<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00040039_0001"/>
This issue-16pages<lb/>
Circulation 8,500<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina Community for over fifty years<lb/>
VOL 51, NO. 52<lb/>
27 APRIL 1076<lb/>
MM<lb/>
m0m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
ECU Sociologist dies in accident<lb/>
By DENNIS LEONARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The recent death of noted ECU<lb/>
sociologist, Dr. Yoon Hough Kim, was felt<lb/>
deeply by other members of the ECU<lb/>
Sociology Anthropology department. Kim<lb/>
was fatally injured in a bike accident last<lb/>
Wednesday and according to Dr. John<lb/>
Maiolo, Kim died of multiple internal<lb/>
injuries Thursday afternoon.<lb/>
"A truck hit him early Wednesday<lb/>
afternoon, while Dr. Kim was riding his<lb/>
bicycle on Tenth St. heading east said<lb/>
Maiolo.<lb/>
Dr. Kim was a noted sociologist and<lb/>
researcher and began his career in Pusan,<lb/>
Korea as a case worker in the Foster Parent<lb/>
program between 1958 and 1960.<lb/>
From 1960 through 1962 Kim served as<lb/>
a research assistant in the Family and<lb/>
Childrens Center in Minneapolis In 1964<lb/>
Kim oonducted an extensive research<lb/>
project on the social life of the blind, which<lb/>
was later published by the American<lb/>
Foundation fa the Blind. The publication<lb/>
which was later revised and edited, was<lb/>
entitled "The Community of the Blind:<lb/>
Applying the Theory of Community<lb/>
Formation<lb/>
Dr. Kim served as the regional director<lb/>
for the N.C. Crime Victimization Study<lb/>
form 1970 to 1971.<lb/>
During 1972 Dr. Kim oonducted a study<lb/>
of the social lifeof tho blind in Korea under<lb/>
a grant from the Social Science Research<lb/>
Council of New York.<lb/>
In 1974 Kim directed a study of social<lb/>
integration in Greene County in addition to<lb/>
his supervision of the masters thesis<lb/>
projects by a large number of the graduate<lb/>
students in Sociology.<lb/>
Dr. Kim received his B.A. degree from<lb/>
Tong A University in Pusan, Korea. In<lb/>
1964, Kim received the M.A. decree from<lb/>
the University of Minnesota and his Ph.D.<lb/>
in 1967.<lb/>
Dr. Kim came to ECU in 1967 and since<lb/>
that time has been very active in both<lb/>
publications and reseat ch.<lb/>
"We do not know how we are going to<lb/>
fill the gap that his loss brings to the<lb/>
department, because he was such a<lb/>
conscientious and capable person said<lb/>
Dr. Melvin Williams, ECU professor of<lb/>
Sociology.<lb/>
"At this moment it will be particularly<lb/>
difficult to replace him as a supervisor of<lb/>
research programs for graduate students in<lb/>
Sociology<lb/>
"Every faculty member has found him<lb/>
to be always availaole for consultation and<lb/>
assistance in their research. He was the<lb/>
kind of person that was anxious to be of<lb/>
assistance added Williams.<lb/>
According to Paula Walker, of the N.C<lb/>
Despite fund cut<lb/>
DR. YOON HOUGH KIM<lb/>
Professor of SociologyAnthropology<lb/>
Highway Patrol, the driver of the truck was<lb/>
not charged with any violation and the fatal<lb/>
wreck was recorded as an accident.<lb/>
Med School progresses<lb/>
By JIMMY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
The $3.8 million cut in the ECU Medical<lb/>
School budget should not affect the<lb/>
progress of the school, according to Dr.<lb/>
William E. Laupus, Dean of the School.<lb/>
The proposed cut is merely "a<lb/>
postponement of funding according to<lb/>
Laupus.<lb/>
The money was to be spent for the<lb/>
construction of a bed tower at Pitt<lb/>
Memorial Hospital, which would enable<lb/>
the facility to accommodate more patients.<lb/>
The money was appropriated away<lb/>
from the ECU budget because it won't be<lb/>
used until a later date.<lb/>
"We might need the tower next year,<lb/>
we might not need it for three years said<lb/>
C.G. Moore, vice chancellor for business<lb/>
affairs.<lb/>
"It is our understanding that it (the<lb/>
$3.8 million) will be returned to the<lb/>
budget said Laupus.<lb/>
The North Carolina Legislature's Joint<lb/>
Appropriations Conference Committee<lb/>
plans to use the $3.8 million to help raise<lb/>
$61 million for a possible increase in state<lb/>
spending.<lb/>
Of the $61 million to be raised, $26.5<lb/>
million will go fa additional enrollment in<lb/>
oommunity colleges and technical insti-<lb/>
tutes, $15.2 million will help the University<lb/>
of Nath Carolina system with additional<lb/>
enrollment, and $5.9 million to help make<lb/>
up fa an underestimate oi salaries fa<lb/>
public school teachers and principals.<lb/>
In a recent news release, Chancel la<lb/>
Leo W. Jenkins said of the med school,<lb/>
"We are on track We intend tooontinue<lb/>
our vigaous effats and to reach our goal<lb/>
of enrolling our first students during the<lb/>
ooming (1976-77) academic year<lb/>
Bike pathway approved<lb/>
AFTER A WEEK BREAK ECU'S famous wall next to the old Student Union was once<lb/>
again loaded to capacity. These students no doubt were relating adventures of a sunny<lb/>
Easter spent in true vacation bliss.<lb/>
Heavily traveled Tenth St.<lb/>
intersection claims victim<lb/>
By TOM TOZER<lb/>
Managing Edita<lb/>
ECU sophomae, Jeannie Cox, a White<lb/>
Hall resident, was struck by an automobile<lb/>
Monday afternoon while attempting to<lb/>
aoss Tenth St. at thecaner of College Hill<lb/>
Dr.<lb/>
Accading to the out-patient desk at Pitt<lb/>
Memaial Hospital, Cox was still in the<lb/>
emergency room Monday afternoon being<lb/>
evaluated by doctas. Cox will be admitted<lb/>
to Pitt Hospital.<lb/>
Cox was struck by an oncoming vehicle<lb/>
while attempting to aoss Tenth St. on her<lb/>
bicycle and accading to Kelly Jacksai,<lb/>
Greenville Rescue Squad offioer, Cox was<lb/>
in a semi-conscious state when placed in<lb/>
the ambulance.<lb/>
"Three aher witnesses besides the<lb/>
driver of the auto that struck Cox told<lb/>
Greenville police officers that she ran the<lb/>
light said ECU campus police offioer Bill<lb/>
Barnes.<lb/>
"Thegirl (Cox) entered Tenth St. from<lb/>
College Hill Dr. and was hit by a 1972<lb/>
Grand Prix Pontiac heading west into<lb/>
town saia Barnes. "Tomy knowledge, at<lb/>
this time, the driver of the car hasna been<lb/>
charged.<lb/>
"The accident occurred at approxi-<lb/>
mately 1:40 p.m<lb/>
Barnes added that the accident occur-<lb/>
red during the early afternoon when traffic<lb/>
and the flow of students is heavy.<lb/>
mmM�MMMPtM0l<lb/>
By JIM ELLIOTT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Student Government Association<lb/>
Legislature Monday appropriated $12,000<lb/>
fa a city-wide bike pathway program and<lb/>
$4,025 to the Homecoming Steering<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Stating that there have been numerous<lb/>
accidents involving faculty and students,<lb/>
including a recent fatality, and that<lb/>
alternatives are needed because of the<lb/>
overaowded student parking situation, the<lb/>
Bike Pathway Program bill allows the<lb/>
summer Legislature to appropriate $12,000<lb/>
to the Greenville Bikeway Program.<lb/>
Articles to the bill stipulate that this<lb/>
money is appropriated with the under-<lb/>
standing that the city will match the funds<lb/>
and that a supervisay board consisting of<lb/>
an equal number of students and city<lb/>
appointees will be established.<lb/>
The bike pathway appropriation will be<lb/>
used in conjunction with $12,000 the<lb/>
Greenville City Council designated fa the<lb/>
project.<lb/>
The city has already spent $8,000 on the<lb/>
project since its inception in 1974.<lb/>
In his presentation to the Legislature,<lb/>
City Planner John Schofield said the<lb/>
combined appropriations would allow the<lb/>
city to apply fa a matching federal grant of<lb/>
$96,000. Schofield said Greenville would<lb/>
be competing with five other North<lb/>
Carolina cities fa the federal money.<lb/>
"We have a relatively good chance fa<lb/>
the federal funds Schofield, himself a<lb/>
famer SGA President at ECU, told the<lb/>
Legislature. "However, the chances of<lb/>
approval depend on who reviews the<lb/>
application<lb/>
With the federal money the project<lb/>
would only use two-thirds a three-fourths<lb/>
of the available funds, according to<lb/>
Schofield. The remainder of the money<lb/>
would be used to develop an cm-campus<lb/>
bike path, he said.<lb/>
Schofield said that after the bikeway is<lb/>
completed the city will assume all<lb/>
responsibilities fa its upkeep. He also said<lb/>
if the federal grant is not obtained, it is<lb/>
possible money may be allocated fa the<lb/>
program by the state.<lb/>
The application fa the federal money<lb/>
must be in Raleigh by June 1, 1976.<lb/>
After approving two amendment-3<lb/>
which together cut $975 fron the Home-<lb/>
oaning Steering Committee budget a<lb/>
See SGA, page 12.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040039_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 57, NO. 5227 APRIL 1P<lb/>
�mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
EdilorialsCommenlary<lb/>
Newsletters wasteful<lb/>
Last year in the Legislature a freshman legislator sponsored a<lb/>
bill to finance a freshman newsletter.<lb/>
Later that year and now this year that same student supported<lb/>
efforts to publish the Ebony Herald.<lb/>
Now, that same student is pushing for an SGA newsletter.<lb/>
That same student campaigned for SGA President on a platform<lb/>
to save the wasteful spendi.ig of student fees.<lb/>
And, that student, Tim Sullivan, won the election and we hope<lb/>
he can keep that promise in light of his past record when it comes to<lb/>
duplicating publications.<lb/>
The freshman newsletter last year was a duplication of services<lb/>
already available in the Fountainhead.<lb/>
Then the Ebony Herald came out and again a duplication of<lb/>
services and a waste of money.<lb/>
Now Sullivan proposes an SGA newsletter when there is<lb/>
nothing that could go into that newsletter that could not go into<lb/>
Fountainhead.<lb/>
The main idea backed by the SGA appears to be "take your<lb/>
business elsewhere" because they don't like the current paper.<lb/>
No one approached the paper about allocating more space or<lb/>
coverage to the blacks, freshmen or the SGA. Nobody really<lb/>
offered any solid criticism of current publications that would<lb/>
support the need for other supplemental publications.<lb/>
The three papers in mention are duplications and waste. Yet<lb/>
Sullivan campaigned hard to save money.<lb/>
In light of the Legislature's willingness to fund any alternate<lb/>
publication, the "Greeks athletic organizations, day students,<lb/>
and left-handed blond-haired students from Alaska all have a<lb/>
"right" to ask for their own publication.<lb/>
By then there will be no need for Fountainhead so to get the<lb/>
"news" all you will have to do is get copies of the dozen or so<lb/>
alternate publications.<lb/>
The freshman newsletter last fall opened the door to<lb/>
duplication, now the Ebony Herald has come through that same<lb/>
door and Sullivan is apparently working hard to get his newsletter<lb/>
idea through.<lb/>
Admittedly, all these publications are not as expensive to<lb/>
operate as Fountainhead.<lb/>
But, even if they oost a dime, it is a dime wasted. And, then<lb/>
there is the waste of divided manpower and services.<lb/>
There is a need fa a strong student newspaper and currently<lb/>
we think Fountainhead fits the bill.<lb/>
But, the continuous flow of alternate publications does little to<lb/>
boost the paper.<lb/>
The SGA should decide if it wants to fund either "one<lb/>
newspaper" or half a dozen "newsletters<lb/>
Some call it competition for the student paper, but it is not<lb/>
competition, after all we all work for the same people who are<lb/>
required to fund that competition.<lb/>
It is not competition, it is duplication and waste!<lb/>
"Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without<lb/>
newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment to<lb/>
prefe the latter"<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor<lb/>
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer<lb/>
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant<lb/>
Production Manager-Jimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson<lb/>
News Editor-Dennis Leonard<lb/>
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Use<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 East Carolina University sponsored by<lb/>
the Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tueeday and Thursday<lb/>
during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 7584386, 7588367, 758-8308<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non students.<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
I UOADErT WHAT<lb/>
uf forgot<lb/>
fLittle guy 'may get hurt<lb/>
The so-calledlittle guy is the one that always gets lost in the<lb/>
shuffle.<lb/>
And, in the case of athletics it is the minor sports that are the<lb/>
little guys, and they may be very much in danger of getting lost in<lb/>
the shuffle in ECU'S new athletic plans.<lb/>
All the talk about pulling out of the Southern Conference was to<lb/>
protect the football program from being declassified by the NCAA.<lb/>
So, football apparently was the main reason for pulling out.<lb/>
Coupled with that withdrawal was the announcement to enlarge<lb/>
Ficklen and even a blind man could see that the latest endeavor is<lb/>
aimed at "major sports" - notably football.<lb/>
This is fine, if the football program can be improved without<lb/>
cutting the throats of those "minor sports We fear however that<lb/>
in the rush to boost football; wrestling, track, swimming, tennis,<lb/>
golf, and even baseball will pay the price.<lb/>
In swimming and wrestling the Pirates were perennial loop<lb/>
champs. The track program was also strong.<lb/>
Will they still get the support they need while the push is on to<lb/>
boost football?<lb/>
We doubt it. There are already some rumblings of discontent<lb/>
from some in the athletic departments. And, it could get worse.<lb/>
If you have but so much money you can divide it only so many<lb/>
ways. And, with football getting the lion's share that leaves little<lb/>
for the rest.<lb/>
We would hate to see ECU'S fine minor sports program lost in<lb/>
the football shuffle. But, nothing so far has been done to calm our<lb/>
worst fears!<lb/>
Maybe the realization is you can't have your cake and eat it too,<lb/>
(or you can't have a well heeled football program and good minor<lb/>
sports). But, other schools do it. And hopefully ECU can too.<lb/>
We would hate to see those little guys get lost.<lb/>
m<lb/>
t<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
News-Arf<lb/>
Goldsbon<lb/>
Dear Edit<lb/>
Of ail<lb/>
Newspapi<lb/>
The r�<lb/>
printed w<lb/>
To bee<lb/>
the paper<lb/>
The or<lb/>
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positive.<lb/>
So, I w<lb/>
body at E<lb/>
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Yet, they <lb/>
to make fi<lb/>
I woul<lb/>
honky-tonl<lb/>
