<?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">
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<pb facs="00040015_0001"/>
8,500 Circulation<lb/>
VOL. 7, NO. 29<lb/>
20 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
u.i i i mini<lb/>
w?<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
n i m ? m ii ni, inn , ?w mum i ubikbh i mi i 'i'i "? i mm ? i ?  mtm?ittmm?<lb/>
This issue-16 pages!<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Paul ready to file suit against Greenville<lb/>
By JIM ELLIOTT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Durham attorney Jerry Paul met<lb/>
Thursday with four students who were<lb/>
involved in the Halloween disturbance in<lb/>
downtown Greenville and members of the<lb/>
Student Government Association to<lb/>
discuss a class action lawsuit against<lb/>
the city.<lb/>
Paul, who received national attention<lb/>
as a counsel for Joan Little, said he has<lb/>
had contact with more than twenty<lb/>
students who were involved in the<lb/>
Halloween night melee, and that "clearly<lb/>
there was a violation of the civil rights of<lb/>
many persons<lb/>
Although he "does not look to the<lb/>
SGA to get involved" in the lawsuit, Paul<lb/>
said he is "ready, willing and able to file<lb/>
suit" against the city.<lb/>
He anticipated the suit would be filed<lb/>
in U.S. District Court in New Bern<lb/>
within 30-45 days, "depending on how<lb/>
fast we get organized<lb/>
An on-campus group called the<lb/>
Organization of Student Rights will<lb/>
spearhead the attempt to bring together<lb/>
students who were involved in the<lb/>
Halloween incident and who would be<lb/>
plaintiffs in the suit.<lb/>
OSR co-chairman Ernie Wruck said<lb/>
Monday he had talked to "quite a few"<lb/>
students who were involved in the<lb/>
Boardmakes<lb/>
new ruling<lb/>
The University of North Carolina<lb/>
Board of Governors ruled Friday that<lb/>
UNC administrators seeking to campaign<lb/>
for political office must receive a leave of<lb/>
absence.<lb/>
Previously, an administrator had to<lb/>
resign his administrative position to run<lb/>
for a full-time office.<lb/>
The board's new policy requires a<lb/>
chancellor to either resign or obtain a<lb/>
leave of absence before formally<lb/>
announcing his candidacy for a full-time<lb/>
office. A leave would have to be<lb/>
recommended by the chancellor's local<lb/>
board of trustees and approved by the<lb/>
full UNC Board.<lb/>
The new ruling would make it<lb/>
possible for ECU Chancellor Leo Jenkins<lb/>
to run for governor and retain his<lb/>
chancellorship.<lb/>
Jenkins has stated earlier that he<lb/>
would consider running for political<lb/>
office if he could obtain a leave of<lb/>
absence. Jenkins could not be reached<lb/>
for comment.<lb/>
The new policy provides:<lb/>
-A university employee must obtain a<lb/>
leave of absence before running for a<lb/>
full-time office or for a part-time office<lb/>
"for which compensation is more than<lb/>
nominal The potential candidate,<lb/>
however, may petition the university to<lb/>
rule that his candidacy would not conflict<lb/>
with his university duties. The Board of<lb/>
Governors will make the final decision for<lb/>
chancellors and other administrators.<lb/>
Local boards of trustees will decide in<lb/>
the cases of those holding lower<lb/>
appointments.<lb/>
-A university employee may seek a<lb/>
leave of absence of up to two years to<lb/>
assume a full-time office or a paid<lb/>
part-time office. A part-time office holder<lb/>
could be awarded a partial leave. If the<lb/>
employee wishes to hold the office for<lb/>
more than two years, he must resian.<lb/>
incident and that "12 students were<lb/>
interested in filing suit against the city<lb/>
Wruck said the membership of the<lb/>
organization would encompass the entire<lb/>
spectrum of students, from those who<lb/>
only were chased away from downtown<lb/>
that night to those who were arrested<lb/>
and beaten.<lb/>
Membership would be open to anyone<lb/>
interested, however, not just those<lb/>
involved in the Halloween incident,<lb/>
Wruck said.<lb/>
An OSR meeting will be held for a<lb/>
concerned students in the Coffeehouse in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center tonight at<lb/>
8:00, according to Tim Sullivan, SGA<lb/>
executive assistant.<lb/>
It was Sullivan who made the first<lb/>
attempt to contact Paul to discuss the<lb/>
possibility of a lawsuit in November.<lb/>
Sullivan was not able to reach Paul<lb/>
personally. He was in California at the<lb/>
time working on a script for a movie<lb/>
about the Joan Little case - but left a<lb/>
message concerning the Halloween<lb/>
incident with Paul's secretary.<lb/>
Later in November, when Paul was in<lb/>
Greenville on a child custody matter, he<lb/>
attended a special public hearing "to see<lb/>
what was happening Several students<lb/>
and concerned citizens and four city<lb/>
council representatives attended this<lb/>
meeting in which the actions of police<lb/>
and those downtown Halloween night<lb/>
were discussed.<lb/>
Last week Sullivan successfully<lb/>
contacted Paul and set up the Thursday<lb/>
meeting between students and the<lb/>
activist attorney.<lb/>
In an interview with Fountainhead<lb/>
after this meeting, Paul said he was<lb/>
disappointed to hear many students<lb/>
apologizing in the public hearing for their<lb/>
actions Halloween night.<lb/>
It is clear that the actions of the city<lb/>
of Greenville and the police were<lb/>
unconstitutional and dangerous, Paul<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He said many students were<lb/>
assaulted and were the victims of the<lb/>
indiscriminate use of tear gas.<lb/>
All cases against those who were<lb/>
arrested that night should have been<lb/>
dropped, Paul added.<lb/>
Commenting on the efforts of<lb/>
students in seeking a redress of<lb/>
grievances from the city, Paul said, "I<lb/>
realize that we are living in a time of<lb/>
student apathy and a law-and-order<lb/>
mentality and I am glad to see students<lb/>
reacting to this<lb/>
"When you challenge the power of the<lb/>
state and break the power of the state<lb/>
they begin respecting individual rights<lb/>
'Ole Smokey' still belches<lb/>
COLD TEMPERATURES across the stat? which brought the first snowfall of the<lb/>
season to Greenville Saturday morning, forced ECU's coal-burning heating plant into<lb/>
operation for the second time this month. Construction of two new fuel oil natural<lb/>
gas burning boilers on 14th St expected to be completed by Jan. 26, will signal an<lb/>
end to the plant's operation.<lb/>
Pitt Hospital agreement reached<lb/>
The ECU Medical School and Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital have reached<lb/>
an agreement concerning the use of the<lb/>
hospital as a teaching facility for the med<lb/>
school.<lb/>
The announcement was disclosed<lb/>
recently by William A. Dees, Chairman of<lb/>
the UNC Board of Governors, when he<lb/>
stated that an "affiliation agreement<lb/>
between the hospital and the medical<lb/>
school was signed Dec. 16 after<lb/>
differences on representation on the<lb/>
hospital board and regulations governing<lb/>
the hospital were worked out The<lb/>
primary concern of the Board of<lb/>
Governors at the present is the proper<lb/>
allocation of funds and starting the<lb/>
construction.<lb/>
This decision is of primary<lb/>
importance to the ECU Med School<lb/>
because the agreement between the<lb/>
hospital and ECU is mandatory before<lb/>
,the Liaison Committee on Medical<lb/>
Education (LCMC), the joint accrediting<lb/>
agency of the American Medical<lb/>
Association will allow accreditation<lb/>
scheduled visit from the LCMC is<lb/>
planned for next month and a formal<lb/>
accreditation meeting will follow in the<lb/>
Spring.<lb/>
The teaching agreement allows 40<lb/>
percent ECU representation on the<lb/>
hospital's board of directors and<lb/>
comparable representation on the<lb/>
hospital's executive committee.<lb/>
Dr. Laupus, Dean of the Med School,<lb/>
was not available for comment.<lb/>
ATTORNEY JERRY PAUL<lb/>
Chesson asks<lb/>
for clarit.cation<lb/>
on treasury item<lb/>
By DENNIS C. LEONARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
SGA Treasurer Larry Chesson has<lb/>
asked for a clarification on several items<lb/>
that appeared in last Thursday's January<lb/>
15th edition of Fountainhead. Chesson<lb/>
stated that there were several points that<lb/>
he wanted clarified to all.<lb/>
Chesson felt that the "whole article<lb/>
was misleading for three reasons "First<lb/>
the headline is misleading, secondly the<lb/>
first paragraph is totally incorrect, and<lb/>
thirdly the sentence stating that the SGA<lb/>
budget was operating in the red was<lb/>
totally erroneous Chesson wanted to<lb/>
further add that he didn't like the way the<lb/>
Fountainhead handled both the SGA<lb/>
Budget Report and the SGA Legislature<lb/>
Report on the same page<lb/>
Chesson clearly stated how the error<lb/>
occurred and how he feels "that he made<lb/>
no mistakes to his knowledge When<lb/>
Chesson made the budget report in<lb/>
October, he noted that there was only<lb/>
$15,000 left for appropriations. Chesson<lb/>
said that he immediately carried the<lb/>
report to Dr. Thornton and Mr. Edwards,<lb/>
the campus budget advisors.<lb/>
"Dr. Thornton and Mr. Edwards admit<lb/>
that they did not check if any error had<lb/>
been made in the previous budgets, and<lb/>
they assumed that my figures were<lb/>
correct said Chesson.<lb/>
Chesson further noted that after<lb/>
checking the budget report with Dr.<lb/>
Thornton and Mr. Edwards once again, it<lb/>
was found that the error had occurred<lb/>
during a previous budget before Fall of<lb/>
1975 and that there was actually<lb/>
$110,304.09 left in the present budget<lb/>
Chesson wanted to further include that "I<lb/>
blame no one for the mistake and the<lb/>
Legislature was only doing what they felt<lb/>
was right<lb/>
<pb facs="00040015_0002"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
i nmmiM 11<lb/>
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Budget error cites need<lb/>
The recent reversals on the exact financial situation in the<lb/>
SGA is interesting from several points of view.<lb/>
First, to start the new year off back in September, the SGA<lb/>
was reported to have a large surplus of cash left over from the<lb/>
past SGA's. Then in December the SGA was told bv Treasurer<lb/>
Larry Chesson that things were not so rosy financially after all.<lb/>
According to Chesson, in December, the SGA coffers only held<lb/>
some $15,000 instead of the previously estimated sum of<lb/>
approximately $110,000.00.<lb/>
Now, after checking the books again in January, Chesson<lb/>
has discovered that his December tabulations were wrong and<lb/>
that indeed the SGA is back "in the money" with the original<lb/>
estimated budget surplus.<lb/>
The first point to be made is not the fact that the SGA<lb/>
Treasurer could make such a mistake. After all, the Treasurer is<lb/>
not a CPA who the SGA is paying $25,000 a year to be right.<lb/>
The Treasurer is a student who has tremendous responsibility.<lb/>
We can't fault Chesson for making the mistake to begin with.<lb/>
He thought he made an honest mistake and immediately made it<lb/>
public and then proceeded to take a lot of criticism for the<lb/>
mistake.<lb/>
The interesting thing is that neither Chesson nor his<lb/>
financial advisor, no less than i doctor from the Business<lb/>
Department, caught the error until wer a month later.<lb/>
It seems like that with the "brai trust" around the executive<lb/>
these days that someone could have caught the error.<lb/>
Then, there is the case of an SGA report from the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee that was highly critical of Chesson<lb/>
and which recommended that Chesson be censured for the<lb/>
mistake. The SGA followed that recommendation last Monday<lb/>
and voted to censure the Treasurer.<lb/>
After fee ting that in fact Chesson's original budaet<lb/>
projection w i right and the huge error had not been made<lb/>
Appropriations Committee chairman Craig Hales sounded like<lb/>
Freddy Prinz when he stated that "it is not the job of the<lb/>
committee to audit the books Hales would be great on "Chico<lb/>
and the Man" saying "that ain't my job, man<lb/>
Well, if the SGA is going to vote to censure the Treasurer<lb/>
then it should at least do a better job or investigating the<lb/>
mistake than it did.<lb/>
The SGA report contended that the mistake Chesson made<lb/>
was "simple to make?but could have been caught sooner if<lb/>
more diligence had been shown<lb/>
Diligence is a good word-in view of the fact that the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee itself did not investigate deeply<lb/>
enough to find out that the mistake was only a mistake in the<lb/>
monthly tabulation and not the monetary shortfall at first<lb/>
thought.<lb/>
Apparently the committee tcok Chesson's word that he made<lb/>
a mistake instead of dipping into the situation deeply enough to<lb/>
find out the real mistake. It was Chesson who found the error<lb/>
this past week, not an SGA committee that recommended to<lb/>
censure him without first finding out if there really was a<lb/>
mistake or not.<lb/>
If Hales is right and it is not the Appropriations Committee's<lb/>
