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<pb facs="00057097_0001"/>
Serving the campus<lb/>
community for 51 years,<lb/>
with a circulation of<lb/>
6,500. This issue is 16<lb/>
pages.<lb/>
?? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
7 December 1976<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Vol.52, No. 21<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Greenville third, page 6.<lb/>
Banks blamed, page 7.<lb/>
Richard 11, page 8.<lb/>
Pirates rally, page 11.<lb/>
Snack shop closes<lb/>
for reno vat ions<lb/>
?25 ft<lb/>
NEW WAREHOUSE ate outside Wright Annex. Photo by Brian<lb/>
Stotler. 1<lb/>
By LARRY UEBERMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The snack shop in Wright<lb/>
Building closed Monday night<lb/>
temporarily so renovation of the<lb/>
Student Supply Store can con-<lb/>
tinue.<lb/>
Mr. Joseph O. Clark of the<lb/>
Student Supply Store said the<lb/>
expansion of the book store is in<lb/>
the second phase of its renova-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The first phase was the<lb/>
cleaning out of the Wright Annex,<lb/>
the old Student Union, and<lb/>
building a warehouse on the patio<lb/>
behind Wright Annex, said Clark.<lb/>
The second phase of the<lb/>
expansion is the renovation of the<lb/>
snack shop. It will be removed<lb/>
and the space will go to the book<lb/>
store.<lb/>
The snack shop will be moved<lb/>
to Wright Annex and the target<lb/>
SGA Vice-Pres. proposes<lb/>
alternatives for BUC<lb/>
By DAVID NASH<lb/>
SGA Reporter<lb/>
Greg Pingston, SGA Vice-<lb/>
President, last evening offered<lb/>
the legislature two alternatives<lb/>
conceived by the BUCCANEER<lb/>
Task Force to assure the public-<lb/>
ation of an annual this year.<lb/>
The first alternative calls for<lb/>
an SGA allocation of $48,000.00 to<lb/>
cover the oost of printing and<lb/>
salaries.<lb/>
This figure would come from<lb/>
reviewing and deleting other<lb/>
major budgets previously passed<lb/>
by the legislature, due to a lack of<lb/>
funds by the legislature.<lb/>
The second alternative re-<lb/>
quires $6,000 from the SGA, with<lb/>
additional funds coming from<lb/>
subscriptions bought by students<lb/>
A ttractions<lb/>
feels more loss<lb/>
By LOUIS TAYLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The B.B. KingDonald Byrd<lb/>
show on Dec. 5 resulted in a<lb/>
$10,000 loss for ECU Major<lb/>
Attractions, according to Student<lb/>
Union advisor Rudolph<lb/>
Alexander.<lb/>
Preliminary figures from the<lb/>
program office indicate that ap-<lb/>
proximately 1250 people paid to<lb/>
see the Sunday night show.<lb/>
Total losses for Major At-<lb/>
tractions now stand at nearly<lb/>
$60,000 since September of this<lb/>
year. This figure is $15,000 more<lb/>
than the $45,000 allotted the<lb/>
Major Attractions committee for<lb/>
the entire year.<lb/>
The last show was financed<lb/>
from Student Union savings,<lb/>
according to Barry Robinson,<lb/>
Student Union president.<lb/>
The last-minute decision to<lb/>
move the show from Minges<lb/>
Coliseum to Wright Auditorium<lb/>
was purely an economic one<lb/>
according to Alexander.<lb/>
Alexander said that slow<lb/>
ticket sales spurred the move and<lb/>
that the Student Union saved<lb/>
approximately $1,500 because of<lb/>
the technical differences between<lb/>
Wright and Minges.<lb/>
Alexander expressed concern<lb/>
over the failure of Major At-<lb/>
tractions this year, calling the<lb/>
present situation a "shame<lb/>
Major Attractions committee<lb/>
chairman Bob Seraiva was ill and<lb/>
unavailable for oomment at press<lb/>
time.<lb/>
to the annual.<lb/>
"Each student would pay $5<lb/>
to $10, and this would take care of<lb/>
the oost stated Vioe-President<lb/>
Pingston.<lb/>
Additional income would<lb/>
oome from ad revenue, a first for<lb/>
the BUCCANEER, according to<lb/>
Pingston.<lb/>
Tommy Thomason, SGA<lb/>
Treasurer, reported that with<lb/>
November revenue from<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, WECU-<lb/>
Radio, and other agencies, the<lb/>
total unappropriated funds is<lb/>
$11,687 40.<lb/>
Total appropriations as of<lb/>
December 3 are $403,687.05,<lb/>
according to Thomason.<lb/>
Tim Sullivan, SGA President,<lb/>
announced Karen Harloe as his<lb/>
choice for SGA Attorney General,<lb/>
from the nine applications re-<lb/>
ceived.<lb/>
"I think she'll be the best<lb/>
Attorney General we've had in<lb/>
three years said Sullivan.<lb/>
"The fact that's really im-<lb/>
portant is that I'm the only link<lb/>
between the SGA and the<lb/>
judiciary said Harloe in re-<lb/>
marks to the legislature.<lb/>
"We, on campus, need to<lb/>
know about off-campus (of-<lb/>
fenses). My main thing is edu-<lb/>
cation added Harloe.<lb/>
Bills introduced to the legis-<lb/>
lature included an appropriation<lb/>
for a Philosophy retreat, and an<lb/>
appropriation to the BUC-<lb/>
CANEER, both scheduled for<lb/>
consideration by the Appropri-<lb/>
ations Committee later this week.<lb/>
date is March 15, 1977.<lb/>
In lieu of the snack shop,<lb/>
vending machines and the tables<lb/>
from the snack shop will be<lb/>
placed in the lobby of Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
"This will help provide a<lb/>
convenience for students and<lb/>
teachers who don't have time to<lb/>
go to Mendenhall or the Croa-<lb/>
tan said Clark.<lb/>
Clark hopes the complete<lb/>
renovation of the Student Supply<lb/>
Store and the snack shop will be<lb/>
completed by August 1977.<lb/>
If the work is not oomplete by<lb/>
August there will be a rush to get<lb/>
the books on the shelves by the<lb/>
start of the semester, since school<lb/>
will start earlier in the fall, said<lb/>
Clark.<lb/>
The book store expansion<lb/>
project was initiated when the<lb/>
Student Union moved to Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center.<lb/>
The original estimate for the<lb/>
renovation was $500,000. The<lb/>
bids came in $100,000 over the<lb/>
estimate, said Clark.<lb/>
This left two alternatives:<lb/>
either the plan oould be delayed<lb/>
and more funds be allocated, or<lb/>
the amount of food equipment<lb/>
and other equipment would be<lb/>
deleted from the oontract, said<lb/>
Clark.<lb/>
A food counter and equipment<lb/>
costing $65,000 was deleted and<lb/>
so was the flooring of the snack<lb/>
shop and some movable equip-<lb/>
ment, such as cash registers, said<lb/>
Clark.<lb/>
Clark hopes to have the funds<lb/>
raised later so these things can be<lb/>
included and have the snack<lb/>
shop and book store oompletely<lb/>
finished by September.<lb/>
"This part of Wright building<lb/>
has undergone many changes.<lb/>
This office was onoe the shower<lb/>
for the athletic facility of Wahl-<lb/>
Coates School said Clark, who<lb/>
attended the school.<lb/>
All the offices that are now in<lb/>
the front of the book store will be<lb/>
moved to the north side of the<lb/>
building where the old student<lb/>
bank was. The offioes will be<lb/>
around the old vault and it will<lb/>
even be used, said Clark.<lb/>
The book store is being<lb/>
renovated because of the growth<lb/>
of the university. Spaoe is needed<lb/>
for trade books, art supplies, and<lb/>
a warehouse. The snack shop<lb/>
must also be modernized since it<lb/>
has not been changed since its<lb/>
construction, said Clark.<lb/>
"The new snack bar will be a<lb/>
scramble system like the Croa-<lb/>
tan. This gives the students a<lb/>
See SNACK, page 3.<lb/>
KAREN HARLOW, a senior from St. Louis, Mo was nominated<lb/>
Monday fa SGA Attorney General by Tim Sullivan, SGA president. Her<lb/>
nomination is now in legislative committee and will be voted on Monday,<lb/>
Dec. 13. Photo by Brian Stotler.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057097_0002"/><lb/>
?HVBH<lb/>
????!?? I<lb/>
BBHBF<lb/>
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?IHHBHHBH<lb/>
??????????l<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
7 December 1976<lb/>
Wrestlers<lb/>
The young ECU wrestlers will<lb/>
face what may be their toughest<lb/>
test of the season this Friday<lb/>
night. Minges Coliseum will be<lb/>
invaded by Athletes in Action the<lb/>
1975 AAU wrestling champions.<lb/>
The Athletes in Action led by<lb/>
Olympic Gold Medalist John<lb/>
Peterson will challenge the de-<lb/>
fending Southern Conference<lb/>
Champions. John Peterson won<lb/>
the Gold Medal this past summer<lb/>
in Montreal and he also won the<lb/>
Silver Medal in the 1972Olympics<lb/>
held in Munich. John has com-<lb/>
piled a 30-1-0 record during his<lb/>
wrestling career with AIA wrest-<lb/>
ling team will wrestle at the 150<lb/>
lb. weight class. Reid is'oneof the<lb/>
toughest Greco Roman wrestlers<lb/>
in the U.S. and he held the 1st<lb/>
alternate position with the U.S.<lb/>
Olympic team this past year. Reid<lb/>
also toured Poland with the U.S.<lb/>
World Games team in 1974. AIA<lb/>
spoke and performed before<lb/>
