Fountainhead, April 29, 1976


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This issue- 20pages
Circulation 8,500
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Fountainhead
Serving the East Carolina Community for over fifty years
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EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
VO 51, NO. 53
29 APRIL 1976

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Recent campus break-ins
prompt police action
ByJACKLAIL
Staff Writer
As a result of a recent series of
break-ins at ECU the Directa of Campus
Security asked Mackenzie Security Inc. in
Greenville to give the officers polygraph
tests.
The tests were given to clear up any
speculation that ECU policemen may have
been involved in the theft of a stereo
system in Mendenhall, the attempted
break-in of a safe in the Student Supply
Store, or the four thefts of money from the
Dean of Women's office.
"I requested the SBI (State Bureau of
Investigation) to investigate the matter
said Joseph Calder, directa of campus
security. "But after three weeks they had
taken no action, so to keep this from
dragging out I had Mackenzie Security Inc.
in Greenville, do the polygraph tests.
"I told my policemen that if any were
involved they would be prosecuted to the
full extent of the law.
"All were tested except one who
resigned befae the tests were given to go
back to farming. I don't believe he was
involved in any way. He had only been here
since August and probably didn't know
where the safe was in the Student Supply
Stae a that the Dean of Women kept
money in her office.
"The polygraph operata asked specific
quest ions about each of the crimes and said
that none of the regular officers a the aie
reserve officer had knowledge of the
crimes.
The person a persais who broke into
the Dean of Women's office used a key but
the person a pasais who broke into the
Students Supply Stae and whoever stole
the stereo from Mendenhall may have had
a key a could have hidden in the building.
"We have no leads in any of these
cases. We have had stake outs on the
weekends of the Dean of Women's office
and hope the thief will fall into one of our
traps

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BREATHALYZER TEST - The Driver Education Safety Committee recently held an
intoxication experiment where lucky students were tested for alcohol consumption by the
N.C. State Highway Patrol.
Faculty-Senate discusses semester calendar
By DENNIS LEONARD
News Edita
The Faculty Senate met Tuesday
afternoon to deal with all unfinished and
new business.
Dr. Henry Ferrell, ECU History
Department professa, repated ai the
recent Faculty-Senate Assembly held in
Chapel Hill.
A resolution was passed at the
Assembly calling fa a 16 percent pay raise
fa all faculty members in the UNC system.
A pay raise rally will be held May 1 and
Dr. Michael Bassman moved that the ECU
Faculty-Senate accept the assembly
resolution and fully suppat the rally. The
resolution carried the Faculty Senate by a
unanimous majaity.
Dr. Edgar Hooks, chairman of the
Calendar Committee, repated ai the
projected academic calendars for the
following upcoming academic years; 1977-
1978, 1978-1979, 1979-1980, 1980-1981.
The calendar repat by Dr. Hooks
brought about serious debate on the flea
by several interested professas.
Tim Sullivan, president of the SGA,
interrupted the namal meeting and asked
permissioi to speak on behalf of the
students on the calendar onntrnvprov
"The SGA passed a resolution Monday
night opposed to the earlier starting
semester date. The semester system aids
students because it lets us out earlier and I
have appointed a four student committee to
look at the calendar said Sullivan.
Accading to Sullivan students holding
agricultural and beach retreat jobs would
find it difficult to come back to school at the
proposed early dates.
Dr. Henry Ferrell introduced an amend-
ment which called fa the acceptance erf the
first semester calendar fa the Fall of 1977.
The purpose of the amendment was to
provide a period of examination after the
first semester is completed to determine
how successful a faulty the calendar was
and to use the following years as times of
adjustment.
In other action undertaken by the
Senate, the Biology Department and the
Counseling Center codes were accepted.
A department's particular code defines
the operative functions of that individual
department.
The Political Science Department's
operative code was rejected by the Senate
on the grounds of vagueness.
Carter's win crucial
By DEBBIE JACKSON
Staff Writer
Jimmy Carter's win in the Pennsylvania
primary Tuesday could be a big step
toward winning the Democratic nomi-
natiai, accading to Dr. Thomas F. Eamon
of the ECU political science department.
"In view of Carter's win, he moves
from position of front-runna to that of a
Accident
victim
remams
unconscious
By BRENDA NORRIS
Staff Writer
Jeannie Cox, an ECU sophomore,
remains unconscious at the Pitt Memaial
Hospital Neurosurgical Unit with brain
contusions.
miss 3ox, 609 White Dam, was struck
by a car Monday, April 26, at 1:40 p.m.
while crossing Tenth St. on her bicycle at
College Hill Drive.
Accading to an attending nurse, her
condition is serious but improving.
Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Luther Cox,
4100 Live Oak Road, Raleigh, arrived at the
hospital Monday night.
Accading to Cox, his daughter suffer-
ed a compound fracture of her right leg and
bruises on the right side of her body and
brain.
Cox said he hopes they can move their
daughter to a neurosurgical unit in Raleigh
sometime next week.
"Jeannie is now responding to stimu-
lus said Cox.
Accading to Cox, there is no way of
knowing when his daughter will regain
consciousness, but he said her left eye is
now partially opening.
Miss Cox is a 20 year-old business
education maja. She graduated fron
Raleigh's Enloe High School in 1974.
definite favaite said Eamoi, assistant
professa.
"Moris Udall was matally wounded
and any chances Henry Jackson might
have had were eliminated Eamcn added.
Eamon commented that Carter's
strength makes Hubert Humphrey's
chances fa the Democratic nomination
more difficult.
"Carter would be a stronger nomi-
nee against President Ford than
Humphrey said Eamon.
Eamon said that Carter's strength in
the primary was due to the weakness of his
opponents.
Accading to Eamon, a CBS-New Yak
rimes survey found Carter leading his
opponents in his positions on four to five of
the maja issues.
In an interview Moiday Eamoi said
aie of Carter's strongest points in his
platfam is the enviraimental issue.
Eamoi nOed Carter's firm opposition
to the commercial supersonic transpot
(SST) as a stand to protect the environ-
ment.
"As governo of Geagia, Carter was
very foceful in environmental controls at a
time when Geagia was not as concerned as
some Oher states said Eamon.
Eamon commented mat Carter has
recently taken a more specific stand on the
employment issue than he has previously
taken.
Two weeks ago Carter endased a
modified version of a full-employment bill
in which the government would guarantee
See Carter, page 4.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
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EdilorabCorrimenlary
Bylaws already outdated
After almost a year of bickering about new Publications
By-laws, the student legislature will more than likely approve a
brand new set of by-laws to govern "certain" campus media next
Monday.
Please note the "certain" mentioned above for the brand new
by-laws that were nearly a year in the making are obsolete before
they are even approved by the legislature. The new by-laws while
offering governing rules and regulations for four student
publications conspicuously omit two other student voices - the
Ebony Herald and WECU.
The current by-laws, that are by and large well written will be
used only to regulate Fountainhead, Buccaneer, Rebel and The
Key.
As best as we can understand the Ebony Herald and WECU are
both bonafide forms of campus media, just like the other four
publications that are named in the by-laws.
Both WECU and the Ebony Herald operate off of student funds
just like the other four publications. And all four are ultimately
under the control of the SGA and are aimed primarily at serving the
student body like the other four publications.
Yet, fa some reasons, the brand new by-laws, that were so long
in the making, do not include these two organizations.
WHY?
When a legislator asked Speaker of the Legislature Ricky Price
why the two were not included in the by-laws at Monday's
legislative session, Price responded by pointing out that those two
organizations had always operated separately from Publications.
That is true. But precedent is no reason to continue anything.
It would appear to only make good sense to us that a
Publications Board should represent all forms of campus
media-not just a certain few. There are both advantages and
disadvantages fa a publication a radio station to operate
independently of any direct control other than that of the SGA.
Yet Fountainhead, Rebel, Buccaneer and The Key are required
to operate under the Pub Board which in turn operates directly
under the SGA. Meanwhile, no one has that much direct control
over the Ebony Herald and WECU, which are often faced to fend
fa themselves when they go to the legislature fa money.
A straig Pub Board should have direct control over all campus
media and should wak as their direct overseer and a liaisoi
between those aganizatiois and the SGA.
The SGA aeated the Ebony Herald fa sane reasai last year
and now they have placed it under the control of the Office of
M inaity Affairs. Why the paper can't go under the same control as
the other campus publications is a mystery to us.
Then there is the case of WECU which in the past has been
faced to come hat in hand to the SGA fa funding without the
benefit of a controlling regulation board to intercede in its behalf .In
the case of WECU, falling under Pub Board would be a definite
plus.
The legislature last Monday voted to postpone final passage of
the by-laws until this week. Hopefully a few will at least take a
seoond look at Article X, Sections A through D which list the four
publications that will fall under the Pub Board and will ask why
the Ebony Herald and WECU don't fall into those same categaies.
m UNDER k)Ef2. COWeZQbL
"Were it left to me to deckle whether we should have a government without
newt-papers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment to
prefe. the latter
Thomas Jefferson
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant
Production Manager-Jimmy Williams
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson
News Editor-Dennis Leonard
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Tiee
Features Editor-Pat Coyle
Sports Editor-John Evans
Advertising Representatives-Mary Arms Vail and Vicky Jones
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by
the Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday
during the school year.
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C. 27834
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 7584309
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non students.
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Birth control Idea
A province government in India recently introduced that
country's first compulsay sterilization law and it might be the
basis of an idea fa other nations that simply can't control their
spiraling birth rates by other means.
The India proposal would make it punishable by both a fine a
jail term fa any oouple having mae than two children. The
proposed law would affect some 2,000,000 couples in that India
state alone. If it beoomes a national law in India there is simply no
telling how many oouples would be affected .
Under the proposed law, oouples with three a mae children
where the husband is under 55 and the wife under 45 would face six
months in prison a fines totalling about $57.00 if they refused
vasectomies a tubectanies.
While this is without a doubt the ultimate in government
interference in a citizens life style, the proposal can't be dismissed
without some hard consideration in light of the fact that many
under-developing nations can't control their spiraling populations.
The U.S. currently has a birth rate per family of about 2
children, give a take a fraction of a child. This country meanwhile
has an eoonony that can handle this small growth rate.
But, there are nations that have averages of five children plus
per country, and they lack the considerable resources that the U.S.
has to accommodate its smaller growth rate.
Mexico is a good example. The Mexican population is currently
growing at a tremendous pace with a population doubling rate that
the U.S. could not handle.
Conventional forms of birth control have been tried in Mexico,
and other nations with high birth rates. But, none have even
dented the growing problem.
We are not advocating that the India law be approved
universally-at least not just yet.
But, it is an idea that will no doubt have to be given serious
oonsideratioi in the next few years as the "have not nations"
continue to have a tremendous problem just coping with their own
expanding population.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL.
mm
51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
3
lxum
In recent newspapers
Gay alliance hits
lack of coverage
To Fountainhead:
On April 2-4, the first annual South-
eastern Gay Conference took place in
Chapel Hill, N.C with ever 300 in
attendance, representing 11 states. It was
a unique accomplishment, of which North
Carolina gays are justifiably proud.
However, Fountainhead has refused to
print any news of the Conference, citing
the reason that "we have done enough on
the gay issue' this year Reporter Pat
Coyle stated that we were becoming ' The
Gay Newsletter and "There were no
gays on campus until we did those articles,
then 99 percent of the campus came out
Sure, Pat.
While the Fountainhead is to be
commended for the excellent series of
articles by Larry Slaughter which it ran
several monthsago, we protest the attitude
that there is a gay "quota Even if this
were an acceptable rationale, has Fountain
head devoted 10 percent of its space this
year to gay-related issues? (And 10 percent
is the most conservative estimate of gays in
the overall population - it is usually thought
to be higher among a oollege community.)
Incidentally, as this letter was being
prepared , we noticed an article in
Fountainhead on the Supreme Court
decision-looks like the quote had just
enough room fa just one more negative
article.
We also protest the highly unprofes-
sional manner in which staff member Pat
Coyle related the news of the refusal.
Simple, business-like explanation of
"editorial discretion" was not enough; Ms.
Coyle, for some unknown reason seemed to
feel compelled to resort to the afore-
mentioned insulting, inaccurate, and dis-
courteous remarks, hanging up before any
answer could be made. We expected better
from Fountainhead staff.
We are sending this letter because we
feel that Fountainhead should be aware
that there is not some inert mass of matter
that can be labeled "gay" and dismissed
perfunctorily, but that gay people (and
those who support the fight for gay civil
rights) are living, breathing, participating
members of the ECU community. Sign us,
People who support fairness for gays,
Jay Siva
Lynn Addleman
Paul Tyndall
Perry Purvis
Edith Webber
C.R. Knight
T.L. Leggette
C.R. WilliamsJr.
Jodie McDowell
Robbin McDowell
Judi Willis
FRANKLY SPEAKING by phil frank
PUT IT "MS WAV- re tfXJCBSSRUtf
ADJUSTED MY CAREER OALS
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'
FRANKLY SPEAKING
by phil frank
OUR BUPSBT'S BBBhi CUT PACK
QUITB A BIT HOW MUCH WERE
YOU INTERESTED IN ?
CCclleqe Med.o Services Box9411 BerNcle 0 94709
Student seeks
return of dog