job to audit the books, to thoroughly check on the financial<lb/>
situation with the SGA, then just whose responsibility is it? The<lb/>
SGA has a Treasurer to keep the books, but it would seem that<lb/>
there should be at least some SGA committee to keep tabs on<lb/>
the Treasurer. Hales does not think that it is his committee's<lb/>
responsibility, so perhaps there is another committee in the<lb/>
SGA that keeps an eye on the Treasurer.<lb/>
The same report that recommended that Chesson be<lb/>
censured also recommended that the Treasurer work more<lb/>
closely with the SGA. Communication is a two-way street.<lb/>
Both the Treasurer and the SGA should work more closely<lb/>
together to insure that mistakes of this type do not happen.<lb/>
Apparently, in this case there was no other student check on the<lb/>
Treasurer's report that Chesson handed in in December which<lb/>
contained the mistake.<lb/>
This error should point out the need for some type of SGA<lb/>
check on the executive Treasurer.<lb/>
s<lb/>
mmwm<lb/>
Pub Board policy<lb/>
Several items dealing with various positions and policies of<lb/>
the Pub Board appeared in last week's papers that need<lb/>
clarification. So, we would like to set the record straight on an<lb/>
editorial and a headline.<lb/>
The correction deals with a headline in Tuesday's paper that<lb/>
declared "Pub Board wants independence Actually, the<lb/>
headline did not accurately relate the story which pointed out<lb/>
that the Pub Board has only passed a resolution to begin an<lb/>
investigation of various ways of operating the Pub Board-be it<lb/>
independent or dependent on in relation to the SGA.<lb/>
The second item dealing with the Pub Board that needs<lb/>
correcting was in an editorial last Thursday entitled "Pub Board<lb/>
independence The opening paragraph contends that efforts by<lb/>
the Publications Board to seek financial independence from the<lb/>
SGA is long overdue. Actually, the Pub Board does not now<lb/>
have a set policy to seek financial independence from the SGA.<lb/>
But, there was much talk of financial independence from the<lb/>
SGA at one time from the Pub Board. Immediately following<lb/>
budget action last Fall, the Pub Board, behind the efforts of<lb/>
chairperson Diane Taylor, were all for seeking a financial<lb/>
separation from the SGA. But, apparently talk is cheap and<lb/>
since then the Pub Board has backed off its initial plan and<lb/>
wants to "investigate the possibilities<lb/>
So, to set the record straight for the Pub Board, that group<lb/>
has no written policy at this time that calls for them to seek any<lb/>
type separation from the SGA.<lb/>
However, it is the editorial opinion of this paper that the Pub<lb/>
Board should, in all haste, begin work on a plan that would<lb/>
ultimately lead to independent status from the SGA, similar to<lb/>
that now held by the Student Union.<lb/>
The Pub Board itself was gung-ho, for such a plan at one<lb/>
time. Hopefully, they will return to that position.<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<lb/>
Managing Editor-Ten Tozer Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant<lb/>
Production Manager-Jimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson<lb/>
News Editor-Jim Elliott<lb/>
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Use<lb/>
Features Editor-Pat Coyle<lb/>
Sports Editor-John Evans<lb/>
Fountainheed is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by<lb/>
the Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
during 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/>
?  4-? ?<lb/>
irfi' ?i'i-??&amp;ifej,(&amp;is te?<lb/>
<pb facs="00040015_0003"/><lb/>
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WP<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
3<lb/>
?<lb/>
Students hit residency<lb/>
requirement for tuition<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
We would like to bring the publics'<lb/>
attention to the appalling situation at the<lb/>
Business Office of East Carolina<lb/>
University. Apparently condoned by Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins, as our three fruitless meetings<lb/>
with him yielded only condolences, the<lb/>
Business Office cheats a large portion of<lb/>
its students out of an illegally extracted<lb/>
out-of-state tuition fee. We are among<lb/>
the many students who are legal<lb/>
residents, and denied a N.C. tuition rate,<lb/>
because we moved here while being<lb/>
students. It's a sad situation when a<lb/>
state supported university discriminates<lb/>
against its own residents for being<lb/>
students<lb/>
Other students were granted a<lb/>
substantially lower N.C. tuition rate, only<lb/>
because they were not in school for the<lb/>
twelve month period prior to their<lb/>
registration. The Business Office makes<lb/>
its in-state, out-of-state decisions in a<lb/>
totally subjective and arbitrary manner,<lb/>
with total disregard of the law and legal<lb/>
residency of each student.<lb/>
In this upcoming Bicentennial<lb/>
remembrance of freedom and a hard<lb/>
fought struggle for equality, we hope that<lb/>
the Business Office and Dr. Jenkins will<lb/>
not ignore the students' rights, as they<lb/>
have blatantly done so for the sake of the<lb/>
dollar. A.C.L.U. where are you?<lb/>
E.L. Weintraub<lb/>
D.S. Williams<lb/>
PoiiSci trip noted<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The classroom learning experience is,<lb/>
of course, worthwhile, but it can be<lb/>
greatly enhanced by actual observation of<lb/>
political processes at work. As<lb/>
participants in the 1973 summer program<lb/>
(Travel Study Tour, Political Science 233 -<lb/>
Political Processes, Western Europe), we<lb/>
feel we should inform other students of<lb/>
the values of the trip in hopes that they<lb/>
will avail themselves of the opportunity<lb/>
to travel in and learn more about Europe.<lb/>
The 42 days in Europe will be full of<lb/>
interviews with heads and members of<lb/>
various political panies, heads of labor<lb/>
and business associations. After the<lb/>
interviews the fun will begin. You will be<lb/>
able to mingle with the people of seven<lb/>
foreign countries. In your spare time you<lb/>
will be able to drink wine on the banks of<lb/>
the Rhine, have tea with an English lord,<lb/>
go to Westminster, and visit the famous<lb/>
Carlsburg brewery. All these experiences,<lb/>
plus more, will not only give you insight<lb/>
into the people, but more importantly, an<lb/>
overall view of the immediate future of<lb/>
Europe. Nine quarter hours of credit will<lb/>
be given for the trip.<lb/>
Our trip was very rewarding and we<lb/>
recommend it to anyone in search of an<lb/>
exciting and worthwhile summer. Dr.<lb/>
Hans Indorf, Professor of Political<lb/>
Science, who will be directing the trip to<lb/>
Europe again this summer, will be happy<lb/>
to answer any questions in Brewster<lb/>
A-132. The summer may seem a long way<lb/>
off but it's later than you think. Now is<lb/>
the time to make a decision.<lb/>
Mindy Skelly<lb/>
John Kellogg<lb/>
Youre<lb/>
a person <lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
So you're a homosexual, and you've<lb/>
come out.<lb/>
So you're a black, and you're proud.<lb/>
So you're a woman, and j ou're<lb/>
liberated.<lb/>
The list grows<lb/>
All that should matter is that you're a<lb/>
person, uniquely different.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Laurie A. McAdams<lb/>
731700<lb/>
P.O. Box 134, Umstead<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAKING by phil frank<lb/>
I'M MAJORING IM EQOWmte.<lb/>
if m going d r omnon,<lb/>
ft LEAST m KMQW WHY! <lb/>
OCOLLEGE MEDIA SERVICES-BOX 941VBEBKELEY. CA 9?709<lb/>
MMMMWMMMHMHM<lb/>
MWMI<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAKING .by phil frank<lb/>
I, MI56 WOOL-GEV! r (5CT YOJR<lb/>
ME93V3E YOU'D BE OUT OF CLASS<lb/>
WE WURGRflNDMOWERS ILLNESS<lb/>
Wft THE OLP QIRL'S DOING BEITER<lb/>
COLLEGE MEDIA SERVICES-BOX 9411-BERKELEY CA 94709<lb/>
Pub Board chairman<lb/>
explains Pub Board policy<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Independence! A word that means<lb/>
many things to many people and as<lb/>
common to the young American<lb/>
vocabulary as any.<lb/>
Hopefully, many of you read the<lb/>
article in Tuesday's, January 13.<lb/>
Fountainhead about the Pub Board<lb/>
resolution to "investigate the possibility<lb/>
of becoming independent of the SGA<lb/>
No doubt that statement means several<lb/>
things (or nothing) to many students.<lb/>
Let me first say that the<lb/>
headline-Pub Board Wants Indepen-<lb/>
dence-was and is erroneous. All we did<lb/>
was formally open an investigation into<lb/>
better ways of handling what is a<lb/>
problem for the publications and an<lb/>
obvious thorn in the side of the SGA.<lb/>
Those involved in the problems<lb/>
between SGA and publications must<lb/>
surely agree that something has got to<lb/>
be done, and done now! Those not<lb/>
involved, I ask you to please follow the<lb/>
investigation and lend your comments<lb/>
when the time comes.<lb/>
Each year when public, s submit a<lb/>
budget proposal to the SGA, dreaded<lb/>
but very expected struggle ins 38. The<lb/>
result is the publications get the amount<lb/>
the SGA thinks sufficient, the editors<lb/>
grumble and continue to plead for more<lb/>
until the issue is resolved into an<lb/>
undercurrent of bad feelings, new<lb/>
enemies, distrust, and an unhealthy<lb/>
situation for both SGA and publications.<lb/>
The unhealthy situation lies in the<lb/>
actual devices for "revenge" that may be<lb/>
used. The publications can cease to<lb/>
print, cease to report SGA events to the<lb/>
students or promote only a bad image of<lb/>
the SGA. In retaliation the SGA can turn<lb/>
a deaf ear on publications pleas for more,<lb/>
aid, can critically slash the budgets of<lb/>
the next year, or even, as was tried under<lb/>
SGA president Bill Bodenhammer (1973)<lb/>
freeze all funds, forcing publications to<lb/>
shut down.<lb/>
With ail the other issues going on,<lb/>
these possibilities should not have to be<lb/>
dealt with.<lb/>
If the SGA is to function properly as<lb/>
far as working for the students, they<lb/>
should be in the position of getting fair<lb/>
coverage in print.<lb/>
If publications are to function<lb/>
properly they must be free to offer<lb/>
unbiased coverage.<lb/>
But ever hear the old sayingDon't<lb/>
bite the hand that feeds you?" Not<lb/>
exactly an objective position for either<lb/>
side, is it?<lb/>
Therefore, the Pub Board, which<lb/>
exists as an arm of the SGA and<lb/>
representative of publications, has set<lb/>
out to investigate alternatives to the<lb/>
present setup.<lb/>
Independence is not our ultimate goal<lb/>
at this time. We merely want it to be<lb/>
better and would appreciate comments<lb/>
from anyone concerned.<lb/>
Diane Taylor<lb/>
Pub Board Chairman<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
All letters to the Editor must be<lb/>
accompanied by an address along with<lb/>
the writer's name. However, only the<lb/>
name will be printed with letters<lb/>
published in the Forum.<lb/>
The letter writer's address will be kept<lb/>
on file in the Fountainhead office and<lb/>
will be available, upon request, to any<lb/>
student.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD WILL, UPON PER-<lb/>
SONAL REQUEST FROM A LETTER<lb/>
WRITER, WITHHOLD A NAME FROM<lb/>
PUBLICATION. BUT, THE NAME OF THE<lb/>
WRITER WILL BE ON RLE IN THE<lb/>
EDITORS OFFICE AND AVAILABLE<lb/>
UPON REQUEST TO ANY STUDENT. ALL<lb/>
REQUESTS FOR WITHHOLDING A<lb/>
NAME MUST BE MADE IN PERSON TO<lb/>
THE EDITOR.<lb/>
Any letter received without this<lb/>
information will be held until the letter<lb/>
writer complies with the new policy.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040015_0004"/><lb/>
y . <lb/>
HHBPPHB<lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
in i m mmm niin ibiiim ? in i Biniiaiiiigiw n<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
NCWPC Presidentto visit ECU<lb/>
By BARBARA MATHEWS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
1975 was a very good year for women,<lb/>
according to Danya Yon, president of the<lb/>
North Carolina Women's Political Caucus<lb/>
(NCWPC).<lb/>
Ms. Yon. who became involved in the<lb/>
NCWPC through state Republican party<lb/>
offices, will be at ECU Jan. 23-24 for the<lb/>
NCWPC fifth annual convention.<lb/>
"The gains we made in 1975 are solid<lb/>
gains she said.<lb/>
"Politically, we have made great<lb/>
strides and I think they will continue,<lb/>
since women are recognized as a force<lb/>
now<lb/>
Ms Yon noted that some feel women<lb/>
experienced major setbacks in the<lb/>
business and economic areas.<lb/>
"Gains in such areas will be slower,<lb/>
but there have really been no setbacks<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
"Women are still the last hired and<lb/>
first fired, and are closely tied to<lb/>
minorities in that respect<lb/>
According to Ms. Yon, the convention<lb/>
will be basically an annual meeting. Five<lb/>
workshops are scheduled featuring topics<lb/>
on political tactics, women and finance,<lb/>
and commissions on the status of<lb/>
women.<lb/>
"We decided to hold the workshop at<lb/>
ECU to partially fill the need to go to<lb/>
eastern North Carolina since our<lb/>