60,000 people last year. Be sure<lb/>
to see the match this Friday night<lb/>
at 8 in Minges.<lb/>
Dance<lb/>
?<lb/>
Coming sco; a chance for you<lb/>
fo dance the night away.<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta<lb/>
On Tuesday, Dec. 7 at 7 there<lb/>
will be a meeting of Phi Alpha<lb/>
Theta. The Christmas party will<lb/>
be the focal point of the meeting.<lb/>
Money for the party must be paid<lb/>
at this time. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Auditions<lb/>
ECU Coffeehouse will hold<lb/>
auditions for winter quarter Dec.<lb/>
10 &amp; 11 at 8 p.m. Any person,<lb/>
groups or things who would like<lb/>
to perform at the Coffeehouse<lb/>
must be present. Come by the<lb/>
Student Union office for more<lb/>
information and to sign up.<lb/>
Social work<lb/>
Two professional social work<lb/>
education courses, each a 10-<lb/>
week college credit course, SocW<lb/>
241, Introduction to Social Wel-<lb/>
fare, and SocW 260b, Processes<lb/>
of Social Work Intervention II,<lb/>
will be offered in New Bern<lb/>
beginning Thursday, Dec. 9,<lb/>
1976, by the Department of Social<lb/>
Work and Correctional Services in<lb/>
cooperation with the Division of<lb/>
oontinuing Education at ECU.<lb/>
The courses will be taught in<lb/>
three-hour sessions at Craven<lb/>
Community College and will run<lb/>
from 6;30-9;30 p.m. each night.<lb/>
Photographer<lb/>
Any interested student who<lb/>
wants to be head photographer<lb/>
for SGA can apply at 228<lb/>
Mendenhall from 9-5, Dec. 6-10.<lb/>
Soccer<lb/>
Soccer coach Curtis Frye<lb/>
would like to meet with all<lb/>
prospective members of next<lb/>
year's team in Room 142 of<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, Thursday,<lb/>
Dec. 9, at 7 p.m.<lb/>
F-Head checks<lb/>
There are checks in FOUN-<lb/>
HEAD office for the following<lb/>
people: Susan Arlene Chestonn,<lb/>
Robert Oneal Davis Jr Janet T.<lb/>
Nethercutt, Stanley Eugene Hol-<lb/>
lowell, Rebecca A. Swart, Brenda<lb/>
Joyce Norris, Elizabeth Shannon<lb/>
Stoney, Patsy Ann Hinton, John<lb/>
Christopher Farren, and Monika<lb/>
Lea Sutherland. If these checks<lb/>
are not picked up by Thursday,<lb/>
Dec. 9, they shall be mailed to the<lb/>
addresses shown on the checks.<lb/>
Volleyball<lb/>
The ECU Power Volleyball<lb/>
Club will hold a meeting and<lb/>
practice9:30a.m. Saturday, Dec.<lb/>
11th, at Minges. ECU-VBC mem-<lb/>
bers and interested persons<lb/>
Dlease attend. Note: Bring I.D.<lb/>
Aliens<lb/>
Any student who holds citi-<lb/>
zenship outside the U.S. and who<lb/>
has not been oontacted, please<lb/>
report to the Admission Offioe in<lb/>
Whichard Building no later than<lb/>
Wednesday, Dec. 8 to oomplete a<lb/>
very important' ' form for the<lb/>
Institute of International Educa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Dinner meeting<lb/>
Pi Sigma Alpha will hold a<lb/>
dinner meeting, Wed. Dec. 8 at 6<lb/>
p.m. at Bonanza Sirloin Pitt on<lb/>
264 by-pass. Nelson Crisp, a local<lb/>
attorney, will speak on the role of<lb/>
the professional woman.<lb/>
Bahai<lb/>
If you want to know more<lb/>
about the Bahai answers for<lb/>
problems of world unity, come to<lb/>
Mendenhall 238 Thursday eve-<lb/>
ning at 7:30 and view a free flick<lb/>
called "Let's Go Tell Them<lb/>
Swine flu<lb/>
Students 18-24 should receive<lb/>
a second swine flu vaccine! 4 to 6<lb/>
weeks following the first injection<lb/>
for maximum immunity. This was<lb/>
recommended by the Pitt Co.<lb/>
Dept. of Health on advice of local<lb/>
Health Dept.<lb/>
Legislators<lb/>
SGA Legislators needed fa<lb/>
dorm positions in Clement and<lb/>
Tyler. Persons interested can file<lb/>
in Mendenhall 228. Screenings<lb/>
will be held Wednesday, Dec. 8,<lb/>
at 500 p.m.<lb/>
Vet's club<lb/>
The ECU Veterans Club is<lb/>
having a winter quarter member-<lb/>
ship drive. The club's member-<lb/>
ship is increasing, but more<lb/>
members are needed. The next<lb/>
meeting will be on Dec. 8, at 7:30<lb/>
upstairs in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
The Christmas party will be the<lb/>
topic of discussion; so come to the<lb/>
meeting, find out where it's at,<lb/>
and join in on the fun.<lb/>
Bowl it up<lb/>
Moonlight Bowling is back!<lb/>
The Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Bowling Center now offers this<lb/>
unique bowling experience on<lb/>
Friday and Sunday evenings from<lb/>
8 p.m. until closing. Come by the<lb/>
Center and test your skills under<lb/>
moonlight. It's a great change of<lb/>
pace!<lb/>
Unhappy?<lb/>
Do you wonder why you' re not<lb/>
as happy as you'd like to be?<lb/>
Something bugging you that you<lb/>
wish you oould talk to someone<lb/>
about? We are here to listen,<lb/>
clarify what you're feeling, and<lb/>
help with alternatives. Call the<lb/>
REAL Crisis Center, at 758-<lb/>
HELP.<lb/>
Madrigal dinner<lb/>
Feast yourself on roast beef<lb/>
and all the trimmings as you store<lb/>
down the Boar's Head-toast loud-<lb/>
ly the wassail cup- sip and sing as<lb/>
you are serenaded by madrigal<lb/>
singers and oourt musicians- sit<lb/>
back royally as acrobats and a<lb/>
magician do their thing- Eliza-<lb/>
bethean style. The Madrigal<lb/>
Dinners will unfold Dec. 14,15, &amp;<lb/>
16 in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Get your tickets today at the<lb/>
C.T.O. A M.3.C. production.<lb/>
UMMM-BOY<lb/>
Sliced tomatoes on a bed of<lb/>
crisp lettuce, baked chicken sea-<lb/>
soned just right, tender green<lb/>
peas, perfect rice, hot rolls, a<lb/>
dessert surprise, and unlimited<lb/>
ref illson coffee or tea. This is just<lb/>
a sample meal that the Student<lb/>
Dietetic Association can prepare<lb/>
for your group. For more informa-<lb/>
tion call Noria Jennings at<lb/>
758-5736. If Noria is not there,<lb/>
leave name and phone number<lb/>
and she will return your call.<lb/>
APG<lb/>
Alpha Phi Gamma will meet<lb/>
rueaday, Dec. 7 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
FOUNIAINHEAD office. New<lb/>
membership will be discussed.<lb/>
Attendance is required.<lb/>
Gordley exhibit<lb/>
The Tran and Marilyn Gordley<lb/>
Exhibition will be held in Men-<lb/>
denhall Gallery, Dec. 1-17. A free<lb/>
reception for the Gordley's will<lb/>
take place Tuesday, Dec. 7 at<lb/>
7:30. The Student Union Art<lb/>
Exhibition Committee urges you<lb/>
to soe this grand display.<lb/>
REAL jam<lb/>
Another REAL Jam-Thistime<lb/>
with sweet down-home originals<lb/>
by Rich Cornfield and fast moving<lb/>
rock by Snatch (with former<lb/>
members of Pegasus and Assh)<lb/>
and Delias High (with former<lb/>
members of Singletree and Hea-<lb/>
ther). All of this will happen<lb/>
Wed Dec. 8, from 8-10 a.m. at<lb/>
the Attic. .75 donation.<lb/>
Lost found<lb/>
The campus Lost and Found<lb/>
Depart, is located at the Informa-<lb/>
tion Desk in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. We have books, rings,<lb/>
glasses, ooats, watches, umbrel-<lb/>
las, etc. If you have lost an item,<lb/>
please come by the Information<lb/>
Desk and see if we have it.<lb/>
Any unclaimed articles will be<lb/>
sold at bargain prices at ECU s<lb/>
Flea Market, sponsored by Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center, Dec. 8, in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Chess tourney<lb/>
The ECU Chess Tournament<lb/>
sponsored by Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center will begin on Friday,<lb/>
Dec. 10, at 5 p.m. and will be held<lb/>
in the Multi-Purpose Room in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. All<lb/>
ECU students are eligible to<lb/>
participate. A $1.00 entry fee is<lb/>
required and registration must be<lb/>
oompleted no later than 12.00<lb/>
noon on the day of the tourna-<lb/>
ment. Registration forms are<lb/>
available at the Student Center<lb/>
Billiards Center. Trophies will be<lb/>
awarded. Enter now!<lb/>
Craftsmen East<lb/>
CRAFTSMEN EAST is having<lb/>
their annual Christmas sale Dec.<lb/>
9 and 10, Thurs. and Fri in the<lb/>
Old CU lobby.<lb/>
Playhouse<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse will<lb/>
offer Shakespeare's, "The Tra-<lb/>
gedy of King Richard The Se-<lb/>
cond beginning Dec. 8. The<lb/>
great classic will be presented in<lb/>
the intimate studio theatre. Call<lb/>
757-6390 now for reservation.<lb/>
Flea market<lb/>
Need some great Christmas<lb/>
gift bargains? You may just be<lb/>
able to find them at the ECU<lb/>
pre-Christmas Flea Market spon-<lb/>
sored by Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. The Flea Market will be<lb/>
held Wed Dec. 8, till 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. Beautiful<lb/>
pottery ware, handmade jewelry,<lb/>
and small plants were a few of the<lb/>
items sold in the Flea Market last<lb/>
year. This year a new addition to<lb/>
the Flea Market will be the sale of<lb/>
unclaimed articles held by the<lb/>