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point out <lb/>
oelebrated<lb/>
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shown the<lb/>
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And, af<lb/>
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 PS. Please<lb/>
Edi<lb/>
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Gotdsboro I<lb/>
We don<lb/>
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' But we'<lb/>
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All letter<lb/>
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HI be print<lb/>
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The letter<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040039_0003"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5227 APRIL 1976<lb/>
mmmmmmwmmmmmmmmmmmmm � hi litjmam<lb/>
3<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
i<lb/>
L etter to Goldsboro editor<lb/>
defends newspaper<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
News-Argus<lb/>
Goldsboro, North Carolina<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
Of all the repulsive newspaper items I have seen lately, your editorial "ECU Campus<lb/>
Newspaper Insults Journalism" takes the cake.<lb/>
The real insult to journalism lies not in our April 1 edition, but in ihe editorial you<lb/>
printed which was loaded with half-truths at best.<lb/>
To begin with, I would like to see the poll you obviously took that indicated to you that<lb/>
the paper is a source of oonosrn to students enrolled at ECU.<lb/>
The only reaction I have received about the Lampoon edition has been very favorable.<lb/>
All the indications I have seen from the students, staff and faculty have been very<lb/>
positive.<lb/>
So, I would like to know just how it is that your paper can speak for the entire student<lb/>
body at ECU.<lb/>
You would expect the people we highlighted in the paper to be the ones complaining.<lb/>
Yet, they apparently have taken the paper in stride for what it is�just a humorous attempt<lb/>
to make fun of various campus institutions.<lb/>
I would also appreciate it if you would circle all the "language one might find on<lb/>
honky-tonk" walls and send it to me. I don't know what honky-tonks you frequent but<lb/>
they must be pretty Wand if they carry the everyday language we used in our April 1<lb/>
edition.<lb/>
But, what really burns me about your editorial was the contention that this paper has<lb/>
expressed nothing but disrespect for Chanoella Jenkins. I personally challenge you to<lb/>
point out all the times the paper has been disrespectful to the Chancellor. There is one<lb/>
oelebrated occasion that an uncomplimentary closing was carried in a letter to the Editor<lb/>
several years ago but outside of that, please tell me about all the disrespect we have<lb/>
shown the Chancellor.<lb/>
The question must arise to many of us at ECU: Was this an editorial effort to produce<lb/>
the ultimate in slip shod journalism? Was it an effort on the part of an insecure and<lb/>
immature editor to demonstrate his insecurity and immaturity?<lb/>
And, after reading your editorial obviously you do not demand as much respect for the<lb/>
institution of journal ism-after all you printed that editorial.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Mike Taylor<lb/>
Fountainhead Editor<lb/>
Lot 200 Shady Knolls<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
f, PS Please send us X application blanks for your paper.<lb/>
Editorials continue<lb/>
 to attack April 1 issue<lb/>
i Editor's Note: This is a reprint from the<lb/>
Goldsboro News-Argus.<lb/>
We don't know Grace M. Ellenberg of<lb/>
5 the Department of Foreign Languages and<lb/>
f Literature at East Carolina University.<lb/>
' But we're glad she s there.<lb/>
FORUM POLICY<lb/>
All letters to the Editor must be<lb/>
xompanisd by an address along with the<lb/>
ritsr's name. However, only the name<lb/>
ill be printed with letters published in the<lb/>
or urn.<lb/>
The letter writer's address will be kept<lb/>
i file in the Fountainhead office and will<lb/>
s available, upon request, to any<lb/>
udents.<lb/>
Fountainhead will, upon personal re-<lb/>
jest from a letter writer, withhold a name<lb/>
om publication. But, the name of the<lb/>
ritsr will be on file in the editors office<lb/>
id available upon request to any student.<lb/>
II requests for withholding a name must<lb/>
i made in person to the editor.<lb/>
Any letter received without this in-<lb/>
rmation will be held until the letter writer<lb/>
implies with the new policy.<lb/>
Professor Ellenberg dared express her<lb/>
"utter shame" at the April 1 issue of the<lb/>
ECU student newspaper which featured on<lb/>
the front page a picture of the exposed<lb/>
posteriors of bent-over male students<lb/>
Professor Ellenberg's letter to this<lb/>
newspaper is refreshing and comforting<lb/>
since it came hard on the heels of a letter<lb/>
from the campus newspaper's editor and<lb/>
other staff members alleging that response<lb/>
to the vulgarity in the issue on the part of<lb/>
students and staff members had been<lb/>
"positive<lb/>
We have since learned that the reaction<lb/>
among members of the ECU Trustees - in<lb/>
session shortly after the issue appeared -<lb/>
was far from positive.<lb/>
There is a feeling in this country that<lb/>
one has the freedom to say or print<lb/>
anything one likes, no matter how obscene<lb/>
or vulgar or revolting it might be to others<lb/>
And in our communities and on our<lb/>
campuses, many people in responsible<lb/>
positions are timorous of being critical lest<lb/>
that contribute to student unrest or<lb/>
compromise "academic freedom<lb/>
Shame on such timidity.<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAKING by phil frank<lb/>
MOT 00 YO0 JINK, vJERRy? MAYBB<lb/>
VER RUSSIANS VOLD BUY SOME"<lb/>
�College Med'O Services BoxQ-lM Be'keey, Ca 94709<lb/>
Lampoon being blown<lb/>
out of proportion<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Alright, so we had a lampoon with a<lb/>
dirty picture on the front. So what? It is<lb/>
getting blown up all out of proportion.<lb/>
Nobody paid fa the picture, and I don't<lb/>
think it seriously injured any maals, not<lb/>
even in Goldsboro. I boldly charge<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD edita with glay seek-<lb/>
ing in the second degree. Let us examine<lb/>
why he would comment on news staies,<lb/>
and republish editaials condemning this,<lb/>
ECU'S greatest bi-weekly student public-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
Each of the two staies condemning our<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD has been graciously<lb/>
answered to in FOUNTAINHEAD. In doing<lb/>
this is the FOUNTAINHEAD bragging a<lb/>
oanplaining? Is the FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
fishing fa compliments to their lampoon-<lb/>
ing expertise, a is the thinking along the<lb/>
lines that 'These great and true public-<lb/>
ations (Goldabao and Raleigh) caught us<lb/>
with our pants down? Why don't they leave<lb/>
us alone?<lb/>
There were agrano total of two 'great<lb/>
and true publications' who 'caught us with<lb/>
out pants down I should like to take this<lb/>
oppatunity to discount evaything they<lb/>
had to say about us<lb/>
First of all brth papers found us worthy<lb/>
of their time and effort to oondemn. This is<lb/>
a compliment to begin with, but look at the<lb/>
news stay about FOUNTAINBLAH in the<lb/>
Raleigh News and Observer. A stay<lb/>
condemning the filth to FOUNTAINBLAH<lb/>
quoted the dirtiest parts to prove their<lb/>
point. I am surprised they did not reprint<lb/>
the cover picture to osnsa our censa<lb/>
flags. Their aedibiiity is in questiai, to my<lb/>
way of thinking, when they wallow in the<lb/>
manure that they are cleaning up.<lb/>
Now let us look at the Goldsbao<lb/>
editorial. We might as well, no one else<lb/>
did. I had heard of the Goldsbao papa<lb/>
befae( to coin a phrase) the feds' incident,<lb/>
but I did not know that they had editaials<lb/>
l f there is a person that reads the editaials<lb/>
fa any aha reason than baedon, there is<lb/>
also someone who calls dial-a-prayer fa<lb/>
religious oonsoiement. That editaial was<lb/>
written with the same sort of rhetaic as a<lb/>
John Birch Society newsJetta.<lb/>
I think it is to the dis-aedit of these<lb/>
great and true publications that they<lb/>
attributed to the FOUNTAINBLAH as<lb/>
much destructive powa as they did.<lb/>
Maybe it is to the credit of the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD. Eitha way, it iseasy to<lb/>
see that the FOUNTAINBLAH will be as<lb/>
regular on campus as Halloween. It is dear<lb/>
that the joint efforts of SGA and<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD will rot make it possible<lb/>
fa students to win a Halloween incident,<lb/>
but even outside faces like Goldsbao and<lb/>
Raleigh cannot take away from the good<lb/>
time FOUNTAINBLAH had in its single<lb/>
issue life span. We may neva win a<lb/>
Halloween !ncident, but we won't loss a<lb/>
Fools' Incident.<lb/>
Kent Johnson<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAKING by phi frank<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 5227 APRIL 1976<lb/>
wmmmemmm<lb/>
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From Voice of America to the Sahara<lb/>
Budding reporters do their thing<lb/>
EDITORS NOTE: The stories by Ms. Roll and Mr. Fulghum were chosen from feature<lb/>
stories submitted in a Rose High journalism 1 class. The FOUNTAINHEAD wishes to<lb/>
thank the students, along with their Student teacher, ECU student Helena Woodard, for<lb/>
sharing the stories with our readers.<lb/>
By SALLY ROLL<lb/>
Past farms, tobacco fields, and a dry,<lb/>
dusty road on the outskirts of the small<lb/>
college town of Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
lies the most powerful domestic installation<lb/>
of Voice of America (VOA), a global radio<lb/>
network of the U.S. Information Agency.<lb/>
The primary purpose of VOA is to aid<lb/>
foreign countries in understanding the<lb/>
people, customs, and policies of the U.S.<lb/>
VOA broadcasts achieve this through<lb/>
unbiased and comprehensive news reports<lb/>
and through feature programs that provide<lb/>
in-depth views of American society,<lb/>
thoughts and interests.<lb/>
The government-owned and operated<lb/>
Greenville complex is composed of one<lb/>
receiving plant and two identical transmit-<lb/>
ting stations. This Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
site was chosen to avoid geographic and<lb/>
atmospheric interference and to enable<lb/>
clear, effective reception. The station<lb/>
officially went on the air February 8, 1963.<lb/>
In terms of collective transmitting<lb/>
power, the Edward R. Murrow Transmit-<lb/>
ting Station, more oommonly known as the<lb/>
Greenville Relay Station, is the most<lb/>
powerful in VOA's world-wide system.<lb/>
This transmitting station accepts pro-<lb/>
grams from the Master Control in<lb/>
Washington, D.C where all VOA broad-<lb/>
casts originate. VOA's Washington news-<lb/>
room operates 24 hours a day and receives<lb/>
a constant influx of news stories from many<lb/>
sources, including international wire ser-<lb/>
vice and VOA's own network of cor-<lb/>
respondents. The information is compiled<lb/>
into news stories for broadcast in 36<lb/>
languages.<lb/>
Before the stories are written, the data<lb/>
is sifted through by editors who translate<lb/>
and adapt it to make it suitable for the<lb/>
listening audience. Having to satisfy a<lb/>
global audience, much of the VOA program<lb/>
material is tailored to suit specific tastes of<lb/>
people in different parts of the world.<lb/>
These stories are distributed to various<lb/>
transmitter plants throughout the world,<lb/>
such as the Greenville facility. These<lb/>
stations then broadcast the programs to<lb/>
receiving stations throughout the world.<lb/>
The oombined Greenville plants alone<lb/>
broadcast 1,640 transmitter program hours<lb/>
weekly in 27 different languages.<lb/>
There are 41 domestic VOA transmit-<lb/>
ting stations located in Bethany, Ohio;<lb/>
Delano and Dixon, California; and Green-<lb/>
ville, North Carolina. There are also 72<lb/>
overseas transmitters located in eight<lb/>
countries.<lb/>
The cost of running an operation like<lb/>
VOA is staggering. The 1976 fiscal budget<lb/>
alone is $58,700,000. Hopefully, the money<lb/>
is well spent, because men must learn to<lb/>
relate to each other in order to survive.<lb/>
This is what VOA strives to accomplish.<lb/>
cduclky riks &amp;-id teacher<lb/>
By DA VID FULGHUM<lb/>
Traveling ever the Sahara Desert from<lb/>
Casablanca, Morocco to Accra, Ghana is<lb/>
quite an experience for anyone, and Donna<lb/>
Whitley of Greenville is no exception.<lb/>
Mrs. Whitley, a belly dance instructor,<lb/>
who has lived in Africa for three years,<lb/>
went through the world's largest desert to<lb/>
Accra to study West African dance with the<lb/>
Ghana Ensemble. Her husband, who she<lb/>
met in Morocco, went along to increase his<lb/>
woodcarving knowledge. The couple stay-<lb/>
ed on the campus of the University of<lb/>
Morocco while they were there.<lb/>
The journey from Morocco to Ghana<lb/>
took approximately six weeks, and during<lb/>
that time, the Whitleys had a chance to get<lb/>
to know the desert.<lb/>
"Most people have the illusion of a<lb/>
desert as being sand dunes, but only one<lb/>
sixth of it is dune, and the rest is flat,<lb/>
rocky, or mountainous said Mrs. Whit-<lb/>
ley.<lb/>
She went on to say that the sand is<lb/>
firmly packed or hard instead of being in<lb/>
dunes as most people might think.<lb/>
Another interesting facet of the desert<lb/>
journey was the weather. During the May<lb/>
trip, the temperature was 120 degrees<lb/>
during the day, but much cooler at night,<lb/>
making sleeping conditions "pleasant<lb/>
aooording to Mrs. Whitley.<lb/>
The oouple also found that May is the<lb/>
desert's rainy season, with, numerous<lb/>
travelers' warnings due to sudden gushes<lb/>
of rain.<lb/>
Their return across the desert in<lb/>
December was characterized by very edd<lb/>
weather, according to Mrs. Whitley.<lb/>
As for the people they encountered in P<lb/>
the desert, "We went two to three days<lb/>
without seeing anyone said Mrs. Whit- <lb/>
ley. t<lb/>
LANDROVER TROUBLE<lb/>
Aooording to Mrs. Whitley, the most<lb/>
frightening part of the trip occurred in a<lb/>
desolate area between Mali and Algeria,<lb/>
when their Landrover broke down. The<lb/>
couple went fa help, leaving a young<lb/>
companion from England to guard their<lb/>
gear. The boy didn't see a single person<lb/>
during the five days they were gone, and<lb/>
he claimed to have almost gone stir crazy.<lb/>
Another interesting point of interest<lb/>
along the way was seeing a 2000 year old<lb/>
tree on the Tassisili Plateau. The tree is<lb/>
considered so sacred that Tuareg nomads<lb/>
guard it constantly.<lb/>
According to Mrs. Whitley, Tuaregs<lb/>
love black tobacco, strong tea, and<lb/>
coagulated camel's milk. They also eat<lb/>
