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<pb facs="00040026_0001"/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
The Best Training For A<lb/>
Fruitful After-awhile<lb/>
Is a Purposeful Right-now<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA TEACHERS COLLEGE<lb/>
If We Can Make Public<lb/>
Opinion Right Our<lb/>
Schools Will Be Right<lb/>
SGA continues to progress through the years<lb/>
Viola Jones, chairman; and Ethel Spratt, secretary; of the E.C.T.C. Student<lb/>
Government Appropriations Committee reported in the November, 1926 edition of The<lb/>
Teco Echo, the student newspaper, that "Having secured the information necessary to<lb/>
make appropriations, we have done so accordingly and in a most fairminded and<lb/>
impartial way<lb/>
The all-girl student government received fees from the 667 students enrolled at the<lb/>
college that year to allow it a $10,000 budget. More than 11 percent of that budget<lb/>
was used to fund The Teco Echo<lb/>
From these humble financial beginnings, the Student Government Association at<lb/>
this university has grown over the years to an organization responsible for the<lb/>
spending of more than a quarter of a million dollars In student fees and has been the<lb/>
leading force in numerous controversial issues affecting the city of Greenville.<lb/>
Listed below are head lines-some with the stories' leads-from The Teco Echo, The<lb/>
East Carolinian and Fountainhead.<lb/>
See Events, page 8.<lb/>
w<lb/>
Newsletter is<lb/>
forerunner to<lb/>
;The Teco Echo'<lb/>
By TOM TOZER<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Student Publications have been<lb/>
servicing the East Carolina Community<lb/>
for over 50 years. "The Teco Echo"<lb/>
is credited with being the first student<lb/>
newspaper The Teco Echo was first<lb/>
distributed in December 1925 with the<lb/>
motto: "If We Can Make Public Opinion<lb/>
Right Our Schools Will Be Right "<lb/>
Surprisingly, the first publication<lb/>
on this campus and the forerunner<lb/>
to the Teco Echo was the East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College News,<lb/>
published twice monthly. Volume I,<lb/>
number I made its debut on October 23.<lb/>
1923.<lb/>
The biggest news item in that first<lb/>
edition of the "News" was the<lb/>
enrollment. The enrollment in 1923 for<lb/>
then East Carolina Teachers College<lb/>
(ECTC) was 486. This campus suffered its<lb/>
first housing shortage back in 1923. The<lb/>
"News" reported that 400 were refused<lb/>
admission because of lack of room.<lb/>
See Papers, page 8.<lb/>
ORIGINAL GROUND BREAKING ceremonies for then East Carolina Teachers College took place in Greenville in March 1907. The<lb/>
area shown for the memorable service is approximately the fountain area of today's East Carolina University.<lb/>
Six leaders responsible for ECTC-ECU growth<lb/>
By DENNIS LEONARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Dr. Richard Wright was the first<lb/>
President of East Carolina Teachers<lb/>
College, and was chosen when the<lb/>
college was begun in 1909. Dr. Wright<lb/>
was President during the formation years<lb/>
of the College and was one of the few<lb/>
men on campus in the all female school.<lb/>
In April of 1934. Dr Wright died<lb/>
unexpectedly<lb/>
On October 5. 1934, the 25th<lb/>
Anniversary of the school, the Board of<lb/>
Trustees elected Dr Leon R Meadows as<lb/>
the President of ECTC replacing the<lb/>
vacant position Dr Meadows was a<lb/>
member of the faculty the first year of<lb/>
the school, acted as a dean for a number<lb/>
of years, and was a former Head of the<lb/>
English Department He was also the<lb/>
Secretary of the Board of Trustees for 12<lb/>
years before his appointment to the<lb/>
presidency<lb/>
On April 26, 1944 a Pitt County Grand<lb/>
Jury indicted Dr Meadows on 16 counts<lb/>
of embezzlement and one count of<lb/>
alse pretense The embezzlement counts<lb/>
charged Dr Meadows with the<lb/>
mishandling of more than $12,000 in<lb/>
special college and student activity funds<lb/>
over a five year period The indictment<lb/>
procedures were begun on April 17th of<lb/>
STv,<lb/>
X<lb/>
DR. RICHARD WRIGHT<lb/>
that same year. The Court's solicitor<lb/>
stated that the 16 indictment "covered<lb/>
those items in the State Auditor's report<lb/>
which clearly indicated the funds were<lb/>
handled in a criminal nature Dr<lb/>
Meadows was forced to resign his<lb/>
position at ECTC, but still received<lb/>
pension payments from the state for $100<lb/>
a month for the rest of his life<lb/>
On April 27, 1944, the Board of<lb/>
Trustees of ECTC appointed Dr Howard<lb/>
DR. LEO JENKINS<lb/>
J McGinnis acting President of the<lb/>
College McGinnis was acting President<lb/>
for two years until the Board of Trustees<lb/>
appointed Dr. Dennis H Cooke President<lb/>
on August 1, 1946<lb/>
Dr. Cooke held the office for<lb/>
approximately one year until he resigned<lb/>
in 1947 to become Head of the<lb/>
Department at the Women's College of<lb/>
the University of North Carolina,<lb/>
Greensboro (UNC-G). Dr. Cooke appro-<lb/>
priately submitted his resignation to the<lb/>
Board of Trustees in this manner, "I am<lb/>
submitting herewith my resignation as<lb/>
President of East Carolina Teachers<lb/>
College, effective September 1, 1947<lb/>
May I take this occasion to thank you<lb/>
and the Board of Trustees for the 100 and<lb/>
1 percent cooperation and support which<lb/>
have been given me and my<lb/>
administration. Also, I am offering my<lb/>
full cooperation and assistance to the<lb/>
Board in locating a desirable person to<lb/>
take my place<lb/>
The Board of Trustees was quite<lb/>
successful and expedient in finding<lb/>
Cooke's successor. In July of 1947, Dr.<lb/>
John D. Messick was elected President<lb/>
of ECTC, and assumed his duties on<lb/>
September 1 of that year. Dr Messick<lb/>
came from Montclair State Teachers<lb/>
College in Montclair, New Jersey.<lb/>
At the time Dr Messick came from<lb/>
Montclair State, Dr Leo Jenkins was<lb/>
teaching Political Science at Montclair.<lb/>
Dr. Messick was a native North<lb/>
Carolinian from the eastern part of the<lb/>
state before moving to New Jersey<lb/>
Dr C.F Irons, the present director of<lb/>
Student Health Service, came to ECTC as<lb/>
the campus physician that same year<lb/>
See Leaders, page 8.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040026_0002"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
2<lb/>
TECO ECHOVOL. 51, NO. 124 FEBRUARY 1978<lb/>
50th Anniversary well worth remembering<lb/>
It was quite by accident that the discovery date for the<lb/>
founding of a student newspaper at East Carolina was made.<lb/>
A decision to write a story on the history of the paper was<lb/>
made and then a writer was dispatched to the library to find out<lb/>
if they had anything on old student newspapers. The result was<lb/>
the discovery that this past December 19th was, in fact, the 50th<lb/>
anniversary of a regular student newspaper at this university.<lb/>
And, while we admit that we are celebrating a little late, we<lb/>
still feel that the anniversary is significant and deserves some<lb/>
special attention. Thus, this special insert covers some of the<lb/>
highlights that these past student newspapers covered.<lb/>
Actually there was a newsletter that preceded that first<lb/>
paper, The Teco Echo by several years. But, it was only a<lb/>
newsletter type publication that was on small sheets of paper.<lb/>
We claim the actual founding of a regular "newspaper" on<lb/>
December 19th, 1925.<lb/>
And, since that small beginning back in 1925, the student<lb/>
newspaper at this institution has grown and prospered, right<lb/>
along with the institution itself.<lb/>
The initial copy of The Teco Echo was only eight pages and<lb/>
included few advertisements and even fewer pictures.<lb/>
The paper was published every two weeks with an advertising<lb/>
rate of 20 cents an inch and a subscription rate of $1.50. Today<lb/>
the paper is published twice a week with an average of 25 pages<lb/>
an issue, and an ad rate of $1.75 per inch and a subscription<lb/>
rate of $10.00 a year.<lb/>
Visually the papers of 1925 and 1976 are worlds apart.<lb/>
Different styles and techniques and advancements in the field of<lb/>
journalism and newspaper production have changed the face of<lb/>
the newspaper industry since that early beginning over 50 years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
Things change-yet they stay the same. The style, design<lb/>
and appearance of today's Fountainhead are different from that<lb/>
early forerunner.<lb/>
But, the purpose is still the sameto serve the student body.<lb/>
The banner of that first paper proclaimed, "The best training<lb/>
for a fruitful after-while is a purposeful right-now Nothing<lb/>
wrong with that idea right now, we contend.<lb/>
For the past 50 years literally hundreds of students have<lb/>
worked on the campus student newspaper. The name of the<lb/>
paper has changed three times, but then so has the name of<lb/>
this institution. From the Teco Echo to the East Carolinian and<lb/>
now to Fountainhead, so too has this institution changed from<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College (ECTC) to East Carolina College<lb/>
and finally East Carolina University.<lb/>
As this institution continued to grow and prosper we, too,<lb/>
hope to grow and prosper, fulfulling that original purpose<lb/>
established over 50 years ago�to serve the students.<lb/>
And, our battle cry as we struggle ahead is the same given<lb/>
by those few who inked the presses over 50 years ago.<lb/>
for that initial newspaper. The original editor Deannie Boone<lb/>
Haskett said it best with "It is your paper, so you must help us<lb/>
make it a success<lb/>
As historians looking back on those original papers, we can<lb/>
agree that they lived up to their purpose-to serve the students.<lb/>
And, hopefully 50 years hence when some newspaper staff of<lb/>
the future decides to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the<lb/>
campus newspaper, those historians can look back on our<lb/>
efforts and agree-they served the students.<lb/>
Our paper<lb/>
Reprint from 1926 Teco Echo.<lb/>
For a long time the girls have been wanting a newspaper.<lb/>
They talked about it among themselves and wished they had<lb/>
one, but nothing was done about it until one day at chapel, Mr.<lb/>
Wright said that it would be possible to have one. That was all<lb/>
that was needed. The whole student body became enthusiastic.<lb/>
They wanted a newspaper, immediately a mass meeting was<lb/>
called and the matter was discussed. The vote was unanimous<lb/>
that we should have a paper. The staffs were elected and work<lb/>
began at once on the paper.<lb/>
Fellow students and alumnae. We hope you like it. It is your<lb/>
paper, so you must help us to make it a success.<lb/>
Is it done here ?<lb/>
Reprint from 1926 Teco Echo.<lb/>
Bryn Mawr's action in having a special smoking room, has<lb/>
caused a great deal of discussion in the other colleges about<lb/>
girls smoking. We wish to flatter ourselves by saying that we<lb/>
believe smoking is the least of our troubles. It just isn't done at<lb/>
our college. Or is it? If so, the girls who do it are ashamed to<lb/>
let it be known, for they know that the sentiment of the<lb/>
students as a whole is so strong against it that it would not be<lb/>
tolerated.<lb/>
A certain college professor told a class of girls one day that<lb/>
the only way to make the men stop smoking would be to begin<lb/>
smoking themselves. Probably the Bryn Mawr girls were<lb/>
following such advice. As for us, we are willing to let the men<lb/>
smoke on alone. It is their coffins, they are making, not ours.<lb/>
"THE TECO ECHO" and the "EAS1<lb/>
CAROLINIAN" were the forerunners to<lb/>
ECU'S present student publication the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD" Student pubiicationc<lb/>
have served the East Carolina community<lb/>
for over fifty years. 1976 marks tht<lb/>
beginning of the second SO year perioc<lb/>
for ECU'S student nswpapen.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040026_0003"/><lb/>
TECO ECHOVOL. 51. NO. 124 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
3<lb/>
From the Swing Era to Jethro Tull<lb/>
50 years of entertainment at ECU<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Laurie Wilson<lb/>
How many times has someone asked<lb/>
you which university you go to and, upon<lb/>
answering East Carolina University, they<lb/>
have responded, "Oh, the party school<lb/>
Well, it seems appropriate at this time to<lb/>
delve into the past and look at some of<lb/>
the publicized events that helped<lb/>
contribute to the reputation of our<lb/>
"swinging" school. Although the action<lb/>
slowed up at times, East Carolina has<lb/>
managed to keep pace with other great<lb/>
institutions throughout the years.<lb/>
(yes, Junior's father) playing the violin<lb/>
rounded out the struggling thirties.<lb/>
Then the Big Apple and the<lb/>
Manhattan Strut were replaced by the<lb/>
College Swing and the lively, turbulent<lb/>
forties swept the campus. Again, music<lb/>
had a big appeal and E.C.T.Cs own<lb/>
school of music presented its first opera,<lb/>
"Martha Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt<lb/>
appeared on a tour for her husband a�?<lb/>
the war years grew ominously closer.<lb/>
During the war, the emphasis was on the<lb/>
men in service and East Carolina did its<lb/>
part to entertain the soldiers. In 1943, a<lb/>
Christmas dance was given for<lb/>
IAN ANDERSON of Jethro Tull captivat<lb/>
during the 1971-1972 school year.<lb/>
When the school was young and<lb/>
known as East Carolina Teachers<lb/>
College, outside entertainment was void<lb/>
on the campus due to lack of financial<lb/>
provisions from the school. Any<lb/>
programs brought in were sponsored by<lb/>
an organization of society who paid the<lb/>
difference between ticket sales and the<lb/>
price of the artist In 1926, a special fund<lb/>
was set up for entertainment and other<lb/>
activities The fees were $5.00 per<lb/>
student per quarter for entertainment and<lb/>
publications. This was the small<lb/>
beginning of what is now known as the<lb/>
Student Union One of the first big<lb/>
events the campus enjoyed was the<lb/>
swinging sound of Paul Whiteman's<lb/>
band, the original jazz orchestra of the<lb/>
late twenties. If one can imagine it, the<lb/>
newly built Wright auditorium was<lb/>
completely sold out, including the<lb/>
standing room.<lb/>
The thirties were ushered in by the<lb/>
depression, but that did not deter Art<lb/>
Kassel and His Kasseis of the Air from<lb/>
making an appearance This illustrious<lb/>
group was one of many musical<lb/>
programs presented in this era of growth.<lb/>
Amelia Earhart made a hit as the first<lb/>
internationally known aviatrix. Her<lb/>
accounts of trips across the oceans<lb/>
excited many a young lady with fanciful<lb/>
thoughts of the heavens. Dale Carnegie<lb/>
brought them all back to earth with a<lb/>
stimulating lecture on his already famous<lb/>
books of success and how to attain it.<lb/>
Russian choruses, Metropolitan sopra-<lb/>
nos, marionettes, and Efrem ZimbaJist<lb/>
as an ECU audience in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
servicemen and all of the East Carolina<lb/>
ladies helped to make it a "razzle dazzle"<lb/>
affair for all. There were speakers on the<lb/>
world and the war, such as Charles<lb/>
Collingwood, a reporter who had just<lb/>
returned from overseas. With 1946 came<lb/>
returning vets and the big band name of<lb/>
Tommy Tucker and Tommy Tucker Time.<lb/>
The veterans were hosted at the<lb/>
homecoming festivities and, as the<lb/>
campus settled back into a reasonable<lb/>
facsimile of peace, the only headaches<lb/>
the entertainment committee had were<lb/>
whether or not the programs were tco high<lb/>
brow or too low brow and if the<lb/>
Coca-Colas provided for the Tommy<lb/>
Tucker band members were going to be<lb/>
used for chasers.<lb/>
The fifties saw a slowdown in<lb/>
programming as the campus pace<lb/>
continued to go from a run into a<lb/>
contented walk. The East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse contributed a great deal of<lb/>
talent with such productions as<lb/>
"Charleys Aunt" and "Pygmalion In one<lb/>
production of "State of the Union<lb/>
Hollywood star Jeffrey Lynn was<lb/>
contracted to come and perform with the<lb/>
East Carolina cast. The Vienna Boys<lb/>
Choir and Oscar Levant, a popular pianist<lb/>
of the time, were highlights of the years<lb/>
and Tommy Tucker made another<lb/>
appearance at a dance concert. Perhaps<lb/>
the biggest event was the opening of the<lb/>
new student union. Offering TV games<lb/>
and dancing every night, It must have<lb/>
added a great deal to the social life of<lb/>
the students<lb/>
With the early years of the infamous<lb/>
sixties came the mellow sounds of many<lb/>
male groups and the craze of the twist.<lb/>
The entertainment committee was divided<lb/>
into the Fine Arts committee and the<lb/>
Popular Series committee. Homecomings<lb/>
proved to draw a great deal of interest<lb/>
and a great number of performers. Frank<lb/>
Gorshin emceed one early homecoming<lb/>
show that included Johnny Nash while<lb/>