To Fountainhead:
On Tuesday, April 13,1976 at 8:001 let
my dog out for a few minutes. I live on
Holly Street. He didn't come back.
On Wednesday morning I phoned the
Greenville Animal Shelter, who told me
that someone had phoned late Tuesday
afternoon from Scott Dormitory. The caller
announced that he had found a dog, a red
cocker Spaniel with Tag no. 153 and would
like to know the owner. The Animal Shelter
gave him my name and phone, and he said
he would contact me, but he did not
identify himself or leave his location.
I approached Scott Dorm, put two
reward posters on every floor, talked to the
resident, who was very helpful, spotted ads
on WRQR, WOOW, WNCT, and WECU ail
week, and advertised in the Reflector. No
response.
Writer
thanks
Rebel
To Fountainhead:
I wish to express my sincere appreci-
ation to the editors of The Rebel for the
sensational spot beside the centerfold
which my poetry ws given in the latest
issue of the magazine. Certainly nothing
has ever helped my poetry to create more
impact than having it juxtaposed with a
fold-out of a naked girl on her knees, but
after all, isn't the human body the "dimax
of composition "?
Of course, most women like to be prime
rib, and I am no exception. I am most
honored to have a piece of my endeavor put
in the center of attention. Like the girl in
the fold-out I can not hide my pride-only
grin and bare it!
Teresa Speight
m
It is now two weeks later and I am
heartbroken. I love my dog (Melvin)
beyond measure. My intent for writing the
Fountainhead is this:
1. This is the second dog I've "lost" in
Greenville, (is there a "dog ring"?)
2.1 will reward anyone in Soott with $10 for
information leading to my dog.
3. I will reward $100 to the finder a
returner of my dog - no questions asked.
4.1 f you borrowed ' my dog for an Easter
gift I WILL BUY YOU A COCKER
SPANIEL IF YOU GIVE MINE BACK no
questions asked. Call me 758-5481.
5. I promise you, I w io revenge; I only
want my dog.
If you haven't had this experience
please be very careful. It will try to rob you
of compassion. I am sad.
If you live in Greenville and own a dog,
treat him like a son a daughter.
Thank you fa this opportunity.
Brent Funderburk
Debby Wyatt
FORUM FOUCY
All letters to the Editor must be
accompanied by en 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
students.
Fountainhead will, upon personal re-
quest from a letter writer, withhold e name
from publication But, the name of the
writer will be on file in the editor s office
and available upon request to any student.
All requests for withholding a name must
be made in person to the editor.
Any letter received without this in-
formation will be held until the letter writer
complies with the new policy.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
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Men's Residence Council to hold field day
By CINDY BROOME
Assistant News Editor
The Men's Residence Council (MRC)
will sponsor a field day May 1 and 2. The
activities will begin Saturday morning, but
will be discontinued until Sunday due to a
concert on the mall Saturday afternoon.
On Saturday, May 1, a bike race will be
heldfr?n 11:00-12:00. Tryoutswill beheld
from 930-11 XX). Activities will then cease
until Sunday.
On Sunday, activities win resume at
2.00 p.m. on the mall. Activities include a
dunking machine, tug-of-war, money-sift,
car-cram, sack race, egg-throw oontest,
frisbee-throw, hog-calling contest, and a
oockroach rally.
There will be a small fee of 10 cents in
order to try to dunk someone at the
dunking machine ?nd there will be a time
limit of thirty minutes for the tug-of-war in
which teams will be divided according to
weight. A person will have twochancesai
the money-sift, in which there will be $15
placed in fifteen pounds of flour; the
car-cram will consist of seeing how many
people can fit into a Faloon, and there will
CARTER
Continued from page 1
full employment. Jackson, Udall and
Humphrey, who is co-sponsor of the bill,
had previously endorsed it.
Eamon did say that Carter favors a
bigger role for private enterprise than do
some of the other candidates.
Eamon also noted that Carter outlined a
specific medical care program last week.
When questioned about Carter's tend-
ency to be fuzzy on the issues, Eamon
stated that he believed Carter had taken as
specific a stand on the issues as had the
other candidates, with the possible ex-
ception of Senator Jackson.
"One reason for Carter's being accused
of fuzziness on the issue is that he takes
what might be considered a very reason-
able position but which is really a very
complex position on a very complex
question said Eamon.
'For example, while he is personally
opposed to bussing, he opposes a
Constitutional amendment on the sub-
ject added Eamon.
LflDEU
Name
School Address
PhoneCheck if
Category? Graduate
Title
Estimated Value
POR orNOT for SALE
Name
School Address
Phone CategoryCheck ifGraduate
Title
Estimated Value
POR orNOT for SALE
Name
School Address
Phone CategoryCheck if U Graduate
Title
Estimated Value
POR orNOT for SALE
Name
School Address
Phone Category Check if LJ Graduate
Title
Estimated Value
POR orNOT for SALE
Af(i? one label to the right hand corner of each
piece entered A keepone label tora claim
chef lc
Eamon said that Carter is becoming
more specific now due to pressure from the
media.
Concerning Carter's "ethnic purity"
statement of last month, Eamon said that
he did not believe it would greatly
influence the black voters.
"Carter should have used the term
character said Eamon. "it was not a
good choice of words.
"Carter will undoubtedly get a large
number of black votes. He is anything but a
racist
Eamon stated that Carter's being a
Southerner oould be advantageous.
"If Carter receives the Democratic
nomination he oould hold most of the
traditional Democratic votes outside the
South, but at the same time carry a lot of
the South in a ace against Ford said
Eamon.
Carter is presently leading Fad 51
percent to 36 percent in the South,
according to Eamon.
Referring to Carter's strong religious
beliefs, Eamon said that Carter might do
well with the conservative religious
movements which have not voted Demo-
cratic in previous national elections.
"Unless Carter oomes across as a
fanatic, his statements on religion would
help him rather than hurt him aooording
to Eamon.
THEJECONbflNNML
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COMPETITION
MAY 2 thru 9
SPONSORED BY
iLLiirria
The Student Union
Art Exhibition Committee
be three to four races in the sack race of
which the champions will consist of the
contestants for the fifth race.
In the egg-throw contest, contestants
will stand three feet from each other and
for every toss of the egg, the contestant
will step back one foot. A foul line will be
provided for the frisbee-throw, in which a
contestant may throw the frisbee in any
manner he wishes, but not step over the
foul line. Only three throws will be
allowed.
In the hog-calling contest, pitch,
originality, and loudness will be the
categories in which the contestants will be
judged. The maximum time limit is
forty-five seconds.
The oockroach rally will consist of a
circle in which roaches or other bugs will
be plaoed from the container in which they
are brought. The first bug to cross the line
will be the winner.
A hamburger-eating oontest will be
held Sunday night at the Burger King from
5.00-7:00. Burger King will provide a prize
for the winner. A $2.00 entry fee is
required.
MRC elects officers
The Men's Residenoe Council (MRC) at
a banquet Monday night elected officers
for the 1976-77 school year. The banquet
was held at the Candlewiok Inn.
The newly elected officers for the
1976-77 year are: Steve Prioe, president;
Mark Lloyed, vice-president, Tim Joyner,
treasurer, and Steve Rankin, secretary.
Danny Hinnant, outgoing President of
the MRC, presented a speech summarizing
theartivitiesof the MRC for the past year.
"We worked very successfully with the
WRC and we hope we can continue this.
We had a Christmas party with the WRC,
and they are planning to help us with the
Field Day, which we hope to make an
annual event each year
There was a round of applause for the
co-advisors-Jon Rogers, Jim Westmore-
land, Ron Scronce, and Cliff Fish-for their
help with the MRC. Also, we greatly
appreciate Dr. Jenkins stopping by
IWLEJ
GENERAL INFO
Categories
There will be nine categories:
1 Painting
2 Drawing
3 Sculpture
4 Printmaking
5 Design
6 Communication Art
A Interior Design
7 Ceramics
8 Photography
9 Graduate
fcach artist is limited to entering a total of two
pieces, kach piece may be entered in the same or
different categories. Each piece must have been
completed within the last two years.
Eligibility
The competition is open only to
students currently enrolled at ECU. The
Art Exhibition Committee has the right to
accept or refuse work.
I he artist will deliver his piece) s) by hand on
Sunday, May 2 between 1 HO and 6 HO p.m. to the booth
beade the Information Desk in Mendanhall Student
Center 'he show will begin May 3 in Mendanhall
(iallery and the artist must pick up his pieoats) at this
same booth on Sunday, May S, tram 1 to 6 p.m. No
pieces will be received or returned by mail.
I he pieces will be judged before Wednesday. May
4, and the winners announced on the tallowing day
JURY
lo be announced.
I he jurors' decisions will be final
PRIZE MONEY
I he following prize money will be given in each &
every category: ($6UU total prize money)
1st J0
iKJ YAJ
Kd ill)
Bast in Show Wi(i
Prize Money will be awarded within ten
days of the closincj ot the show.
Please completely till out two labels lor each pieceI
entered. Attach one label lo the lower right-hand corner I
ot Hie piece I he other label will serve as your dann
dJWGfc.
Al ItNIION
UbLlA PHI Lit MA will hold a Volleyball
i Ournairwnl and boring Plant in U-reenspnngh Park on
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
?
OPEN TONIGHT
t 'TIL MIDNIGHT
LIVE COUNTRY
WESTERN BAND
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6
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
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N.C. Volunteer of the Year
Brehm competes for award
By KERRY SHERRILL
Staff Writer
Anita Brehm, professor in the school of
education, will be competing fa the N.C.
Volunteer of the Year Award, April 30, at
the executive mansion in Raleigh.
Brehm was recently named by the
REAL Crisis Center of Greenville as their
volunteer of the year.
Approximately 1700 persons chosen
from various volunteer organizations have
been invited by Mrs. James Holshouser to
this reception in honor of National
Volunteer Week, April 26,30.
The N.C. Office of Citizen Participation
sponsors the annual event.
Marge Baney, director of the Greenville
REAL Crisis Center, nominated Brehm.
"She represents all the phases of the
kinds of volunteers we have here. Mrs.
Brehm has worked on all levels and is the
kind of person everyone likes said
Baney.
Brehm began training as a REAL
volunteer during the summer of 1974.
"When I first came to ECU, I had 150
advisees and several of them talked to me
about their problems. It gave me great
satisfaction when one of them told me I had
helped said Brehm.
"I was aware of REAL in fact, one of
my advisees was a charter member of
REAL. I wanted to get involved, so I
joined
After going through a bO-hour training
session, she began working four hours a
week answering phones.
Brehm also served as secretary-
treasurer for the REAL Board of Directors.
This year Brehm is chairman of the
board of directors and steering committee.
"The function of the board of directors
is to coordinate various activities such as
fund-raising added Brehm.
The N.C. Drug Authority funds half of
our money but we must raise the rest.
"I hope I win the award because the
publicity would really help our fund-raising
efforts added Brehm.
Easter Seals, SGA
sponsors basketball game
The Northeast Chapter of the Easter
Seal Society for Crippled Children and
Adults in cooperation with the Student
Government Association is sponsoring a
"Freaks vs. Pigs" basketball game, to be
held in MingesCol. on May 6th, Thurs. at
700 p.m.
There will be two games, the first
featuring the women from the SGA going
against the women employees of the City of
Greenville. The second game will feature
the men of the SGA, including your
favorites; Tim Sullivan and Jimmy Honey-
cutt, shooting it out against the combined
forces of the State H ighway Patrol, the City
Police, and The County Sheriff's Office.
The second game starting at 830.
Also to be featured by both halftimes
and between the games will be the Clown
Club of Greenville, the Starlight Square
Dancers, The ECU Square Dance Club, the
Gymnastics Team from ECU.
The cheerleading will be supplied by
the Greenville City Recreation Dept.
Guest commentator will be Dick Jones,
the "Voice of the Pirates
Refreshments will be sold as during
other home basketball games.
According to Greg Pingston, "This
game has two purposes. To improve
relations between the students and police
of Greenville, and more importantly to
raise money for a very needy and
worthwhile cause
Tickets are $2.00 and can be purchased
from Phil Main of Easter Seals, the
Jaycees, Kiwanis, Steinbecks, Nichols,
Larry's Carpet Land, Hastings Ford,
Central Ticket Office, a fran any SGA
member.
PUBLICATION BOARD
OPENINGS FOR 76-77
Applications are now being taken for the
76-77school year. A1 full time students can apply
at Whichard, room 204 from 9 to 5 daily. If you
wan t to get in volved with publications f The
Buccaneer, The Rebel and Fountainhead) and the
SGA take time and apply no w.
mmm
m
GUITAR PLAYERS! - Great scunding olo
Silvertone tube amp - small, lightweight
and loud! A great rock 'n roll amp. Must
sell. $35. 752-7398.
GRETSCH COUNTRY Gentlemen. Excel-
lent cond. A true gem. 752-7398 a
758-6366. Ask fa classified ad dept.
MOTORCYCLE NEEDED - will rent fa a
day. Flexible on rates. Call 752-1660.
WOULD LIKE a ride to Atlanta any
possible weekend. Can leave anytime
after 3:30 on Thursdays & will help with
gas. 752-8903.
OVHRSEASJOBS. Asia, Australia. Africa,
Europe, South America. All occupations.
$bOO-$2,50). Invaluable experiences. De-
tails 25 cents. International Employment
Research. Box 3893 H9, Seattle. WA
98124.
AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVED7 wks. shas,
Dam & Sire on premises. 752-0562.
WANTED-neat, sharp persoi to wak as a
waiter in dining room of a country club,
located approx. 30 miles from G'ville.
Transp. can be arranged. Great tips.
946-1514.
ftigtai Shot Repair Shti 1
ft Shea Stort
i11W.4thStf?tt
rAII I
Nice 2-bdrm. apartment, four blocks from
campus fa rent starting June 1. Girls a
couple? only. Call 752-6724.
1973 HONDA 350 - Four, good oonditioi.
Call 752-7292 aftqr 5.
FOR SALE - Black, vinyl, tufted sofa. Good
cond. $75 - 756-4096.
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752-4272.
WANTED - 2 girls to help serve dinner at
Lambda Chi Alpha. Free meals plus fringe
benefits. Call Scott 752-5325.
LOST - gold locket - initials C.G.H. uaii
752-8680. Reward.
FOR SALE: VW Camperbus good con-
ditioi, 36,000 miles, many extras ready for
travel. Call 728-4694.
WANTED to share apartment fa summer.
Single girl. Call Sally, 752-6724.
GOT THOSE SUMMER job blues? Smile
-students now being selected to fill
positions. Earn approx. $210 pe week. Fa
info call 756-7294.
YARD SALE-at AlphaXi Delta Sat. May 1
from 10 until. 508 East 11 St.
TELL THE WORLD what you think with
your own custom printed bumper stickers,
fa fun a advertising. Any wading with
limit of 25 small lettersspaces top and 15
large lettersspaces bottom line. Black ink
on brilliant Day-Glo vinyl, 3 12" X 15
Original, $4.00;each duplicate $1.00. Send
wading, quantity desired, check a M.O.
to: DANESS, Box 963, Dunn, N.C. 28334.
Satisfaction Guaranteed - allow 4 weeks.
line. Additional
3 issues would
HOW TO USE FOUNTAINHEAD CLASSIFIEDS
SIZE: To determine the no. of lines needed for your ad, figure 40 letters and spaces
per line. Ex. The following ad contains 67 letters and spaces, thus requiring 2 lines:
FOR SALE: 1 slightly used but like new
widget. Reasonable. 758-xxxx.
RATES: First insertion. 50 cents first line, 25 cents each additional
insertions; 25 cents each line. EX. The above 2 line ad inserted in
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 riqht to reject any and all ad copy that, in its opinion, is objectionable.
ERRORS: In case of errdrs in copy for which it is responsible, Fountainhead will
make the corrections in the earliest possible edition, without charge to the advertiser.
NOW AVAILABLE IN
G0LDSB0R0
HONDA CIVIC
Oamm
Honda Civic Sedan
Total Price $2986.56
Mileage
40mpg. highway 38mpg. city
See what the world is coming to
AT
B&F SALES, INC 1701 N. William St. Goldsboro, N C
Phone 758-4031 734-0129 Dealer 7291
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
7
mmm
m
ocks from
. Girls or
oondition.
ofa. Good
752-4272.
dinner at
lus fringe
G.H. uall
jood oon-
; ready fa
r summer.
es? Smile
sd to fill
week. For
Sat. May 1
think with
r stickers,
'ding with
op and 15
Black ink
2" X 15
1.00. Send
k or MO.
.C. 28334.
4 weeks.
d spaces
2 lines:
Additional
es would
wad to:
27834.
jnts must
ntainhead
tionable.
ihead will
idvertiser.
?
ENTERTAINMENT
School of Music presents 'Festival '76'
Tonight begins Festival '76, a pro-
duction of ECU School of Music. The first
presentation in the recital hall of A.J.
Fletcher Music Center will be chamber
music composed by Karel Husa, and will
be presented tonight at 8:15.
Husa is Professor of Music from Cornell
University, and will serve as guest lecturer
and conductor fa the entire four day
festival. Husa's compositions will be
performed by ECU students and faculty,
and feature Peter Takacs and Husa as the
pianists.

