<?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="00057094_0001"/>
THSSSUE<lb/>
16 PAGES<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over 50 years<lb/>
C'RCULATION-<lb/>
8,500<lb/>
VOL. 52, NO. 18<lb/>
11 NOVEMBFR1976<lb/>
mtmm?<lb/>
D.O.T. vetoes<lb/>
264 overpass<lb/>
SGA HIRED PERSONNEL<lb/>
budget cut.<lb/>
hands out BUCCANEERS following staff resignation in protest of<lb/>
Photo by Brian Strotten.<lb/>
By DAVID NASH<lb/>
SGA Correspondent<lb/>
The Department of Transpor-<lb/>
tation (DOT) has rejected a<lb/>
funding proposal for an overpass<lb/>
at Tenth St. and College Hill Dr.<lb/>
because of a shortage of funds,<lb/>
according to SGA Vice-President<lb/>
Greg Pingston.<lb/>
In a letter from T.L. Waters,<lb/>
Manager of Planning and Re-<lb/>
search fa DOT, Pingston was<lb/>
told, "because of a shortage of<lb/>
funds, and many demands fa<lb/>
other highway improvements, the<lb/>
pedestrian overpass has not been<lb/>
approved<lb/>
"To say the least, I'm disap-<lb/>
pointed as hell said Pingston.<lb/>
Earlier this year, Pingston<lb/>
gave a presentation in suppat of<lb/>
the overpass at a hearing of DOT<lb/>
in Washington, D.C after the<lb/>
proposal was rejected in 1975.<lb/>
"We were real optimistic<lb/>
said Pingston.<lb/>
"We did extensive research,<lb/>
and had the support of the<lb/>
Greenville City Council, the local<lb/>
Easter Seals chapter, the Univer-<lb/>
sity Board of Trustees, and the<lb/>
Pitt County Commissioners he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
 We felt it would be approved<lb/>
because of our presentation, and<lb/>
because there has been one<lb/>
accident per month involving a<lb/>
pedestrian in 1976, the most<lb/>
serious last spring, involving<lb/>
Jeanie Cox of Raleigh he said.<lb/>
"We're going to have to start<lb/>
waking ai sane sat of alternate<lb/>
plan added Pingston.<lb/>
Aocading to Pingston, Her-<lb/>
bert R. Carlton, a faculty member<lb/>
of the Political Science Dept. has<lb/>
offered the suggestion of rechan-<lb/>
neling traffic flow around the<lb/>
intersection.<lb/>
We're going to wak toward<lb/>
those lines right now said<lb/>
Pingston.<lb/>
"The overpass is still some-<lb/>
thing we greatly need, and<lb/>
something we're still waking fa,<lb/>
but we're going to wak ai<lb/>
channeling traffic so we can cut<lb/>
down on traffic student pedes-<lb/>
trians will have to cross<lb/>
The bicycle path to various<lb/>
campus and Greenville are- s,<lb/>
another project of Pingston's, is<lb/>
"still in the waking stage<lb/>
"We're having a hard time<lb/>
trying to pin down Dr. Best,<lb/>
Chairman of the Properties Com-<lb/>
mittee Sub-Committee to get the<lb/>
land appropriated said Ping-<lb/>
ston.<lb/>
"We did meet with C.G.<lb/>
Moae, and discussed the feasi-<lb/>
bility of getting land appropria-<lb/>
ted.<lb/>
"We also discussed the prob-<lb/>
lems that might arise from the<lb/>
bicycle path, including lighting<lb/>
and security and he was very<lb/>
favaable commented Pings-<lb/>
toi.<lb/>
The proposed path would run<lb/>
from the main campus to Minges<lb/>
Coliseum, Allied Health, and<lb/>
Evans Park in West Greenville.<lb/>
"We're trying to provide a<lb/>
safe and easy mode of transpata-<lb/>
tioi fa students to get to classes<lb/>
at Minges a Allied Health<lb/>
Pingstoi concluded.<lb/>
Dean grades on-campus entertainment<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Edita<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, ECU dean of Student<lb/>
Affairs, Tuesday discussed the perfamance recad<lb/>
fa ai-campusentertainment from 1962 through this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Alexander presented the statistics to the Student<lb/>
Union Program Board which is composed of Student<lb/>
Union Committee Chairpersons.<lb/>
Aocading to Alexander, 188 perfamers in<lb/>
special Entertainment were contracted since 1962<lb/>
and 176 were held. Of the 12 shows cancelled nine<lb/>
were canceled by the perfamers themselves and<lb/>
three by the university.<lb/>
"Thisgives us a perfamance recad fa Special<lb/>
Entertainment of 93.5 per cent said Alexander.<lb/>
"I don't believe that any commercial house can<lb/>
beat that percentage<lb/>
Under Maja Attractions, Alexander said that<lb/>
239 attractions were scheduled since 1962 and 224<lb/>
were held. Twelve of the attractions were canceled<lb/>
by perfamers and three by the university.<lb/>
Aocading to Alexander, the attractions perfa-<lb/>
?P<lb/>
<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mmtm<lb/>
mance recad is 94 per cent.<lb/>
Alexander said that he was making these<lb/>
statistics avaiiMe to the public because of<lb/>
complaints about entertainment and letters to the<lb/>
edita in the FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
"It's so easy to criticize if you don't know the<lb/>
facts<lb/>
Aocading to Alexander, the Student Union<lb/>
entertainment oommittees have been providing ECU<lb/>
with much more entertainment than can be found on<lb/>
other campuses in Nath Carolina.<lb/>
The Judy Collins oonoert has been the oily big<lb/>
event at UNC-Chapel Hill, said Alexander.<lb/>
N.C. State recently had Mary and Leon Russell<lb/>
which was their first big show in two years,<lb/>
aocading to Alexander.<lb/>
"We are providing more entertainment to the<lb/>
ECU students than in other schools, but the<lb/>
students aren't buying<lb/>
Aocading to Alexander, 16 pop shows have been<lb/>
held on campus this year including summer.<lb/>
"There must be a different clientele here than at<lb/>
other schools.<lb/>
"There has been a lot going on this year but it<lb/>
hasn't been successful. I don't know why<lb/>
? imiiKlW ii M W?tf m'KHiiaiTn m? u n ? i<lb/>
RUDOLPH ALEXANDER, dean of Student Affairs. hUUNlAINHEAD<lb/>
file photo.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057094_0002"/><lb/>
nom<lb/>
p&amp;Bp f ???'?<lb/>
2<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
news<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
mn 11 ??imn tt mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
SHFl<lb/>
Ouch<lb/>
Swine flu vaccines are being<lb/>
given in the infirmary. Students<lb/>
are urged to get their flu shots<lb/>
early - before it's too late!<lb/>
Piano Sonata<lb/>
Aaron Copland's "Piano<lb/>
Sonata Beethoven's "Wald-<lb/>
stein and "Hungarian Rhap-<lb/>
sody' No. 11 By Liszt. The<lb/>
concert is Monday, Nov. 15 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in the Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall, with Michael Rohrbacher,<lb/>
pianist, in a Senior Recital.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
For an evening of music,<lb/>
laughter and the positives of<lb/>
God's Word, come on over to a<lb/>
coffee house, Sat 730 p.m. at<lb/>
The Way Home, 2007 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Videos<lb/>
Water safety B-ball tryouts Dinner Theatre<lb/>
ECKANAR<lb/>
ECKANKAR, the Path of<lb/>
Total Awareness, is sponsoring a<lb/>
seminar in Greenville, N.C. The<lb/>
seminar will be held on Nov. 20 at<lb/>
the Ramada Inn (Hwy 264 By<lb/>
Pass) in Greenville, N.C. The<lb/>
Theme of the seminar is "Train-<lb/>
ing For The Spiritual Life and<lb/>
the program includes original<lb/>
ECK music, poetry, art and<lb/>
drama, as well as talks on various<lb/>
aspects of ECKANKAR. The<lb/>
color film, "ECKANKAR, A Way<lb/>
Of Life" featuring Sri Darwin<lb/>
Gross, the Living ECK Master,<lb/>
will be shown. Registration be-<lb/>
gins at noon and the program is<lb/>
from 1 to 5 p.m. The registration<lb/>
fee is $3.00.<lb/>
Vendors<lb/>
Vendor registration for the<lb/>
Dec. 8, Flea Market, to be held in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium, is now avail-<lb/>
able at the Mendenhall Studenyt<lb/>
Center Information Center, from<lb/>
9 a.m. until 5 p.m Monday<lb/>
through Friday. Students, facul-<lb/>
ty, and staff are eligible to sell<lb/>
items. A $5.00 refundable deposit<lb/>
is required at the time of<lb/>
registration. The last day to<lb/>
register is Monday, Dec. 6.<lb/>
The Student Union Video-<lb/>
Tape Committee presents "K.C.<lb/>
&amp; The Sunshine Band<lb/>
Shows are from 9.O0-11 flO<lb/>
daily in the Mendenhall Lobby.<lb/>
Come by and boogie! And<lb/>
remember: "Knockout" &amp;<lb/>
Ernie Kcvaks III" Next Week!<lb/>
Flea market<lb/>
Need some great Christmas<lb/>
gift bargains? You may just be<lb/>
able to find them at the ECU<lb/>
pre-Christmas Flea Market spon-<lb/>
sored by Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. The Flea Market will be<lb/>
held on Wednesday, Dec. 8,1976,<lb/>
from 9 a.m. until 7 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Lost and found<lb/>
The campus Lost and Found<lb/>
Department is located at the<lb/>
Information Desk in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. We have books,<lb/>
rings, glasses, coats, watches,<lb/>
umbrellas, etc. If you have lost an<lb/>
item, please come by the I nforma-<lb/>
tion desk and see if we have it.<lb/>
Any unclaimed articles will be<lb/>
sold at bargain prices at East<lb/>
Carolina University's Flea Market<lb/>
sponsored by Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center on Dec. 8 in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
There will be a Water Safety<lb/>
Instructor Retraining Course held<lb/>
Dec. 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th in<lb/>
Memorial Gym. The oourse is<lb/>
open to only those qualified<lb/>
Water Safety Instructors who<lb/>
have not been retrained under the<lb/>
Water Safety Revisions of 1976.<lb/>
The first meeting will be held at 7<lb/>
p.m December 1st, in Room 105<lb/>
memorial Gym.<lb/>
Postponed<lb/>
The Nov. meeting of PSI CHI<lb/>
has been postponed until Tues,<lb/>
Nov. 16. The PSI CHI Bake Sale<lb/>
and Fish Fry were both very<lb/>
successful and the Officers of PSI<lb/>
CHI appreciate the support<lb/>
received for these events. Re-<lb/>
member to be at the upcoming<lb/>
meeting which will be held at 7<lb/>
p.m. in room 129 in the SPEIGHT<lb/>
building Nov. 16th. The winter<lb/>
retreat and a Psychology depart-<lb/>
ment Speaker will highlight the<lb/>
meeting. See you at the meeting,<lb/>
refreshments will be free.<lb/>
LSA meets<lb/>
The Lutheran Student Asso-<lb/>
ciation meets on Sunday night at<lb/>
6 p.m. at Our Redeemer Lutheran<lb/>
Church (1801 S. Elm St.O For<lb/>
supper, table talk &amp; program!<lb/>
Enjoyment For all! Call 756-1166<lb/>
for rides.<lb/>
One-act plays Tower of pjsa<lb/>
Twentieth Century Schnoz<lb/>
Productions presents two one-act<lb/>
plays, Friday, Nov. 12, and<lb/>
Saturday, Nov. 13, at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Drama 205. The plays are JEFF<lb/>
PETERS AS A PERSONAL<lb/>
MAGNET by O Henry and THE<lb/>
LADIES SHOULD BE IN BED by<lb/>
Paul Zindel.<lb/>
Admission is free. Everyone<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
F.G.<lb/>
This Friday evening The For-<lb/>
ever Generation will be meeting<lb/>
in the Biology auditorium (Bio-<lb/>
logy 103), at 7:30 p.m. Why not<lb/>
join us for an interesting time of<lb/>
Bible study and fellowship?<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta Hl,lel social<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta English<lb/>
Honor Society will meet Wednes-<lb/>
day Nov. 17, 1976 in room 244<lb/>
Mendenhall at 730 p.m. New<lb/>
members will be inducted and<lb/>
Janice Faulkner will provide a<lb/>
program of folk music. All<lb/>
members are urged to attend!<lb/>
Don't be camera shy. Come to<lb/>
Hillel's movie and Social night.<lb/>
Free potato chips, beer, soda and<lb/>
a big fresh sal id. Date-Ncv. 12,<lb/>
1976. Time 7;30. Fa further<lb/>
information or ride call Lorey<lb/>
Duber 752-8190 or Dr. B. Resnih<lb/>
756-5640.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
The Society of Physics stu-<lb/>
dents will sponsor a public lecture<lb/>
on the Tower of Pisa experiment.<lb/>
At that time the speakers will<lb/>
discuss what does happen when<lb/>
balls are dropped in the air and<lb/>
what Galileo did and did say and<lb/>
do. A short film of the experiment<lb/>
will be shown and questions will<lb/>
be answered. The lecture will be<lb/>
Mon. Nov. 15 at 7 p.m. room 103<lb/>
Biology Auditorium. Public is<lb/>
invited.<lb/>
Can drive<lb/>
The ETA Nu Chapter of Alpha<lb/>
Phi Alpha Fraternity is sponsor-<lb/>
ing its 2nd Annual Thanksgiving<lb/>
can food drive for needy and<lb/>
low-income families in the city of<lb/>
Greenville. This effort is non-<lb/>
profit and student directed.<lb/>
Please help support this effort by<lb/>
donatng maybe one or two<lb/>
surplus non-perishable items to<lb/>
this drive. The collection spot on<lb/>
campus is the Afro-American<lb/>
culture center or you may call<lb/>
752-5347 and have them picked<lb/>
up. We would deeply appreciate<lb/>
your contributions. The drive wil<lb/>
last until Nov. 23.<lb/>
ii r mimmi i<lb/>
Anyone interested in tryouts<lb/>
for the Women's Intercollegiate<lb/>
Basketball team at ECU please<lb/>
report to Minges Coliseum Mon-<lb/>
day at 5:15.<lb/>
Chem seminar<lb/>
Peter Smith professor ot<lb/>
chemistry Duke University will<lb/>
present a seminar on "Highly<lb/>
Reactive Free Radicals As Stud-<lb/>
ied By Electron Spin Resonance<lb/>
It will be held Nov. 12, 1976 at<lb/>
2 p.m. In room 201 Flanagan<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served<lb/>
in the conference room at 300<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
The Rev. William Hadden,<lb/>
campus chaplain &amp; city council-<lb/>
man, will talk about "Erich<lb/>
Fromm and Christianity Sunday<lb/>
at the Unitarian-Universalist Fel-<lb/>
lowship. The meeting will begin<lb/>
with a covered-dish lunch at noon<lb/>
in the First Federal Building on<lb/>
the Bypass at Greenville. Every-<lb/>
one is invited. If cooking is a<lb/>
problem, a bag of apples or a<lb/>
package of cookies qualifies as a<lb/>
covered dish.<lb/>
Model UN<lb/>
The model United Nations<lb/>
Club will meet Thursday Nov. 11<lb/>
at 7 p.m in Brewster C-104. All<lb/>
interested in international rela-<lb/>
tions, foreign affairs diplomacy<lb/>
and the United Nations itself are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
The club's participation at the<lb/>
University of Pennsylvania Model<lb/>
U.N. Conference held in Philadel-<lb/>
phia this past .eekend will be<lb/>
discussed. For further informa-<lb/>
tion call David Mayo at 758-7578.<lb/>
DST pyramids<lb/>
Party with the Pyramids of the<lb/>
Kappa Sigma Chapter of the<lb/>
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority at Tar<lb/>
River Estates on Nov. 13 from 10<lb/>
p.m. to 2 a.m. Cover Charge-$1<lb/>
Refreshments will be served.<lb/>
Grad Exams<lb/>
Graduate Record Examina-<lb/>
tions will be offered at ECU Sat.<lb/>
Dec. 11. Application blanks are to<lb/>
be completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Service, Box<lb/>
966-R, Princeton, N.J. 08340 to<lb/>
arrive by Nov. 10. Applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the Testing<lb/>
Center, Rooms 105-106, Speight<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Coming soon! The first Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center Dinner<lb/>
Theatre! Stuart Aronson is put-<lb/>
ting together a dynamite show of<lb/>
"The Odd Couple" plus a dinner<lb/>
that will put your tastebuds in<lb/>
ectasy. Get tickets now at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Menden-<lb/>
hall for one of four shows,<lb/>
November 11-14. A M.S.C. Pro-<lb/>
duction.<lb/>
Unity Weekend<lb/>
Unity Weekend will be held<lb/>
Nov. 13 and 14 at the Roxy<lb/>
Theatre, 629 Albemarle Ave. It<lb/>
will be a weekend for free<lb/>
exchange of ideas, ide. and<lb/>
talents. There will be musicians,<lb/>
a magician, comics, speakers with<lb/>
something on their minds, food,<lb/>
beverage, and a theme of great<lb/>
hope for the peace and UNITY of<lb/>
all mankind. The Bahais of<lb/>
Greenville and friends urge all to<lb/>
drop, wander or come by the Roxy<lb/>
Theatre any time Sat. evening or<lb/>
Sun. afternoon. A UNITY FEAST<lb/>
will take place at ? p.m. Sat.<lb/>
Inter-Varsity<lb/>