membership is not as strong there she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We want to show national priorities<lb/>
and particularly discuss the upcoming<lb/>
political campaigns<lb/>
Funds raised at the convention will go<lb/>
mainly to keep the caucus running,<lb/>
according to Yon.<lb/>
"We hope to have enough to send<lb/>
members regularly to national Women's<lb/>
Political Caucus meetings said Yon.<lb/>
"Later, the funds may be used for<lb/>
campaigns<lb/>
Ms. Yon said the NCWPC has not yet<lb/>
endorsed any candidates because it is<lb/>
DANYA YON<lb/>
not strong enough as a bi-partisan<lb/>
organization and there are no funds for<lb/>
that purpose.<lb/>
"Later, we will draw up an<lb/>
endorsement procedure and be a political<lb/>
organization she said.<lb/>
"Our goals are to see women in<lb/>
elected and appointed policy-making<lb/>
positions in their own party, and of<lb/>
course, to aid passage of the ERA<lb/>
Membt s of the NCWPC include some<lb/>
of the better-known women in North<lb/>
Carolina politics, according to Yon.<lb/>
"A large number of our members are<lb/>
active in party women's clubs, and some<lb/>
hold elective office she said.<lb/>
"Some are just interested women who<lb/>
have never done more than precinct work<lb/>
in their parties<lb/>
Ms. Yon has served on the state<lb/>
board of Republicans, run for clerk of<lb/>
court in Mecklenburg County, and will<lb/>
serve on a national women's task force in<lb/>
1976.<lb/>
Advertising specialist to teach courses<lb/>
By DENNIS C. LEONARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The ECU Business Department has a<lb/>
new, visiting professor, who specializes<lb/>
 SENIORS ONLY<lb/>
in marketing and advertising. Mr. Frank<lb/>
Logino is teaching at ECU for two<lb/>
quarters through the invitation of<lb/>
Dr. Bearden of the Business Department.<lb/>
Mr. Logino came to ECU directly from<lb/>
Marstellar Inc the 15th largest<lb/>
advertising agency in the U.S located in<lb/>
Chicago.<lb/>
While at Marstellar, Inc Logino was<lb/>
an account executive for Clark Equipment<lb/>
S- Unlimited Income Potential. Career ?<lb/>
Position in Sales Work in j<lb/>
 drooniilio Tallinn nn C.nWnnc ?<lb/>
Biggin Shoe Repair Shop<lb/>
m Shoe Store<lb/>
Across from Blount-Harvey Store<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 W. 4th Street<lb/>
Repair All Leather Goods<lb/>
wiirwiirl<lb/>
Wilber's ?<lb/>
Family 1-<lb/>
Favorites<lb/>
Co the FMC Corporation, and Masonite.<lb/>
Mr. Logino chose to expand his abilities<lb/>
at Marstellar and became a copy writer<lb/>
where he feels "it makes the ads<lb/>
personally more interesting<lb/>
Mr. Logino recieved his undergratuate<lb/>
degree from Wake Forest University and<lb/>
his MBA from Northwestern University in<lb/>
Chicago.<lb/>
He has jast recently co-authored a<lb/>
book with Stewart Britt entitled, What<lb/>
You Should Know About Advertising. He<lb/>
was asked to co-author the book because<lb/>
Britt felt that he would "add more<lb/>
student oriented material and research to<lb/>
the text His future plans in education<lb/>
are to attend either Harvard or UNC-CH<lb/>
to acquire a PhD. in Business.<lb/>
During the course of the interview,<lb/>
Mr. Logino chose to expound on several<lb/>
of the ad industries selling tactics and<lb/>
statistics.<lb/>
He stated that "advertising has to<lb/>
break down audience statistics to<lb/>
determine their acceptance to the<lb/>
product Mr. Logino further noted that<lb/>
the "sophisticated process of consumer<lb/>
research is actually consumer pre-<lb/>
diction<lb/>
He personally believes that "the most<lb/>
important innovation in the marketing<lb/>
sector of business during the past 20<lb/>
years has been consumer behavior<lb/>
research" and added that "advertising<lb/>
has been a direct product of this<lb/>
extensive study<lb/>
Another interesting idea expressed by<lb/>
Logino was that "today's advertising is<lb/>
geared towards the mass public with<lb/>
average intelligence, the 90 to 110 I.Q.<lb/>
range<lb/>
Mr. Logino has done extensive<lb/>
research on the topic of the consumer<lb/>
behavior approach incorporated into the<lb/>
marketing system and should provide an<lb/>
interesting insight into the courses he<lb/>
will be teaching Winter and Spring<lb/>
quarters.<lb/>
The Business Department welcomes<lb/>
the addition of Mr. Logino's youthful<lb/>
intellect and he should add a fresh<lb/>
dimension to the department.<lb/>
Note: Journalism minors do not forget<lb/>
that BUSA 352 is a possible elective and<lb/>
is actually being offered this Spring.<lb/>
FEATMIN6:<lb/>
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Fried Shrimp dinners<lb/>
Country fried chicken<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040015_0005"/><lb/>
mix i m u umi<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
im?miiniw.nn humhi i mm<lb/>
5<lb/>
?<lb/>
Speech problems evident<lb/>
By TERRY DANIELS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Speech problems rate high in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina, according to Mr.<lb/>
Robert Muzzarelli, Director of the Allied<lb/>
Health Speech and Hearing Clinic at ECU.<lb/>
Speech problems are detectable in<lb/>
children as young as one by taking a<lb/>
speech evaluation test at the clinic.<lb/>
Solving problems at a young age aid the<lb/>
child later in life, said Muzzarelli.<lb/>
Evaluation testing takes two to three<lb/>
hours and cost $20. After studying the<lb/>
test results a case history of the client<lb/>
is compiled to determine speech<lb/>
problems and related factors. The Speech<lb/>
Clinic is on the third floor of the Belk<lb/>
Building on Charles St.<lb/>
Clients are normally three to eight<lb/>
years old. They experience speech<lb/>
problems preceded by the parents,<lb/>
requiring only to develop more, to birth<lb/>
defects causing improper speech. There<lb/>
are many adults treated for problems<lb/>
ranging from defects caused from birth,<lb/>
to operations requiring speech therapy.<lb/>
According to Muzzarelli, before a<lb/>
client is treated a physician gives a<lb/>
physical examination. Clinic sessions are<lb/>
50 minutes long, two or three times per<lb/>
week per quarter. The clinic session<lb/>
costs $30 for the quarter.<lb/>
The ECU Clinic is also a student<lb/>
training ground. Seniors and graduate<lb/>
students administer the evaluation test.<lb/>
Clinic sessions are also handled by<lb/>
students.<lb/>
All activities are faculty supervised,<lb/>
said Muzzarelli.<lb/>
The clinic sees 120 to 150 clients per<lb/>
quarter, and administers 50 to 60<lb/>
evaluation tests. There is currently a<lb/>
waiting list of 33 persons to take the<lb/>
tests.<lb/>
According to Muzzarelli, 34 under-<lb/>
graduate and 14 graduate students are<lb/>
involved. Six full-time and three part-time<lb/>
faculty members supervise the tests and<lb/>
clinics.<lb/>
The ECU Clinic formally services all<lb/>
of the eastern North Carolina area until a<lb/>
year ago when similar clinics were<lb/>
opened in Rocky Mount and New Bern.<lb/>
According to Muzzarelli, the new clinics<lb/>
have relieved ECU'S work load, and have<lb/>
opened up job opportunities to ECU<lb/>
improvement in public<lb/>
has helped speech<lb/>
The<lb/>
inics<lb/>
graduates,<lb/>
school c<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
ECU'S clinic<lb/>
during February<lb/>
added Muzzarelli<lb/>
will give<lb/>
for speech<lb/>
screenings<lb/>
problems,<lb/>
CADET LT. COL. DEBORAH A. BAKER, newly promoted, has assumed appointment<lb/>
as Group Commander of the ECU Air Force ROTC, Detachment 600. ECU ROTC<lb/>
Commander Col. Ronald Henderson is shown congratulating Cadet Baker on her<lb/>
new appointment.<lb/>
King memorial held<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
"Dr. Martin Luther Kinqwas the best<lb/>
thing to come down the pike in years,<lb/>
and we are all indebted to him for the<lb/>
way he moved this country declared<lb/>
Donovan Phillips, President of the Pitt<lb/>
chapter of the American Civil Liberties<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
In light of his opinion of Dr. King, a<lb/>
civil right leader who was assassinated in<lb/>
April, 1968, Phillips asked Greenville<lb/>
Mayor Percy Cox to proclaim Thursday,<lb/>
January 15 as Martin Luther King, Jr. Day<lb/>
in Greenville. January 15 would have<lb/>
been King's 47th birthday.<lb/>
Obliging to Phillips' request, Cox<lb/>
proclaimed January 15 as Martin Luther<lb/>
King, Jr. Day in Greenville. Cox cited<lb/>
King's nonviolent leadership in the Civil<lb/>
Rights Movement in the proclamation. He<lb/>
also stated that King promoted an<lb/>
atmosphere of human dignity and trust in<lb/>
a traumatic period in the history of this<lb/>
country.<lb/>
"All the citizens of this country are<lb/>
indebted to him for his unique<lb/>
contribution to his country as an agent<lb/>
not only of change but reconciliation<lb/>
Cox continued.<lb/>
Phillips said he a. ed for the<lb/>
proclamation on behalf of all the local<lb/>
civil rights organizations including the<lb/>
Southern Christian Leadership Con-<lb/>
ference (SCLC).<lb/>
Dr. King was national president of the<lb/>
SCLC at the time of his death.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
See King, page 6.<lb/>
IBI MlWlfl H PI<lb/>
7" Reel to reel tapes - wide assortment of<lb/>
music - many are factory pre-recorded.<lb/>
752-7398.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE-please call 756-5167<lb/>
LOST-jeweled gold locket pendant watch<lb/>
that opens by button at top. If found, call<lb/>
752-8492 or return to Clement, room<lb/>
1007<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752-5133.<lb/>
FOR SALE: VW bus, needs much body<lb/>
work, engine runs good. $100. Call<lb/>
758-8395.<lb/>
LOST: Old English Sheepdog with long<lb/>
tail in vicinity of campus. Gray with<lb/>
white face, medium size. Phone<lb/>
758-0062. REWARD!<lb/>
HARMON-KARDON 930 receiver, 5<lb/>
months old. .4 percent distortion, with<lb/>
walnut cabinet costs $475.00, sacrifice<lb/>
for $350.00. Also, matching sofa and<lb/>
chair, excl. cond. $100.00. Call John<lb/>
758-9930.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Will have own<lb/>
room. Upperclass student desired. Rent<lb/>
$63. 307 H. Eastbrook. Ph. 752-0872.<lb/>
HELP WANTED-responsible person with<lb/>
car to babysit from 6:30 to 8:00 am and<lb/>
from 3:00 to 5:00 pm. Phone 752-1664.<lb/>
FOR SALE-1972 Harley Sportster, much<lb/>
chrome, hi-performance. $2250 firm<lb/>
752-8907<lb/>
FOR SALElbanez V 2 months old,<lb/>
perfect cond. $350 or best offer. Call Bill<lb/>
or Carlton 752-8049<lb/>
FOR SALE- 1972 V.W. Bus, Michelin<lb/>
radials, carpeting, paneling 753-4973.<lb/>
MISSING(borrowed) A small female Irish<lb/>
Setter puppy about 9 weeks old. White<lb/>
markings on chest and chin. Lost<lb/>
vicinity of Calico Restaurant. $75 reward,<lb/>
no questions asked. Leave message for<lb/>
Smitty at 752-9920.<lb/>
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Our research papers are sold for<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040015_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
?<lb/>
?wmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
?i Wm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Pub Board chastises misleading coverage<lb/>
The Pub Board in its regular Thursday<lb/>
meeting passed a motion requiring<lb/>
regular financial reports to be submitted<lb/>
from each of the school's publications.<lb/>
The Board passed a motion to have<lb/>
the Fountainhead editor appear and<lb/>
justify his forum policy. A compromise<lb/>
position was reached while discussing<lb/>
the policy with the Board.<lb/>
The writer will be required to give his<lb/>
name, address and phone number for<lb/>
verification by the editor, but only the<lb/>
name will be printed.<lb/>
The address and phone number are a<lb/>
legal protection for the paper against<lb/>
libel and misrepresentation.<lb/>
The writer's name maybe withheld<lb/>
upon personal request before the editor.<lb/>
"We don't verify all letters, the<lb/>
non-controversial letters especially, but<lb/>
we do call to check the controversial<lb/>
letters Taylor said.<lb/>
"Mistakes are unnecessary if the<lb/>
headline writers would read the first few<lb/>
paragraphs of the story Diane Taylor,<lb/>
Pub Board Chairperson said. This was a<lb/>
response to the gross errors in the<lb/>
headlines in recent papers.<lb/>
Since the Fountainhead editor was<lb/>
present, the Pub Board decided not to<lb/>
require the managing editor to appear, as<lb/>
long as the editor brought the errors to<lb/>
his attention.<lb/>
In another misunderstood issue, the<lb/>
Fountainhead's Jan. 15 editorial misrepre<lb/>
sented Board policy according to Diane<lb/>
Taylor.<lb/>
"The Pub Board in their own words,<lb/>
"is investigating the various means of<lb/>
financing university media<lb/>
The Board, after a heated debate<lb/>
concerning subjectivity and objectivity,<lb/>
passed this motion with one abstention.<lb/>
The Pub Board required the<lb/>
Fountainhead editor to retract his Jan. 15<lb/>
KING<lb/>
Continued from page 5.<lb/>
"Although we've come a long way<lb/>
because of Dr. K.ng. many of the things<lb/>
like racism, poverty, and social and<lb/>
economic depression that he fought to<lb/>
get rid of still exist.<lb/>
"America's challenge during its<lb/>
