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<pb facs="00040029_0001"/>
8,500 Circulation<lb/>
VOL. 51, NO. 42<lb/>
16 MARCH 1976<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina Community for over fifty years<lb/>
This Issue- 20 Pages<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
'Support for the Overpass' resolution passes<lb/>
By TOM TOZER<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
A resolution introduced to the<lb/>
Student Government Association (SGA)<lb/>
Legislature by Ray Hudson, chairman of<lb/>
Student Welfare and Student Affairs<lb/>
committee, entitled "Support for the<lb/>
Overpass" was passed by the SGA<lb/>
Monday night.<lb/>
The overpass, if constructed, would<lb/>
allow students to cross over Tenth St. at<lb/>
the bottom of College Hill Drive without<lb/>
entering traffic.<lb/>
Although the overpass was not<lb/>
approved in the N.C. Department of<lb/>
Transportation's annual Highway Im-<lb/>
provement Plan this year, it is still a<lb/>
feasible project, according to Jim<lb/>
Greenhill, project engineer for the N.C.<lb/>
Department of Planning and Research.<lb/>
"The Tenth St. overpass is still a<lb/>
candidate project said Greenhill. "Each<lb/>
year the Department of Transportation<lb/>
considers which projects have priority for<lb/>
the annual Highway Improvement Plan.<lb/>
"The last two years the report has<lb/>
come out in October and if past trends<lb/>
continue the report will be released again<lb/>
this October said Greenhill. "Projects<lb/>
are considered several months prior to<lb/>
the report's publication.<lb/>
"It is one of the most justified<lb/>
pedestrian structures we (Department of<lb/>
Planning and Research) have examined in<lb/>
a long time because of the large number<lb/>
of pedestrians funneling into close<lb/>
quarters. We reel that the overpass would<lb/>
be used even though students would<lb/>
have to walk out of their way to use it<lb/>
According to Greenhill, in 1963, 7,000<lb/>
automobiles passed the Tenth St.<lb/>
intersection everyday. This figure<lb/>
increased to 10,000 automobiles per day<lb/>
in 1975.<lb/>
The proposed overpass would cost<lb/>
$200,000, and ECU would donate the<lb/>
right of way, according to Greenhill.<lb/>
"It would not hurt if the Board of<lb/>
Trustees passed a resolution asking the<lb/>
Department of Transportation to push the<lb/>
overpass higher on its list of priorities<lb/>
said Clifford Moore, vice-chancellor of<lb/>
Business Affairs. "The state does not<lb/>
have the money to approve all of its<lb/>
proposed projects every year just like the<lb/>
State does not always approve al' ECU's<lb/>
capital improvements. It is not a dead<lb/>
issue<lb/>
SGA proposes student foreign language option<lb/>
by KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Legislature of the Student<lb/>
Government Association (SGA), recently<lb/>
accepted a resolution which<lb/>
states that the ECU student body would<lb/>
like the University to drop or offer an<lb/>
alternative to the foreign language<lb/>
requirement in the Bachelor of Arts<lb/>
degree.<lb/>
NATIONAL TREND<lb/>
The action of the Legislature in<lb/>
passing the resolution reflects what<lb/>
appears to be a current national trend.<lb/>
According to an article, "Needed: A<lb/>
Cure for Provincialism by S. Frederick<lb/>
Starr in the March 8 issue of "The<lb/>
Chronicle of High Education the<lb/>
number of undergraduates studying<lb/>
foreign language has declined by 15 per<lb/>
cent in the past five years.<lb/>
Only one in 20 undergraduates enrolls<lb/>
in courses that consider foreign peoples<lb/>
and cultures in any way, Starr stated.<lb/>
However, the study of some foreign<lb/>
languages and cultures - includig<lb/>
political systems - such as Africa, China,<lb/>
and the Soviet Union, are on the<lb/>
upswing, according to Starr.<lb/>
"A survey in 1973 indicated that only<lb/>
five per cent of those studying in<lb/>
teacher-education programs received any<lb/>
foreign area training Starr continued.<lb/>
The Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) degree at<lb/>
ECU is a nonteaching liberal arts degree.<lb/>
ECU's teaching degree is the<lb/>
Bachelor of Science (B.S.).<lb/>
Only a few departments require<lb/>
completion of a foreign language<lb/>
sequence to obtain the B.S. degree.<lb/>
"The purpose of the resolution is to<lb/>
show the support of the student body for<lb/>
the need of flexibility in the curriculum<lb/>
said Ricky Price, Speaker of the<lb/>
Legislature.<lb/>
Price, who also helped write the<lb/>
resolution, said the resolution also<lb/>
shows student opposition to the single<lb/>
according to McLeod.<lb/>
"The resolution is not directed at<lb/>
eliminating foreign language from the<lb/>
B.A. curriculum said McLeod, who is a<lb/>
vice presidential candidate in this year's<lb/>
SGA elections.<lb/>
"The resolution supports that stu-<lb/>
dents be offered options in the B.A.<lb/>
today,<lb/>
require<lb/>
��<lb/>
SUSAN J. McOANIEL<lb/>
ASSISTANT PROVOST<lb/>
requirement of foreign language.<lb/>
"Out in the business world<lb/>
there are not many jobs that<lb/>
foreign language according to legislator<lb/>
Tim McLeod, who sponsored the<lb/>
resolution.<lb/>
"Computer science and other courses<lb/>
can be substituted to better round the<lb/>
student's education<lb/>
The purpose of the resolution is not<lb/>
to oppose foreign language as such,<lb/>
RICHARD CAPWELL<lb/>
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCE DEAN<lb/>
program, rather than having io take the<lb/>
current requirements.<lb/>
"If a foreign language would help a<lb/>
student to further his career, then let him<lb/>
take it explained McLeod. "But if it<lb/>
would help him to take other course<lb/>
rather than foreign languages then e<lb/>
should have the option of taking the<lb/>
other courses<lb/>
Copies of the resolution are going to<lb/>
be sent to various university officials<lb/>
including those officials who will<lb/>
ultimately have to act on the legislation,<lb/>
if it is put into bill form and passed by<lb/>
the legislature.<lb/>
According to Susan J. McDaniel,<lb/>
Assistant Provost, these officials include<lb/>
the different department chairmen,<lb/>
faculty senates, the board of trustees,<lb/>
and ECU Chancellor Leo W. Jenkins.<lb/>
However, because of a moratorium on<lb/>
curriculum proposals issued by the<lb/>
University of North Carolina Board of<lb/>
Governors, ECU can not present a<lb/>
proposal for a curriculum change until<lb/>
the middle of next year, according to<lb/>
McDaniel.<lb/>
Regardless of the moratorium, and<lb/>
other elements which might delay action<lb/>
on the matter, the co-writers of the<lb/>
resolution, Price and McLeod, plan to<lb/>
immediately put the resolution in bill<lb/>
form, according to McLeod.<lb/>
Whereas the resolution has no force<lb/>
of law, a bill will require some type of<lb/>
action by university officials.<lb/>
Mrs. Marguerite A. Perry, chairman of<lb/>
the Foreign Languages department<lb/>
expressed general acceptance of the<lb/>
principle of offering students options in<lb/>
the B.A. degree program.<lb/>
However, simultaneously she expressed<lb/>
two very serious consequences that<lb/>
might occur if the foreign language<lb/>
requirement is dropped from the B.A.<lb/>
program.<lb/>
"Dropping the foreign language<lb/>
requirement could have a dehumanizing<lb/>
effect said Perry. "I am also concerned<lb/>
that this could cause provirealization of<lb/>
our society<lb/>
See Language, page 6.<lb/>
Ford, Carter win ECU presidential preference survey<lb/>
By TOM TOZER<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
In a recent presidential preference<lb/>
survey of over 100 people in the ECU<lb/>
community conducted by FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD, Republican Gerald Ford and<lb/>
Democrat Jimmy Carter were selected as<lb/>
their party's best presidential candidate.<lb/>
The preference poll was a spot-check<lb/>
survey of 116 people on the ECU<lb/>
campus. The survey included both<lb/>
announced and unannounced candidates<lb/>
for the Republican and Democratic<lb/>
nomination.<lb/>
President Ford out-polled his closest<lb/>
opponent, Ronald Reagan, almost two to<lb/>
one. Ford received 59 preference votes to<lb/>
Reagan's 20.<lb/>
Howard Baker, Senator from Tenn<lb/>
received the highest number of votes<lb/>
among the unannounced candidates for<lb/>
the Republican Party's presidential<lb/>
nomination. Baker polled 12 preference<lb/>
votes.<lb/>
Other unannounced Republican cand-<lb/>
idates receiving votes were: Nelson<lb/>
Rockefeller-seven; Elliot Richardson-<lb/>
seven; Barry Goldwater-six; Pete<lb/>
McCloskey-two; and one vote each for<lb/>
Edward Brooke, Charles Percy, and<lb/>
Richard Nixon.<lb/>
In the Democratic preference poll the<lb/>
battle among announced candidates for<lb/>
the preside itial nomination was between<lb/>
Jimmy Carter, former governor of Ga<lb/>
and George Wallace, governor of Ala.<lb/>
Carter edged Wallace by twelve votes, 32<lb/>
to 20.<lb/>
Henry 'Scoop' Jackson, came in third<lb/>
among the announced candidates with<lb/>
nine votes, followed by Birch Bayh with<lb/>
seven, Morris Udall with seven, Fred<lb/>
Harris-four, and Milton Shapp-one.<lb/>
Sargent Shriver was the sole<lb/>
announced candidate who did not receive<lb/>
votes.<lb/>
Ted Kennedy led the field of<lb/>
unannounced candidates with 21 votes<lb/>
beating Wallace by one vote. Kennedy<lb/>
was followed by Hubert Humphrey with<lb/>
eight votes, Jerry Brown with four, and<lb/>
Ed Muskie with three.<lb/>
Lloyd Bentsen, a former candidate for<lb/>
the nomination, and Frank Church did<lb/>
not receive votes.<lb/>
The N.C. presidential preference<lb/>
primary will be held March 23.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00040029_0002"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
I Ml � HI I IIW Ml � I I HIM IU I �! IWHg II tf I<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
<lb/>
EdilorialsConnmenlary<lb/>
More deadlines<lb/>
Remember the assurance by certain ECU officials that this<lb/>
university would admit first-year med school students by Fall of<lb/>
1976?<lb/>
Well, those same people now are retreating back to January,<lb/>
1977, as the earliest date that those first students can enroll in<lb/>
the ECU Med School.<lb/>
We wonder now when the January target date will be pushed<lb/>
back to June of 1977?<lb/>
Ever since the four-year Med School was funded last year a<lb/>
next to impossible deadline of September, 1976, was set up by<lb/>
certain high officials at the university. Every time the Med<lb/>
School was mentioned this impossible deadline was cited.<lb/>
Now, as most thought, the impossible deadline of<lb/>
September, 1976, will not be met.<lb/>
But, instead of not setting any deadlines or starting dates<lb/>
this time around those same ECU officials insist on putting<lb/>
a time limit on the proposed enrollment.<lb/>
You have to wonder why some officials at the university<lb/>
insist on using the calendar so much when talking about<lb/>
enrollment at the new school.<lb/>
So far the Med School has failed to meet the much<lb/>
publicized deadline of September, 1976. And, more than likely<lb/>
the new one of January, 1977, will be missed as well in view of<lb/>
all the work that remains to be done on the new school.<lb/>
Med school officials admit that there is much faculty<lb/>
recruitment that must be done. Then there are facilities both on<lb/>
campus and at the site of the new Pitt Memorial Hospital that<lb/>
must be completed.<lb/>
But, still we persist on setting impossible time tables. Each<lb/>
time one of these time tables falls, a little of the credibility of<lb/>
the officials who worked so hard to get the new school fal's<lb/>
also.<lb/>
To set that September, 1976 deadline, in view of all the work<lb/>
that had to be done last summer was ridiculous. But, apparently<lb/>
to lessen the howls of critics who saw the med school as a<lb/>
long-range big budget item that would not be operational for<lb/>
some time, the early date was established.<lb/>
So, in Spring of 1975, it was easy to predict that by Fall of<lb/>
1976 that if the budget for the school was approved, that the<lb/>
first students could be admitted and that first class of students<lb/>
could be graduated by 1981.<lb/>
Now, we are rapidly approaching that September 1976<lb/>
deadline and the med school is still milps from being<lb/>
completed. Much progress has been done since .he budget was<lb/>
approved last year. But, still there is much to be done.<lb/>
It will not be many months before the new deadline of<lb/>
January, 1977 will be here, and we wonder then what the next<lb/>
time table will be?<lb/>
And, each time the schedule is setback, the critics who<lb/>
howled the loudest about the med school to begin with, are<lb/>
simply given new ammunition.<lb/>
Setting deadlines is nice if you can meet them. But, if you<lb/>
fail to meet them then people start to wonder about one's ability<lb/>
to administrate competently.<lb/>
When another deadline falls even the strongest supporters of<lb/>
the med school will have to begin to wonder about the<lb/>
administrative act that some officials are trying to pull off.<lb/>
"Ware it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without<lb/>
newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment (o<lb/>
prefer the latter<lb/>
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor tw�. i��,<lb/>
 c - J Thomas Jr rferson<lb/>
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer<lb/>
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant<lb/>
Production Manager-Jimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson<lb/>
News Editor-Jim Elliott<lb/>
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Use<lb/>
Features Editor-Pat Coyle<lb/>
Sports Editor-John Evans<lb/>
Fountainheaa is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by<lb/>
the Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C.27834<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 758-6309<lb/>
Subscriptions $10.00 annually for non students.<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
8. Who i5 the dictator of a small Q<lb/>
raUNtru aFF the CD&amp;st of FLoRidaj<lb/>
ft. FIDEL CRSTRO B. CHRRLE5 PffWSDN<lb/>
CK0RGE WALLACE<lb/>
X KtfDW ITS NOT mUSOJ, Batm<lb/>
Bond important<lb/>
The casual observer may think that the $43.2 million bond<lb/>
Issue that North Carolina voters will vote on March 23rd Is not<lb/>
all that Important to ECU.<lb/>
After all, there are no funds in the bond Issue that will go to<lb/>
ECU. The money will be used on other campuses in the<lb/>
16-member Consolidated University system.<lb/>
But, that casual appearance is in fact far wrong. The passage<lb/>
of the bond issue is most important to ECU for two reasons.<lb/>
To begin with, the bond money is important for construction<lb/>
of needed classroom and other facilities on the other university<lb/>
campuses. To keep pace with growing enrollments new<lb/>
construction is needed, along with the usual construction to<lb/>
replace old facilities.<lb/>
Normally there would have been some capital improvement<lb/>
money in the new budget approved last year by the General<lb/>
Assembly, except for the fact that the budget for the year was a<lb/>
tight one to begin with and then there was the huge<lb/>
appropriation to ECU for the med school.<lb/>
So, money that would have gone to others was sent to<lb/>
Greenville. And, the rest of the system went lacking as far as<lb/>
capital improvements go.<lb/>
Now, the other campuses have a chance to get some capital<lb/>
improvement funds, if the bond issue is approved by the voter.<lb/>
And, if the bond issue is not approved then more than a few<lb/>
will see the med school as the main drain on the capital<lb/>
improvement money.<lb/>
The money is needed to do construction work on other<lb/>
campuses. And, while they probably will not admit it, ECU<lb/>
officials know that the passage of the bond would help take the<lb/>
heat off them and the med school some.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
mmmmmmmMmmmmmmmmwmmM<lb/>
3<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
Student voting<lb/>
problems noted<lb/>
To Fountalnhead:<lb/>
How many students are there in this<lb/>
town? Quite a few. How many can vote?<lb/>
Not too many. The resident students of<lb/>
Greenville are the only students who can<lb/>
vote, but those who want to vote here,<lb/>
can't.<lb/>
I recently went to the Board of<lb/>
Elections and found out I couldn't<lb/>
register to vote. Many reasons were<lb/>
given: I was a student, my parents<lb/>
supported me, the car I own wasn't<lb/>
registered in Pitt County, etc. My<lb/>
intention was clear to me and to the<lb/>
Board: I wanted to register, but couldn't.<lb/>
Since I live in Edenton and go to<lb/>
Review<lb/>
cited<lb/>
To Fountalnhead:<lb/>
Was elated to see John Evans take<lb/>
such an understanding view of the other<lb/>
night's Joe Cocker concert at Minges.<lb/>
Those of us who stayed to the end of the<lb/>
show out of respect for the down-and-out<lb/>
superstar were rewarded by a fine effort<lb/>
from old Joe that more than made up for<lb/>
the initial disappointment caused by his<lb/>
drunken state. Yeah, you're right; he got<lb/>
by "with a little help from his friends<lb/>
Kudos to the entertainment committee<lb/>
for their late excellent work in securing<lb/>
some fine concerts.<lb/>
Steve Keeter<lb/>
Word limit<lb/>
Letters to the Forum supporting a<lb/>
candidate for office must be less than<lb/>
275 words. There are currently several<lb/>
letters on file in the office that will not<lb/>
be printed until they conform to that<lb/>
standard.<lb/>
school five days a week, it was rather<lb/>
difficult to register in Edenton once I<lb/>
decided to register because the Board<lb/>
isn't open on weekends.<lb/>
I know certain guidelines are<lb/>
necessary to determine the status of<lb/>
voters, but when they affect me that is<lb/>
another question entirely. When I was<lb/>
given the right to vote sometime in the<lb/>
past and I can't register where I choose,<lb/>
because of the rules, something has to<lb/>
change. The most important part of the<lb/>
democratic process is voting, especially<lb/>
in a participatory democracy and I can't<lb/>
vote in Greenville, the town I choose to<lb/>
cast my vote. But then neither can you.<lb/>
I'm sure there are many of you in this<lb/>
situation. The point is that we have been<lb/>
