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<pb facs="00040041_0001"/>
This issue- 12pages<lb/>
Circulation 8,500<lb/>
I mwnyinw<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina Community for over fifty years<lb/>
m mi mn mmm hiwiwiu<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
VOL. 51, NO. 54<lb/>
4 MAY 1976<lb/>
??<lb/>
Fund drive starts this week<lb/>
Ficklen expansion fund<lb/>
raisers set $2.5million goal<lb/>
By JACKSON HARRILL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The fund-raising drive for the expan-<lb/>
sion of Ficklen Stadium begins this week,<lb/>
according to John Prevette, project co-<lb/>
ordinator.<lb/>
The goal of the drive is to raise $2.5<lb/>
million by December 31, 1976. Stadium<lb/>
construction will begin in January, 1977,<lb/>
with completion in September, 1977.<lb/>
Working with a limited budget, the<lb/>
project is supported mostly by private<lb/>
funds, with no appropriations from the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
The ECU Regional Development In-<lb/>
stitute is formulating the plans for raising<lb/>
the money. PreveLo, an Institute em-<lb/>
ployee, is working on the project with a<lb/>
budget raised through previous drives.<lb/>
The fund-raising will involve participa-<lb/>
tion of alumni chapters, across the state<lb/>
and country, with visits made to the<lb/>
chapters by Roddy Jones, chairman of the<lb/>
fund-raising committee, and Chancellor<lb/>
Leo Jenkins, vice-chairman of the drive.<lb/>
Commenting on the stadium expansion,<lb/>
both Jenkins and Prevette see it as a great<lb/>
drawing card to non-athletic activities.<lb/>
"We would like to have one of the<lb/>
evangelic crusades here, as well as some of<lb/>
the tremendously large concerts, which fill<lb/>
a stadium said Jenkins.<lb/>
Prevette, in citing reasons for the<lb/>
stadium expansion, noted that there exists<lb/>
the possibility of holding a Washington<lb/>
Redskins exhibition football game here.<lb/>
Prevette said that stadium parking will<lb/>
be handled as always, with parking on the<lb/>
intramural field around the stadium.<lb/>
A meeting will be held on May 11 at<lb/>
1:30at the Regional Development Institute<lb/>
to select a committee whose job will be to<lb/>
select chairpersons of various committees<lb/>
in the drive.<lb/>
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR of Campus Security, Francis Eddings, recently awarded seven<lb/>
3 ECU students cash certificates for notifying the campus police of crimes in progress which<lb/>
i led to arrests.<lb/>
Negotiations may kill park<lb/>
By STAN HOLLOW ELL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Secret negotiations between the state<lb/>
and several squatters on the Core Banks<lb/>
may end plans for the proposed Cape<lb/>
Lookout National Park, according to Dr.<lb/>
Phillip J. dler, president of the local<lb/>
Sierra Club, and ECU history professor.<lb/>
"We fear that the state will renege on<lb/>
its promise to turn over the Core Banks,<lb/>
purchased with tax money, to the Federal<lb/>
Park Service said Adler.<lb/>
 The state originally agreed ten years<lb/>
v ago with the Federal Park Service to buy<lb/>
it Core Banks and turn it into a federal park.<lb/>
n At the same time, the Federal Park Service<lb/>
:i agreed to buy nearby Shackleford Island<lb/>
and the two would make up Cape Lookout<lb/>
t National Park.<lb/>
' Almost a year ago the state finally got<lb/>
c most of the land, but then they found<lb/>
f squatters with no legal claim to owner-<lb/>
ship said Adler. "They also found over<lb/>
200 permanent dwellings<lb/>
The squatters consist of some local<lb/>
people who run fishing camps and people<lb/>
from the piedmont area of North Carolina<lb/>
who have built recreational cottages on the<lb/>
land, according to Adler.<lb/>
"The piedmont area people have<lb/>
banded together and plan to petition the<lb/>
legislature next month to let them lease the<lb/>
areas they now occupy and turn Core<lb/>
Banks into a state park.<lb/>
"We are against making it a state park<lb/>
because there would be too much<lb/>
development. It would lead to destruction<lb/>
of the natural wilderness that is now the<lb/>
Core Banks<lb/>
The Sierra Club is an environmental<lb/>
conservation organization with 138 local<lb/>
members, mostly in Greenville and Pitt<lb/>
County. There are 220 members in Nath<lb/>
Carolina and about 900 in South Carolina.<lb/>
DIANE TAYLOR, outgoing Student Union President, is shown inducting the new<lb/>
President, Barry Robinson, at the annual Student Union banquet held at the Candlewick<lb/>
Inn Friday. See related stay, page six.<lb/>
Mail service remains open<lb/>
By DENNISC. LEONARD<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The recent Student Government<lb/>
Association resolution entitled, "Right to<lb/>
Mail Act of 1976 has forced the<lb/>
Greenville Post Office to reconsider its<lb/>
proposal of ending Saturday mail service.<lb/>
The resolution, which was passed<lb/>
unanimously by the SGA Legislature,<lb/>
openly complained of the previous Satur-<lb/>
day delivery cutoffs and was sent to N.C<lb/>
members of the U.S. House of Representa-<lb/>
tives and the U.S. Senate.<lb/>
In mid-April the Greenville Post Office<lb/>
complied with the SGA's resolution and<lb/>
decisively chose to continue Saturday<lb/>
delivery services.<lb/>
Loyd Mills, Greenville postmaster,<lb/>
stated in a letter addressed to Ricky Price,<lb/>
SGA speaker of the house, that a mail<lb/>
service study had been completed by the<lb/>
Post Office and it was found that the<lb/>
Saturday mail service was wanted and<lb/>
needed by the ECU students.<lb/>
Mills further noted that if a decision<lb/>
were to be made concerning Saturday<lb/>
deliveries, ECU administrators and stu-<lb/>
dents would be consulted two weeks prior<lb/>
to the decision.<lb/>
Contrary to what Mills had previously<lb/>
said, the closing line of the letter to Price<lb/>
stated that this office can see no decision<lb/>
for elimination of Saturday delivery in the<lb/>
f oreseeable f ut ure<lb/>
Mills respectfully sent a copy of his<lb/>
mail service letter to Senators Jesse Helms<lb/>
and Robert Morgan, Dr. Leo Jenkins, and<lb/>
Representative Walter Jones.<lb/>
r<lb/>
Fountainhead staffer<lb/>
receives award<lb/>
The University Book Exchange award-<lb/>
ed Mike Thompson the First Annual<lb/>
Fountainhead Staff Member of the Year<lb/>
Award Monday afternoon.<lb/>
Thompson, age 21, is a senior business<lb/>
major from Rocky Mount and is the present<lb/>
Advertising Manager of Fountainhead.<lb/>
I<lb/>
"It is extremely rewarding to be<lb/>
recognized by people you really enjoy<lb/>
working with said Thompson.<lb/>
"I hope I have been able to help<lb/>
develop the type of paper the studeot body<lb/>
and the Greenville community can appre-<lb/>
ciate<lb/>
Thismarksthe first year the U.B.E. has<lb/>
given an award to the Fountainhead,<lb/>
recognizing the student, whom the staff<lb/>
members feel contributed the most during<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
New Pub Board by-laws passed<lb/>
IMP<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Student Government Association<lb/>
(SGA) Legislature Monday night passed<lb/>
the Publications Board by-laws in the third<lb/>
reading.<lb/>
A motion which was made to delete the<lb/>
word "dosed" from the nev by-laws,<lb/>
concerning whether or not Pub Board<lb/>
meetings should be closed a open, was not<lb/>
passed.<lb/>
A motion made to include the Ebony<lb/>
Herald under the Pub Board was rejected.<lb/>
Ken Campbell, Ebony Herald editor,<lb/>
stated that the Herald was satisfied under<lb/>
the present arrangement.<lb/>
A motion made to include WECU with<lb/>
the student publications under the Pub<lb/>
Board was rejected also.<lb/>
Mike Taylor, Fountainhead editor,<lb/>
spoke briefly on transferring funds within<lb/>
the present Fountainhead budget. He<lb/>
stated that instead of appropriating new<lb/>
money from the SGA, Fountainhead could<lb/>
use the money which is presently in other<lb/>
line items in the budget.<lb/>
Public Meeting<lb/>
A public hearing will be held to<lb/>
to discuss proposed changes in the<lb/>
SGA Constitution Wednesday night<lb/>
at 7:30, in the multi-purpose room<lb/>
in the Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
All students are urged to attend.<lb/>
mu<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040041_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 544 MAY 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
EditortalsConrimenlary<lb/>
Changes could make SGA more effective<lb/>
The Legislature is currently working on an overhaul of the<lb/>
Student Government Association Constitution that was long<lb/>
overdue. The new Constitution, printed in last Thursday's paper,<lb/>
contains several revisions which should help student government<lb/>
operate more smoothly and be more beneficial to the student body.<lb/>
There are some radical changes in the proposed Constitution. If<lb/>
it is approved there will be novice-president, the treasurer will be<lb/>
appointed, the legislature will have two houses, the SGA's<lb/>
calendar year will shift and the speaker of the legislature will<lb/>
become a very powerful position.<lb/>
But, while they may represent dramatic shifts from old policies,<lb/>
the new proposals are innovative, well thought out, and all could<lb/>
aid student government in its delivery of services to the student<lb/>
body. Most of the suggestions are changes whose time has come,<lb/>
in fact, they are well past due.<lb/>
The changes in the executive branch are a good example of<lb/>
dramatic shift - for a good purpose.<lb/>
Under the proposed Constitution, the president will appoint a<lb/>
treasurer which the legislature will have to approve. The position of<lb/>
treasurer is a technical position and should not be filled in a<lb/>
popularity oontest which is what an election is. Selecting a<lb/>
treasurer makes more sense than electing one.<lb/>
The offices of SGA vice-president and secretary are both done<lb/>
away with in the new Constitution. The vice-president for the most<lb/>
part, under the old Constitution, had few duties and his only jobs<lb/>