THE ALARD STRING QUARTET will
perform on Saturday in Fletcher Recital
Hall. Other performances will be Karel
Husa on Thursday and Andre-Michel
Schub on Friday.
On Friday Andre-Michel Schub will
perform classical works in the recital hall at
8:15. Schub is a pianist that New Yak
Times called "ntarvelously expressive
Included in his program are Mussorgsky's
"Pictures at an Exhibitioi" and the
ATTENTION
ECU STUDENTS
THIS IS YOUR LAST
OPPORTUNITYTO
BEGIN A PILOT LIFE
INSURANCE PRO
GRAM ON A DE-
FERRED BASIS
Immediate estate,
low premium, fast
building cash values.
Retirement income.
PAYMENT? DE-
FERRED UNTIL
APRIL 1977.
YOU MUST APPLY
BEFORE
APRIL 30,1976.
For infamation call
Mr. Patrick Paul
Coffman Bldg.
752-0834
southern premiere of Husa's "Sonata No.
2
The Alard String Quartet will perfam
in the recital hall oi Saturday. Their recital
will include waks by Mozart, Debussy,
and Husa. Preceding the recital they will
3VW
present a master class which will be open
to all interested persons.
The last presentation of Festival '76 will
be ECU Symphonic Wind Ensemble,
conducted by Herbert Carter. The sym-
phony concert will be held at Wright
Auditaium and feature two waks of Husa,
both of which will be conducted by Husa.
All of the programs featured in Festival
76 will be frue and open to the public. It is
destined tc be a satisfying musical
experience to all.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
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? I
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Greenville has a liberated license bureau
By ALICE SIMMONS
Staff Writer
Greenville's Driver's License Division
office on East Tenth Street extension looks
average enough on the outside. Most every
county seat has such an office. But not
every License Division comes equipped
with a female testing officer.
One of the handful of women in this
field of work in eastern North Carolina,
Ms. Cris Massey administers tests, both
written and on-the-road, to license-seekers
in Pitt County.
Massey claims that she derives satis-
faction from her job because she is "not
stuck at a desk all day. "I'm in and out
from the building to the car; so I don't get
restless she said.
While it is not unusual to find women in
this field in the metropolitan areas of
Raleigh and Charlotte, Ms.Massey is one
of four females working with driver's
license testing in the eastern districts of
this state. However, she has been spared
most of the expected hassles from both the
public and her co-workers.
"In my two years of work at the License
Division here in Greenville says Ms.
Massey, "I have never gotten any flack
from the people who come in for tests. Men
have been no problem at all to me during
road tests, and employees here in the office
are really good to work with
Sitting behind the nameplate reading
"P. C. Massey she isamusedat some of
the older folks who reply "Yes, sir ' and
"No, sir" to her questions. It is not
unusual to hear them exclaim, "You're a
woman when she stands up.
Massey has seen significant changes in
state driving tests throughout the years.
She believes the available handbooks make
the multiple choice tests virtually impossi-
ble to fail since study aids are provided.
Massey is accustomed to reading
questions aloud to persons unable to read
and write, who in turn indicate their chosen
answers orally.
Back in the early sixties, Massey
attended ECU as elementary and primary
education major. After a stint in the U.S.
Army, she worked in Raleigh, then
returned to Greenville where she took her
present position.
As for the future, she would like to
eventually open a licensed kindergarten. In
preparation for her plans, she is back at
East Carolina attending night school.
Questioned on the subject of marriage,
Massey smiled quizzically. "I don't have
time to ge narried. Besides, I was once
told it would be hard to find somebody who
would put up with me
Her lunch break interview ended, P.C.
Massey returns to her desk, ready to serve
the citizens of Greenville.
Beach season has arrived
"MEN have been no problem at all, and employees here in the oft ice are really good to
work with says Cris Massey.
Summer swimmers should savor safety
By KIM JOHNSON
Staff Writer
Warm weather is finally here! We can
hardly wait to get out of classes Fridays
and head for the beach.
So now is the time to catch up on some
very important facts about water safety
that we may have forgotten since last
Spring.
Where to swim is the first safety point
to consider
Obviously, a supervised area is always
best. No matter how good a swimmer you
might be, swimming in a lifeguarded area
is the greatest assurance of safety.
Unfortunately, most North Carolina
beaches are not protected by lifeguards.
In such a case, you should avoid
swimming alone. But make sure a capable
swimmer is near. Your 80-year-old grand-
mother won't help much if you're
drowning!
You should always make a preliminary
i
SHARKS are not tne only hazards on the beach
m
survey of the area where you'll be
swimming before you dive in. Watch for
exceptionally strong currents, weedy spots
and, certainly before you go plunging head
first through a wave, make sure the water
is deep enough. Broken necks really aren't
much fun.
A second factor to consider is when to
swim.
Contrary to popular belief, it is not
necessary to wait two hours after eating
before swimming. Nevertheless, a full
stomach does interfere with respiration
and any form of strenuous activity after a
heavy meal is not advisable.
Also, swimming during electrical
storms or even rain storms accompanied by
lightning could cause serious complica-
tions like electroouoo
Cramps are anoiher aspect of water
safety that should be noted.
The main point concerning cramps
stressed by most water safety manuals is
not to panic. The idea that most swimming
deaths are results of cramps is highly
exaggerated. There are simple ways of
handling cramps while swimming that can
be found in any water safety manual
However, diving into extremely cold
water is an open invitation to cramps.
Many swimming injuries and deaths
occur because people don't know their
physical swimming limitations.
Swimming endurance depends, first of
all. on individual physical fitness. Accord-
ing to swimming instructor and coach. Ray
Scharf, swimmers too often overexert
themselves.
"Don t be foolish and extend yourself
beyond your capabilities Scharf said
when asked to comment on highlights of
water safety
If people would look ahead and think.
they wouldn't get themselves in precarious
situatia
mm
Pointers to remember when surfing,
boating, or skiing are: (1) know the area
you'll be in so as not to run into logs or
other types of obstructions in the water, (2)
watch fa near-by swimmers; if your surf
board flips up and hits someone, it's your
liability, (3) keep your gear in the best
possible condition and repair.
According to Scharf, the ocean is the
most dangerous place to swim. "Beach
worshippers" need good knowledge of
basic water safety rules.
Most people who have drowned, had
no intention of drowning that day when
they took off fa the beach said Scharf.
They were just careless
He added that Nath Carolina beaches
are extremely treacherous.
WNCT-TV, channel nine, will feature a
series of water safety programs this
summer, conducted by Scharf.
How about an
Ail-American
funeral?
(CPS)lf you are an American Indian,
celebrating the American Bicentennial is
like "celebrating your own funeral said
the directa of the Center fa American
Indian Law at the University of Oklahoma.
In a speech given in San Francisco,
Dr. Jerry Williams Muskrat said that the
U.S. Constitution has failed to protect the
rights of Indians a preserve the sover-
eignty of Indian tribes.
The American Indian, said Muskrat,
has little to celebrate. I would just like
people to remember that 100 years ago
Americans practicing genocide and exploi-
tation said the professa of law.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 57, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
9
ed, had
y when I
FEATURES
wet
By KENT JOHNSON
While visiting the University of Georgia
(U Ga.) during our break I discovered
what they have that is sadly lacking at
ECU this spring, a fad.
Through the past years of streaking,
bobby socks, and goldfish swallowing,
ECU students did not discredit their alma
mater by ignoring new fads. Why should
this year be different? ECU is standing
passively L ' while other institutions vent
their spring fever in creatively productive
new ways.
The wet T-shirt banana-eating beauty
contest that this reporter observed in a
Georgia night club would be an asset to
spring events here at ECU.
The contest consists of daring damsels
competing for the grand prize of a beer keg
by wearing a wet T-shirt and taking turns
eating banana's creatively and sensuously
for the appreciative audience. The banana-
eater creating the most bedlam in the
audience wins the keg, along with a large
following of fans.
ECU should not let themselves be out
done by "Georgia
We are probably more creative and at
least as drunk as they are. To start a new
fad we only need student participation, and
the inspiration, which the FOUNTAIN-
HEAD has never been short on.
Listed here are inspiring fad proposals
which would add to spring activities.
Watermelon Wrestling. This event is
saved until the end of parties. It is a good
chance to vent frustrations without serious
injury.
Jock Strap Raids. Screaming foul
mouthed females converge on Jones,
Ayoock, and Belk demanding jock straps
and sexual satisfaction.
Greased Bear Wrestling. A starved
bear iscovered with used motor oil and led
into Marty's. The bear is then enraged by
not being allowed to leave.
Goldfish Balancing. This event finds
Fraternities and Sororities oompeting to
find the greatest number of goldfish that
can be balanced on the protuding parts of
their bodies. No hands please.
Kerosene Chugging. Fraternities com-
pete to see the amount of kerosene that can
be downed in an hour. Contestants who
"get lit" will be disqualified.
Streaker Stuffing. With this event we
discover how many nude bodies will fit into
a phone booth, a Volkswagen, a room in
Fletcher, and the mens room at the
Rathskeller.
Tear Gassing and Rock Throwing. This
would have been a good idea had it not
been exhausted at Halloween.
Loitering. This pastime is already
enjoyed by some Greenville folk, but isn't
it time the campus population caught up
with the boys down at the pool hall?
Top-popping. has been scientifi-
cally proven that with the proper methods,
a beverage can pop-top can effectively be
used to break windows, dial telephones,
ring doorbells, and unzip zippers.
If this list does not inspire ECU soring
7 &trs
boioni
,? HO ????US -
Simply EaroMc
weoi
758-6657
.
fever activities it should at least inspire
students to think of a few on their own. Do
not let it be said that ECU is no longer a
Party School.
v.
THISWEEKATTHE
ELB
BACK AGAIN
THURS "GOOD TIME

FRI
CHARLIE
rj
EVERY SUNDAY IS LADIES NITE
SPECIALS OF THE WEEK:
8"&10"
Hanging baskets now $6.88
These flowering
plants -
ONL Y$2.49 ?
HYDRANGEAS in candy pink pots?
POTTED MUMS in color coordinated pots
GERANIUMS - 6" pots
I AFRICAN VIOLETS - 4" pots
- ?
IVR.
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We still have wicker
basket stands at $6.99
?38
OPEN SUNDAYS 1:30-5:30
fa QardeiL Guffo"
.?fTVI





BBiDMIiiH
lO
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
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ENTERTAINMENT
'Rebel's' central theme is hope
By PHILLIP ARLINGTON
At the risk of hyperbole and historical
arrogance, the twentieth century, more
than any preceding period, poses immense
difficulties for the creative artist. The
reasons for this are complex and numer-
ous The polarities of human experience
are certainly part of the problem. It is a
question which rears its head out of the
implacable exigencies embedded in the
modern psyche. The poet must confront
the paradoxical image of the beast
wrestling with the angel.
It must be admitted that history tends
to assume a dialectic. Oftentimes, artists
become preoccupied with one or the other
sides of the paradox. In previous issues of
the Rebel, the beast was predominant, and
the poetry and prose of those years were,
necessarily, nihilistic and antagonistic,
were focused on the bizarre and the
estranged, the ludicrous and the surreal.
That sort of artistic perspective, while not
dead, is on the wane, necessarily on the
wane; and what the reader is assured he
will find in the current issue of the Rebel is
what its editor, Mr. Rollins, sees as a
search fa constancy" emerging out of
the temporal anxiety of contemporary
existence, a new found "optimism" which,
nonetheless, must continue to struggle
with the same forces of chaos and
destruction as its predecessors.
A central theme which runs throughout
much of the work in this current issue is
one of hope: an uneasy alliance which
desires to find itself redeemed in the colors
and textures of a world and a humanity
fallen and continuing to fall into the
darkening seas from which the artist
strives to draw forth his promise. The
ephebesof the past decade were interested
in staring into the crumpled and twisted
remains that were the all too brutal results
of an inflated and unhealthy worship of
idealism; the new perspective, if "rW jt
may be called, the perspective this rent
issue of the Rebel wishes to repress it, is
an attempt on the artist's part to regain his
senses, to place a refurbished faith in the
power of art's language to embody the
ineffable rather than belittle it; to evoke
the mystery rather than deny its validity.
Some of the prose bears out this
observation. Rollins' own, "A College
Story presents us with a character
"pulled in two directions Jess is our
oontemporary writer: bored with the
ostentation of the academes, yet, invaria-
bly drawn to them; fascinated with the
Marxist ideal of the nobility of the "simple
folk" in a small southern college town. Its
focus is on the shattering of an innocence
masked as the sensitively urbane, an
innocence that turns out to be, after the
encounter with the prostitute and the
betrayal by his friend, born of ignorance. It
is, in short, a story with the accent on the
moral crisis of a young man reminiscent of
James Joyoe's "Araby" but by no means
quite as oompressed. Rollins is, primarily,
a poet; as such, his prose siyle is
dominated by the adjective rather than the
verb. This makes for a slowly unfolding
narrative which, unless the reader is
interested in all the literary name-dropping
or the inside expose of the nuances of the
intellectual elite, he may wish had been left
out altogether. There is, however, a
quickened pace once the characters have
decided to visit a house of black prostitutes
and there are brilliant flashes of descrip-
tion that reveal a highly developed poetic
style of narrative: With the little bit of
light from the lamp down the hall I could
make out a dark form sleeping on the bed.
The room was soft with sleepThe room
was alive with her breathingA glove of
moonlight lay on her shoulder.
Other prose works worthy of note are
ArchieGastor's" A Small Man" and Susan
Bitner's "Tyger, Tyger Gastor's piece,
like Rollins, deals with the sting of loss and
the trial of recovery but with just the right
touch of irony. Written in the colloquial
diction that congeals the narrative's style
with the setting, Gastor (who, by the way,
has appeared in many Rebels in the past
and is hardly making his "debut")
chronicles Shorty Briley's attempt to
replace his lost sense of worth (symbolized
in the death of his dog, Prettygirl, for
which he blames himself) by appearing to
capture, barehanded, a wild bobcat. The
ironic thrust is at the " man-jacks who do
not realize that the cat is caught in one of
Shorty's traps, and a "small man"
becomes large in eyes of his fellows largely
through trickery and Shorty's cleverness.
Gastor's concern is not so much to elevate
Shorty as it is to diminish and obliquely
criticize the sensation-seeking lust of
Shorty's peers.
Bitner's "Tyger, Tyger" won best prize
for fiction and, admittedly, it is a tightly
structured dramatic piece. It turns upon an
allusion to Blake's poem of the same title,
but the real power of the story is to be
found in its ending. There are, however,
lapses into melodrama; the poem and the
hasty scribblings of a trapped and
frightened girl are the cliched trapping of
many of the finest soap operas the
networks have to offer. But his story, like
the previous two, again emphasizes the
theme of loss and search for recovery
which obviously made this story a
candidate for selection.
M uch of the poetry revolves around this
same theme. There are, broadly speaking,
two types of poetic inclination, that which
seeks beauty of the word, and that which
seeks its power and ruth. A sophist a a
mystic would argue ihat these attributes
are inseparable, but it must be admitted
that only rarely, even in the greatest of
poets, do we find all three fused into poetic
form. The strongest new voice to emerge in
this issue is, as the introduction indicates,
the work of S. Philip Miles. Miles' "suicide
and sylvia plath is rich in the images that
lace the peripheries of contemporary
hysteria. But in Miles the terror is muted,
compressed, an obliqueness that accom-
plishes resonance. Miles embodies the
tortured consciousness of the modern
artist, personified in Plath, which sees the
sun "trailing like a tear" and has dreams
which "onoe hissed to us as snakes
His "This Poem" is typical of the kind of
subjects endemic to oontemporary poetry.
This poem speaks of itself as a poem; tries
to turn the poetic process into a poem in its
own right:
my fragile crafts tie
easily
to the brittle teeth of time
each sound is cauterized
in bright bitter screams
and my words
sprout sudden sweat;
awkward new disease
of the sun.
Other than Miles, there are some
equally strong and beautiful poems. L.M.
Rosenberg's "To a Sick Friend" is a
sardonic portrait of human mutability,
flawed perhaps by some heavily pedestrian
images. David Bosnick's" This night" is a
poem carried almost wholly by a private
emotion translated into an equally private
and delicate matrix of images:
I will run my tongue to your ear
and will whisper,
as the wind taps at sand
and sand at sea.
Theresa Speight's "The CIimax of Compo-
sition" echoes Miles' "This Poem
though the treatments are obviously
different, particularly in tone. Richard
Wayne Smith's "Dianne" is also notable
for its delicate rendering of the destructive
force of love.
These are but a few examples of the
many works which are characteristic of
what the editors feel is a new awareness in
our modern poets. Their works are, in each
instance, accompanied by the graphics and
artwork which complement if not surpass,
in some cases, those of last year's Rebel.
The work of Matt Smartt continues to be of
interest, and all should take note of the
work of Lewis Cherry on page 13 entitled
"Dream Stylus
Overall, this year's Rebel appears less
controversial than its predecessors. Little
in the issue will offend. Fa some that will
be its virtue; fa others, its failure. The
polemical pose of any new edita will seek
to go one-up on his successas. But it
remains to reflect on the validity of the
renewed optimism of these modern poets.
If the period of nihilism and experimen-
talism in literature is spawning a reaction-
ary wave of hope and renewed faith in the
power of art to evoke, delight, and
communicate, we can oily wcnder at the
next react ion. I should hate to see calm
turn to lethargy, beauty to sentimental
pap. The artist has responsibilities that
preclude exercises in "good taste" and the
evasions of the darkness and decay that
clings to the underbelly of the undisturbed
stone. It may be that the future of art will
see not just continued actions and
reactions, a scenario of offenses to and
defenses of the proper function of art in our
society. Perhaps the future will bring relief
to the intransigence; perhaps the rough
beast may learn to sleep beside the
necessary angel; perhaps this will be the
Supreme Fiction which we were, all along,
being prepared fa.
Bluegrass festival on mall May 1
BLUEGRASS FESTIVA L PLA NNED
If bluegrass music is your bag, then
May 1 is a date you don't want to faget.
On this day, the SpeciaJ Concerts Commit-
tee of the Student Union is planning 81?
hours of non-stop bluegrass. The festival,
slated fa the University Mall will begin at
2fl0 P.M. and end around 1030 P.M. In
case of inclement weather, the festival will
be held in Memaial Gym.
The bands being featured are as
American as Mom's apple pie! MISSION
MOUNTAIN WOODBAND, PLANK
ROAD STRING BAND, BUD BRANTLEY
AND THE ONSLOW GRASS, BUCKNER
SMITH, BITTER CREEK, THE GREEN
GRASS CLOGGERS, and the JUGGER-
NAUT JUG BAND. These bands are what
0M u mmmm0mmmmmm
bluegrass is all about-stomping your feet,
dapping your hands, jumping, scratching,
and hollering.
Bluegrass is the pure music of love and
real America. It grew out of the
Anglo-American folk song tradition that
the Scottish, Irish, and English settlers
brought with them to the hills of
Tennessee, Virginia, Kentucky, and the
Carol inas, the songs of their ancestas. The
songs were modified by Negro blues and a
heavy emphasis from religious and gospel
music and in time, Nathern popular music
and jazz. Wakers migrating fron the rural
South to Nathern factaies took bluegrass
along with them. It remains a music fa
purists in a time when much of country
music is becoming big business and the
country itself is vanishing.
m

