<?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="00057085_0001"/>
THIS ISSUE -<lb/>
16 PA GES<lb/>
EA ST CA ROLINA UNI VERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina Community for over 50 years<lb/>
CIRCULA TION -<lb/>
8,500<lb/>
VOL 52, NO. 9<lb/>
12 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
i Mi i m ii mi win 11 a<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
?????<lb/>
NCIC rules<lb/>
against SGA<lb/>
THE STUDENT SUPPLY STORE'S floor space will double from the planned $500,000 re-<lb/>
novations. FOUNTAINHEAD photo<lb/>
Remodeling planned for<lb/>
Stud en t Supply Store<lb/>
By DENNISC. LEONARD<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
The ECU Student Supply<lb/>
Store will soon undergo a<lb/>
$500,000 remodeling program.<lb/>
According to Joseph O. Clark,<lb/>
manager of the Student Supply<lb/>
Store, the sales floor space will be<lb/>
doubled and the snack shop will<lb/>
be relocated in the old student<lb/>
union side of Wright Annex.<lb/>
"The sales floor area will be<lb/>
extended to include the snack<lb/>
shop area and the offices to the<lb/>
side of the sales area, increasing<lb/>
it from 5,600 square feet to 10,200<lb/>
square feet said Clark.<lb/>
"The cost of the expansion<lb/>
project will be paid for entirely by<lb/>
the Student Supply Store operat-<lb/>
ing budget without the aid of<lb/>
University funds<lb/>
The Student Supply Store had<lb/>
to petition the expansion to the<lb/>
N.C. Legislature and the Legisla-<lb/>
ture approved the $500,000 re-<lb/>
modeling oosts.<lb/>
"When the bids came in<lb/>
August 31st, the costs ran over<lb/>
$100,000 more than was originally<lb/>
expected, so the snack shop will<lb/>
not be completed until later on<lb/>
Clark said.<lb/>
"The shell of the snack shop<lb/>
will be oompleteu the same time<lb/>
the other project is totally com-<lb/>
pleted after that<lb/>
The project is to take approx-<lb/>
imately nine months to complete<lb/>
and will be divided into three<lb/>
phases.<lb/>
The first phase will be to<lb/>
renovate the areas where the old<lb/>
Student Union used to be in<lb/>
Wright Annex, plus an addition to<lb/>
the north side of the building tht<lb/>
will house an exDanded ware-<lb/>
See REMODELING, page 6.<lb/>
By LOUIS TA YLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A Workman's Compensation<lb/>
claim filed by an ECU student<lb/>
against the SGA and the univer-<lb/>
sity nearly two years ago was<lb/>
tentatively settled Thursday be-<lb/>
fore a North Carolina Industrial<lb/>
Commission (NCIC) hearing.<lb/>
Michael "Whitey" Martin<lb/>
had filed a claim for injuries<lb/>
received in September 1974 while<lb/>
working for Refrigerator Rentals,<lb/>
an agency of the SGA.<lb/>
In a "clincher" agreement<lb/>
lawyers representing Martin and<lb/>
the SGA worked out a settlement<lb/>
and submitted it to the NCIC for<lb/>
approval.<lb/>
The agreement stipulated that<lb/>
the SGA pay Martin for medical<lb/>
expenses incurred, any perma-<lb/>
nent disability suffered, and any<lb/>
time lost at work.<lb/>
"Clincher" means that the<lb/>
case will be totally closed upon<lb/>
NCIC approval.<lb/>
The settlement, approximate-<lb/>
ly $5,000 will come from Refrig-<lb/>
erator Rentals, aooording to Tim<lb/>
Sullivan, SGA president.<lb/>
At the time of Martin's injury,<lb/>
SGA carried no workman's com-<lb/>
pensation, and there was quest-<lb/>
ion as to whether they were<lb/>
oovered under the university's<lb/>
policy, according to Sullivan.<lb/>
At the request of the SGA.<lb/>
ECU was dismissed from the<lb/>
claim, leaving the SGA fully<lb/>
liable, Sullivan added.<lb/>
This dismissal has two bene-<lb/>
ficial outcomes according to Sulli-<lb/>
van. First, the SGA now has a<lb/>
workman's compensation policy<lb/>
that is independent of the univer-<lb/>
sity's policy.<lb/>
Secondly, organizations re-<lb/>
ceiving funds from SGA to pay<lb/>
salaries retain the right to hire<lb/>
and fire employees. Organi-<lb/>
zations covered by ECU'S policy<lb/>
leave final approval of employees<lb/>
up to the university.<lb/>
The SGA's Workman's Com-<lb/>
pensation went into effect on<lb/>
Sept. 1, 1976 at an annual cost of<lb/>
about $300 or one-tenth of one<lb/>
percent of the SGA budget, said<lb/>
Sullivan.<lb/>
Sullivan added that if a worker<lb/>
is injured on the job, his employer<lb/>
is liable for his injuries regardless<lb/>
of whether or not the employer is<lb/>
covered by insurance.<lb/>
Since the problem had never<lb/>
arisen in the past, the SGA had<lb/>
never seen a necessity to carry<lb/>
Workman's Compensation.<lb/>
Since Martin was providing a<lb/>
service for an SGA agency, the<lb/>
SGA felt he should be compen-<lb/>
sated for his injury.<lb/>
The olaim had been carried<lb/>
out for two years, and both sides<lb/>
wanted an ending to the matter<lb/>
said Sullivan.<lb/>
Legislature appoints committees<lb/>
By DAVID NASH<lb/>
SGA Correspondent<lb/>
The Studer Government<lb/>
Association (SC Legislature<lb/>
held its second nieeting of the<lb/>
year last evening with the focus of<lb/>
business on committee appoint-<lb/>
ments and introduction of bills.<lb/>
Appointments fa the Appro<lb/>
priations, Rules and Judiciary,<lb/>
Screenings and Appointments,<lb/>
and Student Welfare committees<lb/>
were announced by SGA Speaker<lb/>
of the Legislature Ricky Price.<lb/>
Committees will begin scheduled<lb/>
meetings later this week.<lb/>
Appropriation bills were in-<lb/>
troduced for the North Carolina<lb/>
Student Legislature, the BUC-<lb/>
CANEER, the East Carolina<lb/>
"Playhouse and WECU radio.<lb/>
Monika Sutherland, editor of<lb/>
the BUCCANEER, spoke to the<lb/>
legislature concerning the pro-<lb/>
posed yearbook budget.<lb/>
According to Sutherland, the<lb/>
yearbook is now involved in a<lb/>
$5,000 lawsuit with Multi-Pics<lb/>
Studios for breach of contract<lb/>
concerning yearbook portraits for<lb/>
the'76-77 school year.<lb/>
Due to a six percent increase<lb/>
in printing costs, the BUC-<lb/>
CANEER is requesting a budget<lb/>
of $66,010 for the period<lb/>
November, 1976-June, 1977.<lb/>
A bill giving the ECU Voca-<lb/>
tional Rehabilitation Club funds<lb/>
to attend the state convention<lb/>
later this month in Charlotte<lb/>
passed after suspension of the<lb/>
rules and minimal debate.<lb/>
The bill appropriates $100 for<lb/>
transportation costs to the club.<lb/>
Students may owe local taxes<lb/>
By JIMMY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
(ECU) students who own property<lb/>
may be liable for Pitt County as<lb/>
well as Greenville City taxes,<lb/>
according to Phillip Michaels, Pitt<lb/>
County Tax Supervisor.<lb/>
"To establish residence there<lb/>
are different rules fa different<lb/>
purposes but fa tax purposes a<lb/>
student must meet three require-<lb/>
ments: they must pay in-state<lb/>
tuition, they must live here the<lb/>
better part of the year, and their<lb/>
auto must be registered in their<lb/>
name said Michaels.<lb/>
"The city also has the autha-<lb/>
ity to tax these students should<lb/>
they reside within the city lino-<lb/>
its said Michaels.<lb/>
Out of 8,000 registaed autos<lb/>
on campus, 300 to 500 will be<lb/>
taxable, said Michaels.<lb/>
"All of these students will<lb/>
eventually be taxed hae cited<lb/>
Michaels.<lb/>
Property taxes, which make<lb/>
up about 41 percent of the total<lb/>
county appropriations, are the<lb/>
categay under which these taxes<lb/>
on autos come.<lb/>
Out of about $8,060,000,<lb/>
around $10,000 will come from<lb/>
ECU students.<lb/>
Michaels received his infam-<lb/>
atiai on the taxable students<lb/>
through administrative channels.<lb/>
"I asked the chief of campus<lb/>
security, Joseph H. Calder, and<lb/>
he directed me to his superia,<lb/>
Cliff Moae (vice-chancella of<lb/>
Business Affairs) said<lb/>
Michaels.<lb/>
"Mr. Moae said it was public<lb/>
recad, it could not be withheld<lb/>
and he okayed my getting it from<lb/>
Calder Michaels stated.<lb/>
As to the legality of the tax<lb/>
Michaels said, "We intend to<lb/>
i?miiinw<lb/>
stick by the law. We have<lb/>
consulted the state Attorney<lb/>
Genaal, the Institute of Govern-<lb/>
ment in Chapel Hill, and the court<lb/>
attaney and they have all agreed<lb/>
to the legality<lb/>
Accading to W.R. Smith, Pitt<lb/>
County Tax Collecta, "There is<lb/>
no reason why any college<lb/>
student should be taxed in two<lb/>
oounties. They should go to their<lb/>
tax supervisa to determine their<lb/>
status.<lb/>
"I would treat a student as<lb/>
any other delinquent taxpayer,<lb/>
using proper channels said<lb/>
Smith.<lb/>
unimiwmu mm i mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Michaels, who took full re-<lb/>
sponsibility for tax discovery,<lb/>
claimed these taxpayers have<lb/>
benefits, "the same as any other<lb/>
property owner, they are taxpay-<lb/>
ers<lb/>
Miss Margaret Register,<lb/>
registrar of Pitt County Board of<lb/>
Elections, intaprets student re-<lb/>
sidence by "whae your parents<lb/>
live<lb/>
Register clarified her point,<lb/>
"Your plaoe of permanent docile<lb/>
is where you'll vote<lb/>
See TAXES, page 8.<lb/>
nIWI mm IH<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0002"/><lb/>
HI<lb/>
mm<lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
news<lb/>
Flu vaccine Educ. Co-op Psi-Chi<lb/>
State Fair Rape Forum<lb/>
Ir<lb/>
We have a limited supply of<lb/>
swine flu vat ine to be given to<lb/>
our high risk tudents. Students<lb/>
with asthma, jiabetes, chronic<lb/>
bronchitis, er .ohysema, heart<lb/>
disease, and paralytics should<lb/>
oome to the I nfirmary from 8 a.m.<lb/>
to 4 p.m Monday through<lb/>
Friday. The vaccine will be given<lb/>
to students on a first oome, first<lb/>
serve basis. We hope to receive<lb/>
an additional supply of vaccine<lb/>
later.<lb/>
Women's Rugby<lb/>
The ECU Education Co-op<lb/>
program will be presented in<lb/>
Speight 129 at 7 p.m. Tuesday<lb/>
Oct. 12. The presentation will be<lb/>
part of the October meeting of<lb/>
Psi-Chi. All interested students<lb/>
and staff members are welcome.<lb/>
Learn how you might work as part<lb/>
of your education and receive<lb/>
credit fa it!<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of Psi-Chi<lb/>
will hold a meeting, Tuesday Oct.<lb/>
12 at 7 p.m. All new Psi-Chi<lb/>
pledges will be initiated<lb/>
at this meeting. The East Caro-<lb/>
lina Education Co-op Program<lb/>
will be presented during the<lb/>
meeting. Everyone interested in<lb/>
Psychology or the Co-op program<lb/>
is invited. That's tonight at 7<lb/>
p.msee you there.<lb/>
Horny Toads YM fiame<lb/>
There will be an organization-<lb/>
al meeting of the Women's Rugby<lb/>
Club on Thursday, Oct. 14 in<lb/>
Room 105, Memorial Gym at<lb/>
7:30. For further information call<lb/>
Diane at 758-9977.<lb/>
Backdrop<lb/>
The Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
is looking for an industrious and<lb/>
creative student who would like to<lb/>
macrame, paint, tie die, batik,<lb/>
etc. a backdrop fa the stage. If<lb/>
you can come up with an<lb/>
interesting idea and approximate<lb/>
cost, drop this infamation by the<lb/>
Student Union office with your<lb/>
name and local phone number.<lb/>
Poetry Forum<lb/>
The ECU poetry faum will<lb/>
meet at 800 p.m. in room 221,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center on<lb/>
the following dates: October 19;<lb/>
November 2; November 16; De-<lb/>
cember 7; January 4; January 18;<lb/>
February 1; February 15; March<lb/>
15; April 15; April 19; May 3;<lb/>
May 17.<lb/>
FG<lb/>
The Fa ever Generatia is a<lb/>
Christ-centered campus fellow-<lb/>
ship group. Our weekly meetings<lb/>
include a study, discussion a<lb/>
challenge from God's Word,<lb/>
singing and warm fellowship. We<lb/>
invite and enoourage yai to join<lb/>
us this Friday night at 7:30! This<lb/>
week we will be meeting in<lb/>
Mendenhall 244. Hope to see you<lb/>
there!<lb/>
Charlie Byrd<lb/>
Wald-famous guitarist<lb/>
Charlie Byrd will appear at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Thursday, Oct. 14 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
A perfamer equally at ease in<lb/>
the worlds of classical and<lb/>
popular music, Charlie Byrd<lb/>
qualifies as one of the wald'stop<lb/>
classical and jazz guitarists.<lb/>
Public tickets fa the Byrd<lb/>
concert are available at the ECU<lb/>
Central Ticket Office at $3 each,<lb/>
a $2 fa members of groups of 20<lb/>
a more.<lb/>
TURN INTO A TOAD! if you<lb/>
do not sign up fa the New Yak a<lb/>
Washington, D.C. trip over<lb/>
Thanksgiving. You will turn into a<lb/>
hany toad. Last day to sign up is<lb/>
Friday, Oct. 15.<lb/>
Auditions<lb/>
Coffee house auditions fa<lb/>
local talent will be held Oct. 15<lb/>
and 16. Those who wish to<lb/>
perfam should leave their name<lb/>
and local phone number as well as<lb/>
a shat description of their act<lb/>
with Ms. Conway, the Student<lb/>
Union seaetary, no later than<lb/>
Oct. 12.<lb/>
Crusade<lb/>
Campus Crusade fa Christ<lb/>
will meet tonight at 7:00 in<lb/>
Brewster D-201. Everyone wel-<lb/>
cane!<lb/>
Democrats<lb/>
The ECU Young Demoaats<lb/>
will meet on October 12 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in room 244, Mendenhall.<lb/>
Joel McCleary, Jimmy Carter's<lb/>
Nath Carolina Campaign Direc-<lb/>
ta, will speak at this meeting. He<lb/>
will also have infamation about<lb/>
Carter available with him at the<lb/>
meeting. Everyone is invited to<lb/>
attend. Interested students who<lb/>
would like to join the ECU-YDC<lb/>
may do so at this meeting.<lb/>
Ebony Herald<lb/>
EBONY HERALD staff will<lb/>
hold a meeting Thursday night,<lb/>
Oct. 14 at 600 in 248 Menden-<lb/>
hall. All staff members and a her<lb/>
intaested pasons are asked to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Alpha Beta<lb/>
All interested Liaary Science<lb/>
majas are invited to Alpha Beta<lb/>
Alpha Rush Tues. Oct. 12 in the<lb/>
Student Lounge of the Library<lb/>
Science Dept at 5:00. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served. All regulars<lb/>
should attend.<lb/>
?m<lb/>
Buses fa VMI game are free<lb/>
to ECU students. Call Menden-<lb/>
hall extension 218. Leave name<lb/>
and number. Planning on taking<lb/>
at least three buses.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi, a national<lb/>
honor society and service to<lb/>
education aganizatioi will hold<lb/>
its FALL RUSH a Thursday Oct.<lb/>
14 7.00 in Room 244 Mendenhall.<lb/>
Everyone who is in the top 20<lb/>
per cent of their class is invited to<lb/>
join. They must have 15 hours a<lb/>
mae of oollege credit. All old<lb/>
members are suppose to oome to<lb/>
this meeting. Refreshments will<lb/>
be served following the meeting.<lb/>
Blood Drive<lb/>
On October 19, 20, and 21<lb/>
there will be a Blood Drive held at<lb/>
Wright Auditaium. The hours<lb/>
are 11 to 5 on Tuesday, Oct. 19<lb/>
and 10 to 4 on Wednesday and<lb/>
Thursday, 20 and 21. The drive is<lb/>
being held this year to aid in the<lb/>
shatage of blood.<lb/>
University accepted excuses<lb/>
will be given to those students<lb/>
who donate blood anda help<lb/>
during c'usses. Red Cross dona-<lb/>
tion cards will be issued a<lb/>
updated. The goal of this year's<lb/>
blood drive is 1,000 pints.<lb/>
Job Workshop<lb/>
Are you going to be a member<lb/>
of the fatest growing socio-eco-<lb/>
nomic class in America - the<lb/>
unemployed?<lb/>
If so, learn what you do well<lb/>
and like to do and how to get paid<lb/>
fa it.<lb/>
A wakshop on job skills will<lb/>
be led by David Moae at the<lb/>
Baptist Student Union, 511 E.<lb/>
10th St oi Thursday, Oct. 14, at<lb/>
6O0p.m.<lb/>
Newsletter<lb/>
Computer Center newsletters<lb/>
fa the maith of October are now<lb/>
available from the dispatcher in<lb/>
Austin 106. The newsletter is free<lb/>
to all interested students and<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
<lb/>
SGA buses will run to Raleigh<lb/>
vOthe State fair, starting Monday<lb/>
if enough people are interested.<lb/>
Cost $10. Will leave Greenville<lb/>
5:30 p.m. and leave Raleigh at<lb/>
11:30 p.m.<lb/>
Fellowships<lb/>
The Southern Regional Train-<lb/>
ing Program in Public Adminis-<lb/>
tration is now accepting appli-<lb/>
cations fa fellowships fa the<lb/>
