Roberts 6 and Nichols. WP: Roberts
1-1. LP; Reavlsl-1.
HR: Moye ECU.
Second Game
East Carolina 022 200 0 - 6 12 3
Furman 100 326 x - 12 10 0
Durham, Feeney 4, Daughtridge 6,
Kurdewan and McCullough; Mensing,
Barbee and Nichols. WP: Barbee 2-0.
LP: Feeney 1-1).
HR: Roenker ECU.
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Thurs. Meat Loaf, 2 Veg. $180
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
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Time-Out
By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
Covering The NCAA From Charlotte
It is hard to realize what a big production the NCAA Regional playoffs are until
one has actually witnessed and observed the production process himself.
Even as little publicity as last weekend's NCAA Eastern Regionals Quarterfinals in
Charlotte received, in relation to some of the other quarterfinal matchups did, the
production last weekend was really something.
There is surely a great deal to be said about any contest which draws 12,000 in
attendance, but the real scope of the operation becomes more paramount from press
row, as a member of the working media.
First, there were some 125 writers covering the game and no fewer than five radio
stations broadcasting the games. Add to this the tournament help enfranchised to aid
with the sending of copy, and the smooth operation of press conferences and the
like, and there are quite a few people involved in the affair from the press angle.
Writers came from as far away as Chicago, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. to
cover these games. This actually was not all that surprising when one considered that
one of the teams, De Paul, came from Chicago and two other teams, VMI and
Virginia, are in the coverage area of the two Washington dailies. Philadelphia, by the
way, is the site of this year's final round.
But also there were reporters from many North Carolina and South Carolina
small-town papers, as well as the larger towns like Charlotte, Raleigh, Greensboro,
High Point, Winston-Salem, Durham and Columbia, S.C.
Be it to simply be there, or for legitimate coverage purposes, there were quite a
few of the more prominent writers in the Carolinas and Tennessee, as well as
Virginia, in attendance.
And though the pre-Tournament publicity tended to give less attention to the
VMI-Tennessee and Virgmia-DePaul games than many of the other NCAA first-round
games, most of the writers in attendance generally agreed that the games were well
worth the coverage they received.
First. VMI surprised nearly everyone in attendance by face-lifting the integrity of
the Southern Conference by defeating ninth-ranked Tennessee. True, with Bernard
King not playing for Tennessee if made matters a little easier, but then SEC teams are
not supposed to even come close to losing to the Southern Conference.
VMI s deliberate play just proved too much for the Volunteers, who were nearly as
disciplined as the military school but more than likely less hungry than the heavily-
underdog Keydets.
The situation was much the same in the case of the DePaul-Virginia matchup. It
was generally a foregone conclusion that Wally Walker and Company would run
circles around the "city school" from Chicago, but perhaps the Chicago writers in
attendance knew better
Like the VMI team, DePaul practiced a very disciplined style of play under the
tutelage of Ray Meyer. In 34 years at DePaul. Meyer had won 528 of 839 games going
into last weekend's NCAA game. This was done almost entirely with Chicago players.
Again a combination of the underdogs' desire to win and a sense of flatness on
the part of the favorite seemed to make inequalities even up.
Virginia, too, was perhaps smarting from the rigors of the ACC tournament the
week before and all the publicity which it received as a result. This weariness may
also have shown on the North Carolina Tar Heels in their game against Alabama, in
which they were handled by the Crimson Tide and Leon Douglas.
So the first-round of the NCAA Regionals had many surprises, the biggest perhaps
coming in Charlotte And most of the writers in attendance at Charlotte had a hard
time meeting their deadlines because of the excitement of it all. Most, too, agreed
that although the teams may not have been as prominent, the games were well worth
the time and effort from a newsman's viewpoint.
It is the occasional surprises, as well as the events such as an NCAA tournament,
a football bowl game, or a big-league championship, or whatever the writer's interest
might be, that so often carries the writer over the hump of boredom and day-to-day
routine into a world of semi-fantasy and enjoyment.
CONGRATULATIONS, SWIM TEAM
A hearty congratulations to coach Ray Scharf and his ECU swim team for their
second-place finish in this past week's Eastern Regionals in State College, Pa.
