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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057095_0001"/>
THIS ISSUE-<lb/>
16 PAGES<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over 50 years<lb/>
CIRCULA TION-<lb/>
8,500<lb/>
VOL. 52, NO. 19<lb/>
16 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
mnmmM<lb/>
mm<lb/>
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SGA DISCUSSES appropriations at last niqht's meeting.<lb/>
Photoby Brian Stotler<lb/>
SGA short<lb/>
in funding<lb/>
By DAVID NASH<lb/>
SGA Reporter<lb/>
The SGA, after last nights meeting, is left with approximately<lb/>
$3,000 to appropriate for the remainder of the 1976-77 school year,<lb/>
according to Tommy Thomason. SGA Treasurer.<lb/>
Before last evening s meetng, the SGA had $7,884.78 in checking,<lb/>
&amp;110,547.61 in savings, and an expected income of $118,432.39 from fees<lb/>
ior Winter and Spring quarters.<lb/>
Ine legislature, in yesterday's meeting, appropriated approximately<lb/>
$86,838.91.<lb/>
The $3 000 figure does not include expected income fa the<lb/>
remainder i ' the year fran FOUNTAINHEAD, EBONY HERALD and<lb/>
other sources.<lb/>
The bill. Appropriation to the Photo Lab, was amended to revise the<lb/>
salary of the senia photographer from $160 to $150 per month.<lb/>
Every cut that has been made in salaries has been to $150 a below<lb/>
(because of the shatage of funds this year) said Craig Hales,<lb/>
Ghairman of the Appropriations Committee.<lb/>
We just want to be consistent concluded Hales.<lb/>
In other business, FOUNTAINHEAD was appropriated $51,058.91<lb/>
fa the 76-77 school year, a deaease of $9,155.27 from the budget.<lb/>
A deletion of $5,650.09 was made to the requested budget because<lb/>
of unspent funds remaining from the summer appropriation.<lb/>
In other decreases, FOUNTAINHEAD senia editaial personnel<lb/>
salaries were cut, as were travel expenses, and special projects.<lb/>
In other legislative action, the REAL House Crisis Intervention<lb/>
Center was appropriated $3,000, and the Seaetary of Academic Affairs<lb/>
was appropriated $322,00 to fund a Drama Departmental Retreat.<lb/>
The SGA Executive Council was funded $32,388.00 fa the year.<lb/>
Bucsontube<lb/>
Story on page 12<lb/>
Task force studies<lb/>
BUC publication<lb/>
By BECKY BRAD SHAW<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Task Face aganized to study problems<lb/>
concerning publication of this year's annual will<lb/>
meet Wednesday, Nov. 17 and is expected to make<lb/>
several proposals, accading to SGA Vice-President<lb/>
Greg Pingston.<lb/>
The seven-member Task Force will make<lb/>
recommendations ooicerning the type of annual to<lb/>
be published. Also, recommendatiois will be made<lb/>
concerning the appointment of an edita, Pingstai<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The final decisions will be made by the Executive<lb/>
Branch, said Pingston.<lb/>
"We'll go with their recommendations, mae<lb/>
than likely said Pingstai.<lb/>
The Task Face has met twice without making<lb/>
any definite decisions, accading to Pingston.<lb/>
The Task Face is considering two famats fa<lb/>
the annual. One is a typical annual famat and the<lb/>
second is a magazine famat.<lb/>
Monika Sutherland, former BUCCANEER<lb/>
edita, has been waking with the Task Face,<lb/>
Pingstai said.<lb/>
Sutherland has prepared infamatioi at both<lb/>
famats fa the Task Face to consider, according to<lb/>
Pingston.<lb/>
"Monika has a great deal of expertise in this<lb/>
area, and we hope to utilize it said Pingston.<lb/>
The persons comprising the Task Face are:<lb/>
Craig Hales, Russ Pogue, Jim Elliott, Bob Glover,<lb/>
Lynn Schubert, Ken Campbell, and Wanda Gunter.<lb/>
Attractions at wit's end<lb/>
By LOUIS TA YLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Student Union and the<lb/>
Maja Attractions committee is at<lb/>
"wit's end" in trying to deter-<lb/>
mine what type of entertainment<lb/>
ECU student want, according to<lb/>
Student Union President Barry<lb/>
Robinson.<lb/>
As of the Leon Russell con-<lb/>
cert, Maja Attracticns has ex-<lb/>
hausted its own budget of mae<lb/>
than $41,000, and has spent sane<lb/>
$1800 of Student Union savings to<lb/>
bring students a variety of<lb/>
shows, said Robinson.<lb/>
The committee is now con-<lb/>
templating a cancellation of the<lb/>
B.B. King-Donald Byrd show in<lb/>
fava of one that would attract a<lb/>
larger audience, accading to Bob<lb/>
Seraiva, chairman.<lb/>
Seraiva said that in ader to<lb/>
provide shows in the future the<lb/>
next attractions would have to be<lb/>
a financial success, because the<lb/>
committee cannot jeopardize the<lb/>
entire Student Union savings<lb/>
account.<lb/>
Although the 1300 tickets sad<lb/>
at the gate were the most fa any<lb/>
show this year, it was not enough<lb/>
to offset a $10,000 loss.<lb/>
Committee members attribu-<lb/>
ted the low attendance at the<lb/>
Russell-Furay Sunday night sche-<lb/>
duling and competition from the<lb/>
first TV showing of "Gone With<lb/>
the Wind Some members felt<lb/>
that the unusually large number<lb/>
of cancellations this year kept<lb/>
others away.<lb/>
Robinson said that the general<lb/>
atmosphere toward concerts and<lb/>
other campus entertainment has<lb/>
been poisoned, and as a result<lb/>
attendance at these events has<lb/>
suffered. Robinson did not say<lb/>
who a what had poisoned the<lb/>
atmosphere.<lb/>
As if money problems were<lb/>
not enough, the floa in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum was "extensively dam-<lb/>
aged' ' by cigarette burns. As of<lb/>
November 11, the Student Union<lb/>
had not been billed fa that<lb/>
damage, according to Robinson.<lb/>
STUDENT LEGISLA TORS<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotler)<lb/>
Policy changed for<lb/>
medical excuses<lb/>
Editor's note: The following memo was recently<lb/>
issued to all ECU faculty members from Edwin W.<lb/>
Monroe, Vice Chancellor fa Health Affairs.<lb/>
Effective the beginning of the Winter Quarter on<lb/>
Nov. 29, 1976, the policy on medical excuses fa<lb/>
students who are absent from class will be modified.<lb/>
Responsibility fa class attendance rests primar-<lb/>
ily with the students who should communicate<lb/>
directly with the instructa. Instructas, if they<lb/>
desire, may call the Infirmary to verify a health<lb/>
problem did exist and get an estimate of the extent<lb/>
of disability. Individual disgnosis and other specific<lb/>
details cannot be released without the written<lb/>
consent of the student.<lb/>
The Infirmary will provide to the Office of the<lb/>
Associate Dean of Students at the end of each day a<lb/>
list of those students who are confined to bed<lb/>
because of illness a injury. Students may obtain<lb/>
written confirmation of confinement from the Office<lb/>
of the Associate Dean of Students. The Infirmary<lb/>
also will certify if a student is too ill to take a final<lb/>
examination and will recommend that the grade of<lb/>
"Incomplete" be awarded.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 1916 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
news<lb/>
Pre-exam High Country Rock Fall Grads<lb/>
The amazingly incredible<lb/>
CHINESE ACROBATS OF TAI-<lb/>
WAN have returned for their<lb/>
second U.S. tour and have agreed<lb/>
to perform at ECU. This event is<lb/>
one that should be witnessed by<lb/>
every student. It will give you that<lb/>
"lift" you need right now. A<lb/>
phantosmagoric flipping, tumb-<lb/>
ling, flying extravaganza! One<lb/>
performance only - Minges<lb/>
Coliseum, 8 p.m. Wednesday.<lb/>
Tickets are available at C.T.O. in<lb/>
Mendenhall. A MSC Production.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
The first regular meeting of<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi, service to<lb/>
education honor society, for<lb/>
winter quarter will be held on<lb/>
Dec. 2, in room 244 Mendenhall.<lb/>
Pledges are reminded to bring<lb/>
$3.00 for the initiation banquet<lb/>
which will be held at 6.00 Dec. 9<lb/>
in Multipurpose Room Menden-<lb/>
hall. Any old member who would<lb/>
like to attend the banquet should<lb/>
also bring their money. It is very<lb/>
important that all members bring<lb/>
the Christmas gifts for Caswell<lb/>
Center in Kinston.<lb/>
Art Show<lb/>
Tran and Marilyn Gordley<lb/>
show will be shown in Menden-<lb/>
hall gallery Dec. 1-19.<lb/>
ILLUMINA<lb/>
ILLUMINA, the Student<lb/>
Union Art Exhibition Committee<lb/>
will again sponsor the Traveling<lb/>
Disappearing Show in Menden-<lb/>
hall Gallery. The art will be the<lb/>
work of all art students on<lb/>
vacation. If you missed this<lb/>
summer's Traveling Disappear-<lb/>
ing Show, BE SURE to catch it<lb/>
over Thanksgiving vacation, Nov.<lb/>
25-28. It will be gone before you<lb/>
know it.<lb/>
Art Committee<lb/>
The Art Exhibition Committee<lb/>
will meet Wednesday, Dec. 1 at 4<lb/>
p.m. All interested persons are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
CINERGY<lb/>
On Friday and Saturday, Nov.<lb/>
19 and 20, the Films Committee<lb/>
of the Mendenhall Student Union<lb/>
will present "The Wind and the<lb/>
Lion" starring Brian Keith, Sean<lb/>
Connery and Candice Bergen.<lb/>
This fast-moving film combines<lb/>
the beauty of a love affair set<lb/>
amidst the roar of ba .le and<lb/>
intrigue. A movie to suit every-<lb/>
one's taste. An excellently filmed<lb/>
motion picture. Don't miss it!<lb/>
Admission - I.D. and Activity<lb/>
Card. Shows at 7 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
On Monday nights from 8-9<lb/>
p.m. tune in to WECU 57 AM for<lb/>
the best in country rock, blue-<lb/>
grass and country and western<lb/>
swing. Your hosts are Jim Burke<lb/>
and Brian Jernigan. Call in your<lb/>
country requests at 757-6657.<lb/>
Jazz Fans<lb/>
For the best in jazz program-<lb/>
ming, tune into WECU 57 AM.<lb/>
Your jazz men are Carl Griffin,<lb/>
Wed. 10-11 p.m Rob Maxon -<lb/>
MonWed. 12 midnight-2 a.m.<lb/>
and Woody Jackson - Tues<lb/>
Thurs. 12 midnight - 2 a.m. Call<lb/>
in your requests at 757-6657.<lb/>
Psi<lb/>
The Nov. meeting of Psi Chi<lb/>
will be held this evening in the<lb/>
auditorium SP-129at 7 p.m. The<lb/>
speaker will be Dr. Ironsmith, an<lb/>
ECU Psychology Professor. Dr.<lb/>
Ironsmith will discuss the deve-<lb/>
lopment of listening skills in<lb/>
children. This topic is intimately<lb/>
related to SLAP and as always,<lb/>
the Psi Chi meeting is open to<lb/>
ALL interested students.<lb/>
The Psi Chi winter retreat will<lb/>
be discussed and refreshments<lb/>
will be free. Every Psi Chi<lb/>
member should make a special<lb/>
effort to attend this evening's<lb/>
meeting and bring a friend too.<lb/>
See you there, at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi National Honor<lb/>
Fraternity will hold its monthly<lb/>
dinner meeting on Wed Nov. 17,<lb/>
1976, at 6 p.m. at Bonanza Steak<lb/>
House. All brothers are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Deck the Halls<lb/>
Your Christmas tree will be<lb/>
waiting your return. On Thurs-<lb/>
day, Dec. 2, at 3 p.m come over<lb/>
to Mendenhall and help decorate<lb/>
the tree. It's your tree so why not<lb/>
add your own special touch? Be<lb/>
creative and design an ornament<lb/>
fa the tree. Help make the ECU<lb/>
Christmas tree one of a kind. Free<lb/>
drinks and munchies will be<lb/>
available so don't miss it!<lb/>
Flea Market<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 Student<lb/>
Center Information Center, from<lb/>
9 a.m. until 5 p.m. Monday<lb/>
through Friday. Students, faculty<lb/>
and staff are eligible to sell items.<lb/>
A $5.00 refundable deposit is<lb/>
required at the time of registra-<lb/>
tion Dec. 6.<lb/>
ATTENTION:All Fall Quarter<lb/>
Graduates: Remember to pick up<lb/>
your cap and gown in the<lb/>
Students Supply Store before<lb/>
leaving Nov. 24,1976. Announce-<lb/>
ments are also available. There<lb/>
are five in a package fa $1.50.<lb/>
Rec Society<lb/>
The Recreation Society will<lb/>
meet Thurs. Dec. 3 at 7:30 in Rm.<lb/>
221 Mendenhall.<lb/>
Christmas Gifts<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/>
saed by Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. The Flea Market will be<lb/>
held on Wednesday, Dec. 8,1976,<lb/>
from9a.m. until 7 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditaium.<lb/>
Beautiful pottery ware, hand-<lb/>
made jewelry, and small plants<lb/>
were a few of the items sold in the<lb/>
Flea Market last year. This year a<lb/>
new addition to the Flea Market<lb/>
will be the sale of unclaimed<lb/>
articles held by the University's<lb/>
Lost and Found Department.<lb/>
Don't miss it!<lb/>
If you're interested in selling<lb/>
items, any ECU students, staff a<lb/>
faculty member is eligible. Each<lb/>
individual must register to sell<lb/>
items and a $5.00 refundable<lb/>
deposit is required at the time of<lb/>
registration. Registration is avail-<lb/>
able Monday through Friday,<lb/>
from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center In-<lb/>
famatiai Center. Registration<lb/>
ends Monday, Dec. 6, 1976.<lb/>
Can Drive<lb/>
The Eta Nu Chapter of Alpha<lb/>
Phi Alpha Fraternity is sponsa-<lb/>
ing its 2nd Annual Thanksgiving<lb/>
can food drive fa needy and<lb/>
low-income families in the city of<lb/>
Greenville. This effat is non-<lb/>
profit and student directed.<lb/>
Please help suppat this effat by<lb/>
daiating 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 a you may call<lb/>
752-5347 and have them picked<lb/>
up. We would deeply appreciate<lb/>
your contributions. The drive will<lb/>
last until Nov. 23.<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta English<lb/>
Hona Society will meet Wednes-<lb/>
day Nov. 17, 1976 in room 244<lb/>
Mendenhall at 7:30 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/>
Water Safety Videotape Show<lb/>
There will be a Water Safety<lb/>
Instructa Retraining Course held<lb/>
Dec. 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th in<lb/>
Memaial Gym. The course 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/>
Memaial Gym.<lb/>
ECKANAR<lb/>
ECKANKAR, the Path of<lb/>
Total Awareness, is sponsaing a<lb/>
seminar in Greenville, N.C. The<lb/>
seminar will be held oi 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 Fa The Spiritual Life and<lb/>
the program includes aiginal<lb/>
ECK music, poetry, art and<lb/>
drama, as well as talks on various<lb/>
aspects of ECKANKAR. The<lb/>
cola 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/>
Lost and Found<lb/>
The campus Lost and Found<lb/>
Department is located at the<lb/>
Infamatioi 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 nfama-<lb/>
tiot 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/>
sponsaed by Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center on Dec. 8 in Wright<lb/>
Auditaium.<lb/>
World Hunger<lb/>
Join in with the other students<lb/>
on campus involved in raising a<lb/>
consciousness about wald hun-<lb/>
ger. Drop by the table that will be<lb/>
set up in the old CU on<lb/>
Wednesday 10-4 to gain mae<lb/>
infarnation.<lb/>
This week the Student Union<lb/>
Videotape Committee presents<lb/>
"KnockOut" &amp; "Ernie Kovacks<lb/>