MISSION MOUNTAIN WOOD BAND
mum tmmmu mm
With the advent of hootenannies a few
years ago, the popularity of the five-string
banjo inaeased. The banjo is the "back-
bone" of Wuegrase music. Consequently,
folk groups and others began using
non-electric instruments such as the banjo,
fiddle, flat-top guitar, mandolin, and the
upright "doghouse" bass.
Bluegrass music appeals to people from
the whole spedrunvfrom the right, the
left, and the center The music is not
oomrrwrdal folk, a oommerdal oountry,
but the pure music of real America,
meaning it is not "hillbilly" a "oountry
and western a even the "Nashville
sound Songs of life, love, and the wald,
all doie to the pulsing beat of a twangy
banjo-that's bluegrass.
'V
Rare!
end witf
SOLOM,
FIELDS,
feat in m
per f ami 1
huma,
FIELDS,
all times
presentat
the re-CT
authentic
his wit ai
glimpse c
W.C.
appear in
lawyer, b
and even?
show oon!
ing, reco
costume c
gues. The
question
'H?
thi
"Ha
Jim Warn
of the o
Studs" v
Theater ii
?HOT GR
Theatre th
The mi
Blackboard
high qualif
Eastern No
This pi,
welcome ad
"Hot Grog"
visit the Ron
regret your
i?
Ibeai





m
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 5320 APRIL 1976
mmmmmmmmmmm
n
m
ENTERTAINMENT
'W. C. Fields' tonight
W.C. FIELDS IS BACK
Rarely does a performance begin and
end with a standing ovation. MURRAY
SOLOMAN, impersonator of W.C.
FIELDS, has been achieving this unusual
feat in many of the places that he has been
performing. In an evening of unmatched
humor, warmth, and insight, W.C.
Fl ELDS, one of the great comic geniuses of
all times, comes to life in this unique
presentation. Solomon's performance is
the re-creation of a masterful humorist in
authentic costume and make-up, delivering
his wit and wisdom and providing a rare
glimpse of Field's, the man.
W.C. FIELDS in all of his glory will
appear in his many roles as drinker, doctor,
lawyer, bartender, carnival-show barker,
and even asa temperance lecture. The full
show consists of blackouts, special light-
ing, recorded tape parts, and several
costume changes along with the monolo-
gues. The performance is concluded with a
question and answer period.
Solomon says that he strongly identifies
with Fields because he hated children,
loved to drink, and "he didn't play
games In preparation for the act,
Solomon spends four hours putting on
makeup in order to age thirty years and
become the actual W.C. FIELDS.
"AN EVENING WITH W.C. FIELDS'
is a full evening program which incorpor-
ates some of the classic comedy material
that helped establish Field's international
reputation, as well as material drawn from
his private life. The result is an entertain-
ing glimpse of one of show business' most
interesting and complex men. MURRAY
SOLOMON brings his performance to
Mendenhall Student Center Theatre on
Thursday, April 29, at 8:00 p.m. Admission
will be by I.D. and activity card fa E.C.U.
Stur'ents, Mendenhall Student Center
membership card for faculty and staff, and
$2.00 for the public. The program is under
the sponsorship of the Student Union
Lecture Series Committee.
'Hot Grog ' at Roxy
through Saturday
Greenville Movies
PARK
Today through Thursday, the horror fantasy Phantom of Paradise Shows at 315,
510, 706 and 9fl0. Rated PG.
aarts Friday The Devil Within Her. Rated R.
PITT
Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman in All the President's Men ends Thursday. You
ought to see this one. Shows at 7.00 and 930. Rated PG.
Starts Friday Watch Out We're Mad.
PLAZA I
Walt Disney No Deposit No Return starring Don Knotts. Shows at 315, 515, 7:15 and
9:15. Rated G.
Starts Friday The Last Hard Men Rated R.
PLAZA II
Jeremiah Johnson is another Redford movie. An adventure story with shows at 3, 5, 7,
and 9. Rated PG.
TICE
Through Wednesday Goodbye, Nor ma Jean at 9:40 and Summer School Teachers at
8:00. Both are rated R.
STUDENT CENTER WEDNESDA Y CLASSIC
Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion at 8XX) Wednesday. Rated R.
FRIDA Y FREE FLICK
The Conversation starring Gene Hackman and Allen Garfield focuses on the personal
life of an "electronic surveillance technician Shows at 5, 7, and 9. Rated PG.
"Hot Grog the exciting musical by
Jim Wann and Bland Simpson, the writers
of the off-Broadway success "Diamond
Studs" will be appearing at the Roxy
Theater in Greenville.
The widely reviewed play is hailed as
being "filled with vitality The play is a
mixture of satire and fine music. It will be
well worth seeing.
Due to poor attendance Tuesday, and
Wednesday's show was canceled. There
should be no trouble with attendance since
the show will only be in town until Saturday
and promises to be such a spectacular
? Material and
baaU Sit, Workmanship
hnp V Guaranteed
OIIUC V Pro Service
113 Grande Ave.
758-1228
Shop
?HOT GROG' cast now playing at Roxy
Theatre through Saturday.
The musical is about the notorious
Blackboard and promises to be a kind of
high quality entertainment that appears in
Eastern North Carolina not often enough.
This play introduces the Roxy as a
welcome addition to theaters of Greenville.
"Hot Grog" is definitely a fine invitation to
visit the Roxy, and assures that you will not
regret your first visit.
J I iTook! "
I BEARDS & LONG HAIRS,
i
i
i
I
Sister Mary
Palm reader Advisor
.She'll advise you on all problems.

GIANT DOUBLE FEA TURE
LATE SHOW!
(2THEATRES!)
FRIDA YANDSA TURDA Y 11:15 P.M.
ftCUPULCOGOLD1
AND
"HEAVY TRAFFIC"
PLAZA
Cinema 1
752-7649
PITT-PLAZA CENTER ? 756-0088
SO BIG IT'S PLAYING IN 2 THEATRES II
T She's helped thousands, why not
r you? Hwy. 17 South of Washington,
c
I
CA'
T
? 18
Downtown Greenvilie-f ormerf y the Loft
'
4m
Salad
Tatars
French Bread
$2.36
Phone 758 9588
708 Evans St.
hmm ?? ???1L' Z
lift?
Thurs. - "LOAFERS GLORY "
Country Rock, - Progressive Country & Western Swing
Fri. &Sat. - " "JOHN REES QUARTET"
m
m
m
:
wmm
mm
WO?
WMMV





r
12
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
m
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m
ECU Biology professors study Pamlico River
By KIM JOHNSON
Staff Writer
Eastern North Carolina's Pamlioo River
has a major problem-oxygen depletion.
Two ECU biology professors are
currently conducting studies which seek
explanations and solutions to the decrea-
sing amounts of oxygen in the river.
Dr. Graham J. Davis and Dr. Mark
Brinson. with the assistance of ECU
biology graduate student Tom Vicars, are
now studying the causes and long-term
effects of oxygen depletion in the Pamlico
ary.
The Water Resources Research Insti-
(WRRI) of the University of North
olina is funding the research.
According to Davis, oxygen depletion
primarily affects bottom animals such as
clams and the micro-organisms in the
sediment.
No extensive fish kills have been
reported so far, Davis said, but that
T
possibility exists in the future if the
depletion of oxygen is not halted.
According to Davis, salt water coming
into the estuary from the Pamlioo Sound
and fresh water flowing in from the Tar
River are not mixing properly.
Due to the low winds blowing over the
estuary, the two types of water are
becoming stratified, Davis said.
In other words, fresh water is remain-
ing on top and salt water is staying at the
bottom of the estuary.
If the wind were blowing stronger, the
two would mix and, in doing so, more
oxygen would be mixed into the water as a
whole.
Since oxygen is not oeing mixed into
the water, the micro-organisms on the
bottom of the estuary are using up the
oxygen for their own respiration process,
Davis said.
So far. the two professors have been
closely monitoring the oxygen oonosntra-
tion to determine in detail what areas of the
estuary are affected most seriously.
We use an oxygen analyzer which is a
portable instrument sensitive to oxygen
changes that we can let down to different
levels of the water and determine by
reading the accompanying meter, how
much oxygen is in the water at the different
levels.
According to Davis, the amount of
oxygen concentration is determined by one
part oxygen per one million parts water.
We are oonoerned with the possibility
of an industry locating on the river. Davis
said.
An industry would pour more food stuff
into the estuary in its waste material that
oould be used by the micro-organisms in
their respiration process, thus increasing
the depletion of oxygen.
This summer's study will focus on
whether additional food poured into the
estuary will, in fact, increase deoxygena-
tion.
A detailed analysis of food use by
micro-organisms will be on the summer
agenda also, Davis said.
WRRI will sponsor the research for
another year.
Davis will oonduct the study this
summer while Brinson teaches at the
University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill
S(
a mug full of
HOT GROG
at the
??g?P?c5agQcjcrcj
THE TREE PEOPLE WOULD
LIKE TO INVITE YOU TO JOIN
THEM FOR THEIR FAMOUS
MONDAYNIGHTSPECIAL
ROXY
THRU SATURDAY
? featuring
? SMALL PIZZA (ingredient of your choice)
j SALAD ONLY
BOTTOMLESS GLASS OFTEA $2.49
Monday evening 5p.m. - 9p.m.
ASK YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT US!
-iinii i ii" iii iimmii pi wmmnii w m
tfXSfr
THE STUDENTS SUPPL YSTORE
WRIGHT BUILDING
ANNOUNCES THEIR
Wisr
before tl
alone w
"ooping
first-tiro
ECU sc
David K
The i
The Fin
issue of
Human
results c
undertak
"A (
emergen
Nonparei
for the r
one's pe
said the i
"Prev
children (
contradic
model fo
suggests
inoonsisU
parent ha
different
potential
Gilma
trate on
reflecting
on the r
responsib
"With
pation, th
the baby I
said.
Gilmar
with two
devioes ir
baby dayi
gang out
restaurant
baby.
FANTASTIC PRE-REMODELING SALE
SALE STARTS 9AM M0N.MAY3
?00
THE STUDENTS SUPPLY STORE IS PLANNING TO EXPAND
AND MUST MAKE ROOM FOR THE CONTRACTORS.
AN AREA OF THE OLD STUDENT UNION WILL BE USED FOR
JHEONCE-N-A-UFE-TIMESALE. ENTRANCE WILL
BE FROM THE STUDENTS SUPPLY STORE LOBBY-
NEXT TO RAWL BUILDING.
ONEGROUPSHIRTS
40-50 OFF
ONE GROUP - FREE BOOKS
BOOKS
UP TO 80OFF
ONEGROUPJACKETS
40 50OFF
STATIONERY
75 OFF
HANDBALLS
28 OFF
GREEK LAVALIERSl
25 OFF
ART SUPPLIES
UPT0 75OFF
SALE AREA HOURS
MON-FRI9-4
MANY MORE ITEMS AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES M?lVSi
NO REFUNDS OR EXCHANGES SAT 9:00-12:00
mm
mm
m
tm
mm
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m
FOUNTAINHEADVOL.
MMMM
57, NO 5329 APRIL I
13
lerial that
anisms in
ncr easing
focus on
into the
eoxygena-
I use by
summer
3arch for
udy this
s at the
apel Hill.


