<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00039999_0001"/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY VOL 7,NO.13<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA 23 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
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mm<lb/>
Students appeal dorm contracts<lb/>
By HELENA WOODARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The ECU Housing Appeals Committee heard several appeals from students<lb/>
Wednesday concerning housing contracts, according to Committee Chairman James<lb/>
H. Tucker.<lb/>
The contract states that only students who are planning to student teach,<lb/>
graduate, marry, or who have a medical excuse will be allowed to break the contract,<lb/>
according to Dan K. Wooten, ECU housing director.<lb/>
However, the students who are appealing are citing other reasons which should<lb/>
allow them to break the contracts.<lb/>
Reasons include roommate problems, grade problems, excessive noise and age,<lb/>
according to Danny Hinnant, MRC president and Appeals Committee member.<lb/>
"Freshmen and sophomores have a better chance of getting out of the contracts<lb/>
than do juniors and seniors Hinnant said.<lb/>
He explained that freshmen and sophomores with fewer than 96 hours are bound<lb/>
by a Board of Trustees rule which says that freshmen cannot live off-campus.<lb/>
Therefore, once they become juniors, they are automatically freed from the housing<lb/>
contract.<lb/>
However, the only case in which a freshman is usually allowed to break the<lb/>
contract is when the student returns home to be with parents, Hinnant said.<lb/>
According to Hinnant, no upperclassmen were able to get out of the contracts in<lb/>
the appeals meeting, but another meeting will be held later in the week to review<lb/>
more cases.<lb/>
One such case involved an older student who was unable to adjust to dorm living<lb/>
with eighteen and nineteen year old students. Hinnant and Wooten agreed this may<lb/>
be a legitimate reason to break a contract.<lb/>
"The committee has little leeway in interpreting the contract said Tucker.<lb/>
"This is the first time we've had a dorm contract system said Dan K. Wooten,<lb/>
ECU housing director. "The reason is because of the housing shortage. We had to<lb/>
turn away freshmen this fall even with the contracts. We want nine month people<lb/>
instead of six month people<lb/>
Students who break the contracts must make dorm payments in addition to losing<lb/>
a $60 deposit, according to Wooten.<lb/>
"The housing contract first had to be approved by the Board of Trustees, then it<lb/>
was studied and approved by the Attorney General's office Wooten said. He added<lb/>
that several other schools are also using the contract system.<lb/>
Wooten also said by getting nine month people in the dorms on a contract<lb/>
system, it will give housing a high occupancy rate. He added that the higher the<lb/>
occupancy rate, the more money would be saved by housing.<lb/>
"The person who decides he wants to move off campus is going to have<lb/>
problems Wooten said. "We warned students in the Spring Cuarter who had any<lb/>
doubts about living on campus to make off-campus arrangements. Students who do<lb/>
not want their rooms for nine months should go off campus in the beginning he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
JAMES TUCKER<lb/>
DAN WOOTEN<lb/>
SGA Rep. Arlington admits<lb/>
he's unqualified for legislature<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Student Government Association<lb/>
Legislator Phil Arrington recently<lb/>
admitted during an SGA meeting that,<lb/>
according to SGA rules, he is unqualified<lb/>
to be a legislator.<lb/>
Only full-time students are allowed to<lb/>
be SGA legislators.<lb/>
Arrington, an English graduate<lb/>
student, is unqualified because he is<lb/>
carrying only six hours while graduate<lb/>
students are required to carry nine hours<lb/>
to be qualified as full time students,<lb/>
Arrington, said.<lb/>
But, Arrington can only carry six<lb/>
hours since he is student teaching.<lb/>
Consequently he and other graduate<lb/>
students doing student teaching are<lb/>
denied many privileges which full time<lb/>
students enjoy, he said.<lb/>
Graduate students can carry only<lb/>
sixteen hours including their teaching<lb/>
load, according to Joseph G. Boyette,<lb/>
dean of the graduate school.<lb/>
"As far as I am concerned,<lb/>
Arrington is qualified to remain in the<lb/>
SGA said President Jimmy Honeycutt.<lb/>
Graduates who take only six hours<lb/>
and do not pay full time fees, pay their<lb/>
fees based on the quarter hours they are<lb/>
taking.<lb/>
Ragsdale renovations cost $400,000<lb/>
Bids taken, campus construction proceeds<lb/>
By TOM TOZER<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
The renovations of Ragsdale Hall and<lb/>
the original Joyner Library are just two of<lb/>
the recent construction projects on the<lb/>
campus of ECU.<lb/>
Firms in Wilson, Rocky Mount and<lb/>
Kinston, N.C were the low bidders for<lb/>
more than $400,000 worth of renovations<lb/>
to Ragsdale Hall which will become the<lb/>
operating base of the new School of<lb/>
Medicine at ECU.<lb/>
Ragsdale Hall is a former dormitory<lb/>
facing Fifth St. near the center of the<lb/>
ECU main campus. The facility has been<lb/>
unused for the past two years. Ragsdale<lb/>
was built in 1923 with an addition of a<lb/>
wing in 1953.<lb/>
"Ragsdale dorm was the only place<lb/>
on campus available as an operating med<lb/>
school base said Clifford G. Moore,<lb/>
ECU vice-chancellor of business affairs.<lb/>
"A proposal of using mobile home<lb/>
type classroom buildings was rejected in<lb/>
favor of renovating Ragsdale.<lb/>
�ut mmmm i miningimmwii<lb/>
RAGSDALE will become the new Med School base.<lb/>
"Ragsdale Hall will be used as a<lb/>
temporary base of the med school. The<lb/>
permanent base will be housed in the<lb/>
$7.6 million expansion of the Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
"For an approximate five year period,<lb/>
Ragsdale will house the med school base<lb/>
-then it will be returned to the dorm<lb/>
system said James J. Lowry. ECU<lb/>
director of physical maintenance and<lb/>
operations. "This is not to say the<lb/>
building will remain empty of medical<lb/>
equipment<lb/>
Budgeted appropriations for the<lb/>
Ragsdale renovation will total $550,000<lb/>
Overall costs will include design fees,<lb/>
contingencies and costs fo movable<lb/>
equipment.<lb/>
Besides administrative and faculty<lb/>
offices, Ragsdale will contain both<lb/>
teaching and research laboratories,<lb/>
classroom space and two basement areas<lb/>
for other medical research purposes. The<lb/>
facility has 36,978 square feet of space.<lb/>
See page 7.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
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EditorialsCommentary<lb/>
Banquet biff was proper<lb/>
The Student Government Association has bitten the bullet right off the<lb/>
bat this year in approving one of the toughest budget items during just the<lb/>
third legislative session.<lb/>
In action this past Monday, the SGA approved an appropriation of $1500<lb/>
earmarked for an SGA banquet which will be held next Spring.<lb/>
In the past the SGA has waited until the 11th hour, late in the Spring<lb/>
quarter, to appropriate money for this annual affair.<lb/>
Last year the appropriation bill was for $1275 and the event was held at<lb/>
the best "joint" in Greenville, the Candlewick Inn. Some 100 legislators, SGA<lb/>
officers, invited student guests and administration officials were wined,<lb/>
dined and even had the chance to dance during the event.<lb/>
Sounds lavish doesn't it? Well, it was to some extent.<lb/>
But, to the student legislators, and officials who attended it was damn<lb/>
poor compensation for the thousands of hours of work they put in to make<lb/>
student government work.<lb/>
For the record, only a handful of SGA officials are paid, namely the SGA<lb/>
president and his cabinet, and their pay is low. The members of the SGA that<lb/>
were elected this Dast month are required to attend one regular session a<lb/>
week, which usually lasts at least 90 minutes, then one or more committee<lb/>
meetings a week<lb/>
Spending $1275 on a banquet is pitiful poor pay for all the work that last<lb/>
year's student government put in on behalf of the students.<lb/>
But, the event last year was criticized by some legislators who questioned<lb/>
the wisdom of giving such a lavish bash for the SGA.<lb/>
No doubt the banquet this year will be questioned.<lb/>
But, without a doubt, the banquet, whether it costs $1275, $1500 or even<lb/>
$2500, is the very least that can be done for students who work as many long<lb/>
and hard hours during the course of a school year as most SGA members do.<lb/>
Of course there are goldbricks who do very little. But, for the most part,<lb/>
SGA members are hard working students who have the added job of juggling<lb/>
SGA work with school work.<lb/>
The members of the SGA did of course make their own choice to run for<lb/>
office. And they were all aware that no salary went with the job.<lb/>
But, can we really expect them to put in hundreds of hours of work<lb/>
during the year for absolutely nothing? Some students may think this is fair.<lb/>
But, we think that the very least these students deserve is a banquet at<lb/>
the end of the year when recognition is given to those who have worked hard<lb/>
for the past nine months with little thanks and praise.<lb/>
During debate on the bill last week one legislator noted that he did not<lb/>
think he could justify the expenditure to his constituents.<lb/>
Hell, he should not have to. When a group puts in time over the course<lb/>
of a year that the SGA does, to have to worry about spending $1500 on itself<lb/>
is ridiculous.<lb/>
As far as we are concerned, the appropriation could have been more, and<lb/>
still pitiful poor pay for a hard year's work.<lb/>
v-<lb/>
"Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without<lb/>
newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment to<lb/>
prefer the latter<lb/>
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer<lb/>
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant<lb/>
Production Manager- Sydney Green<lb/>
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson<lb/>
News Editor-Jim Elliott<lb/>
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Tise<lb/>
Features Editor-Jim Dodson<lb/>
Sports Editor-John Evans<lb/>
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by the<lb/>
Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday during<lb/>
the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 758-6309<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non students.<lb/>
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fTQ ��fVn THE 2<lb/>
( INPOSSIblE DREAm I<lb/>
Teacher unrest<lb/>
Editor's Note: The following editorial appears in the Oct. issue of N.C.<lb/>
Education Magazine, published by the N.C.E.A. We think that the comments<lb/>
in the editorial are especially timely and relevant to ECU since this institution<lb/>
is the largest producer of teachers in the state and since the lack of pay<lb/>
raises also applies to the hundred of workers on the ECU staff.<lb/>
Teachers have now had their first paycheck of the year, and the lack of a<lb/>
salary increase for 1975-76 has been driven home by the stark figures. Given<lb/>
the increased deductions which applied this year.many NCAE members have<lb/>
found themselves with fewer actual dollars, even before inflation is counted<lb/>
in.<lb/>
It is not surprising, then, that teacher unrest is on the rise. Public school<lb/>
educators have had no general salary increase since the fall of 1974, and that<lb/>
increase was only five percent in a year when inflation ate up more than 10<lb/>
percent of the dollar's purchasing power. Since 1974, the educator's salary<lb/>
has stood still while prices have continued to rocket ahead.<lb/>
At the heart of the present teacher unrest is fear, fear that a shrinking<lb/>
paycheck - for that is what it is - cannot be stretched much thinner, that an<lb/>
already curtailed living standard must somehow be reduced still further. Fear,<lb/>
also, that the gains won so dearly over so many General Assembly sessions<lb/>
are to evaporate in a period of two years.<lb/>
The beginning teacher salary in North Carolina is still just over $8,000<lb/>
annually. Add a wife and a child or two, and that teacher is well below the<lb/>
poverty level and is, indeed, a candidate for food stamps and free lunches for<lb/>
his children.<lb/>
Educators are not alone in their unrest. State employees, community<lb/>
college personnel, and higher educational personnel, are all in a similar<lb/>
situation. Some college faculties are openly talking of organizing to bargain<lb/>
collectively. Garbage collectors and police have already demonstrated that<lb/>
the state's anti-bargaining law is effective only as long as it is not tested.<lb/>
Hopefully, the men and women who return to Raleigh on May 3, 1976,<lb/>
recognize the seriousness of the situation in which public employees find<lb/>
themselves. These people can't raise their prices to cope with inflation; they<lb/>
can't count on hiking the interest rate they receive on their "capital they<lb/>
can't petition the Utilities Commission for a "fair" earnings ratio. All they can<lb/>
do is present their cases to the General Assembly, hopeful that'that body<lb/>
will recognize their dilemma and act to relieve it.<lb/>
Public employees - teachers included - cannot be expected to forever<lb/>
subsidize, with lower paychecks, their employer. Today's unrest can turn into<lb/>
something a great deal more serious very quickly. And it is our judgment that<lb/>
the fine line which separates the two is rapidly being approached.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
3<lb/>
T<lb/>
heForum<lb/>
Over mistakes in yearbook<lb/>
Buc editor offers explanation<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The 1975 BUCCANEERS'have finally<lb/>
arrived on campus and are being<lb/>
distributed to the students Thursday and<lb/>
Friday. There are several things which<lb/>
should be said to the student body in the<lb/>
way of apologies and explanations. First,<lb/>
the yearbooks did not arrive on campus<lb/>
until Friday afternoon. Graduates<lb/>
received theirs before this week because<lb/>
they were mailed directly from the plant.<lb/>
We could not distribute until this<lb/>
week because the books were temporarily<lb/>
stored in a basement and had to be<lb/>
moved upstairs to our office for<lb/>
distribution. The university could not aid<lb/>
in the unloading or moving of the books<lb/>
so any student that helped Friday<lb/>
received their books early. Everyone else<lb/>
had to wait until Wednesday.<lb/>
I would like to thank all of those<lb/>
students that unloaded the books off the<lb/>
truck in the rain Friday afternoon.<lb/>
Without their help we could not<lb/>
distribute the books at all. This thanks<lb/>
especially goes to the Delta Zeta sorority<lb/>
and Pi Kappa Phi fraternity.<lb/>
Second, there are mistakes in the<lb/>
book and for these we apologize,<lb/>
especially to the Football team, Coach<lb/>
Dye and Bobby Myrick for the<lb/>
misidentifications.<lb/>
Our apology also goes to the Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi Fraternity.<lb/>
Third, our staff last year began with<lb/>
about 12 people, about eight finished the<lb/>
book. Two of the people who quit were<lb/>
our Organizations editor and our Greek<lb/>
editor. These two sections were<lb/>
completed late by the co-editors from<lb/>
what little information we could gather.<lb/>
Student<lb/>
likes new<lb/>
Buc<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I've looked through the '75<lb/>
BUCCANEER and Ilike it! The staff<lb/>
did a superb job with layout, content,<lb/>
and coverage. Thank you for giving me<lb/>
an annual I want to put on my bookshelf.<lb/>
I've already heard some petty complaints<lb/>
about the book's lack of pizazz Some<lb/>
people just can't be pleased. They should<lb/>
remember the yearbook is a product of<lb/>
long hours of students' work and not the<lb/>
magical stroke of a wand. If they want<lb/>
something more striking, they should go<lb/>
to the Stop and Go and buy some<lb/>
matches.<lb/>
Linda Fisher<lb/>
We realize there are mistakes, however<lb/>
with no one on the staff familiar with the<lb/>
Greeks and the rest of the organizations<lb/>
we did the best we could with the<lb/>
photographs our photographer gave us.<lb/>
This year we have a larger staff and a<lb/>
new photographer, and we feel we can do<lb/>
a better job if everyone will give us a<lb/>
chance.<lb/>
We would also like to apologize for<lb/>
some of the poor pictures. However, we<lb/>
felt that some coverage was better than<lb/>
no coverage at all.<lb/>
The BUCCANEER staff would like to<lb/>
hear all complaints, criticisms and<lb/>
comments about the book. We will<lb/>
carefully consider these in planning our<lb/>
1976 yearbook. Students should write or<lb/>
come by our office located in the<lb/>
publications center.<lb/>
Again thanks to all those that helped<lb/>
move and distribute the book and we<lb/>
would like to sincerely apologize to<lb/>
everyone for the mistakes. We will try to<lb/>
do better next year but we need your<lb/>
help. All campus organizations and<lb/>
departments should contact us of all<lb/>
activities and send us all necessary<lb/>
information so mistakes can be<lb/>
eliminated.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Monika Sutherland,<lb/>
1976 BUCCANEER Editor<lb/>
0 0 0<lb/>
Student upset<lb/>
by new yean<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I have just finished looking at the<lb/>
1975 Buccaneer. I am a junior at East<lb/>
Carolina and although there have been<lb/>
things done here in the past that have<lb/>
upset me before, this is my first letter to<lb/>
Fountainhead. First off let me say that<lb/>
overall this year's Buc was a job poorly<lb/>
done. It seems no one uses a dictionary<lb/>
on the Buccaneer staff as there are<lb/>
numerous misspelled words, it also<lb/>
seems that they cannot even copy<lb/>
people's names off the rosters and<lb/>
sheets given to them, as they are also<lb/>
mispelled.<lb/>
There are few photographs for a<lb/>
yearbook with a student body the size of<lb/>
ECU. The ones that were taken however,<lb/>
were mostly shabby looking and unclear.<lb/>
Photographer Rick Goldman, who was<lb/>
responsible for the pictures in this year's<lb/>
edition, must have taken the majority of<lb/>
them after leaving downtown. All but one<lb/>
picture that is, the one of himself on<lb/>
page 179, which takes a full page.<lb/>
Goldman appears twice on that page and<lb/>
there is only one picture. It seems that<lb/>
Mr. Goldman's head is bigger than his<lb/>
photographic ability. It also seems a<lb/>
shame to use a full page for his face as<lb/>
there was no room in the annual for the<lb/>
Men's Residence Council or the Varsity<lb/>
Tennis team. Two organizations I believe<lb/>
deserve to be included in any collegiate<lb/>
yearbook.<lb/>
There are numerous other mistakes in<lb/>
this year's book. The picture of head<lb/>
football coach Pat Dye on page 108 is<lb/>
not Pat Dye. On pages 305 and 306, are<lb/>
the words Phi Kappa Pi in large bold<lb/>
print which should read Pi Kappa Phi.<lb/>
As big as the print is, I cannot<lb/>
understand how anyone on the<lb/>
Buccaneer staff would let this, and the<lb/>
other mistakes pass unnoticed.<lb/>
A yearbook is something that we will<lb/>
keep for a long time, often looking<lb/>