denied one of our rights, whether<lb/>
God-given or otherwise, the right to elect<lb/>
our representatives, the people making<lb/>
decisions affecting this university in<lb/>
particular.<lb/>
As students we spend most of our<lb/>
time in Greenville, not our hometowns.<lb/>
Any decision other than voting where we<lb/>
choose becomes an unnecessary burden<lb/>
to us. If we accept our situation we<lb/>
rapidly loose faith, loose faith with<lb/>
administrators, with the rules and with<lb/>
the democratic process. Many of us may<lb/>
not be able to vote at all.<lb/>
I have talked with a representative of<lb/>
the American Civil Liberties Union in<lb/>
Greenville. He suggested that I come to<lb/>
the next meeting, April 7, bringing all<lb/>
interested people denied their rights, to<lb/>
discuss the possibility of a lawsuit.<lb/>
A lawsuit is the only legal recourse<lb/>
we have to regain our right to vote<lb/>
wherever we choose. I hope you, the<lb/>
student, are interested enough to see<lb/>
your rights back, if this is possible in a<lb/>
democracy. In any case everyone will<lb/>
know that we tried.<lb/>
The ACLU meeting April 7 will begin<lb/>
at 8 p.m. in the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center. Please attend if you feel the way<lb/>
I do and want your name included in the<lb/>
lawsuit.<lb/>
Mike Taylor Patrick M. Flynn<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAKING by phil frank<lb/>
"VX) SHALL BE yHEEONQ WGREOTEr<lb/>
CHALLENGE AS MEMBERS OF THE<lb/>
WiuppRNESS-SURVIVAL &amp;PEmOH-<lb/>
TWO WEEKS HTOUtVm NEW YORK<lb/>
c<lb/>
1<lb/>
?T<lb/>
i<lb/>
'I'M NOT SURE I HEARD TUAT<lb/>
LAST STATEMBTr m BlLUNSS<lb/>
DID YOU 6AV,RTtiER qjreCKS ?�<lb/>
�COLLEGE MEDIA SERVICES-BOX 9411-BERKELcY CA 94709<lb/>
Hales draws support<lb/>
To Fountalnhead:<lb/>
With the date for SGA elections<lb/>
rapidly rising, the qualifications for each<lb/>
candidate must be carefully weighed. In<lb/>
my opinion as a legislator, this year one<lb/>
of the hardest working members I have<lb/>
seen is Craig Hales, who is a candidate<lb/>
for the position of SGA Treasurer.<lb/>
Last year Craig was freshman class<lb/>
vice-president and during that year he<lb/>
served on the Appropriations Committee.<lb/>
This year the same class returned and<lb/>
voted him in as Sophomore Class<lb/>
President where he has served as<lb/>
Chairman of Appropriations. In his two<lb/>
years with Appropriations, Craig has had<lb/>
considerable experience with budgets<lb/>
and he is familiar with the demands of<lb/>
the many groups needing money on the<lb/>
budget. This plus being a business<lb/>
major, is invaluable experience to carry<lb/>
into the position of SGA Treasurer.<lb/>
As Chairman of Appropriations, Craig<lb/>
has also taken a stand on many<lb/>
controversial issues, regardless of the<lb/>
criticism he has had to face. I saw this<lb/>
especially with the treasury budget error.<lb/>
Hales, unlike many, saw SGA lose<lb/>
credibility over the error - so he called for<lb/>
an outside audit of the treasury and a<lb/>
stronger screening for the position of<lb/>
Treasurer. Not all the Legislators agreed,<lb/>
however, the students wanted to see<lb/>
someone try to correct the situation and<lb/>
Craig worked very hard to do this.<lb/>
Craig Hales is an experienced<lb/>
Praise for paper<lb/>
To Fountalnhead:<lb/>
This Is a fan letter.<lb/>
I think you and your staff are doing<lb/>
an excellent job wtth the Fountalnhead.<lb/>
My first degree was in journalism and<lb/>
while this does not make me an expert, I<lb/>
have always bean interested In<lb/>
newspapers.<lb/>
Cordially,<lb/>
University Book Exchange<lb/>
I.J. Edwards, Jr.<lb/>
hardworker who is most familiar with<lb/>
budget problems that arise throughout<lb/>
the year in SGA. As I have watched him<lb/>
work this past year in Appropriations and<lb/>
on the Legislator floor, I feel that it<lb/>
would be to the advantage of all the<lb/>
students to have Craig in the office of<lb/>
SGA Treasurer.<lb/>
Jenni Harrison<lb/>
Pingston<lb/>
supported<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
SGA elections are approaching and I<lb/>
would like to enlighten everyone on a<lb/>
candidate I am supporting for the office<lb/>
of Vice President - Greg Pingston. Greg<lb/>
has been active in the SGA legislature<lb/>
and has served on the Student Welfare<lb/>
Committee. His interest and potential<lb/>
leadership ability in my mind make Greg<lb/>
the most qualified for the job of Vice<lb/>
President. I urge everyone to vote for<lb/>
Greg Pingston for SGA Vice President.<lb/>
Cathy Gentry<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
All letters to the Editor must be<lb/>
accompanied by an address along with<lb/>
the writer's name. However, only the<lb/>
name will be printed with letters<lb/>
published in the Forum.<lb/>
The letter writer's address will be kept<lb/>
on file in the Fountainhead office and<lb/>
will be available, upon request, to any<lb/>
student.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD WILL, UPON PER-<lb/>
SONAL REQUEST FROM A LETTER<lb/>
WRITER, WITHHOLD A NAME FROM<lb/>
PUBLICATION. BUT, THE NAME OF THE<lb/>
WRITER WILL BE ON RLE IN THE<lb/>
EDITOR'S OFFICE AND AVAILABLE<lb/>
UPON REQUEST TO ANY STUDENT. ALL<lb/>
REQUESTS FOR WITHHOLDING A<lb/>
NAME MUST BE MADE IN PERSON TO<lb/>
THE EDITOR.<lb/>
Any letter received without this<lb/>
information' will be held until the letter<lb/>
writer complies with the new policy.<lb/>
m<lb/>
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4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51. NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
f pi WM � pi m tjii r, i wi w ftl i gi y �mn I<lb/>
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KIH<lb/>
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Wake Professor Oleck explains law job market<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
To say the job market for law school<lb/>
graduates is tight is misleading because<lb/>
lawyers go into a wide variety of fields,<lb/>
according to Howard L. deck, professor<lb/>
at Wake Forest University.<lb/>
Oleck is a leading authority in the<lb/>
field of non-profit corporations.<lb/>
Speaking to the ECU Law Soceity,<lb/>
Thursday night, March 11, Oleck said<lb/>
lawyers are the best trained people for<lb/>
any type of job<lb/>
"To say the job placement market is<lb/>
tight is misleading because the field<lb/>
offers wide opportunities said Oleck.<lb/>
"Law students are taught to find the<lb/>
crucial factor on which everything turns.<lb/>
This is what makes legal training the<lb/>
most superb training for any type of job.<lb/>
"Only 35 per cent of law school<lb/>
graduates practice law<lb/>
Oleck said North Carolina has the<lb/>
smallest percentage of lawyers per<lb/>
person of all the states in the Union.<lb/>
Currently, the best opportunities for<lb/>
lawyers are in small towns, said the 65<lb/>
year-old professor who has published 32<lb/>
books.<lb/>
There is no reason to stand in line at<lb/>
a big law school, continued Oleck.<lb/>
Clients do not care about which law<lb/>
school the lawyer went to. What the<lb/>
client wants to know is, "do you win?"<lb/>
In preparing for law school, Oleck<lb/>
suggested that taking a cram course on<lb/>
how to take the LSAT is better than<lb/>
taking the LSAT a second time.<lb/>
"When taking the LSAT, some<lb/>
students spend much of their time<lb/>
determining how to take the test said<lb/>
Oleck. "This uses up valuable time<lb/>
"The cram courses on how to take the<lb/>
LSAT are better than taking the LSAT a<lb/>
second time because most schools<lb/>
discredit the second LSAT score.<lb/>
In law school, at least three hours are<lb/>
spent studying for each hour a student is<lb/>
in class, according to Oleck.<lb/>
Although a tremendous amount of<lb/>
studying is required each year in law<lb/>
school, "you've never had more fun in<lb/>
your life than in these years he said.<lb/>
"Most law school professors are<lb/>
howling egotists<lb/>
"In class, law school professors cut<lb/>
you into little pieces and leave you on<lb/>
the floor to bleed to death. We feel it is<lb/>
better to bleed in the law school room<lb/>
rather than in the courtroom in defeat<lb/>
Law schools are more or less bidding<lb/>
for minority students, said Oleck. Law<lb/>
schools are only 5 per cent black.<lb/>
Law school enrollment leveling off according to ABA<lb/>
Students Jockeying for a seat in law<lb/>
school may find the competition has<lb/>
eased up this year. Law school<lb/>
enrollments, which have more than<lb/>
doubled in the last decade, appear to be<lb/>
leveling off, according to statistics<lb/>
gathered by the American Bar Associa-<lb/>
tion (A.B.A.).<lb/>
For (he first time since 1968, the size<lb/>
of first-year law classes declined last fall,<lb/>
according to James P. White, professor<lb/>
of law at Indiana University and the<lb/>
A.B.As consultant on legal education.<lb/>
The number of first-year students<lb/>
dropped from 38,074 to 37,892 in the 156<lb/>
law schools that are accredited by the<lb/>
A.B.A. from fall 1974 to fall 1975. The<lb/>
increase in total enrollment was only<lb/>
3,764 students, or 3.3 percent.<lb/>
Except for a slight drop in 1968, law<lb/>
school enrollments increased steadily<lb/>
over the last ten years, even when enroll-<lb/>
ments in other fields were leveling off or<lb/>
failing at many universities. Recently,<lb/>
however, some lawyers have expressed<lb/>
concern that the schools may be<lb/>
producing more lawyers than there are<lb/>
Jobs.<lb/>
In addition to the general drop in<lb/>
enrollments, law schools may also be<lb/>
experiencing a decline in the quality of<lb/>
the applicants. In 1973-1974, the mean<lb/>
test score for both men and women<lb/>
taking the Law School Admissions Test<lb/>
was 527. In 1974-1975, it was 518 for men<lb/>
and 523 for women.<lb/>
"Many law schools experienced a<lb/>
decrease in the total number of<lb/>
applicants who met the given admission<lb/>
criteria in each law school White said.<lb/>
"Additionally, a number of law schools<lb/>
experienced a greater number of 'no<lb/>
shows' in their first choice of admittees<lb/>
Even so, only one law school reported<lb/>
any unfilled seats in its 1975 entering<lb/>
class.<lb/>
The number of women enrolled in law<lb/>
schools continued to increase, although<lb/>
not as fast as in recent years. Enrollment<lb/>
of women increased from 21,788 to<lb/>
26,737, a rise of 22 percent.<lb/>
Women made up more than one fifth<lb/>
of the entering class at 70 schools, more<lb/>
than 30 percent at 49 schools and more<lb/>
than half at three schools: the Antioch<lb/>
School of Law, the University of<lb/>
California at Davis and Northeastern<lb/>
University.<lb/>
In contrast, there were 607 fewer men<lb/>
enrolled in schools that were approved by<lb/>
the A.B.A. this year as compared to last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Minority group enrollments in taw<lb/>
schools continued to rise, but not as fast<lb/>
as those of women. The total enrollment<lb/>
of persons from minority groups<lb/>
increased from 8,333 to 8,676, or 4<lb/>
percent, compared with 10 percent last<lb/>
(This article was revised with permission<lb/>
from an article appearing in The<lb/>
Chronicle of Higher Education.)<lb/>
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We're organizing YLA chapters on every major campus,<lb/>
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Are you qualified for the job? The YLA coordinator<lb/>
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If you think you've got what it takes to be a YLA co-<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
5<lb/>
SGA V.P. candidates define their platforms<lb/>
is<lb/>
of<lb/>
aw<lb/>
in<lb/>
MB<lb/>
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on<lb/>
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i.)<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Five people filed applications for the<lb/>
SGA office of Vice-President, and two<lb/>
people filed for SGA office of Graduate<lb/>
President. Those who filed for SGA Vice-<lb/>
President are: Terry Lucas, Tim McLeod,<lb/>
Dalton Nicholson, Greg Pingston, and<lb/>
Bob Seraiva. Those who filed for SGA<lb/>
Graduate President are Jimmy Adams<lb/>
and Roger Dubey.<lb/>
Terry Lucas: Senior, majoring In<lb/>
Industrial Technology and Business<lb/>
Administration; hometown is Asheboro,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Qualifications are: former Secretary<lb/>
of Pi Lambda Phi Fraternity; Chairman of<lb/>
Big Brothers Committee.<lb/>
"I feel that the bus transportation<lb/>
could be more fully utilized Lucas<lb/>
stated. "I'd also like to see an overpass<lb/>
built over 10th Street for the benefit of<lb/>
the students who live on 'the hill I had a<lb/>
friend who was hit by a car once at that<lb/>
intersection, and I feel that an overpass<lb/>
should be built<lb/>
"I think that the money should be<lb/>
used to the fullest for the benefit of the<lb/>
students Lucas added.<lb/>
Tim McLeod: Junior, majoring In<lb/>
history; hometown is Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
Qualifications are: former Freshman<lb/>
Class President; President-Chairperson<lb/>
of Symposium Committee; member of<lb/>
Rules Judiciary Committee; member of<lb/>
Constitution Committee; member of the<lb/>
Elections Rules Revision Committee.<lb/>
"I'd like to see an investigation of the<lb/>
Publications Board going independent. If<lb/>
not, I'd like to see old revenues returned<lb/>
to the Pub Board rather than returned to<lb/>
general funds McLeod stated.<lb/>
"I'd also like to see better<lb/>
transportation, more parking lots, and<lb/>
tighter security around campus<lb/>
"I think I could work with any of the<lb/>
candidates who are on the ballot<lb/>
McLeod added.<lb/>
Dalton Nicholson: Senior, majoring in<lb/>
Science Education; hometown is<lb/>
Winterville, N.C.<lb/>
Qualifications are: Vice-President of<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity; former<lb/>
Freshman Class President; SGA secre-<lb/>
tary of Internal and Minority Affairs.<lb/>
"If I'm elected, I'll work along with the<lb/>
President on the major issues that<lb/>
concern the students Nicholson stated.<lb/>
"If there is an issue that would benefit<lb/>
the students, then I'll be willing to help<lb/>
Greg Pingston: Junior, majoring in<lb/>
Political Science; hometown is Cape<lb/>
Kennedy, Florida.<lb/>
Qualifications are: member of SGA<lb/>
Legislature; Chairman of the Easter<lb/>
Seals Basketball Game; member of<lb/>
Student Parking Committee; member of<lb/>
See SGA. osoe 6.<lb/>
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6<lb/>
FOUNTAINH6ADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Non-credit course to be offered<lb/>
By DIANE TAYLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Career determination is the topic of a<lb/>
new non-credit course being offered here<lb/>
by the Division of Continuing Education,<lb/>
March 23-May 25.<lb/>
The course is designed to help<lb/>
participants evaluate their interests and<lb/>
plans for obtaining jobs that lead to<lb/>
careers in those areas of interest.<lb/>
"This is the kind of information that<lb/>
high school juniors and seniors should<lb/>
have had said Rich Morin, assistant<lb/>
director of non-credit programs. "Guid-<lb/>
ance Counselors at all schools ought to<lb/>
have this knowledge<lb/>
Ninety per cent of the course will be<lb/>
spent in actual work on the participant's<lb/>
chosen vocational interests.<lb/>
Titled, Career Determination, the<lb/>
evening course will be open to all ECU<lb/>
students and alumni.<lb/>
Interested persons should register at<lb/>
the Division of Continuing Education<lb/>
Business Office, Erwin Hall. The fee is<lb/>
$25.00 which includes all course<lb/>
materials. Class size is limited to 20<lb/>
persons.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Continued from page 5.<lb/>
Student Welfare Committee.<lb/>
"I'd like to see a renovation and<lb/>
expansion of the transportation system<lb/>
Pingston stated, "and also an in-depth<lb/>
study of the parking situation.<lb/>
"I'd like to work to make the campus<lb/>
safer from assaults by installing more<lb/>
lighting on campus and starting a<lb/>
rotation escort system<lb/>
Bob Seraiva: Junior, majoring in<lb/>
Business Administration; hometown is<lb/>
Wilmington, Delaware. Seraiva could not<lb/>
be reached for comment.<lb/>
SGA GRADUATE PRESIDENT<lb/>
CANDIDATES<lb/>
Jimmy Adams: majoring in Vocation-<lb/>
al Rehabilitation Counseling; hometown<lb/>
is Wilson, N.C.<lb/>
Qualifications are: former Freshman<lb/>
Class President; former Senator of<lb/>
Sophomore Class; former Vice-President<lb/>
of the SGA; former President of the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
Roger Dubey: majoring in Science<lb/>
Education, specializing in Biology;<lb/>
hometown is Manteo, N.C.<lb/>
Qualifications are: historian of Alpha<lb/>
Epsilon Delta; historian of Chi Beta Phi;<lb/>
officer of the American Chemical<lb/>
Association; officer for the ECU Ski<lb/>
Club; member of the Graduate Advisory<lb/>
Council; Sponsor of the bill in the<lb/>
Graduate Advisory Council for the<lb/>
requirements for this election; working<lb/>
with a committee of the Graduate<lb/>
Advisory Council for improving the<lb/>
financial assistance to graduate students.<lb/>
"I'd like first to redefine the status of<lb/>
the graduate student Dubey stated.<lb/>
"I'd also like to represent graduate<lb/>
students in the SGA better than they<lb/>
have been represented<lb/>
Elections for all SGA offices will be<lb/>
held Wednesday, March 24.<lb/>
LANGUAGE<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
Perry also suggested that students<lb/>
enter the B.A. program because they<lb/>
want a liberal arts education. If students<lb/>
want another type of education, she said,<lb/>
they should enter a different degree<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Most ECU departments offer the B.S.<lb/>
degree which does not require a foreign<lb/>
language.<lb/>
Political Science recently had a new<lb/>
degree approved which allows cognate<lb/>
courses rather than a Foreign Language<lb/>
requirement according to Richard<lb/>
Capwell, dean of the College of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences.<lb/>
Also, biology and geology has<lb/>
recently changed its curriculum so that<lb/>
optional or cognate courses may be<lb/>
taken in place of foreign language,<lb/>
according to McDaniel.<lb/>