were those the president gave nim. This year is a good example the<lb/>
SGA can get along without a vice-president since that post was<lb/>
vacant for five months in the Honeycutt administration.<lb/>
The secretary's rjost was simDlv a clerical Dosition that should<lb/>
have been filled by appointment instead of election.<lb/>
Several other key changes in the Constitution of student<lb/>
government is the formation of a board of inquiry and the<lb/>
establishment of a two-house assembly.<lb/>
The Board of Inquiry, consisting of three members, will serve<lb/>
as an investigative unit for student government. This gives the<lb/>
student government a standing "watch-dog" committee that will<lb/>
be available to investigate any and everything. Such a committee,<lb/>
if operated properly, can be of tremendous importance to the SGA.<lb/>
The establishment of the two-house assembly will also boost the<lb/>
effectiveness of student government. The two houses, the Senate<lb/>
and the Legislature, gives a broader base of support and more<lb/>
student input into student government. The Senate, something<lb/>
new for the ECU SGA, will operate as an advisory board for the<lb/>
most part with some appointive powers and will also execute SGA<lb/>
elections.<lb/>
This division of powers in the student government will free the<lb/>
Legislature to deal mainly with important business instead of<lb/>
having to worry about virtually everything, even the smallest<lb/>
procedural matter, as the present Legislature does.<lb/>
Another key change is the shift from the present September to<lb/>
May year to a January to December year.<lb/>
This could be one of the most important changes recommended.<lb/>
What this will do will eliminate the wasted month during<lb/>
"Yd-a it left to<lb/>
newspapers, or<lb/>
prefe. the latter<lb/>
to decide whether we should have a government without<lb/>
without government, I should not hesitate a moment to<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor<lb/>
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer<lb/>
Business Manager-Teresa Whiesnant<lb/>
Production Manager-Jimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson<lb/>
News Editor-Dennis Leonard<lb/>
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Tise<lb/>
Features Editor-Pat Coyle<lb/>
Sports Editor-John Evans<lb/>
Advertising Representatives-Mary Anne Vail and Vicky Jonas<lb/>
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by<lb/>
tV Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2S16 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Editorial Off loss: 758-6386, 758-6367, 758-6309<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non students.<lb/>
i ? i mm m0mrmmmmm0mmm0m0mm in<lb/>
September when there is literally no legislature to help operate<lb/>
student government.<lb/>
Under the new plan when Fall quarter rolls around, there will<lb/>
be a complete legislature ready to begin work.<lb/>
The Constitution also shifts the financial year ahead to Spring<lb/>
which will aid all organizations in program planning for the ooming<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The changes are dramatic, but good ones. And, the committee<lb/>
which worked them out deserves recognition for a job well done.<lb/>
Hopefully the Legislature will approve them.<lb/>
Active month for colleges<lb/>
American colleges have not faired too well in the public<lb/>
relations game of late. Several incidents have gained national<lb/>
attention and none of them did the "old college image" any good.<lb/>
First, early in April, there was the story from California that<lb/>
students at San Jose State had their own film business going.<lb/>
Nothing bad about that - except the films were pornographic in<lb/>
nature. Reports indicated that dozens of students had been<lb/>
involved in an operation that produced as many as 200 porno flicks<lb/>
in the last two years.<lb/>
All the films were shot on campus, and that was what bothered<lb/>
campus officials.<lb/>
Then, up in New York at West Point, which is about as honor<lb/>
bound as you can get, a cheating scandal was uncovered. On a take<lb/>
home exam it appears some cadets realized "two heads are better<lb/>
than one<lb/>
So far several dozen cadets have left the Academy in what could<lb/>
be the worst cheating scandal in the service school's history.<lb/>
And finally, we oome south to Georgia where several weeks ago<lb/>
black women students at a Georgia school held their Board of<lb/>
Trustees hostage till they named a black woman president for the<lb/>
school. The trustees had opted for a male president, but the ladies<lb/>
wanted a female boss, and finally had to kidnap the board to get<lb/>
their wish.<lb/>
April was an "interesting" month on the oollege scene in the<lb/>
U.S. From porno film making to cheating to kidnapping the Board<lb/>
of Trustees, it was an eventful 30 days in the "hallowed halls of<lb/>
learning<lb/>
Let's only hope May can be so eventful.<lb/>
i<lb/>
hel<lb/>
Eb<lb/>
at<lb/>
To Fount<lb/>
It isnc<lb/>
party of<lb/>
However,<lb/>
responsibl<lb/>
defended.<lb/>
ToMik<lb/>
mast as Ec<lb/>
"us"(refe<lb/>
if you or e<lb/>
Ebony Her<lb/>
to the pres<lb/>
your reoen<lb/>
Herald doe<lb/>
doesFounl<lb/>
First,<lb/>
recognizir<lb/>
bonafide c<lb/>
Now, le<lb/>
your mi soo<lb/>
The SGA<lb/>
Fountainhe<lb/>
the Herald<lb/>
on ECU'S c<lb/>
Ebony I<lb/>
paper. Neit<lb/>
paper of int<lb/>
students, f<lb/>
around can<lb/>
Everyone h<lb/>
When v<lb/>
something <lb/>
o make p<lb/>
sven page<lb/>
Homecomin<lb/>
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against Dr.<lb/>
ape suspec<lb/>
Well, Bl<lb/>
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rountainhe<lb/>
Herald.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040041_0003"/><lb/>
)perate<lb/>
?re will<lb/>
Spring<lb/>
xxning<lb/>
imittee<lb/>
I done.<lb/>
ires<lb/>
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good,<lb/>
lia that<lb/>
going,<lb/>
phic in<lb/>
1 been<lb/>
o flicks<lb/>
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i a take<lb/>
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sks ago<lb/>
Dard of<lb/>
for the<lb/>
3 ladies<lb/>
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nails of<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51. NO. 544 MAY 1976<lb/>
3<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
Ebony Herald Editor<lb/>
attacks newspaper<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
It is not my intention to be the receiving<lb/>
party of a stupid with Fountainhead.<lb/>
However, Ebony Herald has been un-<lb/>
responsibly attacked, and I feel it must be<lb/>
defended.<lb/>
To Mike Tayla (listed on Fountainhead<lb/>
mast as Editor-in-Chief) and the " we" and<lb/>
"us" (referred to in the April 29 editorial),<lb/>
if you or anyone else are wondering why<lb/>
Ebony Herald has not rushed a publication<lb/>
to the press to defend itself with regard to<lb/>
your recent editorials, it is because Ebony<lb/>
Herald dees not have 'space to waste' as<lb/>
does Fountainhead.<lb/>
First, let me commend you for<lb/>
recognizing that Ebony Herald is a<lb/>
bonafide campus media.<lb/>
Now, let me set you straight on one of<lb/>
your misconceptions about Ebony Herald.<lb/>
The SGA did not create Ebony Herald,<lb/>
Fountainhead did. Fountainhead created<lb/>
the Herald by not recognizing the Black life<lb/>
on ECU'S campus.<lb/>
Ebony Herald is not a segregationist<lb/>
paper. Neither is it a Black paper. It is a<lb/>
paper of interest and information, by Black<lb/>
students, for everyone. It is distributed<lb/>
around campus just as is Fountainhead.<lb/>
Everyone has a chance to read it.<lb/>
When was the last time a Black did<lb/>
something which was newsworthy enough<lb/>
o make page one of Fountainhead, (or<lb/>
ven page six.) Was it the Black<lb/>
Homecoming Queen? (Only a picture and<lb/>
io story.) Or was it the drug charges<lb/>
against Dr. Andrew Best? Or was it the<lb/>
ape suspect?<lb/>
Well, Blacks feel SOULS elections are<lb/>
ust as important as SGA elections. We feel<lb/>
events in the Afro American Cultural<lb/>
Center are as important as events in<lb/>
vlendenhall Student Center. Since<lb/>
rountainhead does not, it created Ebony<lb/>
Herald.<lb/>
We feel the comments of SOULS<lb/>
President are just as important as the<lb/>
comments of the President of the SGA. We<lb/>
feel that Black achievement in a 'white'<lb/>
environment is newsworthy. (I'm sure you<lb/>
would think White achievement in a Black<lb/>
school's newsworthy.) But since Fountain-<lb/>
head fails to see the newsworthiness of the<lb/>
aforementioned events, Ebony Herald<lb/>
exists, and it will continue to exist.<lb/>
Having been a member of Fountain-<lb/>
head fa ova two quartas, I know the<lb/>
attempts that were made to cover Black life<lb/>
on this campus. None. I did not try to get<lb/>
Black news because I knew how Fountain-<lb/>
head valued and treated Black news.<lb/>
What happened to Mike Tayla's idea<lb/>
of a minaity this year? If he fagot it, it<lb/>
was probably the best thing he has done all<lb/>
year. A minaity edita could not operate<lb/>
uncter Fountainhead with the freedom he<lb/>
would need?certainly not under the<lb/>
current edita. Minaity news could not<lb/>
survive in Fountainhead, because<lb/>
Fountainhead cannot understand the<lb/>
value of such news to the students-<lb/>
especially the Black students.<lb/>
Ebony Herald cannot operate freely<lb/>
under the Publications Board as it now<lb/>
stands. However, if the current Ebony<lb/>
Herald Screening Board is allowed to keep<lb/>
functioning as it is, Ebony Herald would<lb/>
consider being placed under the Public-<lb/>
ations Board. The current screening board<lb/>
gives the Herald the freedom it needs.<lb/>
Mike Tayla recently stated in an<lb/>
editorial that Ebony Herald is a "dupli-<lb/>
cation and waste I disagree with him.<lb/>
As I see it, thae is na any unnecessary<lb/>
duplication in campus publications, and<lb/>
the only waste in campus publications is<lb/>
page two of Fountainhead.<lb/>
Kenneth Campbell<lb/>
Edita of Ebony Herald<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAKING  by phil frank<lb/>