This writer has criticized, if that be the word, oach Scharf on occasion this year,
perhaps unfairly on one occasion, but he must put his hand out to Scharf this time
for an extremely fine job in the Eastern competition.
The second-place finish by the ECU swimmers was outstanding to say the least,
particularly when one notes the caliber of competition. Among others, the Pirates
placed ahead of Villanova and Maryland and was outranked only by the University of
Pittsburgh, which dominated the entire field.
Every member of the ECU team is undoubtedly proud of this accomplishment, as
should the ECU students be Once again, coach Scharf our recognition and our
congratulations
mm
SC shines as VMI ousts
Tennessee, 81-75, in NCAA
By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
CHARLOTTE-lt was a day of
redemption for VMI.
It was a day of redemption for the
Southern Conference.
But most of all, it was a day of
satisfaction for VMI head coach Bill
Blair.
Only two years ago, VMI had been
ranked at the bottom of the Southern
Conference as a hapless junkheap of
basketball talent. Now, in 1976, Blair was
standing before a large crowd of media
as the winning coach in one of four
NCAA Eastern Regional games.
"I know what the press has been
saying about us all year said Blair,
"that we backed into the SC
regular-season championship, that we
backed into the tournament champion-
ships and that we'd get blown off the
court in the NCAA's, but I think we may
have shown some people tonight that
VMI can play basketball
And, indeed, the Southern Conference
champions' 81-75 win over the
ninth-ranked Tennessee Volunteers,
runners-up in the Southeastern Con-
ference, gave Blair plenty to be proud of.
There was a touch of uncertainty in
Blair's rainbow, though. The Vols'
All-America Bernard King never played.
King was sidelined the entire game with
a broken thumb and watched as fellow
All-America Ernie Grunfield put on a
one-man show with 36 points, which
wasn't enough to pull it out for the SEC
representative.
Nonetheless, SEC teams are not
supposed to even come close to losing
to the likes of the lowly Southern
Conference. But that is what happened in
Charlotte Saturday night.
After taking the lead early in the
second half, VMI never trailed and
refused to break under the tournament
pressure, despite the score being tied at
58-58 with seven minutes left in the
game. At that point, Blair called a
time-out and VMI ran off a 10-2 stretch
against the Volunteers, icing the game.
And perhaps it was the discipline of
the VMI way of life that gave the Keydets
the edge over the more flamboyant
Volunteers. Or maybe the VMI team just
wanted it more.
"All year long people have said we
were lucky said 6-3 forward Ron Carter,
who scored 19 points for the Keydets,
"and tonight we had a little something to
prove. I think maybe we proved it - that
we could play good basketball afterall
The Keydets, now 21-8, were playing
in the NCAA for only the second time,
the first coming in 1964 despite a
non-winning record. They shot 66 per
cent for the game and out rebounded
Tennessee 32-25.
Blair said these were the principal
statistical differences in the game.
"We have shot over 60 per cent in five
games this year and our perimeter
shooting tonight was the key. I was
really surprised that we out rebounded
them inside. We didn't play them inside
that much, but instead shot from the
outside to win. It was a great team
victory, and regardless of what the press
has said, we didn't back in tonight
But Tennessee coach Ray Mears
might disagree a little.
See Mears, page 19.
DePaul knocks off UVA,
69-60, in opening round
Wally Walker was sick the few days
preceding the NCAA Eastern Regional
first-round games in Charlotte last
Saturday. Following the game, Walker
still felt sick and that squeamish feeling in
his stomach had become more intense.
Why? Walker's team, the University of
Virginia, the team he had starred four
years for, had just been defeated, 69-60,
by a DePaul team which people knew
little about. The loss in Saturday's NCAA
first round eliminated Walker and the
Cavaliers from the post-season tourna-
ment, only days after they had teamed
for the ACC championship.
"I felt sick all last week, but I feel
even sicker now said the 6-7 senior.
"We didn't play well at all and they
covered me close all game long, and I
just got pushed and shoved a lot. I don't
think I have ever shot so poorly in my
life
For the game, Walker was 4 of 15
from the floor, including 0 for 7 in the
second half, and scored only 11 points.
All game long, Walker was shadowed by
DePaul freshman Curtis Watkins. Walker
fouled out at 1:44 and was followed by
Billy Langloh near the end of the game.
