<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00040024_0001"/>
Early warm spell unleashes hibernators<lb/>
L.rc DCMno nnu nave niuwnaieu an wimer, ecu students crawl from their dorm rooms and off-campus habitats to rejoice In the eariy spring weather. One favorite<lb/>
meeting place of the sunshine worshippers is the grassy Mall area located in the center of the campus. The end of cold weather marks the beginning of spring<lb/>
festivities for the ECU campus.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
This issue-<lb/>
16 Pages<lb/>
VO 7, NO. 38<lb/>
19 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
<lb/>
$1,000 yearbook rip-off reported<lb/>
By MIKE TAYLOR<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Various administration offices on<lb/>
campus were given more than $1,000<lb/>
worth of yearbooks this past year at no<lb/>
charge, according to BUCCANEER editor,<lb/>
Monika Sutherland.<lb/>
Ms. Sutherland listed Dr. Tucker's<lb/>
office, Dr. Jenkins' office, and the<lb/>
Registrar's office as those that received<lb/>
boxes of free books this past year.<lb/>
"And, in the past the Alumni Office<lb/>
has received more than half a dozen<lb/>
boxes of books each year. But, they did<lb/>
not get them this year Ms. Sutherland<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
There are 14 books in each box and<lb/>
the cost per book accessed to the<lb/>
student through student fees is about<lb/>
$9.50 per book, according to Ms.<lb/>
Sutherland. The yearbook is completely<lb/>
funded by the Studer Government<lb/>
Association. This year 7500 copies were<lb/>
printed of the books.<lb/>
Ms. Sutherland noted that Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins' office called and asked for two<lb/>
boxes in December. And, Dr. Tucker's<lb/>
office called in October and asked for<lb/>
two or three boxes of books, according<lb/>
to the yearbook editor.<lb/>
"They never told me what they<lb/>
planned on using the books for. They<lb/>
never offered to pay anything for them.<lb/>
As a matter of fact, we even had to<lb/>
deliver them in most cases Ms.<lb/>
Sutherland continued.<lb/>
The request from Dr. Jenkins' office<lb/>
included a request for mailers to mail the<lb/>
books also, according to Ms. Sutherland.<lb/>
Fountainhead called Dr. Jenkins'<lb/>
See Yearbooks, page 12.<lb/>
Direct funding resolution distributed<lb/>
The ad hoc committee to study media<lb/>
financing met Tuesday in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. The committee decided<lb/>
to distribute a cover letter and a copy of<lb/>
a resolution entitled "Direct Funding of<lb/>
Campus Media" to all campus<lb/>
organizations within the next three<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
The committee will meet again March<lb/>
16 to discuss the surveys. Feedback is<lb/>
needed on the resolution no later than<lb/>
Misleading totals<lb/>
The budget printed in the Tuesday<lb/>
Fountainhead placing total appropriations<lb/>
for Fountainhead at $86,987.71 and the<lb/>
BUC appropriations at $85,637.35 are<lb/>
somewhat misleading.<lb/>
These totals for both the newspaper<lb/>
and yearbook include money left over<lb/>
from the preceding year, according to<lb/>
BUC Editor, Monika Sutherland.<lb/>
Actual new appropriations this past<lb/>
Fall quarter for the BUC were $66,682<lb/>
and for the Fountainhead, $65,483. The<lb/>
other money was funds that were left<lb/>
unspent from previous budgets and not<lb/>
new appropriations.<lb/>
March 12.<lb/>
According to Dane Taylor, Publica-<lb/>
tions Board member, the entire plan to<lb/>
finance student media with existing<lb/>
students fees will go before the Board of<lb/>
Trustees in the spring for their approval.<lb/>
The ad hoc committee, composed of<lb/>
members of the SGA Legislature and the<lb/>
Publications Board, unanimously agreed<lb/>
to distribute the cover letter and<lb/>
resolution to the campus organizations.<lb/>
According to Taylor, a referendum<lb/>
asking for student opinions on the new<lb/>
media financing plan could be included<lb/>
in the March 24th SGA elections.<lb/>
"The referendum and the distribution<lb/>
of the rest u i to the campus<lb/>
organizations is &amp; effort to enlist<lb/>
student support for the financing plan<lb/>
said Taylor. "Student support for<lb/>
the new plan will help when the proposal<lb/>
is brought before the Board of Trustees<lb/>
Rape<lb/>
suspect<lb/>
sought<lb/>
Greenville City Police and ECU<lb/>
Campus police are currently searching<lb/>
the Greenville area for a man who was<lb/>
found in the Women's locker room of<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium last Friday night<lb/>
as a possible suspect in the numerous<lb/>
rape cases.<lb/>
The man, who is identified as black,<lb/>
standing five feet, nine inches tall with a<lb/>
medium afro and a moustache, was<lb/>
stopped Tuesday night by police on<lb/>
suspicion and some identification of the<lb/>
man was gained. The man reportedly<lb/>
lives in Ayden and is not an ECU<lb/>
student.<lb/>
The man when seen Wednesday was<lb/>
wearing a blue jacket with cut off<lb/>
sleeves, white pants and dark-rimmed<lb/>
glasses.<lb/>
According to reports, the suspect had<lb/>
been spotted last Friday in the Women's<lb/>
locker room of Memorial Gymnasium by<lb/>
a life guard. The life guard, who wished<lb/>
to remain unidentified, said at the time<lb/>
he thought the man may have made a<lb/>
mistake going into the wrong locker<lb/>
room, but that after the latest reports<lb/>
concerning the attempted rapes in the<lb/>
area, he contacted Intramural Director<lb/>
Wayne Edwards about the incident.<lb/>
See Rape, page 11.<lb/>
Faculty asked to purchase school paper<lb/>
Fountainhead is now requesting all<lb/>
faculty and staff members on campus<lb/>
who currently read the paper to purchase<lb/>
a $2.00 yearly subscription.<lb/>
The paper is currently distributed<lb/>
campus-wide and is free for the taking,<lb/>
according to Editor Mike Taylor.<lb/>
"Students currently pay the entire tab<lb/>
for the paper which amounts to about<lb/>
$2.00 a year per student. So, we think<lb/>
faculty and staff members should pay the<lb/>
same price Taylor argued.<lb/>
The student newspaper is funded<lb/>
entirely by the SGA with a yearly budget<lb/>
of over $60,000.<lb/>
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Taylor estimated that hundreds of<lb/>
faculty and staff members on campus<lb/>
pick up a paper each issue. Revenues<lb/>
from the $2.00 subscription could be a<lb/>
significant part of the total paper's<lb/>
budget, according to Taylor.<lb/>
We currently print 8500 copies of the<lb/>
paper and distribute about 8100 copies<lb/>
on campus. In the past they have been<lb/>
free for all and I am sure many faculty<lb/>
and staff members have read the paper.<lb/>
This is fine, but we also think that they<lb/>
should help share some of the cost of<lb/>
publishing the paper Taylor continued.<lb/>
"The way it currently operates the<lb/>
<lb/>
students are subsidizing the faculty and<lb/>
staffers who read the paper Taylor<lb/>
added.<lb/>
"Of course this is simply an honor<lb/>
system plan. We hope those people who<lb/>
do not want to pay for the paper will stop<lb/>
picking it up. If the faculty and staff does<lb/>
not want to pay for the paper then we<lb/>
may have to consider a new method of<lb/>
circulation that will put the paper in the<lb/>
hands of only those that pay for<lb/>
it-mainly the students Taylor asserted.<lb/>
Subscriptions for the paper should be<lb/>
mailed to the Fountainhead, Box 2516,<lb/>
ECU Station, Greenville.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040024_0002"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
Yearbook freebies<lb/>
While each student on campus has been coughing up $9.50<lb/>
for a yearbook, apparently various high officials on campus have<lb/>
been getting free yearbooks by the box full.<lb/>
The Chancellor's office, the Office of the Dean of Student<lb/>
Affairs, the Registrar's office and the Alumni Association have<lb/>
been identified by yearbook editor, Monika Sutherland, as<lb/>
getting boxes of free yearbooks each year.<lb/>
No doubt various officials and "special friends" around the<lb/>
state have ECU yearbooks stacked on their shelves gathering<lb/>
dust - all at the expense of ECU students who pay for the<lb/>
yearbook out of student fees.<lb/>
We can understand how a few VIPs might be deserving of a<lb/>
free book from the university. There are after all a few VIPs that<lb/>
deserve getting a freebie from the university.<lb/>
But, we can't think of over 100 people that should be getting<lb/>
yearbooks from the students for free.<lb/>
Obviously the practice of carting yearbooks by the boxes<lb/>
over to Whichard and Spillman is a long established tradition.<lb/>
The current editor walked into the situation and you know how<lb/>
hard it is to break a "freebie" tradition once everyone believes<lb/>
that it is a right by birth to get a free yearbook.<lb/>
But, the practice should be stopped-now. If Dr. Jenkins<lb/>
wants to give each member of the Board of Trustees a yearbook,<lb/>
fine. But he should either pay for the books or approach the<lb/>
SGA or the Pub Board about making it a practice of giving these<lb/>
campus leaders free books.<lb/>
The books are not Jenkins' to give away - they belong to the<lb/>
students who pay the $9.50 each year.<lb/>
The same holds true for any other department that is hauling<lb/>
the books away by the box. If the SGA or the Publications<lb/>
Board wants to establish a "freebie" mailing list for yearbooks,<lb/>
then fine. But, the only people who have the right to give these<lb/>
yearbooks away is the SGA or the Pub Board, and not some<lb/>
campus official who does not pay activity fees towards the<lb/>
books.<lb/>
A similar case can be made for the campus newspaper. The<lb/>
paper is distributed campus wide and presumably faculty, staff<lb/>
and administrators pick up the paper and read it.<lb/>
Yet, they pay not one cent towards its publication. The<lb/>
Fountainhead is funded entirely by the SGA at a cost of over<lb/>
$60,000 a year. The yearbook is also a $60,000 plus expense that<lb/>
the SGA must bear each year.<lb/>
The request made this week for $2.00 per non student as a<lb/>
yearly subscription for the paper is not an outrageous demand.<lb/>
We simply think it only fair for the people who read the paper to<lb/>
pay for it.<lb/>
Students don't get the paper free and neither should anyone<lb/>
else. Faculty and staff members get paid, in most cases nice<lb/>
salaries, to work for this university. Economically, most are<lb/>
better off than the average students who pay for the paper.<lb/>
If all the free yearbooks that were given away were paid for<lb/>
the Buc would have over $1,000 in additional funds to work<lb/>
with. Fountainhead, if it could get $2.00 from the at least 500<lb/>
faculty and staff that are bound to pick up the paper, would<lb/>
have another $1,000.<lb/>
Students are currently paying over $2,000 a year so some<lb/>
people can have some free reading matter.<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/>
Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor<lb/>
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer<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/>
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by<lb/>
the Student Government Association of ECU and appears each uesday and Thursday<lb/>
during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2S16 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 758-6309<lb/>
Subscriptions , $10.00 annually for non students.<lb/>
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More candidates needed<lb/>
The campus political pot is starting to heat up with the list<lb/>
of candidates for Executive branch offices growing longer every<lb/>
day.<lb/>
There is a list of candidates posted on the SGA office door<lb/>
in Mendenhall and with each passing day the list of students<lb/>
who have officially entered the races for one of the four spots<lb/>
up for grabs, President, Vice-President, Treasurer and Secretary,<lb/>
has a couple of new additions.<lb/>
The filing period for any of these four positions is open till<lb/>
February 24th, the last day of class. So, any would-be<lb/>
candidates have at least three more full school days to enter the<lb/>
races.<lb/>
As of Wednesday, four students were in the race for V.P<lb/>
while two students were filed as candidates for treasurer and<lb/>
one student was in the race for secretary.<lb/>
Hopefully, more students will enter the race - particularly<lb/>
the race for SGA President. As yet, no student has officially<lb/>
filed, but it is a safe guess a former SGA official, who stepped<lb/>
down two weeks ago, will enter the race.<lb/>
But, after that there appears to be few other potential<lb/>
presidential candidates on the horizon. Hopefully, at least two<lb/>
or three more candidates will enter the race for the SGA's top<lb/>
position.<lb/>
A race with only one candidate is not much of a race. There<lb/>
should be keen competition for all positions. The V.Ps race<lb/>
appears to be shaping up as one that will be hotly contested<lb/>
and in the treasurer's race the two candidates so far are both<lb/>
SGA veterans and that should be a good race.<lb/>
Of course there is still plenty of time for students to enter<lb/>
the races. Remember the deadline is February 24th.<lb/>
There are a number of good issues that candidates can<lb/>
discuss this election. So, the races should be interesting ones.<lb/>
The issues are there and the candidates are there in some<lb/>
races. Hopefully, though, a few students will step forward and<lb/>
offer their services in the presidential race. Everybody needs<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040024_0003"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3819 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
3<lb/>
ltieForum<lb/>
140students like<lb/>
newspapers name<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
We, the undersigned ECXI students, do not wish the name of our student paper to<lb/>
be changed. We strongly support the name "Fountainhead which has become<lb/>
well-established not only on campus, but also in the Greenville community.<lb/>
1. Susan V. Young<lb/>
2. Debbie Chapman<lb/>
3. Edith Gaft<lb/>
4. Cheryl Lee<lb/>
5. Cindy Lee Lewis<lb/>
6. Sopfia Wilson<lb/>
7. Judith Phillips<lb/>
8. Joan Saunders<lb/>
9. Jennie Poot<lb/>
10. Sharon Threadgill<lb/>
11. Rosalyn Thompson<lb/>
12. Carolyn Powell<lb/>
13. Ruth Spell<lb/>
14. April Barber<lb/>
15. Wanda Johnson<lb/>
16. Karen Gilkey<lb/>
17. Dorott M. Grod<lb/>
18. Anne Massey<lb/>
19. Mary Duggan<lb/>
20. Anne Brittle<lb/>
21. Carol Harrisfan<lb/>
22. Karen Mangum<lb/>
