<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
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<pb facs="00040030_0001"/>
NlO<lb/>
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Dorm Committee<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina Community for ova fifty years<lb/>
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Mrs. Jimmy Carter<lb/>
speaks at Pitt Airport 3?Z<lb/>
wms concessions<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A proposal to the ECU dorm contract which would require the Campus Police to<lb/>
secure a legally valid and sworn search warrant before entering a student's room was<lb/>
recently accepted by the University Administration.<lb/>
Meeting with Dan K. Wooten, Director of Housing, and other administration<lb/>
officials, the SGA Select Committee on Dorm Contracts suggested to the dorm<lb/>
contract several changes of which only two were rejected.<lb/>
The SGA Select Committee on Dorm<lb/>
Contracts was formed after a resolution<lb/>
was passed in January by the SGA<lb/>
Legislature which called for student input<lb/>
into the dorm contract system. The<lb/>
resolution stated that if students are<lb/>
required to reside in the dorms, they<lb/>
should have at least some bargaining<lb/>
power when the contracts are drawn up.<lb/>
The proposal which would require the<lb/>
Campus Police to secure a legally valid<lb/>
and sworn search warrant before entering<lb/>
VOL. 51, NO. 43<lb/>
18 MARCH 1976<lb/>
By DENNIS LEONARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Mrs. Jimmy Carter came to Greenville<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon to campaign for<lb/>
her husband, Jimmy, the presidential<lb/>
candidate from Georgia.<lb/>
Mrs. Carter held a news conference at<lb/>
the Greenville-Pitt Airport for NBC News<lb/>
and the local media.<lb/>
"We're excited about the campaign<lb/>
and in every state we have been in where<lb/>
"North Carolina is very important to<lb/>
us, and with your help, for the first time<lb/>
in a long time, a southerner can be<lb/>
elected President<lb/>
Harry Stubbs, an ECU graduate<lb/>
student in Political Science, told Mrs.<lb/>
Carter of the mock primary<lb/>
department had held and,<lb/>
Jimmy Carter was expected to win<lb/>
by approximately 54 per cent.<lb/>
the<lb/>
that<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
See Interview page 5<lb/>
the people get to know Jimmy, the<lb/>
victories have not been accidents<lb/>
commented Mrs. Carter during her<lb/>
opening remarks.<lb/>
"I believe Jimmy has the background,<lb/>
intelligence, and appeal to make a good<lb/>
president of the United States.<lb/>
"Jimmy is a successful business<lb/>
man, a graduate of the Naval Academy<lb/>
(so he knows the military well), a former<lb/>
state senator, former Georgian Governor,<lb/>
and I personally feel he has the<lb/>
background and advantage over the other<lb/>
candidates.<lb/>
"One of the major advantages in<lb/>
Jimmy's campaign is that we are not<lb/>
from Washington, and this is the first<lb/>
time that the president can be elected<lb/>
with no strings attached.<lb/>
"The American people are looking for<lb/>
someone they can trust and when they<lb/>
see Jimmy they are impressed. There has<lb/>
never been any hint of scandal in<lb/>
Jimmy's personal life, and he is a very<lb/>
honest person to deal with.<lb/>
"We are very excited that the<lb/>
primaries have gone as well as they have<lb/>
and if we win in N.C. next week, it will<lb/>
be a great boost for the Wisconsin and<lb/>
New York primaries.<lb/>
ECU student Barbara Matthews askad<lb/>
Mrs. Carter about the outspokenness of<lb/>
Betty Ford and if she would be that<lb/>
outspoken if Jimmy was elected. "I am<lb/>
not opposed to Betty Ford's openness, I<lb/>
feel the president's wife should take a<lb/>
stand on certain issues, but I am not<lb/>
going to allow myself to interfere with my<lb/>
husband's effectiveness in office<lb/>
George Lewis, NBC News primary<lb/>
coordinator, held a brief press conference<lb/>
with Mrs. Carter after her opening<lb/>
statements to the public.<lb/>
Lewis focused the press briefing on<lb/>
Mrs. Carter's role in the presidential<lb/>
campaign and her extensive travels on<lb/>
the campaign circuit.<lb/>
"I have been traveling since last April<lb/>
on the campaign trail and for the first<lb/>
three weeks the busy schedule was quite<lb/>
tiring. The campaigning has been quite<lb/>
exciting and it is something the entire<lb/>
family has become involved in. We are<lb/>
still a family and I think that this is<lb/>
evident through the work the entire<lb/>
family has undertaken during the<lb/>
campaign months.<lb/>
Mrs. Carter's next N.C. stop will be in<lb/>
Rocky Mount to continue her personal<lb/>
campaign for her husband.<lb/>
MRS. JIMMY CARTER<lb/>
a student's room will be stated in the<lb/>
1976-77 Housing Contract as follows: "If<lb/>
these agents and representatives are<lb/>
members of the University Campus<lb/>
Police, they shall be required to secure a<lb/>
legally valid and sworn search warrant<lb/>
before entering the rool unless entrance<lb/>
is necessary because of an emergency,<lb/>
with consent, andor in accordance with<lb/>
N.CG.S. 15A or appropriate statutes<lb/>
Contract Revisions<lb/>
Section 1 and 2. Article One, Paragraph<lb/>
Three<lb/>
As it is in existing contract: "The<lb/>
University may terminate this Contract if<lb/>
the Student is not registered and paying<lb/>
full tuition and fees; or If the Student's<lb/>
health renders group living unwise; or if<lb/>
the Student's actions are detrimental to<lb/>
the welfare of the student living group;<lb/>
or for violation of Housing Regulations,<lb/>
See Contracts, page 4.<lb/>
SGA Candidate charges<lb/>
campaign rule violations<lb/>
By JIM ELLIOTT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Sammy Hicks, candidate for Student<lb/>
Government Association President, Wed-<lb/>
nesday accused three other candidates<lb/>
for the top SGA post of violating<lb/>
campaign rules.<lb/>
In an affidavit filed with Election<lb/>
Chairman Roy Turner, Hicks charged that<lb/>
Lynn Shubert and Teresa Whisenant had<lb/>
not followed rules concerning the<lb/>
placement of campaign advertising.<lb/>
Hicks also accused Tim Sullivan of<lb/>
violating prohibitions against campaign-<lb/>
ing before the specified date.<lb/>
"According to Article II, Section 2b,<lb/>
any banner may not be displayed except<lb/>
on the mail, at the bottom of College Hill<lb/>
Drive, and the steps leading up to Jones<lb/>
(Dormitory) Hicks said.<lb/>
urn im ? wmmmmm0mmmmmm<lb/>
"In view of this I have found that Miss<lb/>
Lynn Shubert and Miss Teresa Whisenant<lb/>
have not followed this policy. For<lb/>
instance, Miss Shubert has her election<lb/>
campaign literature on the marquis of<lb/>
Bonanza Steak House and Parker's<lb/>
Barbecue. And Miss Whisenant has her<lb/>
campaign literature, which is considered<lb/>
a banner, in the Elbo Room on Cotanche<lb/>
St<lb/>
Turner said he had advised Shubert<lb/>
and Whisenant to remove their campaign<lb/>
literature from these areas.<lb/>
Commenting on the maquis, Shubert<lb/>
said, "They're not illegal and I would not<lb/>
break any election rules.<lb/>
"Election rules state banners, not<lb/>
marquis she continued.<lb/>
See Allegations, page 7.<lb/>
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2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
mw<lb/>
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EditortalsCoTTYTienJary<lb/>
No preference<lb/>
North Carolina voters will be in the national spotlight next<lb/>
week when they go to the polls and take part in the presidential<lb/>
beauty contest-or primary, which ever you prefer.<lb/>
The primary, the second ever in the state, will hopefully yield<lb/>
better results than the first primary four years ago when George<lb/>
Wallace took over 50 percent of the Democratic vote.<lb/>
Wallace is back again, sure enough. But this time he is<lb/>
going to be strongly contested by at least one other candidate.<lb/>
Fresh from a surprise win over Wallace in Florida, former<lb/>
Georgia governor Jimmy Carter is expected to give Wallace a<lb/>
race for the most votes.<lb/>
On the GOP side President Ford is expected to get a stiff<lb/>
challenge from Ronald Reagan.<lb/>
Tar Heel voters will have plenty of names to choose from,<lb/>
unfortunately none really look all that great.<lb/>
First there is Wallace, the Alabama Governor who blocked<lb/>
the schoolhouse door to start his climb to fame in the political<lb/>
arena. Wallace has attempted to change his segregationist<lb/>
posture but neither a leopard or a segregationist can ever really<lb/>
change his spots.<lb/>
Then comes Carter, the peanut farmer from Georgia who<lb/>
flashes an Ipana smile quick enough to get a job doing<lb/>
toothpaste commercials, uarter says "trust me smiles a lot<lb/>
and does little else. His revival type campaign could land him a<lb/>
job with Billy Graham if he fails to get the presidential job.<lb/>
Senator Henry "Scoop" Jackson rates a comment, and that is<lb/>
about all. Jackson is about as exciting as watching the grass<lb/>
grow. In addition, he apparently is in "big labors" pocket which<lb/>
does not make him any more attractive.<lb/>
Representative Morris "Mo" Udall is the liberals choice. But,<lb/>
he would have to get an agent and change his name. Does he<lb/>
really think voters would go for a President named "Mo<lb/>
There are a dozen or so lesser candidates on the Democratic<lb/>
side. Sargant Shriver has a couple of things going for him, even<lb/>
though he is tar down the uemo list, rirsi, ne aid a good jod<lb/>
with the Peace Corps when he ran the show. Then he also<lb/>
deserves credit for having enough guts to run with George<lb/>
McGovern in 1972. Anybody willing to do that obviously has the<lb/>
nerve to be President.<lb/>
Senator Birch Bayh had the good sense to exit the race, as<lb/>
has Governor Milton Shapp. North Carolina Former Governor<lb/>
Terry Sanford saw the handwriting on the wall and left some<lb/>
time ago. Senator Fred Harris is out of it for all practical<lb/>
purposes.<lb/>
Then in the wings, just waiting for convention time in New<lb/>
York is the perennial candidate, Senator Hubert H. Humphrey,<lb/>
who has been running for president as long as anyone can, or<lb/>
cares to remember.<lb/>
The list of Demo hopefuls is long, unfortunately the list of good<lb/>
ones is very short.<lb/>
On the GOP side there is the most exciting choice of<lb/>
ail-between Ronald Reagan and Gerry Ford. That is like asking<lb/>
us to choose between sour kraut or spinachneither is a good<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Reagan is running as hard as he can against everything in<lb/>
Washington, so he can go there. Then Ford, who one of his<lb/>
colleagues once claimed played football without his helmet, is<lb/>
the man who pardoned Richard Nixon. Anything he has done<lb/>
since then is not important.<lb/>
So, the field shapes up for the primary. Take your pick.<lb/>
There is one more choice state voters have. One guy on the<lb/>
ballot is named "no preference After looking at the field that<lb/>
"no preference" guy is looking better all the time.<lb/>
"Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without<lb/>
newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment o<lb/>
prefer the latter<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief-Mike Taylor jy jrtenJon<lb/>
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer<lb/>
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant<lb/>
Production Manager-Jimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising Maneger-Mike Thompson<lb/>
News Editor-Jim Elliott<lb/>
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Tise<lb/>
Features Editor-Pat Coyle<lb/>
Sports Editor-John Evans<lb/>
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by<lb/>
the Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, NC.27834<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 758-6309<lb/>
Subscriptions$10.00 annually for non students.<lb/>
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cone -to XT<lb/>
PIRGing ourselves<lb/>
In elections at the University of North Carolina (Charlotte)<lb/>
March 9, students voted to increase their activity fees two<lb/>
dollars to fund an on-campus chapter of the N.C. Public Interest<lb/>
Research Group.<lb/>
The Carolina Journal (UNC-Charlotte student newspaper)<lb/>
reported "NC PIRG has won overwhelming student approval with<lb/>
more than 65 per cent of the students voting to fund the<lb/>
statewide consumer and environmental group<lb/>
NC PIRG was established in 1972 as a non-profit,<lb/>
non-partisan corporation under North Carolina statutes.<lb/>
Composed of students from N.C. colleges and universities,<lb/>
working together with a full-time, professional staff, NC PIRG<lb/>
has been actively involved with such concerns as consumer<lb/>
protection, environmental preservation, land use planning, and<lb/>
occupational health and safety. NC PIRG was recently involved<lb/>
in petitioning the N.C. Board of Elections to allow students to<lb/>
vote in the communities in which they attend college.<lb/>
NC PIRG chapters have already been established at Duke,<lb/>
Davidson, Wake Forest, St. Andrews and Elon College.<lb/>
Considering the problems they face at ECU, students would<lb/>
be well-advised to investigate the possibility of establishing a<lb/>
chapter here.<lb/>
Problem: Several hundred ECU students are involved in<lb/>
police riot in downtown Greenville last Halloween; so far, no<lb/>
legal vindication.<lb/>
Problem: Freshmen and Sophomore students are forced to<lb/>
sign contracts binding them to dorm residence.<lb/>
Problem: Day students are not provided adequate parking on<lb/>
campus and are rewarded with $20 towing charges for coming to<lb/>
class on time but parking in forbidden areas.<lb/>
Problem: Inadequate campus housing forces many students<lb/>
to live off campus thereby placing themselves at the mercy of<lb/>
merciless landlords who thrive on fine-print laden leases.<lb/>
A chapter could be established either through direct action<lb/>
by the SGA or with a voluntary assessment when activity fees<lb/>
are paid each quarter.<lb/>
Either way it would be a worthwhile investment for anyone<lb/>
concerned about his rights as a student and citizen.<lb/>
KMWMp-<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040030_0003"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1S 6<lb/>
3<lb/>
TieForum<lb/>
to<lb/>
Food operation cited<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
For once, we are going to veer from<lb/>
the academic and political issues that<lb/>
dominate the ECU campus, and enlighten<lb/>
the public on an establishment of<lb/>
continuous discussion, but little, if any<lb/>
action. By high recommendations from<lb/>
the counselors at orientation, these two<lb/>
unaware freshmen were wisely advised to<lb/>
stay clear of the confines of Jones<lb/>
Cafeteria. Choking in one's room was the<lb/>
number one alternative, but buying food,<lb/>
preparing it, and cleaning up didn't<lb/>
exactly tickle our fancy. We would have<lb/>
hesitated to agree so eagerly with our<lb/>
moms on the meal plan if we had first<lb/>
experienced the food in Jones Cafeteria<lb/>
for a week or two. and not only the clay<lb/>
or two during orientation. Our suspicions<lb/>
began to perk up when we heard that in<lb/>
Jones Cafeteria, ECU was down to only<lb/>
one full-fledged cafeteria.<lb/>
At the beginning of the school year,<lb/>
the food wasn't bad at all, but neither<lb/>
were the Greenville Police. However, it<lb/>
was long before October 31st that we<lb/>
regretted ever being associated with the<lb/>
meal plan. The innovation of the Galley<lb/>
Room and all-one-can-eat, put new hope<lb/>
into the stomachs recovering from the<lb/>
meal plans misfortune. Though one's<lb/>
first quarter in the Galley Room could<lb/>
not be classified as the "greatest it was<lb/>
promised that the food would be better.<lb/>
Hicks cites<lb/>
election<lb/>
violation<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
ATTENTION:<lb/>
Chairman<lb/>
Roy Turner, Elections<lb/>
I feel that Tim Sullivan, through the<lb/>
part played by his campaign manager in<lb/>
the letter to the Forum In the<lb/>
Fountainhead, Vol. 7, NO. 39, Feb. 24,<lb/>
1976, p. 3, is in direct violation of the<lb/>
general elections rules, Article IX,<lb/>
Section 5, p. 6, which states there shall<lb/>
be no public campaigning before the 1st<lb/>
mandatory meeting of the candidates.<lb/>
Sincerely Yours,<lb/>
Sammy Hicks<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
All letters to the Editor must be<lb/>
accompanied by an address along with<lb/>
the writer's name. However, only the<lb/>
name will be printed with letters<lb/>
published in the Forum.<lb/>
The letter writer's address will be kept<lb/>
on file in the Fountainhead office and<lb/>
will be available, upon request, to any<lb/>
student<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD WILL, UPON PER-<lb/>
SONAL REQUEST FROM A LETTER<lb/>
WRITER. WITHHOLD A NAME FROM<lb/>
PUBLICATION. BUT, THE NAME OF THE<lb/>
WRITER WILL BE ON FILE IN THE<lb/>
EDITORS OFFICE AND AVAILABLE<lb/>
UPON REQUEST TO ANY STUDENT. ALL<lb/>
REQUESTS FOR WITHHOLDING A<lb/>
NAME MUST BE MADE IN PERSON TO<lb/>
THE EDIIOR<lb/>
Any letter received without this<lb/>
information will be held until the letter<lb/>
writei "mphf;s with the new policy<lb/>
We again doubted and pondered how one<lb/>
could improve the preparing of leftovers.<lb/>
To this day, the Galley Room and Jones<lb/>
Cafeteria hasn't gotten any better, but<lb/>
makes one classify Hardees and<lb/>
MacDonalds as gourmet restaurants. By<lb/>
no means are we downgrading those who<lb/>
served the food, but only their employer,<lb/>
Servomation.<lb/>
The major downfall of any meal plan,<lb/>
is the variety and quality of the food. It's<lb/>
not rare to find the menu dominated by<lb/>
five or six starches during a single<lb/>
serving. One example evolves around<lb/>
salad dressing that is rarely of<lb/>
ingredient, but often a mixture of<lb/>
available ingredients. Servometion's true<lb/>
worth can be assessed during inspection<lb/>
time. For one, both the cafeteria and the<lb/>
Galley room pull all the stops, and serve<lb/>
a halfway decent meal. A case example<lb/>
is an inspector visiting the Galley Room<lb/>
one night.<lb/>
He witnessed the dispensing of fine<lb/>
foods, but his departure also meant the<lb/>
departure of the fine foods. Servomation<lb/>
also has the tendency to close down<lb/>
without sufficient prior notice. It is ironic<lb/>
that we who sign a contract for the meal<lb/>
plan, have to abide by the same contract<lb/>
that Servomation abides by only when it<lb/>
deems necessary. The company that<lb/>
fields the Servomation emblem on the<lb/>
UNCC campus, provides better food, all<lb/>
one can eat, and less hassle. How can<lb/>
one company be so different on two<lb/>
campuses? We believe that if substantial<lb/>
improvements were made, Servomation<lb/>
would be taken advantage of by more<lb/>
than a handful of students who at one<lb/>
time may grace the empty cafeteria with<lb/>
their presence. In essence, one hates to<lb/>
criticize, because that casts doubt or<lb/>
points a finger at a problem. This is a<lb/>
problem, and a solution must be met or<lb/>
those who desperately need such a food<lb/>
service as Servomation, may have to turn<lb/>
elsewhere.<lb/>