Ray Charles and the Raelets were<lb/>
featured at a later November affair. Four<lb/>
seemed to be a popular number and the<lb/>
campus was visited by the Four Preps,<lb/>
the Four Freshmen, and the Four<lb/>
Seasons at one time or another. The<lb/>
Smothers Brothers were "a comedy<lb/>
team" who performed at Memorial Gym<lb/>
in 1962 and Ferrante and Teicher were<lb/>
popular enough to be invited to come<lb/>
twice. The second half of the decade saw<lb/>
the growing age of unrest and the era of<lb/>
the coffee house was begun on campus<lb/>
in 1966. The Embers could be found at<lb/>
the CU for dancing one night, and the<lb/>
Righteous Brothers offered two concerts<lb/>
on another evening. In 1968, Neil<lb/>
Diamond made an appearance and Paul<lb/>
Anka was featured for homecoming<lb/>
activities. Andres Segovia, the noted<lb/>
Spanish classical guitarist, and a country<lb/>
and western show with Marty Robbins<lb/>
and Jim Ed Brown rounded out the<lb/>
musical tastes to suit everyone.<lb/>
Homecoming of 1969 offered two big<lb/>
names in the way of Dionne Warwick and<lb/>
the Fifth Dimension, and B. J. Thomas<lb/>
started the year of' right in September.<lb/>
For Carousel Weekend, Jose Feliciano<lb/>
and the Brooklyn Bridge were on hand to<lb/>
close out one era at East Carolina and<lb/>
begin another.<lb/>
The liberated seventies were greeted<lb/>
at Homecoming by Friends of Distinction<lb/>
and Guess Who closely followed in the<lb/>
year by the sounds of Chicago. Vincent<lb/>
Price made his first guest lecture here<lb/>
five years ago and the first Black Arts<lb/>
Festival was begun in 1971. This was<lb/>
also the year for lecturers and bands.<lb/>
Nicki Cruz was warmly welcomed and Pat<lb/>
Paulsen waswell, Pat Paulsen. Home-<lb/>
coming was celebrated with Bread and<lb/>
Jethro Tull, and Kris Kristofferson and<lb/>
the Allman Brothers finished out the<lb/>
winter quarter. The spring and East<lb/>
Carolina played host to a young brother<lb/>
and sister act known as the Carpenters<lb/>
and a blue grass festival on the mall was<lb/>
a welcome change in routine The more<lb/>
recent years have been an experience in<lb/>
sophistication with programs by such<lb/>
artists as Marcel Marceau, Chick Corea,<lb/>
Earl Scruggs, and the National<lb/>
Shakespeare Company.<lb/>
These have only been the highlights<lb/>
of the past fifty years. There have been<lb/>
many more artists from various fields<lb/>
that have made great contributions to the<lb/>
entertaining of East Carolina students,<lb/>
not only those performers brought in but<lb/>
those from our own departments of<lb/>
drama, music, and art. And with<lb/>
performers like James Taylor, Linda<lb/>
Ronstadt, and Michael Murphey as<lb/>
examples of the present, we can look<lb/>
ahead with anticipation to the next fifty<lb/>
years.<lb/>
BACK IN 1949, Swing band wan tha rag of tha country and ECU was no<lb/>
This picture is of tha Sadie Hawkins Day Dance hakf in Wright Auditorium <lb/>
�wvicorosn at lowar loft, some things nswjr Changs).<lb/>
i<lb/>
�M<lb/>
<pb facs="00040026_0004"/><lb/>
eBMBaa<lb/>
����������l<lb/>
.����'� "F<lb/>
4<lb/>
TECO ECHOVOL. 51, NO. 124 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
Publications change with growing campus<lb/>
By JACKSON HARRILL<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College, later<lb/>
to be known as East Carolina College<lb/>
and still later as East Carolina University,<lb/>
was founded in 1907. The Teoo Echo , the<lb/>
student newspaper of E.C.T.C, printed<lb/>
its first edition on Saturday, December<lb/>
19,1925. Like the school to which it was<lb/>
attached, the paper has gone through<lb/>
just as many name changes.<lb/>
The Teoo Echo , (sometimes spelled<lb/>
"Techo"), made its first appearance as a<lb/>
bi-weekly, with a subscription rate of<lb/>
$1.50 a year.<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief Deanie Boone Haskett<lb/>
worked with a staff of three assistant<lb/>
editors, a business manager, four<lb/>
assistant business managers, an alumnae<lb/>
business manager, and reporters from<lb/>
various student activities on campus:<lb/>
Student Government, Y.W.C.A Athletic<lb/>
League, Tecoan Staff (yearbook). Lanier<lb/>
Society, Pep Society, Home Economics<lb/>
Club, Phi Epsilon, La Societe Francaise,<lb/>
and each Academic class.<lb/>
The first issue carried the following<lb/>
notice: "We herewith present the first<lb/>
issue of the first newspaper published by<lb/>
the students of East Carolina Teachers<lb/>
College. We offer it as it is, with no<lb/>
apologies, no explanations. Let it speak<lb/>
for itself<lb/>
Included was a brief summary of how<lb/>
the paper got its start. The students, it<lb/>
said, had been wanting a paper for a long<lb/>
time, but it was not until E.C.T.C.<lb/>
President Robert H. Wright announced<lb/>
that it would be "possible" to have one,<lb/>
that it was published. A unanimous vote<lb/>
of the student body determined that there<lb/>
should be one; staffs we'o elected<lb/>
and work beoan at once on the paper<lb/>
An explanation of how the name was<lb/>
selected was also inlcuded. "We like our<lb/>
name. We like it because it is catchy and<lb/>
original, and because it really means<lb/>
something. Techo' is, of course, derived<lb/>
from Teachers College' and the word<lb/>
Echo' just fitted in with our idea of what<lb/>
we wanted the paper to bean echo of<lb/>
the colleqe<lb/>
It was mentioned that the newsletter<lb/>
which had previously been published by<lb/>
the college and sent to the alumnae was<lb/>
being combined with the newspaper.<lb/>
borne notes in the old newsletter<lb/>
included a notice about "an excellent<lb/>
new moving picture machine (which)<lb/>
rrv es it possible to have good movies<lb/>
every Saturday evening" and an account<lb/>
of the enrollment: 486 students, "filling<lb/>
dormitories and rooms in the neighbor-<lb/>
hood 400 were "refused admission<lb/>
because of lack or room" and the<lb/>
students came from 5 states (North and<lb/>
South Carolina, Virginia, Pennsylvania,<lb/>
and Tennessee).<lb/>
An editorial in one of the early issues<lb/>
of tne Techo reported that the action<lb/>
taken at Bryn Mawr College (Pennsyl-<lb/>
vania) in creating a "special smoking<lb/>
room" was causing "a great deal of<lb/>
discussion in the other colleges about<lb/>
girls smoking. We wish to flatter<lb/>
ourselves by saying that we believe that<lb/>
smoking is the least of our troubles. It<lb/>
just isn't done at our college. Or is it? If<lb/>
so, the girls who do it are ashamed to let<lb/>
it be known, for they know that the<lb/>
sentiment of the students as a whole is<lb/>
so strong against it that it would not be<lb/>
tolerated<lb/>
The editorial then went on to say that<lb/>
a statement had once been made that the<lb/>
only way to stop men from smoking<lb/>
would be for the women to start, but that<lb/>
"we are willing to let the men smoke on<lb/>
alone, It is their coffins, they are making,<lb/>
not ours<lb/>
The name for the paper and yearbook<lb/>
had been selected by a contest in which<lb/>
the students submitted names. 150<lb/>
names were submitted, and the winner<lb/>
was awarded $5.00.<lb/>
The third issue of the paper included<lb/>
an editorial on the need for more<lb/>
athletics at E.C.T.C. This was in 1926,<lb/>
before the college had turned co-ed.<lb/>
It was reported in the May 2 1947<lb/>
issue that all freshmen and sophomores<lb/>
(except first quarter women) were now<lb/>
permitted to go downtown at night and<lb/>
home the first three weekends of a<lb/>
quarter. Previously, the article stated, all<lb/>
women were required to remain on<lb/>
campus those weekends.<lb/>
On April 6, 1951 the name of the<lb/>
college was changed to "East Carolina<lb/>
College striking the word "Teachers"<lb/>
from the name, although, it was noted,<lb/>
86 percent of the school's graduates were<lb/>
teachers.<lb/>
The headline on the issue of Friday,<lb/>
October 24, 1952 was "Monday Vote<lb/>
Decides Paper, Annual Names As a<lb/>
result of consideration by the Publica-<lb/>
tions board (which was formed in 1938)<lb/>
of names for the newspaper and<lb/>
yearbook, a unanimous vote of the board<lb/>
decided on which names should be<lb/>
placed on the ballot. The reason given for<lb/>
the change of the names was because<lb/>
the word "Teachers" was now gone from<lb/>
the name of the college, which formed a<lb/>
basis for each of the publications' names<lb/>
Techo Echo, Tecoan).<lb/>
The board felt that the change should<lb/>
be to one "whereby the college would<lb/>
receive more publicity The fact was<lb/>
brought out that "There are approxima-<lb/>
tely 1000 papers mailed from this college<lb/>
each week to all comers of the world,<lb/>
and that people seeing the name of the<lb/>
college in (the) nameplate of the paper<lb/>
would associate the paper with a college<lb/>
in eastern North Carolina<lb/>
The East Carolinian won out over<lb/>
Teco Echo for the name of the paper.<lb/>
Buccaneer was chosen as the name of<lb/>
the yearbook out of such suggestions at<lb/>
Pirate's Cheat, Tecoan, Pieces of Eight,<lb/>
and Pirate's Log.<lb/>
The paper became the Fountainhead<lb/>
in 1970, and had the distinction of being<lb/>
the first collegiate paper among those in<lb/>
the state to have Associated Press wire<lb/>
stories in its issues.<lb/>
During its 50-year existence, the bast<lb/>
Carolina newspaper has evolved from a<lb/>
newsletter to a newspaper, first serving<lb/>
an all-women college and now a co-ed<lb/>
university.<lb/>
In spite of the numerous changes in<lb/>
name and format, the Teco Echo, East<lb/>
Carolinian, and Fountainhead have<lb/>
shared a common purpose ; informing<lb/>
and supporting its readership.<lb/>
Barrett's 'year' in Greenville lasts a lifetime<lb/>
By PAT COYLE<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
In 1930 a young graduate of Bowling<lb/>
Green (Ky.) College of Commerce arrived<lb/>
in Greenville, ready to assume her<lb/>
position as secretary to East Carolina<lb/>
Teacher's College President Robert H.<lb/>
Wright.<lb/>
When Agnes Wadlington accepted the<lb/>
job at ECTC, she only planned to stay in<lb/>
Greenville a vear before returning to<lb/>
Oklahoma to teach.<lb/>
Agnes Wadlington's one year stay<lb/>
never ended.<lb/>
She married A. L .Barrett in 1937, and<lb/>
went on to serve all six of East Carolina's<lb/>
presidents before her retirement in 1970.<lb/>
Mrs. Barrett has had a birdseye view<lb/>
of the changes the school has gone<lb/>
through, and of the leaders who<lb/>
implemented those changes.<lb/>
DR. ROBERT H. WRIGHT<lb/>
"Dr. Wright had a vision of the role<lb/>
East Carolina must play, and had the<lb/>
energy and faith needed to work toward<lb/>
growth and expansion she said.<lb/>
Mrs. Barrett went on to say that<lb/>
Wright, the first president, had little<lb/>
interest in press agents or press<lb/>
releases.<lb/>
"The emphasis, at all times, was on<lb/>
teaching she said.<lb/>
Under Dr. Wriaht's leadership,<lb/>
students were compelled to do many<lb/>
things, such as attending chapel five<lb/>
days a week.<lb/>
"It seemed normal to him that many<lb/>
should object to regulations imposed<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
"The students were encouraged<lb/>
in self-government, but were reminoeo<lb/>
that final responsibility was in the<lb/>
administration<lb/>
Mrs. Barrett said President Wright<lb/>
was more interested in the teaching<lb/>
aspect of his job than in business<lb/>
matters.<lb/>
MEADOWS AND GROWTH<lb/>
When Wright died in 1934, Dr. Leon<lb/>
R. Meadows took his place.<lb/>
"His students always referred to him<lb/>
as a teacher who loved poetry, but Dr.<lb/>
Meadows was known in town as a keu <lb/>
businessman who enjoyed building<lb/>
Barrett said.<lb/>
She said Meadows involved himself<lb/>
with building, paving, repairing, landsca-<lb/>
ping and painting.<lb/>
THREE PRESIDENTS<lb/>
Dr. Howard J. McGinnis took over as<lb/>
the school's chief administrator when<lb/>
Meadows retired in 1944.<lb/>
He served two and a half years, and<lb/>
was succeeded by Dr. Dennis H. Cooke<lb/>
who stayed for one year, then went to<lb/>
Women's College, in Greensboro.<lb/>
"Dr. John D. Messick was elected<lb/>
president in September, 1947 Barrett<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"That fall he brought to East Carolina<lb/>
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, with whom he had<lb/>
been associated in Montclair, N.J<lb/>
JUKE BOXES AND GREAT DANES<lb/>
Through the years, Mrs. Barrett has<lb/>
observed the growing pains of a<lb/>
changing campus.<lb/>
She recalled the time in 1958-59 when<lb/>
administrative offices were being<lb/>
enlarged, causing Dr. Messick and<lb/>
herself to have offices on the first floor<lb/>
of Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
"The first floor of Wright was used<lb/>
during the day as a teaching studio for<lb/>
piano and organ, while the basement<lb/>
housed the Student Union Barrett said.<lb/>
"There were many times when a<lb/>
student would be practicing on the<lb/>
organ, while a juke box below blared<lb/>
forth with rock and roll<lb/>
"There were no buzzers, and when the<lb/>
telephone failed as it did rather often, the<lb/>
boys in the SGA volunteered as student<lb/>
express<lb/>
Barrett said that also that year a great<lb/>
dane was purchased as a mascot. For the<lb/>
duration of that summer, her crowded<lb/>
office served as a resting place for the<lb/>
dog, who spent his days next to a floor<lb/>
fan at her desk.<lb/>
"Althouah Buc was handsome and<lb/>
lovable. he let the team<lb/>
down as a mascot she said.<lb/>
"He liked milK and disliked the smell<lb/>
of beer; hated the band and was terrified<lb/>
of crowds<lb/>
TIMES-TO REMEMBER<lb/>
Wf.en asked if one particular event<lb/>
stands out in her mind as a time to<lb/>
remember at East Carolina, Mrs. Barrett<lb/>
recalled the day of Kennedy's assasina-<lb/>
tion, in 1963.<lb/>
"The campus was the most united, in<lb/>
sorrow, at the memorial service held that<lb/>
night she said.<lb/>
"The lights went out durina the<lb/>
service, but nobodv even moved<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
Mrs. Barrett has always maintained a<lb/>
close relationship with many East<lb/>
Carolina students, and has watched their<lb/>
post-graduate progress with interest.<lb/>
She's seen changes in student<lb/>
attitudes through the years, including the<lb/>
late 60's when the 'generation gap' and<lb/>
student unrest were prevalent.<lb/>
"Serious students, capable of<lb/>
profitting by a college enduration, should<lb/>
take a stand against the disruptive<lb/>
minority she said.<lb/>
Don't leave leadership up to the<lb/>
lemonings of this generation<lb/>
MISS AGNES WADLINGTON: 1930<lb/>
MRS. AGNES BARRETT: 1976<lb/>
<pb facs="00040026_0005"/><lb/>
TECO ECHOVOL. 51, NO. 124 FEBRUARY 1076<lb/>
5<lb/>
Powder your noses, girls<lb/>
Dating has changed; or has it?<lb/>
"DATES"<lb/>
From the Watch Tower<lb/>
Editor's Note: This story appeared in the<lb/>
January 30, 1926 issue of "The Teco<lb/>
Echo Volume 1, Number 3.<lb/>
Four o'clock any Sunday Elsie goes to<lb/>
the mirror, powders her nose, straightens<lb/>
ner hair, gives herself an approving<lb/>
glance saunters over to the window.<lb/>
Pushing up the shade, she balances<lb/>
herself on the window sill and looks<lb/>
down at the campus below, when the<lb/>
"dates" are coming in. A smile of<lb/>
contentment steals over her face as some<lb/>
of the boys wave their hands or give her<lb/>
a sly wink. She heaves a sigh of utter<lb/>
contentment-makes sure that she is<lb/>
smiling so that the dimples in her cheeks<lb/>
will show, and keeps her eye on the<lb/>
scene below.<lb/>
Fords, Dodge coupes, Buicks and<lb/>
Lincolns are all parked in front of the<lb/>
parlor door. Fat boys, slim boys, boys<lb/>
with red neckties and floppy hats, and<lb/>
boys with heavy overcoats on, are all<lb/>
"piling out" of the car and are on their<lb/>
way to the parlor. Some are bashful,<lb/>
others are full of gaiety "nerve Seeing<lb/>
Elsie sitting by the window, they wink,<lb/>
laugh and wave at her. Then, as the<lb/>
parlor door is opened, they push in, each<lb/>
trying to get in first.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Elsie is still gazing out of<lb/>
the window and wishing that she had a<lb/>
date. Suddenly she peers out, calls to<lb/>
her roommate and exclaims, "Come here,<lb/>
Jane, and take a look at that guy<lb/>
standing by the Ford coupe, the one with<lb/>
the blue tie and the grey coat "No, not<lb/>
that one the other one. Yeah, that's the<lb/>
one. Now, he is what I call a good<lb/>
looking boy, but doesn't he look bashful?<lb/>
I bet this is the first date that he has ever<lb/>
had up here. What in the world do you<lb/>
reckon he is waiting for? Don't you<lb/>
reckon that he knows it is four o'clock?<lb/>
Poor thing, I wish that I could catch his<lb/>
eye. Is anybody looking?"<lb/>
Leaning out, she gives a low whistle,<lb/>
then as the bashful boy looks up, she<lb/>
How well do you know<lb/>
E. Carolina history?<lb/>
By JACKSON HARRILL<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
The following questions are designed to test the reader's knowledge concerning<lb/>
events which have occurred on East Carolina's campus, and have been reported in the<lb/>