DePaul head coach Ray Meyer praised
his team, especially Watkins, for their
play.
"I'm a very happy man tonight said
Meyer. "Colorful Curt did a great job on
wonderful Wally. Ronnie Norwood
showed how he can break open a ball
game in the second half
Norwood exploded his 21 points in
the second half to finish the game as
high scorer for the Blue Demons with 28
points. It was his outside shooting and
drives down the lane that tore apart the
Cavalier defense in the second half and
allowed DePaul to overcome a 37-31
halftime lead for Virginia.
Meyer, who has accumulated 528.
wins in 34 years of coaching at DePaul,
switched defenses several times against
the Cavaliers and kept the ACC champs
bewildered in the second half.
"We changed defenses on them. We
used three different ones - man-to-man,
zone, box and one. I think it made them
think about what they wanted to do and
we were really about to run the offense in
the second half behind Norwood
DePaul trailed the entire first half, but
took the lead for the first time with 9:06
to play, at 50-49. The last time Virginia
led was at 58-57 with 3:13 to play.
Here the turning point in the game
occurred.
DePaul scored to go ahead at 59-58
and then Virginia coach Terry Holland
was called for a technical foul with 2:16
to play.
Norwood sank the free throw and
followed with a basket to give DePaul a
62-58 lead with 2:02 to play. Virginia
fouled DePaul trying to get the ball back,
but this failed. Holland also employed a
two-platoon offense-defense pattern, but
when Walker fouled out that failed.
See Virginia, page 19.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL.
iiji Hung 9
51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
19
Pirates to host first invitational track meet
The first annual East Carolina
University Invitational Track and Field
Meet will be held Mar. 20 at the Bunting
Track and Field on the ECU campus. This
will also serve as the dedication of the
track in the name of Michael L. Bunting,
prominent alumnus and tremendous
supporter of Pirate Athletics from
Greensboro.
East Carolina will have three of its
own national qualifiers in the meet and
possibly four. Carter Suggs, Donnie
Mack and Marvin Rankins all participated
last week in the nationals. Sam Phillips,
who qualified for the nationals, is
currently on the injured list but may be
back for the ECU Invitational. Larry
Austin, fifth ranked in the nation in the
60 yard dash this year, is injured and will
not be in either meet.
Suggs, a sophomore from Tarboro,
N.C is ranked tenth in the naion this
year by Track and Field magazine. He
has run a 6.1 on several occasions and
has been beaten only by Austin and
Norfolk St. star Steve Riddick, who will
be at the ECU Invitational.
Mack, a freshman from Laurinburg,
N.C has really come through for the
Pirates in the inaoor season. He
consistently was running 6.1's and is in
the top twenty in the nation in the 60.
Rankins has been the Pirate that has
done the most this season. Just a
freshman, Rankins has lost but one race
all year, that being to teammate Sam
Phillips. The Windsor, N.C. native has
run 7.2 in the 60 yard high hurdles just
about every time out this year.
The competition for the Pirates will be
very keen as some of the best sprint
teams in the nation will be on hand.
Seton Hall is the favorite as they were
one of the top teams in the NCAA meet
last year. Howard University of
Washington, D.C is also entered in the
event and should bring a very strong
team. Catholic University, Baptist
College of Charleston, S.C Norfolk
State, Pembroke State, Richmond and
Hagerstown Junior College round out
the field. Each of them have top
performers, especially in the sprint
positions.
Seton Hall and Howard are favored in
the mile relay, while these two and East
VIRGINIA
Continued from page 18.
Slowly, DePaul pulled away over the final
two minutes.
It appeared Virginia still had the upper
hand until Holland was called for the
technical, and one later in the game, with
34 seconds to play.
Ironically, Holland said he committed
the first technical foul on purpose - in
an effort to perk his team up. Instead,
Holland may have cost the Cavaliers the
game.
"The first technical was intentional on
my part said Holland. "I thought it
would pick the team up, but it hurt us.
We couldn't play a game that w, 3 called
as loosely as this one. DePaul was a
physical team and the loose officiating
did not help.
'It was our worst game since January.
