<?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="00040037_0001"/>
This issue-16 pages,<lb/>
8,500 circulation<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina Community for over fifty years<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
VOL. 51, NO. 50<lb/>
13 APRIL 1976<lb/>
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ECU considering forming new conference<lb/>
Only one week after East Carolina University withdrew from the Southern Conference<lb/>
one high university official admitted that there is the strong possibility the Pirates might<lb/>
join six other east coast schools, including Florida State, South Carolina and West<lb/>
Virginia in a new league dubbed the Mid-South Conference.<lb/>
The other schools in the proposed league would include Richmond, William and Mary<lb/>
and Virginia Tech.<lb/>
William and Mary is still a member of the Southern Conference but is reportedly<lb/>
unsatisfied with the league and could follow the lead of Richmond, which withdrew from<lb/>
the league last year, and ECU which will be out next July, and go independent.<lb/>
The ECU official, who asked not to be named, reported that some contacts had been<lb/>
made with all the schools named in the proposed league and that there appeared to be a<lb/>
great deal of interest among most of the schools to form some type new league.<lb/>
The reliable source within the ECU administration also admitted that Georgia Tech<lb/>
had been approached about going into the league but had declined.<lb/>
Meanwhile ECU Chancellor Leo Jenkins indicated that he would be "most receptive"<lb/>
to the formation of such a conference.<lb/>
"Such a league, if it could be formed, would be a strong one and would benefit all the<lb/>
schools involved. I would be willing to work with these other schools in an effort to set<lb/>
something like this up Jenkins oontinued.<lb/>
Student appointed as<lb/>
council represen ta five<lb/>
ByJACKSONHARRILL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
SGA President Tim Sullivan was<lb/>
formally recognized as ECU student<lb/>
representative to the Greenville City<lb/>
Council at the council's monthly meeting<lb/>
last Thursday night.<lb/>
Greenville Mayor Percy Cox said that<lb/>
he looked forward to having a student<lb/>
representative work jointly with the council<lb/>
on any item concerning both the city and<lb/>
university. Cox also noted that Sullivan is<lb/>
permitted to join in city council hearings,<lb/>
and recognized the fact that Sullivan was<lb/>
present at a Monday workshop meeting.<lb/>
Sullivan pointed out that this is the only<lb/>
seat of its kind in the state, and that it is<lb/>
the first time that any city has permitted<lb/>
such a non-voting membership.<lb/>
He believes that there is now a need fa<lb/>
such a position on the council, whereas in<lb/>
the past there have not been issues in<lb/>
which both the city and university shared<lb/>
an interest.<lb/>
The office was established by the city<lb/>
council after consideration of proposals for<lb/>
guidelines fa the representative.<lb/>
"It is a two-way street Sullivan said.<lb/>
 I think that students benefit in that better<lb/>
communication can only mean that we stop<lb/>
beooming strangers. Hopefully this will<lb/>
make us better known in the community<lb/>
Sullivan believes that Greenville needs<lb/>
student input on certain items facing the<lb/>
city.<lb/>
According to Sullivan and Cox areas<lb/>
needing input are the Greenville transit<lb/>
system, which could tnoaporate students<lb/>
into the route, and the city-wide bikeway<lb/>
route, which would benefit students.<lb/>
Sullivan ntfed that the acquiring of this<lb/>
representation is a "new day" fa ECU<lb/>
students. "This is a la different fran what<lb/>
students have had in the past. Befae,<lb/>
students used to sit in the audience but<lb/>
now have an oppatunity to voice their<lb/>
views on matters pertaining to them.<lb/>
The SGA President-Elect listed four<lb/>
"maja ooncessions" which the students<lb/>
received: place on the agenda fa making a<lb/>
COLUMBIA SCHOLASTIC<lb/>
PRESS ASSOCIATION<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
HAS BEEN AWARDED THIS<lb/>
RRST PLACE CERTIFICATE<lb/>
BY THE ASSOCIATION AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY IN THE<lb/>
CITY OF NEW YORK<lb/>
MARCH U, 1976 IN ITS FIFTY-SECOND ANNUAL CONTEST<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD was recently awarded a "First Place Certificate" by the Columbia<lb/>
Scholastic Press Association of Columbia University in New York City. FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
received a total of 929 rciting points out of a possible 1,000, according to the judge who<lb/>
rated FOUNTAINHEAD, ECU s newspaper is' an outstanding1 student publication I he<lb/>
survey included complete ratings on all aspects of FOUNTAINHEAD from news and<lb/>
editorial content, to quality of news coverage and advertisements.<lb/>
The ECU Chancel la admitted that several of the paential members fa the new<lb/>
league were very interested in joining the Atlantic Coast Conference.<lb/>
But, I think you have to be realistic about this. I know South Carolina and Virginia<lb/>
Tech are both very interested in joining the ACC. But. I really doubt that the ACC is going<lb/>
to expand beyond its current seven number Jenkins continued.<lb/>
"So, our best bet, and that of ahers in the region, is to fam our own league Jenkins<lb/>
concluded.<lb/>
With the exception of William and Mary, all the aher potential members of the<lb/>
proposed loop are independents. West Virginia was a member of the South Conference,<lb/>
befae withdrawal in the 1960s.<lb/>
South Carolina was a member of the ACC until it withdrew earl in the 1970s. Since<lb/>
then it has been an independent but recently has indicated a strong interest in conference<lb/>
membership, particularly in rejoining the ACC.<lb/>
A recent poll of the seven members schools in the ACC revealed that there was no<lb/>
strong interest at this time to expand that league. It takes a vae of five of the seven<lb/>
member schools to approve a new member.<lb/>
Four of the seven schools in the ACC are in Nath Carolina while there are other loop<lb/>
members in Maryland, Virginia and South Carolina.<lb/>
SGA PRESIDENT TIM SULLIVAN was formally recognized as student representative to<lb/>
the Greenville City COuncil in last Thursday's monthly meeting.<lb/>
university report; the representative<lb/>
attends wakshops where private discus-<lb/>
sions decide what is said in council<lb/>
meetings; free-speaking privileges on any<lb/>
agenda item; acquisition of agendas in<lb/>
advance of meetings, so student input may<lb/>
be obtained on university-related items.<lb/>
The office is filled on a June to June<lb/>
basis. The SGA President decides who is to<lb/>
attend. "I decided that it was important<lb/>
enough fa me to attend Sullivan noted.<lb/>
"I am the official SGA representative to<lb/>
the council, until I am out of office<lb/>
Lampoon issue causing<lb/>
some outsiders to cringe<lb/>
m<lb/>
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Fountainhead'sannual April 1 lampoon<lb/>
editioi is apparently causing quite a stir off<lb/>
campus. The annual April fool's paper,<lb/>
named Fountainblah, was cited in a recent<lb/>
Board of Trustees meeting and also in an<lb/>
editaial in oie Eastan Nath Carolina<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
And, Monday the Raleigh News and<lb/>
Observer carried a stay ai the April 1<lb/>
Fountainhead edition.<lb/>
The first mention of the paper was<lb/>
made during the ECU Board of Trustees<lb/>
meeting held last Tuesday. At that time<lb/>
several members of the Board cited the<lb/>
lack of good taste and also mentiaied<lb/>
several items in the paper they ooisidered<lb/>
very questionable fa publications.<lb/>
One Board member suggested that the<lb/>
paper in some way be pena,i7ed fa<lb/>
producing ujch an issue that was an<lb/>
embarrassment to the university.<lb/>
Two days later in an April 8th edition of<lb/>
the Gddsbao News-Argus, the paper was<lb/>
staigly criticized in an editaial which<lb/>
contended the paper "is a source of<lb/>
mmmmmwmfmmmmmmmmmrtmtmm<lb/>
embarrassment fa thousands of us who<lb/>
attended ECU The editaial went further<lb/>
to say the paper is a disgrace to the<lb/>
institution and is an unmitigated offense to<lb/>
human decency<lb/>
Other comments outside the university<lb/>
community have been heard. One area<lb/>
resident who saw the issue, repatedly took<lb/>
it to her minister fa comment.<lb/>
No official oomment from university<lb/>
officials has been received by the paper.<lb/>
Most of the unfavaable comments from<lb/>
the oommunity that have been heard deal<lb/>
with a phao on the front page of the paper<lb/>
that showed the posterias of four male<lb/>
students, a phao on the editaial page that<lb/>
displayed a fist making an obscene<lb/>
gesture, and an ad fa a condom using a<lb/>
phao of the past SGA president.<lb/>
Fountainhead edita Mike Tayla ex-<lb/>
plained that the stir in the outside<lb/>
oommunity was 'eally surprising. "I did<lb/>
not think there was anything in the paper<lb/>
wath mentioning in the Board of Trustees<lb/>
See LAMPOON, page 6.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040037_0002"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
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EditortalsComrrienlary<lb/>
Lampoon causing stir<lb/>
What we thought was a harmless enough April 1 Lampoon<lb/>
edition has been blown all out of proportion by some people in the<lb/>
community.<lb/>
First, one member of the Board of Trustees was so offended by<lb/>
the annual April Fool'sedition that he felt the need to criticize the<lb/>
paper in a Board meeting last week.<lb/>
And, then an Eastern North Carolina daily unloaded on the<lb/>
paper in a stinqing editorial that is simply hard to believe.<lb/>
According to that editorial the April 1 edition of FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
BLAH was "a source of embarrassment" and a "disgrace to the<lb/>
institution ana is an unmiugaiea onense to human decency<lb/>
Really?<lb/>
The funny thing about all this controversy is that it is<lb/>
originating outside the university community. The very people that<lb/>
we took all the shots at have not uttered the first wad of criticism,<lb/>
in fact most have only applauded the paper.<lb/>
You would think that the people we took to task in the paper<lb/>
would have been the first to raise their voices in a ay of<lb/>
abominatiai. Yet, they haven't.<lb/>
It seems most of the people on campus who were highlighted in<lb/>
the paper realize what the issue really was-nothing but a chance<lb/>
fa the paper to poke fun at various campus institutions-including<lb/>
ourselves at the paper.<lb/>
There was nothing embarrassing, obscene a offensive in that<lb/>
issue!<lb/>
What is offensive to us is that someaie would try to turn a<lb/>
humaous lampoon edition into a community maality issue. We<lb/>
suggest that this Eastern Nath Carolina paper look in its own<lb/>
backyard fa the real offense to human decency.<lb/>
Grad students left out<lb/>
A reoe it Fountainhead stay did a good job showing the<lb/>
problems graduate students face with gaining access to campus<lb/>
activities and facilities.<lb/>
The problem fa grad students is that 34s of them are<lb/>
classified "part-time" students so they pay no activity fee which<lb/>
means no activity card which means they must pay regular<lb/>
admission prices to all events full-time students either get in free<lb/>
fa a pay reduced prices.<lb/>
The problem revolves around the cut off hour limit to qualify as<lb/>
a full-time student. Most of the grad students fall below this line,<lb/>
so while they constitute a large number of students, they have little<lb/>
to say in what happens on campus.<lb/>
Perhaps the SGA should consider setting new aiteria fa being<lb/>
classified a full-time student and ask the university to consider<lb/>
easing its policy. Or, perhaps a new policy that would allow any<lb/>
student with as few as 6 hours to purchase an activity card, which<lb/>
would allow them either all a just some of the privileges full-time<lb/>
students enjoy.<lb/>
There are a number of ways to revamp the present policy. It is<lb/>
definitely a problem fa the 1000 plus grad students.<lb/>
"Ware it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without<lb/>
newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment to<lb/>
prefe. the latter<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor<lb/>
Managing Editor-Tom Toxar<lb/>
Business Manager-Teresa Whlsehant<lb/>
Production Manager-Jimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson<lb/>
News Editor-Dennis Leonard<lb/>
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Tiaa<lb/>
Features Editor-Pat Coyle<lb/>
Sports Editor-John Evans<lb/>
Advertising Representatives-Mary Anne Vail and Vicky Jones<lb/>
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of Eaat Carolina University sponsored by<lb/>
the Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tuaaday and Thursday<lb/>