IN . Shows are continuous from<lb/>
9-11 daily in the Mendenhall<lb/>
lobby.<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/>
oft Cemetery Road. They would<lb/>
appreciate it and so would the<lb/>
animals.<lb/>
B B.King<lb/>
The Student Union Major<lb/>
Attractions Committee will pre-<lb/>
sent B.B. King and Donald Byrd<lb/>
and the Blackbyrds in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum on Dec. 5, 1976 at 8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Student tickets in advance are<lb/>
$3.00 and public tickets in<lb/>
advance and tickets at the doa<lb/>
are $5.00.<lb/>
Art Expo Sale<lb/>
Over 1200 different prints are<lb/>
available by such renowned<lb/>
artistsasDali, Van Gogh, Renair,<lb/>
and many others at the Art<lb/>
Exhibition and Sale sponsaed by<lb/>
.Mendenhall Student Centei.<lb/>
The Exhibition will run from<lb/>
Mon Nov. 15 thru Fri Nov. 19,<lb/>
8 a.m. - 8 p.m. in the Multi-<lb/>
purpose Room.<lb/>
These prints are $2.50 each a<lb/>
3 fa $6.00. They make great<lb/>
Christmas gifts.<lb/>
Swim Meet<lb/>
Cone and cheer oi the ECU<lb/>
swim team as they take on<lb/>
Furman and Virginia Conmon-<lb/>
wealth University. The meet is<lb/>
Saturday, Nov. 20 in Minges<lb/>
Natataium.<lb/>
Catholic Mass Crafts Center<lb/>
All students and not-students<lb/>
are invited to Catholic mass<lb/>
celebrated every Wednesday at<lb/>
the house on Ninth Street. Fa<lb/>
those who haven't been yet the<lb/>
house is the last one on the<lb/>
right-hand side of Ninth Street as<lb/>
you are headed towards Slay<lb/>
Dam. We have mass, a Newman<lb/>
Club meeting, and delicious<lb/>
dinners every Wednesday at 5 .OO.<lb/>
Come and share a great experi-<lb/>
ence and have a little fun.<lb/>
The MSC Crafts Center is now<lb/>
open. Located on the ground<lb/>
flea, the Crafts Center hours are<lb/>
2:00 p.m. until 10:00 p.m.<lb/>
Discover new walds within!<lb/>
Gobble,Gobble<lb/>
The FOUNTAINHEAD staff<lb/>
wishes to all students, faculty and<lb/>
staff, a safe and restful Turkey<lb/>
Holiday. See ya at Drop-Add!<lb/>
I<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1916 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
3<lb/>
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�MI<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
ECU employment hinders loans<lb/>
By JIMMY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Students who receive federal<lb/>
financial assistance while em-<lb/>
ployed by the university may have<lb/>
to return some money to the<lb/>
federal government, according to<lb/>
Robert M. Boudreaux, ECU'S<lb/>
director of financial aid.<lb/>
"Before students (receiving<lb/>
financial aid) accept a job, their<lb/>
first responsibility istocheck with<lb/>
the financial aid office said<lb/>
Boudreaux.<lb/>
"Financial aid is awarded on<lb/>
need. The U.S. Office of Edu-<lb/>
cation allows plus or minus $100<lb/>
leeway in meeting the student's<lb/>
needs 100per cent according to<lb/>
Boudreaux.<lb/>
" I f a student's needs are met<lb/>
and he later obtains a job. then<lb/>
the money he receives is con-<lb/>
sidered overrewarding said<lb/>
Boudreaux.<lb/>
"Any money made over $100<lb/>
of the total need means we are in<lb/>
trouble and the student involved<lb/>
is in trouble added Boudreaux.<lb/>
"Obtaining a job does not<lb/>
affect certain grants such as the<lb/>
Basic Educational Opportunity<lb/>
Grant (BEOG) Boudreaux<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Loans affected by receiving<lb/>
university money are National<lb/>
Direct Student Loans, Supple-<lb/>
mental Educational Opportunity<lb/>
Grants, Nursing Student Scholar-<lb/>
ship, and the College Work-<lb/>
Study Program.<lb/>
These loans carry an interest<lb/>
rate of three per cent, which is<lb/>
due on the actual long term loan,<lb/>
not on the money received from<lb/>
university employment, Bou-<lb/>
dreaux said.<lb/>
"There is nothing cut-and-<lb/>
dry. Each case must be reviewed<lb/>
individually based on aid and<lb/>
need Boudreaux commented.<lb/>
Jobs which will affect these<lb/>
loans are those funded by the<lb/>
university. Such jobs include<lb/>
Student Government, FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD, BUCCANEER, and<lb/>
REBEL positions, and certain<lb/>
types of work study programs.<lb/>
As for student assistance<lb/>
money, the federal government<lb/>
can dictate to ECU what to do<lb/>
with such money, according to<lb/>
Boudreaux.<lb/>
"It's unfair that the students<lb/>
are paying me financial aid said<lb/>
Steve Wheeler. Fountainhead<lb/>
sports editor.<lb/>
"I feel like I'm doing a seryice<lb/>
for the students. The pay we get<lb/>
is token and not close to minimum<lb/>
wage Wheeler added.<lb/>
"According to the financial<lb/>
aid office, I receive more than 100<lb/>
per cent of my needs. But even<lb/>
with my salary, the loan doesn't<lb/>
meet my needs according to<lb/>
secretary of academic affairs, Tim<lb/>
McLeod.<lb/>
"I think it's bad. I'm up here<lb/>
doing a job and being penalized<lb/>
for it McLeod added.<lb/>
 The rule has always been on<lb/>
the books. It just wasn't taken<lb/>
quite seriously until recently<lb/>
said Tim Sullivan, Student<lb/>
Government Association (SGA)<lb/>
president.<lb/>
"There is nothing that can be<lb/>
done. It is a federal law<lb/>
Sullivan add d.<lb/>
According to Sullivan, SGA<lb/>
funds are under federal rules and,<lb/>
therefore, the SGA must comply<lb/>
with those federal regulations.<lb/>
"This isn't anything new.<lb/>
With the computer it doesn't take<lb/>
us as long to find out who is<lb/>
affected said Boudreaux.<lb/>
 Until the federal government<lb/>
changes, we're going to have to<lb/>
abide by the U.S. Office of<lb/>
Education commented<lb/>
Boudreaux.<lb/>
"It's to the student's advant-<lb/>
age to come in and check on his or<lb/>
her loan said Boudreaux.<lb/>
"If SGA money wasn't uni-<lb/>
versity money, we would be free<lb/>
and clear. But this money is aid<lb/>
money and must be deducted<lb/>
from loans commented Sullian.<lb/>
"You can't fight city hall.<lb/>
We'll wok around it Sullivan<lb/>
added.<lb/>
m<lb/>
ROBERT M. BOUDREAUX<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotter<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1916 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
!��� IITII<lb/>
�MM<lb/>
21st century learning<lb/>
During the remainder of this century this nation is<lb/>
likely to experience either a renaissance or a<lb/>
revolution in education.<lb/>
National test scores have been dropping for the<lb/>
past several years and taxpayers are clamoring about<lb/>
how school systems are spending their money.<lb/>
Educators and social observers offer several<lb/>
explanations for the decline: television and other<lb/>
extra-curricular diversions are usurping time that<lb/>
students would otherwise devote to their schcolwork;<lb/>
too little emphasis has been placed on the basics, the<lb/>
Three Rs; schools, being allocated funds on the basis<lb/>
of the number of pupils, are eager to keep the<lb/>
dropout rate low by pushing slower students through<lb/>
the grades, despite their inadequate academic skills.<lb/>
Even though the Technology Age is still upon us<lb/>
there seems now less enthusiasm for high-priced<lb/>
education, whose capability to produce graduates<lb/>
with the basic literary, linguistic and mathematical<lb/>
skills is spurious, than during the heighth of the<lb/>
Space Age in the '60s. Taxpayers are today<lb/>
demanding more brain for the buck.<lb/>
Results of the Gallup Poll's eighth annual survey<lb/>
of attitudes toward the public schools and education<lb/>
released Saturday indicate 65 per cent of the<lb/>
American public favors a standardized national test<lb/>
for high school seniors. All high school students<lb/>
would have to pass the examination before they could<lb/>
graduate. Gallup polled the public in 1958, using the<lb/>
identical question. The results showed less discon-<lb/>
tentment with the educational system; only half of<lb/>
the American public favored the best team.<lb/>
One school administrator in Virginia has taken<lb/>
into his own hands the matter of guaranteeing basic<lb/>
proficiency of pupils-to the chagrin of many at the<lb/>
outset of his experiment. Sam A. Owen, Greenville<lb/>
County superintendent of schools has eliminated<lb/>
"social promotions" in that county's school system.<lb/>
Greenville's pupils must now demonstrate through a<lb/>
battery of tests that they have learned enough<lb/>
English, math, history and so on to merit being<lb/>
passed to the next grade. The testing has paid off;<lb/>
from an average score ranking in the bottom third of<lb/>
the nation before the end of social promotions,<lb/>
second through seventh graders now rank in the top<lb/>
third percentile on their reading scores.<lb/>
Education, whether basic or experimental, is not<lb/>
going to get any less expensive at the primary<lb/>
through higher levels. Taxpayers should not expect<lb/>
to pay less for the education and socialization of their<lb/>
children. But, the techniques we use to educate<lb/>
should be examined periodically to determine their<lb/>
cost effectiveness.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty 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/>
Sports EditorSteve Wheeler<lb/>
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association<lb/>
of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday during the<lb/>
school year, weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.uu annually for non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
QBP<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
Marching Pirates should play<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Having just recently oome to<lb/>
work at East Carolina, I have<lb/>
been tremendously impressed to<lb/>
point with the spirit shown by the<lb/>
study body, and especially by the<lb/>
Marching Pirates.<lb/>
The student support has been<lb/>
evident at every game ECU has<lb/>
played to date, and the Marching<lb/>
Pirates have been at all home<lb/>
games and a couple of road<lb/>
games as funds would permit.<lb/>
The talent in the band is<lb/>
excellent, and is worthy of<lb/>
recognition. They have been one<lb/>
of the main spirit boosters on the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Now word comes to me that<lb/>
the members of the Marching<lb/>
Pirates have taken a vote on<lb/>
whether or not to stay fa the<lb/>
game, and that several have<lb/>
expressed a desire not to stay.<lb/>
This, to me, seems quite ambig-<lb/>
uous. On the one hand, the band<lb/>
asks for recognition, and makes<lb/>
claims about their great spirit,<lb/>
which has been true. But it is very<lb/>
easy for one to support something<lb/>
that is a winner and something<lb/>
that is convenient. The true test<lb/>
of spirit comes when one is<lb/>
inconvenienced, or supports a<lb/>
program that is not on top.<lb/>
In this case, East Carolina is<lb/>
fighting for the Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence championship. Many of the<lb/>
players have been working four<lb/>
years to reach this goal, and just<lb/>
as they are about to reach it, the<lb/>
support is pulled out from under<lb/>
them. This is not fair to the team<lb/>
or to East Carolina University. If<lb/>
ECU is to receive publicity, it<lb/>
must have the support of its own<lb/>
fans.<lb/>
I would urge the students to<lb/>
re-examine their positions and I<lb/>
hope that the band will also<lb/>
reconsider. Coach Dye and the<lb/>
team deserve your suooort. You<lb/>
have been saying that you've got<lb/>
the spirit, now you have a chance<lb/>
to show it.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Jon Verner<lb/>
Assistant Sports<lb/>
Information Director<lb/>
Television flexes its muscle, again<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The decision to reschedule the<lb/>
Applachian game is a typical<lb/>
example not only of the undeser-<lb/>
ved power of television, but also<lb/>
of unrestrained avarice taking<lb/>
place of fair play.<lb/>
The student body has done a<lb/>
fine job of supporting a fine<lb/>
football team and now it is faced<lb/>
with the fact that the biggest<lb/>
home game of the year has been<lb/>
taken away. So many students<lb/>
stood in endless lines to get<lb/>
tickets for away games. And so<lb/>
many students filled the stadium<lb/>
to far over capacity. The student<lb/>
body traveled to Chapel Hill and<lb/>
to Raleigh to support what we felt<lb/>
was a special group of athletes. It<lb/>
was predicted that Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium would host over 30,000<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
Forum letters should be<lb/>
typed or printed and they must<lb/>
be signed and include the<lb/>
writer'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/>
mmm<lb/>
people for this Appalachian<lb/>
game. It isdoubtful now that with<lb/>
the students gone that the<lb/>
stadium will reach half that<lb/>
capacity. True, many more may<lb/>
see the game on television, but is<lb/>
this unknown silent crowd worth<lb/>
more than the strongly vocal,<lb/>
supportive ECU student body that<lb/>
Pat Dye has been so praiseworthy<lb/>
of? Is it fair to make the ECU<lb/>
band, one of the finest in the<lb/>
nation, miss their Thanksgiving<lb/>
in order to attend the football<lb/>
game? Many of them have not<lb/>
been home sinoe they arrived<lb/>
here in September, and they do<lb/>
not receive any special compensa-<lb/>
tion for being in the band.<lb/>
This letter is not written to<lb/>
criticize Bill Cain for a decision he<lb/>
probably had no choice in mak-<lb/>
ing. We simply feel that it is a<lb/>
poor situation in which the system<lb/>
would make it feasible for the<lb/>
ECU student body to be sold out<lb/>
for television coverage and<lb/>
money.<lb/>
Jeffrey Phillip Swisher<lb/>
Carl Ray Brown<lb/>
Tom Brawner<lb/>
MaraAdler<lb/>
Jeffrey Johnson<lb/>
Hal Bullock<lb/>
Va<lb/>
�P<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 1916 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
5<lb/>
�<lb/>
Frats admit<lb/>
harassment<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Members of three ECU social<lb/>
fraternities have admitted that<lb/>
their organizations practice phy-<lb/>
sical hazing in pledge orientation<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
At least four other fraternities<lb/>
have admitted to mentally haras-<lb/>
sing their pledges here.<lb/>
With few exceptions, ECU<lb/>
social fraternity pledge orienta-<lb/>
tion activities have changed ever<lb/>
recent years, however.<lb/>
But they have not changed<lb/>
enough, according to James<lb/>
Mai lory, dean of men and advisor<lb/>
to all ECU fraternities.<lb/>
Mental and physical harass-<lb/>
ment and ridicule, better known<lb/>
as hazing, were accepted stan-<lb/>
dard for pledge orientation pro-<lb/>
grams in fraternities years ago,<lb/>
according to Mallory.<lb/>
Today, however, hazing is<lb/>
against all National Fraternity<lb/>
Council regulations, university<lb/>
rules, and North Carolina state<lb/>
law.<lb/>
Mallory admitted that hazing<lb/>
is "on the decline" at ECU, but<lb/>