RS
Sociologists prepare paternal report
By FRANCEINE PERRY
ECU News Bureau
Wishful reminiscing about married lite
before the first child's birth and going out
alone with the wife are examined as
"ooping" mechanisms employed by many
first-time fathers in a research report by
ECU sociologists Richard Gilman and
David Knox.
The report, "Coping with Fatherhood:
The First Year appears in the spring
issue of the journal Child Psychiatry and
Human Development, and discusses the
results of a recent survey of new fathers
undertaken by Drs. Gilman and Knox.
"A declining birth rate and the
emergence of the National Organization for
Nonparents indicate an increasing conoern
for the negative effect children have on
one's personal and marital happiness
said the researchers.
"Previous studies on the impact of
children on marital happiness have yielded
contradictory findings. Using a ooping
model for first-time fathers, this article
suggests one possible explanation for these
i noon si st end es: Differences in findings on
parenthood crisis can be explained by
different ways parents cope with such
potential crisis
Gilman and Knox decided to concen-
trate on new fathers as parents, thus
reflecting "an increased cultural emphasis
on the role-sharing of child-rearing
responsibilities by modern husbands.
"With the father's increased partici-
pation, the importance of his ooping with
the baby becomes paramount the report
said.
Gilman and Knox began their study
with two seemingly useful "coping
devioes in mind: fantasizing about pre-
baby days and the "holiday" method-
gang out with the wife fora movie, a
restaurant dinner a a drive, without the
baby.
The researchers assumed that both
methods would be found to be successful
means of ooping with the new stresses of
fatherhood, but they rejected their
hypothesis that fantasy is helpful, after
surveying results of fathers' question-
naires.
"Fantasy should improve the hus-
band's happiness by allowing him to
instantly replace' a aying baby and a
complaining wife with pleasant thoughts of
the past says the Gilman-Knox report.
"This mental review of happier times
should encourage the perspective that the
aying baby days' will soon be over and
the oouple can then return to a more
natural' home life
However, the survey results indicated
that the fathers who resort to fantasy,
those who stated that they wished they
oould return to the time before the baby
was born, often tended to be partners in
unhappy marriages.
Gilman and Knox did find reinfaoe-
ment fa their theay that taking holidays
away from the baby contributes to marital
harmony, and they were surprised to
discover that nearly half of the fathers
surveyed go out with their wives as often,
a more often, than befae the baby was
ban.
"Continued social life was shown to
have desirable consequenoes as a ooping
mechanism said the sociologists. They
found that frequency of a couple's outings
together is positively associated with
expressions of marital happiness: 91
percent of the fathers who said they
maintain their pre-baby social life repated
their marriages as "better than average
but oily 78 percent of those fathers who
desaibed their social life as restrided by
the baby repated happy marriages.
"The impatance of holidays can be
seen in that babies have the capacity to
interrupt those patterns of marital inter-
action that are essential to keep positive
feelings flowing in a relationship con-
duded Gilman and Knox
"A oouple with a new baby might be
well advised to schedule, on a frequent
basis, a sitter to care fa their baby while
they go out alone and care fa their
relatiaiship
To test their two hypotheses, Drs.
Gilman and Knox surveyed 95 white
first-time fathers of legitimate babies ban
in the Pitt County Memaial Hospital
between April, 1973 and March, 1974.
Although the final study was limited to
fathers of the white race, representing
primarily educated and higher-income
groups, a small sampling of initial
questionnaires returned by black fathers
suggested that blacks are "significantly
mae successful in adapting to the aisis of
first-time fatherhood
"Some of the strongest associations of
being black are those chc i
desaibe extended family parti i
child care Gilman and Knox not"
Among these qualities an '? quenl
baby care by the father, outside help in the
home after maher and cf-ild retu from
the hospital, having cared for babies before
becoming a father and a dose relationship
between the new father and hi life's
parents.
A high propation of the nev. black
fathers repated successful adj isti it to
the baby and frequent outings with their
wives.
Anaher group noted by Gil mar and
Knox as notably happy in their marriages
since birth of the new child were
"non-Praestants a group which In-
cluded Roman Catholics and Unitarians as
well as fathers who desaibed themselves
as agnosticatheist, a members of non-
Protestant persuasions.
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????????(????BBBBB
14
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51.
NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
vw
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m
SGA Committee proposes new constitution
Dear Students of ECU,
This is the proposed draft of the new
SGA Constitution. I hope each student will
read this and think seriously about this new
and innovative approach to student
government.
The members of the Select Committee
have waked very hard on this constitution
since February. I would like to acknow-
ledge their hard work and dedication. The
members are Warren Hepler, Ray Hud-
son, Don Rams, Tim McLeod, Valerie
Chaff in and Dr. Hans Indorf who served as
our advisor
Your comments and criticism are
welcomed 2' a public hearing Thursday,
April 29. in the sivall auditorium BC-103 in
Brewster Building
Thank you,
Ricky Price
Speaker of the Legislature
Chairman Select Committee on
SGA Constitution
PROPOSED CONSTITUTION OF THE
STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION
PREAMBLE
We, the students of East Carolina Univer-
sity, with a desire to preserve the atmosphere of
free discussion, inquiry, and self-expression, to
insure personal freedom and general welfare of
the student body, and to establish justice,
hereby form a collective student body of
responsible self-government, and establish this
Constitution of the Student Government Associ-
ation for the student body of East Carolina
University.
ARTICLE I: NAME OF THE ORGANIZATION
Section 1. The name of this organization shall be
the Student Government Association
ARTICLE II: MEMBERSHIP AND PRIVILEGES
Section 1. Every registered student of East
Carolina University snail be a member of this
organization
Section 2. Any full-time student shall be entitled
to vote m Student elections.
ARTICLE III: SUPREME STUDENT LAW
Section 1. This Constitution and all laws enacted
thereto shall be supreme student law. Supreme
student law shall be defined as having
pitaoouem over any other student originated
charters and regulations which shall conform to
this Constitution and subsequent enactments.
Section 2. Enactments of the Legislature and
rules made by agencies of the Student
Government Association shall at no time conflict
with the Constitution of the Student Government
Association or any University regulations or
North Carolina statute deemed to have
precedence
Section 3. The General Statutes of the Student
Government Association shall become the
official supplement to this Constitution The
General Statute shall state the procedures
determined by the Legislature and decisions of
the judiciary.
ARTICLE IV: BILL OF RIGHTS
Section 1: The Student Government Association
recognizes and undertakes to guarantee to all
students the rights and liberties of the
Constitution of the United States and the
Constitution of North Carolina.
Section 2. Specific rights applicable to the
students at East Carolina University are
enumerated in the appendix to this Constitution
and shall form an integral part of this
Constitution
ARTICLE V: ASSEMBLY
Section 1. Supreme Legislative power shall be
vested in the Assembly, which shall consist of
two Houses. The two Houses shall be called the
Senate and the Legislature.
Section 2. Members of the Assembly snail be:
A Senate
a. President of Men s Residence Council or an
appointee
b. President of Women's Residence Council or
an appointee
c. President of Inter-Fraternity Council or an
appointee
d. President of Panhellenic or an appointee
e. President of Student Union or an appointee
f. Chairperson of the Publications Board or an
appointee
g. Student Government Association President or
an appointee
h. There shall be three (3) members selected at
large by the Senate to cover unrepresented
groups.
B. Legislature
The membership of the Legislature shall be
elected as specified in the article Elections and
Recall.
Section 3. There shall be a Speaker elected from
and by the Legislature at its first meeting for the
duration of the Legislative session. The Senate
shall elect a Chairperson from among its
members on terms specified by its bylaws.
Section 4. The Assembly shall enjoy the
following powers and duties:
A. The Legislature
a. To appropriate the funds of the Student
Government Association
b. To enact laws as are deemed necessary to fill
any Student Government Association vacancies
c. To approve or reject by majority vote all
appointments made by the President of the
Student Government Association
d. To establish procedures for the execution of
Legislative business
e. To receive regular activity reports and
statements of accounts from all organizations to
whom funds have been appropriated
f. To approve every three (3) years the
Constitution and or bylaws of all organizations
recognized by the Legislature of the Student
Government Association
g. To make all laws which shall be necessary and
proper for carrying into execution the foregoing
powers, and all other powers vested by this
Constitution
h. To over-ride a Presidential veto by a
two-thirds (23) majority of those present and
voting
i. There shall be a question and answer period
during each Legislature session at which time
the Executive and other members of the Student
Government Association are required to be
present and reply as necessary
B. The Senate
a. To advise on pending legislation
b. To recommend original legislation
c. To consider presidential appointments
d. To be responsible for execution of all Student
Government Association elections
e. To establish procedures for the execution of
Senate business
f To appoint members of the Review Board with
approval of the Legislature
g. To review Student Body petitions for initiative
or review
Section 5. The Speaker or the President shall
have the power to call an emergency meeting of
either House provided the Speaker, the
President and each House is notified twenty-four
(24) hours prior to the meeting.
Section 6. The Assembly recognizes the power of
the Student Body to initiate new legislation in
the following manner: fifteen (15) percent of the
student body shall sign a petition for initiative or
review to be submitted to the Chairperson of the
Senate for determination of correctness. The
Senate shall request the Election Commission to
conduct an election on the proposed bill in not
less than five (5) class days nor more than fifteen
(15) class days after receipt of the petition. A
majority of the votes cast in theelection shall be
sufficient to pass the bill (This article shall not
apply to appropriation bills.)
ARTICLE VI: EXECUTIVE
Section 1. The Executive Powers of the Student
Government Association of East Carolina shall
be vested in a President of the Student
Government Association
A. The President shall be elected at large by the
qualified student voters of East Carolina
University.
B. The President shall serve for a term not to
exceed one calendar year
C The President shall be eligible for re-election.
Section 2. The President shall enjoy the
lollowing powers and duties:
A Make recommendations to the Legislature.
B. Veto acts of the Legislature provided that
such action be exercised within six (6) days of
passage of the bill.
C. Enforce and administer all laws enacted by
the Legislature
D. Be the Chief Representative of all students in
any matters, internal or external, and call and
preside over meetings of all students.
E. Establish such other executive agencies as
shall be deemed necessary and proper to aid in
the performance of duties and to requne reports
as needed.
F. Delegate the exercise of any of the above
duties and powers except: the veto power, the
calling of emergency meetings of the Legislature
and the power to appoint.
G. Perform all duties incident to such office.
Section 3. Financial authority, under the
direction of the President, shall be vested in a
Treasurer of the Student Government Associ-
ation.
A The Treasurer shall be appointed by the
President with approval of the Legislature.
B The Treasurer shall enjoy the following
powers and duties:
a. Be directly responsible to the President and
the Legislature for all financial transactions.
b. Regularly advise the Legislature on all
financial matters under their consideration.
c. Countersign all valid checks for organi-
zations funded by the Student Government
Association.
d. Keep an open and up to date record of all
appropriation acts passed by the Legislature.
e. Perform all other duties incident to such
office.
f. Withhold any appropriated funds only with the
consent of the President and the Speaker until
the Legislature can act.
C. Establish financial procedures which are to
include:
a. Review of all financial requests to the Student
Government Association which are to be
received no later than February 15, for
disbursement during the following fiscal year
b. Preparation of u comprehensive budget which
matches requests with anticipated revenue.
c. Submission of a balanced budget to the
Legislature by March 15, with tentative
appropriation committments communicated to
recipients prior to the end of the school year.
d. Provide the Legislature with monthly financial
reports.
Section 4. Vacancy
A. It the Office of President becomes vacant, the
office shall devolve upon the Speaker of the
Legislature.
B. The Speaker of the Legislature shall be acting
President for a period not to exceed thirty (30)
days during which elections shall be held in
order to elect a new President to serve for the
remainder of the calendar year. During this
transition, the Speaker shall assume all powers
incumbent upon the President excep the power
to appoint and to vo bills.
Section 5. The President, the Speaker of the
Legislature and the Treasurer shall be required
to attend summer school and assume all duties
for the operation of the Student Government
Association during summer school. They shall
continue to receive their regular salaries and, as
a summer supplement, their tuition and fees
shall be paid by the Student Government
Association. Any officer desiring an exception to
this requirement must file a formal request with
the Legislature no later than thirty (30) days
before the end of the regular school year.
ARTICLE VII: JUDICIARY
Section 1. Principles
A. The judicial system has the responsibility to
insure the rights of individual students and
campus organizations within the framework of
campus rules, regulations, student body statutes
and codes.
B Students shall at all times enjoy the benefits
and duties of the Federal and State Constitution
as well as applicable laws while on the campus of
East Carolina University Should there be a
conflict with the University rules and regulations
the provisions of the former shall prevail.
C. The Student Government Legislature shall
establish a roster of minimum sentences for
specified offenses to be widely publicized for
preventive purposes
Section 2. The supreme judicial body shall be the
Review Board.
A The Review Board shall consist of five (5)
tudents who shall be appointed by the Senate,
and approved by the Legislature in April of each
year. Vacancies shall be filled in like manner for
the remainder of the term
B The Review Board shall have final ruling on
all disciplinary matters and appeals arising from
decisions made by the Judicial Board.
C. The Review Board shall render advisory
opinions concerning all constitutional matters.
D. A simply majority shall be necessary for all
rulings. The Review Board cannot hear any case
or deliver any rulings unless four (4) members of
the Board are present. The Board determines its
own rules of procedure.
Section 3. There shall exist a Judicial Board to
hear any and all violations of campus rules,
regulations, statutes and codes.
A. The Judicial Board shall consist of seven (7)
members appointed by the Review Board in
September of each year, subject to the approval
of the Legislature of the Student Government
Association. Vacancies shall be filled in like
manner for the remainder of the term.
B. All members of the Judicial Board shall be
fulltime students.
C. A simply majority opinion shall be necessary
for all rulings delivered by this Board.
D. A quorum shall consist of four members.
E All rulings of this Board can be appealed to
the Review Board.
Section 4. There shall also exist a Board of
Inquiry:
A. It shall consist of three (3) student members,
one each appointed by the President of the
Student Government Association, the Speaker of
the Legislature and Chairperson of the Senate,
for a period of one year beginning in September.
The Chairperson of the Board, to be elected by
Board members, shall be known as Ombuds-
man.
B. The primary purpose of the Board shall be to
investigate non-judicial complaints, grievances
or matters of administrative mismanagement or
procedural injustices at the application of
individual students or at the discretion of the
Student Government Association.
C. Redress shall be speedily sought by all
possible means, and recommendations for
broader rectifying action shall be brought to the
attention of the Student Government Executive
and the Student Government Association
Assembly.
D. Each member of the Board shall individually
be available as a Public Defender for individual
students where the latter is the plaintiff against
a division of the Student Governi ent Associ-
ation.
Section 5. There shall be such residence hall
boards as shall be established for the
maintenance of good order in a residence hall,
provided that the original jurisdiction of these
boards does not extend beyond for which they
were created and that the decisions of these
boards may be appealed to a Judicial board.
Section 6. All boards enumerated in this Article
shall have such powers, duties, and original or
appellate jurisdiction as the Legislature shall
from time to time grant them.
Section 7. The Student Government Association
President shall appoint an Attorney General,
subject to approval by the Legislature, with the
following powers:
A. Provide advice to students of their rights and
privileges under campus rules and regulations
B Represent any student who requests
assistance with his defense before any Board
within the Student Government Association if
the latter is not the defendant.
C. Represent the Student Government Associ-
ation in all cases in which it is involved before
Student Boards.
Section 8. The Legislature may establish such
other judicial institutions as it deems necessary
and proper for the orderly administration of
student justice.
SGA Constitution
continued on
page 15
SGI
AR1
Section 1.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL
mmm
51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
15
SGA CONSTITUTION continued from page 14.
shall be the
of five (5)
the Senate,
pril of each
manner for
ARTICLE VIII: OATH OF OFFICE
Section 1. All Student Government Association
executive, judicial, and legislative members
Shall take the following oath:
"I. , hereby pledge myself to
uphold the Constitution of the Student Govern-
ment Association of East Carolina University, to
promote the highest ideals of honor, and to
?cecute to the best of my ability the duties of my
Office
Section 2. Any member of any constitutionally
?stablished judicial body, who has previously
taken the Oath shall be empowered to
administer it.
ARTICLE IX: ELECTIONS AND RECALL
Section 1. Principles
A Any elections conducted under the juris-
diction of the Student Government Association
Shall be free, secret, well publicized, and open to
?ll qualified student voters.
B. The or: ective of election procedures shall be
to permit widest participation in a fair and
judicious manner Details shall be specified in a
set of election rules enacted by the Legislature
but limited by the provisions contained in this
Constitution. They shall not be subject to
Presidential veto.
Section 2. Qualifications
A. Any full-time student at East Carolina
University is allowed to vote and run for elective
office. Full-time status is determined by
payment of an activity fee and evidenced by an
activity card.
B. Each qualified voter shall have one vote for
each elective office during an election.
Section 3. Constituency
Representation in the Legislature shall be based
on place of residence.
A. Each dormitory of not more than three
hundred and fifty (350) student residents shall
elect one representative to the Legislature, and
each dormitory of more than three hundred and
fifty (350) students shall elect two representa-
tives.
B. The total number of day student represent-
??ves shall be equal to the total number of
njll-time day students divided by the average
number of dormitory students represented by
each legislator from a dormitory.
Section 4. Tenure of Office
A. Elected members of the Legislature and the
Executive shall serve for a period of no longer
than twelve (12) calendar months beginning on
the day on which the oath of office is taken.
B. A vacancy occurs for reasons of recall,
resignation, death, or loss of full-time student
status. The Legislature is empowered to enact
laws as are deemed necessary to fill Legislative
vacancies. Whenever there is a vacancy in an
elective position of the Executive, such office
shall be filled in accordance with the provisions
specified in the applicable Article. No vacancy
can be filled for a period longer than the original
election intended it to be.
Section 5. Recall.
A. The power to recall any elected official for any
reason shall be vested in the constituency of that
official which shall be defined as that body of
students who are qualified to vote for that
official.
B. A petition to recall an elected Executive
Officer must contain the signatures of at least
fifteen percent (15 percent) of the entire student
body.
C. A Legislator may be recalled by a petition
which contains the signatures of at least fifteen
percent (15 percent) of those students eligible to
vote in said Legislator's constituency.
D. The petition to recall shall be presented to the
Senate which shall have ten school days to
determine the validity of said petition. If an
absolute majority of the Senate declares the
petition valid, the Senate shall direct the
Election Commission to hold an election, in
which the incumbent may be a candidate. The
incumbent shall remain in office pending the
outcome of the election
Section 6. Elections
A. Elections for the Legislature and the
Executive shall be held on the third (3rd)
Wednesday in January of each year. The oath of
office shall be administered no later than eight
(8) school days after the election.
B. The winner shall be determined on the basis
of a plurality which must constitute at least
thirty-five percent (35 percent) of those voting.
In the event that such a minimum is not obtained
by any candidate, a run-off election shall be held
within five (5) school days between the two (2)
top contenders for this position
Section 7. Election Commission
A The Senate shall be responsible for the
implementation of elections of the Student
Government Association. It shall have at its
direction an Election Commission whose func-
tion is to insure adherence to and implement-
ation of the Constitution and election laws.
B. The Commission shall be composed of no
more than fifteen (15) members, including the
Chairperson who has been elected by the
Senate. The members are appointed by the
Chairperson but are subject to approval by the
Senate. All members serve for one year during
which they cannot hold any other elective office.
C. The Commission will routinely check full-time
student status of each candidate, and declare a
candidacy invalid if this condition is not met.
Election violations shall be investigated by and
reported to the Judiciary of the Student
Government Association.
ARTICLE X: AMENDMENTS
Section 1. Proposition of amendments to this
Constitution must be made by one of the
following methods:
A. By a vote of two-thirds (23) of the entire
Legislature during two separate meetings.
B. By a petition presented in writing to the
Senate carrying the signatures of fifteen (15
percent) percent of the membership of the
student body.
Section 2. Ratification of amendments to this
Constitution shall be accomplished by a
three-fourths (34) vote of the Legislature on a
final reading which shall take place only after
two weeks of publicity in the campis student
media. Ratification may also be by referendum
of two-thirds (23) of the students voting
provided that at least twenty (20) percent of the
student body votes.
Section 3. After adoption of the amendment by
the Legislature on the final reading, the
amendment shall become effective immediately
unless otherwise specified in the amendment.
ARTICLE XI: TRANSITIONAL
ARRANGEMENTS
Section 1. Current Office Holders
A. Elected officials of the Student Government
Association Executive (elected March 24, 1976),
shall hold office until the general student
elections in January 1977. They shall be eligible
for re-election or appointment to offices
specified in this Constitution at that time.
B. The Legislature will be re-elected Fall
Quarter of 1976, for a term to extend until
January 1977, at which time the Legislature will
be elected for an entire year term.
C. The Senate will be organized and will meet
during the second week of class s during Fall
Quarter 1976.
D. The judiciary shall be selected September
1976, in accordance with their appropriate
selection procedures provided in this Consti-
tution.
E. All statutes, rules, bylaws, or other
documents conflicting with this Constitution
shall be repealed or amended by February 1977.
F. This Constitution shall take effect September
1, 1976, except where it would affect an
incumbent in the present Executive. This
Constitution shall take effect totally with the
January 1977 General Student Government
Association elections.
G. As of February 1, 1977, this Article shall be
deleted from the Constitution.
APPENDIX, BILL OF RIGHTS
We, the students of East Carolina University
assert that we are endowed with certain rights
and responsibilities. Therefore, we seek in this
appendix, the realization, the utilization and the
preservation of these rights.
A. The right to freedom of speech and
expression as an inherent part of an education
free from University restriction, except where
the form of the expression endangers life,
property, or the equal rights of others. Free and
open discussion and expression of ideas are
basic elements of any education.
B. The right to form, join and participate in any
group or organization for intellectual, religious,
social, economic, political or cultural purposes,
including the right to peacefully assemble.
I I ?l?iU ID I HI!
C. The right of each student, subject to
reasonable regulation, to solicit money on
campus for Student Government Association
recognized student organizations.
D. The right to the usage of all campus facilities
designated for public access and activities,
subject only to uniform regulations governing
these facilities.
E. The right of students to have representation
in the formulation of all University policies
pertaining to students' University life.
F. The right to clear and concise campus
regulations available to every student. Only
published regulations reflecting this require-
ment will be binding on the student body.
G. The right of free access to personal student
records and files held by the University. No
information in any student file may be released
to anyone except with the prior written consent
of the student.
H. The right of a choice to decide one s own
living quarters. If a student chooses to live in
University owned housing, the student has the
right to negotiate a contract and agreement,
specifying the landlord-tenant relationship prior
to signing a committment.
I. The right of each student residing in
University owned housing to be free from fear of
any unreasonable search or seizure, as
guaranteed under the Fourth amendment of the
Constitution of the United States.
J. The right of each student to have:
a. Due notice
b. A speedy hearing
c. An open hearing upon request
d. Representation by student counsel
e. Confrontation of accused with accusers
f. Protection against self-incrimination
g. Presumption of innocence until proven guilty
h. Protection against cruel or unusual punish-
ment
i A written record of the hearing upon request
j. The right of appeal
K. The rights of no student to be placed in
jeopardy more than once for the same offense
L. The right of each student to be exempt from
suspension or expulsion from the University,
except for academic failure, failure to pay a
University debt, or violation of a University
regulation when such violation constitutes a
threat to the general welfare of the Unviersity
community.
M. The right of each student to initiate action
within the student judiciary structure for any
violation of rights guaranteed by this Constitu-
tion or its agencies.
N. The right of each student shall be guaranteed
without discrimination on the basis of creed,
race, sex, age, national origin or any other
arbitrary or unreasonable consideration.
O. The general statutes of the Student
Government Association shall elaborate these
rights listed above in complete detail in order
that a clear and concise meaning of all rights can
be covered.
Alumni activities planned
ECU alumni returning to the campus
for this year's Alumni Day Saturday, May
29, will be treated to a variety of social and
recreational activities.
The day will begin with the second
annual Alumni Tennis Clinic at 9 a.m. in
Minges Coliseum. The two-hour clinic will
feature professional instruction in basic
tennis fundamentals by ECU tennis coach
Neal Peterson and other instructors.
From 9:30 a.m. until noon, Mendenhall
Student Center will be open to alumni
visitors, with soft drinks and coffee served
in the lobby. Bowling and billiards facilities
will be available to alumni at a reduced
rate.
At 10 a.m. life bridge master Miriam
Martin will host an Alumni Bridge Party
with several gifts and prizes to be given to
winners. The Bridge party will be held in
Mendenhall and will run for two hours.
Forty participants will be accepted.
From 10 to 11 a.m aJumni may tour
the campus in buses accompanied by
guides. Special features of the tour will be
ECU'S new buildings.
The annual Alumni Luncheon and
Association Meeting will begin at 1230
p.m. at the Greenville Golf and Country
Club, with ECU Chancellor Leo Jenkins as
guest speaker.
At 2:30 p.m. in Mendenhall, 12 East
Carolina classes will hold reunions. Classes
scheduled for reunions, and their chair-
persons are:
Class of 1916: Eva Pridgen Causey of
Tarboro; Class of 1921: (To be announoed);
Class of 1926: Frances R. Smith of
Greenville; Class of 1931: Hannah Turnage
Fitzgerald of Kinston; Class of 1936: Ethel
Vice Armstrong of Wilson: Class o 1941:
M aisle Castlebury Freeman of Dunn; Class
of 1946: Katie Owen Morgan of Lillington;
Class of 1951: Leon R. Elis of Seaford
Delaware: Class of 1956: Garland W. Tut on
of Jacksonville; Class of 1961: Jannie
Harris Preddy of Franklinton; Clas0 of
1966: Joan Powell Greene of Dunr nd
Class of 1971: John J. Cooper of
Fayetteville.
At 7:30 p.m. aoooktail party for alumni
will be held at the Lake Ellsworth Party
Room, on the 264 By-Pass.
The party is sponsored by the Pitt
County ECU Alumni Chapter, who will
provide hor d'oeuvres and setups. Alumni
and their guests are invited to attend in
casual dress.
Further information about ECU Alumni
Day activities is available from the ECU
Alumni Association, ECU, Greenville,
N.C 27834 Early reservations for the
tennis dime and bridge party are advised.
WRC elections announced
By CINDY BROOME
Assistant News Editor
Elections for Women's Residence
Council (WRC) offices and Dormitory
House Council offices will be held May 11.
Filing days will be held from April 15-30,
and campaigning will take place from May
3-10.
The WRC offioes include: president,
vice-president, secretary, treasurer, and
reporter.
Qualifications are: Must be enrolled as
a full-time student, must have a judicial
record that is clear of major rule violations,
must have a current scholastic record of or
above a 2.0 grade point average, and (for
president only) must have previous mem-
bership in WRC for a minimum of two
quarters.
The offioes for House Council include:
coordinator, assistant coordinator, and
secretary-treasurer.
Qualificationsare: Coordinator must be
a sophomore, junior, senior, or graduate
student, each council member must have a
clear judicial record of major rule vio-
lations, must have a current scholastic
record of or above a 2.0 grade point
average, must be a full-time student, and
must reside in a residence hall.
Those interested in filing for an office
must file at her dorm administrator's
office.