student newspaper over the past fifty years.<lb/>
1. Who was the first editor of the Teco Echo ?<lb/>
2. On April 5, 1926, who, and for what occasion, visited East Carolina?<lb/>
3. In what year was the Publications Board formed?<lb/>
4. Under how many names has this school operated?<lb/>
5. How many students were enrolled for the first year the school was in session?<lb/>
6. In what year did East Carolina become a member of the Southern Association of<lb/>
Colleges and Secondary Schools?<lb/>
7. Who delivered the comrriencement address to the class of 1933?<lb/>
8. On what date was Dr. Leo Jenkins inaugurated as President of E.C.C.?<lb/>
9. How many presidents has East Carolina had?<lb/>
10. Who was one of the major attractions on the E.C.T.C. campus in 1928?<lb/>
11. In a straw vote taken on campus in 1928, who did students favor for U.S.<lb/>
President, Al Smith or Herbert Hoover?<lb/>
12. What was Wright Auditorium's previous name?<lb/>
13. In what year did East Carolina have its first basketball team, and who was the<lb/>
coach?<lb/>
14. When was the first Founders Day held?<lb/>
15. Who was the first Dean of Men, and when was he appointed ?<lb/>
16. When, and for what purpose, was the fountain built?<lb/>
17. When was the name "Pirates" selected for East Carolina athletic teams?<lb/>
18. When did Amelia Earhart lecture at East Carolina?<lb/>
19. Who was the first student to inroll at East Carolina?<lb/>
20 When did East Carolina become a part of the University of North Carolina?<lb/>
oestows on him her sweetest smile while<lb/>
the poor boy thinks, "Why in the<lb/>
mischief doesn't that girt stop flirting<lb/>
with me? I wish- well, by George, it is<lb/>
four o'clock and after. Thank goodness<lb/>
for that So grabbing his box of candy,<lb/>
he bravely marches up to the door and<lb/>
the bell.<lb/>
"Well, I like that! Didn't even try to<lb/>
talk to me! Well, all I've got to say is, he<lb/>
is not like most of the bovs that come up<lb/>
here. I couldn't have talked to him, but<lb/>
he need not have acted so stiff. Just for<lb/>
meanness I'm going through the parlor to<lb/>
see if the specials have come and if I see<lb/>
him and know the girl that he has a date<lb/>
with, believe me, I'm going to make that<lb/>
boy feel uncomfortabie<lb/>
So saying, Elsie again powders her<lb/>
nose, straightens her hair and flounces<lb/>
out of the room. Unlucky boy! You won't<lb/>
get much of a chance to taik to your girl.<lb/>
Three teaching vets<lb/>
recall young E. C.<lb/>
By JOHN DAYBERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Mr. Herbert Carter, Miss Nell<lb/>
Stallings, and Mrs. Marguerite Perry have<lb/>
all been ECU faculty members for thirty<lb/>
years or more.<lb/>
"I was the fourth member of the<lb/>
music faculty when I came here in 1946,<lb/>
and I did everything said Carter,<lb/>
chairman of the instrumental department<lb/>
and band director for the music school.<lb/>
Carter taught all instruments, and<lb/>
directed the ECU band, which attracted<lb/>
17 members to its first rehearsal. Before<lb/>
Carter came, the local high school played<lb/>
at ECU'S home games.<lb/>
The music school's headquarters were<lb/>
upstairs in Wright Auditorium. A football<lb/>
field was located where the present<lb/>
music building now stands.<lb/>
"I've watched many changes occur at<lb/>
ECU said Carter. "I've seen some<lb/>
traditions leave us which I hated to see<lb/>
go.<lb/>
"Old Austin, which was located where<lb/>
the art building now stands, and Wright<lb/>
Auditorium were central to the traditions<lb/>
of ECU.<lb/>
"These buildings as well as the<lb/>
fountain in front of Wright meant ECU to<lb/>
many graduates said Carter.<lb/>
Carter would like to see Wright<lb/>
Auditorium renovated, and made into a<lb/>
concert hall.<lb/>
"One tradition we've kept is the Alma<lb/>
Mater said Carter. "I'd like to see a<lb/>
renewed interest in it. I'd love to hear it<lb/>
sung by everyone at the games<lb/>
Miss Nell Stallings, a professor of<lb/>
physical education, began teaching at<lb/>
ECU in 1943.<lb/>
"There were only two instructors in<lb/>
the physical education department then,<lb/>
compared to about 35 instructors now<lb/>
said Stallings. The department was<lb/>
located in Wright, which was where all<lb/>
the basketball qames were played.<lb/>
"The campus was much smaller<lb/>
then said Stallings. "When MemoriaJ<lb/>
Gym was built people complained that it<lb/>
was too far away from campus.<lb/>
"I miss the cohesiveness of the<lb/>
smaller groups. There are so many staff<lb/>
members who are complete strangers to<lb/>
me.<lb/>
"I like the diversity of programs which<lb/>
the university offers now.<lb/>
"I think the communication between<lb/>
students and teachers has improved<lb/>
greatly said Stallings.<lb/>
History quiz answers<lb/>
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6<lb/>
TECO ECHOVOL. 51, NO. 124 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
A journalistic history of East Carolina sports: 1925- 1976<lb/>
In the early daysv'of the TECHO<lb/>
ECHO, the only students on campus<lb/>
were women, and therefore, if you<lb/>
haven't guessed yet, the only athletic<lb/>
teams, belonged to the women.<lb/>
The first athletic team at East<lb/>
Carolina was the Women's basketball<lb/>
team. The team in those days played<lb/>
games primarily between classes and<lb/>
schools. The captain of the women's<lb/>
team in 1923, two years before the paper<lb/>
started publishing and the year of the<lb/>
first TECOAN, or school yearbook, was<lb/>
Hazel Kennedy. The positions on that<lb/>
team were listed as guard, forwards,<lb/>
slide center and jumping center. 1923<lb/>
was also the year that the first Athletic<lb/>
Association at East Carolina was<lb/>
founded, and of course it was made up<lb/>
entirely of women.<lb/>
In 1924, the "big game" between the<lb/>
Senior and Junior classes was played<lb/>
outdoors on Thanksgiving Day and the<lb/>
Junior class beat their Senior counter-<lb/>
parts by a 24-8 count. The Athletic<lb/>
program that year included tennis,<lb/>
basketball, track and hiking. Baseball<lb/>
was added in 1925.<lb/>
In 1925, the TECOAN wrote "Athletics<lb/>
is something every college girl should<lb/>
take part in, and we have found this year<lb/>
that all our girls of the college have been<lb/>
more into athletics than ever before<lb/>
By 1931 all four classes had their<lb/>
own teams and in 1933 men had made<lb/>
their presence onto the ECTC campus<lb/>
and the beginning of a men's Athletic<lb/>
Program had taken place.<lb/>
1931-1932 saw the first men's<lb/>
basketball team come into existence, and<lb/>
the team finished 10-10 under coach C.K.<lb/>
Porter.<lb/>
In 1932 football appeared for the first<lb/>
time on the East Carolina University<lb/>
campus. And so on through the years,<lb/>
the athletic teams at East Caroina beg n<lb/>
to build themselves up and realize the<lb/>
fruits of victory and growth, as well as<lb/>
the agony of defeat and inexperience.<lb/>
The remainder of this special Anniversary<lb/>
section is devoted to these fruits of<lb/>
growth and inexperience.<lb/>
First notings<lb/>
BASKETBALL GAMES<lb/>
Appeared in "The Teco Echo Dec. 19,<lb/>
1923:<lb/>
Among the athletic activities, basket-<lb/>
ball has perhaps aroused most interest.<lb/>
There has been a number of splendid<lb/>
games in which both the college and<lb/>
normal classes have taken part. To<lb/>
decide who should play in the<lb/>
Thanksgiving games caused much<lb/>
excitement and it was only after much<lb/>
hard work, under the excellent coaching<lb/>
of Miss Alexander and Mr. Flanagan and<lb/>
a strenuous game between the Freshmen<lb/>
and Juniors, that a decision was made.<lb/>
The two games for the day were between<lb/>
the C's and D's and between the Juniors<lb/>
and Sophomores. Although the other<lb/>
classes could not actually take part in<lb/>
the playing they sallied forth with an<lb/>
unlimited degree of good spirit and<lb/>
sportsmanship, supporting their sister<lb/>
classes and filling the air with songs and<lb/>
yells. The score-keepers, Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
A.D. Frank, gave the final scores to Mr.<lb/>
Deal, the referee, who announced them<lb/>
to the eager spectators<lb/>
The final scores were as follows: first<lb/>
game, 15-28. Second game 19-20, with<lb/>
the Sophomores and D's as victors.<lb/>
Intercollegiate<lb/>
athletics begin<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO MARCH 19, 1932<lb/>
STUDENT BODY VOTES FOR<lb/>
INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS HERE<lb/>
In the regular meeting of chapel<lb/>
on Friday morning Dr. Rebarker, dean of<lb/>
the coeds on the campus, appealed to<lb/>
the student body for help in order that<lb/>
there might be a continuation of the<lb/>
intercollegiate athletic activities during<lb/>
the spring quarter. The vote taken was<lb/>
unanimously in favor of accepting Dr.<lb/>
Rebarker's proposition that we forego the<lb/>
privilege of another unscheduled enter-<lb/>
tainment this term and give this $200 to<lb/>
the furthering of the baseball team.<lb/>
Mr. Deal, who showed unlimited<lb/>
amount of zeal during the basketball<lb/>
season, has been chosen by the boys as<lb/>
the sponsor of the baseball team. Thus<lb/>
far has shown much interest in the<lb/>
field and shaping of the team into a<lb/>
group that will be able to represent us as<lb/>
well as they did in the last quarter.<lb/>
This is another step towards<lb/>
inter-school activities for both the boys<lb/>
and the girls and the faculty members<lb/>
have pledged their support to furthering<lb/>
the girls' athletics, as well as to that of<lb/>
the boys.<lb/>
Football team<lb/>
OCTOBER 19, 1932 TECHO ECHO<lb/>
FOOTBALL PRACTICE NOW<lb/>
UNDERWAY-COACH HAS BEEN<lb/>
SELECTED-FIRST GAME OCT. 29<lb/>
This year ECTC has a football team<lb/>
practicing every day under Coach Beatty.<lb/>
Two games have been scheduled. The<lb/>
first is with Carolina Reserves, to be<lb/>
played here October 29. The other is with<lb/>
Guilford, at Guilford, on November 12.<lb/>
Clyde Brown has been elected manager<lb/>
of this year's club.<lb/>
This is the second year that the Men's<lb/>
Athletic Association has encouraged<lb/>
intercollegiate sports. Last year a<lb/>
basketball team which won 50 percent of<lb/>
its games was put on the floor, it had a<lb/>
successful year considering the raw<lb/>
material it worked with.<lb/>
Kenneth Beatty of Greenville has<lb/>
been secured as the Athletic coach for<lb/>
the year. He has had considerable<lb/>
experience both as a player and as a<lb/>
coach and has already organized two full<lb/>
teams in his football squad.<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: That year was the first<lb/>
year ever for the ECU-ECTC football<lb/>
team. The team ended up with a record<lb/>
of 0-5 and failed to score a single<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
Ficklen<lb/>
dedicated<lb/>
SEPT. 21,1963<lb/>
As a capacity crowd of 16,000 looked<lb/>
on, East Carolina upset Wake Forest with<lb/>
a resounding 20-10 victory. They spotted<lb/>
the Deacons the lead twice, but with the<lb/>
versatile single-wing offensive they took<lb/>
complete control of the action<lb/>
Hopeful Deacs could not match the<lb/>
Pirate offense. The Pirates scored the<lb/>
last two times they came into possession<lb/>
in the first half and the first time they<lb/>
had it in the second to go ahead. There<lb/>
was no more scoring for Wake Forest<lb/>
after that, with East Carolina holding the<lb/>
upper hand.<lb/>
The Deacs received the opening<lb/>
kickoff, drove to the Pirate fifteen and<lb/>
kicked a field goal for a 3-0 lead.<lb/>
East Carolina recovered a fumble and<lb/>
Michel scored from the two yard line.<lb/>
With four minutes in the first half, Wake<lb/>
Forest held a 10-6 advantage. Bovender<lb/>
started a drive and East Carolina led<lb/>
12-10 at the half.<lb/>
The Pirates took the kickoff and<lb/>
moved fifty-five yards in thirteen plays<lb/>
for a touchdown. The Deacs were<lb/>
crushed 10-10.<lb/>
A pass to Johnny Anderson was<lb/>
good for a two point conversion. East<lb/>
Carolina had a net gain of one hundred<lb/>
ninety yards rushing and passed for<lb/>
seventy-one yards.<lb/>
In the midst of the excitement another<lb/>
event was also occurring. East Carolina<lb/>
College dedicated its new 16,000 seat<lb/>
football stadium as it played the game.<lb/>
Ground had been broken for the J.S.<lb/>
Ficklen Memorial Stadium on May 3,<lb/>
1962. It is named for a Greenville man<lb/>
who was one of the nation's leading<lb/>
tabacconists. The stadium is presently<lb/>
valued at $350,000.00.<lb/>
Tangerine Bowl<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN-TUESDAY<lb/>
NOVEMBER 17, 1964<lb/>
East Carolina crushed Presbyterian,<lb/>
49-8, in their season final before a highly<lb/>
partisan homecoming crowd to end their<lb/>
season with an 8-1 record for the second<lb/>
year in a row.<lb/>
Dave Alexander, the Southern<lb/>
Conference scoring leader, led the<lb/>
Pirates with three touchdowns to bring<lb/>
his season total to 16. Alexander began<lb/>
the 20 point eruption in the second<lb/>
quarter with two touchdowns and<lb/>
finished the Buc's scoring with his third<lb/>
TD late in the fourth quarter. Bill Dine<lb/>
scored a touchdown while passing for<lb/>
two more.<lb/>
Cline made the initial score late in the<lb/>
first quarter when he rolled around his<lb/>
right end for six yards and the TD. Jerry<lb/>
To! ley swept the right end for two points<lb/>
on the fake kick for the point after<lb/>
touchdown and the Bucs led 8-0.<lb/>
Alexander scored on the three yard run<lb/>
up the middle early in the quarter.<lb/>
Three minutes later he crashed over<lb/>
his left tackle and went eight yards for<lb/>
another TD. Two plays later Cline passed<lb/>
33 yards to Dave Bumgarner for the final<lb/>
score of the half.<lb/>
Presbyterian made its lone score in<lb/>
the third quarter on a drive of 57 yards in<lb/>
six plays. Garnet Welch recovered an<lb/>
East Carolina fumble on his 43 yard line<lb/>
and the Blue Jose scored on the 34 yard<lb/>
pass from Jack Nox to Richard Reed. The<lb/>
same two combined for the two point<lb/>
conversion pass.<lb/>
Amid all the ceremony of the<lb/>
homecoming game, the Century Club<lb/>
presented Coach Clarence Stasavich with<lb/>
a 1965 Chevrolet for the great job he has<lb/>
done in leading the Bucs to 8-1 seasons<lb/>
for the last two years.<lb/>
The Bucs 49 points was the highest<lb/>
total of the year and established a new<lb/>
record for points scored in one season.<lb/>
The first victory almost assured East<lb/>
Carolina of a bid to the Tangerine Bowl<lb/>
with Massachusetts as the probable<lb/>
opponent.<lb/>
ECU beats State<lb/>
rOUNTAINHEAD OCT. 19, 1971<lb/>
RALEIGH� Fireworks lighted the sky<lb/>
and the Pirates lighted the scoreboard<lb/>
Saturday night in an inspiring 31-15<lb/>
victory over N.C. State's Wolfpack<lb/>
"football team<lb/>
At rain soaked Carter Stadium, the<lb/>
Pirates finally put it all together while<lb/>
taking State's game apart.<lb/>
ECU fumbled on its second play from<lb/>
scrimmage allowing the Pack to score<lb/>
the game's first touchdown on a one yard<lb/>
run by Willie Burden.<lb/>
But aftc that series, which would<lb/>
ordinarily break the back of some<lb/>
defenses, the Pirates drove 59 yards for a<lb/>
score with the final 10 yards coming on a<lb/>
John Casazza pass to Carl Gordon.<lb/>
Bob Kilbome added his 13th extra<lb/>
point in as many tries.<lb/>
The Pirate defense was strengthened<lb/>
for the game with the return of team<lb/>
captain and defensive tackle Rich Peeler<lb/>
from Shelby.<lb/>
Peeler played with his elbow taped<lb/>
heavily to prevent another dislocation.<lb/>
Even so, he was able to force and recover<lb/>
a fumble which set up ECU's go-ahead<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
Les Strayhom scored it on a one foot<lb/>
plunge but Kilbome missed his first<lb/>
conversion of the season.<lb/>
The Pirates made it 20-7 with just 35<lb/>
seconds to go in the first half an Stray-<lb/>
hom went over once again from one yard<lb/>
out and Kilbome was successful with his<lb/>
boot<lb/>
<pb facs="00040026_0007"/><lb/>
�nMHHH<lb/>
&amp;mfe <lb/>
TECO ECHOVOL. 51, NO. 124 FEBRUARY H7B<lb/>
7<lb/>
run<lb/>
Dean James Mallory once coached ECU baseball team<lb/>
October 30,1960, FountainhMd<lb/>
Most of the men going into James<lb/>
Mallory's office do not know that he is<lb/>
the personificaiton of the national<lb/>
pastime.<lb/>
As Dean of Men, Mallory has been<lb/>
serving for several years. As a baseball<lb/>
player and coach, he has been in the<lb/>
field for thirty-two years.<lb/>
In 1937, Mallory started his career as<lb/>
a player for the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill. By his junior<lb/>
year, he was co-captain of the baseball<lb/>
team and on the football team.<lb/>
In that bygone era, All Americans<lb/>
were chosen in the summer by playing<lb/>
members of professional baseball.<lb/>
tn 1940, Mallory played at Whichita.<lb/>
Kan. The team finished second in the<lb/>
nation. Mallory was selected Baseball<lb/>
Player of the Year and named an All<lb/>
American.<lb/>
Because of financial problems,<lb/>
Mallory turned pro, passing up his last<lb/>
year of school.<lb/>