As does Perry, Capwell also believes<lb/>
students enter the B.A. program to<lb/>
receive a liberal arts education of which<lb/>
foreign language is a part.<lb/>
"I personally hate to see the growing<lb/>
lack of interest in Foreign Language<lb/>
said Capwell. "It seems that some<lb/>
knowledge of another language and<lb/>
culture is necessary for the well-educated<lb/>
person.<lb/>
"At the same time, I'm in sympathy<lb/>
with the emphasis today on studying<lb/>
disciplines the students feel are of more<lb/>
immediate practical value<lb/>
Assistant provost McDaniel explained<lb/>
that one of the basic differences in the<lb/>
B.S. and the B.A. degrees is the foreign<lb/>
language requirement.<lb/>
Also, she continued, the B.S. is more<lb/>
vocational oriented.<lb/>
"Foreign language values are subtle<lb/>
enough that one can easily ignore the<lb/>
use of them according to McDaniel.<lb/>
"This effect leads some students to say<lb/>
that a foreign language is irrelevant to<lb/>
their education.<lb/>
"What is relevant today may not be<lb/>
relevant tomorrow she continued. "If<lb/>
students don't learn a broad field, their<lb/>
education will be timed out of existence.<lb/>
And, regardless of what actions are<lb/>
taken by the SGA and university officials,<lb/>
the foreign language requirement will<lb/>
continue to exist where it currently does<lb/>
until the change is printed in a new<lb/>
catalog, according to McDaniel.<lb/>
ciioni $<lb/>
HOUAS-<lb/>
ham- Jlaw<lb/>
BIKE REPAIR - can do quickly &amp;<lb/>
inexpensively. Inquire at 1212 S. Evans or<lb/>
phone Tommy at 756-7838.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE wanted to share<lb/>
furnished apt. for summer. Prefer honest,<lb/>
reasonably quiet &amp; clean person.<lb/>
$30month plus utilities. Call 752-4043<lb/>
between 9-11 p.m.<lb/>
NEEDED - Stter tor 1 child (age 5) on<lb/>
Mon. and Wed. nights, 7:15 until-usually<lb/>
not later than 12 - average time 11 p.m.<lb/>
Need own transportation. Salary to be<lb/>
discussed. Job will begin in April.<lb/>
'References needed. Must be dependa-<lb/>
able. Call 758-0497.<lb/>
ILKCPI<lb/>
fare<lb/>
l�W W1<lb/>
 800-325-4867<lb/>
(&amp; UnsTravel Charters<lb/>
FURNISHED - Efficienct apt. for 2,<lb/>
utilities included. Across from college.<lb/>
758-2585.<lb/>
VOTE Bob Braxton for SGA Treasurer.<lb/>
FOUND - Set of keys in Rawl Bldg. Call<lb/>
758-6055 or come by Rawl 222.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE-please call 756-5167<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752 5133.<lb/>
HELP WANTED -Set your own hrs. Part-<lb/>
time. For info call 752-2095, March 11<lb/>
between 7 &amp; 9 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1971 Honda CB350 with 2<lb/>
helmets. Good condition, excellent<lb/>
mechanicallly, recent tune-up. $495.<lb/>
752-2059.<lb/>
$100 DOLLAR REWARD for the finding of<lb/>
a black miniature poodle puppy<lb/>
answering to the name of Nookie, lost<lb/>
around 1200 S. Evans St. area. Phone<lb/>
756-7838 or bring by 1212 S. Evans St.<lb/>
752-0385.<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 spaces, thus requiring 2 lines:<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 slightly used but line new<lb/>
widget. Reasonable. 758-xxxx.<lb/>
RATES: First insertion: 50 cents first line, 25 cents each additional line. Additional<lb/>
insertions; 25 cents each line. EX. The above 2 line ad inserted in 3 issues would<lb/>
cost:<lb/>
.50 plus .25 equals .75 for first insertion<lb/>
.25 plus .25 equals .50 each for second and third insertion.<lb/>
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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/>
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COPY: Fountainhead tries to publish only legitimate classifieds. Fountainhead<lb/>
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ERRORS: In case of errors in copy for which it is responsible, Fountainhead will<lb/>
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CooH'c. Material and<lb/>
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m<lb/>
�9<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
817 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
(next to Diener's Bakery)<lb/>
758-0650<lb/>
Art Supplies- If we don't<lb/>
have it - we can get It! <lb/>
. . Hang your Art <lb/>
Art classes �<lb/>
MonTues. 7-9 Oil-Acrylics-Drawinpfr<lb/>
Wed. 1-3 Sculpture <lb/>
7-9 Watercolor J<lb/>
$8 a month - 2 hr. class �.<lb/>
I<lb/>
q?3g2&amp;?thM-<lb/>
'DAIRYMAID'<lb/>
SKIRT<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1978<lb/>
7<lb/>
'�   '  ' " "    ' ' " ' ' " '  ' ' " ' �'�'�� ' ' '��� !���������  .it IIH     , . ����������<lb/>
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HARMONY<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
SOUTH<lb/>
Once A Year<lb/>
Save Up To<lb/>
50<lb/>
Hurry! Limited Quantities � Fst Com � First<lb/>
Serve. All items subject to prior sale.<lb/>
Thursday, March 11th, 10 to 9<lb/>
Friday, March 12th, 10 to 9<lb/>
Saturday, March 13th, 10 to 6<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, Teoc, JVC and Base<lb/>
�:<lb/>
Turntables and Tapedecks<lb/>
JVC 1696 Reel lo reel<lb/>
Sony 2350 Turntable<lb/>
JVC - JLB -31 Direct Orive Turntable<lb/>
Teac A 400 Cassette Deck<lb/>
Sony 5520 Turntable<lb/>
JVC 1656 Cassette Deck<lb/>
fisher 220 Turntable <lb/>
JVC VL-5 Turntable <lb/>
Pioieer 5151 Cassette Oeck<lb/>
BSD 610 Turntable<lb/>
Teac 2050 Auto Reverse Reel (used<lb/>
Sony 5550 Turntable <lb/>
Used Compact Systems<lb/>
Zenith Compact -AMFM, cassettesBro�<lb/>
1 Panasonic Compact-AM FM. cass<lb/>
System Spe<lb/>
1 Sanyo 1800K Receiver<lb/>
1 Garrard Turntable (us<lb/>
1 Pair Of Altec 887'<lb/>
Turntable 'W<lb/>
2<lb/>
i:<lb/>
m<lb/>
5<lb/>
�:��:<lb/>
'C V.3s<lb/>
Sale Price<lb/>
Early Bird Specials<lb/>
1 Milevac Receiver (used)$4000<lb/>
1 Portable Cassette (used)500<lb/>
1 Concord MK 9 Cassette Deck JjJn 7000<lb/>
500<lb/>
Used) $1000<lb/>
40oo<lb/>
Si. Turntable (used) W<lb/>
4 V<lb/>
1 Souid Design Jik<lb/>
1 BSR Je&amp;Jlt (used)<lb/>
Xaund Design Speakers (�sedu� $20<lb/>
�lafayelie Amp (ised) wS<lb/>
1 Pilet 240 lap (isvVC $1500<lb/>
00<lb/>
00<lb/>
�:�:�<lb/>
I<lb/>
Receivers A<lb/>
i Sony 7055 Receiv.<lb/>
jic<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
mps<lb/>
I Morontz 4140<lb/>
1 JVC 555�<lb/>
annel amp<lb/>
V-eceiver<lb/>
1 Pain Bose 901$<lb/>
1 Pair Pioneer R-500<lb/>
1 Pair Altec 887 A<lb/>
1 Pair BK 4s ktf<lb/>
1 Pair Bose Inter Audio 7'd�S<lb/>
1 Pair Scientific Acoi<lb/>
1 Pair JBL-MOO's<lb/>
1 Pair Bose r01<lb/>
1 Pair Er RoOO's<lb/>
1 Pai.jljw Inter Audio 4000 m<lb/>
1 Pair Voricon 15" Swayk<lb/>
1 Pair KLH 32s .lO<lb/>
1 Pair Rectilinear evT'Owboy)<lb/>
1 Pair Bo<lb/>
1 Pair JVC<lb/>
1 Pair Bose Inter Audio 3000s<lb/>
fAi r Receiver<lb/>
M4000<lb/>
400��<lb/>
l3300c<lb/>
,299��<lb/>
�30000<lb/>
l5600'<lb/>
tVC 5535 Receiver l26500<lb/>
I 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/>
?310"<lb/>
�199"<lb/>
�170"<lb/>
'300"<lb/>
340"<lb/>
�<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/>
t Dynaco Pat 3 Pre amp used<lb/>
1 Lafayette 250 Tuner (used)<lb/>
1 Pilot 211 Tuner<lb/>
$25.00<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/>
ummyt nMiMiiiMMiVVJV�'�'�� rVvr"vT:T '<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, N 0. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
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m<lb/>
m<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
By PAT COYUE<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
As the sun sets over Killamey, and the moss sets on the Blarney Stone, and my<lb/>
Uncle Patrick O'Malley sits on his favorite stool at Kelly's Bar, I realize that Saint<lb/>
Patrick's Day is here once again.<lb/>
Granted, Saint Paddy's Day might not have much meaning for most of you (POOR<lb/>
HEATHENS THAT YE ARE!), but for those of us of the Irish Catholic persuasion, well<lb/>
'tis quite a big day.<lb/>
Some of my strongest childhood memories involve my family's celebration of the<lb/>
blessed day. In the first place, St. Pat's Day comes in Lent. It's a Catholic tradition to<lb/>
give-up something highly valued during Lent; like candy or bubble gum or (Heaven<lb/>
Forbid!) alcohol.<lb/>
St. Patrick's Day has always been a "day off" from Lenten abstinence. The candy,<lb/>
bubble gum, and, of course, liquor always flows on March 17.<lb/>
How well I remember lying crouched in the corner on St. Patrick's night, the milk<lb/>
chocolate melting in my mouth, not in my hands; belly pooched out, feeling total<lb/>
satisfaction with St. Patrick, chocolate candy, and the world in general.<lb/>
As I enjoyed my personal world of bliss, the older members of the family would<lb/>
sit around, beer in hand, singing chorus after chorus of "My Wild Irish Rose Stories<lb/>
of the "old country" abounded, which was pretty unusual considering the fact that<lb/>
everybody in the group was bom in Philadelphia.<lb/>
Time passed, and I am now forced to spend my St. Paddy's Days at good ole EZU<lb/>
(where the only green things are GREENville, and the freshmen).<lb/>
I've tried to maintain some semblance of tradition, really I have. I once borrowed<lb/>
my father's clay pipe, and passed it around at a party. It really went over well, until<lb/>
my friends realized it was filled with Tobaccoland Brown instead of Acapulco Gold.<lb/>
I tried singing a tear-jerking rendition of "My Wild Irish Rose" to an old boyfriend,<lb/>
but his only reaction was "Who could hustle to THAT???"<lb/>
I haven't given up hope, though. Surely there are other Irishmen out there, or at<lb/>
least a few who wouldn't mind being Irish for a day, who would enjoy sharing a<lb/>
cultural experience involving singing, being friendly, and, uh, partaking of joyous<lb/>
spirits.<lb/>
As for the non-Irish faction, I repeat that you will be a welcome addition to the St.<lb/>
Paddy's Day festivities. As for all of you out there who go by such names as<lb/>
O'Malley, and Kelly and Ryan and Flynn, you'd best learn to take pride in your<lb/>
heritage. You may not realize it, but there IS an Irish Mafia<lb/>
Dutton, nursery school<lb/>
break sexual barriers<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If you are in the Nursing-Home Ec<lb/>
building one day and happen to find<lb/>
yourself in the Nursery School<lb/>
Department, you might see a young man<lb/>
teaching a group of pre-school children.<lb/>
A common reaction might be one of<lb/>
surprise. Tradition has it that just women<lb/>
teach nursery school. However, with<lb/>
women taking professions that were once<lb/>
considered just for men, why shouldn't<lb/>
men take a profession that was once<lb/>
considered just for women?<lb/>
Terry Dutton, a graduate student of<lb/>
Child Development and Family Relations,<lb/>
is presently teaching pre-school children<lb/>
in the ECU Nursery School.<lb/>
As an undergraduate, Terry was<lb/>
majoring in psychology He became<lb/>
especially interested in child psychology<lb/>
and developmental psychology. He<lb/>
realized that he wanted to work with<lb/>
young children, but he could not find the<lb/>
specific department that he wanted.<lb/>
Eventually, he found what he was looking<lb/>
for - Child Development. Child Develop-<lb/>
ment is a program in the Home Ec<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
At first, Terry was planning to work<lb/>
with therapy for the emotionally<lb/>
disturbed children. Now, he plans to<lb/>
direct a pre-school nursery.<lb/>
"I'd like to be a director for a<lb/>
pre-school program for socially deprived<lb/>
children Terry stated.<lb/>
Working with young children pro-<lb/>
duces many rewards, and Terry stated,<lb/>
"Everyday, there are things that happen<lb/>
that are rewarding.<lb/>
"The most rewarding thing to me is to<lb/>
see children learn something new<lb/>
Another reward was to see the social<lb/>
reactions - to see children become<lb/>
friends.<lb/>
Terry stated that he preferred to work<lb/>
with five-year-olds rather than three-year-<lb/>
olds because their vocabulary was more<lb/>
extensive.<lb/>
"I like being able to converse with the<lb/>
children Terry added.<lb/>
There are two branches of the nursery<lb/>
- a department for the three-year-olds and<lb/>
a department for the four and five-year-<lb/>
olds. Terry works with four-year-old<lb/>
children.<lb/>
When Terry first began teaching the<lb/>
children, he worried that the parents<lb/>
might object to his being a man, and not<lb/>
a woman. However, the parents readily<lb/>
accepted Terry and thought that it was<lb/>
great that a man was teaching nursery<lb/>
school.<lb/>
One mother told Terry that she was<lb/>
glad that he was teaching her son<lb/>
because her son had begun to have a<lb/>
negative attitude towards men; he had<lb/>
begun to think that men were gruff and<lb/>
uninterested in children. However, the<lb/>
chance for him to be taught by Terry<lb/>
made him realize that all men were not<lb/>
uninterested and cold.<lb/>
Out of 45 graduate students in the<lb/>
Child Development and Family Relations<lb/>
department, only six are men. If more<lb/>
men became pre-school and elementary<lb/>
teachers, children would have a chance<lb/>
to be around men almost as much as<lb/>
they are around women.<lb/>
For children without fathers due to<lb/>
Jeath or divorce and pre-school children<lb/>
See Nursery, page 9.<lb/>
Continuing education<lb/>
offers night life<lb/>
By DIANE TAYLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If you are one of those rare<lb/>
individuals who think there's more to<lb/>
college life than Accounting 210,<lb/>
Composition 3 or Music Appreciation-has<lb/>
night life got a little more to offer you!<lb/>
In fact, it you re the free-spirited type<lb/>
who prefers learning just for the sake of<lb/>
learning, here's an opportunity to get<lb/>
away from the grade book, ID number<lb/>
classroom structure and take a course<lb/>
aimed at learning rather than a QP<lb/>
average.<lb/>
Every year the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education offers numerous<lb/>
non-credit courses. Most courses are<lb/>
taught in the evening.<lb/>
The seventeen courses offered this<lb/>
spring range from Scruggs-Style Banjo<lb/>
Pickin to Baseball Officiating, to Basic<lb/>
Scuba Certification, to Fundamentals of<lb/>
Real Estate. Courses are also offered in<lb/>
Gourmet Food Preparation, Written<lb/>
Communications, Oral Communications<lb/>
and Preparation for Parenthood.<lb/>
The list goes on with Advanced Scuba<lb/>
Certification, Beginning Bridge, Begin-<lb/>
ning Russian, Pia-o for Beginners, Basic<lb/>
Guitar, French Language and Culture,<lb/>
and How To Get The Most From A<lb/>
Meeting.<lb/>
Perhaps the most unusual and<lb/>
intriguing course is Adventures in<lb/>
Attitudes. It is designed to help people<lb/>
reach a greater level of happiness and<lb/>
achievement in their work and home life<lb/>
by stimulating self-awareness, personal<lb/>
growth and positive attitudes.<lb/>
These courses do not run on the<lb/>
quarter system. Although a few have<lb/>
already begun, most of them will begin<lb/>
within the next two weeks and end before<lb/>
spring quarter is over.<lb/>
"People take these courses strictly<lb/>
because they want to said Rich Morin,<lb/>
Assistant Director of non-credit pro-<lb/>
grams. They are not fulfilling course<lb/>
requirements or adding electives<lb/>
Because of the extreme interest and<lb/>
usually small classes, participants are<lb/>
able to benefit from more personal<lb/>
instruction.<lb/>
Morin said most courses are taught<lb/>
by ECU faculty and staff but that is not<lb/>
always the case.<lb/>
"Sometimes people from the (Green-<lb/>
ville) community come to us with ideas<lb/>
and qualifications to teach a course he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The courses are open to anyone<lb/>
interested.<lb/>
"Our main target is the adult<lb/>
community around Greenville but we<lb/>
more than welcome students said<lb/>
Morin. Some of our courses are 90<lb/>
percent ECU students<lb/>
Tuition fees for each courses varies<lb/>
according to the expense involved in the<lb/>
course. Since the non-credit programs<lb/>
are not a part of the state supported<lb/>
university curriculum they must be<lb/>
self-supporting. All tuition fees for such<lb/>
courses are paid directly to the Business<lb/>
Office of the Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education in Erwin Hall.<lb/>
Registration for each course ends the<lb/>
day before the class begins. Persons may<lb/>
sign up in room 319, Erwin. The office is<lb/>
open 8 am. to 5 p m. MonFri.<lb/>
Most of the courses offered this<lb/>
spring will be repeated next year,<lb/>
according to Morin.<lb/>
So if you're frustrated with the load of<lb/>
boring required courses and "crip<lb/>
electives, do yourself a favor and enjoy<lb/>
taking something you really want to. But<lb/>
sign up right away, some courses begin<lb/>
tomorrow<lb/>
r<lb/>
AiAidnk�fy<lb/>
L<lb/>
luttle<lb/>
C-OUcX b�t up<lb/>
Lids! r<lb/>
4<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040029_0009"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
9<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
More than spirits and song<lb/>
What does St. Pat's Day mean?<lb/>
By JACKSON HARRILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
As we progress along the course of a<lb/>
typical year, we encounter certain days<lb/>
which have been designated holidays in<lb/>
observance of historical figures, in<lb/>
recognition of their contributions. George<lb/>
Washington and Abraham Lincoln both<lb/>
receive annual birthday parties, although<lb/>
lately we have been celebrating on<lb/>
Mondays, whether or not it is their<lb/>
proper day of birth<lb/>
March 17 is a celebration day. also.<lb/>
St. Patrick is customarily recognised on<lb/>
this date, but for what? It is a generally<lb/>
well-known fact in this country that he<lb/>
was Irish, and green is the color of the<lb/>
day Other than that, it might take a true<lb/>
Irishman to fill you in on the details.<lb/>
Unlike Washington and Lincoln, the<lb/>
celebration date is not St. Patrick's date<lb/>
of birth: it is the day on which he died.<lb/>
But let us start at the beginning.<lb/>
St. Patrick was born in 372 or 384<lb/>
AD. in one of three countries: France,<lb/>
England or Scotland, all three hold claim<lb/>
to him At the age of sixteen he was<lb/>
carried off by pirates and sold into<lb/>
slavery in Ireland. There he was<lb/>