16
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
mm
mmmm
m
Sports
Pirate trackmen to chase Indians once again
By STEVE WHEELER
Staff Writer
After playing bridesmaid to William
and Mary fa the past decade, East
Carolina'strack team will attempt to knock
the Indians off the top spot this week in the
Southern Conference Track and Field
Championships being held in Davidson,
N.C.
The Pirates will have 28 performers
entered in 16 events at the championships.
Some men will be entered in as many as
four events. The only events not entered in
fa the Pirates are the pole vault and
distance events.
A big m tor the Pirates to beat
Indians will be the resignatiai of
William and Mary coach John Randolph.
East Caroline) as neve, beaten Randolph,
who will be going to the U S. Military
Academy at the end of this season.
Injuries have played a biy part in the
Pirates season so far. There have been as
many as 15 perfamers on the injury list
this year. But coach Bill Carson thinks the
Pirates will be in good shape fa the
championships.
"All of our guys are back now and we
feel we are in top shape as of now. We have
been waking hard fa the past two weeks
and we stayed home during the Penn
Relays just to practice more.
East Carolina perfamers are amaig
the favaites in many events such as the
hurdles, springs, relays, and in the field
events.
In the 120 yard high hurdles, Marvin
Rankins has run 13.9 while Sam Phillips
has registered a 14.0. In the 440
intermediate hurdles, Phillips has run a
54.7 while Bill White has a 55.1 to his
credit.
In the sprints, the Pirates should have
some of the best in conference with Carter
Suggs, Larry Austin, Calvin Alston and
Donnie Mack leading the way. Suggs and
Alston have registered 9.6s in the 100
meters dash while running the event only
once each during the regular season
Austin and Mack have been injured all
season but should be factas in the meet
this weekend.
The 200 meters has been Alston's event
all year as the diminutive freshman has set
a new ECU varsity recad by running a
21.0 at South Carolina. Suggs has run the
event only once and has a 21.65 to his
aedit.
Charley Moss(485) and James Freman
(48.6) have led the Pirates in the 400
meters all season but will be pushed by
Ben Dunkenfield and Robert Franklin.
East Carolina's relay team in the 440
(40.9) and mile (314.5) has been strong
all year and will be the favaite in the
IMetters look to finish sixth
ByKURTHICKMAN
Staff Writer
The ECU tennis team lost to Atlantic
Chrialian College, 7-2, Tuesday, and will
carry a 7-11 overall record and 2-4
conference record into the Southern
Conference Tennis Championships today,
tomarow and Saturday in Richmond, Va.
Mitch Pergerson takes the Pirates' best
recad in singles matches to Richmond.
Pergerson, a fifth flight player, holds a
10-5 slate on the year and has a 3-3
conference recad.
ECU coach Neal Peterson has been
impressed with Pergerson's play all year.
Mitch has been a great addition to our
squad this year says Peterson. "I'm
looking fa him to help us throughout the
tournament
Tom Durfee was 9-9 fa the season and
2-4 in the conferenoe while playing in the
first flight.
?'Tom came around fa us, especially
near the end of the season said Peterson.
'I think he will do something fa us this
week. He has shown he is capable of
pulling off an upset
Randy Bailey, Doug Getsinger, Jim
Ratliff, and Bob Neff will be the other
Pirates competing in the angles competi-
tioi.
Bailey is 7-10 on the year, Getsinger is
6-11. Ratliff is 6-12 and Neff is 5-10.
In the doubles matches, Getsinger and
Neff, Durfee and Bailey, and Ratliff and
Mark Callaway saw the most action during
the year
Getsinger and Neff in the second flight
are 5-10 overall, Durfee and Bailey, first
flight perfamers, are 6-10, and Ratliff and
Callaway stand at 3-4 at number three
doubles.
Accading to Peterson, Davidson is the
best team on paper but will have trouble
this weekend. "In my opinion Appala-
chian St. and Furrnan are going to be the
teams to beat Peterson said. "Both of
these teams are tough to handle when
playing on hard surfaces. Citadel should
finish fourth and Richmond looks like the
best bet to finish fifth. I think we will fight
it out with William and Mary fa sixth
place
"A sixth place finish fa this team
would be quite an accomplishment said
Petason. "The top five teams are real
strong and we are about even with William
and Mary as far as talent gees
Haverty wins
golf tourney
ECU'S Barbara Haverty fired a 79 to
take medalist hoias in the Appalachian
invitational Tournament and she teemed
with Marsha Person to win the team title
also.
Individually, Person finished third in
the tournament with a 90. The two
women s combined team scae of 169 was
good fa the title, beating out Appalachian
State, Wake Faest and Winthrop College.
The tournament marked the final
competitioi fa the Lady golfers this
season.
conference meet.
In the field events, Geage Jackson
leads both the long and triple jumps with
leaps of 23-6 12 and 49-11 14,
respectively. Herman Mclntyre, Willie
Harvey and Michael Hodge will be pushing
Jackson in both events. Al McCrimmon
and Curt Dowdy have both high jumped 6-8
this season and should place in the meet.
In the weight events, Tom Watson
Lafan Fabes,v1ike Harris lead the Pirates.
Watsoi leads the shot put aew with a
throw of 52-5112, the discus with a fling of
148-8, and the hammer with a toss of
149-10. Fabes leads the javelin throw with
a distance of 204-4.
Barring injuries, the Pirates should
make this one of the most competitive
conference meets in many years.
I