during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, M.C 27834<lb/>
editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 7584309<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non students.<lb/>
mniMiiiiiifti" iiiii 11 ii am<lb/>
"ACCORDING- TO THIS VZJU<lb/>
DIDN'T IaAT FDP SPRING- �<lb/>
BREAK Tn -TflKEfl VTOTON.<lb/>
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Meeting rule needed<lb/>
A situation developed last week during a Publications Board<lb/>
meeting that should prove to at least those in attendance the need<lb/>
tor some type of closed meeting policy to allow certain matters to<lb/>
be handled behind closed doors before Board members only.<lb/>
The situation in question was a personnel matter. And, when<lb/>
the Pub Board chairperson, Diane Tayla, asked that only members<lb/>
of the Board remain to discuss a personnel matter, she quickly<lb/>
found out from President-Elect, Tim Sullivan, who was also at the<lb/>
meeting, that closed meetings were prohibited by the SGA<lb/>
Constitution.<lb/>
This is not a criticism of Sullivan, fa he was just pointing out<lb/>
policy of the present Constitution. But, hopefully as the SGA<lb/>
studies the Constitution fa possible revisiais, they will include a<lb/>
policy that will allow closed meetings in certain circumstances,<lb/>
personnel matters fa aie.<lb/>
This is not a clause that will shut out the legislature a the<lb/>
student body from attending any SGA funded meetings, but it<lb/>
would be a policy that might allow fa a mae free expressiai of<lb/>
feelings on some matters that simply can't be conducted in front of<lb/>
an open audience.<lb/>
In this particular case the dosed meeting might have brought<lb/>
fath a freer expressiai of feeling from several parties that<lb/>
deserved a chance to air their view. But, in a aowded room with<lb/>
mae people present than really should have been, some opiniois<lb/>
that should have been expressed were not. And, in a situation like<lb/>
this, the entire stay fran both sides may not fully be aired.<lb/>
The state has a policy that allows fa closed meetings, with only<lb/>
Board members in attendance on personnel matters. And, we<lb/>
believe the SGA should add some type policy like this to its<lb/>
Constitution.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL<lb/>
wmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
51, NO. 5013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
3<lb/>
Candewick Inn provides the setting<lb/>
�s<lb/>
SGA officers sworn in during annual event<lb/>
Promising to run an administration that<lb/>
would make the student government<lb/>
" more visible and open toall Tim Sullivan<lb/>
was officially swan in as new Student<lb/>
Government Association president for the<lb/>
coming year Sunday night at the annual<lb/>
SGA installation banquet held at the<lb/>
Candlewick Inn.<lb/>
Also being swan in at that time were<lb/>
Vice President Greg Pingston, Treasurer<lb/>
Tonmy Thanasoi and Seaetary Cindy<lb/>
Whitaker.<lb/>
Sullivan, in brief remarks after being<lb/>
swan in, naed that he was setting high<lb/>
goals fa the caning year. "Someone told<lb/>
me recently that some of the goals I listed<lb/>
were unrealistic and too high fa us to<lb/>
reach Sullivan explained.<lb/>
But, the Burlington native assured all<lb/>
present that his administration would wak<lb/>
their hardest in the caning year to achieve<lb/>
those goals I don't think they are so high<lb/>
that we can't reach them Sullivan<lb/>
assured the audience.<lb/>
Sullivan pointed to the vast power that<lb/>
was at the disposal of the SGA, if it would<lb/>
only use that student power properly.<lb/>
Pingston, who proceeded Sullivan on<lb/>
the program, indicated he thought the<lb/>
coming year would be a "most impatant<lb/>
one toall concerned with ECU And, he<lb/>
pointed to the new lines of communications<lb/>
linked between the student govanment<lb/>
and the city council as key ones that<lb/>
needed to be developed during the coming<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"I see it asa year of action, as a year of<lb/>
SGA AWARDS BANQUET - Ex-SGA President Jimmy Honeycutt applauds as Ricky Price presents awards during the annual<lb/>
SGA Banquet at the Candlewick Inn.<lb/>
accomplishments Pingston predicted.<lb/>
In other activities during the program<lb/>
Craig Hales, chairman of the powerful<lb/>
Appropriations Committee during most of<lb/>
the past year, was tapped as Best<lb/>
Legislata.<lb/>
Hales, a sophomae serving his secaid<lb/>
year in the legislature, served as head of<lb/>
the Appropriations until last month when<lb/>
he resigned to run fa SGA treasura.<lb/>
Best Committee Member fa the past<lb/>
year was Mindy Skelly.<lb/>
Certificates were presented to all<lb/>
members of the legislature and to<lb/>
members of other SGA committees and<lb/>
offices.<lb/>
Others recognized with plaques fa<lb/>
their wak with the Executive Branch by<lb/>
outgoing SGA President Jimmy Honeycutt<lb/>
included: Greg Davis, Ivey Peacock, Roy<lb/>
SGA OFFICER INA UGURA TION - SGA officers Tim Sullivan, Greg Pingston, Tommy Thomason, and Cindy Whitaker were officially<lb/>
sworn in as the executive branch of student government tor the 1976-77 academic year.<lb/>
Turner, Tim Sullivan, Mike Brown, Mike<lb/>
White, Larry Chesson, Kim Kuzmuk,<lb/>
Daltai Nicnols, John Jones and Ricky<lb/>
Price.<lb/>
Honeycutt, who has served four years<lb/>
in the SGA, noted that this past year thae<lb/>
was less division between the Legisla-<lb/>
ture and the Executive branches of<lb/>
government.<lb/>
"In the past these two branches have<lb/>
waked against each other. But, this year I<lb/>
think the two branches waked well<lb/>
together and they produced a good recad<lb/>
between them Honeycutt contended.<lb/>
While he indicated he felt his adminis-<lb/>
tration had produced many fine accom-<lb/>
plishments this past year, he listed the<lb/>
tuition rally held last Spring on the mall<lb/>
that attracted several thousand students<lb/>
and the recent seating of a student on the<lb/>
Greenville City Council as high points of<lb/>
his administration.<lb/>
"All in all I think it was a good year<lb/>
Honeycutt concluded.<lb/>
Price, Speaka of the House, noted that<lb/>
the Legislature had gone through a lot of<lb/>
problems during the past year but that<lb/>
they have also produced some good<lb/>
results<lb/>
"I think it was a great year, no matter<lb/>
what you read in the newspaper Price<lb/>
quipped.<lb/>
Others recognized fa service this past<lb/>
year included outgoing secretary Katie<lb/>
Kennedy and Lynn Yow.<lb/>
Chancefla Leo Jenkins, one of sevaal<lb/>
invited guests to the event, told the group<lb/>
that ECU'S SGA has a good recad over<lb/>
the some 29 years he has been associated<lb/>
with ECU.<lb/>
"I have seen 29 SGA'sin operation and I<lb/>
'hink they have all done a good job of<lb/>
waking fa the students Jenkins con-<lb/>
tended.<lb/>
The Forum page was cancelled today<lb/>
due to a lack of interest by the students<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
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FEATU<lb/>
Planning seminar set for April 30<lb/>
By JIMMY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
A seminar titled, Planning fa the<lb/>
Future of Eastern North Carolina-<lb/>
Potential sand Problems, will be held April<lb/>
30 in Room 244 of ECU'S Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center from8:45a.m. to4;15p.m.<lb/>
Plans began in November on the<lb/>
seminar which is designed to "elaborate on<lb/>
current growth issues on planning in<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina according to<lb/>
Martha K. Morrow, student coordinator.<lb/>
W. Wes Hankins, associate professor of<lb/>
Urban and Regional Planning at ECU, gave<lb/>
full credit to the students involved.<lb/>
Hankins gave special credit to Morrow<lb/>
who "arranged the program and wrote all<lb/>
the letters<lb/>
Hankins, who termed his role in the<lb/>
seminar as making sure all loopholes are<lb/>
plugged cited five main reasons for the<lb/>
seminar. He said it is designed to further<lb/>
educate citizens interested in planning, to<lb/>
celebrates<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
40th chapter anniversary<lb/>
The Tau Chapter of the Phi Sigma Pi,<lb/>
National Honor Fraternity will be celebra-<lb/>
ting the week of April 11-18 as Phi Sigma<lb/>
Pi Week. The organization is the oldest<lb/>
fraternity on campus, having been founded<lb/>
at East Carolina in 1936. It is based on the<lb/>
tripod of scholarship, leadership, and<lb/>
fellowship.<lb/>
To become a brother of the fraternity a<lb/>
student must achieve at least a 3.2 average<lb/>
in all course work taken at the university<lb/>
and must have at least a sophomore<lb/>
classification.<lb/>
Upon accepting a bid to the fraternity,<lb/>
he engages in a pledge period during<lb/>
which he learns of the many aspects of Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi. A pledge is also required to<lb/>
acquaint himself with the active members.<lb/>
After successfully completing the pledge<lb/>
period, the prospective member Is voted<lb/>
on by the brothers and is then initiated.<lb/>
Presently there are 48 members of Tau<lb/>
Chapter.<lb/>
The chapter is active at the national<lb/>
level of the fraternity. In fact, it has been<lb/>
selected the outstanding chapter for ten<lb/>
consecutive years.<lb/>
Another honor which it possesses lies in<lb/>
the fact that Senator Robert Morgan of<lb/>
North Carolina is an alumnus of Tau<lb/>
Chapter.<lb/>
Each year the chapter is invoivec in<lb/>
various activities. It sponsors a sweethejirt<lb/>
in all campus beauty contests and alsc<lb/>
sponsors a Christmas party for underprivi-<lb/>
leged children of the Greenville area.<lb/>
Annually the fraternity contributes tc<lb/>
and awards the Todd Scholarship to an<lb/>
outstanding junior brother. This scholar-<lb/>
ship is awarded in honor of the faculty<lb/>
advisor fa the fraternity, Dr. Richard C.<lb/>
Todd and his wife, Claudia Pinnock Todd.<lb/>
In addition, each year the fraternity<lb/>
recognizes the most outstanding male and<lb/>
female on campus in the tenia class.<lb/>
Note: I tr,�4 to hnd a yr y<lb/>
but i�m to.keVnof<lb/>
i<lb/>
bring in key planning people, to bring key<lb/>
planning experts for government and<lb/>
business leaders to hear, to help planning<lb/>
students from other schools, and to benefit<lb/>
ECU planning students.<lb/>
Seminar topics will include the Coastal<lb/>
Area Management Act, Large Scale<lb/>
Development, and The Future of Small<lb/>
Towns.<lb/>
Seminar topics are vital to this area and<lb/>
will be of great benefit to jobseekers<lb/>
acoording to Marow.<lb/>
Seminar speakers include professas<lb/>
from ECU and UNC-Chapel Hill, and<lb/>
representatives from Texasgulf, Inc and<lb/>
First Colony Farms.<lb/>
"These industries are economically<lb/>
important, but their environmental and<lb/>
social hazards are in direct conflict<lb/>
acoording to Mike Wilson, treasurer of the<lb/>
Student Planning Association.<lb/>
Alicia Petersen, visiting ECU professa<lb/>
of Urban and Regional Planning, and<lb/>
moderata fa the panel oi The Future of<lb/>
Small Towns, said the seminar will<lb/>
"reserve a good portioi of the time fa<lb/>
open discussion<lb/>
According to James R. Birchard,<lb/>
president of Student Planning Association,<lb/>
and also coadinata of the seminar, said<lb/>
the panels will be "loose question and<lb/>
answer type famat<lb/>
Birchard also cited Tom Richter of the<lb/>
Nath Carolina Department of Natural and<lb/>
Economic Resources and Whit Marow fa<lb/>
their professional help in planning the<lb/>
seminar.<lb/>
Anyone interested in the seminar<lb/>
should oontact Alicia Petasen a Wes<lb/>
Hankins at 758-6465 a James Birchard at<lb/>
756-4148.<lb/>
ECU language students<lb/>
go to drama festival<lb/>
Fa the fifth consecutive year, ECU was<lb/>
represented in the Dionysia Festival, a<lb/>
faeign language drama oompetitiai spon-<lb/>
saed by Clemsai University, April 9-10.<lb/>
Collegiate language groups are allowed<lb/>
to perfam in two levels of the oompetitiai,<lb/>
which derives its name from the Greek god<lb/>
of wine.<lb/>
Level one groups perfam an excerpt of<lb/>
a play chosen by the Ctemson aponsas of<lb/>
the festival.<lb/>
Judges watch different renditions of the<lb/>
same play excerpt, and choose winners in<lb/>
the best acta, best actress, and beet oast<lb/>
categates.<lb/>
Winners are chosen on the basis of<lb/>
acting, projection and linguistk; pronunci-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
Level two groups choose their own play,<lb/>
notifying the Dionysia committee in<lb/>
advance of their choice. Judgingis based on<lb/>
the same prerequisites in both levels.<lb/>
ECU was represented in the festival in<lb/>
three areas: French, Level one, Spanish,<lb/>
Level two, and German, Level one.<lb/>
The French graip, directed by Dr.<lb/>
Michael Bassman, perfamed scenes Iran<lb/>
 Ondine' . The Jean Giraudoux play deals<lb/>
with a water nymph who uses her mystical<lb/>
power to win the love of a knight.<lb/>
Spanish perfamers acted out scenes<lb/>