bicentennial is to fulfill Dr. King's<lb/>
dream<lb/>
The activitiesoeganatone o'clockwith<lb/>
memorial services for Dr. King at the<lb/>
Roxy Theatre on Albemarle Avenue.<lb/>
Speakers included Bennie Roundtree, a<lb/>
member of the local Southern Christian<lb/>
Leadership Conference, Irma Daniels,<lb/>
president of the Pitt County Chapter of<lb/>
Concerned Women for Justice, and Dr.<lb/>
Andrew Best, who is Greenville's only<lb/>
black doctor.<lb/>
Best was recently convicted on<lb/>
The U.S. Navy Officerl Procurement Team will be on<lb/>
k campus Jan. 19-21, 7976 in the old Student Union. k<lb/>
Naval Officers will be on hand to talk to interested<lb/>
persons concerning dfficer Positions in Nuclear<lb/>
Power, Aviation, Supply Corps (Business<lb/>
Management), Line, Nuclear Power Instructorand<lb/>
several scholarship programs. Drop by and see<lb/>
if the "New Navy" isforyou.<lb/>
L<lb/>
LT John Gordon PO Box 18568<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27607<lb/>
(919)872-2547<lb/>
Red Rooster Restaurant<lb/>
2713 EAST 10TH STREET ? GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
PHONE 758 1920<lb/>
open 7:00 am - 8:30 pm<lb/>
HOME COOKED MEALS<lb/>
RGD ROOSTGR fl?CIIL9<lb/>
Mon.14BBQ Chicken, 2 Vegetables $1-80<lb/>
Tues. Country-style Steak, w Rice &amp; Gravy, one Vegetable $1.80<lb/>
Wed. Salisbury Steak, 2 Veg. $1 80<lb/>
Thurs. Meat Loaf, 2 Veg. $1 -80<lb/>
Tri. Seafood Platter - Fresh Trout, Shrimp, Oysters, F.F Slaw $2 95<lb/>
all specials include rolls &amp; hushpuppies<lb/>
ALSO: Breakfast served (homemade biscuits)<lb/>
editorial. The reason given was that<lb/>
Taylor interpreted what the Board was<lb/>
doing rather than relying on Board<lb/>
decisions concerning the independence<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
Mike Taylor agreed to the retraction.<lb/>
No retraction of the Jan. 13 article was<lb/>
required by the Board.<lb/>
In other actions applications for<lb/>
editor of the Buccaneer, Fountainhead<lb/>
and Rebel can be picked up, filled out<lb/>
and dropped off in Room 204 Whichard.<lb/>
The application period will be closed<lb/>
Feb. 2, at which time screenings for<lb/>
these positions will begin.<lb/>
The Board passed another motion, to<lb/>
be included in their by-laws, which<lb/>
requires the editor-elect to serve a spring<lb/>
quarter internship period. If the<lb/>
apprentice editor fails to meet this<lb/>
requirement, then a new editor-elect<lb/>
would be selected.<lb/>
This period may be extended to one<lb/>
year by the present editor's discretion.<lb/>
This extended period might be required<lb/>
for potential applicants.<lb/>
The past tradition of the Pub Board is<lb/>
to hold elections for the editor Spring<lb/>
Quarter, without an internship period.<lb/>
Past editors often work for the<lb/>
publications they are applying to, serve a<lb/>
Spring Quarter internship without being<lb/>
required to do so, serve as summer<lb/>
school editor, in the process learning by<lb/>
trial and error, or they are naturally gifted<lb/>
in operating publications since they were<lb/>
born.<lb/>
The Board agreed this would help<lb/>
avoid some errors and give the editor a<lb/>
little practical experience in operating a<lb/>
publication.<lb/>
Those present at the meeting were<lb/>
Ray Hudson, Monika Sutherland, Scott<lb/>
Bright, Eric Shieurin. Diane Taylor, Phil<lb/>
Arrington and Pat Flynn.<lb/>
charges of illegally dispensing controlled<lb/>
drugs.<lb/>
Best's conviction was used as an<lb/>
example of the injustice that still exists<lb/>
in America at a later event held at the<lb/>
1 Pitt County Courthouse.<lb/>
"Dr. Best's conviction is an example<lb/>
of how the system, (not the local system)<lb/>
has tried to discredit black leadership<lb/>
said Greenville Councilman Clarence<lb/>
Gray, who was one of the central<lb/>
speakers at the courthouse rally.<lb/>
Golden Frinks, national SCLC field<lb/>
secretary, speaking at the courthouse,<lb/>
explained that he believes Best was the<lb/>
victim of a political conspiracy. Frinks<lb/>
said politicians outside eastern North<lb/>
Carolina consDired to have Best<lb/>
discredited to keep Best from helping<lb/>
East Carolina University Chancellor Leo<lb/>
Jenkins in his bid for the Democratic<lb/>
nomination for Governor.<lb/>
Ending the activities for the day, a<lb/>
banquet was held at St. Gabriel's<lb/>
Catholic School.<lb/>
Donovan Phillips was the speaker at<lb/>
the dinner.<lb/>
"Dr. King was the most influential<lb/>
black who lived" stressed Phillips. "This<lb/>
country is indebted to celebrate his<lb/>
birthday<lb/>
Phillips also stressed the central<lb/>
theme of the day's activities: "America's<lb/>
challenge during its bicentennial is to<lb/>
fulfill Dr. Kind's dream<lb/>
THE KING MEMORIAL was held in the Roxy Theatre Saturday.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
MW<lb/>
mi<lb/>
tmammmommm<lb/>
m,M<lb/>
tmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
t?S&amp;8&amp;<lb/>
<pb facs="00040015_0007"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
7<lb/>
?<lb/>
tmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm in in<lb/>
ECU archaeology team<lb/>
discovers Indian site<lb/>
By BRYAN SALTER<lb/>
Special to the Fountainhead<lb/>
A team of archaeologists from ECU<lb/>
excavated a new and previously<lb/>
unrecorded Indian burial site in eastern<lb/>
Carteret County. The find is located in<lb/>
the little community of Gloucester on<lb/>
property owned by the Mack Pigott<lb/>
family.<lb/>
The archaeologists, composed of<lb/>
graduate and undergraduate students,<lb/>
were headed by Dr. David Phelps, Prof, of<lb/>
Anthropology and Director of the<lb/>
Archaeology Research Lab of ECU. The<lb/>
archaeology program at ECU is in its fifth<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Excavations began after a preliminary<lb/>
examination on Tuesday, December 9.<lb/>
The work continued to the Christmas<lb/>
holidays period.<lb/>
The location represents an Algonkian<lb/>
or Algonquian burial site intermeshed<lb/>
with a shell pit midden. According to Dr.<lb/>
PhelDS. the site was apparently used for<lb/>
feasting and later as a burial spot. This<lb/>
seems to be a common Algonquian<lb/>
feature for eastern N.C.<lb/>
The probable Indian ethnology was<lb/>
determined from burial patterns as well<lb/>
as pottery remains or sherds found at the<lb/>
site. Similar burial patterns exist at other<lb/>
excavated sites in Chowan Co Currituck<lb/>
Co and on Hatteras Island. In addition<lb/>
to the method of interment, the use of<lb/>
shell-tempered pottery-shell fragments<lb/>
used to help cement the clay - is<lb/>
common to Alaonauian tribes.<lb/>
The Gloucester remains are from the<lb/>
Temple Mound period and are estimated<lb/>
to be about 1500 AD. The Temple Mound<lb/>
Period dates from AD 700 to 1700. This<lb/>
period saw the first establishment of the<lb/>
Mississippian culture in the Eastern<lb/>
Woodlands area and its SDread<lb/>
throughout the region. Temple Mound is<lb/>
subdivided into two phases: Temple<lb/>
Mound I (AD 700-1200) and Temple<lb/>
Mound II (AD 1200-1700). In TemDle<lb/>
Mound II. the MississiDDian tradition had<lb/>
DR. DAVID PHELPS, Associate Professor of Sociology and Anthropology, is<lb/>
shown uncovering pottery fragments in the Carteret diggings.<lb/>
'fr<lb/>
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THIS INDIAN SKULL was discovered recently by the Archaeology ECU Research Lab<lb/>
working on private property in Carteret County, N.C.<lb/>
??rTrtl.l?.?.?M???.??.?<lb/>
spread widely, and its impact on the<lb/>
older resident Woodland tradition culture<lb/>
resulted in numerous regional fusions of<lb/>
the two traditions. This evidence is<lb/>
present at the newly found Carteret<lb/>
County site.<lb/>
Sherds found at the site are net or<lb/>
fabric impressed, a factor of Woodland<lb/>
tradition. The largest sherd found thus<lb/>
far, by David Prewett, bears marking on<lb/>
both sides- an unusual feature. The<lb/>
pottery fragment is wholly impressed on<lb/>
one side and impressed half-way down<lb/>
on the other, the balance bearing a<lb/>
smooth finish.<lb/>
The site is also believed to represent<lb/>
a circular burial instead of the more<lb/>
common rectangular type. A large portion<lb/>
has been washed away over the years.<lb/>
Nevertheless, Dr. Phelps estimated that<lb/>
several layers of occupation miaht be<lb/>
present.<lb/>
"We are just beginning to know the<lb/>
coast and the coastal plains archaeolo-<lb/>
gically said Phelps. "We don't have<lb/>
rryn rrrrt m wjr<lb/>
fJ.XIJ.JJ<lb/>
sufficient records for either of two<lb/>
aboriginal groups: the Neuse (Neusiock)<lb/>
and the Coree (Core or Coranne).<lb/>
A survey was conducted by W.G.<lb/>
Haag in 1954 for the L.S.U. Coastal<lb/>
Studies Institute encompassing the<lb/>
whole Carolina coast.<lb/>
According to Dr. Phelps, the site is<lb/>
important for two reasons: first, for<lb/>
learning the site and of its existence;<lb/>
secondly, for confirming the burial<lb/>
pattern. A minor consideration is learning<lb/>
the distribution range of shell-<lb/>
tempered pottery.<lb/>
The excavation team is composed of<lb/>
ECU students Manny Albright, Jerry<lb/>
Hilliard, Karl Barbee, Kathy Poe, David<lb/>
Prewett, Bill and Cye Gossett, Michael<lb/>
Nevarez, Bob Cande and Mary Hart man,<lb/>
and Bill Simpson, an anthropologist with<lb/>
the N.C. State Parks.<lb/>
See Pictures, page 8.<lb/>
UHSIINA COWBOY SAEOflK<lb/>
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8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 2920 JANAURY 1976<lb/>
m i ummtttm muMa phi mixeai i nm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmn<lb/>
PICTURES<lb/>
Continued from page 7.<lb/>
THIS UNIDENTIFIED INDIAN skull was unearthed by the ECU team. Its sex nas yet to<lb/>
be determined.<lb/>
JERRY HILUARD, graduate assistant, was present on the Carteret County Indian<lb/>
diggings and aided Dr. Phelps in the project.<lb/>
THIS PARTIALLY EXPOSED skeleton was uncovered by the ECU Research Lab and is<lb/>
shown still lodged in the dirt.<lb/>
w m w ww w w w rw w A<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
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m<lb/>
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outh, Inc.<lb/>
Wow at iht ??<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040015_0009"/><lb/>
mi?i?<lb/>
mm<lb/>
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m<lb/>
mtmmmmmi<lb/>
FOUNTAIN HEADVOL<lb/>
7, NO. 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
9<lb/>
mm<lb/>
FEA TURES<lb/>
Lefties show courage<lb/>
in fighting the system<lb/>
By JACKSON HARRILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
There is a plot loose in the world.<lb/>
This one, however, is different from most<lb/>
in that it does not involve governments,<lb/>
politics, or armies. This scheme, though,<lb/>
involves the elimination from the face of<lb/>
the earth of a certain form of the human<lb/>
race: the left-hander. Individual events<lb/>
have led to the conclusion that there<lb/>
lurks in hiding, somewhere, a master-<lb/>
mind formulating a plan to rid humanity<lb/>
of this unusual creature.<lb/>
But a cry is heard in the distance-<lb/>
"Wait! Spare us! We have committed no<lb/>
crime worthy of such punishment as has<lb/>
been handed down to us by a most<lb/>
unmerciful right-handed universe. We are<lb/>
merely another oppressed minority,<lb/>
misunderstood by those of you who have<lb/>
not had to walk a mile in our shoes. Hear<lb/>
our case<lb/>
The voice, by now, has identified<lb/>
itself as the appointed spokesman of all<lb/>
those in the world who share that<lb/>
common bond of fellowship through their<lb/>
left-handedness. The voice falters; it is<lb/>
weak from its many explanations to that<lb/>
vast group of people who do not<lb/>
comprehend the agony and suffering of<lb/>
this tiny band of society. It continues.<lb/>
"We possess a handicap. It only<lb/>
becomes noticeable in the presence of<lb/>
certain items such as butter knives,<lb/>
scissors and baseball gloves. The<lb/>
Droblem is we are just not understood;<lb/>
we only ask that you right-handers of the<lb/>
world would watch out for and protect<lb/>
us. You don't know what it is like to<lb/>
attend fancy dress dinners and have to<lb/>
use those silly little knives they provide<lb/>
on the butter dishes. They were designed<lb/>
as though left-handers weren't expected<lb/>
to ever attend such functions.<lb/>
"Or take scissors, for instance. For<lb/>
your normal right-hander cutting a piece<lb/>
of paper is no problem. But ever since<lb/>
they made their first appearance,<lb/>
scissors have presented a major obstacle<lb/>
to those of my kind. You make several<lb/>
attempts at operating the blasted<lb/>
contraption, and finally either concede to<lb/>
the right-hand or use the left, only to<lb/>
succeed in cutting one of the prettiest<lb/>
ragged edges you have ever seen.<lb/>
"Sports enthusiasts aren't spared,<lb/>
either. That great all-American sport,<lb/>
baseball, teaches the left-hander one<lb/>
all-important lesson: bring your own<lb/>
glove. With right-handers it is simply a<lb/>
matter of showing up at the old sand lot<lb/>
and, when it's your turn to play outfield,<lb/>
simply borrow a glove from someone<lb/>
who is going in to bat. Not so with the<lb/>