23. Kathy McBroom<lb/>
24. Rebecca Hyland<lb/>
25. Connie King<lb/>
26. Michael Smith<lb/>
27. Gretchen Holloman<lb/>
28. Mitzi Cheek<lb/>
29. Penny Phillips<lb/>
30. Betty Driggers<lb/>
31. Cheryl Novah<lb/>
32. Dianne Cowan<lb/>
33. Vicki Anderson<lb/>
34. Dorcas Sunhil<lb/>
35. Anne Mercer<lb/>
36. Holley Hicks<lb/>
37. Hilda Fairfield<lb/>
38. Carol Baranowski<lb/>
39. Kim Ward<lb/>
40. Margaret E. Swindel<lb/>
41. Gay Harrell<lb/>
42. Robin Dutton<lb/>
43. Sylvia Bryan<lb/>
44. Paula Nerron<lb/>
45. Cindy Armstrong<lb/>
46. Vicki Monette<lb/>
47. Cyndi Suggo<lb/>
48. Pam Plant<lb/>
49. Nancy Griffths<lb/>
50. Gloria Sipfle<lb/>
51. Viva Haithcock<lb/>
52. Deborah Taylor<lb/>
53. Gail Taylor<lb/>
54. Maureen Gilmartin<lb/>
55. Tina Kelly<lb/>
56. Susan Parrish<lb/>
57. Tina Meacham<lb/>
58. Sherry D. Riggs<lb/>
59. Sharon Hancock<lb/>
60. Douglas Pickette<lb/>
61. Kathleen F. Lindell<lb/>
62. Marion Barnes<lb/>
63. Karen E. Millsaps<lb/>
64 Vonnie Bush<lb/>
65. Charlotte A. Layton<lb/>
66. Laura DeRatt<lb/>
67. Mike Koonce<lb/>
66. Marie Shearin<lb/>
69. Robert Edwards<lb/>
70. Murray Spriull<lb/>
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Gordon Barnes<lb/>
Harry Waters<lb/>
Rick McBane<lb/>
Edgar Wail<lb/>
C. Barn well<lb/>
Susan V. (Jowhig<lb/>
Cathy Gooding<lb/>
Jerry Roop<lb/>
David Dulin<lb/>
Lawrence Green<lb/>
Anne Stapleford<lb/>
Wallie Bell<lb/>
Lynn Rodd<lb/>
Kathy Glascock<lb/>
Phil A. Thompson<lb/>
Tom Barker<lb/>
Brenda Strayhom<lb/>
Henry W. Connolly<lb/>
Keith B. Jones<lb/>
Gwen Oakes<lb/>
Donna Williford<lb/>
Judith Barbee<lb/>
Al Cobb<lb/>
Bob Mitchell<lb/>
Fay Cooper<lb/>
Sharon Johnson<lb/>
Donna Schwartz<lb/>
Margaret Crisp<lb/>
Sherry Cobb<lb/>
Brad Farina<lb/>
Starla Doss<lb/>
Faith Jordan<lb/>
Tess Hammonds<lb/>
Ginny Garrett<lb/>
Karen Gibbs<lb/>
Billy B. Brumbies<lb/>
Gerald Hall<lb/>
Mitchell Smith<lb/>
Oliver Felton<lb/>
Tim Gordon<lb/>
Jonathon Sroboda<lb/>
Derruis Caskey<lb/>
Keith Walher<lb/>
Don W. Turner<lb/>
Steve Burgess<lb/>
Larry Davin<lb/>
Robert E. Williams<lb/>
Cindy Simmons<lb/>
Mark Mulholland<lb/>
Chuch Dove<lb/>
Mural Vann<lb/>
Nelda Caddell<lb/>
Betty Ellis<lb/>
Elizabeth Anderson<lb/>
Sandy Strickland<lb/>
Phyllis Hooten<lb/>
Diane Letchworth<lb/>
Susan Paul us<lb/>
Mark Bryan<lb/>
Tom Baurieh<lb/>
Grant Roister<lb/>
Chris Porter<lb/>
Brie Smith<lb/>
Albert McMulsen<lb/>
Bruce Robnon<lb/>
Amy Leggett<lb/>
Rose Mary Stocks<lb/>
Teresa Meeks<lb/>
Mike Aycock<lb/>
Jill Dobbins<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAKING .by phil trank<lb/>
LOOfc-TESCWERTHE QOQ&amp;E S<lb/>
�COLLEGE MEDIA SERVICES-BOX 9411-BERKELEY. CA 94709<lb/>
ECU students<lb/>
are litter bugs<lb/>
For those who care and those who<lb/>
should:<lb/>
Friday, February 13, was such a<lb/>
lovely day, I decided to join the many<lb/>
sitting on the brick wall that faces Rawl<lb/>
outside of the old Student Union. As I<lb/>
sat there absorbing the warmth of the<lb/>
sun, I began to notice the debris<lb/>
surrounding me. Behind me, where the<lb/>
wall divides the sidewalk from the grass,<lb/>
there was strewn ail over the ground, an<lb/>
atrocious amount of empty paper cups,<lb/>
drinking straws and food wrappers.<lb/>
Within full view of me and only a few<lb/>
yards away sat two big garbage cans.<lb/>
Obviously, students had done this<lb/>
careless littering.<lb/>
bout then, a kindly-looking grounds<lb/>
keeper approached the wall and began<lb/>
piercing with his poker-apparatus the<lb/>
trash and put it in his bag. As the trash<lb/>
blew "hither and yon I began to<lb/>
empathize with the futility this man and<lb/>
all others who "poke" trash at ECU must<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 FILE IN THE<lb/>
EDITOR'S 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 oolicv.<lb/>
feel. I realize they're paid for this job of<lb/>
"beautifying" our beloved campus, but<lb/>
it's my estimation that with so many<lb/>
unconscientious students littering, that<lb/>
the grounds keepers could "poke" all<lb/>
day, every day and still see no<lb/>
improvement.<lb/>
All of this leads me to wonder -<lb/>
what's wrong with you folks out there? I<lb/>
thought we were part of an aesthetically<lb/>
and ecologically enlightened generation,<lb/>
but it seems ECU students are following<lb/>
in the path of a generally negligent and<lb/>
apathetic former generation. How can<lb/>
co-eds ever be considered responsible<lb/>
people, if they don't even take the<lb/>
responsibility of their own litter?<lb/>
What does ecology have to do with<lb/>
trash at ECU? Well, I believe ecology<lb/>
starts at home and that means putting<lb/>
your own trash in the can!<lb/>
For the conscientious ones, who<lb/>
deserve praise, thanks for setting a good<lb/>
example and for trying to keep the earth<lb/>
clean.<lb/>
Emphatically,<lb/>
Caroline Butler<lb/>
I.D. 670807<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAKING<lb/>
mjwmi m<lb/>
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GEOQT WSHINGTON WAG TIC fATHEfc<lb/>
or our. cams, no one seems to<lb/>
KNJDW MO THE MOTHER IWAS. 901<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040024_0004"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3819 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
wmtmmimmm<lb/>
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Language dept. sponsors symposium<lb/>
Program treats women through the ages<lb/>
Woman's role in society is not, as<lb/>
many believe, an issue bom in the 20th<lb/>
century.<lb/>
Several literary treatments of women<lb/>
were examined during "A Symposium on<lb/>
Women in International Literature<lb/>
Feb. 12 at Mendenhall.<lb/>
The program, sponsored by the<lb/>
Research and Publications Committee of<lb/>
the Department of Foreign Languages<lb/>
and Literatures, consisted of five short<lb/>
papers delivered by professors from the<lb/>
department. <lb/>
NOT OLDER BUT BETTER<lb/>
The concept of women's needs to<lb/>
deter physical aging was treated by<lb/>
Professor Helga Hill. Hill based her paper<lb/>
on the 20th Century play, "Because I Feel<lb/>
Like It by Magdalena Mondragon.<lb/>
The play's plot involves a couple who<lb/>
are circus performers. Surrounded by<lb/>
beauty, the heroine feels she will lose<lb/>
her husband if she does not become<lb/>
more youthful in appearance.<lb/>
A facelift, along with hours at the<lb/>
beauty salon, restores the woman's<lb/>
glamour, but her renewed beauty causes<lb/>
more problems than it solves, and often<lb/>
realizing how misguided she's been, she<lb/>
is able to save her marriage.<lb/>
Hill used "Because I Feel Like It" to<lb/>
characterize women who feel staying<lb/>
beautiful is part of their obligation to<lb/>
men.<lb/>
"They are like porcelain dolls she<lb/>
said. "They're afraid to do anything that<lb/>
would make them gain weight, or give<lb/>
them another wrinkle<lb/>
WOMEN'S RIGHTS IN SPAIN<lb/>
The next speaker, Professor Raquel<lb/>
Manning, spoke on "Jacinto Benavente<lb/>
and Women's Rights in Spain<lb/>
p Benavente's 19th Century play,<lb/>
"The Feminist Theater a group of<lb/>
women create a drama group in which<lb/>
men can take no part. In addition to<lb/>
banning them from acting with the<lb/>
troupe, the women attempt to keep men<lb/>
from the audience, suggesting at one<lb/>
point that, if necessary, men could be<lb/>
checked in a closet during performances<lb/>
(with a number given to avoid mistakes).<lb/>
Manning pointed out the irony of the<lb/>
play, in view of the social situation in<lb/>
Spain at the time it was written.<lb/>
The country, according to Manning,<lb/>
was plagued by poverty, illiteracy and<lb/>
bigotry at the time.<lb/>
Women had no rights, which made<lb/>
Benavente's play seem to be a complete<lb/>
farce.<lb/>
THE VICTORIAN FEMINIST<lb/>
Professor Carolyn Bolt's talk dealt<lb/>
with Lucie Duff Gordon, a 19th Century<lb/>
British woman whose translation of a<lb/>
German witch tale was so good that it<lb/>
received more acclaim than the original<lb/>
book.<lb/>
Gordon, who gained her fluency in<lb/>
German from a childhood stay in<lb/>
Germany, translated "The Amber Witch"<lb/>
by Wilhelm Meinhold when she was 23.<lb/>
Critics recognized the quality of her<lb/>
translation, and she was honored with<lb/>
the task of translating works by Heinrich<lb/>
Heine.<lb/>
A 17TH CENTURY FEMINIST<lb/>
Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz was,<lb/>
according to Professor Luis Acevez, a<lb/>
"Mexican Feminist of the 17th Century<lb/>
Bom in 1648, Juana was illegitimate,<lb/>
or a "daughter of the church<lb/>
Her beauty led her to become a part<lb/>
of the viceroyal court in Mexico City, but<lb/>
she was frustrated by the obstacles<lb/>
society created for a woman desiring an<lb/>
education.<lb/>
This frustration, along with her "total<lb/>
disinclination of mind to marriage" led<lb/>
her to become a nun.<lb/>
After an unhappy stay in the<lb/>
Carmelite order, Sor Juana became a<lb/>
Sister of St. Jerome, a study-oriented<lb/>
order.<lb/>
During her 21 years of convent life,<lb/>
Sor Juana completed many secular<lb/>
writings including psychological and<lb/>
metaphysical poems, and poetry against<lb/>
man the seducer.<lb/>
Acevez pointed out that Sor Juana's<lb/>
works have been remembered by North<lb/>
Carolina Chief Justice Suzy Sharpe.<lb/>
According to Sharpe, "The trouble<lb/>
comes when woman tries to be too many<lb/>
things at one time. Sor Juana drew a<lb/>
blueprint and budgeted her time<lb/>
DON JUAN<lb/>
The final speaker of the symposium,<lb/>
Professor Nancy Mayberry, spoke on<lb/>
"The Creator of Don Juan - Male<lb/>
Chauvinist Pig - or not?"<lb/>
Mayberry explained the original story<lb/>
of Don Juan, "The Trickster of Seville<lb/>
by Tirso de Molina.<lb/>
In this play, Don Juan seduces<lb/>
several women and destroys the honor of<lb/>
both men and women, by various tricks<lb/>
and deceptions.<lb/>
This portrayal of gullible women is<lb/>
not in keeping with de Molina's usual<lb/>
SYMPOSIUM - Raquel Manning speaks<lb/>
on women's rights.<lb/>
treatment of them as highly intelligent<lb/>
beings, Mayberry pointed out.<lb/>
"De Molina usually recognized<lb/>
women as good, bad, and mixed, with<lb/>
the rights to make their own decisions<lb/>
Mayberry said.<lb/>
This straying from his u .ual attitude<lb/>
has led some to consider him<lb/>
chauvinistic.<lb/>
According to Mayberry, the honor of<lb/>
men and women was soiled in "The<lb/>
Trickster of Seville and recognition of<lb/>
that fact would vindicate de Molina from<lb/>
accusations of chauvinism.<lb/>
-By PAT COYLE<lb/>
Hatteras Hammocks provides jobs<lb/>
ECU students work in relaxation<lb/>
By ELIZABETH BEST<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Walter Perkins, manager of Hatteras<lb/>
Hammocks here, and his employees<lb/>
produce a variety of hammocks,<lb/>
hammock swings, hammock stands,<lb/>
planters, shelves, and other items.<lb/>
Because of the pleasant working<lb/>
atmosphere they have created, they seem<lb/>
to enjoy working together.<lb/>
All of the twenty employees at<lb/>
Hatteras Hammocks are ECU students<lb/>
except three or four, according to<lb/>
Perkins.<lb/>
"ECU students have really helped me<lb/>
a lot said Perkins. "I think I've bridged<lb/>
the generation gap because I'm really<lb/>
learning a lot from them<lb/>
The workers at Hatteras Hammocks<lb/>
make about 200 hammocks each week,<lb/>
according to Perkins. Last year they sold<lb/>
around 6,000 hammocks.<lb/>
Perkins, a tobacco buyer for American<lb/>
Tobacco Company, started Hatteras<lb/>
Hammocks in 1971.<lb/>
 <lb/>
J i i.<lb/>
"f<lb/>
HATTERAS HAMMOCKS - Employer and worker alike enjoy the hammock making<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
"Mr. Paul Waldrop of the ECU<lb/>
industrial arts department was a great<lb/>
help to me in designing the equipment<lb/>
and getting the business started said<lb/>
Perkins. "I aiso received considerable<lb/>
help from ECU economics professors<lb/>
Hatteras Hammocks is owned jointly<lb/>
by Perkins and Greenville Tobacco<lb/>
Company.<lb/>
They make hammocks and Hatteras<lb/>
swings in five different sizes, ten<lb/>
different colors, and two different<lb/>
materials, according to Perkins.<lb/>
"The 13 ft. cotten hammock is the<lb/>
best seller he said.<lb/>
Everything is handmade at Hatteras<lb/>
Hammocks.<lb/>
On clear, sunny days, workers can be<lb/>
seen weaving hammocks outside their<lb/>
building located at 11th and Clark St.<lb/>
"We have six permanent looms which<lb/>
stay inside at all times and six portable<lb/>
looms which the students enjoy taking<lb/>
outside on sunny days said Perkins.<lb/>
"Although it takes about three days to<lb/>
build up speed in making hammocks, it<lb/>
takes only about 15 minutes to learn how<lb/>
to make a hammock he said.<lb/>
The employees work very fast because<lb/>
they're paid according to how many<lb/>
hammocks they make per hour,<lb/>
according to Perkins.<lb/>
"The only problem I've had with my<lb/>
employees is that some people take a job<lb/>
here just long enough to learn how to<lb/>
weave a hammock Perkins said.<lb/>
Hatteras Hammocks are shipped all<lb/>
over the United States, according to<lb/>
Perkins.<lb/>
"Naturally we sell more hammocks in<lb/>
North Carolina, but we also sell a lot of<lb/>
our hammocks in Florida, New York, and<lb/>
Texas he said. "We've even sold them<lb/>
as fai mm Hawaii, Korea, Puerto Rico, and<lb/>
Canada.<lb/>
"In order to be fair to our Greenville<lb/>
dealers, who are Globe Hardware, H.L.<lb/>
Hodges &amp; Co and Bostic-Suggs<lb/>
Furniture Co we sell only flawed<lb/>
hammocks here at the warehouse he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
The retail price of a Hatteras<lb/>
Hammock ranges from $38 to $62, where<lb/>
as a flawed hammock sells for about $32,<lb/>
according to Perkins.<lb/>
They also sell hammock stands which<lb/>
retail from $30 to $75, he added.<lb/>
Hatteras Hammocks also has a<lb/>
workshop to process wood used in<lb/>
rrrking hammocks.<lb/>
"I hate to throw away scrap wood and<lb/>
rope, so I'm constantly looking for ways<lb/>
to use these scraps said Perkins.<lb/>
They use scraps to make planters and<lb/>
hanging pots which retail from $3.50 to<lb/>
$22.00, according to Perkins.<lb/>
Not only does Hatteras Hammocks<lb/>
produce a variety of products and<lb/>
personalities, but they are also very<lb/>
patriotic.<lb/>
They sent a bicentennial red, white<lb/>
and blue hammock to President Gerald<lb/>
Ford last week, according to Perkins.<lb/>
MONMMMMIM<lb/>
rage<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3819 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
5<lb/>
M<lb/>
Infirmary referral system comes under fire<lb/>
By RUDY HOWELL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The referral policy at ECU'S infirmary<lb/>