not totally gone.<lb/>
The College Fraternity Secre-<lb/>
tary s Association (CFSA), made<lb/>
up of executive secretaries fa<lb/>
fraternities, asserts "unequivo-<lb/>
cally its opposition to hazing and<lb/>
pre-initiation activities which do<lb/>
not contribute to the positive<lb/>
development and welfare of pled-<lb/>
ges and members according to<lb/>
the CFAS's "Statement of Posi-<lb/>
tion on Hazing<lb/>
The seven fraternity members<lb/>
who admitted that their groups<lb/>
practice some sort of hazing<lb/>
requested that their organizations<lb/>
and names remain anonymous.<lb/>
When asked to comment on<lb/>
the above disclosures, Mallory<lb/>
called physical harassment<lb/>
"gross immaturity but referred<lb/>
to mental hazing as simply a<lb/>
"nuisance<lb/>
"A guy has to go through<lb/>
something to work himself up to<lb/>
the status of a brother he said.<lb/>
Mallory is very opposed to<lb/>
physical hazing.<lb/>
Any fraternity that continues<lb/>
to participate in such activities is<lb/>
on its way to dissolution, accord-<lb/>
ing to Mallory.<lb/>
The three who admitted that<lb/>
their fraternities practice physical<lb/>
hazing refused to give details of<lb/>
the harassment.<lb/>
This reporter, however did<lb/>
witness one such activity refer-<lb/>
red to by a Fraternity as the<lb/>
"death walk<lb/>
The "death march" begins at<lb/>
the top of College Hill Drive and<lb/>
ends at the bottom of the road<lb/>
which runs between the girls<lb/>
high-rise dorms near downtown<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Pledges participating in the<lb/>
three-quarter mile walk must take<lb/>
one large step forward, 3 small<lb/>
steps back for the entire distance<lb/>
while carrying three or four bricks<lb/>
in their left hands at shoulder<lb/>
height, never stopping or chang-<lb/>
ing hands.<lb/>
The president of this frater-<lb/>
nity oversees the "death march"<lb/>
to make sure the pledges perform<lb/>
as instructed.<lb/>
Mental harassment also takes<lb/>
many forms, according to Mal-<lb/>
lory.<lb/>
One form of mental hazing<lb/>
was admitted to by one fraternity<lb/>
and accepted by Mallory and the<lb/>
Inter-Fraternity Council (IFC).<lb/>
In it the pledges must learn<lb/>
the history and by-laws of their<lb/>
fraternity. Then, during the 10 to<lb/>
12-week orientation period, they<lb/>
are taken to a dark room with one<lb/>
bright light shining directly in<lb/>
their faces and quizzed vigorously<lb/>
on the history and by-laws by all<lb/>
the fraternity members.<lb/>
The IFC is the oo-ordinating<lb/>
organization for the ECU frater-<lb/>
nity system.<lb/>
According to Bill Benson, IFC<lb/>
president, ECU fraternities are<lb/>
becoming more oriented to social<lb/>
services in their pledge programs<lb/>
now and are steering away from<lb/>
harassing practices.<lb/>
Benson cited the annual cam-<lb/>
pus blood drive, Christmas bene-<lb/>
fits for underpriveleged children,<lb/>
and Homecoming programs as<lb/>
examples.<lb/>
The majority of ECU fraternity<lb/>
pledge programs today are de-<lb/>
signed to promote simple disci-<lb/>
pline, loyalty and brotherhood,<lb/>
according to Benson.<lb/>
"Hazing has no place in<lb/>
modern fraternity systems Ben-<lb/>
son said, concurring with Mal-<lb/>
lory.<lb/>
Dr. William F. Grossnickel,<lb/>
professor of social psychology,<lb/>
also commented on fraternity<lb/>
pledge orientation programs.<lb/>
"Guys are attracted to frater-<lb/>
nities because the activities are<lb/>
interesting and they feel they can<lb/>
achieve a sort of status, a sense of<lb/>
identity, and, to a certain extent,<lb/>
power he said.<lb/>
"Of course, there's also the<lb/>
old idea that the guys befae them<lb/>
in the particular fraternity had to<lb/>
go through what they're going<lb/>
through, so why shouldn't they?'<lb/>
Tom Phillips, a graduate<lb/>
student in clinical psychology,<lb/>
commented during the interview<lb/>
about social confamity.<lb/>
"The pledge programs are<lb/>
just making the pledges confam,<lb/>
and supposedly coifam to a<lb/>
higher status he said.<lb/>
You're too<lb/>
busy to write home<lb/>
and ask for a<lb/>
college ring.<lb/>
So ArtCarved has<lb/>
done if tor you.<lb/>
Dear Mother and Dad,<lb/>
I'd love an ArtCarved College Ring for:<lb/>
Z Mv oirthdav<lb/>
D Not flunking<lb/>
Winning the game against.<lb/>
Making all mv 8 o'clock classes this<lb/>
weekmonthsemester<lb/>
3 Getting on the dean's list<lb/>
? Finally sending out mv laundrv<lb/>
'other reason!<lb/>
Love,<lb/>
RING DAYS<lb/>
That's when the ArtCarved representative will be here<lb/>
,to help you select your custom-made college ring<lb/>
It's also the day you can charge any ArtCarved ring<lb/>
on Master Charge or BankAmenc ard<lb/>
TUESDAY THRU WEDNESDAY<lb/>
NOV. 16-17th UNTIL 5:00 pm<lb/>
IN THE WRIGHT BUILDING AND<lb/>
ANY DAY IN THE STUDENT SUP<lb/>
PLY STORE<lb/>
ATOMED<lb/>
College Rings by<lb/>
World-famou lor diamond and weddi.tg rings<lb/>
m<lb/>
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j<lb/>
����� ii  .���<lb/>
<pb facs="00057095_0006"/><lb/>
!ljgjaP$lpP<lb/>
6<lb/>
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mmm<lb/>
�<lb/>
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�<lb/>
City Inspector says:<lb/>
School inspections reveal many problems<lb/>
By BECKY BRA DSH AW<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The closing of the Third Street<lb/>
School in May prompted an<lb/>
inspection of all Greenville City<lb/>
Schools by the City Inspector's<lb/>
Office, according to Alton<lb/>
Warren, chief inspector.<lb/>
The inspections revealed pro-<lb/>
blems in each school, although<lb/>
most were minor, Warren said.<lb/>
Warren said the E.B. Ayoock<lb/>
Junior High School had extensive<lb/>
damage, however.<lb/>
The roof was in poor oondition<lb/>
and barrels had been placed<lb/>
throughout the building to catch<lb/>
water leaking through, according<lb/>
to Warren.<lb/>
"The roof should have lasted<lb/>
20 years said Warren.<lb/>
J.A. Carstarphen, , assistant<lb/>
principal at Aycook, said the roof<lb/>
has presented continuous pro-<lb/>
blems.<lb/>
He said the problems could<lb/>
have been dealt with sooner, but<lb/>
that the money for repairs was<lb/>
unavailable.<lb/>
"We're aware of problems,<lb/>
and we'll put in work orders<lb/>
said Carstarphen. "Maintenance<lb/>
workers do the best they can, but<lb/>
our hands are tied without<lb/>
money<lb/>
The Greenville Board of Edu-<lb/>
cation contracted the East.Coast<lb/>
EAT FOR JUST<lb/>
V" plus tax MonThurs.<lb/>
Crabcakes, slaw, jfrench fries plirs<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
Vt pound hamburger steak, slaw,<lb/>
french fries arid rolls.<lb/>
Fish, slaw, french fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
CLIFFS<lb/>
Seafood House ana Oyster Bar<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat. 752-3172<lb/>
2 miles east on highway 264<lb/>
(out 10th St.)<lb/>
dingo<lb/>
Prices start at s36.00<lb/>
Styles in men's<lb/>
and women's sizes<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
on rhe Mall<lb/>
Roofing and Metals Co. to repair<lb/>
the roof.<lb/>
According to Joe Souther of<lb/>
the firm, work has been in<lb/>
progress for three weeks and<lb/>
should be completed two months<lb/>
from now.<lb/>
"We are completely reroofing<lb/>
the building said Souther.<lb/>
The company is using the<lb/>
Trocal System, a new method<lb/>
from Germany, to repair the roof,<lb/>
according to Souther.<lb/>
"No tar or asphalt is used in<lb/>
the system said Souther.<lb/>
According to Carstarphen,<lb/>
$150,000 was budgeted for re-<lb/>
pairs to the Ayoock school.<lb/>
In addition to roof repairs,<lb/>
bathroom tiles were replaced,<lb/>
cracks in walls were puttied over<lb/>
and painted, and the lavatories<lb/>
were repainted, according to<lb/>
Carstarphen.<lb/>
Most of the repairs to the<lb/>
eight year-old building were<lb/>
made during the summer, ac-<lb/>
cording to Warren.<lb/>
Repairs are also in progress at<lb/>
the Third Street School, aocording<lb/>
to Warren.<lb/>
WATCH OUT<lb/>
FOR THE<lb/>
RAINBOW<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
iherwin-Williams<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
North Carolina's Number 3 Rock Nightclub<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
This week "at the Attic<lb/>
Tues. &amp; Wed.Super Gr<lb/>
Thurs.Jubal<lb/>
Fri.fr Sat.Eaze<lb/>
Robert E. Stewart, director of<lb/>
buildings and grounds, said<lb/>
$150,000 has been budgeted fa<lb/>
renovations there.<lb/>
"We are working within the<lb/>
oonfines of our budget, but we<lb/>
will get it (the school) in excellent<lb/>
shape said Stewart.<lb/>
According to Warren, calls to<lb/>
his office by concerned parents<lb/>
had prompted the inspection of<lb/>
the Third Street School.<lb/>
Warren said he inspected and<lb/>
found rotten floors oovered by<lb/>
plywood, crumbling floor joists,<lb/>
broken windows, and crumbling<lb/>
concrete steps at the entrances.<lb/>
"There was no reason for it to<lb/>
be like that said Warren.<lb/>
He said it had been 14 to 15<lb/>
months since the last inspection<lb/>
of the school.<lb/>
However, a state statute re-<lb/>
quires principals to make daily<lb/>
inspections of schools and to call<lb/>
the city inspector if problems are<lb/>
found, said Warren.<lb/>
According to Stewart, plans<lb/>
had been made to correct the<lb/>
problems. Money had been bud-<lb/>
geted and the materials had been<lb/>
bought.<lb/>
Warren's inspection of the<lb/>
school came two weeks before the<lb/>
end of the school year.<lb/>
Warren said he believed the<lb/>
building to be unsafe then and<lb/>
that it should not be used for the<lb/>
last two weeks, so he ordered the<lb/>
school closed.<lb/>
The students from the Third<lb/>
Street School were then sent<lb/>
either to Elmhurst School or to<lb/>
Wahl-Coates School, aocording to<lb/>
Stewart.<lb/>
According to Warren, his<lb/>
office will be more strict with the<lb/>
city school system from now on.<lb/>
"Now we will inspect every<lb/>
six months said Warren.<lb/>
The interior of the Third<lb/>
Street School is being completely<lb/>
rebuilt, according to Warren.<lb/>
The repairs are expected to be<lb/>
oompleted in time for the opening<lb/>
of school next September, said<lb/>
Stewart.<lb/>
According to Warren, the<lb/>
building will be inspected again<lb/>
after repairs to insure the safety<lb/>
of the building.<lb/>
Honor Council acquits<lb/>
former football player<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
A former ECU football player<lb/>
was found not guilty of book theft<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 11 in an Honor<lb/>
Council hearing in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
The defendant was charged<lb/>
with selling three allegedly stolen<lb/>
books but acquitted after short<lb/>
deliberation, according to Jack<lb/>
Jenkins, Honor Council chair-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
The Council also heard a case<lb/>
involving charges of disorderly<lb/>
conduct in the ECU Infirmary.<lb/>
The defendant in this case<lb/>
allegedly acted in a disorderly<lb/>
manner after assisting a friend to<lb/>
the Infirmary who had suffered an<lb/>
asthma attack.<lb/>
The defendant pleaded guilty<lb/>
to threatening an Infirmary resi-<lb/>
dent nurse as she was calling<lb/>
campus police for assistance,<lb/>
aocording to Jenkins.<lb/>
The defendant said he was<lb/>
simply scared, Jenkins said.<lb/>
The Honor Council found the<lb/>
defendant guilty and served him<lb/>
with a written reprimand.<lb/>
In other business, the Council<lb/>
discussed the recent resignation<lb/>
of former Attorney General John<lb/>
Jones.<lb/>
"Collectively, we are puzzled<lb/>
over many of the circumstances<lb/>
surrounding the 'resignation<lb/>
said Jenkins.<lb/>
Tues. &amp; Wed.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mtmmmnm<lb/>
MR<lb/>
<pb facs="00057095_0007"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1916 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
7<lb/>
�iwiiffliMum<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Discussion continues about<lb/>
foreign language requirement<lb/>
By HELENA WOODARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Last Thursday the ECU Curri-<lb/>
culum Committee heard more<lb/>
discussions from faculty members<lb/>
on the SGA's proposal to drop<lb/>
foreign language as a require-<lb/>
ment for the B. A. degree.<lb/>
Only two departments, psy-<lb/>
chology and geology, favored a<lb/>
modification of the foreign lang-<lb/>
uage requirement.<lb/>
Professor Hazel Stapleton,<lb/>
spokesperson fa the psychology<lb/>
department, requested a post-<lb/>
ponement of the proposal partly<lb/>
because of the semester change<lb/>
next Fall quarter<lb/>
"Some faculty members in the<lb/>
psychology department wish to<lb/>
modify the requirements. The<lb/>
A.B. degree is the only one<lb/>
offered in our department. We<lb/>
feel that a modification of the<lb/>
foreign language requirements<lb/>
would be in the best interest of<lb/>
the psychology department<lb/>
said Professor Stapleton.<lb/>
No other department is<lb/>
represented for more than nine<lb/>
quarter hours of a student's time.<lb/>
Foreign language represents 20<lb/>
quarter hours of their time she<lb/>
continued. "The arguments in<lb/>
favor of the requirements over-<lb/>
look this disproportionate<lb/>
figure<lb/>
Dr. Stapleton summed up her<lb/>
report by proposing that each<lb/>
department decide individually<lb/>
on the foreign language require-<lb/>
ments, that departments adopt<lb/>
teaching approaches more suited<lb/>
to students with limited apti-<lb/>
tudes, and that the required<lb/>
number of hours in a foreign<lb/>
language be reduced.<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Williams of the<lb/>
foreign language department said<lb/>
that the line should be drawn at<lb/>
the A.B. degree.<lb/>
"We have already dropped<lb/>
foreign languages as an entrance<lb/>
requirement he said.<lb/>
Dr. John Maiola of the<lb/>
Anthropology and Sociology de-<lb/>
partment said that the B.A.<lb/>
requirement for foreign lang-<lb/>
uages should be kept intact. He<lb/>
added that the B.S. degree should<lb/>
be allowed an alternative.<lb/>
Dr. Ennis L. Chestang, chair-<lb/>
man of the Geography depart-<lb/>
ment said that only one faculty<lb/>
member voted not to keep the<lb/>
foreign lanquage requirement for<lb/>
the B. A. degree in the Geography<lb/>
department.<lb/>
"We're not dealing with a<lb/>
world in which we're isolated<lb/>
from one another. We're doing<lb/>
nothing but perpetrating illiteracy<lb/>
by saying no to the foreign<lb/>
language requirements he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Dr. Erwin Hester, Chairman<lb/>
of the English department, said<lb/>
that the language ability of all<lb/>
students has declined remark-<lb/>
ably.<lb/>
"I would regret to see any<lb/>
step taken which could diminish<lb/>
any feeble language usage skills<lb/>
students might have already he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
According to Dr. Ryan, chair-<lb/>
man of the Curriculum Commit-<lb/>
tee, a recommendation will be<lb/>