1977-78 academic year.<lb/>
Application must be received<lb/>
by March 1, 1977. Fa infam-<lb/>
ation and applications write to:<lb/>
Coleman B. Ransone, Jr Edu-<lb/>
cational Director, Southern<lb/>
Regional Training Program in<lb/>
Public Administration, Drawer I,<lb/>
University, Alabama 35486.<lb/>
There will be a Rape Faum<lb/>
held in the lobby of White Hall on<lb/>
October 12 at 7O0 p.m. A variety<lb/>
of speakers will be present to give<lb/>
infamatioi about what to do if<lb/>
you are raped, what to expect at<lb/>
the hospital, and what to expect<lb/>
from the authaities. EVERYONE<lb/>
IS INVITED!<lb/>
Psyc Research<lb/>
The Psychology department is<lb/>
currently doing research on tech-<lb/>
niques to alleviate dysmenarhea<lb/>
(menstrual aamps).<lb/>
Any females having this prob-<lb/>
lem should immediately contact<lb/>
Jill Wilson in Speight 212 a call<lb/>
752-6676.<lb/>
Guest Speaker WECU Mews<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Student Council fa Exceptional<lb/>
Children Thursday, Oct. 14, at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in Speight Bldg Rm.<lb/>
142. The guest speaker will be<lb/>
Mrs. Mary Ann Howard from the<lb/>
Juvenile Volunteer Program. She<lb/>
will show a film during her<lb/>
presentation. Everyone is invited<lb/>
to attend. Refreshments will be<lb/>
served.<lb/>
ACT<lb/>
The ACT Assessment will be<lb/>
offered at East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity on Sat Nov. 20, 1976.<lb/>
Application blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to ACT,<lb/>
P.O. Box 414, Iowa City, Iowa<lb/>
52240 to arrive by Oct. 25, 1976.<lb/>
Applications may be obtained<lb/>
from the Testing Center, Rooms,<lb/>
105-106, Speight Building, East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
News programs are now being<lb/>
broadcast over WECU RADIO at<lb/>
10:40. 3:40, and 6:40 Monday-Fri-<lb/>
day. If you are interested in<lb/>
waking with the newscasts (re-<lb/>
pating, announcing, re-writing,<lb/>
a just helping out), stop by<lb/>
WECU and sign up.<lb/>
Sports Cars<lb/>
The Sports Car Club of<lb/>
America is sponsaing a Precision<lb/>
Driving Competition on Saturday<lb/>
October 16, at Semour Johnson<lb/>
Air Face Base in Goldsbao,<lb/>
N.C. All licensed drivers ar<lb/>
invited to compete. Registra;ion<lb/>
is at 9:30 a.m. with competition<lb/>
beginning at 1100. Spectators<lb/>
are weloome and encouragec1 to<lb/>
attend free of charge.<lb/>
Adopt A Pet Greek Course<lb/>
The animals available this<lb/>
week include one brown and<lb/>
white mixed aeed, one black and<lb/>
white puppy, two brown, black<lb/>
and white puppies, two black<lb/>
puppies, one mixed collie-black<lb/>
with brown, and three dark<lb/>
kittens.<lb/>
The people at Animal Control<lb/>
would like to extend an invitation<lb/>
to all interested persons to oome<lb/>
by and visit the shelter located on<lb/>
2nd Street, off Cemet er y Road.<lb/>
They would appreciate it and so<lb/>
would the dogs.<lb/>
Chess Club<lb/>
Tuesday Oct. 12, the ECU<lb/>
Chess Club will meet at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
in the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Coffeehouse. All interested per-<lb/>
sons are welcome to attend.<lb/>
WANTED: Classical Greek<lb/>
course to be offered in fall. See<lb/>
W. Dawson, (Phil. Dept.), Brew-<lb/>
ster about signing sheet to show<lb/>
interest in this course.<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
The Allied Health Professions<lb/>
Admission Test will be offered at<lb/>
East Carolina University on Sat-<lb/>
urday, Nov. 20, 1976. Application<lb/>
blanks are to be oompleted and<lb/>
mailed to The Psychological Ca-<lb/>
paatiai, P.O. Box 3540, Grand<lb/>
Central Station, New Yak, New<lb/>
Yak 10017 to arrive by October<lb/>
25, 1976. Applications may be<lb/>
obtained from the Testing Center,<lb/>
Rooms 105-106, Speight Building,<lb/>
East Carolina University.<lb/>
a<lb/>
c<lb/>
d<lb/>
1<lb/>
w<lb/>
Fi<lb/>
E<lb/>
R<lb/>
an<lb/>
of<lb/>
Ct<lb/>
Of<lb/>
in(<lb/>
St<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0003"/><lb/>
?????????????iB<lb/>
???????????????1<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
3<lb/>
imm<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?mi<lb/>
?<lb/>
?MW<lb/>
Honor frat wins national awards<lb/>
By NEIL SESSOMS<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
Tau chapter of Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
honor fraternity, ECU'S oldest<lb/>
fraternal organization, brought<lb/>
home two national awards from<lb/>
its national convention Oct. 1 and<lb/>
2, in Washington D.C.<lb/>
The chapter was presented its<lb/>
eleventh consecutive Outstanding<lb/>
Chapter in the Nation Award.<lb/>
The award given annually<lb/>
based on service projects and<lb/>
achievements of the chapter and<lb/>
the personal achievements of<lb/>
each brother.<lb/>
r he second honor was bestow-<lb/>
ed on Dr. Richard C. Todd, Tau<lb/>
chapter faculty advisor, Phi Sig-<lb/>
ma Pi national advisor, and<lb/>
faculty member of the ECU<lb/>
History department.<lb/>
Dr. Todd was presented an<lb/>
Honor Citation for Service com-<lb/>
Dr. Todd was also elected as<lb/>
National Alumni Representative<lb/>
to serve for the next two years.<lb/>
memorating his 27 years of<lb/>
service to Tau chapter and 23<lb/>
years as National Advisor.<lb/>
The activities that earned Tau<lb/>
chapter the 'Outstanding Chap-<lb/>
ter' award include their Christ-<lb/>
mas party for underprivleged<lb/>
children, participation in the<lb/>
Cerebal Palsy Telethon, the<lb/>
Todd Scholarship, and the Out-<lb/>
standing Male and Female<lb/>
Senior, and Alumni awards.<lb/>
Dan W. Figgins of the U.S.<lb/>
State Department was featured as<lb/>
banquet speaker and addressed<lb/>
the delegation on the New<lb/>
Diplomacy and Foreign Affairs<lb/>
Tau delegates participated in<lb/>
several activities while in the<lb/>
capital including a bus tour of the<lb/>
city, and tour of the Aerospace<lb/>
Museum.<lb/>
Survey disproves<lb/>
chauvinistic notion<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI officers display awards. ECU News Bureau photo.<lb/>
Editor's Note: This is the second<lb/>
article in a four part series which<lb/>
examines the SGA sponsored<lb/>
Student Opinion Survey. This<lb/>
artide looks at Chapter III of the<lb/>
survey,  Educational A ttitudes of<lb/>
Students at ECU<lb/>
By JIM ELLIOTT<lb/>
Senior Editor<lb/>
Sometimes used chauvinisti-<lb/>
cally, the notion that most young<lb/>
women come to college primarily<lb/>
to find a marriage partner is false.<lb/>
More than 80 percent of the<lb/>
females responding to question-<lb/>
naires rated matrimony as "not<lb/>
an important reason for coming to<lb/>
college according to the Stu-<lb/>
dent Opinion Survey.<lb/>
Of those males responding to<lb/>
the question on marriage, 20.8<lb/>
percent indicated that finding a<lb/>
spouse was an important reason<lb/>
for attending college.<lb/>
Most respondents, 72.2 per-<lb/>
cent believe that "to learn a<lb/>
subject or skill for a job is very<lb/>
important<lb/>
Students who attend a univer-<lb/>
sity "to obtain a degree of<lb/>
prestige are on the average male,<lb/>
in-state residents and from a rural<lb/>
background.<lb/>
The survey also shows a<lb/>
"desire to enter a specific pro-<lb/>
gram or department" a very<lb/>
important reason for choosing<lb/>
ECU for 49.2 percent of those<lb/>
questioned.<lb/>
Those who come to East<lb/>
Carolina for its athletic reputa-<lb/>
tion, according to the survey,<lb/>
tend to have lower grade aver-<lb/>
ages than those who do not; more<lb/>
than half are male and nearly<lb/>
three-fourths are less than 20<lb/>
years old.<lb/>
The fourth part of Chapter III,<lb/>
Evaluation of Educational Com-<lb/>
ponents at East Carolina, reveals<lb/>
that 91 percent of the respondents<lb/>
are satisfied with their profes-<lb/>
sors.<lb/>
"Responsiveness of adminis-<lb/>
tration is rated as the most<lb/>
unsatisfactory element in contri-<lb/>
buting to one's education the<lb/>
survey said; 52.4 percent said<lb/>
they were satisfied while 47.6<lb/>
percent said they were dissatis-<lb/>
fied. Younger students, ages 19<lb/>
and under who are freshmen and<lb/>
sophomores, appear to be more<lb/>
satisfied than others.<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
Cinema 1<lb/>
PITT-PLAZA CENTER ? 756-0088<lb/>
STARTS FRIDAY!<lb/>
After you've tried everyfchmjebe.<lb/>
rifc'<lb/>
!R!i"i!K??) ASURPOG! RELEASE<lb/>
Starring MARTY FELDMAN<lb/>
Job interviews<lb/>
to begin Oct. 13<lb/>
CESSNA PILOT CENTER<lb/>
Job interviews for Seniors<lb/>
graduatinp before August, 1977,<lb/>
will begin Oct. 13, according to<lb/>
Furney K. James, Director of<lb/>
ECU'S Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Service.<lb/>
This service is free to Seniors<lb/>
and available to alumni at a cost<lb/>
of five dollars per year.<lb/>
James said interviewers for<lb/>
October include the U.S. Navy<lb/>
Officer Programs, Branch Bank-<lb/>
ing and Trust Co. and Roses<lb/>
Stores, Inc.<lb/>
"Last year we registered<lb/>
1,018 Seniors and 600 alumni<lb/>
said James.<lb/>
According to James, Career<lb/>
Planning and Placement Service<lb/>
assists students in finding jobs in<lb/>
their majors by notifying those<lb/>
registered of job opportunities,<lb/>
arranging interviews and provid-<lb/>
ing resume forms. A wide variety<lb/>
of other services are also offered.<lb/>
Any student interested in any<lb/>
of the services or who has<lb/>
questions can stop by the Career<lb/>
Planning and Placement Service<lb/>
in the Jenkins Alumni Building-<lb/>
I)!)<lb/>
Professional Instruction<lb/>
V.A. and F.A.A. Approved<lb/>
Give yourself that extra edge you need to succeed in<lb/>
today's competitive job market.<lb/>
For more information call 758-2000<lb/>
ISO AERO SERVICE, INC.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0004"/><lb/>
wutBMBWBamawteaaaaaaaaaaaammBmm<lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Vote!<lb/>
In August the Pitt County Tax Supervisor's offioe<lb/>
began sending out bills to county "residents" for<lb/>
tangible properties that they own and maintain in the<lb/>
county. As defined by the N.C. Attorney General's<lb/>
office: "When legal title to personal property is held<lb/>
by a North Carolina resident who maintains a 'home'<lb/>
residence in one county but who lives fa more than six<lb/>
months in another county for the purpose of attending<lb/>
school, teaching school, or working for the State<lb/>
government, the tax situs of the property is in the<lb/>
county in which the individual lives for the greater<lb/>
part of the year Nearly seven percent of ECU<lb/>
students fall into this category and are taxable in Pitt<lb/>
County, according to Phillip Michaels, county tax<lb/>
supervisor. To reside in Pitt County fa the greater<lb/>
part of the year is not, however, adequate criteria to<lb/>
make a student eligible to vote in county elections.<lb/>
Students who have left home to attend school, pay no<lb/>
taxes in their home county, but have not decided to<lb/>
become permanent residents of Pitt County are not<lb/>
eligible to vote here. A great incentive to vote at home<lb/>
no longer exists when taxes are no longer paid and the<lb/>
student is ineligible to vote where he does pay taxes.<lb/>
Although the Attaney General's office first ruled<lb/>
back in 1955 that tax situs was established in the<lb/>
county where a citizen spent most of the year, it was<lb/>
not until this year that Pitt County decided to tax<lb/>
students falling into this categay. In January the Tax<lb/>
Supervisor's office posted notices in dams advising<lb/>
students to voluntarily list all property owned and<lb/>
maintained in Pitt Countv.<lb/>
Even though Michaels denies any connection, it<lb/>
seems mae than coincidental that students are<lb/>
assessed this year when Pitt County is due to lose<lb/>
nearly $400,000 in revenue sharing funds. County<lb/>
commissioners, anticipating a revenue shatfall, have<lb/>
indicated they will attempt to keep the tax rate as low<lb/>
as possible, and what better way than to find new tax<lb/>
bases. Michaels claims students are being taxed this<lb/>
year because his staff was adequate enough to make<lb/>
these discoveries. The county is obligated to collect<lb/>
taxes from students whether a not they are able to<lb/>
vote here, accading to Michaels.<lb/>
Since the voting age fa natiaial, then state and<lb/>
local elections was lowered to eighteen, we have heard<lb/>
many repatsof voting apathy on the part of the newly<lb/>
enfranchised. Voting is a right and an obligation fa<lb/>
citizens of a demoaatic society, but it can also be a<lb/>
hassle fa sane. Voting laws and requisite require-<lb/>
ments should be made as simple and hasslefree as<lb/>
possible. Then we may truly realize enthusiastic voter<lb/>
participation, from all age groups.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community lor over fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis Leonard<lb/>
Business ManagerTeresa Whisenant<lb/>
News EditorsDebbie Jackson<lb/>
Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Trends EditorPat Coyle<lb/>
Sports EditorSteve Wheeler<lb/>
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association<lb/>
of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday during the<lb/>
school year, weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually tor non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
<lb/>
r <lb/>
r r- .<lb/>
t,<lb/>
heForum<lb/>
Well he's the tax man<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The main reason behind the<lb/>
Revolutionary War was "taxation<lb/>
without representation Well,<lb/>
what happened 200 years ago<lb/>
apparently did not cure the<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
Pitt County's tax collector,<lb/>
Phillip Michaels, is now King<lb/>
George and ECU his sovereignty<lb/>
and we, the independent students<lb/>
(?) of ECU are the colonists.<lb/>
If His Royalty Michaels thinks<lb/>
we students are going to pay his<lb/>
and all other oountry salaries<lb/>
without having a chance to vote<lb/>
their cans out of offioe, he'sfull of<lb/>
(expletive deleted)<lb/>
This country was founded on<lb/>
the principle of one man, one vote<lb/>
with no taxation without repre-<lb/>
sentation and even the all-mighty<lb/>
Mr. Michaels cannot change that<lb/>
premise.<lb/>
Michaels, at this point, has<lb/>
the law on his side but the<lb/>
reasoning behind it is to rip off<lb/>
the students of this great univer-<lb/>
sity; students that generate 15<lb/>
percent of Greenville's sales and<lb/>
probably five percent of<lb/>
Michaels' Kingdom.<lb/>
Trying to be naive, Michaels<lb/>
says as taxpayers we have rights,<lb/>
but it seems he and Margaret<lb/>
Register of the Board of Elections<lb/>
have not been using inter-office<lb/>
communications too well, for<lb/>
Register says students vote in the<lb/>
county of their parents.<lb/>
A good boycott of Pitt County<lb/>
businesses might bring a sub-<lb/>
stantial loss of sales tax revenue<lb/>
? iHiillll ?Hilimwlll ,<lb/>
and turn King Phillip I' about-<lb/>
face, unclogging his brain.<lb/>
But, then with students using<lb/>
co-ops to bring food in from<lb/>
surrounding counties, 'King<lb/>
Phillip' would probably put tariffs<lb/>
on the goods.<lb/>
Let's just hope the tyranny of<lb/>
200 years ago doesn't boil up<lb/>
today, but don't oount on it.<lb/>
Sothe'King' can see it,<lb/>
STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Indiscriminate towing rapped<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Did you know that on the night<lb/>
of September 27th, forty (40) cars<lb/>
were towed off of ECU'S campus?<lb/>
From what a tow truck driver told<lb/>
me, he along with two other<lb/>
towing service stations made a<lb/>
killing off of ECU. Unfortunately,<lb/>
my car was one of those forty (40)<lb/>
that were towed away. I realize<lb/>
that signs are posted all across<lb/>
campus stating: "University<lb/>
Registered Vehicles Only-Towing<lb/>
Enforced But what does a<lb/>
"Registered Student of ECU" do<lb/>
when tt.ey acquire the use of a car<lb/>