from "Teatro Feminista by Jacinto<lb/>
Benevente. Mrs. Raquel Manning directed<lb/>
the play, which deals with women's<lb/>
liberation in 19th century Spain.<lb/>
German students perfamed  Tobby<lb/>
by Curt Gcetz. They were directed by<lb/>
Gunther Strumpf.<lb/>
In addition to Saturday's play competi-<lb/>
tion, the Dionysia oommittee sponsaod<lb/>
parties fa casts and advisas, and there<lb/>
was a performance of "Woyoek a<lb/>
German play by Geag Buchner, Friday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
The festival ended with award present-<lb/>
ations Saturday afternoon.<lb/>
ECU brought home several prizes. The<lb/>
German group won awards fa best overall<lb/>
cast, and best acta (Terry Gray).<lb/>
Spanish student Jeff Rollins won the<lb/>
best acta award in his categay.<lb/>
All three plays will be perfamed fa<lb/>
faeign language students on the ECU<lb/>
campus in May.<lb/>
JOG ON IN-<lb/>
to a<lb/>
feature<lb/>
writers'<lb/>
meeting;<lb/>
Thursday -3:00<lb/>
New writers welcome<lb/>
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ex-guru V<lb/>
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freshmen<lb/>
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called, is <lb/>
"the busi<lb/>
because o<lb/>
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world's y<lb/>
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FOUN'IAI<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
MAHARA<lb/>
guide hoi<lb/>
through in<lb/>
office of S(<lb/>
advised a<lb/>
year, besid<lb/>
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VI: Shut up<lb/>
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banning t<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 5013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
5<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
Fountainhead transcends to meditator<lb/>
By MORMON NAILER<lb/>
"I.lie is like .1 telephone pole said<lb/>
ex-gum Mahara.li, "long and pointless<lb/>
I he 18 year old founder ol 'I'M, Inc.<lb/>
(Transcendental Meditation religious cor-<lb/>
poration) will be one ol the many incoming<lb/>
freshmen next fall quarter.<lb/>
His Holiness, as he insists on being<lb/>
called, is planning to major in what he calls<lb/>
"the business philosophy" and chose EZU<lb/>
because ol his below average SAT scores.<lb/>
The following is an exclusive FOUN-<lb/>
IAINHEAD interview with probably the<lb/>
worlds youngest defunct business presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
LOUNi A1NHEAD: What made you decide-<lb/>
to attend EZU?<lb/>
MAHARA II: Is my humble ambition to<lb/>
guide wonderful University to Nirvana<lb/>
through introspection and meditation from<lb/>
office of SOA President. Admissions office<lb/>
adiscd against submitting my bid this<lb/>
year, besides I missed the deadline. I plan<lb/>
to apply next year, and give newly elected<lb/>
President benefit of my religious counsel-<lb/>
ing lor nn regular lee.<lb/>
F: I meant. wh 1I rather than some<lb/>
other institution in some other part ol the<lb/>
States, or thewald?<lb/>
M: Do not ask Guru the whys and<lb/>
wherefores of his wonderful life and<lb/>
ambition. I know my heart, and you know<lb/>
ours, please understand.<lb/>
r: Is it true that your SA I scores were too<lb/>
ovv for most universities to accept you, and<lb/>
� ou arc not welcome in most countries?<lb/>
VI: I hat is not true at all.<lb/>
: But I have the records right here<lb/>
VI: Shut up foolish American. Put none of<lb/>
his that you say in the newspaper.<lb/>
: Let's change the subject. I hear you arc<lb/>
)lanmng to become involved with all<lb/>
ivailable mind-expanding experiences<lb/>
available in the area. Are those your<lb/>
words<lb/>
M: Yes. I am particularly interested in<lb/>
what the natives here, an t they called<lb/>
StudentS?)tt:s what you students call<lb/>
Downtown. I shall like to visit the place<lb/>
when it is said Nirvana is reached by a<lb/>
great many people twice each weekend.<lb/>
And people talk of THC, something that<lb/>
brings self-realization.<lb/>
E: I don't know who you've been talking to.<lb/>
M: Most wonderful drama major, he tells<lb/>
me wondrous thing about place. I know<lb/>
III like.<lb/>
I Let's change the subject again. Why did<lb/>
you leave your 'I'M Inc It is generally<lb/>
known that your mother publidy de-<lb/>
nounced what you were doing, and I heard<lb/>
one follower say that he could not love a<lb/>
boy when his mother did not.<lb/>
M: Shut up. Do not print in your<lb/>
newspaper what you say.<lb/>
F: Well. 1 guess that is about it Mahara Ji.<lb/>
M: You will call me your holiness.<lb/>
F: This is about all 1 have time for Your<lb/>
Holiness.<lb/>
M: But do you not want some religious<lb/>
advice?<lb/>
F: I'm sorry, maybe some other time.<lb/>
M: Maybe some, how say, profound<lb/>
quotes? Something like 'Life is round, yet<lb/>
straight and true' or 'life is hard and solid,<lb/>
yet easy and soft'?<lb/>
F: Or Pretty yet ugly' or tangerine yet<lb/>
apple<lb/>
M: That is good. But I have many more.<lb/>
When hard you can't be beat, hut when<lb/>
soft you get<lb/>
E: Shut up Your Holiness.<lb/>
BREAK e�h W<lb/>
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McGinnis Auditorium, 8:15<lb/>
April 14th &amp; 15th<lb/>
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wmmm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040037_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 6013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
"mm<lb/>
State passes strike resolution<lb/>
The North Carolina State University<lb/>
Student Senate recently passed two<lb/>
resolutions calling for a campus-wide<lb/>
student strike against the proposed<lb/>
reduced drop period and will hold another<lb/>
strike if the administration decides to<lb/>
shorten this drop period.<lb/>
The proposed strike will be held<lb/>
Tuesday, April 13th with a wide variety of<lb/>
campus and student speakers.<lb/>
One major reason behind the student<lb/>
opposition to the reduced drop period is<lb/>
that the students nor the university will<lb/>
benefit from the reduction.<lb/>
The NCSU Student Senate is urging all<lb/>
professors to either suspend classes on that<lb/>
day or hold review sessions at a later date<lb/>
since final exams are approaching.<lb/>
NCSU students are using the strike as<lb/>
an effective too) in trying to influence the<lb/>
administration in making a policy change<lb/>
that totally negates student needs.<lb/>
There is a general feeling among NCSU<lb/>
administrators that the strike would be<lb/>
effective if carried through and action by<lb/>
the Student Senate would also be listened<lb/>
to.<lb/>
Student Senators are taking an active<lb/>
role in the strike passing out petitions for<lb/>
students to sign in opposition to the drop<lb/>
period reduction.<lb/>
There are mixed feelings on the NCSU<lb/>
campus about the proposed strike and<lb/>
while some are in favor of it, others feel the<lb/>
decision to strike is an irrational one.<lb/>
One Student Senator feels that the class<lb/>
strike should be the last alternative to<lb/>
policy changes on campus.<lb/>
Other viable alternatives that are being<lb/>
scrutinized by the NCSU student body is a<lb/>
rally with some hint of organization and<lb/>
effectiveness.<lb/>
Whatever the outcome, the students at<lb/>
NCSU are taking their grievences before<lb/>
the entire campus and it is only through<lb/>
student support that any kind of change<lb/>
can be accrued in favor of the students.<lb/>
LAMPOON<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
meeting or an editorial. Somebody was<lb/>
really hard up for material to write an<lb/>
editorial on if all they could find to<lb/>
comment on was our lampoon edition,<lb/>
Taylor contended<lb/>
The Fountainhead editor pointed out<lb/>
that all the unfavorable comments heard so<lb/>
far have come from off campus.<lb/>
 The people we put this paper out for -<lb/>
the students- have had nothing but praise<lb/>
for the paper. The only reactions I have<lb/>
heard have been very favorable about the<lb/>
paper. In fact, some of the people we poked<lb/>
the most fun at have been the first to tell us<lb/>
they liked it Taylor continued.<lb/>
�'We did not print this paper fa the<lb/>
community at large. It is just something<lb/>
that we do every year to give us a chance to<lb/>
make fun of campus organizations as well<lb/>
as ourselves. I think we were basically fair<lb/>
with the paper since we took a few good<lb/>
shots at ourselves in the paper Taylor<lb/>
continued.<lb/>
"I think it was overall a good paper.<lb/>
And, my staff did a good job putting it<lb/>
together. If I had it to do over again about<lb/>
the only thing I would do differently would<lb/>
be do a better job of using the word<lb/>
censored on that photo on the front. But,<lb/>
beyond that, I will stand by the paper<lb/>
Taylor concluded<lb/>
�wwvw<lb/>
POEMS WANTED<lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA SOCIETY OF POETS is compiling<lb/>
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Drop note in Box 3041 in Hist. Dept.<lb/>
FLEA MARKET - Pitt County Fairground<lb/>
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COPY: Fountainhead tries to publish only legitimate classifieds. Fountainhead<lb/>
reserves the riaht to reject any and all ad copy that, in its opinion, is objectionable.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
The Contrast' is adequately title<lb/>
Editor's Note: We felt the complexity and<lb/>
length of the production deemed necessary<lb/>
a "Rose and Thorn" type review.<lb/>
Rose - SUE ELLEN McCLOUD<lb/>
Royal I Tyler's play, "The Contrast<lb/>
opened Wednesday night in McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium, and if nothing else is<lb/>
adequately titled. The play is an entire plot<lb/>
c' contrasts which vary in method,<lb/>
presentation and context. The opening<lb/>
prologue creates a medium for the<lb/>
contrasts which is maintained throughout<lb/>
the production. In this number the contrast<lb/>
presented is between American patriots<lb/>
and the socially refined Americans who<lb/>
favor the "continent<lb/>
One particularly delightful medium<lb/>
Tyler employs for his contrasts is found in<lb/>
the music and lyrics of Don Pippin and<lb/>
Steve Brown. The conception of colonial<lb/>
Americans singing their "hearts' desires"<lb/>
to the rhythm of the cha-cha and the old<lb/>
soft shoe is ridiculous to the point of<lb/>
hilarity. This contrast between setting,<lb/>
1787 New York, and music is defined even<lb/>
clearer in the choreography of Mavis Ray.<lb/>
One of the better scenes using this<lb/>
technique occurs between Jonathan, Dan<lb/>
Nichols, and Jenny, Mary Ann Franklin.<lb/>
The two servants become acquainted in the<lb/>
parlor of a proper colonial home, and by<lb/>
the end of the scene, perform a hoe-down<lb/>
on stage. An interesting and amusing<lb/>
technique, it worked well, as the<lb/>
audience's pleased response indicated.<lb/>
While the orchestra, directed by Barry<lb/>
Shank, sufficiently performed the musical<lb/>
selections, there were definite problems<lb/>
with timing between orchestra and stage.<lb/>
The costumes, designed by Carol Beule<lb/>
gracefully reflected the contrasts between<lb/>
the flamboyant social vanities of the<lb/>
continent and the practical colonists. They<lb/>
were exceptionally tailored, in keeping<lb/>
with the era. The ingenuity of design was<lb/>
highlighted in a dressing room scene in<lb/>
which Charlotte, Bar ara Richardson,<lb/>
attired herself. The gown, coming together<lb/>
piece by piece, revealed the artistry in<lb/>
sequence and design of costuming.<lb/>
The quality of the product ion as a whole<lb/>
was found lacking, with definite problems<lb/>
in unity and characterization. There were<lb/>
some notable performances, however,<lb/>
given by Rocney Freeze, in the role of<lb/>
Jessamy, and Dan Nichols as Jonathan.<lb/>
Freeze maintained his refined continental<lb/>
air throughout the play despite several<lb/>
difficult transitions concerning his status to<lb/>
other characters. Although continually<lb/>
tripping or bumping into chairs and walls,<lb/>
he managed to retain his poise and control<lb/>
as Jessamy. Nichols virtually filled the<lb/>
stage with his hilariously effective per-<lb/>
formance of the naive country bumpkin<lb/>
come to town. Although his off-key singing<lb/>
seemed aistracting at first, further deve-<lb/>
lopment of his character revealed this trait<lb/>
CONSTANCE RAY as Letitia in Royal Tyler s "The Constrast" per famed at ECU last<lb/>
week. Photo by Kip Sloan<lb/>
as essential to tne determined, laughable<lb/>
Jonathan. "A Hundred Thousand Ways<lb/>
a musical number which Nichols and<lb/>
Freeze share, displays their individual<lb/>
talents beautifully, to the obvious delight<lb/>
of the audience.<lb/>
Amy Boyce, as Maria, delivered with<lb/>
an exceptionally controlled soprano, sever-<lb/>
al less exceptional songs. Yet her flowing,<lb/>
confident voice was secure enough to<lb/>
overcome the weaknesses of the songs.<lb/>
Although portraying the relatively small<lb/>
part of Jenny, Mary Ann Franklin was very<lb/>
