<?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="00040044_0001"/>
Circulation 8,500<lb/>
This issue- 12 pages<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
t AST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
VOL 51, NO. 57<lb/>
13 MA Y 1976<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina Community for over fifty years<lb/>
m<lb/>
mrnwn<lb/>
mm<lb/>
During closed police personnel meeting Tuesday<lb/>
Cannon denies meeting dealt with firings<lb/>
Greenville Police Chief Glenn Cannon has denied that the recent firing of two city<lb/>
policemen was discussed at a closed door meeting of all police personnel Tuesday, 7:30<lb/>
a.m in the city council chambers.<lb/>
But, according to a member of the Greenville Polios Department who was present at<lb/>
the meeting, the session dealt primarily with the dismissal of two officers within the last<lb/>
eight days.<lb/>
A member of the department who was at the meeting, but who asked not to be<lb/>
identified, explained that the Chief indicated to the group that he wanted to explain the<lb/>
recent firings<lb/>
Chief Cannon, reached at his home Wednesday night by telephone, denied that the<lb/>
meeting had anything to do with the recent firings and stated that the purpose of the<lb/>
meeting "was an internal affair for the department only<lb/>
Cannon refused to divulge the purpose of the meeting and when asked if the meeting<lb/>
concerned the recent firings, Cannon answered "no<lb/>
Greenville Mayor Percy Cox, also reached at his home Wednesday night by telephone,<lb/>
indicated he knew nothing about the meetina.<lb/>
According to the source, the Chief told the group "that the two officers were<lb/>
dismissed because of vio'a'ionsof the Greenville Personnel Code<lb/>
"He also told us that this organization type stuff would not be tolerated by anyone,<lb/>
the source said.<lb/>
The first officer was fired on May 4th and the second on May 10th. Both officers fired<lb/>
were reportedly involved in the organization of the Independent Greenville Police<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
But, Cannon denied that the officers in question were fired because of any<lb/>
involvement with the police organization.<lb/>
Cannon said that he did not care to discuss the reasons behind the firings.<lb/>
The souroe contended that  I think everyone at the meeting got the impression whai<lb/>
was really meant. That this type stuff had better stop or that there would be more<lb/>
firings<lb/>
The source at the meeting noted that Cannon told those present that he "hated to do<lb/>
what he had done. He told us that it was a difficult decision to make that he had prayed<lb/>
about the source explained.<lb/>
Cannon reportedly told those present that they should be thankful to have a job and<lb/>
that there were many people who were unemployed who would love to have a job.<lb/>
"I do believe that we have been told that this type activity will not be tolerated<lb/>
anymore the source added.<lb/>
Sullivan vetoes by-law revision<lb/>
By DENNIS LEONARD<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The recent Pub Board by-law revision is<lb/>
going to be vetoed by Tim Sullivan, SGA<lb/>
president, due to lack of needed input into<lb/>
the revision, according to Sullivan.<lb/>
According to Sullivan, he met with<lb/>
three members of publications, Monika<lb/>
Sutherland, BUCCANEER, Jim Elliott,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, and Pat Flynn, KEY, to<lb/>
discuss the by-law revision.<lb/>
I feel these laws were drawn up<lb/>
without the needed input said Sullivan.<lb/>
"In the spirit of trying to solve the<lb/>
problem with Pub Board, the Legislature<lb/>
drew up the new laws. There were a lot of<lb/>
hours and committee time spent, but to<lb/>
everyone's blame; Publications, Legis-<lb/>
lature, and the Executive, the main<lb/>
problem was not solved<lb/>
"The main problem is that in the past<lb/>
the Pub Board has been accused of being a<lb/>
rubber stamp for the publications, and the<lb/>
Legislature never put much faith in the<lb/>
decisions of the Pub Board. It is equally<lb/>
wrong to make the Pub Board a rubber<lb/>
stamp of the SGA.<lb/>
"The problem of how the SGA can<lb/>
continue funding publications with expert<lb/>
opinion and with smooth negotiations is not<lb/>
shown by these proposed by laws and that<lb/>
is why I am vetoing them<lb/>
r<lb/>
The question of a media board surfaced<lb/>
during the recent SGA elections, which<lb/>
would include WECU and the Ebony<lb/>
Herald, has resurfaced now that the newly<lb/>
revised by-laws have been vetoed.<lb/>
"I think it is unfair to place certain<lb/>
media under the Pub Board action and to<lb/>
leave the others to negotiate directly to the<lb/>
SGA. The main goal is to have responsible<lb/>
funding and you cannot have that with<lb/>
arbitrary rules added Sullivan.<lb/>
"The lack of including WECU. Ebony<lb/>
Herald, and any other media that may exist<lb/>
on the campus is a weakness because the<lb/>
by-laws did not address themselves as a<lb/>
total authority.<lb/>
"I object that there is no incentive for<lb/>
publications to collect ad revenue<lb/>
There will be several courses the<lb/>
defeated set of by-laws can take, even<lb/>
though President Sullivan feels so strongly<lb/>
against their affirmation.<lb/>
 The by-laws can go to the Legislature<lb/>
next Monday and the veto could be<lb/>
overridden by a two-thirds vote. If the<lb/>
by-laws fail the old by-laws are still in<lb/>
effect.<lb/>
"I propose that we live under the old<lb/>
by-laws only until the people in the SGA<lb/>
and the people in publications can come up<lb/>
with a decent and strong set of guide-<lb/>
lines<lb/>
Jim Elliott, newly chosen editor of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD fa 1976-77, was the<lb/>
only publications editor available for<lb/>
comment before going to press.<lb/>
"Even though the veto will leave us<lb/>
with the inefficient Pub Board from last<lb/>
year, by backing up and getting a broader<lb/>
perspective, thisvetowill ideally give us an<lb/>
opportunity that is worth using said<lb/>
Elliott.<lb/>
Wilson seeks aid for companion<lb/>
Editor's Note: This is the third of a series<lb/>
of articles dealing with aspects of the arrest<lb/>
and imprisonment of Stephen Harris<lb/>
Wilson, ECU alumni<lb/>
Stephen H. Wilso, escaped from a<lb/>
maximum security prison in Nogales,<lb/>
Mexioo after being imprisoned for a year<lb/>
and a half. Wilson's primary concern now<lb/>
is seeing to the safety and well being of his<lb/>
oompanion, Robert Allen (Bob) Smith, who<lb/>
is still being held in a Mexican prison.<lb/>
"I'm not your big story said Wilson.<lb/>
It is Bob you should be writing about,<lb/>
he is still in prison<lb/>
Smith is a former biology major at ECU.<lb/>
He has been in prison In Mexioo sinoe June<lb/>
25. 1973.<lb/>
' Before we left Bob and I were friends,<lb/>
but in Mexioo together we were more than<lb/>
brothers explained Wilson. "We saved<lb/>
each other's lives<lb/>
Wilson observed the thinking that they<lb/>
went through in prison. "We were there a<lb/>
long time before we could even realize that<lb/>
it was really happening. It just seemed like<lb/>
a weird movie<lb/>
The shock of understanding their true<lb/>
situation was followed by an indignation, a<lb/>
feeling of beina at the wrong end of<lb/>
See Escape, page 6.<lb/>
SGA to purchase new buses<lb/>
By DENNIS LEONARD<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Student Government Association<lb/>
transportation system will be upgrading its<lb/>
services in the nearby future by purchasing<lb/>
two new buses and extending the bus<lb/>
routes across Greenville.<lb/>
According to Greg Davis, transport-<lb/>
ation manager, appropriations have gone<lb/>
through the Appropriations Committee<lb/>
that will enable the SGA to buy two new<lb/>
bus<lb/>
An appropriation of $55,000 was sent<lb/>
through committee Wednesday afternoon<lb/>
fa the purchase c4 the two new buses and<lb/>
fc � ntenance for the remainder of<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
"There will be two new buses running<lb/>
the routes next year and one old bus will be<lb/>
used as a backup said Davis. "We will<lb/>
never have a bus out of service for 10 or 15<lb/>
minutes with this system<lb/>
The proposed new routes will still<lb/>
service the same areas, but will include the<lb/>
Tar River area.<lb/>
"We will leave the apartment or purple<lb/>
route as it is, take the gold route and have<lb/>
it run through Mendenhall, campus,<lb/>
Minges, and out to Allied Health. The third<lb/>
route will pick up the Tar River apart-<lb/>
ments, the housing area between the Tar<lb/>
River and First St and then out to<lb/>
ibeth St. and the fraternity hous<lb/>
there.<lb/>
According to Davis, the new bus system<lb/>
will increase operating oosts by approxi-<lb/>
mately $13,000, which includes gas,<lb/>
salaries, maintenance and insurance.<lb/>
"Thisnew system will set up a program<lb/>
where the buses will be chartered for the<lb/>
weekends, because the backup bus will<lb/>
insure regular bus schedules during the<lb/>
week, plus provide a chance for main-<lb/>
tenance<lb/>
According to Davis the new buses to be<lb/>
purchased will be mechanically superior to<lb/>
the ones now in operation, and the system<lb/>
will definitely be advantageous to the<lb/>
student population.<lb/>
NOGALES PRISON, MEXICO<lb/>
ERROR<lb/>
Please note the following error in the<lb/>
ART CARVED COLLEGE RINGS ad on<lb/>
page 5 in the May 11, 1976 issue of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD. The following lines<lb/>
should have been deleted.<lb/>
"P.S. Hurry. The ringright away<lb/>
"Bring any port ion standard deposit.<lb/>
Fountainhead regrets the error and any<lb/>
inconveniences caused by it <lb/>
n<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5613 MAY 1976<lb/>
WH<lb/>
NHMVIMiVM<lb/>
EditortaisCommenteiry<lb/>
Bus system improvements<lb/>
Apparently SGA President Tim Sullivan has decided to make a<lb/>
major effort to improve the student transit system. Such an<lb/>
improvement is long overdue and the new SGA President will be<lb/>
establishing his administration on solid ground by moving to boost<lb/>
the often maligned bus system.<lb/>
The proposed plan to improve the bus system calls for the<lb/>
purchase of two new buses, which will expand the bus fleet to four.<lb/>
And, the addition of several new routes for the system. Tentative<lb/>
plans call for three buses to run regular routes with one bus being<lb/>
held as a back-up in case of breakdown.<lb/>
The transit expansion will cost upwards of $50,000.00.<lb/>
And, while the expansion will be expensive in initial outlay, it is<lb/>
well worthwhile.<lb/>
Problems have plagued the present bus system since its<lb/>
inception. To begin with, the buses currently in operation were the<lb/>
wrong type buses.Thepresent model bus was not built for city type<lb/>
transit operations with plenty of stop-go driving and close turning<lb/>
spaces. Nor were 'he clutches on the buses built to handle the<lb/>
constant shifting needed in the present system.<lb/>
So, there were constant mechanical breakdowns that caused<lb/>
transportation managers to suffer more than their share of<lb/>
headaches.<lb/>
The system also operated without a back-up so anytime a bus<lb/>
was in the garage with mechanical problems, some students were<lb/>
left with transportation problems since some routes had to be<lb/>
closed until the bus returned. The most frustrating thing a student<lb/>
