<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00040027_0001"/>
8,500 Circulation<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
This Issue 28 Pages<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
?? m<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina Community for overfifty years<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
VOL 7, NO. 40<lb/>
8 MARCH 1976<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Falls freshman class to decline 500<lb/>
Forcedimitation decreases ECU enrollment<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
ECU'S freshman enrollment next Fall<lb/>
quarter 1976 will have about 500 students<lb/>
is than this years freshman class<lb/>
enrollment, according to John H. Home,<lb/>
dean of ECU admissions.<lb/>
To decrease the Freshman class<lb/>
enrollment, ECU admission standards<lb/>
have been increased.<lb/>
Whereas in previous years, the<lb/>
university only required a predicted 1.5<lb/>
grade performance, future freshman must<lb/>
indicate a 1 6 predicted performance to<lb/>
be admitted to ECU.<lb/>
The enrollment decrease is made<lb/>
necessary by the University of North<lb/>
Carolina Board of Governor's recent<lb/>
decision to enforce limitations on the<lb/>
UNC school system's enrollment, said<lb/>
Home.<lb/>
"The board is just emphasizing what<lb/>
has been in effect for a long time<lb/>
explained Home. "In previous years there<lb/>
was money that the Board could give to<lb/>
schools who over enrolled<lb/>
University<lb/>
funds frozen<lb/>
By DENNIS C. LEONARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
James Holshouser, N.C. governor,<lb/>
has recently frozen all state spending<lb/>
funds for the sixteen members of the<lb/>
consolidated university<lb/>
The spending limitations have been<lb/>
implemented to reduce an expected<lb/>
multi-million dollar deficit acquired<lb/>
during the present fiscal year<lb/>
All funds dealing with maintenance,<lb/>
transportation, and supplies have been<lb/>
frozen here at ECU. said Carl Faser,<lb/>
assistant to the provost.<lb/>
There is a state law which prohibits<lb/>
state from deficit spending and that<lb/>
is what Holshouser is trying to prevent "<lb/>
According to Faser. the deficit is<lb/>
supposed to reach approximately $42<lb/>
million by the end of the fiscal year<lb/>
which ends on June 30<lb/>
Holshouser has set down a list of<lb/>
spending limitation guidelines and has<lb/>
asked that all state agencies and<lb/>
affiliates comply with the guidelines.<lb/>
William Friday, president of the<lb/>
consolidated university, has issued a<lb/>
statement to all chancellors of the<lb/>
university system, advising them to<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Presidential<lb/>
candidate<lb/>
added to<lb/>
SGA slate<lb/>
"But now the Board has to enforce<lb/>
the existing limitations because there is<lb/>
no money available to give the<lb/>
universities who over enroll.<lb/>
"The board's decision does not mean<lb/>
that universities must close enrollment. It<lb/>
means they must plan enrollment within<lb/>
their budget They can not over enroll<lb/>
with hopes of receiving extra money from<lb/>
the state government<lb/>
Ee-h university's funds are based on<lb/>
the predicted enrollment of that<lb/>
university's predicted enrollment for the<lb/>
coming year. In predicting their<lb/>
enrollment, the universities are allowed<lb/>
a percentage of increase or decrease.<lb/>
If their enrollment is below what the<lb/>
predicted enrollment the board reduces<lb/>
the university's budget accordingly.<lb/>
However if the enrollment is greater<lb/>
than the university's predicted enrollment<lb/>
the board increases the budget of the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
In the previous years schools in the<lb/>
UNC system were over enrolling so they<lb/>
could receive more money. Now that the<lb/>
money is not available for supporting the<lb/>
over enrolled students, universities will<lb/>
have to limit their enrollment, according<lb/>
to Home.<lb/>
Of the 16 UNC institutions, ECU has<lb/>
made a conscious effort to stay within its<lb/>
budget said Home. "ECU is third from<lb/>
the bottom in percentage of increase in<lb/>
enrollment above the budget their<lb/>
predicted budget figure<lb/>
ECU'S Fall quarter enrollment for in<lb/>
1975 was 11,727. This year's fall<lb/>
enrollment should be about the same,<lb/>
according to Home.<lb/>
"The Board's decision means ECU wiil<lb/>
have to watch very carefully its number<lb/>
of transfer students and readmission<lb/>
students said Home.<lb/>
"We can not stop readmitting<lb/>
students because they entered school<lb/>
under a catalogue with certain<lb/>
requirements. If they meet those<lb/>
requirements we will have to readmit<lb/>
them<lb/>
So the major cut other than freshman<lb/>
will come in transfer students, according<lb/>
to Home.<lb/>
The admissions department has<lb/>
CLEMENT DORM - Ladies living in Clement were again disappointed when they<lb/>
learned that the dorm was really not up for sale.<lb/>
reduce their maintenance costs and to<lb/>
limit spending<lb/>
The spending guidelines set down by<lb/>
the Governor's office deals primarily with<lb/>
the filling of vacant positions,<lb/>
maintenance costs, equipment costs, and<lb/>
transportation expenses.<lb/>
According to the guidelines, there are<lb/>
to be no staff vacancy fillers and there is<lb/>
an emphasis on retaining the present<lb/>
staff if possible. Professors who have<lb/>
been on a leave of absence will be<lb/>
???????<lb/>
One new candidate filed for the office<lb/>
of SGA President on the last day of filing<lb/>
and one previously announced candidate<lb/>
withdrew his name and filed for the<lb/>
vice-presidential office.<lb/>
Ms. Lynn Schubert, a junior from<lb/>
Columbia. S.C filed just a few minutes<lb/>
before the 5 p.m. deadline on February<lb/>
24th Ms Schubert brings the total of<lb/>
candidates to the office to five<lb/>
Previously announced candidates in-<lb/>
clude; Samuel Eric Collier, Sammy T.<lb/>
Hicks, Tim Sullivan and Teresa<lb/>
Whisenant.<lb/>
Ms Schubert is a business<lb/>
administration major who also serves as<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
allowed to return to the university.<lb/>
"The purchase of equipment, printing<lb/>
costs, and especially travel expenses will<lb/>
be sharply curtailed said Faser. "We<lb/>
will not stockpile supplies, will print only<lb/>
those items that are pursuant to the<lb/>
academic endeavor, and will buy<lb/>
equipment that is essential for<lb/>
operation<lb/>
According to Faser, ECU will be<lb/>
adhering to the guidelines very closely.<lb/>
<lb/>
Junior Class vice-president, vice-presi-<lb/>
dent of Delta Zeta, Secretary of Honor<lb/>
Council and is also a member of several<lb/>
honorary fraternities.<lb/>
In announcing her candidacy, Ms.<lb/>
Schubert explained she wanted to try<lb/>
and get more students involved in the<lb/>
SGA process. "My main goal is to get<lb/>
more student input into the workings of<lb/>
the SGA With more student involvement<lb/>
the entire process would do a better job<lb/>
of serving the people it is supposed to<lb/>
serve-the students<lb/>
Dalton Nicholson, who had filed for<lb/>
president, withdrew and filed for<lb/>
vice-president<lb/>
received 4,283 freshman applications. Of<lb/>
those 2,707 have been accepted to ECU<lb/>
However, only 55 per cent are<lb/>
expected to enroll. This means that there<lb/>
are still many openings in the future<lb/>
freshman class of approximately 2,000<lb/>
students.<lb/>
DR. JOHN H. HORNE<lb/>
Dean of Admissions<lb/>
Students<lb/>
liable for<lb/>
auto towing<lb/>
charges<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Technically a student is liable for<lb/>
towing charges after the officer has<lb/>
called a wrecker, said the Director of<lb/>
Campus Security in a recent interview.<lb/>
"Usually the tower will not charge the<lb/>
full amount before he has removed the<lb/>
car said Joseph Calder. director of<lb/>
campus security. "Before he is hooked<lb/>
up, the charge is about $5, and after he<lb/>
is hooked up, it is half the regular rate.<lb/>
"In North Carolina, if you are illegally<lb/>
parked you appoint any law officer for<lb/>
the removal and impoundment of your<lb/>
car.<lb/>
"The towing policy started in 1971 or<lb/>
1972 at the request of the MRC. It was<lb/>
not unusual at this time to have thirty or<lb/>
forty unregistered cars parked on the hill<lb/>
every night.<lb/>
"Towing serves one purpose, to give<lb/>
students with decals on their cars a<lb/>
chance to park. It is a service to decal<lb/>
holders.<lb/>
"We tow every night. Towing depends<lb/>
on two main factors.<lb/>
"The first is the number of policemen<lb/>
on duty on any given night. This varies<lb/>
from day to day in no set pattern.<lb/>
"The second is the availability of a<lb/>
wrecker. We usually tow from 3 a.m. to 6<lb/>
a.m. There is only one wrecker on duty in<lb/>
the county during this time, so if the<lb/>
wrecker is at an accident we are unable<lb/>
to have cars towed<lb/>
"Unregistered vehicles stand a<lb/>
fifty-fifty chance of being towed<lb/>
See Towing, page 7.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUMTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 4?t MAMCH 1tf6<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
EcTrtcxialsConrYTienlarv<lb/>
Enrollment limit needed<lb/>
Consolidated University of North Carolina officials have<lb/>
come down hard on member institutions which enroll more<lb/>
students than they are budgeted for. The age-old practice will be<lb/>
stopped this year, or some type of action will be taken against<lb/>
the institution which has over enrolled itself, officials<lb/>
proclaimed recently.<lb/>
ECU is one of the many guilty parties in this over enrolling<lb/>
scheme. The practice of over enrolling is nothing more than<lb/>
selling more tickets than you have seats. The result is that if all<lb/>
the ticket holders show up then somebody does not get his<lb/>
money's worth in that he either has to stand up, share a seat or<lb/>
literally fight for a seat.<lb/>
Over enrollment is the same principle in that the university<lb/>
simply takes more students than it budgeted for and the<lb/>
ensuing problems are monumental. There are housing problems,<lb/>
not for the university which wants to fill its dorms, but for the<lb/>
student who must find off-campus housing. There are parking<lb/>
problems and then there is the most serious problem of all-over<lb/>
crowded classrooms which greatly affects the quality of the<lb/>
education.<lb/>
We can understand the reasoning behind over enrolling. First<lb/>
and foremost, the university hates to turn away any student who<lb/>
honestly seeks a college education. That is honorable enough.<lb/>
And, we can also understand that high enrollment equals<lb/>
more money in the form of tuition payments and other fees.<lb/>
And, higher enrollment figures are also good political<lb/>
weapons when it comes budget time and the millions in capital<lb/>
outlay for university construction is up for grabs.<lb/>
But, with higher education is the number games really one<lb/>
that we can equate with better education? Does quantity equal<lb/>
quality in this issue?<lb/>
Obviously some think that building bigger universities equals<lb/>
building better universities.<lb/>
One ECU official has predicted continued growth on this<lb/>
campus with enrollment reaching 20,000 one day.<lb/>
We sincerely hope that that day never comes. The problems<lb/>
involved with placing a university the size of UNC-Chapel Hill in<lb/>
Greenville would be great, to say the least. But, that apparently<lb/>
is what local officials hope, to continue the expanded<lb/>
enrollment growth no matter what the ensuing consequences.<lb/>
Uncontrolled growth of the university would, without a<lb/>
doubt, be the greatest mistake the system could follow. Yet,<lb/>
that apparently is the route some think is best to follow.<lb/>
We do not advocate trying to make getting a higher<lb/>
education in the public system in this state next to impossible<lb/>
for the average student. But, we must realize that there has to<lb/>
be a cutoff point that where the system will start producing<lb/>
diminishing returns.<lb/>
North Carolina State, another guilty party in the over<lb/>
enrollment scheme, is setting toughter admission limits. So too<lb/>
is this university in an attempt to curb the enrollment growth.<lb/>
No doubt that these tougher admission standards will deny<lb/>
some students the chance of enrollment in a public institution.<lb/>
But, there is always the private sector and its colleges that have<lb/>
been badly hurt in recent years by lower enrollments.<lb/>
And, finally we must realize that we can't send everyone to<lb/>
college. It is not economically feasible nor were all high school<lb/>
graduates meant for college.<lb/>
"Were it left to me to deckle whether we should have a government without<lb/>
newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment o<lb/>
prefer the latter<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor<lb/>
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer<lb/>
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant<lb/>
Production Manager-Jimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson<lb/>
News Editor-Jim Elliott<lb/>
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Tise<lb/>
Features Editor-Pat Coyle<lb/>
Sports Editor-John Evans<lb/>
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by<lb/>
the Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
during the school ye <lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C.27634<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 756-6309<lb/>
Subscriptions $10.00 annually for non students.<lb/>
PRING- QUflTER I WONT<lb/>
BE WORTH fl FflftT<lb/>
Political speculation<lb/>
Reprint from Greenville Reflector, Feb. 23, 1976.<lb/>
Ned Cline of the Greensboro Daily News, one of the state's<lb/>
most astute political observers, sees this as Leo Jenkins last<lb/>
chance to seek the governorship.<lb/>
Cline in his newspaper column noted that the Jenkins for<lb/>
governor talk has been going around since 1969.<lb/>
Cline gave Jenkins full credit for building East Carolina<lb/>
University from the little ECTC which he discovered many years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
"East Carolina is really in a sense, the school that Jenkins<lb/>
built with the aid of his friends in the legislature who provided<lb/>
the money Cline wrote. "And that's why he only talked about<lb/>
running for governor without ever doing it; his talk was a ploy to<lb/>
give him political bargaining power so he could achieve his real<lb/>
goal of developing ECU<lb/>
But with the winning of the medical school and retirement<lb/>
only a few years away, Cline sees Jenkins as having reached the<lb/>
peak of the political mountain.  and now that he's there he'll<lb/>
either have to put up or shut up.<lb/>
"There are no more mountains to climb at ECU, so it's either<lb/>
on to other (off-campus) challenges or back to what, for Jenkins<lb/>
would undoubtedly be a boring job of running a univesity<lb/>
campus day-to-day<lb/>
Cline questions whether Jenkins can win the governorship.<lb/>
"Jenkins' main role if he gets into the campaign will be as a<lb/>
broker, pulling votes in a primary from other candidates with<lb/>
strong ties in the Eastern counties where just about everybody<lb/>
registered is under the Democratic label.<lb/>
"In that sense, he's a little like George Wallace on the<lb/>
national level; unable to get the nomination but quite possibly<lb/>
able to say who does.<lb/>
"Besides, with the med school behind him, being the power<lb/>
broker behind the 1976 gubernatorial nominee won't be too bad<lb/>
a last hurrah as he enters retirement at his Atlantic Beach<lb/>
condominium hideaway<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m?<lb/>
Kim<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0003"/><lb/>
4MMMBMP<lb/>
F0UNTAINHEADV0L.7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
3<lb/>
TheForjm<lb/>
Student cites registration 'buck passing'<lb/>
To the Fountainhead:<lb/>
Most of the personnel at ECU<lb/>
involved in registration are simply not<lb/>
competent in carrying out their duties<lb/>
unless they quite skillfully and<lb/>
competently know how to "pass the<lb/>
buck Just as the buck (dollar bill) may<lb/>
be tossed in the hands of fifty people in<lb/>
one day's time (via business exchanges),<lb/>
then so may the helplessly frustrated<lb/>
student be tossed from person to person<lb/>
if some small problem should arise with<lb/>
Any takers ?<lb/>
his registration.<lb/>
How do I know? I had the misfortune<lb/>
of being one of those students who had<lb/>
a couple of inconsistencies in my<lb/>
registration. God help me, by the day's<lb/>
end! I was a complete physical and<lb/>
mental wreck.<lb/>
Arriving at Spilman at 9:00 to pay my<lb/>
fees, I waited patiently in the long line<lb/>
that had already formed. About fifteen<lb/>
minutes later, I had been sent through<lb/>
the various checkpoints. Then I was sent<lb/>
upstairs to another long line, which<lb/>
moved so slowly one could almost have<lb/>
fallen asleep between forward steps. It's<lb/>
unbelievable, but there were only two<lb/>
cashiers present there to take care of all<lb/>
of the thousands of students that were<lb/>
registering. (There were three cashiers<lb/>
downstairs). But what was worse, the<lb/>
cashiers kept running out of money.<lb/>
They either had to wait for more, or run<lb/>
downstairs themselves to get it. To me<lb/>
it's unbelievable that ECU can't figure out<lb/>
a simple solution to this problem. Is it<lb/>
that difficult to find more cashiers?<lb/>
Inmate looking for mate<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I am 34 years of age, Afro-American,<lb/>
native New Yorker who is presently in<lb/>
Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary where I<lb/>
probably will remain for the next year. I<lb/>
wish to correspond with a woman who is<lb/>
willing to work with me in the<lb/>
development and successful implementa-<lb/>
tion of "our" life plan.<lb/>
While I stongly prefer that this woman<lb/>
be an Afro-American, the rapidity with<lb/>
which life is lived compels me to work<lb/>
with her who demonstrates her total<lb/>
sincerity in this most important matter.<lb/>
Additionally, it is imperative that this<lb/>
Whisenant candidacy<lb/>
draws support<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
It is time once again to focus on the<lb/>
coming elections, which in contrast to<lb/>
many apathetic students on campus, is<lb/>
the way that the students at ECU gain<lb/>
input into the university system. In the<lb/>
past years of SGA spring elections, the<lb/>
voter turnout has been very slight, but<lb/>
the complaints and the allegations<lb/>
concerning the inoompetency of the<lb/>
elected student officials has been made<lb/>
by the non-voting majority.<lb/>
It is for reasons of student apathy and<lb/>
the needs of the students themselves<lb/>
that I hereby make a political<lb/>
committment. I feel that by supporting<lb/>
Teresa Whisenant for SGA President,<lb/>
this commitment will be secure and the<lb/>
policies she chooses to carry out will be<lb/>
rightfully executed.<lb/>
Teresa has set policy guidelines<lb/>
which she plans to follow and adhere to<lb/>
if elected to the SGA presidency. Her<lb/>
primary goals are the better utilization of<lb/>
the existing transportation system on<lb/>
campus, a complete budget analysis to<lb/>
determine how efficiently student money<lb/>
can be spent, and an analysis of the Pub<lb/>
Board to determine the feasibility of the<lb/>
Pub Board going independent from the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
My commitment is made for what I<lb/>
feel is the best candidate, the one most<lb/>
willing to work for students needs, and<lb/>
the most qualified for the SGA position. I<lb/>
only hope that you, the students, can see<lb/>
the light passing through the many holes<lb/>
into the running regime of the other<lb/>
candidate(s) and vote for Teresa<lb/>
Whisenant for SGA President. Thwart the<lb/>
tyranny and take the time for Teresa!<lb/>
Peter Hiltz<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAWNG .by phi! frank<lb/>
HjUJJTMl<lb/>
roK30A<lb/>
U"S HOT SAFE 4N THE ?7RE?757Wej?<lb/>
ms- ALL 7W?F SENATORS MNDER ?<lb/>
iHG MOW - ARMEP MTU USftAI<lb/>
LOdkS LKB !T5AS<lb/>
SUpPORT GUN CONTROL<lb/>
COUEGE MeOA SCMVCfS BO( Mil 8ERKEUY CA 9T0? CCOUfOC MEOA SERVICES 80 94li-B?WEEv CA 9?09<lb/>
woman possess the following attributes:<lb/>
honesty, dedication, industriousness,<lb/>
and resolution. Physically, it is hoped<lb/>
she would be approximately 5 feet 8<lb/>
inches tall about 28 years of age and<lb/>
have obtained, or soon plan to obtain, at<lb/>
least a baccalaureate. Ideally, this<lb/>
woman would be physically attractive and<lb/>
have a definite desire and ability to have<lb/>
children. Naturally, her health should be<lb/>
good.<lb/>
I am in excellent physical condition,<lb/>
and my physical health is good except<lb/>
that I have hypertension which is under<lb/>
control. I am not physically unattractive,<lb/>
my height is 6 feet 3 inches, and my<lb/>
weight is approximately 200 pounds. My<lb/>
time here in prison has not been wasted,<lb/>
for I expect to have acquired at least 2<lb/>
years of college credit by the time I am<lb/>
released. Even more important, I am<lb/>
devoting considerable time to perfecting<lb/>
myself. Resultantly, those attributes,<lb/>
which I ask that she (this woman I am<lb/>
seeking) possess, shall surely be mine<lb/>
upon my release. Also, I have determined<lb/>
my needs in life and can confidently say<lb/>
she is foremost among them!<lb/>
Finally, I ask any woman, whose<lb/>
makeup I have described, desirous of<lb/>
further information concerning my<lb/>
proposal to contact me at the address<lb/>
below.<lb/>
Harold Selassie<lb/>
80206<lb/>
Post Office Box 1000<lb/>
Lewisburg, Pennsylvania 17837<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
All letters to the Editor must be<lb/>
accompanied by an address along with<lb/>
the writer's name. However, only the<lb/>
name will be printed with letters<lb/>
published in the Forum.<lb/>
The letter writer's address will be kept<lb/>
on file in the Fountainhead office and<lb/>
will be available, upon uest, to any<lb/>
student.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD WILL, UPON PER-<lb/>
SONAL REQUEST FROM A LETTER<lb/>
WRITER. WITHHOLD A NAME FROM<lb/>
PUBLICATION BUT, THE NAME OF THE<lb/>
WRITER WILL BE ON FILE IN THE<lb/>
EDITORS OFFICE AND AVAILABLE<lb/>
UPON REQUEST TO ANY STUDENT. ALL<lb/>
REQUESTS FOR WITHHOLDING A<lb/>
NAME MUST BE MADE IN PERSON TO<lb/>
THE EDITOR.<lb/>
Any letter received without this<lb/>
infornation will-be held until the letter<lb/>