If 70U want to know how you,<lb/>
as a Christian, can deal with<lb/>
alcoholism, oome to I.V. this<lb/>
Sunday night at eight o'clock.<lb/>
Animals<lb/>
The animals available for<lb/>
adoption this week include a<lb/>
white kitten, a tabby cat, two<lb/>
brown and white mixed shephard<lb/>
puppies, a tan and white mixed<lb/>
breed, and a brown dog.<lb/>
The people at Animal Control<lb/>
would like to extend an invitation<lb/>
to all interested persons to come<lb/>
by and visit the Shelter. The<lb/>
shelter is located on 2nd Street,<lb/>
off Cemetary Road. They would<lb/>
appreciate it and so would the<lb/>
animals.<lb/>
CINERGY<lb/>
Get ready fa the big event!<lb/>
The Pink Panther is back in town<lb/>
in "The Return of the Pink<lb/>
Panther an outrageously hilar-<lb/>
ious movie.<lb/>
This movie is guaranteed to<lb/>
give you a laugh a minute or<lb/>
we'll refund your price of admis-<lb/>
sion! If you have a weak heart,<lb/>
stay home you'll die laughing.<lb/>
The movie is presented by the<lb/>
Films Committee of the Student<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
Admission-I.D. &amp; activity card<lb/>
or MSC Membership card.<lb/>
Shows will be at 7 &amp; 9 p.m.<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat Nov. 12 &amp; 13 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Theatre.<lb/>
B<lb/>
7!<lb/>
D<lb/>
B<lb/>
R<lb/>
O<lb/>
<pb facs="00057094_0003"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHCADVOL 52, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
3<lb/>
 tmmmttr<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
Meet the Student Union staff<lb/>
EDI TOR'S NOTE- The Student Union is the major programming body on<lb/>
campus. This should not be confused with the Student Center in which<lb/>
the Union is housed. The Program Board is oompoaed of all Student<lb/>
Union committee chairpersons. Any information concerning program-<lb/>
ming or general information about the Union can be obtained by calling<lb/>
the appropriate chairperson or the Student Union office .<lb/>
PROGRAM BOARD MEMBERS 1976-77<lb/>
Barry Robinson<lb/>
Student Union President<lb/>
756-5086<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
Becky Bradshaw<lb/>
Theatre Arts<lb/>
Charlotte Cheatham<lb/>
Art Exhibition<lb/>
Bill Bass<lb/>
Entertainer<lb/>
Georgina E. Langston<lb/>
Video Tape<lb/>
Steve Huggins<lb/>
Lecture<lb/>
Dennis Ramsey<lb/>
Minority Arts<lb/>
CorethaM. Rushing<lb/>
Films<lb/>
Larry Romich<lb/>
Major Attractions<lb/>
Bob Seraiva<lb/>
Special Entertainment<lb/>
Freddy Proctor<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Ruth Morris<lb/>
Student Union Secret&amp;ry<lb/>
PhylissConway<lb/>
Artist Series<lb/>
Curtis Pitsenbarger<lb/>
Films<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Larry Romich -<lb/>
Chairperson<lb/>
758-8484<lb/>
Edward Bean<lb/>
Dave Haggerty<lb/>
Sue Hathaway<lb/>
Teresa Meeks<lb/>
Gary Romich<lb/>
Regina Thompson<lb/>
Reed Warren<lb/>
Art Exhibition<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Bill Bass, Chairperson<lb/>
752-6058<lb/>
David DeBerry<lb/>
Beverly Joyner<lb/>
Pat Flynn<lb/>
Charles W. Kesler<lb/>
Major A ttractions<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Bob Seriva - Chairperson<lb/>
752-8907<lb/>
Hall Sharpe<lb/>
Regina Thompson<lb/>
John Whitlow<lb/>
Dan Wright<lb/>
Mary Leisy<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Freddy Proctor -<lb/>
Chairperson<lb/>
752-7803<lb/>
Michael Futch<lb/>
Jeff Judy<lb/>
Troy Moore<lb/>
Coni Muhle<lb/>
David Quinn<lb/>
Cyndi Whitaker<lb/>
Wanda Gunter<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Comittee<lb/>
Ruth Morris-Chairperson<lb/>
752-7797<lb/>
James Barnes<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
Larry Surles<lb/>
Clara Worthington<lb/>
Renee Edwards<lb/>
Rob Maxon<lb/>
Molly Petty<lb/>
Entertainer<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Georgina Langston -<lb/>
Chairperson<lb/>
752-3402<lb/>
Rick Bean<lb/>
Bo Dudley<lb/>
Chip Hicks<lb/>
Thomas Frandsen<lb/>
Noelyne Langston<lb/>
Biff Bream<lb/>
Theatre Arts<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Charlotte S. Cheatham -<lb/>
Chairperson<lb/>
752-8033<lb/>
Rebecca Boiling<lb/>
Clarence Williams<lb/>
Jo Ellen Wood<lb/>
Robert Marshall<lb/>
Lisa Sharff<lb/>
Laura Royster<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Becky Bradshaw -<lb/>
Chairperson<lb/>
758-9969<lb/>
Teri Hill<lb/>
David Harrill<lb/>
Bill Martin<lb/>
Susan Moore<lb/>
Mike Morse<lb/>
Patricia Peebles<lb/>
Video Tape<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Steve Huggins -<lb/>
Chairperson<lb/>
758-9430<lb/>
Kathy Wells<lb/>
Bailey Hurt<lb/>
Barry Bailey<lb/>
Minority Arts<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Coretha Rushing -<lb/>
Chairperson<lb/>
758-4526<lb/>
Linda Farmer<lb/>
Joyce Mourning<lb/>
Cynthia Henley<lb/>
Verna Robertson<lb/>
Steve Wright<lb/>
Johnny Bryant<lb/>
Dorothy Harrell<lb/>
Lecture<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Dennis Ramsey -<lb/>
Chairperson<lb/>
752-8271<lb/>
Richard Cole<lb/>
Kathy Dixon<lb/>
Lisa Hopkins<lb/>
Ron Faust<lb/>
Leon Schaffer<lb/>
Robin Pulzone<lb/>
Artist Series Committee<lb/>
Curtis Pitsenbarger -<lb/>
Chairperson<lb/>
756-5086<lb/>
Mike Amy<lb/>
Gay Bowman<lb/>
Karen Harloe<lb/>
Mary Pemberton<lb/>
Gail Ramee<lb/>
Elizabeth Weeks<lb/>
Surrie Farmer<lb/>
Robert House<lb/>
GAUCHOS<lb/>
Make Great Gifts<lb/>
CORDUROY(<lb/>
AND COTTON<lb/>
BLENDS a<lb/>
WITH OR<lb/>
WITHOUT<lb/>
MATCHING<lb/>
VEST<lb/>
IN<lb/>
JUNIOR<lb/>
AND<lb/>
MISSES<lb/>
SIZES<lb/>
REGISTER FOR ONE OF 3<lb/>
FREE TURKEYS TO BE GIVEN AWAY<lb/>
TUESDAY NOVEMBER 23rd AT 5 p.m.<lb/>
YOU DO NOT HAVE TO BE PRESENT TO WIN.<lb/>
ASK ABOUT OUR $10<lb/>
CLUB CARD FOR ADDITIONAL SAVINGS<lb/>
Use our convenient Christmas LAYAWAY or<lb/>
your MASTER CHARGE<lb/>
COUNTRY FLAIR<lb/>
RED OAK ShOPPING CENTER<lb/>
3PEN MON - THURSDAY 10-6 FRIDAY 10-9 p.m.<lb/>
AND SATURDAY 10-6 p.m<lb/>
Ik!<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057094_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAOVOL 52, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
llHWWUPt<lb/>
<lb/>
Onhonorto pickbest<lb/>
SGA President Sullivan's firing of John Jones as<lb/>
Attorney General could be a mixed blessing for the<lb/>
system of jurisprudence on this campus.<lb/>
Jones was appointed by Jimmy Honeycutt, SGA<lb/>
president last year. "In the time John has been in<lb/>
office, he has done a fairly good job Sullivan told<lb/>
the legislature Monday.<lb/>
The President's official reason for having the<lb/>
post vacated was because a new SGA president<lb/>
should be able to choose a new Attorney General<lb/>
Sullivan also complained about Jones' having too<lb/>
much responsibility with his school work to do an<lb/>
adequate job.<lb/>
The responsibilities of this post are significant<lb/>
and to serve in this capacity does require many<lb/>
devoted hours. Together with the Deans of Men and<lb/>
Women, the Attorney General determines what<lb/>
cases have enough evidence to be heard by the<lb/>
Honor Council or Review Board<lb/>
The importance of the position is evidenced by<lb/>
the number of approvals the candidate for the post<lb/>
must survive. Candidates present themselves to a<lb/>
selection committee composed of the Chairman of<lb/>
the Review Board and the Honor Council, the<lb/>
incumbent Attorney General, and two administra-<lb/>
tors appointed by the chancellor of the University.<lb/>
This committee selects two candidates, one of<lb/>
which is chosen by the 9GA president. The<lb/>
president's selection then must be approved by the<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
Sullivan said the attorney general is "totally out<lb/>
of the control of students The president seemed<lb/>
wary of the reluctance of James Mai lory, dean of<lb/>
men, to allow Jones to be eliminated from the job.<lb/>
Sullivan seemed suspicious of the ooziness with<lb/>
which the two agreed on the status of cases.<lb/>
Despite his innuendo and suspicion Sullivan is<lb/>
justified in finding another attorney general who is<lb/>
more to his liking. The composition of the cabinet,<lb/>
attorney general included, is certainly the presi-<lb/>
dent's prerogative.<lb/>
"However, if the selection committee presents<lb/>
Sullivan with a choice of candidates, neither of<lb/>
which is to his liking and worthy of the position we<lb/>
might have witnessed nothing more than political<lb/>
calisthenics on the president's part.<lb/>
Should the selection committee present two<lb/>
candidates, one of which is to Sullivan's liking and<lb/>
worthy of the job, the president's action could be<lb/>
justified. But, what if the candidates are not<lb/>
acceptable? We may never know the validity of<lb/>
Jones' being replaced.<lb/>
M<lb/>
Fcxjntainheod<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor over titty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis Leonard<lb/>
News EditorsDebbie Jackson<lb/>
Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Trends EditorPat Coyle<lb/>
Spats EditorSteve Wheeler<lb/>
Fountainheed 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.uu annually for non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
TOrajfflW -Tp W -UUR IBUfflWfc<lb/>
Eskw wK wefm iscommwE,<lb/>
muWlEf NICE Wi<lb/>
TheForum??<lb/>
Major Attractions cheats ECU<lb/>
1<lb/>
ToFountainhead:<lb/>
According to the Nov. 4 issue<lb/>
of Fountainhead, the Major<lb/>
Attractions committee lost<lb/>
$27,000 on the oombined Home-<lb/>
coming oonoerts. Add to this the<lb/>
recent loss on the Leon Russell<lb/>
concert and we come up with a<lb/>
whopping $37,000 lost in only two<lb/>
weeks! This seems to be an<lb/>
abominable mismanagement of<lb/>
funds. i-<lb/>
I believe that the Major<lb/>
Attractions committee should<lb/>
wake up to the wants of the<lb/>
majority of ECU students. Sure,<lb/>
the shows provided were "fine<lb/>
talents in their own right but so<lb/>
is any performer!<lb/>
The Homecoming concerts<lb/>
New system for<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The Business Office and the<lb/>
Financial Aid Department have<lb/>
been considering means whereby<lb/>
the duplicate lines on Registra-<lb/>
tion Day oould be eliminated. In<lb/>
the future these lines will be<lb/>
reduced by having all of the<lb/>
Administrative Units interfaced<lb/>
on the computer. In the meantime<lb/>
a new plan will become effective<lb/>
Monday, November 15.<lb/>
All scholarship and grant<lb/>
warrants normally claimed at the<lb/>
Financial Aid Office will be at the<lb/>
Cashier's Office. Financial Aid<lb/>
recipients will be pe-mitted to use<lb/>
the warrants to register on<lb/>
November 15 thru 19 and Novem-<lb/>
ber 22 thru 26. For those students<lb/>
really disturb me the most,<lb/>
because although many students<lb/>
remained in Greenville, most had<lb/>
no intention of attending either<lb/>
Charlie Rich or Count Basie. This<lb/>
was not because of "rumors of<lb/>
other concerts but because very<lb/>
few college students have an<lb/>
interest in these types of music.<lb/>
The result was very poor<lb/>
attendance and a negative atti-<lb/>
tude, but the cause was the Major<lb/>
Attraction oommittee's lack of<lb/>
communication with the majority<lb/>
of students as to their preferen-<lb/>
ces.<lb/>
This is a sad thing for all ECU<lb/>
students, but in the future let's<lb/>
hope that the Major Attractions<lb/>
committee will represent the true<lb/>
interests of all students at ECU.<lb/>
Gary Whiting<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi: Campus needs BUC<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
We the brothers of Tau<lb/>
Chapter of Phi Sigma Pi National<lb/>
Honor Fraternity are deeply<lb/>
distressed because of the situa-<lb/>
tion concerning the BUCCANEER<lb/>
as reported in the November<lb/>
financial aid line<lb/>
registering during the week of<lb/>
November 15-19, a refund check<lb/>
will be ready for pick up on<lb/>
Tuesday, November 30. Refund<lb/>
checks for students registering<lb/>
after November 19 will be drawn<lb/>
as soon as possible after Novem-<lb/>
ber 30.<lb/>
Robert M. Boudreaux<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
Forum letters should be<lb/>
typed or printed and they must<lb/>
be signed and include the<lb/>
writjr's address. Names will<lb/>
be withheld upon request.<lb/>
Letters may be sent to Foun-<lb/>
tainhead or left at the Informa-<lb/>
tion Desk in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
second edition of the FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD. We sincerely feel that<lb/>
having a yearbook of high quality<lb/>
is a very important tradition that<lb/>
should oontinue here at EAST<lb/>
CAROLINA UNIVERSITY as it<lb/>
has in the past. Because of our<lb/>
genuine concern in this matter,<lb/>
we the brothers of Tau Chapter of<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi National Honor<lb/>
Fraternity have passed the follow-<lb/>
ing resolution: RESOLVED:<lb/>
Noting that there may not be a<lb/>
BUCCANEER for the 1976-1977<lb/>
academic year due to budget<lb/>
inconsistency and personality<lb/>
conflicts, and further noting the<lb/>
campus-wide interest in said<lb/>
publication, and further noting<lb/>
the excellence of said publication<lb/>
in the past, we the brothers of<lb/>
Tau Chapter of Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
National Honor Fraternity do<lb/>
hereby call upon the legislature of<lb/>
the Student Government of East<lb/>
Carolina University to take imme-<lb/>
diate action towards correcting<lb/>
the current situation.<lb/>
m<lb/>
n<lb/>
<lb/>
M<lb/>
m<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Jeff Wilder, Secretary<lb/>
.<lb/>
.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057094_0005"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
5<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
Utilities Commission plans treatment plant<lb/>
By LARRY LIEBERMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Greenville Utilities Com-<lb/>
mission plans to build a new<lb/>
wastewater treatment facility on<lb/>
the nath side of the Tar River in<lb/>
Greenville by the end of 1981.<lb/>
The law provides fa federal<lb/>
financial assistance in the plan-<lb/>
ning and construction of waste-<lb/>
water treatment facilities. Fa<lb/>
cities to qualify fa this aid thev<lb/>
must prepare a "facilities plan"<lb/>
under Section 201 of PL 92-500.<lb/>
Hane estimates an overall<lb/>
calls for the designing and<lb/>
construction of an 11 million<lb/>
gallon a day wastewater treat-<lb/>
ment plant to handle all the<lb/>
sewage from the Greenville area.<lb/>
"We plan to phase out the old<lb/>
plant at the end of Cemetery<lb/>
Road said Lewis, "there is no<lb/>
involves the study and rehabili-<lb/>
tation of infiltration inflow. Infil-<lb/>
tration inflow is exoess water<lb/>
which enters the sewage lines<lb/>
through bad joints, broken pipes,<lb/>
and deteriaated manholes.<lb/>
"In this phase the cost effect-<lb/>
iveness of the rehabilitation neo-<lb/>
e'sary is decided said Lewis.<lb/>
' The sewage lines are surveyed<lb/>
a d evaluated for the most<lb/>
ft sible oarection<lb/>
Hane said the secoid phase<lb/>
of the 201 plan also involves the<lb/>
detailed planning of the new plant<lb/>
design. This should be completed<lb/>
by January 1, 1979.<lb/>
Lewis said the third stage is<lb/>
the actual construction of the<lb/>
wastewater treatment plant. It<lb/>
will take about two years to build<lb/>
the plant. Construction should<lb/>
begin by January 1979 and end<lb/>
January 1981.<lb/>
Aooading to Hane the actual<lb/>
land fa the plant will be about 60<lb/>
acres but another 140 acres will<lb/>
be used fa drying sludge.<lb/>
The 201 secta is the area to<lb/>
be served by the plant. This<lb/>
includes Greenville and one a<lb/>
two miles beyond the city limits.<lb/>
Hane said there will be a<lb/>
boid referendum in early 1978<lb/>
concerning the wastewater treat-<lb/>
ment plant.<lb/>
"We' re pushing as hard as we<lb/>
can to speed up the progress of<lb/>
the plan said Hane. "Our<lb/>