left-hander. It's either bring your own<lb/>
glove or hope they ne.er hit the ball your<lb/>
way.<lb/>
"But all is not lost with sports, for we<lb/>
have learned to adapt to your ways. We<lb/>
have learned, for example, how to bat<lb/>
left-handed, and do it just as well, or<lb/>
better in some cases, as those who<lb/>
prefer to use the opposite side. This<lb/>
applies also to golf, where we have found<lb/>
an equal standing with those of the<lb/>
opposing limb.<lb/>
"We find our greatest challenge,<lb/>
though, in the area of weapons. Bolts on<lb/>
rifles were made with the right-hander in<lb/>
mind. The same goes for many sights<lb/>
which were placed on the left side of a<lb/>
piece, making aiming almost impossible.<lb/>
"Right-handers dominate, there is no<lb/>
doubt about it. Several conventions in<lb/>
our society reflect that. The handshake<lb/>
represents, or shows, that a man has no<lb/>
weapon in his hand. Woe be unto those<lb/>
who mistakenly shake with a left-hander,<lb/>
thinking him to be right-handed and<lb/>
disarmed, only to find a knife in their<lb/>
side! The waterglass, in the table setting,<lb/>
is placed in the upper right-hand comer,<lb/>
forcing the left-hander to (shudder!) use<lb/>
his right-hand<lb/>
"The left-hander is always faced with<lb/>
a problem when it comes to using<lb/>
cartridge ink pens. In crossing the page<lb/>
while writing there is usially left behind<lb/>
a smear where there ought to be clean<lb/>
and neat handwriting<lb/>
"Some of these problems have been<lb/>
dealt with. There are now left-handed<lb/>
gloves and scissors available, though not<lb/>
in great supply, that we have seen.<lb/>
Progress is being made. We are getting<lb/>
recognition, though not always the kind<lb/>
that we appreciateWhy I didn't know you<lb/>
were left-handed people are fond of<lb/>
saying when they first see you write. It<lb/>
makes you think you have some sort of<lb/>
strange disease. Another favorite<lb/>
observation of others is the way most of<lb/>
us hold our hands when we write, a<lb/>
position sometimes referred to as "the<lb/>
left-handed crook called so because of<lb/>
the way that the wrist curves around on<lb/>
most left-handed people when they write.<lb/>
"There is my case. Please, all we ask<lb/>
is for a bit of understanding The voice<lb/>
trails off, possibly from exhaustion, or<lb/>
maybe it is on its way to convince others<lb/>
somewhere that that person sitting next<lb/>
to you at dinner trying in vain to cut his<lb/>
steak and at the same time dent your rib<lb/>
cage is no different from you-he only<lb/>
needs a little understanding.<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
Friday night's party<lb/>
was a gay affair<lb/>
By PAT COYLE<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Would you believe I went to my first "bi" party? Some of you may ask what a "bi"<lb/>
party is. It's, er, uh, well it's where the guests are of varied sexual, uh, interests.<lb/>
I was not prepared for the unique situation; if I had been, I would have worn my<lb/>
black leotard, and been very chic and "art nouveau As it turned out, I wasn't aware<lb/>
of the sexual preferences of the majority of the guests, and I had been there quite a<lb/>
while before I found out.<lb/>
Being a typical female, I began to eye the guys in the room as soon as I arrived. I<lb/>
saw two interesting prospects, and I was really hoping one of them would ask me to<lb/>
dance. As luck would have it, both of them were in the mood to dance, so they did;<lb/>
with each other. I gathered my shattered illusions and retreated to a corner of the<lb/>
room, where I stood with some of the other man-hungry females. One girl came over<lb/>
and asked me to dance, but she insisted on leading, so naturally I refused.<lb/>
The alcohol flowed freely, and there was a liberal supply of munchies so it was no<lb/>
surprise when my old pal crazy Joey arrived along with Flash, Ed. and the rest of the<lb/>
crowd. I felt a little apprehensive when Crazy Joey got there; C.J. isn't known for his<lb/>
liberal leanings. But I soon saw my concern was for naught. He'd no sooner stepped<lb/>
in the door when a raucous crowd of sex-crazed females advanced, besieging him<lb/>
with dance requests. When I saw him again an hour later, he was lying prostrate on<lb/>
the floor, surrounded by hovering women.<lb/>
The time came when i realized I should make some new acquaintances. I<lb/>
approached a group of fellows and started a conversation, but ended up walking away<lb/>
in total embarrassment. You see, I have two standard sets of party topics I depend on<lb/>
with new friends; one oriented toward the female types, and the other aimed at the<lb/>
typical macho jock types I am used to. Well, I didn't think these fellows were<lb/>
interested in talking about the latest line of Avon cosmetics, but I didn't think they<lb/>
seemed too interested in speculating on the outcome of the Super Bowl, either.<lb/>
Finally realizing that I stood out like the proverbial sore thumb I decided to go<lb/>
home. Early the next morning my mother called. She asked me what I had done<lb/>
Friday night, and when I replied that I had gone to a party she said "Oh, was it a gay<lb/>
affair?" I sighed and said "Was it ever<lb/>
Drinking is problem<lb/>
for college students<lb/>
throughout the nation<lb/>
In two unrelated incidents last month<lb/>
students died after participating in heavy<lb/>
drinking bouts as initiation rites for<lb/>
campus clubs. At the U. of Nevada-Reno<lb/>
one student died and another was<lb/>
hospitalized for acute alcohol poisoning<lb/>
after consuming large amounts of liquor<lb/>
during initiation into a social-service<lb/>
organization, the Sundowners Club. At<lb/>
the U. of Wisconsin-Stevens Point a<lb/>
prolonged drinking session known as the<lb/>
"death march which is a traditional part<lb/>
of the initiation ceremony of a local<lb/>
social club, Siasefi, resulted in the death<lb/>
of a student. An autopsy revealed a<lb/>
blood alcohol level of .43 of one per<lb/>
cent, almost three times the level of legal<lb/>
intoxication.<lb/>
But drinking to excess is a campus<lb/>
tradition that is hard to break. Chugging<lb/>
contests and all-you-can-drink events<lb/>
continue to be incorporated into campus<lb/>
activities, though not usually officially<lb/>
sanctioned. The "Senior Death March"<lb/>
was revived this year at Notre Dame. Like<lb/>
the ill-fated Wisconsin event of the same<lb/>
name, this is a bar-hopping marathon.<lb/>
The drinking schedule, however, does not<lb/>
include a stop at the on-campus Senior<lb/>
Club nor is the event approved of by the<lb/>
Notre Dame officials.<lb/>
There are, of course, many signs of<lb/>
awareness of the campus alcohol<lb/>
problem. The student body president at<lb/>
the U. of Missouri wrote a letter of<lb/>
complaint to the ABC-TV network after a<lb/>
football sidelight snow featured what<lb/>
many thought to be excessive footage of<lb/>
student drinking. And at the U. of<lb/>
Massachussetts, a student-faculty volun-<lb/>
teer service group is petitioning for an<lb/>
alcohol-free weekend. The group is<lb/>
asking the Campus Center to sell no<lb/>
alcoholic beverages and to program<lb/>
events that do not include drinking for<lb/>
one weekend.<lb/>
m<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040015_0010"/><lb/>
89 -? !<lb/>
10<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7. NO 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
FEA TURdS<lb/>
'Promotes day of rest'<lb/>
Greenville has the Sunday blues<lb/>
By RUDY HOWELL<lb/>
?nfusion of<lb/>
: words<lb/>
you a pair of shoes "<lb/>
"For example said Casey, "the<lb/>
manager is confronted with the decision<lb/>
of i Tmg the various categories in<lb/>
h certain items fall. Pampers, for<lb/>
tie labeled either a paper<lb/>
? on"<lb/>
Worth<lb/>
 an<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
- nville<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?mi,<lb/>
<lb/>
?. the<lb/>
saidPhihp Ca<lb/>
?anager Nicl ai<lb/>
"but<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Material and<lb/>
Workmanship<lb/>
Guaranteed<lb/>
Prompt Service<lb/>
!<lb/>
 ? i<lb/>
?<lb/>
. be one of the<lb/>
th law<lb/>
' -he do ?<lb/>
merchants, howi , feel that the<lb/>
blue-la ,rice they don't<lb/>
! to operate for the full we<lb/>
not a moral issue at all said<lb/>
Greenville Banks, ma1 i if Belk-Tyler<lb/>
Department St<lb/>
erchanl <lb/>
be m favor of the blue-law unless<lb/>
?pelled by competition to remain open<lb/>
on Sunday.<lb/>
"I just don't want to operate the full<lb/>
week It doesn't have to be on Sunday,<lb/>
said Banks smiling. "Monday. Tuesday or<lb/>
twT'tiTifiiiiiifM?niiiiiiiiniiM?wnfaiTiii?iMt?mi'iiiiwwtfi"T'ii?TfH?niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiTWMr?tTw<lb/>
iMiiiiiMnJnniiii)iiMftriHmtmiMirtTrTTrniiinnntf<lb/>
THIS WEEK AT<lb/>
ROCK'NSOUL<lb/>
NEW RELEASES BY:<lb/>
Bob Dylan - "Desire"<lb/>
Jan is Ian- "Aftertones"<lb/>
Kansas - "Masque "<lb/>
Little Feat - "Last Record Album "<lb/>
Queen - "Nightat the Opera "<lb/>
Loggins &amp;? Messina - "Native Sons"<lb/>
Elvin Bishop - "Struttin' My Stuff"<lb/>
Chicago IX - "Greatest Hits"<lb/>
 ? v) ?-?0<lb/>
3 d SALE!<lb/>
 CAICI<lb/>
SALE!<lb/>
? <lb/>
LIST LPs<lb/>
on sale<lb/>
for only<lb/>
$3"<lb/>
i.ii.niyillUlllll "??' liUtll IH 'Hlll4tUIU<lb/>
Wednesday would be fine<lb/>
In February or March, a city council<lb/>
meeting will be directed at either revision<lb/>
or revocation of the law. said Mayoi<lb/>
Percy Cox.<lb/>
According to Mayor Cox. there has<lb/>
not been much public interest in the<lb/>
blue-law at city council meetings<lb/>
Ih.it's what worries me said Mayor<lb/>
"We really don'1 gel the imput from<lb/>
? hants that we should Although<lb/>
mally favots the blue-law, May i<lb/>
? ? feels that it win be voted<lb/>
SUNDAY SHOPPERS play "Blue law roulette<lb/>
,?? x T T T T T T T T T T T ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? f ? ? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
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FOUNTAIN HEAD<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040015_0011"/><lb/>
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 <lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
II<lb/>
mnm?<lb/>
mmtm<lb/>
tmrnm<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Cannon more than sexy in Child Under A Leaf<lb/>
the<lb/>
ayor<lb/>
fr ?n<lb/>
)ugh<lb/>
ay( '<lb/>
By LAURIE WILSON<lb/>
CHILD UNDER A LEAF<lb/>
at firsl - ?<lb/>
unfolds I reveal a lov<lb/>
interesting<lb/>
Dyan Cannon finally I<lb/>
iws her ? t non than rauc<lb/>
. or just II '? 'thouqr &amp; 'igly<lb/>
she aptly<lb/>
lies the parl 'iaracter<lb/>
Domino- eems to<lb/>
imply, she i ight in tl :ie of a<lb/>
black and whiti having to live the<lb/>
somber suburban er husband<lb/>
.oph Campanellai ai e in<lb/>
the bright, dreamlike vor : vith her<lb/>
er, Joseph, and the cl I they had. Of<lb/>
rse. the fact that the child was not<lb/>
her husband's was never revealed to r<lb/>
but was kept a se i I bet Aeen Dominoe<lb/>
Jospeh. hidden like a "child under a<lb/>
rhe chile: hat kept their w<lb/>
together and going - she was the drea<lb/>
three major players, although not<lb/>
outstanding, helped to support each<lb/>
other's character and gave good even<lb/>
formances.<lb/>
The director. George Bloomfield.<lb/>
le good use of symbolism and<lb/>
?mg throughout the film. With the<lb/>
: of lighting, he created the two<lb/>
ds Dominoe lived in. Shadows and<lb/>
dark rooms gave a heavy mood to her<lb/>
home and husband while brightness and<lb/>
airy spaces helped create the illusion of a<lb/>
dream world for the lovers. Bloomfield<lb/>
also used such common symbols as<lb/>
ticking clocks and waterfalls, but his<lb/>
favorite was the whiteness of everything<lb/>
surrounding Dominoe and Joseph Two<lb/>
white cars, white rooms, flowers, clothes<lb/>
- all white to enhance the fairy tale<lb/>
quality of their "pure" love He went<lb/>
'??onrj subtlety and became more<lb/>
Dbvious as the story progress-<lb/>
their dream was literally smother<lb/>
buried by it<lb/>
The pace of the film slow -?ces<lb/>
but the final scenes more than .make<lb/>
for that and the full impact on the I<lb/>
may not even be fe ml ater<lb/>
"Child Under A Leaf" will be playing<lb/>
through Thursday<lb/>
Noel Neil I will be appearing at ECU<lb/>
on Thursday, January 22, 1976 at fa:00<lb/>
p m. in the Mendenhali Student Center<lb/>
ECU students will be admitted with<lb/>
their ID and activity cards, faculty and<lb/>
staff members admitted with Mendenhali<lb/>
Student Center Membership card and<lb/>
publii cost is $2 00 Sponsored by the<lb/>
Student Union l ecture Series Committee.<lb/>
mti ? imiMiMii i ft iim t<lb/>
<pb facs="00040015_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
?'?;? ? ? ?<lb/>
Holland, and Spain. Her activities in the coming season will take her to Europe again<lb/>
as well as to Japan with the BBC Orchestra conducted by Pierre Boulez. Each year<lb/>
she premieres several works written especially for her by leading American and<lb/>
European composers.<lb/>
Miss De Gaetani is a native of Ohio and a graduate of the Juilliard School. She<lb/>
has been Artist-in-riesidence at the University of Wisconsin and a facultv member of<lb/>
theJulliard School. Now Artist-in-Residence at the Aspen Music Festival, Miss De<lb/>