University's Lost and Found<lb/>
Department. Don't miss it! If<lb/>
you're interested in selling items,<lb/>
any ECU student, staff or faculty<lb/>
member is eligible. Each indivi-<lb/>
dual must register to sell items. A<lb/>
$5 refundable deposit is required<lb/>
to register. Registration is availa-<lb/>
be Mon. through Fri. till 5 p.m<lb/>
at the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Information Center. Registration<lb/>
ends Mond Dec. 6.<lb/>
G.LW.V.<lb/>
Dr. Jung-Gun Kim, professor<lb/>
of political science at ECU, will<lb/>
speak on "The United Nations:<lb/>
Junk It or Change It?" at a<lb/>
meeting of the Greenville League<lb/>
of Women voters Tuesday, Dec.<lb/>
7. The public is invited to attend<lb/>
the meeting, which is scheduled<lb/>
for 7;30 p.m. at the St. James<lb/>
Episcopal church.<lb/>
Dinner meeting<lb/>
There will be an Omicron<lb/>
Delta Epsilon dinner meeting at<lb/>
the Western Sizzlin' (10th St.)<lb/>
restaurant Thurs Dec. 9, at 6<lb/>
p.m. A shopping spree for foster<lb/>
children is planned afterwards.<lb/>
All members are urged to attend.<lb/>
Induction<lb/>
New members of Beta Gamma<lb/>
Sigma will be inducted at the Dec.<lb/>
8 meeting at 4 p.m. in Rm. 244,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Banquet<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi, service to<lb/>
education national honor society,<lb/>
will hold its initiation banquet at<lb/>
6, Dec. 9, in the Multi-Purpose<lb/>
room in Mendenhall. All mem-<lb/>
bers who were at the last meeting<lb/>
are remminded to bring the $2.00<lb/>
for scholarship ticketsor turn it in<lb/>
to one of the officers before the<lb/>
9th.<lb/>
Qldie-Goldie<lb/>
Wanna see women's basket-<lb/>
ball at its best? Then have your<lb/>
cans in the stands tomorrow<lb/>
(Wednesday) at 6 p.m. fa the<lb/>
Lady Pirates vs, Alumni players.<lb/>
Alumni indude Sheila Cotton,<lb/>
Peggy Taylor, Susan Manning,<lb/>
and Terri Ward, all of whom play<lb/>
on the State Championship team<lb/>
in 1973. Debbie Freeman and<lb/>
Rosie Thompson will lead the<lb/>
Gold team against the 'Oldies<lb/>
Be there now.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057097_0003"/><lb/>
?l<lb/>
7 December 1976 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
ECU English Prof,<lb/>
to attend meeting<lb/>
Janice Faulkner of the ECU<lb/>
English faculty is one of five<lb/>
persons selected to present back-<lb/>
ground papers on public policy<lb/>
issues at a special conferenos for<lb/>
North Carolina legislators and<lb/>
scholars in Raleigh Dec. 10-11.<lb/>
Mrs. Faulkner's topic is<lb/>
"Education: Review and Re-<lb/>
assessment<lb/>
Other topics and presenters<lb/>
include "Labor and Unionism<lb/>
George Antone, professor of<lb/>
history at Appalachian State<lb/>
University; "Health Care C.<lb/>
Arden Miller, professor of<lb/>
pediatrics and child and maternal<lb/>
health at UNC-Chapel Hill;<lb/>
"Criminal Justice Richard Bar-<lb/>
dolph, professor of history at<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro; and "Growth<lb/>
Policies James Cox, director of<lb/>
the Institute for Urban Studies<lb/>
and Community Service, UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte.<lb/>
Each topic will be discussed at<lb/>
a session meeting of state legis-<lb/>
lators and scholars from North<lb/>
Carolina campuses. The back-<lb/>
ground papers will provide<lb/>
historical perspective and factual<lb/>
data on the five policy issues.<lb/>
The conference is sponsored<lb/>
by the Center fa the Study of<lb/>
Human Values at Tanglewood<lb/>
with a grant from the North<lb/>
Carolina Humanities Committee.<lb/>
The twofold purpose of the<lb/>
conference is to assist scholars in<lb/>
understanding problems legis-<lb/>
latas face when dealing with<lb/>
critical and controversial issues<lb/>
and to enhance legislatas' under-<lb/>
standing of the values and<lb/>
perspectives scholars may bring<lb/>
to the making of public policy.<lb/>
THIS REAR WINDOW reflects the coldest winter season in years.<lb/>
School of Art makes plans for<lb/>
dedication, may be held In Jan,<lb/>
ByLYNNCAVERLY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Plans fa famal dedication of<lb/>
the School of Art are being made,<lb/>
according to Dr. Wellington B.<lb/>
Gray, dean of the school of art.<lb/>
The art building dedication<lb/>
ceremonies are tentatively set fa<lb/>
tne latter part of January.<lb/>
Included in the ceremonies<lb/>
will be a retrospective art show in<lb/>
the 9,OCX) square feet gallery.<lb/>
This art show will be one of<lb/>
the best shows ever and will be a<lb/>
histaical type of show said<lb/>
Gray.<lb/>
The gallery is planned to be<lb/>
very versatile with enough mova-<lb/>
ble panels to double the available<lb/>
wall space. The panels will allow<lb/>
fa ate large art show, as well as<lb/>
Sullivan to Invite<lb/>
chief to campus<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
SGA President Tim Sullivan<lb/>
announced at the December<lb/>
Greenville City Council meeting<lb/>
that he plans to invite Police Chiei<lb/>
Glen Cannon to the ECU campus<lb/>
to discuss polioestudent rela-<lb/>
tions with students.<lb/>
SNACK<lb/>
Continued from page 1.)<lb/>
chance to pick there own foods<lb/>
and helpsthe lines move faster so<lb/>
more people can be waited on<lb/>
said Clark.<lb/>
The Student Supply Stae is<lb/>
an auxiliary enterprise which<lb/>
owns the book stae, the snack<lb/>
shop and the Croatan. It is not<lb/>
subsidized in any way, said Clark.<lb/>
According to Clark 100 of<lb/>
the distributive prof its of the book<lb/>
stae, that is after all operating<lb/>
and renovation expenses, are<lb/>
given to the Faculty Scholarship<lb/>
Committee which in turn allocates<lb/>
it to students.<lb/>
Clark said $60,000 was turned<lb/>
over to the committee last year.<lb/>
However, Sullivan did not<lb/>
specify a date a place fa the<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Sullivan also infamed the<lb/>
council that the Nath Carolina<lb/>
Department of Transportation<lb/>
had turned down the request fa a<lb/>
pedestrian overpass at 10th St.<lb/>
and College Hill Drive.<lb/>
Sullivan told the council that<lb/>
ECU would have no p locaneer<lb/>
this year. He descriL this as<lb/>
being a first at ECU.<lb/>
The resignation of the Buc-<lb/>
caneer staff, Sullivan explained,<lb/>
is the reason.<lb/>
Sullivan told the council that<lb/>
the new SGA Attaney General<lb/>
"will hopefully work with the City<lb/>
Council in educating students<lb/>
about the law<lb/>
City Manager James E. Cald-<lb/>
well announced that the Nath<lb/>
Carolina Department of Transpa-<lb/>
tatiai has awarded Greenville<lb/>
$20,000 fa a model bike safety<lb/>
program. Greenville will be one of<lb/>
only two cities in the state<lb/>
selected fa this program.<lb/>
Mr. Caldwell also infamed<lb/>
the council that the Utilities<lb/>
Commission has approved the<lb/>
purchase of a sewage treatment<lb/>
plant.<lb/>
ftettemfcine<lb/>
being capable to permit many<lb/>
smaller shows at one time.<lb/>
In addition, a 2,400 square<lb/>
feet outdoa sculpture area ad-<lb/>
joins the gallery.<lb/>
The new building will also<lb/>
allow fa expansiai of present<lb/>
programs, including the graduate<lb/>
studies area.<lb/>
The art department has not<lb/>
Council<lb/>
acquits in<lb/>
fraud case<lb/>
By JACK JENKINS<lb/>
Special to Fountainhead<lb/>
The ECU Hona Council heard<lb/>
one of its most complex and<lb/>
serious cases last Thursday night<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The defendant, a senior Phy-<lb/>
sical Education maja, was char-<lb/>
ged with attempt to fraud. The<lb/>
incident involved an insurance<lb/>
claim made by the defendant to<lb/>
Blue CrossBlue Shield.<lb/>
At Chapel Hill's Memaial<lb/>
hospital, a friend of the defendant<lb/>
registered his own name and Blue<lb/>
CrossBlue Shield number in<lb/>
place of the defendant's name<lb/>
and policy.<lb/>
The defendant said the he did<lb/>
not want his father to know that<lb/>
he had jeopardized his career by<lb/>
playing Club football.<lb/>
After a week, the hospital<lb/>
personnell discovered the fraud<lb/>
and carected the erra. No legal<lb/>
action was taken by either the<lb/>
hospital a the insurance com-<lb/>
pany.<lb/>
The defendant pleaded guilty<lb/>
before the Honor Council to<lb/>
attempt to traud and claimed that<lb/>
his only goal was to prevent his<lb/>
father from finding out that he<lb/>
was playing Club football.<lb/>
Several letters and repats<lb/>
were presented by the defendant<lb/>
as evidence and much testimony<lb/>
was heard in the hearing.<lb/>
After a twenty-minute recess,<lb/>
the Hona Council decided to<lb/>
dismiss the charges against the<lb/>
defendant.<lb/>
In the decision, the Council<lb/>
believed that any action against<lb/>
the defendant would not have<lb/>
been beneficial to him or to East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