writer complies with the new policy<lb/>
Because there was so little help, no<lb/>
one could find the time to help me with<lb/>
my problem. First, I was 3ent to an office<lb/>
downstairs; then, I was sent to a lady<lb/>
down the hall, where I waited fifteen<lb/>
minutes for her to finish counting<lb/>
money; then I was sent upstairs to<lb/>
another office. When I asked the man if<lb/>
he could call comeone about this for me,<lb/>
he said no; but he did tell me the next<lb/>
person I should see thistimeinwhichard<lb/>
building. This man was the only truly<lb/>
kind and understanding person of the<lb/>
entire "bunch" I encountered. He told me<lb/>
to sit down while he made a phone call<lb/>
for me about my problem. Since the call<lb/>
did not solve the problem, he told me to<lb/>
go upstairs to get a loan to pay my fees;<lb/>
then said "wait a minute-l'll go upstairs<lb/>
with you to help explain the problem<lb/>
So we went upstairs together, and he<lb/>
helped me avoid certain "red tape in<lb/>
getting the loan; then I took these<lb/>
papers back to Spilman where I waited<lb/>
twenty more minutes for the check to be<lb/>
made. There I met another girl who had<lb/>
endured similar circumstances. Finally,<lb/>
after a total of two and a half hours, I<lb/>
paid the fees.<lb/>
When I had a problem finding old<lb/>
files, I ran into similar difficulties. To fill<lb/>
out my schedule, I had to have my files.<lb/>
In order to trace these records, I was<lb/>
sent to General College, then to<lb/>
Brewster, then to Drama Dept then to<lb/>
Whichard, where I bumped into the nice<lb/>
guy I had met there before. True to his<lb/>
nature, he helped me through it all again.<lb/>
He foliowed me to the next few places I<lb/>
was sent and finally had some lady call<lb/>
drama department (where my records<lb/>
were last on file.) By this time it was<lb/>
12:00 and lunch time; so an appointment<lb/>
was made for 1:00 to see this drama<lb/>
advisor. When I did, the records were<lb/>
waiting. This advisor was kind enough<lb/>
to make a few final calls for me. Finally,<lb/>
by 2:00 I had finished registering for my<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
I want to remark now about my<lb/>
opinion of this whole matter, and maybe<lb/>
offer a few suggestions. First, as I<lb/>
related earlier more cashiers are needed,<lb/>
especially for the early morning hours.<lb/>
Instead of only five, twenty cashiers<lb/>
could work much more efficiently with<lb/>
such a large crowd of people. And there<lb/>
should not be such a problem as<lb/>
"running out of money Preparations<lb/>
should be made beforehand to avoid this.<lb/>
Secondly, there should be more<lb/>
people ready to take a sincere interest in<lb/>
the person that does run into certain<lb/>
difficulties. This person should be similar<lb/>
to the man that helped me with my<lb/>
problems. Instead of quickly dispensing<lb/>
a student by sending him to someone<lb/>
else, this special person should make<lb/>
necessary phone calls even personally<lb/>
go with the student if he thinks there<lb/>
might be difficulties.<lb/>
Finally, a different attitude should be<lb/>
taken toward students. Instead of seeing<lb/>
her simply as a face in a very large<lb/>
crowd, he or she should be seen for what<lb/>
she is a person; and a very important<lb/>
person. Too often, it seems to follow<lb/>
that where there is a large population of<lb/>
people, there is a depersonalization of<lb/>
the person. That is wrong painfully<lb/>
wrong to the individual.<lb/>
Linda Cherry<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
mmmmmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
MMP<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
KliHW<lb/>
mm<lb/>
tm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Student Union applications being accepted<lb/>
The Student Union will be accepting<lb/>
applications for committee chairpersons<lb/>
from March 8 to 26. The chairpersons will<lb/>
be selected on the basis of<lb/>
qualifications. All students interested in<lb/>
a position will be required to complete an<lb/>
application and have an interview with,<lb/>
the Student Union President-elect.<lb/>
Applications for the twelve positions may<lb/>
be obtained in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, room 234.<lb/>
The Student Union is one of the two<lb/>
largest student organizations on campus.<lb/>
Programming entertainment in the<lb/>
cultural, recreational, and social realms<lb/>
is the purpose of the Union. The Union is<lb/>
comprised of twelve committees whose<lb/>
purpose is to select, promote, and<lb/>
present these programs. The Union is<lb/>
made up of all students who pay an<lb/>
activity fee at ECU. Their fees are used to<lb/>
make free-time activity a co-operative<lb/>
I'acet with study and education.<lb/>
The committees which one may<lb/>
choose from are:<lb/>
Art Exhibition - This committee is<lb/>
responsible for providing the students<lb/>
with a wide variety of art displays and<lb/>
other visual arts by planning, selecting,<lb/>
promoting, and presenting an art<lb/>
exhibition program.<lb/>
Artist Series - The Artists Series<lb/>
Committee is responsible for program-<lb/>
ming cultural and musical attractions to<lb/>
be presented for the students of East<lb/>
Carolina. The aim of the committee's<lb/>
programming is the entertainment and<lb/>
education of the students.<lb/>
The committee strives to present a<lb/>
wide variety of events. It hopes to<lb/>
present something which will represent<lb/>
all facets of the performing arts. This<lb/>
year's season has included a concert<lb/>
pianist, a singer, a flutist, a guitarist,<lb/>
and various ensembles.<lb/>
Coffeehouse - The Coffeehouse<lb/>
Committee provides a quiet atmosphere<lb/>
for students to enjoy music far removed<lb/>
from the mainstream of contemporary<lb/>
commercial music. A small, darkened<lb/>
room helps to create a unique<lb/>
atmosphere of intimacy between per-<lb/>
former and audience.<lb/>
Coffeehouse was proud to present<lb/>
such performers as Sally Spring and Tim<lb/>
Bays in the past year. We hope you enjoy<lb/>
it even more next year.<lb/>
Entertainer - The Entertainer<lb/>
Committee is a new committee for the<lb/>
1976-77 school year. The purpose of this<lb/>
committee shall be the publication of the<lb/>
Entertainer and the promotn of the<lb/>
Student Union as a whole. This is an<lb/>
ideal committee for anyone with a real<lb/>
desire to get involved in the Union and<lb/>
find out what goes on in the committees.<lb/>
Since this is the first time the committee<lb/>
has been in existence, there are no limits<lb/>
as to what can be accomplished.<lb/>
Lecture - The Lecture Committee is<lb/>
responsible for selecting, planning,<lb/>
promoting, and presenting a lecture<lb/>
series consisting of widely recognized<lb/>
personalities or topics of interest. Since<lb/>
next year promises to be a year of<lb/>
thematic programs, this committee will<lb/>
be extremely involved in working with the<lb/>
whole Student Union<lb/>
Minority Arts - Minority Arts is<lb/>
responsible for selecting, planning,<lb/>
promoting, and presenting minority arts<lb/>
programs as deemed appropriate by the<lb/>
committee to meet the needs of the<lb/>
students who desire minority arts<lb/>
programming. Students of Afro-American<lb/>
cultures and international interests<lb/>
should take particular interest in this<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
Theatre Arts - The promotion and<lb/>
presentation of professional theatre for<lb/>
the Greenville area is the concern of the<lb/>
Theatre Arts Committee. During the<lb/>
1975-76 school year, the Theatre Arts<lb/>
Committee presented the Royal Shake-<lb/>
speare Company in "The Hollow Crown<lb/>
"1776 and Vincent Price in "Three<lb/>
American Voices<lb/>
Travel Committee - The Travel<lb/>
Committee organizes low-cost trips for<lb/>
the students, staff, and faculty of ECU.<lb/>
The trips are usually planned for<lb/>
Thanksgiving and Easter breaks.<lb/>
The committee had a successful trip<lb/>
to New York City during the Thanksgiving<lb/>
break. Forty-six students participated. A<lb/>
trip to Disney World is planned for<lb/>
Easter.<lb/>
Video Tape - The Video Tape<lb/>
Committee is a relatively new committee<lb/>
being only two years old. This committee<lb/>
was designed to bring a new style of<lb/>
entertainment to the students. Unfortu-<lb/>
nately, the committee has been plagued<lb/>
by one mechanical failure after another.<lb/>
Hopefully by next year the committee will<lb/>
be programming again at full tilt. The<lb/>
committee, when operating as it is<lb/>
supposed to, selects tapes to which it<lb/>
feels the campus crowd would be most<lb/>
receptive.<lb/>
Some past examples of this<lb/>
committee's programming which drew<lb/>
large crowds have been Amos and Andy,<lb/>
1947-1974, Heavyweight Fights, and Jim<lb/>
Croce.<lb/>
Films - The Films Committee of ECU<lb/>
Student Union is responsible for<lb/>
selecting popular films for Friday night<lb/>
entertainment and international and<lb/>
classical films for Wednesday night<lb/>
entertainment. Of major importance this<lb/>
year was the inclusion of two x-rated<lb/>
films in the programming. The Films<lb/>
Committee is proud of the fact that they<lb/>
have been able to pack the house in the<lb/>
past and hopes to be able to continue to<lb/>
please the students at ECU in the future.<lb/>
Major Attractions - The Major<lb/>
Attractions Committee is responsible for<lb/>
seeding, promoting, and presenting a<lb/>
See Student Union, page 7.<lb/>
It takes the best<lb/>
to challenge<lb/>
all the rest.<lb/>
Pabst. Since 1844.<lb/>
The quality has always<lb/>
come through.<lb/>
PABST BREWING COMPANY, Milwaukee, Wis<lb/>
Peoria Heights, III Newark, N.J Los Angeles, Calif Pabst, Georgia.<lb/>
ft<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
ft<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0005"/><lb/>
sf &amp; K<lb/>
livviwpm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1978<lb/>
5<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
LlllVi.ll, . . ,  ?.?<lb/>
'?!?<lb/>
i<lb/>
vX<lb/>
?:?:<lb/>
$<lb/>
i-mi ?,ji tltl'?'lVll'lV:tVtVlVv.v??.?.?.??t;i,?.?.v,?.1?1?vlJ?.???i??.<lb/>
HARMONY<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
SOUTH<lb/>
Once A Year<lb/>
Save Up To<lb/>
50<lb/>
Hurry! Limited Quantities ? Fm1 Come<lb/>
Serve. All hems subject to prior sale.<lb/>
l.i r i I in-?? ii-ii, ? mm mi i i n ii in, , i I, ? n ???-??, -iiiiii, rum ? i- ?ii?it i i ? ??? ??????v ? ? . . <lb/>
Thursday, March 11th, 10 to 9<lb/>
Friday, March 12th, 10 to 9<lb/>
Saturday, March 13th, 10 to 6<lb/>
First<lb/>
All the demos and used equipment on the floor have been greatly<lb/>
reduced for our only store wide sale. We're featuring such name brands<lb/>
as Sony, Pioneer, Teac, JVC and Bose<lb/>
:?:?:<lb/>
i<lb/>
Turntables and Tapedecks<lb/>
Sale Price<lb/>
1IVC 1696 Reel to nil?18000<lb/>
1Sony 2350 Turntable?130??<lb/>
1JVC - JLB 31 Direct DriveTurntableM40??<lb/>
1Teac A 400 Cassette Decks300??<lb/>
1Sony 5520 Turntable'15000<lb/>
1JVC 1656 Cassette Deck19 9<lb/>
1Fisher 220 Turntable'90??<lb/>
1JVC VL-5 TurntableJ90co<lb/>
1Pioneer 5151 Cassette Deck'24000<lb/>
1BSR 610 Turntabletoo<lb/>
1Teac 2050 Auto-Reverse Reel(used)'17500<lb/>
'Sony 5550 Turntable'200??<lb/>
Used Compact Systems<lb/>
Sale Price<lb/>
1 Zenith Compact -AMFM. cassettes8000<lb/>
1 Panasonic Compact - AM FM. cassettes8000<lb/>
1 Realistic 4 channel Compact, 8 tracks9000<lb/>
$6500<lb/>
1 KLH Model 20- AMFM, Turntable $25000<lb/>
1 Capehart Compact AM FM<lb/>
8 track, turntable<lb/>
Early Bird Specials<lb/>
1 Milovac Receiver (use!)<lb/>
1 Portable Cassette (used)<lb/>
MO00<lb/>
J500<lb/>
1 Concord MK 9 Cassette Deck (used '328 00)new s7000<lb/>
1 Ci Turntable (used)<lb/>
1 Sound Design Turntable (Used)<lb/>
I BSR 520 Turntable (used)<lb/>
1 Pair Sound Design Speakers (used)<lb/>
1 Lafayette Amp (used)<lb/>
1 Pilot 240 Amp (used)<lb/>
$500<lb/>
MO00<lb/>
MO00<lb/>
$20??<lb/>
$30oo<lb/>
1500<lb/>
System Special<lb/>
1 Sanyo 1800K Receiver<lb/>
1 Garrard Turntable (used)<lb/>
1 Pair Of Altec 887A Speakers<lb/>
$300<lb/>
00<lb/>
Demo Speakers Systems<lb/>
1 Pair Bose 90 1s (walnut)<lb/>
1 Pair Pioneer R-500's<lb/>
1 Pair Altec 887 A<lb/>
1 Pair BK 4 s<lb/>
1 Pair Bose Inter Audio 2000s<lb/>
 Pair Scientific Acoustic 75 s<lb/>
1 Pair JBl LlOOs<lb/>
1 Pair Bose 501s<lb/>
1 Pair Empire 6000s<lb/>
1 Pair Bose Inter Audio 4000s<lb/>
1 Pair Varicon 15" 5-way<lb/>
1 Pair KLH 32s<lb/>
1 Pair Rectilinear 3 s (lowboy)<lb/>
1 Pair Bose 30 Is<lb/>
1 Pair JVC 5313s<lb/>
1 Pair Bose Inter Audio 3000s<lb/>
'585.00<lb/>
'250.00<lb/>
'80.00<lb/>
'285.00<lb/>
'199.00<lb/>
?205.00<lb/>
'450.00<lb/>
'299.00<lb/>
'190.00<lb/>
'290.00<lb/>
'180.00<lb/>
'80.00<lb/>
'300.00<lb/>
'170.00<lb/>
300.00<lb/>
'250.00<lb/>
Receivers And Amps<lb/>
1 Pilot 225 Amp<lb/>
1 Sony 7055 Receiver<lb/>
1 Marantz 4140 4 channel amp<lb/>
1 JVC 5555 Receiver<lb/>
1 Pilot 366 Receiver<lb/>
1 Pioneer 1010 Receiver<lb/>
1 JVC 5535 Receiver<lb/>
1 Pioneer 636 Receiver<lb/>
1 Fisher 190B Receiver<lb/>
1 Sanyo 1800 K Receiver<lb/>
1 Pioneer 646 4 channel Receiver<lb/>
1 JVC 5565 Receiver<lb/>
'14000<lb/>
MOO00<lb/>
?33000<lb/>
'299??<lb/>
l30000<lb/>
'56000<lb/>
'26500<lb/>
?31000<lb/>
1 j 000?<lb/>
M7000<lb/>
?300??<lb/>
?34000<lb/>
Miscellaneous Items<lb/>
1 Sony 2050 4 channel Decoder<lb/>
1 Sansui R 500 Reverb(used)<lb/>
1 Teac AN 60 Dolly Unit (used)<lb/>
1 Realistic 4 channel Decoder used<lb/>
1 Sayno Add on 4 channel amp and decoder<lb/>
1 Dynaco Pat 3 Pre amp used<lb/>
I Lafayette 250 Tuner (used)<lb/>
1 Pilot 211 Tuner<lb/>
S25.00<lb/>
$50.00<lb/>
$50.00<lb/>
$10.00<lb/>
$70.00<lb/>
$35.00<lb/>
$40.00<lb/>
$140.00<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
On The Mall Downtown Greenville<lb/>
,sWr?yerTf?y?t?777?TT? ?,?,?,?,?7. V.VT ?<lb/>
rr ?????? r?f? f??Tn?MMti?t VI' .V MTV 'TT.TT"1'<lb/>
nm???w? ? w ??r? mit????<lb/>
ywnyt't'iw ml.<lb/>
v<lb/>
OT<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0006"/><lb/>
? ?<lb/>
 ? ????. -<lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
0W<lb/>
tmmmrn<lb/>
Ovid Pierce will retire<lb/>
to his "Plantation"<lb/>
For many persons, retirement may<lb/>
mean a long-awaited vacation, a time to<lb/>
catch up on some good reading, or<lb/>
simply a time to relax and take it easy.<lb/>
But for Ovid W. Pierce, writer-in-<lb/>
residence at ECU, retirement means the<lb/>
return to a long-lost love - the country.<lb/>
"Part of my sense of weil being<lb/>
depends on my life outdoors explained<lb/>
Pierce, who admits that he finds it hard<lb/>
to live in an urban atmosphere.<lb/>
Pierce was bom in Weldon, N.C on<lb/>
October 1, 1910, and graduated from<lb/>
Duke in 1932. After receiving his masters<lb/>
degree in English from Harvard in 1936,<lb/>
Pierce served in the Army for four years<lb/>
in the Counterintelligence Corps.<lb/>
Following his stint in the Army,<lb/>
Pierce turned his attention to academic<lb/>
life. After teaching at Tulane and<lb/>
Southern Methodist universities, Pierce<lb/>
joined the English department at ECU to<lb/>
teach courses in creative writing and the<lb/>
novel.<lb/>
His career in writing began as a<lb/>
painful but necessary experience, recalls<lb/>
Pierce.<lb/>
"It's an apprenticeship that you've got<lb/>
to serve said Pierce. "Writers have to<lb/>
serve an aprenticeship just as other<lb/>
performers do<lb/>
His advice to young writers: "There's<lb/>
no one answer to it. Every good venture<lb/>
requires a risk. You shouldn't expect<lb/>
writing to be materially rewarding at<lb/>
first<lb/>
During his tenure at ECU, Pierce has<lb/>
had three novels published. On a<lb/>
Lonesome Porch was published in 1960,<lb/>
The Devils Half in 1968, and The<lb/>
Wedding Guest was published in 1974. In<lb/>
1969 he was awarded the North Carolina<lb/>
Award for Literature.<lb/>
"I was naturally oriented to the<lb/>
southern field said Pierce, who said he<lb/>
admired the works of Eliot Glascoe,<lb/>
James Boyd, and Junior Pedican while at<lb/>
Harvard.<lb/>
Pierce presently is working on a new<lb/>
novel which he describes as "more<lb/>
related to contemporary situation<lb/>
"I've had the feeling that a shorter<lb/>
work can accomplish as much as a<lb/>
looser, more panoramic one. I don't want<lb/>
it to be strictly Southern said Pierce.<lb/>
When asked about his plans for the<lb/>
future, Pierce readily admits looking<lb/>
forward to his reunion with the country.<lb/>
"The country means a lot to me. I'm<lb/>
happy to go back and refresh contact<lb/>
with the world said Pierce smiling.<lb/>
When Pierce is not writing, he usually<lb/>
is engaged in some kind of work around<lb/>
the "Plantation his home which he has<lb/>
restored to its original colonial design.<lb/>
Because the plantation symbolizes a<lb/>
sense of the past and the present, it is<lb/>
very important to Pierce. He often invites<lb/>
his Greenville friends and members of his<lb/>
fraternity there for serious talk or just for<lb/>
sheer leisure.<lb/>
"It (the Plantation) enables me to<lb/>
increase my own sense of awareness<lb/>
said Pierce. "The exposure to the open<lb/>
world is important for me as a writer<lb/>
When asked for one word to describe<lb/>
his experience at ECU, Pierce chose<lb/>
"rewarding<lb/>
"One of the most rewarding<lb/>
experiences of my career was teaching.<lb/>
Sometimes, in later years, indirectly, you<lb/>
get the effect of the influences you've<lb/>
had. Those things mean a lot to you<lb/>
said Pierce.<lb/>
Although Pierce will be retiring in<lb/>
June to his Plantation, he plans to spend<lb/>
a lot of time writing.<lb/>
"Our only comfort is knowing we did<lb/>
what we had to do and did it with our<lb/>
best energy said Pierce. "The pleasure<lb/>
is sometimes in the doing itself<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education<lb/>
will offer piano course<lb/>
"Piano for Beginners a non-credit<lb/>
evening course for adults, will be offered<lb/>
by the ECU Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education this spring.<lb/>
Consisting of 10 two-hour sessions,<lb/>
the course will meet Tuesdays, March<lb/>
9-May 18 at 7:30 p.m. in the A. J.<lb/>
Fletcher Music Center on the ECU<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The course will emphasize note-read-<lb/>
ing, development of sufficient dexerity to<lb/>
perform the easier piano repertoire, and<lb/>
the understanding and use of chords.<lb/>
Individual student interest will also<lb/>
help to determine course content.<lb/>
QD 4230 Marantz Receiver with G-S<lb/>
speakers and BSR turntable. $450 firm.<lb/>
Two months old. 823-1816, after 5.<lb/>
BIKE REPAIR - can do quickly &amp;<lb/>
inexpensively. Inquire at 1212 S. Evans or<lb/>
phone Tommy at 756-7838.<lb/>
IIKCPI<lb/>
furt<lb/>
IWN W<lb/>
 800-325-4867<lb/>
@ Utr.Travel Charters<lb/>
PIANO &amp; GUITAR lessons - Daily and<lb/>
evenings. Richard J. Knapp, B.A<lb/>
756-3908.<lb/>
EARN $250.00 per thousand stuffing-<lb/>
addressing envelopes at home. Inform-<lb/>
ATION: Send $1.00 plus stamped<lb/>
addressed envelope to Heskey Associ-<lb/>
ates, Box 821 BZ, Covington, Kentucky<lb/>
41012.<lb/>
PRIVATE ROOM for rent. Male. 3 blocks<lb/>
from campus. 752-4006 after 12 noon.<lb/>
JOBS ON SHIPS! American. Foreign. NO<lb/>
experience required. Excellent pay.<lb/>
Worldwide travel. Summer jobor career.<lb/>
Send $3.00 for information. SEAFAX,<lb/>
Dept. I-2, Box 2049, Port Angeles,<lb/>
Washington 98362.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1971 Honda CB350 with 2<lb/>
helmets. Good condition, excellent<lb/>
mechanicallly, recent tune-up. $495.<lb/>
752-2059.<lb/>
FOR SALE - 4 chrome reverse rims and<lb/>
E-70 Firestone tires. Fits any 5 lug<lb/>
wheels - air shocks and adapters for VW<lb/>
included - $200. 752-7398 after 6:00.<lb/>
1975 RD 350-B Yamaha Cafe Racer, 200<lb/>
miles, $700 firm. Call 823-1816. after 5.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE-please call 756-5167<lb/>
FOR SALE: 72 VW bus. 758-2599.<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752 5113.<lb/>
LOST- set of keys lost Tues Feb. 17<lb/>
vicinity of Croatan, Speight and Austin<lb/>
Bldg. 3 keys with flat piece of wood<lb/>
shaped like a duck. Call 758-8907.<lb/>
7" Reel to reel tapes - wide assortment of<lb/>
music - many are factory pre-recorded.<lb/>
752-7398.<lb/>
LOST: one cassette tape, contains<lb/>
foreign language info. Please leave at<lb/>
Fountainhead FLASH envelope - no<lb/>
questions asked!<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sanyo refrigerator, 1.5cubic<lb/>
foot size, excellent for dorm, excellent<lb/>
cond. $50 756-7612<lb/>
LOST - a golf club. Power-built 5 Iron.<lb/>
Lost at driving range by Allied Health<lb/>
Bldg. Call Bobby Christianson, 752-8570<lb/>
or at 489 Aycock. Reward.<lb/>
For Sale: "34" length classical guitar in<lb/>
good cond. 2 yrs. old. Call Cindy,<lb/>
7588294.<lb/>
HOW TO USE FOUNTAINHEAD CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
SIZE: To determine the no. of lines needed for your ad, figure 40 letters and spaces<lb/>
per line. Ex. The following ad contains 67 letters and sjpaces, thus requiring 2 lines:<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 slightly used but like new<lb/>
widget. Reasonable. 758-xxxx.<lb/>
RATES: First insertion: 50 cents first line, 25 cents each additional line. Aaditional<lb/>
insertions; 25 cents each line. EX. The above 2 line ad inserted in 3 issues would<lb/>
cost:<lb/>
.50 plus .25 equals .75 for first insertion<lb/>
.25 plus .25 equals .50 each for second and third insertion.<lb/>
Therefore total cost is 1.75. No charge for lost and found classifieds<lb/>
PAYMENT: Classified payable in advance. Send check or money order along wad to:<lb/>
Fountainhead, Classified Ad Dept Old South Bldg ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
DEADLINES: Fountainhead publishes Tues. &amp; Thurs. All classifieds &amp; payments must<lb/>
be received 2 days prior to requested insertion date.<lb/>
COPY: Fountainhead tries to publish only legitimate classifieds. Fountainhead<lb/>
reserves the right to reject any and all ad copy that, in its opinion, is objectionable.<lb/>
ERRORS: In case of errors in copy for which it is responsible, Fountainhead will<lb/>
make the corrections in the earliest possible edition, without charge to the advertiser.<lb/>
<lb/>
Qf GREEty<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Delivery to dorms after 5 p.m. (at regular prices only)<lb/>
(specials not included) Min. order $2.00 "<lb/>
521 COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
IN GEORGETOWN SHOPPES<lb/>
Phone 752-6130<lb/>
PHONE IN ORDERS FOR PICK-UP<lb/>
OPEN- Mon. Thurs. 10:00 to 1:00 a.m.<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. 10 to 2 a.m. Sun. 12 to 12<lb/>
STUFFY'S SANDWICHES<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 2<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No. 4<lb/>