effective. The fresh uninhibited manner in<lb/>
which she delivered and based her<lb/>
character made her brief appearance on<lb/>
stage a lasting one. Constance Ray<lb/>
provided amply in her characterization of<lb/>
Letitia, yet there were some apparent<lb/>
problems in delivery and vocal inflection.<lb/>
The play lacks unity and dees not flow<lb/>
as smoothly as it could. With this lack,<lb/>
and the low level of character work, the<lb/>
comic episodes worked well, and the result<lb/>
was a very entertaining show.<lb/>
Thorn - DA VID R. BOSNICK<lb/>
With an opening number that looked<lb/>
and sounded like milk bottles and small<lb/>
animals being thrown downstairs, the play<lb/>
"The Contrast gradually improved to<lb/>
the point where it might have been<lb/>
successful but for the performance of a few<lb/>
but important characters.<lb/>
Bill Vanr, is tone deaf, or tone dead, or<lb/>
just dead. Chosen as Colonel Manly for his<lb/>
good looks and build, rather than his acting<lb/>
and vocal abilities, he displayed the talent<lb/>
to play Lil Abner in a small summer camp<lb/>
production and nothing more. Awkward<lb/>
and uncomfortable on stage, his lack of<lb/>
vocal control was painfully emphasized by<lb/>
the superb soprano of Amy Boyce. At the<lb/>
high notes he became breathy and<lb/>
inaudible and in an attempt to compensate<lb/>
he shouted the few notes in his range. He<lb/>
read his Iineb with little feeling and seemed<lb/>
almost plastic on stage.<lb/>
Charlotte (Barbara Richardson) while<lb/>
not vocally talented did a creditable job of<lb/>
playing the coquette.<lb/>
Letitia (Constance Ray) was nondescript<lb/>
Her performance neither added nor<lb/>
detracted from the show and it is to her<lb/>
aedit that she not attempt to pad her part<lb/>
with needless affectations. Much the same<lb/>
can be said for Doug (Mr. Dimple) Burnett.<lb/>
Her characterization lapsed at points late<lb/>
in the show but excusing certain vocal<lb/>
"peculiarities" ne was vital and humorous<lb/>
in his interpretation.<lb/>
The uninspired set seemed to trouble<lb/>
the players as they were constantly having<lb/>
to move great distances upon cue to being<lb/>
numbers or receive props. This aocounts<lb/>
for the poor timing, which indicates<lb/>
improper or lazy rehearsal techniques by<lb/>
the director. This is another poor pro-<lb/>
duction by Mr. Loessin who seems happy<lb/>
to type-cast his characters and to hell with<lb/>
their abilities (or lack of same). One must<lb/>
question the amount of directorial indsive-<lb/>
ness imbued this production. The players<lb/>
seemed to be groping, as if they, as a<lb/>
group, lacked a direction in which to take<lb/>
the show.<lb/>
The usually excellent choreography of<lb/>
Mrs. Ray was disappointing in only two<lb/>
spots. The number, "A Woman Rarely<lb/>
Ever in which Charlotte and Letitia move<lb/>
to the fore and then lean together was too<lb/>
programmed and stiff. The lack of<lb/>
effectiveness and grace of the dream<lb/>
sequence was due, in part, to Vann's<lb/>
clumsiness and poor use of lighting. The<lb/>
leg area should have been darker such that<lb/>
Van needn't have worn the cumbersome<lb/>
boots of his costume. (In one of the two<lb/>
performances this reviewer observed, the<lb/>
boots caused him to stumble.)<lb/>
Tyler was far from being a great<lb/>
playwright. Lacking substance and motiv-<lb/>
ation, much of his work is flaccid. This<lb/>
show, however, had certain roles that,<lb/>
played properly, could have been marvel-<lb/>
ously entertaining.<lb/>
Jim Hamilton as the father was the<lb/>
worst performance in a<lb/>
major production ever cited by this<lb/>
reviewer. An example of type-casting one<lb/>
cannot fault Mr. Hamilton as much as the<lb/>
director. The actor cannot sing and his<lb/>
talents simply do not lie in the musical<lb/>
comedy genre. He needed to be far more<lb/>
animated and many of his lines were lost in<lb/>
histhroaty bass voice. His number, "Main<lb/>
Chance Mary nicely choreographed, if<lb/>
not for his vocal ineptitude, could have<lb/>
been the best of the show.<lb/>
Often a small facet of a show can<lb/>
represent the many flaws in a production.<lb/>
Frank, played by Terry Daniels, is a<lb/>
graphic example of the problem of poor<lb/>
casting and direction. Possessed of a<lb/>
humorous role, Daniels merely walked<lb/>
about the stage like a broken idiot<lb/>
muttering his lines and devoid of facial<lb/>
expression. He received laughter only<lb/>
because his part was well written. One can<lb/>
imagine how someone with the vitality of<lb/>
Dan Nichols could have animated that part<lb/>
With Nichols and Freeze rising like the<lb/>
Phoenix from the ashes, "The Contrast'<lb/>
had its momentsof enjoyment. Due to poor<lb/>
direction, however, and abysmal casting,<lb/>
what could have been a tight little song and<lb/>
dance, developed<lb/>
moan and stumble<lb/>
into a cacophonous<lb/>
Big City News reporting<lb/>
All The President's Men not an expose<lb/>
By MIKE TAYLOR<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
In a recent interview Robert Redford,<lb/>
ine producer and one of the stars of "All<lb/>
the President's Men said that this much<lb/>
talked about movie was a not a political<lb/>
story, but a story of how a big newspaper<lb/>
operates.<lb/>
After viewing "All the President's<lb/>
Men now showing at the Pitt in<lb/>
downtown Greenville, I will agree with<lb/>
Redford. The story is not a political expose,<lb/>
although recent memory of the events that<lb/>
the story deals with will make it political in<lb/>
most minds. The real story is in the latest<lb/>
hit for Redford and Dustin Hoffman, that of<lb/>
investigative reporting and the behind the<lb/>
scene operations of a big city newspaper.<lb/>
But, whether you view it as a strictly<lb/>
political film, or or as a story about a<lb/>
newspaper-you can't help but agree on<lb/>
one thing-it is a good movie that will no<lb/>
doubt be a box office smash and well worth<lb/>
the price erf admission at the Pitt.<lb/>
Everyone knows the story. Five burglar<lb/>
are nabbed in the act of bugging Nationa<lb/>
Democratic Headquarters in the Watergati<lb/>
Complex on the night of June, 17, 1972.<lb/>
It first appears to be nothing more thar<lb/>
a routine breakin until the name of a WhiU<lb/>
House operative E. Howard Hunt isfoun<lb/>
Continued on page 9<lb/>
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mmm<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
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HUNT<lb/>
Continued from page 8.<lb/>
in the address book of two of the burglars<lb/>
and from there Hoffman, as Carl Bern-<lb/>
foroed the resignation of President Richard<lb/>
M. Nixon, in August of 1974.<lb/>
Redford as the cautious Woodward who<lb/>
wants to be sure of the facts before going to<lb/>
print. Hoffman meanwhile is the "quick to<lb/>
print" Bernstein who does not have to be<lb/>
UNCOVERING A SCANDAL - Dustin Hoffman plays Carl Bernstein, a Washington Host<lb/>
reporter.<lb/>
stein, and Redford, as Bob Woodward, do<lb/>
the best job of investigative reporting<lb/>
turned in on film.<lb/>
For the next two hours or so Hoffman,<lb/>
and Redford, do an excellent job develop-<lb/>
ing the story of the oentury.<lb/>
Persistence is the word for the day as<lb/>
the dynamic duo simply refuse to take no<lb/>
for an answer. Battling a wall of silence<lb/>
from the people involved with the<lb/>
presidents re-election campaign, from the<lb/>
FBI and even taking on higher ups in their<lb/>
own newspaper, The Washington Post,<lb/>
Redford and Hoffman turn what the White<lb/>
House once called a "third rate burglary<lb/>
attempt" into the story that eventually<lb/>
be sure of his facts. Redford is the rookie,<lb/>
only nine months on the Post staff, whiTe<lb/>
Hoffman is something of an egotistical<lb/>
veteran.<lb/>
Together they play off each other just<lb/>
enough to produce the friction that<lb/>
reportedly does exist between the real<lb/>
Woodward and Bernstein. Together they<lb/>
are just credible enough to be the kind of<lb/>
guys who can be working on the biggest<lb/>
story of the oentury, interviewing the<lb/>
kingpins of government and mapping plans<lb/>
over a McDonald's hamburger.<lb/>
Redford and Hoffman are enough to<lb/>
carry the movie but there are a handful of<lb/>
characters in the background that add<lb/>
Tues. -<lb/>
SUPER GRIT<lb/>
Wed.&amp;Thurs<lb/>
Aimc<lb/>
Fri.&amp;Sat CAT KING<lb/>
(Formerly High O Silver)<lb/>
SHIRTS AND 9lF<lb/>
on Evans Street Mall across from "Big WOOW"<lb/>
rrr just armved<lb/>
������������������������<lb/>
EMBROIDERED GA UZE<lb/>
SHIRTS IMPORTED<lb/>
FROM INDIA 15 OFF<lb/>
� KENNINGTON OF CALIFORNIA SHIRTS<lb/>
� GIRLS TOPS<lb/>
much to the production.<lb/>
First, there is "Deep Throat as played<lb/>
by Hal Holbrook. Holbrook, who portrays<lb/>
the inside informant that led Redford and<lb/>
Hoffman to the big breaks on the story,<lb/>
plays the seaetive "Deep Throat" to the<lb/>
hilt. Holbrook is only seen in the dark<lb/>
shadows of an underground parking<lb/>
garage but, his eye contact alone is potent<lb/>
enough to make anyone believe he is the<lb/>
real thing.<lb/>
Then there is Jason Robards as Post<lb/>
Managing Editor Ben Bradlee who at first<lb/>
is very skeptical that there is anything to<lb/>
make out of the Watergate burglary. But,<lb/>
finally he is convinced by the dogged<lb/>
efforts of Redford and Hoffman and "goes<lb/>
front page with the story<lb/>
Jack Warden, as Harry Rosenfield the<lb/>
Metro Editor for the Post, is the man who<lb/>
orginally assigns the story to Redford and<lb/>
Hoffnnan and backs their efforts to give the<lb/>
story good play.<lb/>
Warden and Robards both portray the<lb/>
type of newspaper editors a reporter<lb/>
dreams of, tough ones that will back their<lb/>
reporter to the hilt though.<lb/>
The cast also includes one Tar Heel,<lb/>
Penny Fuller, who makes her motion<lb/>
picture debut as Sally Aiken, one of the<lb/>
many people associated with the Presi-<lb/>
dents Re-election campaign that Redford<lb/>
and Hoffman must pry infor.nation from<lb/>
It isa stay of investigative reporting at<lb/>
it'sbest-althoughglaified somewhat. Out<lb/>
of all the repaters with all the papers in<lb/>
the oountry, only one in a million will find<lb/>
the beat as attractive as that produced by<lb/>
Redfad and Hoffman. But, then few will<lb/>
ever have the stay that Redfad and Hoff-<lb/>
man were waking on.<lb/>
It is a good stay, and a good movie,<lb/>
something nioe fa a change in Greenville.<lb/>
Now Dlavina at Pitt Theatre<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 5013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Student Union undergoing changes for next year<lb/>
By BECKY BRADSHAW<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Changes will be made in the structure<lb/>
of the ECU Student Union under the<lb/>
leadership of newly chosen president,<lb/>
Barry Robinson.<lb/>
According to Robinson, the special<lb/>
concerts committee will become the special<lb/>
events committee and will program events<lb/>
formerly handled by the recreation and<lb/>
special concerts committee.<lb/>
The travel committee will sponsor the<lb/>
Travel and Adventure Films, previously<lb/>
sponsored by the lecture committee.<lb/>
Robinson will add an entertainer<lb/>
committee. It will publish the "Enter-<lb/>
tainer the Student Union's monthly<lb/>
publication.<lb/>
Robinson is planning several theme<lb/>
weeks for next year, include Science<lb/>
Fiction Week, Beatles Week, and Mardis<lb/>
Gras Week. All facets of union program-<lb/>
ming will be used to carry out the themes.<lb/>
Charlotte Cheatham, theater arts com-<lb/>
mittee chairperson, said her committee is<lb/>
planning very unusual and exciting theater<lb/>
fa next year.<lb/>
The committee is planning three<lb/>
productions unless budget cuts limit<lb/>
programming, according to Cheatham.<lb/>
The video tape committee plans to<lb/>
continue the same format and hopes fa no<lb/>
mechanical failures, said Steve Jernigan,<lb/>
chairperson.<lb/>
Next year the Student Union office will<lb/>
be open to suggestions from the student<lb/>
body, accading to Robinson.<lb/>
"We want to get all students involved<lb/>
in the union and we' re looking faward o a<lb/>
very exciting year said Robinsoi.<lb/>
Psychologist lectures to behavior therapy workshop<lb/>
By NANCY HARTIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Charles H. Moae of the ECU<lb/>
psychology department held a two day<lb/>
wakshop in March on behavia therapy fa<lb/>
scaal wakers and counselas in Hatties-<lb/>
burg, Miss.<lb/>
The Hattiesburg Adult Day-Care Cen-<lb/>
ter and personnel from two mental health<lb/>
programs invited Moae to lecture on<lb/>
behavia modification.<lb/>
"Behavia modification, a behavia<lb/>
therapy, is a special type of clinical<lb/>
psychology, explained Moae. It is built<lb/>
upai learning principles derived from<lb/>
research conducted since 1910 and we<lb/>
change only the behavia that the patient<lb/>
wants changed<lb/>
Moae said that behavia thaapy is oie<lb/>
of three maja therapies used by psycholo-<lb/>