through it and remembering our college<lb/>
lives. The Buccaneer represents the<lb/>
student body, the administration, the<lb/>
athletic teams, the organizations on<lb/>
campus and everything else that happens<lb/>
at, or deals with, East Carolina<lb/>
University. It seems a shame that the<lb/>
Buccaneer staff could not find the time<lb/>
to do their job right and proofread and<lb/>
make sure organizations and individuals<lb/>
whose work deserves recognition, were<lb/>
not left out. Maybe if the publishers who<lb/>
printed this edition had left them out, the<lb/>
book would have been more of a<lb/>
success. As it is, however, this year's<lb/>
Buc is not.<lb/>
Pissed Off<lb/>
mm<lb/>
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m<lb/>
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m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Gym is for<lb/>
student use<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The facilities at ECU should be here for<lb/>
the benefit of the faculty and students who<lb/>
pay the money and keep the school<lb/>
running. Not for the citizens of Greenville.<lb/>
This should include Memorial Gym, night<lb/>
as well as day. It's a sad shame when the<lb/>
students who are paying the money to<lb/>
attend a university are shut out of using<lb/>
the facilities they are paying for. Someone<lb/>
should be at the door checking I.D.s and<lb/>
allowing only students and faculty<lb/>
members of ECU in Memorial Gym at<lb/>
night. We hope the SGA will take the<lb/>
appropriate action to see that something is<lb/>
done to improve this situation. We are not<lb/>
paying to give the people of Greenville a<lb/>
place to play basketball<lb/>
Carter McKaughom '78<lb/>
Andy Nance '78<lb/>
D.L Kankinee'79<lb/>
William M. Rhyne 78<lb/>
Roman Parrish'78<lb/>
Wayne Jones'79<lb/>
tfWflMMM<lb/>
Will band<lb/>
make trip<lb/>
to UNC ?<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I am very concerned about a rumor I<lb/>
heard during Homecoming weekend. It<lb/>
was the one dark spot on an otherwise<lb/>
fantastic three days. Many thanks to<lb/>
all who participated in planning the<lb/>
festivities.<lb/>
But Homecoming 75 is over and we<lb/>
have the rest of the season ahead of us. I<lb/>
was told over the weekend that the<lb/>
Marching Pirates will be performing at the<lb/>
Virginia game but will not be performing at<lb/>
Chapel Hill next weekend. Can anyone<lb/>
explain the rationale behind this state of<lb/>
affairs? Finances are always a concern but<lb/>
let's face it, a trip to Chapel Hill cannot<lb/>
cost as much as a trip to<lb/>
Charlottesvilleand I think most Pirate fans<lb/>
would agree that the band will be needed<lb/>
more against our in-state rivals up at<lb/>
Chapel Hill than against the Virginians.<lb/>
I hope this rumor is false or if it is not,<lb/>
that some argument can be made to have<lb/>
the Marching Bucs at Chapel Hill. They are<lb/>
a band that ECU can be proud of and<lb/>
anyone who sat through their pre-game<lb/>
and half-time shows Saturday without a<lb/>
cold child or two started partying too<lb/>
easily The Marching Tar Heels never had it<lb/>
so good.<lb/>
We have a "turned around" football<lb/>
team. The 42-14 shellacking they handed<lb/>
to WCU Saturday shows what our Pirates<lb/>
can do. Next Saturday can and should be<lb/>
their third game in our new winning streak.<lb/>
The Marching Bucs could help play an<lb/>
important part in that big number three. I<lb/>
for one and I'm sure many others, would<lb/>
rather have the band at Chapel Hill than at<lb/>
Charlottesville so if there is any way, let's<lb/>
get it in gear and have a winning band in<lb/>
Chapel Hill with our winning Pirate<lb/>
football team.<lb/>
Marching Pirates and Football Pirates,<lb/>
we love you.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Joe Stroud<lb/>
Class of 73<lb/>
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY<lb/>
By DANIEL PREVATTE<lb/>
Phillipians 2:10, 11 "Every knee should<lb/>
bow and every tongue confess that Jesus<lb/>
Christ is Lord<lb/>
Lew Wallace was a very famous<lb/>
general and literary genius. He and his<lb/>
dear friend, Robert Ingersoll, the famous<lb/>
skeptic, covenanted together that they<lb/>
would write a book to forever destroy the<lb/>
myth of Christianity.<lb/>
For two years, Mr. Wallace studied in<lb/>
the leading libraries of Europe and<lb/>
America, seeking information which<lb/>
would enable him to write a book which<lb/>
would destroy Christianity. While writing<lb/>
the second chapter of his book, he<lb/>
suddenly found himself on his knees,<lb/>
crying out, "My Lord and my God<lb/>
Lew Wallace went on to write Bin<lb/>
Hut, probably the greatest novel ever<lb/>
written concerning the time of Christ.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039999_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
ii n�w mi i Mini mm win i iyw<lb/>
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Possible change in near future<lb/>
Students, administration ponder;<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
quarter or semester system<lb/>
Recently it was reported in the FOUNTAINHEAD that the university hopes to make<lb/>
the change from our present quarter system to the semester system in just a few<lb/>
years. This future change has constituted many opposing comments from the<lb/>
students at ECU. So let's hear it: what do the students think of the plans to go on<lb/>
the semester system?<lb/>
The first obvious point in favor of the<lb/>
the semester system is that more indepth<lb/>
study can be acquired in classes. As<lb/>
Steve Micham commented, "I think we're<lb/>
trying to cram too much information into<lb/>
the academic courses on a quarter<lb/>
system. We'd be able to get more out of<lb/>
certain courses the other way. Some<lb/>
courses really require more attention than<lb/>
a quarter system can allot to them He<lb/>
went further to say that vacation time<lb/>
would be favorably affected, too. "Other<lb/>
schools now have ten or so days for each<lb/>
vacation, whereas were only getting<lb/>
three or four. And the semester system<lb/>
'would help our summer job situation,<lb/>
too: We would get out of school at the<lb/>
same time as the other schools. As it is<lb/>
now, they already have all of the good<lb/>
jobs by the time we're out. Of course,<lb/>
the switch will cause a lot of confusion<lb/>
at first, but in the long run I think we'd<lb/>
be better off. Shoot, at least we wouldn't<lb/>
have to take mid-terms and finals every<lb/>
time we turned around<lb/>
Unique experience<lb/>
Chester Hardison backed Micham on<lb/>
all points, especially those of too many<lb/>
exams and too little time in classes. "I<lb/>
think the semester system could be<lb/>
much better than the quarter system. Six<lb/>
big exams a year is just too much. And,<lb/>
you never really get started in a course<lb/>
before it's over; As soon as you learn<lb/>
what a professor expects from you, etc<lb/>
it's too late to use the information.<lb/>
Furthermore, longer vacations would be<lb/>
nice<lb/>
"In essence, it's a question of time<lb/>
says student Bob Gurganus. "I agree<lb/>
with the change, primarily for the<lb/>
development of the student-teacher<lb/>
relationship; the semester system would<lb/>
allow teachers to devote more time and<lb/>
energy to their students on a more<lb/>
individual basis. Conversely, the students<lb/>
would have an opportunity to do greater<lb/>
and more intense work in a particular<lb/>
field of study that's not allowed in a<lb/>
quarter system<lb/>
Other students, such as Kevin<lb/>
Gaghan, emphasized the desirability of<lb/>
more time to spend on courses. "We'd<lb/>
have more time to develop things like<lb/>
term papers, and we'd have longer to<lb/>
read all the books we're assigned<lb/>
But what will happen when we get<lb/>
"stuck" with a bad course or an<lb/>
"undesirable" professor? A few students<lb/>
felt that the semester system might be<lb/>
good for non-general college courses,<lb/>
but bad for general college courses and<lb/>
made such comments as, "A whole<lb/>
semester is too long to have to sit<lb/>
through Health 12<lb/>
One of the students against making<lb/>
the switch was Kati Ray. "Both sides<lb/>
have their advantages and disadvantages,<lb/>
but I prefer the quarter system. This way,<lb/>
if you get stuck with a teacher or class<lb/>
you don't like, you don't have to put up<lb/>
with it for a whole semester. And, too,<lb/>
on a quarter system, final exams don't<lb/>
include so much. Granted, we'd get<lb/>
longer vacations at one time and be out<lb/>
at the same time as our friends who are<lb/>
on the semester system at other<lb/>
colleges. But, now we get three breaks<lb/>
and can start all over again three<lb/>
different times. So, if you blow it one<lb/>
quarter, you have two more chances to<lb/>
make it up and each time you get new<lb/>
classes, new teachers, and a new<lb/>
inspiration to do better<lb/>
A very interesting point for<lb/>
consideration, so far not discussed, was<lb/>
mentioned by Pat Judge. Pat is a PRC<lb/>
major. Recently the PRC curriculum was<lb/>
changed. She is concerned about how<lb/>
this switch to the semester system will<lb/>
affect the newly organized PRC<lb/>
curriculum. "Does this mean we'll have to<lb/>
throw it all out and start over again?<lb/>
This, I think is going to be rough on our<lb/>
department, for sure<lb/>
But Pat spoke of another point in<lb/>
favor of the transformation that many<lb/>
other students mentioned, also. "If we<lb/>
were on the semester system, though,<lb/>
transfer students wouldn't have such a<lb/>
hard time with their credit hours as they<lb/>
do now<lb/>
Yet overall, the majority of the<lb/>
students questioned were greatly<lb/>
confused as to what the change will<lb/>
mean for them. Many even reflected<lb/>
degrees of panic over the oncoming<lb/>
semester system division of the<lb/>
academic year because they simply do<lb/>
not understand it.<lb/>
However, one student felt she<lb/>
"understood" the reason why we're<lb/>
turning away from our present quarter<lb/>
system. She summed up her suspicions<lb/>
by saying, "I'm just getting damned tired<lb/>
of this university trying to keep up with<lb/>
Chapel Hill<lb/>
Foreign students reflect on American college life<lb/>
By PAT COYLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Life at ECU, a continuation of the<lb/>
normal life for most young North<lb/>
Carolina students, is a unique experience<lb/>
for foreign exchange students Francoise<lb/>
Roux of France, and Alex Coles of Costa<lb/>
Rica.<lb/>
In comparing campus life here and in<lb/>
her hometown of Aix-en-Provence, Roux<lb/>
cited the classroom atmosphere as a<lb/>
major difference.<lb/>
"In France there is no roll call in<lb/>
class. If you don't want to come to class,<lb/>
no one knows the difference. Also, the<lb/>
students seldom participate in any class<lb/>
discussion she said.<lb/>
Roux, a 22-year old graduate student<lb/>
in English, went on to say that in France<lb/>
there is seldom any type of amity<lb/>
between students and faculty. "You don't<lb/>
even really get to know any of your<lb/>
classmates either she said.<lb/>
For Coles, a 22-year old geography<lb/>
major from San Jose, Costa Rica, there<lb/>
are big curriculum differences between<lb/>
ECU, and his school, the Universidad<lb/>
Nationale.<lb/>
FRANCOISE ROUX<lb/>
"In Costa Rica, once you start taking<lb/>
courses in your specialization, you don't<lb/>
take anything else<lb/>
In France, said Roux, "We spend<lb/>
seven years at the high school level, so<lb/>
when a student enters college, his mind<lb/>
is made up on his major<lb/>
Roux and Coles agree that the<lb/>
political atmosphere at ECU is different<lb/>
from what they're used to.<lb/>
"Most Costa Rican students are<lb/>
affiliated with a political party said<lb/>
Coles. "The political atmosphere at the<lb/>
colleges are usually projections of the<lb/>
national political scene<lb/>
"The students in France are more<lb/>
involved politically said Roux. "The<lb/>
political groups actually fight on campus,<lb/>
and there are no police at the<lb/>
universities, so no one tries to stop<lb/>
them<lb/>
The extracurricular facets of Green-<lb/>
ville life have provided new experiences<lb/>
for both Roux and Coles.<lb/>
"Few students at my university Mve in<lb/>
dorms said Roux. "Those who do all<lb/>
have private rooms, and they seldom<lb/>
make friends with or even acquaintances<lb/>
of their neighbors<lb/>
She went on to say dorm telephones<lb/>
would be unheard of in France, and that<lb/>
people here make more effort to decorate<lb/>
their rooms with posters, stuffed<lb/>
animals, and the like.<lb/>
Coles told of trying his hand at dorm<lb/>
cooking. "I'm learning, but I make a lot<lb/>
of mistakes he said.<lb/>
"There are a lot more things to do<lb/>
after class here he said. "You can play<lb/>
pinball machines, or go downtown, if you<lb/>
want a change. We don't have these<lb/>
things too much in Costa Rica<lb/>
"It's easy to make friends here.<lb/>
People are friendly, both in classes and<lb/>
in the dorm said Roux.<lb/>
Subt<lb/>
Tu<lb/>
In orde<lb/>
transform<lb/>
must, in<lb/>
existing o<lb/>
by the r<lb/>
popularity<lb/>
Jane Colle<lb/>
Jane a<lb/>
toward the<lb/>
cheap so 1<lb/>
skateboarc<lb/>
coolest Jc<lb/>
medium-1<lb/>
coiffure <lb/>
growth c<lb/>
concent ral<lb/>
the jawb<lb/>
temples.<lb/>
Jane <lb/>
pains wit!<lb/>
dress is v<lb/>
prerequisi<lb/>
(One adv<lb/>
naturaly<lb/>
Hahahaha<lb/>
E<lb/>
Today<lb/>
Entertainr<lb/>
If you<lb/>
office ar<lb/>
young m<lb/>
shorts an<lb/>
clever w<lb/>
Brandon<lb/>
Brandi<lb/>
the rundo<lb/>
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concert,<lb/>
starring <lb/>
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and Eric (<lb/>
Bob Dyli<lb/>
where I<lb/>
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and said,<lb/>
Would yo<lb/>
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Reviews I<lb/>
reporter.<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Brand'<lb/>
and is pr(<lb/>
in history<lb/>
job for rr<lb/>
or New Y<lb/>
recording<lb/>
a perforr<lb/>
originals<lb/>
the guita<lb/>
When<lb/>
reviewing<lb/>
Greenvilli<lb/>
on the 1<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL.<lb/>
7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
5<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
Subtle transition<lb/>
 l <lb/>
Turning 'Joe College' into 'Joe Cool<lb/>
n<lb/>
ioint for<lb/>
issed, was<lb/>
is a PRC<lb/>
:ulum was<lb/>
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point in<lb/>
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'e such a<lb/>
rs as they<lb/>
of the<lb/>
greatly<lb/>
ange will<lb/>
reflected<lb/>
oncoming<lb/>
of the<lb/>
imply do<lb/>
felt she<lb/>
ly we're<lb/>
t quarter<lb/>
jspicions<lb/>
med tired<lb/>
up with<lb/>
lephones<lb/>
and that I<lb/>
decorate<lb/>
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at dorm<lb/>
ike a lot<lb/>
s to do<lb/>
;an play<lb/>
i, if you<lb/>
b these<lb/>
3 here.<lb/>
ses and<lb/>
By ALICE SIMMONS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In order for an average Joe College to<lb/>
transform into a Joe Cool College, he<lb/>
must, in addition to joining every<lb/>
existing organization on campus, abide<lb/>
by the heretofore unwritten laws of<lb/>
popularity at ECU. (This holds true for<lb/>
Jane Colleges also.)<lb/>
Jane and Joe must invest some cash<lb/>
toward the purchase of a Frisbee (sounds<lb/>
cheap so far), a ten-speed bike (uh-oh), a<lb/>
skateboard (groan), and a dog !(. The<lb/>
coolest Joe College is characterized by a<lb/>
medium-length, parted-in-the-middle<lb/>
coiffure and an extremely noticeable<lb/>
growth on his face (hair, usually)<lb/>
concentrating above the mouth and over<lb/>
the jawbone and extending to the<lb/>
temples.<lb/>
Jane Cool doesn't take such great<lb/>
pains with her hairstyle. Her manner of<lb/>
dress is what counts. Black leotards are<lb/>
prerequisites for a cool clothing code.<lb/>
(One advantage of this is that people<lb/>
naturaly assume she takes dancing!<lb/>
Hahahahaha)<lb/>
In their quiet moments, tne popular<lb/>
people of ECU can be sighted at various<lb/>
spots on campus. A few can usually be<lb/>
seen sitting around Wright Circle<lb/>
hurriedly doing homework "by the dawn's<lb/>
�arly light<lb/>
A cool couple romantically secluded<lb/>
in a foot-traffic-busy dorm door can be<lb/>
observed locked together in a breath-<lb/>
taking embrace. (Upon closer inspection,<lb/>
it is evident that they are literally "locked<lb/>
together" at the waist by two bicycle<lb/>
chain locks.)<lb/>
So, a composite picture of Big Shots<lb/>
on Campus involved a bearded guy on a<lb/>
28-inch Schwinn pitching Frisbees to his<lb/>
Great Dane while en route to a rendevous<lb/>
with his sloppy-haired girlfriend who is<lb/>
killing time by racing up and down her<lb/>
dorm hall on a skateboard and informing<lb/>
anyone who cares that she has on black<lb/>
leotards (which implies she knows how<lb/>
to dance!)!<lb/>
Yes, you too can find genuine<lb/>
fulfillment in your college years simply<lb/>
by adhering to the code of popularity at<lb/>
East Carolina. Leave organizations,<lb/>
staffs, and committees to those who<lb/>
thrive on hard labor. The fun life can be<lb/>
yours for the buying. What is money<lb/>
when compared with the intangible but<lb/>
lofty status rank you will attain through<lb/>
becoming cooL<lb/>
You can develop into a Jane or Joe<lb/>
Cool simply by becoming a stereotype of<lb/>
every other Jane or Joe Cool roaming<lb/>
Sex, ho hum<lb/>
this campus. Mind you, this total bliss<lb/>
does not necessarily have to terminate at<lb/>
the end of four years. Abstinence from<lb/>
all academically related activities will<lb/>
assure you of the opportunity to remain<lb/>
at ECU for as long as you feel you have<lb/>
to. Perhaps a future program here will<lb/>
include a degree in Living on Absolute<lb/>
Fun (L.O.A.F.) designed just for you.<lb/>
(CPS)-South Carolina students just aren't<lb/>
that intersted in sex anymore, if the<lb/>
enrollment in a University of South<lb/>
Carolina short course in lovemaking is any<lb/>
indication. The course was cancelled this<lb/>
year due to lack of student interest.<lb/>
The course covered the physiology of<lb/>
sex organs, masturbation, homosexuals<lb/>
and other topics students were interested<lb/>
in.<lb/>
Gynecologist W.M. Bryan, the<lb/>
instructor, said the students used to come<lb/>
"in droves. Every Monday night at 7, they<lb/>
filled the amphitheater with 300 to 400<lb/>
people<lb/>
Bryan said attendance dropped, either<lb/>
because "the excitement wore off or<lb/>
everyone knew what they wanted to. Only a<lb/>
handful of students started attending and I<lb/>
felt it was no longer needed<lb/>
What the University needs now, Bryan<lb/>
said, is a course in the psychological<lb/>
implications of sex or a course on venereal<lb/>
disease.<lb/>
EDITORS AT LARGE<lb/>
By LYNN CAVERLY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Today's editor is Brandon Tise,<lb/>
Entertainment Editor.<lb/>
If you are even in the Fountainhead<lb/>
office and see a certain dark-haired<lb/>
young man running around in tennis<lb/>
shorts and entertaining everyone with his<lb/>
clever wit, that will in all probability be<lb/>
Brandon rise, Entertainment Editor.<lb/>
Brandon is the guy who gives us all<lb/>
the rundown on what to see and where to<lb/>
go in Greenville. Brandon's job has taken<lb/>
him to Charlotte to review a Bob Dylan<lb/>
concert, to New York to review a play<lb/>
starring an ECU graduate, and various<lb/>
other concerts such as George Harrison<lb/>
and Eric Clapton. "As a matter of fact the<lb/>
Bob Dylan concert led indirectly to<lb/>