cactus berries and wild wheat.<lb/>
The Tuareg women are more indepen-<lb/>
dent than their other North Africans in that<lb/>
they don't wash the men's clothing or wear<lb/>
veils.<lb/>
tl<lb/>
r<lb/>
can t<lb/>
explan<lb/>
Th<lb/>
debtor:<lb/>
everyo<lb/>
end of<lb/>
have n<lb/>
typesc<lb/>
and Da<lb/>
free if i<lb/>
once th<lb/>
interest<lb/>
percent<lb/>
ment ca<lb/>
if tne a<lb/>
Bees<lb/>
last yec<lb/>
improve<lb/>
Credit a<lb/>
you re di<lb/>
out the<lb/>
have cru<lb/>
mdepenc<lb/>
find outv<lb/>
adverse<lb/>
agency n<lb/>
re-investi<lb/>
to correct<lb/>
r<lb/>
Features<lb/>
staff meeting<lb/>
Thursday: 4:00<lb/>
If you've got the time, we've got the $$$$<lb/>
Graduates; watch out<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
(CPS)-Dear Graduating Senior.<lb/>
We would like to offer ou a golden<lb/>
opportunity to spend your future income<lb/>
quickly and painlessly with a aedit card<lb/>
like the sample enclosed. Just oomplete the<lb/>
handy application and in a few weeks, you<lb/>
may be able to buy many items you never<lb/>
thought you oould affad, and probably<lb/>
couldn't.<lb/>
Graduating senias all over the country<lb/>
are now getting the aedit card blitz as they<lb/>
prepare to enter the waking, spending<lb/>
wald. But even with a solicitation like the<lb/>
one above, students still have to pass<lb/>
through the eye of the aedit companies'<lb/>
needle befae they are entitled to trade a<lb/>
piece of plastic fa goods and services.<lb/>
There's no doubt that sometime the<lb/>
prospective student-debta is going to be<lb/>
glad there s a aedit card in his a ha<lb/>
wallet. Hank cards like MasterCharqe and<lb/>
BankAmaicard can be used fa almost<lb/>
anything including shat-tam cash loans.<lb/>
With a dean slate on any kind of aedit<lb/>
card, the coveted "good aedit rating" is<lb/>
backing otha loans a student might want<lb/>
(a new staeo a the best used car deal of<lb/>
the century). Finally, a student in many <lb/>
cases has an easier time getting approval<lb/>
fa a aedit card while a student than later<lb/>
when he has moved a few times and hasn' t<lb/>
kept a job fa more than a year.<lb/>
Most Arrericans find deficit spending<lb/>
with aedit cards a big boon to their<lb/>
personal finances. In fact, at last count,<lb/>
Americans were charging somewhere<lb/>
around $127 billion a year, approximately<lb/>
$600 in debts fa evay man, woman and<lb/>
child in the U.S. Merchants encourage the ,<lb/>
use of aedit cards whenever possible.<lb/>
My customers use aedit cards so they '<lb/>
See Graduates, page b.<lb/>
Saai<lb/>
Sh<lb/>
S<lb/>
sr-5;<lb/>
mc cm<lb/>
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mmmmmmmm<lb/>
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l-OUNTAINHEADVOL. 57, NO. 5227APRIL 1976<lb/>
5<lb/>
r<lb/>
jmerous<lb/>
i gushes<lb/>
�sert in<lb/>
ery cold<lb/>
itered in<lb/>
ree days<lb/>
s. Whit-<lb/>
the most<lb/>
red in a<lb/>
Algeria,<lb/>
wn. The<lb/>
a young<lb/>
ard their<lb/>
e person<lb/>
one, and<lb/>
tir aazy.<lb/>
interest<lb/>
year old<lb/>
e tree is<lb/>
j nomads<lb/>
Tuaregs<lb/>
ea, and<lb/>
also eat<lb/>
indepen-<lb/>
ns in that<lb/>
gor wear<lb/>
i<lb/>
GRADUATES<lb/>
Continued from page 4.<lb/>
can buy meals they can't afford<lb/>
explained one restauranteur.<lb/>
The credit card racket provides its<lb/>
debtors with those instant loans that<lb/>
everyone wants sometime but oome the<lb/>
end of the month, the bill oollector will<lb/>
have his hand out. On the most oommon<lb/>
types of credit cards-gasoline, retail store<lb/>
and bank cards-the service is generally<lb/>
free if the bill is paid within 30 days. But<lb/>
once the first 30-day grace period is over,<lb/>
interest rates zoom up between 12 and 18<lb/>
percent annually. On travel and entertain-<lb/>
ment cards, an annual fee is charged even<lb/>
if the card is not used.<lb/>
Because of two new credit laws pas.1 J<lb/>
last year, the credit card situation las<lb/>
improved somewhat fa potential debtors.<lb/>
Credit cards arent any easier to get but if<lb/>
you re denied one, the creditor hai to spell<lb/>
out the reasons (not in writing). If they<lb/>
have checked your credit rating with an<lb/>
independent agency, you have the right to<lb/>
find out what's in the file that caused the<lb/>
adverse ruling. If there s a mistake, the<lb/>
agency must go through the motions of<lb/>
re-investigating. And if the agency refujes<lb/>
to correct the error, you have the right to<lb/>
w<lb/>
00<lb/>
$$$<lb/>
Hit<lb/>
for almost<lb/>
ash loans,<lb/>
d of credit<lb/>
rating" is<lb/>
night want<lb/>
car deal of<lb/>
it in many<lb/>
g approval<lb/>
: than later<lb/>
and hasn't<lb/>
t spending<lb/>
n to their<lb/>
last count.<lb/>
omewhere<lb/>
xoximately<lb/>
voman and<lb/>
xxjrage the ,<lb/>
r possible,<lb/>
ds so they '<lb/>
tes, page 5.<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
TO<lb/>
THE REAL<lb/>
WORLD<lb/>
Qoorl'c Material and<lb/>
OaaU ff Workmanship<lb/>
9 h O P VA Guaranteed<lb/>
�,IUC Jk Prompt Service<lb/>
ShOD 113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
MEW SR-56 $154.95<lb/>
If 100 WfPS 10 MEMMfES<lb/>
SR-5M $67.50<lb/>
SR-5M $99.95<lb/>
SR-52 $299.95<lb/>
mg tmmouwm<lb/>
mi, ,r � aMMwnr<lb/>
o Mr m nut mm<lb/>
i lexoslnstiumcrtcv<lb/>
 electronic caaxyo'<lb/>
 SHIPPED FREE<lb/>
 v, 'i r�<lb/>
CO<lb/>
�<lb/>
ft  'i.uun ��<lb/>
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p c. �� �  .a7Wi $rwc<lb/>
am mun. c. m 7k:<lb/>
i� 0" 'Of. �<lb/>
add your own version of the story to the file<lb/>
which must be given to all inquiring<lb/>
creditors.<lb/>
Another triumph for debtors came with<lb/>
a new Federal Reserve Board regulation<lb/>
applying mainly to the bank cards.<lb/>
Previously, when someone paid for either<lb/>
goods or services with a bank card and the<lb/>
merchandise or work was faulty, the<lb/>
customer had noreoourse. The bill still had<lb/>
to be paid to the aedita, which was a<lb/>
bank. Now customers who paid more than<lb/>
$50 fa something a made the purchase<lb/>
within 100 milesof their home can withhold<lb/>
payment fa bad merchandise a service.<lb/>
I hat sa good reason fa limiting the use of<lb/>
bank cards while traveling,<lb/>
Women made some gains with the new<lb/>
credit laws although not as many as had<lb/>
beer: lobbied fa by women's groups.<lb/>
Creditors may no longer evaluate a<lb/>
woman b credit potential on the basis of<lb/>
net nusband s aedit ratings nor may the<lb/>
creditor oonstder married people more<lb/>
ueuit-worthy than singles. Women's<lb/>
uiuuoeanng intentions can no longer be<lb/>
scrutinized and part-time income as well as<lb/>
alimony and child suppat payments can be<lb/>
countea as part of a woman's inoome.<lb/>
Financial wizards who know the value<lb/>
of a good aedit rating have devised a few<lb/>
strategies for getting credit even as<lb/>
low-income students. Former banker<lb/>
Michael Phillips, who wrote The Seven<lb/>
Laws of Money, suggests opening a<lb/>
checking account with the largest amount<lb/>
of money possible even if it means<lb/>
barowing fa a oouple of days. Many<lb/>
bankers keep that first figure faemost in<lb/>
tinir minds when making the great aedit<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
I nen. Phillips said, you need to have a<lb/>
job (being a student will do), an address<lb/>
 Sister Mary<lb/>
Palm reader �Advisor<lb/>
She'll advise you on all problems.<lb/>
Shes helped thousands, why not<lb/>
 you? Hwy. 17 South of Washington,<lb/>
��������������<lb/>
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<lb/>
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Weloomes<lb/>
K ECU Students<lb/>
and Faculty<lb/>
to Enjoy<lb/>
Home Cooked<lb/>
Meals<lb/>
with Low Prices.<lb/>
Daily Specials featured M-F open 8-8.<lb/>
and a checking account fa a.e year. Try<lb/>
applying fa agasoline aedit card, then a<lb/>
Department stae card. These are the<lb/>
easiest kinds of aedit cards to get. Next,<lb/>
go fa a natioial department stae card and<lb/>
use it once a twice. Pay your bills<lb/>
promptly. Then go fa the biggie, the Bank<lb/>
Amencard a MasterCharge.<lb/>
Of course if you re a student and you<lb/>
received an invitation to get a bank card,<lb/>
faget the above steps and go to the head of<lb/>
the class. Even if you don't use the card, a<lb/>
zero balance from non-usage is usually<lb/>
every bit as valuable fa your aedit rating<lb/>
as plenty of paid-up bills.<lb/>
IF YOU MISSED ME<lb/>
BEFORE EASTER<lb/>
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K i tut Id V<lb/>
From the creators and cast of the Otf Broadway hit "DIAMOND STUDS" r <lb/>
HOT GROG <lb/>
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is coming to Greenville, April 26 M.iy 1 at the � V<lb/>
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Ki M New l<lb/>
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exclusive tjn'jjytment<lb/>
featuring thn notorious<lb/>
BLACKBEARO<lb/>
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Mod. Ilnus. tt:00 )'ii<lb/>
Fri. fii Sat<lb/>
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Tor infor�v,�iion un<lb/>
reserved suiis, all<lb/>
752-3810 or SB 0911<lb/>
' I:<lb/>
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�hey 'r�'<lb/>
�tying<lb/>
.il�out HOI GROG<lb/>
llltl � 'C it Hi I ii ' . J ttl MI i ' 'If IjU, �'<lb/>
I'll Mofi �� ' '  ��  , j<lb/>
hirjti s.ii.ii v.t �! i i ulm i throughout<lb/>
R (ty Hi rqes, Durham Morning Herald<lb/>
itlickiitfl i.ii � lil rteiMMe<lb/>
I ,� ii :i � t<lb/>
� � � i m.i� M jii.��: l"<lb/>
inn<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040039_0006"/><lb/>
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Academic cheaters abound<lb/>
(CPS)-Someday the prioe of admission<lb/>
to a medical or law school aptitude test may<lb/>
be attaching the arms of prospective<lb/>
doctors or lawyers to a polygraph machine<lb/>
and questioning them closely.<lb/>
Are you really (name of applicant)? Are<lb/>
these statements about yourself on this<lb/>
application form true? Have you ever<lb/>
attempted to falsify the records you have<lb/>
submitted to us?<lb/>
Already administrators of the Law<lb/>
School Admissions Tests (LSAT) have<lb/>
begun to thumbprint applicants who take<lb/>
the test instead of asking for a driver's<lb/>
license or other photo-bearing identifi-<lb/>
cation as they had in the past. The Medical<lb/>
Schools Association has asked candidates<lb/>
for the Medical College Admissions Test<lb/>
(MCAT) to send photographs when they<lb/>
register for the exam and these are<lb/>
forwarded to the test centers where<lb/>
proctors screen candidates when they<lb/>
arrive.<lb/>
The increasingly stringent security<lb/>
applied to professional school entrance<lb/>
exams is partly the result of a new wave of<lb/>
cheaters who are enrolling in top graduate<lb/>
schools with the help of falsified docu-<lb/>
ments and hired exam-takers. Recently a<lb/>
few big cases have come to light and<lb/>
professional school administrators assume<lb/>
they are only the tip of the iceberg.<lb/>
The most famous case was that of the<lb/>
husband am wife team who wangled<lb/>
admittance to Harvard's law and business<lb/>
schools using falsified transcripts. The<lb/>
team was caught when the man, Spiro<lb/>
Pavlovichlll, bragged to some lawyers who<lb/>
were interviewing him fa a summer job.<lb/>
Without his boasting, the two Pavlo-<lb/>
vichs may never have been found out.<lb/>
Expertly forged transcripts are difficult to<lb/>
spot in the mass of applications which<lb/>
deluge professional schools. Inside help is<lb/>
not unheard of. In February, the president<lb/>
of Brooklyn College acknowledged that 12<lb/>
employees of the school's registrar's off ice<lb/>
had been implicated in transcript-doctoring<lb/>
" to improve their own academic records a<lb/>
those of friends and relatives<lb/>
NEED RESUME-<lb/>
PHOTOS?<lb/>
Call Greenville's Newes.<lb/>
Professional Studio<lb/>
752-0123<lb/>
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GREENVILLE, N. C. 27834<lb/>
Another case involving heavy touching<lb/>
up of a student's official transcript was<lb/>
decided by a Circuit Court of Virginia in<lb/>
February. The student, Harold S. Blumen-<lb/>
thal, was convicted of forging and passing<lb/>
a falsified transcript after investigators<lb/>
found that he had overstated his grades,<lb/>
listed himself as a summa cum laude<lb/>
graduate and forged the registrar's<lb/>
signature on the transcript he submitted to<lb/>
the medical schools' association.<lb/>
Tests administered by the Educational<lb/>
Testing Service (ETS) are also increasingly<lb/>
vulnerable to cheaters as anxious candi-<lb/>
datas stop at less and less to win those few<lb/>
previous places in top professional schools.<lb/>
The ETS has reached the point where it<lb/>
must aggressively police the people who<lb/>
take the tests and investigate in cases<lb/>
where cheating seems likely.<lb/>
Suspicions about test cheating are<lb/>
usually triggered when a student receives a<lb/>
test score much better than previous scores<lb/>
out of line with his academic record. ETS<lb/>
pulls what it calls "large score gain<lb/>
rostersscored exceeding earlier ones by<lb/>
150 points or morefrom its oomputers,<lb/>
investigates some 300 of the 13,600 LSAT's<lb/>
that fall into this category, and eventually<lb/>
cancels 9ome 24 scores.<lb/>
In a case still pending in federal court,<lb/>
a graduate of the University of California at<lb/>
Berkeley Law School is suing the ETS for<lb/>
canceling the score on her third LSAT<lb/>
after handwriting experts had testified that<lb/>
she had not taken the test. ETS notified the<lb/>
Berkeley school that her test score was no<lb/>
longer considered valid but after consult-<lb/>
ing an expert of their own, law school<lb/>
officials decided to admit her anyway. The<lb/>
student has sinoe graduated from law<lb/>
school but the case still sits awaiting action<lb/>
in a Boston court.<lb/>
CO<lb/>
MosS<lb/>
E�coos'aoovscoso'<lb/>
" EAT FAMILY STILE "<lb/>
OLDE TOWNE INN<lb/>
Monday - Thursday<lb/>
4:30-7:30<lb/>
$2.25 plus tax<lb/>
one entree I all the vegetables,<lb/>
treat A tea yeu can eat<lb/>
117E. 5th ST. 758-199t<lb/>
n<lb/>
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WANTED to share apartment for summer<lb/>
Single girl. Call Sally, 752-6724.<lb/>
FOR SALE- 1971 TR-6 - Excellent<lb/>
condition. 758-2663.<lb/>
EUROPE<lb/>
fare<lb/>
WWirtM<lb/>
 800-325-4867<lb/>
�2? Utv.Travel Chatters<lb/>
WOULD LIKE a ride to Atlanta any<lb/>
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after 3:30 on Thursdays &amp; will help with<lb/>
gas. 7528903.<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS. Asia, Australia, Africa,<lb/>
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$600-$2,500. Invaluable experiences. De-<lb/>
tails 25 cents. International Employment<lb/>
Research. Box 3893 H9, Seattle, WA<lb/>
98124.<lb/>
FOR RENT - private room close to campus,<lb/>
for summer school and Fall quarter. Phone<lb/>
752-4006 after 1 p.m.<lb/>
Nice 2-bdrm. apartment, four blocks from<lb/>
campus for rent starting June 1. Girls or<lb/>