gists. Other maja approaches are the<lb/>
humanistic approach, which includes a<lb/>
variety of techniques from existentialism to<lb/>
the theaies of Carl Rogers, and the<lb/>
dynamic a Freudian approach.<lb/>
Mcore's lecture focused on behavia<lb/>
therapy in partial hospitalization programs<lb/>
and adult activity programs.<lb/>
He explained that a partial hospttaliza-<lb/>
tion program is for the emotionally<lb/>
disturbed who attend a hospital all day and<lb/>
return home at night. Moae said this<lb/>
program allows patients to remain a part of<lb/>
the community.<lb/>
The adult day care program is fa<lb/>
moderately and severely retarded adults.<lb/>
Moae said it also "allows patients to<lb/>
remain a part of their community<lb/>
Moore received his bachelor and<lb/>
master degrees in psychology from ECU,<lb/>
and hisdoctaate and clinical training from<lb/>
the University of Geagia.<lb/>
Moae has taught at ECU fa the past<lb/>
eight years and he previously taught at the<lb/>
University of Nath Carolina at Chapel<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
Science education professor receives award<lb/>
Dr. Frank W. Eller of ECU received the<lb/>
Austin T. Bond award fa distinguished<lb/>
service to science education recently.<lb/>
"I'm nearing the end of my career and<lb/>
this is the highest award in the field.<lb/>
Naturally I'm very pleased, but humble, at<lb/>
having received this award said Eller, of<lb/>
the ECU science education department.<lb/>
Science education is the study of all the<lb/>
fields of science and methods and systems<lb/>
of imparting knowledge in those fields.<lb/>
I consider myself a general scientist<lb/>
with considerable in-depth knowledge in<lb/>
several fields said Eller, who has taught<lb/>
at ECU since 1958.<lb/>
Eller received his Bachelor's degree<lb/>
fromCatawba College and his Masters and<lb/>
Doctaate degrees from Columbia Univer-<lb/>
sity. In addition toteaching at ECU, he has<lb/>
also been a visiting professa in Alaska.<lb/>
The improvidence of the general<lb/>
population with respect to consumption of<lb/>
our expenaaoie resources is one of the<lb/>
greatest factas that affects the quality of<lb/>
our future said Eller.<lb/>
The answer to the pressing energy<lb/>
problem lies in development of new<lb/>
sources, ntf conservation, according to<lb/>
Eller.<lb/>
"Conservation will na keep mankind in<lb/>
its present state of technological living.<lb/>
CTiincur cdcpiai<lb/>
"What we need is a aash program in<lb/>
energy development such as we had fa our<lb/>
space program<lb/>
Nuclear energy is safe and should be<lb/>
emphasized at the moment, according to<lb/>
Eller. Solar energy also should be<lb/>
researched further and developed to where<lb/>
it can be used.<lb/>
"Mr self direction is what we need<lb/>
said Eller.<lb/>
" I see no hope that in the long haul the<lb/>
freedoms we now enjoy will be maintained<lb/>
because of our inadequate resources.<lb/>
'The most pressing issue facing<lb/>
mankind today is the development of<lb/>
energy sources to maintain air techno-<lb/>
logical civilization<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 5013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
i �! i�iini�iiniiwmi � imnwwii<lb/>
n<lb/>
�M<lb/>
Union art series completes successful year<lb/>
n dct sts v dd A rC-LJ a i a -n- . .  vAr,t.�,�i �4: i-i. � oot c anH h Qfron i nnc arrrH i n<lb/>
eyfi�CKyeflAOSHlV<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Student Union art exhibition<lb/>
committee is nearing completion of a sue<lb/>
cessful second year of programming.<lb/>
The committee has successfully estab-<lb/>
lished an atmospheric concept which is<lb/>
symbolized in the logo "lllumina"<lb/>
This was the first year of the gallery in<lb/>
Mendenhall, which lent itself to the more<lb/>
conventional realms of art exhibition,<lb/>
according to Brent Funderburk, chair-<lb/>
person of the art exhibition oommittee.<lb/>
Having established the gallery as a<lb/>
center for art on campus, the committee is<lb/>
now ready to hreak down the barriers of<lb/>
conventional art, said Funderburk.<lb/>
"We plan to have more multi-media<lb/>
events, such as this year's Content of<lb/>
Water Color show, which featured a film,<lb/>
exhibition and reception said Funder-<lb/>
burk.<lb/>
The committee plans more outdoor art<lb/>
activities, such as de.nonst rat ions, con-<lb/>
Med School appoints new professor<lb/>
The ECU School of Medicine and Dr<lb/>
Michael R. Schweisthai, Chairman of its<lb/>
Department of Anatomy, announced the<lb/>
appointment of Dr. R. Frederick Becker as<lb/>
Professor of Anatomy.<lb/>
Primarily a neuro-anatomist, Dr.<lb/>
Becker will be coming to Greenville from<lb/>
his post at Michigan State University. A<lb/>
native of Methuen, Mass he has<lb/>
previously held academic appointments at<lb/>
the School of Medicine, Northwestern<lb/>
University, the University of Washington,<lb/>
Jefferson Medical College, and Duke<lb/>
University. Dr. Becker has been involved<lb/>
in extensive research regarding the<lb/>
anatomy and physiology of the fetus and<lb/>
has published over 75 articles and books in<lb/>
his field; several books which he has<lb/>
co-authored have been considered tc be<lb/>
classic textbooks in anatomy.<lb/>
Dr. Becker received his B.S. and M.S.<lb/>
degrees from the University of Massachu-<lb/>
setts and his Ph.D. in Fetal Physiology<lb/>
from the Department of Anatomy at the<lb/>
Medical School, Northwestern University.<lb/>
He holds membership in several profes-<lb/>
sional scientific and educational societies,<lb/>
such as the American Anatomical Associ-<lb/>
ation, the New York Academy of Science,<lb/>
the American Association fa the Advance<lb/>
ment of Science, the Southern Soaety of<lb/>
Anatomist, the Society of Sigma Xi, and<lb/>
the American Association of Medical<lb/>
Colleges.<lb/>
Dr. Becker is married and the father of<lb/>
two children.<lb/>
Outstanding Women awards presented<lb/>
Approximately 95 women students at<lb/>
ECU were recognized as Outstanding<lb/>
Women of 1976 at a special campus<lb/>
ceremony last Thursday niqht.<lb/>
The awards we.e given in conjunction<lb/>
with ECU'S annual Women's Awareness<lb/>
Week (April 4-10), and reoognized out-<lb/>
standing women of various academic<lb/>
departments and in several athletic fields,<lb/>
as well as ECU'S marshalls and women<lb/>
nominees to this year's "Who's Who<lb/>
Among Students in American Universities<lb/>
and Colleges<lb/>
Women's Awareness Week award<lb/>
recipients included students from 29 North<lb/>
Carolina counties, eight other states and<lb/>
the District of Columbia, and the Republic<lb/>
of China and West Germany.<lb/>
Among guests at the awards oeremony<lb/>
and a special reception were parents of<lb/>
award recipients and ECU administrative<lb/>
officials.<lb/>
A special award and cash prize ws<lb/>
given to sophomore Renate Weaver<lb/>
Thompson, daughter of Herta Weaver of<lb/>
Fayetteville, winner of a Women's Aware-<lb/>
ness Week Essay Contest sponsored by the<lb/>
Eastern Carolina Chapter of the National<lb/>
Organization fa Women (NOW) and the<lb/>
ECU Women's Residence Council.<lb/>
Two honaable mention awards and<lb/>
cash prizes of $10 each were given to senia<lb/>
Anna Marie Finley of Berwyn, Pa. and<lb/>
freshman Linda Ann Kraus of Shippens-<lb/>
burg, Pa.<lb/>
Each contest entrant submitted an<lb/>
aiginai essay on the topic, ' How I Feel the<lb/>
Feminist Movement in America Today Will<lb/>
Affect My Life<lb/>
Featured speaker at the awards cere-<lb/>
mony was Dr. Sandra Thomas, vice<lb/>
president of student affairs at Meredith<lb/>
College, whose topic was "Beyond the<lb/>
Bicentennial<lb/>
Dr. Thomas, a U.S. delegate to the<lb/>
International Women's Year Conference in<lb/>
Mexico City last year, is a reoognized<lb/>
authaity on the status of women in the<lb/>
U.S. and other nations.<lb/>
Women's Awareness Week, an annual<lb/>
spring event at ECU, is observed each year<lb/>
with film presentations, lectures, discus-<lb/>
sions and art exhibits on the campus.<lb/>
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tests, and happenings, according to<lb/>
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Funderburk feels the most neglected<lb/>
type of programming is surprise program-<lb/>
ming.<lb/>
He is working on a concept where<lb/>
activities that don't fit into conventional<lb/>
categories can be "celebrated<lb/>
"We propose to present, once every<lb/>
two weeks in a large room in Mendenhall, a<lb/>
surprise event dealing with the arts The<lb/>
tentative title is Infinity Room said<lb/>
Funderburk.<lb/>
"The room will offer to wackos' on<lb/>
campus a place to be creative and a place<lb/>
where students can have a good time<lb/>
without the previous expectations that are<lb/>
never fulfilled by other events said<lb/>
Funderburk.<lb/>
The committee is also interested in<lb/>
programming in film, such as an ani-<lb/>
mation, according to FunderburK.<lb/>
The committee also plans to have a<lb/>
regular column in the Fountainhead that<lb/>
would serve as a calendar of all local art<lb/>
events.<lb/>
"We want to create unity in all art<lb/>
events in the area and communicate them<lb/>
in a 'high energy' way said Funderburk.<lb/>
Featured this year by the art exhibition<lb/>
oommittee were the Leo Jenkins Painting<lb/>
Show, Indian Images, Summerset, a<lb/>
summer painting class show, and several<lb/>
student shows and competitions.<lb/>
To complete this year's programming<lb/>
the oommittee will present the graduate art<lb/>
show April 25-May 1, and the second<lb/>
annual art show and competition, May 2-9<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
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moving<lb/>
coming<lb/>
Bolton, i<lb/>
Forn<lb/>
$12,200<lb/>
intramur<lb/>
only $13<lb/>
During 1<lb/>
was hire<lb/>
"In<lb/>
weapon'<lb/>
our posil<lb/>
wassfipj:<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
Joe<lb/>
grand t<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
victory <lb/>
after noo<lb/>
Rcen<lb/>
Pete Co<lb/>
hurler a<lb/>
fifth to <lb/>
without i<lb/>
Fa t<lb/>
season r<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
and the i<lb/>
In the<lb/>
reaching<lb/>
advancec<lb/>
single by<lb/>
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In th(<lb/>
when Kei<lb/>
scored or<lb/>
In the<lb/>
five run<lb/>
McCullot<lb/>
the base<lb/>
reached c<lb/>
third. B<lb/>
moved tc<lb/>
brought E<lb/>
Paradi<lb/>
bases on<lb/>
Davis the<lb/>
Roenker,<lb/>
After wal<lb/>
favor of A<lb/>
Koctikc<lb/>
home run<lb/>
batted in<lb/>
Wilmii<lb/>
fifth wher<lb/>
dropped I<lb/>
Stevens.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00040037_0013"/><lb/>
WTTjrT!3iJ � "� y&amp;Siz&amp;SB<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
Mwmiifii iwii an mntwwmwimmn<lb/>
13<lb/>
M<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Money greatest obstacle in meeting Title IX<lb/>
By DIANE TAYLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Part of a series<lb/>
The ECU Athletics Department faces<lb/>
numerous problems in moving toward Title<lb/>
IX compliance by the July 1,1978 deadline.<lb/>
Handed down last year by the<lb/>
Department of Health, Education and<lb/>
Welfare (HEW), the new regulations,<lb/>
which demand equal opportunity for men<lb/>
and women, have uncovered same dis-<lb/>
criminations and posed many definite<lb/>
problems. <lb/>
One of the biggest difficulties facing<lb/>
the athletics administrators is money<lb/>
Of the total $934,900-athletics budget<lb/>
for 1975-76, only $51,375 went to women's<lb/>
athletics. This will not be enough to begin<lb/>
moving toward Title IX compliance in the<lb/>
coming year, according to Catherine<lb/>
Bolton, coordinator of women's athletics.<lb/>
Form 1969 when the women received<lb/>
$12,200 for the total athletigfe and<lb/>
intramural program, their budget7 rose to<lb/>
only $13,160 by the 1973-74 school year.<lb/>
During that time only one woman coach<lb/>
was hired, in 1969.<lb/>
"In 1974-75 Title IX became a real.<lb/>
weapon said Bolton. "It was realised<lb/>
our position of leadership in compettyon<lb/>
was slipping (1972-73 The ECU women's<lb/>
basketball team won the state champion-<lb/>
ship and participated in the nationals. The<lb/>
gymnastics team was third in tryfe region<lb/>
and the women's swim team went to the<lb/>
nationals.)<lb/>
That year another woman's coach was<lb/>
hired and the budget rose to $28,000. Last<lb/>
year a third coach was acquired and the<lb/>
women's budget nearly docked again, to<lb/>
$51,375.<lb/>
"Some remarkable changes have al-<lb/>
ready been wrought, but right now we are<lb/>
in the process of trying to correct that lull<lb/>
from 1972-74 when everyone else was<lb/>
growing and we weren't said Bolton.<lb/>
Bolton would not discJose her request<lb/>
fa the 1976-77 budget pending a meeting<lb/>
this month of the Athletics Advisay<lb/>
Council, an advisay board which will<lb/>
review the budget befae it gees to Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins, ECU chancella, fa approval.<lb/>
"I plan to request that the council<lb/>
consider allowing us to move toward<lb/>