could hear while waiting at the bus stop was "the bus has broken<lb/>
down" .That often meant being late for class, or absent altogether,<lb/>
missing an appointment or just as bad, having to get out the old<lb/>
car and hunt for a parking space.<lb/>
Under the proposed plan there will be a back-up to handle the<lb/>
problem. And, routes that oould not previously be handled will be<lb/>
added to the system.<lb/>
There is without a doubt a tremendous need for some type of m<lb/>
student transit system. With a campus that has expanded to Allied<lb/>
Health (ECU Pitt Plaza Branch), Minges Coliseum (ECU East<lb/>
Campus), and the soon to open med school at Pitt Memorial<lb/>
Hospital (ECU-Farmville), there is a great need for dependable,<lb/>
quick transportation.<lb/>
Some students do have access to cars but a reliable bus system<lb/>
will cut down on parking woes and will be a lot cheaper and quicker<lb/>
for students.<lb/>
There is a plan underway by the City of Greenville to establish a<lb/>
bus system. And hopefully one day the student system and the city<lb/>
system can worK out some joint effort to serve everyone.<lb/>
But, don't count on it for the time being. So, that leaves it<lb/>
squarely with the SGA to provide for students.<lb/>
The proposed plan will do that and should be supported by<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Veto good move<lb/>
Student Government Association President Tim Sullivan has<lb/>
used his first veto of a legislature bill and the newly elected<lb/>
President could not have picked a better bill to exercise that<lb/>
privilege on than the proposed Publications Board By-laws.<lb/>
The new by-laws, approved last week by the legislature, are<lb/>
poorly written and are actually already inadequate, even before<lb/>
being placed in operation.<lb/>
Most publication editors opposed the new by-laws and<lb/>
apparently Sullivan agreed with their reservations of the bill.<lb/>
The proposed by-laws included rules to govern Fountainhead,<lb/>
Buccaneer, Rebel and Key, but left Ebony Herald free to roam and<lb/>
do as it pleases. And, the by-laws dealt only with publications<lb/>
instead of all campus media, including WECU. There is a great<lb/>
need for both the Ebony Herald and WECU to fall under the control<lb/>
of the Pub Board, yet in those newly proposed by-laws they were<lb/>
left out.<lb/>
Hopefully Sullivan's veto will force the legislature to take a<lb/>
closer look at the by-laws, something they failed to do when they<lb/>
originally approved the by-laws.<lb/>
$<lb/>
L)<lb/>
i �<lb/>
PICKS UP FILL THE 5mhS W7<lb/>
URNT-flM) RU THE souNt&amp;vau<lb/>
Spend those funds<lb/>
For the past several years thousands upon thousands of dollars I<lb/>
in student revenues have been piling up as a surplus in the Student<lb/>
Government Association budget.<lb/>
But, apparently the new SGA President and the Legislature<lb/>
have decided to put the cash to good use - a move all students<lb/>
should applaud.<lb/>
For some reason that escapes us, the past SGAs have allowed I<lb/>
large surplus, currently over $80,000.00 to build up. Instead off<lb/>
spending that money on worthwhile student projects, the money <lb/>
was saved. Not saved because there was a lack of worthwhile<lb/>
projects to spend it on - saved because of a lack of initiative by<lb/>
SGAs to seek those worthwhile projects. Now, several proposed<lb/>
plans by this SGA will cut deeply into any "surplus" or<lb/>
unappropriated funds that might be left in the treasury. This<lb/>
should have been done several years ago instead of allowing the<lb/>
fund to grow.<lb/>
Student fees should be spent when they are received.<lb/>
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"Were it left to ma to decide whether we should have a government without<lb/>
newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hestiate a moment to prefer<lb/>
the latter<lb/>
�<lb/>
t-<lb/>
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Thomas Jefferaon<lb/>
9 ,�<lb/>
a<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor<lb/>
Managing Editor-Tom Tour<lb/>
Business Manager-Teresa W hi sonant<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/>
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by ttjfe<lb/>
Student Government Asaodation of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday durirbt<lb/>
the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 758-6309 f<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non students.<lb/>
All<lb/>
acoomp<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 57, NO. 5713 MAy 1976<lb/>
Mil HUIUIU I WHIM � I<lb/>
3<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
For comments on homosexual articles<lb/>
Student takes aim at Features Editor<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Attention: Pat Coyle<lb/>
It has oome to my attention at several<lb/>
occasions this year of your more than<lb/>
infatuated curiosity of the lifestyles and<lb/>
acceptance of homosexuals. You have<lb/>
made reference three particular times in<lb/>
your oolumn of homosexuals (whether it be<lb/>
direct or indirect). The last artide of your<lb/>
writing in the Fountainhead told of your<lb/>
fear in the school paper becoming a "Fag<lb/>
Rag Your mention of homosexuality has<lb/>
almost held up to the many artides that<lb/>
were placed in the paper by the News<lb/>
Editor. You are bringing these artides into<lb/>
the limelight as what seems an insecurity<lb/>
on your part.<lb/>
I say this because of your continuous<lb/>
effort to make fun or degrade a person I<lb/>
know and love. At first it was amusing.<lb/>
Since then the joke has gotten old. The<lb/>
gays on campus could not be bothered by<lb/>
Keep those<lb/>
doors closed<lb/>
" To Fountainhead:<lb/>
f<lb/>
This is not a laughing matter. With the<lb/>
current emphasis on safety on campus, a<lb/>
serious safety hazard has come to my<lb/>
attention. This hazard can be easily<lb/>
prevented with the cooperation of each<lb/>
dorm student.<lb/>
In each dorm, the stairwells are<lb/>
endosed by "firedoors These doors are<lb/>
designed for the residents' safety. In case<lb/>
of fire, these doors will oontain fire vkI<lb/>
smoke, provide fire exits fa the residents,<lb/>
and prevent a fire from moving from floor<lb/>
to floor. These doors are effective only if<lb/>
they are kept dosed at all times!<lb/>
With your ocoperation in keeping these<lb/>
doors dosed so they may serve their<lb/>
purpose, a potential safety hazard can be<lb/>
eliminated. For your safety and the safety<lb/>
of others, please keep these "fire doors"<lb/>
dosed.<lb/>
Thank you,<lb/>
Davis L. Shirley<lb/>
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FORUM POLICY<lb/>
All letters to the Editor 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/>
Forum.<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 editor's office<lb/>
and available upon request to any student.<lb/>
All requests for withholding a name must<lb/>
be made in person to the editor.<lb/>
Any letter received without this in-<lb/>
formation will be held until the letter writer<lb/>
complies with the new policy.<lb/>
in, f<lb/>
your non-acceptance. Why do you publidze<lb/>
it? Do you feel their adions and beliefs<lb/>
should be condoned by you? If you are so<lb/>
happy with your heterosexual life, then<lb/>
your bothered effort to bring the subject up<lb/>
once again would not be wasted. If you<lb/>
accept yourself, and others accept them-<lb/>
selves - why not leave well enough alone?<lb/>
Are homosexuals a threat to your feminine<lb/>
manner? They are not bothering you, and<lb/>
not degrading you. Why must you persist<lb/>
in degrading them?<lb/>
In referenoe to my party of January<lb/>
16th, I understood your shock to a situation<lb/>
never having been exposed to. Yet I felt<lb/>
your artide led to a vidous attack of my<lb/>
friends. The party had the sole purpose of<lb/>
celebrating my birthday and my cousin's<lb/>
graduation (Whit McLawhorn). You were<lb/>
invited as our friend. This was the case of<lb/>
every individual there. I hope you realize<lb/>
that more than a hundred people attended<lb/>
that Friday night. Your belief in the party<lb/>
being a "Gayla" affair is far from being<lb/>
valid. Most certainly a large number of<lb/>
gays attended. Yet there were more<lb/>
so-called straight folks than those of the<lb/>
opposite persuasion. Why were you so<lb/>
taken aback?<lb/>
It's terrible that the party upset you to<lb/>
the point of your since continuous effort to<lb/>
attack these people. I'm asking you these<lb/>
questions with a basic hope that you<lb/>
yourself will attempt to understand that<lb/>
people are people and that friends are<lb/>
friends. If you were to accept homosexuals<lb/>
for their beliefs, without accepting their<lb/>
beliefs for your own, you would find them<lb/>
the same as you.<lb/>
They are intelligent, loving, and<lb/>
thoughtful people. There are no more bad<lb/>
homosexuals" than "bad heterosexuals<lb/>
How they express themselves sexually is<lb/>
their business and none of yours or mine.<lb/>
Why do you oontinually try to make it<lb/>
yours?<lb/>
Are you questioning the idea that<lb/>
straight is no longer chic and it is<lb/>
beginning to bother you? Well it hasn't<lb/>
ever bothered me or the man that I'm<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAKING by phil frank<lb/>
"I CANT &amp;E MZEUF IA0RKfNT3<lb/>
f2R A CORATOi "WAT<lb/>
PR0PUCE4 mWi AKAlAflEWft!<lb/>
mot ft. aa�� MrfORf(z,ooo'<lb/>
H2WEVEP we. 14,000<lb/>
COLLEGE MEDIA SERVICES-BOX 9411-BEBKElEY CA 9709<lb/>
Sullivan notes road plan<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
This past Monday, May 10, I attended<lb/>
an open meeting of concerned Pitt County<lb/>
residents and University offidals to listen<lb/>
to proposals on the widening of 64-264<lb/>
from Washington west to Wilson. The state<lb/>
has nired a consulting firm - William S.<lb/>
Pollard Consultants, Inc. of Memphis,<lb/>
.ennessee - to get feedback from all<lb/>
interested parties.<lb/>
While most of the talk in favor of<lb/>
widening 264 to a four-lane highway came<lb/>
from businessmen and farmers, those of us<lb/>
with the University stressed our point of<lb/>
view as well: That ECU was growing, that<lb/>
congestion on the road was a major<lb/>
inconvenience to many students, and that<lb/>
this section of the state was long overdue<lb/>
fa highway improvements.<lb/>
I urge all students who are<lb/>
interested in improving the highway access<lb/>
to ECU-Greenville to write to the below<lb/>
address stating your opinion and your<lb/>
suggestions as to what improvements you<lb/>
would like to see.<lb/>
Mr. T.L. Waters<lb/>
Manager of Planning and Research<lb/>
Division of Highways<lb/>
Highway Building<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27611<lb/>
seeing. He accepts them as much as I. We<lb/>
don't have to prove our love to someone<lb/>
else, neither do homosexuals have to prove<lb/>
their love to you. If "straight" is not chic,<lb/>
we don't care. If "gay" is not chic, we don't<lb/>
care. What we care about is people as our<lb/>
friends - whether they are black, white or<lb/>
yellow and straight, gay or bisexual.<lb/>
That's their choice that they must make.<lb/>
Let them make their own way without the<lb/>
slack for something they can't or don't care<lb/>
to change.<lb/>
I'm not trying toget on "your list My<lb/>
point is that you should become aware of<lb/>
what is going on before making judgments.<lb/>
Don't try to categorize people. It doesn't<lb/>
work. God knows how many people long to<lb/>