employed by his master as a swineherd<lb/>
on the mountain of Sleamish, in the<lb/>
county of Antrim He lived there seven<lb/>
years, during which time he learned the<lb/>
Irish language, and customs and habits<lb/>
of the people.<lb/>
He escaped captivity, and eventually<lb/>
reached the Continent There he was<lb/>
successively ordained Deacon, priest and<lb/>
bishop With the authority of Pope<lb/>
Celestine he returned to Ireland once<lb/>
more to preach the Gospel to its<lb/>
inhabitants<lb/>
Patrick found enemies in the Druidical<lb/>
priests of the more ancient faith in the<lb/>
country They were great magicians, but<lb/>
found their powers useless against<lb/>
Patrick. Their antagonism of the bishop<lb/>
was so great that he was compelled to<lb/>
curse their fertile lands, so that they<lb/>
became dreary bogs: to curse their rivers<lb/>
so that no fish lived there; to curse their<lb/>
kettles so that nothinq could ever be<lb/>
made to boil in them; and lastly, to<lb/>
curse the Druids themselves, so that the<lb/>
earth opened and swallowed them up.<lb/>
One legend associated with the saint<lb/>
and his followers holds that one cold<lb/>
morning they found themselves on a<lb/>
mountain, without a fire to cook their<lb/>
breakfast, or warm themselves. Patrick<lb/>
instructed his followers to gather a pile<lb/>
of ice and snowballs: after this was<lb/>
done, he breathed upon it, and it<lb/>
immediately became a fire.<lb/>
His greatest miracle, however, was<lb/>
that of driving the snakes from Ireland,<lb/>
and causing the soil of the country to kill<lb/>
any serpents that touched it. It has been<lb/>
said that Patrick accomplished the f�at<lb/>
by bqating a drum, which he struck so<lb/>
hard that he knocked a hole in it,<lb/>
endangering the success of the miracle.<lb/>
An angel appeared, though, and mended<lb/>
the drum, which was long exhibited as a<lb/>
holy relic.<lb/>
In 445 he commanded his disciples to<lb/>
abstain from drink in the daytime, until<lb/>
the bell rang for vespers in the evening<lb/>
One man, while working in his fields,<lb/>
obeyed this commandment quite literally.<lb/>
Even though he was exhausted with heat.<lb/>
fatigue and thirst, he refused to drink<lb/>
even one drop of water during the day. At<lb/>
last, when the bell rang for vespers, the<lb/>
man dropped dead-a martyr to thirst.<lb/>
St Patrick died on March 17, 493. He<lb/>
is recognised throughout Ireland as the<lb/>
country's patron saint, a Christian<lb/>
missionary and as a founder of schools<lb/>
and churches.<lb/>
The shamrock is associated with the<lb/>
umber's t<lb/>
Family<lb/>
Favorites<lb/>
FIATilllfc<lb/>
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Ctiiitrj fritd ohkfc�<lb/>
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SPECIAL! Hot dog with<lb/>
homemade chile<lb/>
NOWFEA TURING BREAKFAST<lb/>
ON UTHSTfrom 7AM- 11AM<lb/>
TWt LMATIMS 14te St. OI!JfJi:AYS<lb/>
Ceraer tf ltd �� Iea4e IT. A WEEK<lb/>
�auH He<lb/>
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saint because he used it as a teaching<lb/>
instrument to illustrate the Holy<lb/>
Trinity-God the Father, God the Son and<lb/>
God the Holy Ghost-represented by each<lb/>
of the three green leaves.<lb/>
In Dublin. Ireland the day is<lb/>
celebrated with a march down O'Connell<lb/>
Street. At 150 feet, it is one of the widest<lb/>
avenues in Europe. Monuments of men<lb/>
famous in Irish history stand in the<lb/>
street's center.<lb/>
In America the day is observed by the<lb/>
wearing of green and a parade in New<lb/>
York City.<lb/>
NURSERY<lb/>
Continued from page 8.<lb/>
who are with their mothers daily while<lb/>
the fathers work, a man teacher could<lb/>
help them develop a more well-rounded<lb/>
view of their environment.<lb/>
Terry Dutton is one of few men who<lb/>
teacn pre-school children. In the future,<lb/>
you may find yourself taking your child<lb/>
to a nursery school where there are as<lb/>
many men teachers as there are women.<lb/>
Got any bright ideas?<lb/>
Come to feature writers meeting<lb/>
Thursday, 5:30<lb/>
Writers and<lb/>
interested parties<lb/>
invited<lb/>
MARCH<lb/>
r<lb/>
 16 Tues. - SUITERS GOL<lb/>
fc 17 Wed. - ROCKFISH<lb/>
18 Thur- ROCKFISH<lb/>
S19 Fri. - PEGASUS BBJB c<lb/>
$20 sat. - pegasus aam J<lb/>
hi Sun. - PEGASUS "ADMISSION <lb/>
 RAZZ JAZZ RECORDS "j-f-<lb/>
 GEORGETOWN SHOPPES 752 8654 g PM<lb/>
NEW RELEASES<lb/>
REG. $69aLSTLP'SNOW$4<lb/>
WET WILLIE � "THE WETTER<lb/>
THE BETTER<lb/>
it<lb/>
GENESIS �"ATRICKOFTHETAIL" X<lb/>
<lb/>
RONNIE LAWS "PRESSURE J<lb/>
SENSITIVE" i<lb/>
ROBIN TROWER "LIVE" <lb/>
� ALSO ALL$7 TAPES ONLY $5��<lb/>
t-rfat�-x i i mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040029_0010"/><lb/>
HHHHIHIVHBi<lb/>
10<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmutnm<lb/>
mmmmmmmmm<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Greenwich Village comes to life<lb/>
By BRANDON USE<lb/>
Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Is 1953 a good time for leaving home?<lb/>
Larry Lapinsky thinks it is. He is leaving<lb/>
the Brownsville section of Brooklyn for<lb/>
Greenwich Village and an acting career.<lb/>
Greenwich Village, Bohemian capital<lb/>
of the United States, Manhattan's version<lb/>
of the Left Bank, spot where thousands<lb/>
have gone to pursue artistic careers of<lb/>
one sort or another throughout the years,<lb/>
is the setting for the movie. Even though<lb/>
the film was shot on location in<lb/>
Greenwich Village and Brooklyn, director<lb/>
Paul Mazursky best succeeds in<lb/>
feel of Greenwich Village until we come<lb/>
to terms with the potpourri of the<lb/>
characters and their lives.<lb/>
Lenny Baker and Ellen Greene as the<lb/>
two young lovers, Larry Lapinsky and<lb/>
Sarah, both portray young, middle class<lb/>
Jewish kids from Brooklyn who are<lb/>
hoping to find something in Greenwich<lb/>
Village. Likewise Christopher Walken as<lb/>
Robert, a young poet, Dori Brenner as<lb/>
Connie, an artist, and Antonio Fargas as<lb/>
Bernstein, a gay Black man, all seem to<lb/>
be seeking something in the Village.<lb/>
The trouble is no one except Larry<lb/>
Lapinsky seems to really know what they<lb/>
are seeking. Larry always has a firm goal<lb/>
LENNY BAKER, Ellen Greene, Antonio Fargas, Dori Brenner and Christopher Walken<lb/>
are denizens of Greenwich Village in the early 19508 in Paul Mazurskys "Next Stop<lb/>
Greenwich Village<lb/>
ELLEN GREENE and Lenny Baker are lovers In the Greenwich Village of the early<lb/>
195Cs in Paul Mazursky's "Next Stop, Greenwich Village<lb/>
realistically re-creating the people of<lb/>
Greenwich Village on screen rather than<lb/>
loading us down with heavy physical<lb/>
re-creation. Mazursky, who coincidentally<lb/>
was bom in Brooklyn and left it around<lb/>
1953 for Greenwich Village and an<lb/>
acting career, nevertheless insists that<lb/>
the movie Is only influenced by his life�<lb/>
but not an autobiography.<lb/>
Though Packards and Hudsons line<lb/>
the streets of Sheridan Square and<lb/>
MacDougal Street, and newsstands<lb/>
display Modem Screen Magazine with the<lb/>
cover story, "Wolves I Have Known" by<lb/>
Marilyn Monroe, we don't get the true<lb/>
in mind; to be an actor. All the others<lb/>
are simply existing in the Village for its<lb/>
Mecca-like qualities We see Larry in his<lb/>
everyday struggles to make himself<lb/>
known as an actor but all the rest of his<lb/>
friends are only viewed in coffeehouses,<lb/>
parties, or in their apartments. None of<lb/>
the others have ambition to make<lb/>
something of their lives beyond the<lb/>
Village but Larry who sees the Village<lb/>
merely as a stepping stone to stardom.<lb/>
We find, as Larry does in the course<lb/>
of the film, that many of his "friends" in<lb/>
Greenwich Village are shells of people;<lb/>
facades covered by more facades. Larry<lb/>
sums it ud beautifully when he finds out<lb/>
that Sarah, his girlfriend, has been<lb/>
seduced by Robert. Cornering him in a<lb/>
bar, Larry cooly remarks: "Underneath<lb/>
thatpose, there is nothing but pose<lb/>
Bernstein, who after his boyfriend has<lb/>
left him won't come out from underneath<lb/>
bedcovers, finally confesses to sym-<lb/>
pathetic Larry and Co. that his name<lb/>
really isn't Bernstein, he came from<lb/>
Georgia instead of New York, he has no<lb/>
idea who his father was, and almost<lb/>
everything he has told them was made<lb/>
up. "The only real thing is the gay part,<lb/>
so please go away. I don't want to come<lb/>
out from under the covers<lb/>
Indeed the Village has that carnival<lb/>
facade where among other things Larry<lb/>
and friends dance in conga lines down<lb/>
the streets to prevent weekly suicide<lb/>
attempts from Anita, one of the wasted<lb/>
Villagers.<lb/>
Larry's struggles to be an actor are<lb/>
juxtaposed with struggles from his<lb/>
mother (Shelly Winters) who plays the<lb/>
classic Jewish mother who doesn't want<lb/>
to give up her little boy; even if he is 22!<lb/>
His attempts at living in the grownup<lb/>
world are always being threatened by his<lb/>
mother vho means well, but just can't let<lb/>
go. She constantly interferes with Larry's<lb/>
life, walking in on his parties and his life<lb/>
with Sarah.<lb/>
Lenny Baker as Larry Lapinsky, the<lb/>
only one of the Villagers who seems to<lb/>
have a last name, brings his part to life<lb/>
with a true New York vitality and<lb/>
awareness. Unlike naive Dustin Hoffman<lb/>
in THE GRADUATE, Larry is not<lb/>
confused by the world, only frustrated by<lb/>
it. He is not having harsh reality<lb/>
unwillingly thrust upon him, to the<lb/>
contrary, he actively seeks the challenge<lb/>
of the real world and seems rather adult<lb/>
throughout the film even though it is a<lb/>
film partially about growing up. I suggest<lb/>
that it is more about trying to make<lb/>
dreams become reality than about<lb/>
growing up, for Larry Lapinsky seems on<lb/>
his way by the end of the film to<lb/>
becoming somebody.<lb/>
NEXT STOP GREENWICH VILLAGE is<lb/>
wry humor-drama done very well through<lb/>
the sympathetic directing of a Village<lb/>
veteran, Paul Mazursky. It works because<lb/>
reality is not glossed over by nostalgia;<lb/>
but most importantly -it works.<lb/>
This film playing through tonight at the<lb/>
Park Theater. Their cooperation is<lb/>
gratefully appreciated.<lb/>
Murray Perahia gives sensitive performance<lb/>
By MARY GROVER<lb/>
Murray Perahia's performance in<lb/>
MendenhaJI Student Center last Wednes-<lb/>
day night was both sensitive and<lb/>
inspired. Perahia's playing exhibited<lb/>
technical mastery and spiritual insight.<lb/>
Mr. Perahia's performance seemed<lb/>
stronger in the poetic sense than in the<lb/>
powerful. He played two sets of<lb/>
variations on his program. The first,<lb/>
Haydn's "F-Minor Variations" lent itself<lb/>
well to Perahia's style. Its themes were<lb/>
beautifully conveyed throughout the<lb/>
entire piece. But in Brahm's "25<lb/>
Va lations and Fugue on a Theme of<lb/>
Handel a set of variations much larger<lb/>
mm<lb/>
in scope than the one. Of Hayden's,<lb/>
Perahia seemed to have some trouble<lb/>
tying the whole piece together. Each<lb/>
variation is, in its own right, a complete<lb/>
entity. But more so, it is a link in a<lb/>
stream of musical events, culminating, in<lb/>
this set, in a grand fugue whose<lb/>
demands Perahia seemed just shy of<lb/>
satisfying.<lb/>
Bartok's "Out of Doors' Suite" was<lb/>
second on the program. The five-piece<lb/>
composition encompassing a varied<lb/>
range of sounds and moods was<lb/>
completely played. But again, especially<lb/>
in "The Chase the final piece of the<lb/>
suite, a bigger or heavier 3ound wa��<lb/>
needed to meet its driving and rhythmic<lb/>
specifications.<lb/>
"Papillons" by Schumann, like the<lb/>
Haydn Variations, exhibited Perahia's<lb/>
forte, tonal and textural control. His<lb/>
playing was refined, capturing all the<lb/>
subtleties and nuances of the composi-<lb/>
tion. "Papillons" is an example of the<lb/>
"character" piece of trie 19th century.<lb/>
Each of the twelve sections Involves its<lb/>
own individual mood or character which<lb/>
Mr. Perahia was most successful in<lb/>
relaying.<lb/>
The recital was enjoyable because of<lb/>
its varied program, but more importantly<lb/>
because of Murray Perahia's meaningful<lb/>
and dedicated performance of these<lb/>
pieces.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
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ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Kottke is superb<lb/>
By KENT JOHNSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Leo Kottke concert last Thursday<lb/>
night at Wright Auditorium was a concert<lb/>
that should not have been missed.<lb/>
Artists of Kottke's caliber do not come to<lb/>
ECU often enough.<lb/>
To say that Kottke was proficient with<lb/>
his Martin twelve string guitar wojld be<lb/>
an understatement. A proficient guitar<lb/>
player in a solo performance could not<lb/>
control and impress an audience the<lb/>
way Kottke did.<lb/>
Throughout the concert you could<lb/>
hear the claps, yells and sighs of the<lb/>
members of the audience who were<lb/>
unwilling to wait until the end of the<lb/>
song to show their appreciation. This<lb/>
reporter's jaw dropped more than once in<lb/>
appreciation of a Kottke melody line.<lb/>
Some guitarists seem to say to the<lb/>
audience: "Look what I can make this<lb/>
guitar do Leo Kottke says: "Look at<lb/>
this amazing instrument and what it can<lb/>
do It is this subtle difference that puts<lb/>
Kottke ahead of other guitarists. Only an<lb/>
artist true to form could have produced a<lb/>
show of the quality and style of<lb/>
Thursday's performance.<lb/>
Kottke wears five finger picks on his<lb/>
right hand, and a glass slide on his little<lb/>
finger of his left hand. To watch him<lb/>
play, you would think it was the most<lb/>
natural and easiest way to play guitar. All<lb/>
of his movements were graceful and<lb/>
precise.<lb/>
Kottke is a solo performer, but<lb/>
listening to him it is hard to think that<lb/>
there is no backup. He plays the rhythm<lb/>
with his thumb and forefinger on the<lb/>
lower strings while picking the lead on<lb/>
the higher strings. Without missing a<lb/>
boat he may play a short lead with the<lb/>
slide that is on his little finger. He<lb/>
occasionally retunes his guitar to an<lb/>
open chord.<lb/>
When Kottke appears on stage in blue<lb/>
jeans and a pullover shirt, with short hair<lb/>
by today's standards, he reminds you of<lb/>
your older cousin who you do not see<lb/>
too often. You think that he might have<lb/>
just gotten out of the Navy. In fact<lb/>
Kottke was in the Navy for quite some<lb/>
years.<lb/>
But Kottke is surprising. This<lb/>
cousin's voice wasn't nearly so low as<lb/>
Kottke's. It is not a rasping voice, but a<lb/>
low melodic voice. And besides the way<lb/>
he talks, what he is saying is also<lb/>
surprising, you can't believe a word the<lb/>
man says.<lb/>
During the concert Kottke would<lb/>
pause between songs and explain what<lb/>
inspired him to write the next song, or<lb/>
simply give the name of the song. The<lb/>
name of one instrumental was "A Bus<lb/>
Boy's Baroque Seen Through the Eyes of<lb/>
the Suburb A very sad sounding blues<lb/>
See Kottka. oaoe 12.<lb/>
"To say that Kottke was proficient on hisguitar would be an understatement.<lb/>
-ROCK '� SOUL,<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 M'RCH 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
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ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
KOTTKE<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
melody was inspired by a 13 year old<lb/>
New Jersey youth who discovered he was<lb/>
growing pubic hair and killod himself.<lb/>
He thought he was becoming a werewolf.<lb/>
Kottke attributes this tragedy to<lb/>
television.<lb/>
Kottke was never serious in his<lb/>
monologues. He discussed everything<lb/>
from death to cottage cheese in Raleigh,<lb/>
NIC. and treated all of the subjects with<lb/>
equally amusing sarcasm.<lb/>
Kottke worked as hard at amusing<lb/>
himself as he did to amuse the audience.<lb/>
While he played the guitar his eyes were<lb/>
closed most of the time. At times, it<lb/>
seemed that the audience was<lb/>
hypnotised, but Kottke would not allow<lb/>
that for long, he was intent on having a<lb/>
good time.<lb/>
ECU audiences yell, clap and stomp<lb/>
feet. This audience attitude made Kottke<lb/>
happy. Kottke enjoyed answering the<lb/>
lower members of the audience, and<lb/>
smiled modestly with the applause.<lb/>
The concert began with a lively<lb/>
instrumental. The second song was a<lb/>
song that is probably most often<lb/>
associated with Leo Kottke. "I Guess I<lb/>
Owe It All To Pamela Brown" is a Kottke<lb/>
song in which he attributes his success<lb/>
and "Tod times to a woman that left him<lb/>
for u ,nan that drives a pick-up truck. If<lb/>
she had not left him he thinks that today<lb/>
he would be driving kids to school.<lb/>
Other notable songs Kottke performed<lb/>
were the very sensitive "Yesterday is<lb/>
Gone the wilder Procol Harum song<lb/>
"Power Failure and probably the<lb/>
highlight of the show "Louise<lb/>
Kottke said of his song "Louise that<lb/>
it was a "song about agony, despair and<lb/>
generally the things that make the world<lb/>
go around I asked him about the song<lb/>
after the show and he claimed he did not<lb/>
write it. His albums credit him with<lb/>
writing "Louise You can't believe a<lb/>
word the man says.<lb/>
"I'm trying to progress, to mature, but<lb/>
I find it hard because I delight in the<lb/>
ordinary Kottke said. It is easy to see<lb/>
that Kottke enjoys his music, which is<lb/>
far from ordinary. So, again I have to<lb/>
say, you can't believe a word the man<lb/>
says.<lb/>
The concert was brought to ECU by<lb/>
the Student Union Special Concerts<lb/>
Committee, chaired by Daniel Prevatte.<lb/>
Special recognition should be given them<lb/>
for organizing such a fine show.<lb/>
Louise is a "song about agony, despair, and generally the things that make the world<lb/>
go around<lb/>
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We'll put your $$ where<lb/>
itcounts-on your plate.<lb/>
-<lb/>
PIEW FWESH AT PIER RVC<lb/>
264 By-Pass - Pitt Plaza<lb/>
&amp; jRatljsUlfr<lb/>
109 e. FIFTH St.<lb/>
Tues. - SUPER TUESDA Y 7-10<lb/>
WedBACK AGAIN<lb/>
"BREMDA&amp;TDNT<lb/>
Thur LADIES NIGHT 7-10<lb/>
THERAT iili ii ifr EVER I COVER CHARGE<lb/>