aiginal plan was started in June<lb/>
1973. Then we had to change our<lb/>
plan to fit the 201 mandate in<lb/>
1974. Then in 1975 the EPA<lb/>
changed the criteria fa the plan<lb/>
and we had to upgrade it.<lb/>
"It'slike playing in a baseball<lb/>
game when the rules are changed<lb/>
after each inning<lb/>
Hane said the wastewater<lb/>
treatment plant was needed ije-<lb/>
cause of the projected popula-<lb/>
tional increase in Greenville. It is<lb/>
about 32,000 now and by the year<lb/>
2000 should be 52,000.<lb/>
THIS PRESENT WASTEWATER<lb/>
The initial idea fa a new<lb/>
wastewater treatment plant be-<lb/>
gan about three years ago as a<lb/>
nath side sewage study.<lb/>
The idea was to make the new<lb/>
plant handle the build-up of<lb/>
industrial waste across the river,<lb/>
aooading to Greenville Utilities<lb/>
Canmissioner, Charles H. Hane<lb/>
Jr.<lb/>
"Just after the Utilities Can-<lb/>
mission began thinking about the<lb/>
need for another wastewater<lb/>
treatment plant, Public Law 92-<lb/>
500 went into effect Hane said.<lb/>
Public Law 92-500 is part of<lb/>
the Federal Water Pol' ? tion Con-<lb/>
trol Amendments of 1972.<lb/>
The objective of the law is the<lb/>
restaatioi and maintenance of<lb/>
the chemical, physical, and bio-<lb/>
logical integrity of the nation's<lb/>
waters.<lb/>
treatment plant will be replaced by<lb/>
cost of $11,658,000 for the<lb/>
oomplete planning and construct-<lb/>
ion of the plant.<lb/>
The federal government will<lb/>
supply 75 peroent of the money if<lb/>
the 201 plan is accepted. An<lb/>
additional 12.5 peroent is avail-<lb/>
able fran the North Carolina<lb/>
Clean Water Bond funds, auth-<lb/>
aized in 1971.<lb/>
The Utilities Commission<lb/>
modified their plan to fit the 201<lb/>
plan requirements and have<lb/>
completed it.<lb/>
"The 201 plan should be<lb/>
approved by the Environmental<lb/>
Protection Agency (EPA) and the<lb/>
N.C. Department of Natural and<lb/>
Eoononic Resources by Spring<lb/>
1977 said Hane.<lb/>
Accading to Wadie D. Lewis<lb/>
Jr superintendent of water and<lb/>
sewer department, the 201 plan<lb/>
1981. Photo by Russ Pogue.)<lb/>
room to expand it because it is<lb/>
waking at capacity now with<lb/>
about 511A million gallons day<lb/>
"The pump station at the old<lb/>
plant will be used, even though<lb/>
the treatment plant will be closed,<lb/>
to pump the waste from the south<lb/>
side of the river to the new<lb/>
plant said Lewis.<lb/>
Accading to Hane, the 201<lb/>
plan has three phases The first<lb/>
phase of the plan is the Greenville<lb/>
201 Facilities Plan, which is<lb/>
completed. This was done under<lb/>
contract by Olsen Associates,<lb/>
Inc architects and engineers in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
The second phase of the plan<lb/>
Major and Minor Repairs<lb/>
on ALL Stringed Instruments<lb/>
-Amplifier Repair -Refinishing<lb/>
-Custom Work<lb/>
Guitar, Banjo, Violin &amp; Bass<lb/>
Lessons Available<lb/>
The Guitar Workshop<lb/>
10-1 and 2-5 Daily<lb/>
403A Evans Street Mall 758-1055<lb/>
Jenkins praises<lb/>
vocational schools<lb/>
Chancella Leo Jenkins said<lb/>
Sunday that there should "really<lb/>
be no basic conflict" between<lb/>
vocational training and liberal<lb/>
education.<lb/>
Calling both "great areas of<lb/>
discipline Dr. Jenkins warned<lb/>
that as higher education becomes<lb/>
increasingly expensive "the<lb/>
voices of those aying fa special-<lb/>
izeu training may well become<lb/>
louder<lb/>
It is his view, Jenkins said at<lb/>
dedication of a new campus<lb/>
facility at Vance-Granville Com-<lb/>
munity College in Henderson,<lb/>
that "the great strength of<lb/>
America, in higher education, is<lb/>
found in its diverse objectives,<lb/>
slanted simultaneously toward<lb/>
the vocational and the liberal<lb/>
arts"<lb/>
He added, "there is evidence<lb/>
that the liberal arts people are<lb/>
understanding the need fa voca-<lb/>
tional training and that the<lb/>
professionally oriented groups<lb/>
<lb/>
are embracing the liberal arts.<lb/>
This is as it should be, fa they<lb/>
are mutually dependent<lb/>
Jenkins, president and chan-<lb/>
cella of ECU, the state's third<lb/>
largest higher education institu-<lb/>
tion fa 16 years, repeated his<lb/>
philosophy that as the need fa<lb/>
specialists increases "so will the<lb/>
nued fa instruction in the art of<lb/>
living<lb/>
In education today, Jenkins<lb/>
said, "our schools have had to<lb/>
take on responsibilities infinitely<lb/>
mae oomplex" than the "three<lb/>
Rs<lb/>
"We are concerned with<lb/>
self-realization, with human rela-<lb/>
tionships, with economic efficien-<lb/>
cy, and with civic responsibility<lb/>
He aaded confidently that if<lb/>
the citizens define any new duties<lb/>
to Vance-Granville Community<lb/>
College, and suppat with money,<lb/>
confidence and faith, "this fine<lb/>
institution will assume them and<lb/>
justify your faith and support in<lb/>
the future as it has in the past<lb/>
LOCATED ON MALL DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
2v1 OFF ALL DENIM JUMPSUITS<lb/>
25 OFF ALL COATS IN STOCK<lb/>
50 OFF SELECTED GROUPS OF FALL<lb/>
&amp; WINTER MERCHANDISE<lb/>
25 OFF SELECTED Male, Landlubber,<lb/>
Sultra and Town &amp; Country Jeans<lb/>
LARGE SELECTION OF MEN'S SHORT<lb/>
AND LONG SLEEVE MEN'S RUGBY SHIRTS<lb/>
$3.90-5.90 regularly $10.00-12.00<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057094_0006"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
??3l8&amp;- a<lb/>
PBBIBH<lb/>
IBMMNBBB<lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
IWIIHIMW<lb/>
?T4<lb/>
Charges administration with racism<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Alabama fires professor for criticism<lb/>
(LNS)University of Alabama<lb/>
math professor Steve Whitman,<lb/>
vocal in his criticism of racist<lb/>
hiring policies at the University,<lb/>
has been fired for his protests.<lb/>
Whitman, who is white, has<lb/>
taught at the University's Bir-<lb/>
mingham campus for five years.<lb/>
GeT AdauAiKTEfcWmilU!<lb/>
Mbftfc 3hH0<lb/>
CW 5<lb/>
13 ? Tft?n<lb/>
??? ? "ft?<lb/>
torn .<lb/>
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W 111<lb/>
s,frr auas<lb/>
m? ju?r<lb/>
avntt SU4 W<lb/>
-7<lb/>
This past year the Math Depart-<lb/>
ment had two job openings, and<lb/>
the staff recommended a black<lb/>
man,Dr. Nelson, for one of the<lb/>
positions. "Since racism makes it<lb/>
difficult fa black people to gain<lb/>
good educations, especially in<lb/>
technical areas like math, I was<lb/>
pretty excited about Dr. Nelson,<lb/>
applying explained Whitman.<lb/>
But Roger Hanson, Dean of<lb/>
the School of Natural Sciences<lb/>
and Mathematics, refused to hire<lb/>
Nelson, and Whitman attacked<lb/>
the Dean's action as racist during<lb/>
a faculty meeting of the Depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Later in the academic year,<lb/>
Whitman also wrote a strong<lb/>
letter to the student newspaper<lb/>
protesting a racist article and<lb/>
criticizing the Assistant to the<lb/>
Vice-President, James Wood-<lb/>
ward. In late summer, Whitman<lb/>
received a letter from Hanson<lb/>
saying that his contract would be<lb/>
terminated as of June, 1977.<lb/>
"There is absolutely no evi-<lb/>
dence that I was fired by Hanson<lb/>
for any other reason than the fact<lb/>
that I spoke out against racism at<lb/>
UAB said Whitman, who re-<lb/>
ported that "half a dozen people<lb/>
heard him (Hanson) talk bitterly<lb/>
about me when I called him a racist<lb/>
in April<lb/>
The University's record for<lb/>
"equal opportunity" hiring is<lb/>
suspect indeed. Whitman points<lb/>
out that as of 1975, only about 3<lb/>
per cent of the UAB faculty was<lb/>
black. Thirty-two new faculty<lb/>
?members were hired for the<lb/>
1975-76 academic year, none of<lb/>
them black.<lb/>
"One can compare these<lb/>
figures to the 45 per cent black<lb/>
population of Birmingham, the 25<lb/>
per cent black population of<lb/>
Alabama or the 13 per cent black<lb/>
population of the United States<lb/>
said Whitman.<lb/>
He rattled off several other<lb/>
examples of the University's<lb/>
hiring policies. There was, for<lb/>
instance, the black woman with a<lb/>
Ph.D. whom the Biology Depart-<lb/>
ment refused to hire last yea-<lb/>
even though there were no blacks<lb/>
in the department. Or the black<lb/>
woman who was about to apply to<lb/>
the Philosophy Department three<lb/>
years ago when told that there<lb/>
were no positions available and<lb/>
there wouldn't be any in the<lb/>
future. Since then the department<lb/>
has hired four white men. And<lb/>
there was a black man with a<lb/>
Ph.D. from Stanford whom the<lb/>
Psychology Department refused<lb/>
to hire, choosing a white man<lb/>
instead.<lb/>
"I haven't yet been able to<lb/>
find the statistics for the 1976-77<lb/>
hirings and firings said Whit-<lb/>
man. "But as far as I know there<lb/>
is either one or no black chair-<lb/>
people, no black deans, no black<lb/>
studies major and almost no black<lb/>
courses. Among the few black<lb/>
courses that do exist, some are<lb/>
taught by white people<lb/>
 The issue of black employees<lb/>
other than faculty members is<lb/>
almost too sickening to even<lb/>
discuss continued Whitman.<lb/>
NATIONALLY KNOWN SPEED READING COURSE<lb/>
TO DE TAUGHT HERE IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
GREENVILLE (Spec.) United<lb/>
States Reading Lab will offer a 4<lb/>
week course in speed reading to<lb/>
a limited number of qualified<lb/>
people in the Greenville area.<lb/>
This recently developed<lb/>
method of instruction is the most<lb/>
innovative and effective pro-<lb/>
gram available in the United<lb/>
States<lb/>
Not only does this famous<lb/>
course reduce your time in the<lb/>
classroom to just one class per<lb/>
week for 4 short weeks but it also<lb/>
includes an advanced speed<lb/>
reading course on cassette tape<lb/>
so that you can continue to im-<lb/>
prove for the rest of your life. In<lb/>
just 4 weeks the average student<lb/>
should be reading 4-5 times<lb/>
faster. In a few months some<lb/>
students are reading 20-30 times<lb/>
faster attaining speeds that ap-<lb/>
proach 6000 words per minute. In<lb/>
rare instances speeds of up to<lb/>
13,000 wpm have been<lb/>
documented.<lb/>
Our average graduate should<lb/>
read 7-10 times faster upon com-<lb/>
pletion of the course with mark-<lb/>
ed improvement in comprehen-<lb/>
sion and concentration.<lb/>
For tho. who would like addi-<lb/>
tional information, a series of<lb/>
free, one hour orientation lec-<lb/>
tures have been scheduled. At<lb/>
these free lectures the course<lb/>
will be explained in complete<lb/>
detail, including classroom pro-<lb/>
cedures, instruction methods,<lb/>
class schedule and a special 1<lb/>
time only introductory tuition<lb/>
that is less than one-third the<lb/>
cost of similar courses. You<lb/>
must attend any of the meetings<lb/>
for information about the Green-<lb/>
ville classes<lb/>
These orientations are open to<lb/>
the public, above age 14, (per-<lb/>
sons under 18 should be ac-<lb/>
companied by a parent if possi-<lb/>
ble).<lb/>
If you have always wanted to<lb/>
be a speed reader but found the<lb/>
cost prohibitive or the course too<lb/>
time consuming . . . now you<lb/>
can! Just by attending 1 evening<lb/>
per week for 4 short weeks you<lb/>
can read 7 to 10 times faster,<lb/>
concentrate better and com-<lb/>
prehend more.<lb/>
If you are a student who would<lb/>
like to make A's instead of B's or<lb/>
C's or if you are a business per-<lb/>
son who wants to stay abreast of<lb/>
today's everchanging ac-<lb/>
celerating world then this course<lb/>
is an absolute necessity.<lb/>
These special one-hour lec-<lb/>
tures will be held at the following<lb/>
times and places.<lb/>
Mr. Ribs Restaurant<lb/>
706 Evans St.<lb/>
Monday November 15 at 6:30<lb/>
P.M. and again at 8:30 P.M.<lb/>
Tuesday November 16 at 6:30<lb/>
P.M. and again at 8:30 P.M.<lb/>
Wednesday November 17 at 6:30<lb/>
P.M. and again at 8:30 P.M.<lb/>
Thursday November 18 at 6:30<lb/>
P.M. and again at 8:38 P.M.<lb/>
Friday November 19 at 6:30<lb/>
P.M. and again at 8:30 P.M.<lb/>
SATURDAY NOVEMBER 20 AT<lb/>
10:30 A.M. AND AGAIN AT 1:30<lb/>
P.M.<lb/>
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21 AT<lb/>
2:00 P.M. AND AGAIN AT 4:00<lb/>
P.M.<lb/>
If you are a businessman, stu-<lb/>
dent, housewife or executive this<lb/>
course, which took 5 years of in-<lb/>
tensive research to develop, is a<lb/>
must. You can read 7-10 times<lb/>
faster, comprehend more, con-<lb/>
centrate better, and remember<lb/>
longer. Students are offered an<lb/>
additional discount. This course<lb/>
can be taught to industry or civic<lb/>
groups at "Group rates" upon<lb/>
request. Be sure to attend<lb/>
whichever free orientation that<lb/>
fits you best.<lb/>
ADV.<lb/>
m<lb/>
"My casual observations suggest<lb/>
that the janitorial staff, including<lb/>
and especially those who come<lb/>
here at night and work until<lb/>
morning, is almost all black. It is<lb/>
not an exaggeration to say that<lb/>
these employees form a servant<lb/>
corps for us<lb/>
Whitman says he has gotten<lb/>
little support from the University<lb/>
faculty members. When asked in<lb/>
a student interview why he was<lb/>
putting his job on the line to<lb/>
protest racism, he responded that<lb/>
"when white people discriminate<lb/>
against blacks as has happened<lb/>
here at UAB, it is the responsibi-<lb/>
lity of the white people who feel<lb/>
that this shouldn't be happening,<lb/>
to deal with this discrimination.<lb/>
After all, if we don't we are<lb/>
allowing the racism to be per-<lb/>
petrated in our name<lb/>
"Secondly, I think we all<lb/>
become less human if we sit<lb/>
around and refuse to try to<lb/>
prevent acts of degradation,<lb/>
humiliation and destruction <lb/>
Racism also harms white peo-<lb/>
ple he remarked. "Traditional-<lb/>
ly racism has beenperpetuated<lb/>
by the rich and the institutions<lb/>
they control in order to keep poor<lb/>
whites and poor blacks fighting<lb/>
against each other<lb/>
Whitman is now in tbe process<lb/>
of challenging the University's<lb/>
decision to fire him. "I would like<lb/>
my job back he said. "From<lb/>
every indication that I have<lb/>
received I have been an adequate<lb/>
teacher. But more important is<lb/>
the issue of racism. Had I been<lb/>
more interested in my job I never<lb/>
would have spoken out in the first<lb/>
place. It is absolutely crucial that<lb/>
people who are interested in<lb/>
dealing with racism here begin to<lb/>
act as soon as possible<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
accepts<lb/>
applications<lb/>
Scandinavian Seminar is now<lb/>
accepting applications for its<lb/>
study abroad program in Den-<lb/>
mark, Finland, Norway, or Swe-<lb/>
den for the academic year 1977-<lb/>
78. This living-and-learning ex-<lb/>
perience is designed for college<lb/>
students, graduates and other<lb/>
adults who want to become part of<lb/>
another culture while acquiring a<lb/>
second language.<lb/>
An initial three weeks lang-<lb/>
uage course, followed by a family<lb/>
stay whenever possible, will give<lb/>
the student opportunity to<lb/>
practice the language on a daily<lb/>
basisand to share in the life of the<lb/>
community. For the major part of<lb/>
the year he is separated from his<lb/>
fellow American students, living<lb/>
and studying among Scandi-<lb/>
navians at a "People's College"<lb/>
(residential school for continuing<lb/>
adult education) or some other<lb/>
specialized institution.<lb/>
:i0v:<lb/>
HHHBH<lb/>
?Hi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057094_0007"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
7<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmtmmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
in mm i m<lb/>
Police open fire on crowd, up to 150 killed<lb/>
Indians protest against forced sterilization<lb/>
NEW YORK (LNS) - At least<lb/>
50 people and perhaps as many as<lb/>
150 were killed October 18 when<lb/>
polioe opened fire on villagers<lb/>
protesting mass foroed sterili-<lb/>
zation in India.<lb/>