be individualistic. Give yourself and others<lb/>
the chance. Believe me, once you accept<lb/>
them as personal friends, you will discover<lb/>
that all they have heard is the sound of a<lb/>
different drummer. To each his own.<lb/>
Sinoerely,<lb/>
Georgina Langston<lb/>
Paper thanked<lb/>
for efforts<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
On behalf of the faculty and students in<lb/>
the ECU Journalism Program, I would like<lb/>
to express gratitude and appreciation for<lb/>
the Fountainhead's role in helping to<lb/>
publish the fourth edition of the ECU<lb/>
Journalist-the student laboratory news-<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
The Fountainhead generously assisted<lb/>
in making this lab paper a reality by<lb/>
providing typesetting and layout fadlities.<lb/>
Spedal thanks are in order for Jeanette<lb/>
Coats, who provided typesetting services,<lb/>
and for editor-in-chief, Mike Taylor, whose<lb/>
interest and support helped to make the<lb/>
1976 ECU Journalist a newspaper reality.<lb/>
Spedal thanks and recognition are also<lb/>
in order for Carl Worsfey, publisher of the<lb/>
Rocky Mount Telegram. Worsley provided<lb/>
free printing services for the laboratory<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
Prior to 1975, the ECU Journalist was a<lb/>
mimeographed nev sletter.<lb/>
Persons interested in obtaining a copy<lb/>
of the ECU Journalist should oontad a<lb/>
journalism professor or the English<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Thanks<lb/>
Lawrence J. O' Keefe,<lb/>
Assistant Professor<lb/>
m<lb/>
me<lb/>
Tim Sullivan<lb/>
mm<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00040044_0004"/><lb/>
T<lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5713 MAY 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
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k<lb/>
Student-run restaurant<lb/>
Step into the ECU world<lb/>
of fine gourmet dining<lb/>
By PA T COYLE<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Stepping into the home economics<lb/>
dining room is like entering another world,<lb/>
a world completely different from the<lb/>
campus and surrounding area.<lb/>
In this restaurant run completely by<lb/>
institutional management students, pa-<lb/>
trons are treated to candlelight, fresh-cut<lb/>
flowers, impeccable service, and a multi-<lb/>
course gourmet meal - all for the<lb/>
unbelievable price of $3.50.<lb/>
This luxury fare is offered each<lb/>
Thursday night as part of the students'<lb/>
institutional management training, and it's<lb/>
the students who call the shots.<lb/>
Each student enrolled in the oourse,<lb/>
which is offered only to seniors and<lb/>
graduate students, is responsible for the<lb/>
planning of one evening's dinner.<lb/>
The student is in charge of planning the<lb/>
menu, obtaining necessary food, arranging<lb/>
table decorations, and coordinating the<lb/>
responsibilities of the rest of the class.<lb/>
The class is divided into kitchen<lb/>
workers and dining room servers. Perform-<lb/>
ing all necessary services on a rotation<lb/>
basis gives each student a well-rounded<lb/>
background in restaurant management.<lb/>
THE COM tilNA TION OF atmosphere, fine<lb/>
evening for two Fountainhead staffers, as<lb/>
cuisine, and good company add up to a special<lb/>
they enjoy a student prepared meal.<lb/>
THURSDA Y'S FEA TURED ENTREE of stuffed pork chops, garden peas, and baked<lb/>
apples, was served to a receptive crowd. Each Thursday night, spring quarter, talented<lb/>
ECU food service trainees have prepared a special gourmet dinner for over forty people.<lb/>
The responsibility of coordinating and<lb/>
serving a meal to 40 paying customers<lb/>
would seem to be a formidable task to<lb/>
many.<lb/>
"I used to be scared (when the quarter<lb/>
began) said Kathy Jones. The senior<lb/>
child development majorfoods, nutrition,<lb/>
institutional development minor went on to<lb/>
say, "thanks to this experience, I don't<lb/>
mind entertaining on my own now<lb/>
Career ambitions of the classes'<lb/>
members are as varied as the menus<lb/>
they've planned.<lb/>
Frances Richards, a senior Environ-<lb/>
mental Health major who is minoring in the<lb/>
foods area, feels the oourse has broadened<lb/>
her view of food's sanitation.<lb/>
"Pve gained insight into the restaurant<lb/>
business; from the food worker's side<lb/>
said Richards.<lb/>
Richards sees foods sanitation as an<lb/>
area that will be greatly expanded in the<lb/>
years to oome.<lb/>
She believes her experience in the<lb/>
institutional management oourse will also<lb/>
aid her during her internship this summer<lb/>
at a major D.C. hospital.<lb/>
Menu-planning is an integral facet of<lb/>
the course, not only for the students them-<lb/>
selves, but also for the anxious customers.<lb/>
Mehrshid Nazmi-Ansari an Iran native<lb/>
who is majoring in Institutional Manage-<lb/>
ment, chose a mid-eastern theme for the<lb/>
meal she planned.<lb/>
"I thought it would be good to have<lb/>
something different said Mehrshid.<lb/>
"It was a change from pizza and steak;<lb/>
the kind of food most restaurants around<lb/>
here serve<lb/>
There is one group directly participat-<lb/>
ing in the oourse who probably give little<lb/>
thought to grades or restaurant manage-<lb/>
ment ; the patrons.<lb/>
A reserved seat at the gala affair<lb/>
insures a Thursday evening of first-claas<lb/>
dining.<lb/>
In this course, the customer tells the<lb/>
story of suooessor failure, and the students<lb/>
of institutional management have definite-<lb/>
ly kept the customer satisfied. Dr. Lewis<lb/>
Forrest, the oourse's instructor, has the<lb/>
waiting lists to prove it.<lb/>
Food service trainees learn culinary trade<lb/>
By TOM TOZER<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
The consumption of fast and seemingly<lb/>
tasteless foods is quickly becoming an<lb/>
accustomed habit among Americans,<lb/>
especially college students.<lb/>
Students seeking to please their palates<lb/>
in Greenville are confronted with one stark<lb/>
fact - if you want to eat there are plenty of<lb/>
restaurants to pick from but dining costs<lb/>
money - lots of it.<lb/>
One alternative to this dilemma for<lb/>
those of you going out to dinner is to look<lb/>
no further than the ECU Food Nutrition<lb/>
and Institutional Management Depart-<lb/>
ment. Nine consecutive nights, spring<lb/>
quarter, in the Home Economics Building a<lb/>
four oourse, gourmet meal is served to 40<lb/>
people.<lb/>
The price of a ticket for this very<lb/>
pleasurable experience is an inaedibly low<lb/>
$3.50.<lb/>
The time and effort spent in preparing<lb/>
and serving the cuisine is that of nine<lb/>
students enrolled in Advanced Food<lb/>
Preparation, and their instructor, Lewis C.<lb/>
Forrest.<lb/>
The course title may be somewhat<lb/>
misleading but this is more than made up<lb/>
for by the work done by this small group.<lb/>
during spring quarter they have prepared<lb/>
such entrees as: Chicken a Rochambeau,<lb/>
Beef Wellington, shish kebab, fresh leg of<lb/>
lamb, and Cornish game hens.<lb/>
This reporter had the pleasure of<lb/>
sampling the class's work and during the<lb/>
meal, John H. Cox, a gourmet oooking<lb/>
lecturer, explained some of the aspects of<lb/>
the oourse.<lb/>
Cox, a 1966 St. Joseph's College<lb/>
(Philadelphia) graduate and a 1973 grad-<lb/>
uate of The Culinary Institute of America<lb/>
has been teaching gourmet oooking for two<lb/>
years. He has been at ECU since 1974.<lb/>
According to Cox, each week one<lb/>
student is selected as dining room manager<lb/>
with the remaining eight students dividing<lb/>
up other chores.<lb/>
The dining room manager has the<lb/>
responsibility of preparing all foods and<lb/>
nonfood aspects of the meal within a<lb/>
limited budget. This includes among<lb/>
others, selecting the courses for the meal,<lb/>
printing new menus each week, creating<lb/>
able decorations, and sometimes provid-<lb/>
ing entertainment.<lb/>
 The price of the ticket goes to pay for<lb/>
the oost involved in preparing the weekly<lb/>
dinner said Cox. "We are not interested<lb/>
in making a profit.<lb/>
"All meals are designed around the<lb/>
entree (main oourse) said Cox Planning<lb/>
for each meal begins two weeks in<lb/>
advance. Sometimes adjustments have to<lb/>
be made in the food plan<lb/>
Advanced Food Preparation is a senior,<lb/>
graduate level, five hour oourse, open r<lb/>
students who have oompleted 25 hours of<lb/>
prerequisites in Food Nutrition and<lb/>
Institutional Management or to individuals<lb/>
with experience in fuod service who obtain<lb/>
the instructor's consent.<lb/>
Forrest pointed out other work required<lb/>
by the students besides the actual<lb/>
preparing and oooking of food.<lb/>
"The learning experience does not end<lb/>
with the meal said Forrest. "Each dining<lb/>
room manager writes up an evaluation of<lb/>
the complete menu including a cost<lb/>
analysis<lb/>
Forrest emphasized the importance of<lb/>
getting more students involved in food<lb/>
service training especially male students.<lb/>
"One out of every four people in the<lb/>
U.S. have worked in food service related<lb/>
jobs at one time or another and one in<lb/>
every eight are involved in some aspect of<lb/>
food service today said Forrest.<lb/>
"Jobs are plentiful for Institutional<lb/>
Management graduates and if they are<lb/>
willing to relocate the outlook is even<lb/>
brighter said Forrest. "One half of our<lb/>
graduates are hired as dieticians for<lb/>
hospitals and the other half are hired by<lb/>
restaurants<lb/>
v<lb/>
!<lb/>
vmmm<lb/>
mmtm<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
wamm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040044_0005"/><lb/>
��unn<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 5713 MAy 1976<lb/>
5<lb/>
mmum hi w<lb/>
e<lb/>
5<lb/>
.�' Do you remember a very memorable year?<lb/>
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ai<lb/>
tai<lb/>
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.hi<lb/>
.h<lb/>
!<lb/>
ni<lb/>
3<lb/>
h<lb/>
h<lb/>
u<lb/>
o<lb/>
a<lb/>
II<lb/>
3V<lb/>
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T<lb/>
tl<lb/>
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n<lb/>
Years from now, when we' re all old and<lb/>
gray (except those of you who plan to use<lb/>
Grecian Formula, or Lady Clairol), we shall<lb/>
look back on our glorious years at EZU.and<lb/>
wonder why we wasted so much time. No,<lb/>
seriously, we will remember all of those<lb/>
experiences that combine into what is<lb/>
known as "oollege days we will think of<lb/>
the good times and the bad, the classes we<lb/>
cut, the hangovers we had, all the little<lb/>
things that make life special. We're all<lb/>
sure that these memories will live on<lb/>
forever, but it's surprising just how quickly<lb/>
we do forget. I mean, this has been a very<lb/>
eventful year for all of us. But how much do<lb/>
you remember about '7576, even now?<lb/>
The following quiz is designed to test<lb/>
your ability to retain the most vital<lb/>
occurencesof this school year. The results<lb/>
may surprise you. There will be some<lb/>
extremely important events that you will be<lb/>
ashamed at having forgotten, and there<lb/>
will be some that you will wish you could<lb/>
forget.<lb/>
1. Ike and Tina Turner: A. Gave a<lb/>
smash concert last Fall, B. Died in a local<lb/>
hospital as a result of the tragic bathtub<lb/>
accident they had in the Best Value Motel,<lb/>
C. Were the keynote performers at the<lb/>
annual ECU Classical Music Fair, D. Area<lb/>