Gaetani also conducts master classes at universities throughout the country. She is<lb/>
Professor of Voice at Eastman School of Music.<lb/>
Tickets may be obtained in the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Prices are as follows: ECU Students - $1.50; Faculty and staff -$4.00; and<lb/>
puhlir. - S4 00<lb/>
Greenville Entertainment Now<lb/>
PLAZA CINEMA<lb/>
The Life and Good Times of Grizzly Adams - This movie is a fictionalized version<lb/>
of the life of James Capen Adams, a legendary trapper and mountaineer of the 1800's.<lb/>
Playing now through Tuesday. Rated (G).<lb/>
Brannigan ? John Wayne fans will not be disappointed in his 'atest screen<lb/>
adventure. Wayne plays a tough-but lovable Chicago cop who travels to London to<lb/>
capture an escaped criminal. All seats $1.00 Wednesday and Thursday only. Rated<lb/>
(PG).<lb/>
Three Days of The Condor - Five top names, including two Oscar winners are<lb/>
united in an action and suspense tale dealing with a secret spy network within the<lb/>
Central Intelligence Agency. Starts Friday. Rated (R).<lb/>
PITT<lb/>
American Grafitti - High School reminiscing of the 1950s. Playing now through<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
The Great Waldo Pepper - Starring Robert Redfoid. Starts Friday.<lb/>
PARK<lb/>
Child Under A Leaf - Dyan Cannon plays in a melodramatic tragedy in the role of a<lb/>
wife, mother, and illicit lover. Now playing. Rated (R).<lb/>
Sundance Cassidy and Butch The Kid - Starts Friday. Rated (PG).<lb/>
?<lb/>
Mezzo-soprano Jan De Gaetani will be appearing in the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre on January 26, 1976 at 8:00 p.m. under the sponsorship of the Student Union<lb/>
Artists Series Committee. Miss De Gaetani's astonishing command of contemporary<lb/>
masterworks and her sensitive virtuosity in the Baroque, classical and romantic<lb/>
repertoire are quickly making her one of America's most active singers.<lb/>
In a single season, 1973-74, she appeared five times with the New York<lb/>
Philharmonic, twice in Carnegie Hall, with the American Symphony Orchestra and the<lb/>
Contemporary Chamber Ensemble, as well as in recitals and chamber concerts<lb/>
throughout the country in the major university concert series. She also appeared<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040015_0013"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
13<lb/>
m<lb/>
)<lb/>
STEWART MANN-Set three varsity<lb/>
records against Maryland and Furman in<lb/>
swimming meets this weekend.<lb/>
Women lose<lb/>
pair of games<lb/>
By JANET HOEPPEL<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The ECU women's basketball team<lb/>
headed into Chapel Hill this past<lb/>
Saturday for a weekend of basketball<lb/>
action. But, the two ensuing games with<lb/>
ACC schools, N.C. State and UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill, proved to be too much a&amp;<lb/>
the Pirates dropped contests to both<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
The Pirates tangled with State in<lb/>
Saturday's matchup and dropped an<lb/>
overtime thriller, 84-83. Neither team was<lb/>
cujle to gain more than a seven point<lb/>
margin as both teams ran and shot<lb/>
throughout the game.<lb/>
Despite a 56 combined point effort by<lb/>
Debbie Freeman and Rosie Thompson,<lb/>
the Pirates could not pull the game out<lb/>
as they shot poorly throughout the<lb/>
contest, managing only 37 percent of their<lb/>
attempts.<lb/>
Down by four at the half, 37-33, State<lb/>
came back betnd the rebounding of<lb/>
Susan Yow who hauled down 24 misses.<lb/>
Free throw accuracy proved to be the<lb/>
eventual deciding factor in the game.<lb/>
State hit on 12 of 14 attempts at the line<lb/>
while ECU salvaged only 13 of 24.<lb/>
The game was tied at 70-70 at the end<lb/>
of regulation and the overtime period<lb/>
continued to be a nip and tuck affair with<lb/>
the Wolfpack holding the ball for the<lb/>
final 20 seconds to ensure the victory.<lb/>
Freeman led the Pirates in all<lb/>
categories with 34 points and 15<lb/>
rebounds.<lb/>
STATEECU<lb/>
Andrews8Chamblee7<lb/>
Earnhardt28Freeman34<lb/>
Lejman2Manning6<lb/>
Mason4Ross14<lb/>
Pickard10Thompson22<lb/>
Ussery8<lb/>
Yow24<lb/>
See Women, page 15.<lb/>
East Carolina's women's basketball<lb/>
team will take on Madison College this<lb/>
Saturday at 5:00 in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
The game will be a preliminary to the<lb/>
ECU-VMI men's game. It will be the<lb/>
second home game of the year for the<lb/>
Lady Pirates.<lb/>
Student ID and activity cards will be<lb/>
required for admittance to the game.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Swimmers take pair<lb/>
from Terps, Furman<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
AmenAmenThat is all that has to<lb/>
be said. With that, it can be told that<lb/>
Maryland's Terrapins were involved in<lb/>
something. The Terps wish they had<lb/>
never seen Minges Natatorium as the<lb/>
ECU swim team used record-breaking<lb/>
performances by several swimmers to<lb/>
manhandle the Terp tankers, 77-36.<lb/>
In a tune-up for the big meet the<lb/>
Bucs whipped the Furman Paladins,<lb/>
64-49, on Friday night.<lb/>
ECU won nine of the thirteen events<lb/>
against the Paladins, to run their<lb/>
conference streak to 33 dual meets in a<lb/>
row. It was a rather dull meet with the<lb/>
Pirates swimming in events otlrer than<lb/>
their own.<lb/>
The Bucs took ten of the thirteen<lb/>
events against the highly-touted Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference foe from College Park,<lb/>
Md. After losing to UNC by only one<lb/>
point, the Terrapins came in very<lb/>
confident that they could notch the sixth<lb/>
win against only one loss, but the Pirate<lb/>
tankers were determined to prevent this<lb/>
and were not to be denied.<lb/>
"I believe this is the greatest win ever<lb/>
for the ECU swimming program said an<lb/>
elated head coach Ray Scharf after the<lb/>
Maryland meet, "and we really gave a<lb/>
tremendous effort, the best I've ever seen<lb/>
us give<lb/>
This weekend's two meets produced<lb/>
five ECU varsity records, one pool record,<lb/>
and in the Maryland match, eight meet<lb/>
records. Stewart Mann, avid Kirkman,<lb/>
John McCauley, and Ross Bohlken led<lb/>
the onslaught on the record book, in<lb/>
what may have been the best day ever for<lb/>
the Bucs in the swimming pool.<lb/>
Mann was the big man for the Pirates<lb/>
in these two meets. He set three<lb/>
individual varsity records, was in on one<lb/>
freshman relay record, and a meet relay<lb/>
mark in the Maryland meet.<lb/>
In the Furman meet, Mann swam to a<lb/>
new varsity record in the 500 freestyle<lb/>
with a time of 4:49.11 to break the old<lb/>
mark of 4:51.00 held by Tomas<lb/>
Palri,gren. He was also involved in a<lb/>
freshman record in the exhibition 800<lb/>
freestyle relay. He teamed with John<lb/>
Tudor, Joe Kushy, and Keith Wade to set<lb/>
a new mark of 7:13.68, bettering the old<lb/>
record of 7:17.80. That was the most<lb/>
excitement there was in the Furman<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
Against the Terps, Mann broke two<lb/>
varsity and meet records and swam on<lb/>
the 400 medley relay team that set a<lb/>
meet record. In the 200 individual<lb/>
medley, Mann broke the varsity record by<lb/>
over two seconds while he cracked the<lb/>
meet mark by almost five seconds. His<lb/>
time was 1:58.81, breaking Gary Pabst's<lb/>
varsity record of 2:00.98 and Bob Hassett<lb/>
of Maryland's meet record of 2:03.00.<lb/>
Mann broke another of Pabst's<lb/>
records in the 200 backstroke. His time<lb/>
of 1:59.35 was over a second lower than<lb/>
Pabst's 2:00.55 clocking. It was 3.35<lb/>
seconds better than the meet record<lb/>
previously held by Maryland. Mann was<lb/>
involved in setting the meet record in the<lb/>
400 medley relay. He teamed with David<lb/>
Kirkman, Keith Wade and Billy Thome for<lb/>
a record time of 3:36.47.<lb/>
Coach Rav Scharf had nothing but<lb/>
praise for his freshman star.<lb/>
"Stewart was tremendous this<lb/>
weekend. His 500 record was especially<lb/>
great. We didn't know how good he<lb/>
would be at that distance, but we quickly<lb/>
found out. He could be great in any event<lb/>
we put him. He was especially inspiring<lb/>
in the Maryland meet when he beat their<lb/>
defending champion Hassett in the 200<lb/>
individual medley<lb/>
Kirkman did not win an individual<lb/>
event, but was barely beaten in the 200<lb/>
breaststroke by Bob Hassett of Maryland,<lb/>
who won last year. His time of 2:15.8<lb/>
was good enough for a varsity record. He<lb/>
was also involved in the medley relay<lb/>
meet record. Coach Scharf cited him for<lb/>
his efforts.<lb/>
"David did great in the relay, really<lb/>
swam well. He so wanted to beat Hassett<lb/>
in the breast, but was just edged out<lb/>
McCauley set two meet records, one<lb/>
pooi mark, and was on the 400 freestyle<lb/>
relay team that set a new meet record.<lb/>
In the 50 freestyle, McCauley had a<lb/>
meet and pool record of 21.51. His meet<lb/>
record broke his own record of 21.80 set<lb/>
last year while it also broke the pool<lb/>
mark of 21.55 set by Paul Trevisan in<lb/>
1973. His time of 47.51 in the 100<lb/>
freestyle broke the meet record of 47.90.<lb/>
He teamed up with John Tudor, Billy<lb/>
Thorne, and Ross Bohlken to set the new<lb/>
meet record in the 400 freestyle relay<lb/>
with a time of 3:09.81. This time puts<lb/>
the relay team close to the NCAA<lb/>
qualifying team.<lb/>
Ross Bohlken set a new meet and<lb/>
varsity mark in the 200 freestyle, with a<lb/>
clocking of 1:44.53 to break the four-year<lb/>
standard of 1:45.20 set by Jim Griffin.<lb/>
He finished a close second to McCauley<lb/>
in the 100 and was a part of the 400<lb/>
freestyle record-breaking team.<lb/>
Other winners against Maryland were<lb/>
Doug Brindley in the 1000 freestyle,<lb/>
Steve Fuedlinger in the 200 butterfly, and<lb/>
Tudor in the 500 freestyle.<lb/>
Brindley turned in a fine time of<lb/>
10:10.60 in the 1000, prompting Scharf to<lb/>
say, "Doug has a great time in the 1000.<lb/>
That's our best time of the year for that<lb/>
event<lb/>
Ruedlinger looked strong in the 200<lb/>
butterfly, swimming his best time of the<lb/>
year with a clocking of 1:59.70. Keith<lb/>
Wade finished second with a time of<lb/>
2:00.50. Tudor turned a strong clocking<lb/>
in the 500 freestyle, winning in 4:55.45,<lb/>
while Tomas Palmgren was second in<lb/>
4:58.29.<lb/>
Other winners in the Furman meet<lb/>
were Mann in the 200 freestyle, Keith<lb/>
Wade in the 1000 freestyle and 200<lb/>
backstroke, John McCauley in the 50<lb/>
freestyle, John Tudor in the 200<lb/>
individual medley, David Kirkman in the<lb/>
200 butterfly, and Lund Sox in the<lb/>
one-meter diving competition.<lb/>
The tankers are idle until next<lb/>
Saturday when they travel to Johns<lb/>
Hopkins University to take on the<lb/>
defending NCAA College Division<lb/>
champions. Johns Hopkins defeated<lb/>
Maine earlier 63-50, a team the Bucs beat<lb/>
64-49. This should be another tough meet<lb/>
for the Pirates, who are now 5-1.<lb/>
Pirates drop<lb/>
third in row<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
WILLIAMSBURG, VaA well worn<lb/>
East Carolina University basketball team<lb/>
dropped a 65-58 decision to William and<lb/>
Mary in a Southern Conference game<lb/>
here Saturday.<lb/>
Playing without injured guard Buzzy<lb/>
Braman and center Tyron Edwards, who<lb/>
was at home recovering from a slight<lb/>
case of pneumonia, the Pirates fought<lb/>
back from a 20-point deficit early in the<lb/>
second half to make a run at the<lb/>
league-leading Indians.<lb/>
Had the Pirates not played so poorly<lb/>
in the opening minutes of the second<lb/>
half, when they failed to score during the<lb/>
first four and a half minutes of play, they<lb/>
may have won the game. The Pirates'<lb/>
slow start in the second half followed a<lb/>
season-long pattern, as the Indians built<lb/>
a 49-29 lead with 13:57 left in the game.<lb/>
The Pirates, playing only seven<lb/>
players, trailed William and Mary by<lb/>
35-27 at the half. William and Mary was<lb/>
playing without all-Conference guard Ron<lb/>
Satterthwaite, but sophomore John<lb/>
Lowenhaupt took up the slack with 12<lb/>
first-half points.<lb/>
After the Indians jumped in front by<lb/>
20, the Pirates could easily have folded.<lb/>
Indeed, in past games, the Pirates had.<lb/>
This time, however, an ECU time-out<lb/>
was followed by a seven-minute spurt<lb/>
which saw the Pirates close the gap to a<lb/>
respectable margin.<lb/>
Whether the Indians let up or the<lb/>
Pirates got charged up, ECU outscored<lb/>
the Indians 14-3, scoring eight points in<lb/>
a row, to pull within 52-43 with 6:25 left<lb/>
in the game.<lb/>
Had East Carolina not made so many<lb/>
turnovers and missed so many scoring<lb/>
opportunities the rest of the way, the<lb/>
Pirates may have been able to come all<lb/>
the way back.<lb/>
Trailing 57-m6 with 3:45 left, ECU<lb/>
scored five straight points as Larry Hunt<lb/>
and Louis Crosby hit from the inside and<lb/>
the outside.<lb/>
William and Mary scored to move<lb/>
ahead by 59-51, but Hunt sank a pair of<lb/>
free throws and Al Edwards followed with<lb/>
a three-point play to close the gap to<lb/>