compliance with Title IX she said.<lb/>
"I think in any budgetary dealings what<lb/>
we' re expected to work at and what we ask<lb/>
(fa) are two extremes The real figure<lb/>
probably lies somewhere in between<lb/>
Bolton said.<lb/>
Athletic Directa, Bill Cain, said each<lb/>
sport will probably get a percentage<lb/>
increase in the coming year. Not knowing<lb/>
Pirates take 7-2 victory<lb/>
Joe Rcenker slammed a fourth-inning<lb/>
grand slam to lead the ECU baseball<lb/>
Pirates to a five-run inning and a 7-2<lb/>
victory over UNC-Wilmington last Friday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
Rcenker's blast staked ECU starter<lb/>
Pete Conaty to a 7-0 lead and the ECU<lb/>
hurler allowed two unearned runs in the<lb/>
fifth to win his fourth game of the season<lb/>
without a loss.<lb/>
Fa the Pirates, the win upped their<lb/>
season reoad to 16-4.<lb/>
ECU opened with a run in both the first<lb/>
and the seoond innings.<lb/>
In the first, Pete Paradossi soaed after<lb/>
reaching on a fielder's choice. Paradossi<lb/>
advanced around the bases by virtue of a<lb/>
single by Maoon Moye and a pair of walks<lb/>
to Rcenker and Sonny Wooten.<lb/>
In the second ECU added another run<lb/>
when Ken Gentry walked, stole seoond and<lb/>
soaed on a single by Geoff Beaston.<lb/>
In the fourth the Pirates exploded fa<lb/>
five runs to ice the game. Howard<lb/>
McCullough singled and was replaced on<lb/>
the bases by Robert Brinkley. Beastoi<lb/>
reached at an erra which sent Brinkley to<lb/>
third. Beaston then stole second and<lb/>
moved to third on a passed ball, which<lb/>
brought Brinkley aaoss the plate.<lb/>
Paradossi and Moye walked to lead the<lb/>
bases on UNC-W starter Parker Davis.<lb/>
Davis then served up a gopher pitch to<lb/>
Roenker, who slapped it out of the park.<lb/>
After walking Wooten, Davis departed in<lb/>
lava of Art Hunter, who retired the side.<lb/>
Roonkcr'i roundtripper was his fourth<lb/>
home run of the year and ran his runs<lb/>
batted in total to 16 fa the year.<lb/>
Wilmingtoi's oily scaing came in the<lb/>
fifth when two runs soaed by vrtue of a<lb/>
dropped fly ball by rightfieldt- Charlie<lb/>
Stevens.<lb/>
Randy Ourt and Rick Lancaster lad off<lb/>
with singles fa Wilmington and Conaty<lb/>
rebounded by retiring the next two batters.<lb/>
Conaty appeared out of danger when Mike<lb/>
Good flied a drive to right, but Stevens<lb/>
dropped the ball allowing both runners,<lb/>
going all cut, to soae. The remainder of<lb/>
the game Conaty was nearly unimpreg-<lb/>
nabie, as he allowed only two runners to<lb/>
get as far as seoond base.<lb/>
Following last night's game at the<lb/>
Citadel, the Pirates are to return home on<lb/>
Thursday to fave another conference foe.<lb/>
Richmond, in a 3 p.m. contest at<lb/>
Harrington Field.<lb/>
I<lb/>
mm<lb/>
JOE ROENKER is congratulated by<lb/>
teammates after his grand slam in<lb/>
Saturday s win.<lb/>
m<lb/>
the total projected budget, he could na<lb/>
state how much the inaease would be.<lb/>
"The amount of money to the women's<lb/>
budget doubled last year. It won't double<lb/>
this year, but it will inaease he said.<lb/>
Accading to HEW, Title IX must be<lb/>
met by all federally supported colleges and<lb/>
universities by the 1978 date. Schools not<lb/>
in compliance risk losing all federal funds.<lb/>
However, already existing male sports<lb/>
at ECU will na see budgetary decreases in<lb/>
ader to give and inaease to the women,<lb/>
accading to Cain and Cliff G. Moae, vioe<lb/>
chancella fa business affairs and Ath-<lb/>
letics Advisay Council member.<lb/>
Moae said that he didn't thinK ECU<lb/>
would be in danger of losing federal funds.<lb/>
"In my opinion it (patioisof Title IX)<lb/>
will be thrown out by the courts he said .<lb/>
But if a court battle ensues and parts of<lb/>
Title IX pertaining to athletics are na<lb/>
dismissed, universities will be back again<lb/>
facing inevitabilities fa finding maiey.<lb/>
"If the courts ever face American<lb/>
colleges and universities to comply with<lb/>
Title IX as HEW says they might have to, it<lb/>
will be necessary fa all schools, not just<lb/>
ECU, to double a triple athletic activity<lb/>
fees said Moae.<lb/>
But the athletics department here has<lb/>
been waking to avoid such inevitabilities.<lb/>
They are oonfident of making improve-<lb/>
ments and meeting Title IX standards with<lb/>
a minimum of problems, Bolton and Cain<lb/>
agree.<lb/>
"There has been a readiness on the<lb/>
part of coaches and athletes to comply, said<lb/>
Cain.<lb/>
Last year the woman's athletic offices<lb/>
were moved from Memorial Gym to<lb/>
Minges.<lb/>
"Having men and women's athletics in<lb/>
one facility has necessitated adjustments<lb/>
on all sides said Cain. "The transitions<lb/>
have been made vary smoothly<lb/>
There is, however, a shortage of<lb/>
dressing rooms and offices in Minges.<lb/>
"There's only one locker room fa<lb/>
women and it is shared with the wonen's<lb/>
physical education classes fa changing<lb/>
Bolton said.<lb/>
"We have several plans of what to do<lb/>
about the locker room space. We intend to<lb/>
have it improved by next fall but it<lb/>
certainly won't be solved she said.<lb/>
No starting date has been set fa<lb/>
building a remodeling at Minges, accad-<lb/>
ing to Cain.<lb/>
Anaher problem at Minges is the<lb/>
conflict between men and women fa the<lb/>
swimming pool and basketball courts.<lb/>
Bolton said a solution is being waked ai<lb/>
fa sharing the ideal practice hours.<lb/>
Some of the less obvious discrimin-<lb/>
ations between male and female dthief.es<lb/>
are in equipment and certain luxuries.<lb/>
An example cited by Bolton is that male<lb/>
athletes are supplied with shoes. Women<lb/>
are na. Men are supplied with practice<lb/>
unifams which are laundered after each<lb/>
practice. Bolton said the women do na<lb/>
enjoy the same privileges.<lb/>
 Women are in bad need of equipment<lb/>
purchases said Bolton. "Thegymnastics<lb/>
leotards ana hocky kilts are five years old. I<lb/>
had no idea they were so old she said.<lb/>
"If we're going to meet Title IX we're<lb/>
going to have to get more money<lb/>
Whatever else it may mean, Title IX<lb/>
has been met at ECU with varied opinions.<lb/>
"Unfortunately I'm afraid the law must<lb/>
be necessary to make changes that people<lb/>
see need to change but were too stow. The<lb/>
laws are too fast said Bolton.<lb/>
"Title IX means changing in two a<lb/>
three years. Without it, the changes would<lb/>
probably take 20 years aha said<lb/>
Cain replied, "To hail with Title IX. If<lb/>
we're going to have women's programs, I<lb/>
want to have good ones.<lb/>
"Were going to do what's right by the<lb/>
women, I can tall you that right now ha<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Baton appeared to summarize the<lb/>
overall feelings of the administrators<lb/>
dealing with the new law.<lb/>
"Thank God fa Title IX a we wouldn't<lb/>
be where we are now. But it's happening<lb/>
so fast, it's frightening. We don't know<lb/>
exactly where we're going a what the<lb/>
limitations are she said.<lb/>
 Thursday: Scholarships<lb/>
Bolding, Freeman named<lb/>
Athletes of the Year<lb/>
Two ECU athletes, Jim Bolding and<lb/>
Debbie Freeman, were honaed this past<lb/>
weekend by the Greenville Spats Club as<lb/>
the top ooilegiate Athletes of the Year.<lb/>
Bolding was selected as the Male<lb/>
Athlete of the Year among the ooilegiate<lb/>
candidates and Freeman was voted the<lb/>
-emale Athlete of the Year.<lb/>
Bolding starred fa the ECU football<lb/>
:eam this past season, leading the nation in<lb/>
oass interceptions. He was named to the<lb/>
Associated Press second team All-America<lb/>
team. Bolding, a junia safety, was on hand<lb/>
to receive his award from the Spats Club.<lb/>
Bolding established career reoords fa<lb/>
punt return yardage, punt returns and<lb/>
interceptions, as well as individual game<lb/>
and season records in interceptions.<lb/>
Bolding also set two Southern Conferenoe<lb/>
interception reoads.<lb/>
Miss Freeman stars in volleyball,<lb/>
basketball and track at ECU. She is best<lb/>
known fa her basketball skills as she led<lb/>
the NCAIAW in scaing this year and was<lb/>
named to the league's All-State team. Miss<lb/>
Freemen set school reoads in rebounding<lb/>
and soaring this past season, as well as<lb/>
four individual game reoords.<lb/>
Bolding and Freeman each received<lb/>
trophies.<lb/>
Two other athletes were named as the<lb/>
nigh school Athletes of the Year. Mike<lb/>
Brewington, from Rose High School, was<lb/>
selected as Male Athlete of the Year and<lb/>
Beth Turnage, of Farmville Central, was<lb/>
named the Outstanding Women's Athlete.<lb/>
Brewington has signed to play foaball at<lb/>
ECU next season.<lb/>
The Spring Awards Banquet ended this<lb/>
year's Greenville Sports Club schedule.<lb/>
Meetings will resume on September 7.<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
wm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040037_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 5013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Sports Medicine Conference<lb/>
scheduled for coaches, trainers<lb/>
ECU'S annual spring Sports Medicine<lb/>
Conference has been scheduled for May<lb/>
14-15 in the Carol Belk Allied Health<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
The program is designed for athletic<lb/>
coaches and student trainers who wish to<lb/>
acquire necessary skills and techniques for<lb/>
developing a systematic and successful<lb/>
program of treatment and rehabilitation of<lb/>
athletic injuries.<lb/>
The conference has been approved by<lb/>
the N.C. Dept. of Public Instruction and is<lb/>
expected to receive endorsement again this<lb/>
year by the National Athletic Trainers<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Among the topics of conference ses-<lb/>
sions are anatomy of the shoulder,<lb/>
treatment and rehabilitation of shoulder<lb/>
injuries, dental injuries, athletes' skin<lb/>
problems, eye injuries and heat stress.<lb/>
Conference leaders include Drs. James<lb/>
Bowman, William Monroe and Bill Jones,<lb/>
Greenville physicians; Janet Schweisthal,<lb/>
assistant professor of anatomy at ECU; Dr.<lb/>
Richard Evans, Greenville dentist; Green-<lb/>
ville attorney Larry Graham; and Roc<lb/>
Compton, Liz White and Ronnie Barnes ol<lb/>
the ECU sports medicine staff.<lb/>
Further information about the con-<lb/>
ference and application materials are<lb/>
available from the Office of Non-Credii<lb/>
Programs, Division of Continuing Edu<lb/>
cation, ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Netters suffer shutout<lb/>
defeats to ODUandFur man<lb/>
ByKURTHICKMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Coach Neal Peterson's ECU netters had<lb/>
a frustrating time here this past weekend<lb/>
as they were shutout twice, by Old<lb/>
Dominion on Saturday, 9-0, and Furman on<lb/>
Sunday, 9-0.<lb/>
"Very little can be said about our past<lb/>
two matches Peterson said. "We will<lb/>
just have to forget about them and look<lb/>
ahead<lb/>
As can be determined from the score,<lb/>
the Pirates were far from successful<lb/>
against ODU.<lb/>
In the singles matches, Tom Durfee<lb/>
was the only Buc able to send his match to<lb/>
three sets. Durfee was beaten by Louis<lb/>
Morris, 4-6, 6-0, 6-1.<lb/>
Other Pirates who lost in the singles<lb/>
were Jim Ratliff, Randy Bailey, Doug<lb/>
Getsinger, Mark Gallaway, and Bob Neff.<lb/>
Ratliff was defeated by Bill Hughes,<lb/>
6-1, 6-2, Bailey lost to Mark Engels, 6-1,<lb/>
6-1, Getsinger was taken by Jose Benju-<lb/>
mea, 6-2, 6-4, Callaway lost to Bruce<lb/>
Croskery, 6-2, 6-1, and Neff was defeated<lb/>
by Harry Hitch, 6-2, 6-1.<lb/>
ECU was equally unsuccessful in the<lb/>
doubles matches.<lb/>
Durfee and Bailey succumbed to Morris<lb/>
and Benjumea, 6-2, 0-6, 6-2, Getsinger and<lb/>
Neff lost to Hughes and Engels, 6-7, 6-0,<lb/>
6-2, and JoeZahran and Tim Hill yielded to<lb/>
Croskery and Hitch, 6-2, 6-2.<lb/>
By losing to Furman, the Pirates<lb/>
dropped their conference record to 1-3.<lb/>
Durfee, Ratliff, Getsinger, Neff, Mitch<lb/>
Pergerson, and Bailey were defeated in the<lb/>
singles competition.<lb/>
Durfee lost to Jeff Maddox, 6-3, 6-0,<lb/>
Ratliff was beaten by Hap Gore, 6-2, 6-2,<lb/>
Getsinger was defeated by Jack Jones, 6-2,<lb/>
6-1, Neff lost to Jerry Robinson, 7-5, 6-3,<lb/>
Pergerson fell before Jimmy Wynne, 7-6,<lb/>
6-0, and Bailey was beaten by Phil<lb/>
Hammond, 6-4, 6-0.<lb/>
In the doubles matches, Durfee and<lb/>
Bailey lost to Maddox and Jones, 4-6, 6-4,<lb/>
6-0, Getsinger and Neff were taken by<lb/>
Robinson and Core, 7-5, 6-2, and Ratliff<lb/>
and Callaway lost to Wynn and Langdon<lb/>
Brockington, 6-4, 6-0.<lb/>
ECU played Virginia Military Institute<lb/>
yesterday in Lexington, Va.<lb/>
The matches this past weekend left the<lb/>
Pirates with a 4-9 overall record. Their next<lb/>
match will be Friday as they travel to<lb/>
Davidson College.<lb/>
Four Pirate linksters ranked<lb/>
in Conference top ten<lb/>
In statistics released by the Southern<lb/>
Conference last week, FXU has four<lb/>
golfers listed among the conference's top<lb/>