THE SWfitfW WJtlIBK BLOOD<lb/>
?niwu. gbt nt<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAKING .by phil frank<lb/>
Student disagrees<lb/>
with Rebel review<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Woe is me! The 20th century remains an<lb/>
enigma. True, the angel does wallow in the<lb/>
mire of history.<lb/>
So, what else is new? Men such as<lb/>
Aristotle figured that out long befae the<lb/>
Coverage<lb/>
applauded<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Thanks to a great staff fa a job well<lb/>
done on the covaage of the election of<lb/>
Miss Pat Jones to the Office of President of<lb/>
the state chapter of the North Carolina Phi<lb/>
Beta Lambda.<lb/>
Omiaon Chapter<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
94709<lb/>
FORUM POLICY<lb/>
All letters to the Edita must be<lb/>
accompanied by an address along with the<lb/>
writer's name. However, only the name<lb/>
will be printed with letters published in the<lb/>
Faum.<lb/>
The letter writer's address will be kept<lb/>
on file in the Fountainhead office and will<lb/>
be available, upon request, to any<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Fountainhead will, upon personal re-<lb/>
quest from a letter writer, withhold a name<lb/>
from publication. But, the name of the<lb/>
writer will be on file in the edita's office<lb/>
and available upon request to any student.<lb/>
All requests fa withholding a name must<lb/>
be made in person to the edita.<lb/>
Any letter received without this in-<lb/>
famation will be held until the letter writer<lb/>
complies with the new policy.<lb/>
time of Christ. But no, that's not good<lb/>
enough fa ECU. No, we have the distinct<lb/>
hona of Mr. Phil Arrington stumbling<lb/>
fath (suitably OD ed on the English<lb/>
language) to orone us through it all again.<lb/>
It's not that I didn't expect a trendy<lb/>
little haJf-assed press release with this new<lb/>
edition oi the REBEL. (I mean how else<lb/>
would one expect the vast hades of artistic<lb/>
pagans on campus to fully comprehend the<lb/>
Christ-like visionary elements of the<lb/>
REBEL?) Fine, but really Phil, a whde<lb/>
page? I mean you had readers dropping<lb/>
like flies after the first column. As fa those<lb/>
of us who oontroiled the stamina necessary<lb/>
to wade to the last period, I have a<lb/>
question. DO we get purple hearts?<lb/>
I have no objection to the REBEL, as a<lb/>
unit-often its contents are stimulating, a<lb/>
tiny minaity even brilliant. But sweet-<lb/>
heart, let's na kid ourselves. Much of the<lb/>
REBEL (past and present) reeks with<lb/>
vague bits of lame hysteria (much of that<lb/>
deliberately and badly underplayed) that<lb/>
serve less to stimulate the reacter as they<lb/>
provide a harp to strum the collective egos<lb/>
of ECU'S hard-sae, soft-headed, self-<lb/>
appointed intellectual elite.<lb/>
The great artist remains invariably the<lb/>
man a wanan who learns to weld a shad<lb/>
of humility to his a her God-given gifts.<lb/>
The REBEL consistently shows glimmers<lb/>
of that hard fact. Much of it remains<lb/>
expensive toilet paper.<lb/>
Lee Lewis<lb/>
wm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040041_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 544 MAY 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
Vegetarianism gains popularity<lb/>
People give up meat for multiple reasons<lb/>
ByNANCYHARTIS<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
Why would anyone want to Jjejal<lb/>
vegetarian?<lb/>
? The question seems simpiy .ough, but<lb/>
the answers, coming TroTT themselves,<lb/>
are surprisingly compll<lb/>
Vegetarianism, in case you<lb/>
noticed, is becoming more and moi?<lb/>
popular, particularly with young people.<lb/>
In a poll conducted in the Unity Star<lb/>
Natural Foods Store on Tenth St several<lb/>
vegetarians gave their views on the subject<lb/>
of food and talked about some very<lb/>
not-so-subtle changes that abstention<lb/>
from animal meat can produce.<lb/>
The vegetarians interviewed were<lb/>
characterized by an enormous amount of<lb/>
book knowledge about food. They pro-<lb/>
duced books containing statistics such as<lb/>
 Each American now consumes about 250<lb/>
pounds of meat and poultry per year<lb/>
Aocording to vegetarians, this is almost<lb/>
twice what the body can use-this means<lb/>
Americans waste one-half of all the animal<lb/>
protein they eat!<lb/>
That, however would appear to be a<lb/>
good argument fa cutting down on meat<lb/>
consumption, but not necessarily from<lb/>
abstaining from meat altogether. So, what<lb/>
are the reasons?<lb/>
An ECU student and vegetarian, Dave<lb/>
Woods, said, "From what I've read, the<lb/>
human digestive system isn't capable of<lb/>
fully digesting flesh foods<lb/>
According to various books and<lb/>
pamphlets he has read, Woods said,<lb/>
animal meat putrifies in the body before<lb/>
total digestion occurs.<lb/>
Woods said he agrees with the theory<lb/>
that what you eat has a direct influence on<lb/>
how you feel about life. He said, "I don't<lb/>
think I could go back to my old eating<lb/>
habits"<lb/>
When asked how he gets protein in his<lb/>
diet, he listed sunflower seeds, sprouts,<lb/>
and whole unskinned vegetables. Woods<lb/>
claimed that certain vegetables comple-<lb/>
souroes.<lb/>
A traveling teacher of transcendental<lb/>
meditation and vegetarian for the past<lb/>
seven years, Richard Trise claims a<lb/>
meat-free diet makes him "feel a lot<lb/>
lighter. And I'm not as violent, generally<lb/>
He said, "I don't have to eat as much<lb/>
now for energy<lb/>
Trise reflected, "I didn't like the heavy,<lb/>
sick feeling I'd get after eating meat. I also<lb/>
ment each other in terms of protein value,<lb/>
such as peanuts and potatoes, and he said<lb/>
he eats these in combination fa that effect.<lb/>
Another ECU student, Nancy Lamm,<lb/>
said the effect of not eating meat has been<lb/>
a good one. "I definitely feel better she<lb/>
said, adding, "eating meat made me feel<lb/>
bloated"<lb/>
Miss Lamm listed sprouts, beans,<lb/>
cheese, yogurt, and nuts as her protein<lb/>
didn't like the idea of killing animals fa<lb/>
food<lb/>
A oonoern fa the ecological results of<lb/>
feeding large amounts of grain to livestock<lb/>
was another reason he gave fa becoming a<lb/>
vegetarian.<lb/>
How do non-vegetarians react to<lb/>
vegetarians?<lb/>
Trise laughed, "Around this area,<lb/>
people, well, they give you strange looks<lb/>
sometimes<lb/>
Ellen Steigerwald, ECU student , said<lb/>
people's reaction to her vegetarianism is<lb/>
favaable. "Most people say they think it's<lb/>
a good idea but they just don't ever try it<lb/>
fa aie reasai a another<lb/>
Miss Steigerwald listed many benefits,<lb/>
physical and mental, that she has<lb/>
experienced since becoming a vegetarian<lb/>
two months ago.<lb/>
"My body just feels better. My food<lb/>
digests better. I have more energy and I'm<lb/>
not sick as oftenI don't get upset about<lb/>
dumb things anymae and my emotions are<lb/>
mae clear she stated.<lb/>
Vegetarian Paul Smith, an employe of<lb/>
Procta and Gamble, talked about people's<lb/>
reaction to his eating habits. "At first,<lb/>
some of my friends thought it was pretty<lb/>
weird but now I think most of them accept<lb/>
it. My family accepts it now but at first they<lb/>
were kind of upset he said.<lb/>
Smith said he ate meat fa 20 years and<lb/>
said it took no great will-power to leave it.<lb/>
There are two sides to most questions,<lb/>
and vegetarianism is no exception.<lb/>
Bill McDaniel, a student at Pitt Tech,<lb/>
said, "I guess you oould get protein from<lb/>
other things, fruits and all, but I don't<lb/>
think I oould do it. I love a rare steak too<lb/>
much<lb/>
Famer vegetarian Lois Ellefson said,<lb/>
"Yes, I tried it once but I'm not a<lb/>
vegetarian any longer. It didn't make me<lb/>
feel any better<lb/>
Ms. Ellefson said, "My parents<lb/>
oouldn't understand it. They would invite<lb/>
me over fa dinner and' sabotage' us with a<lb/>
nice big roast<lb/>
Si<lb/>
Vo, vegetarianism doesn 't mean dull eating<lb/>
Even meat eaters can reap the benefits of a vegetarian regime every so often.<lb/>
In addition to being very healthy, the following high protein non-meat main oourses<lb/>
are economical, easy to make, and tastewise, are a refreshing change from the usual meat<lb/>
and potatoes fare most of us subsist on.<lb/>
GET READY:<lb/>
TOP WITH:<lb/>
112 cup sliced black olives<lb/>
1 cup grated Cheddar cheese<lb/>
1 cup chopped peanuts<lb/>
1 3 cup bread aumbs<lb/>
HAVE READY:<lb/>
SAUTEEINOIL:<lb/>
HERBED VEGETABLE SAUTEE<lb/>
3 cups cooked brown rice<lb/>
1-2 cloves of garlic, minced<lb/>
1-2 celery stalks, chopped<lb/>
1 onion, chopped<lb/>
1 green pepper, chopped<lb/>
1 a 2 carrots, sliced<lb/>
1IA lb. mushrooms, sliced<lb/>
14 tsp. paprika<lb/>
14tsp. sage<lb/>
14 tsp. marjaam<lb/>
14 tsp. rosemary<lb/>
112 cup ground, toasted sesame seeds<lb/>
COOK SAUCE UNTIL THICKENED, THEN SERVE ON RICE, WITH SOY SAUCE<lb/>
PEANUT SPAGHETTI<lb/>
PUT HALF OF THE SPAGHETTI IN OILED CASSEROLE' WITH HALF OF THE<lb/>
OLIVES, CHEESE, AND PEANUTS. REPEAT LAYERS, POUR SAUCE OVER THE<lb/>
TOP, AND PUT ON TOPPING. BAKE AT 350 DEGREES FOR25 MINUTES.<lb/>
STIR IN WELL:<lb/>
HAVE READY:<lb/>
TAKE:<lb/>
2cupsoooked, tr jken spaghetti<lb/>
2-4tbsps. butter<lb/>
3 tbsps. whole wheat flour<lb/>
1 tsp. salt<lb/>
1 tsp. dry mustard<lb/>
14tsp. pepper<lb/>
HEAT AND STIR IN A MEDIUM SAUCEPAN UNTIL FLOUR GETS TOASTY.<lb/>
AJD AND STIR UNTIL THICKENED<lb/>
lapwmwmPK<lb/>
2 cups milk a buttermilk<lb/>
112 aiiai, finely chopped<lb/>
3 drops ha pepper sauce<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
THE SALAD LUNCH BUNCH can really do their thing at Mendenhall snack bar any<lb/>
weekday between 11.GO and 2100. A salad bar is set up then, and from 4:30 to 7J0<lb/>
weeknights. For a mere 75 cents, the vegetable lover is entitled to unlimited trips to then<lb/>
bar, which features such novel salad fare as bean sprouts, water chestnuts, chicken r-<lb/>
cubes, and chow mein noodles. <lb/>
FC<lb/>
BEI<lb/>
COL<lb/>
WEj<lb/>
MO'l<lb/>