They cut us off inside and defensed us
well. In the second half (when Virginia
shot 26 per cent) we just couldn't get the
ball in the basket
Meyer reflected on DePaul's success
this year, which, much like that of VMI,
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was long in the making.
"It has been 11 years since we were
last here said a calm, but happy Meyer.
"That's because we did not have a
program worthy of the NCAA. For awhile
we stopped giving scholarships and then
a few years ago we decided to push
basketball and that turned the comer for
us.
"With the exception of Norwood and
Gary Garland all our players are from the
Chicago area and we have always been a
city team. I don't know whether that is
good or bad, but we are
Meyer said that the VMI win was a
surprise to him.
"VMI was a surprise to me. Like most
other people, I didn't think they had a
chance of beating Tennessee. But as I
watched the end of the first half I
realized they had a good team and were
going to win
So it will be DePaul and VMI in one of
the Eastern Regional games in
Greensboro next week. It should be a
very interesting matchup between two
similarly-styled teams particularly
since neither team was expected to make
it to Greensboro.
Carolina should fight it out for the 440
relay crown. Some of the top performers
include James Muskrow of Catholic, who
runs around 46 seconds in the 440 and
Willie Reid ol Haggerstown, who has
long jumped 26 feet.
Dedication of the Michael L. Bunting
Track and Field will take place at 1:50
p.m with Bunting, his wife Vicki, along
with ECU Chancellor Dr. Leo W. Jenkins
and Athletic Director Bill Cain on hand
for the ceremonies.
MEARS
Continued from page 18.
"We played without a great basketball
player tonight. Bernard King is an
All-American and when you play without
one of the finest players in the country,
you just are not at full strength. We knew
they had us outmanned without King, but
we never considered playing him. I don't
think we played that bad, they just were
a very well coached team that shot better
than any team we've played in a long
time.
"We hoped that we could get by
tonight without King, so he would be
ready next week, but now there is no
next week
Blair did an excellent job of coaching
the Keydets, switching defenses at the
half - which paid off in the form of a
victory for the Keydets.
"I thought we played a good defensive
game. We switched zones at the half
from a 3-2 to a 2-3.1 figured Coach dears
would adjust to the 3-2 zone, so I
changed to the 2-3. We did a good job
against their trap
Most of all, though, was the air of
confidence with which the Keydets
played and the drill team precision with
which they executed. Five VMI players
scored in double figures. That was an
example of their team play, as Blair
played but six players a minute in the
game.
Curt Reppart, a senior guard for VMI,
has been at the school since 1972. He
had suffered through 7-19 and 6-18
seasons before the last two years, when
VMI went 13-13 last year and capped it
all with this year's trip into the NCAA
Eastern Regionals.
"My freshman and sophomore years it
was just that we did not have the talent
said Reppart. "Then coach Blair came
along and really recruited some class
players that gave us the talent and
the experience. This year everyone had
played a year with each other and we all
knew we could do it.
"No one believed in us, but we did.
The ones who are in this locker room
right now are the only ones who really
believed in us. We always believed that
we could beat Tennessee. No one else
said we had a chance, but I guess maybe
we showed them
VMI coach Blair was not awarded the
Southern Conference coach-of-the-year
award this year, an event which raised
the ire of VMI Sports Publicist Tom
Shupe enough for him to send out a
letter to all the media concerning the
"injustice
Last Saturday night, though, Blair
probably won over a lot of votes, even
though it was too late. Reppart, too, put
in a plug for his coach.
"Coach Blair has made this team. He
has just been a super coach and there is
no doubt that he is the best coach in the
Southern Conference. He got the team on
its feet with good recruiting and then
molded it with good coaching and
discipline. He made us believe in
ourselves and he believed in us. He is a
winning basketball coach and that is
what has turned the program around
Carter again expressed the feeling of
the VMI team. Carter, at 6-3 jumps like
he is 6-8 and plays a fired-up brand of
basketball. He said, "Everytime we have
beat anyone good this season, people
have said it was an upset. Maybe some
people believe in us, now
Saturday's win over Tennessee still
must be considered an upset, but a win
over DePaul in next week's Eastern
Regionals in Greensboro may not
necessarily be considered such.
If that should happen, it would put
VMI in the finals of the Eastern
Regionals.