The villagers said that when<lb/>
polioe rounded up fourteen men<lb/>
who had more than two children,<lb/>
a crowd of 4,000 to 5,000 people<lb/>
came to their defense. Villagers<lb/>
told an Associated Press reporter<lb/>
in Muzaffarnagar, about 100<lb/>
miles northwest of New Delhi,<lb/>
that hundreds of people were hit<lb/>
when police opened fire into the<lb/>
crowd. Others were rounded up<lb/>
and shot in the market place later<lb/>
in the evening.<lb/>
There has been no way to<lb/>
determine exactly how many were<lb/>
killed, the villagers said, as some<lb/>
bodies were found in the river and<lb/>
others were buried secretly. Over<lb/>
60 people were killed in a<lb/>
similar demonstration in Delhi in<lb/>
April.<lb/>
Prime Minister Indira Ghandi<lb/>
referred to the government's<lb/>
sterilization campaign in an<lb/>
October 27 speech to parliament<lb/>
and admitted that, "some deaths<lb/>
have taken place, due to firing<lb/>
While Mrs. Ghandi insists that<lb/>
"there is no ooercion in the<lb/>
national family planning pro-<lb/>
gram the government has used<lb/>
its Declaration of Emergency of<lb/>
1975 to turn the campaign into a<lb/>
massive assault on poor Indians.<lb/>
The federal government has<lb/>
set sterilization targets for each<lb/>
state, giving the state govern-<lb/>
ments wide latitude in their<lb/>
methods for reaching the targets.<lb/>
At least three of the 22 states<lb/>
have drafted bills prescribing jail<lb/>
terms for one member of a couple<lb/>
who does not voluntarily limit<lb/>
their family to three children.<lb/>
Leaders in the town where the<lb/>
recent demonstrations were held<lb/>
said that regional authorities told<lb/>
ricksha pullers, shop keepers,<lb/>
poor people with government<lb/>
ration cards, and most others who<lb/>
need government lioenses that<lb/>
they would lose their credentials<lb/>
if they did not volunteer fa-<lb/>
ster i I izat ion.<lb/>
"The government policy<lb/>
wrote New Asia News reporter<lb/>
Ashok Mukherji recently, "in-<lb/>
volves the propagation of the<lb/>
official ideology of family plan-<lb/>
ning. The idea that population<lb/>
causes poverty' in many ways fits<lb/>
the prejudices of the bureaucratic<lb/>
elite. It is doubtful that India's<lb/>
rulers really believe the ideology.<lb/>
There are too manyl ndian agricul-<lb/>
tural experts saying that India<lb/>
could relatively easily double its<lb/>
food production.<lb/>
"But real agricultural deve-<lb/>
lopment would involve both in-<lb/>
vestment and large-scale mobili-<lb/>
zation of human labor power.<lb/>
This, however, is not the develop-<lb/>
ment policy that the government<lb/>
of India has been following.<lb/>
Increasingly since the State of<lb/>
Emergency, the emphasis has<lb/>
been on export and relianoe on<lb/>
Western multinationals I ike the<lb/>
brazilian model' which requires a<lb/>
relatively small, but 'disciplined'<lb/>
labor force.<lb/>
CAMPUS SQUIRREL contemplates approaching photoqrapher<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD file photo.)<lb/>
SGA PHOTO LAB<lb/>
TECHNICIAN<lb/>
NEEDED.<lb/>
PLEASE INQUIRE<lb/>
BY CALLING<lb/>
757-6994 757-6366<lb/>
COLLEGE JUNIORS<lb/>
COLLEGE SENIORS<lb/>
NUCLEAR PROPULSION<lb/>
The leading operator of Nuclear Reactors in the United States is currently seeking college<lb/>
juniors and seniors fa graduate training in Nuclear Propulsion after completing<lb/>
undergraduate degree requirements. Interested applicants should be in pursuit of a<lb/>
Baccalaureate Degree with an engineering, pure science, or math major and have<lb/>
demonstrated ability in math and physics courses. A minimum of one year of college physics<lb/>
and math through integral calculus with a "B" average or better in technical courses is<lb/>
required. Successful applicants will be paid over $500 monthly during their senior year of<lb/>
college. Upon graduation and commissioning, applicants will receive one year of nuclear<lb/>
graduate training. Nuclear qualified officers will be challenged by the entire nuclear<lb/>
engineers aboard Naval vessels and ashore.<lb/>
LT. JOHN GORDON<lb/>
Navy Recruiting District Raleigh<lb/>
1001 NavahoDr.<lb/>
Raleigh,NC 27609<lb/>
Call Collect (919) 872-20052006<lb/>
RAZZ JAZZ<lb/>
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WE ARE NOT "JUST JAZZ"<lb/>
WE ARE Led Zeppelin, Bob Seeger, Kansas,<lb/>
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Stevie Wonder,Elton John, Foghat, New<lb/>
Riders, E.W.F Pink Floyd, Jackson Browne,<lb/>
Crosby, Stills, Nash &amp; Young, AND MORE,<lb/>
AND MORE, AND<lb/>
PLUSWEHAVETHESE 6.98 LIST ALBUMS<lb/>
RECORDS- DISCOUNT PRICED<lb/>
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PAPERS-30<lb/>
APACHE<lb/>
SILVERSMITH JEWELRY<lb/>
Rings, Bracelets, Necklaces, custom made to your<lb/>
order.<lb/>
Jewelry Repair, Sizing &amp; Cleaning by Apache.<lb/>
All jewelry work done by Apache is guaranteed.<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
$3.99to $4.99<lb/>
Bring in this Ad and get a Discount off any $4 List<lb/>
w?f? Album, or $4.95or more Bong. Void After<lb/>
OU Limit One Per Customer 122076<lb/>
mm iliiw<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmn<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057094_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mnm<lb/>
m<lb/>
wtmmm<lb/>
WATCH OUT<lb/>
FORTHE<lb/>
RAINBOW<lb/>
ECU professor conducts study<lb/>
SIDS highest among N.C. Indians<lb/>
Sudden Infant Death Syn-<lb/>
drome (SIDS) in North Carolina is<lb/>
more likely to occur among<lb/>
American Indian babies than any<lb/>
other ethnic group, according to<lb/>
an ECU geographer.<lb/>
PIER FIVE<lb/>
Hrs.M-Th<lb/>
11:30-2:00<lb/>
4:00-9:00<lb/>
Fri &amp; Sat<lb/>
11:30-10:00<lb/>
Thurs Fri<lb/>
TROUT SPECIAL<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
11:30-9:00<lb/>
Try homemade onion rings<lb/>
$1.69 includes FF,<lb/>
hushpuppies, slaw;<lb/>
264 Bv-Pass<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Dr. Jack Blok recently com-<lb/>
pleted the nation's first epidemi-<lb/>
ological study of SIDS covering<lb/>
an entire state. Previous studies<lb/>
have been limited to a few major<lb/>
metropolitan areas.<lb/>
In 1972-74 North Carolina's<lb/>
overall SIDS rate per thousand<lb/>
live births was 2.06. Among<lb/>
whites it was found to be lowest,<lb/>
with a rate of 1.23 per thousand<lb/>
live births. The SIDS rate for<lb/>
blacks was 3.75, and among<lb/>
Indians, 5.65.<lb/>
The Blok study of occurrences<lb/>
by county revealed SIDS rates<lb/>
ranging from zero to a high 6.6 in<lb/>
Robeson County, where Indians<lb/>
make up a large proportion of the<lb/>
population.<lb/>
Popularly known as "crib<lb/>
death Sudden Infant Death<lb/>
Syndrome remains a mystery to<lb/>
doctors, despite a recent increase<lb/>
of medical research in this area.<lb/>
SI DS has been associated with<lb/>
respiratory difficulties, and some<lb/>
researchers theorize genetic or<lb/>
environmental causes, but none<lb/>
of these hypotheses has been<lb/>
conclusively proven.<lb/>
Dr. Blok presented .results of<lb/>
his three-year analysis of the<lb/>
American Public Health Associ-<lb/>
ation analysis of the American<lb/>
Public Health Association in<lb/>
Miami Beach last week. The<lb/>
gathering drew about 9,000 pub-<lb/>
lic health professionals represent-<lb/>
ing world, national, state and<lb/>
10 MINUTES<lb/>
OF YOUR TIME<lb/>
COULD SAVE<lb/>
A FRIEND<lb/>
In the time it takes to drive<lb/>
your friend home, you could save<lb/>
his life.<lb/>
If your friend's been drinking<lb/>
too much, he shouldn't be driving.<lb/>
The automobile crash is the<lb/>
number one cause of death of people<lb/>
your age. And the ironic thing is<lb/>
that the drunk drivers responsible<lb/>
for killing young people are most<lb/>
often other young people.<lb/>
Take ten minutes. Or twenty.<lb/>
Or an hour. Drive your friend<lb/>
home. That's all. If you can't do<lb/>
that, call a cab. Or let him sleep<lb/>
on your couch.<lb/>
We're not asking you to be<lb/>
a doctor or a cop. Just a friend.<lb/>
rr<lb/>
DRUNK DRIVER, DEPT. Y<lb/>
BOX 2345<lb/>
ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND 20852<lb/>
I want to save a friend's life.<lb/>
Tell me what else I can do.<lb/>
My name is,<lb/>
Address<lb/>
City<lb/>
1<lb/>
State.<lb/>
-Zip.<lb/>
?Y"l IHHIt.HWAY SAM-IV ADVISOKV c'oMMII'IH-<lb/>
IF YOU LET A FRIEND DRIVE DRUNK,YOU'RE NO FRIEND.<lb/>
I ID I'AMIMIM ill IKASM'iHIMo.SAIhAI HICHMAV I RAI H( SAI I I Y ADMINIM HAI ION<lb/>
local health care organizations.<lb/>
The Blok study is the first<lb/>
which accurately maps SIDS<lb/>
occurrences through a state, with<lb/>
incidence rates outlined for<lb/>
oounties and cities as well as<lb/>
ethnic a socio-economic groups.<lb/>
It was found that there existed<lb/>
a considerable variability among<lb/>
locations in the degrees of risk<lb/>
faced by infants, Blok said.<lb/>
 Among the state's cities with<lb/>
populations of more than 10,000<lb/>
the SIDS rates ranged from zero<lb/>
to 10.6. For whites living in these<lb/>
cities, the rates ranged from zero<lb/>
to a high of 6.2 he noted.<lb/>
"Although North Carolina's<lb/>
total infant mortality rate has<lb/>
been declining in recent years,<lb/>
the SIDS rate has remained quite<lb/>
stable<lb/>
Pre-med<lb/>
advisory<lb/>
office<lb/>
opens<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
A pre-medical advisory office<lb/>
is now open on campus in<lb/>
Brewster building, A-303 to assist<lb/>
pre-med and pre-dental students<lb/>
primarily with curriculum accord-<lb/>
ing to Smitty Lineberger, Alpha<lb/>
Epsilon Delta pre-med honor<lb/>
fraternity president.<lb/>
The advisory office was es-<lb/>
pecially designed to assist fresh-<lb/>
men and sophomores who desire<lb/>
a pre-profession curriculum in<lb/>
medicine or dentistry, according<lb/>
to Lineberger.<lb/>
The office is also available to<lb/>
all pre-med and pre-dental stu-<lb/>
dents who seek advioe on any<lb/>
aspect of their pre-professional<lb/>
work, Lineberger said.<lb/>
Dr. Wayne Ayers, head of the<lb/>
advisory oommittee, is in charge<lb/>
of the office.<lb/>
Students and professors of<lb/>
five ECU departments man the<lb/>
office at different times, accord-<lb/>
ing to Lineberger.<lb/>
Professors assisting are: Dr.<lb/>
Steve Taoken - psychology, Dr.<lb/>
Al Fahren - history, Ms. Grace<lb/>
Ellenberg - Foreign Languages,<lb/>
Drs. Graham Davis, Jack I to and<lb/>
W. James Smith - Biology, Drs.<lb/>
Wayne Ayers and Warren McAl-<lb/>
lister - Chemistry.<lb/>
"The advisory office is a-<lb/>
nother means of building up the<lb/>
ECU pre-med school to better<lb/>
serve the pre-med students<lb/>
Lineberger said.<lb/>
According to Lineberger, pre-<lb/>
med at ECU is "coming into its<lb/>
own now<lb/>
The honor fraternity and the<lb/>
advisory office prove that pro-<lb/>
gress is going on tn ECU'S<lb/>
pre-med program, Lineberger<lb/>
said.<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
'? ? .   ? ? ? -?'? ?: <lb/>
-?'??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057094_0009"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
9<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
?<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Famed Chinese Acrobats<lb/>
to perform in Minges<lb/>
"They were specialists in the<lb/>
impossible (New York Post)<lb/>
This powerful comment was<lb/>
based on just one human being's<lb/>
reaction to the amazing CHINESE<lb/>
ACROBATS OF TAIWAN in their<lb/>
first tour of the United States last<lb/>
year, and now this their excitedly<lb/>
awaited return tour, the dazzling<lb/>
65 member company will come to<lb/>
Greenville, N.C for one very<lb/>
unique performance in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum on November 17 at 8:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Last season, the CHINESE<lb/>
ACROBATS OF TAIWAN created<lb/>
a sensation wherever they per-<lb/>
formed and delighted millions of<lb/>
television viewers with their<lb/>
appearance on "The Mike Doug-<lb/>
las Show" and "Wide World of<lb/>
Sports among others. This<lb/>
year's tour features many new<lb/>
acts never before seen in this<lb/>
country, new production numbers<lb/>
and oostumes, as well as the<lb/>
return of last year's electrifying<lb/>
favorites, including: The Pagoda<lb/>
of Chairs-where a man balances<lb/>
several chairs one upon another,<lb/>
the bottom one resting on four<lb/>
bottles on a table; Balancing<lb/>
Rhapsody-where two sisters<lb/>
balanced head-to-head, climb a<lb/>
12 foot ladder and perform an<lb/>
intricate juggling act; Chinese<lb/>
Somersault-where three sisters<lb/>
show off their acrobatic skills;<lb/>
Circle of Knives-featuring blind-<lb/>
folded tumblers diving through<lb/>
rings of daggers and fire into the<lb/>
lap of those who made the trip<lb/>
before; a Chinese Ch'l-Kung<lb/>
demonstration; and many other<lb/>
exciting acts.<lb/>
You will witness superhuman<lb/>
acts of levitation, Kung-Fu,<lb/>
charming dancers, thrilling feats<lb/>
on bicycles, and breathtaking<lb/>
balancing acts. All will be done in<lb/>
elaborate and colorful oostumes<lb/>
and lighting, with unbelievable<lb/>
virtuosity and artistry. The<lb/>
CHINESE ACROBATS OF TAI-<lb/>
WAN are spectacular.<lb/>
This show is even better than<lb/>
a circus a concert. It is a trip to<lb/>
another land, a rainbow of<lb/>
incredible and even dangerous<lb/>
feats, an astounding onoe-in-a-<lb/>
lifetime evening with many of<lb/>
Taiwan's most famous and honor-<lb/>
ed acrobatic masters.<lb/>
The CHINESE ACROBATS of<lb/>
TAIWAN are much more than the<lb/>
finest company of its kind in the<lb/>
world; they are very special<lb/>
people in every way. There is<lb/>
nothing quite like them in the<lb/>
Western world. You'll flip over<lb/>
them!<lb/>
Ticket prices for the CHI NESE<lb/>
ACROBATS OF TAIWAN are as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
ECU Students$1.00<lb/>
Non ECU Students$2.00<lb/>
Children$2.00<lb/>
Public$4.00<lb/>
Group (20 or more)$3.00<lb/>
All tickets will be $4.00 at the<lb/>
door. Tickets are available at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center, which is<lb/>
open from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00<lb/>
p.m Monday through Friday.<lb/>
Mail orders should include a self-<lb/>
addressed, stamped envelope and<lb/>
should be directed toThe Central<lb/>
Ticket Office, Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center, ECU, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. 27834. Telephone number<lb/>
(919) 757-6611, Ext. 266.<lb/>
The CHINESE ACROBATS<lb/>
OF TAIWAN is a MSC Product-<lb/>
ion.<lb/>
(Fountainhead file photo)<lb/>
Local poets to read on Nov. 14, at 8:30<lb/>
Roxy Theatre plans 'Evening of Sanity'<lb/>
By PAT F LYNN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An evening of interesting<lb/>
listening is planned by local<lb/>
Greenville poets at the ROXY<lb/>
Music Arts and Crafts Center,<lb/>
Sunday, November 14, at 8:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Local poet, Susan Whalen,<lb/>
said, "The ROXY is the best and<lb/>
only place for local, non-univer-<lb/>
sity poets to have a reading She<lb/>
described it as "An Evening of<lb/>
Sanity at the ROXY. It ain't<lb/>
Frisco, it ain't Sixth Gallery, it's<lb/>
Greentown, now.<lb/>
"The reading will be modeled<lb/>
after the old 1950's, 'Beatnick'<lb/>
style, coffeehouse atmosphere<lb/>
Whalen said. "This style of<lb/>
reading had its origin in San<lb/>
Francisco with such major 'Beats'<lb/>
as Ferlingetti and Ginsburg. '<lb/>
"This laid-back atmosphere<lb/>
should be conducive to poetry<lb/>
reading. The participating poets<lb/>
are bringing a bottle of wine for<lb/>
themselves. We welcome anyone<lb/>
in the audience to do the same.<lb/>
"We are calling this reading<lb/>
'An Evening of Sanity' because<lb/>
we want this to be a renewal of<lb/>
poetry for Greenville residents.<lb/>
We think it's about time we<lb/>
initiated something like this for<lb/>
the non-university poets.<lb/>
"They have a forum for their<lb/>
poetry. We don't want so struct-<lb/>
ured a format. Ours will be<lb/>