where I am now said Brandon. "In<lb/>
January of 74, I walked into the office<lb/>
and said, 'I'm going to the Dylan concert.<lb/>
Would you like a review'?<lb/>
"I did the story and eventually became<lb/>
Reviews Editor after doing my stint as a<lb/>
reporter. Now I am Entertainment<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Brandon hails from WinstorvSalem<lb/>
and is presently a senior who is majoring<lb/>
in history. But music is his forte. "No 9-5<lb/>
job for me. I want to go to Los Angeles<lb/>
or New York and hopefully get a job in a<lb/>
recording company, either as a writer or<lb/>
a performer Brandon has about fifty<lb/>
originals to his credit, along with playing<lb/>
the jguitar.<lb/>
When Brandon isn't studying or<lb/>
reviewing a film currently playing in<lb/>
Greenville, he can most likely be found<lb/>
on the tennis courts, or spraining his<lb/>
ankle playing football. He also enjoys<lb/>
eating, "mainly lasagna and Chow Su<lb/>
Ding<lb/>
Qbc) southeastern 7?<lb/>
When asked about his job he<lb/>
answered, "I feel college students are the<lb/>
most honest reviewers of movies,<lb/>
concerts, albums, etc. We don't have to<lb/>
play up any one certain film or group to<lb/>
retain our positions, which unfortunately<lb/>
is the case of some older reviewers who<lb/>
try to pretend they know a lot about rock<lb/>
music. I feel my writers are just as<lb/>
qualified, and we aren't hindered by our<lb/>
size. I feel the most rotten thing in the<lb/>
entertainment field are those reviews that<lb/>
play up something which isn't worth a<lb/>
student's time or money, to go see or<lb/>
listen to<lb/>
Brandon's main objective is to "be<lb/>
happy and try not to step on anyone<lb/>
else's toes, and to keep mine from<lb/>
getting stepped on. I also would like to<lb/>
feel confident enough in whatever I do to<lb/>
know that when I walk out of a room, no<lb/>
one will call me asshole<lb/>
P<lb/>
m<lb/>
STARS OCT. 31 'TOMMY<lb/>
YIIIIIIITTTTn<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
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Citizens misunderstand leash law<lb/>
By CARLA HOKE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Audro Barrett, animal patrol officer at<lb/>
the Greenville Animal Shelter, said the<lb/>
city's leash law remains gravely<lb/>
misunderstood by local residents.<lb/>
Barrett said the ordinance, which<lb/>
became effective May 1, serves to protect<lb/>
the animals.<lb/>
"Landowners get upset and may go to<lb/>
extremes such as poisoning and beating<lb/>
stray dogs who roam their property said<lb/>
Barrett. "If people knew where their dogs<lb/>
were at all times, then there would be a<lb/>
lot fewer animals hurt and killed; not<lb/>
only injured by people, but by cars<lb/>
Cheryl Little, assistant animal patrol<lb/>
officer at the animal shelter, said many<lb/>
residents just will not obey the<lb/>
ordinance.<lb/>
"One guy whose dog was picked up<lb/>
more than once told us he'd rather pay<lb/>
the $25 court fee and the $5 kennel cost<lb/>
every time than tie up his dog said<lb/>
Little. "A few days later we had to call<lb/>
and tell him his dog had been hit by a<lb/>
car on First St. and killed. He was pretty<lb/>
surprised and shaken up<lb/>
"No one seems to realize that they<lb/>
can still run their dogs in the park or on<lb/>
the mall without a leash added Barrett.<lb/>
"If the circumstances are safe, and<lb/>
they're watching now and then, we have<lb/>
no reason to bother them<lb/>
Barrett and Little both said the<lb/>
number of stray dogs being picked up<lb/>
has not changed substantially despite the<lb/>
ordinance, but a definite decrease has<lb/>
been noticed in the number of dogs<lb/>
contracting contagious diseases such as<lb/>
mange.<lb/>
Barrett attributes this decrease to the<lb/>
fewer number of privately owned dogs<lb/>
running unattended with the strays.<lb/>
we.<lb/>
want �<lb/>
your soul!<lb/>
mW on paper of course<lb/>
The Rebel, East Carolina's Literary-Art magazine,<lb/>
is sponsoring a Literary-Art contest for students<lb/>
at East Carolina. First prizes off $100.00 and sec<lb/>
ond prizes off $50.00 will be awarded in three<lb/>
categories: Poetry , Short Stories, And Art work.<lb/>
Deadline for the contest is November 30. Entries<lb/>
may be submitted at the Rebel offfice in the Pub<lb/>
lications Center between the hours off 3 to 5,<lb/>
Tuesdays through Thursdays.<lb/>
Faculty Senate meets i<lb/>
Drop extension proposed<lb/>
By JOHN DAYBERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Course Drop Appeals Committee<lb/>
of the ECU Faculty Senate has<lb/>
recommended that the period in which a<lb/>
student may drop a course free of penalty<lb/>
be from 20 to 25 days after the beginning<lb/>
of a quarter.<lb/>
Haitian's<lb/>
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The recommendation, which was<lb/>
referred to the Credits Committee at the<lb/>
October 21 meeting of the senate, also<lb/>
urges faculty to give and grade at least<lb/>
one quiz or written assignment during<lb/>
this 25 day period.<lb/>
The recommendation is a result of<lb/>
student complaints over the past two<lb/>
years that teachers were giving no graded<lb/>
assignments during the 20 day period in<lb/>
which a course can be dropped penalty<lb/>
free.<lb/>
After the allotted period, a student<lb/>
dropping a course gets either a passing<lb/>
or failing grade for the course, unless he<lb/>
or she gets special permission from the<lb/>
Provost.<lb/>
In other business, it was announced<lb/>
that the curriculum for a Bachelor of<lb/>
Science degree in English has been<lb/>
altered to meet new North Carolina<lb/>
guidelines.<lb/>
The new curriculum will probably go<lb/>
into effect Spring quarter, according to<lb/>
Erwin Hester, chairman of the English<lb/>
department.<lb/>
"Although a student may graduate in<lb/>
accordance with a five year old<lb/>
catalogue, I would advise English<lb/>
students currently pursuing a teaching<lb/>
degree to meet these new guidelines in<lb/>
some way said Hester.<lb/>
The curriculum changes will mean<lb/>
several additional hours for prospective<lb/>
English teachers.<lb/>
Phillip J. Adler of the ECU history<lb/>
department proposed that the names,<lb/>
titles, and educational backgrounds of<lb/>
the ECU faculty members be included in<lb/>
future undergraduate catalogues.<lb/>
"The history department as a whole<lb/>
feels that the exclusion of this<lb/>
information in current catalogues is<lb/>
demeaning to the faculty said Adler.<lb/>
to<lb/>
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7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
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a whole<lb/>
of this<lb/>
�gues is<lb/>
Adler.<lb/>
Twenty-three bids were made on the<lb/>
renovation project: 10 general con-<lb/>
struction bids, three plumbing bids, five<lb/>
mechanical bids, and seven electrical<lb/>
bids.<lb/>
Low bidders on the renovation were:<lb/>
General construction - James D. Little<lb/>
Construction Co Wilson, $167,945.<lb/>
Plumbing - Kinston Plumbing and<lb/>
Heating Inc Kinston, $55,600.<lb/>
Mechanical - Jones Cooling and<lb/>
Heating Inc Wilson, $84,513.<lb/>
Electrical - JAC Electrical Co Rocky<lb/>
Mount, $92,689.<lb/>
"In accepting bids, the low bid has<lb/>
priority said Moore. "We send a<lb/>
complete set of blueprints to the<lb/>
Department of Administration in Raleigh,<lb/>
N.C for approval.<lb/>
"A date is then set for construction<lb/>
companies to make their bids. The<lb/>
university advertises in the trade<lb/>
magazines and newspapers for thirty<lb/>
days prior to the bidding day.<lb/>
"A representative from Real Property<lb/>
and Construction, a division of the<lb/>
Department of Administration, presides<lb/>
over the bidding. Each bidder has seen a<lb/>
complete blue print and is aware of the<lb/>
work involved.<lb/>
"The bidder after accessing the costs<lb/>
involved makes a bid, the lowest bid is<lb/>
the one accepted<lb/>
"The bids were sent certified back to<lb/>
Raleigh and have been approved said<lb/>
Moore. "The renovation of Ragsdale is<lb/>
planned to be completed in the fall of<lb/>
1976 - to coincide with the accreditation<lb/>
of the ECU Med School<lb/>
Besides Ragsdale, the $720,000<lb/>
renovation of old Joyner Library has<lb/>
started, providing for an overall updating<lb/>
of the facility.<lb/>
"Much of the renovation of old Joyner<lb/>
is being done to heating and air<lb/>
conditioning systems said Lowry.<lb/>
"There are five separate heating and air<lb/>
conditioning systems throughout the<lb/>
library. This is not a balanced or uniform<lb/>
system, some areas are neglected<lb/>
The original building was built in 1951<lb/>
and the only area air conditioned was the<lb/>
book stacks. In 1964-65, the whole<lb/>
facility was air conditioned.<lb/>
"The renovation of old Joyner will<lb/>
make it more compatible with the new<lb/>
library extension said Lowry. "It will<lb/>
also provide easy access to the book<lb/>
stacks.<lb/>
"The new construction will provide<lb/>
enough space to teach library science<lb/>
and to block off the stacks. This will<lb/>
safeguard the stacks from students not<lb/>
entering from the new extension.<lb/>
"Some updating to the television,<lb/>
radio, and taping facilities will also be<lb/>
done.<lb/>
"Renovation work has to meet<lb/>
requirements for the handicapped, set<lb/>
down in the state building code. This<lb/>
means there must be free access<lb/>
throughout the old library. Renovation<lb/>
plans include the building of ramps, an<lb/>
elevator, and special toilets<lb/>
June 26, 1975, 16 bids were made on<lb/>
the renovation project of old Joyner<lb/>
Library. Five general construction bids,<lb/>
six mechanical bids, seven electrical<lb/>
bids, and four bids for the elevator<lb/>
construction.<lb/>
Low bidders on the project were:<lb/>
General construction - Chapin Co<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. $220,000.<lb/>
Mechanical (also includes $5,000<lb/>
plumbing work) - Pemberton Inc Rocky<lb/>
Mount, N.C. <lb/>
Electrical-Stack House Ind<lb/>
Goldsboro, N.C, $73,000.<lb/>
Elevator-Dover Elevator Co Greens-<lb/>
boro, N.C, $16,000.<lb/>
A certain amount of the $720,000<lb/>
appropriation goes into advertising for<lb/>
the bidding sessions, blue prints and<lb/>
specifications, and $70,000 is provided<lb/>
for a construction continuancy said<lb/>
Lowry.<lb/>
"Part of the specifications in the<lb/>
written contract provides that work must<lb/>
be completed on the library by the 21st<lb/>
of May, 1975. In renovation work<lb/>
sometimes unforeseen happenings can<lb/>
delay the completion.<lb/>
"Work can be held up because the<lb/>
contractors don't know what is behind a<lb/>
certain wall that has to be moved or torn<lb/>
down<lb/>
Other construction projects are being<lb/>
planned or are near completion on the<lb/>
ECU campus.<lb/>
$2 million is being spent on an<lb/>
expansion of the Leo W. Jenkins Art<lb/>
Center. Of this amount, $135,000 is being<lb/>
spent on movable art equipment.<lb/>
The construction deadline for this<lb/>
project is Nov. 15, 1976, and according<lb/>
to Lowry, the expansion is pretty much<lb/>
on schedule.<lb/>
Bids have already been accepted for<lb/>
an expansion of the ECU Steam Plant.<lb/>
The expansion will include the<lb/>
installation of underground steam lines<lb/>
between Memorial Gym and the Steam<lb/>
Plant.<lb/>
An addition to the Allied Health<lb/>
Building on 264 Highway is in the same<lb/>
stage as the Ragsdale renovation. Bids<lb/>
have been made and have been accepted.<lb/>
RESEARCH PAPERS<lb/>
THOUSANDS ON FILE<lb/>
Send for your up-to-date, 160-page, mail order catalog of<lb/>
5,500 topics. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handling.<lb/>
COLLEGIATE RESEARCH<lb/>
1 720 PONTIUS AVE SUITE 201<lb/>
LOS ANGELES, CALIF.90025<lb/>
We are in the planning stage of the<lb/>
renovation of the Drama Building and<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium said Lowry. "No<lb/>
money has yet been appropriated<lb/>
Progress has begun on the planned<lb/>
renovation of Wright Auditorium, and the<lb/>
ECU Book Store and Soda Shop.<lb/>
"Any money used for the Wright<lb/>
project or soda shop would have to be<lb/>
self liquidating funds said Lowry. "This<lb/>
project would have to pay for itself<lb/>
"The state will not provide money for<lb/>
auxiliaries: intercollegiate sports, dorm-<lb/>
itories, or student centers said Moore.<lb/>
"To my knowledge, this year ECU<lb/>
didn't receive any capital improvements<lb/>
from the UNC Board of Governors said<lb/>
Lowry. "Only the school of medicine was<lb/>
approved and this was a different<lb/>
appropriation all the way through.<lb/>
"None of our items were of a high<lb/>
enough priority to receive funding from<lb/>
the board<lb/>
I<lb/>
CONSTRUCTION in Joyner Library will turn this facility into office building.<lb/>
SPECIALS!<lb/>
Tuesday Wednesday Thursday<lb/>
4 PM to 6 PM<lb/>
� Fried Chicken � Fresh Fish f 95<lb/>
� Chicken Pastry � Other Specials<lb/>
Includes Vegetables and Tea<lb/>
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RIVERSIDE<lb/>
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RIVERSIDE<lb/>
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BAR-BO<lb/>
SEAFOOD<lb/>
<pb facs="00039999_0008"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
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ECU fall enrollment is largest in history<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The official ECU enrollment for Fall<lb/>
1975 is 11,725, the largest in ECU<lb/>
history. Last year's enrollment was<lb/>
11,341.<lb/>
Every school in the University of<lb/>
North Carolina System has increased<lb/>
enrollment this year, according to John<lb/>
H. Home, dean of admissions.<lb/>
"We've worked hard in the admissions<lb/>
office and the alumni are worked hard<lb/>
through alumni programs in the state and<lb/>
out of the state to attract students said<lb/>
Home.<lb/>
"The student body is the best<lb/>
recruiting medium the school has. They<lb/>
brag about their school and this<lb/>
encourages other students to go to their<lb/>
school.<lb/>
"We (ECU) are getting better known<lb/>
for our academic programs and that is<lb/>
very important<lb/>
Although the popularity of ECU'S<lb/>
academic program is spreading, out-of-<lb/>
state enrollment for ECU is down this<lb/>
year from 1975. Almost all reactions<lb/>
attribute this decline to increased tuition.<lb/>
Last year's out-of-state enrollment was<lb/>
1,773 but this year it is 1,275.<lb/>
"We're not in the business of 'getting'<lb/>
students explained Home. "Traditional-<lb/>
ly we've been an open door institution<lb/>
until last year. Recruitment is not a<lb/>
method to increase enrollment. Basically,<lb/>
it is a public service to high school<lb/>
students.<lb/>
ROBERT USSERY<lb/>
Enrollment was closed on June 1,<lb/>
according to Robert M. Ussery, director<lb/>
of Institutional Research at ECU.<lb/>
"Enrollment projections are based on<lb/>
the enrollment history of the university.<lb/>
And, the university's budget is based on<lb/>
projected enrollment for the next school<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"After the budgets were presented<lb/>
last year, it was realized that all UNC<lb/>
schools' budgets would be cut. ECU<lb/>
learned its budget amount early enough<lb/>
to close admissions and prevent over<lb/>
enrollment as it experienced last year.<lb/>
JOHN HORN<lb/>
"ECU can easily enroll and<lb/>
accomodate more students without being<lb/>
over enrolled, if we could get the faculty.<lb/>
Enrollment is determined by the number<lb/>
of faculty a university is allowed<lb/>
Justifications for closing enrollment,<lb/>
Ussery cited, include less crowded<lb/>
classes, and a smaller work load for<lb/>
instructors.<lb/>
Also, "If anyone waits until June to<lb/>
apply for school, they usually do not<lb/>
want to go to school anyway said<lb/>
Ussery.<lb/>
jf"�" � " tirrtimrm w. m iTrmTtinrrrnmrTrTTTT rnrwrrTTTTrTTTrrnTrTTrrriTrrtTn jrww u mwww wrw vwwwwiwww irtlt<lb/>
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THE ECU 1975 enrollment is<lb/>
approximately three percent higher than<lb/>
last year's enrollment.This year ECU has<lb/>
5,481 males and 6,244 females compared<lb/>
to last year's totals of 5,015 males and<lb/>
5,717 females.<lb/>
Also last year's enrollment included<lb/>
3,445 freshmen, 1,726 females and 1,719<lb/>
males.<lb/>
The sum of females and males is not<lb/>
equal to the total in the 1974 data<lb/>
because the statistics were taken from a<lb/>
report to the Office of Civil Rights which<lb/>
is based on how students racially identify<lb/>
themselves. The students who refuse to<lb/>
identify themselves are not included.<lb/>
The class enrollments decrease<lb/>
regressively with each subsequent<lb/>
class. Of the 1,971 sophomores present<lb/>
last year, 1,061 were female and 910 were<lb/>
male. The junior class consisted of 1,865<lb/>
students, 1,050 females and 815 males.<lb/>
The 1,602 seniors were divided between<lb/>
909 females and 693 males.<lb/>
A breakdown of 1975 classification<lb/>
including sex and race will be released in<lb/>
November, according to Ussery.<lb/>
ECU enrollment is up quite markedly<lb/>
from a decade ago. In 1964 the<lb/>
enrollment was 6,599 compared to 11,341<lb/>
in 1974 and 11,725 in 1975. The<lb/>
enrollment is up approximately 75 per<lb/>
cent from 1964.<lb/>
ECU'S 1974 enrollment was up 12.3<lb/>
per cent over 1973 enrollment.<lb/>
En<lb/>
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together <lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
� ii �tmmmmtnm<lb/>
,9<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
ment is<lb/>
gher than<lb/>
ECU has<lb/>
compared<lb/>
nales and<lb/>
included<lb/>
and 1,719<lb/>
les is not<lb/>
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decrease<lb/>
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� present<lb/>
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of 1,865<lb/>
5 males.<lb/>
between<lb/>
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eased in<lb/>
narkedly<lb/>
164 the<lb/>
0 11,341<lb/>
'5. The<lb/>
75 per<lb/>
up 12.3<lb/>
Fleetwood Mac's new album is the best yet<lb/>
FLEETWOOD MAC<lb/>
By BRANDON T1SE<lb/>
Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Throughout its phoenix-like history,<lb/>
Fleetwood Mac has survived just about<lb/>
everything that a band could be expected<lb/>
to face, constant personnel departures<lb/>
and replacements, shifting musical<lb/>
directions, both ends of the rock-fame<lb/>
roller coaster, managerial hassles, and<lb/>
still managed to keep an evident air of<lb/>
acceptance in the rock world.<lb/>
The past two albums Mystery To Me<lb/>
and Heroes Are Hard To Find, were<lb/>
strongly influenced by Bob Welch, the<lb/>
now departed singer-songwriter-guitarist,<lb/>
whom many original Fleetwood Mac fans<lb/>
had accused of stealing the spotlight.<lb/>
Though denied by present members of<lb/>
Fleetwood Mac as a conscious effort, the<lb/>
emphasis was on Welch, especially<lb/>
during the live shows.<lb/>
Since Welch's abrupt departure last<lb/>
New Year's Eve, Fleetwood Mac has been<lb/>
re-organizing and has come out with one<lb/>
of their greatest albums ever, Fleetwood<lb/>
Mac.<lb/>
Christine McVie, one of the music's<lb/>
most underrated songwriters, has put<lb/>
together another set of those "just right"<lb/>
songs that she has excited many<lb/>
listeners with in past albums. Instead of<lb/>
the evident contrast between her songs<lb/>
and Welch's space vehicles in past<lb/>
efforts, songs by new members<lb/>
Stephanie Nicks and guitarist Lindsey<lb/>
Buckingham on Fleetwood Mac,<lb/>