Respectfully yours,<lb/>
Kevin McCourt<lb/>
Chris Farren<lb/>
DlBlLTUEZE WAS CNE SoOPTWtNG<lb/>
ABOJTTUE PfNAJER VOU RXEP l&amp;T<lb/>
AIGHT- T GOT RIP Of OUR KACU<lb/>
Student urges all to cast<lb/>
ballot in SG A elections<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Attention. ECU Students<lb/>
Wednesday, March 24 is a very<lb/>
important day for the students of ECU.<lb/>
This is the day we select who will be<lb/>
command of the executive branch of the<lb/>
student government for the 76-77 school<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Most elections on this campus seem<lb/>
to bring out less than 25 per cent of the<lb/>
possible vote. I get very tired of students<lb/>
complaining when their STUDENT<lb/>
GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION doesn't do<lb/>
what they think it should, well 75 per<lb/>
cent of you don't really have a right to<lb/>
ccTiplain since you didn't participate in<lb/>
the last election. APATHY is the word<lb/>
used most commonly when people<lb/>
neglect their duties 'n a dernocracy and<lb/>
are just too busy, lazy, or just don't give<lb/>
a damn what happens in the election.<lb/>
The 75 per cent of neglecti lg votes<lb/>
Professor takes issue<lb/>
with language story<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I would like to take issue with<lb/>
Kenneth Campbell's use of statistics<lb/>
taken from "Needed: A Cure for<lb/>
Provincialism by S. Frederick Starr<lb/>
(Chronicle of Higher Education-March 8).<lb/>
Campbell, in his March 16 article on<lb/>
the proposed revisions of foeign<lb/>
language requirements for B.A. re-<lb/>
cipients, mentioned the rapid decline in<lb/>
national foreign language enrollment.<lb/>
While accurately employing figures from<lb/>
Starr's article, he neglects to follow the<lb/>
writer's line of reasoning.<lb/>
According to Starr, the pursuit of<lb/>
foreign language studies is the "cure for<lb/>
provincialism" and for American isola-<lb/>
tionist sentiments.<lb/>
Said Starr, "The cost to us of our<lb/>
neglect of foreign-language and area<lb/>
studies is immense. Such fields as<lb/>
government, business, law, and journal-<lb/>
Ism are denied the steady flow they<lb/>
deserve of new recruits with broad, yet<lb/>
m<lb/>
specific, foreign-area training. Now that<lb/>
we are regularly negotiating with many of<lb/>
the 141 governments in the United<lb/>
Nations over matters of vital concern to<lb/>
our domestic well-being, self-interest<lb/>
requires that we be better informed than<lb/>
ever in the past<lb/>
He went on to say that the decline in<lb/>
university language studies, coupled with<lb/>
media de-emphasis of foreign affairs and<lb/>
culture, serve to widen the isolationist<lb/>
gap that improved global communica-<lb/>
tions should bridge.<lb/>
Obviously, there are many impli-<lb/>
cations to this issue, and it is important<lb/>
that student legislators and university<lb/>
faculty alike thoroughly examine all<lb/>
aspects of the question, taking into<lb/>
consideration the intellectual reputation<lb/>
of East Carolina University, both at<lb/>
present and in the future<lb/>
Micheal Bassman<lb/>
Department of Foreign<lb/>
Languages and Literatures<lb/>
should know that each quarter money is<lb/>
taken from the pockets in the form of<lb/>
student fees and spent by the university<lb/>
and student government. The money<lb/>
student government gets from these fees<lb/>
is the only money students really have a<lb/>
say on where and what it should be<lb/>
spent. The SGA is your government and<lb/>
can't represent your views if you don't<lb/>
take the few minutes to vote on<lb/>
Wednesday, March 24.<lb/>
Some students complain that their<lb/>
vote doesn't matter since organizations<lb/>
on campus vote as a block and seem to<lb/>
control the SGA. This view I have often<lb/>
felt is a legitimate gripe in student<lb/>
elections but I also feel if the<lb/>
independent population of this campus<lb/>
would show some guts, backbone, the<lb/>
elections would turn out differently and<lb/>
the elected officials would represent a<lb/>
majority of the students not a minority.<lb/>
Scott R. Bright<lb/>
Hales<lb/>
draws<lb/>
support<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
As an SGA legislator I would like to<lb/>
commend the work of Craig Hales as<lb/>
legislator and Chairman of the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee. During the<lb/>
period of his chairmanship Craig always<lb/>
had the students' best interest at heart.<lb/>
His accounting and business background<lb/>
helped him to remain objective<lb/>
throughout the heated debates over the<lb/>
Publications Board budget and other<lb/>
controversial matters.<lb/>
Because of his experience in the<lb/>
School of Business, and as a member<lb/>
and chairman of the Appropriations<lb/>
Committee I feel he is most qualified for<lb/>
the job as SGA Treasurer and urge<lb/>
everyone to vote for Craig Hales on<lb/>
March 23.<lb/>
Mindy Skolly<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040030_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
MMI<lb/>
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Students for Uda I I begin campaigning on ECU campus<lb/>
By MICHAEL FUTCH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A small group of politically involved<lb/>
ECU students met Thursday night, March<lb/>
11, at 7:30 in the Brewster Building to<lb/>
begin a Morris K. Udall for President<lb/>
organization in this area.<lb/>
"We want to get Udall's name spread<lb/>
around. Make people realize who Mo<lb/>
Udall is said Susan Mclntyre, campus<lb/>
coordinetor for Udall.<lb/>
Mclntyre said Udall's name must<lb/>
become as familiar as Jimmy Carter's in<lb/>
North Carolina. This can only be done<lb/>
through a Udall campaign push by letting<lb/>
the people know what he stands for.<lb/>
"We have to show that Udall has<lb/>
some support in Southern states said<lb/>
Mclntyre.<lb/>
The Udall Committee must be first<lb/>
recognized as a committee, she later<lb/>
added. Mclntyre stressed the need for<lb/>
Udall interest stimulation on campus.<lb/>
Some ideas to get Udall's name<lb/>
recognized included a table in the old<lb/>
Student Union building with Udall for<lb/>
President material. This would b<lb/>
available to interested students.<lb/>
A Udall beer bust and a concert on<lb/>
the mall backed by Udall supporters were<lb/>
also mentioned. None of the ideas were<lb/>
made final.<lb/>
Udall has no plans to make a North<lb/>
Carolina visit before the state primary<lb/>
March 23. This creates a total voluntary<lb/>
effort by Udall workers in the state in his<lb/>
support.<lb/>
Rep. Udall of Arizona has been<lb/>
endorsed by Congressman Richardson<lb/>
Preyor, according to Mclntyre.<lb/>
Udall is in the process of<lb/>
concentrating on the Wisconsin Prirr ,y.<lb/>
Most see this as his key state.<lb/>
Udall is at this time the leading<lb/>
Progressive Democratic candidate. He<lb/>
finished second in the New Hampshire<lb/>
and Massachusetts Primaries. In the<lb/>
Florida Primary, Udall gained two per<lb/>
cent. The Arizonian, however, did not<lb/>
campaign in that specific state.<lb/>
Mo Udall is 53 years old and is<lb/>
currently in his seventh full term in<lb/>
Congress. He was the first candidate to<lb/>
announce candidacy for Presidency in<lb/>
Nov. 1974.<lb/>
Ford's order allows CIA in university contracts<lb/>
(CPS)-The CIA will be allowed to<lb/>
enter into research contracts with<lb/>
universities due to an executive order on<lb/>
foreign intelligence recently issued by<lb/>
President Ford. The only stipulation is<lb/>
that a university's top officials know that<lb/>
the funding came from the CIA.<lb/>
A White House spokesperson explain-<lb/>
ing Ford's order stressed the CIA's need<lb/>
for academic research.<lb/>
The Presidential order authorizes the<lb/>
CIA to enter into "contracts and<lb/>
arrangements" for "classified or unclass-<lb/>
ified research  with academic<lb/>
institutions as long as top school<lb/>
administrators know about the CIA<lb/>
sponsorship.<lb/>
The Ford order modifies to some<lb/>
extent an executive order made in 1967<lb/>
by Lyndon Johnson, barring secret CIA<lb/>
funding of educational and other non-<lb/>
profit organizations. Johnson's order was<lb/>
given after Ramparts Magazine had<lb/>
revealed that the CIA secretly financed<lb/>
the National Student Association and<lb/>
several other groups.<lb/>
The House Select Committee on<lb/>
Intelligence, chaired by Otis Pike (D-NY),<lb/>
found that the CIA had violated<lb/>
Johnson's order against covert funding<lb/>
for universities. Although publication of<lb/>
the committee's report on the CIA was<lb/>
blocked by Congressional action,<lb/>
portions that were leaked to the press<lb/>
stated that the CIA had "unilaterally<lb/>
reserved the right to, and does, depart<lb/>
from the Presidential order when it has<lb/>
the need to do so<lb/>
According to the leaked documents,<lb/>
the House committee was told by Carl<lb/>
Duckett, head of the CIA's division of<lb/>
science and technology, that the agency<lb/>
has "ongoing contracts" for research with<lb/>
a "small number of universities and<lb/>
that "some are covert<lb/>
No specific universities or research<lb/>
projects were named in the leaked<lb/>
portions of the House committee report.<lb/>
CONTRACTS<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
whether such regulations be now in<lb/>
effect or later enacted, as contained in<lb/>
the Residence Hall Pamphlet, "Living<lb/>
which is hereby made a part of this<lb/>
Contract<lb/>
Approved Revision for 1976-77 Contract:<lb/>
"The University may terminate this<lb/>
Contract if the Student is not registered<lb/>
and paying full tuition and fees; or if the<lb/>
Student's health renders group living<lb/>
unwise; or if the Student's actions are<lb/>
detrimental to the welfare of the student<lb/>
living group; or for violation of Housing<lb/>
Regulations, as contained in the<lb/>
Residence Hall Pamphlet, "Living which<lb/>
is hereby made a part of this Contract<lb/>
whether such regulations be now in<lb/>
effect or be later enacted or revised by<lb/>
the governing bodies of the University<lb/>
Section 3 and 4. Article Two, Paragraph<lb/>
One<lb/>
As it is in existing contract: "The<lb/>
Student agries to pay the University a<lb/>
$60.00 advance room fee for residence<lb/>
hall space. Further, the Student agrees to<lb/>
pay the University room rent in an<lb/>
amount up to, but not to exceed $130.00<lb/>
per quarter ($195.00 per quarter for a<lb/>
private room). The $60.00 advance room<lb/>
fee will be credited to the Spring Quarter<lb/>
bill. Students who plan to graduate at the<lb/>
end of Fall or Winter Quarters may have<lb/>
this fee applied to their final quarter's<lb/>
room rent if they request such at the<lb/>
time they are assigned a room<lb/>
Approved Revision for 1976-77 Contract:<lb/>
"The Student agrees to pay the Unviersity<lb/>
a $60.00 room fee for residence hall<lb/>
space. Further, the Student agrees to pay<lb/>
the University room rent in an amount up<lb/>
to, but not to exceed $130.00 per quarter<lb/>
($195.00 per quarter for a private room).<lb/>
The $60.00 advance room fee will be<lb/>
credited toward the Student's rent for the<lb/>
first quarter of enrollment covered by this<lb/>
Contract<lb/>
Section 5. Article Three, Paragraph Two<lb/>
As it is in existing contract: "In the event<lb/>
of mechanical, electrical or water<lb/>
difficulties, the University will make all<lb/>
reasonable efforts to restore service;<lb/>
however, there will be no abatement in<lb/>
room rates because of the University's<lb/>
inability to restore service, nor shall the<lb/>
University be liable for any incon-<lb/>
venience<lb/>
Approved Revision for 1976-77 Contract:<lb/>
"In the event of mechanical, electrical or<lb/>
water difficulties, the University will<lb/>
make all reasonable efforts to restore<lb/>
service<lb/>
iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimnmimmiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiriimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii<lb/>
iiiirrifilflrffiMi!rwnTm7ir:iiiiiniiirTHM'ili'Mlt!in,i inirnrTi'iMiTimniTi<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
NEWS REPORTERS!<lb/>
THE REGULAR NEWS<lb/>
MEETING FOR SPRING<lb/>
QUARTER WILL BEHELD<lb/>
( EA CH TUESDA Y A T4:00,<lb/>
BEGINNING MARCH 23.<lb/>
niiMi'tii'i'TiTirr'r'T'ii 11 frin'MT'rT'r'i'inrnT ifirfurr'ni imi'iii iT't'Tmi'r'irf I'liM'nPHWifiiriMiim'rriTiniiiiiiiif'iii'iiifl l fil't ifiiiFHiri'T<lb/>
HARMONY<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
SOUTH<lb/>
Once A Year<lb/>
Save Up To<lb/>
50<lb/>
Hurryt Limited Quantities ? F"$t Come<lb/>
Serve. All items subiect to prior sale.<lb/>
HELD OVER UNTIL MARCH 21st<lb/>
?<lb/>
First L<lb/>
AH the demos and used equipment on the floor hove been greatly<lb/>
reduced for our only store wide sale. We're featuring such name brands<lb/>
as Sony, Pioneer, Teoc, JVC and Bose<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
On the Mall Downtown Greenville<lb/>
mm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040030_0005"/><lb/>
is<lb/>
in<lb/>
 to<lb/>
in<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL<lb/>
MMMMtMM<lb/>
51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
5<lb/>
Fountainhead interviews Mrs. Jimmy Carter<lb/>
By DENNIS LEONARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mrs. Jimmy Carter was<lb/>
available for an exclusive interview with<lb/>
the Fountainhead during her campaign<lb/>
visit in Greenville Wednesday at the<lb/>
Greenville-Pitt Airport.<lb/>
Q. Mrs. Carter during previous<lb/>
presidential administrations, the press<lb/>
has been neglected and publication<lb/>
restraints have been ordered by the<lb/>
executive, what is Jimmy Carter's<lb/>
position with the press?<lb/>
A. "First let me say that Jimmy has nmnr<lb/>
told a lie as long as I have known him<lb/>
and I think honesty is very important for<lb/>
the executive position. Jimmy feels that<lb/>
he must be completely honest with the<lb/>
public and to be honest with the public<lb/>
involves keeping them informed. There<lb/>
are some things that, if elected, Jimmy<lb/>
simply cannot let the press have, but he<lb/>
will do his best to keep the newsmen and<lb/>
the public informed.<lb/>
Q. There is presently a bill in the Senate<lb/>
titled S-1 which, if passed, could take<lb/>
away quite a few rights for the average<lb/>
American citizen, is Jimmy Carter in<lb/>
favor of this legislation?<lb/>
A. When that bill was originally<lb/>
introduced during the Nixon era, it was<lb/>
basically a good bill, but amendments<lb/>
have ruined the bill as it is now. Jimmy<lb/>
is not in favor of the bill as it presently<lb/>
stands.<lb/>
Q. The abortion topic has surfaced in the<lb/>
past recent months and since it was<lb/>
Georgia where the abortion law was<lb/>
constitutionally tested, what is Carter's<lb/>
stand on the issue?<lb/>
A. I personally am opposed to abortions<lb/>
and quite honestly Jimmy is against<lb/>
them also, but he is opposed to making<lb/>
an amendement to the constitution to<lb/>
change the Supreme Court ruling. During<lb/>
Jimmy's term as governor he had to<lb/>
make changes in Ms administration to<lb/>
comply with the Supreme Court's ruling<lb/>
Jimmy wants family planning, sex<lb/>
education in schools, and family<lb/>
planning centers to be stressed so that<lb/>
an abortion will not be needed in the first<lb/>
place. As the Georgia law was written, it<lb/>
was legal for someone to leave the state<lb/>
of Georgia, fly to New York to get an<lb/>
abortion, and fly back to Georgia. This<lb/>
was not fair for the citizens of the state<lb/>
and made an abortion easily attainable<lb/>
for the rich and neglected the poor. In<lb/>
Georgia there are 150 counties and by the<lb/>
time Jimmy had finished his term, there<lb/>
were 150 family planning centers in the<lb/>
state where there had previously bean<lb/>
none at ail.<lb/>
Q. Mrs. Carter detente has become a<lb/>
much abused cliche in the diplomatic<lb/>
iiffai Shtt liiair Shtt<lb/>
I Shtt Sttrt<lb/>
111W. 4th<lb/>
? USE <lb/>
: CLASSIFIEDS t<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
circles and if your husband is elected,<lb/>
what will be his position on international<lb/>
relations and peace-keeping with the<lb/>
world powers?<lb/>
A. First let me say that Jimmy is a leader<lb/>
AND he will not be solely a domesticated<lb/>
president. During Jimmy's governorship<lb/>
he became involved with world trade and<lb/>
actually brought world trade to the state<lb/>
of Georgia. There are presently 30<lb/>
countries represented in Atlanta atone for<lb/>
trade and diplomatic purposes and they<lb/>
are located there because my husband<lb/>
had enough interest in world trade to try<lb/>
and bring them into the state. Schmidt,<lb/>
the German politician, talked to my<lb/>
husband for two days about international<lb/>
trade and compared the two countries.<lb/>
Schmidt asked Jimmy about the U.S.<lb/>
energy program and then explained the<lb/>
detailed program the Germans have<lb/>
established. Jimmy wanted a copy of the<lb/>
energy program and four months later<lb/>
received a copy in the mail. The reason it<lb/>
took so long was that it took that long<lb/>
for the translation of the very detailed<lb/>
program to occur.<lb/>
"On the question of detente, Jimmy<lb/>
thinks that the U.S. is getting the short<lb/>
end of the stick. Jimmy feels that ws<lb/>
need a two way detente, but we also<lb/>
need to place diplomatic emphasis on<lb/>
the other parts of the world. So as you<lb/>
can see, Jimmy does have a working<lb/>
knowledge of international relations and I<lb/>
feel he is competent enough to deal with<lb/>
diplomatic problems<lb/>
Presidential hopefuls to invade state<lb/>
Several presidential hopefuls will<lb/>
invade the state during the next few days<lb/>
making last minute appeals to voters<lb/>
before next Tuesday's presidential<lb/>
preference primary.<lb/>
George Wallace, who won the N.C.<lb/>
primary four years ago, was to speak in<lb/>
Kinston this morning at 11:30. Wallace<lb/>
was to make his pitch for support at a<lb/>
rally at Stallings Airport before flying to<lb/>
the western part of the state later today.<lb/>
Friday Wallace will be in Wilmington<lb/>
for a 3 p.m. airport rally and then will fly<lb/>
to Rocky Mount for a 7:30 p.m. rally in a<lb/>
local high school.<lb/>
Wallace will make one more stop in<lb/>
the East at least before the Tuesday vote,<lb/>
this one set for Monday in Fayetteville at<lb/>
7:30 at the Cumberland County Memorial<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Jimmy Carter, Wallace's chief rival in<lb/>
the Democratic race, will come to<lb/>
Raleigh and then Wilmington before the<lb/>
primary. He is due in Raleigh Friday and<lb/>
also in Wilmington Friday in his only<lb/>
eastern N.C. swing.<lb/>
Carter's wife, Rosalynn, was in<lb/>
Greenville and New Bern Wednesday.<lb/>
In the Republican race, challenger<lb/>
Ronald Reagan is also set to make a rally<lb/>
at the Kinston airport. That rally is set<lb/>
for 3:40 p.m. Saturday.<lb/>
President Gerald Ford was in the<lb/>
state last weekend and is expected back<lb/>
this weekend but is not expected to<lb/>
campaign in the east.<lb/>
The eastern part of the state is heavily<lb/>
Democratic and gave George Wallace a<lb/>
big boost towards his winning total in<lb/>
the primary four years ago when Wallace<lb/>
out-distanced Duke University president<lb/>
Terry Sanford.<lb/>
buVe too busy<lb/>