made by the General College<lb/>
Committee followed by more<lb/>
debate and a recommendation by<lb/>
the Curriculum Committee before<lb/>
the proposal goes to the Faculty<lb/>
Senate.<lb/>
The proposal involves mostly<lb/>
general education requirements.<lb/>
Some 30 degrees are affected by<lb/>
the foreign language require-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Curriculum Committee discusses SGA proposal.<lb/>
 Photo by Russ Pogue. <lb/>
OXFAM declares 'fast'<lb/>
SOAP<lb/>
CANDLES<lb/>
PICTURES<lb/>
CHRISTMAS<lb/>
ORNAMENTS<lb/>
AND KITS<lb/>
NEW TO GREENVILLE<lb/>
CINDY'S<lb/>
GIFT SHOP<lb/>
rrH5-n<lb/>
Kr 3<lb/>
ByLYNNCAVERLY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 18, has been<lb/>
declared "Fast For A World<lb/>
Harvest" day by OXFAM, ac-<lb/>
cording to Tom Frandsen, co-<lb/>
ordinator of the organization.<lb/>
OXFAM is a non-sectarian<lb/>
international relief and develop-<lb/>
ment agency, aimed at finding<lb/>
new and effective ways of streng-<lb/>
thening the development capabi-<lb/>
lity of the poor people in the Third<lb/>
World.<lb/>
OXFAM does not run or<lb/>
administer its own programs,<lb/>
rather it finances and encourages<lb/>
the work of local agencies and<lb/>
people, according to Frandsen.<lb/>
One of these local agencies is<lb/>
a combined effort of ECU stu-<lb/>
dents who are participating in the<lb/>
OXFAM fast on Thursday. These<lb/>
students encourage all who are<lb/>
interested in joining them to come<lb/>
by the old CU on Wednesday,<lb/>
Nov. 17 from 10-4 p.m. and ask<lb/>
any questions to gain more<lb/>
insight on the purpose of OX-<lb/>
FAM.<lb/>
In addition to the fasting<lb/>
on Thursday, OXFAM suggests<lb/>
that the equivalent of what would<lb/>
have been spent on meals that<lb/>
day be donated to OXFAM.<lb/>
OXFAM takes the donations it<lb/>
receives and through a staff of 30<lb/>
experienced field directors seeks<lb/>
out and encourages poor farmers<lb/>
in Asia, Africa, and Latin Amer-<lb/>
ica to improve their crops and<lb/>
farming methods, according to<lb/>
Frandsen.<lb/>
In doing this for the past 34<lb/>
years, OXFAM has found that<lb/>
people work hard for change in<lb/>
their communities when the work<lb/>
reflects their own choices and<lb/>
needs, said Frandsen.<lb/>
OXFAM began in England in<lb/>
1942 as the Oxford Committee fa<lb/>
Famine Relief. Since then four<lb/>
other OXFAM organizations have<lb/>
been formed in America, Austra-<lb/>
lia, Belgium, and Canada.<lb/>
( 3 MILES ,<lb/>
west '<lb/>
o4K CHV�Cf<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 those 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 PM<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 8:36 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 AM 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/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057095_0008"/><lb/>
a<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1916 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmnm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Journalism program studies<lb/>
social responsibility problems<lb/>
By BOBTHONEN<lb/>
The journalism program at ECU regards<lb/>
teaching technical skills as only part of the job,<lb/>
according to Ira Baker, ECU Journalism Coordinat-<lb/>
or.<lb/>
"It's even more important that the reporter be<lb/>
acutely aware of his social responsibility to let as<lb/>
many voices be heard as possible said Baker.<lb/>
We just used to talk about the right of a free<lb/>
press. Baker said. "Now the word is responsibility,<lb/>
and it has a tail<lb/>
We must train people to take a keenly critical<lb/>
approach to the institutions of our society Baker<lb/>
said, "particularly our institutions of mass com-<lb/>
munication.<lb/>
"There have never been so many things to<lb/>
report he said, "and at the same time we have<lb/>
been faced with closed meetings and secrecy in<lb/>
government<lb/>
Part of the criticism of the press stems from the<lb/>
Vietnam War. "There were so many unpleasant<lb/>
things to report said Baker.<lb/>
We were perhaps killing the messenger who<lb/>
brought the bad news.<lb/>
Another problem is that today's instant<lb/>
communication gives disproportionate publicity to<lb/>
the more militant individuals who are willing to<lb/>
perform outrageous acts said Baker. "While it is<lb/>
more difficult for the man in the street to have<lb/>
access to the media.<lb/>
"With all our electronic equipment it's hard to<lb/>
be heard he said.<lb/>
In addition to technical courses such as "Copy<lb/>
Editing and Make-up" students are offered "The<lb/>
Press and Society" and "Legal Problems of Mass<lb/>
Communication<lb/>
Other courses involve more individual initiative<lb/>
on the student's part and less time in the classroom.<lb/>
Courses such as "Journalistic Production<lb/>
credit work on one of the campus publications<lb/>
towards academic credit<lb/>
Special study seminars in journalism encourage<lb/>
student work on topics of individual interest.<lb/>
Topics have included; the influence of the<lb/>
newspaper editorial on the public, problems of<lb/>
censorship, black journalism and the underground<lb/>
press.<lb/>
More advanced courses involve such aspects of<lb/>
journalism as advising student publications, a<lb/>
valuable asset to those who plan to teach at the high<lb/>
school or junior college level, and the role of the<lb/>
press in modern society, politically, economically<lb/>
and socially.<lb/>
Baker is particularly fond of the benefits<lb/>
provided by the journalism laboratory, a simulated<lb/>
"news room" with oopy desks, typewriters, and a<lb/>
"morgue" (back issues and clippings).<lb/>
Besides his academic role, Baker has served the<lb/>
twice-weekly Fountamhead as faculty advisor.<lb/>
In 1971, he received the "Outstanding Advisor<lb/>
Award" from the Associated Collegiate Press.<lb/>
Many of the students on the newspaper staff<lb/>
have some background in journalism but often the<lb/>
campus newspaper is the first contact students have<lb/>
with the profession.<lb/>
"One of the biggest problems we face is to<lb/>
convince prospective staff members that interest in<lb/>
honest communication is the only absolute require-<lb/>
ment we demand said Fountainhead ed'tor Jim<lb/>
Elliott.<lb/>
"We can teach the skills but we can't teach the<lb/>
interest<lb/>
Teaching the skills is one of the main duties of<lb/>
Lawrence J. O Keefe, assistant professor of<lb/>
journalism at ECU since 1974.<lb/>
Technical courses include writing and editing for<lb/>
newspapers and magazines, courses in make-up<lb/>
(page design), courses which prepare a potential<lb/>
reporter to gather and research factual news<lb/>
articles, and even a course in editorial writing.<lb/>
"The days of a teacher simply getting up and<lb/>
lecturing are gone said Baker, "particularly in a<lb/>
field as fast-changing as journalism<lb/>
While newspapers, magazines and other<lb/>
publications offer a variety of possibilities to<lb/>
aspiring journalists, Baker stresses the growing<lb/>
importance of other commuications media, such as<lb/>
radio and television, which rely heavily upon good<lb/>
journalistic principles and practices.<lb/>
IRA BAKER ECU Journalism Co-ordlnator,<lb/>
advises students who want to learn more about<lb/>
modern m<lb/>
11b. an in,<lb/>
ECU journalism gn<lb/>
suggests technical<lb/>
By ALICE SIMMONS<lb/>
Most of North Carolina's newspapers will adopt com-<lb/>
puterized production within the next few years,predicts Susan<lb/>
Quinn, an ECU journalism graduate.<lb/>
Quinn, now employed at the Greeenville Daily Reflector,<lb/>
believes that the ECU journalism program should anticipate<lb/>
this change by revising all courses to include the technical<lb/>
aspects of computer production.<lb/>
Journalism students, according to Quinn, should be using<lb/>
the new scanner paper and cathode ray systems of oopy<lb/>
material preparation.<lb/>
"Manual typewriters in the department should be<lb/>
replaced with electric typewriters because this is what most<lb/>
ledia to cot<lb/>
:tory courst<lb/>
lUc<lb/>
7hi<lb/>
I 4<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
 makes changes<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD EDITOR, JIM ELLIOTT an-<lb/>
nounces new format.<lb/>
wmmmmmmmmtmmmmmmmwm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD's format<lb/>
will change beginning Winter<lb/>
quarter and, according to Senior<lb/>
Editor, Jim Elliott, the change<lb/>
has been long overdue.<lb/>
Proposed changes in format<lb/>
include deleting page border sand<lb/>
updating the overall look of<lb/>
ECU'S newspaper.<lb/>
Deleting the page borders will<lb/>
increase total page space by 12<lb/>
per cent leaving more space for<lb/>
advertising and stories, according<lb/>
to Jimmy Williams, Production<lb/>
M anager.<lb/>
"This will also give the paper<lb/>
a more contemporary look<lb/>
Williams explained.<lb/>
The front page logo will also<lb/>
change; it will lose its borders and<lb/>
a solid black line will appear under<lb/>
fmmmnmmwmnm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
"This is a much simpler,<lb/>
cleaner, and more eye-pleasing<lb/>
format said Elliott.<lb/>
"It also gives the paper a<lb/>
long-needed change in style<lb/>
which the staff can be proud of<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: The material on this page was<lb/>
prepared to provide a picture of one of the many<lb/>
programs offered at ECU.<lb/>
It is intended to stimulate similar articles from<lb/>
members of other programs who are interested in<lb/>
 showing their wares<lb/>
We offer our services as a forum, but we need your<lb/>
help. We can show you how to gather the facts and<lb/>
write the articles but we are short of manpower.<lb/>
Are you involved in something you feel the rest of<lb/>
the campus would be intersted in? If so, come and see<lb/>
us. We will help you get it in print.<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
SUSAN Q9<lb/>
improvemefl,<lb/>
reporters wil<lb/>
"All of uf<lb/>
the Reflector<lb/>
"Advertit<lb/>
ment contl<lb/>
"I would<lb/>
design, sale!<lb/>
To aspirfi<lb/>
advertising e<lb/>
writing expef<lb/>
"A persa<lb/>
sure to get I<lb/>
boasted of of<lb/>
While atti<lb/>
the Reflector,<lb/>
Press in Kinj<lb/>
Fa sever4<lb/>
public relabel<lb/>
In Januar<lb/>
photo-journal<lb/>
i iinmm<lb/>
N<lb/>
ECU jol<lb/>
lournalism<lb/>
3 to work v<lb/>
soon be gel<lb/>
needs to t<lb/>
Quinn.<lb/>
ort a basic<lb/>
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oung jourr<lb/>
ence is an<lb/>
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g ECU, Qu<lb/>
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SffiSa , � �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057095_0009"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 1916 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
9<lb/>
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modern m<lb/>
11b, an in<lb/>
tedia to consider taking Journalism<lb/>
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ECU lournalism graduate, suggests<lb/>
lournalism program.<lb/>
3 to work with advised Quinn.<lb/>
soon be getting electric typewriters here at<lb/>
needs to be emphasized in the depart-<lb/>
Quinn.<lb/>
ort a basic advertising course that taugh<lb/>
layout<lb/>
oung journalists, Quinn points out that<lb/>
ence is an added bonus to someone with<lb/>
h these two skills she said, "would be<lb/>
with little hassle before the person who<lb/>
ese skills<lb/>
g ECU, Quinn worked with Fountamhead,<lb/>
theWECU radio station as well as the Free<lb/>
"ithsafter graduation, she was employed in<lb/>
id advertising.<lb/>
1976. she was employed as a full time<lb/>
the Reflector.<lb/>
More than 50 years servicing campus<lb/>
mtmmm<lb/>
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�<lb/>
University newspaper reflects growth<lb/>
By RICKY SMITH<lb/>
From a small newsletter to an award winning campus newspaper,<lb/>
Fountamhead has come a long way in over 50 years of existence.<lb/>
ECU has had a news publication since 1923, 15 years after the school<lb/>
was established.<lb/>
The first attempt was a newsletter, the East Carolina Teachers'<lb/>
College News, and was only in operation for two years before the<lb/>
newspaper idea really took hold.<lb/>
The Techo Echo, a bi-weekly tabloid, was the first true newspaper. It<lb/>
contained ads, entertainment and athletics, as well as general news in<lb/>
the format.<lb/>
Deanie Boone Haskett was the first editor-in-chief. She worked with<lb/>
a staff of three assistant editors, five business persons and reporters<lb/>
from around the campus.<lb/>
In 1926 school spirit had a strong emphasis. One issue of the paper<lb/>
listed the requirements for earning a ECTC letter.<lb/>
It took 450 points toearn the sacred letter. Some of the point earning<lb/>
activities included:<lb/>
Original song or yell, 15 points.<lb/>
No candy between meals, 1 point per week.<lb/>
Six glasses of water per day, 1 point per week.<lb/>
Cold bath daily, 1 point per week.<lb/>
Fresh hose daily, 1 point per week.<lb/>
Well ventilated room, 1 point per week.<lb/>
Shampoo once every two weeks, 1 point per month.<lb/>
The name for this first newspaper was derived from the Teachers'<lb/>
College part of the school name and plus Echo to indicate that the paper<lb/>
was to be "an echo of the events that occurred on campus<lb/>
One of the early front pages contained an article on the growing<lb/>
enrollment at ECU.<lb/>
In 1923, 486 students had enrolled while 400 were turned away<lb/>
because of a lack of housing.<lb/>
In a 1947 issue, it was reported that all freshmen and sophomore<lb/>
students were permitted to go downtown at night the first three<lb/>
weekends of a quarter.<lb/>
Prior to this, the students were not permitted off campus those<lb/>
weekends.<lb/>
The word "Teacher" was struck from the school name in April of<lb/>
1951.<lb/>
The Publications Board, formed in 1938, felt that this was the time to<lb/>
review all publication names.<lb/>
The Techo Echo was changed to the East Carolinian and the<lb/>
yearbook's name was changed from the Tecoan to the Buccaneer.<lb/>
In 1970. the paper became known as Fountamhead from the<lb/>
importance placed upon the fountain located in front of Wright Building.<lb/>
That year also saw the paper become the first collegiate paper in the<lb/>
state to have Associated Press wire service.<lb/>
The TECO ECHO<lb/>
New Record Set Here Ai 1736 Student EnroU<lb/>
�it. h t. ii, v. TtwttWPUti<lb/>
MfTCfaprti r6ti�t�$tM<lb/>
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TtNk.1<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO, forerummer to FOUNTAINHEAD. reported growth<lb/>
of students and faculty at ECU.<lb/>
In 1971. Fountainhead received the coveted "All-American" award<lb/>
from Assoaated Collegiate Press judges, with marks of distinction in<lb/>
four of five categories.<lb/>
The same year Fountainhead received high praises in competition<lb/>
sponsored by the Charlotte Observer and the Charlotte News.<lb/>
Feature writing and editorial writing received special merit awards.<lb/>
The award-winning feature was a story entitled "Dean Has Fond<lb/>