structured to the extent only the<lb/>
featured poets will be reading<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
"This differs from the 'Beat'<lb/>
readings in that the atmosphere<lb/>
was completely structureless, no<lb/>
format whatsoever. We are not<lb/>
going to be that unstructured.<lb/>
The reading is going to be divided<lb/>
into two one-hour halves with a<lb/>
break in between.<lb/>
"We are not expecting any<lb/>
spur-of-the-moment audience<lb/>
reading. This differs from the<lb/>
' Beats' also. Though we are going<lb/>
to sit around and read poetry and<lb/>
get drunk, we are reserving the<lb/>
audience reading format for a<lb/>
later time. We are expecting<lb/>
some audienoe response after the<lb/>
i imw<lb/>
m<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
poems are read, clicking of<lb/>
fingers, or whatever.<lb/>
"The local, off-campus poets<lb/>
feel that Greenville is a town<lb/>
where something is happening<lb/>
besides the university. There are<lb/>
people who are talented, talented<lb/>
poets, artist potters, musi-<lb/>
cians said Whalen.<lb/>
"The ROXY is a place where<lb/>
all non-university artists can<lb/>
come together to perform and<lb/>
show exhibits. This is why we<lb/>
have selected the IOXY. Poets do<lb/>
not have the same outlet as<lb/>
musicians or artists, fa example,<lb/>
The ROXY is a place where we will<lb/>
be able to have our dreams oome<lb/>
true.<lb/>
"We are not down on the<lb/>
university, most of us graduated<lb/>
there. On the other hand, the<lb/>
ROXY is a real life situation, a<lb/>
place where craftsmen and artists<lb/>
are making part of their living<lb/>
from the arts.<lb/>
 Poetry has always been high<lb/>
in the arts. The subject matter of<lb/>
Sunday's reading will concern all<lb/>
perspectives from one-night<lb/>
stands to unrequited love to social<lb/>
comments oontinued Whalen.<lb/>
"Certain poets will have a<lb/>
vein of radicalism on life, a<lb/>
radictalism that started in the<lb/>
50's. probably with the 'Beats<lb/>
This vein of radidalism is the<lb/>
spirit that was laid-open in the<lb/>
60's, the anti-establishment spir-<lb/>
it she said.<lb/>
"Some of us reject the es-<lb/>
tablishment social ader that still<lb/>
persists into the 70's. Some of the<lb/>
poems will be about contempa-<lb/>
ary Greenville, what it is like to<lb/>
mmmmmmtmmm<lb/>
live here now.<lb/>
"We are waking people who<lb/>
live and wak in Greenville. Thae<lb/>
are numerous oppatunities fa<lb/>
university people to take advant-<lb/>
age. We have no other outlet.<lb/>
"We have met and had a run<lb/>
through in preparation of Sunday<lb/>
evening. We became convinoed<lb/>
that this famat is the most<lb/>
intimate way to reach other<lb/>
people with our poetry Whalen<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We discussed this aspect<lb/>
when we were throwing this idea<lb/>
around and we thought the<lb/>
exposure of poetry to the people,<lb/>
the spontaneity, was the value o<lb/>
the poetry of the 50's.<lb/>
"Those 'Beat' poets probably<lb/>
would not have been known to<lb/>
any great extent if they had na<lb/>
attempted their infamal read-<lb/>
ings. There is nahing wase than<lb/>
people with talent with no outlet<lb/>
fcr expression. A lot has been<lb/>
done through the ROXY to<lb/>
provide mae serious and mae<lb/>
cultured entertainment Whalen<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The poetry will feature such<lb/>
poets as Jim Carrol, Jesus, Shep,<lb/>
Gina, Jim Howe, Ruby Woods,<lb/>
Susan Whalen, and Rickfield on<lb/>
background guitar during the<lb/>
reading.<lb/>
The poets are asking fa a 50<lb/>
oents donation which will go to<lb/>
the ROXY, but this is not<lb/>
required. They also ask that you<lb/>
bring your own wine.<lb/>
Pink Panther returns<lb/>
Peter Sellers, as Inspecta<lb/>
Qouseau, is once again in search<lb/>
of the Pink Panther diamond.<lb/>
Clouseau has been described as<lb/>
"a man of great dignity who, is<lb/>
unfortunately acoiclent prone<lb/>
Well, does a chicken have lips?<lb/>
Does a fish have a neck? Is<lb/>
Clouseau a man of dignity? Judge<lb/>
fa yourself! What he is, is a<lb/>
frantically funny, pathetic, aack-<lb/>
pot private eye.<lb/>
"from the opening scene in<lb/>
which Clouseau pompously<lb/>
asserts his right to arrest a man<lb/>
begging in front of a bank which,<lb/>
to all but him is quite obviously in<lb/>
the process of being robbed, to<lb/>
the truly insane ending, these<lb/>
mmwmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
virtuoso talents tnreaten to over-<lb/>
flow the screen with invention<lb/>
Whatever that means? I<lb/>
copied it out of a catalogue. What<lb/>
I do know is that this is a funny,<lb/>
funny flick. Afta all, when J<lb/>
asked all my friends (both of<lb/>
them) what they wanted to see<lb/>
this was it. So, STAN CHAM-<lb/>
BERS, since you suggested it, I<lb/>
want to see you there. The shows<lb/>
start at 7:00 P.M. &amp; 9fl0 P.M.<lb/>
Friday and Saturday November<lb/>
12 &amp; 13. If we don't get a packed<lb/>
house, I'll lose my job. Then<lb/>
you'll never know if I'm gang to<lb/>
showan X-rated flick this year a<lb/>
na. Mae about that later. Y'all<lb/>
Come It's free with an I.D. and<lb/>
Activity Card.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057094_0010"/><lb/>
io<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
unumm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mamm<lb/>
m<lb/>
'Mary Ellen Walton 'juggles two husbands<lb/>
ByKIMGARFIELD<lb/>
For actress Judy Norton,<lb/>
better known as Mary Ellen on<lb/>
'The Waltons 1976 will go<lb/>
down as the year she got married<lb/>
 twice.<lb/>
As the multi-award winning<lb/>
series enters its fifth season on<lb/>
CBS, the Walton's eldest daught-<lb/>
er, now 18, becomes engaged to a<lb/>
wealthy young intern while at-<lb/>
tending nursing school. But on a<lb/>
two-hour episode titled "The<lb/>
Wedding which ran last week,<lb/>
Mark Ellen shelved the intern and<lb/>
wound up marrying a young<lb/>
doctor who had taken over the<lb/>
local practice.<lb/>
Wedding number two took<lb/>
place earlier this year when<lb/>
19-year-old Judy married a young<lb/>
singer-musician named Douglas<lb/>
Taylor. The two met at a<lb/>
Scientology workshop, where<lb/>
both have achieved the rank of<lb/>
minister.<lb/>
"I got into Scientology when I<lb/>
was 13 Judy relayed during a<lb/>
lunch break at the Burband<lb/>
studios where "The Waltons" is<lb/>
filmed. "My older sister was<lb/>
having boyfriend problems at the<lb/>
time, so my step-mother took us<lb/>
both to one of the meetings. For<lb/>
me, it was fun getting out of the<lb/>
house three nights a week<lb/>
It wasn't until she got older,<lb/>
she said, that she began to realize<lb/>
the seriousness of her interest in<lb/>
the applied religious philosophy.<lb/>
"It deals with the mind and<lb/>
how it works she explained<lb/>
between forkfuls of a chef's salad<lb/>
in the studio commissary. "If you<lb/>
agree with what the founder, L.<lb/>
Ron Hubbard, says about why<lb/>
people act as they do, then you<lb/>
can use the information to your<lb/>
benefit. I don't believe in the<lb/>
principles because he says so  I<lb/>
believe it because it's worked for<lb/>
me<lb/>
For starters, she feels that it's<lb/>
maeased her awareness of her-<lb/>
self and other people and has<lb/>
given her more self-confidence.<lb/>
She also believes Scientology has<lb/>
helped her as an actress ("I know<lb/>
how a character would behave<lb/>
under certain circumstances even<lb/>
though I personally have never<lb/>
See MARY ELLEN, page 11.)<lb/>
HHS QUARTERLY<lb/>
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ALLSUBJECTTO PRIOR SALE! FIRST COME!<lb/>
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THORENSTD-124TT wSME tone arm<lb/>
JVC 1656 CASSETTE DECK<lb/>
B1 C MODEL 1 SPEAKERS<lb/>
MARANTZ 2440 4 CH. REAR AMPAC<lb/>
BOSE IA 4000 SPEAKERS<lb/>
(FREIGHT DAMAGED)<lb/>
BOSE 901 STANDARD SPEAKERS 598.00<lb/>
(SCRATCHED)<lb/>
ULTRALINEAR SPEAKERS 230.00<lb/>
PIONEER 1020 REEL DECK (DEMO) 650.00<lb/>
SONY 2251 TURNTABLE 430.00<lb/>
SONY PS-5550 TURNTABLE 260.00<lb/>
SONY MODEL 110 B&amp; W T V 140.00<lb/>
SONY 1055INT. AMP. 210 00<lb/>
SONY 1066 INT. AMP. 170.00<lb/>
JVC 1669 CASS. DECK 499.00<lb/>
KLH MODEL CL-4 SPEAKERS (PAIR) 400.00<lb/>
EMPIRE MARBLE TOP SPEAKERS 300.00<lb/>
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BOSE IA 1000 SPEAKERS (PAIR) 140.00<lb/>
PIONEERSA-5200 INT. AMP. 140.00<lb/>
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SYLVANIACOMPACT 219.95<lb/>
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ON THE MALL - DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
(Fountainhead file photo)<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
Peanuts<lb/>
over<lb/>
America<lb/>
By PAT COY LE<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
In case you have been locked in a cave in Bear Grass fa the past<lb/>
week, we have elected a new President (not of the SGA, dummy). Our<lb/>
new President goes by the name of Jimmy Carter. His platform was<lb/>
peanut shells and his trademark is teeth.<lb/>
The week after a Presidential election is always rather disorganized,<lb/>
both for the old Chief Exec and for his successor. The last several days<lb/>
have been no exception.<lb/>
GOP followers have been sadly packing up all the "He's Making Us<lb/>
Proud Again" posters, throwing out the Ford-Dole stickers, and<lb/>
wondering if Ronald Reagan is really too old for the 1980 nomination.<lb/>
The first family has, no doubt, begun the long, sad process of<lb/>
clearing jut of the White House. I can just picture Betty driving to the<lb/>
local package store, bumming liquor boxes to aid in the moving process.<lb/>
President Ford, eyes full of tears, has probably been cleaning out his<lb/>
desk in the Oval Office, pausing to ponder over such memorabilia as his<lb/>
leftover "WIN" buttons, and his autographed photo of Bob Hope.<lb/>
Meanwhile, down in Plains, Ga the Carters are in the process of<lb/>
getting things organized for the biggest move of their lives (other than<lb/>
when they moved from their Connor Mobile Home into their present<lb/>
residence). Rosalyn is worrying about thedimacticdifference between<lb/>
D.C. and G.A. She'Ir no doubt have to run up to Sears-Roebuck to get a<lb/>
new winter coat for Amy. Miss Lillian will take care of the fimily's new<lb/>
linen needs by hodling a quilting bee for all the ladies of Plains.<lb/>
Jumpin' Jimmy is really busy! He'll have to hire some competent<lb/>
foreman to watch the peanuts grow for the next four years. (Maybe one<lb/>
of his brothers). Then comes the task of choosing a staff. (Maybe all of<lb/>
his cousins.)<lb/>
We all have confidence that Mr. Carter will use great care in<lb/>
choosing his Cabinet; especially his foreign policy advisors. There are<lb/>
countless factors to take into consideration when he chooses these<lb/>
important men. Oh sure, we must worry about their competence, their<lb/>
experience, their moral character, but the most important thing is that<lb/>
they have small teeth, as an overabundance of executive teeth could<lb/>
cause a disastrous glare on television broadcasts.<lb/>
The changeover of administrations is not simply the task of the Fads<lb/>
and Carters. There are oountless aides from both camps who will be<lb/>
instrumental in making the transition smooth. They must see to it that<lb/>
the President-Elect is thaoughly briefed on such vital issues as the<lb/>
Middle East, Russian grain sales, the energy problem, etc.<lb/>
Americans seem confident that the switchover will be achieved with<lb/>
efficiency. The only people who seem at all concerned are the socialites<lb/>
in D.C. This group of politicians, faeign diplanats, and Coigressiaial<lb/>
"phoie-answers" are all asking the most vital question of all: Does a<lb/>
good host offer a drink to a Baptist President? I guess we'll just have to<lb/>
wait and find out the answer to that one later.<lb/>
mt0m<lb/>
nwinm<lb/>
L<lb/>
:<lb/>
IHH<lb/>
mwmsm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057094_0011"/><lb/>
hoto)<lb/>
FOUN1AINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
11<lb/>
!??!? I PI Will<lb/>
?M<lb/>
Mt?0<lb/>
?<lb/>
Crosby, Stills, etc. have long histories<lb/>
Transiency runs rampant in rock business<lb/>
By MARK LOCK WOOD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Music (especially rook music)<lb/>
presents to us one of the most<lb/>
transient entites of our day.<lb/>
Hardly does one new group form<lb/>
before another splits up - and so<lb/>
the cycle goes.<lb/>
Crosby, Stills, Nash and<lb/>
Young present perhaps one of the<lb/>
most confusing "family trees" in<lb/>
rook music today. To trace such a<lb/>
tree is frustrating in the least.<lb/>
Neil Young began with the<lb/>
Buffalo Springfield, a group that<lb/>
fizzled after two relatively popu-<lb/>
lar albums. He then pursued a<lb/>
short solocareer culminating with<lb/>
his first album entitled Neil<lb/>
Young in January of 1969. In July<lb/>
of the following year, he joined up<lb/>
with former Buffalo Springfield<lb/>
member, Stephen Stills, along<lb/>
with Graham Nash (ex-Hollies)<lb/>
and David Crosby (ex-Byrd) to<lb/>
form the short-lived Crosby,<lb/>
Stills, Nash and Young. In<lb/>
September of the same year,<lb/>
Young produoed his second solo<lb/>
album entitled Everybody Knows<lb/>
This is Nowhere. He then re-<lb/>
grouped with Crosby, Stills and<lb/>
Nash to produoe the Dooular Deja<lb/>
Vu album in March, 1970. In the<lb/>
following October, once again<lb/>
solo, Young produced the album<lb/>
After the Gold Rush, which was<lb/>
followed closely by another brief<lb/>
regrouping of C, S, n and Y, in<lb/>
April, 1971 for the live Four Way<lb/>
Street album. The road has been<lb/>
solo fa Neil the rest of the way<lb/>
(despite attempts at regrouping<lb/>
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young).<lb/>
The list of solo albums is<lb/>
impressive - Harvest, Journey<lb/>
Through the Past, On the Beach,<lb/>
Tonight's the Night, Zuma and<lb/>
his most recent collaboration with<lb/>
Stephen Stills entitled, Long May<lb/>
You Run.<lb/>
Stephen Stills, another early<lb/>
member of Buffalo Springfield,<lb/>
also presents a myriad rock<lb/>
career. After the aforementioned<lb/>
demise of Buffalo Springfield,<lb/>
Stills and ex-Byrd member David<lb/>
Crosby met Graham Nash in 1968<lb/>
and formed Crosby, Stills, and<lb/>
Nash the following year. The<lb/>
three musicians produced an<lb/>
album by the same namein July of<lb/>
that year, and made an appearance<lb/>
at Woodstock. After the Deja Vu<lb/>
album, Stills pursued a solo<lb/>
career with Stephen Stills in<lb/>
December of 1970. Following the<lb/>
Four Way Street album, Stills<lb/>
produoed a sequel, appropriately<lb/>
entitled Stephen Stills II. Follow-<lb/>
ing this album, Stills along with<lb/>
Chris Hillman (ex-Byrd) formed<lb/>
the super group Manassas, which<lb/>
survived through two albums<lb/>
entitled Manassas and Down the<lb/>
Road. Stills followed this with<lb/>
MARY ELLEN<lb/>
Continued from page 10.)<lb/>
experienced it"), and adds that<lb/>
it's of enormous help in getting<lb/>
along in a highly competitive<lb/>
business.<lb/>
"I don't think it's a coinci-<lb/>
dence that two weeks after I<lb/>
started the first Scientology<lb/>
oourse I got "The Walton's"<lb/>
pilot, when I hadn't worked in a<lb/>
long, long time she offered.<lb/>
"This is back-stabbing business<lb/>
where 100 people can be up for<lb/>
the same job. To me, Scientology<lb/>
is a way of getting rid of the<lb/>
barriers that get in your way<lb/>
whether it's your career or your<lb/>
relationships<lb/>
California-born Judy also cre-<lb/>
dits the philosophy with helping<lb/>
the newlyweds find their dream<lb/>
house, a 2-bedroom, rustic, hill-<lb/>
top home, oomplete with beamed<lb/>
ceilings, fireplace and swimming<lb/>
pool.<lb/>
"We were searching for<lb/>
months, but we maintained a<lb/>
positive attitude and wouldn't<lb/>
compromise too much she<lb/>
explained. "It was everything we<lb/>
wanted in the first place<lb/>