to write home and ask for a college ring.<lb/>
So ArtCarved has done it for you.<lb/>
Dear Mother and Dad,<lb/>
I'd love an ArtCarved College Ring for:<lb/>
D My birthday<lb/>
? Not flunking<lb/>
'ubfcti<lb/>
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? Getting on the dean's list<lb/>
? Finally sending out my laundry<lb/>
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Love,<lb/>
PS Hurry Thr ring I lik?' costs $<lb/>
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?Bring any portion of this ad to us before graduation, order a gold ArtCarved College Ring,<lb/>
and save $10 if you pay in full, or $s if you pay a standard deposit<lb/>
STUDENTS SUPPL Y STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
RING IWlVIONDAY-WEDNESDAY College Rngshy<lb/>
That's when the ArtCarved representative will be here mm fk r f tj OO OATH<lb/>
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It's also the day you can charge any ArtCarved ring<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVdL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
m0m0mmmnnm ?sjimmm m i<lb/>
m ? m<lb/>
op<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
EbonyHeraldeditorchosen<lb/>
By BOB WATSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In one of its first official acts, the<lb/>
Ebony Herald Board of Directors has<lb/>
chosen Ken Campbell as the new editor<lb/>
of the paper.<lb/>
Campbell was chosen at a screening<lb/>
held on March 8. He is a Junior political<lb/>
science major and is minoring in<lb/>
journalism. Campbell has been an active<lb/>
member of the Fountainhead staff for the<lb/>
past two years, and is presently serving<lb/>
as assistant news editor. He has held<lb/>
this position since September, 1975.<lb/>
The board which chose Campbell was<lb/>
established in early February a bill<lb/>
introduced to the SGA by Phil Arrington,<lb/>
calling for the paper to be removed from<lb/>
the authority of the Students of a United<lb/>
Liberated Society (SOULS), and for the<lb/>
creation of the board of directors.<lb/>
Ricky Price, Speaker of the SGA<lb/>
Legislature, said that the legislation was<lb/>
passed to give a definite structure to the<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
The Board of Directors of the Ebony<lb/>
Herald, consists of the Secretary of<lb/>
Minority Affairs, the President of SOULS,<lb/>
the Vice-President of SOULS, the<lb/>
President of the SGA or his appointee,<lb/>
the Speaker of the Legislature or his<lb/>
appointee, and the Secretary of Public<lb/>
Relations of SOULS.<lb/>
According to Dalton Nicholson,<lb/>
Secretary of Minority Affairs, all of the<lb/>
members of the board were present for<lb/>
the screening. Earlier screenings have<lb/>
had to be postponed due to the absences<lb/>
of several members of the board.<lb/>
Nicholson also reported that Camp-<lb/>
bell was the only applicant present for<lb/>
the screening, and that as far as he was<lb/>
concerned the appointment was final.<lb/>
Campbell has indicated to Fountain-<lb/>
head staff members that he plans to<lb/>
maintain his assistant news editor<lb/>
position at least through the rest of<lb/>
Spring Quarter.<lb/>
Campbell refused to make any<lb/>
immediate comment on the future of the<lb/>
Ebony Herald or on his appointment, but<lb/>
Nicholson indicated that he thought the<lb/>
minority publication would release its<lb/>
first edition under Campbell within two<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
Constitution revisions continuing<lb/>
During the past years students have<lb/>
been very apathetic towards applying for<lb/>
graduation marshal I positions. This year<lb/>
the SGA has changed the requirements<lb/>
for accepting marshal Is and will admit<lb/>
both males and females so that more will<lb/>
apply.<lb/>
There will be 18 vacancies to be filled<lb/>
for this years graduation marshalls and<lb/>
those interested should quickly fill out an<lb/>
application.<lb/>
The requirements for the considered<lb/>
honor are; a marshal I must have a 3.0<lb/>
grade point average or better, they must<lb/>
have 96 quarter hours or more, and can<lb/>
be either male or female according to the<lb/>
mentioned change.<lb/>
The graduation marshall plays many<lb/>
important roles in the university and the<lb/>
position is considered to be one of<lb/>
prestige and honor. Graduation marshalls<lb/>
serve as ushers for the concert and<lb/>
lecture series, assists in the graduation<lb/>
excercise, assist in alumni day, and aids<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins in various university<lb/>
functions.<lb/>
The deadline for filing for the<lb/>
marshall position is April 5th, 1976, in<lb/>
the SGA office in Mendenhall. The SGA<lb/>
officers are open from 8: OX) to 5:00<lb/>
Monday through Friday, so there is<lb/>
plenty of time to file.<lb/>
All interested persons should quickly<lb/>
fill out the necessary application to<lb/>
assure the position. All students who<lb/>
meet the requirements and are interested<lb/>
should remember that the position looks<lb/>
very impressive on the transcript records.<lb/>
Marshall applications available<lb/>
The constitution Review Committee of<lb/>
the Student Government Association has<lb/>
contini?d to suggest changes for the<lb/>
revision of the SGA Constitution,<lb/>
according to Ricky Price, chairman.<lb/>
"All parts in the major constitution<lb/>
are being scrutinized Price stated. "So<lb/>
far, many major changes have taken<lb/>
place<lb/>
"Within one month, a committee draft<lb/>
of the revised constitution will be<lb/>
published in the Fountainhead at d<lb/>
Price.<lb/>
There will also be an announced<lb/>
public hearing, which will be further<lb/>
publicized later, for the benefit of the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
MARCH<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
18 Thur- ROCKFISH<lb/>
19 Fri. - PEGASUS<lb/>
20 Sat. - PEGASUS<lb/>
21 SunPEGASUS<lb/>
This week - ADMISSION 50<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 - Sitter 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/>
EUROPE<lb/>
fart:<lb/>
IVS. WI<lb/>
- 800-325-4867<lb/>
fe) UmTravel 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. 752-4272.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Silvertone Bass Amp. Good<lb/>
Condition $85. Hollowbody electric guitar -<lb/>
two pickup - exc. condition $100<lb/>
Call 752 7398.<lb/>
7" Reel to reel tapes - wide assortment of<lb/>
music - many are factory pre-recorded.<lb/>
752-7398.<lb/>
RIDE WANTED from Jacksonville to ECU<lb/>
for MWF 9 a.m. class. Share expense.<lb/>
Jax 455-1265.<lb/>
FOUND - 3 Books "Growth of American<lb/>
Republic "Modern Elementary Mathe-<lb/>
matics "Adolsecence of Youth Con-<lb/>
tact Dean Mai lory's office. Whichard 210.<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/>
Therefore total cost is 1.75. No charge for lost and found classifieds<lb/>
PAYMENT: Classified payable in advance. Send check or money order along wad to:<lb/>
Fountainhead, Classified Ad Dept Old South Bldg ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
DEADLINES: Fountainhead publishes Tues. &amp; Thurs. All classifieds &amp; payments must<lb/>
be received 2 days prior to requested insertion date.<lb/>
COPY: Fountainhead tries to publish only legitima'3 classifieds. Fountainhead<lb/>
reserves the ridht to reject any and all ad copy that, in rts opinion, is objectionable.<lb/>
ERRORS: In case of errors in copy for which it is responsible, Fountainhead will<lb/>
make the corrections in the earliest possible edition, without charge to the advertiser.<lb/>
???????????????????????????????????<lb/>
 SHIRTS AND STUFF ?<lb/>
?????????????????????????????????<lb/>
 The Great <lb/>
Grand Opening<lb/>
15 off ALL MERCHANDISE<lb/>
Featuring the Latest in ;<lb/>
- West Coast Jean Stylss - Rugby Shirts ? Sports Knits<lb/>
- Leisure Prints by Kennington of California<lb/>
? Western Style Shirts by Kennington of California<lb/>
FriS&amp;t March 19-20<lb/>
Evans St. Mall Downtown<lb/>
OPEN DAILY 10a.m. - 5 p.m.<lb/>
Will"M<lb/>
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mtmmmmm<lb/>
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F0UNTA1NHEADV0L. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
7<lb/>
?<lb/>
Retreat at Nags Head<lb/>
Seminars held at Marine Resources Center<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
By DAVID HUNT<lb/>
Special to Fountainhead<lb/>
Last weekend the Geology Club held<lb/>
a seminar retreat on the status of the<lb/>
geological profession. The group stayed<lb/>
at Nags Head and seminars were held at<lb/>
the North Carolina Marine Resources<lb/>
Center in Manteo. The retreat was<lb/>
sponsored by the SGA, the Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education's Environmental<lb/>
Education Program, Geology Department,<lb/>
and Geology Club.<lb/>
Six speakers from various parts of the<lb/>
country spoke at the seminar. They were:<lb/>
Dr. George Freeland of The National<lb/>
Oceanographic and Atmospheric Admin-<lb/>
istration, from Miami, Florida; Mr.<lb/>
Samuel Frazier, Exploration Affairs<lb/>
Advisor of the Gulf Energy and Minerals<lb/>
Company, from Houston, Texas; Dr. Don<lb/>
Hustler caught<lb/>
(CPS)-Who is Bernard John Chubet III<lb/>
and how did he fleece us out of nearly<lb/>
$1300?<lb/>
That is the question several people<lb/>
around Princeton University are asking<lb/>
themselves these days after the discovery<lb/>
that the mysterious Chubet is not a<lb/>
Princeton student as he said and that the<lb/>
bills he ran up at two posh campus clubs<lb/>
might never be paid.<lb/>
It seems Chubet, 22, waltzed into<lb/>
Princeton's exclusive Tower Club last fall<lb/>
clad in the traditional Ivy League duds<lb/>
and throwing around tales of his house<lb/>
in Greenwich and his sporty Alga Ftomeo<lb/>
car. And even though he borrowed a lot<lb/>
of money and sometimes mispelled his<lb/>
own name, everybody bought his story.<lb/>
"You just wanted to believe him, he<lb/>
was so sincere said Tower Club<lb/>
member William Lee. "He was very<lb/>
controversial, very reasonable. You name<lb/>
it, he was it<lb/>
Chubet won over so many friends<lb/>
around Princeton that the Tower Club,<lb/>
accustomed to deal inn with gentlemen<lb/>
scholars, let him ch 'ge up $892.50<lb/>
worth of meals.<lb/>
unarges have been pressed against<lb/>
Chubet and he faces a maximum penalty<lb/>
of $1000 and three years in jail for<lb/>
obtaining services under false pretenses.<lb/>
ALLEGATIONS<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
"As soon as it was contested, the<lb/>
marquis came down. I would rather have<lb/>
my name less known than to do any<lb/>
questionable advertising. I still contend<lb/>
that I have broken no rules and will<lb/>
continue to campaign honestly and<lb/>
fairly<lb/>
In her response to Hicks' allegations,<lb/>
Whisenant said, "In no way would I<lb/>
purposely violate any election rule.<lb/>
"I've talked to Jimmy Honeycutt (SGA<lb/>
President) about this and know for a fact<lb/>
that I have not violated any rules<lb/>
Whisenant added, "As soon as I heard<lb/>
about the complaint I took the posters in<lb/>
the Elbo Room down<lb/>
Sullivan's only immediate comment<lb/>
was, "Sammy is an okay fellow. I just<lb/>
wish he would take the election more<lb/>
seriously<lb/>
Turner said that because there was no<lb/>
Attorney General in office at this time<lb/>
and that one would be affirmed by the<lb/>
Legislature Monday, it would be next<lb/>
Thursday before the irsue would go<lb/>
before the Honor Council.<lb/>
L. Everhart, Vice President of Exploration<lb/>
for the International Minerals and<lb/>
Chemical Corporation, from Libertyville,<lb/>
Illinois; Dr. Fred Honkala, Director of the<lb/>
American Geological Institute, from Falls<lb/>
Church, Virginia; Mr. Jack Johnston,<lb/>
Deputy for coal, oil, and gas in the Office<lb/>
of Energy of the U.S. Geological Survey,<lb/>
from Reston, Virginia; and Mr. Norm<lb/>
Messinger, Director of Interpretation of<lb/>
the Cape Hatteras National Seashore,<lb/>
from Manteo. These mer. concurred on<lb/>
several topics which include: the cyclical<lb/>
nature of jobs in the geological<lb/>
profession and the increasing demand for<lb/>
geologists in environmental investi-<lb/>
gations and mineral resource research<lb/>
and exploration. The informal talks and<lb/>
discussions were Friday night and all day<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
DR. M.P. O'CONNOR explains high<lb/>
energy beach erosion to Qeology Club<lb/>
during retreat.<lb/>
Another purpose for the retreat was to<lb/>
get to know each other better. Saturday<lb/>
afternoon there was an oyster roast at<lb/>
which the staff, speakers and students<lb/>
became better acquainted. Friday and<lb/>
Saturday nights there were mixers at the<lb/>
Ramada Inn in which guests, instructors<lb/>
and students interacted while being<lb/>
entertained with live blue grass music.<lb/>
A field trip was taken on Sunday to<lb/>
study the dynamics of the high energy<lb/>
coastal and estuarine environments. The<lb/>
group investigated major geological<lb/>
systems at Oregon Inlet, Jockey's Ridge,<lb/>
and Coquina Beach, as well as shorelines<lb/>
and the salt marshes along Roanoke,<lb/>
Croatan, and Albemarle Sounds. Those<lb/>
who attended the trip found it to be an<lb/>
enjoyable and profitable experience.<lb/>
Radio hack<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
tmtmm<lb/>
9m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Trees termed a 'safety hazard'<lb/>
V "A ?J' ? -it ?- X? Xf fc Jr X' Js &amp; "?&amp; f " <lb/>
By JIMMY WILLIAMS<lb/>
PrcxJuction Manager<lb/>
The Greenville City Council approved<lb/>
a report on tree conditions which calls<lb/>
for the removal of 13 oak trees on Fifth<lb/>
St. which are dead or dying, following a<lb/>
report by City Planner John Schofield<lb/>
and Landscape Supervisor Terry Ogle-<lb/>
thorpe.<lb/>
The trees which are located between<lb/>
Summit and Lewis Streets along Fifth<lb/>
Street, were termed a "safety hazard" by<lb/>
Schofield.<lb/>
Oglethorpe, in his report to the<lb/>
Council, cited six recommendations for<lb/>
tree care. They include fertilizing,<lb/>
pruning, treatment of wounds, watering,<lb/>
compensation for hard soil and tree<lb/>
removal.<lb/>
According to Schofield, the dead<lb/>
trees will severely affect the other trees if<lb/>
the dead trees are not removed soon.<lb/>
Eight of the dead trees are located on the<lb/>
university side of Fifth St. and five are on<lb/>
the residential side.<lb/>
Seraiva<lb/>
comments on<lb/>
V.P.bid<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Editor's Note: Bob Seraiva was<lb/>
previously unavailable for comment on<lb/>
his bid tor the Vice-Presidency, so his<lb/>
qualifications will be included in this<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
Bob Seraiva, a Vice-Presidential<lb/>
candidate for the SGA, is a junior from<lb/>
Wilmington. Delaware. He is majoring in<lb/>
Business Administration.<lb/>
Qualifications are: member of the<lb/>
Major Attractions Committee-1974; mem-<lb/>
ber of the Law Society-1974; Chairman of<lb/>
the Major Attractions Committee-1975.<lb/>
"I am in agreement that the<lb/>
Publications Board should be a separate<lb/>
entity Seraiva stated.<lb/>
"I believe that an overpass and more<lb/>
parking lots should be built Seraiva<lb/>
added<lb/>
In concluding, Seraiva commented on<lb/>
the foreign language policy. "Math<lb/>
courses would be more helpful to the<lb/>
majority of the students than foreign<lb/>
language courses<lb/>
The 13 oak trees are dying of either<lb/>
root rot or heart rot due to an ice storm<lb/>
in late 1967 or early 1968, said Schofield.<lb/>
Because of the ice storm, the trees<lb/>
were given an emergency pruning,<lb/>
according to Schofield.<lb/>
Removal of the trees will cost<lb/>
between $100 and $150 a piece. All work<lb/>
will be done by the city.<lb/>
The trees will be replaced with<lb/>
flowering trees or oaks that stay green at<lb/>
least eight months a year.<lb/>
According to Schofield, the trees will<lb/>
be replaced with help from local civic and<lb/>
garden clubs.<lb/>
The Environmental Advisory Commis-<lb/>
sion (EAQ, which assisted in the report,<lb/>
suggested that the City Manager<lb/>
designate a city employe to supervise all<lb/>
tree replacements, planting and removal<lb/>
in existing City rights-of-way and<lb/>
property.<lb/>
The city employe will be responsible<lb/>
for proper pruning to further protect and<lb/>
extend the life of the trees.<lb/>
The EAC further suggested that a<lb/>
series of news articles and press releases<lb/>
outlining the problems and actions be<lb/>
provided for the local media.<lb/>
The Recreation Department also<lb/>
assisted in the report.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1978<lb/>
FEAT<lb/>
m<lb/>
East Carolina artist in residence<lb/>
Speight's work reflects romantic realism<lb/>
By STEPHEN MESSICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Moments after the door bell's ring<lb/>
echoed through the large house, a<lb/>
tousled, gray-haired man in an ancient<lb/>
black suit offered a friendly welcome.<lb/>
The man is Francis Speight, one of<lb/>
the most celebrated painters North<lb/>
Carolina has ever produced. And he lives<lb/>
only a block from the campus of ECU.<lb/>
Speight is the artist-in-residenoe and<lb/>
a professor of Fine Arts at ECU.<lb/>
He was bom Sept. 11, 1896, on a<lb/>
farm near Windsor in Bertie County, N.C.<lb/>
"I really enjoyed growing up in the<lb/>
country said Speight.<lb/>
"I particularly liked sitting in the sun<lb/>
and writing and listening to the wind<lb/>
blow through the cypress trees in the<lb/>
swamps<lb/>
Speight attended Wake Forest College<lb/>
for two years (1915-1917) and took art<lb/>
lessons in his spare time. He went to the<lb/>
Chanderiy Art School in Washington,<lb/>
D.C in 1919, and then studied at the<lb/>
Corcoran School of Art in Washington,<lb/>
D.C. in 1920.<lb/>
The a'rtist later enrolled in the<lb/>
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in<lb/>
Philadelphia where he remained as a<lb/>
faculty member until 1961 when he<lb/>
accepted his present post at ECU.<lb/>
"My artistic talent was slow in<lb/>
developing although I did sell a drawing<lb/>
before I had had any formal art lessons<lb/>
Speight revealed.<lb/>
The thin painter breaks into a smile<lb/>
when describing his initial reasons for<lb/>
pursuing an art career.<lb/>
"I knew I could be very good at<lb/>
painting, but I honestly liked painting at<lb/>
first because I thought I could make a<lb/>
living at it laughed Speight.<lb/>
Speight's style has been described as<lb/>
romantic realism. His oils are primarily<lb/>
figures and landscapes, but the artist<lb/>
usually makes some alterations to<lb/>
capture the mood of his subject.<lb/>
"In Philadelphia I enjoyed painting the<lb/>
industrial sections of town because they<lb/>
seemed to be more colorful and full of<lb/>
life Speight explained.<lb/>
Since returning to North Carolina<lb/>
fifteen years ago, his paintings have been<lb/>
dominated by the flat rural landscapes<lb/>
prevalent in the eastern part of the state.<lb/>
"I like people to arrive at their own<lb/>
interpretations of my style, as opposed<lb/>
to personally putting limiting adjectives<lb/>
on my work<lb/>
The Tar Heel artist has received both<lb/>
state and national recognition for his<lb/>
works.<lb/>
In 1961 he received the Doctor of<lb/>
Humane Letters degree from Wake Forest<lb/>
and in 1964 was awarded a Doctor of<lb/>