been able to advertise the gra-<lb/>
duate program in the past<lb/>
aocading to Gray.<lb/>
It someone asked us about it,<lb/>
we told them, but now we will be<lb/>
able to go to various areas of the<lb/>
country and look fa possible<lb/>
candidates fa our graduate pro-<lb/>
grams<lb/>
Dean Gray expects the growth<lb/>
to be slow, but steady, and can<lb/>
easily see about 100 to 125<lb/>
students enrolled in the graduate<lb/>
programs in the future.<lb/>
The art education classes can<lb/>
now observe younger children<lb/>
through a one-way mirra located<lb/>
in the observation area. This<lb/>
allows students who are prepar-<lb/>
ing fa student teaching to gain<lb/>
insight on locating problems in<lb/>
children befae they go into an<lb/>
actual classroom situation.<lb/>
The<lb/>
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Beginning Monday<lb/>
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Downtown Greenville OntheMall<lb/>
Shed Some<lb/>
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Force ROTC 2 Year<lb/>
Scholarships Available<lb/>
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For Nursing, Pre-Med, Math,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057097_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
7 December 1976<lb/>
Executive dumps Buc bill<lb/>
The SGA Executive Branch reluctantly submitted<lb/>
a bill to the Legislature Monday which offers two<lb/>
alternatives to the funding of the BUCCANEER. One<lb/>
possibility offered would be to appropriate $48,000 to<lb/>
put out a BUC fa this year (the Legislature in<lb/>
October cut $5,000 from a proposed $66,000 budget;<lb/>
the entire yearbook staff quit in protest). The other<lb/>
would grant the yearbook $6,000 for staff salaries and<lb/>
leave the remainder of the needed operating money<lb/>
to be collected from subscriptions and advertising<lb/>
sales.<lb/>
Article II of the bill states: "These alternatives<lb/>
above are neither the only alternatives nor the ones<lb/>
recommended by the Executive Branch. These<lb/>
alternatives are seen as the most feasible solutions to<lb/>
the annual publications problems<lb/>
Apparently the Executive was not very impressed<lb/>
with the recommendations it received from the<lb/>
Annual Publication Task Face which was set up to<lb/>
review the problem aeated by the BUC staff's<lb/>
quitting. Otherwise, Article II would not have been<lb/>
included and the Executive would have thrown its<lb/>
suppat behind this bill. Perhaps the Executive is not<lb/>
willing to accept the responsibility fa additiaial<lb/>
problems raised by each of the alternatives.<lb/>
Alternative One would guarantee the publication<lb/>
of a yearbook but in a truncated fam-a product<lb/>
valued at $48,000 instead of $61,000. Furthermae,<lb/>
this appropriation would require the Legislature to<lb/>
recall previously approved budgets fa other campus<lb/>
aganizatiois; the SGA treasury has oily $11,000,<lb/>
accading to the most recent Treasurer's report, with<lb/>
a little mae than $8,000 in additiaial revenues<lb/>
anticipated until the end of the school year.<lb/>
Alternative Two, if pursued, would certainly<lb/>
indicate how students feel about a yearbook,<lb/>
requiring a subsaiption of $5.00 as a vote of approval<lb/>
from at least 8,000 of us. However, this approach<lb/>
would be, in effect, double taxation. Most students<lb/>
expect a yearbook to be produced from their<lb/>
quarterly fees.<lb/>
The Executive has thus done no mae than to toss<lb/>
the hot potato back to the Legislature that can opt<lb/>
either to burn the good faith of fee-paying students<lb/>
with Alternative Two, its own credibility with other<lb/>
campus aganizatiois, using Alternative One a the<lb/>
BUCCANEER staff and suppaters if they faget the<lb/>
issue altogether.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina oommunity for over fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Business ManagerTeresa Whisenant<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis Leonard<lb/>
News EditorsDebbie Jackson<lb/>
J. Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Trends EditorPat Coyle<lb/>
Sports EditorSteve Wheeler<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is trie student newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored by the Student Government<lb/>
Association of ECU and is distributed each Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the school year, weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually tor non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
TDlu7(c<lb/>
FO- CVmS-VwnoS r a" A 2X do 1 lav<lb/>
BtOL-OY cotC.O UTcloliaur pv.Y-C.HokSV<lb/>
gooK .A 25 do cjr Bj?ne?3 Vook QJncV. ft<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Freshman chides cass discrimination<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I was hesitant at first to write<lb/>
toFORUM  thinking freshmen<lb/>
would be denied the right to have<lb/>
their letters printed. I hope I am<lb/>
proven wrong.<lb/>
As a frt timan, an underpri-<lb/>
vileged classman, I have one<lb/>
major gripe. Why are the fresh-<lb/>
man students denied the rights of<lb/>
every other resident of East<lb/>
Carolina University? We pay the<lb/>
same fees as any other class.<lb/>
We live in the same dams as<lb/>
other classmen. A "lucky" few<lb/>
of us drive our cars like other<lb/>
classmen, with one exception: we<lb/>
are faced to park in a mudhole-<lb/>
with trees and a barn as marking<lb/>
places, 'lovingly called "The<lb/>
Freshman Parking Lot located<lb/>
off of Cotanche Street. This<lb/>
parking lot, on a lucky day, might<lb/>
hold 30 cars. Out of the approxi-<lb/>
mate 2,000 freshmen at ECU a<lb/>
mere handful of these freshmen<lb/>
can park their cars without having<lb/>
the wary of being ticketed a<lb/>
towed.<lb/>
As stated on a handout we<lb/>
received at freshman aientatioi<lb/>
fran Joseph H. Calder, Directa<lb/>
of Security, Traffic and Safety-<lb/>
" There are approximately 150<lb/>
freshman parking spaces located<lb/>
approximately 2 blocks from tne<lb/>
men s residence area. There is an<lb/>
additional 350 spaces located<lb/>
approximately 2 blocks from the<lb/>
women's residence halls If any-<lb/>
one can point out 350 parking<lb/>
spaces near the women's resi-<lb/>
dence hall designated fa fresh-<lb/>
man parking, I will gratefully<lb/>
mention no more about the<lb/>
present freshman parking aisis.<lb/>
I leave everyone who reads<lb/>
this with the following quotation<lb/>
from the 1976-77 ECU Handbook-<lb/>
"Accadingly, East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity does not practice or<lb/>
condone discrimination, in any<lb/>
form, against stuoents, emplo-<lb/>
yees, a applicants co the ground<lb/>
of race, cola, natiaial aigin,<lb/>
religion, sex, age, a handicap.<lb/>
Is being a freshman student a<lb/>
handicap?<lb/>
Signed, An Angered Freshman,<lb/>
Owner of a $5.00 Parking ticket<lb/>
Frat leader disclaims razing<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Prior to the Thanksgiving<lb/>
holiday, an article appeared in the<lb/>
Fountainhead titled "Fraternities<lb/>
Admit Harrassment The article<lb/>
itself was very interesting and<lb/>
infamative, however, it was not<lb/>
entirely accurate. The references<lb/>
made to the so-called "hazing"<lb/>
activities that all fraternities are<lb/>
supposed to engage in, were<lb/>
vague and undocumented in all<lb/>
cases but one. I am referring to<lb/>
the "death-walk" which isapart<lb/>
of one fraternity's new member<lb/>
program. Miss Johnson overlook-<lb/>
ed the fact that particular ogan-<lb/>
izatiai is na presently affiliated<lb/>
with the Inter-Fraternity Council<lb/>
which was mentioned as the<lb/>
ooadinating body of the frater-<lb/>
nity system.<lb/>
In each fraternity there are<lb/>
certain activities which it chooses<lb/>
not to publicize. However, in<lb/>
fairness to all fraternities on this<lb/>
campus, I feel that the distinction<lb/>
between those members of the<lb/>
IFC and those who are na should<lb/>
have been mentioned in the<lb/>
article. Also, it should be made<lb/>
clear that while the IFC is the<lb/>
coordinating and governing body<lb/>
fa the fraternity system, its<lb/>
purpose is na to involve itself in<lb/>
the individual fraternities internal<lb/>
affairs of which new members<lb/>
aientatioi is an integral part.<lb/>
Bill Bensoi<lb/>
Inter Fraternity Council<lb/>
<pb facs="00057097_0005"/><lb/>
n<lb/>
?bbHHbbH<lb/>
OH<lb/>
ion<lb/>
ok-<lb/>
Ini-<lb/>
or<lb/>
any<lb/>
)lo-<lb/>
jnd<lb/>
Jin,<lb/>
P<lb/>
t a<lb/>
lan,<lb/>
sket<lb/>
ter-<lb/>
are<lb/>
ses<lb/>
in<lb/>
this<lb/>
ion<lb/>
the<lb/>
?uld<lb/>
the<lb/>
ade<lb/>
the<lb/>
ody<lb/>
its<lb/>
f in<lb/>
nal<lb/>
ers<lb/>
son<lb/>
nal<lb/>
ECU sociologists focus<lb/>
on teaching quality<lb/>
Improvement of the quality of journal of the American Socio- learning.<lb/>