couple who are on the English faculty, E.<lb/>
All of the above.<lb/>
2.The ECU Athletics Department de-<lb/>
cided to: A. Secede from the Southern<lb/>
Conference, B. Secede from the Union, C.<lb/>
Succeed at something, D. Cancel all of next<lb/>
year's activities, donating all athletic funds<lb/>
to the academic scholarship fund, D.<lb/>
Require all players to take an Intelligence<lb/>
Test, and set a minimum athletic I.Q. at 45.<lb/>
3. The Films Committee broke all<lb/>
censorship barriers by showing: A. Walt<lb/>
Disney's Snow White and the Seven<lb/>
Dwarfs, B. Andy Warhol's Snow White<lb/>
wd the Seven Dwarfs, C. Russ Meyer's<lb/>
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, D.<lb/>
Issac Hayes' Snow Dwarf and the Seven<lb/>
Whites.<lb/>
4. The SGA President for the last year<lb/>
was: A. Jimmy (You are my Sunshine)<lb/>
Honeycutt, B. Richard (I am your presi-<lb/>
dent) Nixon, C. Glenn (Let's clean this<lb/>
mess up) Cannon, D. Leo (I'd rather be in<lb/>
Raleigh) Jenkins.<lb/>
5. A rash of sexual molestations<lb/>
orovoked citizens to: A. Walk softly and<lb/>
carry a big stick, B. Walk swiftly and carry<lb/>
a big gun, C. Walk sensuously and carry a<lb/>
welcome mat.<lb/>
6. The FOUNTAINBLAH was: A. A<lb/>
disease contracted from drinking stagnant<lb/>
ECU water, B. The foreign language<lb/>
department's Spring Festival, C. An<lb/>
example of journalism that would even<lb/>
cause Woodward and Bernstein to look<lb/>
twice.<lb/>
7. October 31, 1975 will always be a<lb/>
significant day in our lives because: A. It<lb/>
marked the return engagement of "Tear-<lb/>
gas Serenade  B. It was the day of Tim<lb/>
Sullivan's debutante ball, C. It was the day<lb/>
Gerald Fad resigned to take a job as a<lb/>
go-go waiter at Louie's Lounge, D. It was<lb/>
the uay Brandon Tise finally met his<lb/>
heroes, the Allman Brothers.<lb/>
8. Kenneth K.C. Campbell is: A. The<lb/>
Editor of The Pdack Plagiarist, B. The<lb/>
Editor of the Washington Post, C. The<lb/>
Editor of the Confederate Newsletter, D.<lb/>
The Grand Dragon of the N.C. Ku Klux<lb/>
Klan.<lb/>
9. The letters in the Fountainhead<lb/>
Forum are: A. A Communist plot, B.<lb/>
Subject to change without notice, C. Good<lb/>
for an occasional snicker, D. Our way of<lb/>
saying "We love you Greenville<lb/>
We hope that you did well on this quiz<lb/>
If not, perhaps we will arrange an instant<lb/>
replay of the past nine months, with all<lb/>
baiofti <lb/>
AFTER HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
FRIDAY 7:00-8:30<lb/>
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BJ 3(1<lb/>
PUBLICATION BOARD<lb/>
OPENINGS FOR 76-77<lb/>
ffl<lb/>
Applications are now being taken for the<lb/>
76-77school year. All full time students can apply<lb/>
at SGA(Mendenhall) from 9 to 5 daily. If you<lb/>
want to get involved with publications The<lb/>
Buccaneer, The Rebel and Fountainhead) and the<lb/>
SGA take time and apply no w.<lb/>
their joys and sorrows. What? You don't again? We know what you mean, boy, do<lb/>
ever want to hear about this past year we ever know what you mean!<lb/>
 EARTH it th� registered trodemork of Kols Systemet, Inc<lb/>
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They're soft, they're new,<lb/>
they're light, they're lined,<lb/>
they're the Earth brand shoe,<lb/>
the shoe that started it all,<lb/>
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CHAPEL HILL<lb/>
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(Upstairs Over The Hub)<lb/>
Open 10-6 Mon. thru Sat. (919) 929-9553<lb/>
<pb facs="00040044_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, nO. 5713 MAY 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
v<lb/>
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mwm<lb/>
CT&amp;T to publish student<lb/>
directory for fall of '76<lb/>
By DENNISLEONAHU<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
In compliance with previous Student<lb/>
Government Association's requests,<lb/>
Carolina Telephone and Telegraph has<lb/>
agreed to print a student directory<lb/>
beginning Fall of 1976.<lb/>
According to Don A Collier, CT&amp;T<lb/>
district commercial manager, the student<lb/>
directory will be entitled the "Student-<lb/>
Faculty-Staff Directory<lb/>
"The telephone company will bear the<lb/>
entire costs of printing and publishing the<lb/>
directories said Collier.<lb/>
The purpose of the student directory is<lb/>
to list those students, both day and dorm,<lb/>
who are not normally listed in the city<lb/>
directory that is printed annually.<lb/>
According to Collier there will be<lb/>
approximately 2,250 phones in servioe in<lb/>
the dorms next fall.<lb/>
Beginning August 1st any new<lb/>
students who apply for the servioe will be<lb/>
included in the directory and the cut off<lb/>
date will be the third week in September or<lb/>
as soon as we have 90 percent of our<lb/>
ESCAPE<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
injustice.<lb/>
"Then we started thinking that the<lb/>
Americans would help us Wilson ex-<lb/>
plained. "I guess we thought the Marines<lb/>
would come over the wall and spring us<lb/>
The letters that they received from their<lb/>
friends were their only hope, but the letters<lb/>
became infrequent. "It wasthe feeling that<lb/>
the people I cared about did not care about<lb/>
me that almost broke me said Wilson.<lb/>
A suicidal depression set in. According<lb/>
to Wilson, "It took all of my energy to just<lb/>
sit in my cell. I would try to ay, but I did<lb/>
not have the strength<lb/>
Wilson credits Smith with helping him<lb/>
out of the depression, even though Smith<lb/>
wasinthesameoondition. "It seemed that<lb/>
when I was weak he was strong, and when<lb/>
he was weak I was strong Wilson<lb/>
observed. "We used to have to take turns<lb/>
staying up all night to guard each other<lb/>
At one time, according to Wilson,<lb/>
Smith received an impersonal letter from<lb/>
an old friend and went into a severe<lb/>
depression. He wandered off alone.<lb/>
"When I found him said Wilson, "he was<lb/>
face down in a gutter, unconscious. The<lb/>
junkies had strangled and robbed him<lb/>
When they came out of the depression,<lb/>
according to Wilson, "we were bitter and<lb/>
vengeful. We realized that the whole object<lb/>
was to survive, and we became callous. No<lb/>
one cared for us, and we cared for no one<lb/>
When the Mexicans decided not to feed<lb/>
Wilson and Smith for two weeks, they<lb/>
stuck together for survival. "We were<lb/>
starving said Wilson. "Bob found an old<lb/>
dirty graham cracker and gave me half. We<lb/>
laughed and cried in the same breath<lb/>
Wilson said that he offered to allow<lb/>
Smith to take his place in the escape.<lb/>
Wilson said of the escape, "I guess he<lb/>
thought it wouldn't work. Hell, I didn't<lb/>
think it was going to work. Anyway Bob<lb/>
thought he had a safer plan, and was going<lb/>
to try it, but after my escape they<lb/>
transferred him deeper into Mexico<lb/>
Wilson arrived at the home of his New<lb/>
Jersey parents on Christmas Eve, 1974. In<lb/>
his words, he was, "paranoid, bitter and<lb/>
vengeful Wilson continued, "I missed<lb/>
my Mexican friends, but there was such joy<lb/>
to be out. I wanted to see a forest again. I<lb/>
just wanted to be by myself and look at<lb/>
animals<lb/>
customet s.<lb/>
"The student body of ECU will have the<lb/>
job of designing the entire cover of the<lb/>
directory with both the administration's<lb/>
and the telephone company's approval<lb/>
According to Collier distribution of the<lb/>
' Student-Faculty-Staff Directory will be<lb/>
handled from the SGA and Julian<lb/>
Vainright'soffioe.<lb/>
Prior to the telephone company's recent<lb/>
directory decision, the students were<lb/>
unable to obtain a directory and relied on<lb/>
the SGA to provide some form of a<lb/>
directory.<lb/>
"We have always had an excellent<lb/>
understanding with the university and the<lb/>
students are some of the better paying<lb/>
customers we have. Since we are in the<lb/>
business of providing a servioe, we feel<lb/>
that by giving the students a directory, we<lb/>
will be providing a full service to them<lb/>
According to Greg Pingston, SGA<lb/>
vice-president, the directory is something<lb/>
the SGA has been working on for a long<lb/>
time, and they are glad that CT&amp;T agreed<lb/>
to include the day students.<lb/>
He stayed with his parents fa two<lb/>
months. He had nightmares frequently and<lb/>
he would laugh out loud fa no apparent<lb/>
reason.<lb/>
"Just seeing downtown lights flashing<lb/>
would make me laugh said Wilson. "Or<lb/>
to go into a stae and want to steal all the<lb/>
food would make me smile, giggle, and<lb/>
pretty soon I would be laughing out loud<lb/>
Wilson's primary ooncern now is to find<lb/>
a way to get Smith out. They write<lb/>
frequently, and Wilson sends the prison<lb/>
simple oomfats.<lb/>
"Last month I sent Bob one of those<lb/>
Halloween incident T-shirts Wilson said.<lb/>
"He was the talk of the prison. People up<lb/>
here can't understand what it is like to<lb/>
have people send you things from home<lb/>
while you are in prison<lb/>
Smith half blames Wilson fa na<lb/>
getting him out of prison. His letters are<lb/>
bitter and void of hope. He has been in<lb/>
prison fa almost three years.<lb/>
"I imagine Bob is mae of a Mexican<lb/>
than an American now said Wilson.<lb/>
"Even befae I left he fit in better than I<lb/>
did, he knew the language better than I<lb/>
did<lb/>
Smith was a gentle persoi befae going<lb/>
to Mexico. He did not like to fight. In the<lb/>
prison however, "No one helps a persoi<lb/>
that is not willing to fight Wilson<lb/>
explained. "If you let someone rob you,<lb/>
you are inviting mae robbery. Bob has<lb/>
been living like an animal, fighting fa<lb/>
survival fa three vears<lb/>
"It wasan ambush said Wilson of his<lb/>
rescue attempt. "The Mexicans were<lb/>
waiting fa us and sha the plane we rented<lb/>
full of holes. It took all of my remaining<lb/>
money to fix the plane<lb/>
Any persons interested in contacting<lb/>
famer ECU student in the Mexican prison<lb/>
should oontact this repater in care of<lb/>
Fountainhead.<lb/>
To be oontinued.<lb/>
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electric wcase. Extremely versatile, ad-<lb/>
vanced electronics, excellent condition,<lb/>
must sell. 752-7398 a 758-6366 anytime.<lb/>
Ask fa classified ad mgr.<lb/>
IRISH SETTER stud service. Good blood<lb/>
lines, good confamatioi. Call Dennis<lb/>
758-5359.<lb/>
GRETSCH COUNTRY Gentlemen. Excel-<lb/>
lent oond. A true gem. 752-7398 a<lb/>
758-6366. Ask fa classified ad dept.<lb/>
WOULD LIKE a ride to Atlanta any<lb/>
possible weekend. Can leave anytime<lb/>
after 3:30 on Thursdays &amp; will help with<lb/>
gas. 752-8903.<lb/>
COMPLETELY furnished efficiency fa 2,<lb/>
utilities ind. Also room &amp; private bath fa 1<lb/>
with air conditioner and refrigerator<lb/>
furnished. 758-2585.<lb/>
FM CONVERTER - fa car, hooks up with<lb/>
AM radio in minutes. Only 2 months old.<lb/>
Must sell $25.00. 752-7398 a 758-6366.<lb/>
Ask fa classified ad. mgr.<lb/>
FOR SALE  74 Yamaha 250 Enduro, gooo<lb/>
cond must sell. Bargain price, call<lb/>
756-6273 fa Ben. If gate leave name and<lb/>
no.<lb/>
NEEDED - student to teach English<lb/>
grammar and conversatioi. Fa mae info,<lb/>
call 752-3176.<lb/>
175 YAMAHA Enduro, 1975, very quick,<lb/>
dirt only. $225. 752-1415.<lb/>
FOR SALE - 1975 Toyota truck. 756-6941<lb/>
after 6 p.m.<lb/>
GOT THOSE SUMMER job blues? Smile I<lb/>
-students now being selected to fill "<lb/>
y<lb/>
9<lb/>