Fine Arts degree by Holy Cross College.<lb/>
The state of North Carolina, in<lb/>
recognition of Soeiaht's artistic achieve-<lb/>
SMALL BEGINNINGS - "I always had hop that my panting would someday m<lb/>
widely recognized, although I originally started painting just to illustrate my writings<lb/>
Speight related.<lb/>
ments, awarded him the North Carolina<lb/>
Award in 1964.<lb/>
Speight also received the Morrison<lb/>
Award in 1973 from the Roanoke Island<lb/>
Association. The award traditionally goes<lb/>
to the North Carolinian who has<lb/>
contributed the most to the arts.<lb/>
"I always had hope that my paintings<lb/>
would someday be widely recognized,<lb/>
although I originally started painting just<lb/>
to illustrate my writings Speight<lb/>
related.<lb/>
"My painting career almost came to<lb/>
an end my second year of school in<lb/>
Philadelphia Speight said. "I tried<lb/>
putting out the newspaper in Bertie<lb/>
County, but the politics of the paper<lb/>
changed my journalistic dreams<lb/>
Speight believes art plays an essential<lb/>
part in man's life by serving as a definite<lb/>
extention of his feelings.<lb/>
"An artist can never completely<lb/>
control his paints, which is the real<lb/>
beauty of the art form. If the picture has<lb/>
some meaning to the artist, he should<lb/>
stick with it to complete it emphasized<lb/>
Speight.<lb/>
Speight's wife, Sarah, is also a<lb/>
talented painter, and both of his children<lb/>
have grown up with a strong appreciation<lb/>
for the arts. He said he regrets little in<lb/>
life.<lb/>
"I would have liked to have done more<lb/>
figure and abstract painting, but these<lb/>
didn't really seem to interest me when I<lb/>
was younger said Speight.<lb/>
"As for the future, I will continue<lb/>
painting and would like to write down<lb/>
some notes about my childhood on the<lb/>
farm<lb/>
Francis Speight enjoys discussing art<lb/>
and meeting new people, but he is<lb/>
happiest when he hops into his jeep to<lb/>
find a sunny place in which to paint.<lb/>
Can you handle it?<lb/>
Spring fever will bloom soon<lb/>
By PATT1 JONES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Well folks, it's that time of the year<lb/>
again. SPRING. Ah, yes, spring has<lb/>
arrived. Someone once said, "Spring is a<lb/>
time when a young man's fancy turns to<lb/>
thoughts of love or was that "thoughts<lb/>
of lust?" Anyway, spring is a very<lb/>
distinctive time of the year for us girls as<lb/>
well as the young men. It is a time when<lb/>
outdoor activities increase, people bare<lb/>
their feet (and other body parts), the<lb/>
trees blossom, flowers bloom, and<lb/>
students begin counting down the days<lb/>
until Easter break. The following are a<lb/>
few more characteristics or warning<lb/>
signals of the arrival of spring.<lb/>
You know it's spring when<lb/>
the Greenville flasher hangs up his fur-<lb/>
lined "London Fog" and puts on his<lb/>
seersucker overcoat.<lb/>
you see more people in the sun courts<lb/>
and on the mall than in your cU<lb/>
panty raids pick up and you find<lb/>
yourself trying to convince your mom<lb/>
that someone stole all of your panties<lb/>
from the washing machine.<lb/>
the downtown night spots sponsor a<lb/>
street dance which flops because the<lb/>
number of "riot squad officers"<lb/>
outnumber the partyers 3 to 1! (Rumor<lb/>
has it that Chief Cannon actually had a<lb/>
SWAT team on call! Sony about that<lb/>
Chief!)<lb/>
you see frequent full moons, and they<lb/>
are not up in the sky! (think about it!)<lb/>
dorm dwellers are rudely awakened by<lb/>
the melodious sound of lawn mowers,<lb/>
which are now equipped with search<lb/>
lights so they can begin before day<lb/>
break.<lb/>
a frat man Invites you to rush and you<lb/>
discover a meaning of the word that<lb/>
would make Noah Webster roll over in<lb/>
his grave!<lb/>
still heavily "hung over" from the<lb/>
previous night's festivities, you stagger<lb/>
to your 11:00 class and seeing half-a-<lb/>
dozen multi-colored Frisbees flying<lb/>
through the air, you speed to the ROTC<lb/>
office yelling "Call out the Marines,<lb/>
we're being invaded by Martians<lb/>
?iHHflW<lb/>
m<lb/>
CB owners are obsessed with talking<lb/>
about "beavers" and it's not even hunting<lb/>
season!<lb/>
to study aqua slime and algae growth<lb/>
on stagnant water, the marine biology<lb/>
class embarks upon a field tripto our<lb/>
beloved fountain!<lb/>
it is beautifully sunny ail week long<lb/>
and the only thing that keeps you from<lb/>
cutting class is the thought of a fabulous<lb/>
weekend of 2 whole days in the sunand<lb/>
then it RAINS ALL WEEKEND!<lb/>
in a bicentennial gesture, the Special<lb/>
Attractions Committee organizes a<lb/>
"Greenville Tea Party" on the mall and<lb/>
some turkey actually shows up with a<lb/>
box of Lipton Tea Bags!<lb/>
several students are heard ending their<lb/>
nightly prayers with "And God, please let<lb/>
streaking reach the same peak of<lb/>
popularity this year that it did two years<lb/>
ago! Thanks<lb/>
In conclusion, we realize that Spring<lb/>
is upon us and that it is a great time of<lb/>
ni?iwi ii i mum mi u<lb/>
the year. To me, Spring stimulates<lb/>
self-expression so it seems fitting to end<lb/>
this discussion of Spring with a<lb/>
memorable piece of graffiti that I recently<lb/>
read on a bathroom wall. It goes like<lb/>
this:<lb/>
"Winter has gone and Spring is here.<lb/>
A time of laughter, fun, and cheer.<lb/>
Think you my poem is strange or queer?<lb/>
Then "In your ear with a can of beer<lb/>
i<lb/>
:<lb/>
:<lb/>
m0tm<lb/>
.<lb/>
wmmmmmoammmmm<lb/>
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like<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1W6<lb/>
11<lb/>
r<lb/>
Wardrep cites real estate's importance<lb/>
By MARTY CRAWFORD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If one never gets the chance to talk to<lb/>
Dr. Bruce Wardrep, it is easy to see the<lb/>
great enthusiasm he has for his<lb/>
profession. Assistant Professor in<lb/>
Business Administration, Wardrep's main<lb/>
emphasis is on Real Estate.<lb/>
Wardrep came to ECU in 1973 as<lb/>
somewhat of a unique person, being the<lb/>
only real estate professor in North<lb/>
Carolina with a Ph. D. He was the<lb/>
primary force in beginning the real estate<lb/>
degree program. According to Wardrep,<lb/>
"The courses existed, but were not being<lb/>
taught by people who had a strong<lb/>
background in the area<lb/>
In 1968, the North Carolina<lb/>
Association of Realtors gave a grant to<lb/>
ECU to support real estate education.<lb/>
The grant was given to ECU because this<lb/>
was where all the interest lay. Some of<lb/>
the schools deemed as "traditional" were<lb/>
not interested because they looked upon<lb/>
real estate as a trade, not a profession.<lb/>
Wardrep stated that he came to ECU<lb/>
intending to develop a good real estate<lb/>
concentration in the School of Business,<lb/>
and he feels that he has been fairly<lb/>
successful. There have been from 60 to<lb/>
80 graduates since Dr. Wardrep has been<lb/>
at ECU and he hopes to have at least 25<lb/>
graduating this year.<lb/>
The key to professionalism jn real<lb/>
estate is education. Since ECU is the<lb/>
only university in the state that offers a<lb/>
degree in this area, it attracts students<lb/>
from all over the state.<lb/>
When asked if he thought that going<lb/>
through the university instead of other<lb/>
channels, such as Pitt Technical Institute<lb/>
to become a realtor, Wardrep said,<lb/>
"There is an easier way but not a better<lb/>
way<lb/>
The reasons he gave were that anyone<lb/>
could get a license by simply paying<lb/>
$3.00 at Pitt Tech, for example, but by<lb/>
going through ECU the students would<lb/>
have a more well rounded education, and<lb/>
would be better able to cope with<lb/>
abnormal problems that may arise.<lb/>
The real estate business at present is<lb/>
fragmented, with small firms and few<lb/>
employees. Depending on the area, the<lb/>
field is wide open for qualified people.<lb/>
There is an unlimited income potential.<lb/>
In other words, the sky is the limit,<lb/>
depending only on how hard a person is<lb/>
willing to work.<lb/>
The program is on the verge of<lb/>
expansion, which will hopefully be<lb/>
brought about with the switch to<lb/>
semester system. At this point, they have<lb/>
gone as far as possible within the<lb/>
framework, but hope to expand on the<lb/>
undergraduate level and possibly on the<lb/>
graduate level.<lb/>
Wardrep feels that the field has<lb/>
incredible opportunities. There is little<lb/>
sexual discrimination, mainly because<lb/>
the majority of brokers are self-suppor-<lb/>
ting businesspersons.<lb/>
Real Estate has gotten a lot of bad<lb/>
publicity akin to that of used car<lb/>
salesmen. Wardrep feels that it is really a<lb/>
shame because the industry is much<lb/>
better than people may think.<lb/>
"The biggest problem is the people<lb/>
really don't know what the real estate<lb/>
profession is said Wardrep. "He doesn't<lb/>
know how to get the people interested<lb/>
now who, in 10 to 15 years will end up in<lb/>
real estate anyway<lb/>
Real Estate affects everyone at some<lb/>
time if they live in the dorms,<lb/>
apartments, or their own houses.<lb/>
Wardrep thinks that everyone, whether<lb/>
they are interested in real estate as a<lb/>
career or not, would benefit by some of<lb/>
the introductory courses offered.<lb/>
FREE GIFT CERTIFICATE FOR<lb/>
5 POINT BRAKE SERVICE<lb/>
1. Pull Front WtiMii, Inspect Linings and Drums.<lb/>
2. Oiecw Grease Seals, Wheel Cylinders (or Leakage<lb/>
3. Clean, Inspect and Repack From Wheel Bearings. I' Necessary.<lb/>
4. Check Brake Fluid.<lb/>
5. Adjust Brakes on All Four Wheels for Full Pedal Braking<lb/>
By Appointment Only<lb/>
Reg Pnce $7 50 - With Cert Service Free<lb/>
Only One Certificate To Be Used Per Day<lb/>
Signature<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Keep In glow box until service Is needad<lb/>
I co?L?s<lb/>
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JL<lb/>
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Phone 7S6 5244<lb/>
320 W. HWY. 264 BY-PASS<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
QaaH'c, Material and<lb/>
OddU S4v Workmanship<lb/>
Shoe G<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
Prompt Service<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
r?aaipe3inoinanamLmaiaanopaaac<lb/>
223 Eist Fifth St<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
'DAIRYMAID'<lb/>
SORT<lb/>
THETREEHOUSE<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
EASTERN CAROLINA'S 1<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
A GOOD PLA CE TO MAKE FRIENDS! TONITE<lb/>
YOU CAN EN JO Y THE FINE MUSIC OF RICK<lb/>
KORNFIELD, MARK RHODES AND FRANKI MARTIN<lb/>
8:00PM NO COVER<lb/>
<pb facs="00040030_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAOVOi 51. NO 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
mwmmuM ? hiiwmih i tmmtmmtmmmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Pegasus still king of Greenville<lb/>
PEGASUS<lb/>
By LEE LEWIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
As always, the chicks and dudes were<lb/>
out, (Ever seen a Saturday night in<lb/>
Greenville when they weren't?), the beer<lb/>
was cold and the band was excellent.<lb/>
There's always a good band at the Attic.<lb/>
After a year's absence from these<lb/>
pages (compounded by student teaching,<lb/>
flu and sheer laziness) I return with more<lb/>
lucid comment on the local music scene.<lb/>
There exists a general tendency to put<lb/>
down local and regional bands. And with<lb/>
good reason. Many of them stink! Into<lb/>
town they march uniform in every<lb/>
respect: long hair, capes and costumes,<lb/>
eye shadow, smoke bombs, etc. etc.<lb/>
Self-centered and pathetically egotistic,<lb/>
these constant imitations of Led Zepplin,<lb/>
Yes and the All mans are enough to make<lb/>
you stay in the dorms. It's pretentious,<lb/>
it's sad, it's horse shit!<lb/>
This is a southern town, not England,<lb/>
it's Greenville, not London. Pegasus, as<lb/>
a southern band, fits Greenville as the<lb/>
hand to a glove.<lb/>
Rooted by birth and history in the<lb/>
deep tradition of southern music,<lb/>
Pegasus comes on with all the pretention<lb/>
of a blind side tackle. They mount up,<lb/>
plug in and b'ow you away.<lb/>
Free Flick<lb/>
On stage, Pegasus comes straight at<lb/>
you with a biting blend of southern r&amp;b,<lb/>
heavy English metal and basic Hendrix.<lb/>
"Southern musicians learn from the start<lb/>
to take care of themselves, without a lot<lb/>
of props emphasizes drummer Howard<lb/>
Royal Martin. He's right. Guitarist J.K.<lb/>
Loftin nails it down flat. "If you ever get<lb/>
into that ego thing, it will kill you<lb/>
Amen.<lb/>
I have a friend attending the American<lb/>
University in Mexico City (that's in<lb/>
Mexico) who swears to have net scores<lb/>
of people from the West coast and the<lb/>
Northern industrial states who have heard<lb/>
of ECU and its reputation for raising hell.<lb/>
(You call that fame, people.) Simply put,<lb/>
Greenville remains the most wide open,<lb/>
cooking town in the state; maybe on the<lb/>
East coast.<lb/>
And if Greenville was cooking the<lb/>
night of February 28th (and it was), the<lb/>
fuel that fired the blaze was Pegasus.<lb/>
It was rock h roll roll call. If it<lb/>
moved, if it hummed, if it burned, that<lb/>
damn band played it. Practicing<lb/>
intelligent alternation of blues and flat<lb/>
out boogie, Pegasus once again<lb/>
demonstrated their patented ability to<lb/>
smother a dance floor with grinning faces<lb/>
and heaving bodies.<lb/>
David Stover-bass and vocals, Howard<lb/>
Royal Martin-drums. You build a rock<lb/>
band on rhythm propulsion. The very<lb/>
POPULAR MOVIES<lb/>
NOW SHOWN AT 5:00<lb/>
Were you tired of coming to a movie<lb/>
on Friday night after waiting in anxious<lb/>
anticipation all week only to find that you<lb/>
had come too late and'there were no<lb/>
seats left in the Mendenhall Theatre? The<lb/>
films Committee has again come to your<lb/>
aid. Besides providing fine popular films<lb/>
on Friday nights and great internationals<lb/>
and classics on Wednesday nights, we<lb/>
are now opening new horizons on Fridays<lb/>
and offering our popular movies at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. in addition to the 7:00 and 9:00<lb/>
showings.<lb/>
Due to popular demand, we also are<lb/>
including short cartoons with some of<lb/>
our features This may include anything<lb/>
from Road Runner to Tweetie Bird. The<lb/>
films Committee hopes you continue to<lb/>
frequent our Wednesday night showings<lb/>
which are shown at 8:00, and now our<lb/>
new schedule of Friday showings at<lb/>
5:00, 7:00 and 9:00. Upcoming features<lb/>
are such things as Waldo Pepper, Odessa<lb/>
File, American Graffiti , Football follies,<lb/>
etc. Movie cards showing the date and<lb/>
features offered are available at various<lb/>
places throughout campus, in particular<lb/>
at the Information Desk in Mendenhall.<lb/>
They can be carried around on your<lb/>
person at your easy disposal.<lb/>
Hope to see you at the features soon!<lb/>
Violinist March 25<lb/>
Internationally acclaimed violinist<lb/>
Kyung-Wha Chung will perform in<lb/>
concert at ECU Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center March 25 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The first new violinist in many years<lb/>
to be compared to Heifetz and CNstrakh,<lb/>
Miss Chung made a sensational<lb/>
European debut in 1970, performing the<lb/>
Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto with Andre<lb/>
Previn and the London Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra at the Royal Festival Hall in<lb/>
London.<lb/>
She has since performed numerous<lb/>
concerts in Britain and toured as soloist<lb/>
with Previn and the London Symphony in<lb/>
the Far East. In addition, she has<lb/>
completed ten European tours, appeared<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
on BBC television five times and signed<lb/>
a long-term contract with English Dacca.<lb/>
Music critics throughout the world have<lb/>
laudd her technical ability and sensitive<lb/>
interpretations.<lb/>
Kyung-Wha Chung, only 24 years old,<lb/>
is a member of a distinguished Korean<lb/>
family of musicians.<lb/>
Her concert instrument is the famous<lb/>
"Harrison" Stradlvarlus, made in 1692<lb/>
and considered the foremost example of<lb/>
the Cremona violin-maker's experiment-<lb/>
ation with the "long-patern fiddle<lb/>
TicKets for the Chung concert are<lb/>
available at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
physical presence of Stover's power bass<lb/>
provides an ideal counter to the jack<lb/>
rabbit professional funk of Mr. Martin on<lb/>
drums. They bounce asses and move<lb/>
walls all night long.<lb/>
J.K. Loftin ("on the black Les Paul").<lb/>
Blues runs, power chords, inventive lead<lb/>
work-you name it, Mr. Loftin can do it.<lb/>
An emotional player, J.K. can propel<lb/>
both himself and his instrument to a<lb/>
contagious frenzy. He seems restless at<lb/>
present, eager to move forward both<lb/>
personally and within the group context.<lb/>
Eddie Small, Miami, Fla the<lb/>
Berkeley School of Music, guitar, vocals,<lb/>
prolific writer (definite Hendrix influence).<lb/>
It was his addition in March of 75 that<lb/>
cemented Pegasus into an intense<lb/>
musical vehicle. Having taken his lumps<lb/>
lately (car accident), Eddie has stitches,<lb/>
bruises, and looks a little pale. But take<lb/>
it from me, there's nothing wrong with<lb/>
his hands, specifically his fingers.<lb/>
Instinctively intelligent, even economical<lb/>
in his play, Mr. Small can still (and does)<lb/>
rare back, close his eyes and blow your<lb/>
head off.<lb/>
The competitive yet complementary<lb/>
interplay between J.K. and Eddie on<lb/>
Robin Trowers "Bridge of Sighs" is<lb/>
simply beautiful. Slow and hypnotic,<lb/>
"Sighs" is gallows music, wholly<lb/>
dependent upon execution and discipline<lb/>
for effect. The fact Pegasus pulls the<lb/>
number off so well indicates both<lb/>
maturity and composure within the band<lb/>
as a unit.<lb/>
Yet "Sighs" is an aberration, a<lb/>
sidetrack, for the band. Their forte is<lb/>
high energy rock. When they steam along<lb/>
full blast, playing to a crowded dance<lb/>
floor, weaving both lights and music into<lb/>
their own unique atmosphere, Pegasus<lb/>
presents Greenville in her finest hour. A<lb/>
rare fusion occurs. The fusion of<lb/>
spectator, dancer and musician into a<lb/>
cultural phenomenon we choose to call<lb/>
rock 'n roll. I've never seen anybody do it<lb/>
better than Pegasus.<lb/>
Caught in a moment of quiet<lb/>
conversation at the group's villa' on 14th<lb/>
St drummer Martin summed it up.<lb/>
"There's a oneness. Our lives, our<lb/>
music, and the lives of our audience are<lb/>
all totally interrelated<lb/>
It's rare for a band to minimize its<lb/>
own ego to the extent of caring about the<lb/>
guy who laid down good money to get in<lb/>
the door. But, in a way, that's the whole<lb/>
point of my writing this. Pegasus are<lb/>
musicians and Pegasus are people.<lb/>
People who aren't into the rock star trip<lb/>
at the expense of their music, not into<lb/>
the music at fhe expense of being<lb/>
human.<lb/>
"We try to play music we get off on.<lb/>
If we get off, then others get off- It's a<lb/>
cycle. It feeds itself J.K. said.<lb/>
Thompson at coffeehouse<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