oouples only. Call 752-6724.<lb/>
1973 HONDA 350 - Four, good condition<lb/>
Call 752-7292 after 5.<lb/>
FOR SALE - Black, vinyl, tufted sofa. Good<lb/>
cond. $75 - 756-4096.<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brenrtle. 752-4272<lb/>
WANTED - 2 gins to help serve dinner atj<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha. Free meals plus fringe!<lb/>
benefits. Call Scott 752-5325.<lb/>
LOST - gold locket - initials C.G.H.<lb/>
752-8680. Reward.<lb/>
FOR SALE: VW Camperbus good con<lb/>
dition, 36,000 miles, many extras ready fi<lb/>
travel. Call 728-4694.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 12 string Univox guitar<lb/>
excellent condition. Will sell for best offer<lb/>
758-1489. Ask for Ed.<lb/>
GOT THOSE SUMMER job blues? Smile<lb/>
students now being selected to fill<lb/>
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IRS audits check for tax return cheaters<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Now that most everyone has filed their<lb/>
1975 tax return it is enlighting to look at<lb/>
how the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)<lb/>
checks to see that you were honest.<lb/>
The IRS checks the accuracy of a tax<lb/>
statement by meansof an audit. An audit is<lb/>
when the IRS looks into your financial<lb/>
records to determine if your tax statement<lb/>
is correct.<lb/>
"The IRS audited 51,000 tax returns in<lb/>
North Carolina last year said Glen Jones,<lb/>
of the public affairs office of the N.C.<lb/>
District of the IRS. "We don't have the<lb/>
people to audit more.<lb/>
"We use a combination of human<lb/>
eyeballs and oomputers to choose tax<lb/>
returns that show a possible high degree of<lb/>
error. I was even audited last year. We<lb/>
oontinually try to impress upon people to<lb/>
keep good records.<lb/>
"We have a policy stating that if we<lb/>
audit a taxpayer one year, we don't audit<lb/>
them again the next year unless there is<lb/>
evidence of criminal intent to evade taxes.<lb/>
"We audited about twice as many<lb/>
people in the $25,000 to $50,000 tax group<lb/>
than in the lower groups. It was 5 taxes.<lb/>
peroent of the returns in the higher group<lb/>
and about 2 percent in the lower group.<lb/>
"In 20 peroent of the audits there is no<lb/>
change in the original tax statement. In 10<lb/>
peroent we end up owing the taxpayer<lb/>
money. The other 70 peroent owe money to<lb/>
us<lb/>
"An official of the IRS can put you in<lb/>
jail said Milton Friedman, a noted<lb/>
economist. " I doubt there is a person in the<lb/>
U.S. who couldn't be convicted of a<lb/>
technical violation of some aspect of<lb/>
personal inoometax<lb/>
"In house" manuals of the IRS<lb/>
i eleased under the Freedom of Information<lb/>
Act says that errors can be found in 99<lb/>
peroent of all tax returns.<lb/>
"We had about 70 tax fraud cases in<lb/>
N.C.in 1975 said Jones. "Some were<lb/>
decided in favor of the defendant and some<lb/>
in favor of the IRS.<lb/>
 Fraud is a fraudulent statement where<lb/>
the taxpayer knowingly states false in-<lb/>
formation.<lb/>
"Evasion is not declaring part of his<lb/>
income. It is side stepping paying taxes.<lb/>
"A taxpayer convicted of tax fraud<lb/>
must pay all costs of the civil trial,<lb/>
penalties, back taxes, and interest on back<lb/>
I ECU Placement office<lb/>
suspends campus mailing<lb/>
ByKENCARPUNKY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU College Placement Office has<lb/>
temporarily suspended the mailing of<lb/>
monthly employment bulletins to on-<lb/>
campus students because of the hike in<lb/>
postage rates from 10 cents to 13 cents.<lb/>
"Our budget was set-up last year on<lb/>
the basis of the 10 cent stamp said ECU<lb/>
College Placement Director Furney K.<lb/>
James.<lb/>
"Ordinarily extra money would be<lb/>
available, but funds are very tight at this<lb/>
time<lb/>
According to James, the suspension<lb/>
involves the May and June bulletins only.<lb/>
"We have stopped mailing the bul-<lb/>
letins while the students are here so we can<lb/>
send them out when the students have<lb/>
gone said James. "In our April bulletins<lb/>
we asked off-campus students and alumni<lb/>
to send us stamps if they desired to receive<lb/>
the May and June bulletins and the<lb/>
response has been good.<lb/>
It costs approximately $150 for each<lb/>
mailing of the job bulletin, according to<lb/>
James. This year's budget was approxi-<lb/>
mately $250 short.<lb/>
"The new budget will be approved July<lb/>
1 said James Hopefully we can resume<lb/>
mailing the bulletins at that time. This is<lb/>
the first time the bulletins could not be<lb/>
mailed according to James.<lb/>
"Many college placement offices don't<lb/>
bother to mail job listings at all said<lb/>
James.<lb/>
"The University of Wisconsin charges<lb/>
$15 a year for theirs<lb/>
The May job bulletin is now available at<lb/>
the ECU College Placement Office.<lb/>
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"We very seldom bring charges against<lb/>
a person for one year, usually it is for<lb/>
violations in four, five or more years.<lb/>
"Our revenue offioers are empowered<lb/>
to seize property to collect taxes. A seizure<lb/>
has to go through a U.S. Attorney.<lb/>
"A revenue officer has to collect taxes.<lb/>
It is a harsh last resort. We would rather let<lb/>
a business remain open so they oould pay<lb/>
taxes they owe us, but after a reasonable<lb/>
time we have to take action.<lb/>
"A taxpayer has closely protected<lb/>
rights of privacy, we cannot just go down<lb/>
and pull out a tax return. We must have a<lb/>
reason to see tax returns.<lb/>
"When we request information from a<lb/>
taxpayer we are required by law to tell why<lb/>
we want it. The taxpayer has the right under<lb/>
the Freedom of Information Act to see all<lb/>
letters, memos, and other documents<lb/>
dealing with only his case<lb/>
If after an audit you do not agree with<lb/>
the IRS agents' decision you may appeal<lb/>
either within the IRS a the courts, me<lb/>
steps and options of appeal are described<lb/>
in IRS publication 17, "Your Federal<lb/>
Income Tax" available at any IRS office.<lb/>
According to the April issue of<lb/>
" Playboy" there are from four million<lb/>
to ten million persons who failed to file a<lb/>
Vnaa Shit Repair 3tt<lb/>
I Sntt Start<lb/>
from Mount<lb/>
tax return last year.<lb/>
One popular means of evading taxes is<lb/>
to write the Fifth Amendment on their<lb/>
return.<lb/>
"Unless the forms have figures on<lb/>
them and are signed we say it is not filed.<lb/>
We send them forms to file and if they<lb/>
don't, we see that as failure to file. We<lb/>
don't have many of those cases in N.C<lb/>
The "Playboy" article states that<lb/>
according to secret IRS manuals obtained<lb/>
under the Freedom of Information Act that<lb/>
the IRS normally seeks to extort money<lb/>
that is not owed. Agents are dispatched<lb/>
with quotas for raising additional revenue<lb/>
and are given wide latitude when it comes<lb/>
down to methods.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 57, NO. 5227 APRIL 197b<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Hemingway dull in 'Lipstick'<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
In her debut on the screen, high-dass<lb/>
model Margaux Hemingway, in her role as<lb/>
a model, is relatively unimpressive in<lb/>
Lipstick<lb/>
But her acting can not totally be blamed<lb/>
on her talent alone, at least not yet,<lb/>
because the role in which Ms. Hemingway<lb/>
is cast is too shallow to allow her to show<lb/>
additional talents other than modeling.<lb/>
Where she is posing as the high-class<lb/>
model on location, she does an under-<lb/>
standably good job, but for the rest of the<lb/>
film it is a different story. In this case, at<lb/>
least, it shows that beauty isn't everything<lb/>
m becoming a good actress.<lb/>
The film itself isa lot to blame. With its<lb/>
overused subject matter of rape, and<lb/>
revenge for the act, the film never really<lb/>
goes anyplace.<lb/>
Chris Sarandon, one might remember<lb/>
as the homosexual wife" of Al Padno in<lb/>
Dog Day Afternoon - for which he received<lb/>
an Academy Award nomination, appears<lb/>
as the psychologically unstable musiaan-<lb/>
rapist who tarnishes the modeling reput-<lb/>
ation and silky-smooth image of the<lb/>
heroine in a unique rape-sodomy sequence<lb/>
in her apartment (have to give the director<lb/>
some credit for trying this new approach to<lb/>
such an overused plot send-off).<lb/>
That plot which then develops centers<lb/>
around the heroine's court battle against<lb/>
the rapist and the affect the publicity and<lb/>
experience has on her career and self-<lb/>
esteem<lb/>
Even with the half-hearted casting ot<lb/>
Anne Bancroft as the heroine's incom-<lb/>
petent, but well-meaning, lawyer the film<lb/>
and its true impact is over about<lb/>
half-an-hour after it goes on the screen.<lb/>
The director, Lament Johnson, and the<lb/>
screenwriter, David Rayfiel, must have<lb/>
realized the dead-end the plot arrives at<lb/>
because they attempt to save the film with<lb/>
a second rape oommitted by the musician<lb/>
on the heroine's kid sister-who is played<lb/>
by Margaux Hemingway's true-life sister,<lb/>
Marie! Hemingway. The quick slam-bang<lb/>
ending evolves from this-with the heroine<lb/>
gaining some measure of justice and<lb/>
revenge from the outcome.<lb/>
That outcome is about as unbelievable<lb/>
and unacceptable as the film is unpolished<lb/>
but somehow the film does not end as a<lb/>
total wipe-out.<lb/>
Indeed, the acting of the two Heming-<lb/>
way women is a test for possible future<lb/>
roles-and in this case, the younger Mariel<lb/>
comes out as the far better actress.<lb/>
As fa Margaux�one has to wonder<lb/>
why she is trying to branch out from her<lb/>
highly-successful modeling career into<lb/>
movies. Her role in Lipstick js not the kind<lb/>
which will make her a star overnight. For<lb/>
that matter, Ms. Hemingway may do<lb/>
better by sticking to her modeling career<lb/>
because as an actress she may never make<lb/>
it. She certainly can't make it in the type of<lb/>
role she was burdened with in Lipstick.<lb/>
Bluegrass on the mall<lb/>
BITTER CREEK, a blend of hard-driving traditional and contemporary bluegrass.<lb/>
John Worthington: vocals, guitar; Lane Hollis: vocals, banjo; Frankie Harrison:mandolin;<lb/>
Phii Lamer: vocals, acoustic bass. Appearing 8:15 P.M. Sat May 1 at the ECU Spring<lb/>
Bluegrass Festival - ECU Mall. Festive! begins at 2.00 P.M will also feature five other<lb/>
acts and the Green Grass Cloggers. Sponsored by ECU Student Union Special Concerts<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
One Day At A Time'<lb/>
star interviewed<lb/>
By RICHARD TRUBO<lb/>
Pop Scene Service<lb/>
Mackenzie Phillips-with script in hand<lb/>
and chewing gum in mouth - bounces into<lb/>
her dressing room trailer on the Hollywood<lb/>
studio lot where "One Day at a Time" is<lb/>
being taped She proceeds to slide into a<lb/>
chair, glances at issues of People and Time<lb/>
magazines that are perched nearby, and<lb/>
then sits back to talk about how a 16 year<lb/>
old copes with being a TV star<lb/>
"It's enjoyable hectic, explains Mac-<lb/>
kenzie. "That's the best way I can describe<lb/>
it We work a very hard and rigorous<lb/>
schedule, but I m having fun, too<lb/>
Mackenzie leaves the impression that<lb/>
she solder than someone in her mid-teens.<lb/>
She has amazing poise and self-oonfidenoe<lb/>
At an age when most of her peers are<lb/>
nervousiy struggling with their first pair of<lb/>
false eye'ashes, she is leading a rather<lb/>
norous life and earning a very<lb/>
ixnf or table salary<lb/>
Chamber ensemble May 3<lb/>
The chamber music ensemble of<lb/>
JAMES HOULIK &amp; FRIENDS will appear<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student Center Theatre on<lb/>
Monday, May 3, at 8:00 P.M. The group,<lb/>
now in its third season, is comprised of<lb/>
oboe, clarinet, saxophone, and piano.<lb/>
James Houlik assembled this unusual<lb/>
combination of instrumental voices as a<lb/>
part of his continuing efforts to establish<lb/>
wider exposure for the saxophone and in<lb/>
response to the public thirst for a greater<lb/>
variety of oonoert fare In addition to the<lb/>
fresh sound of these instruments in consort<lb/>
the members perform delightful solo<lb/>
pieces. In recent seasons the group has<lb/>
appeared throughout the eastern United<lb/>
States including several New York per-<lb/>
formances and broadcasts.<lb/>
More than just a name, the performers<lb/>
truly share friendship and enthusiasm for<lb/>
the music they make together. A unique<lb/>
repertoire ranging more than three<lb/>
centuries and an unusual combination of<lb/>
musical instruments make JAMES HOU<lb/>
LIK &amp; FRIENDSa veritable mixed bouquet<lb/>
of musical moments with a broad audience<lb/>
appeal<lb/>
Admission to the oonoert for ECU<lb/>
students will be by I.D. and activity card,<lb/>
and for ECU faculty and staff by<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Membership<lb/>
card. Tickets for the public are priced at<lb/>
$4.00 each, and may be purchased from<lb/>
ECU Central Ticket Office. The concert is a<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Production.<lb/>
'HotGrog'atRoxy<lb/>
EN<lb/>
Gn<lb/>
PARK<lb/>
Today<lb/>
5:10, 7.05<lb/>
Starts<lb/>
PITT<lb/>
Robert<lb/>
ought to s<lb/>
Starts<lb/>
PLAZA I<lb/>
Walt D<lb/>
9:15. Rate<lb/>
Starts<lb/>
PLAZA II<lb/>
Jeremi<lb/>
and 9. Rat<lb/>
TICE<lb/>
Throug<lb/>
8O0. Both<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
In vest ii<lb/>
FRIDA Y F<lb/>
The Co<lb/>
life of an<lb/>
Mary C<lb/>
give a re<lb/>
Reatal Ha<lb/>
include pi<lb/>
Scriabin. E<lb/>
al J tP �<lb/>
:<lb/>
MACKENZIE PHILLIPS<lb/>
But Mackenzie, who portrays Julie<lb/>
Cooper in CBS "One Day at a Time has<lb/>
never fit intoany mold. She is the daughter<lb/>
of John Phillips, founder and lead singer of<lb/>
the Mamas and Papas. While other kids<lb/>
See Star, page nine.<lb/>
HOT GROG will play at the Roxy<lb/>
Playhouse in Greenville, North Carolina,<lb/>
April 26 - May 1. The new musical by Jimm<lb/>
Wann and Bland Simpson, and produced<lb/>
by Peg Leg Productions, recently com-<lb/>
pleted a sucoessful premiere engagement<lb/>
of forty-four shows at The Ranch House in<lb/>
Chapel Htii<lb/>
rhe show depicts actual male and<lb/>
female pirates desperados and romantl<lb/>
along with the bawdy coast of the<lb/>
Carolinas just after the turn of the 1700s.<lb/>
It is brimming with the moving and<lb/>
magnetic music of Wann-Simpson,<lb/>
Carolina's leading young songwriters,<lb/>
whose DIAMOND STUDS became an<lb/>
off-Broadway sensation. "HOT GROG"<lb/>
joins DIAMOND STUDS as treasured<lb/>
memcxy tor thousands of tar heel theater<lb/>
goers<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
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f-OUNJAINHEAUVOL 67, NO 5227 APRIL 1976<lb/>
hump m i �mifcii ii 'iwiiii mm<lb/>
9<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Greenville Movies<lb/>
PARK<lb/>