ten golfers<lb/>
Such a standing would normally be<lb/>
encouraging with the conference tourna-<lb/>
ment coming up. except that conference-<lb/>
champion Furman has five golfers listed<lb/>
imong the top ten in the conference.<lb/>
I he Paladins, who went to the NCAA's<lb/>
last year, have the top three-ranked golfers<lb/>
in the conference, with PXU's Steve Ridge<lb/>
and Mike Buckmastcr rounding out the<lb/>
first five.<lb/>
Gerald Weathers is the number one<lb/>
gollcr according to the statistics with a 72.6<lb/>
average and a low round of 70. Weathers,<lb/>
however, has played in only three rounds<lb/>
this yar. Ken I.ell is second with 73.3<lb/>
average lor six lounds and Bobby<lb/>
Bumgardncr stands at 75.0 lor three<lb/>
rounds.<lb/>
F.( Us Ridge has tin lowest round<lb/>
among conference goHcr's, with a W, and<lb/>
his nine-round average of 75.3 puts him<lb/>
just ahead of teammate Buckmastcr, who<lb/>
has a 75.5 average for the same number of<lb/>
rounds.<lb/>
Other FXU golfers in the top ten are<lb/>
Rob Welton, ranked eighth with a 76.7<lb/>
average, and Keith Hitler, ranked tenth<lb/>
with a 77.3 record. Both golfers have<lb/>
recorded their rankings over nine rounds.<lb/>
Jeff Satyshur, from Richmond, is the<lb/>
only golfer not from FXU or Furman who is<lb/>
listed in the top ten. For nine rounds,<lb/>
Satyshur is ranked sixth with an average of<lb/>
7b.3 strokes a round.<lb/>
The fact that ECU and Furman<lb/>
dominate the standings tould be a preview<lb/>
lor I he Southern Conference Golf Champ-<lb/>
ionships which will be held in Florence,<lb/>
S.( from April I4-2I.<lb/>
Furman is the pre-tournament favorite<lb/>
with P.( U and Appalachian State expected<lb/>
lo be the strongest challenges to the<lb/>
Paladins<lb/>
�j-<lb/>
lm<lb/>
; "5:<lb/>
w<lb/>
The Greenville Soccer Club ended their regular season action with an undefeated<lb/>
record by upending N.C. State Club 2-0 in a home match Sunday.<lb/>
The Soccer Club will be representing Greenville ,i the upcoming divisional play-offs in<lb/>
Chapel Hill slated to begin in two weeks. The Greenville team ended the season with a<lb/>
5-0-1 record.<lb/>
Women harriers ninth<lb/>
EC U's women's track team finished<lb/>
ninth out of ten teams this weekend in the<lb/>
Murray Invitational Track and Field Meet<lb/>
held in Murray, Ky. Murray, the host<lb/>
school, won the individual championship<lb/>
with 127Vj points. ECU finished with 24<lb/>
points.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates did place in six events<lb/>
though, with the highest finish by miler<lb/>
Velma Thompson.<lb/>
Thompson won second in the mile with<lb/>
a time of 5:42.7.<lb/>
Two ECU women Dlaced in two events.<lb/>
Debbie hreeman placed third in the<lb/>
shotput and fourth in the discus, as she<lb/>
turned in her all-time best throw in the<lb/>
discus. Sherry Rape took a fourth in the<lb/>
two-mile run and a sixth in the three-mile<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Cathy Majors was the only other Pirate<lb/>
to place as she finished in sixth place in the<lb/>
high jump.<lb/>
The ladies will be at home this<lb/>
afternoon in their only home meet of the<lb/>
season against William and Mary at the<lb/>
Bunting Field.<lb/>
Person takes first place<lb/>
East Carolina's Marsha Persons finish-<lb/>
ed first in the NCA1AW golf tournament<lb/>
held in Durham last weekend.<lb/>
Person fired a two-day total of 170 to<lb/>
outdistance defending champion Jan Dis-<lb/>
gue on the first-hole of sudden death<lb/>
competition. Barbara Haverty, also of<lb/>
ECU, finished third in the tournament.<lb/>
Miss Person also won the longest drive<lb/>
award and was the low medalist by virtue<lb/>
of her first-place finish. Haverty's two day<lb/>
total was 14.<lb/>
Despite the expertise of Miss Person<lb/>
and Miss Haverty, ECU could not break<lb/>
into the top four as Wake Forest finished<lb/>
first. North Carolina second, Duke third,<lb/>
and Appalachian State fourth.<lb/>
I he women's next competition will be<lb/>
next weekend in the Greensboro Invita-<lb/>
tional next weekend at the University of<lb/>
North Carolina-Greensboro.<lb/>
WP<lb/>
mmrmm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Thet<lb/>
week is<lb/>
and Wo<lb/>
through<lb/>
this year'<lb/>
set as th<lb/>
Any inte<lb/>
bers are<lb/>
Office fo<lb/>
informati<lb/>
Horse<lb/>
Archery i<lb/>
Co-Recre<lb/>
gram thij<lb/>
for both c<lb/>
April 30.<lb/>
include c<lb/>
students<lb/>
and are u<lb/>
Softba<lb/>
Women's<lb/>
week. Se<lb/>
averaging<lb/>
football te<lb/>
macallits,<lb/>
after their<lb/>
Hellionsh<lb/>
for three i<lb/>
The d<lb/>
teams, or<lb/>
poor. Sign<lb/>
average c<lb/>
games bui<lb/>
Ha<lb/>
East C<lb/>
in two me<lb/>
well with<lb/>
Five n<lb/>
Duke Olyi<lb/>
four of th<lb/>
Tom V<lb/>
(50-6) an<lb/>
George Ja<lb/>
jump (224<lb/>
(46-9 Va) t<lb/>
Sam PI<lb/>
gotten ov<lb/>
placed thii<lb/>
with a 14.i<lb/>
Calvin<lb/>
per for man<lb/>
21.6 time<lb/>
Alstcx car<lb/>
time on th<lb/>
seconds si<lb/>
In the<lb/>
most of th�<lb/>
victory reg<lb/>
440 yard c<lb/>
Freeman t<lb/>
time. Rotx<lb/>
a 49.9 doc<lb/>
Mike I<lb/>
placed sea<lb/>
triple jum<lb/>
47-4 Va.<lb/>
East Q<lb/>
the long jui<lb/>
with a 22-1<lb/>
at 22-8 an<lb/>
jump of 22<lb/>
Others<lb/>
Watson in<lb/>
and Al Mot<lb/>
went over I<lb/>
East G<lb/>
their secot<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
15<lb/>
�t<lb/>
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P<lb/>
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rth in the<lb/>
hree-mile<lb/>
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aza<lb/>
) 7 p.m.<lb/>
?S<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
Softball popularity among students is great<lb/>
By LEONARD SMITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The big news in intramural sports this<lb/>
week is that registration for both Men's<lb/>
and Women's Intramural Golf will run<lb/>
through Thursday, April 15. The sight for<lb/>
this year'stournament has been tentatively<lb/>
set as the Ayden Golf and Country Club.<lb/>
Any interested students or faculty mem-<lb/>
bers are urged to come by the Intramural<lb/>
Office fa registration forms and further<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Horseshoe Mixed Doubles and Co-Rec<lb/>
Archery are both being offered under the<lb/>
Co-Recreational Intramural Sports Pro-<lb/>
gram this quarter. The registration period<lb/>
for both activities will be April 12 through<lb/>
April 30. Teams in each activity must<lb/>
include one man and one woman. All<lb/>
students and staff members are eligible<lb/>
and are urged to do so.<lb/>
Softball is the top attraction in the<lb/>
Women's Intramural Sports Program this<lb/>
week. Several of the women's teams are<lb/>
averaging more runs per game than most<lb/>
football teams. For example, the Whatcha-<lb/>
macal I its are averaging 25.5 runs per game<lb/>
after their two victories while the Clement<lb/>
Hellions have averaged 28.7 runs per game<lb/>
for three games.<lb/>
The defense on some of the women's<lb/>
teams, on the other hand, is frightfully<lb/>
poor. Sigma Sigma Sigma 11 is giving up an<lb/>
average of 21 runs per game after two<lb/>
games but is in the running for the Golden<lb/>
Glove Award in comparison with Alpha Phi<lb/>
Is 27.7 per game allowance after three<lb/>
games.<lb/>
The teams to watch at this stage of thw<lb/>
game are the Whatchamacallits, the<lb/>
Clement Hellions, Fletcher Blue, 4th Floor<lb/>
Flyers, Tyler I, Chi Omega I, and Delta<lb/>
Zeta I. All of these teams are undefeated<lb/>
and have won their games rather impres-<lb/>
sively.<lb/>
MEN'SSOFTBALL<lb/>
SCHEDULE CHANGES<lb/>
Beginning on Monday, April 12, Men's<lb/>
Intramural Softball games will begin at<lb/>
4100, 5100, and6100 instead of 4:15and 5:15<lb/>
starting times used in the first two weeks of<lb/>
competition. The change in starting times<lb/>
was made in order to allow the great<lb/>
number of Softball teams an opportunity to<lb/>
play more often. The change in starting<lb/>
times will, perhaps, cause problems for<lb/>
some of the teams because many of the<lb/>
players will not get out of class until 350.<lb/>
However, with proper planning and<lb/>
foresight all players should be able to make<lb/>
it to the Softball fields on time. The ten<lb/>
minute grace period will be included in the<lb/>
one hour of regulation playing time. This<lb/>
means that the dock will start on the hour<lb/>
and not at ten after. Players are asked to<lb/>
hustle on and off the fields in order toget all<lb/>
the games in by 7:00 a before darkness<lb/>
sets in.<lb/>
Harriers in two meets<lb/>
vt)<lb/>
By STEVE WHFtLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina strack team was entered<lb/>
in two meets this weekeno and performed<lb/>
well with a limited team that was taken.<lb/>
Five members of the team ran in the<lb/>
Duke Olympic Invitational on Friday and<lb/>
four of them placed in a strong field.<lb/>
Tom Watson placed fourth in the shot<lb/>
(50-6) and sixth in the discus (146-0).<lb/>
George Jackson finished second in the long<lb/>
jump (22-8 1�) and fourth in the triple jump<lb/>
(46-9 14) before getting a sore leg.<lb/>
Sam Phillips seems to have completely<lb/>
gotten over his hamstring injury as he<lb/>
placed third in the 110-meter high hurdles<lb/>
with a 14.6 clocking.<lb/>
Calvin Alston continued his fine<lb/>
performances in the 200 meter dash with a<lb/>
21.6 time to place third. In the trials,<lb/>
Alstcx came in with 21.3 which is a fine<lb/>
time on the electronic clock (which runs .3<lb/>
seconds slower generally).<lb/>
In the Carolina Relays on Saturday,<lb/>
most of the team was performing. The only<lb/>
victory registered by the Pirates was in the<lb/>
440 yard dash. Charley Moss and James<lb/>
Freeman tied fa the top spot with a 49.6<lb/>
time. Robert Franklin finished fourth with<lb/>
a 49.9 docking.<lb/>
Mike Hodge and Herman Mdntyre<lb/>
placed second and third respectively in the<lb/>
triple jump with leaps of 47-5V4 and<lb/>
47-4 V.<lb/>
East Carolina placed three jumpers in<lb/>
the long jump. Willie Harvey finished third<lb/>
with a 22-10 leap while Hodge was fourth<lb/>
at 22-8 and Jackson placed fifth with a<lb/>
jump of 22-3.<lb/>
Others to place fa the Pirates were<lb/>
Watsoi in the shot (50-8) and Curt Dowdy<lb/>
and Al McCrimmon in the high jump (both<lb/>
went over 6-6).<lb/>
East Carolina's mile relay team had<lb/>
their second best time of the year in<lb/>
tmmmmmmtmmm<lb/>
pladng third with a time of 3:16.2.<lb/>
The Pirates' two-mile relay team also<lb/>
placed third in the best time of the year<lb/>
(7:44.6).<lb/>
Coach Bill Carson was real happy with<lb/>
the Pirates' effats in both meets.<lb/>
"We still have a la of people out but<lb/>
the ones we took all did a good job<lb/>
The East Carolina track squad will<lb/>
travel to Greenville, S.C. Saturday to<lb/>
compete in the Furman Invitational meet.<lb/>
Most of the injured will return to action as<lb/>
this is the last meet preceding the<lb/>
conference championships, a meet Carson<lb/>
says "we're gonna win William and<lb/>
Mary has won the last ten conference<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
Lady netters<lb/>
down ODU, 5-4<lb/>
I he ECU Women's tennis team down-<lb/>
ed Old Dominion, 5-4. on Friday to even its<lb/>
season record at I-I.<lb/>
In the fin and deciding doubles<lb/>
match. ECU's Lora Dionis and Marie<lb/>
Stewart downed Old Dominion's Tina<lb/>
Wilson and Janet Poole in straight sets,<lb/>
giving ECU its only doubles victory of the<lb/>
day.<lb/>
The Lady netters had built a 4-2 lead in<lb/>
the singles matches, as Cathy Portwood,<lb/>
Susan Hclmcr. Vicky Loose and Dionis all<lb/>
took their matches. Only Loose failed to<lb/>
win in straight sets for the Prates.<lb/>
The Ladv Pirates had lost the first two<lb/>
singles matches as Dorcas Sunkcl and<lb/>
Stewart fell to Betsy Kessing and Joanne<lb/>
Kenn of Old Dominion.<lb/>
ECU won the next four matches,<lb/>
though, before ODU tied it up by winning<lb/>
the first two doubles' matches, setting the<lb/>
stage fa the dedding win by Diaiis and<lb/>
Stewart.<lb/>
mmm0Mmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
Of the eighty-eight men's softball<lb/>
teams partidpating this quarter, only one<lb/>
team has fafeited out of competitiai thus<lb/>
far in the season. Jones' Tequilla Sunrise<lb/>
has fafeited two games and thus becomes<lb/>
ineligible fa further softball play. The fad<lb/>
that only one team has fafeited out of play<lb/>
shows that the students really are<lb/>
interested in their softball program here at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
While still on the subject of softball,<lb/>
you may find the following scaes of some<lb/>
interest. The P.E. Majas Club scaed the<lb/>
most runs in a game by a single team when<lb/>
they downed Phi Sigma Pi, 24-10, on April<lb/>
1. The Pack scaed 23 runs in a 23-5 viday<lb/>
over the outmanned Grapplin Gaillas oi<lb/>
March 30. Ayocck's Bright's Sluggers also<lb/>
scaed 23 runs and wound up with the<lb/>
biggest margin of viday thus far in the<lb/>
season as they trounced Belk's Mean<lb/>