has come under criticism for what many<lb/>
students term "impersonal" and "unpro-<lb/>
fessional" treatment.<lb/>
"The policy generally regulated has<lb/>
existed for many years explained Dr.<lb/>
Edwin W. Monroe, vice chancellor of<lb/>
health affairs at ECU.<lb/>
"It was established during the days<lb/>
when most parents felt that the university<lb/>
should provide medical service to<lb/>
students under 21 said Monroe.<lb/>
According to Dr. C.F. Irons, head of<lb/>
the infirmary staff, the policy enables a<lb/>
student who needs better medical<lb/>
treatment to be referred to a specialist in<lb/>
the infirmary or to a local doctor.<lb/>
"If in the best interest of the students<lb/>
we ought not take care of it (a problem)<lb/>
here, we usually refer them to a doctor in<lb/>
the infirmary first, then to a local<lb/>
specialist said Irons.<lb/>
"Reasons for referral range from the<lb/>
need for more laboratory studies or use<lb/>
of X-ray facilities, to poor response to<lb/>
treatment or consultation with a<lb/>
specialist said Irons.<lb/>
According to Monroe, the policy is<lb/>
not compulsory, but rather it is a service<lb/>
to the student since "it is very difficult<lb/>
for a student to contact a doctor's office<lb/>
and expect to be seen<lb/>
At the heart of the issue is what many<lb/>
students characterize as "impersonal"<lb/>
and "unprofessional" treatment.<lb/>
"I can sympathize with their (the<lb/>
infirmary's) situation said one student,<lb/>
after an unfavorable visit to the infirmary.<lb/>
"But there are certain rights of a student<lb/>
that should be protected<lb/>
One student, after having a pap smear<lb/>
and laboratory examination, was out-<lb/>
raged at a message disclosed to her<lb/>
roommate by the infirmary. The message,<lb/>
left on her door, indicated that she had<lb/>
failed to pay a $5 lab fee.<lb/>
"I wasn't very happy to know that not<lb/>
only my roommate, but also the whole<lb/>
dormitory know I was on the pill said<lb/>
the student.<lb/>
Another student complained of the<lb/>
infirmary's "unprofessional" behavior.<lb/>
"I was examined and told I had<lb/>
'venereal warts The word alarmed me<lb/>
since my sexual relations were restricted<lb/>
to one person. When I questioned the<lb/>
doctor about the term, he would not<lb/>
directly answer the question. His attitude<lb/>
made me feel promiscuous even though I<lb/>
wasn't<lb/>
The same student saw a Greenville<lb/>
doctor within six weeks. She was told<lb/>
that the condition was more aptly termed<lb/>
"vaginal warts" and that it was not<lb/>
necessarily contracted by intercourse.<lb/>
In reply to the allegations, Irons<lb/>
expressed deep concern about student<lb/>
reaction.<lb/>
"In defense of our doctors, let me say<lb/>
that all of them have the best interest of<lb/>
the students at heart said Irons. "For<lb/>
example, if a student wants to go on<lb/>
the pill, it's strictly the student's<lb/>
business. We don't express disapproval<lb/>
or approval. We want the students to<lb/>
know that's the way we feel<lb/>
Although refusing to comment on the<lb/>
student allegations, Monroe expressed<lb/>
similar concern about the student<lb/>
reaction.<lb/>
"Students don't need to feel they are<lb/>
a bunch of cattle herded around said<lb/>
Monroe. "I'm sure the doctors don't feel<lb/>
that way. I think it might be helpful, if<lb/>
there is a misunderstanding, that the<lb/>
student feel free to request a conference<lb/>
with the doctor<lb/>
According to Irons, the onlv real<lb/>
improvement would be possible by<lb/>
raising student fees.<lb/>
"The infirmary treats 90 to 96 percent<lb/>
of the student population said Irons.<lb/>
I "The only way we could have better<lb/>
service would be to have more personnel<lb/>
here. We need more people but we can't<lb/>
pay them<lb/>
TKEbrother takes post<lb/>
By DENISE DUPREE<lb/>
The local East Carolina University<lb/>
chapter of Tau Kappa Epsilon (TKE),<lb/>
which has been on campus for nine<lb/>
years, recently had an undergraduate<lb/>
member, Richard W. Leagan, appointed<lb/>
to a Regional officer's position.<lb/>
Tau Kappa Epsilon is the largest<lb/>
fraternity in the world with chapters in<lb/>
Canada and Mexico. There are 315 active<lb/>
chapters and 160,000 active members.<lb/>
Leagan's position is usually held by<lb/>
graduates or vocational workers, and he<lb/>
is probably the only undergraduate to<lb/>
hold this past.<lb/>
Leagan is a junior at ECU, and he is<lb/>
majoring in Liberal Arts, a native of<lb/>
Raleigh, he works full time as a<lb/>
television engineer at WNCT.<lb/>
As a regional officer, Leagan's job will<lb/>
involve helping undergraduate chapters<lb/>
solve the problems of their organization.<lb/>
"To help solve their problems, I will<lb/>
use a five step process said Leagan.<lb/>
"One, identify the problem; two,<lb/>
collect the necessary information; three,<lb/>
come up with a list of alternatives to<lb/>
solve the problem; four, analyze each<lb/>
alternative and select the best method of<lb/>
solving the problem; and five, carry out<lb/>
the solution.<lb/>
"On Friday, February 13, I made my<lb/>
first trip as a regional officer. I went to<lb/>
Wilmington, N.C. for a regional meeting,<lb/>
and I helped buy a chapter house he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We're having an open membership<lb/>
drive, and if anyone is interested in<lb/>
pledging TKE, tell them to come down to<lb/>
the house said Leagan.<lb/>
"Oh yes, for what it's worth he said.<lb/>
"Ronald Reagan is a TKE<lb/>
RICHARD LEAGAN, TKE regional offfcar.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 3819 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
iHW<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Humanities Job prospects<lb/>
fluctuate within areas<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Editor's Note: This is second in a series<lb/>
of stories on job opportunities for ECU<lb/>
graduates.<lb/>
Humanities and fine arts majors,<lb/>
through the bredth of their preparation,<lb/>
are qualifying themselves for a variety of<lb/>
jobs, according to Marguerite A. Peiry,<lb/>
chairman of the ECU Foreign Languages<lb/>
and Literatures department.<lb/>
However, job prospects fluctuate<lb/>
within the different humanities and fine<lb/>
arts areas.<lb/>
MUSIC<lb/>
Music is always a competitive field,<lb/>
but ECU music graduates are in demand,<lb/>
according to Everett Pittman, dean of the<lb/>
School of Music.<lb/>
"The job market is tight but there is a<lb/>
demand for ECU graduates said<lb/>
Pittman. "The most popular field in<lb/>
music is teaching, although the college<lb/>
teaching area is crowded.<lb/>
"Most ECU music majors are<lb/>
concentrating in music education. They<lb/>
want to teach music in public schools<lb/>
ECU has very few students in other<lb/>
areas besides music education although<lb/>
music therapists are in good demand,<lb/>
stated Pittman.<lb/>
Currently the performance majors are<lb/>
not interested in jobs. Rather, they<lb/>
intend to go to graduate school.<lb/>
The school of music offers two<lb/>
undergraduate degrees, and one graduate<lb/>
degree, all with varied curricula.<lb/>
Before the college teaching area<lb/>
became crowded, there was a large yearly<lb/>
turnover in ECU's music faculty. But<lb/>
now, the ECU School of Music has<lb/>
practically the same faculty it had almost<lb/>
three years ago, said Pittman.<lb/>
Students wanting higher degrees in<lb/>
music should leave school for a while<lb/>
before continuing for the advanced<lb/>
degree, recommended Pittman.<lb/>
DRAMA AND SPEECH<lb/>
Although New York is having its best<lb/>
season in quite a while, it is difficult to<lb/>
say whether or not there is a demand for<lb/>
drama and speech graduates, according<lb/>
to Edgar Loessin, chairman of the ECU<lb/>
drama and speech department.<lb/>
"There are too many factors involved<lb/>
to say there are, or there are not jobs in<lb/>
this field said Loessin. "This is not the<lb/>
kind of profession where you always get<lb/>
the job you want quicklv.<lb/>
"For example, in the theater some<lb/>
graduates get a job in their first audition,<lb/>
but others have to wait years to get the<lb/>
job they want, Loessin continued.<lb/>
"However, performers waiting for the<lb/>
right part, work either in other roles or<lb/>
other jobs during the meantime.<lb/>
"Getting in theater can be a long<lb/>
process he said "It is a restrictive and<lb/>
competitive field. Some students require<lb/>
additional training<lb/>
The degrees offered by the<lb/>
department of drama and speech include<lb/>
a professional undergraduate and an<lb/>
undergraduate teaching degree.<lb/>
The department also offers a major in<lb/>
dance The major areas of dance are jazz,<lb/>
ballet, and modern.<lb/>
For its majors, the drama department<lb/>
tries to give insight to each aspect in<lb/>
theater including technical, management<lb/>
and acting. �<lb/>
Drama and speech graduates go into<lb/>
other areas such as broadcasting, public<lb/>
relations, and college and high school<lb/>
teaching also.<lb/>
"The job market for college teachers<lb/>
is good said Loessin. "However it is<lb/>
limited for high school teachers because<lb/>
of a lack of drama departments in high<lb/>
schools<lb/>
But the overall interest in the arts is<lb/>
improving especially in the high schools,<lb/>
he concluded.<lb/>
ART<lb/>
In a country celebrating its<lb/>
Bicentennial, how can art and culture be<lb/>
neglected? Thus, how can an art<lb/>
graduate be out of work?<lb/>
"The field of art is not overcrowded<lb/>
said Wellington Gray, dean of the ECU<lb/>
School of Art.<lb/>
"In 1968 and 1969, this country<lb/>
started to have a renaissance for artistic<lb/>
culture. This made many jobs and<lb/>
opportunities available in industry<lb/>
because of technical advancement and<lb/>
wider commerce.<lb/>
"Today people buy what they used to<lb/>
make he said.<lb/>
"Last year the department did not<lb/>
have any graduates left to recommend to<lb/>
employers. Most of our graduates get<lb/>
real good placements<lb/>
Art related fields also offer good<lb/>
placements for art graduates.<lb/>
"There are art related jobs in such<lb/>
places as furniture companies said<lb/>
Gray. "One ECU student designed church<lb/>
pews and others have helped design<lb/>
handles on chairs and performed other<lb/>
similar art related jobs<lb/>
Designers continue to get offers from<lb/>
textile mills and greeting card com-<lb/>
panies.<lb/>
Many art graduates are self-employed.<lb/>
A recent ECU graduate owns a pottery<lb/>
shop in North Carolina, and he hired up<lb/>
to six and seven people according to the<lb/>
See Jobs, page 7.<lb/>
Saad's<lb/>
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For Sale: "34" length classical guitar in<lb/>
good cond. 2 yrs. old. Call Cindy,<lb/>
758-8294.<lb/>
Yard Sale-All day Sat. Rain day Sun. 311<lb/>
Summit St. Clothes, households, misc.<lb/>
items.<lb/>
NEEDED: 1 female to share nice 4<lb/>
bedroom house with 3 other girls.<lb/>
Already furnished. All you need is a bed.<lb/>
Rent, utilities, and phone approx. $60.00<lb/>
per month. Available immediately. Call<lb/>
758-2217 for details.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE-please call 756-5167<lb/>
PIANO &amp; GUITAR lessons - Daily and<lb/>
evenings. Richard J. Knapp, B.A<lb/>
756-3908.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Silvertone Bass Amp. Good<lb/>
Condition $85. Hollowbody electric guitar<lb/>
two pickup - exc. condition $100.<lb/>
Call 752 7398.<lb/>
7" Reel to reel tapes - wide assortment of<lb/>
music - many are factory pre-recorded.<lb/>
752-7398.<lb/>
JOBS ON SHIPS! American. Foreign. NO<lb/>
experience required. Excellent pay.<lb/>
Worldwide, travel. Summer jobor career.<lb/>
Send $3.00 for information. SEAFAX,<lb/>
Dept. 1-2, Box 2049, Port Angeles,<lb/>
Washington 98362.<lb/>
NEEDED - female roommate. Share<lb/>
two-bedroom furnished apartment behind<lb/>
Allied Health bldg. Call Martha, 756-6437.<lb/>
LOST-ECU class ring in Rawl. Initials<lb/>
G.F.B. on inside. Reward-no questions<lb/>
asked. Contact George Baker 758-3810.<lb/>
NEEDED - 1 or 2 female roommates to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apt. Spring qt. and<lb/>
summer if possible. 756-7524.<lb/>
FOR SALE - Dynaco 120 power Amp. 60<lb/>
watts RMSch. $135. Call Pete, 756-4408.<lb/>
LOST - Seiko sports watch wblack band.<lb/>
Reward. Call Mark at 752-9647.<lb/>
APB needed - 1 female roommate for<lb/>
spring qt. at Eastbrook Apts. 758-1084.<lb/>
FOR SALE - 4 chrome reverse rims and<lb/>
E-70 Firestone tires. Fits any 5 lug<lb/>
wheels - air shocks and adapters for VW<lb/>
included - $200. 752-7398 after 6:00.<lb/>
FOR SALE - PA system. "Woodson" top<lb/>
line, pro quality, like new. Call after 5<lb/>
p.m 752-6399.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 72 VW bus. 758-2599.<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752 5113.<lb/>
BOOK TRADER located corner Evans<lb/>
and 11th. Trade your paperback books,<lb/>
buy used paperbooks, also comic books.<lb/>
Open Tues. Sat. 9-4.<lb/>
FOR SALE - "Ibanez Flying V 2 months<lb/>
old, perfect cond. $350 or best offer. Call<lb/>
Bill or Carlton. 752-8049.<lb/>
LOST: one cassette tape, contains<lb/>
foreign language info. Please leave at<lb/>
Fountainhead FLASH envelope - no<lb/>
questions asked!<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sanyo refrigerator, 1.5cubic<lb/>
foot size, excellent for dorm, excellent<lb/>
cond. $50 756-7612<lb/>
FOR SALE - Four chairs &amp; a table in 2<lb/>
kitchen sets. Other household items also<lb/>
for sale. Price for table and chairsws or<lb/>
best offer. Call 752-0113 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
For Sale - '58 Gibson Les Paul Jr Fender<lb/>
Champ Amp 758-9166.<lb/>
FREE - room and board for girl, 18-30<lb/>
yrs. old in return for cooking 5 meals a<lb/>
week for me &amp; my 2 boys. Call 524-5263<lb/>
after 6 p.m.<lb/>
FOUND-cat at 105 Jarvis. Black female<lb/>
with white collar. 758-1675.<lb/>
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per line. Ex. The following ad contains 67 letters and spaces, thus requiring 2 lines:<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 slightly used but like new<lb/>
widget. Reasonable. 758-xxxx.<lb/>
RATES: First insertion: 50 cents first line, 25 cents each additional line. Additional<lb/>
insertions; 25 cents each line. EX. The above 2 line ad inserted in 3 issues would<lb/>
cost:<lb/>
.50 plus .25 equals .75 for first insertion<lb/>
.25 plus .25 equals .50 each for second and third insertion.<lb/>
Therefore total cost is 1.75. No charge for lost and found classifieds<lb/>
PAYMENT: Classified payable in advance. Send check or money order along wad to:<lb/>
Fountainhead, Classified Ad Dept Old South Bldg ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