for the week? Easy, they get a<lb/>
sticker in order to park on<lb/>
campus. But what does a<lb/>
"Registered Student of ECU" do<lb/>
when they arrive on a Sunday<lb/>
finding the Campus Traffic<lb/>
Station closed? That was the<lb/>
problem I encountered on the<lb/>
night of September 26th.<lb/>
After my classes on the T7th, I<lb/>
went to purchase a sticker but<lb/>
came to find that the office dosed<lb/>
at 4:00. (I arrived a few minutes<lb/>
after 4 W). So I had no sticker and<lb/>
it resulted in the towing of my car<lb/>
that night which cost me $20.00!<lb/>
m<lb/>
On September 30th, I got my<lb/>
car back and went to talk to a Mr.<lb/>
Calder about the unfairness i had<lb/>
received concerning my car. I was<lb/>
told that there existed, someplace<lb/>
down 5th Street, a paIr? lot<lb/>
where one could park one's car<lb/>
without a campus sticker. That<lb/>
was news to me because I have<lb/>
never read nor even seen any<lb/>
information telling one atxxjt that<lb/>
parking lot. By the time I arrive<lb/>
on campus, nightfall is already<lb/>
late in its hours. Personally, I do<lb/>
not have the desire to walk from<lb/>
5th Street to my dorm at night,<lb/>
especially with all of the crazy<lb/>
things that have happened here in<lb/>
the past.<lb/>
You would think this univer-<lb/>
sity could do something in order<lb/>
to help its Registered Students<lb/>
out on this towing problem. A<lb/>
suggestion might be a ticket box<lb/>
that takes in a dollar bill and puts<lb/>
out a dated temporary sticker.<lb/>
Any ideas would be appreciated<lb/>
because I, like so many Register-<lb/>
ed ECU Studentscan not afford to<lb/>
put out $20.00 each time we get to<lb/>
drive a car back to school.<lb/>
Thank you,<lb/>
Pamela J. Carter<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0005"/><lb/>
?HHBHnVnHmBHBnHHn<lb/>
SSBnnnnannni<lb/>
nHHHMmH<lb/>
?nnnnnnnVn<lb/>
nnnnnWannnlnl<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
5<lb/>
l<lb/>
mum<lb/>
?M?<lb/>
<lb/>
TheFbrum1<lb/>
Veep Pingston praises Sullivan<lb/>
I in W Mil ? li<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
To the Fountainhead:<lb/>
Now that the elections are<lb/>
concluded, there are a few issues<lb/>
that need to be brought out for<lb/>
consideration by this student<lb/>
body.<lb/>
The major issue that arose<lb/>
concerned the new SGA Constitu-<lb/>
tion. This Constitution had many<lb/>
faults and was defeated on sound<lb/>
grounds. Indeed there was i,<lb/>
great deal of centralization of<lb/>
power. This is why I fought to<lb/>
reinstate the office of Vice-Presi-<lb/>
dent. I think the students who<lb/>
voted did consider the Constitu-<lb/>
tion's good and bad points and<lb/>
voted accordingly. But that is<lb/>
history. What arose from this<lb/>
issue was a general smearing of<lb/>
office of President of SGA, and<lb/>
the name of Tim Sullivan. He was<lb/>
accused of being a power monger,<lb/>
of manipulating the elections and<lb/>
of being the sole sponsor of the<lb/>
proposed Constitution. He was<lb/>
also accused of down-grading the<lb/>
free flicks and of wanting to<lb/>
control the Student Union and<lb/>
thus oontrol entertainment. The<lb/>
accusations are not only unfound-<lb/>
ed, they are flat out lies at best.<lb/>
The people behind these accusa-<lb/>
tions neither knew the facts nor<lb/>
did they know what was going on<lb/>
in the SGA nor Student Union for<lb/>
that matter.<lb/>
The Constitution was formula-<lb/>
ted and adopted by a committee<lb/>
in the SGA last winter and spring.<lb/>
There were three public hearings!<lb/>
Where were the opponents of<lb/>
the Constitution then? The pur-<lb/>
pose of these hearings was to<lb/>
work out the problems and issues<lb/>
students might have. Most stu-<lb/>
dents agree the present Constitu-<lb/>
tion is weak and needs change. I<lb/>
ask again, where was the Student<lb/>
Union, the SGA Treasurer, and<lb/>
other students who voted no? By<lb/>
waiting until now and merely<lb/>
voting no, these people have done<lb/>
a great injustice to the student<lb/>
body of the University. Instead of<lb/>
creating a strong student serving<lb/>
Constitution, these people have<lb/>
caused the student body to<lb/>
depend on a weak and unstructur-<lb/>
ed frame of government.<lb/>
Mr. Sullivan opposed many<lb/>
aspects of this Constitution that<lb/>
was proposed last week. This<lb/>
Constitution was, however, the<lb/>
Constitution passed by the Legis-<lb/>
lature last spring. The Legislature<lb/>
this year was being voted in at the<lb/>
same time the Constitution was<lb/>
being voted out. So, who should<lb/>
be the supporter of the SGA<lb/>
Constitution when there is no<lb/>
legislature in session?The answer<lb/>
quite simply is the Executive<lb/>
officers of the SGA. I felt the<lb/>
Constitution was too centralized,<lb/>
as did many students, uut being<lb/>
the Vice-President, I felt it my<lb/>
duty to represent the Legislators<lb/>
that worked so hard to draft a<lb/>
strong Constitution.<lb/>
The Student Union is very<lb/>
worried that the SGA is trying to<lb/>
take over entertainment on cam-<lb/>
pus. Even though this couldn't be<lb/>
mmmmmm0mmrmtmmmmmmm<lb/>
further from the truth, I can<lb/>
understand why they should<lb/>
worry. The Student Union has<lb/>
done such a poor job of providing<lb/>
good entertainment that the<lb/>
student body considers entertain-<lb/>
ment more of an exception than a<lb/>
rule. The student body showed<lb/>
their disfavor with the Student<lb/>
Union by voting overwhelmingly<lb/>
to have the Student Union<lb/>
President elected in a campus-<lb/>
wide election.<lb/>
Finally, Mr. Sullivan was<lb/>
accused of manipulating the<lb/>
elections. Anyone who worked on<lb/>
the elections this year knows that<lb/>
great care was taken to provide<lb/>
the students with a fair and<lb/>
objective election. The chairmen,<lb/>
weren't from SGA or from Tim's<lb/>
fraternity. They were completely<lb/>
independent, and if anyone<lb/>
knows Lynn Yow and Clay<lb/>
Burnett, they know the integrity<lb/>
and independence these chair-<lb/>
persons exibit. The Marching<lb/>
Band was also hired to work the<lb/>
elections and count the results. I<lb/>
have never seen a more fair<lb/>
election and Mr. Sullivan did a<lb/>
great job organizing the basics of<lb/>
the election-and that's it! The<lb/>
chairpersons handled the election<lb/>
and the results, and the SGA<lb/>
merely posted the results.<lb/>
Having worked with Tim<lb/>
Sullivan for the past eight<lb/>
months, I know there is not a<lb/>
student on campus who works<lb/>
harder for the students of East<lb/>
Carolina. While many disagree<lb/>
with his philosophy or tactics, his<lb/>
dedication to the student body is<lb/>
never ceasing.<lb/>
Fellow students, I know there<lb/>
isa need for involvement. A need<lb/>
for work, and a need for dedica-<lb/>
tion. Tim Sullivan is working for<lb/>
the students of East Carolina. I<lb/>
feel Tim and I are getting a great<lb/>
deal done fa the students and we<lb/>
can achieve more with your help.<lb/>
Don't donate just ten minutes a<lb/>
day of your time, as one SGA<lb/>
officer does, because there is too<lb/>
much to do to make this Univer-<lb/>
sity better. Get involved and<lb/>
know what you are talking about<lb/>
when you criticize. Know because<lb/>
you are there-don't know because<lb/>
someone told you so!<lb/>
Greg Pingston<lb/>
SGA Vice President<lb/>
Model U.N. to pose in March<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The M odel U N cl ub consists of<lb/>
students interested in foreign<lb/>
affairs, international affairs and<lb/>
the United Nations. Model UN<lb/>
activities are centered on attend-<lb/>
ing and hosting conferences with<lb/>
other Model UN clubs. During a<lb/>
conference the ooilege or univer-<lb/>
sity sponsored delegation repre-<lb/>
sents a oountry designed before-<lb/>
hand by the hosting club. Col-<lb/>
lectively the clubs simulate the<lb/>
United Nations (either the Secur-<lb/>
ity Council or the General As-<lb/>
sembly) in structure and general<lb/>
procedure. The clubs pursue<lb/>
solutions fa world-wide problem<lb/>
by drafting resolutions, motions<lb/>
and recommendations passed by<lb/>
the assembled body at the<lb/>
oonferenoe.<lb/>
Many conferences are held<lb/>
throughout the year across the<lb/>
nation. This year East Carolina's<lb/>
Model UN will be hosting a<lb/>
conference on campus fa the fitst<lb/>
time in many years. This con-<lb/>
ference will enable the students<lb/>
of ECU and the citizens of the<lb/>
surrounding communities to have<lb/>
such an experience without tra-<lb/>
veling to New Yak City. Schools<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
Forum letters should be typed<lb/>
a printed and they must be<lb/>
signed and include the writer's<lb/>
address. Names will be withheld<lb/>
upon request. Letters miy be sent<lb/>
to Fountainhead or left at the<lb/>
Information Desk in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
from throughout the East will be<lb/>
attending our conference in<lb/>
March.<lb/>
Preparation fa a oonferenoe<lb/>
oonsistsof long hours of studying<lb/>
material and infamatioi on the<lb/>
oountry the delegation will be<lb/>
representating. After studying<lb/>
the oountry, the club bones up on<lb/>
the issues and topics to be<lb/>
discussed and debated. Now a<lb/>
reasoned position is developed<lb/>
that is alligned with that<lb/>
oountry's basic views and can be<lb/>
logically defended.<lb/>
The industrialized countries<lb/>
have been described as "just rich<lb/>
little islands surrounded by seas<lb/>
of poverty The third wald<lb/>
natiais have been called the<lb/>
invisible nations. They are invisi-<lb/>
ble only to those of us who close<lb/>
our eyes and turn our backs<lb/>
refusing to consciously recognize<lb/>
their implicationsonour lives and<lb/>
our future; as people, as a nation,<lb/>
as a wald. Is awareness enough?<lb/>
Will we patronize and sympathize<lb/>
a will we recognize and try to<lb/>
alleviate. After all you are but one<lb/>
person, we are but one country.<lb/>
Are these the excuses we will use<lb/>
to relieve our consoiouses, ex-<lb/>
plain away our ignaance of these<lb/>
problems justify our unconcern<lb/>
and inaction.<lb/>
TheModen UN's mission is to<lb/>
educate and suggest tabgible<lb/>
solutions Get involved, we need<lb/>
your ideas to create an ideal.<lb/>
David H. Mayo<lb/>
Secretary-General<lb/>
Model UN<lb/>
North Carolina's Number 3<lb/>
Rock Nightclub<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Thurs<lb/>
Fri<lb/>
Sat<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
Glass<lb/>
Moon<lb/>
Winter<lb/>
Brothers<lb/>
Ezra - 50<lb/>
EAT FOR JUST<lb/>
y V plus tax MonThurs.<lb/>
Crabcakes, slaw, french fries plus<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
V pound hambuiger steak, slaw,<lb/>
freneh fries and rolls.<lb/>
Fish, slaw french fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat. 752-3172<lb/>
2 miles east on highway 264<lb/>
(out 10th St.)<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
300 EVANS<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
PHONE: 75&amp;4U16<lb/>
, Jft FREE PRESOWnOI<lb/>
fttiatttp PICKUP AND DELIVERY<lb/>
flftl&amp;OUMMA<lb/>
Prescription Dept. with medication<lb/>
profiles: yonr prescription always at<lb/>
onr fingertips, even though yon may<lb/>
lose yonr FL bottle.<lb/>
U. S. Navy<lb/>
seeks math, physics and<lb/>
science related majors for<lb/>
specialized Officer Programs.<lb/>
See the U. S. Navy Officer<lb/>
Information Team on campus<lb/>
October 13, 1976 or call collect<lb/>
(919) 872-2547.<lb/>
INTERESTED PERSONS<lb/>
PLEASE REGISTER WITH THE<lb/>
PLACEMENT OFFICE.<lb/>
cssnsn<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
ECU selected<lb/>
for scholarship<lb/>
ECU has been selected by The<lb/>
American Arthritis Association,<lb/>
Inc. tor the establishment of the<lb/>
Bessie Ruck Mangum Scholar-<lb/>
ship, named in honor of the late<lb/>
Mrs. Charles V. Mangum of<lb/>
Rocky Mount, N.C.<lb/>
In announcing for scholarship<lb/>
establishment, Dr. Edwin W.<lb/>
Monroe, Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Health Affairs, stated it will be<lb/>
awarded annually to a worthy<lb/>
student enrolled in the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine when the<lb/>
school begins admitting students.<lb/>
In the interim it is available to a<lb/>
student in the ECU School of<lb/>
Nursing.<lb/>
Clifton P. Jones of Chapel<lb/>
Hill, President of The American<lb/>
Arthritis Association stated:<lb/>
The Association is privileged to<lb/>
honor a great lady and human-<lb/>
itarian with the establishment of<lb/>
the Bessie Ruck Mangum<lb/>
Scholarship at ECU. In this way<lb/>
we can perpetuate her memory<lb/>
and her work<lb/>
Mrs. Mangum and her late<lb/>
husband owned and operated the<lb/>
Rocky Mount Book Store for many<lb/>
years. Mrs. Mangum was also a<lb/>
certified tax consultant and oper-<lb/>
ated her own business after<lb/>
the death of her husband. She<lb/>
held many positions in the Order<lb/>
of the Eastern Star including<lb/>
Grand Matron and Grand Se-<lb/>
cretary of the Grand Chapter of<lb/>
North Carolina. In 1966, due to<lb/>
severe arthritis, Mrs. Mangum<lb/>
resigned as Grand Secretary and<lb/>
was immediately elected Grant<lb/>
Secretary Emeritus of the Grand<lb/>
Chapter of North Carolina.<lb/>
Hiatt speaks to<lb/>
ECU Republicans<lb/>
BILL HI A TT<lb/>
By BECKY BRA DSH AW<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Bill Hiatt, Republican candi-<lb/>
date for Lieutenant Governor,<lb/>
was on the ECU campus Thurs-<lb/>
day to meet students, and to<lb/>
speak to the ECU College Repub-<lb/>
licans.<lb/>
In his speech, Hiatt outlined<lb/>
various problems he sees in the<lb/>
state government.<lb/>
"I believe that the number<lb/>
one problem today as far as state<lb/>
government is concerned is the<lb/>
loss of respect and confidence in<lb/>
governmental officials said<lb/>
Hiatt.<lb/>
"I invite you to look carefully<lb/>
into the background of myself and<lb/>
my opponent and see if either one<lb/>
is guilty of selfish or special<lb/>
interest legislation<lb/>
Hiatt feels education should<lb/>
be the top priority in state<lb/>
government.<lb/>
"Children are our most import-<lb/>
ant resource, ' he said.<lb/>
Hiatt feels swifter trials are<lb/>
important in crime control.<lb/>
"Justice, to be effective, must<lb/>
be uniformly applied without<lb/>
regard to race, sex, or national<lb/>
origin Hiatt said.<lb/>
He also sees the need for<lb/>
parole reforms.<lb/>
Your I.D. Card is worth<lb/>
t FREE SKATE RENTAL<lb/>
rvx ON ECU NITE<lb/>
Every Wednesday 6:30-10:00 at<lb/>
SPORTS WORLD<lb/>
Featuring the new<lb/>
modern roller skating.<lb/>
Game Room - Pro Shop - Snack Bar<lb/>
Located behind Shoneys<lb/>
on the 264 By Pass Greenville Hyw.<lb/>
REMODELING<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
house and a shipping and receiv-<lb/>
ing dock.<lb/>
The actual expansion will be<lb/>
begun in the old Union section<lb/>
and the patio area outside of the<lb/>
building.<lb/>
The second phase will be to<lb/>
close the snack shop down at<lb/>
either the end of fe quarter or at<lb/>
the beginning of Christmas holi-<lb/>
days so that renovation can begin<lb/>
in that section of the building.<lb/>
According to Clark the student<lb/>
Supply Store is looking into the<lb/>
possibility of setting up a temp-<lb/>
orary vending machine area so<lb/>
that students would have a place<lb/>
to grab a snack in the center of<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Phase Three of the project will<lb/>
occur in mid-March when the<lb/>
area of the snack shop should be<lb/>
completed. At that time the book<lb/>
store will temporarily relocate in<lb/>
the snack shop area of Wright<lb/>
Annex so that expansion of the<lb/>
actual book store can begin.<lb/>
"During this period of time<lb/>
there will be a lot of problems,<lb/>
but this was the best plan that<lb/>
everyone oould come up with. We<lb/>
are getting the project done and<lb/>
at the same time we will keep the<lb/>
book store open added Clark.<lb/>
According to Clark the expan-<lb/>
sion is ooming at a crucial time<lb/>
because more space is needed for<lb/>
textbooks, a trade section, and<lb/>