This Sat. and Sun. nite Coffeehouse<lb/>
is proud to host GROUNDSPEED-<lb/>
Greenvilles newest acoustic music trio.<lb/>
Featuring ROY COATES on guitar, BOB<lb/>
HE WICK on bass.and MIKE THOMPSON<lb/>
on banjo &amp; guitar; GROUNDSPEED<lb/>
offers a mixture of bluegrass, Ragtime<lb/>
and Goodtime music. The musicians all<lb/>
hail from classical music backgrounds<lb/>
with Roy a junior Music Education major<lb/>
studying tuba; Bob, a senior Music<lb/>
Therapy major studying bass; and Mike<lb/>
has a degree in classical guitar from UNC<lb/>
currently working on a masters in Music<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
To hear this good time music come<lb/>
on by Mendenahll Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse one or both nites and enjoy<lb/>
down-home music with good taste and<lb/>
flavor (refreshments include cheese,<lb/>
crackers, cookies, coffee, &amp; soda pop<lb/>
ALL for the price of a quarter.)<lb/>
Two Shows Nitely<lb/>
89<lb/>
mmmmmmfmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
lj<lb/>
<pb facs="00040030_0013"/><lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAJNHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
?iiniMimiiiinniirtiwMiiiwiuiniiiji u i?n? n i<lb/>
13<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Gene Cotton appearing March 24<lb/>
GENE COTTON TO APPEAR<lb/>
IN CONCERT<lb/>
If music is indeed the word of our<lb/>
time  Gene Cotton will no doubt be<lb/>
one of its voices. His soft voice and<lb/>
highly individual stylized sound is fast<lb/>
gaining him the reputation of being one<lb/>
of music's most exciting new person-<lb/>
alities. Himself, a brilliant songwriter, he<lb/>
has the knack tor ariving nome the<lb/>
message of his own songs as well as<lb/>
those of others. Cotton's ballads and<lb/>
songs of the people are complemented by<lb/>
his easy going, warm stage presence.<lb/>
After thousands of miles, hundreds of<lb/>
college concerts and coffeehouses, and<lb/>
playing a seven year game of what Gene<lb/>
likes to refer to "Gig Roulette his<lb/>
musical career is definitely on a national<lb/>
Flying Saucers?<lb/>
STANTON T. FRIEDMAN<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
"FLYING SAUCERS ARE REAL"<lb/>
"Flying Saucers Are Real" is the title<lb/>
of an illustrated lecture to be presented<lb/>
by nuclear physicist Stanton T. Friedman<lb/>
at 8:00 p.m Thursday, March 18, 1976,<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center. The<lb/>
program is being sponsored by the<lb/>
Student Union Lecture Committee.<lb/>
Mr. Friedman is the only space<lb/>
scientist in the western hemisphere<lb/>
known to be devoting full time to UFO's.<lb/>
Since 1972, lie has lectured to overflow<lb/>
crowds at more than 250 colleges in 40<lb/>
states. He was one of the few scientists<lb/>
featured in the NBC television<lb/>
documentary, "UFO's: Do You Believe?"<lb/>
Mr. Friedman's unique professional<lb/>
background includes 14 years of<lb/>
industrial experience in the development<lb/>
of advanced nuclear and space systems<lb/>
such as nuclear aircraft, nuclear rockets,<lb/>
fusion rockets, and compact nuclear<lb/>
reactors for space applications. He also<lb/>
worked on the Pioneer 10 and 11<lb/>
spacecraft which have flown out past the<lb/>
planet Jupiter. He is a member of<lb/>
numerous scientific organizations,<lb/>
several UFO groups, and is a Fellow of<lb/>
the British Interplanetary Society. He<lb/>
received Bachelors' and Masters' degrees<lb/>
in Physics from the University of<lb/>
Chicago.<lb/>
"After 16 years of study and<lb/>
STANTON T. FRIEDMAN<lb/>
investigation, I am convinced that the<lb/>
evidence is overwhelming that Planet<lb/>
Earth is being visited by intelligently<lb/>
controlled vehicles from off the Earth<lb/>
said the 40 year old scientist. Mr.<lb/>
Friedman's talk will cover five large scale<lb/>
scientific studies, Air Force data not<lb/>
generally discussed, UFO landings,<lb/>
reports of creatures, travel to the stars,<lb/>
and the arguments of the educated<lb/>
non-believers. Many slides will be shown<lb/>
during his program and a question and<lb/>
answer session will follow. ECU students<lb/>
will be admitted with their ID and Activity<lb/>
card. Faculty and staff will be admitted<lb/>
with their Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Membership card. Public tickets are<lb/>
$2.00.<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
THE SAVINGS ARE GREAT<lb/>
AT OUR<lb/>
S?veQQ<lb/>
on many items in our 14th<lb/>
Street Store. We're closing our<lb/>
Happy Deli Store and have to<lb/>
sell our stock betore the end ot<lb/>
April. The savings are great<lb/>
now!<lb/>
tIhctlCtpj9iitDcli<lb/>
14th Street near Charles St Greenville<lb/>
Deli Orders, Phone 758 6303<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
upswing. "Sunshine Roses released<lb/>
last fall, climbed to be his first chart hit.<lb/>
And now, Cotton has released a new<lb/>
single on ABC Records and in its first<lb/>
stages, "Damn It All" is proving to be<lb/>
another super hit for Gene. A new album<lb/>
soon to be released, a recent guest spot<lb/>
on Dick Clark's American Bandstand, as<lb/>
well as concerts and tours with Olivia<lb/>
Newton-John, John Nash and the<lb/>
Marshal' Tucker Band, are all good<lb/>
reasons why Gene Cotton is going to be<lb/>
a familiar name.<lb/>
In today's world, nothing is so<lb/>
impressive as a multi-talented and<lb/>
successful personality who is able to<lb/>
communicate. Gene Cotton is such a<lb/>
person. His creativity and artistry are<lb/>
reflections of the basic honesty and<lb/>
sincerity of the person, the writer, and<lb/>
the performer. The Special Concerts<lb/>
Committee of the Student Union is<lb/>
GENE COTTON<lb/>
bringing Gene Cotton to the campus on<lb/>
Wednesday, March 24. There will be no<lb/>
admission charged for the concert.<lb/>
LATE SHOW Fri. - Sat. ONLY<lb/>
11:15P.M.<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
IN A FILMED CONCERT "YESS0NGS"<lb/>
RICK WAKEMAN ?<lb/>
TEVE HOWE iur JON ANDERSON vc.u ALAN WHITE ? <lb/>
mm ?. m.iw.mw.? ???<lb/>
AJ9<lb/>
?W.MW. MM l .<lb/>
Plus Added Short<lb/>
cniicfiTt ncnifii<lb/>
The Slruqqle of the Creafurrs of 1 iqht<lb/>
STEREO<lb/>
SOUND<lb/>
PITT<lb/>
SHOW BEGINS<lb/>
11:15P.M.<lb/>
?M<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040030_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
Fo<lb/>
T<lb/>
(SG<lb/>
whic<lb/>
supp<lb/>
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of Ai<lb/>
(The<lb/>
same<lb/>
Tl<lb/>
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and t<lb/>
educi<lb/>
guag<lb/>
"7<lb/>
said<lb/>
foreig<lb/>
tradil<lb/>
integr<lb/>
traditi<lb/>
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which<lb/>
"T<lb/>
requir<lb/>
of the<lb/>
fiercel<lb/>
integn<lb/>
Dr.<lb/>
the fc<lb/>
the B<lb/>
on a c<lb/>
In<lb/>
you n<lb/>
began<lb/>
a liber<lb/>
Dr<lb/>
Germs<lb/>
A.B.<lb/>
degre<lb/>
requin<lb/>
4<lb/>
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M<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040030_0015"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
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FOUNTAJNHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
15<lb/>
Foreign language professors discuss liberal arts degree<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Student Government Association<lb/>
(SGA) recently adopted a resolution<lb/>
which expresses the ECU student body's<lb/>
support for dropping or offering an<lb/>
alternative to the university's foreign<lb/>
language requirement for the Bachelor<lb/>
of Arts degree.<lb/>
(The A.B. and the B.A. degrees are the<lb/>
same degree-the Bachelor of Arts.)<lb/>
The effect of the SGA's action is to<lb/>
change the meaning of the B.A. degree,<lb/>
and thus alter he traditional liberal arts<lb/>
education, according to Foreign Lan-<lb/>
guage professors.<lb/>
"The A.B. degree is a unique degree<lb/>
said Dr. Thomas Williams, an ECU<lb/>
foreign language professor. "It Is the<lb/>
traditional degree which seeks to<lb/>
integrate the cultural and intellectual<lb/>
tradition of our civilization.<lb/>
"The B.A. degree is the only degree<lb/>
which truly seeks to do this.<lb/>
"To eliminate the foreign language<lb/>
requirement is to strike at the very heart<lb/>
of the A.B. degree, and to opt for such a<lb/>
fiercely limited provincialism that the<lb/>
integrative ideal of the A.B. will be lost.<lb/>
Dr. Williams explained that removing<lb/>
the foreign language requirement from<lb/>
the B.A. degree is like playing football<lb/>
on a differently shaped field.<lb/>
In each case, according to Williams,<lb/>
you no longer have the same thing you<lb/>
began with, namely a football gamr nor<lb/>
a liberal arts degree.<lb/>
Dr. Carolyn Bolt, who teaches<lb/>
German in the department agrees that the<lb/>
A.B. will no longer be a liberal arts<lb/>
degree if the foreign language<lb/>
requirement is dropped.<lb/>
"I think it is very sad, she said, and I<lb/>
find it difficult to comprehend the SGA's<lb/>
actions. "The B.A. degree has a<lb/>
definition which includes the study of<lb/>
liberal arts. If someone wants to remove<lb/>
foreign language from the degree, it is no<lb/>
longer a liberal arts degree.<lb/>
"I believe there are things a student<lb/>
should be required to take which they are<lb/>
not going to take on their own. We as<lb/>
DR. THOMAS WILLIAMS<lb/>
professors owe it to them to make sure<lb/>
they take it.<lb/>
"Foreign languages and literatures is<lb/>
one of the more important disciplines in<lb/>
the western civilizations. Without contact<lb/>
with another language and culture, how<lb/>
can one understand his own culture?<lb/>
connie<lb/>
Webs of woven bands with a South-of-the-Border<lb/>
flavor . . . now that's a huarache! And<lb/>
with wood wedges on soles that flex, that's one<lb/>
fun way of walking. T-strap in brown latigo<lb/>
leather uppers.<lb/>
T9<lb/>
Refuting the contention that the<lb/>
future job market is not one where<lb/>
foreign language will be very<lb/>
relevant. Bolt referred to a comoanv in<lb/>
New York which charges $180 per hour<lb/>
for translation work.<lb/>
Last year, Gunter Strumpf, a French &amp;<lb/>
German professor in the department<lb/>
translated to German a 40-page<lb/>
operation's manual for a local machinery<lb/>
company.<lb/>
"They are beseiged with work said<lb/>
Bolt. "Also, with foreign trade<lb/>
increasing, foreign language for busi-<lb/>
nessmen is becoming more and more<lb/>
important.<lb/>
There are great opportunities for<lb/>
engineers, (Bolt's husband is an<lb/>
engineer), chemists, technologists who<lb/>
have knowledge of a foreign language<lb/>
according to Bolt.<lb/>
Values of knowing a foreign language<lb/>
includes being able to speak English<lb/>
one's own language better, according to<lb/>
Gunter Strumpf.<lb/>
Strumpf said that reducing the foreign<lb/>
language requirement will have the same<lb/>
effect as dropping the requirement<lb/>
altogether.<lb/>
"People who specialize in computers<lb/>
are going to specialize themselves into<lb/>
obsolescence said Bolt.<lb/>
"It is true that not every one will use<lb/>
a foreign language, but the greatest thing<lb/>
in studying a language is that it makes a<lb/>
person think and become aware of things<lb/>
PPPMPIM<lb/>
THIS WEEK ATTHE<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
Thurs St Fri.<lb/>
Don't Miss This Group <lb/>
"IIMEiQUAHE<lb/>
Show Band Las Vegas Style<lb/>
Sat10thAVENUE<lb/>
Dr. Williams noted the other values<lb/>
gained from knowing a foreign language.<lb/>
"I think there is a tendency in human<lb/>
nature to prefer that which has<lb/>
immediate observable practical conse-<lb/>
quences.<lb/>
"The immediate practical results tend<lb/>
to weigh more heavily than the long<lb/>
range ones even if the long range resorts<lb/>
are very much more important.<lb/>
"In language study, the long range<lb/>
benefits are immensely important, both<lb/>
personally and vocationally. The short<lb/>
term effect is having to learn irregular<lb/>
verbs each night which is not pleasant.<lb/>
Williams said it is like smoking a<lb/>
cigarette. Studies have proven that<lb/>
cigarette smoking is a health hazard but<lb/>
the immediate gratification is such that<lb/>
the long term effects are disregarded.<lb/>
Since ECU has dropped its foreign<lb/>
language entrance requirement, the<lb/>
SGA's resolution to drop the requirement<lb/>
from the B.A. degree is "unthinkable, if<lb/>
the essence of the B.A. degree is to be<lb/>
maintained said Marguerite a. Perry,<lb/>
chairman of the department of foreign<lb/>
languages.<lb/>
All 16 universities in the University of<lb/>
North Carolina system require some type<lb/>
of foreign language requirement to<lb/>
graduate.<lb/>
r<lb/>
&amp;S?Oj<lb/>
'ASHING CLOTHES? i<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Bring them to<lb/>
KORE-O-MAT.<lb/>
We will wash, dry, &amp; fold<lb/>
your clothes and furnish<lb/>
detergent for 30 a pound!<lb/>
47 KORE-O-MAT<lb/>
? 14th St. at the bottom of the<lb/>
J Hill next to the Happy Store.<lb/>
?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040030_0016"/><lb/>
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nHHHHHMWi<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
WMll W<lb/>
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Nursing professor appointed to state council<lb/>
Therese Polard Lawler, an associate<lb/>
director of the Eastern Area Health<lb/>
Education Center and faculty member in<lb/>
the ECU School of Nursing, has been<lb/>
appointed to the N.C. Perinatal Advisory<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
She is one of 15 council members,<lb/>
which include physicians, medical and<lb/>
nursing school professors, hospital<lb/>
administrators, state officials and<lb/>
nursing supervisors.<lb/>
The council will advise the N.C. Dept.<lb/>
of Human Resources in the development<lb/>
of a statewide program to expand<lb/>
services relating to maternal and child<lb/>
health, and to reduce the state's high<lb/>
rates of infant death and illness.<lb/>
The program will be voluntary and will<lb/>
be divided into six regional perinatal<lb/>
centers. Health services will be extended<lb/>
Pub Boardmotion passed<lb/>
concerning yearbooks<lb/>
The recent Pub Board meeting passed<lb/>
a motion that when the BUCCANEER<lb/>
editor submits an operations manual in<lb/>
the future, the manual will include a<lb/>
complimentary list of yearbook copies<lb/>
that will be distributed to the various<lb/>
departments and administrators.<lb/>
If any students, administrators or<lb/>
faculty would like to have any names<lb/>
submitted to the complimentary list, the<lb/>
list must be submitted to the Pub Board<lb/>
for approval Any extra copies distributed<lb/>
that are not approved by the Pub Board,<lb/>
will be charged the same amount<lb/>
In a recent Fountamhead article, it was<lb/>
disclosed that $2,000 worth of yearbooks<lb/>
were given to various faculty and<lb/>
administrative officials free of charge.<lb/>
The complimentary list will be mandatory<lb/>
in the future to stop the give-away<lb/>
practice<lb/>
The revised by-laws of the Pub Board<lb/>
have been approved by the SGA Rules<lb/>
and Judiciary Committee and will be sent<lb/>
to the Student Welfare Committee and<lb/>
the Appropriations Committee before<lb/>
they will be finally approved.<lb/>
Monika Cutherland, BUCCANEER<lb/>
editor, requested all photo companies<lb/>
seeking portraits for next year to appear<lb/>
before the Pub Board for approval.<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the Ad Hoc<lb/>
Committee investigating media financing<lb/>
next Tuesday, March 16, at 3:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall. room 247.<lb/>
The Board discussed the surveys sent<lb/>
out before the Ad Hoc Committee was<lb/>
formed and it was found that the better<lb/>
yearbooks come from the schools<lb/>
receiving a direct percentage of fees from<lb/>
their respected university.<lb/>
The overall policy of funding at this<lb/>
university was questioned by Phil<lb/>
Arnngton. Pub Board vice chairperson,<lb/>
who asked, "should the ad revenue for<lb/>
the publications revert to the<lb/>
general fund when the revenue from the<lb/>
Drama Department, as well as the Sports<lb/>
program, revert directly back to that<lb/>
department?"<lb/>
so that by 1960 at least 90 per cent of all<lb/>
pregnant women receive prenatal care,<lb/>
and that high-risk mothers or infants<lb/>
receive consultation from physicians,<lb/>
social workers, nutritionists and other<lb/>
health and social services professionals.<lb/>
The plan also involves more education<lb/>
for potential parents, family planning and<lb/>
expansion of school family life education<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
Each region's perinatal resources will<lb/>
be coordinated by its own staff, who will<lb/>
work with local hospitals, clinics and<lb/>
health departments to enhance the<lb/>
quality of available pre-and post-natal<lb/>
care both within hospitals and on an<lb/>
out-patient basis.<lb/>
A pilot regional program is in<lb/>
progress in the area comprised by<lb/>
Bladen, Columbus, Hoke, Robeson and<lb/>
Scotland Counties. At present the<lb/>
formative stages of the program are<lb/>
directed by Dr. John R. Ashe Jr. of<lb/>
Concord, advisory council chairman, and<lb/>
Dr. Richard R. Nugent, of Raleigh,<lb/>
program supervisor.<lb/>
Mrs. Lawler is a specialist in maternal<lb/>
and child health, and has worked<lb/>
professionally in obstetrical and gyneco-<lb/>
logical nursing in New York and Illinois.<lb/>
Since 1974 she has directed a project<lb/>
for perinatal nurse training at ECU, which<lb/>
was funded by the Regional Medical<lb/>
Program. Before accepting a position as<lb/>
associate director for nursing education<lb/>
for the Eastern AHEC, she was Director<lb/>
of Personal Health Services for the Pitt<lb/>
County Health Department.<lb/>
SGA limits appropriations<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The SGA Legislature, Monday night,<lb/>
passed a bill limiting appropriations to<lb/>
departmental organizations, clubs and<lb/>
honor societies to $300.<lb/>
However, the $300 limitation is<lb/>
subject to Legislature's discretion,<lb/>
according to the bill.<lb/>
The bill also states that the monies<lb/>
appropriated by the SGA Appropriations<lb/>
Committee shall not be used to fund<lb/>
personal expenses of students, and any<lb/>
faculty expense.<lb/>
A friendly amendment was added to<lb/>
the bill stating that the bill shall have no<lb/>
effect on departmental retreats.<lb/>
"It has become obvious that<lb/>
organizations on campus are coming to<lb/>
us just for money Mindy Skelly, Appro-<lb/>
priations Committee chairperson told the<lb/>
Legislature.<lb/>
"There are more than 80 organizations<lb/>
on campus and we cannot fund all of<lb/>
them<lb/>
The Legislature passed a bill giving<lb/>
$463 to the Foreign Language depart-<lb/>
ment. The money will be used to pay for<lb/>
student transportation to a convention in<lb/>
Clemson. S.C. on April 9.<lb/>
John Schofield. former SGA President<lb/>
and now Greenville City Planner,<lb/>
informed the Legislature of new federal<lb/>
funds available for bike ways in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Schofield said the federal government<lb/>
will provide matching funds up to 80 per<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
iSSiSiSSSSSSSMSSEiSSEillESMSSi<lb/>
GREG PINGSTON<lb/>
S. G. A.<lb/>
VICE PRESIDENT<lb/>