Memories, describing the career of retiring Dean of Women. Ruth<lb/>
White<lb/>
Ed Brodie, a graduate of ECU was the prize winning staff writer.<lb/>
The editorial award was for a criticism of low attendance at campus<lb/>
Artist Series Concerts, written by editor Bob Thonen.<lb/>
ECU BROADCAST<lb/>
STUDENTS work<lb/>
with modern equipment<lb/>
<pb facs="00057095_0010"/><lb/>
i m<lb/>
10<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1916 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
IM<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm mm<lb/>
Dinner and a show; a good idea<lb/>
ByPATCOYLE<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
The combination of a popular<lb/>
play with a high-quality buffet<lb/>
dinner is surely an almost ideal<lb/>
form of entertainment. What's<lb/>
more, the dinner theatre is now<lb/>
part of the ECU entertainment<lb/>
scene.<lb/>
The Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Theatre debuted Thursday<lb/>
at 7:00. During the first hour, the<lb/>
capacity crowd of 100 enjoyed a<lb/>
dinner that consisted of a choice<lb/>
of rare roast beef or turkey divan<lb/>
Spanish green beans, brown<lb/>
pecan rice, tossed salad, fruit<lb/>
cup, rolls, peach melba, and<lb/>
coffee or tea.<lb/>
The meal, which was catered<lb/>
by Servomation, was perfectly<lb/>
executed. I chose the beef and it<lb/>
couldn't have been better. The<lb/>
rest of the courses were just as<lb/>
pleasing as the entree.<lb/>
The main attraction of the<lb/>
evening, however, was the play<lb/>
itself. The show was "The Odd<lb/>
Couple a Neil Simon hit of the<lb/>
'60s that was adapted into a<lb/>
popular movie, and which finally<lb/>
enjoyed lengthy success as a<lb/>
television situation oomedy star-<lb/>
ring Tony Randall and Jack<lb/>
Klugman.<lb/>
The play is the story of two<lb/>
men, Feli. Unger and Oscar<lb/>
Madison, who move in together<lb/>
after their marriages break up.<lb/>
Felix is an impeccable fussbudget<lb/>
with a fetish for domestic chores.<lb/>
Oscar is a slob from way back; a<lb/>
sportswriter whose favorite sport<lb/>
is life.<lb/>
The characters of Felix and<lb/>
Oscar were brought to life on the<lb/>
Mendenhall stage by Charlie<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD staffers Deb Jackson and Becky Bradshaw enjoy a<lb/>
special meal. (FOUNTAINHEAD photo by Brian Stotler.)<lb/>
Jennette and Stuart Aronson<lb/>
Jennette, a poli so major,<lb/>
and the only student in the cast,<lb/>
seemed to take time to warm up<lb/>
to the role but due to the long run<lb/>
of TV's "Odd Couple I believe<lb/>
part of this oould be attributed to<lb/>
the audience's tendency to expect<lb/>
Tony Randall himself on stage.<lb/>
By Act Two. Jennette was<lb/>
Felix Unger in all his sniveling<lb/>
glory, amusing and irritating the<lb/>
audience simultaneously.<lb/>
The real scene stealer was<lb/>
Stuart Aronson as Oscar. From<lb/>
his Brooklyn inflections to his<lb/>
ambling stature, Aronson was the<lb/>
perfect Oscar. In addition to<lb/>
bringing out the slack sides of the<lb/>
character's personality. Aronson<lb/>
seemed to add a little extra<lb/>
sensitivity, which made the per-<lb/>
formance something special.<lb/>
Aronson, a speech professor<lb/>
with ECU'S Department of Con-<lb/>
tinuing Education, was also in<lb/>
charge of production and di-<lb/>
rection of the play.<lb/>
It was obvious, from the<lb/>
appropriateness of Bill Devins<lb/>
sets to the rapport between the<lb/>
players, that there was lengthy<lb/>
preparation on the part of the<lb/>
director, aew and cast.<lb/>
Other players included Bob<lb/>
McCutcheon, Terry Davis, and<lb/>
David Wardel as the "couple's"<lb/>
poker buddies. All three com-<lb/>
plemented the show's stars, and<lb/>
set the mood for their scenes.<lb/>
Special praise should be given<lb/>
to Cherra Hill and Lynn Malado-<lb/>
witz as the wild British Pigeon<lb/>
sisters; they added much-needed<lb/>
spice to the production.<lb/>
All told, ECU'S first taste of<lb/>
the dinner theatre genre was an<lb/>
almost unqualified success. There<lb/>
were some problems for those<lb/>
seated at the back tables (as I<lb/>
was). It was difficult to follow the<lb/>
action on stage without much<lb/>
shifting and craning. In spite of<lb/>
this minor irritation, I found the<lb/>
evening to be delightful, and I<lb/>
congratulate Aronson, Jennette<lb/>
and the staff of the Student<lb/>
Center for what I rate as a big<lb/>
success.<lb/>
THE ODD COUPLE, commisseratesabout single life(FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
photo by Brian Stotler.)<lb/>
Wonder shines on 'Songs in the Key of Life'<lb/>
ByTHOMASW. SMITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
It has been a long wait<lb/>
between albums for Ste. e<lb/>
Wonder fans, but it has not been<lb/>
a worthless one. His new release,<lb/>
SONGS IN THE KEY OF LIFE is<lb/>
probably the best yet produced by<lb/>
this modern musical genius.<lb/>
This two-record set gives the<lb/>
greatest view of Wonder's versa-<lb/>
tility ever seen in his career. The<lb/>
music moves from near classical,<lb/>
through jazz, to rook. His lyrics<lb/>
cover many aspects of man's<lb/>
existence, from intensely person-<lb/>
al relationships to the unity of all<lb/>
peoples. There is no limit on the<lb/>
variety.<lb/>
The album opens with<lb/>
 Love's in Need of Love Today<lb/>
a basic Stevie Wonder number. It<lb/>
is done in his smooth, easy style<lb/>
and expresses his concern with<lb/>
the world's pitiful condition. It is<lb/>
a reassuring song that establishes<lb/>
that after two years, Stevie is still<lb/>
Stevie. It also sets you up to be<lb/>
knocked over by the third song on<lb/>
side one, "Village Ghetto Land<lb/>
When we hear the opening of<lb/>
this tune, we are surprised by the<lb/>
classical tone. It is a strange<lb/>
blend of orchestral strings and<lb/>
the unique vocals of Wonder.<lb/>
Once the listener settled into the<lb/>
song, it feels comfortable and<lb/>
right, even thought it is a totally<lb/>
new sounr1<lb/>
Side one doses with a jazz-<lb/>
funk instrumental called<lb/>
"Contusion and an upbeat<lb/>
musical tribute to some of the<lb/>
greatest of the jazz greats entitled<lb/>
 Sir Duke Both cuts add a new<lb/>
dimension to Wonders music,<lb/>
sounds that we've never heard<lb/>
from him before.<lb/>
Side t.vo opens with "I<lb/>
Wish " a sona that vearns for the<lb/>
return of the less complicated<lb/>
days of childhood. It isastandard<lb/>
Stevie Wonder tune with a twist.<lb/>
We have the usual, fantastic<lb/>
keyboard and vocals from Stevie,<lb/>
but in addition there is a horn<lb/>
section thrown in that really adds<lb/>
to the music's flavor.<lb/>
We next hear K nooks M e Of f<lb/>
My Feet a love song. Again this<lb/>
is what we normally expect from<lb/>
Mr. Wonder. It is a soothing<lb/>
sound that can make anyone feel<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
UMW<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
(FOUNTAlNHtAU tile pnoto.)<lb/>
m<lb/>
the love described.<lb/>
The third track offers a new<lb/>
sound also. "Pastime Paradise"<lb/>
�concerns the search of mankind<lb/>
for a better environment, rather<lb/>
than trying to maintain the<lb/>
imperfect world of the present.<lb/>
We again hear the use of the<lb/>
string section, but this time, laid<lb/>
over a soft Latin ryhthm. The<lb/>
(combination produces an unusual<lb/>
but tight sound that works very<lb/>
well.<lb/>
"Summer Soft" is a love song<lb/>
with very interesting lyrics.<lb/>
Wonder uses the seasons as<lb/>
symbolsof fleeting love, love that<lb/>
seems strong and substantial, but<lb/>
slowly fades and vanishes. The<lb/>
lyrics alone typify Wonfer's<lb/>
poetic skills.<lb/>
The side closer, "Ordinary<lb/>
Pain parts I and II offer a<lb/>
serious and comical look at a dead<lb/>
relationship. First we hear the<lb/>
man's view of the pain he has<lb/>
suffered at the hands of a cruel<lb/>
woman, gaining our total sym-<lb/>
pathy.<lb/>
In Part II, with the story set<lb/>
against a really funky sound, we<lb/>
hear the other side of the stay<lb/>
from the female. She has come<lb/>
down hard on her man, but only<lb/>
after putting up with a lot of crap<lb/>
from him. By the end of the song,<lb/>
we feel that he has gotten only<lb/>
what he deserves.<lb/>
On side three, we have " Isn' t<lb/>
She Lovely This number tells of<lb/>
a proud father's joy at the birth of<lb/>
hisdaughter. On thiscut, we hear<lb/>
the old sixties Stevie Wonder. He<lb/>
even breaks out with some of his<lb/>
old harmonica style of the past.<lb/>
This song is filled with lightness<lb/>
and a total commitment to life.<lb/>
 Black Man the last tune on<lb/>
side three is a fast paced number<lb/>
that praises the great men and<lb/>
women of all races. The song<lb/>
states that world is for all people,<lb/>
and that all races have made<lb/>
contributions to the improvement<lb/>
of human existence.<lb/>
Side four of the album is<lb/>
dedicated totally to love. The<lb/>
songs demonstrate several levels<lb/>
of love, from deep personal<lb/>
commitment to universal love.<lb/>
In addition to the two records<lb/>
of the album, there is "a<lb/>
something extra bonus record"<lb/>
that contains four more songs.<lb/>
These tunes are of the same high<lb/>
quality as the rest of the album.<lb/>
SONGS IN THE KEY OF LIFE<lb/>
isavery well structured album. It<lb/>
carries on the continuing pro-<lb/>
gressive nature of Stevie<lb/>
Wonder's music. As with his<lb/>
other albums, Wonder experi-<lb/>
ments with many forms of music<lb/>
in an attempt to raise his art to its<lb/>
highest levels.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057095_0011"/><lb/>
' I ' ��"� <lb/>
11<lb/>
pi �m,<lb/>
Bosnickinvades Washington<lb/>
Marquee sees 'Marathon Man1<lb/>
VMM<lb/>
ipjiii<lb/>
w�J<lb/>
6y D� WD R BOSNICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
With the movies in Greenville<lb/>
being the caliber of "The Cars<lb/>
that Eat People I ventured to<lb/>
Washington to see some of the<lb/>
new Fall releases. This column<lb/>
will be devoted to a movie not yet<lb/>
seen in Greenville.<lb/>
Few films can balance sus-<lb/>
pense and violence and success-<lb/>
fully maneuver the audience to<lb/>
climactic anxiety rather than mere<lb/>
anticipation of a violent conclu-<lb/>
sion. The Marathon Man' naves<lb/>
the audience from a confusing<lb/>
anguish during torture are ach-<lb/>
ingly real. One sees the gentle<lb/>
scholar twisted in two; an element<lb/>
necessary for survival. This is<lb/>
perhaps his best performanoe<lb/>
since "Straw Dogs wherein<lb/>
again he  stooped to conquer in<lb/>
a violent world.<lb/>
Lawrence Olivier is less than<lb/>
animated in his role as the Nazi,<lb/>
and while his sanquine interpre-<lb/>
tation of the role is occasionally<lb/>
strong, it is often too subdued.<lb/>
Together, however, the understa-<lb/>
ted and the frenetic Hoffman are<lb/>
well-played. Levy's hysterical<lb/>
frustration at being unable to<lb/>
HOFFMAN and Keller in Marathon Man (FOUNTAINHEAD file<lb/>
photo)<lb/>
and uncoordinated series of paral-<lb/>
lels to an emphatic if not totally<lb/>
satisfying conclusion.<lb/>
This film of obsessions carries<lb/>
the gentle Thomas Levy (Dustin<lb/>
Hoffman) from locent ama-<lb/>
teur jogger to a semetic and<lb/>
sibling-avenging angel. The ac-<lb/>
tion revolves around a former<lb/>
Nazi. Szell (Lawrence Olivier),<lb/>
who conspires with the American<lb/>
government to keep his identity<lb/>
as a war criminal a secret. The<lb/>
sequence includes the death of<lb/>
Levy's brother (Roy Schneider)<lb/>
and brings Levy to torture, and<lb/>
the eventual confrontation with<lb/>
the murderer of his brother and<lb/>
several thousand Jews.<lb/>
Hoffman is excellent as the<lb/>
naive and terrified young history<lb/>
student whose previous crusade<lb/>
has been to clear his deceased<lb/>
father's political guilt. H:s des-<lb/>
peration at being trapped and his<lb/>
answer the methodically cruel<lb/>
Szell's interrogation leads one to<lb/>
feel that this parallel was Director<lb/>
Schlesinger's intent.<lb/>
William DeVane is atrocious<lb/>
as Janeway. the government<lb/>
agent. His resemblence and<lb/>
auditory similarity is needless<lb/>
and blatent symbolism. In a film<lb/>
where the government is aligning<lb/>
itself with a sadistic ex-Nazi,<lb/>
there is no need to parody a<lb/>
positive bureaucratic "take<lb/>
charge image.<lb/>
The remaining players are<lb/>
minor, with Roy Schneider ade-<lb/>
quate as Levy's brother. Martha<lb/>
Keller does well as the comfor-<lb/>
table beauty only a European<lb/>
woman can manage.<lb/>
The major triumph of this<lb/>
film is that it has managed all of<lb/>
its horror, its suspense and<lb/>
violence, without unnecessary<lb/>
Gore. When characters were<lb/>
iniured. thev merelv and realis-<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
s<lb/>
1<lb/>
r<lb/>
1<lb/>
SEE A MAN get his ears cleaned out, permanently, when the<lb/>
incredible CHINESE ACROBATS OF TAIWAN appear in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum Wednesday night at 8.Wp. m. as MSC Production; tickets<lb/>
are on sale at the C. TO. in Mendenhall. Ouch! Fountainhead file<lb/>
tically bled. The scenes of torture<lb/>
rasped against the audience<lb/>
without what has become an<lb/>
almost manditory display of<lb/>
organs and bodily fluid.<lb/>
The film's special effects were<lb/>
excellent and were more lucid as<lb/>
the film incorporated their horror,<lb/>
rather than relying on it for<lb/>
audience attention and revulsion.<lb/>
William Goldman's screen-<lb/>
play isexcellent, and while it does<lb/>
not contain the same background<lb/>
of Nazi cruelty as the novel, the<lb/>
film's dialogue involves enough<lb/>
Simitism as to leave the movie<lb/>
faintly ethnocentric. The Judaic<lb/>
people and their American assim-<lb/>
ilation after the "Holocaust" is a<lb/>
minor facet of the film, yet is an<lb/>
intelligently woven subplot.<lb/>
I give this movie three and a<lb/>
half stars. Hoffman's role is<lb/>
Academy Award quality and the<lb/>
film is an intelligent political<lb/>
thriller. I originally gave it four<lb/>
stars, but I delete a half for<lb/>
needless symbolism.<lb/>
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rv � I � � �-�<lb/>
BMHiBHBn<lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 19116 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
M<lb/>
�MM<lb/>
WON<lb/>
FYe game set<lb/>
Furmantops Bucs<lb/>
6ySrEEAy�E.��<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina fans received<lb/>
both good and bad news on<lb/>
Saturday. The good news was<lb/>
that ECU had been selected to<lb/>
receive regional television cover-<lb/>
age on Thanksgiving night a-<lb/>
gainst Appalachian State, the<lb/>
game being moved five days back<lb/>
from its original Nov. 20 date.<lb/>
The bad news for the Pirate<lb/>
followers was that ECU would<lb/>
have to win against the<lb/>
Mountaineers to claim their first<lb/>
conference title in three years<lb/>
ABC-TV announced Saturday<lb/>
ECU and ASU would be in on a<lb/>
line of regional telecasts for<lb/>
Turkey Day. The game was<lb/>
originally scheduled for next<lb/>
Saturday but to get television<lb/>