the art supplies section.<lb/>
"We will do as much as<lb/>
possible within the limit we have<lb/>
to work in said Clark.<lb/>
Young Democrats back<lb/>
absentee ballot campaign<lb/>
The ECU Young Democrats<lb/>
are sponsoring a drive on campus<lb/>
to get students who registered<lb/>
to vote in other counties to vote<lb/>
<lb/>
1 GRAND OPENING zC fa.<lb/>
o3 C <lb/>
1 WISE FASHIONSo ro c , 0) o -1 <lb/>
1 20 OFF !o 1-zid yoi recei )UNT<lb/>
1 OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF NEW FALL 1 1 JUMPSUITS HIONS DISCOUoupon ai card and DISCC<lb/>
1 COATS &amp; DRESSES ! I WISE FASHIONS 1ISE FASI STUDENTsent this c ritification litional 10 chase.<lb/>
THE MALL DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE1 ? 2 ? cl<lb/>
<lb/>
through the use of absentee<lb/>
ballots. The ECU-YDC will be<lb/>
canvassing the dorms handing out<lb/>
request cards for absentee bal-<lb/>
lots.<lb/>
The process of voting via<lb/>
absentee ballots is a simple one.<lb/>
The request cards that are being<lb/>
handed out now are to be filled<lb/>
out and mailed by October 20<lb/>
The Young Democrats will mail<lb/>
the cards for anyone who so<lb/>
desires. The only oost to the<lb/>
individual is ten cents for a<lb/>
stamp.<lb/>
The Board of Elections in an<lb/>
individual's county will then send<lb/>
back a formal application for an<lb/>
absentee ballot. The individual<lb/>
must fill out that application and<lb/>
mail it back to the Board of<lb/>
Elections of the county in which<lb/>
the individual is registered. The<lb/>
Elections Board will then send the<lb/>
individual a ballot.<lb/>
The individual must then<lb/>
mark their ballot and have it<lb/>
notarized and mail it back to the<lb/>
Elections Board. The ballot must<lb/>
be postmarked by 6 p.m. on<lb/>
November 1.<lb/>
Starting on October 12, the<lb/>
East Carolina Young Democrats<lb/>
will have a table in the lobby of<lb/>
the old CU handing out the<lb/>
request cards. On Monday<lb/>
through Thursday October 25-28,<lb/>
the ECU-YDC will have Notary<lb/>
Publics in the lobby of the old CU<lb/>
to notarize the ballots for anyone<lb/>
voting by absentee ballot.<lb/>
The Pitt County Democratic<lb/>
Headquarters opened on October<lb/>
4. The Headquarters are located<lb/>
in the old Bill Haddock Chrysler<lb/>
building on Memorial Drive.<lb/>
Everyone is invited to visit the<lb/>
headquarters and give some of<lb/>
their time to the Democratic Party<lb/>
should they feel so inclined.<lb/>
The ECU-YDC will meet Oc-<lb/>
tober 20, at 7;30 p.m. in Room<lb/>
244 Mendenhall. Joel McCleary,<lb/>
Jimmy Carter's North Carolina<lb/>
Campaign Director will be here to<lb/>
speak to the group. All interested<lb/>
persons are invited and encour-<lb/>
aged to attend.<lb/>
RAZZ JAZZ<lb/>
RECORDS<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
6.98 LIST ALBUMS 490<lb/>
HEAD EQUIPMENT, JEWELRY, &amp; MORE<lb/>
COTANCHE ST. ACROSS FROM CLEMENT DORM<lb/>
WMHOMMMMM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0007"/><lb/>
?????????????????IBHMHBHBHBBiHHHHHHiHlHBHHMlHiHHBMHBiHHIiHiHHlHHIHHHHHiBlflHHBHHBi<lb/>
????????????????M<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
7<lb/>
m<lb/>
H??Pti<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mtmm<lb/>
ECU delegation attends NCSL<lb/>
ECU sent its North Carolina<lb/>
Student Legislature delegation to<lb/>
the first Interim Council of the<lb/>
1976-77 school year Saturday,<lb/>
Sept. 25th. The meeting was held<lb/>
at UNC-Greensboro.<lb/>
During the meeting several<lb/>
candidates or their representa-<lb/>
tives for statewide office gave<lb/>
campaign speeches. Asa Spalding<lb/>
(Rrp. for Sec. of State), Evelyn<lb/>
Tyler (Rep. for Sup. of Public<lb/>
Instruct.), Harlan Boyles (Dem.<lb/>
for Treas.), Jim Graham (Dem.<lb/>
for Comm. of Agriculture), and<lb/>
John Ingram (Dem. for Insurance<lb/>
Comm.) were among those repre-<lb/>
sented<lb/>
The meeting itself was gavel-<lb/>
ed to order at 9 a.m. The morning<lb/>
was devoted to standard organi-<lb/>
zational matters such as the<lb/>
approval of the new budget and<lb/>
approving new membership<lb/>
charters. At 11 a.m. the candi-<lb/>
dates' forum was held.<lb/>
After lunch the standing com-<lb/>
mittees of statewide study gather-<lb/>
ed and discussed their plans for<lb/>
the coming year. These standing<lb/>
committees include Education,<lb/>
Voter Registration, Coastal Land<lb/>
Management, Migrant and Sea-<lb/>
sonal Farm Workers, Juvenile<lb/>
Justice, and Membership.<lb/>
At 3 p.m. the committees ad-<lb/>
journed and the main body<lb/>
resumed its business. This con-<lb/>
sisted of the presentation of new<lb/>
resolutions to be voted on at the<lb/>
next Interim-council meeting, the<lb/>
announcing of new statewide<lb/>
appointments, and the final vote<lb/>
for the location of the next<lb/>
Interim-council meeting. The<lb/>
body voted UNC-CH as the site<lb/>
for the next meeting Sunday. Oct.<lb/>
24.<lb/>
By 4:30 p.m. all business had<lb/>
been finished and the meeting<lb/>
was gaveled to adjournment.<lb/>
The NCSL is a statewide<lb/>
non-partisan organization. It has<lb/>
been a leading force in joining<lb/>
students and their ideas together<lb/>
for the past 40 years. It has also<lb/>
provided an example and a model<lb/>
for other state student organi-<lb/>
zations.<lb/>
The NCSL is a concerned and<lb/>
active organization. Its activities<lb/>
are primarily focused on pro-<lb/>
blems within North Carolina. This<lb/>
organization has become a very<lb/>
important part of student partici-<lb/>
pation in state government. The<lb/>
NCSL is only one voice of the<lb/>
student population, but it is<lb/>
indeed a loud one.<lb/>
The way the NCSL is heard is<lb/>
by not only finding the problems<lb/>
in the state, but coming up with<lb/>
workable solutions. As mentioned<lb/>
earlier standing committees of<lb/>
statewide study are a major part<lb/>
of the organization. The purpose<lb/>
of these committees is to study a<lb/>
Priest referees<lb/>
nucleardebate<lb/>
By BECKY SWART<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Father Charles Mulholland,<lb/>
American Civil Liberties presi-<lb/>
dent, mediated at the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center Tuesday night<lb/>
debate over nuclear power.<lb/>
ECU physicist Dr. Carl Adler<lb/>
confronted anti-nuclear power<lb/>
speaker Ted Taylor over the<lb/>
feasibility of future nuclear ener-<lb/>
gy use.<lb/>
The topics discussed at the<lb/>
debate were the practical it v of<lb/>
other energy sources versus<lb/>
nuclear energy and their effect on<lb/>
civil libert'es.<lb/>
According to Ted Taylor the<lb/>
meeting ooncerns "nuclear ener-<lb/>
gy and civil liberties, that is,<lb/>
physical power and social pow-<lb/>
er<lb/>
Mr. Taylor mentioned seven<lb/>
hazards of nuclear power and<lb/>
suggested the phase out of<lb/>
nuclear power.<lb/>
Dr. Adler suggested breeder<lb/>
reactors andor converter react-<lb/>
as should replace conventional<lb/>
nuclear power.<lb/>
FATHER CHARLES<lb/>
MULHOLLAND<lb/>
Real estate symposium<lb/>
scheduled for Oct. 20<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Rho Epsilon, ECU's profes-<lb/>
sional real estate fraternity, and<lb/>
the North Carolina Association of<lb/>
Realtors(NCAR) will co-sponsor a<lb/>
real estate symposium on Oct. 20<lb/>
on the ECU campus.<lb/>
The symposium will take plaoe<lb/>
in Room 244 of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center from 10 a.m. to 4<lb/>
p.m. Topics of discussion will<lb/>
include various subjects in the<lb/>
real estate field. Subjects to be<lb/>
covered will be appraisal, broker-<lb/>
age, development, real property<lb/>
law, banking, dynamic women in<lb/>
real estate and real estate as a<lb/>
profession.<lb/>
Some of the better known<lb/>
professionals in the Greenville<lb/>
and Raleigh area will serve as<lb/>
guest speakers on these areas.<lb/>
Included on the agenda wiH be<lb/>
B,d Wheeles, a local Greenville<lb/>
broker; Les Turnage and Sid<lb/>
9<lb/>
m<lb/>
Bailey, of Turnage Realty; Bill<lb/>
Clark, of Lanco Realty; David<lb/>
Duffus, of Howard, Vincent and<lb/>
McDuffus law firm in Greenville<lb/>
and Claude Pope, president of<lb/>
Cameron Brown Loan Co. of<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
Speaking on women in real<lb/>
estate will be Jeannette Cox of<lb/>
Jeannette Cox Realty and presi-<lb/>
dent of the Pitt County Board of<lb/>
Realtors; Ruth Oliver, chairper-<lb/>
son for the NCAR, and Sue<lb/>
Hobgood of David Godwin Realty.<lb/>
Jim Bichsel, the president of<lb/>
NCAR will speak on "Real Estate<lb/>
as a Profession<lb/>
The symposium will be the<lb/>
first of its kind ever held at ECU<lb/>
and is also the first symposium<lb/>
ever held at a North Carolina<lb/>
university which has been co-<lb/>
sponsored by the NCAR.<lb/>
"The symposium is supposed<lb/>
to serve a two-fold purpose said<lb/>
Rho Epsilon President Teresa<lb/>
Whisenant. "First, it is supposed<lb/>
to serve the real estate students<lb/>
by giving them a view of the<lb/>
profession from the vantage point<lb/>
of people in the field. Seoc idly, it<lb/>
is to give those not studying real<lb/>
estate a chance to see the<lb/>
profession as it really is.<lb/>
The North Carolina Associ-<lb/>
ation of REALTORS annually<lb/>
gives the Rho Epsilon fraternity<lb/>
$5,000 as a trust fund for students<lb/>
studying the real estate profes-<lb/>
sion at ECU.<lb/>
Rho Epsilon expects over 125<lb/>
persons to attend the symposium,<lb/>
which is free to the general public<lb/>
as well as members of the<lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
A banquet will be held<lb/>
following the symposium in the<lb/>
evening at the Candlewick Inn for<lb/>
the members of Rho Epsilon and<lb/>
the guest speakers.<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins will honor<lb/>
Dean James Beardin of the<lb/>
Business Department at the key-<lb/>
note address of the symposium.<lb/>
MMMMMOTMMPi<lb/>
particular problem which is perti-<lb/>
nent to the times in the state and<lb/>
firid a way to resolve it.<lb/>
Every year in the spring the<lb/>
NCSL holds a iive-day convention<lb/>
in Raleigh. This is when all the<lb/>
delegations come together to<lb/>
introduce the bills and resolutions<lb/>
each delegation has written at<lb/>
their respective colleges and<lb/>
universities. At this convention<lb/>
all the legislation is seen and<lb/>
studied in a committee system<lb/>
very similar to that in the General<lb/>
Assembly of North Carolina. This<lb/>
is so all delegations will have an<lb/>
influence as to how the legislation<lb/>
appears in final form. If the<lb/>
legislation passes the chambers<lb/>
of the NCSL a oopy of each bill<lb/>
and resolution is sent to every<lb/>
Council of State and Legislator<lb/>
in North Carolina. So far well over<lb/>
40 percent of all bills passed by<lb/>
the NCSL have eventually become<lb/>
state law.<lb/>
The ECU delegation has been<lb/>
one of the leading delegations in<lb/>
NCSL for many years. Bills<lb/>
written by ECU last year provided<lb/>
for a system of voter registration<lb/>
by mail and dealt with the<lb/>
controversial issue of Euthanasia<lb/>
(death with dignity). ECU was<lb/>
awarded honorable mention for<lb/>
best delegation again last year,<lb/>
and many ECU delegates were<lb/>
nominated for the Douglas<lb/>
Carlysle Award, the highest<lb/>
award an individual can receive<lb/>
from NCSL.<lb/>
The ECU delegation of NCSL<lb/>
will open its doors to all interest-<lb/>
ed ECU undergraduate students<lb/>
during its membership drive this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
You can have a voice in North<lb/>
Carolina. Get involved and do<lb/>
something about the problems of<lb/>
North Carolina, Join NCSL and be<lb/>
heard.<lb/>
Playboy cites rise<lb/>
in co-eds' sex life<lb/>
(CPS)-Women college stu-<lb/>
dents are more sexually active<lb/>
than they were six years ago and<lb/>
there is an increase in the number<lb/>
of male virgins, according to a<lb/>
study reported in the October<lb/>
issue of Playboy magazine.<lb/>
The study found that 49<lb/>
percent of the college women<lb/>
polled in 1970 said they grad-<lb/>
uated with their virginity unvio-<lb/>
lated. That figure decreased to 26<lb/>
percent this year.<lb/>
Male virgins increased from<lb/>
18 percent in 1970 to 26 per cent in<lb/>
1976.<lb/>
"This magical equality of<lb/>
percentages means that students<lb/>
have arrived at that promised<lb/>
land-a sexual Utopia where the<lb/>
women are just as active sexually<lb/>
as the men Plavbov said.<lb/>
COME SAVE WITH<lb/>
GIANT<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
HEALTH &amp;<lb/>
BEAUTY AIDS<lb/>
429 EVANS MALL<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
MORNING STAR GALLERY<lb/>
JIM WHALENS PARADOX POTTERY,<lb/>
DRAWINGS , AND COLLAGES<lb/>
DURING OCTOBER.<lb/>
MORNING STAR<lb/>
applied and fine arts<lb/>
-Handmade pottery -Planters<lb/>
-Wall hangings -Mirrors<lb/>
-Prints, Photographs, Drawing<lb/>
403-A Evans St. On The Mall Upstairs<lb/>
umm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0008"/><lb/>
-i rwa-ren; Wgh<lb/>
?????????????PH<lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
t ??mi i in mnn<lb/>
m<lb/>
( I !??<lb/>
???<lb/>
?M<lb/>
Fourth Costa Rica trip scheduled<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
ECU is making plans for its<lb/>
fourth Costa Rica foreign studies<lb/>
program under the direction of<lb/>
Dr. Robert R. Cramer, professor<lb/>
of geography.<lb/>
The program is designed to<lb/>
give up to 18 ECU students an<lb/>
opportunity to study in a foreign<lb/>
environment and to gain better<lb/>
understanding of people in a<lb/>
different culture, according to<lb/>
Cramer.<lb/>
ECU operates in conjunction<lb/>
with the Universidad National in<lb/>
Heredes, the capital of Costa<lb/>
Rica, in providing students a<lb/>
chance to earn 18-28 quarter<lb/>
hours credit or 15-18 semester<lb/>
hours credit in many various<lb/>
courses but in a foreign oountry.<lb/>
The courses to be offered in<lb/>
English at the Costa Rican<lb/>
university will be selected in<lb/>
social studies, humanities,<lb/>
natural sciences and field study.<lb/>
Additional courses in Spanish<lb/>
are available through Costa Rican<lb/>
professors, according to Cramer.<lb/>
TAXES<lb/>
Continued from page 1. <lb/>
According to Register, tax<lb/>
status has nothing to do with<lb/>
residency.<lb/>
"We have people paying<lb/>
taxes on personal property and<lb/>
they can't register because their<lb/>
place of permanent residence is in<lb/>
another county said Register.<lb/>
Register went on to say that<lb/>
voting status is determined on an<lb/>
individual basis and that she did<lb/>
not have the final say.<lb/>
The ECU Student Government<lb/>
Association (SGA) is in the<lb/>
process of finding funds, other<lb/>
than state funds, to finance<lb/>
individual suits which would<lb/>
challenge the voter registration<lb/>
ruling.<lb/>
"We are going to pursue it<lb/>
said Tim Sullivan, SGA presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
"SGA funds are state funds<lb/>
and, therefore, cannot be used to<lb/>
fa outside legal firms to fi-<lb/>
nance said Sullivan.<lb/>
"You can't bring a class<lb/>
action suit in cases of representa-<lb/>
tion, " according to Sullivan.<lb/>
The basis for the individual<lb/>
suits will be "no taxation without<lb/>
representation Sullivan com-<lb/>
mented.<lb/>
"If you're a resident for<lb/>
taxation, then you're a resident<lb/>
for representation said Sulli-<lb/>
van.<lb/>
"We have had several stu-<lb/>
dents come in and attempt to<lb/>
register according to Register.<lb/>
These students are usually<lb/>
turned down due to their inability<lb/>
to prove permanent residence,<lb/>
said Register.<lb/>
"What is permanent resi-<lb/>
dence and what is temporary<lb/>
residence is a debatable ques-<lb/>
tion according to Sullivan.<lb/>
"I don't expect these suits to<lb/>
change the tax status, but do<lb/>
expect them to dearly define the<lb/>
students' rights commented<lb/>
Sullivan.<lb/>
Credits, grades and quality<lb/>
points earned in this program are<lb/>
directly transferred back to ECU.<lb/>
ECU students in the program<lb/>