LA ST YEA R'SMVP- Carter Suggs is recovered from a recent injury and will be trying to
repeat as MVP in this weekend's SC Track and Field Championships at Davidson.
Richmond drops ECU, 3-2,
ECU stands20-7 for year
mam
A tenth-inning walk with the bases
loaded pushed across the winning run as
the University of Richmond dropped ECU,
3-2, in Richmond on Moxtey.
It was ECU's second loss of the year to
the Spiders and dropped its recad to 7-6 in
the conferenoe. The Pirates' overall recad
is 20-7.
The loss was the fourth loss of the year
fa ECU in which the margin of decision
was one run. All four losses were to
conference opponents.
ECU fell behind after the third, when
Richmond scaed a pair of runs on a home
run by Mike Walton, but came back to tie
the game in the fifth on a solo home run by
third-baseman Bobby Supel
The blast was Supel's third of the year,
as well as his third home run in the last two
games. Unfatunateiy, though, it was not a
winning blow.
The game went into extra innings, even
though both teams threatened in the sixth
and seventh innings.
ECU did manage ten hits, but stranded
11 baserunners-a downfall fa the Pirates
in many of their losses this year.
In the tenth ECU could not scae and
Richmond quickly loaded the bases with
mmmmmmmmmmtmmmmmaammmmammm
one out on an erra by Hick Kayda, a
single by Waitai, and an intentioiai pass
to Al Bowles.
The free pass to Bowles wasn't a pcor
move since Bowles had two hits in the
game and the walk would set up a face at
any base, but en this occasion ECU came
out on the shat end of the stick.
Reliever Joe Heavner, who had been
pitching since the sixth just was not able to
get the ball over the plate and walked Bob
Natzinger on four pitches to scae the
winning run.
Four players contributed two hits
apiece fa ECU. They were Supel, Seve
Bryant, Joe Rcenker and Kayda. Un-
fatunateiy, too few of the hits led to runs
as Spider ace Dave Brooks ran his recad to
5-0 with the canplete game.
Fa the seasai, Richmond's recad
went to 20-12 and they finished the
conferenoe with a 9-5 tally. At the same
time, the loss eliminated ECU from any
faint hopes it may have had fa a first a
second-place finish.
ECU'S next game is tonight in Wilson
against Atlantic Christian. Game time will
be 7:30.
I
c
On
Thesig
new pl?
The
Krusen
Bat-
players
in the R
the stat
Ram
when he
The reoc
Krus
from the
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At le.
high-das
These
two most
Elm City.
Roberts L
So it a
type ball ,
One n
Bah Don
who sat a.
Like the t
Somen
last year.
seems tog
Since le
to point ta
First of
where he w
have been
abundance
Louis Crost
recent sign
Next an
guard. Edn
the Pirates
out the first
Edmond
eligibility re
leadership h
The final
could most c
Befae E
team, appan
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individuals, I
that two of tl
At thesai
Patton excep
program and
What lies
top eight play
graduating it i
on next year ;
With four
Uosby, it seer
are left after
results
Ifu'future
"light next ye
I rn yvi iiei
be interesting





V
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FOUNTAINHkADVOL 51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
77
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Time-Out
By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
New Direction In Basketball Program
On Tuesday ECU announced the signing of two basketball recruits to grants-in-aid.
The signings brought to three the number of players ECU has signed this year, plus one
new player who will be eligible to play after transferring from another school this year.
The two players signed by ECU were Jim Ramsey, a guard from Cary, N.C and Herb
Krusen, a swing forward from Silver Spring, Maryland.
Both of these players are looked at by the ECU coaching staff as first-rate recruits and
players that ECU is indeed fortunate to get. Ramsey was named Metro Player -of-the-Year
in the Raleigh area this past season and Krusen is considered one of the top five players in
the state of Maryland.
Ramsey drew considerable attention in the Holiday Festival tournament in Raleigh
when he broke the single game tournament scoring record with a 39 point performance.
The record had been held by Phil Fad, a pretty good basketball player in his own right.
Krusen's major attribute, in addition to scoring and strong rebounding, is his touch
from the free-throw line. At Northwood High School in Silver Spring, Krusen set a school
record by shooting 96 percent from the free throw line and was named to the second-team
All-Metro squad for the Washington, D.C. area.
At least on paper it appears the ECU basketball program has signed a pair of
high-class top-notch recruits which can really help the team in the future.
BUT THE BIG ONES GOT AWAY
These signings may have given coach Dave Pattern some relief for the loss of ECU'S
two most sought after recruits, Albert Spencer of Washington, N.C. and John Virgil of
Elm City. The ECU recruiting team lost on both of these players, as Spencer went to Oral
Roberts University and Virgil signed Monday morning with North Carolina.
So it seems that ECU may have let two big fishes get away, but got basically the same
type ball players, a forward and a guard, in Ramsey and Krusen.
One must not forget the other two newcomers that Patton has stored away, either.
Both Don Whitaker, a guard transfer from Louisburg, and Greg Corneliue, a 6-10 transfer
who sat out this past season, are well-groomed players that oould help the ECU program.
Like the two most recent recruits, they come from winning programs.
THERE ARE SOME SKELETONS IN THE CLOSET THOUGH
Some new blood may be what the ECU team needs after a disappointing 11-15 season
last year. And perhaps the turnaround does not end with merely the new recruits. It
seems to.go deeper than that.
Since last season ended, there have been many moves and ?occurrences which seem
to point towards a new look for the Pirate basketball team in 1976-77.
First of all, ECU guardBuzzyBraman quit school and went home to Silver Spring, Md.
where he will enter the University of Maryland next fall. Apparently Braman, who would
have been a senior next year, saw that he was being phased out of the program by the
abundance of young guard talent beingbrought in by Patton, most recently in the form of
Louis Crosby and Billy Dineen. It must be noted that Braman quit school before any of the
recent signings had been announced.
Next an old face returned to the ECU scene. That would be Kenny Edmonds, another
guard. Edmonds played in most of the games for ECU during the 1974-75 season, when
the Pirates posted a 19-9 record, but had some trouble with his grades last year and sat
out the first two quarters of the academic year before returning to school this quarter.
Edmonds has been playing in pick-up games this spring and, if he has another year of
eligibility remaining, his return to the ECU team would be beneficial, especially in the
leadership he could give to Crosby, Dineen and the two recent guard recruits.
The final occurrencesinee last season's finale is clouded by a shroud of mystery, but
oould most certainly be the most crucial change of all.
Before Easter break, Patton silently dismissed three of last year's players from the
team, apparently in an attempt to clean up some of the team's attitude problems.
This writer must hedge a little here. Even though he knows the names of the
individuals, this writer can see no necessity in naming the three players, except to say
that two of the players were probable starters on next year's squad.
At the same time we are not going to either condemn or condone the actions of ooach
Patton except to say we have confidence in him that he did what he felt best fa the
program and that he did it only after careful consideration.
SO WHA T DOES ALL THIS LEA VE FOR NEXT YEAR
What lies in the future of ECU basketball then? First of all, with three of last year's
top eight players no longer with the team and two others, Earl Garner and Al Edwards,
graduating it would seem there will definitely be an abundance of new, and young, talent
on next year s squad.
Witn four new reauits, Edmonds return, and the promising futures of Dineen and
Uosby, it seems there is a nucleus of youth to build with. Add to this the few players who
are left after the recent dismissals and maybe there will be a "new look and better
fUltS
IfuHuturecanonlytell what will happen and like this year surprised many persons, so
might i(;xt year surprise many.
I tn writer rogretshewon t be here to see the outcome next year, but he is sure it will
De interesting to watch
Golfer of the Year
Rob Weiton has been selected as
FOUNTAINHEAD'sAthlete-of-the-Year in
Golf.
With the maja part of the golf schedule
over with-and only one tournament late in
May remaining-Welton's second-plaoe
finish in the Southern Conference tourna-
ment ranks as the top accompliahment by
the Pirate golfer this year.
In addition, Weiton finished w'th the
second best stroke average on the ECU
team behind Steve Ridge. Weiton's stroke
average was 76.1 while Ridge averaged
75.5 strokes per round.
Weiton, however, proved to be more
oonsistent fa the Pirates ova the final
three tournaments, after shooting a
disappointing 233 taal in the Pinehurst
Invitational to open the season.
Weiton's top perfamance came in the
ecent confaence championship held in
Flaence, S.C. Raying the tough CouqU
Dlub of South Carolina course, the senia
jdfer shot 75-71-78 to finish in second with
? 224 taal, three strokes behind the
medalist. In addition, Weiton placed three
strokes ahead of his nearest teammate,
?
46&'
ROB WELTON
Keith Hilla, and four strokes ahead of
Ridge.
As the only senia member ai the ECU
team this year, Weiton's leadership proved
valuable and his improvement and hard
wak wae rewarded by his seoond-pl
finish in the confaence tournament
J
Any person interested in working
on the FOUNTAINHEaD staff this
summer should be at the staff
meeting Tuesday, May 4 at at 4:00
of w?a
$ JS
521 OOTANCHE STREET
IN GEORGETOWN SHOPPES
Phone 752-6130
PHONE IN ORDERS FOR PICKUP
OPEN- Mon. Thurs. 10:00 to 1:00 a.n
Fri. & Sat. 10 to 2 a.m Sun. 12 to 12
( HOW ABOUT STUFFY'S FREE
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OF $2.00 OR MORE)
Your choice of 12 delicious hot ?r cold
subs starting at 79
YES ONLY 79c for one of STU FFY'S
famous subs ? where you come first!
Evory day this week your f av. bey. Vi price between 8-9 pm
m





ipm. WfsfEsWsBPwiiW"
18
? VNTAINHEAD VOi 51 NO. 532i APHlt 1976
m
mimnanpi
HPW
V
V omen's track makes progress in first year
.JOHN Li A No
Sports Editor
In its first year in existence, the ECU
Wonn rrack and Field team seems to
be making positive strides and two meets
this week oould continue the improvement.
the Lady Pirates traveled to
Salisbui. Md. to compete in a tn-meet
with Sniisbury State College and Towson
State College and Friday night the ladies
will travel to Tallahassee, Fla. to oompete
in the Southeast Invitational, which is
hostxi ny Florida State University.
f the ladies it will be the fifth and
Sixtl leets in the first year of women's
trad U and coach Laun Arrants said
sh een pleased with the progress
i proud of the way the girls
this year. In the meets we
have not date that well as
vve placed, but we have
i i - dually in each meet almost
? ?' tii m
We went to Murray, Ky. and finished
ninth out of ten teams, but the girls all
improved their times. In my opinion that is
a successful showing for us. We hope by
going to Florida that it will improve our
times, too, although we aren't necessarily
expecting to finish high
The hosting Florida State squad has
nine qualifiers fa the national champion-
ships among its 13 member squad, but
Miss Arrants said that she really was not
that worried about her team trying to
oompete with FSU.
"We want to do well, sure said
Arrants. "But more important is that we all
make an improvement and learn something
that we can carry over to future meets and
next year
Being the first year for women's track
at ECU, Arrants said that there had been
many problems to overcome. One of those
problems she mentioned was that East
Carolina was the only major school in North
Carolina with a women's program in track.
Therefore, the ECU team has been faced
to travel to other areas fa oompetition.
Pirate loss to Richmond drops
ECU to fourth in baseball race
o Richmond on Monday not
??: the team ironi any chance
ond place in trie conference,
put the Pirates in a tough
'irst-division finish in the
Monday the Pirates were
place, in front of William
tns, and with five games to
ins could stand a better
? higher than ECU, since the
only i ference game remaining fa the 7-6
Pirates is an, as yet undetermined,
make-uj game with second-place the
Gl-
ues, who are 20-7 overall and
hold ' 1-1 teoord outside the conference,
star games behind the league-lead-
nan Paladins.
F a holds a 9-2 conference mark
and tcod I 12 games ahead of the
Clta i stands at 7-3 on the season.
ratings are made rrwre cloudy due
to the fact that several teams still have a
number of league games to play, as a result
of postponements earlier in the season.
The Citadel, fa example, has four games
left to play, including its game with ECU.
Presently in third-place in the con-
ference is Richmond. The Spiders climbed
to 9-5 in the conference as a result of their
3-2 win over ECU Richmond is only one of
two teams in the league to complete all its
scheduled games.
William and Mary stands at 5-5 after
beating VMI and stands a half game in
back of ECU fa fourth place.
After the Indians, Davidson at 5-8,
Appalachian at 4-8, and VMI at 2-12,
follow.
That means a win against the Citadel is
all-impatant fa the Pirates if a first-
division finish is desired. And even then
the Pirates have to hope that William and
Mary loses at least two of its four
remaining games.
V ? J. mte ? fc " "A" kL J JVr i
$ T T v