His first season was spent with the<lb/>
Washington Senators. He started in the<lb/>
first game after he signed his contract.<lb/>
"There I was, a poor Carolina boy<lb/>
playing the first pro game I had ever<lb/>
seen said Mallory.<lb/>
This was the beginning of a career<lb/>
with the Washington Senators, the<lb/>
Philadelphia Athletics, Saint Louis<lb/>
Cardinals, and the New York Giants. He<lb/>
played several farm teams in his time,<lb/>
too.<lb/>
Women went to<lb/>
Nationals in '73<lb/>
A dream was shattered for East<lb/>
Carolina last weekend in New York City.<lb/>
The women's basketball team, which had<lb/>
gone further and was ranked higher than<lb/>
just about any other team in the school's<lb/>
history, was derailed in its bid for the<lb/>
National Championship.<lb/>
Western Washington State College<lb/>
and Kansas State University played the<lb/>
villain roles as East Carolina lost two of<lb/>
three games in the tournament at Queens<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Thus, the girls who went into the<lb/>
tournament 18-0 and ranked eighth in the<lb/>
nation could not improve upon that<lb/>
rating. Still they finished 19-2, quite a<lb/>
respectable final record.<lb/>
In the first round clash against<lb/>
Washington, EC was plagued by<lb/>
turnovers and repeated cold shooting<lb/>
against a team which had won 21 straight<lb/>
games.<lb/>
The game was close all the way but<lb/>
Washington took advantage of several<lb/>
team fouls against ECU in the final<lb/>
seconds to record a 55-51 triumph.<lb/>
Sheilah Cotten led the EC cause with<lb/>
26 points while Peggy Taylor added eight<lb/>
points and Susan James contributed six<lb/>
points and several fine defensive plays.<lb/>
The loss, their first of the season,<lb/>
sent the EC girls into the consolation<lb/>
bracket against Indiana State.<lb/>
In that second contest, EC played a<lb/>
more typical game and raced away in the<lb/>
final four minutes for a 60-49 win. That<lb/>
game was also close most of the way as<lb/>
the teams entered the final quarter tied at<lb/>
41-all.<lb/>
But Cotton scored nine of her<lb/>
game-high 23 points in the final quarter<lb/>
and East Carolina was not to be denied<lb/>
for the sncond straight time.<lb/>
James was also a key figure in the<lb/>
winning effort as she added 11 points<lb/>
and 10 rebounds. Jean Mobley scored 10<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Mallory realized that he was limited to<lb/>
playing baseball. He prepared to go back<lb/>
to school.<lb/>
He got his degree in counseling and<lb/>
taught at several high schools and<lb/>
colleges, while coaching baseball.<lb/>
While at Eton College, Mallory<lb/>
coached his teams to six Carolina<lb/>
Conference championships in seven<lb/>
years.<lb/>
In 1953, Mallory came to East<lb/>
Carolina as head baseball coach.<lb/>
In his first year, Mallory was sick and<lb/>
Earl Smith coached.<lb/>
He started the next year on a long<lb/>
string of victories. In eight years, he<lb/>
coached six championship teams.<lb/>
In 1957, Mallory became Dean of Men<lb/>
The highlight of his career as coach<lb/>
came in 1961.<lb/>
His ECC Pirates won the NAIA<lb/>
national championship, capturing every<lb/>
award presented, including the Sports-<lb/>
manship Award. The team boasted three<lb/>
All Americans and the Most Valuable<lb/>
Player of the Year.<lb/>
That same year, Mallory received the<lb/>
Vill Winne Award. This award was<lb/>
presented to him as the outstanding<lb/>
contributor to baseball from North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
In 1962, Mallory retired as head coach<lb/>
to become Dean of Men full time, the job<lb/>
had grown too much for one man to<lb/>
handle.<lb/>
Cagers take trip to NCAA after winning conference<lb/>
BUCS ARE KINGS;FACE VULANOVA<lb/>
By DON TRAUSNECK MARCH 9, 1972<lb/>
GREENVILLE, S.C. � East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity-1972 Southern Conference bas-<lb/>
ketball champions!<lb/>
Sounds unreal, like an idle dream.<lb/>
But it came true Saturday night when<lb/>
ECU'S "one-second wonders Jim Fairly<lb/>
and Nicky White, gave the Pirates their<lb/>
first SC cage title ever�and with it,<lb/>
their first trip to the NCAA Playoffs.<lb/>
Fairley scored at the buzzer of<lb/>
regulation to tie the game and White<lb/>
scored at the buzzer of the overtime<lb/>
period as the Pirates edged defending<lb/>
champion Furman, 77-75.<lb/>
The win sends the Pirates into the<lb/>
regionals Saturday night against Villa-<lb/>
nova (19-6) at Princeton, N.J. Game time<lb/>
is 8:05 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday night's win was the<lb/>
culmination of a very good week for the<lb/>
ECU basketball team.<lb/>
With a fifth-place finish still possible,<lb/>
the girls ran into a fired-up Kansas State<lb/>
squad and were disappointed, 47-46.<lb/>
Kansas used numerous ECU turnovers<lb/>
and three fast breaks to ease to a 15-5<lb/>
first quarter lead. It was then 22-5 and<lb/>
24-7 before East Carolina finally caught<lb/>
the spark.<lb/>
Playing with its usual dedication, the<lb/>
squad turned in one of the amazing<lb/>
comebacks of the tournament and<lb/>
actually pulled in front in the final<lb/>
moments of the contest.<lb/>
However Kansas, the eventual<lb/>
consolation bracket winner, won the<lb/>
game in the last 30 seconds.<lb/>
James had a big part in ECU'S<lb/>
second-half rally as she scored 12 of her<lb/>
team-high 18 points in the last 16<lb/>
minutes. Cotten, who had seven points at<lb/>
halftime, finished with 12.<lb/>
Immaculate College of Pennsylvania,<lb/>
the defending champion, won the<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
Although East Carolina did not win<lb/>
the National Championship, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates proved to be one of the<lb/>
outstanding teams in the nation. Next<lb/>
year should be another strong one for<lb/>
coach Catherine Bolton's squad as only<lb/>
four seniors appear on the roster.<lb/>
Gone in 1974 will be Mobley, Becky<lb/>
Atwood, Taylor and Lorraine Rollins, in<lb/>
addition to team trainer Peggy Bennett<lb/>
and statistician Sue Powell.<lb/>
Back to fill their places will be a fine<lb/>
crop of undergraduates: junior Terry<lb/>
Ward; sophomores Lollie Edwards, Laura<lb/>
Kilpatrick, Terry Jones, Myra Modlin, and<lb/>
Ginny Merrifield, and freshmen Ginny<lb/>
Deese, Nancy Ellington, Cariene Boyd,<lb/>
Ellen Garrison, Frances Swenholt and<lb/>
Gale and Marie Chamblee.<lb/>
Lea Kemezis and Sue Calveriey, the<lb/>
team's manager and scorer, respectively,<lb/>
will also return.<lb/>
And Cotten is just a sophomore while<lb/>
James is a freshman, which means the<lb/>
nucleus of a potent squad will be at East<lb/>
Carolina for at least two more years.<lb/>
After suffering their 14th defeat of the<lb/>
season, 92-57 against N.C. State the<lb/>
previous weekend, many people figured<lb/>
the Pirates, with their 11-14 record, were<lb/>
dead.<lb/>
But head coach Tom Quinn predicted<lb/>
that the Pirates would win the<lb/>
championship. And he and his team<lb/>
made the prophecy come true as they<lb/>
beat the Citadel, Davidson and Furman<lb/>
on three successive days.<lb/>
The first day it was Dave Franklin who<lb/>
proved to be the star as he scored 20<lb/>
points, 16 in the second half, in an 80-71<lb/>
win over the Citadel.<lb/>
The following evening, the Bucs<lb/>
were led by Fairley to their 81-77<lb/>
semifinal win over Davidson.<lb/>
In each contest, the Pirates were<lb/>
behind in the second half by eight points<lb/>
against the Bulldogs and by seven<lb/>
against the Wildcats.<lb/>
ECU tops Carolina on gridiron,<lb/>
Stasavich passes away<lb/>
ECU BEATS CAROLINA<lb/>
NOTHING COULD BE FINER!<lb/>
ECU ROUTS CAROLINA 38-17!<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD OCTOBER 28, 1975<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Just a day after the death of its great<lb/>
Athletic Director, Clarence Stasavich,<lb/>
East Carolina University made more news<lb/>
on the national scene by upsetting<lb/>
nationally-known University of North<lb/>
Carolina, 38-17, on the Tar Heels' home<lb/>
field.<lb/>
The master artisan behind the win<lb/>
was Pirate quarterback Mike Weaver.<lb/>
After the game, Weaver said that<lb/>
Stasavich's death had some effect on the<lb/>
team's play.<lb/>
"We picked ourselves up and played<lb/>
this one for him said Weaver. "It was a<lb/>
feeling of, well like 'winning one for the<lb/>
Gipper' I guess<lb/>
And ECU coach Pat Dye also<lb/>
dedicated the game partly to Stasavich.<lb/>
"You've got to give a lot of the credit<lb/>
for this win to the man who passed away<lb/>
yesterday said Dye. "He had so much<lb/>
to do with us being able to reach this<lb/>
point. It's just a shame that he wasn't<lb/>
here to see it<lb/>
There is no doubt, either, that if<lb/>
"Stas" had been alive he would have seen<lb/>
the same outcome. The score may have<lb/>
read differently, but the winning team<lb/>
would have been the same. The victory<lb/>
was just that solid and convincing.<lb/>
Dye, himself, had said he had felt the<lb/>
win as early as the beginning of the<lb/>
week, but that on Friday night the feeling<lb/>
had really hit home.<lb/>
"I guess I just had a premonition<lb/>
said Dye after the game in the hectic<lb/>
Pirate dressing room. "Last night when I<lb/>
sent the managers out to buy boxes of<lb/>
cigars for the playersI had made up my<lb/>
mind that we were going to win and the<lb/>
whole dream came through<lb/>
Dale Carnegie would have been proud<lb/>
of coach Dye and the Pirates Saturday<lb/>
but it is doubtfu! if he would have been<lb/>
as proud as the over 5,000 fans that<lb/>
followed the team to Chapel Hill for the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
In the words of one fan, "We won a<lb/>
lot more than a football game today. We<lb/>
also won respect, power and prestige<lb/>
from the people at Carolina. We have<lb/>
finally made up for all these years of<lb/>
hearing nothing but Carolina<lb/>
That was only part of the feeling at<lb/>
Chapel Hill Saturday. The rest of the<lb/>
feeling, well, you would have had to have<lb/>
been there to feel it.<lb/>
First women<lb/>
scholarships<lb/>
are awarded<lb/>
December 4, 1975<lb/>
For the first time in East Carolina<lb/>
history, scholarships have been awarded<lb/>
to women athletes. The scholarships<lb/>
were awarded to seven athletes from four<lb/>
of the women's seven sports.<lb/>
The recipients were Debbie Freeman,<lb/>
April Ross, Donna Williford, Frances<lb/>
Swenholt, Gail Betton, Clare Albritton,<lb/>
and Beverly Osborn. These girts were<lb/>
awarded the scholarships on the basis of<lb/>
their outstanding ability in both athletic<lb/>
rjertormances in college, as well as their<lb/>
performances in high school.<lb/>
Of the recipients two are seniors, one-<lb/>
is a junior, two are sophomores and two<lb/>
are freshmen. All are athletic scholar-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
The seven scholarships are a step<lb/>
towards the upgrading of the women's<lb/>
spa Is programs at ECU, which has seen<lb/>
the women come under the auspices of<lb/>
the entire Athletic Department and its<lb/>
facilities. Catherine Bolton, the coordi-<lb/>
nator of women's athletics at ECU, said<lb/>
that she foresees the addition of two<lb/>
more scholarships in 1976 for tennis and<lb/>
gymnastics.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040026_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
TECO ECHOVOL. 51, NO. 124 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
State approved ECTC construction in 1907<lb/>
By BOB WATSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A bid of $100,000 In 1907 bought a<lb/>
School which was to become ECU to<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Legislation calling for the construc-<lb/>
tion of a two-year teacher's training<lb/>
school in the eastern part of the state<lb/>
was ratified on March 8, 1907. Within two<lb/>
years East Carolina Teacher's Training<lb/>
School located in Greenville admitted its<lb/>
first students.<lb/>
Ideas for the establishment of such a<lb/>
school had begun circulating in the early<lb/>
1900's among superintendents and<lb/>
principles of public schools from the<lb/>
eastern part of the state.<lb/>
These eastern educators felt that the<lb/>
rural areas of the state, particularly those<lb/>
of the eastern part of the state, were not<lb/>
getting enough qualified teachers from<lb/>
the existing training school in the state.<lb/>
Legislation calling for the building of<lb/>
the school was introduced as early as<lb/>
1906. This legislation called for the<lb/>
consiruction of the school in Elizabeth<lb/>
City, but it failed to pass.<lb/>
In the years that followed the cause<lb/>
was kept alive and agitation continued<lb/>
until the establishment of an eastern<lb/>
located teacher's training school became<lb/>
a political issue involving the old<lb/>
east-west division of the state.<lb/>
As the idea spread, the possibility of<lb/>
the legislation passing the next time it<lb/>
was presented increased. One town after<lb/>
another began to see the advantages of<lb/>
having the college located in it.<lb/>
When the legislation came up again in<lb/>
1907 there were eight towns trying to get<lb/>
the school located in them. The bill<lb/>
passed in 1907 but made no mention of<lb/>
the location of the school.<lb/>
One of the towns which had become<lb/>
very interested in getting the school was<lb/>
Greenville. The city had enlisted the<lb/>
efforts of its leading citizen, ex-Governor<lb/>
Thomas J. Jarvis. He promised the<lb/>
citizens, "If you do as I say, I'll get the<lb/>
school for you<lb/>
The bill of 1907 stated the purpose of<lb/>
the school as "a teacher's training school<lb/>
for young white men and women its<lb/>
object, "to give young men and women<lb/>
such an education and training as shall<lb/>
fit and qualify them for teaching in the<lb/>
public schools of North Carolina<lb/>
The original appropriations for the<lb/>
school as set up by the bill were $15,000<lb/>
for the purpose of erecting and equipping<lb/>
the buildings. $5,000 a year was included<lb/>
to maintain the school. But there was an<lb/>
important inclusion in the bill. It was that<lb/>
the town which was awarded the location<lb/>
of the school was to pay at least $25,000<lb/>
for the construction of the buildings.<lb/>
After the legislation passed each<lb/>
interested town submitted its bid on the<lb/>
amount it would be willing to contribute<lb/>
for the construction. It was on this part<lb/>
of the bill that the citizens of Greenville<lb/>
decided to base their bid.<lb/>
At a meeting of the steering<lb/>
committee that had been organized by<lb/>
the town, Jarvis announced that<lb/>
Greenville should make a bid of $100,000.<lb/>
The members of the committee were<lb/>
shocked, but they did as Jarvis said.<lb/>
The $100,000 bid was presented to the<lb/>
State Board of Education and Greenville<lb/>
v s promptly awarded the school. A 47<lb/>
and a half acre piece of land was<lb/>
purchased on the eastern outskirts of<lb/>
town to build the school on.<lb/>
On July 2, 1908 the first ground was<lb/>
broken by Jarvis. He moved the first<lb/>
shovelful of dirt of the first building to be<lb/>
started. It was to become a dormitory<lb/>
named Jarvis Hall.<lb/>
The building progressed rapidly. On<lb/>
June 11, 1909 Robert H. Wright was<lb/>
chosen to be president of oie school. His<lb/>
salary was to be $2,500 annually and his<lb/>
living quarters were to be provided. The<lb/>
quarters were an apartment located in the<lb/>
men's dormitory.<lb/>
With Wright as president on October<lb/>
5, 1909, East Carolina Teacher's Training<lb/>
School opened its first regular session.<lb/>
The program offered was a two year<lb/>
teacher's degree.<lb/>
One hundred and seventy-four<lb/>
students enrolled that first year and 330<lb/>
enrolled for the year's summer session.<lb/>
The total enrollment for the year was 462.<lb/>
The faculty consisted of ten teachers and<lb/>
Wright, the president.<lb/>
Two years later the school produced<lb/>
its first graduates. There were eleven in<lb/>
that first graduating class.<lb/>
PAPERS<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
The "East Carolina Teachers College<lb/>
News" was in operation for two years<lb/>
from October 1923 to June 1925. In 1925<lb/>
"The Teco Echo" began operation.<lb/>
The January 30 issue of "The Teco<lb/>
News" is one of the earliest papers on<lb/>
file in Joyner Library's Document section.<lb/>
The Teco Echo was a big improvement<lb/>
over the old 'News The Teco Echo<lb/>
was a tabloid published bi-weekly by the<lb/>
Student Government Association of<lb/>
ECTC.<lb/>
The "News" was a newsletter<lb/>
without advertisements. The Teco Echo<lb/>
was more professional. Besides adds,<lb/>
The Teco Echo had editorials, campus<lb/>
notes, an athletic section, a joke section,<lb/>
and features.<lb/>
Advenisers i as Blount-Harvey<lb/>
Co. and J.C. Penny Co. bought space to<lb/>
sell their goods to the all girl ECTC<lb/>
population back in 1926. Carolina Shoe<lb/>
Store advertised reasonable rates for the<lb/>
COED that needs a variety of shoes:<lb/>
"Hiking boots for field trips, oxfords for<lb/>
the campus, slippers for teas and<lb/>
afternoons in town, and of course party<lb/>