positions. Earn approx. $210per week. Fa<lb/>
Fa info call 758-7294<lb/>
ROOMMATE needed: Senia looking fa<lb/>
two other roommates in 3 bedroom <lb/>
furnished apt. at Eastbrook. Swimming tal<lb/>
pool, dishwasher, air conditioning. $63 a 9f<lb/>
month. 752-0872. �.<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT SEMINAR - 2 sessions1<lb/>
ih<lb/>
oovering resumes, letters, applications, ;e'<lb/>
interviewing, &amp; govt. employment. Limit �<lb/>
15 persons, both sessions $10. Call <lb/>
758-5521 after 6 D.m. fa details. h<lb/>
WANTED - 1-2 bedroom apt.duplex to u<lb/>
rent. CheaD! For next school year<lb/>
Call 758-1168 if you have info<lb/>
FOR RENT - Beginning June 1st<lb/>
unfurnished 1-bedroom apartment, electric<lb/>
appl dishw. Call 758-9456 a 758-5187<lb/>
anytime.<lb/>
PORTRAITS by- Jack Brendle. 752-4272.<lb/>
FOR RENT - 2 bedroom apartment,<lb/>
furnished, fa summer. University Con-<lb/>
daniniums. Call 758-3413 after 3.<lb/>
ALBUMS - "Clapton Foghat, Blue<lb/>
Oyster, (1 &amp;3), Three Dog Night, B.B.<lb/>
King, Credence, Humble Pie, others- only<lb/>
$2.50 ea. all good oond. 752-7398 or<lb/>
758-6366. Ask fa classified ad. mgr.<lb/>
YARD SALE - Sat. May 15, 9 a.m. until.<lb/>
Rain date, Sunday, May 16. Caner Maple<lb/>
and 3rd St. Plants, bake sale, furniture,<lb/>
clothing, etc.<lb/>
o<lb/>
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HOW TO USE FOUNTAINHEAD CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
SIZE: To determine the no. of lines needed for your ad, figure 40 letters and spaces<lb/>
per line. Ex. The following ad contains 67 letters and spaces, thus requiring 2 lines:<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 slightly used but like new<lb/>
widget. Reasonable. 758-xxxx.<lb/>
RATES: First insertion: 50 cents first line, 25 cents each additional line. Additional<lb/>
insertions; 25 cents each line. EX. The above 2 line ad inserted in 3 issues would<lb/>
cost:<lb/>
.50 plus .25 equals .75 for first insertion<lb/>
.25 plus .25 equals .50 each for second and third insertion.<lb/>
Therefore total cost is 1.75. No charge for lost and found classifieds<lb/>
PAYMENT: Classified payable in advance. Send check or money order along wad to:<lb/>
Fountainhead, Classified Ad Dept ad South Bldg ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
DEADLINES: Fountainhead publishes Tues. &amp; Thurs. All classifieds &amp; payments must<lb/>
be received 2 days prior to requested insertion date.<lb/>
COPY: Fountainhead tries to publish only legitimate classifieds. Fountainhead<lb/>
reserves the riqht to reject any and all ad copy that, in its opinion, is objectionable.<lb/>
ERRORS: In case of errdrs in copy for which it is responsible, Fountainhead wiH<lb/>
make the corrections in the earliest possible edition, without charge to the advertiser.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5713 MAY 1976<lb/>
7<lb/>
I Maiola to chair annual sociology convention<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Dr John R. Maiolo, chairman of the<lb/>
sociology and anthropology department at<lb/>
ECU, will chair a session of the annual<lb/>
American Sociological Association in New<lb/>
York this August.<lb/>
Maiolo said rv will introduce the<lb/>
session on managerial issues in evaluative<lb/>
research and head a round-table discussion<lb/>
on this topic.<lb/>
The theme tor this year s convention is<lb/>
"Sociology for Whom?" said Maiolo.<lb/>
Maiolo said that he will discuss the<lb/>
sociological ethics of using human subjects<lb/>
in research.<lb/>
"The rights of the individual from<lb/>
whom the researcher gets his information<lb/>
comes first according to Maiolo. "The<lb/>
rights of the public who fund the project<lb/>
come next, and the rights of the researcher<lb/>
come last<lb/>
Maiolo referred to researchers with-<lb/>
holding the true purpose of their investi-<lb/>
gation from subjects.<lb/>
"Confidential information about the<lb/>
subjects is sometimes revealed due to<lb/>
political pressure according to Maiolo.<lb/>
Maiolo added that the majority of social<lb/>
science research is concerned with<lb/>
minority groups.<lb/>
According to Maiolo, many of the<lb/>
subjects do not know that the researcher is<lb/>
infringing upon their rights.<lb/>
"In my estimation, some sociological<lb/>
research is every bit as immoral as<lb/>
anything in the way of investigation that<lb/>
the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)<lb/>
and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)<lb/>
have done said Maiolo.<lb/>
Maiolo said that if confidential inform-<lb/>
ation was used by governmental agencies it<lb/>
could prove harmful to the individual.<lb/>
 People lost their jobs in New Jersey as<lb/>
a result of an-information leak according<lb/>
to Maiolo.<lb/>
"Most private institutes and univer-<lb/>
sities are not structurally equipped to<lb/>
handle ethical and managerial issues<lb/>
Maiolo stated that researchers need<lb/>
clearer guidelines to follow which would<lb/>
protect the rights of the individual.<lb/>
The Department of Health, Education<lb/>
and Welfare (HEW) places the responsi-<lb/>
bility on the agency doing the research,<lb/>
said Maiolo.<lb/>
"A lot of HEW guidelines are smoke<lb/>
screens which protect the bureaucrats in<lb/>
government from any liability said<lb/>
Maiolo.<lb/>
Aocording to Maiolo, the responsibility<lb/>
of the research often falls upon the<lb/>
resparcher himself.<lb/>
"The only way we can solve the<lb/>
problem is to form an outside monitoring<lb/>
agency which is net governmental said<lb/>
Maiolo.<lb/>
This would take the responsibility off of<lb/>
the university committee which often, in<lb/>
turn, places the responsibility on the<lb/>
individual researcher, said Maiolo.<lb/>
"We need to teach better researcher<lb/>
sensitivity to university graduate students<lb/>
in order to improve the integrity of social<lb/>
research said Maiolo.<lb/>
"The researcher's point of view is<lb/>
sometimes harmful to the subjects under<lb/>
investigation<lb/>
Maiolo presented a paper on socio-<lb/>
logical ethics at last year's America<lb/>
Sociological Convention in San Francisco.<lb/>
The presentation was later published in<lb/>
Footnotes, a publication of the American<lb/>
Sociological Association.<lb/>
Maiolo came to ECU this September<lb/>
from Indiana University Northwest in<lb/>
Gary, Indiana. There he was oc-chief<lb/>
investigator of a research program to make<lb/>
recommendations for the new welfare<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
ECU Biology Department receives grant<lb/>
c<lb/>
, u<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
th<lb/>
m<lb/>
By NANCY HARTIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Biology department has<lb/>
received a $13,500 summer research grant<lb/>
from the National Science Foundation.<lb/>
The grant will make possible a program<lb/>
in which four faculty members and nine<lb/>
undergraduate students will participate in<lb/>
researching and monitoring parts of the<lb/>
Tar River and the Pamlico River Estuary.<lb/>
The nine are: Sara D. Cunningham,<lb/>
Robert L. Dough Jr Car Ion C. Duncan Jr<lb/>
Janet L. Haynes, Patricia D. McClellan,<lb/>
Rebecca Ann McRee, Judith Ann Mid-<lb/>
gette, Harold W. Smith, and Richard K.<lb/>
Stanzak.<lb/>
The students will be advised by: Dr.<lb/>
Graham J. Davis, Dr. Carlton Heckrotte,<lb/>
Dr. Donald B. Jeffreys, and Dr. Clifford B.<lb/>
Davis said the rest of the student<lb/>
researchers will be divided into groups,<lb/>
each with a faculty advisor. He said<lb/>
students under Heckrotte will study a<lb/>
species of clams in the estuary that are able<lb/>
to breathe without oxygen.<lb/>
He said Jeffrey's students will study<lb/>
the pollution of the estuary, which occurs<lb/>
through septic tanks along the shore and<lb/>
Knight s group will study food sources for<lb/>
fish in the Pamlico.<lb/>
Davis said the group will also study the<lb/>
Tar River.<lb/>
"We are interested in what is ooming<lb/>
into the esutary from the Tar, and in the<lb/>
effect of the city of Greenville on levels of<lb/>
materials found in the Tar he said.<lb/>
 The water quality of the Pamlioo River<lb/>
is affected to some extent by waste waters<lb/>
from cities along the Tar River, Rocky<lb/>
Mount, Tarboro, Greenville, and Wash-<lb/>
ington he added.<lb/>
Davis said the estuary itself has been<lb/>
studied intensively for the past ten years,<lb/>
providing his group a good base for<lb/>
research.<lb/>
"It's a very interesting estuary because<lb/>
it has very high phosphate levels,<lb/>
especially in the central area. These levels<lb/>
are associated to some degree with<lb/>
phosphate mining on the south shore he<lb/>
commented.<lb/>
The National Science Foundation,<lb/>
sponsors of the allocation, is a government<lb/>
agency that allocates federal funds for<lb/>
scientific study and research.<lb/>
aft<lb/>
P<lb/>
AT THE lELBOROOM<lb/>
Knight,<lb/>
or Davis, project chairman, said some of<lb/>
 the students will be studying the de-<lb/>
oxygenation problem in the Pamlico<lb/>
discovered by the biology department<lb/>
earlier.<lb/>
"Three undergraduates will be working<lb/>
th� with me, and they will be working on<lb/>
various phases of the deoxygenation<lb/>
an problem Davis said. "We will work<lb/>
U7 throughout the estuary from one end to the<lb/>
other he added.<lb/>
Vegetable Plate<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
4 vegetables<lb/>
Phone 758-9588<lb/>
704 Evans St<lb/>
roayawMfcOM hh m�<lb/>
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8<lb/>
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Thursday Night<lb/>
THE EMBERS<lb/>
'� EVERY SUNDAY IS LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
sexixx<lb/>
<pb facs="00040044_0008"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5713 MAY 1976<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Jazz concert next<lb/>
Tuesday at Union<lb/>
 �� k.<lb/>
There will be a jazz concert May 18<lb/>
featuring Bill Watrous and Danny Stiles<lb/>
with the East Carolina Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
directed by George Broussard. Also in the<lb/>
program are the ECU Trombone Ensemble<lb/>
unlike many vituosos , he-has taste and<lb/>
swing, a jazz conception<lb/>
Danny Stiles, a trumpet studio record<lb/>
artist, has a background which spans the<lb/>
musical spectrum from Fred faring to<lb/>
DANNY STILES trumpet studio recording artist will be appearing Tuesday, May 18, at<lb/>
800p.m. in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
and Paul Tardif and the Contemporary Jazz<lb/>
Ensemble. The concert will be at Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center Theatre. Adult tickets<lb/>
are $2.50 and student tickets are $1.00.<lb/>
Bill Watrous is jazz studio trombonist<lb/>
who has worked with Ten Wheel Drive,<lb/>
Woody Herman, Thad Jones. Mel Lewis,<lb/>
and on the Merv Griffin Show. Dan<lb/>
Morgenstern of Downbeat has said of<lb/>
Watrous, "(he) is an astonishing player.<lb/>
The trombone, among the most demanding<lb/>
of instruments, does his bidding. His<lb/>
speed, control, and execution approach<lb/>
perfection. His range - top and bottom -<lb/>
sometimes strains credulity. Unlike some<lb/>
virtuosos, he makes it all look easy. And<lb/>
oount Basie. to Woody Herman, to the<lb/>
Merv Griffin Show. Stiles is one of the few<lb/>
lead trumpet players to make the transition<lb/>
to a jazz player. He is the lead and solo<lb/>
trumpet player with Manhattan Wildlife<lb/>
Refuge, a jazz oriented Big Band led by Bill<lb/>