There's even a stable for her<lb/>
horse, "Spirit whom she rides<lb/>
in horse shows whenever she gets<lb/>
the chance. But because there<lb/>
will be a strong emphasis this<lb/>
season on the growth and deve-<lb/>
lopment of the younger members<lb/>
of thf? Walton family. Judy won't<lb/>
be riding her horse very much.<lb/>
In addition to Mary Ellen's<lb/>
wedding, John-Boy (Richard Tho-<lb/>
mas) will be publishing and<lb/>
hand-printing "The Blue Ridge<lb/>
Chronicle a weekly country<lb/>
newspaper. And by the end of the<lb/>
season, he'll have his first book<lb/>
published.<lb/>
Judy, who has been acting<lb/>
since she was 7 (extra work,<lb/>
mostly) gets a lot of fan mail from<lb/>
teen-agers who want to know how<lb/>
she and the other cast members<lb/>
get along, how she got into acting<lb/>
and who are her favorite rock<lb/>
groups. ("Elton John and The<lb/>
Guess Who)<lb/>
She's been studying singing<lb/>
and dance and hopes to expand<lb/>
her career with other projects<lb/>
when "The Waltons" goes on<lb/>
hiatus If the show is renewed fa<lb/>
a sixth season, however, she<lb/>
plans to remain with it.<lb/>
"I'm not really ready to leave<lb/>
yet she admitted as we strolled<lb/>
back to the mammoth sound<lb/>
:stage. "I don't feel all that secure<lb/>
?and when you're with a series fa<lb/>
a laig time, it's kind of scary to<lb/>
leave it. Especially since we just<lb/>
bought a new house<lb/>
She smiled and added, "On<lb/>
the other hand, if you sit back and<lb/>
stay where you are, then you'll<lb/>
never go anywhere<lb/>
other solo ventures (Stills, Illegal<lb/>
Stills and Stephen Stills Live<lb/>
which culminatad in the most<lb/>
recent Stills-Young oollabaatiai.<lb/>
David Crosby left the Byrds in<lb/>
1968 under what might have been<lb/>
termed "stamy circumstances<lb/>
The disgruntled Crosby soon<lb/>
famed what was to be a lasting<lb/>
friendship with Graham Nash in<lb/>
1968, followed by the Crosby,<lb/>
Stills and Nash, and Crosby,<lb/>
Stills, Nash and Young effats<lb/>
Crosby produoed his first album<lb/>
in March of 1971 entitled, If I<lb/>
Could Only Remember My Name,<lb/>
preceding the CSNY live album.<lb/>
Crosby followed this effat with<lb/>
three collaborations with old<lb/>
friend Graham NashDavid<lb/>
Crosby and Graham Nash, Wind<lb/>
on the Water, and Whistling<lb/>
Down the Wire.<lb/>
Graham Nash began with the<lb/>
Hollies, but during the faays of a<lb/>
contract dispute, began his ca-<lb/>
reer in 1969 with Crosby and<lb/>
Nash. Along with his group<lb/>
effats he also produoed the solo<lb/>
Songs for Beginners and Wild<lb/>
Tales. These were shatly follow-<lb/>
ed by the two most recent<lb/>
CrosbyNash albums.<lb/>
Consider the confusion of<lb/>
King Crimson. In 1969, the group<lb/>
began with standout members<lb/>
Greg Lake, Robert Fripp and Boz<lb/>
Burrell. After a year of tenure,<lb/>
Greg Lake, disgusted with his<lb/>
small part in the group, famed<lb/>
his own with the help of Keith<lb/>
Emerson (famer of The Nice) and<lb/>
Carl Palmer (famerly of Atomic<lb/>
Rooster). We all know them today<lb/>
as, of oourse, Emerson, Lake and<lb/>
Palmer. Boz Burrell left King<lb/>
Crimson also after a shat tenure,<lb/>
but received little notaiety until<lb/>
joining Bad Company in 1974.<lb/>
To further complicate matters,<lb/>
Bill Brufad left Yes in 1973 to<lb/>
help refam King Crimson along<lb/>
with bassist John Wetton and<lb/>
aiginal guitarist Robert Fripp.<lb/>
This complement of musicians<lb/>
lasted until their break up in iate<lb/>
1974. Then, John Wetton joined<lb/>
Uriah Heep and Brufad most<lb/>
recently joined Genesis in ader<lb/>
to allow drummer Phil Collins<lb/>
 mae freedan with his vocals<lb/>
The Beach Boys remained<lb/>
relatively the same group<lb/>
throughout fifteen years. Al-<lb/>
though Brian quit touring with<lb/>
the group in 1964, due to ear<lb/>
problems, he remained a vital<lb/>
face in the studio. Alan Jardine<lb/>
left the group fa a shat six<lb/>
maiths with ambitiai. fa dental<lb/>
school Believe it a not Glen<lb/>
Campbell replaced him during<lb/>
this shat stint. Bruce Johnston<lb/>
was a member of the group<lb/>
throughout most of the fifteen<lb/>
years until 1971, when he left the<lb/>
group to become an executive<lb/>
with Equinox reoads. To replace<lb/>
him, the Beach Beys found two<lb/>
South Africans, Ricky Sataar and<lb/>
Bloudie Chaplin (From Flame).<lb/>
After the So Tough album the two<lb/>
members left the group. The<lb/>
Beach Boys now retain a basic<lb/>
core of Dennis, Brian and Carl<lb/>
Wilson (brothers), Mike Love (a<lb/>
oousin) and Alan Jardin (a famer<lb/>
neighba) so it still remains after<lb/>
15 years, a "family affair<lb/>
So the list goes on and on. I'd<lb/>
trace a histay of Eric Clapton,<lb/>
but who would believe me?<lb/>
THE<lb/>
RAINBOW<lb/>
IS COMING<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
"How to Make $9 to $16<lb/>
per hour while on<lb/>
vacation or on weekend<lb/>
$3<lb/>
plus 50 postage<lb/>
and handling.<lb/>
The Morgan Press<lb/>
308 South Dixie<lb/>
W. Palm Beach, FL 33401<lb/>
?The Morgan Press. 1976<lb/>
CAN<lb/>
TURN<lb/>
YOUR EDUCATION<lb/>
INTO A PROMOTION<lb/>
Visit me at the East Carolina<lb/>
University Bookstore each Thursday<lb/>
and ask me how you can now step<lb/>
right into a good job after basic<lb/>
training. A job with a good salary.<lb/>
Choice of location. And opportu-<lb/>
nities for immediate advancement.<lb/>
OR<lb/>
CALL ARMY<lb/>
SGT PHIL MURPHY<lb/>
PHONE<lb/>
752-4826<lb/>
North Carolina's Number 3 Rock Night Club<lb/>
ATTIC ATTIC ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
Sunday Nov. 14 - Four Band Extravaganza<lb/>
Sutter's GoldBull<lb/>
EzraKing Cotton<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057094_0012"/><lb/>
???B ???B<lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
?MM<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
ECU faces Furma<lb/>
in key league tilt<lb/>
The game between East Caro-<lb/>
lina and Furman this Saturday<lb/>
afternoon should provide more<lb/>
fireworks than the folks of<lb/>
Greenville, South Carolina have<lb/>
seen in a long time.<lb/>
Furman has possession of the<lb/>
football, the 13,000-plus people in<lb/>
Sirrine Stadium will be watching<lb/>
the Southern Conference's top<lb/>
offensive team facing the top<lb/>
defensive unit of the league.<lb/>
(ECU'S defense is also number<lb/>
two in the nation, limiting oppo-<lb/>
nents to 207 yards per game.)<lb/>
The Paladins are an experi-<lb/>
enced offensive team, with eight<lb/>
of the eleven starters classified as<lb/>
seniors- Their leader is David<lb/>
Whitehurst. The 205 pound senio<lb/>
is a poised field general who runs<lb/>
the team's veer option expertly<lb/>
and passes extremely well to wide<lb/>
receivers Greg Laetsch and Tom-<lb/>
my Southard and tight end Angus<lb/>
Poole.<lb/>
Furman's backfield is well-<lb/>
manned with class tailback Harry<lb/>
King the leading rusher. He<lb/>
alternates with Larry Robinson<lb/>
who has also proven himself one<lb/>
of the finest runners in the<lb/>
conference. The fullback is Ike<lb/>
Simpson, a good blocker who is<lb/>
the starter for the third year.<lb/>
When ECU has possession,<lb/>
nobody will go out to buy<lb/>
popoorn. Mike Weaver and oorrv<lb/>
pany are ranked sixth in the<lb/>
nation in rushing, rolling up close<lb/>
to 300 yards per game. They will<lb/>
face a stiff Furman defense which<lb/>
features a super noseguard in 210<lb/>
pound junior Frank Moses. Both<lb/>
linebackers, Larry Anderson and<lb/>
Jimmy Neal, are tough. And<lb/>
strong safety Mark Gordon is<lb/>
all-Southern Conference.<lb/>
ECU assistant coach Rick<lb/>
Bankston expects Furman to use<lb/>
a five-man front, dropping their<lb/>
nebackers down to oover the<lb/>
guards, and bring the strong<lb/>
safety up. They will mix five-man<lb/>
to six-man fronts.<lb/>
This season has been some-<lb/>
what disappointing fa the Fur-<lb/>
man Paladins who have been up<lb/>
and down since surprising N.S.<lb/>
State 17-12 in their season<lb/>
opener.<lb/>
Their overall record stands at<lb/>
four wins, four losses and one tie,<lb/>
with only one conference win to<lb/>
date. Beating ECU, whose record<lb/>
is perfect in Southern Conference<lb/>
play, would make life sweeter fa<lb/>
the people in the aher Green-<lb/>
ville, but the Pirates have some-<lb/>
thing different in mind.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Callahan, Redeen<lb/>
best divers around<lb/>
By DAVID ROBEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU'S women's swim team<lb/>
has had a good season thus far<lb/>
this year due to plenty of hard<lb/>
wak, a good coach and some new<lb/>
talent. The team ga some of that<lb/>
new talent when freshmen Patty<lb/>
Redeem and Cathy Callahan<lb/>
joined the tem as divers.<lb/>
Between the two of three<lb/>
girls, they have put in an<lb/>
excellent showing by sharing first<lb/>
and second place on the boards all<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Patty Redeen is from Reston,<lb/>
Va. She came to ECU to maja in<lb/>
Industrial Technology Luckily fa<lb/>
us saneone ai the men's swim<lb/>
team talked her into trying out fa<lb/>
a positiai on the wanen's team<lb/>
as diver.<lb/>
Redeen swam three years in<lb/>
Amateur Athletic Union (AAU)<lb/>
meets befae aiming to ECU.<lb/>
During her senia year she<lb/>
started waking out on the boards<lb/>
and it was then that she learned<lb/>
the mechanics of diving.<lb/>
"I liked swimming but you<lb/>
have to put so much wak and<lb/>
time into it Redeen stated. "I<lb/>
enjoy diving because it's fun. I<lb/>
like the competition and you<lb/>
really have to ooncentrate to do<lb/>
well<lb/>
Redeen waks out on the<lb/>
trampoline because it helps her<lb/>
diving and she plans to wak out<lb/>
with the men divers to gain more<lb/>
experience. She plans to keep<lb/>
diving fa the team in the future if<lb/>
she can keep her diving fam up<lb/>
to par.<lb/>
"It's hard fa me to push<lb/>
myself and to keep practicing.<lb/>
Ideally, I need to do seven a<lb/>
eight dives and ooncentrate on<lb/>
them. If I do mae I wai't<lb/>
ajncentrate as I should and I<lb/>
probably dive with poa fam.<lb/>
"My diving is mainly self<lb/>
taught because it's hard a next to<lb/>
impossible fa Coach Chepko to<lb/>
wak with me and Cathy and the<lb/>
swim team at the same time<lb/>
she continued. "Miss Chepko<lb/>
does put in extra time and help us<lb/>
aftawards. We don't have a<lb/>
diving coach and I don't think<lb/>
anyone in the state does.<lb/>
"There is little competition in<lb/>
diving in this state and usually<lb/>
Cathy and I fight it out between<lb/>
us fa first and seoond place.<lb/>
That's bad fa the competition to<lb/>
be between us because we are<lb/>
good friends and do a la of things<lb/>
together. Cathy and I work<lb/>
together and tell one anaher<lb/>
what we're dang wrong<lb/>
This brings us to Cathy<lb/>
Callahan, Patty's fellow diva and<lb/>
good friend. Callahan has also<lb/>
won some first places along with<lb/>
Redeen.<lb/>
Callahan, a native of Char-<lb/>
late, has been diving fa four<lb/>
years. She started diving in Texas<lb/>
and then moved to Nath Carolina<lb/>
where she oontinued her diving.<lb/>
mmmmmmm<lb/>
She decided to come to ECU then<lb/>
to try out fa the team.<lb/>
"I enjoy the competition of<lb/>
diving. It's fun but also some-<lb/>
times depressing Callahan<lb/>
said. "It gets depressing when I<lb/>
wak and can't seem to do ber<lb/>
But right now that might be<lb/>
because Patty and I are waking<lb/>
ai much hard dives.<lb/>
"I need to push myself mae<lb/>
and improve. A diva is always<lb/>
trying to improve hisha fam<lb/>
and heshe does so by waking ai<lb/>
hisher concentration and co-<lb/>
adinatiai<lb/>
Callahan says she prefas the<lb/>
low board, one-meta off the<lb/>
wata, because thae is less room<lb/>
fa ara. Although most divas<lb/>
like the three-meta board ova<lb/>
the low board, thae is much mae<lb/>
room fa ara ai it and it is<lb/>
harda to judge.<lb/>
Like Redeen, Callahan agrees<lb/>
that the state needs mae people<lb/>
diving in oollege meets.<lb/>
"I'm intaested in seeing the<lb/>
competition at the State<lb/>
Championship. I would like to see<lb/>
me and Patty grab the first two<lb/>
places at the meet<lb/>
These two girls will travel to<lb/>
the Sate Championship in Janu-<lb/>
ary and should do well. Although<lb/>
they are new to the scene, they<lb/>
have little to fear if they keep<lb/>
diving in the future as they are<lb/>
now. If they keep waking togeth-<lb/>
a they are sure to put in a good<lb/>
show.<lb/>
Sideline Chat<lb/>
with Steve Wheeler<lb/>
CROSS COUNTRY SPA RK LES<lb/>
ECU'saossoountry team in year's past has been less than good in<lb/>
all respects. There has not been active reauiting of distance runners by<lb/>
East Carolina fa three years now. Walk-ons have braved the oool fall<lb/>
weather to run fa the Pirates ai very little a no scholarship money.<lb/>
And, they have done it with little a no recognition. This writer went<lb/>
into the locker room a couple of months ago to get a preview fa the<lb/>
harriers. Coach Bill Carson refused to give any infamatioi out on the<lb/>
team saying they did not need any publicity saying that it might put<lb/>
pressure on them.<lb/>
It turns out the team was not as bad as Carson thought. In the<lb/>
Southern Conference Championships last Saturday at Boone, the Pirate<lb/>
harriers finished a respectable seventh out of nine teams oompeting. Of<lb/>
the seven official teams competing (Furman, William and Mary,<lb/>
Appalachian, VMI, ECU, Davidson, and The Citadel) the Pirates<lb/>
finished fifth, beating Davidson and The Citadel.<lb/>
Individually, sophomae Jim Dill finished 14th, the best finish by a<lb/>
Pirate in three years.<lb/>
All this might na sound like it is too good fa an athletic team to<lb/>
finish fifth out of seven schoola But, fa aoss country, a spat virtually<lb/>
ignaed fa the last three years, it is quite an acconplishment.<lb/>
Coigratulatiois are in acter fa the gutsy team membas.<lb/>
RICHMOND NOT BIG-TIME<lb/>
In the past year, the Southan Confaenoe has seen four schools<lb/>
eitha leave the league a announce their intentions to exit. Richmond<lb/>
left last May, while East Carolina, William and Mary and VMI will take<lb/>
to the road next June.<lb/>
As far asthis writa sees it, only one isdesaving the hona of exitinq<lb/>
the Southan-ECU.<lb/>
This writa has been to Williamsburg and Richmond and seen the<lb/>
shoddy way things are handled and read about the year's top aowd at<lb/>
VMI - 7,700.<lb/>
The way Richmond officials ran their game with the Pirates last<lb/>
week, they would hardly make the high school level. The facilities were<lb/>
less than adequate and the operation of the press box and aowd was<lb/>
much less than big-time; as a matta of face, it was wase than this<lb/>
writa has seen in the Southan this year.<lb/>
The grand Astraurf field was laid on top of asphalt and was hard as a<lb/>
rock as compared to a grass field. Neither goal post was near being<lb/>
straight. As the team walked onto the field Friday fa practice afta the<lb/>
long bus ride up, Mike Weava was the first out. Pete Conaty followed<lb/>
and Weava turned to Conaty and said Hey, Pete, you get to kick at an<lb/>
angle whetha you're in front of the goal posts a na<lb/>
The Spidas did na waste any of the Astraurf eitha. Less than ten<lb/>
feet out of bounds, the bare asphalt begins. This can really cause a<lb/>
serious injury to the playas on the field - even the Spida troops.<lb/>
The press box opaations were less than professional. The press box<lb/>
PA system (which evay school is supposed to have to give the writas an<lb/>
official summary of each play) consisted of Nick Boccella, Richmond's<lb/>
Spats InfamatiaOirecta, yelling bah ways from the middle. When he<lb/>
was wrong someaie had to holla back fa a correction.<lb/>
The game itself looked like a contest between a pair of high school<lb/>
teams. Thae wae a taal of 15 turnovers: nine fumbles, four inta-<lb/>
oeptions, and two blocked runts It is not often when thae are two<lb/>