slippers<lb/>
The election of Fannie Lowe as May<lb/>
Queen made front page news for the<lb/>
January 30 issue of The Teco Echo. It<lb/>
was reported that Fannie 'Is a slender<lb/>
blonde of medium height and well<lb/>
measures up to the requirements of a<lb/>
May Queen According to the<lb/>
requirements listed for May Queen,<lb/>
Fannie was selected because she: "had<lb/>
an active part in Y.W.C.A. activities, was<lb/>
a good all around girl, had a pleasing<lb/>
personality and was fairly attractive, and<lb/>
had a dear student government record<lb/>
An editorial in an early issue of The<lb/>
Teco Echo praised emergence of<lb/>
female equality. In words of Editor in<lb/>
Chief Deanie B. Haskett:<lb/>
"Seldom In the course of human events<lb/>
does a man's organization call on a<lb/>
woman and especially a young oie to<lb/>
speak to it. We don't know why this is<lb/>
so. Maybe they think a man can do it<lb/>
better or maybe they don't. Any way they<lb/>
don't. So the college should feel very<lb/>
proud of the fact that it has within its<lb/>
walls a girl who was so fortunate as to<lb/>
be asked to conduct a meeting for the<lb/>
Men's FederationSally Cheek<lb/>
Some,emphasis was put on athletics<lb/>
by the Teco Echo back in 1926.<lb/>
Under the heading "Athletics" the<lb/>
requirements for a ECTC college letter<lb/>
were listed. A coed needed to earn 450<lb/>
points per year to earn a letter. Some of<lb/>
the more interesting point winning<lb/>
activities were:<lb/>
�Original song or yell, 15 points.<lb/>
-No candy between meals, 1 point per<lb/>
immL<lb/>
-6 glasses of water per day, 1 point<lb/>
-Cold Bath daily, 1 point per week.<lb/>
-Fresh Hose daily 1 point per week.<lb/>
-Well Ventilation in room, 1 point per<lb/>
OTWVm<lb/>
-Shampoo 2 per month, 1 point per<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Over the past fifty years college<lb/>
newspapers have improved along with<lb/>
regular papers. The Teco Echo was this<lb/>
school's first student publication-the<lb/>
building block for the newspapers that<lb/>
followed the East Carolinian and the<lb/>
Fountainhead.<lb/>
LEADERS<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
On January 14, 1960 the East<lb/>
Carolinian headlines read. MESSICK<lb/>
RESIGNS;NEWS SHAKES CAMPUS. Dr.<lb/>
Messick resigned the presidency to<lb/>
become assistant director of the National<lb/>
Committee on Special Education and<lb/>
Rehabilitation, in Washington, D.C. The<lb/>
reasons for Messick's sudden resignation<lb/>
was a "series of jisappointments over<lb/>
pressures applied during his quest to<lb/>
gain financial support for the College<lb/>
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins was nominated in<lb/>
January of 1960 to replace the vacant<lb/>
position.<lb/>
Before coming to ECTC, Dr. Jenkins<lb/>
taught Political Science at Montclair St.<lb/>
College in New Jersey, where the former<lb/>
president Dr. Messick came from.<lb/>
Jenkins was also assistant to the<lb/>
Commissioner for Higher Education in<lb/>
the New Jersey State Department of<lb/>
Education. He graduated from Rutgers<lb/>
university with a B.S Columbia<lb/>
University (M.A.), and New York<lb/>
University (Ed.d).<lb/>
The Student Government Association<lb/>
fully endorsed Dr. Jenkins for the<lb/>
presidency and passed a formal<lb/>
legislation in the Student Senate giving<lb/>
student support. "We feel that Dr. Leo<lb/>
W. Jenkins is both qualified and able to<lb/>
fill the vacancy created by Dr. Messick's<lb/>
resignation. As Dean of the College for<lb/>
President of East Carolina College he will<lb/>
guide it through a new and historic era of<lb/>
educational progress. We therefore<lb/>
endorse Dr. Leo W. Jenkins for the<lb/>
Presidency of East Carolina College<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins was obviously elected to<lb/>
the Presidency and in keeping with the<lb/>
SGA resolution, Jenkins has led the<lb/>
present East Carolina University through<lb/>
"a new and historic era of educational<lb/>
progress .<lb/>
EVENTS<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
June 3. 1937<lb/>
NCSF Has New<lb/>
Changes For S.G.<lb/>
Justin White, president of the North<lb/>
Carolina Student Federation, feels that<lb/>
the new plan of student government<lb/>
authorized by the federation should be<lb/>
given a trial at ECTC.<lb/>
The following is the plan proposed to<lb/>
change and clarify the SGA constitution:<lb/>
1) To have cooperative work between<lb/>
the boys and girls by having one Student<lb/>
Government represent both g oups.<lb/>
President of SGA-girl elected by the<lb/>
girls.<lb/>
Vice President-boy elected by the<lb/>
boys.<lb/>
May 30, 1947<lb/>
Students Adopt New Constitution<lb/>
A new constitution for the Student<lb/>
Government Association was unanimous-<lb/>
ly approved in a mass meeting on<lb/>
Monday night, May 18.<lb/>
The new constitution abolishes the<lb/>
Student Cooperative Council.<lb/>
Henceforth, the Student Council si tall<lb/>
be known as the Student Legislature, in<lb/>
which shall be vested the legislature<lb/>
powers of the student body.<lb/>
September, 1966<lb/>
Student Government<lb/>
Adopts $46,704 Budget<lb/>
Novembers. 1959<lb/>
SGA Endorses Jenkins<lb/>
For School President<lb/>
May 16, 1962<lb/>
Freshmen Will Wear Beanies<lb/>
SGA Purchases Official Car<lb/>
Next year's freshmen will wear<lb/>
beanies from sunrise to sundown every<lb/>
day except Sunday, according to a<lb/>
motion passed at the last student senate<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
"Dinks" will be worn from the first<lb/>
week of school until the first home<lb/>
football game at which time the frosh<lb/>
will shed their "dinks<lb/>
The senate voted to purchase a car for<lb/>
the use of all SGA-supported organi-<lb/>
zations, it was pointed out that the car<lb/>
will be a "tremendous" saving to the<lb/>
SGA, because it now pays six cants per<lb/>
mile for transportation.<lb/>
August 8, 1969<lb/>
Drinking Gets Nod at SGA Session<lb/>
October 19, 1967<lb/>
Women Students Present Petition<lb/>
For Revision of Code to SGA<lb/>
The petition for revision of the<lb/>
Women's dress code was presented with<lb/>
a bill by Marcy Jordan and Patti Nelson<lb/>
to SGA President Steve Moore Tuesday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
February 11, 1975<lb/>
SGA bill gives women free hours<lb/>
11, 1975<lb/>
SGA votes for Cannon's removal<lb/>
16, 1975<lb/>
SGA Treasury investigation planned<lb/>
mBsmmsammumaamsi<lb/>
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FOUNTAJNHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3924 FEBRUARY 1978<lb/>
i i ii�i umhwm nniiin nmn wm �<lb/>
9<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Ted Nugent's album<lb/>
is high energy rock<lb/>
By ROGER WHiTSON<lb/>
Ted Nugent's new record, entitled<lb/>
simply enough - Tad Nugent, on<lb/>
Epic-CBS has got to be classified as<lb/>
electric-energy rock at its best. Nugent's<lb/>
cold steel precision and overwhelming<lb/>
power is reminiscent of Jimmy Paige<lb/>
and Ritchie Blackmore at their best. The<lb/>
song titles themselves remind one of the<lb/>
"electric avenue" days of the late 60's<lb/>
rockers.<lb/>
"Stranglehold opening song on side<lb/>
one, is an outstanding example of<lb/>
Nugent's "no nonsense" approach. "Here<lb/>
I come again now baby, like a dog in<lb/>
heat screams Nugent and it is already<lb/>
obvious he takes his music seriously.<lb/>
Backed by Cliff Davies on drums, Rob<lb/>
Grange on bass and Derek St. Holmes with<lb/>
excellent rhythm guitar - second lead<lb/>
work, Nugent's straight-ahead bull-dozer<lb/>
style is well supported and expanded<lb/>
upon, producing a closely Knit, precise,<lb/>
calculated driving steel sound. Nugent<lb/>
literally explodes with mind-warping<lb/>
guitar energy and Davie's drum work is<lb/>
indescribable.<lb/>
The second cut immediately grabs<lb/>
you by the throat. "Stormtroopin  the<lb/>
title an indicator of what's ahead, offers<lb/>
a superb Nugent-St. Holmes dual-lead<lb/>
exposition that could only be described<lb/>
as America's answer to the Great British<lb/>
muscle rockers.<lb/>
"Hey Baby" is the LPs finest tune.<lb/>
Rob Grange's excellent bass work makes<lb/>
it difficult to remain unmoved. Its<lb/>
American boogie, USDA inspected Grade<lb/>
A. "Hey baby jump in the back of my car,<lb/>
I'm gonna kiss and hug you and move yo'<lb/>
heart an electric personification of the<lb/>
American dream. The four man electric<lb/>
band, considered anachronistic by manv<lb/>
modem critics, is proven to be alive and<lb/>
-joran<lb/>
Try our famous<lb/>
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The next cut, "Just What the Doctor<lb/>
Ordered features Nugent wailing, "I've<lb/>
found the cure for my body and soul, I<lb/>
got me an overdose of rock n' roll<lb/>
Nugent spreads the rare disease to<lb/>
epidemic proportions. CAREFUL: SHEER<lb/>
ELECTRIC ENERGY CONTAGIOUS.<lb/>
Side Two opens with "Snake Skin<lb/>
Cowboys "Oooh snake skin cowboys,<lb/>
who the hell do you think you areyou<lb/>
ain't got nothing on me is an obvious<lb/>
attack on the scores of new<lb/>
country-rockers carried through with<lb/>
simple old-style electric precision, no<lb/>
frills. The victory is Nugent's.<lb/>
"Motor City Madhouse the title a<lb/>
tribute to the old Detroit blues men and<lb/>
hard-core rockers, is an electric orgy of<lb/>
driving guitar and percussion. The<lb/>
chorus, "Motor City Madhouse" is<lb/>
insanely screamed at you through one of<lb/>
America's gutsiest sound systems, the<lb/>
result is mind destructive.<lb/>
The third song on this side, "Where<lb/>
Have You Been All My Life is about as<lb/>
romantically sentimental as the black<lb/>
leather and cold steel producing it.<lb/>
Nugent has no room for either soft<lb/>
sentiment or soft guitar work. Nugent<lb/>
offers you his best to date - love it or<lb/>
leave it.<lb/>
"Cruising down the highway of life so<lb/>
long, I barely know my name" - the<lb/>
openings lyrics of "You Make Me Feel<lb/>
Right at Home" set the mood for this<lb/>
Nugent travel tune. Nugent drives<lb/>
straight for that vast desert between your<lb/>
ears.<lb/>
"Queen of the Forest" closes the LP<lb/>
with another dose of Nugent's<lb/>
Guaranteed Electric Elixir of Life. Nugent<lb/>
dumps truckloads of sheer musical<lb/>
energy into your mind throughout this<lb/>
entire album. Ted Nugent � America's<lb/>
answer to the energy crisis.<lb/>
BREAKFAST<lb/>
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SERVED DAILY<lb/>
7 AM -11:30 AM<lb/>
INCLUDES � 2 EGGS<lb/>
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TVuuU:T<lb/>
Michael Murphey here tonight<lb/>
Michael Murphey's recognition as a<lb/>
singer, songwriter, and guitarist has<lb/>
tremendously increased in the last few<lb/>
years. A cot pie 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/>
well-known. "Wildfire" stayed on the top<lb/>
for months, which caused his fourth<lb/>
album, Blue Sky - Night Thunder, to sell<lb/>
fast.<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.<lb/>
Enjoy Michael Murphey in concert on<lb/>
Tuesday, February 24 at 8:00 P.M. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Starts FrL- Cinema 1'LUCKY LADY" (PG)<lb/>
Starts Fri-ParkKILLER FQRCE"(R)<lb/>
<pb facs="00040026_0010"/><lb/>
�Mi<lb/>
lO<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3924 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
�mta<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
Social science grads enter limited job market<lb/>
EDITORS NOTE: This Is the third in a<lb/>
series of articles on job opportunities for<lb/>
ECU graduates.<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
In social sciences, if you're good your<lb/>
particular tag becomes less important,<lb/>
according to Herbert Paschal, chairman<lb/>
of the department of History.<lb/>
Paschal's comment is justified by the<lb/>
different social sciences department<lb/>
chairmen as they reflect on the job<lb/>
market for social science Graduates<lb/>
PSYCHOLOGY<lb/>
In general, at the bachelors level, not<lb/>
many opportunities for employment as a<lb/>
psychologist exist, according to Charles<lb/>
C. Mitchell, chairman of the department<lb/>
of the psychology department.<lb/>
The state and federal governments are<lb/>
hiring psychologists as analysts to<lb/>
handle statistical and psychological data.<lb/>
The government is also hiring osycholo-<lb/>
gists as research assistants. But these<lb/>
jobs are limited.<lb/>
However, the job situation on the<lb/>
masters level is much better.<lb/>
"For ECU graduates, we cannot<lb/>
supply the demand for masters in clinical<lb/>
and school psychology Mitchell said.<lb/>
"We definitely have more jobs than<lb/>
people<lb/>
"The clinical psychologist works in<lb/>
mental health centers and hospitals as<lb/>
psychological evaluators and therapists<lb/>
"The school psychologist works in<lb/>
school systems conducting evaluations<lb/>
and consultations with teachers and<lb/>
administrators They work with<lb/>
children's emotional problems and help<lb/>
teachers to tailor education for students<lb/>
with certain disabilities<lb/>
Most masters' candidates in the<lb/>
general psychology program plan to<lb/>
obtain their doctorate. However, some go<lb/>
into teaching and administrative posi-<lb/>
tions in mental health and corrections<lb/>
departments.<lb/>
Some doctorates go into industry<lb/>
which is a tight job market for<lb/>
psychologists.<lb/>
"For the Ph.D"s the job market is very<lb/>
tight except in the applied areas such as<lb/>
counseling, school, and clinical said<lb/>
Mitchell.<lb/>
About one-third of ECU'S masters<lb/>
graduates continue for their doctorates.<lb/>
"If you want to really get ahead in<lb/>
Psychology get a doctorate exclaimed<lb/>
Mitchell.<lb/>
ECU'S psychology department has 150<lb/>
majors.<lb/>
SOCIOLOGY<lb/>
Recent government reports show that<lb/>
the demand for Sociologists and<lb/>
Anthropologists will go up, discussed<lb/>
John Maiolo, chairman of the department<lb/>
of sociology.<lb/>
"Prospects are good because the<lb/>
number of jobs that sociologists perform<lb/>
are expanding he continued. "For<lb/>
example, the federal government is<lb/>
beginning to hire sociologists for<lb/>
administrative positions, and for research<lb/>
positions.<lb/>
"As the country continues its trend on<lb/>
environmental programs, the demand will<lb/>
continue in S-A health related fields. The<lb/>
health related fields offer the greatest<lb/>
opportunity for sociologists and anthro-<lb/>
pologists<lb/>
Besides the better known teaching<lb/>
jobs, and research positions that<lb/>
anthropologists are usually associated<lb/>
with, anthropologists also work in<lb/>
archaeology.<lb/>
"In anthropology, there are no good<lb/>
measures of demand said Maiolo. "But,<lb/>
with government hiring, and with<lb/>
community agencies becoming more<lb/>
prevalent, more jobs will open up<lb/>
In 1973, there were 1,067 Ph. Ds in<lb/>
sociology, and that was not enough,<lb/>
according to Maiolo. People who are<lb/>
being told that there are no jobs are<lb/>
being misled.<lb/>
"Although survival doesn't depend on<lb/>
the doctorate or the masters degree, the<lb/>
higher degree helps Maiolo continued.<lb/>
The Sociology department has been<lb/>
pushing the higher degrees, but there are<lb/>
jobs at the bachelors level.<lb/>
In a large state university, a study<lb/>
was done on that school's sociology<lb/>
graduates. The study, done on the<lb/>
graduates between 1970 through 1974<lb/>
inclusively showed that 99 percent of the<lb/>
graduates had jobs. Most did not stay<lb/>
with their first job.<lb/>
Also, of those with jobs, 63 percent<lb/>
left the state.<lb/>
Maiolo is currently conducting a<lb/>
similar follow up report on ECU<lb/>
sociology graduates. This is his first year<lb/>
as chairman of the department.<lb/>
ECU has 40 sociology majors, and 40<lb/>
anthropology majors.<lb/>
HISTORY<lb/>
History graduates have felt the pinch,<lb/>
said department chairman Herbert<lb/>
Paschal, but not more thai any other<lb/>
department.<lb/>
History graduates are not affected by<lb/>
the invention of new machines because<lb/>
this is not what their education entails.<lb/>
Rather, their education centers on<lb/>
developing an ability to cope according<lb/>
to Paschal.<lb/>
"Because of their ability to cope,<lb/>
historians wind up everywhere<lb/>
See Social Sciences, paoe 11<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL.<lb/>
wrmmmmmmmn<lb/>
7, NO. 3024 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
mmmmmmwmm<lb/>
11<lb/>
m<lb/>
Social science job market limited<lb/>
Continued trom D8xv� m of <lb/>
Continued trom pae 10<lb/>
"A significant number of our people<lb/>
go into the managerial pool said<lb/>
Paschal. Civil service and private<lb/>
business also offer opportunities for<lb/>
history graduates.<lb/>
"The teacher market is jammed.<lb/>
Employment for graduate students is<lb/>
worse than it has been.<lb/>
History students go in graduate and<lb/>
law schools, and communications work<lb/>
said Paschal. All of these are crowded.<lb/>
The mediocre student is having a much<lb/>
harder time than he used to have.<lb/>
To offset the effect of a bleak job<lb/>
market for historians wanting to be<lb/>
teachers, the history department is<lb/>