Watrous. The program will include ar-<lb/>
rangements by MWR such as "Spain<lb/>
�Somewhere Along The Way "The<lb/>
Tiger of San Pedro" and "Round Mid-<lb/>
night<lb/>
Don't forget Bill Watrous, Danny Stiles<lb/>
with the ECU Jazz Ensemble, ECU<lb/>
Trombone Ensemble, Paul Tardif and the<lb/>
Contemporary Jazz Ensemble, May 18 at<lb/>
8:00 at Mendenhall Theatre.<lb/>
Greenville Movies<lb/>
PARK By KENT JOHNSON<lb/>
The frightening Psyche Killer is loose in Greenville. Shows at 315, 510, 7.05 and<lb/>
900. Rated PG.<lb/>
Starts Friday Tangerineman and Lady Coco.<lb/>
PITT<lb/>
Someone named Joel McCrea in Mustang Country another G rated adventure flick.<lb/>
Shows at 335, 530, 7.05 and 9O0.<lb/>
PLAZA CINEMA I<lb/>
Omar Sharif, Karen Black and Joseph Bottoms in Crime and Passion. This film may<lb/>
have some social import. Shows at 315, 5:10, 705 and 9O0. Rated R.<lb/>
Starts Friday, jaws with paws, Grizzley. Miss it.<lb/>
PLAZA CINEMA II<lb/>
Jim Mitchum in Trackdown. This movie is rated R and punks should not see it. Shows<lb/>
at 3:15, 515, 7:15 and 915.<lb/>
Starts Friday, The Nashville Tiger and will be rated R.<lb/>
TICE<lb/>
Through Wednesday, parts one and two of Walking Tall. Starts at 8:15.<lb/>
FRIDA Y FREE FLICK A T MENDENHALL<lb/>
A double feature for you football fans, Football Follies and the tear jerker saddy<lb/>
called Brians Song. Both movies rated G. Shows at 5, 7 and 9 if the.projector works.<lb/>
NIGEL BOUL TON, trumpet soloist appears here with the ECU Jazz Ensemble directed by<lb/>
George Broussard.<lb/>
Mall concert on Tuesday<lb/>
Randy Matthews will be appearing with Seeds, Tuesday, May 18 at 8O0 p.m. on the<lb/>
Mall.<lb/>
Randy has a special gift. He has the uncanny ability to make you sit up and listen. His<lb/>
music has a touch of southern blues and a lot of good old rock n roll. He commands<lb/>
attention and people take note.<lb/>
Hisconcerts promise to bring the delightfully unexpected. His brilliant use of comedy<lb/>
has his audiences laughing and aying; laughing because if s funny, aying because it's<lb/>
the truth. He is a dynamic entertainer and enjoys widespread popularity in the college<lb/>
market.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040044_0009"/><lb/>
HHHHi<lb/>
rc<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
m<lb/>
OUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 5713 MAY 1976<lb/>
IIII I �<lb/>
9<lb/>
<lb/>
I ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
<lb/>
tai<lb/>
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'Taxi Driver' score unusually listenable<lb/>
TAXI DRIVER<lb/>
The Original Film Score by Bernard<lb/>
Herrmann featuring Tom Scott.<lb/>
Arista AL 4079<lb/>
C by LARRY S SLAUGHTER<lb/>
f It is rare when an original film score<lb/>
f appears that is as consistently appealing<lb/>
 and listenable as Herrmann's Taxi<lb/>
�t Driver. Most film scores become wayside<lb/>
tokens to the films from which they were<lb/>
i borne and seldom achieve commercial<lb/>
i recognition. The best of the lot are usually<lb/>
ignored by record distributors and the<lb/>
record buying public. Even worse, many<lb/>
remain unreleased and confined to their<lb/>
celluloid origins (i.e. George Gruntz's<lb/>
magnificent jazz score for the 1974 sleeper<lb/>
Steppenwolf). Many films of this decade<lb/>
have given birth to great music that<lb/>
remains in the hands of esoteric record<lb/>
collectors, most gather dust in the rear of<lb/>
record bins. Nitzche's Cuckoo's Nest,<lb/>
'Dannaggio s Don t Look Now, Theodorakis'<lb/>
M and Oerpico, and Barbieri's immortal<lb/>
Last Tango in Paris are such examples.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Commercially, in<lb/>
aesthetics of film music,<lb/>
regard to the<lb/>
Taxi Driver has<lb/>
'qualities that may save its vinyl presence<lb/>
from such undeserved obscurity. Its<lb/>
pcomposer, the late Bernard Herrmann, is<lb/>
3 well known fa his scores of Psycho, Sisters<lb/>
if and Fahrenheit 451 to name but a few.<lb/>
Taxi Driver contains recognizable Herr-<lb/>
s,mann elements: haunting staccatto pas-<lb/>
ex sages and the eerie arrangement of string<lb/>
instruments. But for Taxi Driver,<lb/>
Herrmann's music has taken a radical bend<lb/>
re<lb/>
be<lb/>
into the hot and sensual realm of jazz.<lb/>
Such a bend was necessary for<lb/>
bl'Herrmann to effectively embellish director<lb/>
on<lb/>
be<lb/>
�� ii Material and<lb/>
b33u �f Workmanship<lb/>
Chno Va Guaranteed<lb/>
OnUt; Prompt Servk<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
Prompt Service<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
Martin Scorcese and photographer Steve<lb/>
Shapiro's mesmerizing portrait of New<lb/>
York City. Here is set the dark and morbid<lb/>
tale of a lonely taxi driver (Robert DeNiro)<lb/>
who, constipated with murky New York<lb/>
realities, decided to realize his messianic,<lb/>
psychotic mission to "clean up the scum off<lb/>
the streets Taxi Driver, in its celluloid<lb/>
form, is a feast fa the eyes and ears. It's<lb/>
heavy stuff that provokes the sensations of<lb/>
vertigi Shapiro's color-hungry lenses<lb/>
aeate a disquieting, dreamlike sense of<lb/>
beauty and dislocation fa the viewer<lb/>
Herrmann's hot jazz music functions to<lb/>
contrast this disturbing visual patrait of<lb/>
death-drenched neon and aowded streets<lb/>
that reek of human alienation with the<lb/>
myth of New Yak as Fun City: Tinsel,<lb/>
Glamour. Romance and other such dark<lb/>
cafe ways.<lb/>
The mam theme recurs throughout the<lb/>
scae and is set in melancholic and erotic<lb/>
tones. Tom Scott executes an intense and<lb/>
fluid saxophone solo which prescribes one<lb/>
helluva dose of sleaze and cocktail jazz.<lb/>
(This theme is more of a "vein melter"<lb/>
than any compositiai ever rendered by the<lb/>
currently flunked-out Herbie Hancock.)<lb/>
Sadly, Scott is the only performer<lb/>
attributed with credit fa hisoaitribution to<lb/>
the soundtrack. Percussion, bass, strings,<lb/>
and particularly keyboards are very<lb/>
integral to the resulting polished prettiness<lb/>
of "The Days They Do Not End" and the<lb/>
bump-and-grind of "I Work the Whole<lb/>
City<lb/>
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For the pleasure of hard-cae sound-<lb/>
track freaks, a narrative excerpt by DeNiro<lb/>
has been included. Intensified by the rise<lb/>
and fall of Herrmann's brass arrangement,<lb/>
DeNiro ruminates over his disgust at the<lb/>
blood he has to wipe off the back of his cab<lb/>
seat and "the animals that come out at<lb/>
night" on the New Yak sdewalk.<lb/>
This aural Taxi Driver is a sad and<lb/>
lovely patrait of the illusionsof neon. Such<lb/>
music moves one from inside, demanding<lb/>
recognition of those feelings which it<lb/>
evokes. In great ways, Taxi Driver<lb/>
resembles Issac Hayes faceful jazz scae<lb/>
fa the 1971 film Shaft. All in all, Taxi<lb/>
Driver is a fine album fa both film scae<lb/>
and straight jazz fans, particularly those<lb/>
who are held in awe by the one and only<lb/>
Fun City.<lb/>
Oh, yeah, see the flick. It's a killer.<lb/>
Wilbec's f.<lb/>
Family $�<lb/>
Favorites ��<lb/>
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FrM Shrimp diaaers toast law)<lb/>
Geeatry fried eaicktn Haaiaerters<lb/>
Variety tf Softdriaks Ciiatttfcargart<lb/>
S SPECIAL! Hot dog with<lb/>
homemade chile<lb/>
Now featuring: 14 pounder wcheese and �<lb/>
Steak Sandwich Both with lettuce, tomato,<lb/>
�I Ii onion ring, dill pickle &amp; mayonnaise<lb/>
C TWO UCATI0�S 14th St. �EN 7 DAYS<lb/>
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THURS-FRI-SAT<lb/>
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS<lb/>
6 PIECE COUNTRY ROCK FROM MACON, GA.<lb/>
FEATURING FIDDLER FROM GOOSE CREEK<lb/>
SYMPHONY<lb/>
DOORS OPEN AT 9:00<lb/>
SUNDAY:<lb/>
RITUAL<lb/>
(SEE FIRE AND SMOKE SHOW)<lb/>
R&amp;N INC<lb/>
PHONE: 752-4668<lb/>
<pb facs="00040044_0010"/><lb/>
"<lb/>
10<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5713 MAy 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
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Monte Little named ECU baseball coach<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Monte Little has been named the new ECU baseball coach. Little was named at a press<lb/>
oonferenoe held yesterday morning.<lb/>
Little succeeds George Williams as head ooach following Williams' resignation last<lb/>
Sunday. Little had served as an assistant coach under Williams the past three seasons.<lb/>
Athletic Director Bill Cain, in naming Little as the new field manager fa the baseball<lb/>
Pirates, said, ECU was lucky to have such a replacement for Williams as Little.<lb/>
"We have been very fortunate to have a coach of Monte Little's caliber on our staff the<lb/>
past four years. We are equally as happy, though, to be able to promote from within out<lb/>
own ranks.<lb/>
" Monte's ability to communicate with the athletes and his exceptional baseball<lb/>
knowledge made the selection process easy<lb/>
To look at Little's record at ECU and in baseball it is really no surprise to see him<lb/>
follow Williams to the helm of the baseball team.<lb/>
Over the last four years, Little served as assistant coach on the Pirates' squad and in<lb/>
1972 and 1973 he was the coach of the ECU soccer team.<lb/>
In 1973 he coached the Pirate soccer team toa Division title in the Southern Conference<lb/>
and into the league's championship playoff against Appalachian State.<lb/>
I n advancing to the head coaching job, the 28-year old Ayden native oontinuesa career<lb/>
which took him to the professional ranks fa four and a half years as a player.<lb/>
"In looking at the number of fine men who have been coaches at ECU said Little, "I<lb/>
feel overwhelmed at the opportunity<lb/>
"These men have aeated a tremendous baseball program and I hope to be able to<lb/>
continue this tradition<lb/>
Little played high school baseball fa Ayden High School and jumped to the mina<lb/>
leagues of the professional ranks following graduation.<lb/>
Going to ECU during the off season, Little played fa two years, 1967 and 1968, in the<lb/>
St. Louis Cardinal farm system. His ooach these two years was Sparky Anderson, now<lb/>
manager of the Wald Champiai Cincinnati Reds.<lb/>
A shatstop and seoondbaseman, Little went on to play in the Houston and Detroit<lb/>
aganizatiois the next three years befae a knee injury curtailed his career midway<lb/>
through the 1971 season.<lb/>
In 1971, Little returned to ECU and earned his B.S. degree in Health and Physical<lb/>
Education and in 1972 he earned his M.A. in Education from ECU.<lb/>
He served as soccer coach during the fall of 1972 and was an assistant baseball coach<lb/>
under James Mallay during the 1973 seasoi. In 1974 he was an assistant under Williams<lb/>
on the Southern Conference championship team that went to the NCAA Regionals.<lb/>
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MONTE LITTLE<lb/>
Little is married and has two children, Ty and Tracy Paige. His hobbies are golf,<lb/>
jogging and painting.<lb/>
He will assume the responsibilities as head ooach immediately and will manage the<lb/>
ECU summer league team this summer.<lb/>
Recruiting shows signs of youth movement<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Edita<lb/>
Dave Pattai continues to ink reauits<lb/>
fa next year's team, projecting a possible<lb/>
youth movement in 1976-77.<lb/>
Sunday Patton announced the signing<lb/>
of his fifth new reauit fa next year. All<lb/>
together, Patton now has six new faces to<lb/>
wak with in 1976-77, including transfer<lb/>