Today through Thursday, the horror fantasy Phantom of Paradise. Shows at 315,<lb/>
5:10, 7:05 and 9.00. Rated PG.<lb/>
Starts Friday The Devil Within Her. Rated R.<lb/>
PITT<lb/>
Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman in All the President's Men ends Thursday. You<lb/>
ought to see this one. Shows at 7 00 and 9:30. Rated PG.<lb/>
Starts Friday Watch Out We're Mad.<lb/>
PLAZA I<lb/>
Walt Disney No Deposit No Return starring Don Knotts. Shows at 315, 515, 7:15 and<lb/>
9:15. Rated G.<lb/>
Starts Friday The Last Hard Men Rated T.<lb/>
PLAZA II<lb/>
Jeremiah Johnson is another Redford movie. An adventure story with shows at 3, 5, 7,<lb/>
and 9. Rated PG.<lb/>
TICE<lb/>
Through Wednesday Goodbye. Nor ma Jean at 9:40 and Summer School Teachers at<lb/>
8:00. Both are rated R.<lb/>
STUDENT CENTER WEDNESDAY CLASSIC<lb/>
Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion at 8.00 Wednesday. Rated R.<lb/>
FRIDAY FREE FLICK<lb/>
The Conversation starring Gene Hackman and Allen Garfield focuses on the personal<lb/>
life of an "electronic surveillance technician Shows at 5, 7, and 9. Rated RG.<lb/>
STAR<lb/>
Continued from page eight<lb/>
Mary Grover, a senior piano major, will<lb/>
give a recital April 28 at A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall at 7:30 p.m. The program will<lb/>
include pieces from Schubert, Bach and<lb/>
Scriabin. Everyone is welcome.<lb/>
were writing fan letters to the Beatles and<lb/>
the Rolling Stones, Mackenzie recalls<lb/>
meeting them, as well as watching her<lb/>
father sing in a recording studio when she<lb/>
was not much more than six years old<lb/>
But her early childhood was not entirely<lb/>
pleasurable Mackenzie's parents,<lb/>
divoroed when she was very young, and<lb/>
she lived mostly with her mother, Susan<lb/>
Adams Phillips, and her older brother,<lb/>
Jeffrey. As with most broken homes, there<lb/>
were pressures and heartaches to contend<lb/>
with that are not found in a normal family<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
"That's why'One Day at a Time' is so<lb/>
fascinating to me says Mackenzie. "I<lb/>
play the daughter of a divorcee, and I think<lb/>
the show portrays the whole circumstance<lb/>
very realistically. There are millions of<lb/>
divorced families in America, but until<lb/>
now, no TV show has jver dealt with what<lb/>
really goes on. I'm glad we're not on the air<lb/>
in the family hour, so we can deal in reality<lb/>
a lot more<lb/>
"The character I play is a half-<lb/>
sophisticated, half-creepy teen-ager re-<lb/>
marks Mackenzie. "And she's going<lb/>
through a lot of things - like missing<lb/>
daddy, and then hating mommy and<lb/>
mommy's boy friend for it<lb/>
Mackenzie's own career goals were<lb/>
originally to be a nurse. But the musical<lb/>
influences in her life led her to form her<lb/>
STILL SERVING THE BEST PIZZA,<lb/>
own group when she was just 12. One<lb/>
evening, while performing on amateur<lb/>
night at the Troubadour in West Holly-<lb/>
wood, she was spotted by an agent. A<lb/>
phone cal I and two audit ions later, she had<lb/>
been cast in her first acting rote, in<lb/>
"American Graffiti<lb/>
Snce then, Mackenzie has starred in<lb/>
Rafferty and the Gold Dust Twins as<lb/>
well as three TV movies-of-the-week: "Go<lb/>
AskAlioe "Miles to Go Before I Sleep,<lb/>
and Eleanor and Franklin She also<lb/>
guested on segments of the "Baretta<lb/>
Moving On and "Mary Tyler Moore"<lb/>
shows.<lb/>
"Music still means a lot to me she<lb/>
says But so much has happened to me so<lb/>
fast, I just don't know exactly when we're<lb/>
going to have time to do the album<lb/>
752 7649<lb/>
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People's College produces street lawyers<lb/>
Bv DIANE AUERBACH<lb/>
(CPS)-For years, a stint in law school<lb/>
guaranteed an insular existence. Law<lb/>
students renounced all interest in worldly<lb/>
affairs, retreated to a book-lined enclave of<lb/>
torts and briefs, and emerged three years<lb/>
later, ready to sling legalese with the best<lb/>
of 'em.<lb/>
But their three-year live burial in<lb/>
classic cases prepared most lawyers fa<lb/>
only certain kinds of litigation: million<lb/>
dollar divoroes, upper inoome tax returns<lb/>
and trials of kidnapped heiresses, yes.<lb/>
Indicted 13-year-old heroin addicts, in-<lb/>
junctions against picketing protesters and<lb/>
evictions of 20-member ghetto families, no.<lb/>
Besides, there were all those expensive law<lb/>
school debts to pay off and a comfortable<lb/>
position waiting with Higgins, Matlook,<lb/>
Johnson, Johnson and Johnson.<lb/>
A good street lawyer was too hard to<lb/>
find, decided a few attorneys. They wanted<lb/>
a school to deaease the shortage-and at a<lb/>
reasonable price to students. Enter the<lb/>
People's College of Law.<lb/>
"If you want to become deputy district<lb/>
attaney or work in the legal department of<lb/>
some corporation the school catalog<lb/>
says, "don't waste your time and ours by<lb/>
applying. There are other schools for<lb/>
you-all the others<lb/>
The People's College of Law in Los<lb/>
Angeles prepares its 130 students, nearly<lb/>
half of whom are women and minorities, to<lb/>
work fa social change. It's an alternative<lb/>
to law schools that stress elitism and<lb/>
competition, its founders say. And it's the<lb/>
only one of its kind.<lb/>
Students pay $350 a semester to attend<lb/>
the new school, which is unaccredited.<lb/>
Califania, unlike meet states, does not<lb/>
require attendance at an accredited law<lb/>
'Walk for Humanity' planned for May 8<lb/>
By PAT F LYNN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Newman Club is sponsoring<lb/>
the 1976 Walk fa Humanity. The third<lb/>
annual walk is scheduled fa May 8.<lb/>
The Walk, previously called the Walk<lb/>
fa Human Development, was started in<lb/>
1961 by the American Freedom from<lb/>
Hunger Foundation as a national voluntary<lb/>
committee tosuppat the hunger campaign<lb/>
of the United Nations.<lb/>
As in the past, money raised will be<lb/>
given to a local group, the Pitt County<lb/>
Social Services Crises Fund, and an<lb/>
international group, Bread fa the Wald.<lb/>
"The route will cova different areas in<lb/>
Greenville and view the various types of<lb/>
living conditions in Greenville. The City<lb/>
Manager and Pol ice will approve the route<lb/>
and pre vide the necessary aid in control-<lb/>
ling traffic fa protection of the walkers<lb/>
from accidents said Jeanine Blake,<lb/>
President of the Newman Club.<lb/>
"The walk is designed to cover 25<lb/>
miles. It will begin at Fioklen Stadium at 8<lb/>
p.m. and end at the Baptist Student Union.<lb/>
Final registration fa the Walk is at 7 p.m.<lb/>
at Fioklen Stadium.<lb/>
"The Newman Club hopes to involve<lb/>
the total Greenville community in wath<lb/>
while action.<lb/>
"Anyone who is physically able is<lb/>
asked to walk. A prospective walker is na<lb/>
required to complete the 25 miles, but the<lb/>
donation will be computed on the total<lb/>
number of miles walked.<lb/>
"Sponsors may suppat mae than one<lb/>
hiker. Hikers are urged to secure mae<lb/>
than oie spoisa if possible.<lb/>
"In the next couple of weeks all walkers<lb/>
planning to walk are asked to pick up a<lb/>
"Walk card" at the Newman Club meeting<lb/>
a at any lecal church. Walkers are then<lb/>
asked to fill these cards up with as many<lb/>
pledges as they can.<lb/>
"Fa minas a waiver fam is also<lb/>
included fa parental permission The<lb/>
cards also list the checkpoints where a<lb/>
walker gets his card stamped and<lb/>
validated.<lb/>
"There will be numerous checkpoints,<lb/>
areas where food, medical and toilet<lb/>
facilities can be used by those in need, as<lb/>
well as rest areas fa weary hikers.<lb/>
"One a two days after the walk is<lb/>
completed, walkers are asked to visit their<lb/>
sponsa and collect their pledged donatiois<lb/>
and tell them about the Walk.<lb/>
"The past walks have been very<lb/>
successful, Walkers have collected over<lb/>
$3000 each of the past two years. Last year<lb/>
the money was given to Volunteer<lb/>
Greenville, Meadowbrook Day Care Cen-<lb/>
ter, The Paper The Boy's Club Summer<lb/>
Camp program, and a drought-stricken<lb/>
African country<lb/>
school as a prerequisite fa taking the bai<lb/>
exam.<lb/>
The school's first year students an<lb/>
given conventional classes to prepare therr<lb/>
fa the state bar-administered First-Yeai<lb/>
Law Examination. The students must pas?<lb/>
these to continue studies in an unao<lb/>
credited school.<lb/>
But in the next three years, they takt<lb/>
classes that many say they could fine<lb/>
nowhere else, dealing with tenant-landloc<lb/>
law, ooisumerism, immigration, polio<lb/>
brutality, sterilization and racism.<lb/>
"We're trying to turn out fully trainee<lb/>
people lawyers, lawyers who will go back tc<lb/>
their communities to practice says Henr<lb/>
di Suvero, a faculty member and movinc<lb/>
face behind the opening of the school.<lb/>
The emphasis at People's College is no<lb/>
on past grades-B.As and LSAT scoe:<lb/>
are not even required-but oi the ability tc<lb/>
learn, the faculty say. The school i;<lb/>
virtually run by students. Extensive<lb/>
participation in the school's legal clinic i<lb/>
mandatoy. Remedial writing classes are<lb/>
available, as is free child care. All classe5<lb/>
are held in the evening, so that student<lb/>
can hold onto current jobs.<lb/>
"What we're doing says Studen<lb/>
Mario Vasquez, "is demystifying the law<lb/>
saying that it's not fa the chosen few. <lb/>
traditional law school is very alienating<lb/>
You go to UCLA and you feel the fear<lb/>
Professos use the Sccratic method o<lb/>
teaching. We don't play that kind of game<lb/>
We say, Here is the principle of law ane<lb/>
this is how it applies<lb/>
The real test fa People's College wil<lb/>
come in two years with its first graduating<lb/>
class. Then its ability to produoe graduate:<lb/>
who can pass the Califania Bar Exami<lb/>
natioweputedly oie of the toughest in th<lb/>
oountry-will be gauged.<lb/>
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and movinc<lb/>
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College is no<lb/>
LSAT score:<lb/>
the ability tc<lb/>
ie school i<lb/>
. Extensive<lb/>
egal clinic i:<lb/>
) classes are<lb/>
 All classe?<lb/>
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ays Studen<lb/>
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Peace Corp flooded<lb/>
with eager applicants<lb/>
By ANTHONY SCHMITZ<lb/>
(CPS)Dave Scharnhorst just oouldn't<lb/>
take it anymore. The Peace Corps had<lb/>
plopped him down in what might have<lb/>
been a tropical paradise on Tonga Island in<lb/>
the South Pacific. He found later that "the<lb/>
electricity was off after 10 p.m. There was<lb/>
nothing to do but go to bed and listen to the<lb/>
rats rustle<lb/>
The food was so poor, he claimed, that<lb/>
he and other trainees left their language<lb/>
classes to forage in the jungle for green<lb/>
coconuts to supplement their diet. His roof<lb/>
leaked, there was no running water.<lb/>
Eventually, Scharnhorst and six or<lb/>
seven of the 33 other trainees stationed on<lb/>
the island returned to Washington. But<lb/>
although Washington Peace Corps officials<lb/>
admit that Scharnhorst's living situation<lb/>
was not unprecedented, they've still been<lb/>
turning away applicants in droves.<lb/>
Finding work with the Peace Corps has<lb/>
become even tougher than cracking the<lb/>
gloomy domestic job market for liberal arts<lb/>
graduates. The volunteer agency has been<lb/>
flcoded with applicants eager to join a staff<lb/>
that has shrunk steadily since the Peace<lb/>
Corps heyday in 1966.<lb/>
Nearly 29,000 applications came piling<lb/>
into Peace Corps offices last year from<lb/>
persons looking for jobs in one of the 68<lb/>
countries receiving volunteers. Adminis-<lb/>
trators were left with the job of throwing<lb/>
out more than 80 percent of them to round<lb/>
out the 6,400-member staff.<lb/>
Although requests, from developing<lb/>
nations for volunteers has risen, funding<lb/>
for the agency has not. The Peace Corps'<lb/>
budget has shrunk from a peak of $114<lb/>
million in 1966 to $81 million in the 1976<lb/>
fiscal year. Under pressure to tighten its<lb/>
belt even further, the Corps is expecting<lb/>
$67 million next year.<lb/>
Along with the budget, the number of<lb/>
volunteers put to work has shrunk since the<lb/>
salad days under President Johnson's<lb/>
Great Society. While 15,000 volunteers<lb/>
filled the ranks in 1966, that number has<lb/>
dropped by about 60 percent over the past<lb/>
ten years.<lb/>
Would-be volunteers armed with<lb/>
bachelors degrees can expect a hard time<lb/>
cracking the agency. Even though the<lb/>
subsistence living allowance and native<lb/>
housing doesn't seem glamorous, the<lb/>
Peace Corps is asking for-and getting-<lb/>
technicians and skilled laborers to fill the<lb/>
limited number of positions open.<lb/>
While a B.A. graduate with knowledge<lb/>
of French might still be able to find a job<lb/>
with the Peace Corps, the agency has been<lb/>
shying away from unskilled workers in<lb/>
recent years. Architects, nurses, municipal<lb/>
planners and persons with agricultural<lb/>
skills have a chance of finding jobs, while<lb/>
history and English majors are usually left<lb/>
to take their chances on the American<lb/>
marketplace.<lb/>
In spite of extensive screening, about<lb/>
15 peroent of the Peace Corps staff drop<lb/>
out before finishing their hitches. Like<lb/>
Scharnhorst, who decided that "I don't<lb/>
regret going into the Peace Corps and I<lb/>
don't regret coming back either they<lb/>
leave fa reasons ranging from physical<lb/>
hardships to the lack of liquor and sex.<lb/>
A volunteer recently returned from<lb/>
Omani said that although her group was a<lb/>
good one, three people never showed up in<lb/>
Philadelphia where the group departed<lb/>
from. "One man dropped out a week after<lb/>
we were in Oman, and one woman dropped<lb/>
out after she heard that liquor and sex<lb/>
weren't readily available the volunteer<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Of 12 Peace Corps volunteers who went<lb/>
to Man in 1974, six were left at the end of<lb/>
their scheduled stay, according to the<lb/>
former volunteer who didn't wish to be<lb/>
identified. Rumors have it that the Omani<lb/>
government has been displeased with the<lb/>
staying power of the last group of<lb/>
volunteers and the success of the next<lb/>
group will "be an important factor in<lb/>
whether or not the Omani government<lb/>
continues to request volunteers the<lb/>
former staff member said.<lb/>
George Wakiji, press officer in Wash-<lb/>
ington, said that although the Corps<lb/>
reoognizes the attrition problem, in many<lb/>
cases it might be understandable. After a<lb/>
recent survey of Peace Corps projects in<lb/>
Guatemala following the earthquake,<lb/>
Wakiji said he found volunteers working in<lb/>
conditions "that I don't know if I could<lb/>
have put up with<lb/>
But with 29,000 applications and a<lb/>
tough domestic job market, there shouldn't<lb/>