DEADLINES: Fountainhead publishes Tues. &amp; Thurs. All classifieds &amp; payments must<lb/>
be received 2 days prior to requested insertion date.<lb/>
COPY: Fountainhead tries to publish only legitimate classifieds. Fountainhead<lb/>
reserves the right to reject any and all ad copy that, in its opinion, is objectionable.<lb/>
ERRORS: In case of errors in copy for which it is responsible, Fountainhead win<lb/>
make the corrections in the earliest possible edition, without charge to the advertiser.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL<lb/>
�<lb/>
7, NO. 3819 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
M9JMfli<lb/>
7<lb/>
�C� humanities graduates seeking Jobs<lb/>
Continued from oaoe 6. J <lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
season, said Gray.<lb/>
Jobs in communications art are the<lb/>
biggest now, continued Gray. Communi-<lb/>
cations art is what used to be called<lb/>
commercial art, explained Gray. In<lb/>
popularity, communications art is<lb/>
followed by interior design.<lb/>
"In the last several years, anyone who<lb/>
really wanted a job has been able to get<lb/>
one said Gray. "The trend is stable and<lb/>
continuing.<lb/>
"Art teaching jobs have started to dry<lb/>
up. The percentage of art education<lb/>
majors is shrinking because the number<lb/>
of art students is going up. However, the<lb/>
number of students going into art<lb/>
education remains about the same.<lb/>
"Teaching jobs are available if<lb/>
students will go where the jobs are<lb/>
Conditions such as an out-of-state<lb/>
students wanting to go back home to<lb/>
teach provides students with less<lb/>
opportunity to find a job.<lb/>
The ECU School of Art, the largest in<lb/>
the state, has 850 majors.<lb/>
PHILOSOPHY<lb/>
"Philosophy is as crowded, and<lb/>
maybe a little more crowded than other<lb/>
fields said James Smith, chairman of<lb/>
the Philosophy department at ECU.<lb/>
However, philosophy majors are<lb/>
having good success finding good jobs<lb/>
in areas such as businesses. Smith cited<lb/>
a report stating that 60 percent of today's<lb/>
philosophy graduates go into business.<lb/>
Of the remaining 40 percent, 20<lb/>
percent go to law school, and 20 percent<lb/>
go to graduate school in philosophy,<lb/>
although not even a Ph.D. guarantees a<lb/>
job in Philosophy today, said Smith.<lb/>
"As a rule of thumb continued<lb/>
Smith, "students should stay in school<lb/>
as long as possible because it pays off in<lb/>
the long run<lb/>
There is currently an effort<lb/>
underway to get philosophy taught in<lb/>
high schools.<lb/>
"Philosophy is an excellent minor<lb/>
said Smith. "Logical problem solving<lb/>
methods that are a compliment to any<lb/>
major are taught in philosophy courses<lb/>
The ECU philosophy department<lb/>
which offers a bachelor of arts degree<lb/>
has 15 majors and 25 minors.<lb/>
FOREIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
Again, as in many other professions,<lb/>
the foreign language student who aspires<lb/>
to teach may be in for a job looking for a<lb/>
job.<lb/>
"The job market for teachers has been<lb/>
somewhat disheartening said<lb/>
Marguerite A. Perry, chairman of the<lb/>
department of Foreign Language and<lb/>
Literatures.<lb/>
"However, for students who are less<lb/>
restrictive to location, and students who<lb/>
have good records, there are positions.<lb/>
"But even these are not as numerous<lb/>
as before<lb/>
In response to the tightened job<lb/>
market, the foreign language department<lb/>
now stresses careers in other areas<lb/>
besides teaching and the usual<lb/>
translation and interpretation areas.<lb/>
Also, in conjunction with this effort,<lb/>
the department has taken advantage of<lb/>
the ECU Cooperative Education program.<lb/>
Through the co-op program, three<lb/>
foreign language majors (while still in<lb/>
school) have at different times been<lb/>
placed in the division of International<lb/>
Affairs with the National Aeronautics and<lb/>
Space Administration in Washington,<lb/>
D.C.<lb/>
A fourth student has been assigned to<lb/>
NASA for Fall quarter 1976.<lb/>
O<lb/>
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"We shouldn't be pessimistic said<lb/>
Perry. "It is better to seek and grasp<lb/>
opportunities for our students.<lb/>
"Our primary concern now is to find<lb/>
out what the students like to do said<lb/>
Bramy Resnik, chairman of the Career<lb/>
Opportunities Committee in the Foreign<lb/>
Langauge department.<lb/>
"There are many opportunities for<lb/>
students if they are prepared as intensely<lb/>
as possible<lb/>
Together, foreign language and<lb/>
business are ideal, said Perry. The<lb/>
federal government is offering numerous<lb/>
opportunities that foreign language<lb/>
graduates can take advantage of.<lb/>
"New job opportunities are also<lb/>
expected to open up in the Internal<lb/>
Revenue Service, and the Energy<lb/>
Research and Development Agency where<lb/>
people are being hired to help foreign<lb/>
speaking Americans said Perry.<lb/>
"Banks and other financial institu-<lb/>
tions are also offering such opportun-<lb/>
ities<lb/>
The foreign language department<lb/>
offers two undergraduate degrees. There<lb/>
are about 50 majors in the department.<lb/>
Knowing another language helps a<lb/>
person to communicate with another<lb/>
culture thereby enhancing his ability to<lb/>
appreciate his own culture more fully,<lb/>
and to appreciate himself better as well,<lb/>
said Perry.<lb/>
Other rewarding values enjoyed by the<lb/>
foreign language graduate include the<lb/>
ability to read foreign literature rather<lb/>
than having to read a translated version.<lb/>
ENGLISH<lb/>
And of course, being able to absorb<lb/>
the meaning of literature in one's own<lb/>
language is also personally rewarding.<lb/>
cr<lb/>
This is one of the benefits of studying<lb/>
English, according to Erwin Hester,<lb/>
chairman of the ECU English department.<lb/>
But then, there is another side to the<lb/>
English student. That is, the English<lb/>
student, like the other students, has to<lb/>
face the depressing job market upon<lb/>
graduating.<lb/>
However, the job market is not<lb/>
excessively depressed, according to<lb/>
Hester.<lb/>
"Our only area of low employment is<lb/>
on the doctorate level said Hester.<lb/>
"People certified to teach English in high<lb/>
schools are able to get jobs if they arc<lb/>
not particular about where the job is.<lb/>
"But, oftentimes English jobs are<lb/>
where a young single person does not<lb/>
want to live<lb/>
The best fields in English are those<lb/>
where some writing is involved,<lb/>
continued Hester. Such fields include<lb/>
advertising, public relations, and<lb/>
journalism.<lb/>
ECU English graduates have not had<lb/>
any problems getting English majors in<lb/>
law school, said Hester. Although this<lb/>
does not mean an immediate job,<lb/>
are preparing themselves for a<lb/>
professional career in the not too distant<lb/>
future<lb/>
Presently, masters graduates are not<lb/>
having much trouble finding jobs,<lb/>
although college teaching is the area<lb/>
where jobs are hardest to find.<lb/>
English is an excellent pre-federal<lb/>
service major, according to Hester.<lb/>
English graduates also seek careers in<lb/>
book publishing and different areas of<lb/>
business.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3819 FF3RUARY 1976<lb/>
mmmtmmm<lb/>
9<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Al Pacino is Dog Day Afternoon<lb/>
JAMES BRODERICK<lb/>
By BRANDON USE<lb/>
Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Rob a bank because you want the<lb/>
money? So what? Rob a bank to get<lb/>
money for your wife? Old hat. Rob a<lb/>
bank to get money for your homosexual<lb/>
"wife" to have a sex change operation?<lb/>
Who would believe that? You will, even<lb/>
though it is true. You would believe it if<lb/>
it weren't after seeing Al Pacino in DOG<lb/>
DAY AFTERNOON.<lb/>
Pacino is absolutely brilliant as Sonny<lb/>
Wortzik who robbed a Brooklyn bank on<lb/>
August 22, 1972. The actual robbery was<lb/>
viewed on New York television three and<lb/>
a half years ago and Wortzik for a few<lb/>
hours became a cultural phenomenon.<lb/>
With the help of his friend, Sal, who<lb/>
keeps avowing his heterosexuality<lb/>
throughout the latter stages of the film,<lb/>
Wortzik bungles a bank heist making it<lb/>
look more like Moe, Larry and Curly<lb/>
rather than Bonnie and Clyde. First of<lb/>
all, the third robber gets cold feet and<lb/>
splits, then they find that the bank only<lb/>
has $1100.00 and Sonny needs at least<lb/>
$2500.00. Then as they are about to make<lb/>
their escape they get a call from the<lb/>
barber shop across the street which is<lb/>
full of police. In fact the whole area<lb/>
quickly fills up with police and<lb/>
spectators.<lb/>
This is where Pacino begins to shine.<lb/>
Heretofore he has been a Bozo bank<lb/>
robber but now he is faced with capture<lb/>
and must act fast. He puts on the stall<lb/>
while he thinks about what to do. He<lb/>
decided to talk outside where they have<lb/>
been calling him. Detective Sgt. Maretti<lb/>
(Charles Duming) calls Pacino out for a<lb/>
little tete-a-tete and to show him that the<lb/>
bank is completely surrounded by<lb/>
hundreds of cops. Pacino is beautiful in<lb/>
this scene where he begins strutting<lb/>
around in front of the bank waving his<lb/>
white handkerchief (flag) of truce and<lb/>
yening iur me cops to holster their<lb/>
weapons. It creates mayhem among the<lb/>
officers and Maretti, fearful for the<lb/>
hostages inside (seven tellers, a guard,<lb/>
and the bank president) makes the police<lb/>
comply with Pacino's ravings. Then still<lb/>
in a state of controlled fury, Pacino<lb/>
begins to scream, "Attica! Attica! Attica!<lb/>
This is all the crowd needs in the<lb/>
recently passed Attica riot days to adopt<lb/>
Sonny as a hero. By now he is ready on<lb/>
live New York T.V. and the crowd cheers<lb/>
and applauds Pacino. Everytime he steps<lb/>
out of the bank for the next few hours he<lb/>
is greeted with cheers and calls. "Sonny.<lb/>
Sonny  The police are at bay because<lb/>
they don't want to threaten the lives of<lb/>
the hostages and Sonny and Sal finally<lb/>
decide that they want to fly out of the<lb/>
I<lb/>
. <lb/>
country to Algeria.<lb/>
Pacino as Sonny Wortzik IS the<lb/>
movie. Directed superbly by Sidney<lb/>
Lumet, Pacino chums through every<lb/>
problem that faces him, racks his brain<lb/>
(and ours) for the next move much in the<lb/>
same way we merged with Dustin<lb/>
Hoffman in THE GRADUATE. What we<lb/>
see of Pacino leads us to believe that he<lb/>
wouldn't really shoot any of the<lb/>
hostages, but scenes of the camaraderie<lb/>
that builds up between the hostages and<lb/>
Pacino are juxtaposed with calls from<lb/>
Sonny's real wife, Angela, who asks<lb/>
Sonny why he would scream at her, call<lb/>
her a pig, and threaten her with violence<lb/>
in the previous days and the interrogation<lb/>
of Sonny's homosexual wi' , Leon, who<lb/>
tells Maretti that Sonny "held a gun to<lb/>
my head and said go to sleep so it won't<lb/>
hurt when it goes off As a matter of<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
?��<lb/>
 <lb/>
JOHN CAZALE<lb/>
AL PACINO-stars as Sonny Wortzik in DOG DAY AFTERNOON. Her Pacino is shown<lb/>
with one of the captive bank tellers after he Is obviously successful In his<lb/>
negotiations with police who have him surrounded after he attempts to rob a bank in<lb/>
Brooklyn.<lb/>
1<lb/>
CHARLES DURNING<lb/>
'fact, Sonny's wild actions have caused<lb/>
Leon to take "a pound of pills" and has<lb/>
to be brought to the robbery scene from<lb/>
Bel I view Hospital by Sonny's request.<lb/>
Thus Lumet never lets us completely<lb/>
rest in our judgment of Sonny; which is<lb/>
the real Sonny? The answer is both.<lb/>
Sonny's complexity is shown by Pacino<lb/>
in a performance for which he definitely<lb/>
deserves an Oscar. Sonny is always<lb/>
under control under all these pressures,<lb/>
pressures from the bank robbery,<lb/>
pressures from his two wives, his<lb/>
parents, and indeed seeing his wife<lb/>
crumble before his eyes. His partner, Sal,<lb/>
on the other hand is very shaky<lb/>
throughout the movie, very apprehensive<lb/>
and possibly very deadly since he fondles<lb/>
a submachine gun ninety percent of the<lb/>
time and tells Sonny that he "will start<lb/>
throwing bodies out the front door"<lb/>
because he will never go back to jail.<lb/>
This adds to Sonny's pressures, he<lb/>
must keep Sal cool too in order to avoid<lb/>
disaster. Things get so loose in the bank<lb/>
at one time that Sonny lets a female<lb/>
teller practice rifle drills with his carbine<lb/>
and orders pizza which he insists on<lb/>
paying for with the bank's money. This<lb/>
draws cheers from the onlooking crowd<lb/>
but not nearly the reaction which he gets<lb/>
shortly when he throws handfuls of<lb/>
money into the crowd.<lb/>
Sonny basks in the glory of his<lb/>
celebrity status which subsides into<lb/>
mixed boos and cheers when the crowd<lb/>
learns that he is a homosexual. Sonny<lb/>
may escape to Algeria; he may die, this<lb/>
review will not give the fate. However, I<lb/>
cannot emphasize enough that Pacino's<lb/>
brilliance should not be missed in DOG<lb/>
DAY AFTERNOON.<lb/>
This film playing at Pitt Theater starling<lb/>
Friday, February 27.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040024_0009"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3819 FEBRUARY 1978<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Michael Murphey Feb.24<lb/>
Michael Murphey's recognition as a<lb/>
singer, songwriter, and guitarist has<lb/>
tremendously increased in the last few<lb/>
years. A couple of his past songs made<lb/>
the charts, "Geronimo's Cadillac" and<lb/>
"Cosmic Cowboy but it wasn't until the<lb/>
summer of 1975, with the success of his<lb/>
single. "Wildfire that he became<lb/>
MICHAEL MURPHEY<lb/>
well-known. "Wildfire" stayed on the top<lb/>
for months, which caused his fourth<lb/>
album, Blue Sky - Night Thunder, to sell<lb/>
fast. The fo low-up single, "Carolina in<lb/>
the Pines was also from the same<lb/>
album and continued to climb and<lb/>
eventually did as well. Even before his<lb/>
own recording career, people like Bobbie<lb/>
Gentry, Flatt and Scruggs, The Monkees,<lb/>
and The First Edition recorded his<lb/>
material.<lb/>
In describing his own music, Murphey<lb/>
says "natural imagery runs through all<lb/>
my music. It's country rock, which has a<lb/>
softer, mellower approach than rock and<lb/>
you can fit in English horns, oboes, and<lb/>
acoustic guitars<lb/>
Like his music, Murphey is of<lb/>
independent spirit and pioneer determin-<lb/>
ation - his rise to mass acceptance was<lb/>