THIS WEEK AT THE<lb/>
E1JIOROOM<lb/>
STARTING WED.<lb/>
MESaUARE<lb/>
2c Top 40 Show Band<lb/>
jc Just back from Las Vegas<lb/>
:c Also appearing Fri. 3-7<lb/>
DONTMISSTHIS GROUP<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEAOVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
13<lb/>
Female law school enrollment increase cited<lb/>
By RAY TYLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
More and more women are getting<lb/>
into law school and are doing well there,<lb/>
according to Mrs. Nelson Crisp, a<lb/>
Greenville attorney.<lb/>
"Women are scoring seven percent<lb/>
higher than men on the LSAT (Law<lb/>
Scholastic Aptitude Test) and the grade<lb/>
point average of women in law school<lb/>
exceeds the male average said Mrs.<lb/>
Crisp.<lb/>
Mrs. Crisp made the comments in a<lb/>
speech before the ECU Law Society, Feb.<lb/>
12.<lb/>
The Law Society is an organization for<lb/>
students interested in pursuing legal<lb/>
careers. It obtains information from law<lb/>
schools for its 46 members and<lb/>
maintains a library on law schools,<lb/>
according to Walter Clark, president of<lb/>
the society.<lb/>
Mrs. Crisp, a native of Greenville,<lb/>
started her own practice here in 1968.<lb/>
"I figured that in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, nobody would have me said<lb/>
Mrs. Crisp. "So I went in on my own and<lb/>
I went into the hole my first year<lb/>
Mrs. Crisp, who said she has never<lb/>
experienced any sex discrimination<lb/>
amo.o peers, hears comments about her<lb/>
sex.<lb/>
"Some judges like to say 'you are the<lb/>
prettiest lawyer I have ever seen' and that<lb/>
gets old after awhile.<lb/>
"When I went to law school in 1964<lb/>
there were only five women and three did<lb/>
not continue said Mrs. Crisp. "I had a<lb/>
constitutional law professor who pegged'<lb/>
me and called on me more often but I<lb/>
think that helped me learn better<lb/>
Mrs. Crisp, who did her undergrad-<lb/>
uate work at Duke and attended the<lb/>
University of North Carolina Law School<lb/>
cited one area of law in need of<lb/>
immediate reform.<lb/>
"When child support cases are<lb/>
appealed, it can leave a mother without<lb/>
any income and that's not right said<lb/>
Mrs. Crisp. "But we have a fair system of<lb/>
equal rights that asks who the supporting<lb/>
person is and who is the dependent<lb/>
Mrs. Crisp said the recent move<lb/>
toward allowing lawyers to advertise<lb/>
is dangerous.<lb/>
"I think we have a very good system<lb/>
now she said. "If we had advertising we<lb/>
would have people undercutting others<lb/>
and that's not healthy.<lb/>
"But we still have attomeys who<lb/>
engage in ambulance chasing and<lb/>
attomeys that are buddy-buddy with real<lb/>
estate men so maybe we should try<lb/>
advertising and see what happens said<lb/>
Mrs. Crisp.<lb/>
The ECU Law Society sponsors four<lb/>
lectures each year, and Mrs. Crisp was<lb/>
the second in this year's series. Mrs.<lb/>
Crisp is retained as an attorney for<lb/>
students by the Student Government<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Spring ECU graduates face grim U.S. job market<lb/>
By FRANCEINE PERRY<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
The job market for this spring's crop<lb/>
of college graduates looks pretty grim,<lb/>
but ECU senior Michael Kincer doesn't<lb/>
worry about his employment prospects.<lb/>
Already he has had encouraging<lb/>
on-campus interviews with a variety of<lb/>
employers�a well-known automobile<lb/>
manufacturer, a Richmond Tobacco<lb/>
company, a cosmetic distributor, an<lb/>
office equipment firm, a large bank and<lb/>
the regional office of a camera<lb/>
manufacturer.<lb/>
And the local car dealership which<lb/>
employed Kincer part-time during his<lb/>
student years has urged him to consider<lb/>
permanent employment.<lb/>
The jobs Kincer is considering include<lb/>
management, data processing and<lb/>
marketing positions, which would enable<lb/>
him to apply his campus studies as a<lb/>
business and mathematics major.<lb/>
Some of the potential employers have<lb/>
offered to pay his travel expenses for<lb/>
further interviews.<lb/>
Why is Mike Kincer so fortunate in<lb/>
locating job prospects?<lb/>
"He has a positive attitude toward<lb/>
job-hunting sayd ECU Placement<lb/>
Service Director Fumey James. "Mike has<lb/>
not simply read the unemployment<lb/>
statistics and given up in despair, as<lb/>
many students have.<lb/>
"He knows he has a good deal to<lb/>
offer an employer, and this confidence is<lb/>
communicated to the company represent-<lb/>
atives who interview him<lb/>
James's office arranges for graduating<lb/>
seniors to meet with visiting interviewers<lb/>
from businesses, industries, school<lb/>
systems and other companies and<lb/>
institutions interested in hiring new<lb/>
employees.<lb/>
Problems resulting from the current<lb/>
recession-unemployment, inflation, ,ow<lb/>
revenues and resulting cutbacks-have<lb/>
caused numbers of students to panic,<lb/>
and fail to register for interviews at all,<lb/>
believing that the situation is hopeless,<lb/>
James says.<lb/>
"That is why Mike is in such a<lb/>
favorable position<lb/>
Mike Kincer himself attributes his<lb/>
success to the fact that he does not feel<lb/>
"pressured<lb/>
"Graduate school is always an<lb/>
option he said. "As an Air Force<lb/>
veteran, I still have two more years of the<lb/>
Gl Bill. My wife is employed, so I am not<lb/>
desperate for a job.<lb/>
Job-hunting has not been altogether<lb/>
easy for Kincer; the first job applications<lb/>
he sent away were accepted with thanks<lb/>
but with polite replies that no position<lb/>
was available.<lb/>
"This is why so many students are<lb/>
turned off. You just have to keep trying<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
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SHIRTS AND STUFF<lb/>
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Featuring the Latest in;<lb/>
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Leisure Prints by Kennington of CsMfomta<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
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Mandatory student fees battle rages in U.S.<lb/>
From the cold marble halls of the US<lb/>
Supreme Court to the frozen streets of<lb/>
Madison, Wisconsin, the continuing saga<lb/>
of whose hot little hands get to control<lb/>
student fees rages on.<lb/>
Should University of North Carolina<lb/>
students fork over funds to a liberal<lb/>
student paper that regularly dumps on<lb/>
Spiro Agnew and foes of abortion?<lb/>
Should University of Wisconsin students<lb/>
help pay trial costs of a man accused of<lb/>
bombing that school's math building six<lb/>
years ago where a professor lost his life?<lb/>
Should students at the State University<lb/>
of New York at Buffalo pop for the<lb/>
financing of a student corporation like<lb/>
the Schussmeisters Ski Club?<lb/>
These are just some of the current<lb/>
campus battles being waged over<lb/>
mandatory student fees. The fees,<lb/>
usually included in or added on to<lb/>
student tuition, run from $1 to $50<lb/>
depending on the school, and go towards<lb/>
financing such things as athletic<lb/>
programs, student newspapers, student<lb/>
governments, and various other student-<lb/>
orientated programs and organizations.<lb/>
The use and control of such funds<lb/>
has long been a hot campus issue. At<lb/>
most schools, the student government<lb/>
has the last say as to which student<lb/>
groups receive how much. Groups which<lb/>
receive the money are usually recognized<lb/>
campus organizations, but the process of<lb/>
dishing out the cash is fraught with<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
Critics point out that student<lb/>
governments, whether liberal or conserva-<lb/>
tive, are usually elected by small<lb/>
percentages of the student population<lb/>
and therefore do not accurately reflect<lb/>
the wishes of the students as to where<lb/>
their money should go.<lb/>
When a student government gives<lb/>
$700 to the local Trotskyite cabal to<lb/>
finance a semester worth of leaflets,<lb/>
students of a somewhat conservative<lb/>
bent unleash a howl. When liberal<lb/>
students, on the other hand, see their<lb/>
hard-earned tuition money going to a<lb/>
fraternity to pay for a beer bash, they<lb/>
send up a cry of protest. And when<lb/>
students of all ideological shades see<lb/>
student governments abusing their<lb/>
money by taking needless junkets or<lb/>
sometimes, by outright stealing it,<lb/>
everyone yells.<lb/>
The Daily Tar Heel, the student paper<lb/>
at the University of North Carolina which<lb/>
receives $22,000 in student funds, was<lb/>
recently let off the hook by the US<lb/>
Supreme Court when it refused to hear a<lb/>
case brought by several disgruntled<lb/>
students. The students said they didn't<lb/>
like their mandatory fees supporting a<lb/>
paper whose views did not jive with<lb/>
theirs.<lb/>
The court's refusal left standing a<lb/>
district court ruling which said neither<lb/>
the paper nor the university "imposes or<lb/>
attempts to impose an orthodoxy or point<lb/>
of view concerning religious, moral,<lb/>
philosophical, ideological and political<lb/>
ideas on any individual<lb/>
The students, whose fees range from<lb/>
$7 to $9 out of a tuition of $453 per<lb/>
semester, objected to the paper's line on<lb/>
such topics as Agnew, abortion, Richard<lb/>
Nixon, Hubert Humphrey, bussing and1 the<lb/>
death penalty. They argued that since<lb/>
they couldn't graduate unless their fees<lb/>
were paid, the newspaper policy resulted<lb/>
in state-sanctioned opinion, a violation of<lb/>
their First Amendment rights.<lb/>
University of Wisconsin students<lb/>
however, who objected to their student<lb/>
association's donation to alleged bomber<lb/>
David Fine, were more successful in a<lb/>
similar incident in late February.<lb/>
Fine, 23, the youngest man ever<lb/>
named to the FBI's 10 Most Wanted list,<lb/>
was captured in California January 7 and<lb/>
returned to Wisconsin for trial. When the<lb/>
Wisconsin Student Association (WSA)<lb/>
voted to give $2,000 to his defense team<lb/>
many Wisconsin students were not<lb/>
pleased.<lb/>
A group calling itself "Students for<lb/>
Students" was formed, and in several<lb/>
days collected 5,000 signatures on a<lb/>
petition, enough to place the donation<lb/>
question on a campus referendum<lb/>
scheduled for April. Faced with the<lb/>
opposition, the WSA, which receives<lb/>
$63,000 each year in student fees,<lb/>
rescinded the offer, saying the publicity<lb/>
would have hurt Fine's chances for<lb/>
acquital.<lb/>
Students at the State University of<lb/>
New York (SUNY) at Buffalo, where<lb/>
controversy over student fees has been<lb/>
brewing since the protest days of 1970,<lb/>
may be able to use funds to form student<lb/>
"organizations or corporations" if a<lb/>
recently-passed report is okayed by the<lb/>
SUNY Chancellor and Board of Trustees.<lb/>
Some of the student corporations<lb/>
which might qualify for funding In<lb/>
addition to the Schussmeisters Ski Club<lb/>
are the New York Public Research Group<lb/>
and the Buffalo campus paper, The<lb/>
Spectrum, both non-profit outfits.<lb/>
Although the report recommends that<lb/>
student fees also be permitted for use in<lb/>
activities involving "advocacy or expres-<lb/>
sions of views or opinions, whether or<lb/>
not the SUNY Chancellor and Trustees<lb/>
will go along with the report is another<lb/>
question.<lb/>
As usual, the issue is what<lb/>
constitutes a "student" group and where<lb/>
does "personal" opinion enter into a<lb/>
group's realm.<lb/>
An aide to a high SUNY official, said<lb/>
to reflect the views of other SUNY<lb/>
officials, was no' leased with the report.<lb/>
Using mandatory student fees to support<lb/>
a group's personal view is a "blatant<lb/>
misuse of the fee" he said.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
mmmmmmmmu i ami i � mimmmmm0<lb/>
15<lb/>
'Mercy killing'gaining support in the U.S.<lb/>
By FRANCEINE PERRY<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Euthanasia, or "mercy-killing is not<lb/>
yet accepted fully by the majority of<lb/>
persons in our society, but it is<lb/>
significantly gaining approval, says an<lb/>
ECU sociologist.<lb/>
Dr. Donald Stewart, an aooociate<lb/>
professor of sociology at ECU who has<lb/>
studied attitudes toward euthanasia,<lb/>
discussed his findings at a recent Alpha<lb/>
Kappa Delta research symposium in<lb/>
Richmond, Va.<lb/>
"A dictionary definition of euthanasia<lb/>
is 'the act of putting to death painlessly<lb/>
a person suffering from a painful and<lb/>
incurabie disease said Stewart.<lb/>
Euthanasia and other types of<lb/>
"putting to death" has been openly<lb/>
practiced by many societies, he said.<lb/>
"Infanticide has existed as a means of<lb/>
population control in many cultures. In<lb/>
some pre-literate migratory groups, the<lb/>
aged were abandoned or killed outright,<lb/>
and this was expected, if not approved,<lb/>
by the elderly<lb/>
Even in modem western nations,<lb/>
euthanasia is widely practiced upon aged<lb/>
patients, as reported by Simone de<lb/>
Beauvoir in "The Coming of Age he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Even in modern western nations,<lb/>
Dr. Stewart pointed out a complex<lb/>
ambivalence toward euthanasia in the<lb/>
U.S while it is illegal, it is not<lb/>
infrequently carried out by medical<lb/>
personnel with the consent of the patient<lb/>
or the patient's family. Most euthanasia<lb/>
of this type is unreported, but<lb/>
occasionally a "mercy killer" is arrested.<lb/>
However, court action usually results in<lb/>
acquittal or a light sentence, unlike other<lb/>
forms of homicide<lb/>
Euthanasia is often made possible by<lb/>
the fact that a bedridden patient may<lb/>
contract pneumonia, and if the hospital<lb/>
staff purposely neglects to treat the<lb/>
pneumonia, the patient dies sooner, he<lb/>
said. This is "negative" or "passive"<lb/>
euthanasia, the term applied to a failure<lb/>
by medical personnel to take "heroic<lb/>
measures" to prolong life, thus allowing<lb/>
death to occur naturally. "Active"<lb/>
euthanasia is the deliberate termination<lb/>
of life.<lb/>
Dr. Stewart believes many seriously<lb/>
deformed infants are euthanized soon<lb/>
after birth.<lb/>
"The number of such cases cannot be<lb/>
known, but the evidence indicates that<lb/>
this number is considerable he said.<lb/>
He quoted a Washington, D.C.<lb/>
gynecologist who estimates that at least<lb/>
once a week in his city's hospitals, a<lb/>
mentally or physically deformed infant<lb/>
patient who will not live a "meaningful"<lb/>
life dies when medical treatment is<lb/>
terminated. A Maryland medical center<lb/>
ends treatment to about 20 cases each<lb/>
year of serious and presumably fatal<lb/>
injuries, frequently involving a severed<lb/>
spinal column.<lb/>
"One rationalization is that the<lb/>
amount of medical equipment and the<lb/>
number of qualified medical personnel<lb/>
are limited, and the hopeless terminal<lb/>
patient may be utilizing facilities that<lb/>
might be more effectively used by a<lb/>
patient with a prospect for recovery<lb/>
said Stewart.<lb/>
Dr. Stewart recently directed a survey<lb/>
of a cross-section of North Carolinians<lb/>
regarding their thoughts on euthanasia as<lb/>
a means to end the lives of three chief<lb/>
categories of hopelessly ill persons:<lb/>
deformed infants, the seriously injured of<lb/>
any age, and the elderly who suffer from<lb/>
terminal illness.<lb/>
Forty-one per cent agreed that<lb/>
euthanasia should be practiced in allthree<lb/>
cases, 32 per cent disagreed with all<lb/>
three, and 27 per cent disagree with one<lb/>
or two of the categories, most often<lb/>
drawing the line at euthanizing deformed<lb/>
infants.<lb/>
"Infanticide appeared to be the most<lb/>
unpopular form of euthanasia Stewart<lb/>
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says. "Data from the interviews indicated<lb/>
that at least some persons had the idea<lb/>
that medical technology might someday<lb/>
develop remedies for the deformed<lb/>
infant<lb/>
Age was noted as an important<lb/>
characteristic of each opinion group.<lb/>
Pro-euthanasia people represented a<lb/>
median age of 35 years, and the "anti"<lb/>
group's median age was 54. Forty-eight<lb/>
was the median age for the mixed group.<lb/>
Those most likely to be anti-<lb/>
euthanasia were not only older, but less<lb/>
educated and professed strong religious<lb/>
beliefs, particularly Roman Catholic. The<lb/>
sex of the individuals surveyed did not<lb/>
seem to influence opinion on euthanasia.<lb/>
He believes that most governments<lb/>
will eventually permit the practice of<lb/>
euthanasia but that new legislation is not<lb/>
the most workable means of legalization.<lb/>
In Britain's House of Lords, bills<lb/>
favoring euthanasia have failed three<lb/>
times, though the minority endorsing<lb/>
euthanasia has increased with each<lb/>
ballot. Five U.S. states have also voted<lb/>
down pro-euthanasia bills.<lb/>
"In this nation, a Supreme Court<lb/>
decision, such as the 1973 ruling which<lb/>
effectively legalized abortion, is the<lb/>
easiest way to legalize euthanasia said<lb/>
Stewart. "Public opinion is rising in its<lb/>
favor, according to national and regional<lb/>
polls taken during the past 15 years. A<lb/>
decisive court ruling will one day reflect<lb/>
this increasing approval<lb/>
Organizations such as the Euthanasia<lb/>
Educational Foundation, a lobbying and<lb/>
educational group, and the Death with<lb/>
Dignity movement have grown rapidly.<lb/>
Increased media coverage, including<lb/>
popular television programs on the<lb/>
subject, have expanded public accept-<lb/>
ance of euthanasia, he said.<lb/>
"Thousands of 'Living Wills' stating a<lb/>
person's wishes to be allowed to die<lb/>
rather than be kept alive by artificial<lb/>
means, have been signed, even though<lb/>
the actual legality of these documents is<lb/>
in doubt<lb/>
Euthanasia has become a major issue<lb/>
only since the invention of complex<lb/>
life-support machines and other techno-<lb/>
logical advances which can keep a<lb/>
comatose patient alive indefinitely Yet<lb/>
one of the most well-known recorded<lb/>
cases of euthanasia was the 1939 death<lb/>
of Sigmund Freud, noted Stewart.<lb/>
After more than 30 unsuccessful<lb/>
operations for a slow, deadly cancer of<lb/>
the cheek and jaw, Freud was tormented<lb/>
by pain and aware that he had no chance<lb/>