blocked punts in which neitha result in a score.<lb/>
Anaha inequity in the Richmond game was the officiating. That was<lb/>
positively the wast officiating this writa has eva seen in a college<lb/>
foaball game. They wae contracted out of the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Confaenoe officials office, but seemed to call as if they wae just<lb/>
learning the game of football. Norvell Neve (ACC Supavisa of Ofticials)<lb/>
needs to keep a dosa eye on his pasonally-trained staff.<lb/>
Richmond might have the money to be ag-time, out tney sure oc na<lb/>
show it. Teams like Richmond, VMI and William and Mary trying to go<lb/>
maja in oollege will have many problems. They will definitely have to do<lb/>
something to their stadiums to hold mae people. Even then they will<lb/>
have problems. This writa sees their leaving the Southan a mistake.<lb/>
STILL HIGH IN STATS<lb/>
East Carolina's football team, which took a big drop in the<lb/>
statistical categaies against Richmond, is still among the nation's best.<lb/>
Individually, Pete Conaty istenth among scaas with an 8.6 avaage<lb/>
pa game and sixth in field goals with 1.44 pa game.<lb/>
In punt returns, Gaald ranks ninth with a 13.3 yard avaage pa<lb/>
return. Hall and Reggie Pinkney are tied fa sixth in intaoeptions with<lb/>
.67 pa game. Pinkney leads the nation in intaoeption raurn yardage<lb/>
with 197 while Hall ranks second with 153.<lb/>
Team-wise East Carolina ranks sixth in rushing offense with 298.1<lb/>
yards pa game. Defensively, the Pirates stand second in taal defense,<lb/>
giving up just 207.1 yards per game, fourth In ruahing defense (105.4<lb/>
yards pa game), and fifth In acaing defense (10.2 points pa game.)<lb/>
??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057094_0013"/><lb/>
FOUNTAIN,iEADVOL 52. NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
13<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
MPii?W<lb/>
?MMMMM?I<lb/>
Inexperienced grappiers<lb/>
open season in tourney<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
When you go to an ECU<lb/>
wrestling match this year, do not<lb/>
expect to see Mike Radford, Ron<lb/>
Whitcomb, or Tom Marriott<lb/>
throwing their opponents to the<lb/>
mat for a pin. Those three<lb/>
national performers plus two<lb/>
more starters are gone from the<lb/>
five-time Southern Conference<lb/>
champions, so except for a few<lb/>
top returnees, the Pirates will be<lb/>
fairly inexperienced going into<lb/>
this weekend's opening tourna-<lb/>
ment at Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
The Bucs return three national<lb/>
performers this season along with<lb/>
two other starters and four<lb/>
part-time starters from 1975 in<lb/>
their bid for an unprecedented<lb/>
sixh straight SC title.<lb/>
The Pirates will be competing<lb/>
Friday and Saturday in the<lb/>
Monarch Invitational with just<lb/>
seven of the ten weight classes<lb/>
filled. Wendell Hardy and Jeff<lb/>
Curtis, both 118 pounders, are<lb/>
out with injuries as are Paul<lb/>
Thorp and Kirk Tucker at 150.<lb/>
D.T. Joyner, the only heavy-<lb/>
weight of the team, is currently<lb/>
playing football but should join<lb/>
the team in a couple of weeks,<lb/>
unless the team gets a bowl bid.<lb/>
"We've got some good re-<lb/>
turners John Welborn, SC<lb/>
Coach of the Year, said, "But,<lb/>
losing guys of the caliber of<lb/>
Marriott, Whitbomb and Radford<lb/>
definitely hurts. They are almost<lb/>
irreplacabie.<lb/>
"Inexperience will definitely<lb/>
be a problem. We have just four<lb/>
seniors and three of them were<lb/>
part-time starters last year. We<lb/>
also have only two juniors with<lb/>
experience and two that have<lb/>
seen very little action. That leaves<lb/>
us with 15 freshmen and sopho-<lb/>
mores<lb/>
Inexperience may not be the<lb/>
only probelm the Pirates face this<lb/>
season. They tackle their tough-<lb/>
est schedule of dual meets ever.<lb/>
However, most of the hard-nose<lb/>
matches will be held in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum, affording the Bucs a<lb/>
much-needed home-mat crowd.<lb/>
 There is no doubt that this is<lb/>
the strongest list of opponents<lb/>
I've had to face si nee coming here<lb/>
nine years ago Welborn added.<lb/>
"We have many of the same<lb/>
teams we had last year, but<lb/>
they've gotten so much stronger<lb/>
this year. Lehigh finished fifth in<lb/>
Division I last year while Wilkes<lb/>
College won the Division II<lb/>
championsup. State and Carolina<lb/>
have put a lot of money in their<lb/>
programs and should be top 20<lb/>
teams this season. Athletes in<lb/>
Action boasts an Olympic gold<lb/>
medalist in John Peterson and<lb/>
have several former national<lb/>
champs. West Chester is always<lb/>
tough also<lb/>
The only real test fa the<lb/>
Pirates on the road will be at<lb/>
William and Mary, the pre-<lb/>
season SC favorite.<lb/>
"William and Mary would<lb/>
have to be the conference early<lb/>
pick Welborn continued. "They<lb/>
have just about everyone back<lb/>
from last year. Wrestling them up<lb/>
there will be tough, but we've got<lb/>
them right before the conference<lb/>
meet and we should be in good<lb/>
shape by then with our young<lb/>
peoplethey should have some<lb/>
experience<lb/>
The Bucs will be hosting the<lb/>
1977 Southern Conference Cham-<lb/>
pionships Mar. 4-5, something<lb/>
Welborn is happy about.<lb/>
"It's sure nice having them<lb/>
come to our place. With our<lb/>
student support (the Pirates<lb/>
averaged over 2,000 fans per<lb/>
meet at home last year) it will<lb/>
surely help<lb/>
Phil Mueller, Paul Osman and<lb/>
Paul Thap all competed fa the<lb/>
Pirates in last year's NCAA<lb/>
national tournament.<lb/>
Mueller, a 167 pounder, is a<lb/>
senior from Eden, N.C. He<lb/>
transferred here from the Univa-<lb/>
sity of Wisconsin at Stevens Point<lb/>
last year and made it to the<lb/>
quarterfinals of the NCAA's.<lb/>
While at UW, Mueller finish-<lb/>
ed fourth and second in the NAIA<lb/>
finals during his freshman and<lb/>
sophonae years, respectively.<lb/>
Mueller had a super dual meet<lb/>
recad last year, losing just once.<lb/>
He won a number of tournaments<lb/>
including the Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence title.<lb/>
Osman, wrestling at 126, was<lb/>
named the outstanding wrestler<lb/>
of the Neptune Invitational in<lb/>
winning his weight class easily.<lb/>
He was also a Southern Confa-<lb/>
See WRESTLING, page 14.<lb/>
ECU Karate Club best in<lb/>
nation two years in row<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Intramural Carespondent<lb/>
Did you know there is an athletic team on<lb/>
campus that has won two straight national titles and<lb/>
numerous other state and regional titles? Did you<lb/>
also know that the same club has a membership of<lb/>
over 400 students, one of the largest on the ECU<lb/>
campus, and yet is one of the least publicized clubs<lb/>
on campus?<lb/>
You probably didn't if you are like most people,<lb/>
but that has been the situation concerning the ECU<lb/>
KaFate Club since its founding on the East Carolina<lb/>
campus back in 1962.<lb/>
The dub, which is now the largest on campus,<lb/>
began in 1962 as an impromptu get together after<lb/>
Bill McDonald was approached by several students<lb/>
who were interested in learning "those funny<lb/>
exercises" he was doing.<lb/>
"I got interested in Karate as a teenager in Ft.<lb/>
Bragg in 1958 explained McDonald, "and when I<lb/>
came to East Carolina College I used to wak out by<lb/>
myself in the old Memaial Gym. Several students<lb/>
wanted to know what I was doing one day and I told<lb/>
when I told them they asked me to teach them. That<lb/>
is how the ECU Karate Club started.<lb/>
"At first we met in the gym continued<lb/>
McDonald, "but we were soon run out because of<lb/>
the noise (screams) we made and the funny outfits<lb/>
(white robes) we wae. We started practicing<lb/>
outside underneath the streetlight beside the old<lb/>
football stadium and pretty scon we had about 25<lb/>
ilia i i nmmmmmmmmnmtm ? 'i 'Wi<lb/>
students involved<lb/>
A professa became interested in what the club<lb/>
was doing and offered his assistance as an advisa.<lb/>
Through his help, the students became a recognized<lb/>
club by the college and were allowed to come in out<lb/>
of the cold.<lb/>
"We've been winning medals ever since<lb/>
boasted McDonald. "It seems that everyone knows<lb/>
about the ECU Karate Club except the people at<lb/>
ECU and in Greenville. We have even had people<lb/>
come to ECU over antf her school because of the<lb/>
Karate Club.<lb/>
"It used to bother me that nobody knew about<lb/>
us added McDonald, "but I have gotten over it by<lb/>
now and the publicity has been a little better in the<lb/>
past few years<lb/>
During the 14-year existence of the dub it has<lb/>
won 14 Nath Carolina State championships, as well<lb/>
as numerous southern and southeastern champion-<lb/>
ships. Over the last two years the Karate Club has<lb/>
won the National Open Championships. In the<lb/>
championships the ECU dub competed against the<lb/>
best university, dub and school teams in the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
"We are well respected throughout the nation<lb/>
said McDonald.  People know us when we arrive at<lb/>
a meet because we have always done so well in all<lb/>
aspeds and regions of competition<lb/>
Of its 401 members, only a few are members of<lb/>
the competitive team. Accading to McDonald the<lb/>
remainder of the dub members are divided into<lb/>
See KARATE, page 15.<lb/>
ummmzmmmmmmmmmnnmmwHm<lb/>
PHIL MUELLER, senior wrestler at 167 pounds, has his arm raised in<lb/>
victory one of the many times he was victoriocis last year. One of the top<lb/>
eight in the nation in his weight class, Mueller leads the Pirate grapplers<lb/>
into the Monarch Invitational tomorrow in Norfolk, Va. FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD file photo.<lb/>
DateJVntuu OpponentLL Place<lb/>
Nov. 12-13Monarch OpenNafolk, Va.<lb/>
19-20Carolina Invitational Chapel Hill, N.C.<lb/>
Dec. 8Campbell, N.C. Central BuiesCreek, N.C. and Barber Scotia<lb/>
10Athletes in Adion Home<lb/>
27-28Wilkes OpenWilkes Bane, Pa.<lb/>
Jan. 6West ChesterHome<lb/>
8LehighHome<lb/>
10Wilkes CollegeHome<lb/>
21Appalachian State Home<lb/>
28University of N.C. Home<lb/>
Feb. 7N.C. State Univasity Home<lb/>
12Old DominionNorfolk, Va.<lb/>
19RichmondHome<lb/>
24William and Mjry Williamsburg, Va.<lb/>
Mar. 4-5South. Con. Tourna. Home<lb/>
17-19NCAA Wrest. Champ. Naman, Okla.<lb/>
ctOSTEn<lb/>
rn<lb/>
Namea.wt.Hometown<lb/>
Mitch BurrJr.177Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Jeff CurtisJr.118Greensbao, N.C.<lb/>
Jay DeverFr.167Moaestown, N.J.<lb/>
Mark FurstFr.126Columbus, Ohio<lb/>
"TimGaghanSr.142Alexandria, Va.<lb/>
RonGoodallFr.190Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Steve GoodeFr.158Patsmouth, Va.<lb/>
'Wendell HardySo.118Patsmouth, Va.<lb/>
Steve HinsonSo.l?Chariate, N.C.<lb/>
Ron JeromeSo.167Adams Center, N.Y.<lb/>
D.T. JoynerSo.Hwt.Nafolk, Va.<lb/>
 James KirbySo.134Centreville, Va.<lb/>
Harry MartinFr.134Alexandria, Va.<lb/>
Phil MuellaSr.167Eden, N.C.<lb/>
'Paul OsmanJr.126Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Mark PetersSo.177Oak Ridge, N.C.<lb/>
Bruce PaterSo.177Wat at own, N.Y.<lb/>
Paul PrewittSr.158Nawich, N.Y.<lb/>
Barry PurserSo.177Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Frank SchaedeFr.142Fairfax, Va.<lb/>
?Paul ThapJr.150Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Kirk TuckerSo.150Gastonia, N.C.<lb/>
"Jain WilliamsSr.190Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
'1975-76 starter<lb/>
1975-76 part-time starter<lb/>
Captains-Phil MuellerPaul Prewitt Co-captains-Tim Gaohan.<lb/>
Join Williams.<lb/>
Head Coach-John Welban<lb/>
<pb facs="00057094_0014"/><lb/>
?mMBm<lb/>
14<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Hockey team places high in Deep South<lb/>
ByANNEHOGGE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU'S field hockey team won<lb/>
three of its four matches in last<lb/>
weekend's Deep South Field<lb/>
Hookey Tournament.<lb/>
The Pirates finished as one of<lb/>
the top teams of the tourney.<lb/>
Others in the top five were<lb/>
Appalachian, Duke, UNC-G and<lb/>
Winthrop. UNC-CH lost ail three<lb/>
of its matches<lb/>
ECU won its first match<lb/>
Friday against Coker College by a<lb/>
score of 6-0. Scoring was done by<lb/>
Gail Bettor with three goals,<lb/>
Kathy Zwigard with two and<lb/>
Montai ne Swain with one.<lb/>
ECU lost its second match to<lb/>
UNC-G by a score of 2-0. Jill<lb/>
Masterman scored both of<lb/>
UNC-G" s goals.<lb/>
The Pirates were victorious in<lb/>
both of their matches Saturday.<lb/>
Thev beat Davidson 1-0. with<lb/>
Zwigard scoring ECU'S winning<lb/>
goal.<lb/>
ECU won its final match<lb/>
against Converse College by a<lb/>
score of 7-0. Zwinard orreri six<lb/>
WRESTLING<lb/>
Continued from page 13.)<lb/>
ence champ and competed in the<lb/>
nationals.<lb/>
Thorp did an excellent job at<lb/>
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150 and 158 last year. He won<lb/>
some crucial matches during the<lb/>
dual meet season, beating a<lb/>
national place winner. He was<lb/>
upset in the conference finals, but<lb/>
went to the nationals as the<lb/>
conference's wild-card berth.<lb/>
Other top returnees include<lb/>
Wendeil Hardy, D.T. Joyner, Tim<lb/>
Gaghan, Paul Prewitt, and John<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
Hardy, a sophomore 118<lb/>
pounder, finished second in the<lb/>
Conference championships last<lb/>
year. A former Virginia state<lb/>
champ, Hardy has a lot of<lb/>
potential but has been bothered<lb/>
of late with a strained knee. He<lb/>
will miss the first couple of<lb/>
tourneys this year.<lb/>
Joyner, also a sophomore, is a<lb/>
defensive tackle on ECU'S foot-<lb/>
ball team in addition to wrestling<lb/>
at the heavyweight class. Joyner<lb/>
placed second in the SC last year<lb/>
and is a former Virginia state<lb/>
title-holder.<lb/>
Gaghan, a senior co-captain,<lb/>
came on at the end of last year to<lb/>
place second in the 134-pound<lb/>
weight class at the league meet.<lb/>
He is a precision wrestler and a<lb/>
good year is expected.<lb/>
Prewitt, captain on this year's<lb/>
team, took a second at 158 in the<lb/>
Southern and is expected to have<lb/>
a good year.<lb/>
John Williams, a senior 190-<lb/>
pounder saw considerable action<lb/>
last year and should help the<lb/>
team out this year.<lb/>
Top newcomers include: Jay<lb/>
Dever, 177; Mark Furst, 126;<lb/>
Harry Martin, 134; Frank<lb/>
Schaede, 142; Steve Goode, 158;<lb/>
Ron Goodall, 190.<lb/>
"I think some of our young<lb/>
freshmen and sophomores will<lb/>
have to come along by the end of<lb/>
the year for us to win the<lb/>
conference Welborn stated.<lb/>
"We have a tradition of winning<lb/>
around here and I hope it<lb/>
continues<lb/>
You might not see Marriott,<lb/>
Whitoomb, or Radford on the mat<lb/>
this year, but you will probably<lb/>
see a winner for most of the year,<lb/>
after some of the inexperienoe<lb/>
wears off.<lb/>
points with Betton adding one.<lb/>
Coach Laurie Arrants said she<lb/>
has "received many compliments<lb/>
on the set-up of the tournament.<lb/>
It was well run. I'd like to thank<lb/>
the sororities and sports medicine<lb/>
fa their assistance<lb/>
Arrantsfeit her team "played<lb/>
well, we finally pulled together.<lb/>
The UNC-G match was one of our<lb/>
better games, but we lost it in the<lb/>
second half<lb/>
Three ECU players will move<lb/>
on in tournament play. Betton<lb/>
was named to the Deep South<lb/>
first team. Zwigard and Beth<lb/>
Beam were named to the Deep<lb/>
South third team.<lb/>
They will play this weekend in<lb/>
the Southeast Regional Field<lb/>
Hockey Tournament at Winthrop<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Talking Sports<lb/>
with Kurt Hie km an<lb/>
ACTION WAS FOUGHT in last weekend's Deep South field hockey<lb/>
tournament held here. Photo by Kip Sloan.<lb/>
As expected, the 30 man limit on recruiting high school football<lb/>