provide beautiful excursions from<lb/>
McVie's framework without losing the<lb/>
unified direction of the album. Christine<lb/>
McVie's songs of subtle sensuality are<lb/>
complimented by Stephanie Nicks'<lb/>
gorgeously, rough-edged vocals and<lb/>
outstanding acoustically oriental songs,<lb/>
"Rhiannon" and "Landslide<lb/>
"Rhiannon" blends in much better<lb/>
with the Fleetwood Mac sound than does<lb/>
"Landslide but both are so laid back<lb/>
(pardon the expression) that it all makes<lb/>
a tremendous plus for the album.<lb/>
Not to be overlooked either are the<lb/>
contributions of new member Lindsey<lb/>
Buckingham. "Monday Morning the<lb/>
first song on the album is a nice upbeat<lb/>
number, but his other song, "I'm So<lb/>
Afraid' with its rising guitar is absolutely<lb/>
haunting. Buckingham's guitar work is<lb/>
not necessarily an improvement over<lb/>
Welch's in technique but rather in taste.<lb/>
It is Christine McVie however that has<lb/>
increasingly become the voice of<lb/>
Fleetwood Mac. :She offers four songs<lb/>
on this album: "Say You Love Me<lb/>
"Sugar Daddy "Warm Ways" and "Over<lb/>
My Head All are unmistakably Christie<lb/>
McVie with "Over My Head" probably the<lb/>
best of the four songs.<lb/>
Her husband John McVie, bassist,<lb/>
and drummer Mike Fleetwood, the only<lb/>
two original members, still provide one of<lb/>
the best rhythm combinations in rock<lb/>
today with Fleetwood's drumming always<lb/>
maintaining a strong presence<lb/>
For "Over My Head "Rhiannon and<lb/>
"Landslide" alone, the ablum is worth it.<lb/>
I think it's one of the best albums to<lb/>
come out in the last three years from<lb/>
anyone, so if in doubt: GET IT!<lb/>
This week's movies<lb/>
PITT THEATRE<lb/>
The Elger Sanction - adventure thriller starring Clint Eastwood.<lb/>
PLAZA CINEMA<lb/>
RollerbaM - starring James Caan as sports hero of deadly futuristic game. Also starring<lb/>
John (Paper Chase) Housemen.<lb/>
PARK THEATRE<lb/>
Man of the East - starring Terrence Hill (that "Trinity" man) in a new role.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION FRIDAY MOVIE<lb/>
Alex in Wonderland - starring Donald Sutherland as a movie director who directs his<lb/>
lown fantasies.<lb/>
�P<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
w<lb/>
m<lb/>
Melissa Manchester<lb/>
By ERNEST LEOGRANDE<lb/>
Pop Scene Service<lb/>
"I just took a vacation Melissa<lb/>
Manchester said, "and went to Jamaica.<lb/>
The first one I've been able to take. One<lb/>
week. Now I know I'll never take another<lb/>
vacation. They just show you how tired<lb/>
you are<lb/>
She has given herself little time to<lb/>
rest from the time she was 17. That's<lb/>
how old she was whenshebecame a staff<lb/>
writer, turning out songs for a music<lb/>
publishing company for other people to<lb/>
sing.<lb/>
Today, at 23, Melissa Manchester is<lb/>
singing her songs herself, songs like the<lb/>
hit "Midnight Blue" and "Just Too Many<lb/>
People<lb/>
"I was studying acting at the New<lb/>
York University School of Arts she said,<lb/>
recalling her start at 17. "One of the<lb/>
fellows in class found out I sang a little.<lb/>
He was writing songs with another fellow<lb/>
and he said, 'Would you come with us<lb/>
and sing our songs at publishing<lb/>
companies'?<lb/>
"After I had done that a while, I tried<lb/>
writing my own songs and really enjoyed<lb/>
it. So after I would say goodbye to them<lb/>
for the day, I would backtrack to the<lb/>
companies and ask, 'Can I sing my own<lb/>
songs for you? And I got hired very<lb/>
quickly, to be a staff writer, at Chappel.<lb/>
"It was crazy. There I was, a staff<lb/>
writer after writing about a minute and a<lb/>
half. The poor fellows unfortunately only<lb/>
sold a couple of songs themselves.<lb/>
"That same year I enrolled in a class<lb/>
in song writing at the university. Word<lb/>
had gotten out that there was a Paul<lb/>
Simon teaching and everyone was<lb/>
asking, Is it really him'?"<lb/>
It was really that Paul Simon. So after<lb/>
that class and nine months at Chappel I,<lb/>
Melissa had had as much as she wanted<lb/>
and quit to start playing and singing her<lb/>
stuff in coffeehouses.<lb/>
The acting bug was still with her,<lb/>
though She had done some street<lb/>
theater with the New York City<lb/>
Department of Parks. So she auditioned<lb/>
for an off-Broadway musical, "The Me<lb/>
Nobody Knows She was hired, only to<lb/>
be fired almost immediately.<lb/>
"It was my acting she said. "It<lb/>
stunk. I could not communicate words if<lb/>
I didn't have songs around them. But the<lb/>
man who fired me gave me an excuse<lb/>
other than my acting and that left such a<lb/>
bad taste in my mouth, that he wouldn't<lb/>
tell me the truth. I used to go to the<lb/>
theater all the time before that but for a<lb/>
long time I just couldn't go back.<lb/>
"Now I would like to try being an<lb/>
actress again even though I might have<lb/>
the feeling that no matter what praise or<lb/>
accolades they laid on, it was just a<lb/>
matter of time till they found out.<lb/>
"With singing I feel comfortable. I've<lb/>
been doing it since I was 3. It's second<lb/>
nature. I understand the energy forces of<lb/>
music.<lb/>
"But I would like to get involved in<lb/>
some part of the theater, writing or being<lb/>
an assistant choreographer or just being<lb/>
a go-fer, just to be there and see it<lb/>
work<lb/>
Some people might ask just what<lb/>
she's talking about, since anyone who<lb/>
goes on stage and entertains people with<lb/>
her voice and her piano is performing a<lb/>
theatrical act.<lb/>
And being one of Bette Midler's<lb/>
original Harlettes was plenty theatrical.<lb/>
The Harlettes, a flashy female vocal trio,<lb/>
backed up Ms. Midler in her shows.<lb/>
Being a Harlette was actually Melissa's<lb/>
entry into the field of general public<lb/>
attention.<lb/>
"I knew Barry Manilow, who was<lb/>
Bette's accompanist she said, "and<lb/>
The Stimula Condom.<lb/>
"It's like hundreds<lb/>
of tiny fingers<lb/>
urging a woman to let go<lb/>
S. jL'<lb/>
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body heat instantaneously. Stimula is supremely<lb/>
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to the penis And SK-70, a remarkable<lb/>
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Made by the world's largest manufacturer of<lb/>
condoms, a million have already been sold in<lb/>
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discreet packages Send for your sample today.<lb/>
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that's how I met Bette. I asked if she was<lb/>
planning to use backup singers for her<lb/>
show she was going to do at Carnegie<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
"I hadn't thought about it she said.<lb/>
"Well, think about it; I told her. 'You<lb/>
want to sing for me?' she asked. 'No I<lb/>
said, 'I want to sing instead of you<lb/>
She and Bette had remained good<lb/>
friends, but Melissa isn't pleased by the<lb/>
occasional written comments which say<lb/>
her performing style is like Bette's, as if<lb/>
it were an imitation.<lb/>
"I take my work very seriously she<lb/>
said, "and I'm not on anybody's free ride.<lb/>
I think the highest compliment you can<lb/>
pay anybody in any profession-be they<lb/>
plumbers or portrait painters�is to call<lb/>
them an original<lb/>
"Do you think of yourself as an<lb/>
original?" I aoked.<lb/>
"Well, I hope I'm getting closer to it<lb/>
she replied.<lb/>
Melissa, who has just finished her<lb/>
second album this year, writes almost all<lb/>
the songs she sings, usually with<lb/>
collaborators. "Most of this life style js<lb/>
output she said. "I write a lot on<lb/>
airplants. I carry music sheets with me<lb/>
for that.<lb/>
"I work a lot on nervous energy, but<lb/>
you have to realize that you have a<lb/>
choice. So sometimes when I hear these<lb/>
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just have to say to them, 'Go to sleep,<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
11<lb/>
ECU participates in Bicentennial program<lb/>
East Carolina University is participat-<lb/>
ing in a national Bicentennial Program<lb/>
called Bicentennial Youth Debates (BYD).<lb/>
BYD has both high school and college<lb/>
age divisions and is open to any person<lb/>
under 25 years of age who has not yet<lb/>
received a Bachelors Degree. Our school<lb/>
events will take place about November 1.<lb/>
Winners from our school will advance<lb/>
through dir ict, sectional and regional<lb/>
levels of competition to a final national<lb/>
conference. Scholarships will be awarded<lb/>
to outstanding participants.<lb/>
The purpose of the BYD is to<lb/>
encourage students to examine American<lb/>
history and values through forensic<lb/>
efforts. There will be a winner in each of<lb/>
three events - Lincoln-Douglas Debate,<lb/>
Extemporaneous Speaking and Persua-<lb/>
sive Speaking.<lb/>
The national conference will feature<lb/>
discussions between students and<lb/>
national leaders, such as those on the<lb/>
BYD National Advisory Council. Initial<lb/>
members of the Council include Joseph<lb/>
Block, Chairman of the Board of National<lb/>
Merit Scholarship Corporation; Walter<lb/>
Cronkite, CBS News correspondent ;<lb/>
Arthur Goldberg, former U.S. Supreme<lb/>
Court Justice; George Meany, President<lb/>
of AFL-CIO; Barry Goldwater, U.S.<lb/>
Senator; Dean Rusk, former Secretary o'<lb/>
State and William F. Buckley, Jr editor<lb/>
of National Review.<lb/>
In addition to the competitive aspects<lb/>
of the program, students will have the<lb/>
opportunity, throughout the year, to visit<lb/>
local civic and community organizations<lb/>
Flood areas concern planners<lb/>
By JAMES PERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In recent years there has been a great<lb/>
deal of interest in flooding and flood<lb/>
insurance. There is also legislation<lb/>
designed to protect home buyers from<lb/>
purchasing in unprotected areas.<lb/>
Why would Greenville be concerned<lb/>
with all this?<lb/>
According to John 'Schoefield,<lb/>
Greenville city planner, Greenville has not<lb/>
one but two major flood areas (flood<lb/>
plains).<lb/>
The largest of the two surrounds the<lb/>
Tar River. The second area surrounds<lb/>
Green Mill Run. Green Mill Run is the<lb/>
usually quiet creek that flows from Frog<lb/>
Level, west of Greenville, through Green<lb/>
Spring Park, the ECU campus and into<lb/>
the southwestern part of town. This creek<lb/>
is a major part of the Greenville drainage<lb/>
system.<lb/>
During the past two years the<lb/>
Department of Health, Education and<lb/>
Welfare (HEW) provided guidelines for<lb/>
the establishment of a flood hazard<lb/>
boundary. This boundary is based on the<lb/>
highest level that flooding has occurred<lb/>
during a 100-year period.<lb/>
In the case of Green Mill Run the<lb/>
boundary for the north side of the ECU<lb/>
campus runs right to the doorstep of the<lb/>
Brewster Building.<lb/>
Structures built in these flood plain<lb/>
areas before last year are not affected by<lb/>
the HEW guidelines, but, any new<lb/>
structures must meet one of two<lb/>
requirements in order to build in a flood<lb/>
area.<lb/>
According to Schoefield, either the<lb/>
structures must be (1) flood proofed or<lb/>
(2) the level of the first floor must exceed<lb/>
the highest level of flooding that could<lb/>
be reached in the area.<lb/>
There are two projects underway now<lb/>
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factor.<lb/>
The Greenville Development Com-<lb/>
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which construction is proceeding lies<lb/>
within the Green Mill flood plain.<lb/>
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Some twenty structures will be<lb/>
located in this project. Although flood<lb/>
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standards, interested parties should be<lb/>
aware of soil conditions.<lb/>
The major problem of flood plain<lb/>
control exists around the Tar River area.<lb/>
There is a particular section which is<lb/>
occupied by families living in very<lb/>
substandard housing.<lb/>
In 1971 the city annexed and bouaht<lb/>
this section. There have been several,<lb/>
severe floods here. The city is trying to<lb/>
relocate the families in this area but<lb/>
there is a definite lack of housing to<lb/>
accomplish this in a great hurry,<lb/>
according to Schoefield.<lb/>
The long range plans for this area are<lb/>
for the establishment of some kind of<lb/>
recreational facility, possibly a park.<lb/>
to speak on the current topics. Topics for<lb/>
the events are being coordinated with the<lb/>
American Issues Forum which provides a<lb/>
framework for America's present and<lb/>
future by focusing on her past. Topics<lb/>
range from issues such as freedom of the<lb/>
press and control of the economy to the<lb/>
work ethic and use of our natural<lb/>
resources.<lb/>
Bicentennial Youth Debates is a<lb/>
project of the Speech Communication<lb/>
Association, the largest association of<lb/>
professional speech educators in the<lb/>
nation. BYD is supported by grant funds<lb/>
from the National Endowment for the<lb/>
Humanities, an agency created by<lb/>
Congress to support researc.i, education<lb/>
and publications in the humanities.<lb/>
For additional information about the<lb/>
program, please contact Thomas Eamon<lb/>
in Brewster A-130. Please contact by<lb/>
Monday, October 27.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mmnm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmwm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
Student legislature meets here<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The North Carolina Student Legis-<lb/>
lature will hold its October interim<lb/>
council meeting at ECU, Sunday morning<lb/>
Oct. 26.<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Leo W. Jenkins will<lb/>
be present to greet the students.<lb/>
The business session will begin at<lb/>
10:30 a.m. in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Coffee and doughnuts will be<lb/>
provided for members and guests.<lb/>
"An interim council meeting of the<lb/>
NCSL is a meeting of all member schools<lb/>
to carry on the business of the NCSL<lb/>
said ECU delegation chairperson Steve<lb/>
Noble. "A lot of business goes on<lb/>
between the annual conventions.<lb/>
"The NCSL provides a vehicle through<lb/>
which the students of N.C. can initiate<lb/>
changes in the state government and<lb/>
general issues of the state<lb/>
Activities within the NCSL includes<lb/>
writing bills that they will present before<lb/>
the General Assembly of N.C.<lb/>
ECU's bill topics for this year are<lb/>
Euthanasia, and voter registration<lb/>
through the mail.<lb/>
Students also participate in standing<lb/>
committees. Standing committees are<lb/>
composed of members from the different<lb/>
schools. They investigate many areas<lb/>
attempting to insure efficiency in<lb/>
government.<lb/>
"The standing committees and their<lb/>
investigations are an essential part of the<lb/>
NCSL according to Noble.<lb/>
Karen Lee, an ECU student is chairman<lb/>
of the legislature's polling committee.<lb/>
This committee will be conducting polls<lb/>
on current issues which involve college<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The students' rights and freedoms<lb/>
committee last year drew up a bill which<lb/>
expressed student rights in all areas of<lb/>
college activities. They are currently<lb/>
trying to get the bill implemented to each<lb/>
of North Carolina's schools with NCSL<lb/>
participants.<lb/>
The University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Greensboro is the only school that has<lb/>
implemented the bill thus far.<lb/>
"We have a legislative reform<lb/>
committee which is looking into the<lb/>
General Assembly of N.C. They are<lb/>
discussing how it operates and whether<lb/>
or not it needs changing<lb/>
Areas of the General Assembly, the<lb/>
legislative committee are investigating<lb/>
now include the legislative committees,<lb/>
and abuse of mail privileges, according<lb/>
to Noble.<lb/>
"The education committee is involved<lb/>
in a study of public education. They are<lb/>
concerned about textbooks, public<lb/>
school operations, and teacher qualifi-<lb/>
cations '<lb/>
Voter registration is a new committee<lb/>
started last year, said Noble. They are<lb/>
working with other campus organizations<lb/>
on a campaign to get more student<lb/>
voters.<lb/>
"The prison reform committee is<lb/>
going strong said Noble. "They are<lb/>
investigating how N.C. prisons are<lb/>
operating and how they can be<lb/>
improved<lb/>
The prison reform committee plans to<lb/>
rewrite the present set of rules for N.C.<lb/>
prisons, according to one NCSL member.<lb/>
Honeycutt exercises first veto<lb/>
Student Government Association<lb/>
president Jimmy Honeycutt has exercised<lb/>
his first veto of the year and given the ax<lb/>
to the by-laws of the Publications Board.<lb/>
The SGA had approved the by-laws at<lb/>
their weekly meeting last Monday.<lb/>
JIMMY HONEYCUTT<lb/>
Honeycutt made his veto known at a<lb/>
meeting of the Appropriations Committee<lb/>
meeting Tuesday. The Appropriations<lb/>
committee is presently reviewing the<lb/>
total publications budget for Fountain-<lb/>
head, Buc, and Rebel. SGA by-laws state<lb/>
that for a campus organization to be<lb/>
funded they must have a set of by-laws<lb/>
approved by the SGA. And, with<lb/>
Honeycutt's veto, the Pub Board does<lb/>
not have a recognized set of by-laws and<lb/>
technically can't be funded.<lb/>
Honeycutt cited as his prime reason<lb/>
for vetoing the bill a guarantee written<lb/>
into the by-laws that would have assured<lb/>
the Pub Board a $120,000 yearly<lb/>
minimum for operations.<lb/>
"I can't see letting any organization<lb/>
have a guarantee that says in effect that<lb/>
the SGA has little or no control over their<lb/>
budgets as this minimum would<lb/>
Honeycutt continued.<lb/>
The SGA president also cited articles<lb/>
in the by-laws that leave very little control<lb/>
of publications with the SGA.<lb/>
SGA officials noted that the by-laws<lb/>
went through as one of the first bills<lb/>
during the new legislative year and that<lb/>
few legislators knew of the $120,000<lb/>
clause in the by-laws.<lb/>
The Pub Board must not submit new<lb/>
by-laws for SGA approval or try and get<lb/>
the present by-laws, which were written<lb/>
during the first weeks of the school year,<lb/>
passed through the SGA again overriding<lb/>
Honeycutt's vote.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
ii � immuy i gin i in mil uii<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
SGA administration called unresponsive<lb/>
�<lb/>
De<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Honeycutt administration in the<lb/>
SGA is doing a great injustice to the<lb/>
students of ECU and Jimmy Honeycutt,<lb/>
SGA President should be impeached,<lb/>
according to John Prevette, President of<lb/>
the ECU Young Democrats.<lb/>
My biggest gripe is that the<lb/>
Honeycutt regime is doing a great<lb/>
injustice to ECU students and North<lb/>
Carolina in general said Prevette who<lb/>
after filing an application for SGA<lb/>
President last spring, withdrew and<lb/>
helped with the campaign of another<lb/>
presidential candidate.<lb/>
Prevette, who admits not having the<lb/>
backing of the Young Democrats in his<lb/>
quest for Honeycutt's impeachment, says<lb/>
he is speaking for the 'dissident<lb/>
students of ECU.<lb/>
"We can't do anything about<lb/>
impeachment until the students realize<lb/>
the evils of the Honeycutt administra-<lb/>
tion said Prevette. "Coming out of the<lb/>
Watergate syndrome you would expect<lb/>