GIF!<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00040041_0005"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
MM<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 544 MAY 1976<lb/>
11<lb/>
5<lb/>
So you think you're a movie trivia expert.<lb/>
dent , said<lb/>
arianism is<lb/>
jy think it's<lb/>
ever try it<lb/>
ly benefits,<lb/>
she has<lb/>
vegetarian<lb/>
r. My food<lb/>
gy and I'm<lb/>
jpset about<lb/>
txions are<lb/>
employe of<lb/>
ut people's<lb/>
"At first,<lb/>
was pretty<lb/>
hem accept<lb/>
at first they<lb/>
0 years and<lb/>
to leave it.<lb/>
: questions,<lb/>
ion.<lb/>
Pitt Tech,<lb/>
rotein from<lb/>
Dut I don't<lb/>
e steak too<lb/>
efson said,<lb/>
I'm not a<lb/>
t make me<lb/>
y parents<lb/>
ould invite<lb/>
e' us with a<lb/>
tg<lb/>
By DAG LOCK WOOD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The following is a series of exoerpts from famous movies, both old and new, which I<lb/>
have collected as fond remembrances of great moments on the silver screen.<lb/>
See if you can guess the movies. First Prize: the famous Marvel no-prize. Second<lb/>
Prize: a year's supply of buffalo chips. Third Prize: an exclusive marathon, private<lb/>
viewing of each and every movie involved.<lb/>
( Denotes a song.)<lb/>
1. I'm going to blow down the walls of Jericho!<lb/>
2. I d like an ice-cream cone, please.<lb/>
3. Many a snowflake will fall in your life, but only a woman can make you cry.<lb/>
4. I don't like that surfing shit!<lb/>
5. Yeah, yeah, get some pizzas for the ladies!<lb/>
6. Do you think he's crazy? No, just enthusiastic.<lb/>
7. W-w-w-um-um-um-w-w-well<lb/>
8. We need a blonde with big breasts, so big, not this big, but THIS big.<lb/>
9. What do you mean it's stuck?<lb/>
10. UNGAWAH! Sorry!)<lb/>
11. Nothing straightens a woman out better than a slap across the face or a slug from a<lb/>
forty-five.<lb/>
12. It's taken over an entire bowling alley!<lb/>
13. Sisters<lb/>
14. I want to drink your blood, blah, blah, blah<lb/>
15. What do you mean you don't want to go through with this?<lb/>
16. Jay Gatsby was NOT a homosexual<lb/>
17. Esto es un robo.<lb/>
18. You can't go out in that boat, the glue won't hold.<lb/>
19. There we were, floating in the water, and the sharks kept circling.<lb/>
20. Well, Mrs. Robinson, uh, uh, uh<lb/>
TDoaM-<lb/>
EVERY U<lb/>
WEDNESDA Y NITE<lb/>
IS LADIES NITE<lb/>
M<lb/>
m<lb/>
OF THE <lb/>
VER THE<lb/>
H<lb/>
?!?!? ?!?!? ?!5N ?!3N ?!5!? ?!?!?.?!?S?!? ?!?!? ?3fc ?S!? ?5N ?!t? ?St ?!5N TZ?xMM<lb/>
CREGO'S SUGGESTIONS<lb/>
FOR MOTHER'S DAY - MAY9TH<lb/>
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OR PICK A GIFT FOR MOTHER FROM<lb/>
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21. You're only the second best flier in the world.<lb/>
22. So you say this stuff will float, huh?<lb/>
23. Yes, all the people in this boat have their own little quirks.<lb/>
24. Get ready to eject, ready NOW!<lb/>
25. Bigger bigger biggest!<lb/>
Still with us? Well, here's an extra bonus question. If you get it right, you get an<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040041_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 544 MAY 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
mum<lb/>
m<lb/>
Union induction banquet<lb/>
held at Candlewick Inn<lb/>
By BOB WA TSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Over 126 people wdre present fa the<lb/>
ECU Student Union's 1976 Induction<lb/>
Banquet, held at the Candlewick Inn<lb/>
Friday night.<lb/>
Activities at the Banquet ranged from<lb/>
the seriousness of swearing in the new<lb/>
Union officers to the humorous silliness<lb/>
of the presentation of 'Rudies<lb/>
The "Rudy affectionally named after<lb/>
Dean S. Rudolph Alexander, head of the<lb/>
student center, is the Union's comical<lb/>
answer to the Oscar. "Rudy" statues were<lb/>
presented to the winners of the award. The<lb/>
statue actually resembles Alexander.<lb/>
After a cocktail hour and dinner, the<lb/>
official functions of the banquet began. Dr.<lb/>
James Tucker presented awards erf a<lb/>
serious nature. The first of these awards<lb/>
was fa the Most Outstanding Committee<lb/>
members. One member from each of the<lb/>
Union's Committees was cited fa his<lb/>
outstanding participation.<lb/>
The winners of these awards were from<lb/>
the Travel Cmmittee - Becky Bradshaw,<lb/>
from Video Tape Committee - Steve<lb/>
Jernigan, from Art Exhibit Comm. -<lb/>
Barbara McPhail, from Artist Series<lb/>
Comm. - Barry Robinson, from Film<lb/>
Comm. - Dave Haggerty, from the Lecture<lb/>
Comm. - Willie Hawey, from Major<lb/>
Attractions Comm. - John Evans, from<lb/>
Reaeation Comm. - Bruce Whitten, from<lb/>
Special Concerts Comm. - Daniel Prevatte<lb/>
and from the Theatre Arts Comm. -<lb/>
Chariate Cheatham.<lb/>
There was also an award given to<lb/>
the Most Outstanding Committee Chair-<lb/>
person, Brent Funderburk of Art Exhibi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
After presenting these awards Tucker<lb/>
then presented the Gary Massie Award to<lb/>
Diane Tayla. The Gary Massie Award is<lb/>
given each year to the Union's Most<lb/>
Outstanding Worker.<lb/>
Following the presentation of these<lb/>
serious awards, Barry Robinson was<lb/>
installed as the new Union President. In a<lb/>
shat speech Robinson stressed that the<lb/>
Union President'smaja respaisibility is to<lb/>
ooadinate the activities of the oommittees.<lb/>
He then presented the new oommittee<lb/>
chairmen.<lb/>
"I'm looking faward to a good year<lb/>
waking with these people said Robin-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Then came the presentation of the<lb/>
Rudies. With accompaniment from the<lb/>
"Mendenhallian Orchestra eight stu-<lb/>
dents on kazoos, the awards were given.<lb/>
Impersonators of such well-known<lb/>
celebrities as Charlie Brown and Lucy, the<lb/>
Captain and Toenail and Timmie and<lb/>
Lassie were on hand to present these<lb/>
awards.<lb/>
"Rudies" were given in such cate-<lb/>
gories astruly together individual and<lb/>
"the Foiz award and the "selivee is<lb/>
golden award<lb/>
All of these awards were presented in<lb/>
an amusing manner and were accepted<lb/>
with good grace.<lb/>
There was one "Rudy" given, however,<lb/>
which was not altogether comical in nature.<lb/>
Dean S. Rudolph Alexander received the<lb/>
last Rudy of the evening and in tribute to<lb/>
his help also received a standing ovation<lb/>
from the participants.<lb/>
Upon conclusion of the Rudy award<lb/>
segment of the banquet, Diane Tayla<lb/>
deburned her resignatiai speech. She<lb/>
quoted Vincent Price and Bob Hope.<lb/>
"I'm going to be awfully sary to leave<lb/>
this group of zany but beautiful people<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
After her speech Tayla asked everyoie<lb/>
to remain and enjoy the dancing which<lb/>
followed.<lb/>
521 COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
IN GEORGETOWN SHOPPES<lb/>
Phone 752-6130<lb/>
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OPEN- MonThurs. 10:00 to 1:00 a.n<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. 10 to 2 a.m Sun. 12 to 12<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY TO DORMS AFTER 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
?OR ORDER OF$2.00 OF OR MORE, (at regular<lb/>
)rices only) Your choice of 12 delicious hot<lb/>
or cold sandwiches starting at 79.<lb/>
EVERY DA YTHIS WEEK<lb/>
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FREE WITH ANY SANDWICH<lb/>
FROM 8- 10 P.M.<lb/>
GRETSCH COUNTRY Gentlemen. Excel-<lb/>
lent cond. A true gem. 752-7398 a<lb/>
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WANTED - 2 girls to help serve dinner at<lb/>
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benefits. Call Scott 752-5325.<lb/>
FOR SALE - Refrigerata. 752-6724.<lb/>
ARE YOU SURE that your summer job is<lb/>
the best job fa you? Come by and compare<lb/>
it with ours at 6 a 9 p.m. tonite (Tues.) in<lb/>
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WOULD LIKE a ride to Atlanta any<lb/>
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after 3:30 on Thursdays &amp; will help with<lb/>
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PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752-4272.<lb/>
AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVERS7 wks. shots,<lb/>
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GOT THOSE SUMMER job blues? Smile<lb/>
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limit of 25 small lettersspaoes top and 15<lb/>
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wading, quantity desired, check a M.O.<lb/>
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SHIRTS AND $TFf <lb/>
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SUBLISTATIC PRINTS SHIRTS REG.$600VOIV$4SOEMBRIODERED SHIRTS REG.$1600 NOW$129a<lb/>
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OFFER EXPIRES 5:30 p.m May 7,1976.<lb/>
?<lb/>
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May 6-7.<lb/>
Featu<lb/>
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At 8<lb/>
speak on<lb/>
family str<lb/>
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Living To<lb/>
and "Adv<lb/>
The a<lb/>
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chaired b;<lb/>
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nesday, <lb/>
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real tips.<lb/>
hink with<lb/>
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op and 15<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 544 MAY 1976<lb/>
7<lb/>
Family conference scheduled<lb/>
By FRANCEINE PERRY<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
"The Family and New Alternatives" is<lb/>
the topic of the 16th annual ECU Family<lb/>
Life Conference, Thursday and Friday,<lb/>
May 6-7.<lb/>
Featured speakers are Ellen Peck,<lb/>
founder and special projects director of the<lb/>
National Organization for Non-Parents<lb/>
(NON) and Robert H. Rimmer, author of<lb/>
"The Harrad Experiment" and other<lb/>
novels dealing with alternative forms of<lb/>
marriage.<lb/>
All sessions are open to the public.<lb/>
The conference will begin with a<lb/>
presentation by Ms. Peck at 1 p.m May 6,<lb/>
in 244 Mendenhall, entitled, "The<lb/>