No. 5<lb/>
No. 6<lb/>
No. 7<lb/>
No. 8<lb/>
No. 9<lb/>
No. 10<lb/>
Spiced Ham - Cooked Salami - Cheese<lb/>
Cheese - Provolone ? Swiss ? American<lb/>
Ham - Swiss<lb/>
Ham ? Salami - Swiss<lb/>
Tuna Salad<lb/>
Roast Beef<lb/>
Turkey<lb/>
Club - Ham - Turkey ? Cheese<lb/>
Stuffy's Famous - Ham-Cappacola Salami-Cheese<lb/>
Stuffy's Star - Ham - Cappacola ? Prosciuttni ?<lb/>
Salami ? Cheese<lb/>
All Stuffy's Garnished at no extra cost with Tomatoes,<lb/>
lettuce, onions, oil. vinegar, oregano, and salt.<lb/>
BEVERAGES<lb/>
Coca Cola ? Sprite Tab - Orange Juice ? Root Beer Draft Beer - Coffee<lb/>
Iced Tea ? Lemonade - Milk ? Hawaiian Punch - Grape Hot Chocolate<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
?MH<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0007"/><lb/>
mMMkmmmwl<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
FOUyAINHEApVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
7<lb/>
Dr. Bland conducts reasearch on fungi control<lb/>
By KURT HICKMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Charles E. Bland of the ECU<lb/>
biology department is now conducting<lb/>
research on fungi control in marine<lb/>
crustaceans.<lb/>
This project is funded by the<lb/>
University of North Carolina Sea Grant<lb/>
Program, the National Oceanic and<lb/>
Atmospheric Administration, and the<lb/>
State of North Carolina.<lb/>
Crustaceans under study include blue<lb/>
crabs, dugness crabs, lobsters and<lb/>
shrimp.<lb/>
"The occurrence, distribution, life<lb/>
cycle, taxonomy, structure, and control<lb/>
of fungal diseases which affect these<lb/>
crustaceans are the essence of the<lb/>
study Bland said.<lb/>
According tc Bland, the culturing of<lb/>
TOWING<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
"We give priority to two wrecker<lb/>
services, Tenth and Evans 76 and Dunn's<lb/>
Body Shop. They have proved that they<lb/>
give the students reasonably good<lb/>
service. They will let a person have their<lb/>
car back after closing hours.<lb/>
"Most of the others will not. If a car<lb/>
was towed on Friday afternoon, ,erson<lb/>
might not be able to get thei -&amp;r til<lb/>
Monday morning.<lb/>
"These two are also the closest to<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
"Towing in the dorm area has<lb/>
decreased this year due to the freshman<lb/>
parking lots.<lb/>
"We received approximately $40,000<lb/>
last year from vehicle registration and<lb/>
parking tickets.<lb/>
"This money goes to the operation of<lb/>
the traffic office, parking signs,<lb/>
improvements to parking lots, and<lb/>
towards new parking lots. It is not used<lb/>
to pay campus police officers<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
Continued from page 4.<lb/>
variety of sellable contemporary enter-<lb/>
tainers to satisfy the students' needs for<lb/>
continuous programming.<lb/>
This year the committee has<lb/>
presented two of the finest shows in the<lb/>
history of the Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee. The first show, Linda<lb/>
Ronstadt, was not only a box office<lb/>
success but provided a totally coherent<lb/>
program especially when supported by<lb/>
two fine back-up acts like Andrew Gold<lb/>
and Goose Creek Symphony. The other<lb/>
show, James Taylor, has been referred to<lb/>
as the finest performance by a single<lb/>
artist ever to appear on ECU campus.<lb/>
These two shows represent the<lb/>
committee's ability for intuitive program-<lb/>
ming. Evidence of this fact is to look at<lb/>
any record charts or box office records,<lb/>
and one can easily appreciate the insight<lb/>
of this year's Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee to meet the students' needs.<lb/>
Special Concerts - This committee is<lb/>
responsible for selecting and presenting<lb/>
a special concert series and other<lb/>
attractions to meet the needs of students<lb/>
who desire entertainment which bridges<lb/>
the gap between Coffeehouse and Major<lb/>
Attractions. Next year the committee will<lb/>
be responsible for recreational events<lb/>
such as ice cream bingo, soap box<lb/>
derbies, frisbee contests, etc.<lb/>
To avoid the rush, Apply Now<lb/>
i in, i i a m nuiiinui mani mpiiihi<lb/>
these crustaceans for food purposes has<lb/>
become popular during the last five years<lb/>
in many parts of the world. Fungal<lb/>
diseases are a serious problem because<lb/>
fungi kill the larvae of the crustaceans,<lb/>
Bland said.<lb/>
Bland began his research six years<lb/>
ago by studying fungi common to the<lb/>
blue crab on the North Carolina coast.<lb/>
According to Bland, people came to him<lb/>
with problems of fungi control in<lb/>
crustaceans of other areas.<lb/>
Bland is now conducting crustacean<lb/>
research on specimens from Florida,<lb/>
Texas, California, Oregon, Mexico,<lb/>
Tahiti, and Honduras.<lb/>
Bland said he has visited these areas<lb/>
for research but most of the specimens<lb/>
he studies are mailed to him.<lb/>
There is a good possibility that Bland<lb/>
will conduct field research in Honduras<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
Three ECU graduate students, Tim<lb/>
Charles, Tom Tharp, and Henry Daniels,<lb/>
are assisting Bland in the study for their<lb/>
thesis research. Eddie Bennett, an ECU<lb/>
undergraduate is also helping with the<lb/>
project.<lb/>
Daniels is concentrating on the<lb/>
physiology of fungi in crustaceans and<lb/>
the chemical control of shrimp<lb/>
pathogens, Bland said.<lb/>
According to Bland, Charles is<lb/>
researching the taxonomy of different<lb/>
disease causing fungi.<lb/>
Tharp is studying the structure and<lb/>
development of lobster pathogens while<lb/>
Bennett is researching the chemical<lb/>
control of lobster pathogens, Bland said.<lb/>
Bland coordinates the work of the<lb/>
students and conducts his own research.<lb/>
According to Bland, he and the<lb/>
students are working with one chemical<lb/>
that has shown promising results of<lb/>
fungi control in the crustaceans under<lb/>
study.<lb/>
"With the growing popularity of<lb/>
culturing crustaceans for food purposes,<lb/>
this study will eventually be helpful to<lb/>
North Carolina commercial fishermen<lb/>
Bland said.<lb/>
On Jan. 29, Bland traveled to San<lb/>
Diego, Calif to present research<lb/>
findings to the World Mariculture<lb/>
Society.<lb/>
Bland has requested further funding<lb/>
for the project over the next three years.<lb/>
According to Bland, between $16,000 and<lb/>
$20,000 is needed annually to conduct<lb/>
the research.<lb/>
Radio hack<lb/>
SAVE s119.85 REALISTIC<lb/>
STEREO COMPONENT SYSTEM!<lb/>
? Realistic STA-82 AM-FM Stereo Receiver with Auto-Magic?<lb/>
FM Tuning ? Two Realistic Mini-10 Walnut Veneer<lb/>
Bookshelf Speaker Systems ? Realistic LAB-34<lb/>
Changer with Base and $17.95 Value Cartridge<lb/>
Components Sold Separately . . . 479.80<lb/>
and you can rz <lb/>
CHARGE IT 'Sk<lb/>
At Radio Shack II" imliTll<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center<lb/>
Radio<lb/>
haok<lb/>
OlAkU<lb/>
Most items also avaitab<lb/>
?( Radio Shack Oaetars<lb/>
LOO for this en<lb/>
in your neighborhood<lb/>
MA TANDY CORPORATION COMPANY<lb/>
PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmimtwi i m<lb/>
ECU receives grant for marine related research<lb/>
TERRY DANIELS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The state of North Carolina<lb/>
appropriated $24,740 for 1976 to ECU'S<lb/>
Institute for Coastal and Marine<lb/>
Resources (ICMR). The money is for<lb/>
faculty members, graduate students, and<lb/>
undergraduate students for marine<lb/>
related research.<lb/>
Four schools in the North Carolina<lb/>
university system receive money for<lb/>
marine research. These are the University<lb/>
of North Carolina, North Carolina State<lb/>
University, North Carolina University at<lb/>
Wilmington, and East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
According to Richard A. Stephenson,<lb/>
director of ICMR, East Carolina<lb/>
University receives the least amount of<lb/>
money but, due to additional grants<lb/>
received its amount has doubled.<lb/>
One year research grants to $4,000 are<lb/>
available to faculty members. Graduate<lb/>
students may get one year grants up to<lb/>
$2,000 and undergraduates may get one<lb/>
year grants to $500.<lb/>
Grants are considered for proposals<lb/>
related to marine research in North<lb/>
Carolina. Priorities are given to proposals<lb/>
from the six participating departments in<lb/>
the ICMR program. These departments<lb/>
are biology, geology, sociology-anthropo-<lb/>
logy, geography, history, and parks and<lb/>
recreation.<lb/>
"It is the taxpayers' money and<lb/>
should be used for the benefits of them<lb/>
said Stephenson. Projects funded by the<lb/>
money involve the North Carolina coast<lb/>
from Bogue Banks northward.<lb/>
According to Stephenson, the grants<lb/>
are strictly for research. This summer, a<lb/>
report from the grants will be published.<lb/>
In the fall, a 16mm film dealing with<lb/>
North Carolina's estuaries will be<lb/>
published for public instruction.<lb/>
Research results are distributed by<lb/>
the public education and service program<lb/>
of ICMR which also operated in<lb/>
conjunction with the Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education to provide speakers<lb/>
for organizations, public education<lb/>
programs, and coastal marine counseling<lb/>
services.<lb/>
"Our oceans are the last frontier and<lb/>
little is known about them. The ICMR<lb/>
program will help to not make mistakes<lb/>
in the water that were made on land<lb/>
said Stephenson.<lb/>
According to Stephenson, the ICMR<lb/>
program began two years ago. It works<lb/>
as a multi-disciplinary unit, involving<lb/>
departments with related interests at East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
The program motivates students to do<lb/>
research and puts students into the field,<lb/>
said Stephenson.<lb/>
East Carolina University's research<lb/>
center is on the Pamlico River, now<lb/>
consisting of eight buildings. Three<lb/>
employees are at the center, along with a<lb/>
state wildlife biologist. Texas Gulf Inc.<lb/>
supports 90 percent of the center, said<lb/>
Stephenson.<lb/>
Prekindergarten meets with ECU representatives<lb/>
The Pitt County Advisory Board for<lb/>
the Statewide Prekindergarten screening<lb/>
Program (SPSP) recently met with<lb/>
representatives from ECU at the ECU<lb/>
Developmental Evaluation Clinic.<lb/>
Patricia Adams, supervisor of local<lb/>
screening teams, discussed the legisla-<lb/>
tion which established the Dept. of<lb/>
Human Resources Program and descri-<lb/>
bed its benefits to prekindergarten-aged<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Dr. Malene Irons, director of the ECU<lb/>
RESEARCH<lb/>
FREE CATALOG!<lb/>
Write or call for your copy of our<lb/>
latest catalog of over 5.000 re-<lb/>
search studies These s'jdies are<lb/>
designed to HELP YOU IN THE<lb/>
PREPARATION of<lb/>
? Research Papers<lb/>
? Essays ? Case Studies<lb/>
? Speeches ? Book Reviews<lb/>
WE ALSO DO CUSTOM WRITING<lb/>
MINUTE RESEARCH<lb/>
1360 N Sandburg ?1602<lb/>
Chicago Illinois 60610<lb/>
312-337-2704<lb/>
Developmental Evaluation Clinic, discus-<lb/>
sed the vaJue of early screening of<lb/>
children for strengths and weaknesses<lb/>
affecting preacademic skills.<lb/>
Reports of the screening will be used<lb/>
by parents and local children's service<lb/>
agencies, she said. Screening teams in<lb/>
L im ? p ' X 0 0 0 0 0 AP 0 Mf<lb/>
Pitt, Martin, Bertie, Beaufort, Hyde,<lb/>
Greene and Wayne Counties will be<lb/>
supervised by the ECU clinic.<lb/>
Screening of Pitt County's 1300<lb/>
four-year-old children will attempt to<lb/>
recognize the special needs of children<lb/>
by providing a profile for each child<lb/>
reflecting development and educational<lb/>
status prior to kindergarten entry.<lb/>
Attending the Advisory Board meeting<lb/>
were officials from Pitt County agencies<lb/>
and boards, interested citizens, and<lb/>
representatives from the screening<lb/>
program.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
THEARTSHOP<lb/>
&amp; GALLERY<lb/>
817 Dickenson Ave.<lb/>
(next to Diener's Bakery)<lb/>
758-0650<lb/>
Art Supplies - hang<lb/>
your pictures<lb/>
Art classes<lb/>
MonTues. 7-9 Oil-Acrylics-Drawing<lb/>
Wed. 1-3 Sculpture <lb/>
7-9 Watercolor<lb/>
$8 a month - 2 hr. class<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
TREE<lb/>
H0US1<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
STILL SERVING THE BEST PIZZA<lb/>
AND HOT SUBS IN TOWN<lb/>
ASK YOUR FRIENDS<lb/>
Come sketch with us<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Every Sun Mon&amp;t Tues 8:00<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
?$f Enjoy the coffee house atmosphere<lb/>
created by the music of the fine musicians<lb/>
who make surprise appearances at the<lb/>
Treehouse  NO COYER CHARGE<lb/>
$AVE MONEY!<lb/>
Our selection of used texts is<lb/>
bigger and better than ever<lb/>
beforel This spring we have<lb/>
thousands of used texts which<lb/>
can save you 25 over the price<lb/>
of new texts!<lb/>
University Book Exchange<lb/>
Across Cotanche St. from the girls dorms Downtown in Greenville.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0009"/><lb/>
???B<lb/>
ftp<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
?mmm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1978<lb/>
HiWelil i mm<lb/>
9<lb/>
SLAP department will move to Belk in July<lb/>
By STEVEN MESSICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU'S department of speech, lang-<lb/>
uage and auditory pathology (SLAP) in<lb/>
the school of Allied Health will move<lb/>
from Belk building to new facilities July<lb/>
20.<lb/>
The new building, which is now under<lb/>
construction beside Belk, will provide<lb/>
facilities for therapy. All SLAP courses<lb/>
will still be taught in Belk.<lb/>
"The funds for the construction costs<lb/>
were left over from the 1969 construction<lb/>
funds for Belk said Ronald C. Thiele,<lb/>
dean of allied health.<lb/>
"The addition will free needed space<lb/>
in Belk. making more efficient use of the<lb/>
facilities<lb/>
Robert Muzzarelli, associate professor<lb/>
and director of the speech and hearing<lb/>
clinic in SLAP, cited three reasons for<lb/>
the construction of new SLAP quarters.<lb/>
"The allied health building is severely<lb/>
overcrowded with all departments being<lb/>
housed on the same floor said<lb/>
Muzzarelli.<lb/>
"Many SLAP facilities in Belk could<lb/>
be very useful to other allied health<lb/>
departments. But before the decision to<lb/>
expand was made, limited space in Belk<lb/>
prohibited the sharing of them<lb/>
explained Muzzarelli.<lb/>
"Additional space is also needed to<lb/>
cope with the large out-patient program<lb/>
in SLAP.<lb/>
"There are 119 children and adults<lb/>
who depend on the department for health<lb/>
services. These people bring their<lb/>
families to the sessions, really pushing<lb/>
the present facilities beyond their<lb/>
physical capabilities<lb/>
Dr. W. Garrett Hume, chairman of the<lb/>
SLAP department, said funding and<lb/>
planning started two years ago. The<lb/>
addition is designed exclusively for the<lb/>
SLAP department.<lb/>
"Our goal is to have the new SLAP<lb/>
building in full operation by next fall<lb/>
quarter said Hume.<lb/>
"The new building will be used mostly<lb/>
for therapy, with the SLAP research<lb/>
department remaining on the third floor<lb/>
of Belk<lb/>
"The speech and hearing clinic is<lb/>
primarily a training clinic for SLAP<lb/>
students and, secondly, provides health<lb/>
services to the community said<lb/>
Muzzarelli.<lb/>
A computer program has also been<lb/>
established for the SLAP department<lb/>
through the ECU Computing Center to<lb/>
aid the clinicians and clients.<lb/>
"The computer program will free us of<lb/>
tedious administrative responsibilities<lb/>
and will supply masters degree students<lb/>
with a bank of research data explained<lb/>
TAMERLANE<lb/>
WILL BE CLOSING IN2 WEEKS FOR ITS<lb/>
SPRING CLEANING &amp; REMODELING.<lb/>
Look for Greenville's 1 Disco to be<lb/>
even more exciting &amp; watch for<lb/>
Tamerlane's (RE-GRANDOPENING)<lb/>
PARTY) WEEKLONG<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAYS 1:30-5:30<lb/>
EfcsUne Qardeti Ceiftr<lb/>
8<lb/>
UkiM i w mite U. t TV MaMw On Kvam St txtmtim<lb/>
TatMMMM 7UMTt<lb/>
Hwn: ttomUTUtwrlmv I: J?-J: M<lb/>
WE'VE GOT A CURE<lb/>
FOR SPRING FEVER<lb/>
AFTER YOUR FIRST BEACH TRIP -<lb/>
COME SEE US!<lb/>
r Fantastic assortment of planters,<lb/>
baskets, and containers for all your<lb/>
repotting needs.<lb/>
?Jf We also have potting soil plant food<lb/>
and plants - all priced for people on a<lb/>
budget. See our variety department<lb/>
for inexpensive gifts<lb/>
i<lb/>
8<lb/>
Muzzaerlli. by the Professional Services Board of the<lb/>
"It will also help the SLAP department American Board of Examiners in Speech<lb/>
at ECU in working toward accreditation and Auditory Pathology<lb/>
 I<lb/>
SLAP ADDITION - The SLAP Department will move into their<lb/>
being constructed behind Allied Health.<lb/>
new building presently<lb/>
BmtatotiB<lb/>
tfhere dining is a distinct pleasure<lb/>
Luncheon Menu<lb/>
MONDAY- FRIDAY 11:00 A.M2:00 P.M.<lb/>
Featuring Our Tamous Salad "Bar<lb/>
Dine at our Salad Bar<lb/>
Regular Salad 1-50<lb/>
Chefs Salad2.50<lb/>
Our Sandwich Special<lb/>
Houston's Pride Steak Sandwich on a Fresh Bun, served with Lettuce,<lb/>
Tomato, Potato Chips and a Pickle<lb/>
2.25<lb/>
Christopher's Rib Eye Burger<lb/>
(Ground Rib Eye) served on a Fresh Bun with Lettuce, Tomato, Potato<lb/>
(hips, and a Pickle<lb/>
1.75<lb/>
Steaks<lb/>
4 OZ. RIB EYE4-25<lb/>
With Baked Potato and Salad<lb/>
6 OZ. RIB EYE5.25<lb/>
With Baked Potato and Salad<lb/>
Homemade Soups<lb/>
Our Famous New England Clam Chowder75<lb/>
Garden Vegetable5<lb/>
French Onion with Cheese and Croutons100<lb/>
2826 Memorial Drive For information &amp; reservations<lb/>
Adjacent to the Camelot Inn Call J. Houston Tucker, Jr. 756-6401<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0010"/><lb/>
'?iTSfft'JfMiSSKs<lb/>
10<lb/>
FOUNTA1NHEAOVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
mtmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Business offers increased<lb/>
job market for ECU grade<lb/>
KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fourth in a<lb/>
series of articles on job opportunities for<lb/>
ECU graduates.<lb/>
In previous articles in this series,<lb/>
department chairmen have constantly<lb/>
referred to business as offering job<lb/>
opportunities to science, social science,<lb/>
and fine arts and humanities graduates.<lb/>
Therefore business is probably the<lb/>
most opportune for today's job hunters.<lb/>
Surely, as the country improves its<lb/>
economy, jobs will become available.<lb/>
When new agencies are created,<lb/>
persons with a business background are<lb/>
needed to help administer the agencies'<lb/>
new programs.<lb/>
Business minded and business<lb/>
trained people are needed to help keep<lb/>
local and national economics stable.<lb/>
ECU'S business departments are<lb/>
incorporated in the School of Business<lb/>
Administration. The school offers the<lb/>
Bachelor of Science degree in Business<lb/>
Administration (BSBA) with concentra-<lb/>
tions in either economics, business<lb/>
administration, or accounting and<lb/>
finance.<lb/>
ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE<lb/>
During March, seven companies are<lb/>
coming to ECU to interview for<lb/>
accountants, according to Danny R.<lb/>
Hines, chairman of the Accounting and<lb/>
Finance department.<lb/>
The interviewers will also be looking<lb/>
for accounting majors who are potential<lb/>
certified public accountants (CPA).<lb/>
"The main function of a CPA is to<lb/>
certify that in his opinion the final stated<lb/>
amounts as prepared by the accountants<lb/>
of a particular firm were prepared in<lb/>
accordance with general accepted<lb/>
accounting principles explained Hines.<lb/>
Students desiring to be CPA's enter<lb/>
the accounting and finance department.<lb/>
"Finance students are students in the<lb/>
department who want to go into banking,<lb/>
insurance, and to some extent,<lb/>
management trainee programs Hines<lb/>
Oftentimes, accounting and finance<lb/>
students find themselves in tax work,<lb/>
and estate and trust planning, too,<lb/>
remarked Hines.<lb/>
Also, other opportunities exist for an<lb/>
accounting student when he earns a<lb/>
certificate of management accounting, or<lb/>
when he becomes a certified internal<lb/>
auditor.<lb/>
As far as ECU accounting graduates<lb/>
are concerned, between 1972 and 1975,<lb/>
inclusive, 44 per cent became CPA's. Of<lb/>
this 44 per cent, 22 per cent went to work<lb/>
for local firms, eight per cent went to<lb/>
regional firms, and 14 per cent went to<lb/>
international accounting firms.<lb/>
Fourteen per cent of the total<lb/>
graduates during this period went to<lb/>
work on internal auditing staffs in<lb/>
governmental and private positions and<lb/>
in utilities companies as well.<lb/>
"There is a solid future in<lb/>
accounting said Hines. "However,<lb/>
students in accounting and finance are<lb/>
going to have to give more attention to<lb/>
the American Institute's report that the<lb/>
requirement for entering the profession<lb/>
be a fifth year<lb/>
Hines explained that the fifth year<lb/>
would be devoted to obtaining a masters<lb/>
degree.<lb/>
"It is getting harder and harder to<lb/>
complete the CPA exam without a<lb/>
masters degree he said.<lb/>
"The job market is better for students<lb/>
with masters in accounting, and the<lb/>
Ph.D. level is very good. The Ph.D. in<lb/>
accounting is one of the most sought<lb/>
after Ph.Ds in the nation.<lb/>
There are 385 accounting majors in<lb/>
the accounting department.<lb/>
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION<lb/>
"Students who are flexible in<lb/>
geographic location find it easier to get<lb/>
the jobs they want said Frank A. Close,<lb/>
chairman of the Business Administration<lb/>
department.<lb/>
"The labor market looks good for<lb/>
students in marketing, general business,<lb/>
management, and real estate Close<lb/>
continued. "As the economy continues<lb/>
its recovery, there should be more<lb/>
See Jobs, page 18.<lb/>
e e e ??'? e e Ve'e e ??? e Ve Jeeee e e 55<lb/>
I RAZZ JAZZ RECORDS ?<lb/>
? GEORGETOWN'S SHOPPES 752-8654 g PM<lb/>
? STYX "EQUINOX"<lb/>
I JOE COCKER "JAMAICA<lb/>
SAY YOU WILL"<lb/>
5PETER FRAMPTON "ALIVE'<lb/>
$798UST $5"<lb/>
$100 0FF on ALL BONGS<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
COMING SOON:<lb/>
STEVIE WONDER'S NEW LP AND<lb/>
LED ZEPPLIN'S "PRESENCE"<lb/>
eeee eeeeeeeeeeeeeeet<lb/>
.at all a? da aiaa4aaaa4a d d eAAaajai<lb/>
I<lb/>
mm<lb/>
PITT<lb/>
TECHNICAL<lb/>
INSTITUTE<lb/>
CONTINUING EDUCATION<lb/>
DIVISION<lb/>