gHfeHaSElEE<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
MOM<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
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?1H<lb/>
<pb facs="00040030_0017"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL<lb/>
51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
wm0mmmm0mm0m<lb/>
17<lb/>
Universities liberalizing on campus drinking<lb/>
By CYNTHIA CROSSEN<lb/>
(CPA)-While the spector of alcoho-<lb/>
lism is haunting more college campuses<lb/>
these days, many universities are<lb/>
relaxing their rules prohibiting drinking<lb/>
in residence halls and campus bars.<lb/>
In recent months, universities in at<lb/>
least four states have edged toward or<lb/>
approved limited drinking on campus.<lb/>
One of the arguments frequently given<lb/>
for liberalized on-campus drinking<lb/>
policies is that drinking in dorm rooms is<lb/>
so widespread that it might as well be<lb/>
legal.<lb/>
In fact, one out of every 20 college<lb/>
students is a problem drinker, according<lb/>
to statistics of the Department of Health,<lb/>
Education and Welfare. And almost half<lb/>
the college students surveyed recently by<lb/>
a Chicago-based advertising agency said<lb/>
they bought carry-out liquor at least once<lb/>
a month.<lb/>
That liquor can now be consumed in<lb/>
privacy of a student's own dorm room at<lb/>
Oregon State University where students<lb/>
21 years and older were given permission<lb/>
to drink in their rooms last summer. The<lb/>
new rule at Oregon State forbids drinking<lb/>
in public places like lounges or dining<lb/>
halls.<lb/>
The Oregon policy also forbids<lb/>
drunkenness. But enforcement efforts are<lb/>
not likely to be rigorous. The University<lb/>
is counting on the "living groups not<lb/>
the University administration, to keep<lb/>
track of who's drinking and how much.<lb/>
The right to drink in a dorm room<lb/>
hasn't been as easily won at other<lb/>
schools. Students at Marshall Unviersity<lb/>
in Huntingdon, W.Va. are battling the<lb/>
University administration just for the<lb/>
privilege of drinking 3.2 beer on campus.<lb/>
According to West Virginia law, 3.2 beer<lb/>
is not intoxicating.<lb/>
THE LOFT<lb/>
ThursSun<lb/>
<lb/>
JOSHUA"<lb/>
Playing all their own original<lb/>
Progressive Rock<lb/>
above the Jolly Roger<lb/>
RErNJnc.<lb/>
209 E. 5th St. 752-4668!<lb/>
V t 9??. ? &amp;&amp; &amp; &amp; ?X? ?X ?X ? ?J(? Jf ?X?? X? <lb/>
USE <lb/>
I FOUNTAINHEAD <lb/>
I CLASSIFIEDS t<lb/>
T <lb/>
 tn wiiwi mM iiiimiii imniii ?i' ii i 11 ? ? ? i ?!?<lb/>
Marshall students have been pushing<lb/>
for 3.2 beer on campus since 1969. Until<lb/>
last spring, it was up to the University<lb/>
president to dec whether students<lb/>
could drink on camDus.<lb/>
But this summer, liquor was<lb/>
prohibited on all West Virginia<lb/>
campuses. Since this fall, the Marshall<lb/>
University president has had the final say<lb/>
and students now have "some hope of<lb/>
approval<lb/>
rhe tactics that students have used to<lb/>
win the right to drink on campus have<lb/>
varied from school to school. The<lb/>
Nebraska Wesleyan's Board of Governors<lb/>
approved a student senate recommend-<lb/>
ation to allow dorm drinking in a matter<lb/>
of only a few months. The Wesleyan<lb/>
board reaffirmed its opposition to liquor<lb/>
in the dormitories but said its use was<lb/>
up to the "judgement and social<lb/>
responsibility of students<lb/>
The action at Nebraska Wesleyan<lb/>
convinced students at the University of<lb/>
Nebraska at Lincoln to take another stab<lb/>
at liberalizing drinking policies there. But<lb/>
student association president Jim Say<lb/>
predicted that "there is almost no hope<lb/>
of getting approval through the regents<lb/>
and a proposal to the state legislature<lb/>
would probably be a more effective way<lb/>
of winning the right to drink.<lb/>
Students at other schools are working<lb/>
for the sale of liquor on campus as well.<lb/>
Arizona State University student associ-<lb/>
ation president Craig Tribken this fall<lb/>
launched a campaign calling for the sale<lb/>
of wine and beer on campus. Students of<lb/>
legal drinking age at Arizona State are<lb/>
already permitted to drink in their<lb/>
residence halls.<lb/>
"The stigmatizing of alcohol off<lb/>
campus gives it (drinking in general) an<lb/>
unhealthy atmosphere Tribken said. "I<lb/>
think people should be able to elect<lb/>
whether or not to drink. This is an<lb/>
important factor in creating adults<lb/>
baton! <lb/>
Si M -McW t 1 IS<lb/>
U'LP 7H?VS4T<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAYS 1:30-5:30<lb/>
JJV L?c??MVhi?MMS?.TVStaM?iONCvam<lb/>
Brighten up your room<lb/>
with LIVING color!<lb/>
4" pot charm ?r fibous Begonias $1.95<lb/>
4" pot Geraniums were $1.95 - NOW 99<lb/>
Minature Roses $3.95<lb/>
HANGING BASKETS:<lb/>
5" baskets $3.95 (NEW SIZE)<lb/>
6" baskets $5.95 Reg $6.95<lb/>
8" baskets $5.95 Reg. $8.95<lb/>
10"baskets $9.95 Reg. $10.95<lb/>
Colorful Coleus 69c &amp; 99<lb/>
Several groups of speoiaily reduced plants.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040030_0018"/><lb/>
18<lb/>
FOUNTAJNHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
u'tfiwm i? mtmmi iiwn ?m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
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Commercial lending workshop scheduled for ECU<lb/>
The sixth annual Commercial Lending<lb/>
Workshop sponsored by the Carolinas-<lb/>
Virginias Chapter of Robert Morris<lb/>
Associates and the ECU division of<lb/>
Continuing Education has been sche-<lb/>
duled for the ECU campus April 11-15.<lb/>
Workshop curriculum will include<lb/>
aspects of commercial lending in the<lb/>
banking profession, such as loan<lb/>
administration, pricing, decision-making,<lb/>
ethics, types of lending and lending<lb/>
principles.<lb/>
The program is designed for new<lb/>
commercial lending employees with six<lb/>
to 24 months of banking experience. Its<lb/>
ECU psychologist has article published<lb/>
An article by ECU faculty psycholo-<lb/>
gist Victor Mallenbaum appears in a<lb/>
newly published training text for growth<lb/>
group leaders and group psycho-<lb/>
therapists.<lb/>
Dr. Mallenbaum's "The Chair and the<lb/>
Johnson Grass: Authority and Murder in<lb/>
a Personal Growth Group first printed<lb/>
in "Voices: The Art and Science of<lb/>
Psychotherapy is now included in "The<lb/>
Critical Incident in Growth Groups<lb/>
The article is a vivid account of<lb/>
critical events in a part of the life of one<lb/>
growth group. Love, power and belonging<lb/>
are illustrated as major driving forces and<lb/>
areas of conflict.<lb/>
The leader's personal involvement and<lb/>
attempt to retain his perspective as a<lb/>
Juvenile workshop offered<lb/>
"Planning Juvenile Delinquency Pre-<lb/>
vention Programs a two-day workshop<lb/>
program for juvenile officers of law<lb/>
enforcement agencies and other person-<lb/>
nel with special interests or responsi-<lb/>
bilities concerning the problems of<lb/>
juvenile delinquency, will be offered here<lb/>
April 2-3.<lb/>
The program is sponsored by the ECU<lb/>
Dept. of Social Work and Correctional<lb/>
Services and the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education in cooperation with<lb/>
the N.C. Juvenile Justice Coordinating<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Workshop leaders will be William<lb/>
Formby and William Smith, members of<lb/>
the ECU correctional services faculty.<lb/>
Both are experienced in aspects of law<lb/>
enforcement and corrections.<lb/>
Purpose of the program is to provide<lb/>
participants with basic knowledge for<lb/>
designing and implementing juvenile<lb/>
delinquency prevention programs within<lb/>
their local agencies, using resources of<lb/>
allied juvenile justice agencies.<lb/>
The program is funded by a grant<lb/>
through the Law Enforcement Assistance<lb/>
Administration, and is therefore available<lb/>
at no charge to participating personnel.<lb/>
Reimbursement for travel, lodging and<lb/>
meals will be made to each participant.<lb/>
Further information and registration<lb/>
materials are available from the Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education, ECU, Green-<lb/>
ville. N.C. 27834. Registrations must be<lb/>
returned to ECU by March 26.<lb/>
major intervener is revealed in the<lb/>
encounters of group members, with him<lb/>
and with each other.<lb/>
In addition to his present duties as a<lb/>
member of the ECU psychology faculty,<lb/>
Dr. Mallenbaum has served as consultant<lb/>
to the Pitt County Mental Health Center's<lb/>
programs in group psychotherapy and as<lb/>
a trainer of psychology interns.<lb/>
He has also been a staff member of<lb/>
personal growth and community leader-<lb/>
ship workshops for governmental,<lb/>
industrial, educational and religious<lb/>
agencies.<lb/>
purposes are to provide participants with<lb/>
an opportunity to study basic lending<lb/>
fundamentals and a credit training<lb/>
workshop experience to complement and<lb/>
supplement in-bank credit training<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
Enrollment will be limited to 40<lb/>
persons.<lb/>
Among the instructors are Alexander<lb/>
B. Berry III, senior vice president of the<lb/>
Bank of Virginia Co Richmond Va J.<lb/>
Scott Edwards vice president of Central<lb/>
Carolina Bank and Trust Co Durham;<lb/>
James L. Nicholson Jr senior vice<lb/>
president of Central Carolina Bank and<lb/>
Trust Co Durham; John L. Nosker,<lb/>
senior vice president of the Federal<lb/>
Reserve Bank, Richmond, Va and W.W.<lb/>
Eckard, senior vice president of First<lb/>
Union National Bank, Charlotte.<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
commercial lending workshop and<lb/>
registration materials are available from<lb/>
the Division of Continuing Education,<lb/>
ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Research results released<lb/>
A recent archaeological research<lb/>
project in Atlanta financed by a $4,388<lb/>
grant from the Metropolitan Atlanta<lb/>
Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA) yielded<lb/>
"no real results according to Dr. David<lb/>
S. Phelps of the ECU anthropology<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
ECU was one of two campus<lb/>
archaeological laboratories selected in<lb/>
November, 1975, from throughout the<lb/>
southeast to excavate sites along<lb/>
MARTA's newly purchased right of way.<lb/>
Expectations were high as two<lb/>
archaeological teams left ECU for the<lb/>
first of two one-week periods.<lb/>
"The area now occupied by the city of<lb/>
Atlanta has been inhabited for about<lb/>
15,000 years said Dr. Phelps, "so we<lb/>
expect to uncover some interesting<lb/>
artifacts left by the early inhabitants<lb/>
There were some positive surface<lb/>
indications at the selected sites, but only<lb/>
fragments of Indian pottery were found,<lb/>
according to Dr. Phelps.<lb/>
VOTE<lb/>
TERESA <lb/>
WHISENANT)<lb/>
FOR l<lb/>
S. G.A.<lb/>
PRESIDENT<lb/>
She not only puts the students first<lb/>
but gets things done too.<lb/>
????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????<lb/>
f<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
in mm i ??<lb/>
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IMI<lb/>
<pb facs="00040030_0019"/><lb/>
40<lb/>
m<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
PiMlMMMIMMMIi<lb/>
19<lb/>
Report shows Marines most troublesome,<lb/>
least educatedofany branch of service<lb/>
(CPS)When Marine General Louis<lb/>
Wilson appeared before a Senate<lb/>
committee recently, he told the<lb/>
legislators that today's Marines are "as<lb/>
good or better than any who have ever<lb/>
worn the uniform; stronger, smarter,<lb/>
well-motivated and well-led<lb/>
Not everyone is so sure.<lb/>
A Brookings Institute report released<lb/>
recently shows that Marines are the least<lb/>
educated of any service branch and the<lb/>
most likely to get into trouble. Marines<lb/>
lead the Army, Navy and Air Force in<lb/>
courts-martial, absentees, desertions and<lb/>
and non-judicial punishments.<lb/>
Claiming that the Marines have been<lb/>
"ill equipped to compete successfully for<lb/>
top quality manpower" since the draft<lb/>
ended in 1973, Wilson conceded that the<lb/>
Corps has a discipline problem and is<lb/>
taking steps to correct it. Undesirable<lb/>
recruits will be kicked out of the Corps<lb/>
and higher quality people will be taken<lb/>
in, Wilson promised, even at the risk of<lb/>
settling for a smaller force.<lb/>
Given the number of Marines currently<lb/>
breaking the rules, a crackdown could set<lb/>
a number of heads rolling. In 1975, one<lb/>
of every ten Marines deserted, one-third<lb/>
of the Corps was absent during the year,<lb/>
and almost four out of every ten Marines<lb/>
were given some form of non-judicial<lb/>
punishment. Military courts considered<lb/>
cases against seven per cent of the<lb/>
Corps.<lb/>
The Army, the closest contender for<lb/>
the service branch with the most<lb/>
disciplinary incidents, had about a third<lb/>
as many courts-martial, absentees and<lb/>
desertions. The Navy and Air Force had<lb/>
even fewer recorded discipline problems.<lb/>
The Corps isn't sure of the reasons<lb/>
behind their problems, although some<lb/>
officers claim the higher rate of<lb/>
disciplinary action is a result of the<lb/>
Auto owners get free service<lb/>
Washington, D.C. - Automobile owners in<lb/>
the 10-state area surrounding Washing-<lb/>
ton, D.C. can now dial directly into the<lb/>
federal highway safety agency for a quick<lb/>
read-out on auto defect problems or to<lb/>
report auto safety problems "Uncle"<lb/>
should know about. The federal toll-free<lb/>
Hotline number is 800-424-0123 for<lb/>
residents of the areas listed below, and<lb/>
426-0123 for residents of metropolitan<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
"If you have a vehicle problem which<lb/>
threatens your safety or the safety of<lb/>
others said a recent federal announce-<lb/>
ment to auto owners in this area, "or if<lb/>
you know of such a problem which the<lb/>
ational Highway Traffic Safety Adminis-<lb/>
tration (NHTSA) should look into, the<lb/>
Auto Safety Hotline Office wants that<lb/>
information and your call<lb/>
According to Gilbert L. Watson, Chief<lb/>
of the Consumer Services Office which<lb/>
operates the Hotline facility for NHTSA,<lb/>
the new consumer telephone service<lb/>
began on October 15 as an aid for auto<lb/>
owners who need help in solving<lb/>
safety-related vehicle problems or who<lb/>
have defect-related information to report.<lb/>
NHTSA is the U.S. Department of<lb/>
Transportation's enforcement "arm"<lb/>
which sets auto performance standards<lb/>
for the industry and enforces the recall<lb/>
and repair of defective autos when<lb/>
necessary.<lb/>
Watson says the Hotline keeps four<lb/>
trained operators busy from 8:30 am to<lb/>
5:00 pm every workday. Automatic<lb/>
telephones are utilized in "off" hours to<lb/>
record caller's names and telephone<lb/>
numbers so that owners will receive a<lb/>
prompt operator call-back when business<lb/>
hours resume. "Calls which identify<lb/>
possible defects Watson expl is, "are<lb/>
relayed directly to NHTSA's investigative<lb/>
office by the Hotline staff. But<lb/>
defect-related or not, we will apply<lb/>
whatever powers the agency can lawfully<lb/>
apply, to help owners solve the problems<lb/>
reported to us.<lb/>
The Hotline's toll-free service is<lb/>
available to callers from Maryland,<lb/>
Delaware, Virginia, West Virginia, North<lb/>
Carolina, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and<lb/>
Connecticut. In New York the service is<lb/>
available to residents of New York City,<lb/>
Long Island, Buffalo and Rochester. The<lb/>
free-call area also extends into southern<lb/>
Ohio for residents in the telephone<lb/>
area-codes 513 and 614.<lb/>
Auto owners in the 10-state area are<lb/>
urged, if they have problems or<lb/>
information concerning safety-related<lb/>
automobile defects, to call the Auto<lb/>
.Safety Hotline in Washington.<lb/>
tighter ship the Corps runs.<lb/>
According to Capt. Joseph Pratte, the<lb/>
discipline rate is higher because the<lb/>
Marines "enforce the rules a lot more<lb/>
than other branches. Our mission is<lb/>
different he said. "We need blind<lb/>
obedience to orders if we're going to be<lb/>
able to pull off a Mayaguez type thing.<lb/>
We can't have people questioning orders,<lb/>
and a lot of people aren't responsive to<lb/>
that kind of discipline<lb/>
Other, less complimentary opinions,<lb/>
hold that the problems are a result of the<lb/>
comparatively low educational level of<lb/>
many recruits. In fiscal 1976, 67 per cent<lb/>
of the Marines had a high school<lb/>
education, compared to 87 per cent for<lb/>
the entire armed services, according to<lb/>
Marine information officers.<lb/>
Wilson promised that 75 per cent of<lb/>
Marine recruits will have high school<lb/>
educations during next fiscal year, with<lb/>
the remaining 25 per cent to have at least<lb/>
ten years of schooling.<lb/>
The Marine Commandant said that<lb/>
improving the quality of recruits "is not a<lb/>
goal, it is an imperative. Every Marine is<lb/>
expected to perform to established<lb/>
standards. Substandard performance will<lb/>
not be tolerated<lb/>
But finding "a few good men" could<lb/>
become harder for the Corps as it<lb/>
competes with other service branches<lb/>
that have increased pay, relaxed<lb/>
grooming and discipline standards and<lb/>
improved living conditions to lure recruits<lb/>
into the volunteer forces.<lb/>
Good weathe ;s here! You're going to get out and have fun with friends.<lb/>
t nd these Happy Store Specials are just the thing to<lb/>
V&amp;rinq in Spring<lb/>
39c<lb/>
64 Ike 69c<lb/>
1 Lb. (Long)<lb/>
Loaf Bread<lb/>
Miller Lite<lb/>
Six 12 Oz. Cans<lb/>
l<lb/>
79<lb/>
10th Street<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
1<lb/>
88<lb/>
Fifth<lb/>
PERKE0<lb/>
Liebfraumilch<lb/>
We're your party and picnic store. Three of<lb/>
our stores are now open 24 hours, and have<lb/>
low price gas! Come in now!<lb/>
Greenville 514 E. 14th Street, Watauga St Pactolus Hwy, 10th A Evans Sts<lb/>
Wilson Street in Farmville<lb/>
mwmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
0m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040030_0020"/><lb/>
??????????????HBH<lb/>
ry.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
v<lb/>
m<lb/>
mtimmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Disappointing<lb/>
trip to Tucson<lb/>
for wrestlers<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
For the second straight year in a row,<lb/>
it was another disappointing performance<lb/>
by the East Carolina wrestling team in<lb/>
the NCAA Championships.<lb/>
The Pirates accumulated 6 112 points<lb/>
as a team and finished in 31st place.<lb/>
"It just goes to show you how tough<lb/>
the competition is in the NCAA<lb/>
Tournament said Pirate head coach<lb/>
John Welbom. "Eight wrestlers that<lb/>
defeated guys on our team placed in the<lb/>
tournament so I really can't be too<lb/>
disappointed with them<lb/>
Paul Osman, Tom Marriott, Paul<lb/>
Thorp, Phil Mueller, Ron Whitcomb, and<lb/>
Mike Radford, the six wrestlers who<lb/>
qualified for the tournament, were all<lb/>
victims of top seeds. Nevertheless, every<lb/>
member of the team won at least one<lb/>
match except Marriott, who was<lb/>
eliminated from the tournament in the<lb/>
first round of action.<lb/>
Paul Osman got the Pirates off to a<lb/>
quick start in the Thursday morning<lb/>