very much his own doing. He observes a<lb/>
much wider horizon, absorbing new<lb/>
inspirations for the future. As he once<lb/>
said: "The world is a songwriter, and I'm<lb/>
just a damn good stenographer<lb/>
Enjoy Michael Murphey in concert on<lb/>
Tuesday, February 24 at 8:00 P.M. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Non Art show happening on Friday night<lb/>
On Friday night, Feb. 20 at 7:30 at 603 East 9th Street, tnere will occur �<lb/>
developmental psychological happening in our Bicentennial year 76 An "anything<lb/>
goes" pre-exam blow-out is in store for all those so inclined. Costumes are preferred,<lb/>
but not required. An after event "Halloween party" will follow immediately at 403<lb/>
Student Street. Costumes will be required for admittance to party.<lb/>
Audience participation is a prime objective in this event and pads of paper and<lb/>
drawing boards will be available for your own personal response to this art form? (Ha<lb/>
ha). Over 20 distinguished invited guests have received personal invitations to make<lb/>
their mark for mankind and compete for unique prizes. Those invited guests should be<lb/>
planning how they will express themselves to the bear. Paint, flowers, whips and love<lb/>
taps will be their weapons to show their true feelings about Johny Dollar, but most<lb/>
importantly their verbal speeches. $25 jewelry prize for best costume; $25 prize for<lb/>
best T-shirt made at the event. 7:30sharp! Jons Qunderson<lb/>
TAMERLANE<lb/>
� 7rxp reading day afternoon party<lb/>
2:00-8:00 everybody invited to<lb/>
get "ready" for exams<lb/>
it WECU TAMERLANE PARTY<lb/>
SUN DA YNITE o ver $300��in prizes<lb/>
FUN-CONTESTS<lb/>
 OPEN EVERY FRIDAY AT 3PM<lb/>
.<lb/>
i<lb/>
HHMMIMMWWWWIHMHIIIIHI<lb/>
WtMWW<lb/>
STILL SERVING THE<lb/>
BEST PIZZA IN TOWN.<lb/>
Ask Your Friends!<lb/>
MONDAY NI6NT 5-9 p.m. all for tiLY $1.99<lb/>
� Small pizza with on ingredititt of your choict.<lb/>
� Frath ffottaa salad .<lb/>
� All tha iead taa you can drink!<lb/>
COFFEE HOUSE ATMOSPHERE-Mualc by Rick Cornfield, Mark Rhodea,<lb/>
and Frankle Martin Tuea &amp; Thura. 7 PM doalng<lb/>
NO COVER-A GOOD TIME TO MAKE FRIENDS.<lb/>
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�<lb/>
DAN NICHOLS AND JIM HAMILTON<lb/>
JOHN ROBBINS<lb/>
Playhouse<lb/>
Productions<lb/>
Feb 20-21<lb/>
The East Carolina Playhouse will present Samuel Beckett's Act Without Words, !l<lb/>
and Krapp's Last Taps in its Workshop Series Feb. 20 and 21, in the Studio<lb/>
Theatre. Admission is free.<lb/>
Act Without Words, II is a short funny play which uses two actors in the mime<lb/>
form. Comic in presentation, the short play enacts one of Beckett's oft repeated<lb/>
themes, that our lives are largely gratuitous Dan Nichols and Jim Hamilton act the<lb/>
two mime parts.<lb/>
Krapp's Last Tape is about an old man who annually records each year's activity<lb/>
on a tape recorder. We see Krapp at about 70. He listens to himself at 39 but can<lb/>
hardly understand the character. At 70, Krapp is totally disinterested in the<lb/>
philosophical discoveries of Krapp at 39. He is moved only by a love-making scene<lb/>
recorded 30 years ago. Krapp is played by John Robbins, who was last seen in the<lb/>
Playhouse production of Who's Happy Now?<lb/>
Albert Pertalion directed both shows.<lb/>
(NKMlm<lb/>
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FOUNTA1NHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3819 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
pi�m�umnn<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
Sullivan files for president<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Tim Sullivan, former SGA Executive<lb/>
assistant, is currently the only candidate<lb/>
who has declared his candidacy for<lb/>
president for the Student Government<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
"The fact that only one has filed<lb/>
amazes me said SGA President Jimmy<lb/>
Honeycutt. "I know there are more<lb/>
students on campus who want to help<lb/>
the students "Experience in student<lb/>
government, and administrative ability<lb/>
are secondary qualifications. The primary<lb/>
qualification for SGA office is to want to<lb/>
help the students of ECU<lb/>
Honeycutt plans to remain neutral<lb/>
throughout the campaigning period for<lb/>
spring elections.<lb/>
Sullivan, a Sophomore, filed Wednes-<lb/>
day afternoon.<lb/>
"I see SGA this year in decline, and it<lb/>
bothers me said Sullivan in a statement<lb/>
of intent. "The fact that no one in the<lb/>
past week of filing has decided to oin tor<lb/>
President shows this decline<lb/>
The campaign will center on who can<lb/>
best deal with the problems students<lb/>
face as members of the Greenville<lb/>
community, and restoring confidence in<lb/>
the SGA.<lb/>
"I am no more confident of victory<lb/>
than anyone else in the race, said<lb/>
Sullivan. "But, I am confident that this<lb/>
year's race will decide whether SGA<lb/>
withers up and dies, or whether it takes<lb/>
its rightful place as the defender of the<lb/>
students of this U liversity.<lb/>
Sullivan was his Freshman class<lb/>
president, he is also a former<lb/>
Fountainhead staffer.<lb/>
Since resigning as SGA Executive<lb/>
assistant on Feb. 9, he has sponsored a<lb/>
legal rights session. Also he is still<lb/>
going to publish an SGA newsletter<lb/>
although he is no longer on the SGA<lb/>
payroll.<lb/>
"Tim is the most dedicated student<lb/>
government official that I have come in<lb/>
contact with while in the SGA said<lb/>
Ricky Price, SGA Speaker of the House.<lb/>
"He has a knack for accomplishing<lb/>
difficult tasks for students of ECU said<lb/>
the speaker, who ran against Sullivan for<lb/>
freshman class president.<lb/>
"If he has a weakness, it is that he<lb/>
works too hard<lb/>
He resigned his post as SGA<lb/>
EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT on Feb. 9<lb/>
because of grades, according to Sullivan.<lb/>
"Sullivan resigned his post to give all<lb/>
his time to himself, and his campaign<lb/>
said SGA legislator Sammy Hicks. "If he<lb/>
quits on the students now, what will stop<lb/>
him from doing it as President<lb/>
Hicks, a potential candidate<lb/>
for SGA president, noted that only one<lb/>
other SGA member has resigned an SGA<lb/>
position in the Spring elections.<lb/>
"They have their backs on the<lb/>
students for personal gain said Hicks.<lb/>
Hicks says he wants to run for the<lb/>
presidency, but he must think it over and<lb/>
decide what is best for the students.<lb/>
"It is possible but not probable he<lb/>
said. "I'm still thinking about it<lb/>
Competition is already assured among<lb/>
the other SGA offices as Kim Taylor, Tim<lb/>
McLeod, Terry Lucas, and Greg Pingston,<lb/>
have filed for the Vice Presidency.<lb/>
Candidates for the Treasurer's<lb/>
position include Tommy Thomason, and<lb/>
Craig Hales. Jimmy Adams, Robert<lb/>
Dubrey and Larry Glynn have filed for<lb/>
graduate school president. Also, Kim<lb/>
Taylor has filed for SGA secretary<lb/>
lllllllllllllllllllllllU<lb/>
REFRIGERA TOR<lb/>
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following locations only.<lb/>
1. on the Hill in front of Scott Dorm<lb/>
2. on the Mall between Jarvis and Fleming<lb/>
3. on the circle between Garrett and Greene<lb/>
After returning your refrigerator you<lb/>
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on the same dates and times above.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO.<lb/>
iiwm ii i nniiirm<lb/>
3819 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
mi � i mi i ii m<lb/>
n<lb/>
Psychologist speaks on learning problems<lb/>
By HELENA WOODARD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Charles W. Woodard, a community<lb/>
psychologist from Greenwood, S.C<lb/>
spoke here last Monday night on<lb/>
psychology as related to the black<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
Woodard, whose lecture centered<lb/>
around the learning problems black<lb/>
students have in school, quoted<lb/>
extensively from such notables as<lb/>
Thomas Pettigrew, Dwight Engles, A.R.<lb/>
Jensen, and Linguist William Labov, and<lb/>
cited some of their reasons for these<lb/>
learning difficulties.<lb/>
While Engles and Jensen cited<lb/>
genetic and biological differences as<lb/>
opposed to environmental differences for<lb/>
being chief reasons for low IQ scores<lb/>
among black school children, Labov has<lb/>
noted language barriers between lower-<lb/>
class black students and their often<lb/>
middle-class teachers.<lb/>
Woodard cited two basic kinds of<lb/>
language codes; one used predominantly<lb/>
by the lower class and one used mainly<lb/>
by the middle class.<lb/>
"Lower-classed black individuals have<lb/>
trouble understanding their teachers who<lb/>
often use standard English speaking<lb/>
codes Woodard said.<lb/>
Woodard also cited studies showina<lb/>
that on standard IQ tests Southern lower<lb/>
class individuals could not be expected<lb/>
to perform as well as Northern middle<lb/>
class individuals.<lb/>
"According to a recent study,<lb/>
teachers give gifted students preferential<lb/>
treatment. Teachers may treat culturally<lb/>
deprived kids in negative ways Woodard<lb/>
said.<lb/>
'There are significant differences<lb/>
when black researchers give prepared IQ<lb/>
tests to blacks and when white<lb/>
researchers give IQ tests to blacks, the<lb/>
same is true with counseling Woodard<lb/>
said. "We need more black researchers<lb/>
who better understand black children<lb/>
RAPE<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
Since the swimming pools and locker<lb/>
rooms in Memorial Gym fall under the<lb/>
supervision of the Intramural Department,<lb/>
Dr. Edwards said he was concerned.<lb/>
It was approximately 5 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon that the life guard<lb/>
spotted the individual in the hallway at<lb/>
Memorial and told Dr. Edwards.<lb/>
Dr. Edwards spoke with the man in<lb/>
his office, but allowed him to leave<lb/>
before calling Campus Security.<lb/>
Edwards said the man had told him<lb/>
that he was not an ECU student, but that<lb/>
he was taking a course "downtown The<lb/>
man told Edwards that he came to the<lb/>
building at night to "work out Persons<lb/>
questioned in the building said they had<lb/>
seen him walking through the building,<lb/>
but that they did not know who he was.<lb/>
At last reports, the Greenville Police<lb/>
Department and the ECU Campus Police<lb/>
were still looking for the suspect.<lb/>
The development of positive black<lb/>
concepts can be exhibited by instructors<lb/>
in the classroom, Woodard added.<lb/>
"Eradicating racism must start with<lb/>
the social education of the young; the<lb/>
pre-school children where more than 60<lb/>
per cem oi a child's development is<lb/>
formed he added.<lb/>
Woodard appealed to the audience as<lb/>
future educators to foster an environment<lb/>
in accordance with a child's own<lb/>
capabilities.<lb/>
Head Start programs, which have<lb/>
been under some controversy as well as<lb/>
other compensatory programs, are<lb/>
strongly supported and urged by<lb/>
Woodard.<lb/>
"Compensatory education doesn't<lb/>
increase IQ Woodard said, quoting from<lb/>
A.R. Jensen.<lb/>
Diagnostic prescriptive teaching and<lb/>
team teaching were other modern<lb/>
educational approaches discussed and<lb/>
supported by Woodard for teaching<lb/>
children individually.<lb/>
Woodard, again citing the problem of<lb/>
language barriers through black English<lb/>
dialects as opposed to standard English<lb/>
dialects in the classroom, proposed the<lb/>
idea of teaching English to children as a<lb/>
foreign language.<lb/>
"We should show them both systems<lb/>
(standard and nonstandard English).<lb/>
There should be interaction of standard<lb/>
English speakers with dialectical English<lb/>
speakers. They should know that their<lb/>
language is a viable one Woodard said<lb/>
referring to classroom teachers and black<lb/>
students speaking nonstandard English.<lb/>
CHARLES W. WOOOARD-<lb/>
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12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3819 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Women's Club may admit Title IX males<lb/>
By DIANE TAYLOR<lb/>
The ECU Women's Club may begin<lb/>
admitting men after Monday, Feb. 16, to<lb/>
comply with federal Title IX regulations.<lb/>
"We haven't exactly had any men<lb/>
beating our door down said Mrs. Betty<lb/>
Grossnickle, president-elect. "But after<lb/>
Monday night they can if they want to<lb/>
Title IX prohibits discrimination by<lb/>
sex on any federally supported<lb/>
educational facility. Since the University<lb/>
Women's Club is a recognized campus<lb/>
organization it is covered by the new law.<lb/>
"I knew about Title IX but I had no<lb/>
idea it affected us said Mrs. Wanda<lb/>
Broome, president.<lb/>
Broome said she tound out the club's<lb/>
Title IX eligibility on Monday, Fee. 9.<lb/>
She then contacted members of the<lb/>
by-law committee. They will recommend<lb/>
changes for compliance at the regular<lb/>
meeting on Feb. 16, she said.<lb/>
Proposed changes will be in the name<lb/>
of the club, word changes throughout the<lb/>
by-laws, and additions to the entrance<lb/>
qualifications, according to Broome.<lb/>
Grossnickle said she did not expect<lb/>
any men to apply for membership right<lb/>
away. "But I would like to see it because<lb/>
there is no comparable men's club here<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
"This is one of the few universities I<lb/>
know of where they don't have a faculty<lb/>
club Grossnickle said.<lb/>
Several years ago an attempt was<lb/>
made to establish a faculty club for men<lb/>
here, according to Grossnickle. But the<lb/>
attempt failed.<lb/>
However, the women's club, which<lb/>
has been here for more than ten years,<lb/>
now has 112 active dues paying<lb/>
members.<lb/>
An annual activity of the club is<lb/>
raising money for scholarships. Although<lb/>
in the past, scholarships have gone to<lb/>
female students, Grossnickle said the<lb/>
sex was not mentioned in the by-laws.<lb/>
Broome and Grossnickle agreed that<lb/>
other women's club activities probably<lb/>
would not change.<lb/>
"I don't know whether the men would<lb/>
want to go hear lectures on breast cancer<lb/>
or not said Broome. "We have various<lb/>
activities and programs and sometimes<lb/>
our husbands attend with us<lb/>
An interest group within the women's<lb/>
club is the Faculty Wives Gourmet Club,<lb/>
which has 35 members.<lb/>
"I suppose we'll have to change that<lb/>
name said Grossnickle, chairperson of<lb/>
the gourmet club. "But we've aJways<lb/>
done it in couples anyway.<lb/>
"I don't forsee any problems in<lb/>
admitting men said Grossnickle. "In<lb/>