59-56 with 43 seconds to play.<lb/>
Crosby and William and Mary's John<lb/>
Kratzer added two each for their<lb/>
respective teams and WM fed 61-58 with<lb/>
27 seconds left. ECU now had no<lb/>
recourse but foul William and Mary to get<lb/>
the ball back.<lb/>
When ECU fouled the Indians, John<lb/>
Arbogast and Lowenhaupt each converted<lb/>
both ends of one-and-one situations to<lb/>
ice the 65-58 victory for the Indians.<lb/>
Even though the Pirates showed some<lb/>
class over the final 13 minutes with their<lb/>
comeback, it was still the Pirates' lack of<lb/>
execution in the first 27 minutes that<lb/>
cost them the game. During the<lb/>
comeback, the Pirates' execution was not<lb/>
that much better, the defense simply got<lb/>
the ball back more often.<lb/>
The loss dropped ECU to 4-4 in the<lb/>
conference and 6-9 overall. William and<lb/>
Mary went to 3-0 in the conference and<lb/>
8-6 on the season.<lb/>
After the game, ECU coach Dave<lb/>
Patton said he may have seen something<lb/>
jell for the Pirates during the second-<lb/>
half comeback.<lb/>
"I think I saw the turning point in the<lb/>
second half said Patton. "We finally got<lb/>
the guys to relax and play like they can.<lb/>
"If we had played the first half like we<lb/>
played the second said Patton, "we<lb/>
See Pirates, page 15.<lb/>
?P<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmn<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040015_0014"/><lb/>
F<lb/>
?mm<lb/>
14<lb/>
FOUMTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
imwmmniii tthth ? tun mm i mmtm m<lb/>
?<lb/>
iiPMiHip<lb/>
tmmm<lb/>
Ketcham's shot at NCAA may be coming this year<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Ever since Paul Ketcham arrived at<lb/>
East Carolina and donned his wrestling<lb/>
togs, he's had two major goals, to<lb/>
wrestle in the NCAA Tournament and<lb/>
achieve the ultimate goal of any<lb/>
collegiate wrestler- to become All-<lb/>
America.<lb/>
For Ketcham. the Pirates' veteran<lb/>
performer in the 126-pound weight class,<lb/>
it would undoubtedly be the perfect end<lb/>
to an up and down career at East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
?You know, it's been downright<lb/>
embarrassing to put so much time into<lb/>
wrestling and not being able to even go<lb/>
to the nationals explained Ketcham.<lb/>
I've put a lot of work into wrestling<lb/>
during the last three years and it would<lb/>
be just like a dream come true if I could<lb/>
place in the nationals<lb/>
Ketcham's journey to East Carolina<lb/>
was a lengthy one to say the least. After<lb/>
wrestling for three years at Annandale<lb/>
High School, he went to school for one<lb/>
semester at Old Dominion before<lb/>
dropping out. The Army got him for the<lb/>
next three years and, upon his release,<lb/>
he worked for two years before entering<lb/>
Northern Virginia Community College.<lb/>
While at Northern Virginia CC, he<lb/>
began working out with the George<lb/>
Mason team because no program existed<lb/>
at NVCC. Ketcham soon learned of John<lb/>
Welborn's dynasty at East Carolina and<lb/>
made his way down to Greenville the<lb/>
following year.<lb/>
For Ketcham, he couldn't have come<lb/>
at a more opportune time. Danny<lb/>
Monroe, the Pirates' all-time great,<lb/>
suffered a shoulder separation early in<lb/>
the season and was sidelined for the<lb/>
remainder of the year. Ketcham stepped<lb/>
in and won the North Carolina Collegiate<lb/>
Tournament, the Maryland Federation<lb/>
Tournament, the Thanksgiving Open and<lb/>
placed second in the Georgia Tech Open.<lb/>
Nevertheless, teammate Glenn Baker got<lb/>
the nod to go to the conference<lb/>
tournament, after beating Ketcham in a<lb/>
head-to-head matchup.<lb/>
And last year, after another brilliant<lb/>
performance during the regular season<lb/>
(15-7-1 overall record, 2nd in the N.C. ?<lb/>
Collegiate, Thanksgiving), Monroe return-<lb/>
ed to the lineup, once again leaving<lb/>
Ketcham on the sidelines.<lb/>
"Sure I was disappointed that I didn't<lb/>
get to go to the conference tournament<lb/>
and qualify for the nationals during those<lb/>
two years explained Ketcham, "but<lb/>
Glenn Baker and Danny Monroe beat me<lb/>
and there was nothing else I could do<lb/>
except to keep working. I wrestled in<lb/>
some tournaments last summer which<lb/>
has given me plenty of experience and<lb/>
national exposure<lb/>
Ketcham won the 126-pound<lb/>
championship in the Monarch Open and.<lb/>
 -<lb/>
dfm<lb/>
placed second in the Neptune Invitation-<lb/>
al. He owns a fine 12-5 overall record this<lb/>
year. Above all, though, he is intent on<lb/>
winning the Southern Conference title<lb/>
and advancing to the NCAA finals.<lb/>
"It's my last year at East Carolina and<lb/>
it will be my last chance to get to the<lb/>
nationals said Ketcham. "Although I<lb/>
haven't gotten off to a great start this<lb/>
year, I'm progressing gradually and I'm<lb/>
gaining more and more confidence in<lb/>
myself<lb/>
The NCAA Tournament is still two<lb/>
months away, but for Paul Ketcham it's<lb/>
one last chance. Somehow, you have to<lb/>
believe that he will be there.<lb/>
Buddies still number one<lb/>
The Hatchets defeated the previously<lb/>
unbeaten Revolutionary Bucks last week,<lb/>
59-52, to jump four places in the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD'S TOP TEN Standings<lb/>
from number eight to number four The<lb/>
Hatchets were led to victory by Terry<lb/>
Nobles' 25 points, as Nobles continued<lb/>
as the Intramural Scoring leader. Nobles<lb/>
is averaging 26.2 points per game.<lb/>
The Nutties Buddies romped past the<lb/>
Scott Brown Clowns, 67-32, to hold on to<lb/>
the number one slot ahead of the<lb/>
Average White Team and idle Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi.<lb/>
In other top games among leading<lb/>
teams the Bitterweed Gang romped past<lb/>
WFHS, 66-30, Average White Team<lb/>
humbled the Scott Studs, 62-15, and the<lb/>
fifth-ranked Purple Steam drilled the Pink<lb/>
Lords, 53-38, and the Jack Rollers<lb/>
humbled River Bluffs, 93-14.<lb/>
In the scoring race, Nobles' lead has<lb/>
grown over the Revolutionary Bucks'<lb/>
Erwin Durden, who is averaging 21.5<lb/>
points per game. Al McCrimmons, with<lb/>
a 21.0 average has now qualified for third,<lb/>
and Lennie Blackley of Pi Kappa Phi and<lb/>
Mike Gray of the Mud Sharks are tied<lb/>
with a 20.3 average. Gray poured in 31<lb/>
points for the high game of the week, in<lb/>
the Mud Sharks' 65-50 loss to Lafayette<lb/>
Holiday.<lb/>
With three weeks of regular play<lb/>
remaining and 24 teams still unbeaten<lb/>
some of the top games are still to come.<lb/>
The finals for the Men's Intramurals<lb/>
league will be played on Saturday,<lb/>
February 21, as a preliminary game to the<lb/>
ECU Varsity contest. Semifinal playoffs<lb/>
will be held on February 19.<lb/>
Leading scorers at least three games<lb/>
PLAYERGAVG.HG<lb/>
Nobles, Hatchets426.233<lb/>
Durden, Rev. Bucks421.525<lb/>
McCrimmons, APA321.028<lb/>
Blackley, Pi Kapps320.326<lb/>
Gray, Mud Sharks320.331<lb/>
Hall, W.W. Boys319.024<lb/>
Rivera, Scott Brewers418.236<lb/>
Hope, Purple Steam417.722<lb/>
Toms, Bitterweed417.223<lb/>
G. Smith, Hi Rollers417.221<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD TOP TEN<lb/>
1. Nutty's Buddies 14-0<lb/>
2. Average White Team 44-0<lb/>
3. Pi Kappa Phi 33-0<lb/>
4. Hatchets 84-0<lb/>
5. Purple Steam 24-0<lb/>
6. Bitterweed Gang 55-0<lb/>
7. P.E. Majors 64-0<lb/>
8. In Your Eyes x4-0<lb/>
9. Desperados x5-0<lb/>
10. Walkers 74-0<lb/>
No. in parenthesis last week's<lb/>
rankings<lb/>
LADY PIRATES - The ECU Women's basketball team will return home this Saturday<lb/>
night for a 5:00 clash with Madison College. The Lady Pirates lost their only other<lb/>
home game this year, falling to West Chester State by a 79-74 count.<lb/>
SPECIALS!<lb/>
Tuesday Wednesday Thursday<lb/>
. . 4 PM to 6 PM<lb/>
? Beef Stew a<lb/>
? Fried Chicken ? Fresh Fish 1<lb/>
? Chicken Pastry ? Other Specials<lb/>
Includes 3 Vegetables and Tea<lb/>
Also Serving Beer, Wine, &amp; Set-ups<lb/>
( With Meals) -<lb/>
Banquet and Party<lb/>
Facilities Available<lb/>
RIVERSIDE<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
710 N. Greene St.<lb/>
Phone 752-2624<lb/>
RIVERSIDE<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
BAR-B-Q<lb/>
SEAFOOD<lb/>
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Mftl<lb/>
<pb facs="00040015_0015"/><lb/>
mmtmim<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
wmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
15<lb/>
Time-Out<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Day Of Reckoning Is Here<lb/>
For ECU Basketball<lb/>
East Carolina's basketball team seemed to show some improvement over tlieir<lb/>
losing ways of late in the second half of Saturday's game at William and Mary.<lb/>
Nonetheless, the Pirates never should have found themselves down by 20 prints in<lb/>
such a low-scoring contest. Trie only thing that saved the Pirates from embarrassment<lb/>
was the final thirteen minutes of the game, in which ECU outscored the Indians by a<lb/>
29-16 spread.<lb/>
This writer still feels, however, that the East Carolina team is not putting out the<lb/>
way it should be. There is nothing wrong with the talent on the team, for coaches<lb/>
Dave Patton and Butch Estes have done an excellent job in recruiting for this year's<lb/>
team.<lb/>
No, the problem lies somewhere down deep within the players themselves and it's<lb/>
called desire. A large deal of the desire comes from the positive attitude of doing<lb/>
one's best and playing one's hardest at all times. The ECU team has not done that<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
True, of late, the ECU team has been hampered by an injury to Buzzy Braman, but<lb/>
even before the Pirate guard was sidelined the Pirates were not performing.<lb/>
This year was supposed to be the year for East Carolina basketball. The Pirates<lb/>
had three top recruits in Louis Crosby, Tyron Edwards and Billy Dineen and a bevy of<lb/>
talent back from last year.<lb/>
What has happened instead is that the Pirates have lost nine of their first 15<lb/>
games, seven of these games by 17 points or more. Granted ECU'S competition over<lb/>
the first 15 games has been on the road against some really good teams, but a good<lb/>
basketball team learns to play at its best, regardless of the opposition or adversity.<lb/>
The ECU team has yet to do this, even on its home court.<lb/>
One has to wonder what is going through the minds of the three freshmen who<lb/>
came to this school instead of taking offers from more well-known and better<lb/>
established teams, including UCLA and North Carolina State. Certainly they showed<lb/>
an interest in playing basketball at East Carolina. Why can't the players who have<lb/>
been here awhile show such an interest?<lb/>
The problem goes from the very last man on up to the starting five. It's a team<lb/>
effort to lose as much as it is to win. The effort does not appear to be there<lb/>
What has happened to the ECU team? One might have believed they were a bunch<lb/>
of quitters before that comeback Saturday against William and Mary. That was a<lb/>
classy showing by the Pirates, but that kind of effort and desire has been displayed<lb/>
in only two previous games this year. Will the Pirates continue to play with desire, or<lb/>
will they once again be content to go through the motions as they seem to have been<lb/>
doing most of the time? The students, fans and coaching staff deserve more.<lb/>
They say a sign of a good coach is how well he can handle his team through<lb/>
adversity and Dave Patton certainly has a test before him now. However, everything<lb/>
that has happened to the East Carolina team can not be blamed on Patton. He can't<lb/>
play for them. He can't go out there and kick the players around to make them play<lb/>
These are the things they have to do for themselves.<lb/>
There is no leader on the team this year. The players who before the season were<lb/>
looked to for leadership have decided apparently they don't want the role. The case<lb/>
may be that one of the freshmen, most likely Louis Crosby or Billy Dineen, is going to<lb/>
have to take the initiative to become a team leader. Although their class may not<lb/>
warrant it, these two players seem to want to win the most and seem to be the most<lb/>
consistent and most effective over the last five games.<lb/>
Perhaps a player like Larry Hunt or Wade Henkel could help bring the team<lb/>
around. Statistically, Hunt seems to be doing as well as he did last year, but he<lb/>
doesn't seem to be playing with the same intensity or effectiveness than he did last<lb/>
year. Henkel is supposedly the most talented player on the team, if one will believe<lb/>
the players and coaches. Yet somewhere in that head of his, Henkel has to make up<lb/>
his mind what he wants to do. Does he want to continue his habit of whining and<lb/>
sulking or does he want to play basketball for a change?<lb/>
There are definitely changes which need to be made and with the majority of the<lb/>
games at home from now on, the ECU team should have the support of the home<lb/>
crowd behind them. That is, if the students of East Carolina have not given up on the<lb/>
team yet. At times this year, one could hardly blame them if they had.<lb/>