will take classes during the week<lb/>
and go on field trips every other<lb/>
weekend within Costa Rica.<lb/>
Cramer, who will aocompany<lb/>
the students, plans to also<lb/>
conduct field trips to other<lb/>
Central American countries.<lb/>
Students who participate in<lb/>
the program are required to pay<lb/>
the equivalent of one ECU<lb/>
semester's tuition and fees plus a<lb/>
$450 program fee which includes<lb/>
expenses for the ECU director,<lb/>
Costa Rican professors, field<lb/>
trips, guest lectures, etc totaling<lb/>
$591 for North Carolina residents<lb/>
and $1,415 for non-residents.<lb/>
Students live with Costa Rican<lb/>
families and pay less than $90<lb/>
total per month fa room and<lb/>
board, meals and laundry service<lb/>
provided by the families.<lb/>
This faeign study program is<lb/>
available to all students regard-<lb/>
less of maja, mina a classifi-<lb/>
cation and is not directed towards<lb/>
studying geography, acoading to<lb/>
Cramer.<lb/>
"The geography dept. got it<lb/>
started in 1973, but it is open to<lb/>
any interested students he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The program begins July 25,<lb/>
1977 and runs through Nov. 7,<lb/>
1977 which is one month befae<lb/>
the regular ECU semester begins<lb/>
and ends.<lb/>
"We are pushing it now so<lb/>
that students who wish to go can<lb/>
plan ahead and discuss what<lb/>
courses they wish to take. Also, it<lb/>
takes time to secure passpats,<lb/>
etc. and planning ahead waks<lb/>
much better than trying to rush<lb/>
everything at the last minute he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
ECU has offered other such<lb/>
programs in the past in Germany,<lb/>
Rome and Japan.<lb/>
Costa Rica was chosen, how-<lb/>
ever, because the other oountries<lb/>
were so expensive and their<lb/>
governments were unstable, ac-<lb/>
oading to Cramer.<lb/>
Registration deadline fa the<lb/>
program is Feb. 15, 1977.<lb/>
Students are required to pay a<lb/>
refundable $50 deposit by March,<lb/>
1977.<lb/>
For further information,<lb/>
Cramer may be reached in<lb/>
Brewster Building, Room A-222<lb/>
a called at his office, 752-6230, a<lb/>
at hone, 756-1767.<lb/>
At 40, Fred Parhatn<lb/>
had an accident which cost<lb/>
him his job in the foundry.<lb/>
He went to school<lb/>
and became a<lb/>
technical illustrator.<lb/>
Fred Parham couldn't do the<lb/>
work he did, so he learned to do the<lb/>
work he liked. You can do the same.<lb/>
There are over one million technical<lb/>
opportunities available in this country<lb/>
right now.<lb/>
Send today for your free record<lb/>
and booklet, "You Can Be More Than<lb/>
You Are" by Tony Orlando and Dawn.<lb/>
You'll hear some great music<lb/>
and find out how you<lb/>
can start a bright,<lb/>
new career by going<lb/>
to technical school.<lb/>
Write:<lb/>
Careers<lb/>
P.O. Box 111<lb/>
Washington, D.C. 20044<lb/>
A Public Service of This Newspaper &amp; The Advertising Council<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
nm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmtm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0009"/><lb/>
?????????<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
9<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
itmtmtm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Scheduled to play Oct. 31<lb/>
Murphy, Cheech&amp;Chong booked<lb/>
The Major Attractions Com-<lb/>
mittee of the ECU Student Union<lb/>
combines the talents of two<lb/>
outstanding acts to climax the<lb/>
homecoming concert weekend.<lb/>
MICHAEL MURPHEY, along<lb/>
with the comedy team of<lb/>
CHEECH AND CHONG will<lb/>
appear in concert on Sunday,<lb/>
October 31 at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Today, having three gold<lb/>
albums and a fourth one which<lb/>
shipped gold, CHEECH AND<lb/>
CHONG have attained the top<lb/>
rung of superstar status. Not only<lb/>
do they perform before sdd-out<lb/>
ooncerts around the country, but<lb/>
hey also resurrect the medium of<lb/>
he comedy album and brought it<lb/>
o a popularity and a power never<lb/>
xefore attained-even in its hey-<lb/>
day in the early-to-mid sixties<lb/>
before the medium fell on hard<lb/>
times.<lb/>
Additionally, in this age of the<lb/>
music mystique and power,<lb/>
CHEECH AND CHUNG's come-<lb/>
dy albums outsell all but a<lb/>
handful of the rock superstars.<lb/>
Mere statistics cannot properly<lb/>
emphasize their special effect and<lb/>
niche on the current scene.<lb/>
However, both their first two<lb/>
albums were multiple Grammy<lb/>
nominees; "CHEECH AND<lb/>
CHONG" sold more than one<lb/>
million copies; "BIG BAMBU"<lb/>
sold more than 1 Vz million; 1973<lb/>
Grammy Award Winning "LOS<lb/>
COCHINOS" has sold more than<lb/>
112 million and is still at the top of<lb/>
the charts. "BIG BAMBU" was<lb/>
also the number one comedy<lb/>
album of 1972; "CHEECH AND<lb/>
CHONG" was number two.<lb/>
MICHAEL MURPHEY is an<lb/>
artist, humanist, and an outstand-<lb/>
ing songwriter. After studying<lb/>
classical Greek at North Texas<lb/>
State University, Michael moved<lb/>
to Los Angeles where he lived for<lb/>
six years. In that period, he<lb/>
composed over 400 songs for<lb/>
Screen Gems and played bass for<lb/>
various groups. By the time 1970<lb/>
rolled around, Murphey had<lb/>
earned himself a reputation as<lb/>
one of the most gifted young<lb/>
lyricists in the country, with his<lb/>
songs being recorded by such<lb/>
artists as BOBBY GENTRY,<lb/>
FLATT AND SCRUGGS, ROGER<lb/>
MILLER, THE MONKEES, and<lb/>
THE FIRST EDITION.<lb/>
This increasing notoriety led<lb/>
to a recording contract with A &amp;<lb/>
M Records in 1971 .Bob Johnston,<lb/>
the celebrated producer of re-<lb/>
cords by such artists as BOB<lb/>
DYLAN, LEONARD COHEN,<lb/>
JOHNNY CASH and other, had<lb/>
long been an admirer and an<lb/>
associate of Murphey1 sand it was<lb/>
logical that he was the one to<lb/>
produce Michael's debut album<lb/>
"GERONIMO's CADILLAC<lb/>
and its successor, "COSMIC<lb/>
COWBOY SOUVENIR<lb/>
In the middle of 1973, Mur-<lb/>
phey left A &amp; M and, several<lb/>
months later, was signed to an<lb/>
exclusive recording contract with<lb/>
Epic Records. With Bob Johnston<lb/>
still at his side, Michael imme-<lb/>
diately re-entered the studio with<lb/>
the end result being his first Epic<lb/>
album, simply entitled<lb/>
"MICHAEL MURPHEY The<lb/>
album was received exceptionally<lb/>
well by critics all across the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Ater a year of extensive<lb/>
touring around the United States,<lb/>
M urphey once again turned to the<lb/>
studio, and his fourth album,<lb/>
"BLUE SKY NIGHT THUNDER"<lb/>
released in March 1976. Another<lb/>
Johnston production job, the<lb/>
album contains Murphey's hot-<lb/>
test single to date, "WILDFIRE"<lb/>
a song whose popularity indicated<lb/>
that Murphey is finally beginning<lb/>
to break through to audiences in<lb/>
areas outside the Southwest,<lb/>
where he is well established.<lb/>
Tickets for the concert are<lb/>
priced at $2.00 for ECU Students<lb/>
and $4.00 for the Public All<lb/>
tickets sold at the door will be<lb/>
priced at $4.00. Tickets are<lb/>
available from the ECU Central<lb/>
Ticket Office, and public tickets<lb/>
are available from the Record Bar<lb/>
at Pitt Plaza.<lb/>
Hoffman and Dern, two sides of stardom<lb/>
By BARBARA LEWIS<lb/>
Bruce Dern is still waiting for<lb/>
stardom, that eerie position<lb/>
where he will be able to pick and<lb/>
choose the roles he wants to play.<lb/>
He's almost made it. with meaty<lb/>
roles in "The Great Gatsby and<lb/>
most recently, in Hitchcock's<lb/>
"Family Plot Now he's hoping<lb/>
that his leading role in Para-<lb/>
mount' s" Black Sunday" will put<lb/>
him over the summit.<lb/>
"Being a good actor is not<lb/>
enough says the lanky, long-<lb/>
faced actor. "Like Shakespeare<lb/>
sa d, 'the play's the thing but in<lb/>
this instance, it's a commercial<lb/>
film that counts. Producers and<lb/>
studios are only interested in<lb/>
filmsthat make money. If an actor<lb/>
is in money-making film, he gets<lb/>
his choice of roles. Right now, I<lb/>
have plenty of offers, I've been<lb/>
working oonstantly, but I haven't<lb/>
reached that plateau yet where I<lb/>
can afford to turn down roles, like<lb/>
Redford and Newman can<lb/>
Dern has immersed himself int<lb/>
the role of a returned POW who<lb/>
was tortured by the Vietnamese.<lb/>
He has had nightmares thinking<lb/>
about the captured pilot cramped<lb/>
up in a wired tiger cage.<lb/>
"When I think about him, I<lb/>
get claustrophobia Dern con-<lb/>
tends. "I'm a guy who likes to<lb/>
run. I get out and jog every<lb/>
morning before I report to the set.<lb/>
When I'm not working-and that<lb/>
Teleview<lb/>
Handsome Gemini Man fades<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
"The Gemini Man" will be<lb/>
lucky if it doesn't fade out before<lb/>
the Fall television season is over.<lb/>
Slotted against "Welcome Back<lb/>
K otter "The Waltons and<lb/>
 Barney Miller the show seems<lb/>
to be standing on shaky ground.<lb/>
In fact, surviving through this<lb/>
season may be Sam Casey's<lb/>
toughest assignment.<lb/>
Not being a TV addict, I asked<lb/>
myself why this was the only<lb/>
show that I had watched so far<lb/>
this fall. It wasn't for the<lb/>
inspiring redeeming social value.<lb/>
I finally hit on the answer when I<lb/>
discovered myself panting in<lb/>
front of the set.<lb/>
It was the episode where<lb/>
Casey goes to a tennis camp and<lb/>
is seduced and abducted by a<lb/>
Mata Hari type, who is his<lb/>
instructor. There I was, trying to<lb/>
do my homework, and only<lb/>
? i nip ? hi u imiMiii i m<lb/>
halfway paying attention to the<lb/>
tube, when out walked Ben<lb/>
Murphy in tennis shorts, looking<lb/>
like a pro (tennis or no tennis).<lb/>
After I pried myself off of the<lb/>
screen and had somewhat regain-<lb/>
ed my composure, I sat back to<lb/>
enjoy 60 minutes of the corniest<lb/>
plot and script that any producer<lb/>
ever dared to put on TV. But it<lb/>
was great. There was no effort<lb/>
involved in keeping track of what<lb/>
was going on, just a lot of action<lb/>
shots of Murphy doing what he<lb/>
does best-looking fantastic.<lb/>
I don't know how the rest of<lb/>
the American public will react to<lb/>
 Gemini Man but the set in my<lb/>
dorm room will be turned on to it<lb/>
every Thursday night. I know it's<lb/>
not a good show, but who cares?<lb/>
It's television, after all. Who says<lb/>
that a show has to be worthwhile<lb/>
to be fun?<lb/>
The dialogue is so stilted that<lb/>
it's funny. There was one really<lb/>
enthralling line in the episode<lb/>
about the tennis camp. After<lb/>
"Mata Hari" had seduced our<lb/>
dashing hero, and stabbed him in<lb/>
the neck with a poison hat pin,<lb/>
she and some thug rushed Casey<lb/>
off to the middle of the desert to<lb/>
do away with him. They placed<lb/>
him in an abandoned cave, and lit<lb/>
the fuse to the dynamite, which<lb/>
would bury him under 500 tons of<lb/>
rock.<lb/>
As the villainess was making<lb/>
her retreat, she turned slowly and<lb/>
said in a would-be melodramatic<lb/>
tone, "Sam Casey, I hate to see<lb/>
you go. You were a fantastic<lb/>
kisser I laughed for ten min-<lb/>
utes.<lb/>
So, the most that can be said<lb/>
for "Gemini Man" is that it's a<lb/>
good break from studying, and<lb/>
the ordinary humdrum routine.<lb/>
The worst you can say about it is<lb/>
that, realistically, it is probably<lb/>
the worst show on TV. Next<lb/>
season, there will more than<lb/>
likely be another polioe story in its<lb/>
Thursday night slot. And they call<lb/>
that progress!<lb/>
hasn't been often lately?I run up<lb/>
the character as if he existed. It is<lb/>
his own acting style, which he<lb/>
refers to as "immersion" rather<lb/>
than "method<lb/>
 I tried to think about what it<lb/>
was like to be isolated from<lb/>
people, no one to talk to,<lb/>
completely detached. I suddenly<lb/>
took on all of his personality traits<lb/>
and I became a miserable and<lb/>
unhappy psrson<lb/>
Dern chose an inopportune<lb/>
time to throw himself into the<lb/>
character, he says. "I took my<lb/>
wife to Paris and I ended up<lb/>
hating the place. I looked at<lb/>
everyone suspiciously and argued<lb/>
oonstantly with my wife, with<lb/>
waiters, with drivers-with every-<lb/>
one. It wasn't me; I was acting<lb/>
out the role<lb/>
In "Black Sunday based on<lb/>
the best-selling novel by Thomas<lb/>
Harris, Dern plays an emotionally<lb/>
disturbed veteran who pilots the<lb/>
television blimp covering the<lb/>
Superbowl. Mike Lander, the<lb/>
character portrayed by Dern, is<lb/>
unable to find a job piloting a<lb/>
commercial plane when he is<lb/>
released from the POW camp and<lb/>
seeks vengeance by volunteering<lb/>
to participate in an Arab terrorist<lb/>
plot to bomb the football stadium.<lb/>
Swiss-born Marthe Keller,<lb/>
who made her American film debut<lb/>
in "Marathon Man which has<lb/>
not yet been released, plays a<lb/>
leader of the Black September<lb/>
organization that engineers the<lb/>
attack on the Orange Bowl.<lb/>
Marthe Keller found her role<lb/>
in "Black Sunday more challeng-<lb/>
ing than the part she played in<lb/>
Marathon Man<lb/>
"Now I have to think terrible<lb/>
things to make me appear upset.<lb/>
Everyone is pleasant and easy to<lb/>
work with. But when I was<lb/>
working with Dustin, it was<lb/>
different. He was always losing<lb/>
his temper and making me ay, so<lb/>
it was easy to play that part on<lb/>
screen<lb/>
Hoffman and Academy Award<lb/>
winning director John Schlesing-<lb/>
er had constant differences while<lb/>
shooting "Marathon Man after<lb/>
Laurence Olivier had completed<lb/>
See STARS, page 10.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
MOTHER KELLER and Dustin<lb/>
Hoffman on the set of "Marathon<lb/>
Man a soon-to-be released flick<lb/>
iimi i unm m inmniio<lb/>
directed by John Schlesinger, and<lb/>
featuring Lawrence Olivier.<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0010"/><lb/>
????????????B<lb/>
HHBHBIHBBH<lb/>
10<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmmmmmgm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
?<lb/>
?Wi-Wg<lb/>
v<lb/>
Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope<lb/>
By DA VID R. BOSNICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Tom Mallow production<lb/>
of Don't Bother Me I Can't Cope,<lb/>
presented at Wright Auditorium<lb/>
on October 7, was marvelous, not<lb/>
because of what it says, but what it<lb/>
does. It leaps at you from the start<lb/>
and catches you in a vortex of<lb/>
music and pulsing rhythm. At the<lb/>
close, one is left entertained,<lb/>
amused, desirous, sensitized and<lb/>
embarrassed, but not intimidated<lb/>
by this symbol of the black<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
There is no doubt that the<lb/>
musical is dated. The ideas<lb/>
behind most of the songs have<lb/>
long been made clear. The<lb/>
essence of a musical is not its<lb/>
meaning, but in the energy and<lb/>
effervescence it creates. This<lb/>
musical is ethnic by nature, not<lb/>
by intent. It is not a pointed<lb/>
accusation, but rather an inner-<lb/>
vating and sometimes mournful<lb/>
statement of the generally poor<lb/>
human condition.<lb/>
Presented were the most<lb/>
talented group of players that<lb/>
ECU has entertained in this<lb/>
reviewer's memory. The talents<lb/>
ranged from the eloquence of<lb/>
Elijah Gill's physical symmetry to<lb/>
the vocal immensity of Elaine<lb/>
Holloman. These two alone would<lb/>
ensure a good performance, yet<lb/>
the addition of the strong and<lb/>
playful Bill Dorsey sets the work<lb/>
reeling from side to side as the<lb/>
energy moves through the pro-<lb/>
duction numbers.<lb/>
There was excellent juxta-<lb/>
position of songs as when Ms.<lb/>
Worthington intoned the soft "It<lb/>
Takes a Whole Lot of Human<lb/>
Feeling then switched to a<lb/>
frenetic "My Love's So Good<lb/>
The troupe had 27 songs to<lb/>
perform, and while music oc-<lb/>
casionally lapsed into the medi-<lb/>
ocre (Motown, Marvin Gaye), the<lb/>
energy did not diminish.<lb/>
A major facet of this pro-<lb/>
duction that must be singled out<lb/>