someone who is truthful and sensitive to<lb/>
the students. There should be a<lb/>
continuous striving for good government<lb/>
and we just don't have that with the<lb/>
SGA. When people don't vote, corruption<lb/>
can be elected to office<lb/>
Prevette should not just run his<lb/>
mouth, but he should do something<lb/>
constructive like getting involved in the<lb/>
SGA, if he doesn't like things, said<lb/>
Jimmy Honeycutt.<lb/>
"The administration is not being<lb/>
responsive to the students said<lb/>
Prevette. "Honeycutt and the Executive<lb/>
Council closed elections polls during the<lb/>
summer while the students weren't here<lb/>
and could not speak for themselves.<lb/>
"There is no system of checks and<lb/>
balances in Honeycutt's administration.<lb/>
He has appointed his friends to office.<lb/>
The President has control of everything<lb/>
going on in the SGA although he is<lb/>
Homecoming queen disappointed<lb/>
By HELENA WOODARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Jen Alfreda Barnes, ECU'S first black<lb/>
homecoming queen, says that she<lb/>
represents all ECU students.<lb/>
"I was elected by a majority of the<lb/>
votes cast Jeri said. "I am not just a<lb/>
queen for the blacks. I am the ECU'S<lb/>
homecoming queen and that's the way I<lb/>
feel I should be accepted she said.<lb/>
Jen was disappointed when she was<lb/>
not asked to sit in the Chancellor's box<lb/>
during the Homecoming football game,<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
"I can understand individual students<lb/>
not accepting me, but not Dr. Jenkins.<lb/>
Maybe he felt that I would have been<lb/>
uncomfortable sitting in his box, but I<lb/>
would not have<lb/>
"Today it was explained to Jeri why<lb/>
she was not asked to sit in the<lb/>
Chancellor's box according to Dr. Leo<lb/>
W. Jenkins, Chancellor of ECU.<lb/>
"It was decided after last year's<lb/>
Homecoming that the queen would be<lb/>
more comfortable sitting with her family<lb/>
and friends, Jenkins said.<lb/>
"Last year, both Miss Black ECU and<lb/>
Miss Homecoming sat in the Chancellor's<lb/>
box. In the past, some of the queens<lb/>
returned to their family and friends after<lb/>
spending only a few minutes in the<lb/>
Chancellor's box<lb/>
Some people are trying to make a<lb/>
racial issue out of this event, but this is<lb/>
not the case at all, said Jenkins.<lb/>
Jeri says that she is disappointed, but<lb/>
not bitter.<lb/>
According to Mike Taylor, Home-<lb/>
coming steering committee member, the<lb/>
committee was told that the queen would<lb/>
be invited to sit in the Chancellor's box.<lb/>
The queen and her escort have been<lb/>
invited to sit in the Chancellor's box<lb/>
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Nov. 1, according to Jenkins.<lb/>
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neither a legislator nor is he a memebr of<lb/>
the judicial body.<lb/>
"I'm sure it is clear to the students<lb/>
that Prevette's accusations have no truth<lb/>
to them and are not worth commenting<lb/>
on said Honeycutt. "But I feel that<lb/>
without some comment on my part<lb/>
Prevette's accusations may be misunder-<lb/>
stood by some students.<lb/>
"Neither the SGA nor myself have<lb/>
violated any rules or constitutional laws.<lb/>
There is a system of checks and<lb/>
balances. Every appointment that I make<lb/>
has to be approved by the SGA<lb/>
legislature<lb/>
"We (the dissident students) are<lb/>
waiting for Honeycutt to do the right<lb/>
thing, to violate a rule and then we are<lb/>
going to try to impeach him<lb/>
The recent elections' irregularities<lb/>
were serious enough to start an<lb/>
impeachment action against Honeycutt,<lb/>
but the students were too involved with<lb/>
other activities, such as Homecoming, to<lb/>
be concerned about the election orf<lb/>
Honeycutt, according to Prevette.<lb/>
Mall nears<lb/>
completion<lb/>
By BETTY GUNTER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The construction of Greenville's<lb/>
downtown mall is slightly behind<lb/>
schedule but should be finished by Nov.<lb/>
26, 1975.<lb/>
Sixty per cent of the work is<lb/>
complete, said T.L. Wagner, project<lb/>
manager and deputy director of city<lb/>
development.<lb/>
Construction began the first week of<lb/>
August, 1975.<lb/>
The W.G. Dunn Construction Co. did<lb/>
not work during all the scheduled work<lb/>
days because of poor weather conditions,<lb/>
according to Wagner.<lb/>
Some workers may work on Sundays,<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Skilled laborers will not work<lb/>
overtime, however, due to the extra<lb/>
amount taken out in taxes, Wagner said.<lb/>
Two items in the construction plans<lb/>
have been changed since the original<lb/>
plans were drawn.<lb/>
"The mall will not include pools,<lb/>
fountains, or restrooms Wagner said.<lb/>
"The elimination of these is due to<lb/>
vandalism in other city malls<lb/>
Only a few minor problems in<lb/>
construction remain to be worked out,<lb/>
according to Wagner and C.A. Holiday,<lb/>
the city engineer.<lb/>
One was obtaining paving blocks, but<lb/>
that has been solved, Holiday said.<lb/>
Another problem is the unpredictable<lb/>
weather.<lb/>
The mall is designed to upgrade<lb/>
Greenville and the cooperation of the<lb/>
downtown merchants has been good,<lb/>
said Wagner.<lb/>
"The mall will be basically complete<lb/>
by November 26 said Wagner. "A few<lb/>
days will be allotted for a last minute<lb/>
general clean up<lb/>
sei<lb/>
The<lb/>
Prograr<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
15<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Departmental retreat program<lb/>
seeks $400 for each outing<lb/>
The SGA Departmental Retreat<lb/>
Program will ask the legislature on Oct.<lb/>
28th, to finance the first retreat of this<lb/>
academic school year. The department<lb/>
involved, Politcal Science, has six<lb/>
professors and thirty students ready to<lb/>
take the retreat, set for the first weekend<lb/>
in November. The Sociology, Anthropo-<lb/>
logy and Philosophy departments have<lb/>
also asked to be included in the SGA<lb/>
program this year.<lb/>
"The retreat program, when handled<lb/>
right, is an example of SGA at its best<lb/>
said Rick Ketner, secretary of Academic<lb/>
Affairs. The (retreat) program is one of<lb/>
the fairest ways of distributing SGA<lb/>
funds. Any department which shows a<lb/>
real interest and a willingness to work<lb/>
can have a retreat<lb/>
Ketner, whose office oversees the<lb/>
retreats, has sent letters out to each<lb/>
department head explaining "the philoso-<lb/>
phy and the reasoning of weekend<lb/>
retreats<lb/>
The retreats began last year with them<lb/>
- Academic Affairs Secretary, Jimmy<lb/>
Honeycutt. They consisted of a particular<lb/>
department organizing a group of its<lb/>
majors, minors and interested students<lb/>
with several professors to go away from<lb/>
school for a weekend and discuss<lb/>
problems and goals of that department,<lb/>
according to Ketner.<lb/>
Ketner has set the total number of<lb/>
people going at a minimum of 30 and a<lb/>
maximum of 40 to 45. He stated that a<lb/>
ratio of three or four students to every<lb/>
professor was also required "as the goals<lb/>
of the retreat are to make the<lb/>
teacher-student relationship closer and<lb/>
get away from the more formal classroom<lb/>
atmosphere<lb/>
SGA has an agreement with a motel<lb/>
at Atlantic Beach to handle all retreats<lb/>
during the year, which Ketner says saves<lb/>
money. The SGA buses are used to give<lb/>
free transportation.<lb/>
The Salisbury, N.C. sophomore stated<lb/>
that he needed four weeks notice on any<lb/>
retreat plans, and that no retreats would<lb/>
be scheduled after March.<lb/>
"If we send people to Atlantic Beach<lb/>
in the spring we may never see them<lb/>
again he said. "Honestly, the<lb/>
temptation for fun and sun might detract<lb/>
from the work that should be done<lb/>
Another requirement set down by<lb/>
SGA for these retreats is that each<lb/>
department submit plans as to the topics<lb/>
to be discussed and the breakdown in<lb/>
time allowed for each group. Also, a<lb/>
written report on the retreat should be<lb/>
submitted to Ketner by the department.<lb/>
The Academic Affairs Secretary stated<lb/>
that he would give an oral report on each<lb/>
retreat to the legislature.<lb/>
"If there are skeptics in the legislature<lb/>
who don't believe the retreat program will<lb/>
hold water we'll try to convince them of<lb/>
its worth Ketner said.<lb/>
Ketner estimated that the retreats will<lb/>
average $400.00 each, including lodging<lb/>
for two nights and transportation.<lb/>
the PROPOUT<lb/>
- ZV I PIP IT BECAUSE I<lb/>
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16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
�win miiiM�iiii i mntimu h m<lb/>
Whittling away the staff of life<lb/>
By JIM ELLIOTT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The world's total grain reserve has<lb/>
shrunken from a 1961 surplus capable of<lb/>
sustaining the human race for three<lb/>
months to a supply in 1975 that would<lb/>
feed the earth's population for less than<lb/>
- 13 days if a catastrophe occurred.<lb/>
This trend seems to foreshadow the<lb/>
starving fate of mankind predicted by the<lb/>
18th century social economist Thomas R.<lb/>
Malthus. Over 150 years ago the English<lb/>
scientist foresaw the world's population<lb/>
multiplying at a rate too rapid for<lb/>
agriculture to support it. Malthus<lb/>
postulated that as agricultural production<lb/>
increased arithmetically and population<lb/>
grew geometrically, doubtless, it was<lb/>
only a matter of time before mass<lb/>
starvation swept the globe.<lb/>
Hoping to stave off Malthus'<lb/>
calamitous conclusions. 20th century<lb/>
man applied technology to farming and<lb/>
in 1961 an unprecendented breakthrough<lb/>
occurred.<lb/>
GREEN REVOLUTION<lb/>
A result of genetic experimentation,<lb/>
the "gree.i revolution" increased food<lb/>
production in the developing countries by<lb/>
25 per cent by using high levels of<lb/>
nitrogen fertilizers on hybrid crops. The<lb/>
food picture brightened and many<lb/>
thought tht if space-age farming was not<lb/>
the answer to the world's food needs, it<lb/>
would at least delay widespread<lb/>
starvation until technology was able to<lb/>
synthesize food from nonliving materials,<lb/>
such as crude oil.<lb/>
By importing the agricultural revolu-<lb/>
tion, two countries with staggering<lb/>
population growths. India and the<lb/>
Philippines, had become agriculturally<lb/>
self-sufficient at the end of the decade.<lb/>
But the 70s brought renewed<lb/>
pessimism. The price of nitrogen<lb/>
fertilizers that needed petroleum to be<lb/>
manufactured rose with the spiraling<lb/>
costs of crude oil. the anticipated<lb/>
developments in synthetic food had<lb/>
failed to materialize, and population<lb/>
growth in the least developed countries<lb/>
(LDC's) had negated the increased food<lb/>
production. In 1975, the world<lb/>
population, two thirds of which being<lb/>
located in the LDC's, was nearly four<lb/>
billion and was expected to double every<lb/>
35 years, excluding any major disasters.<lb/>
FROM THE SOIL<lb/>
The research of Gerald H. Elkan, a<lb/>
microbiologist at N.C. State University,<lb/>
seeks to dentify the causes of the<lb/>
impending food supply peril and to offer<lb/>
feasible solutions The Fullbright Award<lb/>
winning scientist lectured before a group<lb/>
of more than 50 persons at ECU Oct. 16,<lb/>
on some of the findings of his research,<lb/>
esoterically entitled; Symbiotic nitrogen<lb/>
fixation and the world protein shortage<lb/>
Calling the rapid dwindling of the<lb/>
world food security index a "scary<lb/>
problem Elkan labeled population<lb/>
growth the only direct cause of the<lb/>
world's food shortage.<lb/>
"This lecture could start and stop on<lb/>
the question of population growth<lb/>
Elkan said early in his presentation.<lb/>
Along with human propagation as a<lb/>
food crisis cause, Elkan added the<lb/>
problems of distribution of arable land,<lb/>
high costs and shortages of energy, and<lb/>
climate.<lb/>
WEATHER<lb/>
"Unlike the other causes there is no<lb/>
solution to rain shortages and other<lb/>
climatic problems resulting from cyclic<lb/>
changes Elkan noted.<lb/>
As examples of climatic causes,<lb/>
Elkan cited the rain shortage in the<lb/>
Russian Ukraine which will decrease the<lb/>
harvest there by one third this year, and<lb/>
the continuing drought in Sahel, the<lb/>
lower Saharan region in northern Africa,<lb/>
which has caused thousands to starve.<lb/>
But how can food reserves be<lb/>
stabilized, and much more difficultly<lb/>
increased, when population growth is<lb/>
soaring and the worldwide fertilizer<lb/>
shortage is worsening leading Elkan to<lb/>
conclude: "The 'green revolution' has<lb/>
pretty much gone down the drain<lb/>
Elkan's proposals began with an<lb/>
appraisal of current protein sources.<lb/>
Protein is an element of food essential<lb/>
for human life. It is obtained from<lb/>
animals (beef, chicken, pork), fish, and<lb/>
plants (cereals and legumes). To increase<lb/>
the available protein one or more of these<lb/>
sources must be increased, Elkan said.<lb/>
He went on to examine the potentialities<lb/>
of each source.<lb/>
The world fish catch had been<lb/>
increasing until 1973 when it took a<lb/>
sharp drop, he said. Scientists believe<lb/>
that 70 million metric tons of fish is the<lb/>
best catch possible each year without<lb/>
depleting the resource. Last year's catch<lb/>
was slightly more than that figure.<lb/>
Neither would trying to increase<lb/>
protein supply through stepped up<lb/>
animal production be a feasible solution,<lb/>
Elkan averred. "The beef cattle is a very<lb/>
inefficient protein source. It requires<lb/>
about 20 pounds of grain to produce one<lb/>
pound of beef protein. Somewhat more<lb/>
efficient is pork requiring about 6.3<lb/>
pounds of grain to produce a pound<lb/>
AGRICULTURE "ONLY WAY"<lb/>
"The only way to increase the protein<lb/>
supply today is to increase plant<lb/>
production Elkan stated. With one acre<lb/>
of land, one head of beef cattle, and one<lb/>
year; enough food can be produced to<lb/>
sustain an average person's needs for 77<lb/>
days. Given that same acre of land<lb/>
planted in legumes-such as soybeans-in<lb/>
one year a farmer can harvest a crop that<lb/>
would feed him for about six years<lb/>
Legumes are also nitrogen-fixing<lb/>
plants. This means that they remove<lb/>
nitrogen from the air and direct it into<lb/>
the soil. Consequently, their cultivation<lb/>
would eliminate a great deal of the need<lb/>
for scarce and expensive nitrogen<lb/>
fertilizers.<lb/>
To point out the already affirmed<lb/>
nutritional value of legumes, Elkan<lb/>
quoted a passage from the Bible:<lb/>
FIRST NUTRITIONIST<lb/>
"Then said Daniel to Melzar, whom<lb/>
the prince of the Eunuchs had set over<lb/>
Daniel, Hahahiah, Mishael, and Azarial,<lb/>
"Prove thy servants, I beseech thee, ten<lb/>
days; and let them give us pulse (a<lb/>
legume) to eat, and water to drink. Then<lb/>
let our countenances be looked upon<lb/>
before thee, and the countenances of the<lb/>
chidren that eat of the portion of the<lb/>
kind's mean; and as thou seest, deal<lb/>
with thy servants<lb/>
"So he consented to them in this<lb/>
matter, and proved them ten days. And at<lb/>
the end of ten days their countenances<lb/>
appeared fairer and fatter in flesh than all<lb/>
the children which did eat the portion of<lb/>
the king's meat<lb/>
Daniel 1:11-15<lb/>
But to better exploit resources now<lb/>
available to agriculture, socio-political<lb/>
factors as well as economics must be<lb/>
dealt with, Elkan contended:<lb/>
"In the U.S. each person requires<lb/>
about 1,950 pounds of grain annually for<lb/>
food. Of this amount, 1,750 pounds of<lb/>
grain goes into meat production. In the<lb/>
underdeveloped countries an adult<lb/>
survives on 400 pounds of grain each<lb/>
year. In an LDC, such as Nigeria the<lb/>
average crop yield per pound of fertilizer<lb/>
would be three times that of the U.S. if<lb/>
the fertilizer were available to them. In<lb/>
the U.S. as much fertilizer goes to<lb/>
non-food uses (golf courses, lawns,<lb/>
cemetaries, etc.) as India's total use of it.<lb/>
The same amount of protein used in the<lb/>
U.S. to feed pets would sustain 15<lb/>
million persons<lb/>
Increasing agricultural and food<lb/>
management efficiency would certainly<lb/>
behoove the rich nations. The U.S.<lb/>
especially, in light of its recently<lb/>
negotiated five year grain deal with the<lb/>
Soviet Union. For, without the insurance<lb/>
of a large, stable grain reserve, any of<lb/>
the world's nations (not just the LDC's)<lb/>
could suffer from climatic or other<lb/>
natural or man-made calamities. The<lb/>
world protein shortage is just that-a<lb/>
world problem.<lb/>
Voting campaign held<lb/>
A quarter of a million college and<lb/>
high school students are eligible to vote<lb/>
in North Carolina. But they can't vote<lb/>
unless they are registered.<lb/>
The Campaign for Student Voters<lb/>
(CSV) will encourage these 250,000<lb/>
potential voters to register before the<lb/>
North Carolina primary in March.<lb/>
Founded last summer by eight high<lb/>
school, community college, and univer-<lb/>
sity student groups, CSV has the<lb/>
endorsement of the Governor, the<lb/>
Lieutenant Governor and the State Board<lb/>
of Elections. CSV is only the second<lb/>
such drive in history to be endorsed by<lb/>
the Board of Elections.<lb/>
CSV will hold conferences where<lb/>
student leaders can learn about voting<lb/>
laws and how to organize a registration<lb/>
campaign on their own campuses. So far<lb/>
about 600 students from across the state<lb/>
have been invited to these conferences,<lb/>
said Gary Thomas of the N.C. Student<lb/>
Legislator, coordinator of CSV.<lb/>
In some counties, officials have made<lb/>
it hard for students to register. But with<lb/>
the help of the State Board of Elections.<lb/>
CSV hopes to break down these barriers<lb/>
and make it easier for stuoenis to<lb/>
exercise their rights as citizens.<lb/>
Individuals or groups who want to<lb/>
join CSV's effort may write coordinator<lb/>
Gary Thomas, co Student Government,<lb/>
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill,<lb/>
N.C. 27514.<lb/>
Don't Forget!<lb/>
m<lb/>
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Be<lb/>
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langus<lb/>
for th�<lb/>
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(ACLS)<lb/>
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Bassm<lb/>
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phile<lb/>
transpo<lb/>
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who re<lb/>
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ship of<lb/>
"The<lb/>
Easterr<lb/>
governn<lb/>
through<lb/>
Simi<lb/>
in the<lb/>
modem<lb/>
and Slov<lb/>
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scu<lb/>
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artists ij<lb/>
Gallery ii<lb/>
The i<lb/>
Joseph J<lb/>
KeHoe,<lb/>
Universit;<lb/>
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from 8 i<lb/>
St rot hers-<lb/>
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Bassman receives grant to study<lb/>
Romanian philology<lb/>
Dr. Michael F. Bassman, ECU foreign<lb/>
language professor, received a $700 grant<lb/>
for the study of Romanian philology.<lb/>
He received the grant through the<lb/>
American Council of Learned Societies<lb/>
(ACLS) supported by the Ford Found-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
"I received the grant in April and did<lb/>
my study this past summer said<lb/>