of recovery.<lb/>
His physician treated the pain with<lb/>
large doses of morpria, and at Freud's<lb/>
request, placed a fatal dosage by his<lb/>
bed, the ultimate cure for suffering wnich<lb/>
had become unbearable. On Sept. 21,<lb/>
1939, Freud quietly swallowed the drug<lb/>
and fell into his last sleep, ending his<lb/>
pain forever.<lb/>
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16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
IM<lb/>
wm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
0m<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
�AA<lb/>
Swimmers take secondplace in Regionals<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina swim team traveled<lb/>
to University Park, Pa. last weekend and<lb/>
came back with the second place trophy<lb/>
in the Easterns Swimming Champion-<lb/>
ship. Pitt won the meet with 443 points,<lb/>
while the Pirates mounted up 299.<lb/>
Syracuse placed third with 265, and<lb/>
Maryland picked up fourth with 229.<lb/>
Twelve teams competed in the<lb/>
Championship.<lb/>
The Pirates broke eight varsity records<lb/>
and four frosh marks in the three day<lb/>
event that saw East Carolina qualify one<lb/>
relay team and one individual for the<lb/>
national championships in two weeks.<lb/>
John McCauley, Keith Wade and John<lb/>
Tudor were the major assaulters on the<lb/>
record books. McCauley broke the 50<lb/>
freestyle mark and was in on the relay<lb/>
teams that broke the 400 and 800<lb/>
freestyle records. His time in the 50<lb/>
freestyle was the fourth best in the<lb/>
nation this year and qualified him for the<lb/>
nationals. He also qualified in the 100<lb/>
freestyle for the nationals.<lb/>
McCauley was one of three double<lb/>
winners and he took it one step further<lb/>
by also swimming on a winning relay<lb/>
team to give him three victories. His time<lb/>
in the 50 freestyle of : 20.83 broke every<lb/>
mark it could. The time was .24 of a<lb/>
second belter than his previous best. In<lb/>
the 100 freestyle, McCauley barely<lb/>
missed the varsity record but timed out<lb/>
in : 46.30 to qualify him for the nationals.<lb/>
McCauley teamed up with Ross<lb/>
Bohlken, Billy Thome, and John Tudor<lb/>
to break both relay marks. In the 800<lb/>
freestyle relay, the quartet swam to a<lb/>
varsity mark of 6:59.55 to break the old<lb/>
mark by three seconds. This time,<lb/>
however, failed to send them to the<lb/>
nationals.<lb/>
In the 400 freestyle relay, the same<lb/>
quartet swam to a 3:06.17. This mark<lb/>
broke the varsity mark by three seconds<lb/>
and qualified them for the nationals.<lb/>
Keith Wade had three records, two of<lb/>
which were varsity and frosh marks and<lb/>
one that was just a freshman record. In<lb/>
the 200 individual medley, Wade barely<lb/>
missed breaking two minutes when he<lb/>
timed out in 2:00.01 to set a new<lb/>
freshman record. In his specialty, the<lb/>
butterfly, Wade replaced Mike Bretting in<lb/>
the record books as the leader of these<lb/>
events. In the 100 fly, Wade won the<lb/>
consolation round with a time of :52.56<lb/>
to break Bretting's mark by .47 of a<lb/>
second. In the 200 fly, Wade broke<lb/>
Bretting's mark by .43 of a second. His<lb/>
time was 1.57.41.<lb/>
John Tudor set a new record in the<lb/>
500 freestyle. His time of 4:43.98<lb/>
bettered his old mark by about two<lb/>
seconds. He also swam on both relay<lb/>
teams that set marks.<lb/>
The only other record broken was in<lb/>
the 400 individual medley where Tomas<lb/>
Palmgren came out of his slump to break<lb/>
his old record by more than four<lb/>
seconds. His time of 4:15.12 was good<lb/>
enough to place him in second place for<lb/>
the event but did not qualify him<lb/>
nationally.<lb/>
Doug Brindley also had fine races in<lb/>
the 500 and 1650 freestyles. His time of<lb/>
4:46.37 was good enough for fifth place<lb/>
in the 500. In the 1650 freestyle, Brindley<lb/>
won the consolation with a time of<lb/>
16:45.60, just off his record for the<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Stewart Mann had some good times<lb/>
at the Easterns even though he was sick<lb/>
for the first couple of days. In the 200<lb/>
backstroke, Mann finished second with a<lb/>
time of 1:59.36. He also placed in both<lb/>
individual medley events. In the 400 IM<lb/>
Mann finished sixth with a time of<lb/>
4:17.01. In the 100 IM Mann had a<lb/>
2:00.51 to place tenth.<lb/>
Junior Steve Ruedlinger placed fourth<lb/>
and sixth in the 200 and 100 butterflies,<lb/>
respectively, with times of 1:58.15 and<lb/>
: 53.05.<lb/>
Ross Bohlken placed third in the 200<lb/>
freestyle and ninth in the 100 freestyle.<lb/>
His time of 1:44.56 in the 200 free was<lb/>
just off his record for the event.<lb/>
Billy Thome, in addition to swimming<lb/>
on both relay teams, placed fourth in the<lb/>
50 free, seventh in the 100 free, and fifth<lb/>
in the 200 free. His placing in these<lb/>
events gave the Pirates added depth they<lb/>
needed to finish second in the meet. His<lb/>
times of :21.67 in the 50 and 1:44.97 in<lb/>
the 200 were his best ever.<lb/>
Coach Ray Scharf had much praise<lb/>
for his tankers after coming in second in<lb/>
this big of an event.<lb/>
"We really swam well in this meet.<lb/>
I'm really proud of the boys. We could<lb/>
have done better in certain places, like<lb/>
the 800 free relay but overall I can't<lb/>
complain. This is the best we've ever<lb/>
done here. We had finished fifth, but<lb/>
never higher<lb/>
The next meet for tankers will be Mar.<lb/>
25-27 when McCauley and the 400 free<lb/>
relay team travel to Providence, R.I. for<lb/>
the NCAA Division I National Champion-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
Ridge leads linksters in impressive showing<lb/>
ECU'S golf team opened its 1976<lb/>
season last week by finishing tenth out<lb/>
of 18 schools in the Pinehurst Invitational<lb/>
golf tournament in Pinehurst, N.C.<lb/>
The team was paced by junior Steve<lb/>
Ridge, who finished tenth individually<lb/>
with a three-round total of 223. Ridge's<lb/>
final tally was seven strokes behind the<lb/>
individual medalist. Johnny Elam, of<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Elam fired a two-under par 70 on the<lb/>
tournament's final day to beat Wake<lb/>
Forest's Jay Haas by two strokes. Wake<lb/>
Forest finished as the team champion as<lb/>
they outdistanced the second-place Tar<lb/>
Heels by 30 strokes. 1099 to 1129. Wake<lb/>
finished with three of the top four golfers<lb/>
and four of the top six finishers to pull<lb/>
off the runaway victory<lb/>
For ECU. the tournament was a<lb/>
positive showing, according to coach<lb/>
Mac McLendon In evaluating the team's<lb/>
performance. McLendon said that<lb/>
although their were some disappointing<lb/>
individual performances, the team's<lb/>
finish as a whole was promisma.<lb/>
My goal before the tournament was<lb/>
to finish in the top eight, and we missed<lb/>
that by six strokes, but I think we proved<lb/>
that we have a good golf team "<lb/>
The tournament was held on the<lb/>
championship Pinehurst number two<lb/>
course, ore of the nation's premier<lb/>
courses, and McLendon noted that this,<lb/>
as much as anything, was worth<lb/>
competinq in the tournament.<lb/>
"When you play the Pinehurst number<lb/>
two course you have played one of the<lb/>
best courses in the country. It can't help<lb/>
but improve your game You would be<lb/>
hardpressed to find better competition<lb/>
than in the Pinehurst tournament and a.<lb/>
better course than the number two<lb/>
course<lb/>
The field at Pinehurst included all the<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference schools, two<lb/>
t0Mmmmmtt i m � n m �<lb/>
of which ECU finished ahead of, and<lb/>
several of the better schools in the<lb/>
southeastern United States<lb/>
The team opened the tournament<lb/>
ranked next to last in the 18-team filed,<lb/>
but they were in seventh after the<lb/>
first-round of play. A poor second day of<lb/>
play, though, hurt the team and<lb/>
prevented it from placing hiqher.<lb/>
During the second day, the team<lb/>
battled the rain and fell off its first day<lb/>
totals by 28 strokes and to tenth overall.<lb/>
On that second day, only two ECU<lb/>
golfers broke 80. Ridge and Rob Welton<lb/>
with 78's.<lb/>
But the remainder of the tournament<lb/>
the Pirate golfers did well. Ridge finished<lb/>
with a 72 to finish at 223, which<lb/>
outdistanced his nearest ECU teammate<lb/>
by 11 strokes. That was Welton. who put<lb/>
together rounds of 79, 78, and 77 to<lb/>
finish with a 234 total The remainder of<lb/>
the ECU golfers finished in this fashion:<lb/>
Mike Buckmaster 235, Trip Boinest 237,<lb/>
Keith Hiller 239 and Fred Acker 252. In<lb/>
determining the tea:n totals the top five<lb/>
individual scores were used each day<lb/>
Steve Ridge played like a true<lb/>
champion said McLendon. "He played<lb/>
against some of the top players in the<lb/>
country on one of the toughest courses<lb/>
there is. and he held his own.<lb/>
The showing by the rest of the team<lb/>
was good, but not up to their potential or<lb/>
capabilities. Fortunately, we have a<lb/>
second chance at some of the teams that<lb/>
beat us and it is my belief that we will be<lb/>
able to improve on our position in<lb/>
regards to some of the teams which beat<lb/>
us this time around<lb/>
The ECU golfers performance was a<lb/>
good start towards qualifying for the<lb/>
NCAA tournament, but with the tough<lb/>
schedule ECU has this year that will take<lb/>
a lot of work To qualify for the NCAA, a<lb/>
team must.not only win its conference,<lb/>
but play well in the tournaments it<lb/>
enters<lb/>
ECUs next tournament play will be<lb/>
this coming weekend. March 19-21. in<lb/>
the Camp Lejeune tournament Last year,<lb/>
the Pirates finished in fourth place in the<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
Pirates steal way past WCU, 5-1<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Geoff Beaston tied an ECU career<lb/>
record for stolen bases by stealing<lb/>
second in the sixth inning of yesterday's<lb/>
game with Western Carolina University.<lb/>
Moments later, Beaston scored on a<lb/>
single by Steve Bryant to put ECU up,<lb/>
2-1. Charlie Stevens followed with<lb/>
another single to score Bryant and ECU<lb/>
went on to down the Catamounts, 5-1, at<lb/>
Harrington Field.<lb/>
ECU set or tied a bevy of records,<lb/>
both individually and collectively, during<lb/>
the game. As a team, ECU set records<lb/>
for times walked in a game, 10, and<lb/>
stolen bases in a game, seven.<lb/>
Individually, four Pirates set or tied<lb/>
records. Beaston tied the career record<lb/>
for stolen bases with his sixth-inning<lb/>
steal, after setting the career record for<lb/>
hits against Furman on Saturday.<lb/>
Joe Roenker walked three times in the<lb/>
game to tie another single game coord;<lb/>
and Glenn Card and Bryant each stole<lb/>
two bases to tie a single-game record.<lb/>
Bryant, Roenker and Stevens were the<lb/>
hitting stars for the Pirates at the plate.<lb/>
Bryant went 3-for-5 at the plate and<lb/>
scored three runs; Stevens was 2-for-4<lb/>
with two runs batted in; and Roenker<lb/>
went two-for-two in the game, raising his<lb/>
season average to .500.<lb/>
Pete Conaty started for the Pirates<lb/>
and picked up his first win of the year in<lb/>
his first appearance.<lb/>
Conaty lasted six innings before<lb/>
giving way to freshman Keith Kurdewan<lb/>
with two on and none out in the seventh.<lb/>
Kurdewan retired the side with no<lb/>
damage in the seventh and set down the<lb/>
Cats in order in the eighth and ninth to<lb/>
preserve the win for the Pirates and<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
��<lb/>
dm ueWeese opened on the mount<lb/>
for Western, but was knocked out by the<lb/>
Pirates in the seventh. DeWeese was<lb/>
never effective, walking nine batters, but<lb/>
survived until the seventh because the<lb/>
Pirates could not score the runners. For<lb/>
the game ECU stranded 14 baserunners.<lb/>
DeWeese allowed four runs and was<lb/>
relieved by Rick Cherry, who gave up the<lb/>
final ECU run in the eighth.<lb/>
Western broke a scoreless tie in the<lb/>
fourth when David Idol singled and<lb/>
scored on a one out double by Bob<lb/>
Gil more, giving the Cats a 1-0 lead. In<lb/>
every inning from the fifth through the<lb/>
seventh the Cats threatened, but could<lb/>
not score against Conaty, stranding two<lb/>
runners each frame. In the seventh, the<lb/>
Cats put men on second and third with<lb/>
no one out, but Kurdewan came in to<lb/>
stop the Cats for the inning and the<lb/>
game<lb/>
See Baseball, page 17.<lb/>
!���� nniii ii mm n i �'i �<lb/>
m<lb/>
 : �'� '<lb/>
<pb facs="00040029_0017"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
����������<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51. NO.<lb/>
4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
17<lb/>
ECU runners fail to place<lb/>
ECU'S three national qualifers in<lb/>
indoor track failed to qualify for the<lb/>
NCAA championship heats this weekend,<lb/>
but turned in respectable performances<lb/>
nonetheless.<lb/>
Carter Suggs, who qualified for the 60<lb/>
yard sprint, advanced to the quarterfinals<lb/>
with a time of 6.3 on the electric timer in<lb/>
each of his first two heats (the electric<lb/>
timer generally times the events .15 of a<lb/>
second slower than normal).<lb/>
In his third heat, Suggs finished third<lb/>
with another 6.3 clocking. In his heat, he<lb/>
was beaten out for the two qualifying<lb/>
spots by Harvey Glance of Auburn and<lb/>
Reggie Jones of Tennesse. In the finals,<lb/>
Glance wound up winning the 60 yard<lb/>
competition and Jones placed third, so<lb/>
Suggs was beat out by some fine<lb/>
sprinters.<lb/>
The Pirates other 60 yard qualifer,<lb/>
Donnie Mack, also advanced through<lb/>
three races, placing third in the third race<lb/>
with a 6.3 time (equivalent to 6.15), with<lb/>
only the top two being taken to the<lb/>
finals.<lb/>
In the 60 yard high hurdles, Marvin<lb/>
Rankins was ousted in the quarterfinals,<lb/>
after running 7.4 in each of the first two<lb/>
races. In the third race, Rankins clocked<lb/>
7.3, but was nosed out by James Walker<lb/>
of Auburn, who finished second in the<lb/>
finals, and another hurdler.<lb/>
So despite the fact that they failed to<lb/>
score any points, the ECU runners<lb/>
performance in the NCAA was not a<lb/>
complete disappointment.<lb/>
U.S. golfers visit Japan<lb/>
Winning in athletics is no doubt a<lb/>
preferred goal, but for eight NCAA<lb/>
golfers and two coaches, it took a<lb/>
backseat to more important issues at the<lb/>
first United States-Japan Collegiate Golf<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
According to golf tabulations, the<lb/>
final score read: U.S. 26, Japan 14. Only<lb/>
a deeper glance will show the contest<lb/>
resulted in a winning tie, based on the<lb/>
closer relations established between the<lb/>
two nations.<lb/>
An NCAA First<lb/>
Besides setting precedent as the<lb/>
NCAA's first international competition,<lb/>
the golf tournament opened doors to<lb/>
perhaps further participation in collegiate<lb/>
athletics between the NCAA and Japan.<lb/>
Already, there is talk about a second golf<lb/>
matchup and, perhaps, a long term<lb/>
agreement for continuing the competi-<lb/>
tion. There's also the possibility of<lb/>
expanding the competition to other<lb/>
sports.<lb/>
Co-sponsoring the event on the<lb/>
Japanese side was the Sports Nippon<lb/>
Press, a daily sports and recreation<lb/>
newspaper in Tokyo, in cooperation with<lb/>
the Japan Student Golf Association.<lb/>
Working in close contact with the NCAA,<lb/>
all three organizations showed how<lb/>
intercollegiate athletics can be used as a<lb/>
diplomatic tool to bring nations closer<lb/>
together.<lb/>
Jay Haas, 1975 individual NCAA<lb/>
medalist from Wake Forest captained the<lb/>
squad. Other members included Wake<lb/>
Forest teammates Curtis Strange and<lb/>
Bob Byman; Oklahoma State University's<lb/>
Lindy Miller and Tom Jones; Phil<lb/>
Hancock from the University of Florida;<lb/>
University of Oregon's Pete Jacobsen;<lb/>
and Mike Brannan, Brigham Young<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Strange Medalist<lb/>
Strange, 1974 NCAA champ, captured<lb/>
individual honors at the tournament by<lb/>
posting an eight under par 208 (72-67-69)<lb/>
during the three-day affair, while Haas<lb/>
placed fourth with a 214 total.<lb/>
One common feeling seemed to run<lb/>
among the entire U.S. contingent. The<lb/>
tournament Aas virtually flawless and<lb/>
was perhaps the most exciting<lb/>
experience of their lives.<lb/>
"I don't know of adequate words and<lb/>
phrases in the English language to<lb/>
properly do justice to any type of<lb/>
summary of this tournament said<lb/>
Wimberly. "Great, tremendous, extraordi-<lb/>
nary don't seem to be enough<lb/>
Excellent Organization<lb/>
indeed it was flawless, from the<lb/>
original orientation session in Los<lb/>
Angeles prior to the Japan visit, to a<lb/>
mmmmemimmjmmmmm<lb/>
tearful departure in Tokyo after perhaps<lb/>
one of the most progressive weeks in<lb/>
U.SJapanese relations.<lb/>
Wimberly, reflecting back on what<lb/>
could be improved to make a second<lb/>
meeting more organized, could think of<lb/>
nothing.<lb/>
"We found the Japanese people to be<lb/>
the most gracious, selfless individuals<lb/>
we've ever met Wimberly said. "I've<lb/>
never been associated with a more<lb/>
efficiently run tournament and it<lb/>
produced an incredible bridge of<lb/>
goodwill<lb/>
It all started when NCAA Director of<lb/>
Events Jerry Miles proposed the<lb/>
competition to Matsujiro Kawana, head<lb/>
of Sports Nippon's Los Angeles office.<lb/>
Things really got rolling when Chikao<lb/>
Kano, chairman of Sports Nippon, visited<lb/>
with Miles during his trip to the U.S.<lb/>
The NCAA Golf Committee was<lb/>
informed of the possibility of conducting<lb/>
the competition and with the endorse-<lb/>
ment of the Committee, the Executive<lb/>
Committee, and the U.S. Golf Associa-<lb/>
tion, Miles went to Tokyo to finalize<lb/>
arrangements.<lb/>
The NCAA prepared a "Handbook for<lb/>
Coaches and Participants" and directed<lb/>
the arrangements for the Association's<lb/>
first international competition.<lb/>
Arriving in Japan, the U.S. entourage<lb/>
found themselves confronted by televi-<lb/>
sion cameras, popping flashbulbs and<lb/>
everything surrounding the color of being<lb/>