7 December 1976 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
teaching in tne nation's under-<lb/>
graduate sociology programs is<lb/>
the focus of several recently<lb/>
published articles by ECU socio-<lb/>
logists.<lb/>
An article by ECU faculty<lb/>
members Christa Reiser and<lb/>
Kenneth Wilson in the November<lb/>
issue of the national journal<lb/>
"Footnotes" is critical of the<lb/>
content of professional meetings<lb/>
of the American Sociological<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Although about two-thirds of<lb/>
campus sociologists list a desire<lb/>
to improve their teaching as a<lb/>
priority interest, the annual ASA<lb/>
meetings offer little encourage-<lb/>
ment. Only four per cent of the<lb/>
sessions at the 1976 annual<lb/>
meetings were devoted to teach-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The Reiser-Wilson article<lb/>
goes further to suggest alterna-<lb/>
tives to offset this imbalance.<lb/>
Appearing in the same issue<lb/>
of "Footnotes is an article by<lb/>
Dr. John Maiolo, chairperson of<lb/>
the ECU Department of Sociology<lb/>
and Anthropology. He examines<lb/>
the structure of ASA sessions<lb/>
planned for 1977 around the<lb/>
theme "Shared and Divergent<lb/>
Perspectives which concentra-<lb/>
tes on interdisciplinary efforts in<lb/>
sociology.<lb/>
Too frequently, sessions are<lb/>
directed by "big names" in the<lb/>
sociology field, while the lesser-<lb/>
known day-to-day researchers<lb/>
who have actually put together<lb/>
the relevant data are ignored, he<lb/>
notes.<lb/>
"Footnotes' is the official<lb/>
logical Association.<lb/>
Maiolo is also the author of<lb/>
two articles in the current issue of<lb/>
"Sociation the publication of<lb/>
theN.C. Sociological Association.<lb/>
His "The History and Develop-<lb/>
ment of Sociology and Anthropo-<lb/>
logy at East Carolina University"<lb/>
traces the growth of ECU'S<lb/>
department since its establish-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
In the second article, "Enrich-<lb/>
ing Undergraduate Education<lb/>
Maiolo suggests several formal<lb/>
and informal means whereby the<lb/>
roles of student and instructor<lb/>
may become less restricted and<lb/>
thus lead to the betterment of<lb/>
Among his suggestions, many<lb/>
of which are now carried out at<lb/>
ECU, are department-sponsored<lb/>
retreats for studentsand facul-<lb/>
ty members, the availability of<lb/>
more hours in an instructor's day<lb/>
for meeting with students, more<lb/>
student participation in depart-<lb/>
mental clubs and committee<lb/>
activities, and encouragement of<lb/>
more personal relationships be-<lb/>
tween faculty and students.<lb/>
These solutions to the prob-<lb/>
lem of restricted student-teacher<lb/>
roles will become effective only if<lb/>
reward and recognition is given to<lb/>
instructors who adopt them, says<lb/>
Maiolo.<lb/>
attic<lb/>
Wed. Real House<lb/>
Benefit<lb/>
Thurs. Delias<lb/>
High<lb/>
E.C.U. Special Half Price<lb/>
Admission<lb/>
Fri. Sat. Sun. Mama's Pride<lb/>
Honor frat inducts<lb/>
five new members<lb/>
By NEIL SESSOMS<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
Tau Chapter of Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
national honor fraternity, ECU'S<lb/>
oldest fraternal organization, for-<lb/>
mally inducted five new brothers<lb/>
Nov. 13.<lb/>
The new brothers were honor-<lb/>
ed that night at a Chicken<lb/>
Pluckin' dinner at Contentnee<lb/>
Camp Grounds attended by<lb/>
nearly 75 brothers, alumni, and<lb/>
dates.<lb/>
During the five week pledge<lb/>
period, the new brothers held a<lb/>
car wash to benefit the Todd<lb/>
Scholarship fund, attended three<lb/>
pledge meetings and one regular<lb/>
business meeting, and presented<lb/>
their philosophy of life and<lb/>
fielded questions from the broth-<lb/>
ers at an informal initiation to<lb/>
become eligible for formal initia-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Admission requirements<lb/>
demand a 3.3 overall grade point<lb/>
average and evidence of leader-<lb/>
ship abilities.<lb/>
The new brothers include<lb/>
Allen Price, Bill Wooten, Wayne<lb/>
Banks, Ernie Stine, and Bill Ross.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi is based on the<lb/>
tripod of scholarship, leadership,<lb/>
and fellowship and Tau Chapter<lb/>
has been active at ECU since<lb/>
1936.<lb/>
Is there a special kid in your life<lb/>
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SGA studies new<lb/>
inventory system<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association (SGA) is studying the<lb/>
possibility of a more efficient<lb/>
inventory system.<lb/>
"Inventory has been kept<lb/>
simply by using purchase orders<lb/>
or requisitions filed according to<lb/>
the date said Mike White, an<lb/>
ECU student who is developing a<lb/>
new inventory system for the<lb/>
SGA. "Obviously it is hard to find<lb/>
something bought three years<lb/>
ago, unless the date of purchase<lb/>
is known<lb/>
An up-to-date system is<lb/>
needed to know what is still being<lb/>
used and where it is, according to<lb/>
White.<lb/>
"We are sending out a letter<lb/>
to all departments requesting that<lb/>
they list all purchases in the last<lb/>
three years said White.<lb/>
"Then we will compare the<lb/>
lists with our files to find out if<lb/>
equipment iswornout, broken, or<lb/>
thrown away<lb/>
The departments most affec-<lb/>
ted by the new inventory are<lb/>
publications, the Urama and<lb/>
Music departments and the SGA,<lb/>
according to White.<lb/>
"My job is to find out what<lb/>
there is and set up a new system<lb/>
said White.<lb/>
?If the SGA Legislature<lb/>
agrees, we plan to put the<lb/>
inventory on a computer separate<lb/>
from, but with ECU equipment<lb/>
said White.<lb/>
The payroll department will<lb/>
keep the records on the computer,<lb/>
according to White.<lb/>
"A department can call the<lb/>
SGA when equipment is worn out<lb/>
or broken and we can take it off<lb/>
the inventory, which will keep it<lb/>
current said White.<lb/>
"The good thing about this<lb/>
system is that all purchases will<lb/>
be filed on the computer five<lb/>
ways, by requisition number,<lb/>
date, type, department, and one<lb/>
other way said White.<lb/>
"A good thing about letting<lb/>
the payroll department keep the<lb/>
inventory is that new officers will<lb/>
not have to learn the system. Also<lb/>
an inefficient officer would not be<lb/>
able to ruin the system com-<lb/>
mented White.<lb/>
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Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 7 December 1976<lb/>
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Oven Brown Potatoes Sauce<lb/>
Green Beans &amp; Rolls &amp; Butter<lb/>
Mushrooms Lemon<lb/>
Glazed Carrots Maringue Pie<lb/>
Iced Tea<lb/>
Galley Room of Jones Cafeteria<lb/>
Dec. 15-between 5:00 &amp; 7:00 P.M.<lb/>
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Greenville cited as third<lb/>
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1976. Pet Candle Inc<lb/>
Zip<lb/>
By DENNIS FOSTER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Greenville is currently the<lb/>
third fastest growing city in North<lb/>
Carolina. This growth can't be<lb/>
expected to occur in a way that is<lb/>
conducive to order unless expan-<lb/>
sion is planned.<lb/>
"During the past five years,<lb/>
Greenville has experienced a<lb/>
population increase of about 4 per<lb/>
cent per year according to John<lb/>
Schofield Greenville City Plan-<lb/>
ner. "This trend is expected to<lb/>
continue into the mid-1980's<lb/>
Along with an increase in<lb/>
population, there must be growth<lb/>
in jobs, housing, commercial<lb/>
businesses, educational facilities,<lb/>
and utilities, said Schofield.<lb/>
"Areas of residential growth<lb/>
are directly related to the location<lb/>
of industries said Schofield.<lb/>
"People want to live near their<lb/>
jobs.<lb/>
"With this in mind, undevel-<lb/>
oped areas of the city are being<lb/>
zoned to handle future develop-<lb/>
ment in a way that each will be<lb/>
easily accessible to the other, but<lb/>
will not inhibit the functions of<lb/>
the other said Schofield. Most of<lb/>
the future expansion of Greenville<lb/>
is expected to occur in three areas<lb/>
of the city said Schofield.<lb/>
"An industrial park, consis-<lb/>
ting of about 1,000 acres which<lb/>
has been zoned for industry, has<lb/>
been set up across the river near<lb/>
Burroughs Welcome according<lb/>
LADIES'<lb/>
WRANGLER<lb/>
DENIM<lb/>
JEANS<lb/>
Clincher Bock<lb/>
Misses Size<lb/>
lOto 20<lb/>
X-Sizes<lb/>
34.40<lb/>
129!<lb/>
13<lb/>
95<lb/>
LADIES'<lb/>
FASHION<lb/>
SLACKS<lb/>
100 Polyester Gabardine<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
llw-12"<lb/>
LADIES'<lb/>
JUMP-<lb/>
SUITS<lb/>
Denmi Corduroy<lb/>
P fester<lb/>
Double Knits<lb/>
tut<lb/>
to T.I. Wagner, deputy commis-<lb/>