be much trouble f riding replacements.<lb/>
tVo<lb/>
 THIS WEEK AT THE<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
��S 10THA VENUE<lb/>
THURS "GOOD TIME<lb/>
FRI CHARLIE<lb/>
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hOUNTAINHtADVOL. 51, NO. 5227 APRIL 1976<lb/>
�IMM<lb/>
m<lb/>
ifliiinpi<lb/>
Student Iranians protest Shah's strict rule<lb/>
By BILL McGray<lb/>
(CPS)This is the story of secret police,<lb/>
a megalomaniac, some American univer-<lb/>
sities, one hundred million dollars and<lb/>
student protesters who wear bags over<lb/>
their heads.<lb/>
The students are young Iranians;<lb/>
according to the Iranian Embassy in<lb/>
Washington there are nearly 17,000 of<lb/>
them currently taking courses at U.S.<lb/>
colleges, making them this country's<lb/>
second largest foreign delegation after<lb/>
studentb from Hong Kong.<lb/>
1 he Iranians are overwhelmingly male,<lb/>
they are mainly studying engineering and<lb/>
other technical subjects, most hail from<lb/>
Iran's upper class and many of them are<lb/>
angry<lb/>
Like no other group of students these<lb/>
nays, militant Iranians, mainly members of<lb/>
the '3.000 strong Iranian Students Associ-<lb/>
ate n (ISA), are raising a collective stink at<lb/>
dozens of colleges across the country and<lb/>
around the world.<lb/>
If they aren't going on hunger strikes or<lb/>
shouting down speakers, the Iranians are<lb/>
holding teach-ins, sit-ms, dashing off<lb/>
siting letters to campus editors, leaf-<lb/>
leting or parading about with signs,<lb/>
holding their identities with ski masks and<lb/>
bags that make them look like medieval<lb/>
joust ers.<lb/>
The target of their ire and the reason<lb/>
for their paranoia is His Imperial Majesty,<lb/>
Mohammed Reza Pahlevi, King of Kingi<lb/>
and Light of the Aryans, also known as the<lb/>
Shah of Iran. The Shah gained power in<lb/>
1953 after a now-acknowledged CIA coup.<lb/>
In 1967 he crowned himself after reported-<lb/>
ly watching a film of Queen Elizabeth's<lb/>
coronation 20 times in preparation.<lb/>
The ISA and its many world-wide<lb/>
sympathizers say the Shah is an iron-fisted<lb/>
dictator who uses Iran's annual $20 billion<lb/>
oil revenues to consolidate his power and<lb/>
turther his empire, all at the expense of<lb/>
that country's poor-most of irans 32<lb/>
million people. The Shah has bought over<lb/>
$10 billion wath of sophisticated U.S.<lb/>
weapons and ships in the past decade.<lb/>
"U.S. arms sales come from money sucked<lb/>
from the Iranian people says an ISA<lb/>
student at New Mexico State.<lb/>
Censorship abounds in Iran, the ISA<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
next year, the Legislature passed a bill<lb/>
giving $4,025 to the committee.<lb/>
The first amendment, introduced by<lb/>
'isi-tore Valerie Chaffin, would nave<lb/>
�nated the $475 "Contingency' line<lb/>
item, but was defeated. The Legislature<lb/>
later suspended rules to a.low reconsider-<lb/>
ation of the Cha vnG.T.ont, which<lb/>
parsed on the secr.i vote.<lb/>
Chaff;n saic th s expense couid oc<lb/>
covered by the $705 rpiUb from this<lb/>
,e?r Homecominn Committee cdqet.<lb/>
'��sscoate Dear, oi Stuaent Affa.rs<lb/>
Rjdolph Alexander, who s acv.sor to the<lb/>
St dent on,or, tad tne Legislature it<lb/>
should eliminate a $500 item in the budget<lb/>
for "entertainment" if a cut had to be<lb/>
made. Alexander said the SGA had gotten<lb/>
out of the business of programming when<lb/>
the Siudent Union became independent<lb/>
several years ago and that it should stay<lb/>
out now.<lb/>
Snort I y thereafter, Legislator Ray Hud-<lb/>
son introduced an amendment eliminating<lb/>
the entertainment line item. This amend-<lb/>
ment Jassec with one negative vote.<lb/>
Student onion President-eiect Barry<lb/>
Roc "son, responding to quer.es on the<lb/>
i ear's Homecoming Committee<lb/>
. . m� .on. it icQica,rc tii3t tne<lb/>
CGiTii u,ee rioO in previous yeao oolioiec<lb/>
money from ;no downtown rr,erchants Put<lb/>
this year the committee has oeen emoar-<lb/>
'&amp;ocJj id CO so.<lb/>
W1?WE<lb/>
-vA<lb/>
K .<lb/>
A0c�. �j�.<lb/>
<lb/>
'�!��� A, � - �<lb/>
'�<lb/>
�<lb/>
NO<lb/>
 .��<lb/>
r, , b. � ��� v. �� iiKj nil<lb/>
P. K (QIC,<lb/>
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claims, and when it comes to "God's<lb/>
Shadow as the Shah likes to be called,<lb/>
never is there heard a discouraging word.<lb/>
Failure to abide by this rule means prison,<lb/>
where 100,000 political opponents of the<lb/>
Shah now sit, battered by cattle prods and<lb/>
other modern devices of torture, aocording<lb/>
to Amnesty International, the French<lb/>
newspaper Le Monde and several other<lb/>
European organizations. Since 1972, over<lb/>
300 Iranians have been executed for<lb/>
political crimes. The Shah also controls the<lb/>
70,000-member SAVAK secret police, and<lb/>
even the Iranian embassy has admitted<lb/>
that there are SAVAK agents on the prowl<lb/>
in America, keeping an eye on Iranian<lb/>
ex pat riots.<lb/>
What really rankles the ISA and its<lb/>
supporters is the complicity between U.S.<lb/>
universities and the Shah. Ever since the<lb/>
Arab oil boycott two years ago, college<lb/>
administrators have been tripping over<lb/>
each other in their attempts to strike up<lb/>
bargains with Iran, seeing the wealthy<lb/>
country as one way out of their present<lb/>
money woes.<lb/>
American educational experts put the<lb/>
total value of educational services gone<lb/>
from the U.S. to Iran at $100 million. One<lb/>
of the largest deals is an $11 million,<lb/>
five-year agreement with George Wash-<lb/>
ington University in which its professors<lb/>
will set up an economic institute in<lb/>
Iran. UCLA, Berkeley, the University of<lb/>
Pennsylvania, MIT, Harvard, and dozens<lb/>
of other schools have also agreed to<lb/>
establish some sort of program with the<lb/>
Shah's government.<lb/>
Little of this has gone unnoticed at the<lb/>
sshoois involved. "Some (academic per-<lb/>
sonnel) have scruples about doing anything<lb/>
to reinforce the Shah's rule but the<lb/>
prevailing feeling seemsto be that it's nice<lb/>
to help a oountry fight its backwardness<lb/>
commented Science Magazine.<lb/>
But some Iranian students, as well as<lb/>
American students and professors, point<lb/>
out the militaristic nature of many of the<lb/>
agreements and ask how they will help<lb/>
raise Iran's$1,800 annual per capita wage<lb/>
or cut into its 75 percent illiteracy rate.<lb/>
Student protests last fall at Southern<lb/>
Massachusetts University over a plan to<lb/>
use the campus as a training ground for the<lb/>
Iranian Navy led officials there to cancel<lb/>
the program. In early February, a debate<lb/>
on Iran at the University of Texas ended in<lb/>
a brawl between ISA members and a<lb/>
photographer whom they accused of<lb/>
working for SAVAK.<lb/>
Most recently, protests and verbal<lb/>
outbursts disrupted John Hopkins Uni-<lb/>
versity's Graduation Day celebration when<lb/>
the university-which has an agreement<lb/>
with Shah-awarded an honorary degree to<lb/>
his wife's sister.<lb/>
Reza, an Iranian graduate student in<lb/>
engineering at the University of California<lb/>
at Berkeley, says it is easy for Iranians to<lb/>
turn against the Shah once they leave Iran.<lb/>
"The Shah built the oountry he was a<lb/>
great man, Reza thought before he came to<lb/>
the U.S. to study. "So I came here, I saw<lb/>
American papers, watched some TV.<lb/>
Automatically, my mind started opening<lb/>
up. It happens to all Iranians here<lb/>
As for the Shah, he does not appear<lb/>
worried that many of his hopes for the<lb/>
future have turned into enemies. "I am not<lb/>
afraid of my people, he told CBS last<lb/>
year. "They trust me. I trust them<lb/>
ff:<lb/>
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S -vLi&amp;CROFT "GETCLOSER"<lb/>
ARY RUSSELL<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040039_0013"/><lb/>
13<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51. NO. 5227 APRIL 1976<lb/>
�<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
; Pirates dump VMI, running record to 20 wins<lb/>
f<lb/>
i<lb/>
East Carolina's Pirates swept a double-<lb/>
header from VMI Saturday by 11-0, 11-1<lb/>
scores and thus ran its' season record to 20<lb/>
wins and six losses.<lb/>
Prior to the VMI twinbill, the Pirates<lb/>
had defeated William and Mary, 6-1, and<lb/>
lost to Pembroke State, 5-1. The three SC<lb/>
wins over VMI and William and Mary ran<lb/>
ECU'S record to 7-5 in the conference and<lb/>
the loss to Pembroke was the first loss<lb/>
outside the conference for ECU.<lb/>
Getting back to baseball, the VMI<lb/>
sweep gave ECU its most victories in a<lb/>
season since 1970, when Earl Smith<lb/>
coached the SC champion Pirates to a 20-13<lb/>
record. In 1968, the Pirates won 21 and in<lb/>
1967 they won 23 games. Both of these<lb/>
records are within striking distance for this<lb/>
year's team-which has four games to play<lb/>
following yesterday's game with Rich-<lb/>
mond.<lb/>
Against VMI, the Pirates had two-hit<lb/>
pitching performances by Terry Durham<lb/>
and Dean Reavis. In the first game,<lb/>
Durham struck out a record 11 batters,<lb/>
including a record four in a row, to set the<lb/>
Keydets back.<lb/>
In the nightcap, Reavis came back and<lb/>
struck out eight Keydet batters while<lb/>
hurling a two-hitter Reavis faced only 22<lb/>
batters in the sever i -inning contest.<lb/>
It was the first time since April 3 that<lb/>
Reavis had gone the route in a contest, and<lb/>
his first win in the same amount of time.<lb/>
The ECU hurler is now 4-2 on the season<lb/>
and Durham stands at 5-1 fa the year.<lb/>
In the opener, ECU blasted out 17 hits<lb/>
against the hapless Keydets and got<lb/>
homeruns from Geoff Beaston, Charlie<lb/>
Stevens and Sonny Wooten. For Beaston it<lb/>
was his first home run of the year. For<lb/>
Stevens it was his second and for Wooten it<lb/>
was his third roundtripper of the year.<lb/>
Beaston drove in three runs and went<lb/>
2-for-4 at the plate, while six other ECU<lb/>
batters came up with two hits or more.<lb/>
Leading the way with three hits was<lb/>
Howard McCullough, who had two more<lb/>
hits in the nightcap. McCullough had two<lb/>
singles and a double in the first game to<lb/>
bat across four runs. For the twinbill, he<lb/>
was 5-for-7 with six runs batted in.<lb/>
Beaston, Steve Bryant, Wooten, Joe<lb/>
Roenker, Stevens and Addison Bass all had<lb/>
two hits for ECU, with Wooten batting<lb/>
across three runs for the Pirates.<lb/>
The only run off Durham came in the<lb/>
final inning when VMI scored on an error<lb/>
by Bobby Supel and a double which scored<lb/>
the runner with two out. It was an<lb/>
unearned run. Before that, Durham had<lb/>
retired 15 batters in a row.<lb/>
In the nightcap, Reavis did not allow a<lb/>
runner past second and after the third<lb/>
inning Reavis did not allow a baserunner.<lb/>
At the plate, Supel led the way. Playing<lb/>
third instead of Beaston, Supel blasted two<lb/>
home runs, a double, scored four runs and<lb/>
batted in three more to lead the Pirates'<lb/>
12-hit assault.<lb/>
Supel homered to lead off the first and<lb/>
homered with two aboard in the fourth. He<lb/>
doubled in the sixth and scored on a<lb/>
sacrifice, and then he was intentionally<lb/>
passed in the seventh, scoring on a single<lb/>
by Sonny Wooten. MoCullough's two hits<lb/>
and two runs batted in also aided the ECU<lb/>
cause and Wooten continued his hitting<lb/>
tear with a two-for-five showing at the<lb/>
plate.<lb/>
Against Pembroke, the Pirates dropped<lb/>
their first non-conference game of the year.<lb/>
ECU's Keith Kurdewan started and was hit<lb/>
for four runs in as many innings. Bob<lb/>
Feeney and Joe Heavner went the<lb/>
remainder of the way for ECU.<lb/>
Stevens and McCullough each got two<lb/>
hits for the Pirates, who stranded ten<lb/>
baserunners in the game. ECU s only run<lb/>
scored in the first when Beaston opened<lb/>
with a double and scored on a sacrifice fly<lb/>
by Robert Brinkley.<lb/>
On April 17, the Pirates avenged an<lb/>
earlier 10-9 loss to William and Mary by<lb/>
downing the Indians, 6-1. in Williamsburg.<lb/>
Larry Daughtridge and Feeney combin-<lb/>
ed to pitch a three-hitter, with Daughtridge<lb/>
going the first five and Feeney pitching the<lb/>
final four in relief. Feeney allowed only one<lb/>
hit in his four inninqs.<lb/>
Pete Paradossi, Brinkley and Rick<lb/>
Koryda each picked up two hits and a run<lb/>
batted in to lead the Pirate plate<lb/>
performanoe. Three East Carolina runs<lb/>
were a result of William and Mary<lb/>
errors.<lb/>
On April 15, the Pirates wasted a<lb/>
grand-slam home run by Wooten as they<lb/>
dropped a 7-6 decision to Richmond at<lb/>
Harrington Field. The Pirates had gone<lb/>
ahead 4-2 on Wooten's blast, but Rich-<lb/>
mond came back with two to tie it and then<lb/>
three more to go in front, 7-4, before ECU<lb/>
came up short with a run in each of the<lb/>
final two innings.<lb/>
Welton, Pirates finish second in SC tourney<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
For two rounds ECU's golfers stood eye<lb/>
to eye with defending conference champion<lb/>
Furman in the Southern Conference<lb/>
tournament in Florence, S.C. In the third<lb/>
round, though, ECU blinked.<lb/>
The Pirates led the Paladins by three<lb/>
after the first day of the three-day<lb/>
tournament and trailed by an identical<lb/>
margin following the second day's play. On<lb/>
the tournament's final day, though, the<lb/>
ECU team skied to a 391 team score and<lb/>
wound up 21 strokes behind the first-place<lb/>
Paladins, who shot a team score of 373, and<lb/>
in seoond place for the third year in a row.<lb/>
Perhaps the secret to the Pirates'<lb/>
success the first two days and their failure<lb/>
on the final day lay in ECU coach Mac<lb/>
McLpndon'spre-tourney prospects.<lb/>
Before the tournament, McLendon had<lb/>
said the top three ECU scores each day had<lb/>
to be 75 or better in order fa the Pirates to<lb/>
win. In those first two rounds, the ECU<lb/>
team was successful in getting three<lb/>
golfers at 75 a betta-thus the successful<lb/>
rounds. On the third day, however, ECU<lb/>
failed to record a single scae of 75 a<lb/>
better.<lb/>
Nonetheless, the Pirates fine rounds<lb/>
the first two days kept favaite Furman<lb/>
fron making a farce of the tournament, as<lb/>
had been expected, and left the title as a<lb/>
two-team matchup between ECU and the<lb/>
Paladins, as Appalachian State and<lb/>
Richmond failed to mount any challenge<lb/>
fa second place.<lb/>
The opening round for ECU was<lb/>
anchaed by Trip Boinest's 73. Boinest, the<lb/>
Pirates' number six man, led a group of<lb/>
four ECU golfers which matched McLen-<lb/>
don' s goal. M ike Buckmasta fired a 74 and<lb/>
Rob Welton and Keith Hiller carded 75's.<lb/>
The fifth ECU score was Steve Ridge's<lb/>
77, which gave ECU a team score of 374 the<lb/>
first day, three strokes ahead of Furman's<lb/>
377. ASU and Richmond were well off the<lb/>
pace even after the first day, with 389 and<lb/>
390, respectively.<lb/>