Madonna Complex which deals with<lb/>
pressures upon women to beoome mothers.<lb/>
At 830 p.m. Thursday, Rimmer will<lb/>
speak on alternatives to the conventional<lb/>
family structure in the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Theater.<lb/>
Rimmer will also be featured at both<lb/>
Friday sessions in 244 Mendenhall: "The<lb/>
Living Together Revolution at 10 a.m<lb/>
and "Adventures in Loving at 1 p.m.<lb/>
The conference is oo-sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU Student Government Association and<lb/>
an inter-depart mental campus committee<lb/>
chaired by Dr. Mel Markowski of the ECU<lb/>
School of Home Economics.<lb/>
SGA meeting planned<lb/>
The SGA will hold a public hearing on<lb/>
the new proposed Constitution on Wed-<lb/>
nesday, May 5, 1976, at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall's Multi-Purpose Rocm.<lb/>
In addition to her activities with the<lb/>
National Organization for Non-Parents,<lb/>
Ellen Peck is an internationally known<lb/>
author and lecturer and writes a syndicated<lb/>
column for young adults.<lb/>
Her best-selling book, "The Baby<lb/>
Trap attacked America's obsession with<lb/>
motherhood. She was also co-editor of<lb/>
"Pronatalism: The Myth of Mom and<lb/>
Apple Pie<lb/>
Rimmer is well-known as a proponent<lb/>
of alternative lifestyles, primarily through<lb/>
his novels which deal with forms of<lb/>
pluralistic marriage which he believes will<lb/>
be legally and openly practiced by the turn<lb/>
of the century.<lb/>
His novels - "The Harrad Experi-<lb/>
ment "The Rebellion of Yalr Marratt<lb/>
"Proposition 31 and "Thursday, My<lb/>
Love" - have been translated into several<lb/>
languages and have sold millions of copies.<lb/>
Rimmer attributes the popularity of his<lb/>
novels to the fact that" they are a reflection<lb/>
of the style of loving and interpersonal<lb/>
relationships" with which his readers can<lb/>
identify.<lb/>
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OxS "Love Set" 's' yellowwhite 7V. bluewhite C)s w h i te b I u e<lb/>
'Monico' "n white -<lb/>
i<lb/>
PHI MU ALPHA<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
MUSIC MADNESS<lb/>
ANIGHTOFROCK, FOLK, JAZZ, AND DIXIELAND<lb/>
(FORMERLY (j)MA TALENT SHOW)<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
cp&amp;ouna<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
PROCEEDS TO ASSIST THE CHARLES K. LOVELACE MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
???'<lb/>
<pb facs="00040041_0008"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 544 MAY 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm.<lb/>
ww<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Captain Beyond<lb/>
By JIMMY HANES<lb/>
On Monday night, April 26th, the Attic<lb/>
was host to the band, Captain Beyond,<lb/>
which has two albums to its credit, both on<lb/>
Capricorn label.<lb/>
The group's first appearance in early<lb/>
1971 with the album entitled simply<lb/>
CAPTAIN BEYOND. This album is more<lb/>
popular with the band's followers than is<lb/>
the second. The second album, SUF-<lb/>
FICIENTLY BREATHLESS, came about<lb/>
while the group underwent a change in its<lb/>
lineup. The influence of new musicians<lb/>
brought a change to Beyond's music. This<lb/>
selection of songs is a little more subtle and<lb/>
possibly not as successful as the earlier<lb/>
release.<lb/>
Monday night's performance showed<lb/>
that the group still had a gutsy style of<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Captain Beyond is once again personi-<lb/>
fied by the original members, Rhino, Lee<lb/>
Forman, Bobby Caldwell, and Jason<lb/>
Cahoon, who is the group's new lead<lb/>
singer.<lb/>
A personal interview revealed this<lb/>
individual growth since the group broke up<lb/>
in 1973. Bassist Lee Dorman has spent<lb/>
some time playing in the Spencer Davis<lb/>
group before the reunion of Beyond.<lb/>
Jason stated that he had been maturing<lb/>
musically for quite some time, and proved<lb/>
himself capable of performing with the<lb/>
group.<lb/>
Barring a few technical flaws of<lb/>
equipment, and almost unbearable decibel<lb/>
level, the show was relatively pleasing to<lb/>
the crowd.<lb/>
Each of the members' skill at perform-<lb/>
ing brought the enthusiastic crowd to its<lb/>
feet throughout the performance which<lb/>
included an impressive drum solo by<lb/>
Caldwell.<lb/>
The effort given by the band was<lb/>
commendable for a performance with a<lb/>
responsive crowd in a small music hall.<lb/>
Captain Beyond is presently on a oome<lb/>
back tour which started after a three year<lb/>
lay off in the fall of this year and is<lb/>
scheduled to end sometime in June,<lb/>
followed by the release of their third<lb/>
album, around October.<lb/>
The band's remaining shows and<lb/>
subsequent release of their album should<lb/>
help to bring them into the public eye onoe<lb/>
again. Hopefully they will receive the<lb/>
recognition that seemed to elude the<lb/>
original band.<lb/>
ECU STUDENT UNION will present The Bridge on the Mall Thursday, May 6, 1976.<lb/>
PARK<lb/>
Greenville Movies<lb/>
Through Thursday The Devil Within Her. Shows at 3:15, 5:10, 7.05, and 900. Rated<lb/>
R. Starts Friday Psychic Killer.<lb/>
PITT<lb/>
Terrance Hill in Watch Out, We're Mad! Shows at 705 and 9.O0. Rated G.<lb/>
PLAZA CINEMA I<lb/>
Charlton Heston and James Coburn in The Last Hard Men. Shows at 3:15, 5:10, 7.05<lb/>
and9O0. Rated R.<lb/>
Starts Friday Crime and Passion.<lb/>
PLAZA CINEMA II<lb/>
Lipstick with Anne Bancroft. Shows at 335, 525, 7:15, and 905. Rated R. Starts<lb/>
Friday Trackdown.<lb/>
TICE<lb/>
The Rogue at 9:40 and Up Your Alley at 800. Both movies Rated R.<lb/>
WEDNESDA Y'S CLASSICS A T STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
At 800 Son of Flubber, a Walt Disney masterpiece.<lb/>
FRIDAYSFREE FLICK<lb/>
The Odessa File. Shows at 5, 7, and 9. Rated PG.<lb/>
LEAD SINGER JASON CAHOON along with guitarist fa Captain Beyond.<lb/>
A Dissenting Opinion<lb/>
fly DENNIS C. LEONA RD<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Captain Beyond played to a full house<lb/>
at the Attic last week in what has to be<lb/>
termed as one of the worst performances in<lb/>
a long time at North Carolina's number<lb/>
three night spot.<lb/>
To begin with the band did not oome on<lb/>
stage until almost 12O0 p.m. and expected<lb/>
the cowd to enjoy about an hour and a half<lb/>
worth of tasteless music.<lb/>
The only success that the band could<lb/>
have had that Monday night at the Attic<lb/>
was successfully ruining the ear drums of<lb/>
the eager audience.<lb/>
Captain Beyond turned the volume to<lb/>
the peak and all that could be heard was a<lb/>
massive rumbling from the direction of the<lb/>
PA system.<lb/>
Speaking of PA's, the lead vocalist<lb/>
would have been better by dancing in the<lb/>
bathroom because he could have been<lb/>
heard there a lot better than he was on<lb/>
stage. The vocals were completely over-<lb/>
powered by what must have been the bass<lb/>
and the lead guitarist.<lb/>
The drummer was supposedly rumored<lb/>
as one of the best to play in the area, but<lb/>
the only thing he showed this critic was<lb/>
mat he could barely hold two sticks and<lb/>
maintain some simulation of rhythm.<lb/>
The lead guitarist showed very few lead<lb/>
runs and mostly played three chord<lb/>
raunchy rock.<lb/>
The evening was a total disappointment<lb/>
and Captain Beyond kept the Capricorn<lb/>
tradition by providing tasteless music for<lb/>
the hurting listener.<lb/>
THIS DRUMMER SHOULD have stayed hidden says reviewer Dennis Leonard.<lb/>
honk, I in iht mm<lb/>
? THE ROXY PLAYIKHSK JESfiES&amp;m<lb/>
NO I SPMIAI ISSUI . (.KlINVIl LI. NORTH CAROLINA MAY, 1976 ? BY THI i.KAII l HI PfOPLl<lb/>
EXTRA<lb/>
HOT GROG HELD OVER!<lb/>
Greenville. N.C. ??'HOT GROG" has<lb/>
been held over at THE KOXY PLAY<lb/>
HOUSE for lour shows May 6-10 Ihe<lb/>
new show by North Carolina's own.<lb/>
Jim Warm and Bland Simpson depicts<lb/>
actual male &amp; female pirates, despera-<lb/>
dos, and romantics atony the bawdy<lb/>
COMt of the Carolina; just after the<lb/>
turn of the I700'j. It is brimming<lb/>
with moving and magnetic music of<lb/>
Warm Simpson, Carolina's leading<lb/>
young songwriters, Whose "DIAMOND<lb/>
STUDS" became an off-Broadway<lb/>
sensation "HOT GKOG" Joins<lb/>
"DIAMOND STUDS" as treasured<lb/>
memory for thousands of Tar Heel<lb/>
theater goers You'll regret not sharing<lb/>
this unique southern espencnce<lb/>
mm<lb/>
SIIOVsllMI S Ihius In Sal 9 pin Sun 1 pm IKKIIS On sale at Hi. Mushroom<lb/>
Downtown Mall Record Har. Pitt Plaa and at the door (AIL 752 815, After 7 pm 758-99II<lb/>
I't.hUutd h t't-rhg Froducttom irh Ro&amp;, lid<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmumm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
I. rWHEf<lb/>
<lb/>
6<lb/>
6<lb/>
7<lb/>
Q<lb/>
<pb facs="00040041_0009"/><lb/>
311<lb/>
J vocalist<lb/>
mg in the<lb/>
ave been<lb/>
e was on<lb/>
tely over-<lb/>
1 the bass<lb/>
i rumored<lb/>
area, but<lb/>
critic was<lb/>
sticks and<lb/>
thm.<lb/>
y few lead<lb/>
ee chord<lb/>
continent<lb/>
Capricorn<lb/>
music for<lb/>
I VI NUt<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
? I HIIIIIWHII I II ?<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 57, NO. 544 MAY 1976<lb/>
9<lb/>
School Of Music For May<lb/>
4 Tuesday<lb/>
4 Tuesday<lb/>
5 Wednesday<lb/>
6 Thursday<lb/>
6 Thursday<lb/>
7 Friday<lb/>
9 Sunday<lb/>
9 Sunday<lb/>
10 Monday<lb/>
11 Tuesday<lb/>
DALE TUCKER, piano, Graduate Recital<lb/>
730<lb/>
GAIL DAVIS ST A NCI L, piano, Senior<lb/>
Recital, 9:00<lb/>
FRANK ODDIS, percussion, Graduate<lb/>
Recital, 730<lb/>
PHI MU ALPHA Concert, 7 30<lb/>
PHI ML) ALPHA PLEDGE, Recital &amp; XX)<lb/>
ROBERT M. SULLIVAN, piano, Senior<lb/>
Recital, 8:15<lb/>
LEE HENDRICKS, organ, Senior Recital<lb/>
Jarvis Memorial United Methodist<lb/>
Church, 3:15<lb/>
UNIVERSITY CHORALE AND WOMEN'S<lb/>
GLEE CLUB CONCERT, 8:15<lb/>
SIGMA ALPHA IOTA MUSICAL, 900<lb/>
DEBRA HARDY, piano<lb/>
SUSAN LINTON, voios, Senior Recital<lb/>
7:30<lb/>
tkg ?? Sfeoe SUpair Slwfl<lb/>
I She SUrt<lb/>
111W.4thStiMt<lb/>
rAll<lb/>
Pick a few bones<lb/>