Greg Cornelius.<lb/>
Pattoi's rrost recent signee, Kyle<lb/>
Powers, is a 6-5 fa ward fron Fayetteville,<lb/>
N.C. Powers is reputed to be a fine outside<lb/>
shot much in the vein of reauit Herb Gray<lb/>
and Earl Garner, who graduates this year.<lb/>
Powers was named to the All-Con-<lb/>
ference and All-City-County teams in<lb/>
Fayetteville and averaged 18.6 points per<lb/>
game his senia year.<lb/>
Powers was captain of the Pine Faest<lb/>
High School team in both his junia and<lb/>
senia years and Pattai said he was<lb/>
pleased to get Powers.<lb/>
"He is a tremendous shooter and a fine<lb/>
passer said Patton. "He oomes from a<lb/>
good program which will give him a head<lb/>
start as a good oollegiate player<lb/>
The five new reauitsand Cornelius will<lb/>
add six players to the ECU squad, which<lb/>
already has three freshmen returning from<lb/>
last year in Tryon Edwards, Louis Crosby<lb/>
and Billy Dineen.<lb/>
Cornelius and reauit Dai Whitaker<lb/>
fron Louisburg College will be junias in<lb/>
eligibility status next year, but Pattai will<lb/>
have oily Larry Hunt and possibly Kenny<lb/>
Edmonds with mae than a year of<lb/>
experience at the Maja College level.<lb/>
Patton now has eleven players with less<lb/>
than two years of Division One basketball<lb/>
under their belts. With the dismissal of two<lb/>
veterans from the squad only Larry Hunt is<lb/>
a seasoned veteran on the current 12-man<lb/>
roster.<lb/>
Dineen and Crosby both played a lot<lb/>
last year but next year definitely will stress<lb/>
youth fa the Pirates.<lb/>
 We have a lot of good young players it<lb/>
seems said Patton, "but right now it is<lb/>
all on paper. We have six players who<lb/>
haven't even dribbled a basketball fa ECU<lb/>
yet and they are going to have to oome<lb/>
down here and prove they can play<lb/>
So far, though, Patton said he has been<lb/>
happy with this year's reauiting.<lb/>
"We are pleased with our reauiting<lb/>
this year said Pattai. "We lost our<lb/>
number one prospect in John Virgil from<lb/>
Elm City, but we have oome up with some<lb/>
good players anyway.<lb/>
"We have had a very good reauiting<lb/>
year and possibly one of the best ever at<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Patton said the Pirates have one mae<lb/>
player they are trying to sign, but if<lb/>
doesn't sign, then ECU will not try<lb/>
sign anyone else.<lb/>
That means this year oasketbal<lb/>
reauiting is about oomplete and with ah<lb/>
new faces and the shake-up of the ok<lb/>
players from last year's squad, a youthfu<lb/>
approach seems in stae fa East Carolina!<lb/>
basketball program next year.<lb/>
'4<lb/>
ECU wins three at Pitt<lb/>
East Carolina trackmen won three<lb/>
events and placed in four others Saturday<lb/>
in the sixth annual Pitt Invitational track<lb/>
and field.<lb/>
The newly-crowned Southern Con-<lb/>
ference champions took first in the 100 and<lb/>
220 yard dashes and won the 440 relay. The<lb/>
Pirate perfamers also placed in the high<lb/>
hurdles, long and triple jumps, and the<lb/>
mile relay.<lb/>
"It was our best perfamanoe ever in a<lb/>
big meet said Coach Bill Carson, "and<lb/>
what folks don't understand is that we did<lb/>
it in 46 degroo weather<lb/>
Carter Suggs won the 100 in 9.6 while<lb/>
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Calvin Alstai took the 220 in 21.5. )<lb/>
Washington was third in u 100 in 9.8.<lb/>
The three then teameo with MauiJ<lb/>
Huntley to win the 440 relay in 41.5<lb/>
Geage Jackson took third in the Ion<lb/>
jump and fifth in the triple jump with leap<lb/>
of 23-1 34 and 46-7 14, respective!)<lb/>
Herman Mclntyre finished fourth in th<lb/>
triple with a jump of 47-4 112.<lb/>
Marvin Rankins and Sam Phillips tfl<lb/>
fa thit j in the 120 yard high hurdles wtf<lb/>
times of 14.2.<lb/>
In the mile relay, Charlie Moss, Valdfli i<lb/>
Chavis, James Freeman, and Ben Ducker A<lb/>
field teamed up fa a fourth place finish i<lb/>
3:16.5.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5713 MAy 1976<lb/>
n<lb/>
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Time-Out<lb/>
erson MVP in trnnis<lb/>
illips tl<lb/>
dies<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The Southern<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
Nowf Then, And Whenever<lb/>
The grand old gentlemen of the Southern Conference's member schools arrived in<lb/>
Greenville yesterday for their annual meeting. Providing their rooms are suitable and<lb/>
their minds functional, the three-day meeting which began yesterday and runs through<lb/>
tomorrow could bring some major decisions into the fold.<lb/>
First of all, it seems ironic to this writer that the oonferenoe would be holding its<lb/>
meeting in Greenville this year-thusallowing ECU the oourtesy of not having to travel at<lb/>
all in order to tell the league to "get lost Perhaps the ECU officials will be kinder in the<lb/>
way they state it, but the meaning is the same nonetheless.<lb/>
Richmond will once and for all bid a fond farewell to the loop, of which it has been a<lb/>
member since 1921, and ECU will inform the conference officially of its plans to leave the<lb/>
sinking ship" at the same time next year.<lb/>
We term the conference as a "sinking ship" because that is exactly what it is-its<lb/>
demise has just been less dramatic and eventful than that of the Titanic.<lb/>
The Southern may have something to be proud of in that it has spawned the<lb/>
foundations fa two strong athletic conferences during its 55 year history-the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference and the Southeastern Conference. And with reports being as they are,<lb/>
the conference may easily be credited with spawning a third athletic conference in the<lb/>
next five years. This all depends on whether a not ECU and Richmond follow through<lb/>
on their attempts to hook-up with already independent schools.<lb/>
And who knows how many members the conference will have in five years. At the<lb/>
present time one can see at least two, possibly three, schools besides ECU and Richmond<lb/>
which could be on the verge of leaving the oonferenoe for one i jason or another.<lb/>
Appalachian State and William and Mary have fast g own into the two strongest<lb/>
powers in the oonferenoe besides ECU and further growth oould cause these schools to<lb/>
seek dryer land in the near future. Tome, at least, ASU seems a likely candidate to withdraw<lb/>
in the near future.<lb/>
Davidson, too, oould be thinking about leaving the Southern Conference. It may on the<lb/>
surface seem ridiculous to say that a school may not beq jfied athletically to stay in the<lb/>
conference, but the Davidson story is a different one.<lb/>
With the school de-emphasizing football to a small-college program and with the<lb/>
remainder of its programs having problems, the academically-rich school may find it to its<lb/>
best interest to jump ship and retreat into its own shell of small-college sports and<lb/>
big-time scholastics. Certainly it's the one school which is not "keeping pace" with the<lb/>
sinking ship<lb/>
We aren't faulting Davidson for the direction it has taken in its program, but we are<lb/>
only serving to pant out that their school has chosen a different route than is, or seems to<lb/>
be, the norm these days.<lb/>
The oonferenoe will, sooner or later, admit Western Carolina to its ranks and more<lb/>
than likely Marshall and the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Of course, there<lb/>
may be a question of whether a not these schools still want in, since most of the interest<lb/>
they showed was prior to ECU'S recent decision to leave the oonferenoe.<lb/>
It would appear certain that if the oonferenoe delays any action on expansion for<lb/>
another year-as they have in the past three years-then Western Carolina, Marshall and<lb/>
UT-Chattanooga might just pack their bags and go looking for a more streamlined ooean<lb/>
liner.<lb/>
SO HOW DOES ONE SAVE A SINKING SHIP?<lb/>
ECU did not help with its decision to leave the loop, but then ECU has never been a<lb/>
school to sit back and watch the world go by. And rightly so. The ECU program has<lb/>
xitgrown the Southern in every way that it will ever be able to and so it is time fa ECU to<lb/>
aid farewell.<lb/>
ECU really can't do much at the meeting to help the Southern and if ECU's officials<lb/>
ire smart they will leave their nose out of any business that pertains to the oonferenoe<lb/>
ter next year.<lb/>
The situation is as simple as this. The Southern Conferenoe has finished digging its<lb/>
jraveand is waiting to fall in. ECU and Richmond have escaped an early athletic death by<lb/>
leading to leave when they have.<lb/>
As fa the rest of the schools, their futures seem dim to this writer if they remain<lb/>
I vhere they are. In my three years experience in watching the conference, I can see some<lb/>
I )t the oonferenoe schools have no where to go exoept the Southern and the ones that do<lb/>
� ire the ones which are abandoning ship.<lb/>
� The grave is there, the shovels are ready. One only has to wonder where everyone will<lb/>
 �� five years from now. We don't doubt that the Southern Conference will be around, we<lb/>
I<lb/>
r,ly doubt that anyone will give a damn that it is. Exoept, of course, those schools which<lb/>
jrnain.<lb/>
� It oould be very interesting to see what evolves this week. We wish the Conference's<lb/>
I tficials all the luck, but somehow we think that maybe the damage was done long ago<lb/>
�<lb/>
hen the league let schools like West Virginia, Virginia Tech and Richmond get away<lb/>
h. you can add ECU to that list now.<lb/>
M itch Pergerson has been selected as<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD's Athlete of the Year in<lb/>
tennis.<lb/>
Despite a 7-10 season and a disappoint-<lb/>
ing seventh-place finish in the conferenoe<lb/>
tournament Pergerson showed great pro-<lb/>
mise fa future years with his perfamanoes<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Playing out of the number five singles<lb/>
bracket, Pergerson was 10-5 on the year<lb/>
overall and 3-3 in the oonferenoe. In the<lb/>
oonferenoe tournament, though, he finish-<lb/>
ed a disappointing seventh.<lb/>
ECU tennis ooach Neal Peterson had<lb/>
great praise fa Pergersai during the<lb/>
seasai calling him a "great addition to the<lb/>
squad and a player that should improve<lb/>
with age next season<lb/>
MITCH PERGERSON<lb/>
Roenker MVP in baseball<lb/>
Joe Roenker has been selected as the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Athlete-of-the-Year fa<lb/>
Baseball.<lb/>
Rcenker led the Pirates in seven hitting<lb/>
categaies during the year and batted .313<lb/>
in 28 games. He was the most consistent<lb/>
and most powerful of the ECU regulars at<lb/>
the plate and perfamed without a flaw in<lb/>
42 chances in the field.<lb/>
Roenker blasted five home runs to lead<lb/>
the Pirates' slugging and led the team with<lb/>
21 RBI's. Two of Roenker's home runs<lb/>
were grand slams and they came in<lb/>
consecutive games against UNC-Wilming<lb/>
ton and the Citadel.<lb/>
Roenker also led the Pirates in runs<lb/>
scaed (23), hits (31), total bases (48),<lb/>
walks (20) and strike outs (24). His<lb/>
slugging average of .476 was tops on the<lb/>
club among regulars as only Bobby<lb/>
Supel's .827 percentage in 29 at bats was<lb/>
better.<lb/>
Roenker's on base percentage was the<lb/>
best among regulars on the team, ?s he<lb/>
reached base a total of 51 times in 121 trips<lb/>
to the plate.<lb/>
In the field, Roenker was only one of<lb/>