offering study in other areas historians<lb/>
generally pursue.<lb/>
The department is offering study in<lb/>
historic sites development and museums.<lb/>
They are also offering a field work course<lb/>
utilizing the Tryon Palace in New Bern.<lb/>
"This is a good time to stay in<lb/>
school said Paschal. Nothing bothers<lb/>
me more than to hear that we are over<lb/>
educating our young people. It is the<lb/>
most ridiculous thing I've ever heard.<lb/>
"People who are better trained are<lb/>
more likely to get better jobs<lb/>
Although Paschal sees each degree<lb/>
area in history as crowded, he says the<lb/>
history major is as well off as other<lb/>
social science majors.<lb/>
Two bachelors degrees along with two<lb/>
masters degrees are offered in the<lb/>
department. The department has about<lb/>
200 majors.<lb/>
POLITICAL SCIENCE<lb/>
Political Science is not a professional<lb/>
idjor, rather it is a liberal arts major,<lb/>
according to William F. Troutman, Jr<lb/>
chairman of the political science<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Political science graduates go into<lb/>
business, civil service, law, journalism,<lb/>
and teaching, according to Troutman.<lb/>
The teacher's job market is t'ght. For<lb/>
this reason, in its two undergraduate<lb/>
degrees, the department stresses a<lb/>
liberal arts approach, while professiona-<lb/>
lism is secondary, said Troutman.<lb/>
"This gives a program for those going<lb/>
into civil service, social work and public<lb/>
administration. "It certainly pays the<lb/>
student who majors in political science<lb/>
to become proficient in the use of<lb/>
computers, as well as foreign language<lb/>
"Relative to the other social sciences<lb/>
areas, the job market in political science<lb/>
is not tight. It is improving as the<lb/>
economy is improving. However, not<lb/>
everybody who steps out will get a job.<lb/>
While in school the student must prepare<lb/>
himself so that he will become<lb/>
indispensible<lb/>
Eighty eight majors are in the political<lb/>
science department, which offers two<lb/>
undergrad degrees,and a master of arts<lb/>
degree.<lb/>
MATHEMATICS<lb/>
Not many people qualify to study<lb/>
mathematics, according to Tullio<lb/>
Pignani, chairman of the department of<lb/>
math which has 57 majors.<lb/>
"To be a math major, you must be a<lb/>
disciplinarian within yourself said<lb/>
Pignani.<lb/>
Math majors appear to be facing an<lb/>
excellent job market.<lb/>
"There is no question about it there is<lb/>
a demand for math graduates Pignani<lb/>
said. "About 98 percent of our graduates<lb/>
are getting jc js they want<lb/>
These jobs are in business firms,<lb/>
industry, banking, computer services<lb/>
firms, and the federal government.<lb/>
"The job market is not crowded at all<lb/>
for undergraduates said Pignani.<lb/>
However, there are too many Ph.Ds<lb/>
in certain areas such as algebra, and<lb/>
topology<lb/>
Offering three undergraduate de-<lb/>
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grees, and two masters degrees,<lb/>
according to Pignani, the department<lb/>
believes the math graduate has a wide<lb/>
variety of opportunity that he can render<lb/>
his services to, more so than any other<lb/>
discipline.<lb/>
STUDENTS OPINION<lb/>
Mike Kincer, a senior math major, is<lb/>
having extremely good success job<lb/>
hunting.<lb/>
"I had the impression that there are<lb/>
no jobs, but after some job hunting, I<lb/>
was shocked to find out different said<lb/>
Kincer, who started college in 1968, but<lb/>
quit and went to join the Air Force.<lb/>
Before going to the Air Force, Kincer<lb/>
maintained a 1.9 average while in school.<lb/>
However, since returning to school after<lb/>
four years of service, he has been on the<lb/>
dean's list every quarter.<lb/>
"I got the impression from the<lb/>
business employers I have seen that the<lb/>
job market is not as bad as some people<lb/>
think it is.<lb/>
Competition is stiffer, but the jobs<lb/>
are still there, said Kincer. A college<lb/>
degree now gives the student the ball to<lb/>
carry.<lb/>
"I don't have to jump for chances he<lb/>
said. "I can tell from interviews with<lb/>
prospective employers that I am there to<lb/>
look at them as much as they are there<lb/>
to look at me.<lb/>
"The employer is not conducting<lb/>
interviews to waste time.<lb/>
AN UNIDENTIFIED COED takes a study<lb/>
break, basking in the warm sun and<lb/>
catching a few rays during one of the<lb/>
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12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3824 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
�ii t mi a i<lb/>
m<lb/>
Overpass feasibility study continues<lb/>
By RANOY STALLS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A feasibility study on a proposed<lb/>
pedestrian overpass across Tenth Street<lb/>
at the bottom of College Hill Drive was<lb/>
conducted by the Highway Ranning and<lb/>
Research branch of the North Carolina<lb/>
Department of Transportation in Decem-<lb/>
ber 1974.<lb/>
According to Clifford Moore, vice<lb/>
chancellor of Business Affairs, "Money is<lb/>
the problem, and in the last information<lb/>
received from the North Carolina<lb/>
Department of Transportation the project<lb/>
has been delayed due to unavailable<lb/>
resources Moore conceded that there is<lb/>
definitely a problem of vehicle and<lb/>
pedestrian congestion.<lb/>
Charles Atkins, assistant to T. L.<lb/>
Waters of Ranning and Research, stated,<lb/>
"The feasibility study concluded that the<lb/>
overpass was a reasonable project<lb/>
The staff, after approving the<lb/>
overpass, submitted it to the Ranning<lb/>
Program Committee which consists of<lb/>
members of the Board of Transportation,<lb/>
appointed by the governor. The Ranning<lb/>
Program Committee concluded that the<lb/>
project was not possible at that time.<lb/>
"The project was not especially rejected<lb/>
but rather held-over until around April<lb/>
when the Planning Program Committee<lb/>
reviews the years projects said Atkins.<lb/>
Atkins concluded that just because the<lb/>
project was approved by the staff it does<lb/>
not mean that the project will be<lb/>
necessarily approved by the Ranning<lb/>
Program Committee.<lb/>
The Reade Street crossing to<lb/>
downtown Greenville is another likely<lb/>
place of accidents involving pedestrian<lb/>
students and vehicles. A proposed<lb/>
overpass there seems to be at a<lb/>
standstill. The City of Greenville<lb/>
proposed to the University to build the<lb/>
overpass at a 50-50 sharing of the cost.<lb/>
"State funds cannot be used to build an<lb/>
overpass which goes directly into a<lb/>
shopping center said Moore. (George-<lb/>
town) Joe Laney, head of the Greenville<lb/>
Redevelopment Commission said, "If the<lb/>
University could contribute in some way<lb/>
we are open for discussion. We are not<lb/>
trying to channelize students into stores,<lb/>
but it makes practical sense from a<lb/>
safety point of view to put students<lb/>
across on an overpass<lb/>
The overpass situation at present<lb/>
looks grim and possibly more accidents<lb/>
of serious nature will arouse action. Joe<lb/>
Caulder, director of ECU Campus<lb/>
Security, emphasizes that "The conges-<lb/>
tion at the bottom of the hill is definitely<lb/>
a major problem<lb/>
Parking lot breakins are reported on campus<lb/>
By RICHARD DROGOS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Parking lot thefts are on the increase<lb/>
here at ECU.<lb/>
James Owens, a student at ECU,<lb/>
observed a man walking around the day<lb/>
student parking lot Thursday and<lb/>
reported it to the campus police.<lb/>
"He was looking into the cars so I<lb/>
decided to wait and see if he actually<lb/>
broke into one said Owens. "He had<lb/>
entered the parking lot through the<lb/>
woods so I figured he must be up to<lb/>
something<lb/>
Owens said he drove around the block<lb/>
and came back to see if the man was still<lb/>
there. He saw the man still looking into<lb/>
the cars so he reported the incident to<lb/>
the campus police.<lb/>
Situations of this type are becoming<lb/>
commonplace on campus. The campus<lb/>
police were unable to do anything to the<lb/>
man Owens saw because they had no<lb/>
evidence that showed he had broken into<lb/>
the car.<lb/>
"Articles such as C.B. radios, tapes<lb/>
and tape decks are the mainstay of the<lb/>
thiefs in the parking lots said Francis<lb/>
Eddings, Chief of Police Matters here at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
"Tapes are highly negotiable items<lb/>
and can be very easily taken out of a<lb/>
vehicle. The damage to the vehicle itself<lb/>
is usually more than the actual<lb/>
merchandise stolen.<lb/>
"Time is no problem for the thief, it<lb/>
usually takes about a minute for the<lb/>
article to be removed from the car said<lb/>
Eddings.<lb/>
There were no available statistics at<lb/>
the police station but Eddings told this<lb/>
reporter that the thefts were not<lb/>
consistent enough for statistics.<lb/>
"The thefts usually run in cycles.<lb/>
Some months we may have several<lb/>
break-ins and other months we may not<lb/>
get any reports.<lb/>
"We work hard at trying to stop these<lb/>
offenders but there is no set time that we<lb/>
Some people still think<lb/>
we don't exist.<lb/>
Little do they hnor<lb/>
WEca<lb/>
8 COMPLETE <lb/>
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can watch for the break-ins said<lb/>
Eddings.<lb/>
"These types of thefts are ones we<lb/>
call thefts of opportunity. Students who<lb/>
leave their cars open are inviting thiefs to<lb/>
take what they please and there really is<lb/>
no way to catch the offenders because of<lb/>
the time element involved said Eddings.<lb/>
When the police do catch someone<lb/>
breaking into a car they will take the<lb/>
necessary action themselves. Eddings<lb/>
could not give specifics as to what may<lb/>
happen to the offenders.<lb/>
"The penalties vary from case to case,<lb/>
judges always consider the thiefs' past<lb/>
records, his age and other things that<lb/>
come into play before any sentence is<lb/>
handed down said Eddings.<lb/>
"If students will take the necessary<lb/>
time to see that their cars are properly<lb/>
secured then they will never have lo worry<lb/>
about this serious problem<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO.<lb/>
3824 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
13<lb/>
ECU swims to eleventh SC title<lb/>
Pirates take<lb/>
91 -86 win<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina got some fine individual<lb/>
performances out of some of its players<lb/>
Saturday night and raced to a 91-86<lb/>
come-from-behind win over Georgia<lb/>
Southern.<lb/>
The Pirates were led on offense by Al<lb/>
Edwards and Earl Gamer, as well as new<lb/>
faces Wade Henkel and Billy Dineen.<lb/>
Edwards and Gamer were as hot as<lb/>
pistols from the floor as they scored 19<lb/>
and 16 points. Edwards at nine for 11 for<lb/>
the game, and Gamer hit for eight of ten<lb/>
shots, to lead a 54.1 percent shooting<lb/>
night for East Carolina.<lb/>
The Pirates needed that hot<lb/>
evening, as Georgia Southern shot over 50<lb/>
percent for the game and 57.1 in the first<lb/>
half to stay even with East Carolina most<lb/>
of the game.<lb/>
"I've never seen anything to beat the<lb/>
way everybody makes shots they have to<lb/>
make against us said ECU'S Dave<lb/>
Patton after the game. "We just can't<lb/>
have an easy game. We play a good<lb/>
game and still have to play crazy to win<lb/>
The Pirates led at the half, by 42-37,<lb/>
but fell behind by 59-53 with 12 minutes<lb/>
to play.<lb/>
East Carolina fought back, though,<lb/>
and outscored Southern by a 9-2 count<lb/>
over the next three minutes. The Pirates<lb/>
took the lead for good with 9:01 left in<lb/>
the game, by a 62-61 score.<lb/>
"We got down in the second half and<lb/>
could have quit, but we didn't said<lb/>
Patton. "Instead, we hung in there and<lb/>
came back. I am real proud of the guys<lb/>
for that<lb/>
After they took the lead, it w<lb/>
Henkel and Dineen who came into the<lb/>
spotlight, as each player played probably<lb/>
his best game of the year.<lb/>
Henkel came off the bench to spell<lb/>
the regulars and wound up with 16 points,<lb/>
seven rebounds, three blocked shots and<lb/>
made only one turnover in 25 minutes of<lb/>
playing time. He was six of ten from the<lb/>
floor and four of five from the free-throw<lb/>
stripe.<lb/>
It was at the free throw stripe that<lb/>
ECU won the game, and that was where<lb/>
-�en made his contribution.<lb/>
Pirates hit on 17 of 19 free throws<lb/>
for 89.u percent and most of those free<lb/>
throws came over the final three minutes,<lb/>
when the Pirates went into the four<lb/>
corners, with Dineen at the point. The<lb/>
Pirates' last 11 points of the game came<lb/>
from the free-throw line, as Dineen made<lb/>
eight-of-eight from the line.<lb/>
"I was pleased with the way we ran<lb/>
the four-comers offense over the final<lb/>
three minutes said Patton. "Billy<lb/>
Dineen really stepped up in there and<lb/>
made those pressure free throws<lb/>
East Carolina went into the four<lb/>
corners with 3:05 left in the game. At<lb/>
that time, the Pirates held a 80-73 lead.<lb/>
The Pirates hit five of six foul shots,<lb/>
Dineen and Louis Crosby two and Reggie<lb/>
Lee one, to go in front by 85-73 with<lb/>
2:22 left.<lb/>
Dineen hit on the Pirates' final six<lb/>
free throws down the stretch to keep the<lb/>
See Pirates, page 14.<lb/>
�wwiwii ��imii<lb/>
RICHMOND, VA. � East Carolina's<lb/>
swim team breezed to its eleventh<lb/>
straight Southern Conference Swimming<lb/>
and Diving Championships here last<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
The Pirates won by 300 points over<lb/>
the Furman Paladins, who placed sixth in<lb/>
last year's meet. Ray Scharf's swimmers<lb/>
won 13 of the 16 swimming events.<lb/>
The top ECU swimmer was Ross<lb/>
Bohlken. Bohlken, who was named the<lb/>
championship's Outstanding Swimmer,<lb/>
finished first in the 100 and 200<lb/>
freestyle and swam on the winning 400<lb/>
and 800 freestyle relay teams.<lb/>
"I was real pleased with our<lb/>
performance on Saturday said Scharf.<lb/>
"After slipping a bit on Friday and not<lb/>
winning three events, I thought we came<lb/>
back real well.<lb/>
"We had some swimmers who came<lb/>
down with the flu after we got here and<lb/>
we were not as strong as usual in the<lb/>
shorter events, which are the ones we<lb/>
got beat in on Friday<lb/>
Two other swimmers besides Bohlken<lb/>
came through with double victories for<lb/>
ECU. Stewart Mann won the 200<lb/>
backstroke and 200 Individual Medley,<lb/>
the second in conference record time.<lb/>
Steve Ruedlinger won the 100 and 200<lb/>
meter butterfly events. Mann was also a<lb/>
member of the winning 800 freestyle<lb/>
relay and 400 medley relay teams.<lb/>
Ruedlinger also swam on the 400 medley<lb/>
relay team.<lb/>
John McCauley finished first in the 50<lb/>
freestyle and swam on the 400 medley<lb/>
and 400 freestyle relay teams. John<lb/>
Tudor won the 500 freestyle and swam on<lb/>
the winning 800 freestyle relay and 400<lb/>
freestyle relay teams.<lb/>
David Kirkman won the 200<lb/>
breaststroke and swam on the 400<lb/>
medley relay and Doug Brindley won the<lb/>
1650 freestyle event in a conference<lb/>
record time.<lb/>
The Pirates broke eight conference<lb/>
records in all. The new marks included:<lb/>
Bohlken in the 200 freestyle, the 800<lb/>
relay team, Tudor in the 500 freestyle,<lb/>
Mann in the 200 IM, and 400 medley relay<lb/>
team, Brindley in the 650 free, Bohlken in<lb/>
the 100 free, and the 400 freestyle relay<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Scharf now looks towards the Eastern<lb/>
Regionals, and he is hoping the Pirates<lb/>
will be ready for the meat.<lb/>
"All the other teams wen shaved and<lb/>
psyched up for the mast, which I<lb/>
expected. The other teams were much<lb/>
better than last year and swam much<lb/>
stronger. I only hope we get it all<lb/>
together in two weeks for the Eastern<lb/>
Regionals<lb/>
Furman's Pete Anderson was selected<lb/>
as the Outstanding Coach in the meet, as<lb/>
his Paladins climbed four places over last<lb/>
year's finish.<lb/>
TEAM STANDINGS: East Carolina-<lb/>
610, Furman-310, VMI-247, Appalachian<lb/>
St202, Richmond-201, William and<lb/>
Mary-172, Davidson-74, The Cftadel-34.<lb/>
Second half rally tames Catamounts<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina University's basketball<lb/>
team pulled a complete turnaround last<lb/>
night, coming from 17 points behind in<lb/>
the first half to down the Western<lb/>
Carolina Catamounts, 75-62.<lb/>
The Pirates played what was probably<lb/>
their best second half of the year and<lb/>
held Western Carolina to only 19 points<lb/>
in the entire second half.<lb/>
"This is undoubtedly the best win that<lb/>
we have had all year said an elated ECU<lb/>
coach Dave Patton. "We did just a<lb/>
tremendous job. Everyone we put in there<lb/>
did the job. We played like we wanted it<lb/>
tonight and we beat a good basketball<lb/>
team<lb/>
The Pirates started out by playing<lb/>
anything but good basketball, as Western<lb/>
sprinted to a 33-16 with 8:14 left in the<lb/>
first half. The ECU team failed to quit,<lb/>