Spring quarter Non-Curriculum Schedule<lb/>
ALL COURSES $3.00 EXCEPT FOR DRIVERS ED. WHICH IS $17.00.<lb/>
Court Titk<lb/>
Adult Basic Education<lb/>
Adult Driver Training<lb/>
Adult High School<lb/>
Art: Drawing &amp; Painting<lb/>
Assorted Crafts<lb/>
(Decoupage, Copper<lb/>
Tooling, String Crafts)<lb/>
Auto Care For Car Owners<lb/>
Baking 8, Decorations For<lb/>
Home &amp; Commercial Use<lb/>
Bargello<lb/>
Basic First Aid<lb/>
Brick Masonry<lb/>
Cabinet Making<lb/>
Canvas Embroidery I<lb/>
Canvas Embroidery I<lb/>
Canvas Embroidery I<lb/>
Canvas Embroidery I<lb/>
Canvas Embroidery II<lb/>
Canvas Embroidery II<lb/>
Canvas Embroidery Ml<lb/>
Ceramics<lb/>
Crewel Embroidery I<lb/>
Crewel Embroidery I<lb/>
Crewel Embroidery I<lb/>
Crewel Embroidery II<lb/>
Cross Stitch<lb/>
White on White Needlepoint<lb/>
Smocking<lb/>
Crochet<lb/>
Crochet<lb/>
Crochet<lb/>
Furniture Upholstery<lb/>
Interior Decorating<lb/>
Investments J. Securities<lb/>
Knitting<lb/>
Lawnmower Repairs<lb/>
Macrame<lb/>
Photography (3Sr m)<lb/>
Piano (Basic)<lb/>
Piaee (Advanced)<lb/>
Pottery<lb/>
Quitting<lb/>
Real Est.te (Fundamentals)<lb/>
Sewing I<lb/>
Sewing I<lb/>
Sewing I<lb/>
Sewing (Advanced)<lb/>
Sewing (Advanced)<lb/>
Sign Language (Advanced)<lb/>
Stretch Sewing<lb/>
Tobacco Auctioneering<lb/>
Tobacco Ticket Marking<lb/>
Woodcarving<lb/>
R- bafara tha room num bar Indicate ttia clata will maat at Rom Htfii Schaot-<lb/>
FAEC?Clatt will meat at tha Farmvllla Adult Education Cantar, m Wilton Stroat, Farmvllla,<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
i Call tho Farmvllla Adult Education Cantar or Pin Taclmical inttituta tar intormaHon partalnlng to<lb/>
Caramict<lb/>
t Clatt will ba (Iliad with tint thirty partana calling tha Continuing Education Division at Pitt Tachnia<lb/>
Inttituta.<lb/>
f Call Pitt Tachnical Inttituta tor tha location of maclaat.<lb/>
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT THE CONTINUINO EDUCATION DIVISION OF PITT<lb/>
TECHNICAL INSTITUTE, 7M-11M. Ext. M<lb/>
Pitt Tachnical Inttituta admit all applicant without raoard to raco, tax, croad, color pt national<lb/>
origin.<lb/>
Hours SogintTimaDayRom<lb/>
663-17-10M&amp;Tu12<lb/>
603-97-10TftTh11<lb/>
443-37-10W&amp;Th12<lb/>
303-87-10MR-12<lb/>
303-117-10Th TuR 16<lb/>
243-97-102<lb/>
303-177-10W10<lb/>
243-1112-3ThH<lb/>
123-97-10TBA11<lb/>
4003-87-1M-F11<lb/>
303139-12Sat.11<lb/>
303-117-10ThR 16<lb/>
243-119-12Th-1<lb/>
304-57-10MH<lb/>
304-510-1M-1<lb/>
243-812-3M?1<lb/>
304-157-10Th4<lb/>
243-99-12Tu4<lb/>
30March7-10M-FTBA <lb/>
303-87-10MR-144<lb/>
304-47-10Tu4<lb/>
304-410-1Tu4<lb/>
243-1012-3W4<lb/>
304-1610-1F4<lb/>
243-109-12W4<lb/>
183-47-10Th4<lb/>
303-117-10ThR-161<lb/>
303-87-10MR 161<lb/>
303-129-12F4-<lb/>
603-97-10TftThTBA<lb/>
303-117-10ThR 162<lb/>
153-87-9:30MR-15C<lb/>
303-97-10Tu24<lb/>
303-117-10Th23<lb/>
213-87-10MR 162<lb/>
333-107-10W24<lb/>
173-107-10W2M<lb/>
173-87-9M220<lb/>
303-117-10ThR-125<lb/>
303-89-12M4-<lb/>
453-97-10Tu12<lb/>
66387-10MAW4<lb/>
333-97-10Tu287<lb/>
333-47-ltThFAEC<lb/>
333-117-10Th4<lb/>
66M710MAW287<lb/>
303-117-10ThR 143<lb/>
333-97-10Tu4<lb/>
80388-12M112<lb/>
803-t8-12M1U<lb/>
it3-37-10TuFA EC<lb/>
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER<lb/>
?<lb/>
iiewi<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
E<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0011"/><lb/>
m ii in mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm0mwt0mmmmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAOVOL. 7 NO. 408 MARCH 1978<lb/>
ii<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
h<lb/>
<lb/>
? <lb/>
pwe<lb/>
c?ouni System<lb/>
BftcK ?OAj jUjs Twrs. - Swi<lb/>
 ;AfcOU? ijolbj og?R<lb/>
 aoq EAST 5 ST.<lb/>
752-Nfc?9)<lb/>
IToLL Vh fT -fftM 2?c.)<lb/>
?<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mwmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0012"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
Wmam<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmwm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
Local GOP's discuss upcoming primary<lb/>
By RAY TYLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The N.C. presidential primary is<lb/>
awhile away but supporters of Ronald<lb/>
Reagan here are hinting that the former<lb/>
California governor will carry eastern<lb/>
North Carolina in his battle against<lb/>
President Gerald Ford.<lb/>
Herbert W. Lee, chairman of the First<lb/>
Congressional District Republican party<lb/>
and co-chairman of the district's Citizens<lb/>
for Reagan Committee (with Gaylord<lb/>
Perry), cited a telephone survey in Craven<lb/>
County and personal observation in Pitt<lb/>
County as indicators of Reagan's lead.<lb/>
"The results of the survey indicate<lb/>
Reagan is ahead of Ford in Craven<lb/>
County with 80 to 90 per cent of the<lb/>
registered Republicans claimed Lee.<lb/>
"We've had no polls here (Pitt), but I<lb/>
know he will carry Pitt by 55 to 60 per<lb/>
cent<lb/>
Lee's prediction was backed up by an<lb/>
ECU professor, Dr. John P. East of the<lb/>
political science department. East, a<lb/>
member of the state's Reagan for<lb/>
President Committee, was a bit more<lb/>
cautious, however.<lb/>
"Both in this area and statewide it is<lb/>
a very competitive race said East. "But<lb/>
if I was a betting man I would bet on<lb/>
Reagan<lb/>
East claimed that both the party<lb/>
leaders and the rank and file in this area<lb/>
At Caswell Center<lb/>
were behind Reagan.<lb/>
"The first district chairman and the<lb/>
county chairman are Reagan supporters<lb/>
and I have a gut instinct the rank and file<lb/>
are also said East. "But I would have to<lb/>
say it is a very competitive situation<lb/>
Both East and Lee said President<lb/>
Ford has alienated the conservative wing<lb/>
of the party by appointing liberal persons<lb/>
to key positions.<lb/>
"He started oil by appointing Nelson<lb/>
Rockefeller as vice-president. And then<lb/>
there was Richardson, Levi and<lb/>
Scranton said East. "All his major<lb/>
appointments have been liberal Republi-<lb/>
cans and that combined with detente<lb/>
with Russia and the snub of<lb/>
Solzhenitsyn has scared the daylights<lb/>
out of the conservatives<lb/>
Lee said Ford was expected to be a<lb/>
caretaker president who was appointed by<lb/>
former President Richard Nixon to satisfy<lb/>
both Republicans and Democrats. His<lb/>
best move as president would have been<lb/>
to satisfy the conservative wing of his<lb/>
own party, according to Lee.<lb/>
"He was handed the leadership by<lb/>
Nixon and the first thing he should have<lb/>
done was find somebody acceptable to<lb/>
the conservative wing of the party said<lb/>
Lee. "But he goes and appoints<lb/>
Rockefeller, a man who has run for the<lb/>
party nomination for president three<lb/>
times and never received it<lb/>
Two arguments cited in favor of the<lb/>
Ford candidacy are the fact that he is the<lb/>
incumbent and the belief that bitter<lb/>
in-party fighting will result in neither<lb/>
Republican being elected. Lee believes<lb/>
these arguments are not valid.<lb/>
"The traditional argument for the<lb/>
incumbent is he has already won once<lb/>
said Lee. "But Ford was not elected. He<lb/>
was appointed<lb/>
East said either man would have to<lb/>
make a strong appeal to independent<lb/>
voters if either was to win the general<lb/>
election.<lb/>
"The candidate would have to get out<lb/>
and get independents and Democrats to<lb/>
vote his way and, besides, I think it is<lb/>
good for the party to kick the pillars out<lb/>
and stir up things a bit.<lb/>
"The liberals used the same argument<lb/>
in 72 with Nixon. 'Don't criticize him. He<lb/>
is the president But they have realized it<lb/>
is a human institution, subject to<lb/>
criticism said East, a member of the<lb/>
1972 Electoral College.<lb/>
East, an unsuccessful candidate for<lb/>
Congress in 1966, believes that<lb/>
comments by Ford's wife, Betty, and his<lb/>
son, Jack have not helped Ford with the<lb/>
conservatives.<lb/>
"Betty is not an asset as far as<lb/>
conservatives are concerned. Her<lb/>
comments on sex and Jack's statements<lb/>
on marijuana did not help Ford<lb/>
But the main complaint the<lb/>
conservatives have with President Ford is<lb/>
that he has not listened to the right<lb/>
advisors, according to Lee.<lb/>
"He lacks the ability to chose the<lb/>
right people and he listens to the wrong<lb/>
folks Lee said.<lb/>
Lee, an executive vice-president of<lb/>
Home Savings in Greenville, said he<lb/>
approves of some of the things Ford has<lb/>
done, but believes they are not enough.<lb/>
"I approve of the vetoes of spending<lb/>
bills and the veto of the construction site<lb/>
picket bill. But we knew he was planning<lb/>
to sign the construction site bill and did<lb/>
not because of the presence of Ronald<lb/>
Reagan<lb/>
Lee claims the advantage of Reagan<lb/>
is his ability to hold the line on<lb/>
government spending.<lb/>
"When he was governor, he cut down<lb/>
on the chiselers on welfare and cut down<lb/>
on administrative costs.<lb/>
"Although the state budget increased,<lb/>
he went into office with a big debt and<lb/>
came out with a surplus so he had to be<lb/>
doing something right said Lee.<lb/>
Since there are only 4,500 registered<lb/>
Republicans in Pitt County, according to<lb/>
Lee, the Reagan campaign is planning<lb/>
little active campaigning for the primary.<lb/>
But a Reagan dinner was heid in East<lb/>
Carolina's Memorial Gym Feb. 21, with<lb/>
the chairman of the state committee for<lb/>
Reagan, Sen. Jesse Helms, as the guest<lb/>
speaker.<lb/>
Social worker Bielbattles stereotypes<lb/>
By STEVEN MESSICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
To Suellen Biel, a 1975 graduate of<lb/>
the ECU department of social work,<lb/>
mentally retarded people are very special.<lb/>
Biel is a social worker at the Caswell<lb/>
Center in Kinston, N.C. Caswell is a<lb/>
state institution for the mentally<lb/>
retarded. Her job involves the placement<lb/>
of the mentally retarded persons into the<lb/>
community.<lb/>
"It's very rewarding to see a person<lb/>
who has lived in an institution for 20<lb/>
years be able to lead as normal a life as<lb/>
possible through placement in the<lb/>
community said the green-eyed Biel.<lb/>
The mentally retarded can be placed<lb/>
back into their own homes, group<lb/>
homes, rest homes, family care homes,<lb/>
or foster homes, with the placement<lb/>
geared toward the functioning level of the<lb/>
resident.<lb/>
"When a resident is placed in the<lb/>
community, he participates in a program<lb/>
so he isn't idle during the day<lb/>
explained Biel.<lb/>
"A resident, depending upon his<lb/>
capabilities, may be involved in<lb/>
competitive employment, sheltered work-<lb/>
shops or day activity programs<lb/>
Biel said the job of placing residents<lb/>
is difficult because generally the<lb/>
community doesn't feel responsible for<lb/>
the mentally retarded and, consequently,<lb/>
doesn't provide the necessary resources<lb/>
for placement. The social worker may<lb/>
have to deal with many differences of<lb/>
opinion from the public when placing a<lb/>
resident.<lb/>
"There are, unfortunately, many<lb/>
erroneous stereotypes about mentally<lb/>
retarded persons that prevent the<lb/>
community from openly accepting them<lb/>
said Biel.<lb/>
"Deinstitutionalization of residents is<lb/>
just one of the many new trends that<lb/>
have developed in the field of mental<lb/>
health within the past ten years Biel<lb/>
emphasized with a bright smile.<lb/>
"Mental health now has a team<lb/>
concept with social workers, health care<lb/>
teachers, and psychologists working<lb/>
together for the benefit of the residents.<lb/>
The rights of the mentally retarded are<lb/>
being protected now more than ever.<lb/>
"And the whole stereotype of the<lb/>
institution is being done away with by<lb/>
having fewer restrictions, along with<lb/>
building renovations complete with bright<lb/>
colors<lb/>
If placement doesn't work out, a<lb/>
resident can return with any information<lb/>
involving the residents being kept totally<lb/>
confidential.<lb/>
For the 23 year-old Biel, a native of<lb/>
Fayetteville, the transition from student<lb/>
to professional was very smooth due to<lb/>
the three months of field work at Caswell<lb/>
during her senior year.<lb/>
"The only adjustment was that in the<lb/>
classroom situation. I didn't fully realize<lb/>
that a team makes decisions that will<lb/>
affect the residents for the rest of their<lb/>
lives explained Biel.<lb/>
Biel said she always wanted to be a<lb/>
social worker, but it wasn't until her<lb/>
senior year that she decided which<lb/>
branch to specialize in.<lb/>
"I enjoyed working with the mentally<lb/>
retarded so much in my field placement<lb/>
that I naturally decided that was the field<lb/>
of social work to pursue after<lb/>
graduation said Biel.<lb/>
Mentally retarded persons are eager to<lb/>
show the community that they can live<lb/>
meaningful lives in society and Suellen<lb/>
Biel is making sure they receive an<lb/>
opportunity to prove it.<lb/>
Scabies, or 'the itch'<lb/>
strikes ECU campus<lb/>
c1<lb/>
If you have found yourself itching<lb/>
rather profusely lately, maybe you should<lb/>
drop by the Infirmary and have yourself<lb/>
checked out. You could be on of the<lb/>
unfortunate ones on campus who have<lb/>
contracted Scabies or "the itch"<lb/>
According to Pauline L. Cox,<lb/>
Superintendent of the Infirmary, Scabies<lb/>
is caused by a little bug known as a<lb/>
mite. The mite bores down underneath<lb/>
the skin and lays its eggs. This results in<lb/>
extreme itching, that when scratched,<lb/>
causes inflammation and infection. Areas<lb/>
which are more prevalent in contracting<lb/>
Scabies are most likely to be on the<lb/>
arms, back, midriff, and sometimes the<lb/>
legs.<lb/>
Scabies are transmitted by personal<lb/>
contact The Infirmary advises against<lb/>
wearing one another's clothing and also<lb/>
sleeping in other people's beds. These<lb/>
mites crawl freely about, so they find the<lb/>
abo - mentioned to be excellent<lb/>
transportation.<lb/>
Cox feels that the majority of the<lb/>
people who think that they have<lb/>
contracted Scabies may have some other<lb/>
type of rash. However, it is best to visit<lb/>
the Infirmary and let the doctors decide<lb/>
instead of trying home remedies.<lb/>
Earlier in the year, one floor of<lb/>
Clement Dorm was fumigated. More was<lb/>
made of this than was necessary.<lb/>
Accordhg to Cox, the "epidemic" was<lb/>
more psychological than anything else.<lb/>
Everyone knows what it is like to start<lb/>
experiencing symptoms that are being<lb/>
described, whether they are present or<lb/>
not.<lb/>
No one is certain as to the origin of<lb/>
these mites. Superintendent Cox says<lb/>
that finding this is alnost as futile as<lb/>
finding a cure for the common cold. The<lb/>
best advice she can give is to practice<lb/>
hygiene.<lb/>
By MARTY CRAWFORD<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
V<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0013"/><lb/>
"wt<lb/>
imm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAOVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1071<lb/>
13<lb/>
mm<lb/>
vw<lb/>
EATURES<lb/>
Introducing Anne Dudley<lb/>
Cartoonist joins features staff<lb/>
AAq dnks aritfoofoloqy rmpo<lb/>
For W<lb/>
AHTHteopoLOG<lb/>
 ThoOtqtfT IHfT<lb/>
I WOULD iNTEEWfcW<lb/>
rYA6E L<lb/>
So t-fcT Mt"<lb/>
' t<lb/>
IMIIMIHIMHIMIM4MIIIIIIMHWMIHIII<lb/>
Riverside Restaurant<lb/>
NOWSERVING<lb/>
B<lb/>
aonacsaaaootttxattiMMX<lb/>
FAMILY STYLE FISH<lb/>
includes fresh fish. french<lb/>
fries, cole slaw, and<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
$2.50<lb/>
???"??oVKSBWJItSioKW<lb/>
SERVED DAILY FROM 4-9pm (except Mondays)<lb/>
ALSO SERVING BEER, WINE, AND SET-UPS (with ratals)<lb/>
BANQUET AND PARTY FACILITIES AVAILABLE<lb/>
RIVERSIDE<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
Open 10:30AM- 9:00PM<lb/>
7JO N. Greene St.<lb/>
Phone 752-2624<lb/>
m<lb/>
BS<lb/>
It MM<lb/>
??<lb/>
IIHHWWM<lb/>
I<lb/>
ANNE DUDLEY<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Anne Dudley has recently joined the<lb/>
Fountainhead staff as cartoonist. She is<lb/>
a 19-year-old sophomore and is a<lb/>
mathematics major from Cedar Creek,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Anne has been interested in art all her<lb/>
life. In high school, she took courses in<lb/>
art and graphics. One summer, she spent<lb/>
six weeks in Florida at the Ft.<lb/>
Lauderdale Institute of Art. The summer<lb/>
study was a high school program, and<lb/>
she took courses in photography, figure<lb/>
drawing, commercial art and water<lb/>
colors.<lb/>
There are many different types of art,<lb/>
and Anne stated that she prefers sewing<lb/>
to the others. By the word "sewing she<lb/>
means embroidery and needlepoint.<lb/>
"There are about thirty different<lb/>
stitches in embroidery Anne stated.<lb/>
Anne's hobbies include cooking,<lb/>
sewing, drawing, antique-collecting, and<lb/>
gardening.<lb/>
$tudent$ Rent-A-Box ? Reduced Rates I<lb/>
Maximize-Your Savings<lb/>
Economize-Save<lb/>
SERVICEABLE<lb/>
ECONOMICAL<lb/>
PORTABLE<lb/>
HEALTHY<lb/>
CONVENIENT<lb/>
DECORATIVE<lb/>
COMPACT<lb/>
NECESSARY<lb/>
We now rent Vespe cycles!<lb/>
Household Equipment<lb/>
Cam port<lb/>
Garden Hand Tools<lb/>
Canoes<lb/>
Camping Equipment<lb/>
You Can't Afford Not To<lb/>
Rant on annual or session basis<lb/>
Beat the High Cost of Living<lb/>
Can or Contact<lb/>
756 3S82<lb/>
3<lb/>
SLIDE RULE SALE<lb/>
STUDENTSSUPPLY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
Keuffel &amp; Esser o<lb/>
 Teledvm Posf W<lb/>
Sama &amp; Eta mi Circular<lb/>
ALL AT 50 OFF<lb/>
SHOP EARLY Cr SAVE<lb/>
sH<lb/>
Iff<lb/>
?<lb/>
mwm<lb/>
HDull<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0014"/><lb/>
??I<lb/>
??HHP<lb/>
14<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
m ? mtmm <lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
HWIMIH"<lb/>
SPRING ClI<lb/>
WE'RE MO VING 0URE?c<lb/>
ROOM FOR MOK<lb/>
L<lb/>
SPEAKER OF THE YEAR<lb/>
YOU CAN HEAR THEM AT THE LOFT OR AT THE ATTIC<lb/>
I NFINITY 3000 J SPEAKERS<lb/>
LIST $19960 EACH<lb/>
SALE! $29900 PAIR<lb/>
3 WAY SPEAKER SYSTEM<lb/>
Dual 1214<lb/>
(used) with Pickering Cartridge<lb/>
New $200.00 Sale $75.00<lb/>
Dual 1225<lb/>
(used) with Shure M91 ED<lb/>
New $240.00 Sale $96.00<lb/>
(2) AR3A<lb/>
speakers (used) 3 way systems<lb/>
New $590.00 pair Sale $325.00 pair<lb/>
(2) Interaudio 4000<lb/>
(Demos)<lb/>
New $469.00 pair Sale $198.00 pair<lb/>
RCA<lb/>
AM-FM Rec<lb/>
New $1.25.00<lb/>
(used)<lb/>
t $50.00<lb/>
Dynaco PA<lb/>
pre-am plifier<lb/>
New $130.00<lb/>
(2) JVC 8T<lb/>
Decks (used)<lb/>
New $55.00<lb/>
d)<lb/>
la $75.00<lb/>
T<lb/>
$25.00<lb/>
(2) Bose 901<lb/>
speakers wit<lb/>
New $664.00 pail<lb/>
jalizer<lb/>
d $390.00 pa<lb/>
Stereo Warehouse<lb/>
112 EAST 5TH STREET 752-9100 P.O. BOX 602<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. 27834<lb/>
 i m<lb/>
<lb/>
SPLasse<lb/>
CARTR1C<lb/>
Shure M91ED<lb/>
List $65.00 Sale $21.00<lb/>
Shure M55E<lb/>
List $35.00 Sale 118.00<lb/>
Shure M95ED<lb/>
List $70.00 Sale $29.00<lb/>
Li<lb/>
A<lb/>
Li<lb/>
A<lb/>
Li<lb/>
SOONT<lb/>
BEt<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0015"/><lb/>
15<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
 ii mmmmiiii tamfmtmmmtmmmmm<lb/>
?tm<lb/>
m<lb/>
CEARANCE<lb/>
V0fWu'FF.7.TO MA KE<lb/>
)R SPECIAL DEALS<lb/>
CA<lb/>
l-FM Rec<lb/>
v $1.25.00<lb/>
(used)<lb/>
0 $50.00<lb/>
naco PAlf<lb/>
?am plifien<lb/>
 $130.00<lb/>
d)<lb/>
$75.00<lb/>
JVC 8T<lb/>
:ks (used)<lb/>
'$55.00<lb/>
$25.00<lb/>
Bose 901<lb/>
akers wit<lb/>
$664.00 pail<lb/>
jalizer<lb/>
d $390.00 pair<lb/>
Pioneer 1010<lb/>
AM-FM Receiver 100 watts RMS per channel<lb/>
New $699.95 Sale $425.00<lb/>
Marantz 2325<lb/>
AM-FM Receiver 125 watts RMS per channel<lb/>
New $799.95 Sale $480.00<lb/>
JVC C01668<lb/>
Cassette Deck (used)<lb/>
New $429.95 Sale $185.00<lb/>
Sony SQ 200<lb/>
4-channel decoder amplifier (used)<lb/>
New $150.00 Sale $75.00<lb/>
SONY 7055 RECEIVER<lb/>
45 WATTS RMS PER CHANNEL<lb/>
LIST$45900<lb/>
SALE$379??<lb/>
SHERWOOD 7110 RECEIVER<lb/>
17 WATTS RMS PER CHANNEL<lb/>
LIST$259??<lb/>
SALE$19900<lb/>
e $21.00<lb/>
e $18.00<lb/>
a $29.00<lb/>
BECOME<lb/>
SOUNDS<lb/>
impRESSive.iNi<lb/>
mm<lb/>
muiimmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAOVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1979<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Styx outdoes Cocker in Minges<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
joe Cocker and Styx came to Minges<lb/>
Coliseum Friday night and delivered a<lb/>
rock-and-soul show that few in the<lb/>
sparse crowd are liable to forget, if for<lb/>
no other reason than for the stage<lb/>
presence of the two feature acts and the<lb/>
opening act, Skyhook.<lb/>
Skyhook, a group with 30 hit records<lb/>
in Australia, presented one of the<lb/>
strangest 30 minute shows ever put on in<lb/>
Minges, complete with an entire series of<lb/>
exploding lights and burlesque stage<lb/>
props. Among the props presented by the<lb/>
Australians, on their first American tour,<lb/>
were the costumes, as each of the<lb/>
group's five members displayed. There<lb/>
was one group member in a spider outfit,<lb/>
another dressed as a white cowboy, and<lb/>
yet another was done up like David<lb/>
Bowie.<lb/>
It was obvious by the group's<lb/>
carrying-ons that they were trying to<lb/>
establish an image for themselves-and<lb/>
undoubtedly they did in this show. The<lb/>
questions which remains, though, is<lb/>
what kind of image?<lb/>
After Skyhook's antics, though, the<lb/>
show really got underway and regardless<lb/>
of which concert-goers liked better, the<lb/>
musically primed Styx or the alcohol-<lb/>
ically-primed Joe Cocker, each put on a<lb/>
show which was well worth the money.<lb/>
Styx came on stage with a rocking<lb/>
number and never stopped pleasing the<lb/>
somewhat disappointing audience<lb/>
throughout its hour-long set, which<lb/>
included a 15-minute encore.<lb/>
Remarking several times on the nature<lb/>
of the crowd, lead singer Dennis<lb/>
DeYoung kept the group moving right<lb/>
JOE COCKER, the alcoholic wonder, captured in dassic form in Minges Coliseum,<lb/>
March 5. In his new, heavier form, more than one fan was heard to remark about his<lb/>
George Carlin iookalike. Bring the vomrt bucket, Joe.<lb/>
along, through their hits "Lorelei" and<lb/>
"Lady Even without these familiar<lb/>
tunes, though, the group came on<lb/>
strong, with its strong guitar leads and<lb/>
the excellent musicianship of the<lb/>
drummer.<lb/>
Between "Lorelei" and "Lady" the<lb/>
group performed "Sweet Madame Blue"<lb/>
off its latest album. As were all the<lb/>
pieces in the group's act it was done<lb/>
with the utmost of professional quality.<lb/>
Pausing midway through the show to<lb/>
catch his breath, DeYoung, adorned in a<lb/>