- with Mr. Ribs<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Special<lb/>
$2.95<lb/>
HZ<lb/>
eMr?<lb/>
PtKMW 7M-tS?<lb/>
70 Evans St.<lb/>
??MHMIIMM HE4<lb/>
THETtREEPEOPLE ARE $<lb/>
wnTuv, YOUR FRIENDS J<lb/>
COME IN AND VISIT<lb/>
US AND WE'LL MAK<lb/>
YOU THE BEST PIZZA<lb/>
IN TOWN!<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
FRI.&amp;SAT.<lb/>
THE BEATLES<lb/>
IN<lb/>
'A HARD DAYS<lb/>
LATE SHOW<lb/>
11:15P.M.<lb/>
I<lb/>
MS<lb/>
?It<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
All Seats $1.25<lb/>
11 Tuesday<lb/>
12 Wednesday-15 Saturday<lb/>
16 Sunday<lb/>
17 Monday<lb/>
18 Tuesday<lb/>
FAYE TUCKER, voice, Senior Recital,<lb/>
9:00<lb/>
ECU OPERA THEATER in conjunction<lb/>
with ECU PLAYHOUSE presents<lb/>
Verdi's La Traviata, McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium, 8:15<lb/>
SCOT GARDNER, percussion, Senior<lb/>
Recital, 730'<lb/>
SMALL ENSEMBLE CONCERT, 8:15<lb/>
JAZZ ENSEMBLE CONCERT<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS<lb/>
LARGE COMPANY HAS SEVERAL<lb/>
MORE OPENINGS FOR ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
THISSUMMER. $21000 A WEEK AND UP.<lb/>
INTERVIEWS 6&amp;9PMTUES.MAY4,<lb/>
IN RA WL 135. PLEA SE BE ON TIME.<lb/>
AT THE iELBO ROOM<lb/>
K<lb/>
m<lb/>
M<lb/>
H<lb/>
M<lb/>
Tuesday thru Thursday<lb/>
"ARMAGEDDON"<lb/>
M<lb/>
FIRST TIME BACK SINCE FALL<lb/>
v EVERY SUNDAY IS LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
F? ? ? ??? W-S4 i Wi h ?? 4 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? <lb/>
CLOSEOUTSALE i<lb/>
ALL $6.98 Ip's $3.99<lb/>
ALL $7.98 tapes $4.99<lb/>
HURRY DOWN WHILE ALBUMS<lb/>
ARE STILL AVAILABLE.<lb/>
Am?<lb/>
I RAZZ JAZZ RECORDS<lb/>
 Mon Sat 10AM 10 PM<lb/>
 GE0RGET0WNE SH0PPES 752 -8654<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040041_0010"/><lb/>
io<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 544 MAY 1976<lb/>
End Indians 'streak<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Pirates run away with SC track<lb/>
By STEVE WHEFLFR<lb/>
DAVIDSON, N.CECU, expecting to<lb/>
challenge fa the Southern Conference<lb/>
Track Championship this weekend in<lb/>
Davidson, won seven of the 20 events and<lb/>
showed excellent depth to upset the<lb/>
ten-time champion William and Mary by 53<lb/>
points.<lb/>
The Pirates finished with 187 points,<lb/>
followed by the Indians' 134. Furman<lb/>
placed third with 100, while Richmond took<lb/>
fourth with 87. Appalachian State finished<lb/>
The Pirates have finished second nine<lb/>
times out of the last ten years.<lb/>
"Our guys gave a hundred percent and<lb/>
this was a total team win said an elated<lb/>
Carson following the meet. "We knew<lb/>
what we had to do to win the championship<lb/>
and we planned everything accadingly.<lb/>
When we had all those injuries during the<lb/>
season, we brought the guys back<lb/>
primarily fa this meet<lb/>
The strategy waked fa the Pirates as<lb/>
they took 27 men to the championships and<lb/>
had 22 scae.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
fifth with 41 with VMI (32), The Citadel<lb/>
(27), and Davidsoi (12) trailing the field.<lb/>
East Carolina, relying on strong efforts<lb/>
in the sprints, hurdles and field events,<lb/>
beat the Indians in coach John Randolph's<lb/>
last season, something that was supposed<lb/>
to give the Indians the psychological edge,<lb/>
if nothing else.<lb/>
But it was the Pirates who went out and<lb/>
did the job in the championships. In doing<lb/>
so, they gave coach Bill Carson his first<lb/>
track championship at ECU. Carson won<lb/>
the title in hisonly year at Furman in 1967.<lb/>
Since then, William and Mary has won<lb/>
every title in track, indoas and outdoas.<lb/>
Carson also took another accolade when<lb/>
he was unanimously named 'Coach of the<lb/>
Year' in the Southern Conference by his<lb/>
peers. Carson was happy with this but was<lb/>
happier fa what the win can do fa the<lb/>
Carolina program.<lb/>
"Winning this championship was to the<lb/>
track program like the football team<lb/>
beating the Tar Heels was in football<lb/>
said Carson. "This win will help our entire<lb/>
program. We are no longer bridesmaid<lb/>
Louis Blount of Appalachian State was<lb/>
named the ' Perfamer of the Year' by the<lb/>
virtue of his double win in the three and six<lb/>
mile events.<lb/>
&amp;??&amp;<lb/>
There were four other double winners,<lb/>
three being from East Carolina. Ed Perkins<lb/>
of Richmond took the 3000 meter steeple-<lb/>
chase and the mile, while taking third in<lb/>
the three mile.<lb/>
Carter Suggs took the 100-yard dash<lb/>
and ran on the winning 440 relay team.<lb/>
Calvin Alston took the 200 and ran on the<lb/>
same relay team that won. Charlie Moss<lb/>
won the 440 and led off the victaious mile<lb/>
relay team.<lb/>
The wins by Blount and Perkins in the<lb/>
distanoe events, along with Russell Smel-<lb/>
ley of Richmond's win in the 880 came in<lb/>
events that have long been bread and<lb/>
butter events fa the Indians, but they were<lb/>
without star miler, Mac Collins who has<lb/>
been injured all during the outdoor season.<lb/>
But, East Carolina did not win because<lb/>
Collins was out, but rather because of their<lb/>
own depth in the sprints and field events,<lb/>
something that has not been present in<lb/>
years past.<lb/>
Suggs won the 100 in recad9.4, a time<lb/>
which qualified him fa the nationals.<lb/>
Alston took second in 9.5, while Al<lb/>
Washington placed fourth at 9.7, and Larry<lb/>
Austin sixth at 10.1. Alston won the 220 in<lb/>
a recad time of 21.1, which also qualified<lb/>
him fa the nationals. Washington took<lb/>
third in 21.5, Maurioe Huntley fifth in 22.4,<lb/>
and Suggs joffed around the half-oval in<lb/>
27.2.<lb/>
In the 440, Pirate runners took five of<lb/>
the six spots with Moss winning in 48.5 and<lb/>
James Freeman taking second in 48.8.<lb/>
Robert Franklin (49.0), Valdez Chavis<lb/>
(49.7) and Ben Dunkenfield (50.5) took<lb/>
fourth, fifth, and sixth, respectively.<lb/>
Marvin Rankinstcok the 120 yard high<lb/>
hurdles in SC recad time of 13.9, while<lb/>
teammate Sam Phillips took second in 14.3<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
The 440 relay team of Alston, Suggs,<lb/>
Two games remain<lb/>
Win over Atantic raises<lb/>
ECU record to 27-7<lb/>
Huntley and Washington ran alone in their<lb/>
heat and set the new recad with a 40.6<lb/>
clocking, a time which also qualified them<lb/>
fa the nationals.<lb/>
Moss, Freeman, Chavis, and Dunken-<lb/>
field teamed up in the mile relay to win in a<lb/>
time of 3:15.9.<lb/>
That was the extent of placing of the<lb/>
Pirates in the running events, but that was<lb/>
all they needed as they placed at least two<lb/>
men in each of the seven field events they<lb/>
were entered in. Tom Watson led the<lb/>
Pirates in field events as he placed second<lb/>
in the hammer, third in the javelin and<lb/>
shot, and sixth in the discus. Watson's 53'<lb/>
1 1IW in the shot was his personal best.<lb/>
Mike Harris was also an iron man in the<lb/>
weight events as he took second in the<lb/>
discus, fifth in the hammer, and sixth in<lb/>
the shot. Lafan Fabes took sixth in the<lb/>
javelin.<lb/>
Geage Jackson won the long jump (23'<lb/>
11112") and placed third in the triple jump<lb/>
(48 10 12") to lead the Pirates in the<lb/>
jumping events. He was backed up by<lb/>
Herman Mcintyre - second in triple (48'<lb/>
11") and fifth in the loig (22 "11), Mike<lb/>
Hodge (fourth in both) and Willie Harvey<lb/>
(sixth in the long jump).<lb/>
In the high jump, Al McCrimmon and<lb/>
Curt Dowdy tied fa second with leaps of<lb/>
6'8 They had no misses going into 6'<lb/>
10 but failed to negotiate it.<lb/>
In the end, it was the balance of the<lb/>
Pirate perfamers that won the meet. ECU<lb/>
had ten perfamers to scae ten a more<lb/>
points, this group being led by Tom<lb/>
Watson's 21 points and Calvin Alston's<lb/>
20.5 Geage Jackson picked up 16 points<lb/>
fa the Pirates.<lb/>
With that kind of balance, the Pirates<lb/>
were not to be denied. And after ten years<lb/>
of runner-up, victay was so sweet fa the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
Years ol<lb/>
IDarolina tra<lb/>
The endi<lb/>
ts bridesm;<lb/>
rttraction w<lb/>
Fa a che<lb/>
:he title anc<lb/>
Carson<lb/>
iy not only<lb/>
jften placin<lb/>
Meanwh<lb/>
avents, as tl<lb/>
Bill Car:<lb/>
-ield and tf<lb/>
always beer<lb/>
Jeservesag<lb/>
lard and ov<lb/>
The first<lb/>
:rack, swimr<lb/>
TOM WA TSON LED the Pirates to the conferenoe championship by scoring 21 points in<lb/>
four events<lb/>
niMnwa 1 niMMi mtmmw i mm i ?????<lb/>
ECU downed Atlantic Christian College<lb/>
in baseball last Thursday, 6-4. The win ran<lb/>
the Pirates' recad fa the year to 21-7 with<lb/>
two games to play in the season.<lb/>
The Pirates built a 6-1 lead befae a<lb/>
three-run rally by the Bulldogs closed the<lb/>
game's final margin to two runs.<lb/>
Pete Conaty started fa the Pirates and<lb/>
ran his season mark to 5-0. Dean Reavis<lb/>
came on in the eighth to help Conaty,<lb/>
picking up his second save of the year.<lb/>
ECU scored four runs in the fifth to go<lb/>
ahead by a 4-1 margin.<lb/>
Howard McCullough led off the inning<lb/>
by reaching on a pair of erras which put<lb/>
him on second base.<lb/>
Geoff Beaston then singled and stole<lb/>
second base, with McCullough scoring on<lb/>
an erra ai Beaston's steal of second. The<lb/>
Pirates then got a triple from Steve Bryant<lb/>
to scae Beaston and after two outs were<lb/>
made, Glenn Card blasted a double to<lb/>
score Bryant.<lb/>
Bobby Supel then drove in the final run<lb/>
of the inning by blasting a triple off the<lb/>
440-foot sign in the center field to score<lb/>
Card.<lb/>
The Pirates added two more runs in the<lb/>
seventh. Joe Roenker singled and Card and<lb/>
Supel walked to load the bases. A wild<lb/>
pitch then allowed Roenker to scae and<lb/>
Charlie Stevens flied to left to scae Card<lb/>
with the Pirates' final run.<lb/>
Coiaty was nicked fa three runs by<lb/>
ACC in the eighth, even though he did not<lb/>
give up a hit. With no one out, a pair of<lb/>
walks and an erra loaded the bases and<lb/>
Reaviscameon in relief. Reavis walked the<lb/>