exposure needed, the game was<lb/>
moved back.<lb/>
Furman's Paladins made the<lb/>
bad news possible by upsetting<lb/>
the Pirates 17-10 in Sirrine<lb/>
 <lb/>
ECUFUR<lb/>
First Downs2010<lb/>
Rushes-Yards76-26344-243<lb/>
Passing Yards1536<lb/>
Return Yards829<lb/>
Passes (A-C-1)6-I-08-4-0<lb/>
Punts-Avg.4-425-37<lb/>
Fumbles-Lost3-33-2<lb/>
Penalties-Yards 3-15<lb/>
8-76<lb/>
JIMBOLDING<lb/>
 two fumble recoveries<lb/>
Stadium in Greenville, S.C.<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
As they have done all year,<lb/>
turnovers and the lack of ef-<lb/>
ficiency in the passing game<lb/>
proved to be the downfall for the<lb/>
Bucs.<lb/>
After driving 80 yards in 20<lb/>
plays, the Bucs led as the first<lb/>
quarter ended. However, early in<lb/>
the second stanza, Mike Weaver<lb/>
fumbled on the Pirate 22 yard line<lb/>
and the Paladins took the ball in<lb/>
for the score. On the ensuing<lb/>
kickoff Eddie Hicks cobbled the<lb/>
ball at the 16 yard line and<lb/>
Furman turned this miscue into a<lb/>
field goal to lead at the half 10-7.<lb/>
After Pete Conaty tied the<lb/>
game in the third quarter with a<lb/>
field goal, the Paladins took over<lb/>
on their 16 following the kickoff.<lb/>
Larry Robinson took a pitch from<lb/>
quarterback David Whitehurst<lb/>
and went 84 yards untouched for<lb/>
the winning score.<lb/>
"Yes, I can think of three big<lb/>
plays that oould have been the<lb/>
difference said a dejected Pat<lb/>
Dye after the game.  Take away<lb/>
those two fumbles in the first half<lb/>
of ours and that long run in the<lb/>
second half and it would have<lb/>
been a different game<lb/>
Dye said the run by Robinson<lb/>
was the longest against any of his<lb/>
teams ever and that it was a<lb/>
"great run<lb/>
Furman won the toss of the<lb/>
ooin at the start of the game and<lb/>
elected to receive. Neither team<lb/>
could move the ball in the early<lb/>
part of the game and there were<lb/>
three punts before a first down<lb/>
was registered.<lb/>
After Bill Freeman's punt<lb/>
rolled into the end zone, East<lb/>
Carolina took over on the 20 with<lb/>
959 left in the quarter. The<lb/>
Pirates used a ball control offense<lb/>
to drive down the field in 20 plays<lb/>
for the score. There was not a run<lb/>
over nine yards in the entire drive<lb/>
before Willie Hawkins bulled over<lb/>
from the one of fourth down with<lb/>
five seconds left in the quarter.<lb/>
The Bucs used solely a power<lb/>
offense up the middle and off<lb/>
See FOOTBALL, page 13)<lb/>
ECU-Appalachian St. vie<lb/>
for championship on TV<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina and Appalachian State will play<lb/>
their Southern Conference championship football<lb/>
game on Thanksgiving night at 8:30 instead of next<lb/>
Saturday at 7:00, as originally scheduled, ABC-TV<lb/>
announoed Saturday.<lb/>
The game will be carried throughout the<lb/>
Southeastern regional of the United States and will<lb/>
be aired in Eastern North Carolina by WCTI in New<lb/>
Bern, WRAL in Raleigh, and WWAY in Wilming-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
"The Appalachian game was expected to be a<lb/>
big one all year Head Coach Pat Dye said<lb/>
following the Pirates' first conference loss of the<lb/>
year at Furman last Saturday.  And it's going to be<lb/>
even bigger now. It's for the conference title. I'm<lb/>
just happy about one thing, and that is we will be on<lb/>
TV on Turkey Day<lb/>
There seem to be a lot of people not too happy<lb/>
with the change. Business Manager for Athletics<lb/>
Earlene Leggett reports many calls from people<lb/>
wanting refunds on their tickets. But, since the<lb/>
game has been postponed and not cancelled there<lb/>
will be no refunds.<lb/>
"Ticket sales were running real high for this<lb/>
game until the announcement Saturday Leggett<lb/>
said in a telephone interview. "But they have really<lb/>
fallen off since ABC announoed the game would be<lb/>
shown on T.V. We've also gotten many requests fa<lb/>
, efunds, but that is impossible.<lb/>
"This would have definitely been the largest<lb/>
crowd of the year if it would be next Saturday. Ticket<lb/>
sales are much higher than for Homecoming (21,506<lb/>
saw the Pirates beat Western Carolina on<lb/>
Homecoming, the largest ever in Firklen Stadium)<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmux i �� urn<lb/>
but they are really falling off now. Of course,<lb/>
Appalachian will bring a big load of fans, especially<lb/>
now that our students will be out for Thanksgiving<lb/>
and quarter break<lb/>
There is a possibility the dormitories and<lb/>
cafeteria will be held open until the Friday morning<lb/>
after Thanksgiving.<lb/>
According to the Housing Office, dorm counsel-<lb/>
lors and administrators will be canvassing the<lb/>
student body to see how many wil1 be willing to stay<lb/>
over fa the game. A final decision on the dam<lb/>
situatiai is expected ai Thursday. FOUNTAIN<lb/>
HEAD WILL NOT PRINT AGAIN BEFORE THE<lb/>
HOLIDAYS BECAUSE OF EXAMS BUT SIGNS<lb/>
WILL BE POSTED IN EACH DORM IF THEY ARE<lb/>
TO BE LEFT OPEN.<lb/>
In a telephoie interview yesterday, Coach<lb/>
Dye said the students have been second to none in<lb/>
suppat of the team this season and hopes a big<lb/>
turnout will be on hand fa the championship game.<lb/>
"Our student body has given us a lift all season.<lb/>
I hope they'll like the idea of staying over fa the<lb/>
game a caning back to see it. We' II certainly need<lb/>
the suppat. Appalachian says they are going to<lb/>
bring a big aowd and we certainly want to match<lb/>
theirs.<lb/>
"Obviously, the fact of being on TV will be a big<lb/>
boost to our program and to the university. This<lb/>
game is fa the Southern Conference championship<lb/>
and we need the home-field advantage. Appalachian<lb/>
has a tremendous team. They have, without a doubt,<lb/>
the best kicking game we have faced all year. They<lb/>
are probably the best offensive and defensive team<lb/>
overall we'll have faced all year<lb/>
The Pirates enter the game with an 8-2 overall<lb/>
mark and 3-1 in the league. The Mountaineers stand<lb/>
2-1-1 in the SC and 6-3-1 in all games.<lb/>
Bill Keyes<lb/>
-savers<lb/>
East Carolina University's Athletic Department is fatunate to have<lb/>
aocesstothe services of an excellent Spats Medicine program which is<lb/>
headed by a most qualified Certified Athletic Trainer. Rod Compton,<lb/>
with a Master's Degree fran Bowling Green, is the Chairman of ECU'S<lb/>
Department of Spats Medicine as well as head of the Spats Medicine<lb/>
service to athletics.<lb/>
Along with ATHLETIC TRAINING, the journal of the National<lb/>
Athletic Trainer's Association (which Compton is edita of), NATA<lb/>
publishes other materials. In the "Athletic Careers" leaflet, the role of<lb/>
the athletic trainer is assessed:<lb/>
The athletic trainer is one of the msot important cogs in a complete<lb/>
athletic sports program. The trainer's duties consist of prevention of<lb/>
injuries, immediate first aid for those that are injured, and treatment<lb/>
and rehabilitation procedures as directed by the team physician.<lb/>
It is the doctor's responsibility to diagnose and prescribe and the<lb/>
trainer's duty to carry out the doctor's orders and to keep the coach<lb/>
informed of the athlete's physical condition.<lb/>
The most important service offered by a good trainer is better<lb/>
medical management and the prevention of injuries. Injured athletes will<lb/>
return to competition more quickly, squad morale will be higher, and<lb/>
indirectly, a few more games will be won.<lb/>
If we are to guess at the wath of Spats Medicine in light of number<lb/>
og games won, we would have to deem ECU'S program effective. This<lb/>
fall's football team is at the top in Southern Conference standings and<lb/>
last year's athletic program barely missed capturing the Commis-<lb/>
sioner's Cup.<lb/>
Compton defined the goal of Spats Medicine as to provide the bst<lb/>
possible medical care in the health maintenance of the student-<lb/>
athletes The staff helping Compton achieve this goal at ECU includes<lb/>
Assistant Trainer Ronnie Barnes, Jim Keating, Ralph Stevenson,<lb/>
Johnny Blake, Kirby Patterson, David Maddox, Robert Ruhlam, Keith<lb/>
Luxton, Tommy Craig, Vivian Johnston, Buron Schulken and Craig<lb/>
Baker. Liz White is Assistant Trainer fa Women's Athletics.<lb/>
While Compton heads the service program, Dr. James Bowman, an<lb/>
athopedic surgeon, is the team physician. He heads up a team of<lb/>
community-based specialists (including an urologist, an internal<lb/>
medicine physician, an eye specialist, a dentist, an endodontist) as well<lb/>
as a family practitioner who cares fa any illnesses to football players<lb/>
during early weeks of practice befae the University Infirmary opens.<lb/>
The Infirmary provides the associate team of physicians.<lb/>
NATA, the Spats Medicine advocate, is responsible fa a number of<lb/>
recent rules changes in football, just as the Flying Wedge was outlawed<lb/>
in earlier years fa medical considerations.<lb/>
Spearing - the use of the head in blocking and tackling - has been<lb/>
outlawed because of the number of head and neck injuries resulting from<lb/>
the use of the technique, as well as damage done to other parts of the<lb/>
body from blows from the helmet.<lb/>
No downfield blocking below the waist is allowed on punts to cut<lb/>
down on the great number of knee injuries sustained in this situation.<lb/>
As has been the rule in high school football fa years, mouthpieces<lb/>
are now mandatay fa oollege players in collision sports. This has cut<lb/>
down on almost all dental injuries. If an ECU player suffers a dental<lb/>
injury while neglecting to wear a mouthpieoe, he is not covered and must<lb/>
pay fa treatment himself.<lb/>
The rule reauiring four days of conditioning befae going into pads in<lb/>
pre-season ca into effect at the urging of Sports Medicine advocates.<lb/>
"Thisgives pla irstime to get conditioned to the heat and get back in<lb/>
the swing of things as far as the demands of the sport is oonoerned<lb/>
aocading to Compton.<lb/>
Assistant Athletic Directa John Welban says, "I think we've got<lb/>
one of the best (Sports Medicine services) in the country. They've<lb/>
waked tremendously with me in wrestling, and I've waked with them<lb/>
administratively enough to know that they do a great job. They've made<lb/>
great strides since I've been here. I can see a great difference in the last<lb/>
few years from nine a ten years ago. Yes, I think we've got one of the<lb/>
hest Sports Medicine services in the country. I couldn't be any happier<lb/>
with it<lb/>
These sentiments are also expressed by all ahers associated with<lb/>
ECU Athletics. Hats off to ECU Spats Medicine. Look fa "Bill Keyes<lb/>
Raps with Rod Compton" on our pages in December.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
f<lb/>
M�<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmumwmm<lb/>
' <lb/>
Wm - <lb/>
<pb facs="00057095_0013"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1916 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
13<lb/>
m<lb/>
Women tankers drop meet to No. Carolina<lb/>
By DAVID ROBEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina women's swim<lb/>
team lost to Carolina this past<lb/>
Saturday 73-58. Although the<lb/>
Bucetteslost, the meet went well<lb/>
considering the talent that the<lb/>
national ranked Heels have.<lb/>
Ellen Bond did well in this<lb/>
meet as she usually does. She<lb/>
won her event, the 50 yard<lb/>
breaststroke in 35.09.<lb/>
Cindy Sailor, who is a natural<lb/>
swimmer also won her race.<lb/>
Sailor has done well all season<lb/>
and she won the 50 yard butterfly<lb/>
event in 29.35. Sailor took the 100<lb/>
yard butterfly as well. She<lb/>
clocked in at 1 07.60.<lb/>
Sharon Burns, another stand-<lb/>
out this year, won the 100 yard<lb/>
freestyle and grabbed the number<lb/>
two spot in the 50 yard freestyle.<lb/>
Sailor, Wade, Crawford and<lb/>
Burns managed to win the 200<lb/>
yard freestyle relay. Carolina won<lb/>
the 200 medley relay.<lb/>
Karen Crawford placed third<lb/>
in the 100 yard individual medley<lb/>
and the 50 yard freestyle. She<lb/>
came in second in the 100 yard<lb/>
freestyle. Crawford did exceed-<lb/>
ingly well for oompeting in three<lb/>
individual events.<lb/>
In diving, Cathy Callahan<lb/>
came in third in the one-meter<lb/>
board. She also placed third on<lb/>
the three meter board.<lb/>
"Although we lost, we did.<lb/>
well against Carolina com-<lb/>
mented Coach Chepko. "If we<lb/>
swam that well against Appala-<lb/>
chian, we would have beat<lb/>
them<lb/>
The team next takes on<lb/>
Furman and VCU this Saturday at<lb/>
the MingesNatatorium. It will be<lb/>
their last meet before they travel<lb/>
to Durham for the NCAIAW<lb/>
Championship Meet on Decem-<lb/>
ber 10.<lb/>
<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
Continued from page 12)<lb/>
tackle in the drive. Hawkins and<lb/>
Raymond Jones were the.work-<lb/>
horses in the drive with 33 and<lb/>
29 yards, respectively. ECU did<lb/>
not throw a pass.<lb/>
After Weaver fumbled in the<lb/>
second period, it took the Pala-<lb/>
dins seven plays to cover the 22<lb/>
yards with fullback Ike Simpson<lb/>
plunging over from the four on a<lb/>
fourth-and-two situation. Andy<lb/>
Goss' conversion tied the game.<lb/>
After Hicks fumble, the Pala-<lb/>
dins started at their 16. White-<lb/>
hurst gained four on first down,<lb/>
but the Pa. Jins were called for<lb/>
motion xi second down. White<lb/>
hurst passed incomplete on se-<lb/>
cond down and on third down, but<lb/>
Furman was called for offensive<lb/>
pass interference on third down,<lb/>
losing the down as well as being<lb/>
assessed a 15 yard penalty.<lb/>
Goss came on to try a 47 yard<lb/>
field goal. The ball hit the<lb/>
crossbar and bounoed over to give<lb/>
the Paladins a 10-7 lead.<lb/>
Later in the quarter, the<lb/>
Pirates drove to the Furman 33,<lb/>
where Pete Conaty missed on a 49<lb/>
yard field goal attempt.<lb/>
The Pirates tied the game in<lb/>
the third quarter after Simpson<lb/>
fumbled and Jim Bdding re-<lb/>
covered for ECU. Conaty hit this<lb/>
time on a 27 yard attempt to knot<lb/>
the game at 10.<lb/>
<lb/>
RAYMOND JONES<lb/>
 99 yards rushing<lb/>
This is when Robinson got oft<lb/>
on his long haul of 84 yards with<lb/>
the football for the winning score.<lb/>
The Pirates drove to mid-field<lb/>
three times and to the Furman 31<lb/>
before the game ended but could<lb/>
not push the ball over for the<lb/>
score.<lb/>
The best effort came when the<lb/>
Pirates got the ball on their 14<lb/>
with just under nine minutes left<lb/>
in the oontest. The Bucs used<lb/>
over six minutes off the dock and<lb/>
drove 55 yards in 16 plays before<lb/>
a fourth down play sending<lb/>
Hawkins off right tackle was<lb/>
stopped for no gain, halting the<lb/>
Pirates' bid to maybe score and<lb/>
go for a winning two-point<lb/>
conversion.<lb/>
The Pirates' game plan of ball<lb/>
control worked like it was sup-<lb/>
posed to as ECU led in time of<lb/>
possession 36:07 to 2353 for the<lb/>
Marching Pirates<lb/>
vote no to<lb/>