white lace blouse, white boots, and black<lb/>
tights, drew a response from the crowd<lb/>
when he said, "Someone told me this is<lb/>
the campus where all the hell-raisers go,<lb/>
so we are going to motivate you. Let's<lb/>
rasie some hell<lb/>
Whether or not the hell-raisers were at<lb/>
the concert, at the beach, or at home,<lb/>
Styx gave the crowd quite a show,<lb/>
reluming for an encore after a standing<lb/>
ovation.<lb/>
The group's first time in Greenville,<lb/>
DeYoung thanked the crowd for such a<lb/>
warm appaluse. "We have gotten one hell<lb/>
of a reception for our first time in<lb/>
Greenville. We hope you are glad you<lb/>
came, and we have had such a good time<lb/>
that we are going to play one more<lb/>
rock-and-roller for you<lb/>
And the group let into a 15-minute<lb/>
encore number that left the group<lb/>
hollering for more.<lb/>
With Styx finished for the night, it<lb/>
was Joe Cocker's turn. Perhaps Cocker<lb/>
had prepared himself a little too well for<lb/>
the show, for he was definitely a little<lb/>
looped when he took the stage and it<lb/>
Continued on page 17.<lb/>
A GUITARIST for Skyhook, one of Australia's top glitter bands. Though their<lb/>
glitter-gimmick format turned off some, backstage visitors remarked that in reality<lb/>
they were "down to earth, straight Can't tell a book?<lb/>
STYX'S guitarist's, Chuck Panazzo and James Young, electrify Minges with the night's<lb/>
best performance. Although some complained about the dedbai count, few could<lb/>
disagree about the group's quality.<lb/>
m<lb/>
MM<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0017"/><lb/>
MWBeBHeHMHBWeflBHeHH<lb/>
PsMsPH<lb/>
??????????<lb/>
?<lb/>
M<lb/>
p<lb/>
AP<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 401 MARCH 1070<lb/>
H?W<lb/>
17<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Cocker<lb/>
Continued from pege 16.<lb/>
really appeared that he may not make it.<lb/>
through the first 30 minutes.<lb/>
But Joe Cocker is a professional and<lb/>
so is his group, sho are all a good deal<lb/>
better musicians than Cocker is a singer.<lb/>
With his band and his singing trio of<lb/>
good-looking ladies carrying him through<lb/>
the first 30 minutes, sometimes even<lb/>
cutting numbers short when it was<lb/>
obvious the headliner had forgotten<lb/>
where to come in, Cocker slowly sobered<lb/>
up.<lb/>
And with his group, his roadies, and<lb/>
a rather intoxicated (or whatever)<lb/>
gentleman in the audience, urging him<lb/>
on, Cocker remained on stage and the<lb/>
crowd patiently stayed where they were.<lb/>
And if they stayed for the final 45<lb/>
minutes of the show, they were well<lb/>
rewarded, because drunk or not, Cocker<lb/>
proved his talent with his final six or<lb/>
seven numbers.<lb/>
Prancing all over the stage and often<lb/>
times coming dangerously close to<lb/>
falling, or at least it seemed that way, he<lb/>
began to woo the crowd alive.<lb/>
With the number "Put Out the Light"<lb/>
the show switched keys. The singing trio<lb/>
of ladies no longer needed to laugh<lb/>
about Cocker's condition, but instead<lb/>
could really enjoy themselves, as Cocker<lb/>
and his band joined in to carry the show<lb/>
to success.<lb/>
Following the rejuvenating "Put Out<lb/>
the Light which really brought the first<lb/>
signs of mass enthusiasm from the<lb/>
crowd, Cocker broke into the show-stop-<lb/>
per "You Are So Beautiful proving in<lb/>
fact that he could handle himself after<lb/>
all.<lb/>
Finishing with vigor, Cocker perfor-<lb/>
med "Feelin' Alright" and It's High Time<lb/>
THIS<lb/>
omnipresent at the front<lb/>
Friday until he received<lb/>
Cocker.<lb/>
We Lflt" without a flaw and left the<lb/>
crowd stomping for an encore, which<lb/>
or'y 45 minutes sooner had seemed a<lb/>
total impossiblity.<lb/>
And what an encore Cocker did. For<lb/>
his encore number, Cocker did "With A<lb/>
Little Help From My Friends Maybe<lb/>
there was a little more to this song this<lb/>
time than usual, because Cocker's<lb/>
friends, professionally in the band and<lb/>
respectfully in the audience, came<lb/>
through for him Friday night.<lb/>
Despite his drunkenness at the outset<lb/>
of the show, both hung in with him and<lb/>
allowed him to gain his senses better<lb/>
and deliver a show that was memorable.<lb/>
All in all, the performances of<lb/>
Skyhook, Styx and Joe Cocker added up<lb/>
to an evening that was not only unique<lb/>
and out of the ordinary, but also an<lb/>
evening that was a musical success. And<lb/>
under the circumstances, that was more<lb/>
than enough.<lb/>
KC?aVNSCUt<lb/>
WANTS TO WELCOME BACK<lb/>
ALL STUDENTS.<lb/>
BE SURE TO COME IN AND CHECK<lb/>
OUT OUR WEEKL Y SPECIALS!<lb/>
INCLUDED THIS WEEK ARE<lb/>
Styx "Equinox"<lb/>
and<lb/>
Joe Cocker's<lb/>
'Jamaica Say You Will"<lb/>
Both $6.98<lb/>
List for ONLY $3.99<lb/>
COME AND CHECK US OUT!<lb/>
208 E. Fifth St.<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
MURRAY PERAHIA, Pianist<lb/>
Wednesday, March 10, 1976<lb/>
8:00 p.m. Mendenhail<lb/>
Student Center Theatre<lb/>
In just a few seasons, Murray Perahia<lb/>
has made the kind of impact on the<lb/>
international music scene that comes<lb/>
only once in a decade. In September,<lb/>
1972, he became the first A- arican to<lb/>
win the Leeds International Pianoforte<lb/>
Competition, and over 50 major<lb/>
engagements and his subsequent highly<lb/>
acclaimed London recital debut "won him<lb/>
an astonishing reception of the kind<lb/>
usually reserved for Rubinstein" Christian<lb/>
Science Monitor.<lb/>
Prior to hit; victory at Leeds, Perahia<lb/>
had already established himself in the<lb/>
U.S having performed with the New<lb/>
York Philharmonic, Milwaukee, Denver,<lb/>
Quebec, St. Louis, and Seattle<lb/>
Symphonies.<lb/>
The Student Union Artists Series<lb/>
Committee is pleased to present this<lb/>
highly-acclaimed pianist. Tickets for the<lb/>
concert may be obtained in the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhail Student<lb/>
Center as follows: ECU students - $1.50,<lb/>
faculty and staff - $4.00, and public -<lb/>
$4.00.<lb/>
LEO KOTTKE, noted for his exceptional guitar pertormence, veil oe m ooncen on<lb/>
Thursday, March 11 at 8:00 p.m. in Wright Auditorium. Tickets an $1.00 for ECU<lb/>
students and $3.00 for the public and can be purchased at the Centra) Ticket Office in<lb/>
Only public tickets sold at the door.<lb/>
VWrtWVWWVWWWWWfWWWWWAfVWVWSWWWVA<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
TUBS -<lb/>
WED ?<lb/>
THURS<lb/>
FRI<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
SUN<lb/>
MON<lb/>
NANTUCKET<lb/>
GOOD HUMOR<lb/>
SKY KING WITH<lb/>
CHRIS BRUBECK<lb/>
JESSE BOLT<lb/>
JESSE BOLT<lb/>
TERRA NOVA<lb/>
SUTTERSGOLD<lb/>
" EAT FAMILY STYLE "<lb/>
OLDE T0WNE INN<lb/>
-<lb/>
Monday - Thursday<lb/>
4:30-7:30<lb/>
$2.25 plus tax<lb/>
one entree I all the vegetables,<lb/>
bread I tea you can eat<lb/>
II7E.5th ST. 758-1991<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0018"/><lb/>
18<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
n<lb/>
?i m?<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Business opportunities increase for ECU graduates<lb/>
Continued from page 10.<lb/>
opportunities available tor graduates<lb/>
Students in the business administra-<lb/>
tion department go into wholesale and<lb/>
retail sales, marketing, management<lb/>
trainee positions, and real estate. They<lb/>
also go into general business, and<lb/>
banking and finance.<lb/>
Among the advantages of the masters<lb/>
degree in business administration, is it<lb/>
offers a student an opportunity to go into<lb/>
a middle management area, rather than a<lb/>
management trainee area.<lb/>
As of Fall quarter 1975, there were<lb/>
900 majors in the business administra-<lb/>
tion department.<lb/>
ECONOMICS<lb/>
In economics, it is almost imperative<lb/>
that students get a masters degree before<lb/>
leaving school, according to Louis H.<lb/>
Zincone, chairman of the Department of<lb/>
Economics. "<lb/>
"Economics deals with research<lb/>
said Zincone. "Because of the<lb/>
specialization of the economics student,<lb/>
he has to look for job opportunities. Not<lb/>
everyone is looking for him because of<lb/>
his specialization.<lb/>
"With a bachelor's degree, an<lb/>
economist can only fill in formulas for<lb/>
which no education is needed<lb/>
"The undergraduate cannot do any<lb/>
analysis simply because he does not<lb/>
know enough said Zincone.<lb/>
Between 1972 and 1975, inclusive, 26<lb/>
per cent of ECU'S economics graduates<lb/>
went into management and sales, and 17<lb/>
per cent went into banking, credit and<lb/>
insurance. Also, 13 per cent of the<lb/>
graduates went into manufacturing while<lb/>
12 per cent went into public accounting.<lb/>
Of the economics students graduating<lb/>
between 1972 and 1975, fifty-one per cent<lb/>
remained in North Carolina, and 34 per<lb/>
cent accepted jobs out of the state. The<lb/>
other students either accepted positions<lb/>
with the government or attended graduate<lb/>
school. <lb/>
In a research capacity, the economist<lb/>
work is similar to that of academic<lb/>
researchers. The economists uses<lb/>
research to project future economic<lb/>
conditions, for example, according to<lb/>
Zincone.<lb/>
The economics department has 60<lb/>
majors.<lb/>
SCHOOL OF TECHNOLOGY<lb/>
The Business Education and Office<lb/>
Administration department, which is in<lb/>
the School of Technology, prepares<lb/>
teachers of business, and it trains<lb/>
executive secretaries.<lb/>
"In teacher education, we are finding<lb/>
more jobs available in vocational areas,<lb/>
and distributive education said William<lb/>
Durham, chairman of the department.<lb/>
"Wherever career exploration pro-<lb/>
grams are being developed, jobs are<lb/>
becoming available for our graudates.<lb/>
"The nonvocational jobs are not as<lb/>
plentiful as the vocational jobs in the<lb/>
extended day and optional school<lb/>
programs<lb/>
Distributive education programs con-<lb/>
sist of the student going to school<lb/>
one-half of the day, and working<lb/>
one-half of the day.<lb/>
Over half of the department's 129<lb/>
majors are women.<lb/>
Degrees offered by the department of<lb/>
business education and office adminis-<lb/>
tration include an undergraduate and a<lb/>
graduate teaching degree.<lb/>
"We feel reasonably good said<lb/>
Durham. "We are not as frustrated as<lb/>
other teacher programs<lb/>
Durham says she is currently looking<lb/>
for four teachers now. And, more than 20<lb/>
job announcements reporting openings<lb/>
for college teachers have come across<lb/>
his desk since September.<lb/>
Most of these college positions seem<lb/>
to be in the midwest, he said.<lb/>
INDUSTRIAL AND TECHNICAL<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
"We've never been able to fill the<lb/>
requested number of teaching positions<lb/>
said Norman C. Penered, chairman of the<lb/>
department of Industrial and Technical<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
The department of Industrial and<lb/>
Technical Education is also in the School<lb/>
of Technology.<lb/>
"Two and one-half years ago, we had<lb/>
14 requests for every student we had he<lb/>
continued. "As eastern North Carolina is<lb/>
becoming industrialized, managerial<lb/>
positions are being created<lb/>
School of Technology graduates are<lb/>
getting the jobs they want if they are<lb/>
mobile, Penered said.<lb/>
Jobs available are varied, and none is<lb/>
more popular than the other.<lb/>
"The teaching field may be hurt in the<lb/>
future because teachers are not getting<lb/>
raises said Penered. "Students may<lb/>
decide to go to jobs which offer better<lb/>
salaries.<lb/>
"Technology graduates start with<lb/>
higher salaries in industry than in<lb/>
teaching.<lb/>
The weakest area for job placement in<lb/>
industrial technology is in graphic arts,<lb/>
according to Penered.<lb/>
Although the department has 229<lb/>
majors, Penered says that number will<lb/>
not create a crowded market.<lb/>
About ten members of the enrollment<lb/>
are women.<lb/>
Industrial Technology is a degree<lb/>
program designed to prepare individuals<lb/>
for the technical managerial, production<lb/>
or supervisory, and related types of<lb/>
professional leadership positions in<lb/>
industry.<lb/>
The department of industrial and<lb/>
technical education offers three under-<lb/>
graduate degrees, they include a<lb/>
teaching, non-teaching and a technical<lb/>
teaching degree. It also offers two<lb/>
masters degrees.<lb/>
SCHOOL OF HOME ECONOMICS<lb/>
Home economics is an applied field.<lb/>
It can be associated with psychology, or<lb/>
business, or any number of other fields.<lb/>
"The job opportunities in the field are<lb/>
excellent, according to Miriam B. Moore,<lb/>
chairman of the ECU Home Economics<lb/>
department. "The greatest demand is on<lb/>
the doctorate level<lb/>
Each week she receives about nine<lb/>
job announcements. Currently, Dr. Moore<lb/>
is looking for four faculty members.<lb/>
"Jobs are somewhat scarce on the<lb/>
undergraduate level she said. "But if<lb/>
the graduate is mobile, he can get a job<lb/>
Last year, only three of the<lb/>
department's graduates did not get a job.<lb/>
They were unsuccessful in getting a job<lb/>
because they could not move out of the<lb/>
area<lb/>
All home economics graduates do not<lb/>
become teachers. Some work in<lb/>
agricultural extension services, and<lb/>
others work in mental health centers.<lb/>
The graduates are prepared for a<lb/>
variety of jobs since the School of Horn?<lb/>
Economics offers a variety of curricula,<lb/>
said Moore.<lb/>
Expert Alteration<lb/>
Service Available<lb/>
Charles St.<lb/>
Next to Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.<lb/>
MonSat.<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS on Nantucket<lb/>
Island. Locally published book lists<lb/>
hundreds of jobs, how to find<lb/>
them, accomodations, survival.<lb/>
Send $4.95 to Ambergris Public-<lb/>
ations, Box 883, Nantucket, Mass.<lb/>
02554. 2-4 weeks delivery.<lb/>
Material and<lb/>
OaaU S4Wrv Workmanship<lb/>
Shoep,2S2<lb/>
ShOP 113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
THIS WEEK AT THE<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
NEED RESUME'<lb/>
PHOTOS?<lb/>
Call Greenville's Newest<lb/>
Professional Studio<lb/>
752-0123<lb/>
dnageA<lb/>
creative r<lb/>
PMOTOORAPHY<lb/>
Weddings Portrait<lb/>
Commercial<lb/>
2904 FAST 10th STRF I I<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C 27834<lb/>
BACK AGAIN- BECOMING ONE OF<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S FAVORITE BANDS<lb/>
??r Tues ? Fri<lb/>
?X- Sat-DISCO ? no cover charge<lb/>
?X- Sun - LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
Coming next week "TIME SQUARE" don't miss'EM<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
1<lb/>
?'???X<lb/>
?:<lb/>
P<lb/>
<lb/>
P<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0019"/><lb/>
fSSUKmSBK ?? 45Sir ? ? '?<lb/>
ion<lb/>
i of<lb/>
s in<lb/>
and<lb/>
Kter-<lb/>
e a<lb/>
nical<lb/>
two<lb/>
ield.<lb/>
1, or<lb/>
Ids.<lb/>
1 are<lb/>
xxe,<lb/>
nics<lb/>
s on<lb/>
nine<lb/>
oore<lb/>
the<lb/>
Jt if<lb/>
ob<lb/>
the<lb/>
job.<lb/>
job<lb/>
the<lb/>
not<lb/>
in<lb/>
and<lb/>
r a<lb/>
omp<lb/>
cula,<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAOVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
19<lb/>
Eighth Tryon symposium<lb/>
features varied lectures<lb/>
The furnishings, music, political<lb/>
cartoons, silver and tavern life of colonial<lb/>
America are among the topics of<lb/>
scheduled lectures at the eighth annual<lb/>
Tryon Palace Symposium in New Bern,<lb/>
March 21-23.<lb/>
The symposium is presented by the<lb/>
Tryon Palace Commission and the ECU<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education in<lb/>
cooperation with the Tryon Palace<lb/>
Restoration and the N.C. Division of<lb/>
Archives and History.<lb/>
Persons interested in the period's<lb/>
decorative arts, culture and social history<lb/>
are invited to participate in the three-day<lb/>
symposium.<lb/>
Thomas Thome, professor emeritus of<lb/>
fine arts at the College of William and<lb/>
Mary, Williamsburg, Va. will discuss<lb/>
political cartoons of the Revolutionary<lb/>
period.<lb/>
Prof. Thome will concentrate on<lb/>
caricatures, illustrated satires and<lb/>
lampoons of political significance from<lb/>
1763 to 1783, when the Revolutionary<lb/>
spirit was kindled by mass-produced<lb/>
depictions of corruption in high places.<lb/>
Interestingly, most of the pro-Ameri-<lb/>
can political satires were produced and<lb/>
printed in England, a paradox which<lb/>
Thome's discussion will explore futher.<lb/>
John Davis, curator of metal work for<lb/>
the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation,<lb/>
will address the gathering on American<lb/>
silversmiths in 1776 and show slides of<lb/>
museum items from the Williamsburg<lb/>
collection.<lb/>
An expert on 18th century silver and<lb/>
pewter, Davis is the author of articles<lb/>
published in Antiques Magazine and in a<lb/>
Winterthur Conference Report as well as<lb/>
detailed exhibition catalogues.<lb/>
The Tory establishment in Revolution-<lb/>
ary New Bern is the topic of a lecture by<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Parramore of the Meredith<lb/>
College history faculty.<lb/>
He will devote part of the lecture to<lb/>
Governor Tryon and his circle and life in<lb/>
the Tryon Palace itself, which he calls<lb/>
"Camelot on the Neuse<lb/>
In addition, the Parramore lecture will<lb/>
cover Tryon's successor, Josiah Martin,<lb/>
who was also surrounded by a loyal<lb/>
circle even during the final attacks by<lb/>
revolutionaries which led to Martin's<lb/>
hasty departure from New Bern.<lb/>
Mary Mason Campbell, author of the<lb/>
"New England Butt'ry Shelf Cookbook"<lb/>
and "Betty Crocker's Kitchen Gardens"<lb/>
will speak on early American taverns:<lb/>
their food, drink and services; their<lb/>
furnishings, signs and other decorative<lb/>
features; and their importance in the<lb/>
social structure of the Revolutionary era.<lb/>
She is well known as an authority on<lb/>
early American gardening and food<lb/>
preparation, and is now engaged on a<lb/>
book concerning herb lore of the past.<lb/>
Novie M. Greene, harpsichordist and<lb/>
artist-in-residence at Lees-McRae Col-<lb/>
lege, Banner Elk, will present a program<lb/>
on music in colonial America and<lb/>
perform on two harpsichords.<lb/>
A teacher and performer of early<lb/>
keyboard music, Ms. Greene has been<lb/>
virginialist and musical arranger for the<lb/>
Appalachian Early Music Consort. She is<lb/>
at president a candidate for the PhD<lb/>
degree in musicology from Case Western<lb/>
Reserve University.<lb/>
ECU receives research grant<lb/>
The ECU Foundation has awarded a<lb/>
new grant of $20,000 to the university<lb/>
Research Council to aid in fostering and<lb/>
promoting research at ECU.<lb/>
The latest Foundation grant brings to<lb/>
a total of $80,500 the amount of<lb/>
contributions to the ECU Research<lb/>
?.?-?.?.?.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
.?:?,????<lb/>
Council by the Foundation in the past<lb/>
five years. Dr. Joseph G. Boyette, Dean<lb/>
of the Graduate School and chairman of<lb/>
the Research Council, expressed appre-<lb/>
ciation for the Foundation's continuing<lb/>
"strong support of the research and<lb/>
publication needs of the university<lb/>
Have you considered<lb/>
a career in<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
BUSINESS?<lb/>
Our two-year program, Master in International Busi-<lb/>
ness Studies, includes intensive language study;<lb/>
in-depth cultural studies; business skills; and a six-<lb/>
month work experience in Latin America or Europe.<lb/>
Other Djsiness graduate degree programs at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of South Carolina include master's in business<lb/>
administration, economics, accountancy and trans-<lb/>
portation; and Ph.D. in business administration and<lb/>
economics.<lb/>
For further information clip and mail this coupon to:<lb/>
Director of Graduate Studies<lb/>
College of Business Administration<lb/>
The University of South Carolina<lb/>
Columbia, South Carolina 29208<lb/>
m<lb/>
Name.<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
(Paid for by SC Partnership Fund)<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
in<lb/>
m<lb/>
.??v.v.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
HAVEAGOODTIMEM<lb/>
The Treehouse Gang.<lb/>
j<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
SUPPL Y<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
WRGHT<lb/>
BUILDING<lb/>
Announcing the<lb/>
Texas Instruments SR-52<lb/>
Tremendous<lb/>
Programming<lb/>
Power SR-52<lb/>
?m<lb/>
6.<lb/>
it<lb/>
Evaluate complicated<lb/>
funtcions. Calculate<lb/>
(transcendental<lb/>
functions. Find the roots<lb/>
of: F(x) ? 0 Find numerical<lb/>
solutions to ordinary<lb/>
differential equations.<lb/>
Invert and multiply<lb/>
matrices. Solve<lb/>
simulataneous algebraic<lb/>
equations. Integrate a<lb/>
' ufr ?S,<lb/>
i<lb/>
&amp;?&amp; ???- ?r ?<lb/>
?-I?? ,<lb/>
? 5 ca-<lb/>
SR-52 ?"?"?<lb/>
HANDHELD<lb/>
PROGRAMMING<lb/>
POWER<lb/>
function between<lb/>
arbitrary limits. Determine<lb/>
best-fit values for statistical samples.<lb/>
Now you can set up calculations like<lb/>
these just once. Record them.<lb/>
Then use them for years.<lb/>
30 DAY FREE REPLACEMENT<lb/>
ON DEFECTIVE UNITS<lb/>
WE HA VE OTHER MODELS<lb/>
A VAILABLEA T NEW PRICES<lb/>
uwas Instruments<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
Adaptors For 1200<lb/>
T11200<lb/>
T11250<lb/>
1500<lb/>
2550<lb/>
2560 II<lb/>
SR 16<lb/>
SR16II<lb/>
SR50A<lb/>
and 1250<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
SUPPL Y STORE<lb/>
Mon-Fri 8:30am 5pm<lb/>
Sat- 9am 12noon<lb/>
Wright Bldg.<lb/>
Iniversity<lb/>
ulator<lb/>
?HTlCiJr<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0020"/><lb/>
20<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
WWMIW<lb/>
???! ll?i<lb/>
ELECTRONIC<lb/>
SUPERMARKET'S<lb/>
lANNUAL<lb/>
ALL NEW<lb/>
MERCHANDISE!<lb/>
FANTASTIC SAVINGS!<lb/>
HOUR<lb/>
Thursday, March 11th, 10 to 9<lb/>
Friday, March 12th, 10 to 9<lb/>
Saturday, March 13th, 10 to 6<lb/>
We will be Closed Wednesday to prepare for the sale.<lb/>
CBi S<lb/>
CraigReg.Sale<lb/>
4101155.95129.95<lb/>
4102179.95149.95<lb/>
4104199.95169.95<lb/>
4103239.95199.95<lb/>
Kris Vega159.95<lb/>
with free normal installation<lb/>
CB Receivers39.9524.95<lb/>
Anti-Theft Bracket14.9510.95<lb/>
T.V. Antennas<lb/>
Channel Master T.V.<lb/>
Color Antenna<lb/>
(Model No. 1164)<lb/>
&amp; Rotor System<lb/>
$135<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Normal<lb/>
Installation<lb/>
Litton<lb/>
Litton is Drastically<lb/>
Changing the way<lb/>
America cooks.<lb/>
ALL MICROWAVE OVENS REDUCED<lb/>
DURING THIS 30 HOUR SALE<lb/>
SAVE TIME, MONEY<lb/>