first batter, allowing a run to score, and an!<lb/>
erra on a fielder's choice brought in two<lb/>
mae runs befae the side was retired.<lb/>
The game saw 10 erras oommitted, as<lb/>
ACC made six erras and ECU committee<lb/>
four.<lb/>
Supel went two-fa-four at the plataJa<lb/>
continue his recent hitting tear. He now<lb/>
has seven hits in the last three games,<lb/>
including six extra base hits, and is batting<lb/>
.391 on the year and .538 in the last three<lb/>
games.<lb/>
The Pirates play UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
tonight befae dosing the season on<lb/>
Saturday with a home contest against<lb/>
Campbell College at 3 p.m.<lb/>
The heav<lb/>
r'oung prove<lb/>
oroe and bl(<lb/>
vhioh Younr.<lb/>
Sluggishl<lb/>
:hey unanim<lb/>
overweight, t<lb/>
and Young ji<lb/>
The chall<lb/>
aluable poii<lb/>
aggressivene<lb/>
Ali'sinep<lb/>
le still app<lb/>
"naneuvering<lb/>
At 34 year<lb/>
"Jim. Many tx-<lb/>
vould be the<lb/>
jnder his bel<lb/>
Therefae<lb/>
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jpsetting hin<lb/>
And even<lb/>
and referee w<lb/>
or the under 1<lb/>
It had all t<lb/>
allthatis there<lb/>
vill be anothe<lb/>
As fa Ali,<lb/>
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The chanr<lb/>
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? !??? nwiMura<lb/>
wmmmmwm<lb/>
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Voting foi<lb/>
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vinner of the<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 544 MAY 1976<lb/>
11<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
?<lb/>
ie in their<lb/>
ith a 40.6<lb/>
ified them<lb/>
I Dunken-<lb/>
to win in a<lb/>
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least two<lb/>
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i led the<lb/>
Bd second<lb/>
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onal best,<lb/>
nan in the<lb/>
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jump (23'<lb/>
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11), Mike<lb/>
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imon and<lb/>
leaps of<lb/>
g into 6'<lb/>
ce of the<lb/>
eet. ECU<lb/>
or more<lb/>
by Tom<lb/>
Alston's<lb/>
16 points<lb/>
e Pirates<lb/>
ten years<lb/>
!t for the<lb/>
ime-Out<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
piati<lb/>
he now<lb/>
games,<lb/>
i batting<lb/>
st three<lb/>
lington<lb/>
son on<lb/>
against<lb/>
Years of frustration came to a halt this past weekend for Bill Carson and the East<lb/>
Carolina track and field squad.<lb/>
The ending came in the form of more or less a beginning, as the Pirate track team shed<lb/>
ts bridesmaid role of the last several years and vaulted into the role as the feature<lb/>
rttraction with a SC championship in track and field.<lb/>
For a change, Carson had not been saying much publically about his team's chances at<lb/>
the title and this strategy paid off in a championship, which was long overdue at ECU.<lb/>
Carson's squad accomplished the convincing first-place finish over William and Mary<lb/>
ly not only taking seven first-places, but also through its depth in the other events by<lb/>
3ften placing three or four participants in the upper six places.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the Indians just were not as strong in their specialties, the distance<lb/>
avents, as they had been in past years and this made quite a difference.<lb/>
Bill Carson was justifiably named the Conference Coach of the Year fa Track and<lb/>
rield and this writer would like to praise "Wild Bill" also. Even though we have not<lb/>
ilways been ready to heap praise and compliments on the man, he most certainly<lb/>
jeservesa good hand this time around - as do all his many team members who worked so<lb/>
lard and overcame many injuries to achieve this first-place finish.<lb/>
The first-place gives ECU three championships in the conference this year; outdoor<lb/>
track, swimming and wrestling.<lb/>
An Overweight And Aging Champion<lb/>
The heavyweight title fight this past weekend between Muhammed Ali and Jimmy<lb/>
roung proved to be a very close and exciting bout. The excitement was not so much in the<lb/>
oroe and blows of the punches which were thrown, but more in the degree of the fight<lb/>
vhich Young was putting up against Ali-the World's Champion.<lb/>
Sluggishly, Ali still seemed tocontrol the show and the judges must have agreed since<lb/>
hey unanimously gave Ali another championship. Although he was out of shape and<lb/>
Dverweight, Ali still had the upperhand by virtue of his position as the World's Champion<lb/>
and Young just did not take enough fight to him.<lb/>
The challenger tried, but his "through the ropes" antics hurt him badly. He lost<lb/>
aluable points by not sticking it out and boxing with Ali. Obviously, this lack of<lb/>
aggressiveness had a major effect on the outcome of the fight.<lb/>
Ali'sineptnessand bad timing prevented him from scoring the knockout punch, but<lb/>
ie still appeared mobile enough to go after Young and round up points for his<lb/>
naneuvering.<lb/>
At 34 years old Ali looked old and a better fighter than Jimmy Young would have beat<lb/>
lim. Many believed Young did beat him. Had Young been a slugger instead of a boxer he<lb/>
Arcxild be the World's Champion today. Hejust did not have enough fightsand experience<lb/>
jnder his belt to pull it through.<lb/>
Therefore what evolved was one of those close calls in sports where the underdog<lb/>
joses a major challenge to the champion but falls short of the supreme achievement of<lb/>
jpsetting him.<lb/>
And even though he won a great deal of the crowds' respect and sympathy, the judges<lb/>
and referee were the ones that oounted. These men are tot experienced to let sympathy<lb/>
or the underdog get in the way of the rightful and proper champion.<lb/>
It had all the makings of a great story if Young had won. But it was not to be. Instead<lb/>
allthat is there isadose and exciting outcome and hopes from the Young corner that there<lb/>
vill be another chance.<lb/>
As for Ali, he showed Friday night that he is surely growing old. Age 34 for any athlete<lb/>
s the beginning of the end and many good athletes have thrown it in by that age. In<lb/>
xxing, age 34 is even older and the fact that Ali is still champion at this ripe old age is a<lb/>
nark of greatness by itself.<lb/>
The champion has to know the end is coming near, though, and he may seriously be<lb/>
onsidering his often circulated intentions to retire. With three fights in the next four<lb/>
nonths Ali could be setting the stage for his glorious farewell from the ring.<lb/>
Rest assured he plans to leave on top. After winning 51 of his 53 career fights so far it<lb/>
s unlikely that he wants to blemish his career by a defeat in its twilight.<lb/>
The near-loss to Young may be as dose as Ali comes to losing from here on out.<lb/>
Athlete of the Year voting<lb/>
Voting for the FOUNTAINHEAD's<lb/>
tthlete-of-the-Year has begun and the<lb/>
vinner of the Athlete-of-theYear, Coach-<lb/>
if-the-Year and top ten athletes of the Year<lb/>
iwards will be announced next week in the<lb/>
OUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
Forty athletes were placed into nomin-<lb/>
ion for the Athlete-of-the-Year award and<lb/>
ey will be voted on by a 25-member<lb/>
mittee consisting of the FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
EAD Sports Staff, members of the<lb/>
Athletic Department and the head coaches<lb/>
of each sport. Each voter gets one vote for<lb/>
Athlete-of-the-Year and can pick ten<lb/>
athletes of the year.<lb/>
Last year Ron Staggs won a dose<lb/>
selection as Athlete-of-the-Year when only<lb/>
eight people voted. This year the voting<lb/>
process was enlarged to indude coaches so<lb/>
that there would be a greater number of<lb/>
people involved.<lb/>
DZ's, Foxes remain<lb/>
unbeaten in softball<lb/>
The Fletcher Foxes are one of the<lb/>
undefeated teams remaining in Women's<lb/>
Intramural Softball. The Foxes are in the<lb/>
10-team League A, of the DormDay<lb/>
Student Division aid they ran their record<lb/>
to 7-0 last week by picking up two easy<lb/>
vidories. On Monday, the Foxes crushed<lb/>
the Clementines, 18-4, and on Tuesday, the<lb/>
Foxes pounded out run after run in a 23-2<lb/>
shellacking of error-prone Newman's<lb/>
Knockers. With only two relatively easy<lb/>
games remaining on their league schedule,<lb/>
the Foxes are virtually assured of being<lb/>
number one representative of their league<lb/>
in the upcoming playoffs. However, the 4th<lb/>
Floor Flyers (5-1), Tyler I (5-1), and the<lb/>
Hustlers (5-2) are still very much in the<lb/>
race while the Batters (4-2), Clementines<lb/>
(3-3) Newman"s Knockers (2-4), White I<lb/>
(2-5), and Greene II (1-5) are all capable of<lb/>
pulling off an upset. The tenth team, 7th<lb/>
floor Tyler, has forfeited out of further<lb/>
oompetiton.<lb/>
The race in the 9-team League B of the<lb/>
DormDay Student Division is very tight.<lb/>
Three teams are huddled together at the<lb/>
top of the standings while two other teams<lb/>
hover within striking distance. The What-<lb/>
chamacal I its (6-1) seemed well on their way<lb/>
to an undefeated league record when they<lb/>
ran into some difficulties and were forced<lb/>
to forfeit a game last Wednesday. The<lb/>
Whatchamacallits regained their usual<lb/>
form on Thursday as Lu Ann Sykes (3<lb/>
HRs), BelindaByrum(2HR's, and Debbie<lb/>
Knight (1 HR) led the attack in a 25-2<lb/>
thrashing of hapless Greene I. The What-<lb/>
chamacallits' stiffest league competition<lb/>
will come from the Clement Hellions (5-1)<lb/>
and the Cotten Fielders (5-1). Fletcher<lb/>
Green (5-2) and the Fleming Floozies (4-3)<lb/>
are also capable of making trouble for the<lb/>
frontrunners while Greene I (3-4) seems to<lb/>
be sliding down hill. Umstead (1-3), White<lb/>
II (0-4), and the Tyler Tigers (1-3) have<lb/>
forfeited out of play.<lb/>
The competition in the 12-team Sorority<lb/>
SOME A CTION FROM last week b game.<lb/>
Division appears to be for second place as<lb/>
Delta Zeta I (8-0) has really thwarted all<lb/>