pig-tail" round when he pinned<lb/>
Shippensburg State's Glen Burket in 7:16<lb/>
in the 126 weight class. But Harold Wiley<lb/>
from California at Santa Barbara, who<lb/>
was the eventual runnerup at 126 came<lb/>
back to pin Osman in 3:45 in the second<lb/>
round. Osman then fell back into the<lb/>
cons lation bracket and ran into Ken<lb/>
Nelson of Oklahoma, who finished third<lb/>
at 126. Nelson handed Osman a 4-2<lb/>
setback which eliminated him from the<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
Mike Radford was the only Pirate<lb/>
wrestler to advance to the quarterfinal<lb/>
round. Radford, who received the number<lb/>
eight seed at 190, took close decisions<lb/>
over Bill Bert rand oi Penn State and Greg<lb/>
Cooper of Navy to reach the quarterfinal<lb/>
round. Iowa State's Frank Santana, the<lb/>
number one seed, took second place in<lb/>
the tournament, and decisioned Radford<lb/>
6-1. This dropped Radford into the<lb/>
consolation bracket. There Millersville's<lb/>
Erick Guyll pinned Radford in 3:45 to<lb/>
eliminate him from the tournament.<lb/>
Ron Whitcomb and Phil Mueller both<lb/>
took opening round victories before<lb/>
losing in the second round. Whitcomb<lb/>
decisioned Arizona's Richard Rose 11-5<lb/>
before losing a close 7-4 match to Iowa<lb/>
State's Willie Gadson, who took sixth<lb/>
place in the tournament at 177.<lb/>
Mueller upset eight seeded Dennis<lb/>
Graham of Portland, 15-8, in the first<lb/>
round, but was then pinned for the first<lb/>
time in his career by Paul Reed from<lb/>
Wyoming in the second round<lb/>
After losing to Arizona State's Roy<lb/>
Oliver in the first round, Paul Thorp came<lb/>
back to win his first consolation match at<lb/>
150 with a close 10-9 decison over Penn<lb/>
State's Bill Vollrath.<lb/>
But Thorp was eliminated in the next<lb/>
consolation round by Michigan's Mark<lb/>
Churella who took third in the<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
Several members of the team will<lb/>
compete in the First Colonies Tourna-<lb/>
ment this weekend in Newport News,<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
Invitational<lb/>
meet to be<lb/>
 held Saturday<lb/>
The ECU track team will open its<lb/>
outdoor season this Saturday when it<lb/>
hosts the ECU Invitational track meet. At<lb/>
the same time, the ECU team will be<lb/>
dedicating the track in honor of Michael<lb/>
Bunting, a long-time ECU supporter of<lb/>
athletics.<lb/>
The meet will start at 12:30 with the<lb/>
field events and the dedication will take<lb/>
place at 1:50, to be followed by the<lb/>
running events of the day.<lb/>
Dignitaries on hand for the<lb/>
ceremonies will be ECU Chancellor Leo<lb/>
Jenkins, Athletic Director Bill Cain,<lb/>
Bunting, his family and his father and<lb/>
mother.<lb/>
McCauley, Mann:<lb/>
Swimmers of Year<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Stewart Mann and John McCauley<lb/>
have been selected FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
co-players of the year for the sport of<lb/>
swimming.<lb/>
Mann, the freshman sensation from<lb/>
Charlotte, broke three varsity records<lb/>
during the regular season before ending<lb/>
the season in a slight slump.<lb/>
"Stewart really started out fast in the<lb/>
season said coach Ray Scharf. "He has<lb/>
set a new standard.<lb/>
The other record to fall his way came<lb/>
in a meet where the swimmers were<lb/>
again swimming out of their events<lb/>
Mann won the1000 freestyle in 9:53.70 to<lb/>
become the first East Carolina swimmer<lb/>
to break ten minutes in the event.<lb/>
McCauley did exactly the opposite of<lb/>
Mann to capture his share of the honor.<lb/>
The regular season of McCauley's<lb/>
produced but one record, a new poo<lb/>
mark in the 50 freestyle of :21.51. hk<lb/>
Participating in the meet will be<lb/>
Howard University, from Washington,<lb/>
D.C Seton Hall of New Jersey,<lb/>
Pembroke State, ECU and Hagerstown<lb/>
(Md.) Junior College. In addition, several<lb/>
of the top high school athletes from<lb/>
North Carolina will be participating in<lb/>
track events.<lb/>
Awards will be given to the top three<lb/>
finishers in each event, the winning<lb/>
team, and meet MVP's in the running and<lb/>
field events.<lb/>
The meet will consist of all standard<lb/>
NCAA running and field events, with the<lb/>
exception of the pole vault. High school<lb/>
events will be the 100 yard dash and the<lb/>
120 high hurdles.<lb/>
Among the leading participants for<lb/>
ECU will be national participants Carter<lb/>
Suggs, Donnie Mejk and Manin Rankins.<lb/>
Several top sprinters will be competing in<lb/>
the running events.<lb/>
Parking is available behind Scales<lb/>
Field House and next to Harrington<lb/>
Field.<lb/>
.?If a<lb/>
STEWART MANN<lb/>
tremendous potential, much of which we<lb/>
have not yet tapped. He will really be a<lb/>
great individual before we leave here<lb/>
Mann started off the early season<lb/>
with a bang. The first record to fall to the<lb/>
frosh star was the 500 freestyle, one of<lb/>
his 'off events, an event he does not<lb/>
swim often. Mann turned in a record of<lb/>
4:49.11 to break teammate Tomas<lb/>
Palmgren's mark.<lb/>
The next records to fall were in his<lb/>
speciality, the backstroke and individual<lb/>
medley. It was in the Manland meet, the<lb/>
first time East Carolina had ever beaten<lb/>
Maryland in swimming. Mann clocked<lb/>
1:58.81 in the 200 IM to beat favorite Bob<lb/>
Hassett of the Terps. In the 200<lb/>
aackstroke, Mann won in 1:59.35 time to<lb/>
JOHN McCAULEY<lb/>
was a fairly consistent winner but did not<lb/>
win every time out.<lb/>
In the Easterns competition last<lb/>
weekend in University Park, Pa the 6-7<lb/>
sophomore broke every meet and pool<lb/>
record he could in the 50 freestyle in<lb/>
timing out in :20.83 to rank him fourth in<lb/>
the nation this year in that event. That<lb/>
also qualified him for the nationals. He<lb/>
also qualified for the nationals in the 100<lb/>
freestyle and with the 400 freestyle relay<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"That time of John's in the Easterns<lb/>
was really phenomenal stated coach<lb/>
Ray Scharf. "He beat the rest of the field<lb/>
by a half a second. But John has always<lb/>
had tremendous potential. He can<lb/>
some mighty fine times.<lb/>
Pirates to host Davidson and Carolina<lb/>
Tuesday's scheduled home game with<lb/>
Western Carolina was cancelled due to<lb/>
rain, marking the third time this year that<lb/>
the ECU baseball team has had a home<lb/>
date rained out.<lb/>
The Pirates have now lost a total of<lb/>
three games to the elements from a<lb/>
schedule which was originally to have<lb/>
contained 34 games.<lb/>
But the rainout will hardly curtail the<lb/>
ECU team's play for this week, as the<lb/>
Pirates will play seven games in the next<lb/>
five days, including three doubleheaders<lb/>
and five games against ACC competition.<lb/>
ECU is currently 3-2.<lb/>
Today with weather permitting the<lb/>
Pirates travelled to Raleigh to take on the<lb/>
North Carolina State Wolfpack in a<lb/>
doubleheader. An earlier doubleheader<lb/>
with the Wolfpack was rained out and the<lb/>
two teams are still attempting to<lb/>
reschedule that date for later this month.<lb/>
Saturday ECU returns home for a<lb/>
doubleheader with conferencefoe David-<lb/>
son College. For the Pirates, the 1:30<lb/>
doubleheader is crucial<lb/>
ECU dropped its first two conference<lb/>
games last weekend at Furman and if the<lb/>
Pirates expect to have a shot at the<lb/>
conference baseball crown they must win<lb/>
m<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
the remainder of their league games.<lb/>
Davidion loses its three top hitters<lb/>
from last year, but returns a very fine<lb/>
crop of hurlers which should provide an<lb/>
excellent matchup for the ECU staff.<lb/>
On Sunday the Pirates take to the<lb/>
road and will play Duke University in<lb/>
Durham. The two squads will play a<lb/>
doubleheader beginning at 1.30. The<lb/>
games will be the only competition<lb/>
between the two teams this season. Last<lb/>
season, the two teams met three times,<lb/>
with Duke taking two and ECU one.<lb/>
The biggest home game of the season<lb/>
may come next Monday when the Pirates<lb/>
host the North Carolina Tar Heels for a 3<lb/>
p.m. game at Harrington Field.<lb/>
The contest will be the only game<lb/>
between the two teams this season and<lb/>
the Tar Heels, who finished as North<lb/>
Carolina Summer League champions,<lb/>
have not visited Greenville during the<lb/>
regular season in three years. Last year's<lb/>
game between the Tar Heels and Pirates<lb/>
was washed out.<lb/>
The Tar Heels came to Greenville<lb/>
three times during the summer, but did<lb/>
not come here during the regular season.<lb/>
A big crowd is expected for Monday's<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The caliber of this year's ECU<lb/>
baseball squad should be evident in<lb/>
the team's play in the next five days<lb/>
and hopefully there will be good turnouts<lb/>
for the Davidson twinbill Saturday and<lb/>
the North Carolina game on Monday.<lb/>
East Carolina University Director of<lb/>
Athletics Bill Cain announced today that<lb/>
Saturday's baseball doubleheader with<lb/>
Davidson has been designated as "Team<lb/>
Day" by the department.<lb/>
All area junior high, high school and<lb/>
youth league teams are invited to attend<lb/>
the contests, starting at 1:30 p.m. at<lb/>
Harrington Field, ail guests of the<lb/>
Department of Athletics.<lb/>
Cain said that the area programs have<lb/>
been important as far as feeder programs<lb/>
for the college baseball program and that<lb/>
Saturday's promotion is in recognition of<lb/>
this fact. To gain admission to the<lb/>
contests, the head coach or supervisor of<lb/>
each group must simply register his team<lb/>
at the ticket game<lb/>
This is so the groups can be<lb/>
recognized between games.<lb/>
<lb/>
4'<lb/>
?N<lb/>
<pb facs="00040030_0021"/><lb/>
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HHHHHBMHHIaVBl<lb/>
??????????????????????i<lb/>
?<lb/>
M?W<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
?m'i'nw<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
21<lb/>
OT<lb/>
Time-Out<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
be<lb/>
NCAA Tournament Winding Down<lb/>
The NCAA championships wind down to four teams this weekend, with the<lb/>
Regional semifinals being played tonight and the Regional finals being played on<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Currently 16 teams are still in the NCAA race, but by Saturday evening there will<lb/>
be but four teams remaining. Competition in Greensboro, Louisville, Baton Rouge and<lb/>
Los Angeles will decide the Regional champions, with the Midwest and Mideast<lb/>
Regional posing the least obvious of outcomes.<lb/>
In the East, upset winners DePaul and VMI square off for the right to face Rutgers,<lb/>
which should be an easy victor over Connecticut in the other Eastern Regional game.<lb/>
The road looks pretty clear for Rutgers to win in the East, but watch for the surprising<lb/>
VMI squad to possibly upset the Scarlet Knights. First, though, VMI must overcome<lb/>
DePaul. Both teams have similar strategies, so it should be a close game.<lb/>
In the Midwest, where the most competition seems to be, the two best teams face<lb/>
off against one another. Notre Dame and Michigan face each other in the first<lb/>
Regional game in Louisville's Freedom Hall, while Texas Tech and upset winner<lb/>
Missouri square off in the other matchup.<lb/>
The winner of the Notre Dame-Michigan game should take the Midwest Regional,<lb/>
which would mean a matchup against the East champion in the NCAA semifinals in<lb/>
Philadelphia on March 27.<lb/>
In the Midwest, three of the nation's top ten teams play.<lb/>
More so, the nation's top two ranked teams, Marquette and Indiana, compete<lb/>
against Alabama and Western Michigan, respectively. Neither Indiana or Marquette<lb/>
can actually consider itself a clear-cut favorite over their opposition, but they<lb/>
definitely have to be favored.<lb/>
Alabama knocked the blue out of the Carolina Tar Heels and are capable of doing<lb/>
it against the number one-ranked Hoosiers. Western Michigan did not have it quite as<lb/>
rough, beatingVPI, 77-67, in the first round, but are a capable team, and have a 25-2<lb/>
record.<lb/>
The Alabama-Indiana matchup should be the biggest game of the NCAA so far,<lb/>
with the possible Indiana-Marquette matchup upstaging it on Saturday.<lb/>
If that should happen, who knows who would advance to the semifinals in<lb/>
Philadelphia. Marquette has won 22 straight and stands 26-1 on the year, and of<lb/>
course, Indiana is unbeaten with a 28-0 record.<lb/>
Hopefully, there won't be an upset so that these two teams can meet for what<lb/>
easily could be the national championship.<lb/>
UCLA COULD REPEAT AS NCAA CHAMPIONS<lb/>
Last year, UCLA sent coach John Wooden off in style with a national<lb/>
championship. This year, Wooden's replacement Gene Bartow, has had a tough time<lb/>
living up to the Wizard of Westwood's legend, as the Bruins stand at 24-4 going into<lb/>
this evening's face-off with Pepperdine, a team which surprisingly knocked off<lb/>
Memphis State.<lb/>
The Western Regionals is being held in Bruin country this year and for this<lb/>
reason, the Bruins should advance to the final four in Philadelphia.<lb/>
It would seem appropriate some how for the Bruins to be there.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
!?<lb/>
SPRING FOOTBALL - ECU'S football team has just started its's spring workouts. Here<lb/>
Rick Bankston runs some of the huskier ECU players through drills.<lb/>
?mill in imi "Hi ?<lb/>
If anyone but UCLA is to be the winner in the Western Regionals it would seem to<lb/>
be the University of Nevada-Las Vegas team. The NCAA's version of the James gang,<lb/>
the UN-Las Vegas team has scored up to.161 points in a single game this season in<lb/>
rolling up its' 29-1 record. It has been accused of playing a light schedule, though. Its<lb/>
matchup with Arizona tonight will be no easy task, but one the Las Vegas team<lb/>
should handle successfully.<lb/>
An UCLA-Las Vegas matchup could rival the Indiana-Marquette pairing and would<lb/>
maKe that half of the bracket far more exciting than the other half, with the NCAA<lb/>
championship to be decided among those four teams in all probability.<lb/>
This writer picks the four teams to advance to Philadelphia on March 27 to be<lb/>
Rutgers, Notre Dame, Indiana and Las Vegas, with the NCAA champion to be decided<lb/>
between Rutgers and Indiana, but we aren't so sure. A UCLA-Rutgers matchup, a<lb/>
Marquette-Rutgers matchup, a Las Vegas-Rutgers matchup all seem possible. And we<lb/>
aren't even so sure Rutgers will be there. I guess that's what is meant by a strong<lb/>
field. Anyway, it should be interesting in the next two weeks to see who makes it to<lb/>
the top and this week is the first step in finding out.<lb/>
WOLFPACK IS LAST OF ACC POST-SEASON TEAMS<lb/>
Going into tonight's NIT contest with UNOCharlotte the North Carolina State<lb/>
Wolfpack is the only remaining ACC team in post-season competition. State beat<lb/>
Holy Cross Monday and UNC-Chariotte beat Oregon to arrange the matchup between<lb/>
the two remaining North Carolina teams in the playoffs.<lb/>
The ACC's failure in post-season play this year has been the topic of much talk<lb/>
this week, even as far north as Terrapin country in the papers in the Washinton, D.C.<lb/>
area.<lb/>
One Washington writer, Dick Heller of the Washington Star, opened his Monday<lb/>
story with the line: Is Atlantic Coast Conference basketball bush instead of best?<lb/>
Heller witnessed the destruction of Virginia in Charlotte last weekend and had<lb/>
plenty to say following the game concerning the failure of the ACC to advance past<lb/>
the NCAA's first-round.<lb/>
Marvin Francis, the ACC service bureau director and coordinator of the Eastern<lb/>
Regionals also made a comment concerning the ACC's failure.<lb/>
"Can you believe that line-up said Francis when talking about the field for this<lb/>
weekend's Eastern playoffs in Greensboro. "Rutgers, Connecticutt, DePaul and VMI at<lb/>
Greensboro. I'm glad we sold 14,000 tickets before this weekend<lb/>
The ACC for years has been establishing itself as the dean of NCAA basketball<lb/>
conferences and nowits reputation has been tarnished. State's success in the NIT is<lb/>
imperative, especially against upstart UNC-Charlotte, and it is the only survivor of<lb/>
the ACC tournament rigors left to defend the loop's honor.<lb/>
But maybe the problem is in the ACC tournament itself. The tournament adds<lb/>
extra burden on the ACC participants to succeed, instead of decreasing the pre-NCAA<lb/>
pressure in an effort to relieve the tension.<lb/>
Perhaps the ACC representatives to the NCAA should be determined by the<lb/>
regular-season placings instead of the tournament champion and an at-large<lb/>
representative. Of course, that is the NCAA's choice of selection, but surely a full<lb/>
season is a better reflection on a team's ability to compete than two or three games<lb/>
in a tournament.<lb/>
In addition, the added pressure of the importance of the tournament tends to<lb/>
hinder the preparation for the NCAA rather than aid it.<lb/>
Nonetheless, surely what happened last Saturday in Charlotte and rayton is no<lb/>
true reflection of the conference's power, and Francis himself is not worried.<lb/>
"These things happen in the NCAA said Francis. "We'll still show up and play<lb/>
next season. What happened Saturday is no indication of the league's strength. You<lb/>
have to remember that Phil Ford had a knee injury for Carolina and Wally Walker had<lb/>
the flu for Virginia. Take away a team's quarterback and it's hard to perform well<lb/>
Speaking of football, the ACC season is but six months away and if that doesn't<lb/>
help matters any, then the league will have to wait until next winter to resume the<lb/>
rebuilding of its basketball dominance. Maybe next year the conference won't have to<lb/>
make excuses for losing<lb/>
Marvin Rankins honored as<lb/>
indoor-track athlete of the year<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Marvin Rankins used a consistent<lb/>
indoor season in the 60 yard high hurdles<lb/>
to capture the FOUNTAINHEAD Athlete-<lb/>
of-the-year in his sport - indoor track.<lb/>
Rankins lost only one race all season,<lb/>
leading up to the national finals. That<lb/>
was to teammate Sam Phillips. His times<lb/>
all year were running at a consistent 7.2,<lb/>
a real good time for that event. Track<lb/>
coach Bill Carson talked about his star's<lb/>
consistency.<lb/>
Marvin really was consistent all year.<lb/>
He did not lose a race going into the<lb/>
nationals to anyone on another team. He<lb/>
went up against some of the top<lb/>
competition and came away the winner<lb/>
Rankins lost to Phillips in the East<lb/>
Coast Invitationals early in the season<lb/>
but did not lose again until the nationals.<lb/>
He defeated top competition in the<lb/>
VMI and Delaware Invitationals to give<lb/>
him a reputation of a winner.<lb/>
In the nationals, Rankins made it to<lb/>
the semi-finals but hit the final hurdle in<lb/>
the semis and barely missed qualifying<lb/>
for the finals. Carson comments on his<lb/>
effort.<lb/>
"Marvin showed a little bit of<lb/>
inexperience in the nationals. He knew<lb/>