Bassman.<lb/>
"The University of Bucharest in<lb/>
Brasov in the Transylvanian Alps invited<lb/>
me to a seminar to study Romanian<lb/>
philology. The ACLS grant paid<lb/>
transportation expenses<lb/>
Dr. Bassman was one of 26 scholars<lb/>
who received grants for study in East<lb/>
European languages under the sponsor-<lb/>
ship of the ACLS.<lb/>
"There is a shortage of specialists in<lb/>
Eastern European languages. The<lb/>
government is promoting these studies<lb/>
through the ACLS Bassman said.<lb/>
Similar awards were given for studies<lb/>
in the Czech, Hungarian, Macedonian,<lb/>
modem Greek, Polish, Serbo-Croatian,<lb/>
and Slovene languages.<lb/>
Recipients of the grants included<lb/>
faculty members and graduate students<lb/>
from Indiana, Yale, Southern California,<lb/>
Harvard, Pittsburgh, Wisconsin, Temple,<lb/>
Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvania State<lb/>
Universities, Jewish Theological seminary,<lb/>
the University of London, and Oxford<lb/>
University.<lb/>
"Romanian is becoming increasingly<lb/>
important in today's world Bassman<lb/>
commented. "Romania is the only<lb/>
country in the world that has diplomatic<lb/>
relations with every country in the world.<lb/>
"Romance philology is my concen-<lb/>
tration and Romanian is special interest<lb/>
Dr. Bassman presented a paper on<lb/>
Romanian philosophy at the seminar.<lb/>
A member of the ECU faculty since<lb/>
1971, Bassman holds advanced degrees<lb/>
from Brown and Connecticut universities<lb/>
and has studied at several European<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
In 1973 he was visiting professor in<lb/>
Romance languages and philology at<lb/>
the University of Auckland,New Zealand<lb/>
Dr. Bassman is teaching a course this<lb/>
year entitled Romanian Language,<lb/>
Literature and Folklore.<lb/>
Mendenhall exhibit features<lb/>
sculpture and painting<lb/>
A collection of work by two Georgia<lb/>
artists is on display at the Kate Lewis<lb/>
Gallery in ECU'S Whichard Building.<lb/>
The exhibition includes paintings by<lb/>
Joseph Strothers and sculpture by John<lb/>
KeHoe, both faculty memebrs at the<lb/>
University of Georgia.<lb/>
The gallery is open each weekend<lb/>
from 8 a.m. through 5 p.m. and the<lb/>
Strothers-Kehoe show will run through<lb/>
the month of October.<lb/>
Strothers has exhibited widely in the<lb/>
southeast and has received many<lb/>
purchase awards and grants. His<lb/>
paintings are represented in the<lb/>
permanent public collections of the<lb/>
Weatherspoon Gallery in Charlotte and<lb/>
the Wachovia Bank Collection.<lb/>
Kehoe has studied in Paris, Rome<lb/>
and Japan, and has lectured and<lb/>
frequently demonstrated his three-dimen-<lb/>
sional techniques at U.S. colleges and<lb/>
universities. His work also has been<lb/>
exhibited at numerous southeastern<lb/>
galleries and museums.<lb/>
"33300,000<lb/>
Unclaimed<lb/>
Scholarships<lb/>
Over $33,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, grants, aids, and<lb/>
fellowships ranging from $50 to $10,000. Current list of<lb/>
these sources researched and compiled as of Sept. 15, 1975.<lb/>
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
11275 Massachusetts Ave Los Angeles, CA 90025<lb/>
? I am enclosing $9.95 plus $1.00 for postage and handling.<lb/>
PLEASE RUSH YOUR CURRENT LIST OF<lb/>
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIP SOURCES TO:<lb/>
State <lb/>
(California residents please add 6 sales tax.)<lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
17<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
DR. MICHAEL BASSMAN<lb/>
 -�'��,�. <lb/>
 '� y At<lb/>
EXTRA SPECIAL <lb/>
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HURRY! LIMITED SUPPLY<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039999_0018"/><lb/>
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MMMNHH<lb/>
B  a jgg<lb/>
18<lb/>
�.<lb/>
FOWTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
wmmmwmwnmmmmmm<lb/>
mmwwwmmm<lb/>
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Pirates meet Carolina in Saturday contest<lb/>
When ECU meets North Carolina<lb/>
Saturday at Chapel Hill, it will be only<lb/>
the second time in Bill Dooley's term as<lb/>
head coach that the Tar Heels have faced<lb/>
the wishbone. The only other time came<lb/>
in 1974, when UNC lost to Georgia Tech,<lb/>
29-28, in Atlanta.<lb/>
East Carolina comes into the game<lb/>
having won four of its last five games<lb/>
and Carolina enters having lost four of its<lb/>
last five games. ECU has a 4-3 record,<lb/>
while UNC stands at 2-4.<lb/>
" However, the caliber of the Tar Heels'<lb/>
opposition has been much more rigid<lb/>
than that of the Pirates; such as the<lb/>
likes of number one ranked Ohio State,<lb/>
Maryland, Notre Dame and ACC rival<lb/>
North Carolina State.<lb/>
Nonetheless. Carolina's Bill Dooley is<lb/>
preaching that it will take a lot for his<lb/>
team to come back against the Pirates.<lb/>
"Our young team faces a tremendous<lb/>
challenge in playing East Carolina said<lb/>
Dooley. "We'll see what kind of character<lb/>
we have after two close losses to Notre<lb/>
Dame and State<lb/>
Dooley doesn't know how much of the<lb/>
Tar Heels bite has been taken by last<lb/>
weeks 21-20 thriller at State and the<lb/>
21-14 heartbreaker the week before with<lb/>
Notre Dame. Both games saw the Tar<lb/>
Heels fade in the fourth quarter. So far<lb/>
this year. Carolina has been outscored<lb/>
97-57 in the final quarter.<lb/>
"It's going to take a lot to bounce<lb/>
back because East Carolina has improved<lb/>
an awfully lot since its first two games<lb/>
said Dooley. "In pre-season they were<lb/>
worried by their defense, but that seems<lb/>
to have come around<lb/>
East Carolina's wishbone moved to<lb/>
406 yards total offense last week against<lb/>
Western Carolina, and is averaging about<lb/>
330 yards a game.<lb/>
With Mike Weaver at quarterback last<lb/>
week, the Pirates combined the pass and<lb/>
run in wishbone style to dump Western<lb/>
Carolina. Now, Dooley is worried about<lb/>
stopping the Pirates.<lb/>
Trying to stop the Pirates will be an<lb/>
inconsistent defense that has been<lb/>
plagued with inconsistency all year,<lb/>
primarily in the fourth quarter.<lb/>
The defense is led by end Bill Perdue,<lb/>
cornerback Russ Conley, linebacker<lb/>
Bobby Gay and linemen Dee Hardison,<lb/>
Roger Shonosky and Rod Broadway.<lb/>
In last week's loss to State, Carolina<lb/>
once again got good days on offense<lb/>
from tailback Mike Voight (39 carries for<lb/>
155 yards), fullback Brian Smith,<lb/>
wingback Mel Collins and linemen Craig<lb/>
Funk and Mark Cantrell.<lb/>
It is Smith that ECU coach Dye feels<lb/>
is the key to the Carolina offense, as well<lb/>
as the big men up front.<lb/>
"I think the key to their offense is the<lb/>
fullback Brian Smith said Dye. "He's<lb/>
both an excellent blocker and he can run<lb/>
the ball well. Up front, the team is so<lb/>
physical that we'll have to be ready.<lb/>
"On defense said Dye, "we'll have to<lb/>
get a lot of people around the ball and<lb/>
penetrate. It's hard to say how good they<lb/>
are because they've played so much<lb/>
better teams than we have<lb/>
James "Boom Boom" Betterson has<lb/>
been held out of the last two games by<lb/>
an injury and it is not known if he'll be<lb/>
ready or not. Without him, Voight has<lb/>
carried the ball 75 times in the last two<lb/>
games for 324 yards.<lb/>
Dye probably says it best about<lb/>
Carolina when he makes the statement<lb/>
that the Tar Heels are probably "the best<lb/>
2-4 team in the country<lb/>
How they stand so far.<lb/>
East Carolina 4-3<lb/>
3N.C. State<lb/>
25Appalachian St<lb/>
20Wm. and Mary<lb/>
41S. Illinois<lb/>
14Richmond<lb/>
3The Citadel<lb/>
42W. Carolina<lb/>
North Carolina 2-4<lb/>
2633Wm. and Mary<lb/>
417Maryland<lb/>
07Ohio State<lb/>
731Virginia<lb/>
1714Notre Dame<lb/>
020N.C. State<lb/>
14<lb/>
112<lb/>
7<lb/>
34<lb/>
32<lb/>
26<lb/>
21<lb/>
21<lb/>
143<lb/>
148<lb/>
105<lb/>
Dye has cautious attitude<lb/>
going into Carolina game<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Going into this Saturday's game with<lb/>
North Carolina in Chapel Hill, East<lb/>
Carolina's Pat Dye is not making any<lb/>
promises to the home folk, but at the<lb/>
same time he is not conceding defeat to<lb/>
the Tar Heels.<lb/>
"I'm not awed by going up there and<lb/>
playing them said Dye. "Our players<lb/>
shouldn't be either, I just hope they<lb/>
aren't.<lb/>
"We're not going up until Saturday,<lb/>
so we won't have time to get scared. We<lb/>
plan to just slip in, play and slip out<lb/>
Last second goal by Duke downs Pirates, 2-1<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Barry Brahtman caromed a ball past<lb/>
ECU goalie John Keener with four<lb/>
seconds left in the game to give Duke a<lb/>
2-1 soccer victory over East Carolina here<lb/>
yesterday afternoon.<lb/>
Keener, who was credited with 14<lb/>
saves during the game, had positioned<lb/>
himself directly in front of Brahtman in<lb/>
the one-on-one confrontation, but<lb/>
somehow the Duke striker blasted the<lb/>
ball through him.<lb/>
The kick came off a Blue Devil fast<lb/>
break only moments after ECU'S Rich<lb/>
Johnson had missed on an indirect<lb/>
penalty kick witr 1.10 left in the yame.<lb/>
The loss dropped the ECU squad to<lb/>
2-4-2 and was the second loss to an ACC<lb/>
school this year<lb/>
ECU had jumped out to a 1-0 lead on<lb/>
Jeff Karpovich's goal early in the first<lb/>
period and held the lead, despite<lb/>
lackluster offensive play, at halftime by<lb/>
the same 1-0 counf.<lb/>
Moments after Karpovich hit his goal<lb/>
five minutes into the match, Harry<lb/>
Hartofelis also had an opportunity to<lb/>
score for the Pirates. Hartofelis' shot at<lb/>
an empty net, however, was wide, as well<lb/>
as Curt Winborne's shot with 2:24<lb/>
remaining in the half.<lb/>
During the remainder of the opening<lb/>
half the two squads traded sides,<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
controlling the ball at one end of the<lb/>
field and then at the other. Neither team,<lb/>
however, really challenged at a shot<lb/>
except for ECU'S three opportunities.<lb/>
The second half was more physical<lb/>
than the first and for most of the half,<lb/>
Duke controlled the ball at its end of the<lb/>
field.<lb/>
Duke's domination of the ball in the<lb/>
second half was so great that ECU<lb/>
actually had only three legitimate shots<lb/>
a1 the goal.<lb/>
At one point early in the half, ECU<lb/>
missed two close up shots in<lb/>
succession, although no real shot was<lb/>
open due to poor positioning by the ECU<lb/>
team, or good defense by the Duke team.<lb/>
The first of many tense moments in<lb/>
the second half came when East Carolina<lb/>
was called for dangerous play, giving<lb/>
Duke the ball right in front of the Blue<lb/>
Devil goal. Keener, however, blocked a<lb/>
good shot and followed by blocking the<lb/>
next two shots, before Tom Tozer cleared<lb/>
the ball up field with some fancy<lb/>
footwork<lb/>
Tozer failed to get a shot off,<lb/>
however, and Duke returned the ball to<lb/>
its end of the field. For a time, ECU<lb/>
seemed to be standing around, with the<lb/>
exception of some spirited play from<lb/>
Hartofelis and John Gwynn on offense<lb/>
and fullbacks Tom Long and Scott Balas<lb/>
on defend1<lb/>
The Pirates were awakened when<lb/>
m<lb/>
Duke was given an opportunity to hit a<lb/>
goal on an obstruction penalty in front of<lb/>
the ECU net.<lb/>
This came at the 25:58 point of the<lb/>
half. Both teams lined up in front of the<lb/>
goal, but Brian Murray blasted the shot<lb/>
high into the net, over the ECU team, for<lb/>
a 1-1 tie.<lb/>
ECU stormed back but missed a shot,<lb/>
as did Duke, as the play got<lb/>
progressively rougher. On two occasions,<lb/>
ECU players had to come to the aid of the<lb/>
daring Keener when the ECU freshman<lb/>
moved too quickly from the goal and was<lb/>
caught out of place.<lb/>
ECU's last major shot at the Duke<lb/>
goal came with 4:30 left when Jan<lb/>
Kilbyhigh broke on a fast break,<lb/>
outmaneuvered the goalie, but missed<lb/>
the net barely to the left.<lb/>
The winning goal came in the waning<lb/>
moments when Brahtman broke free from<lb/>
the congestion at midfield, outdribbled<lb/>
the Pirates, and slammed the ball at<lb/>
Keener. Keener went to his knees to<lb/>
block the shot and partially did, but the<lb/>
ball squibbled through and into the net,<lb/>
sending the Duke players into a frenzy<lb/>
and the ECU players into dejection.<lb/>
Despite the loss, the play of Keener,<lb/>
Long, Hartofelis, Gwynn and Tony Isichei<lb/>
is to be commended.<lb/>
The Pirates' next game will be at<lb/>
home Sunday against the Braves of<lb/>
Pembroke. Kickoff time is 4 o'clock.<lb/>
before anyone knows we're there<lb/>
Taken out of context, this statement<lb/>
could be taken to mean Dye doesn't<lb/>
expect much from his team against North<lb/>
Carolina, but that is not actually the<lb/>
case. He is only being cautious.<lb/>
"We have to think big to beat people<lb/>
like Carolina, State and Virginia. We can't<lb/>
think in terms that we aren't good<lb/>
enough or that we shouldn't be playing<lb/>
this type of opponent. We are playing<lb/>
them to win and that's what we plan to<lb/>
think about when we go to Chapel Hill<lb/>
However, Dye did seem worried about<lb/>
the Tar Heels' size advantage in the line<lb/>
where every ECU man is outweighted on<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
"The only major worry I have is that<lb/>
Carolina is so much bigger than we are.<lb/>
Other than that, it is hard to tell because<lb/>
they have played so much better caliber<lb/>
competition that we have<lb/>
Dye did say the offense's play against<lb/>
Western Carolina was encouraging, as<lb/>
well as that of the defensive secondary.<lb/>
"We got back to our basic offense<lb/>
against Western Carolina and the results<lb/>
were real good. Our attack was with the<lb/>
basic wishbone, and that allowed us<lb/>
some big plays running, and in turn,<lb/>
opened up some big passing plays.<lb/>
"Right now our offense looks better<lb/>
than anytime before this season.<lb/>
"Our secondary had its best day of<lb/>
the year. Those four young men (Jim<lb/>
Bolding, Bobby Myrick, Ernest Madison<lb/>
and Reggie Pinkney) have great talent<lb/>
and they put it all together Saturday.<lb/>
Seven interceptions is tremendous and<lb/>
that kind of performance will turn most<lb/>
any game around<lb/>
Finally Dye sees the game this<lb/>
weekend as a big one for East Carolina<lb/>
University, not just the football team.<lb/>
"There is no way of getting around<lb/>
the fact that playing an ACC school, and<lb/>
particularly Carolina, has got to mean so<lb/>
much to our program, our fans and our<lb/>
alumni. The ECU folks have always been<lb/>
looked down upon by Carolina folks. It<lb/>
means that much more to our alumni for<lb/>
that reason<lb/>
Kickoff time at Kenan Stadium for<lb/>
Saturday's game is 1:30.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
19<lb/>
51 iT<lb/>
mi<lb/>
Larry Lundy honored as Rhodes Scholar nominee<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Larry Lundy has been playing football<lb/>
for the ECXI Pirate football team now for<lb/>
three years and, although a starter, he<lb/>
had gained little exposure until last week<lb/>
when it was announced he had been<lb/>
nominated for a prestigious Rhodes<lb/>
Scholarship.<lb/>
Lundy, who was a Southern<lb/>
Conference All-Academic athlete last<lb/>
year, is the first ECU student ever<lb/>
recorded as having received such a<lb/>
recognition.<lb/>
The Havelock, N.C. native, said of the<lb/>
honor that it was "what I consider the<lb/>
greatest honor I've ever received without<lb/>
a doubt<lb/>
The nomination came to Lundy after it<lb/>
had been recommended by Athletic<lb/>
Director Clarence Stasavich that he be<lb/>
nominated.<lb/>
Lundy then contacted Dr. John Ebbes,<lb/>
faculty advisor on the Rhodes Scholar-<lb/>
ship, who put his name into nomination<lb/>
with the state Rhodes Scholarship office,<lb/>
which will later send it on to the national<lb/>
selection board. If Larry should be so<lb/>
lucky as to receive a Rhodes Scholarship,<lb/>
he will be one of 32 awarded the honor in<lb/>
the United States.<lb/>
Lundy's credentials not only include a<lb/>
3.4 overall average and a philosophy<lb/>
major, but his talents on the football<lb/>
field, since the Scholarship is also<lb/>
selected on the basis of athletic<lb/>
endeavors.<lb/>
Lundy is a starting tackle on the East<lb/>
Carolina offensive line and he wished to<lb/>
recognize his line mates instead of<lb/>
expound upon Ns nomination.<lb/>
"Our offensive line this year is<lb/>
working more efficiently as a group to<lb/>
get done what we want to get done. So<lb/>
far, I think we've had a pretty good year.<lb/>
This could be because we were all<lb/>
experienced at the beginning of the<lb/>
season<lb/>
Presently, Lundy's mates on the<lb/>
starting offensive line are Wayne Bolt<lb/>
and Jimbo Walker at the guards, Ricky<lb/>
Bennett at the opposite tackle and Tim<lb/>
Hightower at center. Randy Parrish has<lb/>
also started some games for the Pirate<lb/>
offensive line this year.<lb/>
Lundy said blocking, like classwork,<lb/>
is not just a straight ahead type thing, it<lb/>
Mike Voight a valuable asset<lb/>
to Tar Heel football program<lb/>
By RICK BREWER<lb/>
Special to the Fountainhead<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.CMike Voight is<lb/>
half-way to the magic 1,000-yard rushing<lb/>
mark and it now appears the University of<lb/>
North Carolina junior will reach that goal<lb/>
for the second straight year.<lb/>
Voight upped his season rushing total<lb/>
to 525 yards by gaining 155 yards against<lb/>
N.C. State last Saturday. The total came<lb/>
on a career-high 39 rushes as Mike<lb/>
played most of the game at tailback.<lb/>
Last season Voight ran for 1,033<lb/>
yards as he and James (Boom Boom)<lb/>
Betterson alternated at tailback. But with<lb/>
Betterson sidelined for the last two<lb/>
weeks witi. a leg injury, Voight has<lb/>
become the workhorse of the Tar Heel<lb/>
attack.<lb/>
He had 36 carries for 169 yards two<lb/>
weeks ago against a powerful Notre<lb/>
Dame defense. Then he followed that up<lb/>
with his brilliant performance against the<lb/>
Wolfpack.<lb/>
"With Boom out of there, I'm really<lb/>
running harder than ever said Voight<lb/>
after the State game. "I know how much<lb/>
he wants to play and I feel like he's<lb/>
depending on me to do the playing for<lb/>
both of us<lb/>
Voight's performance drew praise<lb/>
from Wolfpack coach Lou Holtz.<lb/>
"Mike Voight is just a super, super<lb/>
football player said Holtz. "He's a<lb/>
tremendous runner and a great<lb/>
competitor<lb/>
Voight is now averaging just over 105<lb/>
yards rushing per game. If he keeps<lb/>
running at thai pace, the Tar Heels will<lb/>
have their sixth 1,000 yard rusher in the<lb/>
Bill Dooley coaching era.<lb/>
In his career, Voight now has 1,840<lb/>
yards rushing. He has passed Betterson<lb/>
and moved into fourth place among<lb/>
Carolina's all-time leaders. Still ahead of<lb/>
him are Don McCauley (3,172), Charlie<lb/>
Justice (2,634) and Ken Willard (1,949).<lb/>
One reason Voight has had such great<lb/>
running success the last two weeks has<lb/>
been the strong play of the Tar Heel<lb/>
offensive line. The Tar Heel line has been<lb/>
getting better and better every week.<lb/>
The leader ail season has been Mark<lb/>
Cantrell. Cantrell had an accolade thrown<lb/>
his way last week when N.C. State<lb/>
changed its entire defense for the<lb/>
Carolina game. Wolfpack Coach Lou<lb/>
Holtz said the change was made in an<lb/>