attempts to stow down their steam roller.<lb/>
Delta Zeta I is one of only two unbeaten<lb/>
teams in Women's Intramural Softball and<lb/>
is easily the dass of Sorority Division. On<lb/>
Monday, the Delta Zeta I team picked up<lb/>
an easy forfeit vidory over their sister<lb/>
team, Delta Zeta II. On Thursday, DZ I<lb/>
crushed a sloppy Alpha Phi II bail dub,<lb/>
18-8, behind Karen Younces solo blast.<lb/>
Chi Omega (6-1), Alpha Delta Pi (5-1),<lb/>
Gamma Sigma Sigma (6-2), Alpha Omicron<lb/>
Pi (5-2), and Alpha Xi Delta (5-3) are in a<lb/>
real dog-fight for second place. The also<lb/>
rans indude Sigma Sigma I (3-4), Alpha<lb/>
Phi II (2-5), Sigma Sigma Sigma II (2-5),<lb/>
and Alpha Phi I (0-4). Two teams, Delta<lb/>
Zeta II (3-4) and Kappa Delta (0-2) have<lb/>
forfeited out of further softball competition<lb/>
this spring.<lb/>
Milker's <lb/>
Family<lb/>
Favorites<lb/>
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Mad SM tiaaart<lb/>
Caattry Mad eMafcaa<lb/>
lark tf SefMriafcs<lb/>
FU<lb/>
J SPECIAL! Hot dog with<lb/>
horn am ado chile<lb/>
Now featuring: 14 pounder wcheese and<lb/>
Steak sandwich Both with lettuce, tomato,<lb/>
J ? onion ring, dill pickle ft mayonnaise<lb/>
T TWf LOCITIMS 14 St. OPEN 7 DAYS<lb/>
S feratr of 5fb a?d Itada ST. A WEEK<lb/>
pAMJgURJflmJ!<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040041_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 544 MAY 1976<lb/>
mgmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mwm<lb/>
mummi<lb/>
news F LAS<lb/>
FLASH FLASH FLAS<lb/>
Bluegrass Festival Senior Meeting<lb/>
An all day bluegrass festival and<lb/>
pig-piokin' will be held on Sat. May 15th<lb/>
from 1 00 on. Relax and enjoy plenty of<lb/>
good eatin' pig along with ice-cold<lb/>
beverages for everyone.<lb/>
Stomp your feet to several of N.Cs<lb/>
finest bluegrass bands including Ground-<lb/>
speed and others.<lb/>
Bring your family. Bring your friends.<lb/>
Tickets and maps will go on sale at the<lb/>
Mushroom, Rock-n-Soul, Sounds Im-<lb/>
pressive and friends. Hurry a limited<lb/>
number of tickets are available.<lb/>
PRC Meeting<lb/>
There will be a meeting this Wed May<lb/>
5, at 700 in room 221 Mendenhall. This is<lb/>
the last meeting of this school year so all<lb/>
active members are asked to attend.<lb/>
There will be a meeting of all interested<lb/>
seniors, Wednesday at 7 p.m. in Rawl 130<lb/>
to discuss the Senior Gift of 1976.<lb/>
Dietetic Assoc.<lb/>
There will be a Student Dietetic<lb/>
Association meeting Thursday, May 6 at<lb/>
5:00 p.m. in the Home Eoonomics Living<lb/>
Room. Changes in the SDA By-Laws will<lb/>
be introduced and plans will be discussed<lb/>
for a senior oookout. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Sierra Club<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the Sierra<lb/>
Club on May 10th at 8 p.m. at the 1st<lb/>
Presbyterian Church.<lb/>
CONE Students phj Beta Lambda<lb/>
A workshop on Job Opportunities for<lb/>
Health Educators will be held May 13 from<lb/>
6:15 - 900 at the Willis Building.<lb/>
History Discussion<lb/>
There will be a panel discussion on<lb/>
"What is history?" by members of the<lb/>
History Department, Thursday, May 6 at<lb/>
4 00 in Brewster B-104. Anyone interested<lb/>
in this important topic is welcome to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Installation of offioers will be Wednes-<lb/>
day, May 5, at 7 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Group picture will be<lb/>
taken at this meeting. There is no word, as<lb/>
of yet, on the Happy Hour.<lb/>
Psi Chi<lb/>
Sickle Cell<lb/>
Sickle Cell Anemia Education Program,<lb/>
Mendenhall, room 244, Tuesday, May 4,<lb/>
730. Miss Atkinson, Genetic Ecjucator<lb/>
Counselor will speak and show a film.<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
There will be a Happy Hour sponsored<lb/>
by the Student Council fa Exceptional<lb/>
Children at the Elbo Room on Monday,<lb/>
May 10 from 8 to 1 a.m. Advanced tickets<lb/>
(Sp. 156) 25 cents - at the doa - 50 cents.<lb/>
Featuring a Male Beauty Contest at<lb/>
1000 p.m. Come and support your favaite<lb/>
contestant. 1st place - $10.00, 2nd place -<lb/>
$5.00.<lb/>
Suppat a good cause.<lb/>
There will be a Psi Chi meeting on<lb/>
Tuesday, May 18, at 7 p.m. in Speight rm.<lb/>
129. At this meeting new members will be<lb/>
initiated, new officers installed, and<lb/>
awardsand scholarships will be presented.<lb/>
All members are enoouraged to attend this<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta<lb/>
On Tues May 4, there Will be a Phi<lb/>
Alpha Theta meeting. It will be at 7O0 in<lb/>
the Richard C. Todd room. All members<lb/>
are urged to attend. We will be discussing<lb/>
our upcoming cook out.<lb/>
Ski Club<lb/>
TM<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.For more information call<lb/>
758-1640.<lb/>
There will be a free introductay lecture<lb/>
on the Transcendental Meditation (TM)<lb/>
program, Wednesday, May 5th at 8 p.m. at<lb/>
the Party Room of Tar River Apts. Further<lb/>
infamatioi: 758-8668.<lb/>
REAL<lb/>
Have a problem? Need infamatioi?<lb/>
Real Crisis Center open 24 hours. Call<lb/>
758-HELP a oome by 1117 Evans St.<lb/>
Union positions Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Positions are open on the Student<lb/>
Union Lecture Committee fa the 1976-77<lb/>
school year. Apply now at the Student<lb/>
Union office in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Certificates fa new initiates in Phi Eta<lb/>
Sigma have arrived and can be received in<lb/>
the office of Dr. John D. Ebbs(214 Austin).<lb/>
Students are enoouraged to pick up their<lb/>
certificates immediately.<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Delta PRC Outing<lb/>
The May meeting of A.E.D. will beheld<lb/>
at 7O0 p.m May 4,1976 in Flanagan 201.<lb/>
The speaker will be Ms. Arlene Collins,<lb/>
R.N. of Pitt Tech who will present a film<lb/>
and talk on the Lamaze method of<lb/>
childbirth. All members, associates and<lb/>
interested people are urged to attend.<lb/>
ECU Jaycees<lb/>
There will bean aganizatioial meeting<lb/>
of the ECU Jaycees Wednesday, May 5, at<lb/>
7 p.m. in Mendenhall Student Center room<lb/>
248. There will be representatives from the<lb/>
Jaycees there to discuss the Jaycees and<lb/>
answer questions. This will be a meeting to<lb/>
organize a campus Jaycee chapter. Anyone<lb/>
from 18 to 35 years old is welcome to oome<lb/>
Wednesday. Your attendance is necessary<lb/>
to establish this chapter.<lb/>
Hustle Lessons<lb/>
"The Entertainer" Committee is new.<lb/>
We need people to learn how to hustle in<lb/>
the real wald of journalism, drama, music<lb/>
and art. This committee could be beneficial<lb/>
to you. Apply at the Mendenhall Info,<lb/>
desk. (An ECU Student Union Committee).<lb/>
Pronto.<lb/>
Design Workshop<lb/>
The Design Department will present a<lb/>
wakshopon May 14 and 15. The wakshop<lb/>
fee is $7.00. Students must pay by<lb/>
Monday, May 10 in Jenkins 215.<lb/>
The wakshop will feature JoseAugustin<lb/>
Fumero as the key speaker. Fumero will<lb/>
exhibit a braiding machine which can<lb/>
combine up to sixteen different fibers to<lb/>
produce a single strand of yarn.<lb/>
Campus Crusade<lb/>
Campus Crusade fa Christ will meet<lb/>
Tuesday, May 4, at 7O0 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
D wing room 201. Come join us fa a time<lb/>
of fellowship and Bible study.<lb/>
Yard Sale<lb/>
Fletcher Hall is sponsaing a yard sale<lb/>
on the front lawn on Wednesday, May 5th<lb/>
from 12-6. Anyone who has any items to<lb/>
sell contact Pam Holt. Everyone is invited.<lb/>
Field school<lb/>
Applications fa the East Carolina<lb/>
Archaeological Field School, being held<lb/>
first session summer, are now available<lb/>
from the Archaeology Labaatay in Nath<lb/>
Cafeteria.<lb/>
Memorial service<lb/>
A Memaial Service fa ECU English<lb/>
Professa Paul Farr and Russell Christ man<lb/>
will be presented on Sunday, May 9, at<lb/>
7.00 p.m. in Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
Room 244<lb/>
The ECU Parks, Recreation and<lb/>
Conservation students will hold their<lb/>
annual spring outing May 16 at the Tar<lb/>
River Estates Party House. Starting time is<lb/>
3 p.m.<lb/>
Activities that promise fun fa all are<lb/>
planned and good food will be served. The<lb/>
event is open to PRC majas, alumni, staff<lb/>
and friends.<lb/>
Tickets are $2 and may be purchased<lb/>
from a member of the PRC curriculum.<lb/>
Pub Board<lb/>
Pub Board applications are now being<lb/>
taken fa 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/>
Pi Sigma Alpha<lb/>
Pi Sigma Alpha will meet in C Wing of<lb/>
Brewster Building at 7O0 Wednesday,<lb/>
May 5. The purpose is to elect 1976-77<lb/>
offioers and announce banquet plans. It is<lb/>
impatant fa all members to attend.<lb/>
Buccaneer<lb/>
Are you aeative? Do you like to write?<lb/>
Are you involved with campus life and<lb/>
want to oontribute to something wath-<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 waking a the<lb/>
Buccaneer staff fa 76-77 ai Wednesday,<lb/>
May 5 at 400 in the Buocaneer office,<lb/>
located on the second floor of the<lb/>
Publications Center. No experience neces-<lb/>
sary.<lb/>
Presidency<lb/>
"Personal Character anu the American<lb/>
Presidency an address by noted social<lb/>
psychologist Gadon J. DiRenzo at ECU,<lb/>
has been rescheduled fa May 14, at 2 p.m.<lb/>
in the Biology Auditaium.<lb/>
The public is invited to attend the<lb/>
presentation, which is sponsaed by th?<lb/>
ECU Department of Sociology and Anthro<lb/>
pology and the ECU Student Governmem<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Majorettes<lb/>
Anyone interested in majaette tryout<lb/>
please contact Regina Bullock, 752-940<lb/>
fa a time fa interview.<lb/>
Freaks Vs. Pigs<lb/>
There will be an Easter Seal Basketbal<lb/>
game between the SGA and the Greenvilk<lb/>
Police Department. It will be the "Freak;<lb/>
vs. Pigs" in a shoot out at Minge:<lb/>
Coliseum on May 6th. Student suppat<lb/>
ers are asked to attend to help witf<lb/>
community relations.<lb/>
?IIMIIIKllllHHllllfllBil Ml<lb/>
<pb facs="00040041_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>