I " USE 5
I FOUNTAINHEAD j
f CLASSIFIEDS

T? f - 5fi f Stf- J T -T " 'T 'T' T ST ? ?r ?T ?
"We are the only women's team in
Nath Carolina and that has posed a big
problem said Arrants. "Being the only
school, we have had to travel a long way to
get oompetition and the traveling has put
an added strain on the girls because they
aren't used to it
Miss Arrants also said that the team
had to overoome the fact that it only had
three weeks to prepare fa its season. She
said this was perhaps the biggest setback
of all fa the team's development.
"I really feel that we did not have
enough time to get ready befae the season
started and that this hurt us more than
anything else. Hopefully, that won't
happen next year and we hope that some of
the other schools in North Carolina will
start programs so that we don't have to
travel so far.
"Despite everything, though, it has
been a pretty good season so far. All the
girls have had great attitudes and I think
that's commendable. They have really
stuck to it and worked at making
improvements and the results should show
up in the improved times they have been
turning in
It seems that at least in the first year of
its existence that women's track has been
successful fa the ECU program. Mae
importantly, it appears the groundwork has
been laid for future growth by the
program.
Com
Te
Thisw
track tec
champion
it oould nr
champion!
The re
in the rac
Commissk
the confer
ions.
Su
?.
I
rAROU
fm?
Few pi
hitting tear
Supel has
flames.
During I
and Richmc
but also fa
In the I
five hits in
while at the
and three
runs.
Against
and oollecte
runs. He al
hat game.
He oont
with a two-f
"lome run, r.
All that I
theECU sop
Prior to
played in bt
n those se
only two hit
DEBBIE FREEMAN has been one of the standouts for the Women's track team this
spring, competing in the shot, discus, and javelin events. She is shown here receiving her
award as ECU Women's Athlete-ot-the-Year. The Greenville Sports Club made the
presentation. Photo by Kip Sloan
20 ACRE FARM
WITH SECLUDED WOODLAND
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UTTING TEA
us year.





iiHHHHiiMHmHMBBHHBMB
19
mmmt
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
mmmmmfmemmmmmmmmmfmumm
ar
olina will
t have to
h, it has
r. All the
id I think
ive really
making
ould show
iave been
st year of
has been
im. More
jworkhas
i by the
Conference Tournament Previews
Tennis, track teams determine Cup finish
This weekend when the ECU tennis and
track teams travel to the conference
championships, at Richmond and Davidson,
it could mean more than simply a quest fa
championships for the two squads.
The reason being ECU is ranked third
in the race for the Southern Conference
Commissioner's Cup, which is symbolic of
the conference's overall athletic champ-
ions.
The Pirates, who are currently ranked
behind William and Mary and Appalachian
State, have won the Cup two years in a
row, but could be hard-pressed to pull it
out this year.
Including the results of last week's
conference golf tournament; William and
Mary is first with 52 points, Appalachian
State is second with 51 points and East
Carolina is third with 50 points. Following
Supel on hot streak
Few players experience the kind of
hitting tear that ECU third-baseman Bobby
Supel has put together over the last two
games.
During the last two games against VMI
and Richmond Supel not only hit for power,
but also for average and speed.
In the last two games Supel collected
five hits in nine at bats for .556 average,
while at the same time he hit two doubles
and three home runs and drove in five
runs.
Against VMI, Supel was three-for-four
and collected a double and a pair of home
runs. He also batted across four runs in
hat game.
He continued his feat at Richmond
with a two-fa-four day with a double and a
lome run, plus a single run batted in.
All that has made up fa the slow start
theECU sophonae began the season with.
Pria to the VMI game, Supel had
played in but seven of the 25 ECU games,
n those seven games, he had collected
only two hits in 10 at bat.
team this
eiving her
made the
Doubtlessly, ECU coach George
Williams is glad that the Snow Hill native
ga a chance to play and, accading to
assistant ooach Monte Little, Supel's hot
bat is something else.
"I haven't seen a ha streak iike this in
a college player in a long time said Little.
Little admits that the third-baseman
still has some things to brush up on, but
certainly with the incumbent third-base-
man Geoff Beaston graduating at the end
of this year, Supel's recent streak brings
high hopes fa the future.
"Bobby has a la of ability that has to
be refined said Little, "but people will
hear a la from him in the future
Supel's streak has pushed his average
up to .368 fa the year and he ranks second
on the team in home runs and batting
average. In addition, he has the highest
slugging percentage on the team (official at
bats into taal bases) with an inaedible
.947 rating.
IITTING TEAR-Bobby Supel s recent hot streak has raised his batting average to .368
its year.
these three schools are Richmond (43
points), VMI (42.5 points), Furman (36.5
points), the Citadel (29 points) and
Davidson (18 points).
And with only baseball, tennis and
track left to oount in the standings, time is
shat fa ECU.
The task of winning a third straight
Canmissioner' s Cup is made harder by the
fact that William and Mary is favaed to
win the track championships and Appala-
chian is favored to take the tennis
championships. ECU is picked fa second
in the track championships, but it is
unlikely that it will finish any higher than
sixth in tennis.
However, the ECU baseball team,
despite its disappointing conference re-
cad, may prove to be the savia fa the
ECU athletic teams. At present, the ECU
keystoners are 7-6 in the conference and
could finish as high as second. At the same
time, both William and Mary and
Appalachian State seem headed fa
second-division finishes. How far down
they finish in the second division and how
high up ECU finishes is the key to the
baseball points, though, since Furman has
virtually clinched the baseball a own
With ASU and William and Mary
favaed to win the tennis and track titles,
the key there is fa ECU to finish at least
one place ahead of Appalachian in track
and at least one place ahead of William and
Mary in tennis. Bah feats are within reach
of the Pirate teams.
If that should occur, it would give ECU
a chance to take the Cup by finishing far
enough ahead of the two schools in
baseball. It would be an outside chance,
but a chance none the less.
Therefae, thae is a la more at stake
this weekend at Davidsoi and Richmond
than merely a good track and tennis
showing. At stake is the possibility of a
third straight Commissioner's Cup fa
ECU.
Wrobel leads Intramural golf
Mike Wrobel of Scat Dam fired a
one-over par 73 to take the first-round lead
in the ECU Intramural Golf champion-
ships.
Wrobel turned the 6,500 yard Ayden
Country Club course in 36-37 to take a
two-stroke lead over two aher golfers in a
taal field of 120 golfers.
In second behind Wrobel were Bobby
Christainsen and Soott McDowell. Bah
golfers fired rounds of 38-37 over the
Ayden course. Fa the day 21 golfers sha
80 a better to keep it tight going into this
aftanoon' s final 18-hofe round.
Other golfers shoaing 80 a better
wae: at 76-Doug Davis, Ernie Massie,
Mike Trouth and Steve Wiggins; 77-Donny
Deatoi and Hank Wylie; 78-Keith Wad-
dell ; 79-Dasett Ward and Greg Peckman;
80-Sonny Crata, Stewart Cloer, Leland
Parker, Mike Reynolds, Bill Landreth,
John Rodman, Harold Rush and Joe
Schuyer.
Kappa Alpha was the individual team
leader after the first round with a team
scae of 312 fa its tcp four golfers.
The 120 goifas was a recad turnout fa
the ECU Intramural golf championships
and the large numbers caused sevaal
backups. Nonetheless, two-thirds of the
starting field remained in ocntentioi after
the opening day.
The day's highest round was 132, but
the golfer who turned such a tremendous
feat wished na to be mentioned.
Winter's t
Family
Favorites
Ktktry weea fiiterta BBQ
e.i,j n ? a
? im Mhm ?wNtVT!
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Steak sandwich Both with lettuce, tomato,
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?3 Cwitf ol ilk art ???? ST. A I"6
i mix i i m
mm

mmm





20
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5329 APRIL 1976
iiuiwiiiiMHipaiwrtW
oMOMPMOMm
mm r miiwun
?tf
news FLASH FLAS
FLASH FLAS
Union positions Phys ed club
Positions are open on the Student
Union Lecture Committee for the 1976-77
school year. Apply now at the Student
Union office in Mendenhall Student
Center.
Majorettes
Anyone interested in majorette tryouts
please contact Regina Bullock, 752-9404
for a time for interview.
Festival '76
FESTIVAL '76 (An Important Cultural
Event) A spring celebration of music with
Harel Husa, composerconductor; Andre-
Michel Schub, pianist; Alard String
Quartet. April 29-May 2 at A.J. Fletcher
Music Center. All events free. Contact
School of Music for specific information.
There will be a short meeting of the
Physical Education Majors Club on Mon-
day, May 3, at 8:00. All majors and
prospective members are urged to attend.
Election of officers and planning of a party
are the main topics to be discussed. Come
to Room 146 in Minges Coliseum to see
what the department ?nd the profession
can do fa you.
Happy hour
Delta Sigma Phi fraternity is sponsoring
a happy hour at the Jolly Roger Monday,
May 3 from 930 - 2 O0. A drawing will be
held for 3 fifths of Jack Daniela For
tickets, caad any Delta Sig. Hope to see
you there.
Rebel 76
Vet checks
Ron Brown, VA representative at ECU,
says that a number of veterans and
dependents will receive short checks for
May. This is due to the VA's advance
payment system, which uses approximate
dates to project anticipated enrollment,
often a year or more in advance.
Adjustments can be made with a minimum
of inconvenience. Anyone receiving a
check fa less than 28 days for May should
contact Brown at 758-3215, a come by
room 206 Whichard Building.
Forever
Rebel '76 has arrived and may be
picked up free of charge at Mendenhall
Student Center, the Old Student Union,
various dorms, the Library, and their
prominent places on campus. If you have
trouble finding a copy, there are numerous
copies in the REBEL office in the
Publications Center. The Rebel staff is
grateful to the students and faculty that
helped us make this year's copy such a
success.
Pi Sigma Alpha
Pi Sigma Alpha will meet in C Wing of
Brewster Building at 7:00 Wednesday,
May 5. The purpose is to elect 1976-77
officers and announce banquet plans. It is
important for all members to attend.
The Forever Generation will not meet
this Friday night due to a retreat to the
mountains. We will, however, meet the
following Friday night, May 7, at 730 p.m.
in Mendenhall 244. Hope to see you there!
Car wash
Divers
Hear ye! Hear ye! Hear ye! A car wash
by the Department of Social Work &
Corrections Student Advisory Committee
will be held at Pitt Plaza at the Shell Station
Saturday, May 1 from 10:00 - 3:00 at a
price of $1.00.
All persons who dive or who are
interested: The South Eastern North Arf chflW
Carolina Dive Club meeting will be ???Vlf
Monday, May 3, at 6:00 p.m. There will be
a Happy House, dinner and a presentation
by Jim Taylor on the N.C. Artificial Reef
Project. For more information or a ride call:
Debby Boyce 758-2358.
firad art
Entry forms fa the 2nd Annual Show
are available in this issue of Fountainhead.
Please note that art (ready to exhibit) is to
be turned in on Sunday, May 2, from 1 to 6
p.m. in Mendenhall. Show issponsaed by
ILLUMINA, the Student Union Art
Exhibition Committee.
This week in wald famous Mendenhall
Gallery the electric, eclectic nature of the
ECU Graduate School Art Dept. is on view
to all. The show features 45 waks of 25
artists and will remain on exhibition until
Sunday, May 2. Grad students who wish to
enter waks in the Greenville Sidewalk
Show may pick up wak at Friday, April 30
at 4 O0 p.m. sharp and other waks must be
picked up between 1 O0 and 6XX) p.m.
Sunday, May 2. Come experience the show
which is sponsaed by the Student Uniai
Art Exhibitiai Canmittee, ILLUMINA.
Phi Eta Sigma
The May meeting of Phi Eta Sigma will
take the fam of a picnic outing at Green
Springs Park (East Fifth Street) on
Monday, May 10, from 5DO- 7O0p.m. All
members are urged to attend and bring a
friend if they choose. Members who plan to
attend must sign a sheet in Dr. Ebbs' office
(Austin 214) no later than 12.00 noon on
Friday, May 7.
Grad record exam REAL
The Graduate Record Examination will
be offered at ECU on Sat June 12, 1976
Application blanks are to be oompleted and
mailed to Educational Testing Service,
Princeton, N.J. 08540toarrive by May 12,
1976. These applications are also available
at the Testing Centa, Rooms 105-106,
Speight Building, ECU.
Field school
Applications fa the East Carolina
Archaeological Field School, being held
first session summer, are now available
from the Archaeology Labaatay in Nath
Cafeteria.
Annual picnic
The Annual Spring Picnic of the ECU
League of Scholars will take place
Wednesday, May 12. Any member who
has not received a fam caicerning the
picnic should contact Dr. Ebbs fa details
and let him know if you're planning to
come. Please oontact him no later than
May 10.
If you wish to bring a date, please notify
Dr. Ebbs and note that you must being
$1.00 to cover expenses.
Seminar
The Computing Center will present a
seminar in Austin 201 at 4.00 p.m. on
Tuesday, May 4, 1976 entitled "Advanced
SPSS All interested persons are invited
to attend
Public hearing
Thae will be a public hearing on the
new proposed SGA Caistitutioi Thursday,
April 29, in the small auditaium BC-103 in
Brewster Building All students are invited
to attend.
Applications
The Entertainer Canmittee of the
Student Union is now taking applications
for membership. Applications can be
picked up at the Student Union office, room
234, Mendenhall daily. The Entertainer is
going to undergo maja changes to oover
Student Union news and activities in the
coming year. If you are interested, please
apply and it is also painless.
Have a problem? Need infamatioi?
Real Crisis Center open 24 hours. Cal
758-HELP a oome by 1117 Evans St.
Rho Epsilon
vili
to
las
he
ink
illy
ng
ow
?n
Rho Epsilon will hold a meeting next
Wed May 5.
Bill Clark will speak on renovation oC
Procta Hotel, at 300, in 221 Mendenhall.
of
en
xe
las
Ski Club
Cool Water Ski Club is providing free
transpatatioi and instructions fa skiinr.
slalom or on two skies forward or
backwards. Rafting and surfing is aisc
available. All meetings are held ir
Washington Fa rnae infamatiai cal
758-1640.
Basketball
There will be an Easter Seal Basketball
game between the SGA and the Greenville
Police Department. It will be the "Freaks
vs. Pigs" in a shoot out at Minges
Coliseum on May 6th. Student suppat-
ers are asked to attend to help with
community relations.
Buccaneer
Are you aeative? Do you like to writer
Are you involved with campus life ane
want to contribute to something wotr
while? If you answered yes to any of th
above questions we want you. If yo
answered no but would like to get involve
we still want you. There will be a meetin
of all persons intaested in waking ai th
Buccaneer staff fa 76-77 ai Wednesday
May 5 at 400 in the Buccaneer offia
located on the second floor of th
Publications Center. No experience neces
sary.
Animals Available
The dogs available fa adopt ion thi
week include a mixed shepard, a black an?
white, mixed breed, and two kittens. Th
people at Animal Control would like t
invite all interested persons to visit th
Animal Shelter located off Cemetery
on 2nd Street.
Memorial service Pub Board
A Memaiai Service fa ECU English
Professa Paul Farr and Russell Christman
will be presented on Sunday, May 9, at
7O0 p.m. in Mendenhall Student Center,
Room 244
Pub Board applications are now beir
taken fa the Pub Board of 76-77
year. Applications can be picked up
Wright room 204. Saeenings will be hej
the first week of May. It only takes a fe
minutes to apply and it is painless.

mmm





Title
Fountainhead, April 29, 1976
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
April 29, 1976
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.393
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/40040
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