he was going up against the best in the<lb/>
nation, but he just did not lean into the<lb/>
tape. If he would have done that he<lb/>
would have made it to the finals. He'll<lb/>
pick up that kind of experience with<lb/>
time<lb/>
Rankins will continue to try again that<lb/>
valuable experience and will be ready<lb/>
when the outdoor nationals come around<lb/>
in May.<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00040030_0022"/><lb/>
22<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
MMMMMMWWMM?lMMW?M<lb/>
This Is True<lb/>
by<lb/>
Willie Patrick<lb/>
THE OLD BALLQAME<lb/>
C'mon, now, be serious. Would you really miss baseball this year if the camps<lb/>
were to stay shut and the major league baseball scene be a scene of the past?<lb/>
There has to be about six million astonished Americans asking themselves this<lb/>
question every day. This writer, though, views the situation as being one in which<lb/>
common sense has been replaced by greed.<lb/>
Oh. the situation? The lockout of the major league baseball owners of the spring<lb/>
training camps in Florida and Arizona until an agreement between the owners and<lb/>
the players' association can be reached. That agreement, in all probability, will mean<lb/>
that the players can either retire at age 40 in either Palm Springs or Jamaica,<lb/>
depending on who gets the better deal.<lb/>
The proceeding paragraphs have been brought to you unrehearsed before your very<lb/>
eyes. If you think they are confusing, try reading a blow-by-blow account of the<lb/>
negotiations that are taking place between the owners and the players<lb/>
MY FRIEND THE SPORTS WRITER<lb/>
Every sportswriter on a baseball beat who is worth his free beer and hotdog will<lb/>
claim to be great friends with the manager of the local club. This is why there has<lb/>
been so much adverse publicity regarding the legal hassles involving baseball these<lb/>
days: the sportswriters feel themselves being screwed out of a free vacation.<lb/>
This season, when you read a story about a manager, written by a sportswriter,<lb/>
remember the words of the late Leonard Schecter, who wrote "the mere fact that a<lb/>
sports writer has been a sports writer for 15 or 20 years and hasn't gone on to doing<lb/>
bigger and better things shows that he hasn't got either the ability or good sense to<lb/>
do so<lb/>
There is a lot of wisdom in that statement, if you know a sports writer. But there<lb/>
is something to be said for someone who bites the hand that pours the drink. While<lb/>
an owner or corporation may think an employee to be disloyal, it be wise for the<lb/>
owner or corporation executive to take note of the complaints, comments, or whatever<lb/>
the employee has to say. When the employee, such as the sports writer, quits<lb/>
complaining, the person is a lost commodity to the company.<lb/>
Don't ask me how that got in the story. I haven't written this column in three<lb/>
months and I am rusty as hell.<lb/>
BEAT THE TAR HEELS<lb/>
In keeping with a tradition started by the wrestling and football teams, let it be<lb/>
said that Monday. March 22 has been designated by all baseball freaks in East<lb/>
Carolina University and the area as "Beat the Tar Heels Day<lb/>
This writer has word from a definitely impeachable source that a special section of<lb/>
the bleachers adjacent to the UNC dugout will be reserved for anyone wishing to vent<lb/>
their wrath upon the boys in faded blue.<lb/>
The Pirates have not played UNC during the regular baseball season for three<lb/>
years, so the team is hoping for a strong turnout Monday afternoon at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Dr. Edwards of the Intramural Office has informed this writer that there are no<lb/>
intramural contests scheduled for this day, so with the nice weather that has been<lb/>
predicted, there should be a good crowd on hand to help irritate, agitate and<lb/>
intimidate the visitors.<lb/>
Maybe this will be a readable column next week after I have had some practice<lb/>
writing again.<lb/>
Freeman makes Greensboro All-State<lb/>
ECU'S Debbie Freeman has received<lb/>
yet another honor for ner outstanding<lb/>
play during this year's basketball season.<lb/>
Miss Freeman, a sophomore from<lb/>
Jacksonville. N C. was named to the<lb/>
Greensboro Daily News All-State wo-<lb/>
men's basketball team over the<lb/>
WEEKEND. Earlier this month, Miss<lb/>
Freeman was selected to the NCAIAW<lb/>
Division One All-State team.<lb/>
On the team were only three repeaters<lb/>
from last year's squad, which had<lb/>
included two ECU players, Sheilah<lb/>
Cotten and Lu Ann Swaim Both women<lb/>
have since graduated from ECU.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Aggressive offense is key<lb/>
to success for Joe Roenker<lb/>
By WILLIE PATRICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Joe Roenker tends to keep his<lb/>
baseball hitting philosophy as simple as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
Ask him why he hits fastballs great<lb/>
distances and he will talk of<lb/>
"concentration and watching the ball<lb/>
Ask him why he will often look bad<lb/>
when attacking an off-speed pitch and he<lb/>
has a solid answer there, too.<lb/>
"You have to be an aggressive hitter<lb/>
at the plate said Roenker. "Some guys<lb/>
go up to the plate with the idea of not<lb/>
making an out, and this makes him a<lb/>
defensive type hitter. I go up to the plate<lb/>
with the intention of mashing the ball<lb/>
somewhere, so I am on the offensive<lb/>
What has this got to do with<lb/>
off-speed pitching? Roenker said that a<lb/>
pood curve has been known to fool him<lb/>
on occasion, but that is no one's fault<lb/>
but his own. He related an incident of<lb/>
the Pirates' opening game against<lb/>
Maryland and compared it to one at<lb/>
Furman on Saturday.<lb/>
"The Maryland pitcher was about as<lb/>
good as I have ever seen said Roenker,<lb/>
who whiffed four times against him. "His<lb/>
curve moved and he could throw the<lb/>
fastball by you, so you just couldn't<lb/>
adjust.<lb/>
"But as for the Furman games, I<lb/>
really don't know what to say except that<lb/>
I am a streak hitter - and the streak<lb/>
started down there<lb/>
The first four games of the Pirate<lb/>
season in which Roenker was a<lb/>
participant provided quite a study in<lb/>
contrasts. After contributing to the chill<lb/>
factor in Harrington Field during the first<lb/>
game, the Pirate left-fielder banged out<lb/>
five hits in seven trips against the<lb/>
Paladins, then went two-for-two with<lb/>
three walks against Western Carolina.<lb/>
This means Roenker is hitting .500 to<lb/>
lead the Pirates into Thursday's double-<lb/>
header at N.C. State.<lb/>
JOE ROENKER<lb/>
' tilt he admits the season to be still<lb/>
youi Roenker said that some of his<lb/>
adde ielp this year may be coming from<lb/>
his wife, Karen, who Roenker said is one<lb/>
of the best fans he knows.<lb/>
"She knows something about base-<lb/>
ball said Roenker. "And she knows<lb/>
enough about me to let me know when<lb/>
I'm doing something wrong on the field<lb/>
Karen hasn't had to say much to him<lb/>
lately, though. And the Pirates hope that<lb/>
to be the case for the rest of the season.<lb/>
Netters beaten twice<lb/>
By KURT HICKMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's tennis team was<lb/>
beaten twice last week as they lost<lb/>
Thursday to the University of Richmond,<lb/>
7-2, and Saturday to Bloomsburg St<lb/>
94.<lb/>
The match with Richmond saw Mitch<lb/>
Pergerson, in the singles competition,<lb/>
and the doubles team of Doug Getsinger<lb/>
and Bob Neff as the only Pirate victors.<lb/>
Pergerson bested the Spiders' Tommy<lb/>
Richards, 6-7, 6-3, 6-2. This was<lb/>
Pergerson's first victory in four tries<lb/>
against Richards in college matches.<lb/>
ECU coach Neal Peterson is happy<lb/>
with Pergerson's play so far this year.<lb/>
"Pergerson is showing marked improve-<lb/>
ment Peterson said.<lb/>
Neff and Getsinger defeated Richards<lb/>
and Bill Chavent in the second match of<lb/>
the doubles competition, 6-0, 6-3.<lb/>
"Getsinger and Neff are playing well<lb/>
together and have the makings of a solid<lb/>
doubles team Peterson said.<lb/>
The Bucs had a rough day against<lb/>
Bloomsburg St. as they were shut out for<lb/>
the first time this year.<lb/>
"We just ran into some belter talent<lb/>
this past week said Peterson.<lb/>
The Pirates now stand at 1-3 on the<lb/>
year. Their next match is Thursday as<lb/>
they host Atlantic Christian College.<lb/>
Some people still rhinh<lb/>
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t exist.<lb/>
Little do they hmrw<lb/>
WECB<lb/>
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line-out.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040030_0023"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
23<lb/>
i<lb/>
HALF THE FUN of a rugby game is the fans. These fans at the moment are in a pretty sullen state. Maybe the match hasn't started yet.<lb/>
TOUCHDOWN??? No Its called a try. This wing is ninning goalward for a scoring try. When he reaches his destination he must<lb/>
touch the ball to the ground. Not throw it in the air. What a funny game, this rugby<lb/>
NO IFS CALLED a jump ball in<lb/>
basketball, in rugby they call it a<lb/>
line-out.<lb/>
Photos<lb/>
by<lb/>
Frank Barrow<lb/>
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Wilber's <lb/>
Family <lb/>
Favorites<lb/>
PUTNMi<lb/>
Hickory wood fiatertd Q Fish<lb/>
Frit Shrimp Hmmn Roast letf<lb/>
Cowitry fried ckick.n Namaiircsrs<lb/>
Variety sf Softiriaks Cheeseburgers<lb/>
A RUGGER is about to make a two-handed pass to a teammate, or, in this case, just<lb/>
anyone. The defensive man, of course, will try to prevent him from doing so.<lb/>
SPECIAL! Hot dog with<lb/>
homemade chile 25<lb/>
NO W FEA TURING BREA KFA S T<lb/>
ON 14THST from JAM 11AM<lb/>
TWOLOCITIOUS MthSf. OPEN7DAYSy<lb/>
Comor of 5th aid Roads ST. A WEK L<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040030_0024"/><lb/>
24<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 4318 MARCH 1976<lb/>
mummtmmim<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
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wm0?mm<lb/>
newsFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASH<lb/>
Mike Thompson ROTC basketball Art tour<lb/>
An enlightening weekend of music is<lb/>
in store for those who come to the<lb/>
Coffeehouse March 20-21. Mike Thomp-<lb/>
son, an accomplished classical guitarist<lb/>
and banjo player, and his group,<lb/>
Groundspeed, will appear for shows at 8<lb/>
&amp; 9 p.m. Admission is 25 cents.<lb/>
The ECU Air Force ROTC Detachment<lb/>
will host ROTC basketball teams from<lb/>
several states at its seventh annual "ECU<lb/>
600" Basketball Tournament March 19-20.<lb/>
The public is invited to attend both<lb/>
the Friday and Saturday games without<lb/>
charge. The event will begin at noon<lb/>
Friday in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
SOULS meeting ?0 more c<lb/>
There will be a meeting Tuesday the<lb/>
23rd of March at 8:00. The meeting will<lb/>
be for the election of SOULS officers for<lb/>
76-77.<lb/>
The following offices will be open:<lb/>
President, Vice-President, Secretary,<lb/>
Treasurer, and Public Relations Secre-<lb/>
tary. There will be a list in the A.A.C.C.<lb/>
where students can file. Filing deadline<lb/>
is Monday, March 22, 1976. So get out<lb/>
and get involved.<lb/>
Bet that caught your eye didn't it?<lb/>
Now that we have your attention, why<lb/>
don't you consider applying to head a<lb/>
Student Union Committee? The Student<lb/>
Union is one of the two most prestigious<lb/>
student organizations on campus.<lb/>
Applications may be obtained in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Sorry, but<lb/>
there will be classes until further lack of<lb/>
interest is shown.<lb/>
Alpha Phi Gamma NOW essay contest<lb/>
-East Carolina University<lb/>
is accepting applications for its summer<lb/>
"Art and Architecture of Europe" tour,<lb/>
featuring visits to museums and famous<lb/>
buildings in France, Italy and Greece.<lb/>
The tour will depart for Paris via New-<lb/>
York Monday, May 31, and will leave<lb/>
from Venice Monday, June 21.<lb/>
Points of interest to be visited include<lb/>
Chartres, Versailles, Athens, Corinth,<lb/>
Rome, Naples, Pompeii, Sorrento, and<lb/>
Florence. Much of the between-stop<lb/>
traveling will be done by motor coach,<lb/>
enabling tour visitors to view the<lb/>
countryside.<lb/>
Tran Gordley, associate dean of the<lb/>
ECU School of Art, will conduct the tour.<lb/>
Participation on the tour may be applied<lb/>
toward six quarter hours college credit,<lb/>
for graduate or undergraduate degrees or<lb/>
teaching certificate renewal.<lb/>
Further information and application<lb/>
materials are available from "Travel<lb/>
Study Tour Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education, East Carolina University,<lb/>
Greenville, NIC. 27834.<lb/>
There will be a meeting of Alpha Phi<lb/>
Gamma Tuesday March 23 at 7:00 pm in<lb/>
the Fountainhead office. All members<lb/>
are urged to attend since reorganization,<lb/>
rush and spring initiation will be<lb/>
discussed. It 's imperative that as many<lb/>
members as possible attend.<lb/>
DST sing-in<lb/>
DST Sing-In Practices will be<lb/>
held-Tuesday-March 16, Thursday-March<lb/>
18 andThursday-March 25, 1976 at 7:00<lb/>
p.m. Practices will be held at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Please check at desk for<lb/>
room number.<lb/>
Sex preservation<lb/>
Students for trie Preservation of Sex<lb/>
is what it isn't. Society of Physics<lb/>
Students is what it is. Everyone<lb/>
interested in Physics is invited to come<lb/>
to a meeting Thurs March 18th at 3:30<lb/>
in PE 213.<lb/>
Spring grads<lb/>
Attention all Spring Quarter graduates<lb/>
caps and gowns can be picked up in the<lb/>
student supply store between March 23<lb/>
through the 25th. These keepsake gowns<lb/>
are yours to keep providing the $10.00<lb/>
graduation fee has been paid. For those<lb/>
receiving the masters degree, the $10.00<lb/>
fee pays for your cap and gown, but<lb/>
there is an extra fee of $7.50 for your<lb/>
hood. Any questions about your caps and<lb/>
gowns should be referred to the student<lb/>
supply store. Announcements are now<lb/>
for sale in the student supply store, with<lb/>
five in a package for $1.50.<lb/>
An essay contest for ECU students<lb/>
has been announced by the Eastern<lb/>
Carolina Chapter of the National<lb/>
Organization for Women (NOW), and the<lb/>
ECU Women's Residence Council.<lb/>
A first prize cash award of $30 will be<lb/>
given to the writer of the best essay<lb/>
response to the topic question. How Do<lb/>
You Feel That the Feminist in America<lb/>
Today Will Affect Your Life'7'<lb/>
Two honorable mention awards, with<lb/>
prizes of $10 each, will also be given<lb/>
Winners will be announced during the<lb/>
campus Women s Awareness Week. April<lb/>
4-10<lb/>
Essays must be of sufficient length to<lb/>
reflect sincerity and careful thought, but<lb/>
no longer than 1500 words All entries<lb/>
should be typewritten, double-spaced,<lb/>
and submitted no later than March 25<lb/>
Entries should be brought to Room<lb/>
214. Whichard Building iDean Fulghums<lb/>
office)<lb/>
Any currently enrolled student at East<lb/>
Carolina University who enters the<lb/>
contest is eligible to win one of the<lb/>
awards.<lb/>
Coffee &amp; discussion<lb/>
Students interested in the history and<lb/>
worship of the Episcopal Church are<lb/>
invited to a "coffee and discussion" hour<lb/>
every Thursday afternoon 3 30-5:00.<lb/>
These sessions are held in the chaplains<lb/>
office 501 E. 5th St. (2nd Floor Methodist<lb/>
Center) Students and faculty are invited<lb/>
to join the group at any session.<lb/>
Rockola theater<lb/>
ECU Studio Productions will present a<lb/>
Rockola Free Theater project, on March<lb/>
26 and 27, at 8:07 p.m. in the ECU<lb/>
Student Studio Theater.<lb/>
Included in the production will be,<lb/>
"The Conquest of Everest and<lb/>
"Chamber Music which are two short<lb/>
one act plays by Arthur Copit.<lb/>
Also, "Balls a Rockola film will be<lb/>
presented.<lb/>
Admission is free.<lb/>
Car wash<lb/>
On Saturday, March 20th the Little<lb/>
Sisters of Delta Sigma Phi are<lb/>
sponsoring a car wash at the Shell<lb/>
Station located near Winn Dixie on Rt.<lb/>
264. Advance tickets are being sold for<lb/>
$1.00. On Saturday the price will be<lb/>
$1.25. The car wash will be from 9-2<lb/>
pm.<lb/>
Table-talk<lb/>
Lutheran Student Association will<lb/>
meet this Sunday evening at 6:00 for<lb/>
supper and Table-Talk at Our Redeemer<lb/>
Lutheran Church at 1800 S. Elm Street. If<lb/>
you need a ride to the meeting call the<lb/>
office; 756-2058.<lb/>
Flying saucers Go-between group<lb/>
m<lb/>
Stanton T. Friedman, a<lb/>
nuclear physicist and an authority on<lb/>
UFO phenomena will explain his theory<lb/>
that "Flying Saucers are Real" when he<lb/>
speaks March 18 at East Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
The lecture and slide program is<lb/>
sponsored by the ECU Student Union<lb/>
Lecture Committee and begins at 8 pm in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Student Center theater.<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
There will be a meeting to organize a<lb/>
go-between committee for Christian<lb/>
groups on campus. All organized groups,<lb/>
independent Bible studies or interested<lb/>
Christians are welcome. The meeting will<lb/>
be held Mon March 22, 1976, in the<lb/>
Multipurpose room of Mendenhall. For<lb/>
more information call 758-9733. 1<lb/>
Corinthians 12:14-27.<lb/>
Spring Fling<lb/>
Spring Fling at the Elbo Room<lb/>
sponsored by Garrett and Scott Halls.<lb/>
There will be a door prize, chugging<lb/>
contests, and a Bikini contest. There will<lb/>
be live entertainment. Admission will be<lb/>
25 cents Monday, March 22, 8:00-1:00.<lb/>
General public cordially invited.<lb/>
Belly dance<lb/>
Authentic Arabic (Belly) Dance. Ms.<lb/>
Whitley taught in Casablanca and<lb/>
California. Now scheduling spring<lb/>
classes. Please note the number<lb/>
correction - 752-0928.<lb/>
Pledge meeting<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi Pledge Meeting will<lb/>
be Tuesday night, March 23 at 7:00 in<lb/>
the multi-purpose room at Mendenhall.<lb/>
Bring the $14 dues to this meeting.<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/>
Accounting society<lb/>
There will be an Accounting Society<lb/>
meeting on Monday, March 22, at 5:30 in<lb/>
Rawl 130. Guest speaker will be Mr.<lb/>
Hilton Boyd of the IRS. Topic: Overview<lb/>
of the IRS. Your attendance is urged.<lb/>
Computing seminar<lb/>
A seminar on Borroughs JCL and<lb/>
Packet Page interpretations will be<lb/>
presented by the Computing Center on<lb/>
Tuesday, March 30, from 3-4 p.m. in 201<lb/>
Austin.<lb/>
The public is invited to attend.<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega holds weekly<lb/>
meetings at 8:00 Sunday nite. From<lb/>
7:15-8:00 the bros. hold weekly informal<lb/>
meetings. All male students are invited<lb/>
for information or rides call 752-3496.<lb/>
Stuffers needed<lb/>
Fountainhead needs people to stuff<lb/>
inserts in Tuesday's paper. Pay is $2.10<lb/>
per hour. Come by the Fountainhead<lb/>
office (Pub: jations Center) Tuesday,<lb/>
March 23 at 3:00. The first 10 people<lb/>
arriving will get the jobs.<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040030_0025"/>
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