Turkey Day<lb/>
ECU s Marching Pirate Band took a vote yesterday and decided not<lb/>
to play for the Bucs' final home game on Thanksgiving night.<lb/>
The Pirates will be playing Appalachian State for the Southern<lb/>
Conference football championship on regional television.<lb/>
A band meeting was held yesterday at 3 p.m. and the members<lb/>
disc jssed the lateness which ABC-TV announoed that the game would<lb/>
be moved. Band director George Naff said the out-of-state members<lb/>
stated they had plans and did not have anywhere to stay here anyhow.<lb/>
"We've got a lot of out-of-staters that have previously made plans<lb/>
and just don't want to break their plans to stay Naff stated.<lb/>
The Marching Pirates will be missing out on some much-needed<lb/>
exposure when the television cameras turn onto the field before the<lb/>
game to hear Appalachian State's band playing the national anthem.<lb/>
Yes, the ASU marching band will be here. ASU will also be out for<lb/>
Thanksgiving break at the time.<lb/>
"We have a very good band here Naff added. " But we are going to<lb/>
miss out on the coverage we've always wanted. But, about thirty per<lb/>
cent of the team will definitely not play. And we would sound pretty bad<lb/>
with just sixty to seventy per cent of the members playing. We would be<lb/>
going backwards if we put part of a band out there<lb/>
mn Hmwmimm i mi<lb/>
Paladins. The Bucs ran off 82<lb/>
plays in the game to just 52 fa<lb/>
Furman. But the Paladins had the<lb/>
slight edge in total yardage, 279<lb/>
to 278.<lb/>
"We moved the ball between<lb/>
the 20's Dye added. "But we<lb/>
couldn't get it in. I think we were<lb/>
handicapped some by wide re-<lb/>
ceiver Terry Gallaher missing the<lb/>
game, as far as our passing was<lb/>
ooncerned<lb/>
Robinson, who became the<lb/>
conference's all-time leading<lb/>
rusher, led all backs with 137<lb/>
yards in ten carries, while Kent<lb/>
Woerner added 58 in nine rushes.<lb/>
Fullback Raymond Jones a-<lb/>
gain led the Pirates' attack with<lb/>
99 yards in 23 carries, while<lb/>
Hawkins and Hicks added 65 and<lb/>
62, respectively.<lb/>
The loss left the Bucs 3-1 in<lb/>
the Southern Conference and 8-2<lb/>
overall. The Paladins lifted their<lb/>
SC mark to 2-2-1 while going<lb/>
5-4-1 in all games with just lowly<lb/>
Wofford left to conquer. <lb/>
FASTPORA<lb/>
WORLD<lb/>
-IAHVEST<lb/>
NOV. 18<lb/>
SCORING SUMMARY<lb/>
ECU 7 0 3 0 - 10<lb/>
Furman 0 10 7 0 - 17<lb/>
ECU-Hawkins one run (Conaty<lb/>
kick)<lb/>
FUR-Simpson four run (Goss<lb/>
kick)<lb/>
FUR Goss47 FG<lb/>
ECU-Conaty 27 FG<lb/>
FURRobinson 84 run (Goss<lb/>
kick)<lb/>
A-13,600,<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
"How to Make $9 to $16<lb/>
per hour while on<lb/>
I vacation or on weekend<lb/>
Join a billion people in the world<lb/>
November 18 and go without food<lb/>
Fast For A World Harvest on the<lb/>
Thursday before Thanksgiving and<lb/>
send your food money to Oxfam<lb/>
America They'll use it to support<lb/>
projects helping hungry people all<lb/>
over the world grow more food<lb/>
Oxfam America. 302 Columbus<lb/>
Avenue. Boston. Ma 02116<lb/>
(617) 247 3304<lb/>
There will be e teble eet<lb/>
up in the old CU for those<lb/>
interested in OXFAM on<lb/>
Nov. 17,10-4.<lb/>
V<lb/>
$3<lb/>
plus 50 postage<lb/>
and handling.<lb/>
The Morgan Press<lb/>
308 South Dixie<lb/>
W. Palm Beach, FL 33401<lb/>
CThe Morgan Press, 1976<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
INFORMATION<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
CLINIC<lb/>
Your Area<lb/>
ASSISTING 1-24 WEEK<lb/>
PREGNANCIES<lb/>
TERMINATED BY LICENSED<lb/>
PHYSICIANS.<lb/>
IMMEDIATE ARRANGEMENTS<lb/>
WILL BE MADE WITH NO<lb/>
HASSLE<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1-800-321-1682<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: 752-4826<lb/>
OLDE TOWNE INN<lb/>
117 E. 5TH ST. 758-1991<lb/>
Eat a home cooked famity style dinner with us.<lb/>
One entree (choose from three) and all the vegetables<lb/>
you can eat - served family style (tea or coffee included)<lb/>
OIMLV 22B (PLUS TAX)<lb/>
SUNDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
4:30-7:30 P.M. REAR DINING ROOM<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057095_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1916 NOVEMBEr 1976<lb/>
m � ��<lb/>
iriiwmii, unwiiMM<lb/>
��<lb/>
wj�igan��i<lb/>
�<lb/>
��<lb/>
Cagers try to forget last year<lb/>
6yeL.K�VES<lb/>
Sports Features Correspondent<lb/>
Prognosticators often look at<lb/>
basketball teams in light of their<lb/>
performance during the previous<lb/>
season. But since the East<lb/>
Carolina Pirates had a disap-<lb/>
pointing 1975-76 season and<lb/>
a number of last year's players<lb/>
are missing from the new roster,<lb/>
Coach Dave Pat ton will buy none<lb/>
of the prognosticators' standards<lb/>
of measurement.<lb/>
Patton says, "Each team<lb/>
makes and establishes its own<lb/>
characters. This year's sucess<lb/>
will depend entirely upon per-<lb/>
formances this year and have<lb/>
nothing to do with performa ices<lb/>
of last year. I don't care to<lb/>
mention last year anymore. This<lb/>
is a new group, and fa the most<lb/>
part, a group not associated with<lb/>
last year. We will not in any way<lb/>
pressure ourselves with what<lb/>
happened last vear<lb/>
Al Edwards and Earl Garner<lb/>
have graduated and a few other<lb/>
including starter Reggie Lee are<lb/>
not returning. But Patton is<lb/>
optimistic in his own assessment<lb/>
of the team's chances for an<lb/>
outstanding season with the likes<lb/>
of 6-9 center Larry Hunt and front<lb/>
linemen Tyron Edwards and Greg<lb/>
Cornelius returning. (Cornelius<lb/>
sat out last season after transfer-<lb/>
ring from Stanford University in<lb/>
Alabama but is now familiar with<lb/>
Patton's system as well as his<lb/>
teammates' style of play.)<lb/>
Freshmen Herb Gray (6-7),<lb/>
Herb Krusen (6-5), and Kyle<lb/>
Powers (6-5) will all contribute a<lb/>
great deal in the front line.<lb/>
Sophomores Louis Crosby,<lb/>
named to last year's All-Rookie<lb/>
team in the Southern Conference,<lb/>
and Billy Dineen return at guards<lb/>
with Don Whitaker, a transfer<lb/>
from Louisburg who was one of<lb/>
the top junior college guards in<lb/>
the area fa the past two seasons,<lb/>
and Jim Ramsey, who played well<lb/>
in the East-West All-Star game<lb/>
last summer, expected to play<lb/>
a lot.<lb/>
In reference to strategy, Pat-<lb/>
ton says, "We will try and get our<lb/>
running game established again<lb/>
this year. One area I'm impressed<lb/>
with is in that we can rebound,<lb/>
get it down the floa, and most<lb/>
important, get it in the hole. Our<lb/>
rebounding and shooting should<lb/>
be greatly improved<lb/>
Patton continues, "It remains<lb/>
to be seen just how good we'll be.<lb/>
We've got good kids who are<lb/>
waking hard and doing every-<lb/>
thing we ask of them. A lot will be<lb/>
determined by how quickly our<lb/>
young kids come around. But<lb/>
they're doing everything we ask<lb/>
of them. We couldn't ask fa<lb/>
more<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
G. Canehus<lb/>
L. Crosby<lb/>
B. Dineen<lb/>
T. Edwards<lb/>
H. Gray<lb/>
D. Hartley<lb/>
W. Henkel<lb/>
L. Hunt<lb/>
H. Krusen<lb/>
K. Powers<lb/>
J. Ramsey<lb/>
D. Whitaker<lb/>
T. Williams<lb/>
ROSTER<lb/>
pos.<lb/>
Fr<lb/>
G<lb/>
G<lb/>
C<lb/>
F<lb/>
C<lb/>
F<lb/>
C<lb/>
F<lb/>
F<lb/>
G<lb/>
G<lb/>
G<lb/>
HWT.<lb/>
6-9<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
5-11<lb/>
6-11<lb/>
6-7<lb/>
6-10<lb/>
6-8<lb/>
6-9<lb/>
6-5<lb/>
6-5<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
6-0<lb/>
6-1<lb/>
WGTCLASS<lb/>
215So<lb/>
180So<lb/>
160So<lb/>
225So<lb/>
180Fr<lb/>
215Jr<lb/>
220Jr<lb/>
210Sr<lb/>
200Fr<lb/>
190Fr<lb/>
185Fr<lb/>
155Jr<lb/>
180Sr<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
OPPONENT<lb/>
UNC-Asheville<lb/>
WCU<lb/>
VMI<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
Geagia Southern<lb/>
'The Citadel<lb/>
Holiday Basketball<lb/>
Doubleheader (Duke,<lb/>
N.C. State, Rice, ECU)<lb/>
New Hampshire<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
'Davidson<lb/>
ASU<lb/>
'William and Mary<lb/>
VMI<lb/>
Furman<lb/>
Old Dominion<lb/>
'Davidson<lb/>
WCU<lb/>
Old Dominion<lb/>
ASU<lb/>
LOCATION<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
College Park, Md<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Richmond, Va.<lb/>
Davidson, N.C.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Williarnsburg, Va<lb/>
Lexington, Va.<lb/>
Greenville, S.C.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Cullowhee, N.C.<lb/>
Nafolk, Va.<lb/>
SENIOR LARRY HUNT leads a young East Carolina<lb/>
team into the season Nov. 29<lb/>
mm<lb/>
'William and Mary<lb/>
ASU<lb/>
Georgia Southern<lb/>
'Furman<lb/>
'The Citadel<lb/>
Meroer<lb/>
First Round Southern<lb/>
Conference Tourney<lb/>
Southern Conference<lb/>
Tournament<lb/>
'Southern Conference Games<lb/>
SC Tournament to be hosted by 2nd, 3rd, and 4th<lb/>
seeded teams on three different home courts.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Boone, N.C.<lb/>
Statesbao, Ga.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Charleston, S.C.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Roanoke, Va.<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by John Evans<lb/>
With this being the last intramural column befae break we'll try anc<lb/>
bring you up-to-date on registration dates and play dates fa those spats<lb/>
which begin right after break.<lb/>
First there will be basketball fa both men and women. Registration<lb/>
dates fa the men's play are fron November 29-December 3 with play<lb/>
beginning on December 6. Fa wanen registratiai will run between<lb/>
November 22 and December 6 and play will begin on December 13.<lb/>
Intramural bowling will also begin immediately following the quarter<lb/>
break. Registration dates fa both men and women are the same,<lb/>
December 13-January 6. Bowling competition will begin on January 10.<lb/>
One co-rec event, the Spats Trivia Contest, will be held between<lb/>
Thanksgiving and Christmas. The new co-rec event will be held on<lb/>
December 6. Registration begins tonarow and will run through<lb/>
December 3. And I assure, I have no idea whatsoever what a Sports<lb/>
Trivia contest is all about. When you find out, let me know.<lb/>
All other intramural activities begin after Christmas break.<lb/>
OFFICIAL S CLINIC FOR BASKETBALL<lb/>
Officials will be needed fa basketball intramurals this winter. An<lb/>
official's clinic fa all those interested will be held on December 6 and 7<lb/>
at 4 p.m. in Memaial Gym Room 105.<lb/>
PLAYOFFS IN VOLLEYBALL, WATER BASKETBALL<lb/>
Playoffs in volleyball and water basketball get underway this week<lb/>
and should have the champions decided by this evening. Fifteen teams<lb/>
began play in the volleyball playoffs, with campus championships to be<lb/>
held Tuesday at 8:45 and 9:30. Favaed to take their divisional titles and<lb/>
advance are the Volley Follies in the independent division, Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
in the fraternity league, BSU Bullets in the club league and Aycock Stars<lb/>
in the dam divisiai.<lb/>
Five teams finished the regular-seasoi undefeated. They were<lb/>
Kappa Alpha, the BSU Bullets, Pi Kappa Phi, the Aycock Stars and the<lb/>
Volley Follies. Three other teams suffered only one defeat. They were Pi<lb/>
Lambda Phi, Tau Kappa Epsilon and the Sediment Stonpers. Two<lb/>
teams, the Lambda Chis and Every Mother's Son were defeated in the<lb/>
final week and were knocked out of a playoff spot. The Lambda Chis, 5-0<lb/>
beginning the week, lost their final two games of the season to the Pi<lb/>
Kapps and the Tekes.<lb/>
In women's play, only two teams remain unbeaten going into the<lb/>
semifinals of the all-campus championship. The two teams with perfect<lb/>
marks are the AF Sweethearts and Hypertension. Both are favaed to<lb/>
win and face each other in the finals. The Alpha Phis and the Fletcher<lb/>
Big Subs were both knocked from the unbeaten ranks in their last<lb/>
regular-season game. The Alpha Phis continued and advanced to the<lb/>
semifinals, where they played the AF Sweethearts yesterday. Ttv Oig<lb/>
Subs were defeated in the quarterfinals by the Sweethearts. The other<lb/>
semifinal team was Greene I, which advanced by fafeit to play<lb/>
Hypertension in a semifinal game. The two winners were to have met<lb/>
yesterday fa the all-campus title.<lb/>
The finals in the two-on-two basketball play were scheduled fa<lb/>
yesterday also. Competing were the team of Liz White and Albert<lb/>
Holloman against Tim Seitz and Linda Christian.<lb/>
In water basketball play the biggest upset in the playoffs through<lb/>
Monday was the upset by Afternoon Delight over IMS. Afternoon<lb/>
Delight had lost tolMSearlier in the year Nrt won this time around 44-32<lb/>
behind Rick Bright" s 32 points. Pam Carter and Walt Estes each added<lb/>
six pants fa the winner. Sonny Gundlach led I MS with 18 points. Other<lb/>
playoff semifinalists were the Monkberry Moon Delight, the<lb/>
Neaomancers and Don't Tell Me Your Problems. The winners of<lb/>
Monday's semifinal games were to meet tonight at 8:30 fa the<lb/>
championship of the fall league.<lb/>
CHANGE IN HANDBALL COURTS SIGN-UP<lb/>
Beginning next quarter reservations fa handball and racquetball<lb/>
courts will betaken only from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. in the Intramural office.<lb/>
The oourts may be reserved during these hours from Monday through<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057095_0015"/><lb/>
Hg<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1916 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
15<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
II try anc<lb/>
se sports<lb/>
Host Furman. VCU<lb/>
Swim team opens season<lb/>
By DAVID ROBEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The prospects of the ECU'S<lb/>
men's swim team being Southern<lb/>
Conference champions again<lb/>
looks excellent as they prepare for<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
The season will begin Satur-<lb/>
day when ECU will play host to<lb/>
Furman and Virginia Common-<lb/>
wealth University (VCU) at the<lb/>
Minges Natatorium.<lb/>
The team was first in the<lb/>
oonferenoe last year and will be<lb/>
vying for its eleventh consecutive<lb/>
championship. ECU'S only losses<lb/>
last year were to Carolina and<lb/>
State. Perhaps the nicest surprise<lb/>
of 75-76 was when the Bucs<lb/>
drowned Maryland 77-36.<lb/>
Coach Ray Scharf will be head<lb/>
coach again this year. Scharf<lb/>
came to ECU in 1967, when he<lb/>
was assistant coach for one year,<lb/>
and has been head coach since<lb/>
then except for the first year.<lb/>
As head coach, Scharf has not<lb/>
lost a single oonferenoe meet.<lb/>
"I'm very optimistic about the<lb/>
team this year, but then I'm<lb/>
always optimistic commented<lb/>
Scharf I can say we are stronger<lb/>
than last year. We are always<lb/>
reorganizing and changing for the<lb/>
better. There are thirty-one<lb/>
swimmers and three divers on the<lb/>
team this year. Eight of these<lb/>