Machine, 23-4. In aher scaes of interest,<lb/>
the biggest shut-out of the young season<lb/>
occurred on opening day when Scott's<lb/>
Brewers rolled to an 18-0 win over hapless<lb/>
Belk's Tigers. On April 8, Bitterweed Gang<lb/>
had to fight to uphold their preseason<lb/>
hopes in a tough 14-13 win over the Follies.<lb/>
LA TEST PRESIDENT'SCUP<lb/>
POINT STANDINGS<lb/>
The race fa the President's Cup is<lb/>
virtually over in two of the four men's<lb/>
divisions. The latest figures released by<lb/>
the Intramural Offioe indude all points<lb/>
awarded fa Wrestling and the March<lb/>
Intramural Coundl Meeting. In the Dam<lb/>
Division, Scat Dam has amassed 783<lb/>
points to all Dut wrap up their divisional<lb/>
race. Jones' Dam trails badly with 567<lb/>
points, followed in ader by Belk, Ayoock,<lb/>
Slay, and Umstead with 412, 406,15�, and<lb/>
80 coints respedively.<lb/>
Herb's Superbs (639) leads second<lb/>
place Bitterweed Gang (369) by 270 points<lb/>
in the race fa the Graduate-Independent<lb/>
Division's President's Cup. They are<lb/>
followed by The Desperados (294), The<lb/>
Pack (254), Follies (243), Lafayette Holiday<lb/>
(236), and Bamboo (173).<lb/>
The Club Division lead belongs to the<lb/>
P.E. Majas Club (708). However, Phi<lb/>
Epsilon Kappa (693.5) is in a good position<lb/>
to grab the cup if they can win their<lb/>
divisional softball aown. B.S.U. (467),<lb/>
AFROTC (345.5), and Phi Sigma Pi (142)<lb/>
are the remaining also-rans.<lb/>
The real race fa the President's Cup is<lb/>
iftthe Fraternity Divisioi where four teams<lb/>
still remain in good position to make a<lb/>
move fa the cup. Kappa Alpha (669.5)<lb/>
leads by virtue of their very strong Fall<lb/>
Quarter perfamance while Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
(667) is the real team to watch. Tau Kappa<lb/>
Epsilon (659) and Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
(617.5), however, are na out of the pidure<lb/>
yet. The first four are followed by Kappa<lb/>
Sigma (583.5), Phi Kappa Tau (565.6),<lb/>
Sigma Nu (560.5), Delta Sigma Phi (371),<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega (368), Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
(349), and Pi Lambda Phi (240.5).<lb/>
Rifgaa Shot Raaair Saaa <lb/>
ft Shea Stara<lb/>
111W.4thStiwt<lb/>
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H.L HODGES &amp; COJNC<lb/>
210 East 5th St.<lb/>
JUST ARRIVED AT<lb/>
H. L HODGES&amp; CO.<lb/>
nillHllllHIHHHHUllHllfUl<lb/>
SPRING SHIPMENT<lb/>
OF ADIDAS T-SHIRTS<lb/>
( DIFFERENTCOLORS TO<lb/>
CHOOSE FROM IN 4 SIZES<lb/>
� ALSO ADIDAS TANK SHIRTS<lb/>
&amp; NIGHTSHIRTS<lb/>
�����<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040037_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5013 APRIL 1976<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmnm<lb/>
news<lb/>
Pre-registration ECU marshalls<lb/>
Pre-registration for the School of Art<lb/>
v be held Tuesday evening, April 13 in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium, from 5-8 p.m.<lb/>
Vet benefits<lb/>
All veterans who have not been<lb/>
certified for summer should report to Mrs.<lb/>
Jackson's office during the week of April<lb/>
12, 1976 (pre-registration).<lb/>
All graduate students during a regular<lb/>
quarter are now required to enroll fa 9<lb/>
quarter hours to receive full benefits<lb/>
Print exhibit<lb/>
The Printmaking Department of the<lb/>
School of Art will sponsor an exhibit and<lb/>
sale of approximately 600 original prints<lb/>
from the famed Ferdinand Roten Galleries<lb/>
collection on April 15,1976. The event will<lb/>
be held at Brewster 103B. Along with<lb/>
prints by such masters as Picasso, Goya,<lb/>
Renoir and Hogarth, can be seen works by<lb/>
many of today's American artists, some<lb/>
famous and some not yet famous.<lb/>
Area residents are invited to browse<lb/>
through this outstanding collection of<lb/>
original graphics. A knowledgeable Roten<lb/>
representative will be on hand to answer<lb/>
questions about the prints and the artists<lb/>
and to discuss other prints not in this<lb/>
collection but which may be obtained from<lb/>
the gallery in Baltimore.<lb/>
A world-respected authority on<lb/>
graphics of all types, Roten holds<lb/>
exhibitions and sales at major museums,<lb/>
colleges, art galleries and art centers<lb/>
throughout the U.S. and Canada.<lb/>
The informal displaying of the collect-<lb/>
ion allows visitors to examine at dose<lb/>
range the various graphic techniques of<lb/>
different artists. The exhibit takes place<lb/>
from 10:00 a.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Flying Club<lb/>
Learn to fly. Anyone interested in<lb/>
joining the ECU Flying Club call Alpha<lb/>
Aviation, 752-0655.<lb/>
Frat initiates<lb/>
The ECU chapter of Phi Kappa Phi<lb/>
honor society will initiate 227 outstanding<lb/>
junior, senior and graduate students in<lb/>
ceremonies April 15 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Auditorium.<lb/>
Also to be initiated are Herman G.<lb/>
Moeller of the ECU Corredional services<lb/>
faculty and Troy Pate of Goldsboro,<lb/>
chairman of Trustees.<lb/>
A reception for new members and their<lb/>
families will be given by Chancellor and<lb/>
Mrs Leo W. Jenkins following their<lb/>
initiation ceremonies.<lb/>
Senior show<lb/>
There will be a B.F.A. senior show of<lb/>
ceramics held at the Greenville Art Center,<lb/>
April 10-17. The subject is pragmatic day<lb/>
by Lyn C. Johnson.<lb/>
University Marshalls for 1976-77 are<lb/>
Lottie Lorene Caraway, Donna Lee Comp-<lb/>
ton, Deborah Lynne Corey, Bonnie Lynn<lb/>
Crissman, Billie Mann Davis, Robin<lb/>
Maurer Hammond, Debra Hines, Carolyn<lb/>
Gray Hodges, Diane Elizabeth Kyker,<lb/>
Linda McClain, Mary E. Modlin, Leslie<lb/>
Spahr Moore, Cynthia Lynn Murphy, Ellen<lb/>
Schrader, Mary Susan Strickland, Mary<lb/>
Ellen Warner, Marilyn York Willis, and<lb/>
Donna Louise Wodard.<lb/>
Impersonator<lb/>
Impersonator Murray Solomon will<lb/>
re-aeate the late W.C. Fields on the stage<lb/>
of ECU'S Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre Thursday, April 29, beginning at 8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
In authentic oostumes and make up<lb/>
which takes four hours to apply, Solomon<lb/>
will present the wit and wisoom of Fields<lb/>
as a perfamer and as a persoi.<lb/>
Amoig the Fields roles induded in the<lb/>
presentation are drinker, doda, lawyer,<lb/>
bartender, carnival-show barker and even<lb/>
temperance ledurer. The show is en-<lb/>
hanced by spedal lighting, reoaded tape<lb/>
and several costume changes, and will be<lb/>
conducted with a question and answer<lb/>
period.<lb/>
Solomon says he strongly identifies<lb/>
with W.C. Fields because he disliked<lb/>
children, loved to drink and "didn't play<lb/>
games On stage he will inajrpaate<lb/>
Fields' classic comedy material into<lb/>
glimpses of the immortal comedian's<lb/>
private life.<lb/>
Tickets fa "An Evening with W.C.<lb/>
Fields" are available at the ECU Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhall. The show is<lb/>
part of the Student Union's Ledure Series.<lb/>
Republicans<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the College<lb/>
Republicans on Wed. April 14 at 7 00 p.m.<lb/>
E led ions of officers fa 1976-77 will be<lb/>
made. Noninees are as follows: President<lb/>
Julien Johnson, Debra Epos. Vice presi-<lb/>
dent Jeff Johnson, Roi Hughes, Toby<lb/>
Rogers. Seaetary, Nancy Roundtree.<lb/>
Treasura,Scott Bright. Members and anyone<lb/>
intaested in the Republican party are<lb/>
urged to attend. At 800 Dr. East will speak<lb/>
to the dub. Fa mae infamation a rides<lb/>
call Buzz at 758-9881 a Debra at 758-1278.<lb/>
Alpha Beta Alpha<lb/>
The moithly meeting of Alpha Beta<lb/>
Alpha (Library Srience Fraternity) will be<lb/>
held on Tuesday, April 13 in the Student<lb/>
Lounge of the Library Sdence Department,<lb/>
room 255 at 500 p.m. Plans fa the<lb/>
Washingtai, D.C. trip will be discussed.<lb/>
All members are urged to attend.<lb/>
Legislators<lb/>
Saeening held fa SGA legislatas from<lb/>
Ayaxk, Slay and Greene dams will be<lb/>
held, April 14 at 400 in the SGA office at<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
This is it!<lb/>
Staffing fa Student Union positions is<lb/>
just about oompleted.<lb/>
You can still apply fa a committee<lb/>
position through Wednesday, April 14.<lb/>
Pick up your application in Mendenhall any<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Get involved!<lb/>
Field hockey<lb/>
If you are intaested in playing a<lb/>
learning to play field hockey. You are<lb/>
invited to play Wednesday, April 14, at<lb/>
3:30 in the field behind the Allied Health<lb/>
Building. Come prepared to play. Sticks<lb/>
and balls will be provided. Membas of the<lb/>
1975 intaooilegiate team will dired the<lb/>
session. Faculty as well as students are<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
Thae will be an impatant meeting of<lb/>
the League of Scholars this Wednesday at<lb/>
5.00 p.m. in Brewsta B-102. E led ions fa<lb/>
the upcoming year will be held. Plans fa<lb/>
Scholarship Weekend and the League's<lb/>
Spring Picnic will also be discussed. In<lb/>
addition, a photographer from The<lb/>
Buccaneer will be present to take a pidure<lb/>
of the group fa the yearbook. All membas<lb/>
are enoouraged to be at this meeting.<lb/>
Ceramics show<lb/>
Lyn Carta Johnson, senia student in<lb/>
the ECU School of Art, will show examples<lb/>
of her ceramics and weavings in the<lb/>
Greenville Art Centa April 10-17.<lb/>
A candidate fa the Bachela of Fine<lb/>
Arts degree in art ceramics, she is<lb/>
minaing in design. She is a memba of<lb/>
Delta Phi Delta hona sodety in art.<lb/>
The daughta of V.B. Johnson of 1104<lb/>
Millbrcok Road, Raleigh, Lyn Johnson is a<lb/>
1972 graduate of Sandason High School.<lb/>
Inter-varsity<lb/>
Inta-varsity will have a spedal meeting<lb/>
this week at the regular time and place.<lb/>
Evayone is asked to attend.<lb/>
Ice-cream bingo<lb/>
The Spring Ice-Cream Bingo will be<lb/>
held on Tuesday, April 27th. It will be held<lb/>
in the multi-purpose roan in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Centa. The following prizes will<lb/>
be given out: 2 certificates from Hodges; 2<lb/>
certificates from Razz Jazz; 1 plant from<lb/>
Sunshine Garden Centa; 4 discount movie<lb/>
tickets; 1 catificate fa $25 meal at<lb/>
Houston's a Beef Barn.<lb/>
Along with the bingo and prizes will be<lb/>
free ice-cream in a variety of flavas. This<lb/>
will all take place at 7:30 so ECU students<lb/>
come and enjoyment the refreshments,<lb/>
games and prizes.<lb/>
Black andGold Ball Recruiters<lb/>
The Sixth Annual Black and Gold Ball<lb/>
sponsaed by the Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
Fraternity will be held at the Amaican<lb/>
Legion Hut on May 1,1976 from 9 p.m. to 1<lb/>
a.m. Tickets will be $5.00 pa couple and<lb/>
$3.50 pa person. Live entertainment will<lb/>
be aought to you by L.T.D. Fa additional<lb/>
infamatioi, please oontad Mel Duoken-<lb/>
field in 402-A Belk a phone 752-5347.<lb/>
Special concerts<lb/>
Applications fa Special Concerts<lb/>
Committee are being taken now.<lb/>
National Guard Recruiters will be on<lb/>
campus in the Student Book Stae lobby<lb/>
Wednesday, April 14 from 830-500.<lb/>
Bahai<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
WP<lb/>
m<lb/>
This Thursday evening at 730 p.m. in<lb/>
238 Mendenhall we will discuss the topic of<lb/>
"Women and the New Era If you are<lb/>
intaested in the rde of women in the<lb/>
coming age, please come and join us.<lb/>
Evayone is welcome.<lb/>
Art grad show<lb/>
All Graduate Art Students at ECU are<lb/>
invited to exhibit in this phenomenal event.<lb/>
Work must be presented Wednesday,<lb/>
April 14,1976 to the booth in Mendenhall.<lb/>
The show will go up Sunday, April 25, in<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery, it is necessary to<lb/>
secure the work befae Easta Vacation.<lb/>
Sponsored by ILLUMINA, the ECU<lb/>
Student Union Art Exhibition Committee.<lb/>
mmtmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
French courses<lb/>
In the Fall quarta schedule of Faeign<lb/>
Language courses published in<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, April 8, all French<lb/>
courses above French 1 were omitted.<lb/>
FREN (French)<lb/>
1 Elem. French (M-F 9O0) (5)<lb/>
1 Elem. French (M-F 1200) (5)<lb/>
1 Elem. French (M-F 1200) (5)<lb/>
2 Elem. French (M-F 11 00) (5)<lb/>
2 Elem. French (M-F 1200) (5)<lb/>
3 Inta. French (M-F 1000) (5)<lb/>
3 Inta. French (M-F 1200) (5)<lb/>
3 Inta. French (M-F 1 00) (5)<lb/>
4 Inta. French (M-F 800) (5)<lb/>
4 Inta. French (M-F 11 00) (5)<lb/>
100 Contempaary France (MWF 9.00 (3)<lb/>
103 Review of Grammar (M-F 10.00) (5)<lb/>
220 Fren. Lit. in TRANSLATION<lb/>
(MWF 9.00) (3) Taught in English<lb/>
230a Surv. of Lit. I (MWF 11 00) (3)<lb/>
350g The French Novel (MWF 1 00) (3)<lb/>
 Russian 220 - Nineteenth century prcee<lb/>
IN TRANSLATION, taught in English, is<lb/>
also scheduled fa Fall quarta (MWF<lb/>
11 00) (3)<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
�<lb/>
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