fact, I'd like to see this as the nucleus of<lb/>
a faculty club. Maybe it's all for the good<lb/>
after all she said.<lb/>
YEARBOOKS<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
office about the free yearbooks, but the<lb/>
ECU Chancellor was reported out of<lb/>
town. A secretary did acknowledge that<lb/>
the Chancellor received several boxes of<lb/>
books a year and explained that "he<lb/>
sends them to very special friends, like<lb/>
members of the Board of Trustees and<lb/>
other special friends like President Friday<lb/>
and Senator Morgan<lb/>
Alumni Association Director Don<lb/>
Leggett was in Atlanta and unavailable<lb/>
for comment.<lb/>
Dr. Tucker, Dean of Student Affairs,<lb/>
explained that his office got books to<lb/>
place in administrative offices in<lb/>
Whichard and to give to special friends<lb/>
of the university.<lb/>
"We give the books to people like<lb/>
members of the Board of Trustees and<lb/>
other officials Dr. Tucker explained.<lb/>
Dr. Tucker contended that his office<lb/>
never made a request for books until<lb/>
after the students had had a chance to<lb/>
pick up the yearbooks.<lb/>
"We, of course, wait till we feel like<lb/>
all the students who want books get<lb/>
them. Then if there are any left, we<lb/>
request the books. We feel that we can<lb/>
make good use of them instead jf<lb/>
allowing them to go to waste Dr.<lb/>
Tucker continued.<lb/>
The Dean of Student Affairs pointed<lb/>
out that the books are good for public<lb/>
relations and recruiting purposes.<lb/>
"But, the students come first and we<lb/>
make sure they get all the books they<lb/>
need before we get any Dr. Tucker<lb/>
concluded.<lb/>
Ms. Sutherland contended that the<lb/>
practice of giving away boxes of books to<lb/>
the administration was a well established<lb/>
custom. "I have been associated with the<lb/>
yearbook for three years and I know<lb/>
personally that this has been going on<lb/>
that long Ms. Sutherland asserted.<lb/>
Ms. Sutherland admitted that in the<lb/>
past the BUCCANEER had been lucky in<lb/>
usually having a surplus of books.<lb/>
"We usually have some extra copies<lb/>
left over after students pick up their<lb/>
copy. But, we always need to keep some<lb/>
extra ones for students who come back a<lb/>
few years later and want a book. And, we<lb/>
need books for our library and future<lb/>
reference she continued.<lb/>
atSHOHEY'S<lb/>
But, the yearly giveaway to<lb/>
administrative offices is a drain on the<lb/>
total supply of books available, according<lb/>
to Ms. Sutherland.<lb/>
The editor of the yearbook noted that<lb/>
with the rising printing cost the number<lb/>
of books given away amounted to a<lb/>
substantial sum of money.<lb/>
"We definitely could use the money<lb/>
that we end up giving away like this. We<lb/>
sure could use an extra $1,000 to apply<lb/>
back on the book Ms. Sutherland<lb/>
added.<lb/>
The yearbook editor admitted that she<lb/>
had thought about refusing to give out<lb/>
the free books to administrators.<lb/>
"We give away special complimentary<lb/>
copies to some high administration<lb/>
officials already. And, we try and give<lb/>
copies to the various departments that<lb/>
call and ask for them she continued.<lb/>
"And, I don't see how I can refuse<lb/>
them if they continue to call and ask for<lb/>
them Ms. Sutherland concluded.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3819 FEBRUARY 1876<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
13<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Kerbaugh scores 24<lb/>
Lady Pirates squeeze out 81-65 win<lb/>
GALE KERBAUGH<lb/>
24 points off the bench<lb/>
By JANET HOEPPEL<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
It must certainly take a lot to keep the<lb/>
Lady Pirates' basketball team down. The<lb/>
Monarchs of Old Dominion University<lb/>
could not find what it takes.<lb/>
Returning home after a resounding<lb/>
defeat during the Winthrop Tournament<lb/>
this past weekend, the Pirates came back<lb/>
strong to pull out a close 81-75 victory<lb/>
over Old Dominion Tuesday night at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
It was simply a fantastic night for the<lb/>
ECU bench, as player after player came<lb/>
in to play vital roles in the Pirate line.<lb/>
But, above all, it was a night of<lb/>
nights for two Pirate guards. Ellen<lb/>
Garrison, from her starting guard<lb/>
position, directed an ECU offensive<lb/>
attack with pinpoint passes and assists.<lb/>
There was also Gale Kerbaugh, who<lb/>
came off the bench early in the first half<lb/>
to make a 24 point contribution to the<lb/>
ECU scoring attack.<lb/>
The contest was close throughout the<lb/>
game. The Pirates were plagued by<lb/>
numerous turnovers in the early minutes<lb/>
of the first half as they fell behind, 13-9.<lb/>
ODU forward, Yvette Baggett, who scored<lb/>
17 points in the half, burned the Pirate<lb/>
defense scoring most of the Monarchs'<lb/>
points herself.<lb/>
Then Coach Bolton turned Kerbaugh<lb/>
loose, and the freshman guard ripped<lb/>
through the ODU defense with nine of 11<lb/>
ECU points-at one time scoring seven<lb/>
straight. Behind her outside shooting and<lb/>
fast break layups, the Bucs broke back<lb/>
on top, 20-17, with less than nine<lb/>
minutes remaining in the half.<lb/>
The Monarchs grabbed the lead once<lb/>
more during the half, that coming on a<lb/>
Baggett bucket to pull the Monarchs on<lb/>
top, 27-26.<lb/>
Baskets by Susan Manning, Debbie<lb/>
Freeman, and Kerbaugh quickly remedied<lb/>
the situation, however, as the Pirates<lb/>
regained the lead. ,�CU was up by five<lb/>
38-33, at the end of the half.<lb/>
See Kerbaugh, page 14.<lb/>
DEBBIE FREEMAN<lb/>
she scored 26 points<lb/>
Scharf's swimmers looking for 11th straight title<lb/>
The East Carolina swim team is going<lb/>
for its 11th consecutive Southern<lb/>
Conference title in the league swim meet<lb/>
that starts today at Bobbins Center in<lb/>
Richmond, Va.<lb/>
This will be coach Ray Scharf's ninth<lb/>
championship , and he has never been<lb/>
beaten in either a dual meet by a<lb/>
conference opponent or the league<lb/>
championships. He has some interesting<lb/>
comments on the meet.<lb/>
"This meet for us should be an easy<lb/>
one said the veteran coach. "But I<lb/>
really don't think we'll have to swim real<lb/>
well to win. I'd like to win every<lb/>
swimming event this year. That is not too<lb/>
much to ask. We've done it before and<lb/>
I'm sure we're better this year than in<lb/>
seasons past<lb/>
But winning is not the only motive for<lb/>
going.<lb/>
"This meet is nothing but a warm-up<lb/>
for the Eastern Regionals for us. We<lb/>
want to do well in the Easterns, maybe<lb/>
have a chance to win. We just want to<lb/>
have a good meet<lb/>
Stewart Mann, freshman sensation<lb/>
from Charlotte, seems to be a cinch for<lb/>
the most tstanding performer. Mann<lb/>
leads the c ference in six categories,<lb/>
but will swim in only four in the<lb/>
championships. But, he is heavily<lb/>
favored to win all of them. Mann has<lb/>
clocked out at : 56.02 in the 100<lb/>
backstroke, 1.59.35 in the 200<lb/>
backstroke, 1:58.81 in the 200 individual<lb/>
medley (IM), and 4:20 in the 400 IM.<lb/>
Sophomore John McCauley is<lb/>
expected to defend his titles in the 50<lb/>
and 100 freestyles, but will be pushed<lb/>
hard by teammates Billy Thome, John<lb/>
Tudor, and Alan Clancy in the 50 and<lb/>
Thome, Tudor, and Ross Bohlken in the<lb/>
100. McCauley's bests this year of :21.51<lb/>
in the 50 and : 47.00 in the 100. Thome<lb/>
has a :21.8 in the 50.<lb/>
Bohlken has brought his time in the<lb/>
200 freestyle down to 1:44.02 and should<lb/>
easily repeat in that event.<lb/>
In the distance events, 500 and 1,650<lb/>
freestyles, freshman walk-on Doug<lb/>
Brindley is the odds-on favorite to win.<lb/>
Brindley has a 4:49.76 in the 500 this<lb/>
year and a 16:50 in the1650 in practice.<lb/>
Tomas Palmgren, defending champ in<lb/>
both these events wiM swim the 1650 but<lb/>
will pass up the 500. Palmgren has had<lb/>
sub-par performances thus far this<lb/>
season and it is hoped he will come<lb/>
around for the conference champion-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
David Kirkman is expected to defend<lb/>
in both of his specialties, the 100 and<lb/>
200 breaststroke. Kirkman has timed<lb/>
1:00.8 in the 100 and 2:14.25 in the 200<lb/>
this season is heavily favored.<lb/>
Butterriiers Steve Ruedlinger and<lb/>
Keith Wade should rule the champion-<lb/>
ships in the 100 and 200 butterflies.<lb/>
Ruedlinger has had 1:59.70 in the 200,<lb/>
while Wade has clocked in at :53.40<lb/>
in the 100.<lb/>
The Pirates will not be taking a diver<lb/>
or some of the other swimmers, just the<lb/>
ones that have a good chance to win or<lb/>
place. But, they should have no problem<lb/>
repeating in the Southern Conference.<lb/>
Pirates stand 7-7 in SC<lb/>
after loss to Furman<lb/>
Sports Spotlight<lb/>
lursday, February 19<lb/>
Women's Basketball at Campbell<lb/>
Swimming in SC Tournament<lb/>
:riday, February 20<lb/>
Women's Basketball at Randolph-Macon<lb/>
Swimming in SC Tournament<lb/>
Track at SC Tournament<lb/>
turday, February 21<lb/>
Women's Basketball at Longwood<lb/>
Swimming in SC Tournament<lb/>
Track at SC Championships<lb/>
Men's Intramural Basketball Championships<lb/>
Basketball vs. Georgia Southern<lb/>
Gymnastics vs. Florida, USC<lb/>
 Sunday, Feb. 22<lb/>
Greenville Soccer Club against Raleigh<lb/>
ECU Rugby<lb/>
Monday, reuruary 23<lb/>
Basketball vs. Western Carolina<lb/>
Buies Creek, N.C. Richmond, Va.6:00<lb/>
Farmville, Va. Richmond, Va. Lexington, Va.7:00<lb/>
Farmville, Va. Richmond, Va. Lexington, Va. ECU HOME Columbia, S.C.10:00 5:00 7:30 2:00<lb/>
HOME2:00 2:00<lb/>
HOME7:30<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Monday night was another one of<lb/>
those games for the East Carolina<lb/>
basketball team. It was one of those<lb/>
nights when the Pirates played good<lb/>
enough to win, but didn't.<lb/>
It had happened two weeks previously<lb/>
when the Pirates had lost in the closing<lb/>
seconds to a William and Mary team that<lb/>
hadn't played well enough to win on<lb/>
most nights. In that game, a shot at the<lb/>
final buzzer felled the Pirates by a 56-54<lb/>
score.<lb/>
But Monday's loss to the Furman<lb/>
Paladins ended the ECU team's regular<lb/>
season schedule in the conference on a<lb/>
sour note. The Pirates, who finished with<lb/>
a 7-7 conference record, could have<lb/>
clinched fourth place in the league with a<lb/>
win over the Paladins.<lb/>
A fourth place finish would have<lb/>
insured the ECU team of a hon court<lb/>
berth in the conference tournament's<lb/>
first-round play. Instead, the Pirates now<lb/>
have to sit back and wait to see if VMI<lb/>
can clinch the berth for them by<lb/>
whipping Appalachian State on Saturday.<lb/>
If that happens, ASU and the Pirates<lb/>
would both stand .500 in the conference<lb/>
and sir.ce ECU has outscored Appala-<lb/>
chian in the two games between the<lb/>
teams, it would get the home berth.<lb/>
You can bet ECU coach Dave Patton<lb/>
and his players are looking with interest<lb/>
to that game.<lb/>
"All we can do now said Patton,<lb/>
after Monday's loss, "is to keep our<lb/>
heads up and hope that we get that<lb/>
number four spot. There is always a<lb/>
tomorrow in basketball and that day has<lb/>
come for us<lb/>
"We're just going to try and work on<lb/>
our confidence now and try to keep from<lb/>
losing our confidence. It would be nice if<lb/>
we could go into the tournament with a<lb/>
little spirit and confidence<lb/>
According to Patton, confidence is<lb/>
the biggest problem for the Pirate team<lb/>
right now.<lb/>
"We are just not confident enough in<lb/>
the way we play said Patton. "Our<lb/>
confidence isn't what it used to be or<lb/>
should be, and losing two games like we<lb/>
have lately against William and Mary and<lb/>
Furman certainly hasn't helped that<lb/>
Despite the confidence problem,<lb/>
Patton said he thought his team had<lb/>
played its' best basketball of the year in<lb/>
the last five games prior to the Mercer<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"We've played four of our last five<lb/>
games with good performances. Starting<lb/>
with the Davidson game, the only game<lb/>
we played poorly in was against the<lb/>
Athletes in Action, yet we won only two<lb/>
of the five games<lb/>
See Patton, page 14.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040024_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3819 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
HWmilllll I �!�!�� Ill t l w Ml<lb/>
w<lb/>
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Leading scorer<lb/>
Garner leading the way in his senior year<lb/>
By JANET POPE<lb/>
"They told me to watch George Foreman,<lb/>
he comes on strong<lb/>
I said he might need some Ban roll-on<lb/>
Earl Gamer<lb/>
If you beg, plead or threaten Earl<lb/>
Garner with bodily harm he will<lb/>
reluctantly do his Muhammed Ali<lb/>
impersonation - and it's a dead ringer.<lb/>
Earl can't understand why people are<lb/>
always asking him to do his<lb/>
impersonations. He says he can't<lb/>
concentrate on the sport. The sport he<lb/>
refers to is basketball and contrary to<lb/>
what Earl says his concentration is good.<lb/>
Amidst a disappointing Pirate<lb/>
basketball season, Garner, who was lost<lb/>
in the shuffle last year, has emerged a<lb/>
starter, and the team's leading scorer.<lb/>
He is averaging 14 points, reaching his<lb/>
ECU career high of 31 points against<lb/>
Davidson.<lb/>
Garner transferred to ECU from<lb/>
Catonsville College as a JUCO<lb/>
PATTON<lb/>
Continued from page 13.<lb/>
Now with only games against Georgia<lb/>
Southern and Western Carolina left on<lb/>
the schedule, Patton feels that maybe his<lb/>
team is playing close to the form that is<lb/>
necessary for the tournament.<lb/>
"I think it has been harder this year<lb/>
because we had such a good team last<lb/>
year said Patton. "With the recruits we<lb/>
brought in, people expected a lot from us<lb/>
and I think I expected too much from us,<lb/>
too '<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
"Now we are playing more intelligent.<lb/>
I can see us playing better, even if the<lb/>
results haven't been there. We are still<lb/>
making the silly mistakes, though, but<lb/>
we are playing better now than before<lb/>
So, maybe, just maybe, the East<lb/>
Carolina team is set for the conference<lb/>
tournament. It certainly has been a long<lb/>
season for the East Carolina team, but as<lb/>
far as the ECU team is concerned, they<lb/>
would like to play three more conference<lb/>
games. That is the number it would take<lb/>
for the Pirates to win the championship<lb/>
of the Southern Conference.<lb/>
By LEONARD SMITH<lb/>