effort to combat the play of Cantrell and<lb/>
his teammates in the line.<lb/>
While Cantrell turned in another good<lb/>
performance against State, the top<lb/>
players in the line were guard Craig Funk<lb/>
and tackle Tommy Burkett. Both had<lb/>
outstanding days as the Tar Heels rolled<lb/>
up 367 yards in total offense.<lb/>
See Voight, page 21.<lb/>
involves practice and hard-work.<lb/>
"We have several different blocking<lb/>
schemes that we use against the various<lb/>
defenses we see. Quite Sequently we call<lb/>
signals between ourselves to help with<lb/>
the blocking and make it more efficient<lb/>
Lundy is really looking forward to this<lb/>
week's game with North Carolina for the<lb/>
reason he is simply tired of hearing the<lb/>
name in this area.<lb/>
"I was raised around this area<lb/>
(Havelock is 50 miles away) all my life<lb/>
and all I've ever heard about is Carolina<lb/>
and I'm a little sick of it.<lb/>
"Two years ago we were robbed of<lb/>
beating them by several controversial<lb/>
calls and being a senior, this will be my<lb/>
last chance to get a shot at Carolina<lb/>
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20<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
in i � m i ii a i mmmmmmmmi<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
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Time-Out<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Dooley doing some<lb/>
on his own<lb/>
i<lb/>
Saturdays football contest means so much to East Carolina that little should need<lb/>
be done to psyche up our squad for the game. For North Carolina, though, getting up<lb/>
for Saturday's game could be a little harder.<lb/>
Two big losses in the past two weeks and a grueling 31-28 win over Virginia the<lb/>
week before could make it that way. This regardless of the fact the Tar Heels seem<lb/>
fairly healthy, despite the uncertain status of running back James "Boom Boom"<lb/>
Betterson. If Betterson plays Saturday, this could give the Tar Heels the added<lb/>
incentive to rise up this weekend and "put it to the Pirates<lb/>
But Bill Dooley seems to be doing a pretty good job of preparing for Saturday's<lb/>
game by criticizing the officiating of last week's 21-20 loss to North Carolina State.<lb/>
This raving by Dooley has Pat Dye bothered.<lb/>
"You know said Dye, "it worries me that coach Dooley and coach Holtz are<lb/>
saying so much publicly about the officials. We've had good officiating with the ACC<lb/>
schools since I've been here, but it seems so much is said before our game with<lb/>
North Carolina and it worries me<lb/>
Which brings to mind a 28-27 loss ECU had to North Carolina the last time the<lb/>
Pirates met the Tar Heels in 1973.<lb/>
"You remember that East Carolina lost its chance to beat North Carolina last time<lb/>
we played up there with official's calls. Now they'll be intimidated with coach<lb/>
Dooley's comments on the eve of our game.<lb/>
I just don't believe in publicly knocking the officials. One should go through the<lb/>
proper channels like I did when I was unhappy with one of our Southern Conference<lb/>
games earlier this year<lb/>
In the Southern Conference, going through the proper channels usually doesn't<lb/>
help at all, but coach Dye does have a point in that the criticism could affect official's<lb/>
willingness to call plays against the host Tar Heels, because of comments Dooley is<lb/>
making.<lb/>
"Coach Dooley is worried about the officiating after a game said Dye, "but I'm<lb/>
worried about it before the game<lb/>
One of ECU'S favorite coaches, Sonny Randle, may be out on the line this week.<lb/>
Randies Virginia Cavaliers play Wake Forest in Charlottesville this weekend and, if<lb/>
the Cavaliers lose, it could result in a sticky situation for Randle.<lb/>
Before the season began Randle was quoted as saying he'd quit after this year if<lb/>
Virginia did not have a winning football team. Well so far this season Virginia has lost<lb/>
five of six games and one more loss could mean Randle is up the creek. Somehow, I<lb/>
wish that Virginia would win its next two games, so ECU would have a chance to do<lb/>
the honors on November 8. That's when the Pirates travel to Virginia to take on the<lb/>
Cavaliers and Randle in a Homecoming clash.<lb/>
Last week's fearless forecasts resulted in eight winners in 10 games. That .800<lb/>
record jogs my season tally up to 46-16-2 for a .742 percentage. As for this week,<lb/>
there are some real close ones to call and it promises to be a very suspenseful week<lb/>
nationally and locally. If I'm going to have a bad week this season, this week could<lb/>
easily be the one. This week's picks:<lb/>
North Carolina over East Carolina, 27-19.<lb/>
-Take away my booster card, but I go against the Bucs for the first time this year.<lb/>
Appalachian State over Richmond, 28-24.<lb/>
-The thin mountain air may be too much for the sooty Spiders' web.<lb/>
Notre Dame over Southern Cal 24-21.<lb/>
-What a choice. Could easily go other way. Last year it was A.Ds day. Who will it<lb/>
be this time?<lb/>
South Carolina over Louisiana State, 34-13.<lb/>
-Gamecocks are at peak of season. LSU only mediocre this year.<lb/>
Pittsburgh over Navy, 28-19.<lb/>
-Tony Dorset! always does well against the Midshipmen. Has water wings again this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Virginia over Wake Forest, 21-17.<lb/>
-I hate to go with Randies Cavaliers, but Deacons are digressing week-by-week.<lb/>
VMI over the Citadel, 17-6.<lb/>
-The Army-Navy game of the Southern Conference may need war maneuvers to cany<lb/>
away the survivors<lb/>
Ohio State over Purdue, 42-6.<lb/>
-Buckeyes keep rolling along to a National Championship.<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M over Baylor, 17-10.<lb/>
-Last year's SWC champs won't repeat in 1975, but this should be a good game.<lb/>
North Carolina St. over Clemson, 31-12.<lb/>
-Wolfpack invades Death Valley, come away with Tiger skin for Holtz.<lb/>
Michigan over Indiana, 22-6.<lb/>
-Biggest Big Ten Matchup of day ends in a big win for bowl hungry Wolverines.<lb/>
Spiders emerge on top<lb/>
Richmond's Spiders took a 24-19 win<lb/>
over VMI last week, placing them in sole<lb/>
position of first place in the conference<lb/>
standings with a 3-0 record.<lb/>
The VMI loss, coupled with The<lb/>
Citadel's 44-0 pasting of Davidson,<lb/>
dropped the Keydets into a tie for second<lb/>
with the Bulldogs.<lb/>
Those were the only two conference<lb/>
games last week, as three of the other<lb/>
four conference teams came out winners.<lb/>
ECU downed Western Carolina for<lb/>
Homecoming, 42-14, ASU routed Ler.oir<lb/>
Rhyne, 52-28, and Furman dumped Holy<lb/>
Cross by a 21-14 tally. Meanwhile, the<lb/>
Wlliam and Mary Indians continue to<lb/>
lose, dropping their sixth game of the<lb/>
year without a win, 22-0, to Rutgers.<lb/>
Despite downing the Keydets,<lb/>
Richmond still has a major contest ahead<lb/>
of itself this weekend when it meets<lb/>
Appalachian State in Boone. Another<lb/>
major game will match the Citadel<lb/>
against VMI in Lexington in a battle<lb/>
between the conferences second-place<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
Elsewhere, ECU takes its 4-3 record<lb/>
to Chapel Hill to take on Carolina in an<lb/>
afternoon clash. ECU has won four of its<lb/>
last five games, while over the last two<lb/>
weeks the Tar Heels have dropped a pair<lb/>
of squeakers in the fourth quarter, one to<lb/>
Notre Dame, 21-14, the other to N.C.<lb/>
State, 21-20.<lb/>
William and Man meets Furman at<lb/>
home as they try to prevent the longest<lb/>
losing streak since 1915, when it went<lb/>
0-8. The Paladins, winners of their last<lb/>
two games, will be seeking to pull into a<lb/>
tie with ECU in the conference standings.<lb/>
If Furman wins, it will also pull into a tie<lb/>
with the loser of the VMI-Citadel game.<lb/>
Davidson will take its 0-4 record to<lb/>
Hampden-Sydney.<lb/>
Three conference records were set<lb/>
last week. First, against Davidson, the<lb/>
Citadel set a conference record by<lb/>
holding the Bulldogs to only 34 yards in<lb/>
total offense. The Citadel also became<lb/>
the number one team in the nation in<lb/>
scoring defense, having allowed but 32<lb/>
points in six games.<lb/>
Against Lenoir Rhyne, Appalachian<lb/>
set two single game offense records. One<lb/>
was for total yards rushing-572, and the<lb/>
other for first downs-35.<lb/>
But the big game last week was VMI<lb/>
and Richmond, as the Spiders jockeyed<lb/>
into the driver's seat in the title race.<lb/>
After the game, Richmond's coach Jim<lb/>
Tait was all smiles.<lb/>
Richmond's Ed Krellis returned the<lb/>
opening kickoff 100 yards to start the<lb/>
team on their way to a 17-0 lead, before<lb/>
VMI rallied back to almost win the game.<lb/>
Now with VMI and the Citadel and<lb/>
Richmond and Appalachian State<lb/>
squaring off this weekend, Saturday<lb/>
should really tell a lot more about who<lb/>
will be conference champ, or it could just<lb/>
cloud matters further, if Richmond loses.<lb/>
Richmond3-0-0<lb/>
The Citadel2-1-0<lb/>
Virginia Military2-1-0<lb/>
East Carolina2-2-0<lb/>
Appalachian St.1-1-0<lb/>
Furman1-2-0<lb/>
William &amp; Mary0-2-0<lb/>
Davidson0-2-0<lb/>
3-0<lb/>
4-2-0<lb/>
2-4-0<lb/>
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The Toyo View is designed to take full advantage of<lb/>
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Its only limitation is your own imagination.<lb/>
October 24, 25<lb/>
Carolina Photo<lb/>
115 B Henderson Drive Jacksonville, North Carolina<lb/>
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INTRAMUI<lb/>
It IB WreHK.<lb/>
In this ad<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
i i � �iU r i � Mi ii n mi wiftl �aj i ii<lb/>
21<lb/>
Godette shines on Pirate defense this season<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina football opponents have<lb/>
been sorry to see Gary Godette this year.<lb/>
His presence on the squad has not only<lb/>
given the Pirates' a leader for their young<lb/>
linemen, but also an experienced and<lb/>
respected player with which to challenge<lb/>
the opposition's offense.<lb/>
But before the season started it<lb/>
Hockey ties,<lb/>
spikers lose<lb/>
In a home match, Tuesday afternoon,<lb/>
the women's field hockey team tied the<lb/>
Tar Heels of UNC-Chapel Hill, 3-3.<lb/>
The Pirates took a quick 2-0 lead in<lb/>
the first half on the offensive play of Gail<lb/>
Betton and Jane Gallop.<lb/>
The second half consisted of more<lb/>
scoring and offensive play. Goals by<lb/>
Bashie Buba and Laurie Gunter rallied<lb/>
Carolina back into the game. However,<lb/>
another ECU score, this time by Cariene<lb/>
Boyd, gave the Pirates a 3-2 lead.<lb/>
Going into the final minutes of the<lb/>
game, it looked as though the Pirates<lb/>
would pull out the match. However, in<lb/>
the final one minute of play, Carolina<lb/>
scored, producing a 3-3 tie.<lb/>
The tie left the Pirate record at 3-5-1,<lb/>
with their next game October 27 against<lb/>
UNC-G in Greensboro.<lb/>
In other women's action ECU was<lb/>
defeated twice in their second<lb/>
triple-header match by UNC-G and<lb/>
Appalachian State University.<lb/>
In the first match the Pirates fell to a<lb/>
2-1 decision to UNC-G. The game scores<lb/>
were 11-15, 15-11, 11-15.<lb/>
Appalchian delivered ECU with its<lb/>
second three game defeat of the evening<lb/>
with a 10-15, 15-13, 8-15 match victory.<lb/>
wasn't certain how the Havelock native<lb/>
would fit in on the defense. Godette had<lb/>
hurt his knee in pre-season training last<lb/>
year and this sidelined him for the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Starting the 1975 season, Godette<lb/>
slowly got back into shape, trained the<lb/>
knee and got back into play;ng condition.<lb/>
When the season started Godette was<lb/>
back at defensive end. A position where<lb/>
he had made All-Conference his<lb/>
CARY GODETTE<lb/>
INTRAMURALS - This action came In one of the Intramural playoff gamaa earlier in<lb/>
the week. The playoffs are taking place this week in all three divisions of competition.<lb/>
In this action, Pi Kappa Phi beat PI Lambda Phi, 34).<lb/>
mt<lb/>
me<lb/>
mm<lb/>
sophomore year. The knee injury<lb/>
bothered him a little at first, but now<lb/>
Godette says his knee is fine.<lb/>
"I had gained about 20 pounds since I<lb/>
last played and at first this put extra<lb/>
strain on the knee and it hurt said<lb/>
Godette. "The first couple of games I had<lb/>
it treated and it was alright. Since that<lb/>
time I really haven't had much trouble<lb/>
with it. It has cut down my lateral<lb/>
mobility, but I can still move straight<lb/>
ahead all right<lb/>
Godette is a junior eligibility-wise,<lb/>
because of his injury, so he still has a year<lb/>
left on the Pirate squad, but he was<lb/>
around when Pat Dye's predecessor,<lb/>
Sonny Randle, was head coach.<lb/>
Under Randle, Godette was a<lb/>
defensive end, too, but a different type of<lb/>
defensive end.<lb/>
On Randle's defense, the ends were<lb/>
down linemen with containment respons-<lb/>
ibilities. Now, under Dye, the ends play<lb/>
stand up and read on the keys, although<lb/>
at times they also play containment.<lb/>
"We play a different defense now<lb/>
where everyone has a responsibility to<lb/>
take care of said Godette. "At defensive<lb/>
end we try to play the option by keeping<lb/>
the tight end off the linebacker and<lb/>
forcing the quarterback to pitch the ball<lb/>
while still staying in the play, in case of<lb/>
a pitch.<lb/>
"On a regular offensive alignment, we<lb/>
just try and keep a seam from forming in<lb/>
the line where the back can get loose.<lb/>
Sometimes when I play the weak side I'll<lb/>
have pass coverage<lb/>
Godette says he will usually go to<lb/>
where the offensive power is, sending<lb/>
freshman Zack Valentine to the other<lb/>
side.<lb/>
"It all depends on where the offense<lb/>
is geared. I will generally go where the<lb/>
offense runs at, whether it's the weak<lb/>
side or the strong side<lb/>
So far this season Godette has been<lb/>
involved on 44 tackles, 33 solos, and<lb/>
recovered two fumbles. He has also<lb/>
tackled the opposition for losses eight<lb/>
times. That's not bad for a guy with a<lb/>
bad knee.<lb/>
Gary Godette can't convince his<lb/>
opponents he has a bad knee, though.<lb/>
Voight<lb/>
.Confined from page 19.<lb/>
Funk played both left and right guard<lb/>
and also was the kickoff-retum and<lb/>
punting teams.<lb/>
"Our offensive line did a great job<lb/>
said UNC Coach Bill Dooley. "When we<lb/>
had to get a score in the game's closing<lb/>
moments, our line moved State right off<lb/>
the line of scrimmage. It was an<lb/>
outstanding effort<lb/>
Despite Carolina's 21-20 loss to N.C.<lb/>
State last week, the Tar Heels got<lb/>
another excellent performance from<lb/>
quarterback Bill Paschal I. He completed<lb/>
seven of 11 passes for 77 yards and one<lb/>
touchdown and also gained 42 yards<lb/>
rushing.<lb/>
Paschal I has now thrown at least one<lb/>
touchdown pass in every game this fall.<lb/>
On the season, he has now completed 50<lb/>
per cent of his passes for 732 yards.<lb/>
"There are some outstanding quarter-<lb/>
backs in the Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
says Dooley, "but, I'll match Bill Paschall<lb/>
against any of them. He's having a great<lb/>
year for us<lb/>
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22<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
am n mmu <lb/>
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Women voters holdsecond forum<lb/>
By JACK MILLER<lb/>
An explanation of the state and local<lb/>
educational power structure in N.C. was<lb/>
the topic of a public forum Tuesday, Oct.<lb/>
21 in the ECU Allied Health Building.<lb/>
"Who Runs the Schools?" was the<lb/>
second of three forums on 'Education in<lb/>
Transition: Private Rights and the Public<lb/>
Good sponsored by the Greenville - Pitt<lb/>
County League of Women Voters.<lb/>
The keynote speaker, Anne M.<lb/>
Del linger, Asst. Prof, of Public Law and<lb/>
Government, UNC-Chapel Hill, noted the<lb/>
importance of education in our society<lb/>
and said that interest in education was<lb/>
shared by nearly everyone.<lb/>
We see tne relationship between<lb/>
education in our society and our well<lb/>
being she said.<lb/>
In answer to who runs the schools,<lb/>
Del linger said, "I wish I could give you<lb/>
an exciting answer, like the CIA runs the<lb/>
schools, but I can't.<lb/>
"There is no simple answer regarding<lb/>
who runs the schools. Though there are<lb/>
many different viewpoints from various<lb/>
segments of society, not one answer can<lb/>
")e all-inclusive<lb/>
Dellinger outlined the state authority<lb/>
regarding the formulation of school<lb/>
policy.<lb/>
"The constitution of N.C. provides for<lb/>
the General Assembly, an appointed<lb/>
eleven memebr State Board of Education,<lb/>
and an elected state superintendent of<lb/>
public education to formulate and carry<lb/>
out school policy Dellinger said.<lb/>
The General Assembly sets up<lb/>
general guidelines and directions for the<lb/>
state board. The state board then takes<lb/>
these directions and formulates policy,<lb/>
e.g how teachers should be licensed,<lb/>
fees to be paid, what textbooks are to be<lb/>
used, and the like.<lb/>
"The job of the state superintendent<lb/>
is to carry out the policy of the state<lb/>
board<lb/>
Dellinger noted the General Assembly<lb/>
is occasionally specific in its directions<lb/>
to the state board, as when it called for<lb/>
the teaching of free enterprize concepts<lb/>
Capitalism fai<lb/>
(CPS)-A majority of Americans favor<lb/>
major changes in our economic system,<lb/>
including employee ownership and control<lb/>
of US companies, according to a<lb/>
nation-wide poll conducted by the<lb/>
People's Bicentennial Commission.<lb/>
Among the results are the following:<lb/>
33 percent of the public believes that<lb/>
the capitalist system is on the decline;<lb/>
58 percent believe that big business<lb/>
dominates the actions of our public<lb/>
officials, while 25 percent believe that<lb/>
public officials dominate the actions of<lb/>
America's major corporations;<lb/>
66 percent favor employee ownership<lb/>
and control of U.S. companies;<lb/>
The results indicate that Americans are<lb/>
much more willing to experiment with the<lb/>
economy than most politicians think.<lb/>
in the public schools.<lb/>
At the local level, school operation is<lb/>
determined by the local school board and<lb/>
the local superintendent, according to<lb/>
Dellinger.<lb/>
"As in the state system, the local<lb/>
board formulates policy and the<lb/>
superintendent carries it out Dellinger<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Though ideally this means the local<lb/>
board has complete control over school<lb/>
policy, this is not always the case,<lb/>
according to Dellinger. "A well estab-<lb/>
lished superintendent can wield much<lb/>
influence and power in the formulation<lb/>
process Dellinger said.<lb/>
According to Dellinger, the powers of<lb/>
the local board include decisions on<lb/>
school property acquisition, when to<lb/>
build new buildings, and the hiring and<lb/>
retaining of all school personnel, though<lb/>
the state may regulate the pool of<lb/>
potentials from which the board may<lb/>
draw.<lb/>
"The local board decides things which<lb/>
most directly affect the students during<lb/>
the day Dellinger said.<lb/>
"An example of a state board directive<lb/>
is the requirement that local boards must<lb/>
provide a reading program in the primary<lb/>
grades Dellinger said.<lb/>
"The local board then continues from<lb/>
there. It may offer traditional methods or<lb/>