It has been a long time since a SC
team has advanced as far in the NCAA's.

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20
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976
m
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news FLASH FLASH FLASH FLASH FLASH
Jimmy Carter Candidates
Free flick
Animals Available
There will be a meeting of the
Students for Jimmy Carter, Tues March
16 at 7:30 pm in Mendenhall Room 248.
This meeting is to finalize plans for
conducting a canvass in Greenville of all
voters. All interested persons are invited.
English essays
The deadline for the Department o
English Undergraduate Critical Essay
Contest is Monday, March 22, at 5 p.m.
All undergraduates enrolled in English
classes during the past calendar year are
eligible.
Essays should be typed, accompanied
by the instructor's recommendation, and
delivered to the secretary in the English
Office (Austin 122). A prize of $50 will be
awarded. For full details contact the
English Office.
Phi Beta Lambda
Phi Beta Lambda will hold its fourth
annual business symposiurron" March" 24,
10:00 till 1:30, Mendenhall Student
Center. All interested students are
welcome.
Gamma Sig Sig
Service Sorority Gamma Sigma Sigma
invites all people to rush. Tuesday.
March 16 a social will be held at 5:30 pm
in the Fletcher social room. A salad bar
will be included. Wednesday, March 17 at
7:30 p.man informaloet-tooether will be
held at 302 Jarvis Street. Everyone will be
able to make their own sundaes For
further information call Gisele Easters or
Debiie Chasen, (room 317 Fletcher) at
752-8107. Hope to see you there!
Computing News
The Computing Center Newsletter for
March is now available in the Computing
Center office in Austin 134. The
newsletter is free to all Computer Center
users and interested students and
faculty.
Seniors
Attention all graduating seniors�due
to the increase in postage rates the
BUCCANEER can not afford to mail
yearbooks to graduates next fall when
they arrive. In order to receive your
annual next fall.Dlease do one of th��
following:
1. Mail $1.00 for postage, your ID number
and your correct address to the
BUCCANEER office (Publications Center,
ECU, Greenville, N.C.)
2. Give a friend your spring activity card
as proof of enrollment and he or she may
pick up a book for you.
3. Or come by the BUCCANEER office &
pick i�p a book after they arrive. Be sure
to have some proof of attendance
(schedule, activity card receipt for paying
fees, etc.).
Will the following SGA candidates
please make arrangements with the
FOUNTAINHEAD to have their pictures
taken: Jimmy Adams, Larry Glynn, Roger
Dubey, and Dalton Nicholson.
SGA Candidates
There will be another mandatory
meeting of all candidates running for
SGA offices on March 22 at 8:00 p.m. at
Mendenhall.
Newman club
There will be a meeting of the
Newman Club this WEDNESDAY, March
17, at 5 pm in room 233, Mendenhall.
Plans for the up-coming Walk for
Development will be discussed. Anyone
interested in volunteering to help work on
this project are asked to be present.
Lambda Chi Alpha
The Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity will
be sponsoring two car washes this
Saturday, March 20. They will be held at
the Exxon Station at Pitt Plaza and at the
Perco Station on 14th Street from 10 til
3. Please come out and get your car
washed.
Studnet Oniun
We need you! If you can spell,
apply for a Student Union Committee
chairperson position. There are twelve
openings for next year's committee
heads. Applications may be obtained at
Mendenhall Student Center. Apply now
for these prestigious positions.
NEHA
The Student National Environmental
Health Association will hold a business
meeting on Wednesday, March 17 at 5:00
pm in the Allied Health Building.
Attendance is mandatory for all
members. Nashville Convention will be
discussed.
Campus Crusade
Campus Crusade for Christ, an
interdenomination Christian organization,
will meet this Tuesday evening at 7:00 in
Brewster D wing room 201.
Come join us for a time of
Fellowship, sharing and an in-depth
study.
Vets club books
Students who did not pick up their
books or money should go bv the Vet's
Club office Thurs March 18, between 10
am and 2 pm.
Wednesday, March 17 -It Happened
One Night. Clark Gable and Qaudette
Colbert make a handsome pair in this
winner of five major Academy Awards.