On the second day, Furman fired a<lb/>
team scae of 369, nine over par as a team,<lb/>
to pass the Pirates and move into<lb/>
first-place with a 764 total. ECU fired a 375<lb/>
team soae, and again had three rounds of<lb/>
75 a better.<lb/>
ECU'S top round the second-day was<lb/>
turned by Welton, who fired a one-under<lb/>
par 71. The 71 put him at 146 for tht<lb/>
tournament and put him in second-place<lb/>
behind Furman's Ken Ezell, who was at<lb/>
143 after shooting 73.<lb/>
Ridge fired an even-par 72 and Hilla<lb/>
stroked a 74 to put their totals at 149, which<lb/>
was good fa third-place, giving ECU three<lb/>
of the top four places after the second day.<lb/>
After his 73 the first day, Boinest<lb/>
ballooned to 84, but Frank Acker's 76 gave<lb/>
ECU four good rounds fa the day. Again,<lb/>
Richmond and ASU fell furtha back in the<lb/>
race, with totals of 771 and 778 respective-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
On the final day, the roof caved in on<lb/>
the ECU golfers. The best scae of the day<lb/>
fa the Pirates was Boinest's 76 and only<lb/>
three other golfers, Welton, Hilla and<lb/>
Ridge, broke 80. Welton and Hilla fired<lb/>
78's and Ridge finished with a 79 as the<lb/>
Pirates watched Furman run away from the<lb/>
pack.<lb/>
Fa Welton, it was frustrating. Fur-<lb/>
man' s Ezell fired a 78 the final day to finish<lb/>
with a 221 total in first place, but Welton<lb/>
could do no betta than a 78 playing with<lb/>
i�PHllMPH l HI" Ml l I �� �Ui i<lb/>
Ezell and remained three strokes behind in<lb/>
seoond-plaoe with a 225 scae.<lb/>
Naietheless, McLendon was still pleas<lb/>
ed with Welton's play in the tournament.<lb/>
"Rob was a pleasant surprise fa us<lb/>
said McLendon. "He played well the first<lb/>
two rounds and didn't play that badly when<lb/>
playing with the leader Ezell the final day.<lb/>
I just wish the entire team oould have<lb/>
played betta that last day.<lb/>
"But, then, that has been our problem<lb/>
all year-putting three good rounds toge-<lb/>
tha. We've played two good rounds in<lb/>
eve. y tournament this year and then blown<lb/>
it all with a bad third round.<lb/>
"It was disappointing that we got so<lb/>
dose and then couldn't win added<lb/>
McLendon. "You have to give a lot of<lb/>
aedit to Furman, though. They played like<lb/>
real champions and didn t fold. When you<lb/>
have six golfas in the top ten then you<lb/>
must be doing something right.<lb/>
ECU placed two otha golfas besides<lb/>
Welton in the too ten, which also counted<lb/>
fa the All-Con'erence team.<lb/>
Hilla s 78 gave him a total of 227,<lb/>
which tied him fa sixth place, and Ridge's<lb/>
79 put him in a tie fa eighth-place wth a i<lb/>
228 scae. Altogetha, Furman ano ECU<lb/>
placed nine of the ten playas on the<lb/>
All-Confaenoe team.<lb/>
Otha scores by ECU golfas wae<lb/>
Boinest with a 76 fa a233 total, Acka with<lb/>
80 and 234, Buckmasta with 81 and 236,<lb/>
and Phil Bell with an 81 to finish at 244.<lb/>
In the team totals, Appalachian passed<lb/>
Richmond with a 387 scae to finish in third<lb/>
with 1,168 strokes. Richmond finished with<lb/>
1,181 and then, inada, came William and<lb/>
Mary, VMI, the Citadel and Davidson.<lb/>
The Pirate golfas will play in oily one<lb/>
more event this year. That will be in the<lb/>
Southan Intaoollegiate tournament in<lb/>
Athens, Ga. on May 27-29.<lb/>
Two cage recruits signed<lb/>
East Carolina head basketball coach<lb/>
Dave Patton announced the signings of two<lb/>
playas to grant-in-aids fa the 1976-77<lb/>
basketball season.<lb/>
Signed wae Jim Ramsey of Gary, N.C.<lb/>
and Herb Krusen of Silver Spring,<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
Ramsey is a 6-2 guard from Cary High<lb/>
School and was selected to the All-Metro<lb/>
team. He was the Playa of the Yea in the<lb/>
Raleigh aea last season. He avaaged ova<lb/>
20 points a game.<lb/>
Krusen comes fron Nothwood High<lb/>
School, just outside of Washington, D.C<lb/>
whae he was named to the All-County,<lb/>
All-State and seoond team All-Metropoli-<lb/>
tan squads in the Washington aea.<lb/>
Krusen is oonstdaed to be one of the<lb/>
top five playas fron the state of Maryland.<lb/>
During the 1975-76 season, Krusen<lb/>
avaaged 23.7 points a game and shot 96<lb/>
pa cent fron the foul line, including 43 in<lb/>
a row at one point. His 1,067 points during<lb/>
his two-yea carea at Nothwood wae eight<lb/>
points shy of the school record fa scoring.<lb/>
Krusen is a 6-5 forward.<lb/>
Coach Patton said he was pleased to get<lb/>
these two playas and that they wae a pair<lb/>
of top-notch reauita The signings briny<lb/>
the total of ECU recruits fa this yea to<lb/>
three. Ealia ECU signed guard Dai<lb/>
Whitaka fron Louisburg Junia College.<lb/>
PI" IHlli ��<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040039_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5227 APRIL ,976<lb/>
III! UMlll HUH<lb/>
M<lb/>
i<lb/>
W<lb/>
P<lb/>
Alston hopes for good showing in SCmeet<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Many times in athletics, it takes aa<lb/>
injury to key performers to give a guy a<lb/>
chance to prove himself in a starting<lb/>
situation. And when this person gets the<lb/>
chance to prove hirrself, it sometimes<lb/>
turns out that he is better than his<lb/>
predecessors. Calvin Alston falls into this<lb/>
mold.<lb/>
During the indoor season, Alston was<lb/>
the fourth best sprinter on the team (three<lb/>
others above him qualified for the<lb/>
nationals, but he failed in the 60 yard<lb/>
dash). Larry Austin was injured in the<lb/>
indoor conference meet, while Donnie Mack<lb/>
and Carter Suggs were injured in the first<lb/>
two outdoor meets. This gave Alston the<lb/>
chance he needed. He definitely took<lb/>
advantage of this.<lb/>
In the next meet after Suggs was<lb/>
injured, Alston ran at the South Carolina<lb/>
State-Record Relays in Columbia, S.C.<lb/>
against some strong competition. He did<lb/>
really well, running third in the 200 meters<lb/>
with a fine time of 21.0. This time, when<lb/>
oonverted to yards, set a new school record<lb/>
fa East Carolina, 21.1 (oonversiai fada<lb/>
fran 200 meters to 200 yards is to add .1<lb/>
seconds). This is not bad fa the man who<lb/>
was considered to be the fourth best<lb/>
sprinter on the team. Alston commented on<lb/>
his efforts.<lb/>
"I knew I could run the 200 a 220 in a<lb/>
good time. I'm a bit slow on the turn, but<lb/>
when I hit the straightaway, I can really<lb/>
turn it on. I believe I can run a 20.8 a 20.9.<lb/>
I got my chance when the others were<lb/>
injured, which is a bad way to get it, but I<lb/>
took advantage of it<lb/>
Being diminutive (listed at 5-8, which<lb/>
looks to be a bit tall) seems to be no<lb/>
problem fa Alstai. When he comes off the<lb/>
curve in the 200 meters a 220 dash, Alstai<lb/>
turns it oi and usually stalks down his<lb/>
con petition.<lb/>
On his height, Alston says that "it<lb/>
helps me being shat because the other<lb/>
Netters win two matches<lb/>
ECU'S tennis team ran its season<lb/>
recad to 7-10 with a pair of victaies over<lb/>
non-conference fees UNG-Wilmington and<lb/>
Campbell, after dropping a conference<lb/>
match to Davidson College the week<lb/>
befae. The loss to Davidson put ECU'S<lb/>
conference mark at 2-4 fa the year, with<lb/>
wins over VMI and William and Mary.<lb/>
At the same time, Mitch Pergerscn ran<lb/>
his season mark to 9-4 with a pair of wins.<lb/>
Pergerson's recad ranks him as the top<lb/>
number five singles competita in the<lb/>
conference going into this weekend's<lb/>
conference tournament in Charleston, S.C.<lb/>
ECU beat UNC-W by a 90 soae and<lb/>
Campbell by an 8-1 count, after falling to<lb/>
Davidson 9-0 on April 17.<lb/>
Tom Durfee, Pergerson, Bob Neff,<lb/>
Randy Bailey and Doug Getsinger all took<lb/>
two wins apiece and Jim Ratliff took one. In<lb/>
doubles play, the teams of Durfee-Bailey,<lb/>
Get singer-Neff and Ratliff-Calloway all<lb/>
took two wins apiece, despite being<lb/>
shutout by Davidson.<lb/>
With the tournament approaching,<lb/>
Pergerson's 9-4 mark is the best on the<lb/>
team and he oould stand a chance of<lb/>
placing high in the number-five singles<lb/>
competition, but will be hard-pressed to<lb/>
win, sinoe he has a 2-2 recad against<lb/>
conference foes.<lb/>
The netters close out their regular<lb/>
season on Tuesday with a match against<lb/>
small-college power Atlantic Christian in<lb/>
Wilson.<lb/>
TKEs hold boxing tournament<lb/>
The First Annual Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
boxing tournament found three ECU<lb/>
varsity athletes stealing the spotlight by<lb/>
winning championships in three of the nine<lb/>
weight classes.<lb/>
In the heavyweight class, ECU footbal-<lb/>
ler Harold Randolph connected with an<lb/>
uppercut to flcor wrestler Phil Mueller in<lb/>
the first-round of their scheduled three-<lb/>
rounder.<lb/>
Two wrestlers, Clay Scott, in the<lb/>
welterweight class, and Paul Osman in the<lb/>
featherweight class, took championships.<lb/>
Osman was voted the tournament's<lb/>
Outstanding Boxer.<lb/>
Other winners were Kevin Johnson in<lb/>
the most exciting match of the night<lb/>
against Milton Green, Robert Spizzo in the<lb/>
light welterweight dass, John Leggett in<lb/>
the middleweight dass, Jerry Leggett in<lb/>
the light middleweight dass, Mark Jones<lb/>
in the light heavyweight dass and Mark<lb/>
Davis in the middle heavyweight dass.<lb/>
The TKE tournament was run under<lb/>
Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) rules and<lb/>
referees were used from the Jacksonville,<lb/>
N.C. AAU.<lb/>
guysthink I'm too shat to beat them. This<lb/>
gives me the edge<lb/>
Alston came out of high school not<lb/>
really being touted as a superstar sprinter.<lb/>
He ran a 9.6-100 yard dash and 21.5-220<lb/>
yard dash, which are good statistics fa the<lb/>
scholastic scene. But since entering East<lb/>
Carolina, Alston has really been impro-<lb/>
ving. Track coach Bill Carson commented<lb/>
on his improvement.<lb/>
"Calvin has really been waking hard<lb/>
all year and has had a marked improve-<lb/>
ment. His hard wak has really paid off<lb/>
good dividenda"<lb/>
The Pirates are starting preparations<lb/>
fa the oonferenoe meet this weekend and<lb/>
Alston thinks the Pirates are going to<lb/>
unseat William and Mary fa the first time<lb/>
in 11 years.<lb/>
"I think we are going to win the<lb/>
conference, if we can get everybody back<lb/>
from injuries. I'm sure we are going to be<lb/>
ready. East Carolina has played second<lb/>
fiddle fa too long<lb/>
About hischancesof winning the 220 at<lb/>
the meet, Alston thinks they are good.<lb/>
"I'm really pointing to that meet. I think I<lb/>
can win, but there are some fine<lb/>
perfamers in the conference and on this<lb/>
team<lb/>
f<lb/>
CALVIN ALSTON-will be competing for the ECU track team in the SC track<lb/>
championships in Davidson this weekend. Alston will be competing in the 200 and 220<lb/>
yard dashes and the 440 yard relay Photo by Kip Sloan.<lb/>
Clip this coupon!<lb/>
And get three games for only1.00.<lb/>
Bring three friends along. We'll let<lb/>
them in on the deal, too.<lb/>
� t�rj ppgca<lb/>
� rrocA<lb/>
WASHINGTON HWY<lb/>
GhEENVILLE, N.C<lb/>
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By<lb/>
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Even in the<lb/>
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teachings i<lb/>
Fa Ali this<lb/>
s what he si<lb/>
dose up ai<lb/>
M uhammed<lb/>
it he does, b<lb/>
just by his<lb/>
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By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
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MP<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5227 APRIL 1976<lb/>
15<lb/>
Ali: A Champion In More Ways Than One<lb/>
c When a champion oomes to town it is usually not iceable, even in the case of a town like<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
Last week, Muhammed Ali came to the nation's capital along with challenger Jimmy<lb/>
iung in preparation fa their 15-round Wald Champiaiship bout on Friday. And the<lb/>
t(tion's capital was waiting fa them.<lb/>
')<lb/>
id First of all, hundreds of boxing fans and interested non-fans paid three and four<lb/>
larsahead to watch the champion wakout at his suburban headquarters. Actually the<lb/>
oee and four dollar tickets gave the people the right to stand in line fa a chance to get<lb/>
2: but not necessarily a shot at the champ.<lb/>
tc<lb/>
j, Once one did get in, though, Ali was up fa the show. He would spar through wakouts<lb/>
,( h his entourage of sparring partners, which included Jimmy Ellis, a famer champion<lb/>
j, nself back when Ali had been stripped of his title. Ali also was there with the gab fa<lb/>
r( i press and the Washingtoi press caps, who are used to big-time spats but not so<lb/>
ejjch big-time boxing, were up to the task of interviewing the champ.<lb/>
?.<lb/>
Muhammed Ali is fa sure a first-dass spats personality and he is as exciting in<lb/>
soi as he is oi the tube, oily much larger in size and stature. Where in the ring he<lb/>
s to intimidate opponents, he is not so much that way with the press and tose who<lb/>
4lize himthe youth of the champ's following.<lb/>
Even in the heat of trying to prepare fa the heavyweight fight, Ali found time to visit<lb/>
al school children and spend an afternoon with them.<lb/>
9<lb/>
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The trip was not an egaistical one fa the champ, but rather it evolved as a spats idol<lb/>
ing down with the kids and talking to them on their level. Ali did not speak of what it<lb/>
3 like to beat people up a how great it was to be a fighter, but rather he spoke of how<lb/>
xxtant it was to stay in school, get an education and beoome a responsible adult. And<lb/>
children listened.<lb/>
This is the coe side of the champ that few spats fans see. The side away fron the<lb/>
stful antics he displays in front of the press a the televisiai camera.<lb/>
Ali has said, and he said it again during interviews in Washington, that when he does<lb/>
re from the boxing game he will become an evangelist. He wants to spread the wad<lb/>
teachings of his god, Allah, to all the black men and women of the wald.<lb/>
Fa Ali this isa sacred goal and one he must certainly be serious in fulfilling. The man<lb/>
s what he says he will do, inside and outside the ring, and he is a person who when<lb/>
close up and in person, impresses as a sincere, but entertaining, celebrity.<lb/>
Muhammed AM knows that one of his maja traits is entertainment. And entertain is<lb/>
it he does, both inside and outside the ring. He has helped to save the spat of boxing,<lb/>
just by his personal achievements but by bringing the game back to the level it had<lb/>
bn from in the early 60's befae he came into being a professional boxer.<lb/>
'Phe spat was most certainly hurt during the three years Ali was held inactive, but<lb/>
that he has returned to boxing so has the sport beoome one of the highest paying and<lb/>