is the work of the choreographer,<lb/>
Edmond Kresly. He has a true<lb/>
sense of erotic motion, fluid<lb/>
motion, and the pure job of<lb/>
rhythmic movement. His ability<lb/>
to crystallize these differences<lb/>
and blend them into the series of<lb/>
vignettes that is "Cope" is his<lb/>
genius. The dance often moves<lb/>
the show when the vitality of the<lb/>
cast cannot overoome the lethragy<lb/>
of the lyrics and melody.<lb/>
There is symbolism in this<lb/>
work that was to epitomize<lb/>
aspects of black existence. It is to<lb/>
the credit of the director Vingette<lb/>
Carroll that she doesn't allow the<lb/>
show to bog itself down to<lb/>
needless rhetoric or militancy.<lb/>
It is a shame that ECU, which<lb/>
has protested the lack of quality<lb/>
entertainment, oould only half fill<lb/>
ancient Wright Auditorium. This<lb/>
show was of Broadway caliber<lb/>
and stellar energy. The pro-<lb/>
duction number, "Good Vi-<lb/>
brations" is the single most<lb/>
dynamic medley of song and<lb/>
dance presented at ECU in four<lb/>
years. It is your sorrow if you<lb/>
missed it.<lb/>
STARS<lb/>
Continued from page 9.<lb/>
the role. Out of deference to<lb/>
Olivier, Hoffman apparently con-<lb/>
trolled his temper until the<lb/>
distinguished actor's departure.<lb/>
But the following day, Hoffman<lb/>
stormed off the set after a volatile<lb/>
exchange with Schlesinger, who<lb/>
had directed him in "Midnight<lb/>
Cowboy<lb/>
Schlesinger asked Hoffman to<lb/>
walk through a scene with<lb/>
Marthe. The actor started and<lb/>
then stopped short. "It's not<lb/>
right he said to the director.<lb/>
"Don't worry about it, Dusty.<lb/>
I know what I'm doing. I'll take<lb/>
care of it in the editing<lb/>
"Man, it's not right. It's not<lb/>
organic the actor repeated<lb/>
several times.<lb/>
"Believe me, Dusty, it'll<lb/>
work Schlesinger insisted.<lb/>
Hoffman shouted a number of<lb/>
expletives, kicked the floor and<lb/>
stormed out, pausing briefly to air<lb/>
his oomplaints to Robert Evans,<lb/>
the producer. Evans, who had<lb/>
been president of Paramount<lb/>
before becoming an independent<lb/>
producer, found himself with a<lb/>
new role as a moderator.<lb/>
If the movie becomes a<lb/>
financial success, it may have<lb/>
been worth it. At any rate, it was<lb/>
an auspicious beginning for<lb/>
Marthe Keller, and contributed to<lb/>
her knowledge of English.<lb/>
"I learned many new words<lb/>
from Dustin that I didn't learn in<lb/>
English class the European star<lb/>
observed.<lb/>
KETTVI CARRAONE<lb/>
Urn Easy<lb/>
On Sale October 1-21<lb/>
!?:<lb/>
THE BEACH BOYS<lb/>
IS Big Ones<lb/>
Inriudet the KB Rod. and Rol Mi?<lb/>
Also Inrkxtes Chape of Love<lb/>
TMSongfafctoMe<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
ORLEANS<lb/>
Waking and Dreaming<lb/>
UNDA RONSTADT<lb/>
Hasten Down The Wnd<lb/>
<lb/>
"live MciJaU&amp;'7'iaiAleA<lb/>
COMING OUT<lb/>
JAMES TAYLOR<lb/>
In the Pocket<lb/>
Includes Shower the People<lb/>
Money Machine FamtfyMan<lb/>
Slow Burning Love<lb/>
JUDY COLLINS<lb/>
Bread And Roses<lb/>
HAPPINEbS IS BEING WITH THE<lb/>
SPINNERS<lb/>
t 5 <lb/>
1i5?<lb/>
GORDON<lb/>
UGHTFOOT<lb/>
Summer rim<lb/>
Dream<lb/>
Includes<lb/>
Neve Too Close<lb/>
Protocol<lb/>
Spanish Moss<lb/>
Id Doli Agon<lb/>
HARRY CHAPIN<lb/>
Greatest Stories-Live<lb/>
$4.99 LP; $6.99 Tape<lb/>
Harry Chapin: 2-Record Set<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
10-9 Mon-Sat.<lb/>
wmmmnmmtm<lb/>
?<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0011"/><lb/>
MHHHHHHHIHHBIBIHBHBHOTIH<lb/>
????<lb/>
SEE ? 'mm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. b2, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
11<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<lb/>
mmmt<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Salukis fall to running Pirates<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Even with experience of form-<lb/>
er professional football player<lb/>
Gayle Savers in their camp.<lb/>
Southern Illinois oould not oope<lb/>
with East Carolina's strong run-<lb/>
ning game as the Pirates rolled to<lb/>
a 49-14 win over the Salukis<lb/>
Saturday right in front of 16,200<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium fans.<lb/>
The former Chicago Bear<lb/>
running back is in his first year at<lb/>
SIU as is head football coach Rey<lb/>
Dempsey and the two newcomers<lb/>
have seen the Salukis win three<lb/>
games (the same as the last two<lb/>
years put together), but the<lb/>
Pirates turned out to be too<lb/>
formidable an opponent for the<lb/>
Salukis.<lb/>
ECU rushed for 491 yards<lb/>
against the Salukis while passing<lb/>
for 40. The Pirate defense held<lb/>
Southern Illinois to 49 yards<lb/>
rushing and 181 yards total.<lb/>
"I was having a difficult time<lb/>
keeping up with everything that<lb/>
was going on out there tonight<lb/>
head coach Pat Dye said following<lb/>
the game. "I thought we did a<lb/>
good job overall but we made an<lb/>
awful lot of mistakes. Our coach-<lb/>
ing staff did the job this week.<lb/>
The kids were approaching this<lb/>
game as if we were playing State<lb/>
or Carolina.<lb/>
"Coach Dempsey did a good<lb/>
job also Dye added. "Their kids<lb/>
oould have laid down and quit,<lb/>
but they kept ooming back<lb/>
Three ECU players topped the<lb/>
oentury mark in rushing in the<lb/>
game with Eddie Hicks leading<lb/>
the way with 172 yards on 21<lb/>
carries. Willie Hawkins picked up<lb/>
112 on 18 rushes while reserve<lb/>
quarterback, Pete Conaty, carried<lb/>
ten times for 103 yards.<lb/>
Conaty saw an unusual a-<lb/>
mount of time playing as the<lb/>
Pirate field general.<lb/>
"We've always known Pete<lb/>
was a fine quarterback Dye<lb/>
stated. "He's a fine all-round<lb/>
football player and an excellent<lb/>
kicker. But we've not been using<lb/>
him enough at quarterback.<lb/>
Mike's (Weaver) a great quarter-<lb/>
back, but we've not been giving<lb/>
him enough rest. I don't know<lb/>
why because Pete is a great as a<lb/>
signal-caller<lb/>
PERFECTION ENDS<lb/>
Although Conaty had a near-<lb/>
perfect game at quarterback, he<lb/>
lost a oouple of streaks as a<lb/>
place-kicker. The senior from<lb/>
Annandale, Va. went into the<lb/>
game with 11 extra points without<lb/>
missing and ten straight field<lb/>
goals.<lb/>
On the Pirates' second pos-<lb/>
session, Mike Weaver flipped a<lb/>
25-yard touchdown pass to tight<lb/>
end Clay Burnett. On the try for<lb/>
the extra point attempt, Conaty<lb/>
missed the kick.<lb/>
In the middle of the second<lb/>
period, with the Pirates facing a<lb/>
fourth-and-twelve at the Salukis'<lb/>
25-yard line, Dye elected to try for<lb/>
the three-pointer. Kicking against<lb/>
a strong cross-wind, Conaty had<lb/>
the distance but the wind pulled<lb/>
the ball wide right of the<lb/>
uprights.<lb/>
Dye said he was "disappoint-<lb/>
ed Pete missed getting the record<lb/>
CLAY BURNETTE 86 sprints into end zone after catching 25yard pass from Mike Weaver.<lb/>
but we had to try it, we needed<lb/>
the points. I'm sure Pete is<lb/>
disappointed, but I know he<lb/>
understands we had to try it<lb/>
PI RATES DOM I NATE<lb/>
ECU'S defense thoroughly<lb/>
dominated the first half of play as<lb/>
See FOOTBALL, page 14.<lb/>
Bill Keyes<lb/>
I Athletes weather storm<lb/>
MMMMMMM<lb/>
FINAL TEAM STATS<lb/>
SIUECU<lb/>
First Downs1025<lb/>
Rushes-Yards36-4976491<lb/>
Passing Yards13240<lb/>
Return Yards7185<lb/>
Passes (A-C-l)26-14-46-2-1<lb/>
Punts-Aug.9-453-42<lb/>
Fumbles-Lost1-08-3<lb/>
Penalties-Yards11-10411-136<lb/>
 <lb/>
Sports<lb/>
ANDREA HERRERA 28 is<lb/>
stopped by Steve Hale 10, John<lb/>
Morris83 and Nick Bullock 71<lb/>
for little gain. Entering the game<lb/>
as the nation's seventh leading<lb/>
rusher, Herrera was held to 74<lb/>
yards. Photo by Kip Sloan.<lb/>
Many of the world's great athletes have managed to get themselves<lb/>
into jams by falling short of their own or the fans' expectations<lb/>
sportswise or by doing something to vent the fans' ire. But the truly<lb/>
great ones also manage to weather the storms. Dwight Stones has<lb/>
proven to be one of the truly great ones.<lb/>
In 1973 the teen-age high-jumper leaped to a world reoord of 7 feet.<lb/>
6V2 inches. Then at the NCAA track and field championships in June of<lb/>
this year, Stones jumped to 7' T' and a new world record, making him a<lb/>
favorite for the upcoming Olympics. Stones was expected to oome home<lb/>
from Montreal a gold medal winner, but things didn't work out fa<lb/>
Stones as expected. First of all, he oomplained to Canadian reporters<lb/>
about such matters as the unfinished stadium and the lengthy check-in<lb/>
process before events and how they oould affect athletes' performances.<lb/>
The Canadians who predominated the crowd of 50,000 at the Olympic<lb/>
Stadium reacted to Stones' remarks by booing during his qualifying<lb/>
leaps.<lb/>
He had already apologized and given clarifying statements to the<lb/>
press and the Canadian spectators stilt reacted negatively, so not to be<lb/>
outdone by the crowd, the flamboyant Stones blew kisses to the fans<lb/>
after easily clearing qualifying heights and later said of their reaction,<lb/>
"It'snot gonna bother me. In fact, I allow it to stimulate me. This whole<lb/>
thing will make victory that much sweeter<lb/>
But victory in the form of a gold medal did not Stones taste, and<lb/>
settling fa bronze wasn't the wast part of the trip. Someoie called the<lb/>
police and threatened to shoot him. Stones remarked: "I was scared to<lb/>
death when I went out on the victay stand<lb/>
Undoubtedly, the true fans of the twenty-two year old Califanian<lb/>
suffered with him the agoiy of defeat. But they didn't desert him. They<lb/>
didn't have time to. Only four days after the finals of the high jump at<lb/>
Montreal, their hero broke his own wald record by clearing the bar at 7<lb/>
feet, 714 inches at Philadelphia's Bicentennial Meet of Champions.<lb/>
Then many American track and field enthusiasts stuck out their<lb/>
chests and continued to wear their Mickey Mouse T-shirts with pride.<lb/>
Stones had weathered the stam and again proven to be the greatest<lb/>
high-jumper in the wald. Dwight Staies was, as ever, resplendent.<lb/>
CONA TY WEA THERS STORM, TOO<lb/>
East Carolina placekicker Pete Conaty is another athlete who had a<lb/>
shat stam to weather. He went into Saturday nights contest with<lb/>
Southern Illinois having kicked 11 of 11 PAT's and a perfect string of 10<lb/>
field goals, with a chance of rewriting the record book.<lb/>
But it didn't wak out that way fa the senia fran Annandale,<lb/>
Virginia. After M ike Weaver's TD pass to Clay Burnett, Conaty came in<lb/>
to add the point after which ECU fans had begun to consider autonatic.<lb/>
But the blond wonder missed. The soae was 6-0 rather than 7-0.<lb/>
Later in the first half, Conaty failed to put the ball through the<lb/>
uprights, and the winds blew a little more stiffly at Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium especially in Pete Conaty's face.<lb/>
Everyone wondered why Conaty had lost his magic, but he put on a<lb/>
perfamanoe that isequalledbynoneothersonthisteama otherwise in<lb/>
the Southern Conference. Conaty rushed fa 103 yards in ten carries and<lb/>
scored 13 points on one TD run of 62 yards, two two-point conversions,<lb/>
and three PAT kicks. He left the field a hero. Though it was only a short<lb/>
one, Pete Conaty had weathered the stam.<lb/>
?<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
I<lb/>
mv09<lb/>
HMMIH<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
lU?HHHP?<lb/>
??<lb/>
THE PIT<lb/>
'Six Screaming Bullets' open holes for ECU<lb/>
ByJONVERNER<lb/>
Special to Fountainhead<lb/>
East Carolina University has<lb/>
Six Screaming Bullets" on the<lb/>
loose.<lb/>
The term "six screaming<lb/>
bullets" might not be what one<lb/>
would ordinarily think. It is not<lb/>
the nickname of the Pirate<lb/>
running backs, or the pass<lb/>
receivers. In fact, the term has<lb/>
very Iittle to do with speed of foot.<lb/>
"Six screaming bullets" is<lb/>
Coach Pat Dye's description of<lb/>
the offensive line. Senior of-<lb/>
fensive tackle Ricky Bennett<lb/>
authority.<lb/>
"We feel we can play with<lb/>
anybody says Parrish. "Every<lb/>
time we get out there we know<lb/>
we're going to move the ball<lb/>
Bennett agreed, adding, "the<lb/>
whole team is on an upward trend<lb/>
right now, playing with unity and<lb/>
confidence. We're all supportive<lb/>
of ach other<lb/>
Matt Mulholland sees the<lb/>
confidence spreading to other<lb/>
units of the team.<lb/>
"Everybody's one, together,<lb/>
when we mess up and give the<lb/>
ball away or something, we know<lb/>
the defense will get the bail back<lb/>
stats indicate<lb/>
They all seem to agree on the<lb/>
fact that they get very little<lb/>
attention from what they do.<lb/>
"Being on the offensive line<lb/>
doesn't get you much publicity<lb/>
said Bennett We do our job but<lb/>
get very little aedit outside of the<lb/>
team<lb/>
"We know it's nothing per-<lb/>
sonal against us added Bolt,<lb/>
"it's the curse of every offensive<lb/>
linemm. You learn to live with<lb/>
it<lb/>
Randy Parrish concurred, but<lb/>
commented, "we can't let that<lb/>
get to us. The backs are the ones<lb/>
what we do for anything. It is a<lb/>
good feeling to see that they<lb/>
realize it's tough in there<lb/>
"Mike and the running backs<lb/>
are the first to thank us after a<lb/>
play works added Mulholland.<lb/>
"That gives us a feeling of<lb/>
community<lb/>
So much of a community, that<lb/>
as Clay Burnett sees it, "they all<lb/>
know that the wishbone is ten<lb/>
blockers and a quarterback<lb/>
Being an offensive lineman is<lb/>
not easy anywhere. However, at<lb/>
East Carolina, there seems to be<lb/>
an advantage.<lb/>
"After every game, six cakes<lb/>
or pies are delivered to the<lb/>
offensive linemen said Mul-<lb/>
holland. "A lady in town makes<lb/>
them, and the offensive line is the<lb/>
only people that get them. With<lb/>
Bolt, Skull, Rick, Clay, Timmy<lb/>
Hightower and myself being<lb/>
experienced at putting those<lb/>
away, it's nice to know somebody<lb/>
cares about just us<lb/>
"Six screaming bullets" is the<lb/>
name given offensive linemen<lb/>
Tim Hightower, Matt Mulhol-<lb/>
land, Wayne Bolt, Randy Parrish,<lb/>
Ricky Bennett, and Clay Burnett.<lb/>
CLAY BURNETTE<lb/>
MATT MULHOLLAND<lb/>
WAYNE BOLT<lb/>
TIM HIGHTOWER<lb/>
RANDY PARRISH<lb/>
RICKY BENNETT<lb/>
describes how they got the name.<lb/>
 The secret of success for any<lb/>
offensive lineman is how quick<lb/>
you get off the ball he said.<lb/>
 Coach Dye wants us to come off<lb/>
the ball on the snap like scream-<lb/>
ing bullets, so he started calling<lb/>
us the screaming bullets<lb/>
Wayne Bolt, the starting right<lb/>
guard, says that the name has<lb/>
brought about a unity within the<lb/>
line.<lb/>
"It (the name) has really<lb/>
brought us together he said.<lb/>
"We always do things together,<lb/>
and we are proud of the nick-<lb/>
name, so the rest of the guys on<lb/>
tlle team could see us as a unit<lb/>
The "screaming bullet" unit<lb/>
has performed admirably through<lb/>
the first five games this season.<lb/>
They have opened up holes for<lb/>
the backs to run through for an<lb/>
average of 323.6 yards per game<lb/>
That figure ranks in the top ten<lb/>
nationally. Their blocking has<lb/>
allowed four backs to rush for<lb/>
over 200 yards on the season.<lb/>
Bolt pointed out that, al-<lb/>
though the offensive line lost two<lb/>
members from last year, Randy<lb/>
Parrish and Matt Mulholland<lb/>
have stepped in and done we'l.<lb/>
"We did lose two guys from<lb/>
the line he said "but Skully<lb/>
(Parrish) and Matt have done<lb/>
well. We haven't been hurt at<lb/>
all<lb/>
Parrish, who starts at the<lb/>
other guard spot, echoed the<lb/>
sentiment that unity was a key<lb/>
factor in the play of the line.<lb/>
 The whole offensive line has<lb/>
been playing together as a unit<lb/>
he explained and we' ve become<lb/>
real dose. If I let down, I feel like<lb/>
I've let the other guys down, and<lb/>
they feel the same<lb/>
They all agree that they have<lb/>
gained tremendous confidence in<lb/>
themselves this year, which en-<lb/>