sioner of the Greenville Redevel-<lb/>
opment Commission.<lb/>
"Industriesare evaluated by a<lb/>
committee before they are allow-<lb/>
ed to build he said. "Only<lb/>
clean, in regard to pollution, and<lb/>
well paying industries are allow-<lb/>
ed. This is to insure good jobs and<lb/>
a healthy environment for resi-<lb/>
dents<lb/>
"A residential area has been<lb/>
zoned near the industrial park<lb/>
aocording to Schofield. "Growth<lb/>
in this section of town is<lb/>
expected<lb/>
"With an increase in popula-<lb/>
tion, commercial growth, such as<lb/>
shopping centers, is necessary to<lb/>
supply people with needed goods<lb/>
and services said Schofield.<lb/>
"This is taken into consideration<lb/>
when predicting directions of<lb/>
growth for the city<lb/>
"At the moment, we do not<lb/>
have a long term plan for the<lb/>
city's expansion. Data is being<lb/>
compiled and we are in the<lb/>
process of drawing up such a<lb/>
plan said Schofield.<lb/>
"Near the hospital and med-<lb/>
school, we are already experien-<lb/>
cing notable commercial grow-<lb/>
th he said. "Residential devel-<lb/>
opment is expected as more and<lb/>
more people are employed in the<lb/>
area<lb/>
"A high degree of develop-<lb/>
ment is expected along N.C. 11<lb/>
towards Pitt Tech and N.C. 43<lb/>
said Schofield.<lb/>
"As population increases, so<lb/>
does the need for utilities,<lb/>
electricity, sewage and waste<lb/>
treatment, and an adequate water<lb/>
supply according to Charles<lb/>
Horne, Director of Utilities fa the<lb/>
Greenville Utilities Commission.<lb/>
"Population and use of elec-<lb/>
tricity don't necessarily corre-<lb/>
late said Horne. "Some indus-<lb/>
tries use enormous amounts of<lb/>
electricity. Therefore, the present<lb/>
facilities will not be adequate in<lb/>
the near future<lb/>
"A new power plant is in the<lb/>
planning stages now said<lb/>
Horne. "We have some land<lb/>
under option for the new plant. It<lb/>
will be located one and one-half<lb/>
miles upstream from the town<lb/>
"The power plant must have<lb/>
the capacity to handle the peak<lb/>
amount of need, usually in the<lb/>
summer, at all times, plus there<lb/>
must be a backup unit in case the<lb/>
main one fails said Horne.<lb/>
Customersactually pay for the<lb/>
capacity of the plant more than<lb/>
actual electricity used, he said.<lb/>
 A new waste treatment plant<lb/>
is also in the planning stages<lb/>
said Horne. A site has been<lb/>
purchased by the city for the<lb/>
plant<lb/>
"The present plant has al-<lb/>
ready reached its capacity and<lb/>
will not meet EPA standards by<lb/>
1977 said Horne.<lb/>
"The new plant should be<lb/>
completed in four years said<lb/>
Horne.<lb/>
"The city's water supply,<lb/>
which comes from the river (60)<lb/>
and deep wells (40) should be<lb/>
adequate for five more years<lb/>
according to Horne.<lb/>
"A site for a new water<lb/>
treatment plant has been pur-<lb/>
chased and a new plant should be<lb/>
completed within the next five to<lb/>
10 years said Horne.<lb/>
 A middle school, grades 6, 7,<lb/>
and 8, is pianned for the near<lb/>
future said Schofield. "A site<lb/>
for the school has been purchased<lb/>
near Hooker Rd. and Arlington<lb/>
Dr he said.<lb/>
U.S. still blocking<lb/>
Vietnam from U. N<lb/>
(LNS)The United States has<lb/>
once again blocked Vietnam's<lb/>
admission to the United Nations.<lb/>
All fourteen other Security Coun-<lb/>
cil members voted November 15<lb/>
in favor of admission. The vote<lb/>
had been delayed since Septem-<lb/>
ber due to a threatened veto<lb/>
during the U.S. presidential<lb/>
election campaign.<lb/>
Last year, the U.S. vetoed the<lb/>
admission of the North and South<lb/>
Vietnamese governmentsafter<lb/>
the defeat of U.S. forces there<lb/>
and before the country's reunifi-<lb/>
cation in April. The U.S. cast a<lb/>
second veto after the General<lb/>
Assembly voted 123-0 to have the<lb/>
Security Council reconsider.<lb/>
The U.S. has given different<lb/>
arguments and become more<lb/>
isolated each time it has cast its<lb/>
veto. During the 1975 vote, the<lb/>
U.S. insisted that North and<lb/>
South Vietnam could not be<lb/>
admitted unless South Korea<lb/>
was. But the Security Council<lb/>
refused to consider the South<lb/>
Korean application on the<lb/>
grounds that it is the U.N. policy<lb/>
that North and South Korea work<lb/>
towards reunification, and to<lb/>
admit the South alone would not<lb/>
aid this goal.<lb/>
This year, the U.S. did not<lb/>
raise the issue of South Korea.<lb/>
Instead it attempted to justify its<lb/>
veto on the grounds that Vietnam<lb/>
has not given a full accounting of<lb/>
the800 American servicemen still<lb/>
officially listed as missing in<lb/>
action in the Vietnam war.<lb/>
However, the U.S.and Viet-<lb/>
nam have recently begun bilateral<lb/>
talks in Paris, following a Viet-<lb/>
namese initiative. In the process<lb/>
of setting up these talks, diplo-<lb/>
matic notes were exchanged<lb/>
which indicated that Vietnam is<lb/>
prepared to normalize relations<lb/>
with the U.S. on the basis of the<lb/>
1972 Paris Peace Agreement and<lb/>
is committed to resolve the MIA<lb/>
question and return the remains<lb/>
of Americans who died in Viet-<lb/>
nam.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057097_0007"/><lb/>
7 December 1976 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Investigative reporters cite cause for financial woes<lb/>
Banks blamed for New York City crisis<lb/>
Edith's Note: This investigation<lb/>
of banks' roles in New York City's<lb/>
recent financial crisis will be<lb/>
presented in two parts. The<lb/>
remainder of this report will<lb/>
appear in the next issue.<lb/>
(LNS)Two New York City<lb/>
investigative reporters are blow-<lb/>
ing the top off the biggest story to<lb/>
hit this city in decades. Most New<lb/>
Yorkers know the banks have<lb/>
profited off the high interest loans<lb/>
the city's budget is propped up<lb/>
on. They know that the Municipal<lb/>
Assistance Corporation and ten<lb/>
Emergency Financial Control<lb/>
Board-monsters created to<lb/>
"solve the fiscal crisis-have<lb/>
effectively put bankers at<lb/>
helm of teh city.<lb/>
the<lb/>
But one could only have<lb/>
suspected that the banks actually<lb/>
tipped off the crisis which has<lb/>
resulted in thousands of layoffs<lb/>
and catastrophic cuts in social<lb/>
services.<lb/>
Reporters Jack Newfield and<lb/>
Paul Du Brul explain in the<lb/>
November 22 issue of the Village<lb/>
Voice that for the past four years<lb/>
they have been researching ma-<lb/>
terial for a book on the corporate<lb/>
powers "who control most of the<lb/>
important decisions in this bleed-<lb/>
ing city<lb/>
"In the course of researching<lb/>
the book, we had come aaoss the<lb/>
story of the big banks' covert<lb/>
dumping of city paper, and the<lb/>
auaal role the dumping played in<lb/>
precipitating the fiscal aisis<lb/>
Newfield and Du Brul report<lb/>
that between October of 1974 and<lb/>
March of 1975, some $2.3 billion<lb/>
in city securities were put up for<lb/>
sale by Chase Manhattan, Citi<lb/>
band, Morgan Guaranty Trust,<lb/>
the Bank of America and others.<lb/>
The economic depression that had<lb/>
begun in early 1974 was reaching<lb/>
new depths. Chase Manhattan,<lb/>
for one, was faltering: business<lb/>
borrowing down, loans gone bad,<lb/>
SocioAnthro retreats probe<lb/>
student-faculty,job problems<lb/>
Nelson Rockefeller no longer<lb/>
governor, his Urban Development<lb/>
Corporation on the road to<lb/>
bankruptcy.<lb/>
So, write Newfield and Du<lb/>
Brul, "David Rockefeller (the<lb/>
president of Chase) forgot the<lb/>
thousand pious speeches he had<lb/>
made on the responsibility of the<lb/>
bank to be a 'good corporate<lb/>
citizen. He decided to protect the<lb/>
bank and forget New York. In a<lb/>
few months, Chase alone unload-<lb/>
ed $1 billion in paper they knew<lb/>
was becoming worthless on un-<lb/>
suspecting customers, many of<lb/>
whom invested their life's sav-<lb/>
ings<lb/>
City Comptroller Harrison<lb/>
Goldin admitted that he had<lb/>
" suspicions that the bank was<lb/>
bailing out on the city as early as<lb/>
the summer of 1974, but said<lb/>
nothing publicly because he felt<lb/>
the information was not conclu-<lb/>
sive. He did, however, let his<lb/>
fellow members of the Board of<lb/>
Estimates, the mayor, the City<lb/>
Council president and the five<lb/>
borough presidents in on the<lb/>
news. But no one made a public<lb/>
peep.<lb/>
Some city officials iad made<lb/>
public attacks on the banks, but<lb/>
these were primarily because of<lb/>
the high rates of interest the<lb/>
banks were charging the city.<lb/>
"What the bank aitics failed to<lb/>
understand write Newfield and<lb/>
Du Brul, "was that this was no<lb/>
elaborate scam to grab a few<lb/>
million dollars in additional inter-<lb/>
est payments out of the city; the<lb/>