This wonderfully warm, funny and
moving comedy is a story of a fugitive
heiress and a rebellious reporter who
tames her. A runaway romance between a
tough guy and a society girl - a rough
diamond and a polished jewel. Rated G.
Mrs. Carter
Mrs. Rosalyn Carter, wife of
Democratic Presidential candidate Jimmy
Carter, will be in Greenville on Wed.
March 17th. She will arrive at the
Pitt-Greenville airport at 11:45 am to
greet supporters and hold a news
conference. Mrs. Carter will go from
Greenville to New Bern for a reception
and fund raising dinner Wednesday
evening at the New Bern Shrine Club.
The reception begins at 6:00 pm followed
by dinner at 6:30 pm. Tickets for the
dinner are $5.00 per person and may be
obtained from Les Meekins at 752-1998 or
Dennis Ramsey at 756-4136. Everyone is
invited to see and hear Mrs. Carter on
Wednesday at the airport in Greenville
and at the dinner in New Bern.
Model UN
There will be a Model UN meeting
Thursday afternoon in the Political
Science coffee lounae at 4:00. The tooic
of discussion will be pertaining to future
plans about the Model UN at ECU.
Semper Fidelis
The Alpha Phi chapter of the Semper
Fidelis Society will be meeting Tuesday
night, March 16, 1976 at 7:00 p.m. in
Brewster B-103. There will be a guest
speaker talking to the club. The Officer
Selection Team from Raleigh will be at
the oia JU this week, so make plans to
stop by and see what the Marine Corps
Officer Programs have for you.
Republicans
The College Republicans are having a
meeting Wednesday, March 17, at 8:00
pm. The meeting will be held in Brewster
B-104. All interested in joining
with the republican campaign are invited
to attend. For more information or rides
call Buzz at 758-9881.
Senator Smith
Senator McNeill Smith, chairman of
the N.C. Commission to review Revenue
Laws, will be the guest speaker at a
Greenville-Pitt County League of Women
Voters' (LWV) meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday
(March 30) at the First Presbyterian
Church. The public is invited to attend.
Sen. Smith will discuss "N.C. Tax
Structure: Present and Future
The animals available for adoption
this week include one black cat, 3 black
puppies, 3 black and tan puppies, 3 black
and white puppies, 2 tan and white
puppies, 1 black and white mixed breed,
1 biege and black mixed breed.
The people at Animal Control would
like to extend an invitation to all
interested persons to visit the Animal
Shelter, located on 2nd Street, off
Cemetery Road.
SGA Openings
The SGA Legislature has seven
openings for day student legislators.
Also, there is one opening in each of the
following dorms: Jarvis, Aycock, and
Fletcher.
Applications are being accepted in
228 Mendenhall, the SGA main office by
the executive secretary.
Screenings for the Attorney General
will be held Wed Mar. 17, at 4 o'clock.
Disney-Daytona
Space is still available on the Student
Union Travel Committee trip to
Disneyworld and Daytona Beach schedu-
led for April 16 through April 24.
The costs of the trip are: $75 based
on quad occupancy; $85 based on triple
occupancy; $95 based on double
occupancy.
Four days are planned at Disneyworld
and two days are planned at Daytona
Beach.
Accommodations are at the Econo-
Travel Motels in Orlando, Fla. and
Daytona Beach, Florida. Transportation
will be by chartered Trail ways buses.
Reservations are now being taken in
the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall
Student Center, but hurry! The last day
to register for the trip is Tuesday, March
23.
Don't miss out on this great trip.
Fair
Here's a chance to make money, meet
good people, enjoy superb entertainment
and food. Drop by or participate in the
Roxy Music, Arts and Crafts Center-
Crafts Fair to be held March 20th,
Saturday 9 am to 9 pm.
Call the Roxy Music, Arts and Crafts
Center for further info, or come by 936
Albemarle St.
Ad Hoc
There will be a meeting of the Ad
Hoc Committee Tuesday, March 16, at 5
pm in room 247, Mendenhall. All
interested persons are invited to attend.
Belly Dance
Authentic Arabic (Belly) Dance Ms.
Whitley taught in Casablanca and
California. Now scheduling spring
classes. Call 752-9028.
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Title
Fountainhead, March 16, 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
March 16, 1976
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.383
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/40029
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
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