though, and buckled down after a<lb/>
time-out to play better basketball.<lb/>
The inspired and hustling play of<lb/>
Wade Henkel and Louis Crosby led the<lb/>
Pirates back to within eight at the half,<lb/>
even though they only scored six points<lb/>
between them. The two played so<lb/>
aggresively that it generated to the entire<lb/>
team and ECU rallied to trail by only<lb/>
43-35 at the half.<lb/>
"I think it was the final eight minutes<lb/>
in the half that made the difference. In<lb/>
my mind, that had to be the turning<lb/>
point. We were down by 17 points, but<lb/>
fought back to eight. That mm really<lb/>
great effort said Patton.<lb/>
The effort the team displayed in the<lb/>
latter part of the first half carried over<lb/>
into the second half, when the Pirates<lb/>
outshot the Cats by a 51.4 to 26.7 from<lb/>
the field in the second half.<lb/>
The second half comeback was led by<lb/>
Reggie Lee, Crosby, and Larry Hunt, but<lb/>
was an entire team effort.<lb/>
Lee hit for 10 of 13 shots for the<lb/>
game, and finished with 23 points, 14 in<lb/>
the second half, before fouling out with<lb/>
1:14 left in the game.<lb/>
Crosby scored only four points in the<lb/>
second half, but his ball handling was<lb/>
superb, as he passed and dribbled the<lb/>
Catamount defense to shreds.<lb/>
Hunt pulled down eight rebounds and<lb/>
scored six points after a lackluster first<lb/>
half, but his defensive heroics actually<lb/>
did not show in the final stats.<lb/>
The two players who were probably<lb/>
overlooked the most, though, were the<lb/>
two playing their final regular season<lb/>
home games - Seniors Al Edwards and<lb/>
Earl Gamer.<lb/>
Gamer finished as the game's high<lb/>
scorer with 24 points and, along with<lb/>
Crosby, he played the entire game.<lb/>
Gamer also added eight rebounds.<lb/>
In short, it was a team performance.<lb/>
Dave Patton expressed the feeling well,<lb/>
when he said, "I really hope that we<lb/>
won't be here for Registration Day on<lb/>
March 4<lb/>
March 4 is the day the Southern<lb/>
Conference finals will be played<lb/>
in Greenville, S.C. If the Pirates play the<lb/>
way they have in the last two games<lb/>
against Western and Georgia Southern,<lb/>
they may have to pick up their schedules<lb/>
late.<lb/>
ECU wrestlers ready to defend title<lb/>
When the Southern Conference<lb/>
wrestling championships get started this<lb/>
weekend in Charleston, S.C. the East<lb/>
Carolina wrestlers will be after their fifth<lb/>
straight conference title.<lb/>
With four defending champions back<lb/>
from last year the chances are pretty<lb/>
good that ECU will make it five in a row.<lb/>
ECU coach John Welbom thinks the<lb/>
nationally-ranked Pirates have a good<lb/>
chance to do so.<lb/>
"We will be going after our fifth<lb/>
straight title said Welbom, "and if we<lb/>
wrestle up to our capabilities we stand a<lb/>
real good chance of accomplishing it<lb/>
The four returning conference<lb/>
champions for East Carolina are Tom<lb/>
Marriott, a three-time SC champ, at 142<lb/>
pounds, Paul Thorp at 150 pounds, Ron<lb/>
Whitcomb at 177, and two-time<lb/>
conference champion Mike Radford in the<lb/>
190 pound class.<lb/>
Whitcomb has a season record of 26-1<lb/>
and Radford stands at 23-2. In addition<lb/>
to these four champions, Welborn<lb/>
considers his 167 pound wrestler, Phil<lb/>
Mueller, as the favorite in his weight<lb/>
class. Mueller has a record of 21-2 this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
When one considers ECU has romped<lb/>
past all four of its Southern Conference<lb/>
opponents this year, it would seem that<lb/>
the Pirates would take the title with no<lb/>
trouble. ECU'S biggest challenge to the<lb/>
title is thought to be William &amp; Mary,<lb/>
who the Pirates i dr�jpped 36-3 earlier in<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
Welbom, however, is cautious of that<lb/>
win over the Indians earlier in the year,<lb/>
and he said he is not taking the<lb/>
tournament lightly.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary will be our toughest<lb/>
competition said Welbom. "We beat<lb/>
them 36-3 in a dual meet, but that was<lb/>
misleading. We had a tight match with<lb/>
State and they lost by only one point to<lb/>
them. They also beat the University of<lb/>
Maryland, which has a good team.<lb/>
"They have a good team and if we<lb/>
don't wrestle to our capabilities, they<lb/>
may sneak by and beat us<lb/>
As far as the rest of the conference is<lb/>
concerned, Welbom said there are several<lb/>
good individual men, but that William<lb/>
and Mary should be the top team.<lb/>
"The other schools have some<lb/>
outstanding wrestlers. Richmond has two<lb/>
good wrestlers, the Citadel will have the<lb/>
iifiMii i m iBiimwn mil mm<lb/>
top seed at 158 in Mike Regner, VMI will<lb/>
have the top-seeded heavyweight and the<lb/>
second-seeded wrestlers in the 177 and<lb/>
190 pound classes, Appalachian has a<lb/>
real good kid, Arthur Ash at 190 pounds,<lb/>
who has finished second to Mike Radford<lb/>
the last two years, and a good kid in<lb/>
Dennis France at 142 pounds. I don't<lb/>
know anything about Davidson, but they<lb/>
should be the weakest of the teams in<lb/>
the tournament. The 158 and 190 pound<lb/>
classes will be the most competitive<lb/>
Furman began the year with a team,<lb/>
but is not expected to take part in the<lb/>
conference tournament.<lb/>
In William and Mary, Welbom sees a<lb/>
team with several fine wrestlers. Leading<lb/>
the Indians is conference champion Jim<lb/>
Hicks. Hicks was the Indians' only victor<lb/>
in the dual meet, as he beat Paul Osman,<lb/>
10-3, in the 134 pound spot. For the<lb/>
conference tournament, though, Welbom<lb/>
is looking for Osman to get down to 126<lb/>
pounds, and for Tim Gaghan to<lb/>
compete in the 134-pound class This<lb/>
would give Osman a better chance to win<lb/>
at the 126-pound class, where Hicks was<lb/>
the conference champion last year.<lb/>
Osman, however, could wrestle at 134<lb/>
Sae Wrestling, page 15.<lb/>
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F0UNTA1NHEADV0L. 7, NO. 3824 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
wmnm<lb/>
mjmmin<lb/>
Behind Freeman's 100<lb/>
Lady Pirates take three weekend victories<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
FARMVILLE, VA. - Debbie Freeman<lb/>
returned to form last weekend to score<lb/>
100 points in the three games for the<lb/>
East Carolina Lady Pirates' basketball<lb/>
team, and lead them to three weekend<lb/>
victories<lb/>
Freeman, who had slumped a little<lb/>
over the last few games, served notice to<lb/>
opponents in the NCAIAW State<lb/>
tournament March 4-6 that she would be<lb/>
ready, as she hit on 46 of 82 field goal<lb/>
tries in the three wins<lb/>
The Lady Pirates defeated Campbell<lb/>
College by 80-71 on Thursday,<lb/>
Randolph-Macon College by 7968 on<lb/>
Friday, and Longwood College on<lb/>
Saturday by an 82-67 count. The three<lb/>
wins extended the team's winning streak<lb/>
to four games and upped the season<lb/>
record to 11-4. ECU has now won 11 of<lb/>
its last 12 games.<lb/>
Thompson, Garrison play well<lb/>
Even though Freeman was by far the<lb/>
standout performer for the Pirates over<lb/>
the weekend, she was aided greatly by<lb/>
the play of Rosie Thompson, Ellen<lb/>
Garrison and a fine East Carolina bench.<lb/>
Thompson scored 52 point �pd<lb/>
controlled 43 rebounds for the Pirate in'<lb/>
the three games. Against Randolph-<lb/>
Macon and Longwood, Garrison contri-<lb/>
buted clutch outside shooting when the<lb/>
Pirates needed it most.<lb/>
Against Longwood, Freeman enjoyed<lb/>
her best game of the three, as she made<lb/>
15 of 24 shots from the floor to lead the<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
In the Longwood game, the ladies<lb/>
struggled with the hosts for 30 minutes<lb/>
before they ran off a string of 17 straight<lb/>
points midway through the second-half<lb/>
and rolled to a 78-58 lead with three<lb/>
minutes left.<lb/>
The two teams traded the lead in the<lb/>
first half until Longwood climbed to a<lb/>
26-20 lead with nine minutes to play.<lb/>
ECU, however, fought back little by little<lb/>
to take the lead at 30-28 before<lb/>
Longwood moved back in front.<lb/>
The Pirates tied the game just before<lb/>
the half, when Garrison drilled home a 20<lb/>
foot set shot to knot the game at 39-39<lb/>
all.<lb/>
Second half turns tide<lb/>
In the second half, as they have done<lb/>
all year, the ECU women made a different<lb/>
game of it.<lb/>
It remained tight early in the half,<lb/>
with Longwood pulling in front at one<lb/>
point by 52-51 with 1330 to play. After<lb/>
Thompson put ECU 3head on a drive the<lb/>
full length of the court for a twisting<lb/>
layup, the Lady Pirates never trailed<lb/>
again.<lb/>
ECU then burst loose for 17 points<lb/>
over a seven minute period, while holding<lb/>
the Longwood team to none.<lb/>
The spurt stretched ECU'S lead to 20<lb/>
at 80-60 and allowed the ECU reserves to<lb/>
play the final three minutes.<lb/>
ECU scored but one basket over the<lb/>
final two and a half minutes, by Senior<lb/>
Brenda Dai I, as the Longwood ladies<lb/>
fought back to within 13.<lb/>
Longwood's leading scorer was Sue<lb/>
Rama with 27 points.<lb/>
ECU shot 46 percent for the game and<lb/>
outrebounded Longwood by 48-36.<lb/>
Thompson led rebounding with 14<lb/>
carooms and Susan Manning and<lb/>
Freeman added nine rebounds each.<lb/>
36<lb/>
Against Randolph-Macon the game<lb/>
evolved into a shooting match between<lb/>
Freeman and Randolpb-Macon's Sylvia<lb/>
Bailey. Freeman won the contest and<lb/>
ECU won the game, 79-68.<lb/>
Freeman scored 36 points for the<lb/>
Lady Pirates, hitting on 16 of 29 floor<lb/>
shots and all four of her free throws.<lb/>
Bailey scored 31, with 18 of her points<lb/>
coming in the first half.<lb/>
ECU staggered through most of the<lb/>
first half, but was able to grab a 33-30<lb/>
halftime lead, with a 12-6 stretch over the<lb/>
final six minutes of the half<lb/>
During that stretch, Garrison connect-<lb/>
ed on three straight shots and assisted<lb/>
on a fourth basket to lead the East<lb/>
Carolina comeback.<lb/>
In the second half, Freeman went to<lb/>
work. Hitting on 10 of 15 shots, Freeman<lb/>
poured in 22 points, while the<lb/>
ECU defense held Bailev to 13 points.<lb/>
Freeman hit four shots early in the<lb/>
half, and Garrison and Thompson each<lb/>
added a score to put ECU ahead by 45-40<lb/>
over the Maconettes. A short lapse by<lb/>
ECU, though, allowed R-M to rally and<lb/>
tie the score at 55-55.<lb/>
At this time, ECU ran off a 16-2<lb/>
stretch against the Maconettes to clinch<lb/>
the victory.<lb/>
The streak started with two baskets<lb/>
by Freeman and a layup by Thompson off<lb/>
a pass from Freeman. This put ECU on<lb/>
top by 61-55.<lb/>
Garrison then countered a R-M basket<lb/>
with one of her patented 15 footers and<lb/>
Freeman hit for a rare four-point play,<lb/>
with a layup and two free throws after a<lb/>
deliberate foul was called. Marie<lb/>
Chamblee and Freeman then stretchedthe<lb/>
lead to its largest margin of the game,<lb/>
71-57, with 325 to play.<lb/>
After the two minute mark, ECU<lb/>
coach Catherine Bolton cleared the<lb/>
bench, pulling Freeman from the game<lb/>
just three points shy of the school single<lb/>
game scoring record.<lb/>
Women's JV break record<lb/>
FARMVILLE Va�East Carolina's Wom-<lb/>
en's Junior Varsity finally put it all<lb/>
together Saturday afternoon against<lb/>
Ferrum Junior College.<lb/>
The Jayvee Lady Pirates, who lost<lb/>
their first five games of the year, romped<lb/>
past Ferrum by a 101-56 score.<lb/>
The Junior Ladies took the lead early<lb/>
in the first half and pushed to a 43-24<lb/>
halftime advantage<lb/>
Behind Jean Evans' 20 points in the<lb/>
second half, the Jayvees exploded for 58<lb/>
points while holding the luckless Ferrum<lb/>
roundballers to just 32 points.<lb/>
The Lady Jayvees never led by less<lb/>
than 19 in the second half, but did not<lb/>
begin to pour it on until they reeled off<lb/>
16 straight points to build u 78-42 lead<lb/>
with 9:39 to play<lb/>
After that point, the Baby Bucs<lb/>
steadily increased their lead to 92-52 with<lb/>
354 to play, then 95-54 with 250 to play.<lb/>
The Juniors finally broke the century<lb/>
mark when Janet Bunch sank a short<lb/>
drive shot at the buzzer.<lb/>
The 101 points topped the previous<lb/>
high of 91 set by the Women's varsity<lb/>
earlier this year and the 58 points in the<lb/>
second half was also an ECU high.<lb/>
Evans finished as the Jayvees' high<lb/>
scorer with 26 points and Belinda Byrum<lb/>
added 22 points. Bunch, with 10 points,<lb/>
and Rhonda Cotten and Marsha Person,<lb/>
with nine points, also led the ECU<lb/>
scoring, as coach Laurie Arrants used<lb/>
two complete teams back and forth<lb/>
during ihe game.<lb/>
On Friday, the Jayvees downed the<lb/>
Longwood Jayvees, 69-65<lb/>
The wins upped the Junior Varsity<lb/>
record to 3-6 with their last game on<lb/>
Wednesday against North Carolina State.<lb/>
Bolton's move, however, allowed the<lb/>
ECU subs to get in some well-deserved<lb/>
playing time. Dail, as she would do on<lb/>
Saturday, hit for the final points of the<lb/>
game on Friday night, w.th seven<lb/>
seconds left.<lb/>
Besides Freeman, Thompson added<lb/>
18 points and 14 rebounds for the Pirates<lb/>
and Garrison finished with ten points for<lb/>
the night.<lb/>
Campbell easy victory<lb/>
On Thursday night, the ECU team<lb/>
breezed to an 80-71 win over Campbell<lb/>
College. In the win Bonon cleared the<lb/>
bench and substituted heavily in the<lb/>
second half, thus allowing Campbell to<lb/>
make the score look respectable.<lb/>
Freeman led the Pirates with 33<lb/>
points, scoring 27 points in the first half.<lb/>
She also added 21 rebounds for the<lb/>
team. Thompson added 18 points and 15<lb/>
rebounds for ECU and Frances Swenholt<lb/>
came off the bench to finish as the third<lb/>
highest ECU scorer, with eight points.<lb/>
The three wins and the chance to play<lb/>
the subs will benefit the Lady Pirates in<lb/>
the next two weeks, as they meet<lb/>
Western Carolina and Appalachian State<lb/>
in Raleigh next weekend before traveling<lb/>
to Chapel Hill for the state NCAIAW<lb/>
tournament. The games with WCU and<lb/>
ASU will have a great deal to do with the<lb/>
Lady Pirates' seeding in the state<lb/>
tournament, as both the games count in<lb/>
the NCAIAW standings.<lb/>
PIRATES<lb/>
Continued from pegs 13.<lb/>
ECU team in a commanding lead, as they<lb/>
finished with the final margin of 91-85.<lb/>
Dineen finished the game with 10<lb/>
points, including his eight free throws.<lb/>
Crosby, who was seven of 17 from the<lb/>
floor, finished with 16 points for the<lb/>
Pirates, giving ECU five players in double<lb/>
figures.<lb/>
Patton started three freshmen in his<lb/>
starting lineup, and with Henkel playing<lb/>
a lot, he played four players that are in<lb/>
their first or second year. Patton said he<lb/>
was pleased with the way these young<lb/>
players performed.<lb/>
�When you're 9-14, you change some<lb/>
things around. I have to be pleased with<lb/>
the way the three freshman and one<lb/>
sophomore played. These four players<lb/>
played most of the game<lb/>
The 91 points was the most that East<lb/>
Carolina scored this year, and the 21<lb/>
assists was also a high for the year.<lb/>
East Carolina was to play Western<lb/>
Carolina last night.<lb/>
SCRAMBLE - Action from Saturday's ECU-Goorgia Southern game found ECU'S Larry<lb/>
Hunt 34 and Louis Crosby background battling Kevin Anderson 43 of Georgia<lb/>
Southern for a loose ball. Photo by Kip Sloan.<lb/>
ccoccoa�scogosaoccoBosoovs�oc<lb/>
Welcome Students<lb/>
We're glad you're here!<lb/>
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OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
MON.&amp;TUES. 6AM -10PM<lb/>
ALL THE PANCAKES YOU<lb/>
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SPECIAL - COMPLETE MEAL<lb/>
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Serving Breakfast. Lunch and dinner<lb/>
at all hoan<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3924 FEBRUARY 176<lb/>
Baseball season begins with game against Terps<lb/>
J<lb/>
East Carolina University will open its<lb/>
baseball season here March 6 against the<lb/>
University of Maryland.<lb/>
The Pirates will be hoping to start a<lb/>
season similar to the even-numbered<lb/>
seasons which have preceded them to<lb/>
this point. Except for 1972, the Pirates<lb/>
have won the Southern Conference<lb/>
championship every even-numbered year.<lb/>
The opening game will be the first of<lb/>
two with the Terps, who finished third in<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Conference with a 7-3<lb/>
loop mark last season. Other ACC<lb/>
opposition will come from N.C. State,<lb/>
and defending champions, UNC and<lb/>
Duke.<lb/>
East Carolina finished 17-12 overall<lb/>
and 9-5 in conference play. The Pirates<lb/>
have a 14-game league slate, as is usual<lb/>
in the conference. The Pirates also have<lb/>
a pair scheduled with UNC-Wilmington,<lb/>
last season's NAIA national tournament<lb/>
representative from this area.<lb/>
"This schedule will help us determine<lb/>
how quickly we will become competi-<lb/>