celebrities. And celebrities they were as<lb/>
the Japanese rolled out the red carpet<lb/>
treatment from excellent accomodations<lb/>
to Tokyo's Imperial Hotel to incompar-<lb/>
able food, sightseeing and warm<lb/>
companionship.<lb/>
Throughout the entire week, mo-<lb/>
mentos were exchanged between the two<lb/>
teams and close friendships were<lb/>
established. And to the surprise of the<lb/>
Americans, Japanese collegiate golfers<lb/>
are competive.<lb/>
Suburon Fujiki finished second with a<lb/>
210 total and Masahiro Kuramoto was<lb/>
third at 211.<lb/>
"The Japanese really wanted to<lb/>
learn said Oklahomo State's Jones.<lb/>
"They had about 200 million cameras and<lb/>
were always studying our swings. They<lb/>
watched everything we did. It was a great<lb/>
trip I'll never forget<lb/>
"The trip to Japan was the greatest<lb/>
thing I have ever been involved in<lb/>
Brannan related.<lb/>
"I felt very honored to be part of this<lb/>
new competition between our two<lb/>
countries Byman noted. "I hope it will<lb/>
continue so that others can have the<lb/>
opportunity to experience what all of us<lb/>
did<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
BASEBALL<lb/>
Continued from page 16.<lb/>
ECU tied the game in the fifth on an<lb/>
infield hit and a stolen base by Bryant<lb/>
and Sonny Wooten's single to right. ECU<lb/>
loaded the bases later in the inning, but<lb/>
Card hit into a double play.<lb/>
In the sixth, ECU scored two runs and<lb/>
the Pirates added a run in the seventh<lb/>
without a hit, when Card walked, moved<lb/>
up on an error, stole third and scored on<lb/>
a passed ball.<lb/>
Bryant scored the final ECU run in the<lb/>
eighth, beating out an infield hit, stealing<lb/>
second and scoring on a hit by Stevens.<lb/>
The Pirates wereJo meet Western for<lb/>
another game this afternoon, before<lb/>
traveling to Raleigh on Thursday for a<lb/>
1 30 doubieheader with the N.C. State<lb/>
Wolfpack<lb/>
Western Carolina 000 100 000 - 1 5 2<lb/>
East Carolina 000 012 11x - 5 9 0<lb/>
Conety, Kurdswan 7 and McCullough;<lb/>
DsWesM, Cherry 7 and Qrlndetaff.<lb/>
WP-Conaty (1-�1 LP-DsWaase 0-1.<lb/>
Furman takes two, zonking<lb/>
ECU in doubieheader action<lb/>
By WILLIE PATRICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
GREENVILLE, S.C-What a difference<lb/>
a day makes.<lb/>
After ail, since it rained from 3:30<lb/>
p.m. Friday until after all good little<lb/>
coaches and players were asleep, who<lb/>
would have thought that the Pirates<lb/>
would be able to get in their<lb/>
doubieheader with the Furman Paladins.<lb/>
Furman did, and the Pirates<lb/>
accomodated the hosts nicely by blowing<lb/>
both ends of a doubieheader, 4-3 and<lb/>
12-6.<lb/>
The losses evened the Pirates' record<lb/>
at 2-2 overall and dropped them to 0-2 in<lb/>
Southern Conference play.<lb/>
The Paladins scored the first run of<lb/>
the day when Craig Reisinger reached<lb/>
first on an error, moved to third on a pair<lb/>
of infield groundouts and scored when a<lb/>
relay throw went astray.<lb/>
Macon Moye put the Pirates in front<lb/>
in the next inning, though, by pounding<lb/>
a 3-2 pitch 360 feet over the leftfield<lb/>
fence to score himself and Joe Roenker,<lb/>
who had singled.<lb/>
The Paladins tied the count again in<lb/>
the fourth with a run and then, after the<lb/>
Pirates scored in the sixth, tied it again<lb/>
in the bottom of the seventh. An<lb/>
unearned run in the eighth proved to be<lb/>
the Pirates' undoing, though.<lb/>
In the second game, Furman again<lb/>
scored in the first inning. Roenker, who<lb/>
finished with five hits for the day,<lb/>
unloaded a 400-foot shot high atop a<lb/>
bank beyond the leftfield fence to know<lb/>
the count.<lb/>
This apparently unnerved Chris<lb/>
Mensing, the Paladin starter, who<lb/>
walked Moye and then served up singles<lb/>
to Glenn Card and a run-scoring single to<lb/>
Rick Koryda, which scored Move for the<lb/>
go ahead run.<lb/>
Run-scoring by Roenker and Koryda<lb/>
put the Pirates up 4-1 at the end of the<lb/>
third and a sacrifice fly and another<lb/>
single by Roenker put the count at ECU<lb/>
6, Furman 1 at the end of the top of the<lb/>
fourth.<lb/>
But the Paladins weren't dead. They<lb/>
nicked Pirate starter Terry Durham for<lb/>
three runs in the fourth, before he retired<lb/>
in favor of Bob Feeney. The Paladins<lb/>
then climbed on Feeney for two more in<lb/>
the fifth to tie the score at 6-6.<lb/>
The climax of the day came in the<lb/>
sixth. The Paladins betted Feeney for<lb/>
three more runs and relievers Larry<lb/>
Daughtridge and Keith Kurdewan for<lb/>
three more to end the onslaught.<lb/>
The Pirate half of the seventh was<lb/>
purely academic, as were the other<lb/>
innings throughout the game when the<lb/>
score was close. For the day the Pirates<lb/>
left 19 runners stranded and committed<lb/>
six errors.<lb/>
First Game<lb/>
East Carolina 020 001 00 - 3 6 3<lb/>
Furman 100 100 11 - 4 5 0<lb/>
Reavis and McCullough; Fadem,<lb/>
Roberts 6 and Nichols. WP: Roberts<lb/>
1-1. LP; Reavlsl-1.<lb/>
HR: Moye ECU.<lb/>
Second Game<lb/>
East Carolina 022 200 0 - 6 12 3<lb/>
Furman 100 326 x - 12 10 0<lb/>
Durham, Feeney 4, Daughtridge 6,<lb/>
Kurdewan and McCullough; Mensing,<lb/>
Barbee and Nichols. WP: Barbee 2-0.<lb/>
LP: Feeney 1-1).<lb/>
HR: Roenker ECU.<lb/>
Red Rooster Restauraat<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/>
R�D R009TGR 9PGCI1K<lb/>
Mon. 11A BBQ Chicken, 2 Vegetables $1.80<lb/>
Tues. Country-style Steak, wRice &amp; Gravy, one Vegetable $1.80<lb/>
Wed. Salisbury Steak, 2 Veg. $1 80<lb/>
Thurs. Meat Loaf, 2 Veg. $180<lb/>
Fri. Seafood Platter - Fresh Trout, Shrimp, Oysters, F. F Slaw $2.95<lb/>
all specials include rolls &amp; hushpuppies<lb/>
ALSO: Breakfast served (homemade biscuits)<lb/>
ft<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040029_0018"/><lb/>
�yvvr f$Pf e. �v t<lb/>
'<lb/>
�������1BBBBMM<lb/>
18<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
H<lb/>
MMf<lb/>
iniiiMwiniimni<lb/>
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MMM<lb/>
mmt<lb/>
Time-Out<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Covering The NCAA From Charlotte<lb/>
It is hard to realize what a big production the NCAA Regional playoffs are until<lb/>
one has actually witnessed and observed the production process himself.<lb/>
Even as little publicity as last weekend's NCAA Eastern Regionals Quarterfinals in<lb/>
Charlotte received, in relation to some of the other quarterfinal matchups did, the<lb/>
production last weekend was really something.<lb/>
There is surely a great deal to be said about any contest which draws 12,000 in<lb/>
attendance, but the real scope of the operation becomes more paramount from press<lb/>
row, as a member of the working media.<lb/>
First, there were some 125 writers covering the game and no fewer than five radio<lb/>
stations broadcasting the games. Add to this the tournament help enfranchised to aid<lb/>
with the sending of copy, and the smooth operation of press conferences and the<lb/>
like, and there are quite a few people involved in the affair from the press angle.<lb/>
Writers came from as far away as Chicago, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. to<lb/>
cover these games. This actually was not all that surprising when one considered that<lb/>
one of the teams, De Paul, came from Chicago and two other teams, VMI and<lb/>
Virginia, are in the coverage area of the two Washington dailies. Philadelphia, by the<lb/>
way, is the site of this year's final round.<lb/>
But also there were reporters from many North Carolina and South Carolina<lb/>
small-town papers, as well as the larger towns like Charlotte, Raleigh, Greensboro,<lb/>
High Point, Winston-Salem, Durham and Columbia, S.C.<lb/>
Be it to simply be there, or for legitimate coverage purposes, there were quite a<lb/>
few of the more prominent writers in the Carolinas and Tennessee, as well as<lb/>
Virginia, in attendance.<lb/>
And though the pre-Tournament publicity tended to give less attention to the<lb/>
VMI-Tennessee and Virgmia-DePaul games than many of the other NCAA first-round<lb/>
games, most of the writers in attendance generally agreed that the games were well<lb/>
worth the coverage they received.<lb/>
First. VMI surprised nearly everyone in attendance by face-lifting the integrity of<lb/>
the Southern Conference by defeating ninth-ranked Tennessee. True, with Bernard<lb/>
King not playing for Tennessee if made matters a little easier, but then SEC teams are<lb/>
not supposed to even come close to losing to the Southern Conference.<lb/>
VMI s deliberate play just proved too much for the Volunteers, who were nearly as<lb/>
disciplined as the military school but more than likely less hungry than the heavily-<lb/>
underdog Keydets.<lb/>
The situation was much the same in the case of the DePaul-Virginia matchup. It<lb/>
was generally a foregone conclusion that Wally Walker and Company would run<lb/>
circles around the "city school" from Chicago, but perhaps the Chicago writers in<lb/>
attendance knew better<lb/>
Like the VMI team, DePaul practiced a very disciplined style of play under the<lb/>
tutelage of Ray Meyer. In 34 years at DePaul. Meyer had won 528 of 839 games going<lb/>
into last weekend's NCAA game. This was done almost entirely with Chicago players.<lb/>
Again a combination of the underdogs' desire to win and a sense of flatness on<lb/>
the part of the favorite seemed to make inequalities even up.<lb/>
Virginia, too, was perhaps smarting from the rigors of the ACC tournament the<lb/>
week before and all the publicity which it received as a result. This weariness may<lb/>
also have shown on the North Carolina Tar Heels in their game against Alabama, in<lb/>
which they were handled by the Crimson Tide and Leon Douglas.<lb/>
So the first-round of the NCAA Regionals had many surprises, the biggest perhaps<lb/>
coming in Charlotte And most of the writers in attendance at Charlotte had a hard<lb/>
time meeting their deadlines because of the excitement of it all. Most, too, agreed<lb/>
that although the teams may not have been as prominent, the games were well worth<lb/>
the time and effort from a newsman's viewpoint.<lb/>
It is the occasional surprises, as well as the events such as an NCAA tournament,<lb/>
a football bowl game, or a big-league championship, or whatever the writer's interest<lb/>
might be, that so often carries the writer over the hump of boredom and day-to-day<lb/>
routine into a world of semi-fantasy and enjoyment.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS, SWIM TEAM<lb/>
A hearty congratulations to coach Ray Scharf and his ECU swim team for their<lb/>
second-place finish in this past week's Eastern Regionals in State College, Pa.<lb/>
This writer has criticized, if that be the word, oach Scharf on occasion this year,<lb/>
perhaps unfairly on one occasion, but he must put his hand out to Scharf this time<lb/>
for an extremely fine job in the Eastern competition.<lb/>
The second-place finish by the ECU swimmers was outstanding to say the least,<lb/>
particularly when one notes the caliber of competition. Among others, the Pirates<lb/>
placed ahead of Villanova and Maryland and was outranked only by the University of<lb/>
Pittsburgh, which dominated the entire field.<lb/>
Every member of the ECU team is undoubtedly proud of this accomplishment, as<lb/>
should the ECU students be Once again, coach Scharf our recognition and our<lb/>
congratulations<lb/>
mm<lb/>
SC shines as VMI ousts<lb/>
Tennessee, 81-75, in NCAA<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
CHARLOTTE-lt was a day of<lb/>
redemption for VMI.<lb/>
It was a day of redemption for the<lb/>
Southern Conference.<lb/>
But most of all, it was a day of<lb/>
satisfaction for VMI head coach Bill<lb/>
Blair.<lb/>
Only two years ago, VMI had been<lb/>
ranked at the bottom of the Southern<lb/>
Conference as a hapless junkheap of<lb/>
basketball talent. Now, in 1976, Blair was<lb/>
standing before a large crowd of media<lb/>
as the winning coach in one of four<lb/>
NCAA Eastern Regional games.<lb/>
"I know what the press has been<lb/>
saying about us all year said Blair,<lb/>
"that we backed into the SC<lb/>
regular-season championship, that we<lb/>
backed into the tournament champion-<lb/>
ships and that we'd get blown off the<lb/>
court in the NCAA's, but I think we may<lb/>
have shown some people tonight that<lb/>
VMI can play basketball<lb/>
And, indeed, the Southern Conference<lb/>
champions' 81-75 win over the<lb/>
ninth-ranked Tennessee Volunteers,<lb/>
runners-up in the Southeastern Con-<lb/>
ference, gave Blair plenty to be proud of.<lb/>
There was a touch of uncertainty in<lb/>
Blair's rainbow, though. The Vols'<lb/>
All-America Bernard King never played.<lb/>
King was sidelined the entire game with<lb/>
a broken thumb and watched as fellow<lb/>
All-America Ernie Grunfield put on a<lb/>
one-man show with 36 points, which<lb/>
wasn't enough to pull it out for the SEC<lb/>
representative.<lb/>
Nonetheless, SEC teams are not<lb/>
supposed to even come close to losing<lb/>
to the likes of the lowly Southern<lb/>
Conference. But that is what happened in<lb/>
Charlotte Saturday night.<lb/>
After taking the lead early in the<lb/>
second half, VMI never trailed and<lb/>
refused to break under the tournament<lb/>
pressure, despite the score being tied at<lb/>
58-58 with seven minutes left in the<lb/>
game. At that point, Blair called a<lb/>
time-out and VMI ran off a 10-2 stretch<lb/>
against the Volunteers, icing the game.<lb/>
And perhaps it was the discipline of<lb/>
the VMI way of life that gave the Keydets<lb/>
the edge over the more flamboyant<lb/>
Volunteers. Or maybe the VMI team just<lb/>
wanted it more.<lb/>
"All year long people have said we<lb/>
were lucky said 6-3 forward Ron Carter,<lb/>
who scored 19 points for the Keydets,<lb/>
"and tonight we had a little something to<lb/>
prove. I think maybe we proved it - that<lb/>
we could play good basketball afterall<lb/>
The Keydets, now 21-8, were playing<lb/>
in the NCAA for only the second time,<lb/>
the first coming in 1964 despite a<lb/>
non-winning record. They shot 66 per<lb/>
cent for the game and out rebounded<lb/>
Tennessee 32-25.<lb/>
Blair said these were the principal<lb/>
statistical differences in the game.<lb/>
"We have shot over 60 per cent in five<lb/>
games this year and our perimeter<lb/>
shooting tonight was the key. I was<lb/>
really surprised that we out rebounded<lb/>
them inside. We didn't play them inside<lb/>
that much, but instead shot from the<lb/>
outside to win. It was a great team<lb/>
victory, and regardless of what the press<lb/>
has said, we didn't back in tonight<lb/>
But Tennessee coach Ray Mears<lb/>
might disagree a little.<lb/>
See Mears, page 19.<lb/>
DePaul knocks off UVA,<lb/>
69-60, in opening round<lb/>
Wally Walker was sick the few days<lb/>
preceding the NCAA Eastern Regional<lb/>
first-round games in Charlotte last<lb/>
Saturday. Following the game, Walker<lb/>
still felt sick and that squeamish feeling in<lb/>
his stomach had become more intense.<lb/>
Why? Walker's team, the University of<lb/>
Virginia, the team he had starred four<lb/>
years for, had just been defeated, 69-60,<lb/>
by a DePaul team which people knew<lb/>
little about. The loss in Saturday's NCAA<lb/>
first round eliminated Walker and the<lb/>
Cavaliers from the post-season tourna-<lb/>
ment, only days after they had teamed<lb/>
for the ACC championship.<lb/>
"I felt sick all last week, but I feel<lb/>
even sicker now said the 6-7 senior.<lb/>
"We didn't play well at all and they<lb/>
covered me close all game long, and I<lb/>
just got pushed and shoved a lot. I don't<lb/>
think I have ever shot so poorly in my<lb/>
life<lb/>
For the game, Walker was 4 of 15<lb/>
from the floor, including 0 for 7 in the<lb/>
second half, and scored only 11 points.<lb/>
All game long, Walker was shadowed by<lb/>
DePaul freshman Curtis Watkins. Walker<lb/>
fouled out at 1:44 and was followed by<lb/>
Billy Langloh near the end of the game.<lb/>
DePaul head coach Ray Meyer praised<lb/>
his team, especially Watkins, for their<lb/>
play.<lb/>
"I'm a very happy man tonight said<lb/>
Meyer. "Colorful Curt did a great job on<lb/>
wonderful Wally. Ronnie Norwood<lb/>
showed how he can break open a ball<lb/>
game in the second half<lb/>
Norwood exploded his 21 points in<lb/>
the second half to finish the game as<lb/>
high scorer for the Blue Demons with 28<lb/>
points. It was his outside shooting and<lb/>
drives down the lane that tore apart the<lb/>
Cavalier defense in the second half and<lb/>
allowed DePaul to overcome a 37-31<lb/>
halftime lead for Virginia.<lb/>
Meyer, who has accumulated 528.<lb/>
wins in 34 years of coaching at DePaul,<lb/>
switched defenses several times against<lb/>
the Cavaliers and kept the ACC champs<lb/>
bewildered in the second half.<lb/>
"We changed defenses on them. We<lb/>
used three different ones - man-to-man,<lb/>
zone, box and one. I think it made them<lb/>
think about what they wanted to do and<lb/>
we were really about to run the offense in<lb/>
the second half behind Norwood<lb/>
DePaul trailed the entire first half, but<lb/>
took the lead for the first time with 9:06<lb/>
to play, at 50-49. The last time Virginia<lb/>
led was at 58-57 with 3:13 to play.<lb/>
Here the turning point in the game<lb/>
occurred.<lb/>
DePaul scored to go ahead at 59-58<lb/>
and then Virginia coach Terry Holland<lb/>
was called for a technical foul with 2:16<lb/>
to play.<lb/>
Norwood sank the free throw and<lb/>
followed with a basket to give DePaul a<lb/>
62-58 lead with 2:02 to play. Virginia<lb/>
fouled DePaul trying to get the ball back,<lb/>
but this failed. Holland also employed a<lb/>
two-platoon offense-defense pattern, but<lb/>
when Walker fouled out that failed.<lb/>
See Virginia, page 19.<lb/>
iwiKimni i -m<lb/>
r<lb/>
���'�<lb/>
nan<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040029_0019"/><lb/>
<lb/>
mwm<lb/>
�<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL.<lb/>
iiji Hung 9<lb/>
51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
19<lb/>
Pirates to host first invitational track meet<lb/>
The first annual East Carolina<lb/>
University Invitational Track and Field<lb/>
Meet will be held Mar. 20 at the Bunting<lb/>
Track and Field on the ECU campus. This<lb/>
will also serve as the dedication of the<lb/>
track in the name of Michael L. Bunting,<lb/>
prominent alumnus and tremendous<lb/>
supporter of Pirate Athletics from<lb/>
Greensboro.<lb/>