banks were simply trying to get<lb/>
clear, in case the worsening<lb/>
depression brought the whole<lb/>
paper house of public and private<lb/>
debt aashing down<lb/>
Continued Dec 9.)<lb/>
By SHEILA TURNAGE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The SociologyAnthropology<lb/>
School and Community Health<lb/>
departments held retreats Dec.<lb/>
4-5 centering around establishing<lb/>
better student-faculty relation-<lb/>
ships and job opportunities.<lb/>
The retreats were partially<lb/>
financed by the SGA and were the<lb/>
first to have an SGA representa-<lb/>
tive attend.<lb/>
The members of the retreat<lb/>
proposed that the department set<lb/>
up a meeting for majors to discuss<lb/>
the semester curriculum. They<lb/>
also proposed that professors and<lb/>
students interact less formally by<lb/>
having small groups of students<lb/>
meet at professors' homes and by<lb/>
professors having more liberal<lb/>
office hours.<lb/>
A resume of professors'<lb/>
research and educational exper-<lb/>
ience will be given to departmen-<lb/>
tal majors to help students with<lb/>
their research.<lb/>
Students proposed that the<lb/>
department supply more informa-<lb/>
tion about jobs and graduate<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
Topics from the three 90<lb/>
minute discussion sessions and<lb/>
the wrap-up session were com-<lb/>
piled from student and faculty<lb/>
suggestions by Dr. John Maiolo,<lb/>
head of the department, and<lb/>
Mary Hartman, president of the<lb/>
SociologyAnthropology Club.<lb/>
Alpha Kappa Delta, an honor<lb/>
society for Sociology students,<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
300 EVANS<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
PHONE: 752-2136<lb/>
' r2Ta FREE PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
fyboAgMfc PICKljp AND delivery<lb/>
puiicnipttoiM<lb/>
Prescription Dept. with medication<lb/>
profile: your prescription always at<lb/>
our fingertips, even though yon may<lb/>
lose your HL bottle.<lb/>
SOCIO 4NTHRO retreaters before weekend excursion.<lb/>
inducted five undergraduate<lb/>
members and five graduate mem-<lb/>
bers Saturday night. They were<lb/>
Beth Lambeth, Dale Northcott,<lb/>
Cindy Harrell, Rosalind Waters,<lb/>
and Rebecca Faison- undergra-<lb/>
duates; Linda Starr, Harold E.<lb/>
McKinney, Bobby Little, Diane<lb/>
Fulcher, and Tamara Tate Ben-<lb/>
kosky, graduates.<lb/>
Thirteen faculty members, 8<lb/>
graduate students, and 27 under-<lb/>
graduates attended the retreat.<lb/>
The Community Health re-<lb/>
treat was planned and conducted<lb/>
by two students, Charlotte Layton<lb/>
and Roger Mcoring.<lb/>
Five faculty members and six<lb/>
students attended the retreat.<lb/>
EAT FOR JUST<lb/>
V ;J plus tax MonThurs.<lb/>
Crabcakes, slaw, french fries plus<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
Va, pound hamburger steak, slaw,<lb/>
french fries and rolls.<lb/>
Fish, slaw french fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat. 752-3172<lb/>
2 mileH east on highway 264<lb/>
(out 10th St.)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057097_0008"/><lb/>
IIHiBnBMHIMHmHiH<lb/>
???????i<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD 7 December 1976<lb/>
KingBlackbyrds<lb/>
stir Wright crowd<lb/>
ByTHOMASSMITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
and<lb/>
MICHAELFUTCH<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Anyone who missed the B.B.<lb/>
KingDonald Byrd concert Sun-<lb/>
day night may have missed the<lb/>
best show of the year. Both acts<lb/>
put on high energy, unforgetable<lb/>
performances.<lb/>
Donald Byrd and the Black-<lb/>
byrds have to be one of the best,<lb/>
if not the greatest jazz-funk bands<lb/>
performing today. The group did<lb/>
a non-sup, fast paced show that<lb/>
made the audience want to get up<lb/>
and move.<lb/>
The group's music was a<lb/>
blend of hard charging soul and<lb/>
traditional and modern jazz.<lb/>
While the bass, guitar, and<lb/>
drums kept the basic rhythm, jazz<lb/>
solos were performed on sax,<lb/>
trumpet, flute, and mini-moog.<lb/>
Often the solos would be ot the<lb/>
standard variety. Some, especial-<lb/>
ly those using the mini-moog had<lb/>
a very experimental jazz flavor.<lb/>
The mixture of the two styles<lb/>
of music produced a unique<lb/>
sound. Each stood out from the<lb/>
other, yet there was a synthesis<lb/>
that harmonized the two.<lb/>
All the members of the group<lb/>
had the opportunity to display<lb/>
their talents. The nost impres-<lb/>
sive work was done by the<lb/>
guitarist, the saxophonist, and<lb/>
the keyboard man. Each showed a<lb/>
mastery of his instrument,<lb/>
especially the saxophonist, who<lb/>
played both tenor and soprano<lb/>
sax, flute, and also did vocals. All<lb/>
were excellent.<lb/>
It is difficult to believe that a<lb/>
group that could do such a tight<lb/>
performance are still full-time<lb/>
college students, led by a former<lb/>
professor. To be able to carry on<lb/>
both careers requires a great<lb/>
amount of inspiration and de-<lb/>
dication from each member of the<lb/>
group. If they do nothing else<lb/>
they represent Howard University<lb/>
well. The school should be proud,<lb/>
and has the right to be, of<lb/>
producing this caliber of<lb/>
musicians and men.<lb/>
After watching Donald Byrd<lb/>
and the Blackbyrds perform, B.B.<lb/>
King had to be antidimactic,<lb/>
right? Ain't no way! This blues<lb/>
master has been kicking around<lb/>
too long to lose oontrol of his<lb/>
audience.<lb/>
B.B. King can be highly<lb/>
respected in that he has never<lb/>
ventured very far from his roots -<lb/>
the blues. This music form has<lb/>
declined in mass popularity dur-<lb/>
ing the last 4-5 years; the blues<lb/>
had a direct influence on the<lb/>
music in the '60s and early '70s:<lb/>
the Beatles, the Stones, the<lb/>
Animals, the Airplane, Cream,<lb/>
Paul Butterfield, and the list<lb/>
could go on. The influence<lb/>
remained during the Rock n Roll<lb/>
era, the British Invasion, the<lb/>
Psychedelic era, and up to the<lb/>
' Southern Blues initiated by the<lb/>
early Allmans. It has since<lb/>
dwindled with jazz and disco as<lb/>
the frontrunners today.<lb/>
King has remained faithful to<lb/>
the Blues and has become<lb/>
somewhat of a legend in that<lb/>
form. Today, at the age of 51, he<lb/>
is still touted (if not out of<lb/>
respect) as "The King of the<lb/>
Blues<lb/>
B.B. King was his usual best<lb/>
during the performance. As an<lb/>
oustanding professional<lb/>
musician, he simply does not give<lb/>
a bad show. He displayed why he<lb/>
slowing down in his later years;<lb/>
maybe so, but he has made up for<lb/>
it with a fluidity that comes with<lb/>
age. He doesn't waste a note.<lb/>
King played such standards as<lb/>
"How Blue Can You Get" and<lb/>
"Ain't Nobody Home King,<lb/>
like the music he plays, never<lb/>
becomes dated by repetition. He<lb/>
was at his best with the slower<lb/>
blues tunes, and maybe person-<lb/>
ified his oommand of his music<lb/>
Women thrive at<lb/>
Ivy League schools<lb/>
B.B. KING FOUNTAINHEAD file photo.<lb/>
is today known as the most<lb/>
popular and most influential<lb/>
bluesman of them all.<lb/>
The band opened with two<lb/>
numbers before King appeared.<lb/>
The performance began with<lb/>
Grover Washington's "Mr.<lb/>
Magic which almost continued<lb/>
the flavor of the Blackbyrds - a<lb/>
form of jazz-soul. King's band<lb/>
consisted of a brass section,<lb/>
rhythm guitar, electric bass,<lb/>
keyboards and drums. As King is<lb/>
a perfectionist, the band proved<lb/>
to be exceptionally good.<lb/>
When King finally emerged<lb/>
onstage, his vocals proved to be<lb/>
terribly inaudible. The sound was<lb/>
to remain poor during the<lb/>
majority of the show. In fact, he<lb/>
became irritated when he had to<lb/>
repeat a specific verse three times<lb/>
due to mike failure. After the<lb/>
show, King said the "PA bugged<lb/>
me for awhile It was easily<lb/>
comprehended by his facial<lb/>
movements.<lb/>
It's a damn shame that the<lb/>
sound was so poor; King is as<lb/>
much a blues singer as he is a<lb/>
blues guitarist. He is known fa<lb/>
his finger work, but the man has a<lb/>
blues voice among the best. He<lb/>
sings with oonviction, and that's<lb/>
rare in 1976.<lb/>
King displayed why he has<lb/>
become such an influence on rock<lb/>
guitarists during the show. The<lb/>
precision of his guitar work is<lb/>
almost perfect. He has his own<lb/>
distinctive sound, a tone which<lb/>
borders between harsh and mel-<lb/>
low. There has been talk of King<lb/>
with his 1969 million-seller, Art<lb/>
See B.B. King, page 10.<lb/>
By GAEL MCCARTHY<lb/>
Women seem to be growing<lb/>
well among the halls of ivy.<lb/>
According to university<lb/>
spokesman at Harvard, Yale and<lb/>
Princeton, the nation's top three<lb/>
Ivy League schools, the numbers<lb/>
and accomplishments of women<lb/>