ables them to play with more<lb/>
?li??Will ii<lb/>
fa us. Then we are anxious to<lb/>
show that we're not that bad, by<lb/>
getting out there and knocking<lb/>
some heads<lb/>
Clay Burnett is in a unique<lb/>
position on the team. He is the<lb/>
tight end, which he daims is "90<lb/>
percent blocking and 10 percent<lb/>
pass catching He says he gets<lb/>
kidded about his position.<lb/>
"You mean they gave you<lb/>
permission to talk to me he<lb/>
joshed. "The interia linemen<lb/>
kid me a lot about not being part<lb/>
of the gang, so I'm flattered they<lb/>
induded me. Really, though, in<lb/>
ader to be a success, we' ve got to<lb/>
play asa unit, which we are doing<lb/>
now. We're doing better than the<lb/>
who put the points on the board,<lb/>
but we help 'em get there. They<lb/>
know it too, and are quick to<lb/>
congratulate us on a good block<lb/>
There is, accading to all of<lb/>
the "saeaming bullets sane-<lb/>
thing that makes it wathwhile.<lb/>
"It's a tremendous feeling of<lb/>
pleasure and satisfaction you get<lb/>
inside said Parrish. "You know<lb/>
when you've done the job well<lb/>
"A great personal satisfad-<lb/>
ioi" is the way Bennett sees it.<lb/>
Each one knows, however,<lb/>
that his teammates appredate<lb/>
what they do.<lb/>
"Mike Weaver came to me<lb/>
the other day Bolt said, "and<lb/>
told me he wouldn't want to do<lb/>
Women's volleyball team<lb/>
wins two matches<lb/>
Tennis team falls<lb/>
to St. Mary's, 8-1<lb/>
By BRUCE PROCTOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Following Wednesday's<lb/>
matches against Atlantic Christ-<lb/>
ian and Chowan, ECU'S volleyball<lb/>
team moved their recad up to<lb/>
2-5.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates posted their<lb/>
first viday over Chowan by<lb/>
downing the Brances 16-14 and<lb/>
15-0. The Pirates followed with<lb/>
another win against the Bull Dogs<lb/>
from Atlantic Christian, 15-8 and<lb/>
15-11.<lb/>
In last Monday's meet the<lb/>
Pirates "played the best volley-<lb/>
ball all year" accading to Coach<lb/>
Catherine Bdten, only to tall 15-6<lb/>
and 15-13 to N.C. State. Later<lb/>
that afternoon Wake Faest de-<lb/>
feated East Carolina in the second<lb/>
match-up as the won the first set,<lb/>
15-13. The Pirates rallied in the<lb/>
second set to tie the match with a<lb/>
15-11 scae. The tie breaking set<lb/>
was woi by Wake Faest, 15-7.<lb/>
Last night, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
travelled to Greensbao to face<lb/>
defending NCAIAW champ UNC-<lb/>
Greensbao and Catawba Col-<lb/>
lege. No scaes were available at<lb/>
press time.<lb/>
Thursday, East Carolina will<lb/>
play Shaw University and Meredit<lb/>
College in Raleigh.<lb/>
? mm<lb/>
ECU'S women's tennis team<lb/>
dropped their record to 3-2<lb/>
Thursday when they dropped<lb/>
their second match of the year to<lb/>
St. Mary's 8-1 on the Minges<lb/>
court.<lb/>
Susan Helmer, playing at<lb/>
number four singles, was the only<lb/>
vida fa the Lady Pirates as she<lb/>
beat Mary Fadren, 6-1, 5-7, 6-4.<lb/>
Margaret Scott downed the<lb/>
Bucettes' DacusSunkel, 6-4,6-0,<lb/>
while Terri Kirk outlasted Cathy<lb/>
Patwcod, 7-5, &amp;0, at one and two<lb/>
singles respectivelv.<lb/>
Third flight Pirate perfamer<lb/>
Leigh Jefferson dropped a 6-2,<lb/>
6-3 dedsion to Allison Hines<lb/>
while Maria Stewart (no. 5) lost to<lb/>
Mary Swain, 6-1, 6-3.<lb/>
Vicky Loose was beaten by<lb/>
Emily Bass at number six, 6-3,<lb/>
6-4, to give St. Mary's a 5-1 lead<lb/>
through singles competition.<lb/>
In doubles competitioi, Scat<lb/>
and Swain defeated Sunkel and<lb/>
m0mmmmt m i ioHmiih<lb/>
Patwcod, 8-3, while Kirk and<lb/>
Hines of St. Mary's won by the<lb/>
same margin over Helmer and<lb/>
Loose. Bass and Maria Boisseau<lb/>
beat Jefferson and Karen Clark at<lb/>
number three doubles, 8-4.<lb/>
Soccer club<lb/>
beats Wilson<lb/>
With fancy footwak and good<lb/>
ball control, the Greenville Soccer<lb/>
Club won a soccer match here 4-2<lb/>
over Wilsrjn, Saturday.<lb/>
Ton O' Shea got Greenv ;lle off<lb/>
to a good start with a goal off an<lb/>
assist from halfback Duncan<lb/>
Howe. The goal came 532 into<lb/>
the first half. But fa Greenville<lb/>
that wasn't enough as Jeff<lb/>
Kunkler put one in nine minutes<lb/>
later.<lb/>
CShea didn't stop after sca-<lb/>
ing his first one - scaing two<lb/>
more befae halftime.<lb/>
?MMMMMWMWW<lb/>
GALE KER-<lb/>
BAUGH spikes<lb/>
volleyball as<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
win two match-<lb/>
es. Photo by<lb/>
Kip Sloan<lb/>
J<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0013"/><lb/>
OnHHMHHnHHBHHHI<lb/>
HMH<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
13<lb/>
?M?<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECU Hall of Fame inducts<lb/>
late Clarence Stasavich<lb/>
The man most associated with<lb/>
athletics at ECU and Lenoir<lb/>
Rhyne College will be inducted<lb/>
posthumously into the East<lb/>
Carolina Sports Hall of Fame<lb/>
October 30. That man, of oourse,<lb/>
is Clarence Stasavich, the master-<lb/>
mind of the single wing offense<lb/>
fof 24 years between the two<lb/>
institutions.<lb/>
COACH ST AS<lb/>
Stasavich came to East<lb/>
Carolina in 1962 as head football<lb/>
coach. He held that position for<lb/>
eight years and compiled a<lb/>
50-27-1 reoord, tying Jack Boone<lb/>
as the winningest coach in ECU<lb/>
history. That followed a 16 year<lb/>
stay at Lenoir Rhyne were he had<lb/>
a reoord of 120-37-7.<lb/>
With a combined career re-<lb/>
cord in coaching of 170-64-8,<lb/>
Stasavich retired in 1969 as the<lb/>
third winningest active coach in<lb/>
the country, ranked behind Bear<lb/>
Bryant of Alabama and<lb/>
Johnny Vaught of Ole Miss.<lb/>
During his eighteen years as a<lb/>
head coach, Stasavich won nine<lb/>
conference championships for<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne, seven straight<lb/>
from 1955 through 1961, the<lb/>
NAIA National Championship in<lb/>
1960 for Lenoir Rhyne, had three<lb/>
consecutive bowl teams at East<lb/>
Carolina in 1963, 1964, and 1965<lb/>
with records of 9-1 each year and<lb/>
tied for the Southern Conference<lb/>
title the first year East Carolina<lb/>
was in the league.<lb/>
His devotion to the Southern<lb/>
Conference resulted in the annual<lb/>
football championship trophy be-<lb/>
ing named the Clarence Stasavich<lb/>
Memorial Trophy, that to be<lb/>
effective this year for the first<lb/>
time.<lb/>
In 1963, Stasassumed the role<lb/>
of athletic director for East<lb/>
Carolina and became the main<lb/>
driving force for the development<lb/>
of a Division I, major university<lb/>
athletic program. Under his<lb/>
guidance, East Carolina was<lb/>
classed a Division I school in<lb/>
football in 1966, following the<lb/>
induction of the Pirate program in<lb/>
1964 into the Southern Con-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
Facilities development<lb/>
changed the total complexion of<lb/>
the ECU campus. Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum was built, along with<lb/>
Fioklen Stadium, Scales Field<lb/>
House, Harrington Field and the<lb/>
Bunting Track during the Stasa-<lb/>
vich era.<lb/>
In 1969, Stasavich relin-<lb/>
quished his duties as head<lb/>
football coach to devote all his<lb/>
time to the athletic directorship.<lb/>
He served in that capacity until<lb/>
his death on October 24,1975, the<lb/>
day before his longtime dream<lb/>
Swimmers fall<lb/>
to Blue Devils<lb/>
By DAVID ROBEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU's ladies swim team lost<lb/>
to Duke in their first meet of the<lb/>
year this past Saturday. Duke<lb/>
swept the first place position with<lb/>
a total of 82 points while ECU had<lb/>
46 points.<lb/>
Although ECU lost the meet,<lb/>
the team won first and second in<lb/>
both of the diving events. Cathy<lb/>
Callahan won the first place on<lb/>
the one-meter board with a total<lb/>
of 172 points. Callahan also won<lb/>
first place on the three meter<lb/>
board with a score of 154 points.<lb/>
Patty Redeen won both second<lb/>
positions spot on the one-meter<lb/>
and three-meter boards with a<lb/>
total of 155 and 152 respectively.<lb/>
Other standouts from the East<lb/>
Carolina team were Ellen Bond,<lb/>
Sharon Burns, Karen Crawford,<lb/>
Lynn Uteguard, and Cindv Sailer.<lb/>
Burns took second place in the<lb/>
100 yard individual medley in<lb/>
1:10.0, third in the 50 yard<lb/>
freestyle in 27.6, third in the 100<lb/>
yard freestyle in 1 00.02.<lb/>
Bond took third position in the<lb/>
individual medley in 1:12.7, third<lb/>
??WM ?l<lb/>
came true. Thai was a victory<lb/>
over the University of North<lb/>
Carolina in football, which the<lb/>
Pirates got on October 25 in<lb/>
Chapel Hill, 38-17.<lb/>
His accomplishments as a<lb/>
coach resulted in his induction<lb/>
into the Helms Hall of Fame and<lb/>
the North Carolina Sports Hall of<lb/>
Fame.<lb/>
He was twice honored as<lb/>
national Coach of the Year in 1959<lb/>
at Lenoir Rhyne and in 1964 at<lb/>
East Carolina. Five times he was<lb/>
named District Coach of the Year.<lb/>
Stasavich was born February<lb/>
9, 1913, in Georgetown, III. He<lb/>
graduated from Georgetown<lb/>
Township High School in 1931<lb/>
and earned an AB Degree in<lb/>
science from Lenoir Rhyne Col-<lb/>
lege in 1935. He received his MA<lb/>
Degree from the University of<lb/>
North Carolina in 1946.<lb/>
Stasavich is survived by his<lb/>
wife, the former Helen Warwick<lb/>
of Hickory, two daughters,<lb/>
Rebecca and Mary, and one son,<lb/>
Walter.<lb/>
The ECU Sports Hall of Fame<lb/>
originated in 1974, with ten initial<lb/>
inductees. Four were inducted in<lb/>
1975.<lb/>
Stasavich's induction will oc-<lb/>
cur during halftime activities of<lb/>
this year's Homecoming game<lb/>
against Western Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
PIRATE SPORTS THIS WEEK<lb/>
Oct. 11 Volleyball (2-5) vs. UNC-G and Catawba at Greensboro<lb/>
Women's Tennis (3-2) at Atlantic Christian<lb/>
Soccer (2-7) at Davidson<lb/>
Oct. 14 Volleyball vs. Meredith and Shaw at Raleigh<lb/>
Women's tennis vs. UNC-G (HOME) 3:00<lb/>
Field hockey at Duke<lb/>
Soccer vs. Pembroke St. (HOME) 300<lb/>
Women's golf at UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
Oct. 15 Field Hockey at Catawba<lb/>
Oct. 16 Football at VMI<lb/>
Field hockey in Winthrop Invitational, Rock Hill, S.C.<lb/>
Soccer at the Citadel<lb/>
Chapter X<lb/>
here's neuer a couer<lb/>
charge at Chapter x.<lb/>
7f)e place to party<lb/>
botutttoimt.<lb/>
Sftonbay ntgf)t$ are<lb/>
(Sirte' Dorm 9MaW?.<lb/>
ft bifferent borm eacf) week.<lb/>
mb. ntgf)t i? ?abie$ 9Wgljt.<lb/>
in the 50 yard breaststroke in<lb/>
36.74, third in the 100 yard<lb/>
breaststroke in 1 21.2.<lb/>
Crawford snatched third place<lb/>
in the 200 free style in 220.4.<lb/>
Utegard placed third in the 50<lb/>
yard backstroke in 35.4, third in<lb/>
the 100 yard butterfly in 1:13.8,<lb/>
third in the 100 yard backstroke in<lb/>
1:18.21.<lb/>
Sailer took second place in the<lb/>
50 yard butterfly in 29.6 sec<lb/>
fourth in the 100 yard butterfly in<lb/>
1:11.35.<lb/>
"Although we didn't score<lb/>
high, I'm highly pleased with our<lb/>
diving team. Callahan and Re-<lb/>
deen did extremely good and I'm<lb/>
looking forward to our success in<lb/>
diving. We have vasily im-<lb/>
proved said Coach Stevie<lb/>
Chepko.<lb/>
"We improved our times in<lb/>
seven of our thirteen events since<lb/>
last year. In the individual medley<lb/>
we improved by one second and<lb/>
we improved by fourteen seconds<lb/>
in our free relay she added.<lb/>
The ECU ladies swim team<lb/>
will be competing against UNC-G<lb/>
this Thursday in Minges Nata-<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
<lb/>
PHONE 752 2188<lb/>
301 SOUTH EVANS STREET, CHERRY BLDG.<lb/>
10 Discount on<lb/>
Everything<lb/>
in the Store.<lb/>
Except Custom Work.<lb/>
Top of the Mall-Downtown Greenville<lb/>
ARTISTS AND WRITERS<lb/>
The East Carolina University Literary and Art Magazine<lb/>
is now accepting submissions. The magazine is<lb/>
interested in poetry, prose fiction, plays, and all genres<lb/>
of the visual arts. Submissions can be turned in at the<lb/>
Rebel office in the publications center (old east cafeteria)<lb/>
across from Joyner library. All works accepted for<lb/>
publication will be financially supplemented<lb/>
All student submissions will automatically be entered in<lb/>
the Annual Attic Art and Literary Awards contest.<lb/>
This contest is made possible by a large donation from<lb/>
the Attic.<lb/>
?<lb/>
mm<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0014"/><lb/>
???HiiV<lb/>
14<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
The "Almost Anything Goes' Sports carnival will take place<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon on the ECU Mall, although only ten teams have<lb/>
signed up to compete.<lb/>
The event will be modeled after the television show of the same name<lb/>
and will feature seven events. Winning teams will be determined by<lb/>
total points and prizes will be awarded to the winners of the overall<lb/>
competition and the other members of the top five teams.<lb/>
So come on out and watch the action. You might see someone you<lb/>
know making a perfect fool of themselves.<lb/>
TOUCH FOOTBALL ENTERS LAST WEEK<lb/>
The playoffs will be upon us in only one more week and only seven<lb/>
undefeated teams remain in men's play. Only three women's teams<lb/>
remain undefeated.<lb/>
The top four teams from each of the men's eight divisions and the<lb/>
women's two divisions will make the grade for the playoffs with the rest<lb/>
having to wait until next year.<lb/>
So even though most of the divisional titles have been settled there<lb/>
remains several key battles to determine what also-rans qualify for the<lb/>
playoffs. All games will be completed by Thursday, with most of the<lb/>
competition coming on Monday and Tuesday.<lb/>
In the dormitory leagues the Scott Time-Outs remained unbeaten by<lb/>
defeating Charlie division foe Umstead TD's 28-12. The TD's had<lb/>
previously been unbeaten.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the Yellow Jackets held on to a slim one game lead over<lb/>
the Scott Players and the Lost Gonzo Band. The Yellow Jackets topped<lb/>
the Widow Makers 42-0 fa their sixth win without a loss in the Alpha<lb/>
division.<lb/>
In the Bravo division no team is unbeaten, but the Mausers took a<lb/>
slim lead over the Schlitz Blitz, who fell from the unbeaten ranks. Scott's<lb/>
Wombats are way out in front in the Delta division.<lb/>
Fraternity league play found two teams dropping from the ranks of<lb/>
the unbeaten when Tau Kappa Epsilon shut out Pi Kappa Phi 22-0 and<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau trimmed Sigma Nu 8-6 on a oome-from-behind fourth<lb/>
quarter rally. Kappa Alpha and the Tekes remained unbeaten with 5-0<lb/>
marks, while Pi Kappa Phi. Sigma Nu and Phi Kappa Tau all stood at<lb/>
4-1.<lb/>
The Independent division found the Pack at 6-0 and ahead of Last<lb/>
Chance, which won by a pair of shutouts to finish at 5-1 for the regular<lb/>
season. The Club division found the Rugby Ruggers topping the P.E.<lb/>
Majors 28-0 to finish second behind Phi Epsilon Kappa. The Ruggers<lb/>
lost to the Phi E K's earlier in the year, 7-6, for their only loss.<lb/>
In women's play Tyler dam oontinued to have three unbeaten teams<lb/>
fa a total of 13-0 but Delta Zeta took two wins.<lb/>
The Delta Zetas fafeited their first game of the year but have won<lb/>
three in a row and stand 3-1 going into the final week of play.<lb/>
Fleming's Floozies also showed improvement with a 30-0 win over<lb/>
See INTRAMURALS, page 15.<lb/>
m<lb/>
This week at the<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
10th Avenue<lb/>
Don't forget Friday 300<lb/>
Sunday Night is Ladies Night.<lb/>
GO PIRATES!<lb/>
m<lb/>
??<lb/>
m<lb/>
i<lb/>
SC player of week<lb/>
Conaty attains another honor<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Spats Edita<lb/>
Pete Conaty has attained yet<lb/>
another hona as the football<lb/>
season reaches its mid-point.<lb/>
The senia fran Annandale,<lb/>
Va. came off the bench to lead the<lb/>