t popular spats, not only in the United States but in the wald. There are very few<lb/>
ts where people will pay 20 dollars fa the cheapest seat in the house and boxing is<lb/>
of them.<lb/>
Mi is partly the cause of thisand as long as he is in the spat it will remain prosperous.<lb/>
The fight coming up this weekend is an example. It is probably the top fighting card of<lb/>
ime in Washington, D.C. and oompletes a rebirth of top-grade boxing which started<lb/>
years ago when Abe Pollin built his Capitol Centre. It took a Muhammed All fight to<lb/>
 though.<lb/>
Jut, there is another fighter in this fight besides Ali. His name is Jimmy Young.<lb/>
;re Ali is to make over one million dollars on the fight, Young will make only 100,000<lb/>
irs. Far lessisat stake fa Young than fa Ah.If he wins he becomes Wald Champiai,<lb/>
may end Ali s career as a boxer. If he loses it isnowaseafeat than what befell greats<lb/>
Joe Frazier, Geage Faman and so many lesser men befae them. Surely Young will<lb/>
fter Ah and the champ doubtlessly knows it.<lb/>
�or 100,000 dollars Young can do a lot more than people think he may be able to do,<lb/>
t is extremely tough to vote against the mae intriguing and mae popular Ali. Few<lb/>
unless they are out to make a quick buck.<lb/>
his fight has all themakingsof a great fight. It oould be better than most fights up to<lb/>
. except maybe the first and third Ali-Frazier fights and the Faeman-Frazier fight fa<lb/>
ement. Naietheless, Young probably will not last the fight. Certainly, Ali will<lb/>
ince you of that and talking to Young one may not change your thinking. The<lb/>
enger is playing it that oool.<lb/>
 any rate, oome Friday night Muhammed Ali will onoe again be asked to shut up and<lb/>
v the wald what he can do. We predict that once again he will do it successfully<lb/>
nst still another up-and-coming challenger and continue to stake his claim as one of<lb/>
greatest-if not the greatest-boxers of all-time.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Women netters take, 7-2<lb/>
win over N. C. State<lb/>
ECU'S women's tennis team avenged<lb/>
an early-season loss by downing Nath<lb/>
Carolina State, 7-2, here April 16. Earlier<lb/>
in the year, the Packettes had downed<lb/>
ECU, 5-4.<lb/>
In the singles's competition, ECU<lb/>
jumped out and clinched the match by<lb/>
winning five of six matches.<lb/>
Winning in straight sets were Dacas<lb/>
Sunkel over Carol Woodard, 6-4, 6-1;<lb/>
Marie Stewart over Margie Acker, 6-0, 6-1;<lb/>
Susan Helmer over Peggy Smith, 6-3, 6-3;<lb/>
Vicki Loose over Kathy Sizemae, 6-2, 6-1;<lb/>
and LaaDioiis over Kathy White by 6-4<lb/>
and 6-3 scaes.<lb/>
In the doubles' competition, Cathy<lb/>
Patwood helped to avenge her loss in the<lb/>
singles' play by teaming with Sunkel fa an<lb/>
8-6 win over State's Alicia Jones and Peggy<lb/>
Smith. The other doubles' victay was<lb/>
turned in by Stewart and Dicnis. The<lb/>
wonen paired to down State's duo of<lb/>
Sizemae and Wcodard, 6-1.<lb/>
The win ran the women's record oi the<lb/>
year to 2-1.<lb/>
In addition, the ECU women's track<lb/>
team downer Mlliam and Mary in a home<lb/>
meet with Debbie Freeman and Velma<lb/>
Thompson each winning three events. The<lb/>
win was the first fa the Lady Pirates' in<lb/>
their oily dual meet of the year.<lb/>
Sports Shorts<lb/>
Vito Ragazzo, a former assistant<lb/>
football coach at ECU, has been hired as an<lb/>
assistant coach at Wake Faest. Ragazzo<lb/>
was a member of the University of Nath<lb/>
Carolina coaching staff last year and was at<lb/>
one time the head football coach at VMI.<lb/>
ECU's golf team, wfiich finished second<lb/>
to Furman at last week's conference<lb/>
tournament, will play in the Southern<lb/>
Intercollegiate Tournament in Athens, Ga.<lb/>
on May 26-28. It will be the first<lb/>
appearance by ECU in the Southern<lb/>
Intercollegiate.<lb/>
Bill Blair, who coached VMI to a 22-10<lb/>
record and a second-place finish in the<lb/>
NCAA Eastern Regicnals this year, has<lb/>
been named head basketball coach at<lb/>
Colaado.<lb/>
Blair'scoaching reoadat VMI included<lb/>
the team's first winning basketball team in<lb/>
35 years and the school's first Southern<lb/>
Conference basketball championship since<lb/>
1964.<lb/>
Blair'ssucoessa at VMI will be Charlie<lb/>
Schmaus. Schmaus served as an assistant<lb/>
on the VMI staff the last two seasons.<lb/>
Both the ECU tennis and track teams<lb/>
will be participating in Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence tournaments this coming weekend.<lb/>
The track team will travel to Davidson<lb/>
Friday and Saturday fa the conference<lb/>
meet. The tennis team will travel to<lb/>
Richmond, Va. Thursday through Saturday<lb/>
fa the oonference tournament. Last year,<lb/>
the Pirate harriers placed second and the<lb/>
tennis team was seventh in the oonference.<lb/>
NOW IN STOCK AT H.L. HODGES&amp;CO.<lb/>
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Birdwell Beach Britches<lb/>
AVAILABLE IN SIX COLORS<lb/>
: � IDEAL FOR BEACH, LEISURE,<lb/>
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portd (Senter<lb/>
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mmm<lb/>
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mmmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040039_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5227APRIL 1976<lb/>
ii ii �wnwmmimwiiiiaw i up miai<lb/>
newsFL<lb/>
IT ILir<lb/>
Young Democrats Buccaneer<lb/>
Grad Art<lb/>
Sports Equipment<lb/>
ai<lb/>
r�<lb/>
There will be a Young Democrats Club<lb/>
meeting on Wednesday, April 28, at 7 30 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Check at desk<lb/>
for meeting room number.<lb/>
Art Tour Canceled<lb/>
ECU'S annual art and architecture tour<lb/>
of Europe has been canceled. A lack of<lb/>
interest was sighted as one of the major<lb/>
causes.<lb/>
The tour sponsored by the Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education and the School of<lb/>
Art was to have made stops in Paris,<lb/>
Athens, Corinth, Rome, Pompeii, and<lb/>
several other cities and sites of artistic<lb/>
value. The participants could have received<lb/>
six quarter hours in Art 325G, if they had<lb/>
achieved 144 hours of accepted work. For<lb/>
those who had accumulated less than the<lb/>
144 hr. minimum, six credit hr. in Art 155<lb/>
was offered. You also could opt to not<lb/>
attempt credit work.<lb/>
Other factors weighed heavily in the<lb/>
cancellation.First, the pamphlet describing<lb/>
the tour was not received at the prescribed<lb/>
time. This limited theoirculation and flow<lb/>
. of information concerning the tour. Secon-<lb/>
dly, the tour was to last only 21 days and<lb/>
carry 6 hr. of credit opposed to other<lb/>
similiar tours, academic or other wise, that<lb/>
last the length of the summer and offer 12<lb/>
hr. credit. Finally and probably most<lb/>
importantly was the price tag, $1,452.<lb/>
While included were economy class air fare<lb/>
to and rrom New York, room at first rate<lb/>
hotels, transportation between oities and<lb/>
tuition; passport and visa fees, laundry,<lb/>
and an average of 1 meal a day<lb/>
included.<lb/>
Although speculative, it is thought that<lb/>
the tour will be offered next year.<lb/>
Are you creative? Do you like to write?<lb/>
Are you involved with campus life and<lb/>
want to contribute to something worth-<lb/>
while? If you answered yes to any of the<lb/>
above questions we want you. If you<lb/>
answered no but would like to get involved<lb/>
we still want you. There will be a meeting<lb/>
of all persons interested in working on the<lb/>
Buccaneer staff for 76-77 on Wednesday,<lb/>
May 5 at 4XX) in the Buccaneer office,<lb/>
located on the second floor of the<lb/>
Publications Center. No experience neces-<lb/>
sary.<lb/>
Honor Society<lb/>
The spring initiation of Phi Eta Sigma,<lb/>
national honor society for freshmen, will be<lb/>
held in the Multipurpose Room of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center on April 29,<lb/>
1976, beginning at 730 p.m. All students<lb/>
to be initiated are urged to be present.<lb/>
Pub Applications<lb/>
Pub Board applications are now being<lb/>
taken for the Pub Board of 76-77 school<lb/>
year. Applications can be picked up at<lb/>
Wright room 204. Screenings will be held<lb/>
the first week of May. It only takes a few<lb/>
minutes to apply and it is painless.<lb/>
Featured this week in Mendenhall<lb/>
Gallery is a wondrous barrage of beauteous<lb/>
debris created by the Art students slaving<lb/>
through Graduate school. Come by for a<lb/>
delicious meal fa the senses and inspira-<lb/>
tion fa the soul. The show features 45<lb/>
waks by 25 artists and will squat in oie<lb/>
gallery until Sunday May 2. It's a gas, gas,<lb/>
gas! Spoisaed by ILLUMINA. the Art<lb/>
Exhibitiai Canmittee.<lb/>
ai<lb/>
Do you need a volleyball and net fa i<lb/>
game around the dams? How abou<lb/>
softballsa basketballs? If you need spat: '<lb/>
equipment, oome by the MRC office ir<lb/>
Scott Dam Lobby and bring your ID care<lb/>
and your MRC a WRC card. Check thi<lb/>
schedule on the dcor a call 758-6084 to sa<lb/>
when the office will be open.<lb/>
re<lb/>
Newman Club<lb/>
Ski Club<lb/>
Cool Water Ski Club is providing free<lb/>
transpatatioi and instructions fa skiing<lb/>
slalom or on two skies forward or<lb/>
backwards. Rafting and surfing is also<lb/>
available. All meetings are held in<lb/>
Washington fa mae infamatiai call<lb/>
758-1640.<lb/>
BC<lb/>
tc<lb/>
T)<lb/>
<lb/>
o<lb/>
e:<lb/>
There will be a Newman Club meetim<lb/>
this Wednesday at 5:00 p.m room 223<lb/>
Mendenhall. Dinner will be served follow<lb/>
ing Mass. Those persons planning t ,<lb/>
participate in the Walk fa Humanity ar <lb/>
asked to drop by and pick up their Wal V(<lb/>
cards. All interested persons are invited t <lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Basketball<lb/>
Art Show<lb/>
There will be an Easter Seal Basketball<lb/>
game between the SGA and the Greenville<lb/>
Police Department. It will be the "Freaks<lb/>
vs. Pigs" in a shoot out at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum on May 6th. Student suppat-<lb/>
ers are asked to attend to help with<lb/>
community relations.<lb/>
Psi Chi Officers Seminar<lb/>
The Second Annual Art Show an<lb/>
Competition will take place in Mendenha<lb/>
Gallery from Sunday, May 2 to Sunday<lb/>
May 9,1976. Entry famsfa all categaie<lb/>
will be available by Thursday at Mender<lb/>
hall Infamatiai Desk, Jenkins Art Of fie<lb/>
a the Rawl Art Office. Six hundred dollar<lb/>
prize money will be awarded with 1st, 2nc<lb/>
3rd in each categay and a best In Sho<lb/>
Award. Stay tuned to this Channel fa ma<lb/>
this week. The show will be sponsaed fc<lb/>
ILLUMINA, The Art Exhibition Canmi<lb/>
ree.<lb/>
e:<lb/>
it:<lb/>
n<lb/>
w<lb/>
<lb/>
g<lb/>
ar<lb/>
o<lb/>
ie<lb/>
nc<lb/>
HI<lb/>
n<lb/>
te:<lb/>
ni<lb/>
th�<lb/>
Astrology<lb/>
Congratulations to the newly elected<lb/>
Psi Chi offioers fa 1976-77: President-<lb/>
Mark Brodsky; Vioe-President-Jim Vallely;<lb/>
Secretary-Betty Manning; Initiate Seaet-<lb/>
ary - Beth Lambeth; Treasurer - Cynthia<lb/>
Harrell; Publicity Chair per son-Janet<lb/>
Gaino; Library Chairperson-Barbara<lb/>
Peoples.<lb/>
If you are interested in Astrology a<lb/>
reincarnatiai, there is now a place fa you<lb/>
to go in the Greenville area to study these<lb/>
' Subjective Sciences . The Center fa Study<lb/>
and Growth is in the Greenville area fa<lb/>
your use in learning about all things of<lb/>
which there are no classes about at ECU.<lb/>
Get in oontact with Lois Dean at 752-3008.<lb/>
Psych Picnic<lb/>
A picnic fa Psi Chi members will be<lb/>
held ai Tuesday, May 4, at 330 p.m. Also<lb/>
a Softball game is planned: Psychology<lb/>
faculty vs. Psi Chi. Contact Psychology<lb/>
faculty members a Psi Chi offioers fa<lb/>
further details.<lb/>
The Computing Center had scheduled a<lb/>
seminar entitled "Introduction to SPSS"<lb/>
fa April 20, 1976. This seminar has been<lb/>
rescheduled fa April 27, 1976 at 4.00 p.m.<lb/>
in Austin 211. Everyoie is invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi<lb/>
The last business meeting of the year<lb/>
fa Gamma Beta Phi will be Thursday,<lb/>
April 29, at 7 p.m. in room 244 of the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. AH pledges<lb/>
and members are requested to attend and<lb/>
bring $3.00 fa the Spring Banquet.<lb/>
OSR<lb/>
Alpha Phi Gamma Campu$ Cru$ale<lb/>
Alpha Phi Gamma will meet Wednes-<lb/>
day night at 7:00 in the Buccaneer office.<lb/>
All new members are asked to be present.<lb/>
Also there will be a meeting at 430<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon in 301 Austin of the<lb/>
wakshop oommittee. It is important that<lb/>
everyone attend.<lb/>
SGA Openings<lb/>
Students in Slay, Aycock and Greene<lb/>
dams - are you suffering from lack of<lb/>
interest syndrome? Cure that ill! Apply<lb/>
immediately to SGA fa positions<lb/>
now open. Stay tuned to Fountainhead fa<lb/>
time and place. SGA Screening and<lb/>
Appointments Committee.<lb/>
9M<lb/>
m<lb/>
Campus Crusade fa Christ an inter-<lb/>
doninatiaial Christ centered Christian<lb/>
organization will meet this Tuesday<lb/>
evening, April 27, at 7:00.<lb/>
We will be meeting at the Campus<lb/>
Crusade House, 1509 E. Fifth St. (across<lb/>
from Nursing Bldg.) Cone join us fa a<lb/>
time of Christian Fellowship.<lb/>
Animals Available<lb/>
The dogs available fa adoption this<lb/>
week include a mixed shepard, a black and<lb/>
white, mixed breed, and two kittens. The<lb/>
people at Animal Control would like to<lb/>
invite all interested persons to visit the<lb/>
Animal Shelter located off Cemetery Road<lb/>
on 2nd Street.<lb/>
��<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Any person interested in working<lb/>
on the FOUNTAINHEAD staff this<lb/>
summer should be at the staff j<lb/>
meeting Tuesday, May 4 at at 4:00 j<lb/>
Blood Drive<lb/>
Suppat your Red Cross Blood Drive.<lb/>
Give blood to save lives on April 27 from<lb/>
11-4, April 28 from 10-5, April 29 from<lb/>
10-5, in Wright Auditaium, ECU campus.<lb/>
These people - students and nonsti<lb/>
dents - who have been in contact with tr<lb/>
Organization fa Student Rights about tr<lb/>
class action lawsuit being filed against tf<lb/>
City of Greenville can fill out "power i<lb/>
attaney farns now. The fams need to t<lb/>
filled out by each person who wishes to t<lb/>
a plaintiff in the case as scon as possibl<lb/>
either this week a the week after East<lb/>
break. All that is required is a signatur<lb/>
Those who wish to take part in this actk<lb/>
should go to the law office at 119 We<lb/>
Third Street, across the street from the c<lb/>
courthouse, and inquire with one of tl<lb/>
secretaries. You can go from 9�)0-5�<lb/>
The OSR urges all people who feel th�<lb/>
rights were violated, whether they we<lb/>
arrested a not, to file. Let's make �<lb/>
Halloween a little safer fa everybody, ai<lb/>
fight to see that the past does not repe<lb/>
itself.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040039_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>