innovate on its own, determine what<lb/>
extracurricular activities should promote<lb/>
reading, and decide on other areas of<lb/>
work which would achieve its goal<lb/>
Dellinger noted that general policy<lb/>
guidelines by the state board give the<lb/>
local boards much leeway in running the<lb/>
schools. The local superintendent has<lb/>
the responsibility of administering the<lb/>
policy of the local board. "He must be<lb/>
intimately acquainted with local and state<lb/>
policy since he will execute it Dellinger<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In financing the schools, Dellinger<lb/>
said the state and local governments<lb/>
share responsibility.<lb/>
"Though the state legislature could<lb/>
fund the schools totally, it does delegate<lb/>
some financial responsibility to the local<lb/>
boards Dellinger said.<lb/>
"However, N.C. is a poor state. This<lb/>
means that the local systems receive a<lb/>
large proportion of their funds from state<lb/>
taxes<lb/>
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Dellinger said the range of pupil<lb/>
expenditure in N.C. was from $725 to<lb/>
$1,257. She attributed the large<lb/>
discrepancy in part to the vagueness of<lb/>
state statures regarding school funding.<lb/>
Dellinger said that in 1974, 69 per<lb/>
cent of school monies came from the<lb/>
state, 21 per cent came from the local<lb/>
level, and 10 per cent came from the<lb/>
federal government.<lb/>
"Though the state contributes the<lb/>
largest proportion of money, it has<lb/>
sought little control in operating the<lb/>
school systems Dellinger said.<lb/>
"The federal government is just the<lb/>
opposite. While it contributes the<lb/>
smallest share of school money, it<lb/>
requires that many conditions be met<lb/>
before that money can be spent<lb/>
She added that federal funds are<lb/>
earmarked for many things, including the<lb/>
Head Start program for underprivileged<lb/>
children programs for the handicapped,<lb/>
sex discrimination alleviation, and school<lb/>
nutrition programs.<lb/>
Concluding Dellinger said, "School is<lb/>
basically a relationship between young<lb/>
people and teachers. Because of this,<lb/>
teachers may have the greatest individual<lb/>
power of all<lb/>
A four person panel of area educators<lb/>
commented on the speaker's present-<lb/>
ation. They were Ms. Myra Cain, Englsih<lb/>
Dept ECU, Ms. Fannie Jackson,<lb/>
Director, Meadowbrook Daycare Center;<lb/>
Dr. Michael Logan, Anthropology Dept<lb/>
ECU; and Dr. Herbert Pascal, History<lb/>
Dept ECU.<lb/>
Ms. Fannie Jackson said the local<lb/>
boards have the greatest power over how<lb/>
the schools are run. She added that<lb/>
involvement by everyone in the school<lb/>
policy making process was needed to<lb/>
build an effective school system.<lb/>
"Schools are for the children and<lb/>
belong to the people she said. "Total<lb/>
involvement is needed by the community<lb/>
for an effective school system<lb/>
Dr. Herbert Pascal answered the<lb/>
question, who runs the schools?, by<lb/>
pointing out the increasing role the<lb/>
courts are playing in determining school<lb/>
policy boundaries. "The range of judicial<lb/>
review is increasing without bounds or<lb/>
limits said Pascal. "I find the trend<lb/>
alarming<lb/>
Dellinger did not agree. "I feel that we<lb/>
will see an increase over the next ten<lb/>
years, but it will begin to slack off and<lb/>
we will not see the Supreme Court<lb/>
running our schools she said.<lb/>
The last forum in this series will be<lb/>
on Tuesday, Oct. 28 at 8 p.m. in the<lb/>
Allied Health Building auditorium.<lb/>
The topic will be "Why Have<lb/>
Schools?"<lb/>
Speaker for the evening will be James<lb/>
L. Smith, Assoc. Professor of Philoso-<lb/>
phy, ECU.<lb/>
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"But th<lb/>
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The e:<lb/>
"lowever,<lb/>
3xtended<lb/>
November<lb/>
Dublicity<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039999_0023"/><lb/>
:��� V �:��' ���'��<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
23<lb/>
GA essay contest deadline<lb/>
nay be extended until mid-Nov.<lb/>
The Student Government Association<lb/>
las announced that less than two weeks<lb/>
emains before the deadline on the SGA<lb/>
Essay Contest, titled, "If I Were<lb/>
President of SGA, I would<lb/>
The contest began in mid-September<lb/>
inder the office of SGA Vice-President,<lb/>
dike Brown. Tim Sullivan, SGA Executive<lb/>
Vssitant, took over the project when<lb/>
3rown was granted a leave of absence<lb/>
ast week until winter quarter.<lb/>
"There are some loose e.ios now, with<lb/>
he transition commented Sullivan.<lb/>
"But there's not too much to worry<lb/>
ibout. The contest is going full-steam<lb/>
The executive officer did state,<lb/>
lowever, that the deadline might be<lb/>
axtended two weeks - until mid<lb/>
Movember due to the lack of earlier<lb/>
Dublicity<lb/>
"We want to make sure everyone has<lb/>
chance to enter continued the<lb/>
3urlington native.<lb/>
"The first of our goals during this<lb/>
contest is to generate some healthy<lb/>
feedback, to get the ideas and gripes<lb/>
from the student body. The second goal<lb/>
Aas to have some fun<lb/>
SGA is offering several prizes as an<lb/>
added incentive, said Sullivan. These<lb/>
include a portable TV for first prize.<lb/>
Other prices are: AM-FM ClockRadio -<lb/>
2nd prize, hair-styler - 3rd prize, and<lb/>
three $10.00 gift certificates as 4th<lb/>
prizes.<lb/>
"If the ideas put across in the essays<lb/>
are good then the small amount of<lb/>
money used for the prizes will have been<lb/>
well-spent Sullivan said.<lb/>
The Executive Branch's budget, which<lb/>
the contest falls under, set aside $250.00<lb/>
for the various prizes. That budget<lb/>
passed the legislature during its October<lb/>
20th session.<lb/>
"Because we want as many entries as<lb/>
possible, the deadline might be extended<lb/>
until the middle of next month<lb/>
(November) said Sullivan.<lb/>
SGA has placed posters around the<lb/>
campus publicizing the contest, with<lb/>
emphasis on the prizes and the need to<lb/>
keep Student Government from becoming<lb/>
an "Ivory Tower" isolated from student<lb/>
concerns, he said.<lb/>
SdraWcpeninc?<lb/>
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FENDER Twin Reverb Amp. Only 1 year<lb/>
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BOOK TRADER located corner Evans<lb/>
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buy used paperbooks, also comic books.<lb/>
Open Tues. Sat. 9 4.<lb/>
SPEAKER CABINET Two 12's. Great<lb/>
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good shape, only $100. 752 7398.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '64 Buick, white with red<lb/>
interior, good tires (snow tires on back).<lb/>
Needs muffler and radio antenna. Price<lb/>
$175.00.<lb/>
FOR SALE Yamaha FG 160 acoustic<lb/>
guitar. Excellent condition 758-1207.<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752 5133.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Silvertone Bass Amp. Good<lb/>
Condition $85. Hollowbody electric guitar<lb/>
two pickup exc. condition $100.<lb/>
Call 752 7398.<lb/>
2 BEDROOM TRAILER for rent at<lb/>
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After 5, call 758 0032.<lb/>
KENWOOD AMP KA8006 70 Watts a<lb/>
channel, Rectilinear 111 speakers,<lb/>
Pioneer Turntable PL 12ac, 11 months<lb/>
Old, $700, Phone 758 5359.<lb/>
APPLICATIONS for pub board photo<lb/>
grapher now being accepted. Call<lb/>
758 6366<lb/>
WANTED Good home for 12 week old<lb/>
white half persian kitten. Call 752 3995.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to share<lb/>
Eastbrook apt. with male. Reduced rent<lb/>
in exchange for housekeeping (washing,<lb/>
etc). Call after 9 p.m. 758 2135.<lb/>
FOR SALE 1974 Bronco, excellent<lb/>
condition. MUST sale, $3300.00. Call<lb/>
758 0497, after 6 p.m.<lb/>
LOST Black Lab puppy (5 months<lb/>
old), in vicinity of East Rock Spring<lb/>
Road &amp; College Hill NO ID. Answers<lb/>
to Zack. Rewards call Ed Rawi at<lb/>
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JVC RECEIVER 4VR 5414, 30 Watts a<lb/>
channel at quad, 60 Watts a channel<lb/>
at stereo, 18 months old, $350, phone<lb/>
758 5359<lb/>
WANTED for new art shop photographs,<lb/>
ceramics, crafts and such for sale on<lb/>
consignment come by w sample between<lb/>
15 p.m. Mon Fri. Studio Photographen,<lb/>
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PART TIME WAITRESS pick your own<lb/>
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STURGILL GUITAR Carolina 100 model<lb/>
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7529496.<lb/>
TYPING term papers 7560081.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Small Schwinn Varsity 10<lb/>
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1968 Volkswagen Squareback $1000<lb/>
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758-1228<lb/>
Dear Pirate Fans,<lb/>
The owner of the Happy Stores is a Carolina<lb/>
graduate who challenges the Pirates to beat the<lb/>
Tarheels Saturday . If ECU wins the Happy Store<lb/>
will give a free beer to everyone in Greenville who<lb/>
returns from Chapel Hill with a victory ticket stub.<lb/>
On the way to Chapel Hid Saturday, show<lb/>
your tickets at the Happy Store and they will sell<lb/>
you a 75 bag of ice for 25�.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Bill Ipoch<lb/>
Pres. Happy Stores<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1323 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
news<lb/>
! FLASH F<lb/>
SGA recognition Buc suggestions SOULS meeting SGA Essay<lb/>
i<lb/>
All campus organizations which are<lb/>
willing to be recognized by the SGA<lb/>
should have a legislator submit their<lb/>
Constitution to the legislature as soon as<lb/>
possible. No organization will be able to<lb/>
receive appropriations from the SGA if<lb/>
their Constitution is not submitted.<lb/>
Squadron meeting<lb/>
Squadrons from N.C. and S.C. will<lb/>
meet to discuss problems and new<lb/>
developments that have occurred within<lb/>
the past year. It also gives the AAS<lb/>
Commanders from Area B-2 a chance to<lb/>
get acquainted.<lb/>
Youth debate<lb/>
ECU is participating in the Bicenten-<lb/>
nial Youth Debates series. This presents<lb/>
undergraduate students with an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to demonstrate skills in debating,<lb/>
extemporaneous speaking, or persuasive<lb/>
speaking. Topics include consideration of<lb/>
many current political tcpics.<lb/>
No previous training in speaking is<lb/>
required for participation in the<lb/>
extemporaneous and persuasive speaking<lb/>
categories.<lb/>
Students interested should contact<lb/>
Thomas Eamon in Brewster A-130 by<lb/>
Monday, October 27.<lb/>
Chem seminar<lb/>
George K. Schweitzer, professor of<lb/>
Chemistry at the University of Tennessee,<lb/>
will present a seminar on "Photoelectron<lb/>
Spectroscopy Fri OCt. 24 at 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
in room 201, Flanagan Building.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served in the<lb/>
conference room at 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
B.S. senior show<lb/>
There will be a senior show by Angela<lb/>
Pittman, a B.S. candidate concentrating<lb/>
in ceramics, in Rawl. Cases from Oct.<lb/>
26-31. It will feature wheel thrown and<lb/>
handbuilt ceramics, especially Raku fired<lb/>
pieces. There will also be textiles,<lb/>
silkscreened fabrics and weaving.<lb/>
Union committee<lb/>
Anyone interested in applying for a<lb/>
position on the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Union Recreation Committee may pick up<lb/>
applications at the information desk at<lb/>
Mendenhall or from the secretary at the<lb/>
committee offices in Mendenhall. Eight<lb/>
available positions are open to those<lb/>
interested.<lb/>
What is a yearbook to you? What do<lb/>
you think it should or should not<lb/>
include? What did you like or dislike<lb/>
about the 1975 BUCCANEER? The 1976<lb/>
BUCCANEER staff is interested in your<lb/>
opinion because we want to create a<lb/>
great book in 76. We need your ideas,<lb/>
suggestions or complaints so we can<lb/>
improve in the future. Please call us at<lb/>
758-6501, stop by the BUCCANEER office<lb/>
in the Publications Center between 9 and<lb/>
4 daily or drop a note in campus mail<lb/>
telling us what you think about the<lb/>
BUCCANEER. Your ideas and complaints<lb/>
will be greatly appreciated and carefully<lb/>
considered in the preparation of the 1976<lb/>
BUCCANEER. Help us make this<lb/>
yearbook your yeartxxk.<lb/>
Election complaints<lb/>
Don Rains, chairperson of the SGA<lb/>
Rules and Judiciary Committee is<lb/>
welcoming all elections complaints. The<lb/>
election controversy may be over, but<lb/>
many students still have opinions to be<lb/>
heard, he says. Rains can be reached at<lb/>
758-4019.<lb/>
ial bike ride<lb/>
Applications are beginning to come in<lb/>
from college students throughout the<lb/>
U.S. for the 1976 Cross Country College<lb/>
Bike Ride being held in honor of the<lb/>
American Revolution Bicentennial. The<lb/>
ride is sponsored by Universities<lb/>
throughout the U.S. and will begin in<lb/>
Denver on June 20, 1976, and terminate<lb/>
on July 15, in Philadelphia and<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
According to Steve Danz, project<lb/>
coordinator, riders will stay at colleges<lb/>
and hostels along the route. The route<lb/>
itself will be along the Transamerica Bike<lb/>
Trail. Riders will participate in<lb/>
Bicentennial activities along the route.<lb/>
College students interested in joining the<lb/>
ride should write to bikecentennial, 805<lb/>
Glenway Suite 227, Inglewood.Ca. 90302<lb/>
for application and further information.<lb/>
Blood drive<lb/>
On October 21, 22, 23, there will be a<lb/>
Blood Drive held in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
The hours are 11:00 to 5:00 on Tuesday<lb/>
and 10:00 to 4:00 on Wednesday and<lb/>
Thursday. The Blood Drive is being held<lb/>
for three days this year because of the<lb/>
extreme shortage of blood.<lb/>
Unniversity accepteo excuses will be<lb/>
given to those students who donate blood<lb/>
and I of help during classes. Red Cross<lb/>
donation cards will be updated or issued.<lb/>
Our goal for the three day period is a total<lb/>
of 750 pints.<lb/>
Your help will be appreciated.<lb/>
There will be a Souls meeting<lb/>
Thursday night (Oct. 23) at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
the Afro-American Cultural Center. All<lb/>
members are asked to be present to hear<lb/>
and vote for officers. Voting hours will be<lb/>
from 8:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. Thursday<lb/>
night only.<lb/>
Europe<lb/>
Now is the time to plan your next<lb/>
summer. Your bicentennial vacation could<lb/>
be a turkey, or it could be one you'll never<lb/>
forget. ECU is offering a 76 European tour<lb/>
during the first summer session next year,<lb/>
and you could go. Europe is waiting: See<lb/>
Copenhagen, London Brussels, Amster-<lb/>
dam, Bonnand Paris. Forty-two days of<lb/>
travel, fun and education (nine credit hours<lb/>
worth!) For more details, go to the<lb/>
Political Science Dept Brewster-A wing.<lb/>
Young Democrats<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the Young<lb/>
Democrats on Monday, Oct. 27 at 8:00<lb/>
p.m. in 244 Mendenhall. This meeting will<lb/>
be held for Senator Thomas Strickland who<lb/>
3 a Democratic candidate for the office of<lb/>
Governor of North Carolina. All students<lb/>
and faculty are urged to attend.<lb/>
IBM demonstration<lb/>
There will be a demonstration of an<lb/>
IBM 5100 portable mini-computer by Mr.<lb/>
Jack Wallace on Monday, Oct. 27 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in Rawl 129. This demonstration is<lb/>
sponsored by the Association for<lb/>
Computing Machinery (ACM). The public<lb/>
is invited to attend. Anyone interested in<lb/>
computers as a hobby or a profession is<lb/>
encouraged to come to this demonstration<lb/>
or see Dr. Richard Kerns in Rawl 133 to<lb/>
learn about ACM and the computer-related<lb/>
programs offered at ECU.<lb/>
Eckankar<lb/>
An ECKANKAR introductory lecture will<lb/>
be i.etd Oct. 23,1975, at 7:30 p.m. in room<lb/>
221 Mendenhall. All students, faculty and<lb/>
interested persons are invited to attend.<lb/>
ECKANKAR is the Path of Total<lb/>
Awareness It is the natural way to<lb/>
God-Realization via Soul Travel. Soul<lb/>
Travel is the art of shifting one's attention<lb/>
away from the material worlds into the<lb/>
worlds of true beingness beyond energy,<lb/>
matter, time and space. Through the<lb/>
spiritual exercises of ECK and the inner<lb/>
guidance of the living ECK Master, one<lb/>
proves through his own experiences,<lb/>
existence beyond the physical body, and<lb/>
begins his jounrney back to God, the<lb/>
source from which he came. This breaks<lb/>
his cycle of karma and reincarnation and<lb/>
finally leads him into the God-Realized<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Would you like to walk away next<lb/>
month with a portable tv, an AM-FM<lb/>
clockradio, a hair styler - free? Enter the<lb/>
Student Government essay contest<lb/>
entitled: "If I were SGA President, I<lb/>
would Take a problem you see or<lb/>
campus - parking, more game courts,<lb/>
outdoor sculpture, anything, and write.<lb/>
Five typed pages maximum, double-<lb/>
spaced. For more info, call or come bv<lb/>
SGA, 2nd floor Mendenhall.<lb/>
Oktoberfest<lb/>
The German Club will sponsor ar<lb/>
Oktoberfest, complete with beer anc<lb/>
snacks Thursday, Oct. 23 at 8:00 P.M. al<lb/>
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bolt.<lb/>
For further information, contact the<lb/>
foreign language dept. Everyone is invited<lb/>
Oriental Art Sale<lb/>
A special exhibition and sale o<lb/>
Original Oriental Art will be presented or<lb/>
Thurs. Nov. 20,1975, at the Social Science<lb/>
Bldg. from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Marson Ltd. of Baltimore, Mary lane<lb/>
specializes in exhibiting for sale �.<lb/>
collection of Original Oriental Art totalinc<lb/>
approximately 500 pieces from Japan<lb/>
China, India, Tibet, Nepal and Thailand<lb/>
The oldest prints date back to the 18th anc<lb/>
19th Century and include Chinese<lb/>
woodcuts, Indian minati're paintings anc<lb/>
manuscripts and master vorks by suet<lb/>
artists as Hiroshige, Kuniyoshi, anc<lb/>
Kunisada. The modern pieces consist of i<lb/>
large group of original woodcuts<lb/>
etchings, lithographs, serigraphs anc<lb/>
mezzotints created by such work<lb/>
renowned contemporaries as Saito<lb/>
Azechi, Mori, Katsuda, and Maki. <lb/>
representative will be present to answe<lb/>
questions about the work, artists and th<lb/>
various graphic techniques employed<lb/>
Prints are shown in open portfolios in ar<lb/>
informal atmosphereand you are invited i<lb/>
browse through this fascinating anc<lb/>
well-described collection. The price range<lb/>
is wide and there is a treasure to be founc<lb/>
for most everyone's budget.<lb/>
SGA openings<lb/>
The Speaker of the Legislature and th<lb/>
Secretary of the SGA will hold a screenin<lb/>
for the position of clerk of the legislature<lb/>
Applicants can apply in room 23<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Bridge sessions<lb/>
Weekly Duplicate Bridge Sessions ar<lb/>
being held this and every Thursday nigh<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. in room 14 of Mendenha<lb/>
Student Center. Contact Neil Bellingc<lb/>
(752-0459) or Mr. Lindsay Overto<lb/>
758-6611) for more details.<lb/>
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