&amp; FOOD<lb/>
?J<lb/>
Portable Radios<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Casst te Players<lb/>
with Weather Bands<lb/>
COLOR<lb/>
We Have A<lb/>
Complete Line of CB<lb/>
Antennas &amp; Accessories<lb/>
INCLUDING<lb/>
Vanco SWR-1 Meter<lb/>
VancoSPB-4 Speaker<lb/>
Vanco PH-5 Horn Speaker<lb/>
All Antenna Specialist Antennas<lb/>
Drastically Reduced For 30 Hours.<lb/>
ALL FLOOR MODEL SONY<lb/>
COMPACTS &amp; SONY TV'S<lb/>
REDUCED FOR THIS<lb/>
30 HOUR SALE<lb/>
ALL FLOOR MODEL<lb/>
CRAIG COMPACTS<lb/>
REDUCED<lb/>
TtST<lb/>
BLANK TAPES<lb/>
BASF TAPES<lb/>
Reg.<lb/>
8 TRACK 45 MIN. '3.00 '<lb/>
8 TRACK 90 MIN. 3.75 $<lb/>
CASSETTE 60 MIN?3.75 J<lb/>
CASSETTE 90 MIN. '5.60 $<lb/>
CASSETTE 120 MIN. '7.50 '<lb/>
LH SUPER Reel to Reel M0.60<lb/>
LH '8.49<lb/>
CRAIG<lb/>
SPEAKERS<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
CRAIG SPEAKERS<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
AUTO STEREOS &amp; CONVERTERS<lb/>
CRAIG ANY IN DASH ? 9427<lb/>
AM FM TAPE PLAYER<lb/>
ANY UNDER DASH 9405<lb/>
AM-FM TAPE PLAYER<lb/>
SANYO a<lb/>
FT 890 8 TR. 69.95<lb/>
FT 819 8 TR 59.95<lb/>
J.I.I ??<lb/>
607 CASSETTE 49.95<lb/>
828P 8 TRACK 39.95<lb/>
ALSO: FM CONVERTERS<lb/>
FM ANTENNA AMPLIFIER<lb/>
Sylvania<lb/>
A well known Consumer Magazine<lb/>
recently Top-Rated Sylvania Color<lb/>
Console's<lb/>
ALL FLOOR MODELS<lb/>
DRASTICALLY REDUCED<lb/>
DURING THIS 30<lb/>
HOUR SALE<lb/>
SM<lb/>
Electronic Supermarket<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
Downtown Greenville Phone 752-3601,<lb/>
i- <lb/>
to<lb/>
Council<lb/>
YOUR CB. HEADQUARTERS<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0021"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
21<lb/>
ECU historian retraces shipyard industry<lb/>
By GEORGE A. THREEWITTS<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
North Carolina's shipbuilding industry<lb/>
is seldom mentioned in history books,<lb/>
but a historian at ECU says that N.C.<lb/>
shipyards once employed thousands of<lb/>
people and played an important role in<lb/>
the maritime history of the United States.<lb/>
"It is amazing, the amount of<lb/>
shipbuilding that has gone on in this<lb/>
state says Dr. William N. Still,<lb/>
associate professor of history at ECU.<lb/>
"During World War Two there were<lb/>
more 'Liberty' ships launched at<lb/>
Wilmington than anyplace in the<lb/>
country400 ships. Shipyards in New<lb/>
Bern, Morehead City and Elizabeth City<lb/>
were constructing minesweepers, auxil-<lb/>
iary vessels and barges. And I've been<lb/>
told that a company in Manteo built PT<lb/>
boats but I haven't checked that out yet<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Still, an authority on the Civil War<lb/>
and the author of two books about<lb/>
ironclads and Confederate shipbuilding,<lb/>
is currently researching the state's<lb/>
shipbuilding industry.<lb/>
He explained that his interest in<lb/>
maritime history began last year while<lb/>
teaching a coastal studies course at<lb/>
ECU. He discovered that there was very<lb/>
little information on ship and boatbuild-<lb/>
ing in N.C.<lb/>
In his initial research, he ran across a<lb/>
book listing the American flag merchant<lb/>
Geophysicist<lb/>
to speak at ECU<lb/>
Geophysicist David M. Stewart, who<lb/>
recently made headlines concerning<lb/>
predictions of earthquakes in the<lb/>
Wilmington area, will speak at ECU<lb/>
Thursday, March 11, at 7:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
Biology Auditorium.<lb/>
Dr. Stewart's ECU appearance is<lb/>
sponsored by the ECU Society of Sigma<lb/>
Xi. Interested persons are invited to<lb/>
attend his presentation on earthquake<lb/>
prediction.<lb/>
Director of the McCarth Geophysical<lb/>
Laboratory at Chapel Hill, Dr. Stewart<lb/>
has served as consultant to many state,<lb/>
federal and private agencies before<lb/>
joining the UNC faculty in 1971, was<lb/>
employed by the National Science<lb/>
Foundation, the U.S. Geological Survey,<lb/>
NASA and the Water Resources Research<lb/>
Institute.<lb/>
At present he is a seismic<lb/>
collaborator for the U.S. Dept. of<lb/>
Commerce Environmental Data Service<lb/>
and a member of the N.C. State Mining<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
Itiggaii Shot Rtpair Shea<lb/>
ft Shot Sftrt<lb/>
Across from Bkmnt-Harvty Stow<lb/>
111W. 4th Strut<lb/>
RspairAIIL?thfQoodi<lb/>
<lb/>
 <lb/>
 USE<lb/>
: CLASSIFIEDS I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ships that entered New York harbor<lb/>
between 1789 and 1867. To his surprise,<lb/>
300 of the vessels had been built in<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
With his interest ignited, Still applied<lb/>
for and received a grant from the ECU<lb/>
Coastal Marine Institute. The grant<lb/>
enables him to spend more of his time<lb/>
traveling around the state and talking to<lb/>
people who remember shipbuilding.<lb/>
"I also find a lot of information in old<lb/>
newspaperswhen a ship was launched,<lb/>
who built it and its dimensions and<lb/>
tonnage. What I need now is more<lb/>
information about the shipyards and the<lb/>
types of vessels that were constructed<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
His sources have uncovered some<lb/>
relatively obscure ships and building<lb/>
sites. For instance a shipyard in Tarboro<lb/>
constructed a steamboat in 1895. And<lb/>
small inland shipyards in Fayetteville,<lb/>
Goldsboro, Murfreesboro and Williams-<lb/>
ton were producing numerous 19th-<lb/>
century river craft.<lb/>
"Anywhere there is a waterway<lb/>
something was built. It's just fantastic<lb/>
trying to run these things down<lb/>
The biggest obstacle for the historian<lb/>
is finding suitable material from the 17th<lb/>
and 18th centuries. The early records<lb/>
were kept by the British and most of the<lb/>
ships that were constructed in the<lb/>
colonies during the period were listed<lb/>
only as "Plantation built<lb/>
"There was a shipbuilding industry in<lb/>
North Carolina during the Colonial period<lb/>
and how extensive, I don't know just yet.<lb/>
I think it was more extensive than people<lb/>
realize<lb/>
Still says he wants to know<lb/>
everything about N.C. shipbuilding from<lb/>
the Colonial period through World War<lb/>
Two and he is looking for people with<lb/>
information, dates and records.<lb/>
 want to know how Wilmington got<lb/>
the steel during the war to construct 400<lb/>
'Liberty' ships and where are the 15,000<lb/>
people who were working the Wilmington<lb/>
shipyards during the war years?<lb/>
"They say that 30 years ago N.C.<lb/>
fishermen used sailboats. I want to know<lb/>
something about the transition from<lb/>
sailing vessels to powered vessels.<lb/>
"I also want to know about<lb/>
commercial fishing and shrimping in this<lb/>
state. There is absolutely nothing on the<lb/>
evolution of the trawler<lb/>
When he gets his answers, Still plans<lb/>
to write a book. He expects it to be the<lb/>
first book ever written about the once<lb/>
great but forgotten shipbuilding industry<lb/>
in the Tar Heel state.<lb/>
DR. WILLIAM STILL<lb/>
ECU Historian<lb/>
vweseeceweeeeezeeewe<lb/>
o<lb/>
p<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
0.<lb/>
A<lb/>
X<lb/>
y<lb/>
AT BARRE, LTD.<lb/>
805Dickinson Ave. Greenville,N.C. 752-5186 Mon-Sat 10-<lb/>
n;<lb/>
HI<lb/>
<lb/>
in<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
in<lb/>
m<lb/>
in<lb/>
<lb/>
$? KsfeUIfr <lb/>
109 e. FIFTH St.<lb/>
NOW WITH FOOTSBALL HOT DOGS FROSTED MUGS<lb/>
 SUPER TUESDAY 7-10<lb/>
 WED. TOGETHER AGAIN<lb/>
BRENDA MURRINS-TONY SULLIVAN<lb/>
 THURS. LADIES NITE 7-10<lb/>
rr<lb/>
 <lb/>
m mi imwmpiipnininiiironmu<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
mwm<lb/>
till<lb/>
THE RAT - NEVER A COVER CHARGF<lb/>
HM1M11P HO I111M1WMUM<lb/>
illNIIINIIINIIINIIINillNIIINIIINHINIiiPinaq<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0022"/><lb/>
Epfc '<lb/>
22<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
?p<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
fenny;?nTy?;??yj<lb/>
ii<lb/>
ii<lb/>
BOOK RUSH SPECIAL 3 DAYS ONLY<lb/>
?TUESDAY<lb/>
? WEDNESDAY<lb/>
?THURSDAY<lb/>
ECU T-SHIRTS<lb/>
ONLY$195<lb/>
?<lb/>
s;i<lb/>
i ii<lb/>
?<lb/>
11<lb/>
ii<lb/>
11<lb/>
ECU ZIPPER FRONT<lb/>
HOODED SWEATSHIRTS<lb/>
ONLY$696<lb/>
INCLUDING SWEATPANTS, SWEATSHIRTS,<lb/>
P.E. PANTS, JACKETS, HATS, AND TENNIS SHORTS.<lb/>
ALL OTHER SPORTSWEAR $1??OFF<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
BOOK<lb/>
EXCHANGE<lb/>
ACROSS THE STREET FROM THE GIRLS DORMS DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
Si<lb/>
?<lb/>
11<lb/>
EC<lb/>
Sundc<lb/>
the U<lb/>
Field.<lb/>
Be<lb/>
the PI<lb/>
whicl<lb/>
comp<lb/>
the a<lb/>
As<lb/>
playex<lb/>
Reavi:<lb/>
comp<lb/>
of the<lb/>
In<lb/>
three-<lb/>
inning<lb/>
and f<lb/>
blast<lb/>
Tt<lb/>
in a i<lb/>
could<lb/>
came<lb/>
Rick<lb/>
M<lb/>
no-h<lb/>
Niffe<lb/>
two <lb/>
E<lb/>
11<lb/>
F<lb/>
Care<lb/>
throi<lb/>
abar<lb/>
ama<lb/>
three<lb/>
total<lb/>
con;<lb/>
Chai<lb/>
<lb/>
13th<lb/>
reco<lb/>
the :<lb/>
E<lb/>
the<lb/>
year<lb/>
E<lb/>
Welt<lb/>
But<lb/>
solu<lb/>
Tou<lb/>
Univ<lb/>
end<lb/>
Sou<lb/>
for<lb/>
alw;<lb/>
tale<lb/>
are<lb/>
You<lb/>
hop<lb/>
has<lb/>
Bill<lb/>
to<lb/>
Ail-<lb/>
qua<lb/>
12<lb/>
p!a<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0023"/><lb/>
tm<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1978<lb/>
inn i nniwm r i mm m i i mm m i mm<lb/>
23<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
ECU takes two from Terps in season opener<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU opened its 1976 baseball season<lb/>
Sunday by sweeping a doubleheader from<lb/>
the University of Maryland at Harrington<lb/>
Field.<lb/>
Before a near capacity crowd of 1,200,<lb/>
the Pirates took a 3-0 win in the opener,<lb/>
which went 12 innings, and then<lb/>
completed the sweep with a 3-2 win in<lb/>
the second game.<lb/>
As expected, the Pirate pitching<lb/>
played a big role in the sweep, as Dean<lb/>
Reavis and Bob Feeney posted a pair of<lb/>
complete games in their opening chores<lb/>
of the year.<lb/>
In the opener, Glenn Card blasted a<lb/>
three-run homer to left to end the extra<lb/>
inning affair, knocking in Joe Roenker<lb/>
and Macon Moye ahead of him. Card's<lb/>
blast came with one out.<lb/>
The Pirates and Terps got hooked up<lb/>
in a pitching duel early, as neither team<lb/>
could get a hit until the fifth. The first hit<lb/>
came on an infield roller by ECU transfer<lb/>
Rick Koryda.<lb/>
Maryland broke up Reavis' bid for a<lb/>
no-hitter in the sixth, when Bob<lb/>
Niffenegger singled up the middle with<lb/>
two out.<lb/>
Reavis appeared to tire over the next<lb/>
three innings, as the game moved into<lb/>
extra frames, but ECU coach George<lb/>
Williams stuck with his starter all the<lb/>
way.<lb/>
"I couldn't see taking him out the way<lb/>
he was pitching said Williams. "He was<lb/>
doing a super job and was still going<lb/>
strong, so I let him pitch<lb/>
Maryland starter, Bob Ferris, went<lb/>
nine before leaving, allowing only three<lb/>
hits and two walks, while striking out<lb/>
eight.<lb/>
His replacement, Ron McNally, fell<lb/>
victim to an error by Niffenegger in the<lb/>
tenth, hit Moye with a pitch, and then<lb/>
gave up the roundtripper to Card, which<lb/>
ended the game.<lb/>
Reavis allowed but six hits as he set<lb/>
a modem-day ECU record with his<lb/>
12-inning stint.<lb/>
In the second game, ECU scored<lb/>
three quick runs in the first two innings<lb/>
and then settled down behind Feeney for<lb/>
a 3-2 win.<lb/>
Feeney gave up two runs on five hits<lb/>
to the Terps over the first three innings,<lb/>
but after that the Neptune, N.J. junior<lb/>
shutout the ACC favorites without a hit<lb/>
over the final four innings. The win ran<lb/>
Feeney's regular-season ECU career<lb/>
record to 5-0 in three years. Last year<lb/>
Feeney finished with a 4-0 record.<lb/>
T3 Pirates' three runs came on<lb/>
back-to-back doubles by Geoff Beaston<lb/>
and Pete Paradossi in the first. Beaston<lb/>
scored on Paradossi s double and<lb/>
First Game:<lb/>
Maryland 000 000 000 000 - 0 6 3<lb/>
East Carolina 000000000003-350<lb/>
Ferris, McNally 1; and Hudson;<lb/>
Reavis and McCullough. WP - Reavis<lb/>
1-0. LP - McNally 0-1. HR - Card ECU<lb/>
1.<lb/>
Second Game:<lb/>
Maryland 101 000 0 - 2 5 3<lb/>
East Carolina 210 000 x - 3 7 1<lb/>
Brashears and Spies; Feeney and<lb/>
McCullough. WP - Feeney 1-0. LP -<lb/>
Brashears 0-1. 2B - Housley (VMj,<lb/>
Beaston ECU, Paradossi ECU.<lb/>
Paradossi came around on a passed ball<lb/>
and a wild pitch by Maryland starter Mike<lb/>
Brashears.<lb/>
ECU added a run in the second when<lb/>
Beaston scored Card on a single to right,<lb/>
after Card reached on an error by Terp<lb/>
first baseman Gary Bishop and moved to<lb/>
second when Koryda reached on another<lb/>
error. For the day, Maryland made six<lb/>
errors, four by Bishop and ECU just one.<lb/>
In the field, Beaston and Louisburg<lb/>
transferSonny Wooten stood out-Beaston<lb/>
performed like a vacuum cleaner at third,<lb/>
despite an error in the second game,<lb/>
handling 11 chances for the twinblll and<lb/>
saving two hits down the line from extra<lb/>
bases. Wooten, in his first game for<lb/>
ECU. had 17 putouts and an assist in the<lb/>
first game and made some good saves of<lb/>
errant throws. In the second game,<lb/>
Wooten made ten putouts.<lb/>
Coach Williams was generally pleased<lb/>
with the team's opening day perfor-<lb/>
mance, which had been delayed a day by<lb/>
rain.<lb/>
"Maryland is supposed to be a<lb/>
favorite in the ACC and it's gotta be good<lb/>
for us to take two from them. We've been<lb/>
practicing since January 10 and the<lb/>
weather has been super. Therefore, we<lb/>
are in real good shape for the first of the<lb/>
season<lb/>
The Pirates were to play North<lb/>
Carolina State this afternoon in a 1:30<lb/>
doubleheader at Harrington Field. This<lb/>
weekend, the Pirates travel to Furrnan for<lb/>
a pair of games against the Paladins on<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
ECU grapplerssendsixto NCAA tourney<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Wrtier<lb/>
For the last five years, the East<lb/>
Carolina wrestling team has roared<lb/>
through the regular season with reckless<lb/>
abandon. The Pirate mat men have<lb/>
amassed 49 dual victories against only<lb/>
three losses and one tie, and have won a<lb/>
total of 18 tournaments including five<lb/>
consecutive Southern Conference<lb/>
Championships.<lb/>
And they have been ranked as high as<lb/>
13th in the nation as well as being<lb/>
recognized as the number one team in<lb/>
the South.<lb/>
But what happened to the Pirates in<lb/>
the biggest collegiate tournament of the<lb/>
year - the NCAA Championships?<lb/>
East Carolina head coach John<lb/>
Welborn really doesn't have any answers.<lb/>
But he would certainly like to find a<lb/>
solution to the problem when the NCAA<lb/>
Tournament opens Thursday at the<lb/>
University of Arizona in Tucson.<lb/>
"Maybe we're just worn out by the<lb/>
end of the season said Welborn, the<lb/>
Southern Conference Coach of the Year<lb/>
for the last five seasons. "But we've<lb/>
always had some outstanding individual<lb/>
talent in the nationals. It's just that there<lb/>
are so many great wrestlers out there.<lb/>
You've got to be at your peak to even<lb/>
hope of placing in the tournament<lb/>
The highest an East Carolina team<lb/>
has ever finished is 26th in 1974 when<lb/>
Bill Hill took fifth in the 177 weight class<lb/>
to become ECU'S first and only<lb/>
Ail-American. Last year, the Pirates<lb/>
qualified sevn wrestlers only to score 4<lb/>
12 points ard finish way back in 38th<lb/>
place.<lb/>
"Four of the six guys we're taking out<lb/>
there this year were there last year and<lb/>
have previous NCAA experience said<lb/>
Welborn. "Every single one of our guys<lb/>
are capable of placing in the tournament.<lb/>
It's just a matter of getting a few breaks<lb/>
with the pairings and avoiding any<lb/>
injuries<lb/>
Paul Osman (126), Tom Marriott (142),<lb/>
Phil Mueller (167), Ron Whitcomb (177),<lb/>
and Mike Radford (190) all qualified for<lb/>
the nationals by winning their weight<lb/>
class in the Southern Conference<lb/>
Championships. Paul Thorp was upset in<lb/>
the finals of the 150 weight class by<lb/>
William and Mary's Max Lorenzo but<lb/>
received the conference "wild card" berth<lb/>
and will still make the trip.<lb/>
Marriott, a senior from Herkimer, N.Y.<lb/>
will be making his fourth straight<lb/>
appearance in the nationals. Radford,<lb/>
who has enjoyed a brilliant senior<lb/>
campaign, will be making his third<lb/>
appearance while Whitcomb and Thorp<lb/>
will be wrestling in their second NCAA<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
Mueller, Whitcomb and Radford have<lb/>
been virtuallyunstoppablethis season and<lb/>
all three could get top seedings in the<lb/>
tournament. They have amassed a 77-5<lb/>
overall record including a 30-1 dual<lb/>
record along with ten tournament titles.<lb/>
Osman has a 22-7 record with two<lb/>
tournament championships to his credit<lb/>
while Thorp boasts a 24-6-1 record along<lb/>
with two tournament titles.<lb/>
John Welborn would just love to see<lb/>
all six of his wrestlers place in the<lb/>
tournament. A top finish in the NCAA<lb/>
Championships would be the perfect end<lb/>
of yet, another outstanding wrestling<lb/>
year at East Carolina.<lb/>
Take fifth straight SC title<lb/>
By BRIAN DsMAY<lb/>
Special to Fountainhead<lb/>
ECU rolled to its fifth consecutive<lb/>
Southern Conference wrestling crown in<lb/>
Charleston, S.C. last week.<lb/>
All ten Pirate wrestlers advanced to<lb/>
the finals, assuring East Carolina its<lb/>
widest margin of victory in recent mat<lb/>
history.<lb/>
East Carolina finished the tournament<lb/>
with 111 points. William and Mary placed<lb/>
second with 74 34 points and VMI<lb/>
finished third with 30 points.<lb/>
The Pirates began their domination<lb/>
early. Wendell Hardy, seeded first at 118,<lb/>
decisioned Rick Rios of VMI 5-2. Then<lb/>
overwhelmed Hank Hardin of ASU, 12-4,<lb/>
before losing the championship to Tom<lb/>
Sursee of William &amp; Mary in a tough 4-2<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
At 126, Paul Osman recorded two<lb/>
falls on his way to his first conference<lb/>
championship. Osman pinned Joe<lb/>
Spalviero of the Citadel in 5:18. He then<lb/>
pinned Kim Latsha of VMI in 7:52. For<lb/>
the championship, Osman decisioned<lb/>
Bob Pincus of William &amp; Mary 5-0.<lb/>
See DsMav. page 27.<lb/>
mmmtt<lb/>
?<lb/>
FOUR IN A ROW - Tom Marriott will be inking hit fourth trip to the NCAA<lb/>
championships this week wrten six ittsinbsis of the ECU team travel to Tucson,<lb/>
Arizona for the NCAA competiton. Photo by Kip Sloan.<lb/>
ii ii 'mmm i ?? mini i?iiimmiui mi. i umiu wn m?n<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
wmi<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0024"/><lb/>
24<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7,<lb/>
NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
WP<lb/>
?iwi???<lb/>
??<lb/>
W<lb/>
<lb/>
ftPWi<lb/>
ECU netters take SC win<lb/>
By KURT HICKMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's tennis team bounced<lb/>
back Friday from a Wednesday loss to<lb/>
Salisbury St. and defeated William and<lb/>
Mary for the first time ever. 5-4.<lb/>
The clincher against the Indians came<lb/>
in the number two doubles match as<lb/>
ECU'S Doug Getsmger and Bob Neff beat<lb/>
William and Mary's Nick O'Hara and<lb/>
Craig Keith, 0-6, 6-2, 6-3.<lb/>
"Getsmger and Neff were impressive<lb/>
in their victory as doubles competition is<lb/>
the strongpomt of the William and Mary<lb/>
team said ECU coach Neal Peterson.<lb/>
ECU had to overcome an 0-2 deficit at<lb/>
the Pirates' Tom Durfee and Jim Rat I iff<lb/>
suffered setbacks in the singles<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
The Pirates came back and captured<lb/>
the remaining four singles matches.<lb/>
Get singer got the Bucs unt racked<lb/>
with a close 7-5, 7-5 victory over the<lb/>
Indians' O'Hara.<lb/>
Neff, a senior playing his first year for<lb/>
the Pirate netters, was next in line and<lb/>
he soundi; defeated Keith, 6-1 6-0.<lb/>
Peterson said Neff "has great natural<lb/>
ability and is a positive addition to this<lb/>
year's team<lb/>
Mitch Pergerson continued the Pirates<lb/>
string of victories with a 6-2, 1-6, 7-5<lb/>
triumph over John Mann. Pergerson was<lb/>
doing 5-2 in the third set before his<lb/>
comeback win.<lb/>
"Pergerson's victory gave the whole<lb/>
team a lift Peterson said.<lb/>
ECU'S Randy Bailey closed out the<lb/>
singles matches by defeating Tom<lb/>
Winter, 2-6, 7-6, 6-4. Peterson was<lb/>
pleased with Bailey's comeback after<lb/>
losing the first set. "It was great to see<lb/>
his game come around the way it did<lb/>
said Peterson.<lb/>
The Pirates now stand at 1-1 on the<lb/>
year They take to the courts again today<lb/>
when they host the small college power<lb/>
Atlantic Christian.<lb/>
Regional meet ahead<lb/>
The biggest swimming meet of the<lb/>
year for the East Carolina University team<lb/>
begins tomorrow. The Pirates set their<lb/>
goals very early for a good showing in<lb/>
the Eastern Intercollegiate Champion-<lb/>
ships, to be held this year at University<lb/>
Park, Pa. Last year, East Carolina<lb/>
finished fifth in the field of 12 teams.<lb/>
"There's no doubt this is the meet for<lb/>
us said coach Ray Scharf. "For the first<lb/>
time this year our guys will be shaved<lb/>
and psyched. We go all out for this one.<lb/>
And we are hoping to improve a great<lb/>
deal on our fifth place finish of last year<lb/>
It will be extremely tough to do so, even<lb/>
though our times are from two to 15<lb/>
seconds better than last year<lb/>
East Carolina this year has already<lb/>
defeated Maryland, the defending<lb/>
champs of the Easterns. The pick of<lb/>
favorites this year, though, is not the<lb/>
Terrapins. The top competition should<lb/>
come from the University of Pittsburgh,<lb/>
with Villanova and Syracuse just behind.<lb/>
"Pittsburgh is strong in all events<lb/>
explained Scharf. "But most important,<lb/>
they are deep in all events. We have a<lb/>
great deal of strength on certain events<lb/>
but not near the depth of Pitt. For us to<lb/>
win, someone would have to knock off<lb/>
some Pitt people, and we would have to<lb/>
get some breaks.<lb/>
"However, I do feel we can compete<lb/>
with Villanova, Syracuse and Maryland<lb/>
for second place<lb/>
At present, a number of ECU<lb/>
swimmers rank high in the top times of<lb/>
the 12 teams entered. Stewart Mann is<lb/>
ranked number one in the 200 IM, 200<lb/>
back and 400 IM. Ross Bohlken is<lb/>
number one in the 200 free and second in<lb/>
the 100 free. John McCauley, defending<lb/>
eastern champ in the 50 free, is number<lb/>