East Carolina will have three of its<lb/>
own national qualifiers in the meet and<lb/>
possibly four. Carter Suggs, Donnie<lb/>
Mack and Marvin Rankins all participated<lb/>
last week in the nationals. Sam Phillips,<lb/>
who qualified for the nationals, is<lb/>
currently on the injured list but may be<lb/>
back for the ECU Invitational. Larry<lb/>
Austin, fifth ranked in the nation in the<lb/>
60 yard dash this year, is injured and will<lb/>
not be in either meet.<lb/>
Suggs, a sophomore from Tarboro,<lb/>
N.C is ranked tenth in the naion this<lb/>
year by Track and Field magazine. He<lb/>
has run a 6.1 on several occasions and<lb/>
has been beaten only by Austin and<lb/>
Norfolk St. star Steve Riddick, who will<lb/>
be at the ECU Invitational.<lb/>
Mack, a freshman from Laurinburg,<lb/>
N.C has really come through for the<lb/>
Pirates in the inaoor season. He<lb/>
consistently was running 6.1's and is in<lb/>
the top twenty in the nation in the 60.<lb/>
Rankins has been the Pirate that has<lb/>
done the most this season. Just a<lb/>
freshman, Rankins has lost but one race<lb/>
all year, that being to teammate Sam<lb/>
Phillips. The Windsor, N.C. native has<lb/>
run 7.2 in the 60 yard high hurdles just<lb/>
about every time out this year.<lb/>
The competition for the Pirates will be<lb/>
very keen as some of the best sprint<lb/>
teams in the nation will be on hand.<lb/>
Seton Hall is the favorite as they were<lb/>
one of the top teams in the NCAA meet<lb/>
last year. Howard University of<lb/>
Washington, D.C is also entered in the<lb/>
event and should bring a very strong<lb/>
team. Catholic University, Baptist<lb/>
College of Charleston, S.C Norfolk<lb/>
State, Pembroke State, Richmond and<lb/>
Hagerstown Junior College round out<lb/>
the field. Each of them have top<lb/>
performers, especially in the sprint<lb/>
positions.<lb/>
Seton Hall and Howard are favored in<lb/>
the mile relay, while these two and East<lb/>
VIRGINIA<lb/>
Continued from page 18.<lb/>
Slowly, DePaul pulled away over the final<lb/>
two minutes.<lb/>
It appeared Virginia still had the upper<lb/>
hand until Holland was called for the<lb/>
technical, and one later in the game, with<lb/>
34 seconds to play.<lb/>
Ironically, Holland said he committed<lb/>
the first technical foul on purpose - in<lb/>
an effort to perk his team up. Instead,<lb/>
Holland may have cost the Cavaliers the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"The first technical was intentional on<lb/>
my part said Holland. "I thought it<lb/>
would pick the team up, but it hurt us.<lb/>
We couldn't play a game that w, 3 called<lb/>
as loosely as this one. DePaul was a<lb/>
physical team and the loose officiating<lb/>
did not help.<lb/>
'It was our worst game since January.<lb/>
They cut us off inside and defensed us<lb/>
well. In the second half (when Virginia<lb/>
shot 26 per cent) we just couldn't get the<lb/>
ball in the basket<lb/>
Meyer reflected on DePaul's success<lb/>
this year, which, much like that of VMI,<lb/>
!$l775"OFF<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Purchase of any<lb/>
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was long in the making.<lb/>
"It has been 11 years since we were<lb/>
last here said a calm, but happy Meyer.<lb/>
"That's because we did not have a<lb/>
program worthy of the NCAA. For awhile<lb/>
we stopped giving scholarships and then<lb/>
a few years ago we decided to push<lb/>
basketball and that turned the comer for<lb/>
us.<lb/>
"With the exception of Norwood and<lb/>
Gary Garland all our players are from the<lb/>
Chicago area and we have always been a<lb/>
city team. I don't know whether that is<lb/>
good or bad, but we are<lb/>
Meyer said that the VMI win was a<lb/>
surprise to him.<lb/>
"VMI was a surprise to me. Like most<lb/>
other people, I didn't think they had a<lb/>
chance of beating Tennessee. But as I<lb/>
watched the end of the first half I<lb/>
realized they had a good team and were<lb/>
going to win<lb/>
So it will be DePaul and VMI in one of<lb/>
the Eastern Regional games in<lb/>
Greensboro next week. It should be a<lb/>
very interesting matchup between two<lb/>
similarly-styled teams  particularly<lb/>
since neither team was expected to make<lb/>
it to Greensboro.<lb/>
Carolina should fight it out for the 440<lb/>
relay crown. Some of the top performers<lb/>
include James Muskrow of Catholic, who<lb/>
runs around 46 seconds in the 440 and<lb/>
Willie Reid ol Haggerstown, who has<lb/>
long jumped 26 feet.<lb/>
Dedication of the Michael L. Bunting<lb/>
Track and Field will take place at 1:50<lb/>
p.m with Bunting, his wife Vicki, along<lb/>
with ECU Chancellor Dr. Leo W. Jenkins<lb/>
and Athletic Director Bill Cain on hand<lb/>
for the ceremonies.<lb/>
MEARS<lb/>
Continued from page 18.<lb/>
"We played without a great basketball<lb/>
player tonight. Bernard King is an<lb/>
All-American and when you play without<lb/>
one of the finest players in the country,<lb/>
you just are not at full strength. We knew<lb/>
they had us outmanned without King, but<lb/>
we never considered playing him. I don't<lb/>
think we played that bad, they just were<lb/>
a very well coached team that shot better<lb/>
than any team we've played in a long<lb/>
time.<lb/>
"We hoped that we could get by<lb/>
tonight without King, so he would be<lb/>
ready next week, but now there is no<lb/>
next week<lb/>
Blair did an excellent job of coaching<lb/>
the Keydets, switching defenses at the<lb/>
half - which paid off in the form of a<lb/>
victory for the Keydets.<lb/>
"I thought we played a good defensive<lb/>
game. We switched zones at the half<lb/>
from a 3-2 to a 2-3.1 figured Coach dears<lb/>
would adjust to the 3-2 zone, so I<lb/>
changed to the 2-3. We did a good job<lb/>
against their trap<lb/>
Most of all, though, was the air of<lb/>
confidence with which the Keydets<lb/>
played and the drill team precision with<lb/>
which they executed. Five VMI players<lb/>
scored in double figures. That was an<lb/>
example of their team play, as Blair<lb/>
played but six players a minute in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Curt Reppart, a senior guard for VMI,<lb/>
has been at the school since 1972. He<lb/>
had suffered through 7-19 and 6-18<lb/>
seasons before the last two years, when<lb/>
VMI went 13-13 last year and capped it<lb/>
all with this year's trip into the NCAA<lb/>
Eastern Regionals.<lb/>
"My freshman and sophomore years it<lb/>
was just that we did not have the talent<lb/>
said Reppart. "Then coach Blair came<lb/>
along and really recruited some class<lb/>
players that gave us the talent and<lb/>
the experience. This year everyone had<lb/>
played a year with each other and we all<lb/>
knew we could do it.<lb/>
"No one believed in us, but we did.<lb/>
The ones who are in this locker room<lb/>
right now are the only ones who really<lb/>
believed in us. We always believed that<lb/>
we could beat Tennessee. No one else<lb/>
said we had a chance, but I guess maybe<lb/>
we showed them<lb/>
VMI coach Blair was not awarded the<lb/>
Southern Conference coach-of-the-year<lb/>
award this year, an event which raised<lb/>
the ire of VMI Sports Publicist Tom<lb/>
Shupe enough for him to send out a<lb/>
letter to all the media concerning the<lb/>
"injustice<lb/>
Last Saturday night, though, Blair<lb/>
probably won over a lot of votes, even<lb/>
though it was too late. Reppart, too, put<lb/>
in a plug for his coach.<lb/>
"Coach Blair has made this team. He<lb/>
has just been a super coach and there is<lb/>
no doubt that he is the best coach in the<lb/>
Southern Conference. He got the team on<lb/>
its feet with good recruiting and then<lb/>
molded it with good coaching and<lb/>
discipline. He made us believe in<lb/>
ourselves and he believed in us. He is a<lb/>
winning basketball coach and that is<lb/>
what has turned the program around<lb/>
Carter again expressed the feeling of<lb/>
the VMI team. Carter, at 6-3 jumps like<lb/>
he is 6-8 and plays a fired-up brand of<lb/>
basketball. He said, "Everytime we have<lb/>
beat anyone good this season, people<lb/>
have said it was an upset. Maybe some<lb/>
people believe in us, now<lb/>
Saturday's win over Tennessee still<lb/>
must be considered an upset, but a win<lb/>
over DePaul in next week's Eastern<lb/>
Regionals in Greensboro may not<lb/>
necessarily be considered such.<lb/>
If that should happen, it would put<lb/>
VMI in the finals of the Eastern<lb/>
Regionals.<lb/>
It has been a long time since a SC<lb/>
team has advanced as far in the NCAA's.<lb/>
<lb/>
NO WA T�<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040029_0020"/><lb/>
20<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4316 MARCH 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
M<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
news FLASH FLASH FLASH FLASH FLASH<lb/>
Jimmy Carter Candidates<lb/>
Free flick<lb/>
Animals Available<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Students for Jimmy Carter, Tues March<lb/>
16 at 7:30 pm in Mendenhall Room 248.<lb/>
This meeting is to finalize plans for<lb/>
conducting a canvass in Greenville of all<lb/>
voters. All interested persons are invited.<lb/>
English essays<lb/>
The deadline for the Department o<lb/>
English Undergraduate Critical Essay<lb/>
Contest is Monday, March 22, at 5 p.m.<lb/>
All undergraduates enrolled in English<lb/>
classes during the past calendar year are<lb/>
eligible.<lb/>
Essays should be typed, accompanied<lb/>
by the instructor's recommendation, and<lb/>
delivered to the secretary in the English<lb/>
Office (Austin 122). A prize of $50 will be<lb/>
awarded. For full details contact the<lb/>
English Office.<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda will hold its fourth<lb/>
annual business symposiurron" March" 24,<lb/>
10:00 till 1:30, Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. All interested students are<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
Gamma Sig Sig<lb/>
Service Sorority Gamma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
invites all people to rush. Tuesday.<lb/>
March 16 a social will be held at 5:30 pm<lb/>
in the Fletcher social room. A salad bar<lb/>
will be included. Wednesday, March 17 at<lb/>
7:30 p.man informaloet-tooether will be<lb/>
held at 302 Jarvis Street. Everyone will be<lb/>
able to make their own sundaes For<lb/>
further information call Gisele Easters or<lb/>
Debiie Chasen, (room 317 Fletcher) at<lb/>
752-8107. Hope to see you there!<lb/>
Computing News<lb/>
The Computing Center Newsletter for<lb/>
March is now available in the Computing<lb/>
Center office in Austin 134. The<lb/>
newsletter is free to all Computer Center<lb/>
users and interested students and<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
Seniors<lb/>
Attention all graduating seniors�due<lb/>
to the increase in postage rates the<lb/>
BUCCANEER can not afford to mail<lb/>
yearbooks to graduates next fall when<lb/>
they arrive. In order to receive your<lb/>
annual next fall.Dlease do one of th��<lb/>
following:<lb/>
1. Mail $1.00 for postage, your ID number<lb/>
and your correct address to the<lb/>
BUCCANEER office (Publications Center,<lb/>
ECU, Greenville, N.C.)<lb/>
2. Give a friend your spring activity card<lb/>
as proof of enrollment and he or she may<lb/>
pick up a book for you.<lb/>
3. Or come by the BUCCANEER office &amp;<lb/>
pick i�p a book after they arrive. Be sure<lb/>
to have some proof of attendance<lb/>
(schedule, activity card receipt for paying<lb/>
fees, etc.).<lb/>
Will the following SGA candidates<lb/>
please make arrangements with the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD to have their pictures<lb/>
taken: Jimmy Adams, Larry Glynn, Roger<lb/>
Dubey, and Dalton Nicholson.<lb/>
SGA Candidates<lb/>
There will be another mandatory<lb/>
meeting of all candidates running for<lb/>
SGA offices on March 22 at 8:00 p.m. at<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Newman club<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Newman Club this WEDNESDAY, March<lb/>
17, at 5 pm in room 233, Mendenhall.<lb/>
Plans for the up-coming Walk for<lb/>
Development will be discussed. Anyone<lb/>
interested in volunteering to help work on<lb/>
this project are asked to be present.<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
The Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity will<lb/>
be sponsoring two car washes this<lb/>
Saturday, March 20. They will be held at<lb/>
the Exxon Station at Pitt Plaza and at the<lb/>
Perco Station on 14th Street from 10 til<lb/>
3. Please come out and get your car<lb/>
washed.<lb/>
Studnet Oniun<lb/>
We need you! If you can spell,<lb/>
apply for a Student Union Committee<lb/>
chairperson position. There are twelve<lb/>
openings for next year's committee<lb/>
heads. Applications may be obtained at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Apply now<lb/>
for these prestigious positions.<lb/>
NEHA<lb/>
The Student National Environmental<lb/>
Health Association will hold a business<lb/>
meeting on Wednesday, March 17 at 5:00<lb/>
pm in the Allied Health Building.<lb/>
Attendance is mandatory for all<lb/>
members. Nashville Convention will be<lb/>
discussed.<lb/>
Campus Crusade<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ, an<lb/>
interdenomination Christian organization,<lb/>
will meet this Tuesday evening at 7:00 in<lb/>
Brewster D wing room 201.<lb/>
Come join us for a time of<lb/>
Fellowship, sharing and an in-depth<lb/>
study.<lb/>
Vets club books<lb/>
Students who did not pick up their<lb/>
books or money should go bv the Vet's<lb/>
Club office Thurs March 18, between 10<lb/>
am and 2 pm.<lb/>
Wednesday, March 17 -It Happened<lb/>
One Night. Clark Gable and Qaudette<lb/>
Colbert make a handsome pair in this<lb/>
winner of five major Academy Awards.<lb/>
This wonderfully warm, funny and<lb/>
moving comedy is a story of a fugitive<lb/>
heiress and a rebellious reporter who<lb/>
tames her. A runaway romance between a<lb/>
tough guy and a society girl - a rough<lb/>
diamond and a polished jewel. Rated G.<lb/>
Mrs. Carter<lb/>
Mrs. Rosalyn Carter, wife of<lb/>
Democratic Presidential candidate Jimmy<lb/>
Carter, will be in Greenville on Wed.<lb/>
March 17th. She will arrive at the<lb/>
Pitt-Greenville airport at 11:45 am to<lb/>
greet supporters and hold a news<lb/>
conference. Mrs. Carter will go from<lb/>
Greenville to New Bern for a reception<lb/>
and fund raising dinner Wednesday<lb/>
evening at the New Bern Shrine Club.<lb/>
The reception begins at 6:00 pm followed<lb/>
by dinner at 6:30 pm. Tickets for the<lb/>
dinner are $5.00 per person and may be<lb/>
obtained from Les Meekins at 752-1998 or<lb/>
Dennis Ramsey at 756-4136. Everyone is<lb/>
invited to see and hear Mrs. Carter on<lb/>
Wednesday at the airport in Greenville<lb/>
and at the dinner in New Bern.<lb/>
Model UN<lb/>
There will be a Model UN meeting<lb/>
Thursday afternoon in the Political<lb/>
Science coffee lounae at 4:00. The tooic<lb/>
of discussion will be pertaining to future<lb/>
plans about the Model UN at ECU.<lb/>
Semper Fidelis<lb/>
The Alpha Phi chapter of the Semper<lb/>
Fidelis Society will be meeting Tuesday<lb/>
night, March 16, 1976 at 7:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster B-103. There will be a guest<lb/>
speaker talking to the club. The Officer<lb/>
Selection Team from Raleigh will be at<lb/>
the oia JU this week, so make plans to<lb/>
stop by and see what the Marine Corps<lb/>
Officer Programs have for you.<lb/>
Republicans<lb/>
The College Republicans are having a<lb/>
meeting Wednesday, March 17, at 8:00<lb/>
pm. The meeting will be held in Brewster<lb/>
B-104. All interested in joining<lb/>
with the republican campaign are invited<lb/>
to attend. For more information or rides<lb/>
call Buzz at 758-9881.<lb/>
Senator Smith<lb/>
Senator McNeill Smith, chairman of<lb/>
the N.C. Commission to review Revenue<lb/>
Laws, will be the guest speaker at a<lb/>
Greenville-Pitt County League of Women<lb/>
Voters' (LWV) meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday<lb/>
(March 30) at the First Presbyterian<lb/>
Church. The public is invited to attend.<lb/>
Sen. Smith will discuss "N.C. Tax<lb/>
Structure: Present and Future<lb/>
The animals available for adoption<lb/>
this week include one black cat, 3 black<lb/>
puppies, 3 black and tan puppies, 3 black<lb/>
and white puppies, 2 tan and white<lb/>
puppies, 1 black and white mixed breed,<lb/>
1 biege and black mixed breed.<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/>
SGA Openings<lb/>
The SGA Legislature has seven<lb/>
openings for day student legislators.<lb/>
Also, there is one opening in each of the<lb/>
following dorms: Jarvis, Aycock, and<lb/>
Fletcher.<lb/>
Applications are being accepted in<lb/>
228 Mendenhall, the SGA main office by<lb/>
the executive secretary.<lb/>
Screenings for the Attorney General<lb/>
will be held Wed Mar. 17, at 4 o'clock.<lb/>
Disney-Daytona<lb/>
Space is still available on the Student<lb/>
Union Travel Committee trip to<lb/>
Disneyworld and Daytona Beach schedu-<lb/>
led for April 16 through April 24.<lb/>
The costs of the trip are: $75 based<lb/>
on quad occupancy; $85 based on triple<lb/>
occupancy; $95 based on double<lb/>
occupancy.<lb/>
Four days are planned at Disneyworld<lb/>
and two days are planned at Daytona<lb/>
Beach.<lb/>
Accommodations are at the Econo-<lb/>
Travel Motels in Orlando, Fla. and<lb/>
Daytona Beach, Florida. Transportation<lb/>
will be by chartered Trail ways buses.<lb/>
Reservations are now being taken in<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, but hurry! The last day<lb/>
to register for the trip is Tuesday, March<lb/>
23.<lb/>
Don't miss out on this great trip.<lb/>
Fair<lb/>
Here's a chance to make money, meet<lb/>
good people, enjoy superb entertainment<lb/>
and food. Drop by or participate in the<lb/>
Roxy Music, Arts and Crafts Center-<lb/>
Crafts Fair to be held March 20th,<lb/>
Saturday 9 am to 9 pm.<lb/>
Call the Roxy Music, Arts and Crafts<lb/>
Center for further info, or come by 936<lb/>
Albemarle St.<lb/>
Ad Hoc<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the Ad<lb/>
Hoc Committee Tuesday, March 16, at 5<lb/>
pm in room 247, Mendenhall. All<lb/>
interested persons are invited to attend.<lb/>
Belly Dance<lb/>
Authentic Arabic (Belly) Dance Ms.<lb/>
Whitley taught in Casablanca and<lb/>
California. Now scheduling spring<lb/>
classes. Call 752-9028.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040029_0021"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>