Granny's Greats are the 1975-76 ECU<lb/>
Women's Intramural Basketball cham-<lb/>
pions after downing last year's<lb/>
champions Delta Zeta by a 55-38 score.<lb/>
The outcome of the game was never<lb/>
in doubt as Granny's Greats jumped out<lb/>
to an early lead and gradually increased<lb/>
the margin. Liz White and Ann<lb/>
Lowdermilk canned 11 and 10 points,<lb/>
respectively, in the first half as Granny's<lb/>
Greats ran the half time score to 27-13.<lb/>
Paula Culberth was i te only bright<lb/>
spot in an otherwise dismal game for<lb/>
Delta Zeta as she scored nine first half<lb/>
points and finished with a game high 24<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Lowdermilk finished with 22 points<lb/>
for the winners, while White contributed<lb/>
19 points.<lb/>
Herb's Superbs, Belk's Nutties<lb/>
Buddies, Pi Kappa Phi, and the P.E.<lb/>
Majors Club all captured their respective<lb/>
divisional titles last week in Men's<lb/>
Intramural Basketball to set the stage for<lb/>
this week's All-Campus Championship<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
Herb's Superbs had to rely on their<lb/>
foul shooting to pull out a 47-38<lb/>
come-from-behind victory over the<lb/>
Desperados in the GraduateIndependent<lb/>
Division's Championship game. Tough<lb/>
zone defenses and numerous errors kept<lb/>
the score low.<lb/>
The Desperados led at the half, 21-18,<lb/>
but fell behind in the second half and<lb/>
were forced to foul. Herb's Superbs<lb/>
actually finished with fewer field goals<lb/>
(14-18) but connected on 19 of 22<lb/>
attempts from the charity stripe to<lb/>
account for the final margin.<lb/>
The two semi-final games of the<lb/>
Men's Intramural Basketball All-Campus<lb/>
Championship Tournament will be played<lb/>
tonight on the main court at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum The first game will begin at<lb/>
8 15 and will feature the P.E. Majors<lb/>
Club and Pi Kappa Phi At 9:45, Belk's<lb/>
Nutties Buddies will face defending<lb/>
champ Hero's Superbs.<lb/>
The two semi-final winners will meet<lb/>
at 5:00 on Saturday, February 21, in the<lb/>
All-Campus Championship Game which<lb/>
will be played as a preliminary contest<lb/>
before the ECU-Georgia Southern game.<lb/>
Mike Banks of Herb's Superbs<lb/>
finished with 15 points to take game<lb/>
scoring honors, while teammate Bob<lb/>
Ringer pumped in 14 points.<lb/>
Len Blackley canned 19 points to lead<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi past the Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
Raiders, 38-20, in the Fraternity<lb/>
Division's Championship Game. Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi held a slim 15-12 halftime lead, as<lb/>
Blackley scored 13 points.<lb/>
The Pi Kappa Phi attack in the second<lb/>
half was considerably more team-oriented<lb/>
and it paid off for them, as they<lb/>
outscored the Raiders, 23-8, in the<lb/>
second half to win going away. Lambda<lb/>
Chi Alpha's Fraysure Fulton led his team<lb/>
with 10 points.<lb/>
Belk's Nutties Buddies (10-0) captured<lb/>
the Dorm Division Championship by<lb/>
defeating the Scott Hatchets, 35-29.<lb/>
Nutties Buddies used a well balanced<lb/>
attack in the first half to gain an early<lb/>
advantage ar "M2 lead at the half.<lb/>
In the second fu. the Buddies set a<lb/>
slower tempo by tryiny to work the ball<lb/>
into their big men in the middle. The<lb/>
Hatchets took advantage of the slower<lb/>
pace and several turnovers to cut the<lb/>
Buddies' lead. However, the clock caught<lb/>
up with them before they could<lb/>
completely overtake the Buddies and<lb/>
their title hopes and their season came to<lb/>
an end. The Buddies' Eddie Hicks led all<lb/>
scorers with 10 points.<lb/>
Perhaps the biggest mismatch of the<lb/>
four divisional championship games<lb/>
occurred in the Club Division as the P.E.<lb/>
Majors Club dumped the Phi Epsilon<lb/>
Kappa Marauders, 44-27. The Majors<lb/>
quickly took control of the game and<lb/>
gradually increased their lead as the<lb/>
game progressed.<lb/>
As expected, former ECU basketball<lb/>
star Donnie Owens led the Majors' attack<lb/>
and finished with a game high 19 points.<lb/>
All-American. What has made this year<lb/>
such a switch from last year? "I don't<lb/>
think I've improved that much really. It's<lb/>
just that I'm playing more. Oh, one thing<lb/>
is that I've adjusted better to the style<lb/>
basketball played here<lb/>
A native of Baltimore, Md Earl will<lb/>
not hesitate to recount his rather bizarre<lb/>
high school track career. He was<lb/>
disqualified from a track meet because I<lb/>
jumped the pole vault without a pole.<lb/>
See, I thought it was the high jump<lb/>
Then there was the incident where he got<lb/>
thrown off the team for cheating. He<lb/>
jumped two hurdles at once.<lb/>
As for the future, "Looks like my<lb/>
basketball days are numbered, so I guess<lb/>
I'll teach driver's education somewhere<lb/>
Earl's basketball philosophy is that<lb/>
"You can't underestimate anybody. You<lb/>
got to respect everybody's play,<lb/>
regardless<lb/>
As for himself, he characterizes<lb/>
himself as the "love thy neighbor type"<lb/>
and "one of the nicest guys you'd ever<lb/>
want to meet<lb/>
Of those who know Garner on the<lb/>
ECU campus, there are not too many<lb/>
who would fight that statement.<lb/>
KERBAUGH<lb/>
Continued from page 13.<lb/>
Sloppy play and poor shot selection<lb/>
at the outset of the second period caused<lb/>
ECU turnovers again. ODU jumped to a<lb/>
one point advantage, 39-38, early into the<lb/>
half. After ECU tied the game, 41-41, the<lb/>
Monarchs extended the lead to a four<lb/>
point margin at 45-41.<lb/>
Garrison, Freeman, and Kerbaugh<lb/>
went to work again, and the Pirates'<lb/>
running attack began to roll. With less<lb/>
than 12 and a half minutes to play, the<lb/>
Pirates had surged back on top by taking<lb/>
a 57-47 lead. The ten point lead proved to<lb/>
be ECU'S largest of the evening-but,<lb/>
most importantly, the lead was theirs to<lb/>
keep.<lb/>
Baggett continued to be the big gun<lb/>
for the ODU offense, totaling a game<lb/>
high 35 points, but more than a one man<lb/>
show was necessary to overcome the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
Down for the rest of the game, ODU<lb/>
nevertheless refused to lie down. The<lb/>
Monarchs stayed within striking distance<lb/>
and when Garrison fouled out with six<lb/>
minutes remaining and Rosie Thompson<lb/>
continued having an off night, it<lb/>
appeared that the Pirates might be in<lb/>
trouble.<lb/>
Two more substitutes, Marie Cham-<lb/>
blee for Garrison and Joni Home<lb/>
replacing Thompson, supported the<lb/>
Pirates when it was needed most.<lb/>
With 2:38 showing on the clock, ECU<lb/>
held only a 75-71 advantage, and the<lb/>
most serious ODU threat was made.<lb/>
Home, however, scored from the<lb/>
outside to increase the Pirate lead to six<lb/>
at 77-71, and from that moment onward,<lb/>
four points was a close as the Monarchs<lb/>
could manage to get to the ECU team.<lb/>
Kerbaugh rebounded a missed ECU<lb/>
shot and put the ball up to score from<lb/>
the outside. The 79-73 margin proved to<lb/>
be insurmountable when two Manning<lb/>
free throws iced the victory with six<lb/>
seconds left.<lb/>
Coach Bolton commented on the win,<lb/>
saying: "We beat them with the fast<lb/>
break, and I didn't think we could do<lb/>
that As has been the case many times<lb/>
this season, the Pirate running game has<lb/>
been the difference in the ballgame.<lb/>
Debbie Freeman led the Pirates in<lb/>
scoring with 26 points, but it was<lb/>
obvious that Gale Kerbaugh was the<lb/>
impetus the Pirates needed to supply<lb/>
them with the victory. Her 24 point<lb/>
performance was a season and career<lb/>
high. In addition to her scoring,<lb/>
Kerbaugh grabbed nine rebounds.<lb/>
It was an exciting win for the Pirates<lb/>
who played their final home game of the<lb/>
season. The victory raised the Pirate<lb/>
record to 8-4. The ECU team has five<lb/>
more games remaining before the state<lb/>
tournament. They play Campbell College<lb/>
tonight and Randolph-Macon and<lb/>
Longwood College in a pair of weekend<lb/>
games.<lb/>
ECU-Thompson 2 6-11 10, Freeman 12<lb/>
2-2 26, Manning 3 2-3 8, Roes 0 0-0 0,<lb/>
Garrison 3 0-0 6, Kerbaugh 11 2-7 24,<lb/>
Swenholt 0 0-0 0, Chambtee 2 04) 4,<lb/>
Home 1 1-1 3. TOTALS 34 13-25 81.<lb/>
ODU-Abraham 3 3-5 9, Baggett 12 11-12<lb/>
35, Burgun 10-0 2, Davy 3 04) 6, Larry 1<lb/>
0-0 2, Tichards 7 0-2 14, Warden 0 2-4 2,<lb/>
Lampert 1 3-4 5. TOTALS 26 19-27 75.<lb/>
HALF-ECU-38 ODU-33.<lb/>
1 BLOCK FROM MENDENHALL<lb/>
Wine Sho<lb/>
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INTRODUCING<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040024_0015"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAJNHEADVOL<lb/>
� Hi I 'HWllll I<lb/>
7, NO. 3819 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
15<lb/>
� <lb/>
Time-Out<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The Return Of Sonny Randle<lb/>
Sonny Randle returned to Greenville Tuesday afternoon to speak to the Greenville<lb/>
Sports Club luncheon at the Ramada Inn. For Randle, it was the first trip back to the<lb/>
city, except for Clarence Stasavich's funeral, since he had left for the University of<lb/>
Virginia to become head coach.<lb/>
For those who still don't know, Randle was fired in late November as football<lb/>
coach at the Charlottesville school. He is now out of a job and living on the<lb/>
remainder of the five-year contract which he signed when he first arrived at Virginia.<lb/>
But yesterday at the Sports Club, Randle shed some light on his present job<lb/>
situation. He said that at the current time he has received many offers to work for<lb/>
firms outside of football, but that until his contract is negotiated at Virginia he will<lb/>
not be able to seek out or sign for any job within football.<lb/>
Randle related that he hoped he would have the contract with Virginia resolved<lb/>
within the next several weeks and that if he had a choice he would like to remain in<lb/>
college coaching.<lb/>
This writer had always felt Randle was seeking the professional ranks, but<lb/>
knowing Randle as a man of integrity and character, he means what he says.<lb/>
Somewhere there has to be a job open for Sonny Randle. The man is too fine a<lb/>
person to be looked over because of what happened at the University of Virginia.<lb/>
Perhaps a good insight into the drawing attraction of Randle was the overflow<lb/>
turnout the Greenville Sports Club had for his program. The crowd on Tuesday<lb/>
undoubtedly was double that of any crowd the Sports Club has had this year. Regard-<lb/>
less of their reasons, the crowd really came to see Randle.<lb/>
Among those in the crowd were persons who had played for him at East Carolina,<lb/>
including New York Giants' quarterback Carl Summerell, as well as those who had<lb/>
scorned him when he had left East Carolina for Virginia.<lb/>
Regardless of the reasons they were there this writer hopes that those in<lb/>
attendance Tuesday listened to Randle with an open mind and took in what the man<lb/>
was saying, because he had a lot to say. What he said did not so much deal only<lb/>
with Sonny Randle, but also with life. A life that has for the moment hit an impasse.<lb/>
Before long, though, don't be surprised if you hear that Randle has been hired to<lb/>
some good job with a big-name football school. Sonny Randle is a winner and a lot<lb/>
of people, deep down inside, know it.<lb/>
SOUTHERN CONFERENCE TITLES AT STAKE<lb/>
Two Southern Conference titles are on the line this weekend, in swimming and<lb/>
in indoor track. East Carolina in all probability will place first in swimming and<lb/>
second in track.<lb/>
There is no reason to believe coach Ray Scharf's swimmers will do anything but<lb/>
dominate the swim championships. In every dual meet against a conference opponent<lb/>
this year, Scharf's swimmers have run all over their opposition, in many cases with<lb/>
the athletes swimming in events they normally do not compete in.<lb/>
Scharf will surely bring home his eleventh crown this weekend. One point bothers<lb/>
this writer, though. Scharf has said he does not plan on taking his diver, Lund Sox,<lb/>
to the conference championships because he does not feel that Sox can place. Scharf<lb/>
said that since Sox will not be able to place, why should he take him?<lb/>
This is very kind of Scharf. A diver works to improve and do well all year long, and<lb/>
makes considerable improvement, only to be rewarded at the end of the year by his<lb/>
coach telling him be cannot go to the conference championships. Obviously, Scharf<lb/>
really knows how to make his swimmers and divers feel wanted.<lb/>
BILL CARSON'S TRACK TEAM<lb/>
With injuries to several of his top athletes, Bill Carson has to go into this<lb/>
weekend's Southern Conference Indoor Track and Field Championships with mixed<lb/>
emotions.<lb/>
This has probably been one of the best teams Carson has ever had in terms of<lb/>
overall depth, but with injuries to several of his top sprinters and hurdlers, Carson<lb/>
will be at a handicap to compete against William and Mary. William and Mary's<lb/>
strength lies in the distance events, where ECU is very weak, and Carson in the past<lb/>
has relied on his short distance men, his sprinters and his field men to counter the<lb/>
Indians.<lb/>
Past results show that William and Mary have won the indoor championships the<lb/>
last ten years, with Carson finishing second to the Indians last year.<lb/>
ECU has four winners and its relay team back from last year, but it will still take<lb/>
quite a show for the ECU team to come out any higher than second place.<lb/>
SPRING WEATHER BREEDS BASEBALL FEVER<lb/>
The opening of the East Carolina baseball season is just around the comer as the<lb/>
Pirates open at home against the University of Maryland on March 6.<lb/>
Former FOUNTAINHEAO Staff Writer, Willie Patrick, who is also a Student<lb/>
Assistant in the Athletic Department, has been hard at work preparing the publicity<lb/>
and promotions for this year's season. He has told this writer that this year's team<lb/>
will be a very exciting one and should make a real run at the Conference title.<lb/>
This writer can't wait for the time when the home plate umpire yells "Play Ball" for<lb/>
the first time.<lb/>
Indoor track team will try to<lb/>
better William and Mary at meet<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's indoor track and field<lb/>
team will try to unseat William and Mary<lb/>
from the top spot after ten years of<lb/>
domination, as the Southern Conference<lb/>
Indoor Track and Field Championships<lb/>
will take place this weekend in the VMI<lb/>
Fieldhouse at Lexington, Va.<lb/>