men are newcomers and they all<lb/>
show excellent potential.<lb/>
"We only lost one senior last<lb/>
year, so we have about the same<lb/>
team as last year. The majority of<lb/>
the team has experience and they<lb/>
have proven themselves by set-<lb/>
ting numerous new records.<lb/>
"My best returning swimmer<lb/>
has to be John Tudor. Tudor does<lb/>
well in all events and I think he<lb/>
has the potential to be one of the<lb/>
best in the nation Scharf added.<lb/>
Tudor, a native ot Greens-<lb/>
boro, broke two varsity reoords<lb/>
last year. He became the South-<lb/>
ern Conference champion in the<lb/>
500 yard freestyle. A freshman<lb/>
last year, Tudor also set a new<lb/>
varsity record in the 400 yard<lb/>
freestyle. Tudor is expected to do<lb/>
well this year and he proved this<lb/>
by winning the Purple-Gold Inter-<lb/>
squad meet of November 11.<lb/>
Stewart Mann, a sophomore,<lb/>
will be aiding the team again this<lb/>
year. Mann was the Southern<lb/>
Conference champion in the<lb/>
individual medley and the 200<lb/>
yard backstroke. He set a new<lb/>
varsity record last year in the<lb/>
individual medley.<lb/>
Also back is Steve Ruedlinger,<lb/>
a senior from Altamonte Springs,<lb/>
Fla. As a co-captain last year,<lb/>
Ruedlinger was the Southern<lb/>
Conference champion in the 100<lb/>
and 200 yard butterfly events.<lb/>
David Kirkman, a senior from<lb/>
Chapel Hill, will lead the team<lb/>
this year as captain. Kirkman was<lb/>
the conference champion in the<lb/>
200 yard breastroke.<lb/>
Tomas Palmgren of Finland is<lb/>
back this year. As a sophomore<lb/>
last year he set a new varsity<lb/>
record in the 400 yard individual<lb/>
medley. Palmgren has held the<lb/>
Finnish national championship in<lb/>
the freestyle and the individual<lb/>
medley.<lb/>
Fellow countryman Eero<lb/>
Elovaara joined the team this<lb/>
year. As a long distance swim-<lb/>
mer, Elovaara will also oompete<lb/>
in the individual medley.<lb/>
Freshmen M ichael Hennessey<lb/>
and Jim Brunner will be joining<lb/>
veteran Lund Sox (Scratch to his<lb/>
team mates) on the diving boards<lb/>
this year. Sox was the state diving<lb/>
champion of 1974.<lb/>
"We're not like State and<lb/>
Carolina who recruit Olympians<lb/>
and world record holders said<lb/>
Scharf. "We usually get the<lb/>
average guy and through alot of<lb/>
work he does well. I would say we<lb/>
have the most dedicated team on<lb/>
the campus. These men have<lb/>
double workouts daily. They<lb/>
begin in the morning at 6:45 and<lb/>
swim until 8.15. After classes<lb/>
they practice from 3.15 to 5 30 or<lb/>
six o'clock.<lb/>
"They average between six<lb/>
and twelve thousand yards daily.<lb/>
It is this dedication and work that<lb/>
wins swim meets. We've got a<lb/>
good team this year and I would<lb/>
like to see them supported this<lb/>
year like they have been in the<lb/>
past<lb/>
The team has twelve meets<lb/>
and two championship meets this<lb/>
year, starting with the tri-meet<lb/>
with Furman and VCU Saturday<lb/>
at 12 p.m. at Minges Natatorium.<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
DATE<lb/>
Nov. 20<lb/>
Dec. 4<lb/>
Dec. 11<lb/>
Jan. 13<lb/>
Jan. 15<lb/>
Jan. 22<lb/>
Jan. 23<lb/>
Jan. 25<lb/>
Feb. 5<lb/>
Feb. 17-19<lb/>
March 9-12<lb/>
March 23-26<lb/>
EVENT<lb/>
Furman &amp; VCU<lb/>
Penn. State Relays<lb/>
ASU<lb/>
Maine<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
SC Championships<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Univ. Park Pa.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Coll. Park, Md.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Chapel Hill, N.C.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Greenville, S.C.<lb/>
Eastern ChampionshipsMorganton, W. Va.<lb/>
NCAA Championships Cleveland, Ohio<lb/>
1975-76 Varsity Record 9-2<lb/>
ROSTER<lb/>
NAME CLASS<lb/>
Bolton, Bryan So.<lb/>
Brindley, Doug So<lb/>
Brown, David So<lb/>
Brunner, Jim Fr<lb/>
Commes, Mike Fr<lb/>
Davis, Paul So<lb/>
Elovaara, Eero Fr<lb/>
Fehling, Bill Fr<lb/>
Graham,ChucK JrFr<lb/>
Hennessey,Mich. Fr.<lb/>
Jackson, Ken So<lb/>
'Kirkman, David Sr<lb/>
Kushy, Joseph So<lb/>
Lovette, Mark Fr<lb/>
Mann, Stewart So<lb/>
McCarthy, Barry Jr<lb/>
McCauley, John Jr<lb/>
McKenna, Tom Jr<lb/>
Mendel I, Steven So<lb/>
Moodie, Dave So<lb/>
McCullough.T. Fr<lb/>
Nieman, Pierre Fr<lb/>
Ouellet, Pierre Fr<lb/>
Palmgren, TomasJr<lb/>
Pero, John So<lb/>
Ruedlinger, Step.Sr<lb/>
Schnell, Ronald Jr<lb/>
Scoggin, Steve So<lb/>
Sendrowski, D. Fr<lb/>
Sox, Lund So<lb/>
Tapsoott, Hilton So<lb/>
Thorne, William Jr<lb/>
So<lb/>
So<lb/>
STROKE<lb/>
Back<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Fly<lb/>
Diver<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Free<lb/>
IM<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Dive<lb/>
Breast<lb/>
Breast<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Fly<lb/>
IM<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Back<lb/>
Breast<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Free<lb/>
IM<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Fly<lb/>
Fly<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Diver<lb/>
Breast<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Fly<lb/>
Tudor, John<lb/>
Wade, Keith<lb/>
"Captain<lb/>
Coach of Swimming - Ray Scharf - 10th<lb/>
Hometown<lb/>
Baltimore, Md.<lb/>
Kill Devil Hills, N.C.<lb/>
Livingston, N.J.<lb/>
Boca Raton, Fla.<lb/>
Greensboro, N.C.<lb/>
Springfield,Mass.<lb/>
Kuhatie, Finland<lb/>
Reading, Pa.<lb/>
Greensboro, N.C.<lb/>
Bowie, Md.<lb/>
Chapel Hill, N.C.<lb/>
Chapel Hill, N.C.<lb/>
OldBethpage, N.Y.<lb/>
Greensboro, N.C.<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
Winter Park, Fla.<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
Belle Mead, N.J.<lb/>
New York, N.Y.<lb/>
Ontario, Canada<lb/>
Kinston, N.C.<lb/>
Winter Park, Fla.<lb/>
Garnder, Mass.<lb/>
Helsinki, Finland<lb/>
Statesville, N.C.<lb/>
Altamonte Spring Fla.<lb/>
Wilmington, N.C.<lb/>
Winston-Salem, N.C.<lb/>
Gardner, Mass.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
Greensboro, N.C.<lb/>
Greensboro, N.C.<lb/>
Greensboro, N.C.<lb/>
season<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
I SELL FEATHER JEWELRY<lb/>
at a designer house in Kansas<lb/>
City let me sell to you! Lowest<lb/>
prices in town, plus discounts on<lb/>
Christmas orders before Dec. 10.<lb/>
Call FORUM FEATHERS<lb/>
752-6856 or write 800 Heath St<lb/>
14.<lb/>
If you have something to buy<lb/>
or sell oome to the Red Oak Show<lb/>
and Sell; We sell on consignment<lb/>
anything of value, excluding<lb/>
clothing. Open Mon. - Sat.<lb/>
11.00-6O0 Sun. 2-6, closed Thurs.<lb/>
Located 3 miles west of<lb/>
Greenville at the intersection of<lb/>
264 and Farmville Highway in the<lb/>
Jold Red Oak church building.<lb/>
LOST- Tortise-shell glasses in a<lb/>
black padded case. Lost on<lb/>
Thursday of last week. Please<lb/>
contact 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) or Lucy (756-<lb/>
1263).<lb/>
FOUND: Man's watch at club<lb/>
football game Sunday, Oct. 10. on<lb/>
intramural field. Call 752-8825.<lb/>
Do you have problems? Do<lb/>
you need a caring listener? Call<lb/>
758-2047.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom Univer-<lb/>
sity Townhouse. $195.00 per<lb/>
month. Central air, pool. Avail-<lb/>
able now. 758-3089 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fastback Mustang,<lb/>
302 V-8, automatic, AM radio &amp;<lb/>
tape, Mags. $1000.00. 756-1857<lb/>
any afternoon or night.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: $75, includes<lb/>
kitchen privileges. Female pre-<lb/>
ferred. 758-2309.<lb/>
LOST: Checkbook with dark<lb/>
brown textured cover, Biff or<lb/>
Karen Brean, on Oct. 20 in the<lb/>
vicinity 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/>
balanced seat taught by qualified<lb/>
professional on your own horse.<lb/>
Hunters, eventing, dressage.<lb/>
Regina Kear 758-4706. Free<lb/>
Kittens.<lb/>
SMALL SCALE masonry, brick,<lb/>
block, concrete repair a original<lb/>
work. Rex Bost 758-7569.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Yamaha FG-200<lb/>
Aocoustic Guitar-well cared for.<lb/>
Case, leather strap, new precision<lb/>
shaler machine heads and many<lb/>
other extras. $135.00. 758-7690.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Efficiency apartment<lb/>
for 2 - utilities furnished across<lb/>
from college, 758-2585. Com-<lb/>
pletely furnished with air oond-<lb/>
itioni g.<lb/>
' NEEDED: Female roommate for<lb/>
large condominum. $50.00<lb/>
month. Freedom of house in<lb/>
exchange for light housekeeping<lb/>
duties. Pool, tennis oourts and<lb/>
sauna available. Board not in-<lb/>
cluded. 756-5423.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Complete double<lb/>
bed(Queen size); and dresser<lb/>
with mirror. Very reasonable.<lb/>
Call 758-2774 until 12 midnight<lb/>
(Bill).<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 I85.00.<lb/>
758-1314 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sony 6046 A 20 watt<lb/>
receiver. 6 mo. old $190.00.<lb/>
758-7884.<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 inclu-<lb/>
ded, excellent condition. $50.00<lb/>
Call 752-9550.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer Receiver 50<lb/>
watt rms per channel. 3 years old,<lb/>
$300. Ar-2AX speakers $175. Call<lb/>
756-1547.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female student with<lb/>
auto2hrs. daily from 1 30 to 350<lb/>
to pick up 2 boys at Wahl-Coats<lb/>
and sit with them until 330. Gas<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 for professional typ-<lb/>
ing and related services. All work<lb/>
guaranteed!<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1969 For Fairlane.<lb/>
Good condition. Priced to go. Call<lb/>
756-1906.<lb/>
FOR RENT: To mature person.<lb/>
Huge room in faculty house, quiet<lb/>
neighborhood. Details discussed<lb/>
Jackie. Day-757-6962 Night-<lb/>
758-4899.<lb/>
HELP-Ride needed mighty bad to<lb/>
Charlotte anytime after today this<lb/>
week. J. Pope 758-9670, 423<lb/>
Tyler.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Stereo - Pioneer SX<lb/>
1250,160 watts RM S per channel.<lb/>
Sony TC-580 remote control servo<lb/>
switching reel to reel with mic<lb/>
and line mixing.<lb/>
LOST: Contact Lenses in a green<lb/>
case. Between Brewster and<lb/>
Rawl. Reward, Albert McMicken,<lb/>
758-5074.<lb/>
MEDITATION- Want to lean<lb/>
meditation without the high pries<lb/>
of atmosphere. Complete instruc-<lb/>
tions $3.00. Monaco, P.O. Box<lb/>
2593, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOM ATE 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/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
wm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057095_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 1916 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
mmmtmmmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
�<lb/>
ii � mi "�M�<lb/>
Hawkins low-key star<lb/>
By BILL KEYES<lb/>
Sports Features Correspondent<lb/>
The East Carolina Football<lb/>
Guide devotes a half page to the<lb/>
player profile on Willie Hawkins.<lb/>
Between the great amount of<lb/>
statistical facts are such de-<lb/>
scriptive phrases as "excellent<lb/>
speed and quickness and ability"<lb/>
and "not only runs well but is<lb/>
excellent pass receiver and fine<lb/>
blocker<lb/>
The 5-11, 190 pound running<lb/>
back from nearby Grimesland<lb/>
oould also be described as a cross<lb/>
between the Roadrunner (with his<lb/>
speed, quickness, and smarts), a<lb/>
Porche 911 S (with his ability to<lb/>
outmaneuver the opposition and<lb/>
tight walk the sidelines beyond<lb/>
compare), and a Chesire cat (for<lb/>
after he puts the move on a<lb/>
oornerback and darts to paydirt,<lb/>
he flashes that big toothy grin<lb/>
that is also a part of the Willie<lb/>
Hawkins' trademark.<lb/>
Performance is not always the<lb/>
main topic of a conversation about<lb/>
Hawkins, for it is accepted fact<lb/>
that when "the Hawk" gets the<lb/>
football, something happens. (In<lb/>
Hawkins' first two years at<lb/>
ECU he rushed for more than five<lb/>
yards per carry each year.) The<lb/>
main topic of conversation is how<lb/>
he carries himself in regard to his<lb/>
performance. In the opener a-<lb/>
gainst Southern Miss, Hawkins<lb/>
carried 11 times for a total of 128<lb/>
yards. He ran off the field quietly<lb/>
- though with that grin - and<lb/>
responded to fans' adulatory<lb/>
remarks only with gracious thank<lb/>
you's.<lb/>
In the Citadel game he rushed<lb/>
for only 17 yards on a skimpy four<lb/>
carries. He would have liked to<lb/>
have carried the ball twenty<lb/>
times, but he showed no displea-<lb/>
sure. He was the same quiet<lb/>
Willie Hawkins<lb/>
White-shoed number 33 plays<lb/>
a quiet role on the Pirates'<lb/>
football team. When given the<lb/>
ball, he responds favorably to the<lb/>
fans' delight. But when he is used<lb/>
chiefly as a blocker in other<lb/>
games, he takes it all in stride.<lb/>
His biggest concern is the success<lb/>
of the team. When it comes to<lb/>
being a so-called team player,<lb/>
Willie Hawkins oould have writ-<lb/>
ten the book.<lb/>
WILLIE HAWKINS<lb/>
4<lb/>
WADE HENKEL 54 will be returning to the ECU<lb/>
basketball team In January. Henkel is out with a broken<lb/>
thumb now. File photo<lb/>
EXPANSION<lb/>
$3<lb/>
.75<lb/>
Records<lb/>
1<lb/>
$4.99<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
Records<lb/>
The Record Bar in Pitt Plaza has just completed their<lb/>
expansion and fall restocking program and is offering<lb/>
the following pre-Christmas specials: Chicagox<lb/>
Best of the Doobie Brothers Boston Leon &amp; Mary RUSSell: Wedding CHICAGO X<lb/>
BOSTON ���<lb/>
BfST Of Tttf DOOMS<lb/>
inclu I<lb/>
More I- A Fe�4n . Pe I eOl Wind<lb/>
 rc . � Ra K A Boll Band<lb/>
Smokin Hitch A R.de<lb/>
�� ��<lb/>
including<lb/>
 'hr Rainy Day In New rtfk City<lb/>
iivouim�iiMpN� One ���<lb/>
Vnu Are On My Mind Sk II<lb/>
i.<lb/>
L"<lb/>
J3<lb/>
also<lb/>
James Taylor's Greatest Hits<lb/>
(if in stock)<lb/>
�Gordon Lightfoot: Summertime Dream<lb/>
�Foghat: Night Shift<lb/>
�Michael Murphy: Flowing Free Forever<lb/>
:Deep Purple: Made in Europe<lb/>
Elvin Bishop: Hometown Boy Makes Good<lb/>
Styx: Crystal Ball<lb/>
Pure Prairie League: Dance<lb/>
Faces: Snakes &amp; Ladders<lb/>
Electric Light Orchestra:<lb/>
A New World Record<lb/>
Leo Sayer: Endless Flight<lb/>
AND MANY MORE<lb/>
$4.99<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
�Record Bar also has a complete line of record care products featuring the Discwasher, Dll Fluid, Sound Guard Watts Preeners etc<lb/>
�Blank tape by Memorex, Scotch and Maxell<lb/>
�Large selection of Music Books by Jackson Browne, Linda Ronstadt, Eagles, Dylan, Doobie Bros John Denver and many more<lb/>
Large selection of Oldie 45's -A � ,<lb/>
�Classical Lahpl SalP; Parh wwPPk As a result of ver s shipping problems we may be out ofstock on certain<lb/>
Classical iaDei sales eacn weeK pease accept oar apologies and ask for a rainchet<lb/>
Pitt Plaza 10-9 MonSat.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057095_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>