two in that event but number one in the<lb/>
100 free.<lb/>
John Tudor is number two in the 500<lb/>
free, while Doug Brindley, Steve<lb/>
Ruedlinger. Keith Wade and David<lb/>
Kirkman all rank in the top six in their<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Carolina eliminates Lady Pirates from title hopes<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL?Going into last week's NCAIAW State basketball tournament here,<lb/>
the East Carolina women's basketball team knew it was going to have to play well to<lb/>
win.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates played poorly and they lost<lb/>
The North Carolina women's team aborted any title hopes which the ECU women<lb/>
may have had, with a solid 86-67 win on Thursday.<lb/>
Carolina, sparked by the shooting of All-State selections Cathy Shoemaker and<lb/>
Cathey Daniels, opened up a huge lead at the half and coasted through the second<lb/>
half for the win.<lb/>
ECU played miserably in the first half, as the team seemed unable to loosen up<lb/>
and play in the huge surroundings of UNC's Carmichael Auditorium. In the first half,<lb/>
the ECU Aomen made only nine of 34 field goal attempts and only six of 15 free<lb/>
throw tries, allowing the Tar Heels to run out to a 41-24 half-time lead.<lb/>
Even though the Lady Pirates outrebounded Chapel Hill by a 58-56 margin, their<lb/>
failure from the floor and at the line was the real difference in the game.<lb/>
"If you don't score, you don't win said ECU coach Catherine Bolton. after the<lb/>
game, and if you can't shoot well, then you can't score<lb/>
And even though ECU played better in the second half, the Tar Heel women did<lb/>
also, as they outshot the Lady Pirates from the floor, 49.8 per cent to 34.0 per cent.<lb/>
The better UNC shooting made up for the 34-22 free throw advantage that ECU<lb/>
ed. even though the Pirates only scored few more charity shots than UNC, 17-12.<lb/>
That. too. had a telling tale in the game.<lb/>
We didn't even shoot well at the free throw line said Bolton. "There were several<lb/>
points late in the game, when we could have gotten closer, but we could not hit the<lb/>
one-and-one bonus This really hurt us<lb/>
After the horrendous first half, East Carolina came back and played better in the<lb/>
second half, but by then the game had been decided.<lb/>
Carolina played with a lot of poise in the first half said Bolton, "and they blew<lb/>
us out m the first half because of it. We came back and played well in the second<lb/>
half, but let it get away from us. I honestly felt that we had a chance to win up until<lb/>
the final five minutes "<lb/>
That was the point where UNC opened up its largest lead of the game, 22 points,<lb/>
afte' ECU had whittled the lead to only 11 earlier in the half.<lb/>
Trailing by 49-38 with 15:01 left, ECU stayed within 14 until Carolina ran off six<lb/>
straight for a 62-42 lead with ten minutes to play. Even then ECU rallied again, to<lb/>
within 14 before the Tar Heels opened up the 22-pomt lead, at 77-55, with 4:18 to<lb/>
play.<lb/>
East Carolina rallied to within 13 once again, at 77-64, but they never came closer<lb/>
than that<lb/>
The final two minutes Bolton played the five seniors on the team, four of which<lb/>
were finishing their fourth season on the team It was the play of the seniors that<lb/>
Bolton went back to.<lb/>
We will miss them a lot and I really thought we'd be stronger for a good<lb/>
tournament because of their experience, but we just couldn't do it. We wanted to<lb/>
them a good finish, but we just couldn't give it to them. There was never a lack<lb/>
of effort, we were just tight the whole game, and Carolina was loose "<lb/>
The loss was a disappointing one. especially to the seniors, but there were some<lb/>
.tanding ECU performances nonetheless.<lb/>
Freshman All-State selection Rosie Thompson finished as the game's high scorer<lb/>
and high rebounder with 29 points and 14 rebounds, as she was the only ECU player<lb/>
ake half her shots, 10 of 18, from the floor Thompson also set two ECU records<lb/>
during the Qame, she broke the record for free throws in a game, 16, and free throws<lb/>
attempted in a season, 124<lb/>
Seniors Ellen Garrison and Susan Manning played well on defense, showing good<lb/>
adership and aggressiveness as they had all year Seniors Marie Chamblee, Frances<lb/>
Swenholt and Brenda Dail played well coming off the bench, but the shooting was<lb/>
just not there?and it was costly to ECU.<lb/>
The loss ended the Pirates' season with a 12-6 record, and eliminated them from<lb/>
the tournament.<lb/>
Leading scorers for Carolina were Shoemaker, with 21, Joan Leggett, with 15, and<lb/>
Joyce Patterson, Courtney Peck and Linda Matthews, all with ten.<lb/>
For ECU, Debbie Freeman finished the game with 18 points and 14 rebounds. The<lb/>
18 points left Freeman 32 points shy of the single season record for points scored,<lb/>
and the 14 rebounds helped her to set the season record for rebounds.<lb/>
TIME-OUT  ECU head coach Catherine Bolton gives instructions to her team during<lb/>
a time-out in last week NCAIAW tournament game with North Carolina. ECU lost<lb/>
86-67, ending its season with a 12-6 record. Photo by Kip Sloan.<lb/>
?wiwiiinnMiiwtiHifitiiwiiiimiinnmmiiiiiMMiiiMnn<lb/>
?iwiiiiiMMnwmHii?iniiiiiiinniiiiiiiiinMimiiiamiiinmnmniiimii<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
WORLD<lb/>
Featuring the New<lb/>
Modern Roller Skating<lb/>
EVERYTUESDAY IS ECU NITE<lb/>
50 OFF REGULAR PRICE WHEN SHOWING 1.0.<lb/>
LOCATED DIRECTLY BEHIND SHONEY'S 756 6000<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
M<lb/>
m?<lb/>
?MM<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0025"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 408 MATCH 1976<lb/>
25<lb/>
Improvements being made on Intramural fields<lb/>
i<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Improvements are being made to the<lb/>
Intramural fields next to Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
this spring. This will force the ECU<lb/>
Intramural Department to move the site<lb/>
for men's softball to the field behind the<lb/>
Allied Health building, according to<lb/>
Intramural Director Dr. Wayne Edwards.<lb/>
"The fields next to Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
have always been in terrible shape said<lb/>
Edwards, "they have holes, rises and<lb/>
gulleys and this makes them really<lb/>
dangerous to play on<lb/>
Edwards said that the fields are being<lb/>
resurfaced and reseeded from funds<lb/>
obtained by ECU through a capital<lb/>
improvement loan from the University of<lb/>
North Carolina system. No student fees<lb/>
are being used for the improvement of<lb/>
the fields, according to Edwards.<lb/>
"The attempt to improve the quality of<lb/>
these fields was something started by<lb/>
Physical Education Chairman Dr. Hooks<lb/>
three or four years ago said Edwards.<lb/>
"He started back then in an attempt to<lb/>
get the money allocated to improve the<lb/>
whole complex from the University<lb/>
system's Capital Improvements budget<lb/>
The improvements will cost approxi-<lb/>
mately $50,000, which will include the<lb/>
installation of temporary backstops on<lb/>
the Allied Health fields to set up four<lb/>
fields for this year.<lb/>
"The money is going to improve the<lb/>
Intramural fields on both sides of<lb/>
Ficklen said Edwards. "They are<lb/>
supposed to grade and level the fields<lb/>
and plant grass. Hopefully they will be<lb/>
ready for football in the fall<lb/>
The actual construction on the fields<lb/>
will be handled by the ECU Maintenance<lb/>
staff and no outside firms will be used,<lb/>
thus making the cost of the project less.<lb/>
Surveying of the fields was begun winter<lb/>
quarter, but the principal work will be<lb/>
undertaken during the spring and<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Edwards said the improvements on<lb/>
the fields may cause some hardships<lb/>
initially, but that in the long run the<lb/>
moves will be beneficial to the entire<lb/>
intramural program at East Carolina.<lb/>
"Once we have finished the<lb/>
improvements, we should have as good<lb/>
fields as any other school in the state.<lb/>
We will have permanent backstops<lb/>
instead of the temporary ones which we<lb/>
have had in the past. The old backstops<lb/>
Basketball Players of the Year<lb/>
V<lb/>
UtbBIt t- HfcfcMAN<lb/>
Debbie Freeman has been selected as<lb/>
FOUNTMNHEAD's Athlete of the Year for<lb/>
Women's Basketball Miss Freeman, a<lb/>
sophomore from Jacksonville, N.C<lb/>
polled four of the eight votes for the<lb/>
award, with senior Ellen Garrison and<lb/>
freshman Rosie Thompson receiving two<lb/>
votes each from the field of FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD Sports Writers and Athletic<lb/>
Department members who voted.<lb/>
In addition to being named to the<lb/>
NCAIAW Division I All-State team,<lb/>
Freeman set six individual records during<lb/>
the season for East Carolina. She set<lb/>
records for most field goals in a game,<lb/>
with 16; most free throws in a game,<lb/>
with 13, most field goal attempts in a<lb/>
season, 468; most rebounds in a season,<lb/>
with 237; best scoring average, 22.8; and<lb/>
best rebounding average, with 13.2. In<lb/>
addition, Freeman finished but 32 points<lb/>
shy of the single season scoring record<lb/>
of 442 held by Sheilah Cotten.<lb/>
Freeman also finished as the NCAIAW<lb/>
Division I scoring leader during the<lb/>
regular season, with a 23.1 average, and<lb/>
was third in the league in rebounding.<lb/>
EARL GARNER<lb/>
Earl Garner has been selected for the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Athlete of the Year<lb/>
award for basketball. The 6-6<lb/>
senior led the team in scoring with a 15.4<lb/>
average and in field goal percentage, with<lb/>
.516, and was third among ECU regulars<lb/>
in free throw accuracy, at 746, and<lb/>
second in rebounds, averaging 6.0 a<lb/>
game.<lb/>
In addition, Garner was one of four<lb/>
ECU players to play in every game and<lb/>
had the highest single game point output<lb/>
of the year, with 31 against Davidson.<lb/>
Garner was also selected to the<lb/>
Southern Conference second-team during<lb/>
the regular season.<lb/>
Garner's leadership and playing<lb/>
performances in the latter part of the year<lb/>
were some of the few bright spots in the<lb/>
ECU season this year A season which<lb/>
saw East Carolina finish 11-15, and get<lb/>
eliminated in the first round of the league<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
were really not adequate and the new<lb/>
backstops will be put in such a position<lb/>
that they won't interfere with the football<lb/>
fields.<lb/>
"The surfacing and leveling of the<lb/>
fields will also help our program next<lb/>
year, since we plan to begin soccer as an<lb/>
intramural sport<lb/>
Edwards does admit that playing the<lb/>
games at Allied Health will cause some<lb/>
problems<lb/>
"I'm sure that it will cause some<lb/>
inconvenience to the dormitory students<lb/>
due to the problems in getting out there,<lb/>
but we are going to move the games<lb/>
back half an hour to give them more time<lb/>
to make it to the fields after classes.<lb/>
"The fields at Allied Health will be<lb/>
much better than the ones at Ficklen and<lb/>
there are much better parking facilities<lb/>
for anyone driving out there to play or<lb/>
watch the games.<lb/>
"There will be four fields. We have<lb/>
two that are in super shape and two that<lb/>
are average<lb/>
Three of the fields will be where the<lb/>
driving range and Field Hockey fields are,<lb/>
and the fourth will be facing Greenville<lb/>
Boulevard.<lb/>
Edwards said that some of those who<lb/>
enjoy playing golf may be upset because<lb/>
the location of the fields will prevent<lb/>
them from practicing when games are in<lb/>
process.<lb/>
"There will be some people who will<lb/>
be disappointed because it will prevent<lb/>
them from hitting golf balls, but we have<lb/>
to go where we feel the most interest lies<lb/>
and we feel more are interested in<lb/>
softball. We regret that we can't please<lb/>
everyone, but we are trying to do the<lb/>
best we can<lb/>
Edwards said improvements will also<lb/>
be made to the women's fields on<lb/>
College Hill Drive.<lb/>
"The women's fields will be in the<lb/>
same place as always. These fields will<lb/>
have new plates and backstops added,<lb/>
too, but we don't feel that there will be<lb/>
any interruption of play<lb/>
Edwards added that the playing of<lb/>
softball at Allied Health will not hurt the<lb/>
fields for further use by the field hockey<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"The fields at Allied Health will<lb/>
remain all grass fields. We don't want to<lb/>
tear up the fields for the sake of using<lb/>
them just one year. In future years we<lb/>
could go there to play if we need the<lb/>
fields, but I don't anticipate the need<lb/>
arising in the near future<lb/>
Spring practice beginning<lb/>
for Pirate football team<lb/>
Spring football practice will open at<lb/>
ECU on Thursday, March 11.<lb/>
Coach Pat Dye will begin working<lb/>
with his third Pirate football team,<lb/>
following seasons of 7-4 and 8-3.<lb/>
Last year's club finished the season<lb/>
with six consecutive wins, including<lb/>
major victories over the University of<lb/>
North Carolina. 38-17 and the University<lb/>
of Virginia, 61-10.<lb/>
"We enter this year's spring practice<lb/>
with the most confidence since I've been<lb/>
here said Dye. "We are returning 17 of<lb/>
22 starters, and for the first time since<lb/>
I've been here, we return experienced<lb/>
personnel at every position. Also, with<lb/>
the way we ended last season I feel we<lb/>
all have a great deal of confidence in<lb/>
each other and especially in our<lb/>
wishbone offense<lb/>
The major objective of spring practice<lb/>
will be to find depth for all positions.<lb/>
This continued to be the major problem<lb/>
facing Dye and his staff.<lb/>
Also, replacements for All-Southern<lb/>
Conference defensive tackle Willie<lb/>
Bryant and strong safety Bobby Mynck<lb/>
will be of top priority.<lb/>
Of the 17 starters returning, the list is<lb/>
headed by All-America defensive back<lb/>
Jim Bolding, who led the nation in pass<lb/>
interceptions in 1975 with ten. Honorable<lb/>
mention AM-America Cary Godette will<lb/>
return at defensive end. These two<lb/>
seniors will lead a defensive group that<lb/>
Dye says will be the quickest and fastest<lb/>
in the country this fall.<lb/>
East Carolina will begin preparations<lb/>
in the spring for its opening game of the<lb/>
1976 season against Southern Mississip-<lb/>
pi on Sept. 11, in Ficklen Stadium in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Red Rooster Restaurant<lb/>
2713 EAST 10TH STREET ? GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
PHONE 758 1920<lb/>
open 7:00 am - 8:30 pm<lb/>
HOME COOKED MEALS<lb/>
RGD ROOSTGR WGCIltf<lb/>
Mo- 1 4 BBQ Chicken. 2 Vegetables $1.80<lb/>
lues Country-style Steak, wRice &amp; Gravy, one Vegetable $1.80<lb/>
Wed  -bury Steak. 2 Veg. $1.80<lb/>
Thurs. Meat Loaf, 2 Veg. $1 80<lb/>
Fn Seafood Platter - Fresh Trout. Shrimp, Oysters, F F . Slaw $2 95<lb/>
all specials include rolls &amp; hushpuppies<lb/>
ALSO: Breakfast served (homemade biscuits )<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0026"/><lb/>
26<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 408 MARCH 1976<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm m i m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
MM<lb/>
mm m ? nnm<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
Pirates drop opening game of tournament, 79-72<lb/>
It was truly a matter of officiating<lb/>
playing a major role in the outcome of a<lb/>
game, as Appalachian State defeated<lb/>
East Carolina, 79-72, to eliminate the<lb/>
Pirates in the firstrround of the Southern<lb/>
Conference tournament.<lb/>
During the game, 21 fouls were called<lb/>
on ECU and but four personals were<lb/>
called on the Mountaineers, as the<lb/>
Mountaineers made 17 of 24 free throws<lb/>
and ECU never even got a shot from the<lb/>
free throw line.<lb/>
The zero trips to the line for East<lb/>
Carolina set not only a club record, but<lb/>
had to come close to an NCAA record.<lb/>
The mere fact that East Carolina never<lb/>
reached the line was futility enough for a<lb/>
dejected East Carolina head coach Dave<lb/>
Patton.<lb/>
"How do you play 40 minutes of<lb/>
basketball and not get a single shot from<lb/>
the foul line? We outscored them from<lb/>
the field by five field goals, but from the<lb/>
line it was 17-0<lb/>
East Carolina made 55.4 per cent of<lb/>
its shots for the game, and 62.5 per cent<lb/>
in the second half, but the difference in<lb/>
free throws was too much for the Pirates<lb/>
to overcome.<lb/>
Appalachian, too, made 55.4 per cent<lb/>
of its shots for the game, and 57.1 in the<lb/>
second half, but the Mountaineers had<lb/>
nine fewer attempts than ECU did.<lb/>
However, the officials made up for<lb/>
that. In both the first and second half,<lb/>
Appalachian reached the one-and-one<lb/>
situation before the Pirates had even<lb/>
seen a foul called on the Mounties, and<lb/>
the strong second-half shooting by East<lb/>
Carolina could not make up the 35-32<lb/>
halftime deficit of the Pirates, principally<lb/>
due to the number of fouls called against<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
"In a normal situation, you are sure<lb/>
you'll get some foul shots, but we<lb/>
didn't said Patton. "I don't like to<lb/>
blame the officiating for any loss, but<lb/>
they didn't help any. We did not do<lb/>
everything we should have on defense,<lb/>
but I think we played well enough to win<lb/>
under most circumstances<lb/>
The officiating certainly played a<lb/>
major role in the outcome of the game,<lb/>
but the Mountaineer players came in to<lb/>
Greenville with a bent desire to down the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
An example of this was the way the<lb/>
ASU team played. Appalachian coach<lb/>
Bobby Cremins played only five men the<lb/>
entire game, as each starter played the<lb/>
full 40 minute. The Mountaineers'<lb/>
(a<lb/>
leading player was their 6-8 center,Calvin<lb/>
Bowser.<lb/>
Dowser, who averaged less than 40<lb/>
per cent from the field during the season,<lb/>
hit on 12 of 18 shots from the floor and<lb/>
eight of ten free throws to finish with 32<lb/>
points for the game. It was Bowser's<lb/>
highest output of the season.<lb/>
ECU coach Patton related to Bowser's<lb/>
play.<lb/>
"Bowser shoots 39 per cent duringthe<lb/>
year and he makes 12 of 18 against us. It<lb/>
was the same old story of people getting<lb/>
hot whenever they play us.<lb/>
"We've had problems with our defense<lb/>
all year and with the zone defense on<lb/>
offense. We've fronted them on defense,<lb/>
but haven't had off-the-wall help, and we<lb/>
have lived and died with the jump shot<lb/>
same officials again on Wednesday (the<lb/>
first day the tournament was played in<lb/>
Greenville, S.C.)"<lb/>
East Carolina had led at the outset of<lb/>
the game, never by more than four<lb/>
points. ASU did not take the lead until<lb/>
6:51 remained in the half when Bowser<lb/>
scored on two baskets and a foul shot to<lb/>
put the Apps ahead at 25-24.<lb/>
ECU came back right away to go<lb/>
ahead, and led at 30-27 before ASU<lb/>
scored eight straight points to lead by<lb/>
35-32 at the half.<lb/>
FINAL ECU MEN'S STATS<lb/>
RECORD: 11-15<lb/>
NAMEGFAPCT.FTPCT.AREBAVG.TPAVG<lb/>
Gamer26177-343.51647-63.746361556.040115.4<lb/>
Lee26138-286.48353-70.75761893.432912.7<lb/>
A. Edwards25119-254.46929-42.690231194.826710.7<lb/>
Hunt26101-216.46838-57.667242409.22409.2<lb/>
Henkel2279-176.44922-29.75917894.01808.2<lb/>
Crosby2697-212.45811-24.45851692.72057.9<lb/>
Braman1934-78.43621-29.72451221.2894.7<lb/>
Lewis23-4.7503-4.750063.094.5<lb/>
Dineen25?33-75.44022-34.64722180.7883.5<lb/>
T. Edwards2024-72.33315-22.6828613.1633.2<lb/>
Windley31-4.2500-0.000000.020.6<lb/>
Hartley602.0002-21.00010.220.3<lb/>
Williams50-1.0000-0.000010.200.0<lb/>
TOTALS26806-1724.468263-376 .699293102839.5187572<lb/>
all year, if the shot hasn't gone in, we've<lb/>
been dead<lb/>
In this game, though, ECU's shooting<lb/>
was good and that certainly can not be<lb/>
faulted for the loss. The difference was<lb/>
in the free throw ratio and the spirit with<lb/>
which the Mountaineers played.<lb/>
"I don't know how long I will stay in<lb/>
this business, but I'm sure I'll never<lb/>
coach a bunch of kids with more guts<lb/>
than this group said Appalachian head<lb/>
coach Bobby Cremins. "We got a<lb/>
tremendous game from Calvin Bowser<lb/>
and he looked just super.<lb/>
The win was the first in post-season<lb/>
play for the Mountaineers since they<lb/>
joined the conference in 1972 and the<lb/>
13-12 regular season record was the best<lb/>
season the Apps have had in nearly 20<lb/>
years.<lb/>
"This is a tremendous win for our<lb/>
program and I am very happy said<lb/>
Cremins. "East Carolina kept coming at<lb/>
us, but we have what it took to pull it<lb/>
out. I was very pleased with the way we<lb/>
played on defense. We were ready<lb/>
Cremins did allude to the game's<lb/>
officiating, but he really did not make a<lb/>
point of it.<lb/>
"When you win, the officiating always<lb/>
looks good. I wouldn't mind having the<lb/>
ECU never caught up in the second<lb/>
half, even though it shot well. The<lb/>
closest the Pirates came was at 37-36<lb/>
and 39-38 early in the half. After that,<lb/>
though, ASU began its parade to the<lb/>
free-throw line and slowly pulled away.<lb/>
The Apps scored seven straight to go<lb/>
in front by 46-38 and built up as much as<lb/>
a 13 point lead, at 71-58 with 3:07 left,<lb/>
before a late ECU rally closed the final<lb/>
margin to 79-72.<lb/>
The loss overshadowed some out-<lb/>
standing performances for East Carolina<lb/>
by Earl Gamer and Wade Henkel. Garner<lb/>
was eight for ten in the second half and<lb/>
finished with 26 points, while playing the<lb/>
full 40 minutes.<lb/>
Henkel scored 12 points and grabbed<lb/>
eight rebounds during 20 minutes of<lb/>
playing time. Other players in double<lb/>
figures for East Carolina were Louis<lb/>
Crosby and Billy Dineen. Each finished<lb/>
with 10 points.<lb/>
For Patton, the reason for the loss<lb/>
kept coming back to the difference at the<lb/>
line: "If we had had the opportunities<lb/>
from the line I'd understand, but we<lb/>
never even had a chance at the line. I feel<lb/>
the officiating had a great deal to do with<lb/>
the qame's outcome.<lb/>
"If we had shot only half the number<lb/>
of free throws that they did, we'd have<lb/>
probably won the game. We play at hoi<lb/>
and we score five more baskets than they<lb/>
do, but we lose the game. I just can't<lb/>
believe it<lb/>
The loss ended the Pirates season.<lb/>