Chances were somewhat reduced this<lb/>
past weekend when star sprinter Larry<lb/>
Austin pulled a hamstring and will miss<lb/>
about two months of action. Pirates'<lb/>
track coach Bill Carson does not believe<lb/>
the injury will hurt the Pirates' chances in<lb/>
the championships this weekend that<lb/>
much.<lb/>
"Larry was a big asset to our team, a<lb/>
sure bet for first or second said the<lb/>
veteran track mentor. "But we have<lb/>
plenty of other sprinters who can come<lb/>
in and do the job. I think we can still<lb/>
take three or four of the top five in the<lb/>
championships<lb/>
Carter Suggs, the outstanding<lb/>
performer in the indoor and outdoor<lb/>
meets of last year, has run a 6.0 in the<lb/>
60 yard dash, while Donnie Mack has hit<lb/>
6.1, which qualifies him for the nationals<lb/>
along with Austin and Suggs. Austin,<lb/>
though, most likely will not be in top<lb/>
form by then and will probably miss the<lb/>
meet. Calvin Alston and Maurice Huntley<lb/>
will also be in the 60 and both have 6.3's<lb/>
to their credit.<lb/>
The meet will be real close, in<lb/>
Carson's eyes. "I figure that William and<lb/>
Mary is about four to eight points better<lb/>
than us in this kind of competition, but if<lb/>
one of our guys that usually does not<lb/>
come through does it in this meet, we<lb/>
could conceivably win<lb/>
The Indians won last year's meet by<lb/>
40 points over the Pirates but Carson<lb/>
vows that will not happen this year.<lb/>
"There's no way that they will beat us<lb/>
that bad this year. We have our best<lb/>
overall talent we've ever had and we will<lb/>
not be beaten that bad<lb/>
Suggs will be back to defend his 60<lb/>
and 440 titles he won last year at the<lb/>
championships. Also expected to be<lb/>
among the leaders in the 440 are<lb/>
Huntley, James Freeman, Robert<lb/>
Franklin, and Charley Moss.<lb/>
East Carolina should take first and<lb/>
second in the 60 yard high hurdles,<lb/>
providing Sammy Phillips is fully<lb/>
recovered from the pulled hamstring he<lb/>
suffered at Carolina last month. He and<lb/>
frashman sensation Marvin Rankins have<lb/>
each qualified for the nationals with<lb/>
times of 7.2. Rankins has lost just once<lb/>
this season, that being to Phillips. Both<lb/>
have had top notch competition.<lb/>
Jim Willitt in the 880, with best time<lb/>
of 1:54.0, should push the leaders at that<lb/>
distance, while the mile relay should<lb/>
repeat as champions in that event.<lb/>
East Carolina scored relatively few<lb/>
points last year in the field events. This<lb/>
should not happen this year, as the<lb/>
Pirates have a strong contingent of<lb/>
ieapers in all the jumping events, plus<lb/>
experience in the shot put and hammer<lb/>
throw.<lb/>
In the long jump, George Jackson has<lb/>
leaped 23-11 while Curt Dowdy and Mike<lb/>
Hodge have been around 23 feet several<lb/>
times this season. In the triple jump,<lb/>
Herman Mclntyre has gone 49-3, while<lb/>
Jackson and Hodge have both leaped<lb/>
over 48 feet.<lb/>
Keith Allamong and Dowdy have both<lb/>
been hitting 6-6 recently in the high jump<lb/>
and could score points for the Bucs.<lb/>
In the 35-pound hammer throw, Tom<lb/>
Watson has hit the 47-7 mark this<lb/>
season, but will be challenged hard by<lb/>
Drexel George of William and Mary, who<lb/>
has thrown 50 feet once. Watson is<lb/>
among the leaders in the shot put with a<lb/>
51-5 to his credit, while Wayne Poole has<lb/>
thrown 49-8.<lb/>
All in all, this year's meet should be a<lb/>
thriller, as so many past have not. Maybe<lb/>
the Pirates will have enough to stop the<lb/>
Indians from making it 11 indoor<lb/>
championships in a row.<lb/>
We're looking for certain majors<lb/>
to become Lieutenants.<lb/>
Nursing and pre med majors  math majors and<lb/>
minors  computer science  physics majors<lb/>
The Air Force needs people  many with the above<lb/>
academic majors. AFRGTC is currently offering a two<lb/>
year scholarship program with a $100 a month<lb/>
allowance during tour junior and senior years at East<lb/>
Carolina University. All this leads to an Air Force<lb/>
officer's commission plus advanced education.<lb/>
If you'd like to cash in on these Air Force benefits,<lb/>
start by looking into the Air Force ROTC.<lb/>
Contact Captain Richard Rowan ECU Wright Annex<lb/>
Application Deadline March 15, 1976 758-6598<lb/>
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC<lb/>
m<lb/>
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wmts<lb/>
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SSS, j ' �.�  '<lb/>
HH<lb/>
sgi' as<lb/>
<pb facs="00040024_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3819 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
� me mum f mummmmmt<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
l�M<lb/>
<lb/>
newsFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASH<lb/>
Birthright<lb/>
Last Tango<lb/>
Race cancelled Disney World trip<lb/>
Every pregnant woman, married or<lb/>
unmarried, rich or poor, has the right to<lb/>
decide her pregnancy's future, to know<lb/>
the alternatives to abortion. Birthright is<lb/>
an organization dedicated to thse<lb/>
principles. Interested in volunteering a<lb/>
few hours a week? Call Terri at 758-8296<lb/>
any weekday between 4-6.<lb/>
Buc portraits<lb/>
Any students that want their portraits<lb/>
in the yearbook and did not get it taken<lb/>
when the photographer was on campus,<lb/>
may submit a black and white billfold<lb/>
picture to the BUCCANEER staff before<lb/>
the end of the quarter.<lb/>
Pub Board<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the Pub<lb/>
Board Tuesday, March 9, in Mendenhall.<lb/>
All members are uraed to be present,<lb/>
plans for election of photographer and<lb/>
media financing will be discussed.<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will meet Thrursday<lb/>
night in the Multi-purpose Room in<lb/>
Mendenhall. All members are asked to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Essay contest<lb/>
An essay contest for ECU students<lb/>
has been announced by the Eastern<lb/>
Carolina Chapter of the National<lb/>
Organization for Women (NOW), and the<lb/>
ECU Women's Residence Council.<lb/>
A first prize cash award of $30 will be<lb/>
given to the writer of the best essay<lb/>
response to the topic question, "How Do<lb/>
You Feel That the Feminist Movement In<lb/>
America Today Will Affect Your Life?"<lb/>
Two honorable mention awards, with<lb/>
prizes of $10 each, will also be given.<lb/>
Winners will be announced during the<lb/>
campus Women's Awareness Week, April<lb/>
4-10.<lb/>
Essays must be of sufficient length to<lb/>
reflect sincerity and careful thought, but<lb/>
no longer than 1500 words. All entries<lb/>
should be typewritten, double-spaced,<lb/>
and submitted no later than March 15.<lb/>
Entries should be brought to Room<lb/>
214, Whichard Building (Dean Fulgham's<lb/>
office).<lb/>
Any currently enrolled student at ECU<lb/>
who enters the contest is eligible to win<lb/>
one of the awards.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Appearing at the Coffeehouse this<lb/>
weekend will be the Melody Ranch<lb/>
Ramblers. Admission is 25 cents for 2<lb/>
hours of fine music. Shows are Friday<lb/>
and Saturday, at 8 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
ECU'S second X-rated movie, Marlon<lb/>
Brando and Maria Schneider star in this<lb/>
both controversial and popular movie. It<lb/>
will be shown on both Friday, and<lb/>
Saturday, Feb. 20 and 21 at 7:00 and<lb/>
9:20 P.M. ID. and Activity Card required.<lb/>
There will be a car wash Saturday,<lb/>
February 21, at Pitt Plaza Shell on the<lb/>
264. Bypass. It will be sponsored by<lb/>
Sigma Nu Fraternity. Advance tickets are<lb/>
being sold by any Sigma Nu, only one<lb/>
dollar. They will make your car look like<lb/>
Nu. 10 a.m. till.<lb/>
Saxophonist<lb/>
Saxophonist Michael R. Haithcock,<lb/>
senior student in the ECU School of<lb/>
Music, will perform in recital February 20<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m. in the A.J. Fletcher Music<lb/>
Center Recital Hall.<lb/>
Disco party<lb/>
WECU in conjunction with Tamerlane<lb/>
presents its first annual DISCO PARTY,<lb/>
Sunday night, Feb. 22, from 9 p.m. to 1<lb/>
a.m. in Tamerlane.<lb/>
They will be giving away gift<lb/>
certificates, meals, record albums, and<lb/>
concert tickets totaling more than $400.<lb/>
Also they will give two kegs to the form<lb/>
or organization with the most representa-<lb/>
tives at the Party.<lb/>
Listen to WECU (57 AM) for more<lb/>
details.<lb/>
SGA Officers<lb/>
Filing is open for the positions of<lb/>
SGA President, Vice-President, Treasurer,<lb/>
Secretary, and Graduate School<lb/>
President. All interested persons should<lb/>
go by room 228 in Mendenhall to get an<lb/>
application form. Filing ends February<lb/>
24.<lb/>
Eye Wills Wanted<lb/>
Lately have you seen your reflection<lb/>
in a mirror, in a pool, in a store window<lb/>
as you walked down the street? How<lb/>
lucky you are to enjoy these almost<lb/>
taken-for-granted pleasures. You can<lb/>
help give one or more blind persons a<lb/>
chance to do so and it will cost you<lb/>
absolutely nothing. Sign an eye-will on<lb/>
Thursday at the Eye-Will table, Wright<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Ebony Herald<lb/>
Screening will be held Thursday at<lb/>
6:00 p.m. Feb. 19, 1976 in room 239<lb/>
Mendenhall for editor. Persons interested<lb/>
in working on the staff should leave their<lb/>
names with the SGA secretary before<lb/>
thursday. Persons interested in the<lb/>
editorship should have a resume with<lb/>
them Thursday evening.<lb/>
<lb/>
Due to a lack of entries The Crate Car<lb/>
500 that was scheduled to take place on<lb/>
College Hill Drive on Feb. 21, 1976 has<lb/>
been cancelled. It is hoped that the event<lb/>
can be rescheduled for Spring Quarter<lb/>
and that better participation will be<lb/>
forthcoming.<lb/>
Moynehan at ECU<lb/>
The Campus wide Symposium<lb/>
Committee of the SGA approved $2,000<lb/>
last night for the Political Science honor<lb/>
society, to have David Moyenhan on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Moyenhan is a former United States<lb/>
Ambassador to the United Nations.<lb/>
Currently he is preparing to teach at<lb/>
Harvard University.<lb/>
Disney World - Daytona Beach (4 days<lb/>
at Disney World and 2 days at Daytona<lb/>
Beach) Friday, April 16 - Saturday, April<lb/>
24. Quad Traveler - $75.00, triple traveler<lb/>
- $85.00, and double traveler - $95.00.<lb/>
(Includes transportation and accomod-<lb/>
ations). Reservations will be taken<lb/>
beginning March 8 at Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Mendenhall.<lb/>
Special concerts<lb/>
Special Concerts is now taking<lb/>
applications for membership. If you want<lb/>
to work to bring good, relatively unknown<lb/>
groups to ECU and have time to spend<lb/>
promoting them like crazy, then Special<lb/>
Concerts is for you. Come by room 234,<lb/>
Mendenhall and apply.<lb/>
Video tape is back Amnesty Week<lb/>
The video tape machine is back at<lb/>
last. For those of you who have n.wer<lb/>
seen it in operation come by the<lb/>
snackbar of the ECU Student Center and<lb/>
have a look. This week's show: Ace<lb/>
Tracking Co. in The New Army. You can<lb/>
see it between the hours of 10:00 A.M.<lb/>
and 8:00 P.M. through Feb. 24th.<lb/>
Accounting Society<lb/>
Accounting Society dinner meeting<lb/>
Monday, February 23, 6:00 p.m. at<lb/>
Parkers. Guest speaker will be Mr. Hilton<lb/>
Boyd of the IRS. His topic will be<lb/>
"Overview of the IRS We will also have<lb/>
the election of sec.trea.<lb/>
i<lb/>
The Harvest<lb/>
9<lb/>
"The Harvest" is a new coffeehouse<lb/>
located in the Methodist Student Center<lb/>
(across from Garrett Dorm) and is open<lb/>
every Friday from 8:00 to 12:00 P.M.<lb/>
This Friday a former country-western<lb/>
singer from Pink Hill, Haywood Smith,<lb/>
will bring his repertoire of song into the<lb/>
relaxed atmosphere of "The Harvest<lb/>
Bear bites<lb/>
In case the bear gets loose this<lb/>
Friday night the ECU Infirmary has listed<lb/>
guidelines for bear bites: keep victim<lb/>
calm, treat for shock, rub wound with<lb/>
sterile ten dollar bill, follow this<lb/>
treatment with a Fifth of Tequila.<lb/>
Remember also - don't feed these<lb/>
dreadful beasts - prevention is the best<lb/>
medicine.<lb/>
Forever Generation<lb/>
The Forever Generation of ECU, a<lb/>
Christ centered fellowship group, invites<lb/>
you to join us this Friday night at 7:30 in<lb/>
room 244 Mendenhall. We will be having<lb/>
a brief Bible study, games, fellowsh.p<lb/>
and refreshments.<lb/>
The Catholic Students Organization<lb/>
on Campus will honor NATIONAL<lb/>
AMNESTY WEEK - Feb. 22nd - 29th by<lb/>
taking part in an hour long demonstration<lb/>
on the Evans Street Mall. The<lb/>
demonstration will be held on Monday,<lb/>
Feb 23rd from 12:00 Noon to 1:00 p.m.<lb/>
All ECU students are invited to join in<lb/>
the effort to bring amnesty to the<lb/>
thousands of young people who opposed<lb/>
participation in the Vietnam war. The<lb/>
great majority of the young men who<lb/>
would benefit from a national amnesty<lb/>
bill are those who were denied their<lb/>
rights as conscientious objectors by<lb/>
unthinking local draft boaras. There are<lb/>
many seeking amnesty who deserted<lb/>
when confronted with the inhuman<lb/>
brutality of a war that is now generally<lb/>
regarded as a mistake.<lb/>
Land Classification<lb/>
A Land Classification worKsnop<lb/>
prepared and presented by the North<lb/>
Carolina Land Policy Council will be held<lb/>
in the Willis Building in Greenville on<lb/>
February 24 from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.<lb/>
This workshop is being sponsored by the<lb/>
Greenville-Pitt County League of Women<lb/>
Voters. All interested persons in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina are urged to attend so<lb/>
that they can understand and participate<lb/>
in the development of the Land<lb/>
Classification System.<lb/>
Fifty years<lb/>
Winter Quarter marks the Fiftieth<lb/>
Anniversary of a student newspaper at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
In next Tuesday's edition of<lb/>
Fountainhead, there will be a nostalgic<lb/>
look into the past fifty years of this<lb/>
newspaper. Coverage will include some<lb/>
of the more important news making<lb/>
occurances during tr(t�t fifty year period.<lb/>
Some interesting peculiarities have been<lb/>
written in the annals of the student paper<lb/>
and it is an appropriate time that these<lb/>
oddities be divulged. This historic edition<lb/>
will be the last one printed during Winter<lb/>
Quarter.<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040024_0017"/>
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