three ECU players to not make an erra,<lb/>
the aher two being Sonny Wooten and<lb/>
part-time outfielder Robert Brinkley.<lb/>
To top it off, Roenker was one of two<lb/>
ECU players named to the All-Conference<lb/>
first team<lb/>
JOE ROENKER<lb/>
Carson signs recruit<lb/>
Bobby Phillips, brother of ECU tracks-<lb/>
ter Sam Phillips, has announced his<lb/>
signing with the new Southern Conferenoe<lb/>
track champions<lb/>
The Union Pines High School star<lb/>
entered last year's high school meet as his<lb/>
school's only representative and scaed<lb/>
enough points to finish tenth among ail the<lb/>
schools entered. He was second in the high<lb/>
hurdles, finishing behind ECU star,<lb/>
Marvin Rankins, third in the low hurdles<lb/>
and fifth in the long jump.<lb/>
Thus far this spring, Phillips has<lb/>
reoaded the following times a distances:<lb/>
14.0 in the high hurdles, 20.7 in the low<lb/>
hurdles, 9.8 in the 100 yard dash, 22.0 in<lb/>
the 220 yard dash and 2?6" in the long<lb/>
jump.<lb/>
"Bobby is an outstanding athlete<lb/>
said ECU coach Bill Carson. "In fact, he is<lb/>
of national caliber. Bobby will be a great<lb/>
asset to our program<lb/>
Phillips is from Carthage, 6-0, 165<lb/>
pounds, and has been voted the last two<lb/>
years as his team's MVP in track.<lb/>
Earlier this year, Carson also an-<lb/>
nounced the signing of Fayetteville track<lb/>
stars Al Tillery and Otis Melvin.<lb/>
H.L HODGES &amp; CO JNC<lb/>
-Jiporj teenier<lb/>
752-4156<lb/>
210 East 5th St.<lb/>
With this coupon - 20 discount on athletic<lb/>
shoes�tennis, flats, basketball, and casual.<lb/>
(excludes spikes)<lb/>
Good thru Sat May 15.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5713 MAY 1976<lb/>
mrmm0m0mmwmmmum0mmmmwmmmmmmmmwm<lb/>
iwwi<lb/>
m<lb/>
news<lb/>
HFLA<lb/>
Take a dive<lb/>
Interested ir wjba diving9 If so, there<lb/>
will be a meetir of the Eastern Carolina<lb/>
Dive Club on Tu xJay, June 1, at King's<lb/>
Barbecue in Kinston. The membership is<lb/>
open to all persons interested in diving.<lb/>
Here is the chance for divers to get to know<lb/>
other divers, and to get into the water more<lb/>
often.<lb/>
The meeting begins at 6:30 p.m. with a<lb/>
happy hour (BYOB), dinner is at 7:30, and<lb/>
the meeting at 8:30 A family style dinner<lb/>
rved fa S3.00<lb/>
Matters of the June 6 dive at<lb/>
Shacklefotd Banks, along with other club<lb/>
be discussed A guest<lb/>
.II also present a program<lb/>
; For further information,<lb/>
758-4402 (Greenville) or 523-6643<lb/>
� �<lb/>
Go-op workshop<lb/>
ECU Cooperative Education Depart-<lb/>
onsonng a Co-op Articulation<lb/>
ation Workshop Thursday, May<lb/>
13 10 am. in the Willis Building<lb/>
Auditorium. Mrs. Glenda Lentz, president-<lb/>
elect of the International Cooperative<lb/>
Education Association and Director of<lb/>
Co-op and Placement at the University of<lb/>
South Florida in Tampa, will be on hand to<lb/>
share her expertise. Persons from all levels<lb/>
of education throughout North Carolina<lb/>
Aill be m attendance to share their interest<lb/>
:n advancing co-op in our state.<lb/>
Lawn concert<lb/>
Lawn concert. A.J. Fletcher Music<lb/>
Center, by the ECU Concert Band. George<lb/>
Naff, Director. Tuesday. May 18. 3:15 p.m.<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Jazz concert<lb/>
Informal jazz concertfree refresh-<lb/>
ments, Mendenhall Student Center, by the<lb/>
ECU Stage Band, George Naff, Director,<lb/>
Wednesday evening, May 19, 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Fr e.<lb/>
Bahai<lb/>
In coming to terms with death Abdu'I<lb/>
Baha has said that man should "see<lb/>
himself as ever living, everlasting in the<lb/>
divine purpose of his creation. Be as lights<lb/>
of the world which cannot be hid and which<lb/>
have no setting in horizons of darkness<lb/>
Please attend our meeting in 238 Menden-<lb/>
hall on Thursday evening at 7 30 and share<lb/>
your views with us<lb/>
Beatles' albums<lb/>
On Wednesday. May 19, WECU Radio<lb/>
will giveaway a Beatle'sal bum every hour<lb/>
for 20 hours. Day students are eligible to<lb/>
win by sending a post card containing their<lb/>
name and address to WECU on or before<lb/>
Wed May 19 Listen tc WECU57AM<lb/>
r deta<lb/>
SDA cookout<lb/>
The Student Dietetic Association cook-<lb/>
out has been changed to Tuesday, May 18,<lb/>
1976 at 6.00 p.m. It will be at Jeanne<lb/>
Welch's house. Those going should oome<lb/>
by the Home Economics building and sign<lb/>
up at the Institution Management bulletin<lb/>
board by Friday, May 14th. Members are<lb/>
asked to bring a dish; there will be a list of<lb/>
choices of dishes to choose from on the<lb/>
bulletin board.<lb/>
AFT Organization<lb/>
Come and hde a Danish and affee<lb/>
i Dr. Robert Nielsen. Director of the<lb/>
Colleges and Universities Division, Amer-<lb/>
ican Federation of Teachers, and Phil<lb/>
McKeaney. Executive Director, North<lb/>
Carolina Federation of Teachers; art<lb/>
officers from other UNC campuses; and<lb/>
r ECU colleagues who have joined AFT.<lb/>
Time is 3:00. Thursday. May 13. 1976<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student Center Auditorium<lb/>
(244).<lb/>
An organizational meeting will be held<lb/>
after the information meeting. Come to the<lb/>
meetings and let us explore together ways<lb/>
and means by which we will move towards<lb/>
bettering education in the state.<lb/>
Flea market<lb/>
A Flea Market, sponsored by Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center, will be held on<lb/>
Thursday. May 20, in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
between the hours of 9.00 a.m. and 7.O0<lb/>
p.m. Any university student, faculty or<lb/>
staff member may sell items, in the Flea<lb/>
Market. Everyone who wishes to sell must<lb/>
register and reserve space in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium at the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Information Center, from 9:00 a.m.<lb/>
to 5:00 p.m May 10-14. Deadline for<lb/>
space reservation is May 15 at 500 p.m.<lb/>
Reservations will be made on a first come.<lb/>
first serve basis.<lb/>
Car wash<lb/>
The Kappa Sigma Chapter of Delta<lb/>
Sigma Theta Sorority is sponsoring a ar<lb/>
wash and hot dog and ooke sale Saturday.<lb/>
May 15th. Place will be decided later.<lb/>
Sportin' Night<lb/>
There will be a Sportin' Night Happy<lb/>
Hour sponsored by Student Volunteers for<lb/>
REAL at the Elbo Room on Monday, May<lb/>
17 from 8-1 p.m. Advanced tickets from<lb/>
any REAL Volunteer -25 cents, at the<lb/>
door-50 cents. Featuring a series of<lb/>
drawings for sports equipment donated by<lb/>
local merchants. Come in your favorite<lb/>
sports attire and be eligible for a special<lb/>
prize contest at 11.00 p.m. Support REAL.<lb/>
REAL<lb/>
Have a problem Need information?<lb/>
Real Crisis Center open 24 hours. Call<lb/>
I Pa cane by 111 7 Evans St.<lb/>
VW<lb/>
m mnmnu<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Ski Club<lb/>
Cool Water Ski Club is providing free<lb/>
transportation 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/>
OSR<lb/>
These people - students and nonstu-<lb/>
dents - who nave been in contact with the<lb/>
Organization for Student Rights about the<lb/>
class action lawsuit being filed against the<lb/>
City oi Greenvrtle can ftfl out ' DOwer of<lb/>
attorney' fermsnow.<lb/>
All that is required is a signature<lb/>
Thdee wno wish to take pan in this action<lb/>
should 90 to the aw offioe at 119 West<lb/>
lhird Street, across the street from the old<lb/>
courthouse, and inquire with one of the<lb/>
secretaries. You can go from 900-5 00<lb/>
The OSR urges all people who feel their<lb/>
nqhts were violated, whether they were<lb/>
arrested or not. to file. Let's make this<lb/>
Halloween a little safer for everybody, and<lb/>
tight to see that the past does not repeat<lb/>
itself'<lb/>
Attention grads<lb/>
Attention all graduating seniors-due to<lb/>
the increase in postage rates the<lb/>
BUCCANEER can not afford to mail<lb/>
yearbooks to graduates next fall when they<lb/>
arrive. In order to receive your annual next<lb/>
fall, please do one of the following:<lb/>
1. Mail $1.00 fa postage, your ID number<lb/>
and your correct address to the<lb/>
BUCCANEER office (Publications Center,<lb/>
ECU. Greenville, N.C.)<lb/>
2. Give a friend your spring activity card as<lb/>
proof of enrollment and fie a she may pick<lb/>
up a book fa you.<lb/>
3. Or come by the BUCCANFf H office &amp;<lb/>
pick up a book aftci ifif, irrivi Ho sure to<lb/>
have sane proof of attendance (schedule,<lb/>
activity card receipt fa paying<lb/>
4. Pay.<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta<lb/>
Sigma fau Delta, English Honorl<lb/>
Society, will hold its monthly meeting<lb/>
rhursday, May 13. at 730 in room 244<lb/>
Mendenhall. Plans fa the cookojt on May<lb/>
20 will be discussed. Mi. Ovid Pierce has<lb/>
agreed to oome and answer any questicnf<lb/>
you may have concerninq Southern litera-f<lb/>
ture and writing<lb/>
Alpha Phi Gamma AC s meetjlg<lb/>
Initiation fa Alpha Phi Gamma (The<lb/>
Society fa Collegiate Journalists) will take<lb/>
place this Sunday at 7 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Room 221.<lb/>
Of course, all members and those to be<lb/>
initiated are urged to attend. The initiation<lb/>
ceremony will be followed by the induction<lb/>
of new officers fa the 1976-77 school year.<lb/>
Dress is coat and tie.<lb/>
Any questions please contact John<lb/>
Evans at 756-4136 a 758-6366.<lb/>
Newsletter<lb/>
The Computing Center Newsletter fa<lb/>
May is now available. Interested persons<lb/>
may obtain a free copy in Austin 106<lb/>
BIRTHRIGHT<lb/>
If you would like to volunteer to wak<lb/>
fa BIRTHRIGHT - alternatives to abation<lb/>
and pregnancy counseling - we need<lb/>
volunteers fa the summer. Call Terry at<lb/>
758-8298<lb/>
Pregnant?<lb/>
Pregnant? Need to talk to someoie<lb/>
about it? There isalways someone who will<lb/>
listen at BIRTHRIGHT. Call us at<lb/>
758-LOVE a oome to talk to us at 501 �<lb/>
5th St. any Tuesday on Thursday from 7-10<lb/>
p.m. We are a non-denoninatiaial group<lb/>
of oonoerned volunteers.<lb/>
Skydive<lb/>
The A.C.S. Student Affairs meeting<lb/>
will be held this Thursday m F-201 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. There will be elections fa next year's<lb/>
officers, infamatioi oi the Spring Punic<lb/>
and a film. Refreshments will be served.<lb/>
Entertainer<lb/>
Do you feel you are no longer on your<lb/>
toes and in touch with the dream wold?<lb/>
Meet people, impatant oies, through the<lb/>
Student Union. We are now accepting<lb/>
applications fa the Entertainer Committee<lb/>
 to fulfill hopes of happiness and bright<lb/>
lights. Applications at Mendenhall Info<lb/>
Desk. So let it shine!<lb/>
Grad management<lb/>
The Graduate Management Admission(c<lb/>
Test will be offered at ECU on Saturday,<lb/>
July 10, 1976. Application blanks are tobef!<lb/>
completed and mailed to Educational<lb/>
Testing Service, Box 966-R, Princeton,<lb/>
N.J. 08540 toarrive by June 18, 1976. The<lb/>
applications are also available at t<lb/>
Testing Center, Rooms 105-106, Spetg<lb/>
Building, ECU.<lb/>
Consumer problems<lb/>
Are you having problems with mer-<lb/>
chants, merchandise, money, or any ft<lb/>
consumer Droducts? We can help! Contact 1<lb/>
Ray Hudson, Mendenhall Student Center <lb/>
3GA Studen� Welfare Office ohone I'<lb/>
1vf-6611, ext. 216.<lb/>
This may be your last chance to learn<lb/>
how to SKYDIVE. Fa infamation. cal<lb/>
758-6374 now.<lb/>
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