The team's final record was 11-15, well<lb/>
below what most had expected it to be.<lb/>
Patton, however looked to the future for<lb/>
a minute and made a prediction of sorts.<lb/>
"I'm proud of our guys, they did not<lb/>
quit. I guarantee if people stay around<lb/>
and will wait until next year, a year like<lb/>
this year will not happen again<lb/>
For the sake of East Carolina's<lb/>
basketball program, let's hope not.<lb/>
Appalachian State 79Robinson 6 4-6<lb/>
16, Pace 4 5-6 13, Bowser 12 8-10 32,<lb/>
Hubbard 8 0-0 16, Campbell 1 0-1 2,<lb/>
TOTALS 31 17-24 79.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA 72-Gamer 13 0-0 26,<lb/>
Crosby 5 0-0 10, Dineen 5 0-0 10, Lee 2<lb/>
0-0 4, A. Edwards 3 0-0 6, Hunt 2 0-0 4,<lb/>
T. Edwards 0 0-0 0, Henkel 6 00 12.<lb/>
TOTALS 36 Q4 72.<lb/>
tvwwwwunJrwwl<lb/>
Wilber's i<lb/>
 .Family ?<lb/>
Favorites<lb/>
Freeman, Thompson head All-State team<lb/>
Debbie Freeman and Rosie Thompson<lb/>
were selected to the NCAIAW Division I<lb/>
All-State toam for 1976. The ECU players<lb/>
were two of ten players selected to the<lb/>
team by the coaches of the North<lb/>
Carolina Association for Intercollegiate<lb/>
Athletics for Women (NCAIAW).<lb/>
Freeman finished as the high scorer<lb/>
in the NCAIAW Division One totals,<lb/>
averaging 23.1 curing the regular season,<lb/>
and as the state's third highest<lb/>
rebounder, averaging 13.3 during the<lb/>
regular season<lb/>
Thompson wound up third in scoring<lb/>
and fifth in rebounding in the state, with<lb/>
18.8 points and 10.6 rebounds a game.<lb/>
Thompson set single game records<lb/>
for free throws attempted, 16, and<lb/>
rebounds, 23, and a season record for<lb/>
free throws made, with 88, and free<lb/>
throws attempted, with 125.<lb/>
The other members of the NCAIAW<lb/>
team were : Susan Yow and Christy<lb/>
Earnhardt, N.C. State; Cathy Shoemaker<lb/>
and Cathey Daniels, North Carolina;<lb/>
Judy Stroud and Jayne Arledge, Western<lb/>
Carolina; and Carol Almond, Appalachian<lb/>
State and Cathy Strange, UNC-Greens-<lb/>
boro<lb/>
FEATURING:<lb/>
Hickory wood flatored BEQ Fish<lb/>
Fried Shrimp timers Roast Beef<lb/>
Country fried chicken Hamburgers<lb/>
Variety of Softdrinks Cheeseburgers<lb/>
SPECIAL! Hot dog with<lb/>
homemade chile 25?<lb/>
NO W FEA TURING BREA KFA S T<lb/>
ON UTHSTfrom 7AM 11AM<lb/>
TWO LOCATIONS 14th St.<lb/>
Corner of Stb and Rtada ST.<lb/>
if Ml ftw U m Ul ft<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
OPEN 7DAYS<lb/>
AWEEK<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0027"/><lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUHTyNHCADVOL. 7, NO. 4?t<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmmM<lb/>
27<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
Golfers open season in Pinehurst tournament<lb/>
The East Carolina University golf team<lb/>
opened its season Monday at Pinehurst<lb/>
in the three-day Pinehurst Collegiate<lb/>
Invitational Tournament. Twelve teams<lb/>
are entered, including last year's NCAA<lb/>
Superbs win<lb/>
Intramural<lb/>
cage crown<lb/>
The Herbs Superbs repeated as<lb/>
Intramural basketball champions this<lb/>
year, taking a 95-68 victory over the P.E.<lb/>
Majors on February 21.<lb/>
The Superbs, behind the scoring of<lb/>
Albert Holloman and Mike Banks,<lb/>
exploded for 57 points in the second half<lb/>
to rout the P.E. Majors.<lb/>
The game remained fairly close<lb/>
throughout the first half, even though the<lb/>
Superbs jumped to an early 10-2 lead.<lb/>
The Majors rallied to tie it at 13-13 and<lb/>
actually led on three occasions, the last<lb/>
by 32-30 with 3:58 remaining in the half.<lb/>
The Herbs came back at this point with<lb/>
eight points to lead at the half by 38-32.<lb/>
During the first half, the Herbs were<lb/>
led by Banks, with 14 points, and<lb/>
Holloman, with 11 points. Owens tallied<lb/>
20 points for the Majors in the first half.<lb/>
In the second half, Holloman paced<lb/>
the Herbs' runaway by scoring 22 points.<lb/>
The Superbs became more aggresive<lb/>
against the shorter Majors and Owens'<lb/>
shooting soon could no longer keep the<lb/>
Majors in the game.<lb/>
Trailing by only six with 14:00 left in<lb/>
the game, the Majors soon fell victim to<lb/>
the Superbs' fast break and rebounding<lb/>
advantage as the Superbs ran off a 20-5<lb/>
streak, including a streak of 11 straight<lb/>
points to build a 21 point lead at 73-52.<lb/>
Over the final ten minutes, the Superbs<lb/>
broke the game wide open, running their<lb/>
lead to as many as 30 points with just<lb/>
1:42 to play.<lb/>
The rebounding of Jim Kyle, Bob<lb/>
Ringer and Tom Tolda was ultimately the<lb/>
difference in the game. The trio fed<lb/>
Holloman and Banks for the shots.<lb/>
Holloman finished with 33 points and<lb/>
Banks added 26 from his point position.<lb/>
For the losers, most of the offensive<lb/>
punch came from Owens. Owens pumped<lb/>
in 40 points for the Majors and the<lb/>
Majors, although outmanned were not<lb/>
outhustled.<lb/>
Four other players finished in double<lb/>
figures for the two teams. For the<lb/>
Superbs, Ringer scored 15 and Tolda<lb/>
added 14 and for the Majors, Dave<lb/>
Applegate scored 14 and Steve Gaylor<lb/>
added 10.<lb/>
The FOUNTAINHEAD's Intramural<lb/>
all-tournament team is as follows: Albert<lb/>
Holloman and Mike Banks, Herbs<lb/>
Superbs; Donnie Owens, P.E. Majors;<lb/>
Len Blackley, Pi Kappa Phi; and Dave<lb/>
Applegate, P.E. Majors.<lb/>
The ECU Intramural champions in<lb/>
basketball and volleyball will compete<lb/>
against Appalachian State's champions in<lb/>
basketball and volleyball in the latter part<lb/>
of March.<lb/>
The ECU teams participating will be<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi and Alpha Xi Delta in<lb/>
volleyball and the Herb's Superbs<lb/>
and Granny's Greats in basketball. All<lb/>
four teams will travel to Boone foi<lb/>
competition on Friday night and return tc<lb/>
Greenville on Saturday afternoon.<lb/>
championship team from Wake Forest<lb/>
and the other ACC teams.<lb/>
First year head coach Mac McLendon<lb/>
has lined up a schedule of five top flight<lb/>
tournaments in lieu of dual matches for<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
"If you want to get the best<lb/>
competition for your team and expose<lb/>
them to the best major college golf, then<lb/>
you have to play the tournaments<lb/>
explained McLendon. "We could play a<lb/>
number of sure-win dual meets but that<lb/>
doesn't do anything to help our program<lb/>
or our individuals. We want to play<lb/>
against the best to get better ourselves<lb/>
The 1976 Pirate team will face a<lb/>
challenging year due to the tough<lb/>
competiiion and the youth of the club.<lb/>
Eight of the 11 team members are<lb/>
freshmen or sophomores. Only two<lb/>
seniors are on the club.<lb/>
Keith Hitler starts the season as the<lb/>
Pirates' number one man. The sophomore<lb/>
won the Seaside Invitational last year and<lb/>
is considered to have tremendous<lb/>
potential.<lb/>
Two seniors will play the numbr two<lb/>
and three positions at Pinehurst. Rob<lb/>
Welton moves up from third position last<lb/>
year to the second position this year<lb/>
Tripp Boinest is virtually an untried<lb/>
product for East Carolina, but has<lb/>
considerable amateur tournament play.<lb/>
Last year's North Carolina state high<lb/>
school champion, Frank Acker, will start<lb/>
the season as the number four man. Mike<lb/>
Buckmaster and Steve Ridge will start as<lb/>
the number five and six men,<lb/>
respect ivelv.<lb/>
DEMAY<lb/>
Continued from page 24.<lb/>
Tim Gaghan recorded a fall in the first<lb/>
round at 134, pinning Eric Fiegal of the<lb/>
Citadel in 7:37. In the semi-finals,<lb/>
Gaghan decisioned Dennis France of<lb/>
Appalachian, 6-1. Gaghan then lost the<lb/>
final to Jim Hicks of William &amp; Mary in a<lb/>
hard fought 4-1 decision.<lb/>
Tom Marriott took his fourth<lb/>
consecutive conference title at 142,<lb/>
recording a pin and a major decision<lb/>
enroute to the finals. In the<lb/>
championship, Marriott disposed of<lb/>
Justin Green of Richmond, 11-4.<lb/>
At 150, Paul Thorp pinned Mark<lb/>
Scandling of Davidson to advance to the<lb/>
finals. Thorp then lost a high scoring<lb/>
iecision to Max Lorenzo of William &amp;<lb/>
Mary, 15-10. Thorp, however, was<lb/>
awarded the conference wild card berth<lb/>
and will travel to the nationals along with<lb/>
the regular conference champions.<lb/>
Paul Prewett upset second-seed<lb/>
Malcolm Hunter of William &amp; Mary in the<lb/>
semi-finals by pinning him in 4:34.<lb/>
Prewett lost the championship to the<lb/>
tournament MVP Mike Regner of the<lb/>
Citadel, 17-8.<lb/>
Phil Mueller recorded the only pin of<lb/>
the finals while winning at 167. Mueller<lb/>
pinned Bob Sherrard of VMI in 6:55.<lb/>
Top seeded Ron Whitcomb had a first<lb/>
round bye and second round decision<lb/>
over Greg Gantt to advance to the finals.<lb/>
Whitcomb then took his second<lb/>
conference title by shutting out Chip<lb/>
Dempsey of William &amp; Mary with a 4-0<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
At 190, Mike Radford collected his<lb/>
third conference title with a decision over<lb/>
John Vzzi of VMI, 9-2.<lb/>
D.T. Joyner gave the Southern<lb/>
Conference a look of things to come in<lb/>
his class. Joyner pinned John Lind of<lb/>
Richmond in 5:34 during the semi-finals.<lb/>
He then took VMI heavyweight Ned<lb/>
Stepahovich to the last minute before<lb/>
losing 9-4.<lb/>
After it was all over, ECU coach John<lb/>
Welborn had nothing but praise for all<lb/>
his wrestlers. At the same time though,<lb/>
the other conference coaches were<lb/>
praising Welborn by naming him Coach<lb/>
of the Year for the fifth straight vear.<lb/>
For Welborn and his champions the<lb/>
next stop will be Tusoon, Arizona for the<lb/>
NCAA wrestling tournament this week.<lb/>
Without a doubt they'll return just like<lb/>
they left, Winners.<lb/>
Women cagers split season finales<lb/>
Prior to the NCAIAW tournament, the<lb/>
ECU women finished their regular season<lb/>
with a pair of games in Raleigh against<lb/>
Appalachian State and Western Carolina.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates split the two games,<lb/>
beating ASU and losing to Western, to<lb/>
finish their regular season with a 12-5<lb/>
record and a 2-3 record in the NCAIAW<lb/>
Division One. The 2-3 record tied ECU<lb/>
with North Carolina for fourth place, thus<lb/>
matching the two teams in the first-round<lb/>
of the NCAIAW tournament.<lb/>
Against Western Carolina, the Pirates<lb/>
suffered from a poor second half, after<lb/>
leading 37-34 at the half, and fell to the<lb/>
Catamount ladies by a 78-68 count.<lb/>
ECU had led by as much as 26-13 in<lb/>
the first half, before Western rallied to<lb/>
close the gap to 30-27 with four minutes<lb/>
left and 35-34 just before the half.Ellen<lb/>
Garrison made a shot with 50 seconds<lb/>
left in the half to give ECU the<lb/>
three-point lead at intermission.<lb/>
After intermission, the Lady Cats<lb/>
came back to score eight straight points<lb/>
and go ahead 53-44 with 12:20 to play in<lb/>
the game. After that, the Cats never<lb/>
trailed, as they ran their lead to as much<lb/>
as 12 before the final horn.<lb/>
For East Carolina the leading scorers<lb/>
were Freeman with 21 points and<lb/>
Thompson with 19 points. Western's high<lb/>
scorer was Jayne Arledge with 19 points.<lb/>
Western finished third in the league, at<lb/>
3-2 and 12-7, after a loss to North<lb/>
Carolina State the next day.<lb/>
On Saturday, East Carolina rebounded<lb/>
and dropped ASU, 77-68, to clinch a tie<lb/>
with Carolina for fourth. The Lady Apps<lb/>
still finished second in the NCAIAW<lb/>
standings despite the loss, finishing the<lb/>
season with 3-2 and 15-4 records.<lb/>
Thompson was the leading scorer for<lb/>
ECU against ASU, as she scored 32<lb/>
points, on 13 of 18 field goals and six of<lb/>
eight four shots.<lb/>
Garrison added 14, on seven of 12<lb/>
field goals, and Freeman had her lowest<lb/>
scoring game of the year with only 11<lb/>
points. Freeman, however, grabbed 14<lb/>
rebounds, had seven assists, and<lb/>
blocked three shots, for one of her better<lb/>
team performances of the year. Marie<lb/>
Chamblee also played well in her first<lb/>
start, scoring seven points, grabbing four<lb/>
rebounds and making four assists.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates shot 56.7 per cent in<lb/>
the second half to out-score ASU, 43-29,<lb/>
after trailing 39-34 at the half.<lb/>
NO WA r<lb/>
H.L HODGES &amp; CO JNC<lb/>
210 East 5th St.<lb/>
ZIPPER HOODED SWEATSHIRTS<lb/>
IN NAVY $J9s<lb/>
ARRIVING DAILY-MEN'S &amp;<lb/>
LADIES' SPRING TENNISWEAR<lb/>
LADIES TENNIS SHOES BY JACOBS,<lb/>
FEATURING PADDED HEEL AnXAtinss,<lb/>
&amp;INNERSOLES WUW?7U <lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0028"/><lb/>
w ww<lb/>
28<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, N O. 408 MARCH 1978<lb/>
Try sky diving<lb/>
Have you ever thought that you<lb/>
would like to try skydiving? Now is your<lb/>
chance. For information call 758-9940.<lb/>
Club football<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi Ebony Herald<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
There will be a delegation meeting for<lb/>
the NCSL at 7:30 Wednesday, March 10,<lb/>
1976, room 244 in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. All members are urged to attend.<lb/>
DST sing-in<lb/>
On Friday, March 26, 1976, the sorors<lb/>
of Delta Sigma Theta are sponsoring a<lb/>
Sing-In. All persons interested in<lb/>
participating please contact Pat Jones -<lb/>
752-9338, 124 Fletcher Dorm or Paulette<lb/>
Jones - 758-9077, 106 Tyler Dorm.<lb/>
Deadline for entry is March 12, 1976 -<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Anyone interested in trying out for<lb/>
East Carolina Club Football should report<lb/>
for practice at 4:00 Monday, March 15 at<lb/>
the field in front of Minges. Shoes and<lb/>
short pants are required at practice. ECU<lb/>
club football wiM play a six game<lb/>
schedule plus the tojrtle Beach game.<lb/>
Forever Generation<lb/>
The Forever Generation of ECU is a<lb/>
Christ-centered campus fellowship group.<lb/>
We meet weekly for a study, discussion,<lb/>
or challenge from the Bible, singing, and<lb/>
warm fellowship. Our meetings are<lb/>
supplemented by cookouts, get-to-<lb/>
gethers, weekend retreats and other good<lb/>
times.<lb/>
Why not take a break this weekend<lb/>
and come join us this Friday night at<lb/>
7:30? We will be meeting in Mendenhall<lb/>
244.<lb/>
The Gamma Beta Phi Society of East<lb/>
Carolina, a national collegiate honorary<lb/>
and service to education organization, is<lb/>
having a rush meeting Thursday, March<lb/>
11 at 7:00 p.m room 244 Mendenhall. If<lb/>
you are in the top 20 per cent of your<lb/>
class, you are invited to attend.<lb/>
Additional information will be available at<lb/>
the meeting.<lb/>
Whisenant kick-off<lb/>
All ECU students are invited to attend<lb/>
a campaign kick-off party for Teresa<lb/>
Whisenant, candidate for SGA president,<lb/>
from 6-8 Wednesday March 10, at the<lb/>
El bo Room. There will be drawings for<lb/>
prizes plus reduced prices on your<lb/>
favorite beverage. This event is<lb/>
sponsored by the supporters and friends<lb/>
of the Whisenant for President<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Law admissions Interviews<lb/>
Happy hour<lb/>
The Law School Admission Test will<lb/>
be offered at ECU on Saturday, April 10,<lb/>
1976. Applications blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to LSATLSDAS,<lb/>
Box 944-R, Princeton, N.J. 08540 to<lb/>
arrive March 11, 1976. These applications<lb/>
are available at the Testing Center<lb/>
Rooms 105-106, Speight Building, ECU.<lb/>
Grad Record exam<lb/>
The Graduate Record Examination will<lb/>
be offered at ECU on Saturday, April 24,<lb/>
1976. Applications blank are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to Educational<lb/>
Testing Service, Princeton, N.J. 08540, to<lb/>
arrive by March 24, 1976. These<lb/>
applications are available at the Testing<lb/>
Center, Rooms 105-106, Speight Build-<lb/>
ing, ECU.<lb/>
Study skills class<lb/>
A non-credit Study Skills Class will<lb/>
be conducted by Dr. Weigand beginning<lb/>
March 10, 1976. The class will meet daily<lb/>
at 1.00 p.m. in room 305 Wright Annex.<lb/>
The class is available to all students.<lb/>
Attendance is voluntary - no formal<lb/>
registration is required.<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
The March meeting of Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
will be held on March 11, 1976, in<lb/>
Mendenhall 221, beginning at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
There will be a business meeting,<lb/>
followed by a talk by Mr. Furney James<lb/>
on Placement Services at ECU and<lb/>
Summer Job Prospects. All Phi Eta<lb/>
Sigma members are urged to attend.<lb/>
Mrs. Marjorie White, Personnel<lb/>
Director of the Galleon Esplanade, Nags<lb/>
Head, N.C. will visit the ECU campus<lb/>
Wednesday and Thursday, March 10 and<lb/>
11 to interview prospective Cooperative<lb/>
Education students for this summer.<lb/>
Students interested in Cooperative<lb/>
Education and an interview time should<lb/>
contact Doug Kruger in the office of<lb/>
Cooperative Education, 311 Rawl Build-<lb/>
ing. Mrs. White would like to talk with<lb/>
imaginative and creative students<lb/>
interested in various phases of<lb/>
merchandising. She is also interested in<lb/>
talking with craftsmen that might be<lb/>
interested in setting up a summer shop.<lb/>
For additional information, contact Doug<lb/>
Kruger in Cooperative Education<lb/>
758-6979.<lb/>
Bahalluah<lb/>
This week's discussion will center<lb/>
around the Biblical prophecies which<lb/>
have been fulfilled by the coming of<lb/>
Bahaullah, the Teacher of the new age.<lb/>
Please join us in room 238 Mendenhall,<lb/>
Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
MEOIHC<lb/>
Veterans who received health training<lb/>
while in the military or who are now<lb/>
enrolled in an academic health or medical<lb/>
program may receive job placement<lb/>
assistance from an ECU program called<lb/>
Operation MEDIHC (Military Experience<lb/>
Directed Into Health Careers).<lb/>
The North Carolina Operation<lb/>
MEDIHC program is a counseling,<lb/>
referral, and placement program designed<lb/>
to assist men and women trained and<lb/>
experienced in health skills, to capitalize<lb/>
on those skills upon their return to<lb/>
civilian life.<lb/>
If you wou'J like to register with<lb/>
MEDIHC stop by the MEDIHC office (318<lb/>
Erwin Hall) on the ECU campus, or call<lb/>
or write: Dale R. Canup, Director, N.C.<lb/>
Operation MEDIHC, 318 Erwin Hall, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834, (919) 758-6801.<lb/>
Junior Panhellenic is sponsoring a<lb/>
Happy Hour today from 4:00 to 6:00 at<lb/>
the Jolly Roger. Contests and prizes will<lb/>
be offered. Those buying tickets from<lb/>
Junior Panhellenic members before the<lb/>
Happy Hour will be eligible for a door<lb/>
Drize.<lb/>
Lib Sci frat<lb/>
The regular meeting of the Alpha Eta<lb/>
Chapter of Alpha Beta Alpha (Library<lb/>
Science Fraternity) will be held in the<lb/>
student lounge in the Library Science<lb/>
Department of Joyner Library at 5 p.m<lb/>
Tuesday, March 9.<lb/>
Plans for the Washington, DC. trip<lb/>
April 29-May 2 will be discussed. All<lb/>
those interested are urged to attend<lb/>
Adopt an animal<lb/>
The animals available for adoption<lb/>
this week include three black mixed<lb/>
puppies, one mixed white dog, and a<lb/>
black puppy.<lb/>
The people at Animal Control would<lb/>
like to extend an invitation to all<lb/>
interested persons to visit the Animal<lb/>
Shelter located on 2nd Street, off<lb/>
Cemetery Road.<lb/>
Pub Board meeting<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the Pub<lb/>
Board this Tuesday March 9, at 5 p.m.<lb/>
in Mendenhall. All interested persons are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
Newman club<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Newman Club this Wednesday, March 10,<lb/>
at 0 p.m. in room 223, Mendenhall,<lb/>
following Catholic Mass. Dinner will be<lb/>
served and all interested persons are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
Screening for the editorship of The<lb/>
Ebony Herald will be held Wednesday<lb/>
evening at six or seven o'clock in<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
All persons interested in the<lb/>
editorship are urged to attend.<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
There will be a Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
Business Meeting on March 9, Tuesday<lb/>
at 4:00 p.m. in Rawl 135. This is a<lb/>
mandatory meeting. The state convention<lb/>
and symposium will be discussed. Three<lb/>
unexcused absences constitute expul-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Borm contracts<lb/>
The SGA dorm contract committee<lb/>
will meet with Dan Wooten, dean of<lb/>
Housing, and other administrators<lb/>
Tuesday, March 9 at 3:00 in Mendenhall<lb/>
The committee's recommendations<lb/>
will be discussed.<lb/>
Appropriations<lb/>
Several appropriations bills are<lb/>
currently being held up in the SGA<lb/>
appropriations committee because the<lb/>
committee is in the process of changing<lb/>
the way it finances these bills, according<lb/>
to Mindy Skelly, chairman.<lb/>
The appropriations committee will<lb/>
meet Wednesday to decide how it will<lb/>
finance the bills already in committee,<lb/>
and subsequent appropriations bills.<lb/>
Rec Society<lb/>
There will be a regularly scheduled<lb/>
meeting of the Recreation Society Wed.<lb/>
nite in room 221 at 7:00. Plans for the<lb/>
pig pickin' and spring events will be<lb/>
discussed. Nominations for officers will<lb/>
also be held.<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
Howard L. Oleck, professor at Wake<lb/>
Forest Law School and one of the<lb/>
foremost leading authorities in the field<lb/>
of non-profit corporations, will speak at<lb/>
ECU this Thursday, March 12, at 7:30 in<lb/>
Brewster-B 102, sponsored by the ECU<lb/>
Law Society.<lb/>
Oleck has published over 32 books,<lb/>
300 articles and approximately 700<lb/>
columns on various related topics. His<lb/>
contributions to the legal profession<lb/>
include several celebrated books and<lb/>
articles on the World War II era. deck,<lb/>
prior to joining the Wake Forest faculty,<lb/>
taught at the Cleveland Marshall College<lb/>
of Law. Oleck received his B.A. from the<lb/>
University of Iowa, his J.D. from New<lb/>
York Law School, a LL.D. from<lb/>
Baldwin-Wallace College and a Litt.D.<lb/>
from John Marshall University<lb/>
The ECU Law Society invites all<lb/>
interested parties to attend.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040027_0029"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>