tive said George Williams, in his third<lb/>
year as head coach. "Team by team, the<lb/>
Atlantic Coast and Southern conferences<lb/>
present some good baseball<lb/>
Williams hopes his club will be in the<lb/>
thick of the conference race, as well as<lb/>
give a good showing outside the<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
Gone from the 1975 club is Ron<lb/>
Staggs, who set eight ECU career hitting<lb/>
records before departing for the pros last<lb/>
summer. He will be replaced by Sonny<lb/>
Wooten, a much sought after first-base-<lb/>
man who helped Louisburg College to a<lb/>
third-place finish in the national junior<lb/>
college tournament last spring.<lb/>
Catcher Howard McCullough, second-<lb/>
baseman Steve Bryant, third-baseman<lb/>
Geoff Beaston and shortstop Ken Gentry<lb/>
all return to head the Pirate infield. Glenn<lb/>
Card, Addison Bass, Joe Roenker, Robert<lb/>
Brinkley and Charlie Stevens will see<lb/>
outfield duty. All are returning lettermen,<lb/>
except for Stevens, who blistered junior<lb/>
college pitching at Louisburg last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Dean Reavis, the conference's leading<lb/>
ERA pitcher (182), returns to head a<lb/>
1976 PIRATE BASEBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
March 6-Maryland; 7-Maryland; 9-N.C.<lb/>
State (2); 13-at Furman (2); 15-Westem<lb/>
Carolina; 16-Western Carolina, 18-at N.C.<lb/>
State (2); 20-Davidson (2); 21-at Duke(2),<lb/>
22-UNC; 24-at Campbell; 28-Atlantic<lb/>
Christian; 31-The Citadel.<lb/>
Apr 3-Appalachian State(2); 5-at<lb/>
Pembroke; 7-William &amp; Mary; 9-UNC-Wil-<lb/>
mington;i2-at The Citadel; 15-Richmond;<lb/>
17-at William &amp; Mary; 22-Pembroke; 24-at<lb/>
V M l(2); 26-at Richmond; 29-at Atlantic<lb/>
Christian.<lb/>
May 4-at UNC-Wilmington; 8-Camp-<lb/>
bell.<lb/>
Doubieheaders start at 130 p.m<lb/>
single games at Harrington Field will<lb/>
sf at 3 p.m.<lb/>
SC Ticket Prices<lb/>
Tickets for the ECU-Appalachian State<lb/>
first round Southern Conference game<lb/>
will cost both students and faculty<lb/>
$1.75, according to Southern Conference<lb/>
regulations.<lb/>
Southern Conference regulations say<lb/>
that students, as well as the public, have<lb/>
to be charged for conference tournament<lb/>
games. Under the rules, the hosting<lb/>
school can charge no less than they<lb/>
would normally for public tickets. The<lb/>
conference policy stipulates that the<lb/>
hosting school may charge less for<lb/>
students, but that the prices for student<lb/>
tickets can be no less than half the price<lb/>
for public tickets.<lb/>
According to Bill Cain, ECU Director<lb/>
of Athletics, the regular prices for public<lb/>
tickets will be charged and half that price<lb/>
will be charged for students.<lb/>
Therefore, it will cost ECU students<lb/>
and faculty $1.75 to attend,<lb/>
Cagers to host first round<lb/>
East Carolina will host a first round<lb/>
game in the Southern Conference<lb/>
tournament which begins Saturday.<lb/>
The Pirates, who finished their<lb/>
conference slate with a 7-7 mark, will<lb/>
meet Appalachian State, which finished<lb/>
the season at 6-6 in the conference.<lb/>
East Carolina finished tied for third<lb/>
in the conference after VMI beat<lb/>
Appalachian State. 78-74, and William<lb/>
and Mary beat Richmond, 107-102, in<lb/>
conference games last weekend.<lb/>
The wins gave VMI its first Southern<lb/>
Conference title ever and their first<lb/>
winning record in 35 years. William and<lb/>
Mary finished second in the conference<lb/>
and Richmond and East Carolina finished<lb/>
tied for third with 7-7 season records.<lb/>
Richmond got the third seed in the<lb/>
conference tournament on the basis of<lb/>
head-to-head competition between the<lb/>
two schools.<lb/>
The first round pairings for the<lb/>
tournament will be VMI hosting<lb/>
Davidson, Furman at William and Mary,<lb/>
the Citadel at Richmond, and Appala-<lb/>
chian State visiting ECU. The four<lb/>
winners will travel to Greenville, S.C for<lb/>
the tournament semi-finals and finals on<lb/>
March 3-4.<lb/>
ECU head coach Dave Patton was<lb/>
understandably pleased that the Pirates<lb/>
captured the fourth-place home berth in<lb/>
the first-round. He said that he felt it<lb/>
gave ECU a definite advantage that it<lb/>
would not have had if the game had been<lb/>
played in Boone.<lb/>
"Actually we ended up tied for third<lb/>
said Patton. "That's a little higher than I<lb/>
though we'd finish.<lb/>
"I am happy to get the fourth place<lb/>
position and the home berth. I definitely<lb/>
feel it is an advantage for us<lb/>
Patton said that at the outset of the<lb/>
tournament, he would consider VMI as<lb/>
the tournament favorite. Patton said,<lb/>
however, that if Furman makes the final<lb/>
four he might have to change his mind.<lb/>
"VMI has to be considered as the<lb/>
favorite as long as there are still eight<lb/>
teams in the tournament. After that, it<lb/>
depends on what teams win in the first<lb/>
round. If Furman makes it, I might have<lb/>
to consider them as favorites<lb/>
Furman is hosting the Southern<lb/>
Conference tournament and has won the<lb/>
title during the last three years.<lb/>
staff which has for the past two years<lb/>
topped the conference team pitching<lb/>
ratings. Reavis should be supported by<lb/>
lefthander Bob Feeney, 4-0 last year, and<lb/>
Terry Durham, who started late in the<lb/>
spring and had strong summer league<lb/>
records. Pete Conaty, who fared well in<lb/>
summer league ball, and Keith<lb/>
Kurdewan, a freshman from Neptune,<lb/>
N.J will be among the five others<lb/>
Williams says will challenge for star ng<lb/>
roles.<lb/>
"We've been fortunate to have weather<lb/>
which has permitted us to play outside a<lb/>
lot said Williams. "But there is no way<lb/>
you can gauge what will happen when the<lb/>
season starts. We'll just have to get<lb/>
ready and see what happens<lb/>
ECU SENIORS - The ECU baseball team return tan seniors. They are: Top Row, I. to<lb/>
r.) Addison Bass, Glenn Card, Dean Reavis, Joe Rcenker and Bob Feeney. Bottom<lb/>
Row, I. to r. Howard McCuliough, Steve Bryant, Geoff Beaston, Ken Gentry and<lb/>
Bruce Leery. Photo by Ron Woodcock).<lb/>
WRESTLING<lb/>
Continued from page 13.<lb/>
pounds if he doesn't make the 126<lb/>
weight.<lb/>
Other top wrestlers for William and<lb/>
Mary are Max Lorenzo at 150 pounds and<lb/>
Tom Dursee at 118 pounds.<lb/>
The Pirates have beaten both of these<lb/>
wrestlers before. Wendell Hardy de-<lb/>
cisioned Dursee, 7-4, and Marriott<lb/>
downed Lorenzo, 7-5, in the match earlier<lb/>
this year. This decisions could easily<lb/>
turn around this weekend, though.<lb/>
So the eighteenth-ranked Pirate<lb/>
wrestlers had best forget about their 10-2<lb/>
season mark and look to the tournament<lb/>
this weekend. For Wei born, seven<lb/>
victories is a goal for the tournament.<lb/>
"I would be happy if we won seven of<lb/>
the classes. We have done it before and I<lb/>
think we could do it again this year. If we<lb/>
win six, I'd say it was a good meet, but<lb/>
any less and I would be disappointed. I<lb/>
would say that seven is the most we<lb/>
could win<lb/>
Winning the conference would mean<lb/>
an automatic berth in the NCAA for the<lb/>
winners in each class.<lb/>
When all is over Saturday night<lb/>
expect East Carolina to be in the winner's<lb/>
circle, but don't be surprised if it isn't<lb/>
that easy a time for the Pirates, because<lb/>
it won't be.<lb/>
We're looking for certain majors<lb/>
to become Lieutenants.<lb/>
Nursing and pre mad majors  math majors and<lb/>
minors  computer science  physics majors<lb/>
The Air Force needs people  many with the above<lb/>
academic majors. AFROTC 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 Marct 15, 1976 756-6698<lb/>
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.<lb/>
i�Wa1HH<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mi<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040026_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3024 FEBRUARY 1976<lb/>
Himi Hi<lb/>
mmmmmmnm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
newSFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASH<lb/>
Guitar and Banjo Spring Fees<lb/>
Non-credit courses in beginning<lb/>
guitar and in "Scruggs-style" banjo<lb/>
playing will be offered this spring by the<lb/>
ECU Division of Continuing Education.<lb/>
Basic Guitar, consisting of ten<lb/>
sessions, will meet Thursdays, March 11<lb/>
- May 20 from 1 to 2:30 p.m. in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Music Center.<lb/>
Instructor will be ECU graduate<lb/>
student Michael Thompson, who received<lb/>
the Bachelor of Music degree in classical<lb/>
guitar performance from UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill, and is a former student of Jesus<lb/>
Silva of the N.C. School of the Arts.<lb/>
The banjo course consists of eight<lb/>
sessions, scheduled Tuesday evenings,<lb/>
March 9 - May 4, from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in<lb/>
the A.J. Fletcher Music Center.<lb/>
Arrangements for registration and<lb/>
instrument rental may be made through<lb/>
the Office of Non-Credit Programs,<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, or telephone 7581436148.<lb/>
Missing Bikes<lb/>
The ECU campus police station has a<lb/>
lot of student owned bikes that have<lb/>
been found or stolen. If you are a student<lb/>
whose bike is missing, please go by the<lb/>
police station and claim the bike.<lb/>
Scouting<lb/>
Although contrary to knowledgeable<lb/>
public opinion, Scouting does exist at<lb/>
ECU. The name of this recognized<lb/>
college Scouting program is the East<lb/>
Carolina Delegation (ECD). This organi-<lb/>
zation is one of several college Scouting<lb/>
organizations that exist in the United<lb/>
States. The ECD is open to all college<lb/>
students interested in the Scouting<lb/>
program. The organization's functions<lb/>
consist of helping in the council<lb/>
Scouting program and providing services<lb/>
for ECU students, such as the<lb/>
backpacking course currently being<lb/>
taught by the ECD on campus.<lb/>
Anyone interested in this organization<lb/>
should contact Butch Harris at 752-9672.<lb/>
Speech, Hearing<lb/>
On Friday, March 12, the ECU<lb/>
Chapter of the National Student Speech,<lb/>
Hearing, and Language Association will<lb/>
present their 6th annual Spench, Hearing<lb/>
and Language Symposium. The sympo-<lb/>
sium will be held in the Allied Health<lb/>
building, room 101, with registration<lb/>
beginning at 8:15. Guest speakers will be<lb/>
Dr. Eugene Cooper from the University<lb/>
of Alabama and Dr. James McLean from<lb/>
George P�abody College. The morning<lb/>
portion of the symposium will consist of<lb/>
a presentation by Dr. Cooper on<lb/>
Stuttering Therapy and Dr. McLean will<lb/>
speak on Language Therapy in the<lb/>
afternoon. Anyone is welcomed to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
The Cashier's office will accept fees<lb/>
for the Spring Quarter 1976 beginning<lb/>
Monday, February 23, 1976. Payment in<lb/>
advance will help avoid some incon-<lb/>
veniences and delays on Registration<lb/>
Day.<lb/>
Hosteling<lb/>
If you're looking for an exciting way<lb/>
to spend the upcoming Bicentennial<lb/>
Summer - cheap - check out<lb/>
"hosteling<lb/>
American Youth Hostels, Inc is a<lb/>
non-profit, non-sectarian organization<lb/>
dedicated to promoting enjoyment of the<lb/>
outdoors through traveling. You can hike,<lb/>
bike, canoe, horseback ride or travel a<lb/>
variety of different ways. Overnights can<lb/>
be spent in one of 151 Youth Hostels<lb/>
across the U.S. (or in one of the 4,500<lb/>
International Hostels overseas) for<lb/>
anywhere from $1 to $3.50 a night.<lb/>
Hostels aren't fancy! They provide<lb/>
simple, sleeping accomodations, with a<lb/>
bed, mattress and blankets (separate<lb/>
dorms for men and women), a "common<lb/>
room" for recreation - where you can<lb/>
moet and talk with hostelers from all over<lb/>
the world, hot showers and a kitchen,<lb/>
complete with the use of stove, pans,<lb/>
etc.<lb/>
Membership in American Youth<lb/>
Hostels is open to everyone regardless<lb/>
of age. The yearly fee is $5 for under 18;<lb/>
$11 for those 18 and over.<lb/>
Write for a free pamphlet about<lb/>
hosteling on your own. Or ask for the<lb/>
AYH trip folder, "Highroad to Adventure<lb/>
1976 which lists preplanned, all-<lb/>
expense trips (with a leader). The address<lb/>
is American Youth Hostels, Inc National<lb/>
Campus, Delaplane, Virginia 22025.<lb/>
Volunteer Assoc.<lb/>
Attention all past, present and<lb/>
hopefully future members of the East<lb/>
Carolina University Student Volunteer<lb/>
Association - there will be a meeting held<lb/>
in the multi-purpose room in Mendenhall<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 28 at 7 p.m. Susan<lb/>
Mesher of Volunteer Greenville will be<lb/>
speaking on "volunteerism Attendance<lb/>
is imperative.<lb/>
Found<lb/>
A Social Security card for Charles G.<lb/>
Payne, number 238-94-5940, was found<lb/>
on campus recently. It can be claimed at<lb/>
the Fountainhead Editor's office.<lb/>
Book Exchange Disney World trip<lb/>
All students are cordially invited to<lb/>
buy and sell their books through the ECU<lb/>
Veteran's Club Book Exchange. The<lb/>
exchange will be located at Rm. 202<lb/>
upstairs in Wright Auditorium between<lb/>
the hours of 9 a.m. and 12 p.m.<lb/>
Afternoon hours will be posted. The<lb/>
exchange will be operating from Feb. 26<lb/>
through March 12.<lb/>
Rec. Society<lb/>
Everyone going on the society<lb/>
sponsored ski trip over the weekend of<lb/>
the 6th is requested to attend a special<lb/>
meeting Wed Mar. 3, at 6:00 in room<lb/>
221 at Mendenhall. If you are unable to<lb/>
attend please contact Bill Dando at<lb/>
758-2159. There will be a regularly<lb/>
scheduled meeting of the society the<lb/>
following Wed.<lb/>
Poetry Competition<lb/>
The National Poetry Press announces<lb/>
its spring competition for the, College<lb/>
Student's Poetry Anthology. The closing<lb/>
date for submission of manuscripts by<lb/>
College Students is April 10.<lb/>
Any student attending either junior or<lb/>
senior college is eligible to submit his<lb/>
verse. There is no limitation as to form or<lb/>
theme. Shorter works are prefened by the<lb/>
Board of Judges, because of space<lb/>
limitations.<lb/>
Each poem must be typed or printed<lb/>
on a separate sheet, and must bear the<lb/>
name and home address of the student<lb/>
and the college address as well.<lb/>
Manuscripts should be sent to the<lb/>
Office of the Press, National Poetry<lb/>
Press, Box 218, Agoura, Calif. 91301.<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
There will be a short Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
business meeting on<lb/>
Plans for the state convention and<lb/>
symposium will be discussed. Three<lb/>
unexcused absences constitute ex-<lb/>
pulsion.<lb/>
Joyner Credit<lb/>
Fountainhead wishes to thank the<lb/>
staff at Joyner Library for their<lb/>
assistance in compiling the special<lb/>
fiftieth anniversary issue.<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 - $96.00.<lb/>
(Includes transportation and accomod-<lb/>
ations). Reservations will be taken<lb/>
beginning March 8 at Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Mendenhall.<lb/>
Bahai<lb/>
This week's meeting will focus on the<lb/>
similarities between Christ and Bahaullah<lb/>
in relation to their purpose and<lb/>
teachings. Everone is invited to attend<lb/>
in room 238 Mendenhall, Thursday<lb/>
evening at 7:30.<lb/>
Lillian Woo<lb/>
Lillian Woo, candidate for N.C. State<lb/>
Auditor, will be the guest speaker of the<lb/>
ECU Young Democrats on Monday,<lb/>
March 8 at 7:30. The meeting for YDC<lb/>
members and other interested students<lb/>
will be held in room 244 Mendenhall.<lb/>
Anthro Lecture<lb/>
Dr. Irwin Press, Associate Professor<lb/>
of Anthropology at the University of<lb/>
Notre Dame, will visit the ECU campus<lb/>
on February 20 and 21. Dr. Press, who<lb/>
specializes in Medical Anthropology, has<lb/>
done extensive research and publication<lb/>
on folk curors in Latin America, Spain,<lb/>
and the United States.<lb/>
His public lecture is scheduled for<lb/>
February 20 at 10:X in the auditorium of<lb/>
the Belk Building, School of Allied<lb/>
Health and Social Professions. The<lb/>
lecture topic will be "Culture and Health:<lb/>
Implications for Clinical Medicine<lb/>
Dr. Press is being sponsored by the<lb/>
undergraduate Sociology-Anthropology<lb/>
Club of the Department of Sociology and<lb/>
Anthropology. The public is invited to<lb/>
attend the public lecture.<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/>
Macbeth<lb/>
Wednesday's free flick. John Finch<lb/>
stars in this fnovie of the classic<lb/>
"Macbeth Rated R. 8:00 p.m. ID and<lb/>
activity card.<lb/>
Coronation Photos Prayer Breakfast<lb/>
Pictures taken at the Coronation Ball<lb/>
will be shown Wed Feb. 25, 1976 in the<lb/>
Culture Center from 9 a.m. -1 p.m.<lb/>
Come join us for a time of prayer<lb/>
and Christian fellowship at 1509 E. 5th<lb/>
St Thursday mornings at 7:00.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
�p<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040026_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>