A team can't play without support from the student body and this ECU team can't<lb/>
stay down forever. The big question is: When will the team finally come around?<lb/>
The answer to that question has got to come from the team itself. Come on guys,<lb/>
we know you have it in you, so show us.<lb/>
PIRATES<lb/>
Continued from page 13.<lb/>
would have won easily. They could have<lb/>
laid down, but they didn't<lb/>
Perhaps the Pirates need to be<lb/>
hopelessly behind before they can play<lb/>
basketball, at least such was the case<lb/>
Saturday night. It was an improvement<lb/>
over the last two games with Richmond<lb/>
and Appalachian State, though.<lb/>
Hunt finished as the high ECU scorer<lb/>
with 15 points and Crosby added 14.<lb/>
Between them, Hunt and Crosby scored<lb/>
23 of the Pirates' 31 points in the second<lb/>
half. Hunt also had 12 rebounds and Al<lb/>
Edwards added 10, as the Bucs held a<lb/>
32-25 rebounding advantage. Lowenhaupt<lb/>
was the game's top scorer with 18<lb/>
points.<lb/>
ECU returns home tomorrow night to<lb/>
play the Richmond Spiders in a 7:30<lb/>
game at Minges. Then the VMI Keydets<lb/>
come to play the Pirates on Saturday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Scoring:<lb/>
East Carolina 58?Lee 4-0-8, Crosby<lb/>
7-0-14, Dineen 2-3-7, A. Edwards 4-2-10,<lb/>
Hunt 5-5-15, Garner 1-0-2, Henkel 0-2-2.<lb/>
Totals 23-12-58.<lb/>
William and Mary 65?Vail 4-0-8,<lb/>
Enoch 5-2-12, Arbogast 4-3-11, Pamell<lb/>
1-0-2. McDonough 2-3-7, Lowenhaupt<lb/>
7-4-18, Kratzer 2-3-7, Musselmann 0-0-0,<lb/>
Risinger 0-0-0, Myers 0-0-0. Totals<lb/>
25-15-65.<lb/>
WOMEN<lb/>
Continued from page 13.<lb/>
Thompson and Freeman again led the<lb/>
Pirates' scoring 14 and 12 points,<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
In Sunday's following game against<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill, the Pirates collapsed to<lb/>
a balanced Tar Heel scoring attack,<lb/>
6&amp;-51.<lb/>
Although tied 28-28 at halftime, the<lb/>
Pirates were never in the game following<lb/>
intermission when UNC grabbed the lead<lb/>
and never relinquished it.<lb/>
Prompted by a total of 34 ECU<lb/>
turnovers the Tar Heels led by as many<lb/>
as 24 points during the remainder of the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
UNCECU<lb/>
Shoemaker21Chambiee8<lb/>
Scott4Freeman12<lb/>
Long6Garrison2<lb/>
Patterson6Home1<lb/>
reCK10Kerbaugh1<lb/>
Lervjett1Manning6<lb/>
1 Jison6Ross7<lb/>
h hews10Thompson14<lb/>
D8 sis5<lb/>
Introducing THE WEDGE from Zenith<lb/>
The WEDGE ? Model Q596W<lb/>
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Into 8 ohms from 40 Hz to 15 kHz with<lb/>
no more than 0.5 total harmonic<lb/>
distortion. The finest Allegro modular<lb/>
sound system Zenith has ever offered!<lb/>
Shown with Allegro 3000 speakers with<lb/>
big 10" woofer and the Allegro tuned<lb/>
port for deeper, richer bass. Includes<lb/>
built- n 8-Track Tape Player; 3-Speed<lb/>
Automatic Record Changer and<lb/>
AMFMStereo FM Tuner with Hi Filter,<lb/>
FM Muting, toggle switches and<lb/>
advanced new styling. Simulated wood<lb/>
cabinet with rtchly-o.rained Walnut finish.<lb/>
This moaei else aveiierne wim tuu-<lb/>
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with slide recording level control end<lb/>
VU meters as Model QR596W.<lb/>
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IM E. Sacsnd St.<lb/>
Ayden, M C.<lb/>
Phone 744-4t31<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040015_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 2920 JANUARY 1976<lb/>
?ism i njniiiK i i mmat$ i mp??n<lb/>
<lb/>
news<lb/>
Buccaneer Photos Pub Editors<lb/>
Available<lb/>
The portrait photographer will be back<lb/>
in the Buccaneer office for three days<lb/>
next week. The days are Monday, Jan.<lb/>
26; Tues Jan. 27; and Wed Jan. 28.<lb/>
Hours will be nine to twelve, and one to<lb/>
five only. Appointments are required. The<lb/>
Buccaneer can not guarantee that<lb/>
portraits wilt be taken unless an<lb/>
appointment is made.<lb/>
Appointments may be made by calling<lb/>
758-6501 or coming by the Buccaneer<lb/>
office. This is the last time this year a<lb/>
photographer will be on campus.<lb/>
Remember proofs must be returned to<lb/>
the photograph company in order to get.<lb/>
it in the yearbook.<lb/>
Geology<lb/>
Dr. Stan Riggs will give an informal<lb/>
talk entitled "Geologic Ramblings<lb/>
through South Africa Thursday Jan. 22,<lb/>
1976 at 7:30 p.m. in room 301 Graham.<lb/>
Details of Nags Head Retreat and<lb/>
Club T-Shirts will also be discussed.<lb/>
All members and any others are<lb/>
encouraged to attend.<lb/>
TM<lb/>
The Students International Medi-<lb/>
tation Society invites the University<lb/>
community to a free introductory lecture<lb/>
on the Transcendental Meditation<lb/>
program Wednesday January 28 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in room 201 Flanagan Hall. For<lb/>
further information on the TM program<lb/>
and on the SIMS club call: 752-9056.<lb/>
Newman club<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Newman club this Wed. at 5 p.m. in<lb/>
room 223 Mendenhall. Dinner will be<lb/>
served following Mass. All interested<lb/>
persons are invited to attend.<lb/>
Model UN<lb/>
There will be a meeting of tb? Model<lb/>
UN delegation on Wednesday ?u. xon<lb/>
at 4:00. It is imperative that all mer. rs<lb/>
please attend and be on time i r<lb/>
discussion in the Political Science coffee<lb/>
lounge.<lb/>
History Retreat<lb/>
The Department of History, in<lb/>
conjunction with the SGA, is again<lb/>
planning a departmental retreat for the<lb/>
weekend of January 31-February 1. The<lb/>
purpose of this excursion is to promote<lb/>
the activities and progress of the<lb/>
department, and to foster more amicable<lb/>
relations between professors and<lb/>
students. Any History major or minor<lb/>
may sign up in the departmental office,<lb/>
BA-316. First come, first serve. The<lb/>
retreat will be held at Atlantic Beach. The<lb/>
only cost will be your meals and<lb/>
entertainment.<lb/>
Applications are now being taken for<lb/>
students interested in running for the<lb/>
editorship of one of three campus<lb/>
publications, Rebel, Bucanneer and<lb/>
Fountainhead. Applications can be<lb/>
obtained in room 204, Whichard.<lb/>
Applications must be returned to room<lb/>
204 Whichard by 5 p.m. Feb. 2nd.<lb/>
Rho Epsilon<lb/>
Rho Epsilon, ECU'S professional real<lb/>
estate fraternity will hold a meeting<lb/>
Wed Jan. 21 at 3:30 in Mendenhall<lb/>
room 221. Featured guest speaker will be<lb/>
Frank Longino. He will speak on the<lb/>
advantages of advertising in real estate<lb/>
market. All members are urged to attend.<lb/>
Happy hour<lb/>
Delta Zeta Sorority is sponsoring a<lb/>
"Happy Hour on Tuesday, January 27,<lb/>
1976 from 3:00 to 6:00. at the Elbo.<lb/>
Purchase a 25 cents aamission ncKet<lb/>
from any Delta Zeta.<lb/>
Episcopal Meeting<lb/>
Reverend Bill Hadden, Episcopal<lb/>
campus chaplain will begin a study<lb/>
course Thursday afternoon January 29 at<lb/>
the Methodist Center located at 501 East<lb/>
Fifth Street (across from Garrett Dorm).<lb/>
The course will begin at 3:30. The theme<lb/>
of the study will be "The History and<lb/>
Workship of the Episcopal Church All<lb/>
Students are welcome.<lb/>
Pub Position<lb/>
The Pub Board is now investigating<lb/>
the various means of financing<lb/>
university media. All comments are<lb/>
welcomed.<lb/>
There will be a regular meeting of the<lb/>
Pub Board this Tuesday at 5 p.m. in<lb/>
room 247 Mendenhall. All interested<lb/>
persons are invited to attend.<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta, History honor<lb/>
society, will meet on Tuesday, January<lb/>
20, 1976 in the Richard C. Todd Phi<lb/>
Alpha Theta room at 7:30 p.m. All<lb/>
members should be present.<lb/>
Mini convention<lb/>
There will be a mini-convention of the<lb/>
Carolina Fan Federation at the home of<lb/>
Edwin Murray, 2540 Chapel Hill Road,<lb/>
Durham, N.C. on Sunday, January 25. All<lb/>
fans, collectors and dealers of comic<lb/>
books, science fiction and fantasy and<lb/>
nostalgia in general are invited. There is<lb/>
no program and no charge. Anyone<lb/>
wishing additional information, please<lb/>
call Charles Lawrence at 752-6389.<lb/>
The animals available this week<lb/>
include seven black cats, part Siamese,<lb/>
and one tabby cat.<lb/>
The people at Animal Control would<lb/>
like to remind you that 1976 city tags,<lb/>
which are required for your pet, are now<lb/>
available from City Hall or the Animal<lb/>
Shelter, located on 2nd St off Cemetery<lb/>
Rd.<lb/>
Legal Action<lb/>
Attorney Jerry Paul would like to meet<lb/>
with ECU students who wish to initiate<lb/>
legal action against the City of Greenville<lb/>
in relation to the 1975 Halloween<lb/>
incident. He will be in Mendenhall<lb/>
Tuesday at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Pub board<lb/>
Applications are now being accepted<lb/>
for one position on the Pub Board.<lb/>
Forms may be picked up and dropped off<lb/>
at room 204 Whichard. Screening will be<lb/>
held Jan. 27 in room 247 Mendenhall.<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
There will be a Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
dinner meeting, January 27, Tuesday,<lb/>
4:30 p.m. in Fletcher Dorm Social Room.<lb/>
Parker's Barbecue will cater. Dinner<lb/>
will be free to all paid members. Guest<lb/>
speakers will be present. This is a<lb/>
mandatory meeting. Three unexcused<lb/>
absences constitute expulsion.<lb/>
Student Directories A'P"3 Pni ?9mB<lb/>
Student directories are still on sale in<lb/>
the old CU for 75 cents a copy.<lb/>
Remember it costs to call information<lb/>
now!<lb/>
Bahai<lb/>
This weeks meeting will include a film<lb/>
entitled, A New Wind, which relates to<lb/>
the universality of the Bahai faith.<lb/>
Following will be a general discussion<lb/>
and music. Join us Wednesday at 7:30 in<lb/>
room 238 Mendenhall.<lb/>
Senior Show<lb/>
Paintings and drawings by John<lb/>
Graham Bradley, senior student in the<lb/>
ECU School of Art, are on display this<lb/>
week at the Greenville Art Center.<lb/>
Bradley's collection of oil paintings<lb/>
and graphite drawings include several<lb/>
expressions of fantasy themes, suggest-<lb/>
ed by literary fantasy and from his own<lb/>
original concepts.<lb/>
A candidate for the Bachelor of Fine<lb/>
Arts degree in painting, with a minor<lb/>
concentration in drawing, Bradley plans<lb/>
to pursue his art studies independently<lb/>
upon graduation, and return to formal<lb/>
study in the future.<lb/>
Last Chance<lb/>
Applications for Student Union<lb/>
President for the 1976-77 school year arc<lb/>
being taken until January 23. Apply at<lb/>
the information desk at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Who's Who photos<lb/>
Anyone who received a Who's Who<lb/>
award for this year, please report to the<lb/>
Buccaneer office in the Publications<lb/>
Center between 10-11 or 12-5 on<lb/>
Mondays, Tuesdays or Wednesdays. We<lb/>
need to take a photograph and get a<lb/>
small summary of you.<lb/>
Efforts are presently underway to<lb/>
form a chapter of the National Police<lb/>
Science Honor Society, Alpha Phi Sigma,<lb/>
at East Carolina University. Membership<lb/>
can be granted to students who have<lb/>
declared their major in Corrections in<lb/>
pursuit of a baccalaureate degree.<lb/>
Additionally, the student must have<lb/>
completed one tnird of their credit hours<lb/>
required for graduation and possess a<lb/>
minimum 3.0 nrade point average in their<lb/>
major. Students must also rank in the<lb/>
upper 35 percent of their class and have<lb/>
completed a minimum of four corrections<lb/>
courses. If you are interested a meeting<lb/>
will be held in the Allied Health Building,<lb/>
Room 210, on January 22, at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega<lb/>
Once again this year, Alpha Phi<lb/>
Omega Fraternity will sponsor White Ball<lb/>
to aid in the Easter Seals campaign. Any<lb/>
campus organization is eligible to enter a<lb/>
White Ball candidate. A voting booth will<lb/>
be set up in the old Student Union lobby<lb/>
beginning January 19th through the 23rd<lb/>
from 9:00 to 4:00. Each organization has<lb/>
a canister into which money is placed<lb/>
by supporters of that organization. For<lb/>
each penny contributed, one vote is<lb/>
tabulated for that candidate. At the end<lb/>
of the voting period, the candidate with<lb/>
the largest number of votes will be<lb/>
crowned White Ball Queen. The first,<lb/>
second, third and fourth runners up will<lb/>
be her court. The sponsors of the Queen<lb/>
and the first runner up will receive a<lb/>
trophy. A plaque will be awarded to the<lb/>
candidates representing these two<lb/>
sponsors. The pictures of the candidates<lb/>
should be eight by ten inches in black<lb/>
and white.<lb/>
The rules will be as follows:<lb/>
1. Only one organization can sponsor<lb/>
each contestant.<lb/>
2. No soliciting of any Greenville<lb/>
merchants for contributions.<lb/>
3. Each contestant must be a registered<lb/>
female student at East Carolina.<lb/>
Wednesday nite<lb/>
at Minges Pirate b ball<lb/>
?<lb/>
POMMi<lb/>
?<lb/>
mm<lb/>
?MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00040015_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>