Pirate offense to a 48-14 victay<lb/>
over Southern Illinois and was<lb/>
named Southern Conference of-<lb/>
fensive player of the week fa his<lb/>
effats.<lb/>
Caiaty rushed fa 103 yards in<lb/>
ten carries including a 62 yard<lb/>
scramble fa a touchdown. He<lb/>
also ran fa a oouple of two-point<lb/>
conversions kicked three mae fa<lb/>
13 points in the game.<lb/>
Going into the game, Conaty<lb/>
led the nation in field goals and<lb/>
was seventh in scaing. He led<lb/>
both catagaies in the SC.<lb/>
Conaty was named Athlete-of-<lb/>
the-Month last week by<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
<lb/>
PETE CONATY<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
Continued from page 11.<lb/>
the Salukis picked up just one<lb/>
first down, that being on a<lb/>
penalty.<lb/>
Late in the first quarter,<lb/>
facing a third-and-11 situation,<lb/>
SIU quarterback Bob Collins<lb/>
passed over the middle. Pirate<lb/>
linebacker Harold Fat picked off<lb/>
the pass at the Saluki 27 yard line<lb/>
and waltzed into the end zone.<lb/>
Weaver's run attempt fa two<lb/>
failed and ECU led 12-0.<lb/>
The second quarter was<lb/>
Conaty's quarter all the ay. The<lb/>
lithe signal-caller came on the<lb/>
second series and led the Pirates<lb/>
to paydirt. Facing a third-and-17<lb/>
at the ECU 38, Conaty went back<lb/>
to pass. Finding no one to throw<lb/>
to, Conaty broke a tackle in the<lb/>
backf ield and headed towards the<lb/>
left sideline. A good fake left a<lb/>
SIU defender grasping a handful<lb/>
of air at mid-field and another<lb/>
fake at the Saluki 15 left two<lb/>
defenders on the ground as<lb/>
Conaty darted into the end zone.<lb/>
Conaty then ran fa the two-point<lb/>
oonversiai and put the Pirates up<lb/>
20-0.<lb/>
TWO-MINUTE OFFENSE<lb/>
The Pirates ga the ball back<lb/>
at their 13 with just 1:42 left in the<lb/>
half. Conaty then worked at<lb/>
quarterback with precision and<lb/>
engineered the two-minute of-<lb/>
fense fa the Bucs.<lb/>
Conaty picked up 14 yards on<lb/>
the first play then pitched out to<lb/>
Hicks and Hawkins fa runs 14<lb/>
and 19 yards, respectively, put-<lb/>
ting the Pirates oi the SIU 40.<lb/>
After Hicks gained seven mae ai<lb/>
a pitchout, Conaty hit split end<lb/>
Terry Gallaher for 15 yards.<lb/>
Hawkins then gained nine mae<lb/>
on a pitchout, and Conaty picked<lb/>
six mae on a keeper, giving the<lb/>
Pirates a first down oi the three.<lb/>
Hicks was picked to try fa the<lb/>
touchdown and dove the final<lb/>
three yards over leftguard with<lb/>
just 0.14 left in the half. Conaty<lb/>
again ran fa two to g. ve the Bucs<lb/>
a 28-0 lead in the locker room at<lb/>
half time.<lb/>
OLDE TOWNE INN<lb/>
117 E. 5THST. 758-1991<lb/>
Eat a home cooked family style dinner with us<lb/>
One entree (choose from three) and all the vegetables<lb/>
you can eat - served family style (tea or coffee included)<lb/>
ONLY 22i (PLUS TAX)<lb/>
SUNDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
4:30-7:30 P.M. REAR DINING ROOM<lb/>
m<lb/>
Southern Illinois got on the<lb/>
scaeboard early in the second<lb/>
half following a Conaty fumble.<lb/>
Andre Herrera, the nation's<lb/>
seventh leading runner, held to<lb/>
just 74 yards in 19 carries, darted<lb/>
over from seven yards out to give<lb/>
points to the Salukis. Ken Sea-<lb/>
man converted to cut the Pirate<lb/>
lead to 28-7.<lb/>
HICKSRUNSWILD<lb/>
After taking the kickoff and<lb/>
picking a first down, Conaty and<lb/>
the rest of the Pirates faced a<lb/>
third-and-ten at the 36. Conaty<lb/>
then ran left oi the option and<lb/>
pitched to Hicks just as he was<lb/>
being hit. Hicks had nothing but<lb/>
clear field in front of him and ran<lb/>
64 yards to paydirt. Conaty then<lb/>
hit his first extra point of the<lb/>
game to give the Pirates a 35-7<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
The Bucs received another<lb/>
touchdown near the end of the<lb/>
third stanza as Harold Randolph<lb/>
picked off anothr Collins pass and<lb/>
returned it 39 yards to the Saluki<lb/>
17.<lb/>
Sam Harrell, a second-string<lb/>
halfback, took a pitch from<lb/>
Conaty and gained 15 yards on<lb/>
first down. Willie Hawkins then<lb/>
hit off tackle twice, scaing the<lb/>
second time from a yard out.<lb/>
Conaty's conversion made it 42-7.<lb/>
Jimmy Southerland came on<lb/>
to quarterback the Bucs in the<lb/>
fourth period, but in his second<lb/>
series, fumbled on the Pirate nine<lb/>
yard line, giving the Salukis a<lb/>
good scaing opportunity.<lb/>
Gary Linton scaed from the<lb/>
one on second down and after<lb/>
Seaman's conversion, the ECU<lb/>
lead was 42-14.<lb/>
FROSH KEYS DRIVE<lb/>
On the Pirates last possession<lb/>
of the evening, Dye inserted<lb/>
fourth-string freshman quarter-<lb/>
back Leander Green. Green di-<lb/>
rected a 75 yard drive in 14 plays<lb/>
to give the Pirates the final<lb/>
touchdown of the game, which<lb/>
came on a three-yard burst by<lb/>
Sam Harrell.<lb/>
The Pirates again had a good<lb/>
night on punt and interoeption<lb/>
returns, gaining 185 yards to just<lb/>
seven fa the Salukis. The Bucs<lb/>
126 yards on interceptions was a<lb/>
new school recad.<lb/>
The win fa the Pirates was<lb/>
their fifth of the season against no<lb/>
losses and the 11 th straight since<lb/>
last year, seoond longest winning<lb/>
streak in the nation to Rutger's12<lb/>
game streak. Southern Illinois is<lb/>
3-2 on the season.<lb/>
SCORING SUMMARY:<lb/>
Southern III. 0 0 7 7-14<lb/>
East Carolina 12 16 14 7-49<lb/>
EC-Burnett 25 pass from Weaver<lb/>
(kick failed)<lb/>
EC?Fort 27 interception (run<lb/>
failed)<lb/>
ECConaty 62 run (Caiaty run)<lb/>
EC<lb/>
EC-Hicks 3 run (Conaty run)<lb/>
Sl-Herrea 1 run (Seaman kick)<lb/>
EC-Hicks 64 run (Conaty kick)<lb/>
EC-Hawkins 1 run (Conaty kick)<lb/>
Sl-Linton 1 run (Seaman kick)<lb/>
EC-Harrell 3 run (Conaty kick)<lb/>
Attendance-16,200<lb/>
EDDIE HICKS eludes defenders<lb/>
in long touchdown run but play<lb/>
was called back because Hicks<lb/>
stepped out of bounds at 50.<lb/>
Photc by Russ Pogue.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
JM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0015"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
15<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
MIW<lb/>
ft<lb/>
Booters remain unbeaten in Southern<lb/>
7-14<lb/>
7-49<lb/>
ByANNEHOGGE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU's soccer team won its<lb/>
2nd oonferenoe match Saturday<lb/>
by beating Furman 3-2. The win<lb/>
brings the Pirates' overall record<lb/>
to 2-6 and leaves them undefeat-<lb/>
ed in conference play.<lb/>
ECU's three goals, which<lb/>
were scored in the first half, were<lb/>
made by Tim Harrison, Jeff<lb/>
Karpovioh and Pete Angus. Full-<lb/>
INTRAMURALS<lb/>
Continued from page 14.)<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi. Toni Strayhorn scored four touchdowns in the game fa<lb/>
the Floozies. The Floozies are now 4-1.<lb/>
DIVISIONAL POWER RATINGS<lb/>
Dormitory<lb/>
1. Scott Time Outs<lb/>
2. Scott Yellow Jackets<lb/>
3. UmsteadTD's<lb/>
4. Aycock Mausers<lb/>
5. Scott Wombats<lb/>
Club<lb/>
1. Phi Epsilon Kappa<lb/>
2. Rugby Club<lb/>
3. P.E. Majors<lb/>
Fraternity<lb/>
1. Kappa Alpha<lb/>
2. Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
3. Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
4. Sigma Nu<lb/>
5. Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
Independent<lb/>
1. The Pack<lb/>
2. Last Chance<lb/>
Women<lb/>
1. Tyler I<lb/>
2. Tyler II<lb/>
3. Tyler III<lb/>
4. DeltaZetal<lb/>
5. Fleming Floozies<lb/>
TENNIS RESUL TS- Team, Women and Mixed Doubles<lb/>
Tennis play is winding down with the last week of men'steam tennis<lb/>
approaching. Women's singles play is in its' third week and eight teams<lb/>
remain in the mixed doubles competition.<lb/>
In team tennis the Belk Bouncers hold a big lead in Dam League One<lb/>
and the Aycock Deuoes hold a 15-13 edge over the Belk No Sweats.<lb/>
Meanwhile in Club-lndFrat play the Nasty's hold a five-point lead over<lb/>
the CEEBOSand Tau Kappa Epsilon holds a 15-9 lead over Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi. The two fraternity leaders meet this week in a aucial "must win"<lb/>
match fa the Pi Kapps if they are to stay in oontentioi fa the tennis<lb/>
title.<lb/>
In women's singles play oily eight players remain going into the<lb/>
third week.<lb/>
Advancing by fafeit were Christy Williams, Mary Sawyer and Debra<lb/>
Skut. Delaes Ryan and Mary Leisy advanced by byes, but three of the<lb/>
quarterfmalists had to win matches outright to advanoe.<lb/>
The closest match was Claire Lii.jenfelser's three- it win over Cathy<lb/>
Deal. Lingenfelser beat Deal 1-6, 6-4, 6-4 in the closest match so far this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Lingenfelser'squarterfinal opponent will be Janet Hoeppel. Hoeppel<lb/>
defeated Debra Williams in straight sets, 6-2, 6-2. Janice McVeigh will<lb/>
meet Christy Williams after beating Cathy Cox 6-4, 6-3.<lb/>
In mixed doubles play favaites Keith Gray and Cynthia Averett had<lb/>
little trouble advancing to the quarterfinals, where they will meet Toni<lb/>
Davenpat and Ton Burgens.<lb/>
The U. S. Navy<lb/>
Officer Information Team<lb/>
will be on campus<lb/>
October 13,1976.<lb/>
Naval Officers will be on hand to<lb/>
talk to interested persons concerning!<lb/>
Officer Positions in Nuclear Power,<lb/>
Aviation, Supply Corps (business<lb/>
management). Line, and several<lb/>
scholarship programs.<lb/>
Drop by and see if the "New Navy"<lb/>
is for you.<lb/>
INTERESTED PERSONS<lb/>
PLEASE REGISTER<lb/>
WITH THE PLACEMENT OFFICE<lb/>
back Scott Balas was credited<lb/>
with one assist.<lb/>
The Pirate booters had 27<lb/>
shots on goal to Furman's 13.<lb/>
Furman came up with 14 saves<lb/>
while ECU was dose behind with<lb/>
K).<lb/>
Golfers<lb/>
last in<lb/>
tourney<lb/>
By DAVID ROBEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU ladies golf team took<lb/>
last position with a scae of 391 at<lb/>
the Hillendell Golf Tournament at<lb/>
Durham, Friday. Duke grabbed<lb/>
first place with a scae of 340<lb/>
while Appalachian took second<lb/>
with a total of 359.<lb/>
In the individual placements,<lb/>
Debbie Steward of Duke placed<lb/>
first. Appalachian took seoond<lb/>
and third and Heather Jones of<lb/>
ECU plaoed fourth.<lb/>
Three of the young ladies from<lb/>
the Lady Pirates have qualified<lb/>
fa the state tournament. Heather<lb/>
Jones, Marsha Pierson and Jill<lb/>
Carney will be able to oompete fa<lb/>
individual placement. To qualify<lb/>
fa team competition in the state<lb/>
tournament, ECU needed four<lb/>
girls to quality. Sinoe only three<lb/>
did quality, the Pirate Ladies will<lb/>
not be able to oompete as a team.<lb/>
The next tournament is Friday<lb/>
the 14th when the ECU ladies golf<lb/>
team will travel to UNC-CH to<lb/>
compete.<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
Sherwin-Williams<lb/>
113 Grande Ave<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Kennels<lb/>
Will be sponsaing classes<lb/>
in Basic Obedience Training.<lb/>
Class starts Oct 7th.<lb/>
Cost 30.00<lb/>
Call Ed Perry 752-9854<lb/>
fa mae infamation<lb/>
Rt. 7 Box 128 Greenville, "N.C.<lb/>
Coach Curtis Frye was proud<lb/>
of his team, which "doninated<lb/>
the match and played strong<lb/>
offensively<lb/>
The Piratestravelled to David-<lb/>
son yesterday in an attempt to up<lb/>
their league mark to 3-0, but no<lb/>
soae was available at press time.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
needs<lb/>
sports writers<lb/>
call 757-6366<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
MENWOMEN!<lb/>
JOBS ON SHIPS! American.<lb/>
Faeign. No experience required.<lb/>
Excellent pay. Waldwide travel.<lb/>
Summer job a career. Send $3.00<lb/>
fa infamatiai SEAFAX, Dept.<lb/>
Boc 2049, Pat Angeles, Was-<lb/>
hingtoi 98362.<lb/>
If you have something to buy<lb/>
a sell cane to the Red Oak Show<lb/>
and Sell; We sell on consignment<lb/>
anything of value, excluding<lb/>
clothing. Open Mon. - Sat.<lb/>
11 fiO-6 O0 Sun. 2-6, dosed Thurs<lb/>
Located 3 miles west o'<lb/>
Greenville at the intersection of<lb/>
264 and Farmville Highway in the<lb/>
old Red Oak church building.<lb/>
HELP WANTED. Income de-<lb/>
pendent upon initiative. Set your<lb/>
own hours. Fa infamatiai call<lb/>
752- 4685 October 12- 1976<lb/>
rrom d:00-9:30 p.m. only!<lb/>
FOR SALE: Md. Parway y4"<lb/>
diving wetsuit. 752-9461.<lb/>
FOR SAL  Mustang-loaded with<lb/>
value. Power steering and power<lb/>
disc brakes, factay air, radio,<lb/>
automatic floa shift, mint con-<lb/>
dition. Owner will accept best<lb/>
offer. Phone days 757-6961 a<lb/>
after 6 p.m. 756-6552.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 Honda CL-175,<lb/>
very good oonditioi; asking $300,<lb/>
includes two helmets. Call<lb/>
758-9322.<lb/>
WANTED: Keyboard player fa<lb/>
weekend band, top 40 and<lb/>
pop-oountry. Bookings through<lb/>
Jan. Days call 758-3378, nights<lb/>
call 752-6566.<lb/>
NEED SPENDING MONEY: Stu-<lb/>
dents desiring part-time wak,<lb/>
hours 5 p.m10 p.m Mon. -<lb/>
Thurs. No experience needed.<lb/>
Finishing fiberglass boats. Call<lb/>
today, 758-9901.<lb/>
WANTED: Inflatable rubber doll<lb/>
fa Oct. 30 &amp; 31st. Plase contact<lb/>
David Winstead at 752-4673.<lb/>
Need fa stage production.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Girls bike, 10-speed<lb/>
Raleigh Record. White 1975<lb/>
model like new, in very good<lb/>
condition. Call Jane 746-4990.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Realistic stereo com-<lb/>
ponent. Best offer. Call Jack<lb/>
752-7596.<lb/>
PIANO AND GUITAR lessons.<lb/>
Daily and evenings. Richard J.<lb/>
Knapp, B.A. 756-3908.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate to<lb/>
share 3-bedroom trailer. Rent $60<lb/>
plus utihtes. Call 758-9577 after<lb/>
3.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 1245 Fiat<lb/>
Convertible. Whiteblack top, 5<lb/>
speed. Low mileage. Must sell.<lb/>
Call 752-8179<lb/>
For Sale: 65 MGB Good<lb/>
Conditon. Call 758-0984.<lb/>
Yard sale, October 1 &amp; 2 All types<lb/>
of junk. 1310 Cotten Drive,<lb/>
Greenville. 758-1530.<lb/>
Do you have problems? Do<lb/>
you need a caring listener? Call<lb/>
758-2047.<lb/>
Fa Sale- 72 Vega, 4 speed,<lb/>
20,000 miles. Call Allan after 4<lb/>
o'clock. 746-4990.<lb/>
FOR SALL: AR2AK loud speak-<lb/>
ers. $220.00. Exoellent conditiot.<lb/>
Serious inquiries only. 758-5150.<lb/>
REWARD-$20.00 fa return of<lb/>
class ring lost in stands at<lb/>
ECU-Citadel game, Oct. 2. Silver,<lb/>
blue stone, East Fasyth Senia<lb/>
High. Contact Ronnie A. Lennon<lb/>
426 Ayoock 752-1068.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Waterbed, including<lb/>
frame, liner, and platfam. BSR<lb/>
McDaiald 510 turntable. Call<lb/>
Steve at 752-3509.<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mw<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 912 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmmmu ? ??<lb/>
mm<lb/>
We have a date to<lb/>
agxrxu<lb/>
don't forget<lb/>
appointment<lb/>
for your<lb/>
YEARBOOK PORTRAIT<lb/>
To make it easier for you to get your portrait made we are bringing the<lb/>
photographer to you. Stevens' photographers will be at two different<lb/>
locations for your convience from 9-12 and 1-5 daily for two weeks Fall<lb/>
quarter. A photographer will be in the lobby of Fletcher Dorm from<lb/>
October 25-29 and November 1-5. A second photographer will be located<lb/>
at the top of Wright Auditorium in the old Fountainhead office during the<lb/>
same two week period.<lb/>
Appointments may be made by calling 757-6501 between the hours of 9-12<lb/>
and 1-4 or by coming up to the BUCCANEER office located on the second<lb/>
floor of the Publications Center.<lb/>
There are no plans for the photographers to return to campus any time<lb/>
this year so please call and schedule an appointment now. The dates are<lb/>
October 25-29 (Homecoming Week) and November 1-5 and the locations are<lb/>
Wright Auditorium and Fletcher Lobby.<lb/>
NO SITTING FEE!<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
?M<lb/>
mmnm<lb/>
mmmmmmw<lb/>
<pb facs="00057085_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>