players has had quite an impact on the college football scene. The rule is<lb/>
designed to keep the big schools with large budgets from dominating the<lb/>
sport and so far it is working as planned. Big name schools are still<lb/>
recruiting top quality athletes, but they cannot get all the ones they<lb/>
would like because of the 30 limit.<lb/>
This is leaving a surplus of good football players which provides<lb/>
talent to other schools.<lb/>
Penn St. is a good example of a big name school that has been forced<lb/>
to ignore a number of fine players in favor of oonosntrating on a selected<lb/>
few. In the past the Nitany Lions recruited most of Pennsylvania's top<lb/>
high school football players and that state has always had a wealth of<lb/>
high school talent. PSU took these players and built itself into a national<lb/>
football power. With the 30 man limit now in effect PSU now has to turn<lb/>
down many quality prospects. These players go elsewhere, namely<lb/>
cross-state rival Pittsburg and Maryland. Has this strengthened the<lb/>
programs at Pitt and Maryland, two schools whose football programs<lb/>
were in poor condition a few years ago? Pitt is now tanked number one in<lb/>
the nation and the Terps stand in at number seven.<lb/>
NFL Playoffs Approach<lb/>
The National Football League season is nine games old and the<lb/>
playoff picture is beginning to develop.<lb/>
In the American Football Conference, Oakland, 8-1, has just about<lb/>
wrapped up the Western Division. The Raiders have a solid lead over<lb/>
Denver, 5-4, and appear to have the strongest team in the conference.<lb/>
An inadverdent whistle by referee Chuck Herbeiing enabled Oakland to<lb/>
overtake Jack Pardee's Chicago Beers this past week, but the Raiders<lb/>
seldom need such breaks to win. They probably have the best 43 man<lb/>
roster in football which is nothing new fa this team.<lb/>
Ted Marchibroda's young BaJtimae Colts, 8-1, should waltz to the<lb/>
Central Division title. The Colts have won 16 of their last 17 regular<lb/>
season games and needless to say, this team has the momentum. The<lb/>
Baltimore fans, oonsidaed by many to be football's most fanatical, are<lb/>
again filling Memaial Stadium and the enthusiasm in the " Moiumental<lb/>
City" is unbelievable.<lb/>
Cincinnati, 7-2, firmly established itself as a solid contender fa the<lb/>
AFC championship with a 20-12 victay over Los AngelesMonday night.<lb/>
The Bengals are young and talented. So far this year they have escaped<lb/>
the injury jinx that has plagued them in the past. Cincinnati is capable of<lb/>
holding off the onooming Pittsburg Steelas, who should get the<lb/>
wild-card spot in the playoffs if the Bengals don't fold.<lb/>
The Steelers, 5-4, have had their problems but are slowly coming<lb/>
around. They have not allowed a point in their last three games and<lb/>
should be a big facta in the playoffs.<lb/>
The National Foaball Confaenoe races are somewhat closer with<lb/>
Dallas, 8-1, Los Angeles, 6-2-1, and Minnesota, 7-1-1, leading their<lb/>
divisions right now. Minnesota hasa readyvon the Central Division and<lb/>
Dallas is in good shape to take the East.<lb/>
Los Angeles finally has some competition in the West as the San<lb/>
Francisco 49ers, 6-3, are only a half game behind the Rams. L.A. has<lb/>
had quarterback problems as James Harris has never been accused of<lb/>
being a top notch pro signal caller. However, the Rams are strong<lb/>
defensively and this is what oounts in the long run. The wild-card<lb/>
position could very well come from this division, especially if the 49ers<lb/>
overtake the Rams for the divisional championship.<lb/>
The NFC East is the most balanced division in the NFL Avoiding a<lb/>
collapse, Dallas will win it. St. Louis, 7-2, and Washington, 6-3 will<lb/>
battle either Los Angeles a San Francisco fa the wild-card Bah the<lb/>
Cardinals and Redskins are faced with the same problem, numerous<lb/>
injuries and a tough remaining schedule.<lb/>
Who will play in the Super Bowl XI on January 9 in Pasadena?<lb/>
Statistically the two best teams in their respective conferences right now<lb/>
are Dallas and Baltimore. However, statistics don't mean a thing At<lb/>
least 10 teams have a good chance to daim the title of Wald ChamDion<lb/>
for 1976. ???!???<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057094_0015"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52. NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
15<lb/>
?P<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
M<lb/>
VIVIAN PIERCE shows excellent form on a front<lb/>
kick. A member of the ECU Karate Club, Vivian is a<lb/>
second degree black belt and national champion in<lb/>
her class. Intramural photo.)<lb/>
KARATE<lb/>
Continued from page 13.<lb/>
beginners, intermediates and non-competitive ad-<lb/>
vanced students.<lb/>
The beginners make up about 60 percent of the<lb/>
club membership. They are mainly learning Karate<lb/>
for self-defense or conditioning and about two-thirds<lb/>
of these members will continue into the intermediate<lb/>
class.<lb/>
The intermediate class consists of about 25<lb/>
percent of the club membership and is composed<lb/>
mainly of those students working to attain belt<lb/>
ranks.<lb/>
The final 15 peroent is the advanced class. These<lb/>
students are seeking a better knowledge of the art of<lb/>
Karate. Of these advanoed students, about 25-35<lb/>
will work on the competitive team.<lb/>
"The largest problems we have with the dub is<lb/>
not having enough room or money said<lb/>
McDonald. "This isn't meant to sound like sour<lb/>
grapes, it's just a fact<lb/>
For the first time this year the Karate Club is<lb/>
receiving some financial support from the Intra-<lb/>
mural department.<lb/>
"The competitive student needs to train daily<lb/>
and there just isn' t enough room fa them to do so<lb/>
continued McDonald. "Money is a problem because<lb/>
we need it to travel to the meets with the<lb/>
competition team. For example, the nationals will be<lb/>
in California this year but we don't have the money<lb/>
to send a full team out there. Consequently, we<lb/>
probably won't oompete at all<lb/>
Nonetheless, McDonald said the success of the<lb/>
team has caused i1 to grow a lot over the years and<lb/>
serve several other useful purposes.<lb/>
"Our club seems to have helped a lot of people<lb/>
said McDonald. "Of oourse there is the self-<lb/>
defense. There have been two reported cases where<lb/>
women students have protected themselves from<lb/>
rape by using what they learned in class against<lb/>
their assailants.<lb/>
 The club has had a decided effect on the lives of<lb/>
many people added McDonald. "For some it<lb/>
builds up their confidence and helps to relieve<lb/>
everyday tension and curb aggression. For others it<lb/>
is a form of everyday exercise and conditioning<lb/>
McDonald is quick to say that conditioning is<lb/>
important to anyone interested in getting the most<lb/>
out of Karate and its benefits.<lb/>
"Karate competitors must be in extremely good<lb/>
condition. They must do all sorts of exercises for<lb/>
every part of the body, as well as bag work with their<lb/>
moves, kicks and punches<lb/>
The ECU Karate Club practices the GOJU-<lb/>
SHORIN style of Karate, which involves continual<lb/>
repetition to learn the correct moves. The moves are<lb/>
MKi n? ? imiw i' i mi m i i u<lb/>
done over and over again for perfection that<lb/>
eventually will help them in the two levels of<lb/>
competition, sparring and Kata.<lb/>
Sparring is done against an opponent. Scoring is<lb/>
based on landing a kick or a punch without the<lb/>
opponent blocking it. Competitors spar for three<lb/>
minutes and the fighter with the most points is<lb/>
declared the winner.<lb/>
"In sparring a man may have to fight ten times<lb/>
before winning the title McDonald points out,<lb/>
"and even then it isn't really contact sparring<lb/>
Contact sparring involves the use of gloves and<lb/>
boots to cushion the oontact of the blow so as not to<lb/>
injure the competitor and generally can be stratched<lb/>
to go more than one round. In regulation sparring a<lb/>
blow is achieved when a move ends up within two<lb/>
inches of the opponent's body, without hitting the<lb/>
opponent.<lb/>
The "Kata" is a routine using different<lb/>
sequences to depict an imaginary fight. In a sense a<lb/>
Kata is like a skater's routine in ice skating or a<lb/>
gymnast's floor exercise. The Kata is scored on the<lb/>
basis of balance, power, technique, knowledge of<lb/>
form, weapon control and eye control.<lb/>
"It takes hours and hours of practice to perfect<lb/>
one's Kata explained McDonald. "Most com-<lb/>
petitors have to practive everyday and the higher the<lb/>
belt rank, the more intricate the scoring becomes,<lb/>
but you always compete on your own level<lb/>
Beyond competition McDonald adds there have<lb/>
been many members of the dub who have reached<lb/>
the level of Black Belt. McDonald himself is a<lb/>
fifth-degree black belt (there are 10 degrees of black<lb/>
belt). Vicki Morrow, the dub's President, is a<lb/>
second degree black belt and a past national<lb/>
champion. McDonald said there were currently<lb/>
several black belts within the dub's ranks.<lb/>
McDonald feels that those not competing and<lb/>
achieving high belt ranks can still get a lot from the<lb/>
study of Karate.<lb/>
"I feel anyone willing to put the time and the<lb/>
effort into learning Karate can learn it said<lb/>
McDonald. "And it can be very worthwhile in that it<lb/>
helps to relieve tension and give i person<lb/>
self-oonfidence. It is also a year-round adivity so it<lb/>
is a good form of getting exerdse throughout the<lb/>
year. I think if more people know about Karate its<lb/>
popularity would catch on<lb/>
Maybe now more people know about Karate.<lb/>
PLAYOFFSCHEDULE<lb/>
Monday 8:45<lb/>
Scott Dry Heaves vs. Scott Players<lb/>
Umstead Voilies vs. Soott 76ers<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi (A) vs. Pi Lambda Phi<lb/>
Kappa Alpha (A) vs. Tau Kappa Epsilon (A)<lb/>
Volley Follies vs. Sediment Stompers<lb/>
AFROTC vs. Phi Epsilon Kappa<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
MENWOMEN!<lb/>
JOBS ON SHIPS! American.<lb/>
Foreign. No experience required.<lb/>
Excellent pay. Worldwide travel.<lb/>
Summer job or career. Send $3.00<lb/>
for information SEA FAX, Dept.<lb/>
Boc 2049, Port Angeles, Was-<lb/>
hington 98362.<lb/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED? Call<lb/>
Alice, 757-6366 or 758-0497.<lb/>
Eight years of experience. I need<lb/>
the money. Only 50 cents a page.<lb/>
USED 8 track tapes, variety of<lb/>
rock by Bob Dylan, Elton John,<lb/>
Led Zeppelin and others. $2.50<lb/>
each or lot of 45 for 185.00.<lb/>
If you have something to buy 758-1314 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
or sell come to the Red Oak Show<lb/>
and Sell; We sell on consignment FOR SALE: Sony 6046 A 20 watt<lb/>
anything of value, excluding receiver. 6 mo. old $190.00.<lb/>
clothing. Open Mon. - Sat. 758-7884.<lb/>
11:00-6 00 Sun. 2-6, dosed Thurs.<lb/>
Located 3 miles west of<lb/>
Greenville at the intersedion of<lb/>
264and Farmville Highway in the<lb/>
pld Red Oak church building.<lb/>
LOST- Tortise-shell glasses in a<lb/>
black padded case. Lost on<lb/>
Thursday of last week. Please<lb/>
contad Smitty 756-5394.<lb/>
HELP-Two girls need ride to<lb/>
Tupelo, Mississippi fa Thanks-<lb/>
giving. Will share expenses. Call<lb/>
Kathy (752-8180) a Lucy (756-<lb/>
1263).<lb/>
PIANO AND GUITAR lessons.<lb/>
Daily and evenings. Richard J.<lb/>
Knapp, B.A. 756-3908.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Soundesign 8-Track<lb/>
tape deck, stereo headphone jack,<lb/>
two Soundesign speakers indu-<lb/>
ded, excellent condition. $50.00<lb/>
Call 752-9550.<lb/>
FOR SALE :1974 Yamaha<lb/>
DT125A. Only 1600 miles. Used<lb/>
as commuter, never in dirt. Gal<lb/>
756-7275.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female student with<lb/>
auto 2 hrs. dai I y fran 1 30 to 3 30<lb/>
FOUND: Man's watch at dub t0 Pick UP 2 boys at Wahl-Coats<lb/>
football game Sunday, Od. 10. on sit witn tnem until 3:3?- Gas<lb/>
intramural field. Call 752-8825.<lb/>
Do you have problems? Do<lb/>
you need a caring listener? Call<lb/>
758-2047.<lb/>
WANTED-Female roommate to<lb/>
share 3-bedroom traila located at<lb/>
Shady Knoll. Rent $50 plus<lb/>
utilities. Call 758-9577 after 3:00.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fast back Mustang,<lb/>
302 V-8, automatic, AM radio &amp;<lb/>
tape, Mags. $1000.00. 756-1857<lb/>
any afternoon a night.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AR2AX loud speak-<lb/>
ers. $220.00. Excellent conditioi.<lb/>
Serious inquiries only. 758-5150.<lb/>
LOST: Checkbook with dark<lb/>
brown textured oover, Biff a<lb/>
Karen Brean, oi Od. 20 in the<lb/>
vidnity of Austin. 758-4126.<lb/>
FOR SALE: BSR Auto-Manual<lb/>
turntable equipped with cueing,<lb/>
anti-skate, new stylus. I35.00.<lb/>
409 B-Belk.<lb/>
RIDING LESSONS: International<lb/>
balanoed seat taught by qualified<lb/>
professional on your own hase.<lb/>
Hunters, eventing, dressage.<lb/>
Regina Kear 758-4706. Free<lb/>
Kittens.<lb/>
will be furnished and pay will be<lb/>
discussed. Call 758-9467 between<lb/>
12 and 1 M-F only.<lb/>
RENT: Private and semi-private<lb/>
rooms with kitchen privileges-<lb/>
available Winter-Spring terms.<lb/>
756-2459.<lb/>
FOR SALE-1966 Jeep Wagoneer<lb/>
4 wheel Dr. Mech. good, body<lb/>
fair, asking $700, 758-1083.<lb/>
NEED TYPING? Call Gail Joyner<lb/>
at 756-1062 fa professional typ-<lb/>
ing and related services. All wak<lb/>
guaranteed!<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1969 Fa Fairlane.<lb/>
Good oondition. Priced to go. Call<lb/>
756-1906.<lb/>
SUPER DEAL: Sony HST-110<lb/>
Receiver, BSR 8 track player,<lb/>
recorder, deck, Garrard X-10<lb/>
turntable, 2 Woodstock air sus-<lb/>
pension speakers. Excellent con-<lb/>
ditioi. $200.00. Matt 758-3763.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Stereo - Pioneer SX<lb/>
1250,160 watts RMS per channel.<lb/>
Sony TC-580 remote control servo<lb/>
switching reel to reel with mic<lb/>
SMALL SCALE masonry, brick,<lb/>
block, conaete repair a aiginal and line mixing.<lb/>
wak. Rex Bost 758-7569.<lb/>
Yamaha FG-200 LOST: Contad Lenses in a green<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
Aoooustic Guitar-well cared fa<lb/>
case. Between Brewster and<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Case, leather strap, new predsion vard, Albert McMicken,<lb/>
shaler machine heads and many 758-5074.<lb/>
other extras. $135.00. 758-7690.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Effiaency apartment<lb/>
MEDITATION- Want to learn<lb/>
meditation without the high price<lb/>
itihties furnished across of atmosphere. Complete instruo-<lb/>
from college, 758-2585. Com- tjons $3.00. Monaco, P.O. Box<lb/>
pletely furnished with air cond-<lb/>
itioning.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate fa<lb/>
large condominum. $50.00<lb/>
month. Freedom of house in<lb/>
exchange fa light housekeeping<lb/>
duties. Pool, tennis courts and<lb/>
sauna available. Board not In-<lb/>
ducted. 756-5423.<lb/>
2593, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
To share two bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment; two blocks from campus,<lb/>
704D East Third St. If I'm not<lb/>
home leave your name and phone<lb/>
number, so I can call you back.<lb/>
H'Wi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057094_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
,? ?? r t(??ij?Mii<lb/>
?M??MMWMMM?MM<lb/>
e<lb/>
n<lb/>
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mG@G l?@(sD<lb/>
a<lb/>
O<lb/>
(?<lb/>
for only<lb/>
you get a<lb/>
of your choice PLUS<lb/>
CWUor BLACKOUT C6BE<lb/>
THURSDAY- MONDAY<lb/>
ftfOAU put meo'l" on Ljour buni<lb/>
752-8351 4th and Reade<lb/>
IWMMMMMMMM<lb/>
MMWWIIMMWMI<lb/>
MMMWW<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057094_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>