on campus are rising.<lb/>
Says Bill Fitzsimmons of<lb/>
Harvard's admissions office,<lb/>
"There's no real difference be-<lb/>
tween what women major in or<lb/>
what their interests are and, as<lb/>
the gap between numbers of men<lb/>
and women narrows, so do the<lb/>
differences in their scholastic<lb/>
pursuits<lb/>
Fitzsimmons says there are<lb/>
1.84 men to every woman on<lb/>
campus at Harvard this year,<lb/>
compared to 2.3 men to every<lb/>
woman last year.<lb/>
Until 1975-76, Harvard admit-<lb/>
ted men students through its<lb/>
admissions office and women<lb/>
students were admitted through<lb/>
Radcliffe's admissions office.<lb/>
This year there is a single<lb/>
admissions office for both.<lb/>
As a result of the college's<lb/>
"equal access" admissions, plus<lb/>
publicity and recruitment by the<lb/>
college and its alums, more<lb/>
students are applying in far<lb/>
greater numbers from areas that<lb/>
haven't previously supplied great<lb/>
numbers of Harvard students.<lb/>
These include Illinois, Indiana,<lb/>
the Midwest generally, parts of<lb/>
California, Texas and Oklahoma.<lb/>
Admissions are healthy. "Of<lb/>
the 7,580 men who applied to<lb/>
Harvard, 1,408 were admitted<lb/>
and 1,034 are coming, so far. Of<lb/>
the women, 3,688 applied, 745<lb/>
were admitted and 561 are<lb/>
oomingand we are still admit-<lb/>
ting people on the waiting list<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
From the waiting list of<lb/>
several hundred, perhaps 25 will<lb/>
be admitted. Total number of<lb/>
students for the coming freshman<lb/>
year is 1,600. "And all represent<lb/>
the best students we could attract<lb/>
from the country and outside the<lb/>
country Fitzsimmons says.<lb/>
Legally, women students are<lb/>
still admitted to Radcliffe, men to<lb/>
Harvard. But classes, living<lb/>
quarters and extracurricular<lb/>
activities are the same. The<lb/>
deqree is from Harvard - which<lb/>
has been true for several years,<lb/>
Fitzsimmons adds.<lb/>
Thanks to alums' contribu-<lb/>
tions, he says, "financial ability is<lb/>
not part of the consideration on<lb/>
who will attend Harvard. Roughly<lb/>
two-thirds-close to 70 percent-of<lb/>
our students are on financial aid.<lb/>
See IVY GIRLS, page W.<lb/>
ECU Playhouse presents<lb/>
tragedy of Richard II<lb/>
The East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
will present William Shake-<lb/>
speare' s classic,  The Tragedy of<lb/>
King Richard II December 8 at<lb/>
8:15 in the Studio Theatre on the<lb/>
ECU campus for eight per-<lb/>
formances.<lb/>
"Richard II" is the story of a<lb/>
weak king who falls victim to<lb/>
beguiling courtiers, his own bad<lb/>
decisions, and poor tempera-<lb/>
ment. Shakespeare once said<lb/>
Richard is a leader who is<lb/>
"imperious and oppressive" at<lb/>
the play's beginning, but learns<lb/>
from his loss of the crown to be<lb/>
"wise, patient, and pious"<lb/>
In the role of Richard II is<lb/>
Martin Thompson who recently<lb/>
was well received by audiences in<lb/>
The Student Prince as Mr. Lutz.<lb/>
Suzanne Howell debuts in the<lb/>
lead role at the Playhouse as the<lb/>
domineering and fiesty mother of<lb/>
Richard, Queen Isabella.<lb/>
Other familiar faces to recent<lb/>
Playhouse audiences are Mick<lb/>
Godwin as the Duke of York,<lb/>
Rodney Freeze as Bolingbroke,<lb/>
Rosaline Jaoobi as the Duchess of<lb/>
York, and Bill Vann as Fitzwater.<lb/>
Richard II is directed by the,<lb/>
Playhouse's well-known Summer<lb/>
Theatre directorproduoer, Edgar<lb/>
Loessin.<lb/>
"Richard II" will be present-<lb/>
ed December 8-11 and 13-16.<lb/>
Tickets are $2.50 general ad-<lb/>
mission and ECU student tickets<lb/>
are free with I.D. and Activity<lb/>
Cards. The McGinnis Auditorium<lb/>
box office is open 10-4 Monday<lb/>
through Friday. For reservation<lb/>
call 757-6390.<lb/>
Sit Ufc ANDERSON L as John of Gaunt and Martin Thompson R as<lb/>
King Richard appear in the East Carolina Playhouse production of<lb/>
Shakespeare s Richard II opening this Wednesday in the ECU Studio<lb/>
I heat re. ECU News Bureau Photo<lb/>
<pb facs="00057097_0009"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
7 December 1976 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Have you ever struck out?<lb/>
Professional loser shares sad experiences<lb/>
By MICHAELFUTCH<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Have you ever felt like a real<lb/>
loser? You knowthe impression<lb/>
that you are the only one in the<lb/>
world who cares about yourself<lb/>
and usually that isn't very much.<lb/>
Vou feel down and out and under<lb/>
as well. You are able to associate<lb/>
with the old Doors' tune: "I've<lb/>
been down so goddamn long that<lb/>
it looks like up to me Yep, a<lb/>
total loser with nowhere to go fa<lb/>
sympathy. But believe me, you're<lb/>
not alone, as there are others in<lb/>
this cold-natured wald of ours<lb/>
sharing your plight.<lb/>
Take this situation for<lb/>
example: You wake up on Friday<lb/>
maning feeling great because<lb/>
the weekend is here. After your<lb/>
two maning classes, you find a<lb/>
oomfy spot on the wall because of<lb/>
Marquee<lb/>
by DAVID R BOSNICK<lb/>
Another zero flick week<lb/>
By DAVID R. BOSNICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Eat my Dust' , "Gone in Sixty-Seoonds "Get Mean, Gus" ; what<lb/>
do all of these titles have in oommon? Are they the mutterings of Charles<lb/>
Manson befae the jury? No. Pieces of panographic sanscript? No. The<lb/>
mantra of a psychotic pump jockey? No.<lb/>
What they all have in oommon is that they are all scabs on the MGM<lb/>
lion s back and they are all appearing in Greenville this week. They are<lb/>
not wath even a cursay synopsis, but in no particular ader they are<lb/>
about: a Czechoslovakian mule who kicks 80-yard field goals, a oowboy<lb/>
who goes to Spain and introduces the use of the bazooka to the Huns, a<lb/>
misanthropic dwarf who thinks he's Richard the second, the inability of<lb/>
the entire Cahfania Highway Patrol toapprehend one car thief, and Ron<lb/>
(Happy Days) Howard getting his learner's permit.<lb/>
I presume the theatres showing these fiascos planned this week as a<lb/>
tax write-off. A celluloid bonfire is mae in ader.<lb/>
The final two films are at least t to be taken seriously, with one a<lb/>
vapid disappointment, and the other sheer joy and a classic in its genre.<lb/>
The bad news first; "Shout at the Devil" is an attempt at the epic<lb/>
production film of the late 50 s, which understandably bankrupted<lb/>
several studios. There is a revival of films of this type of cinema with<lb/>
turns the like of "The Wind and the Lion "The Man Who Would Be<lb/>
King , all containing aspects of the "film spectacular "Shout at the<lb/>
Devil is spectacularly dull, with a pcorly conceived screenplay and<lb/>
staticlifeless perfamances by the players.<lb/>
The film is based, loosely, on the Wald War I African sabotoge of a<lb/>
German battleship, the Bluecher, as it was drydocked in Zanzibar. The<lb/>
teat was supposedly aooomplished by two Ango sotiders-of-fatune who<lb/>
were bribed into herotcs by the British Navy. The two characters are<lb/>
played by Lee Marvin, the remarkably uninspired 0 Flynn, whose<lb/>
pencnant for gin leads him into ivory poaching and military<lb/>
commendation, and Roger Moae, whose maja talent seems to be<lb/>
wearing white on white and still appearing potent.<lb/>
The plot rushes ridiculously together as O'Flynn with his Gunga<lb/>
Din-like mute sidekick Muhammed (Rene Kdlenhofh) team up with the<lb/>
well-bred though poverty-stricken Sebastian Oldsmith (Moae) to fool<lb/>
tnepre-W.W.I Germans and poach on the Kaiser's land in Africa. This<lb/>
tails, so they return to the O'Flynn home, which is a remarkable Tara<lb/>
carved out of the African wilderness. There, having of course contracted<lb/>
malaria, the barely sweating Moae falls in love with O'Flynn s<lb/>
daughter, Barbara Parkins) and bites the heads off of live chickens, blah,<lb/>
oian, blah.<lb/>
Tne famula fa this picture was passe with the discovery of the<lb/>
canteen. The pia is rushed into overly staged action scenes and their<lb/>
survival from many of their 'harrowing' experiences is never fully<lb/>
explained, but rather is phaographically avoided.<lb/>
Jhe attempt to patray two lovers, joining against a common foe is<lb/>
overstated, tired, and banal.<lb/>
Parkins and Moae are at least as exciting a combinatioi as baloney<lb/>
and mayonnaise, but not nearly as palatable. Marvin is lazy and shows<lb/>
only occasional sparks of medioaity. He looks as if he got up late one<lb/>
afternoon and did this movie. Don't do this movie.<lb/>
I give this film one star, and the copy of the film itself is poa. It is<lb/>
misframed fa a segment of twenty minutes and one cannot tell what, if<lb/>
anything, is gang on.<lb/>
The film truly wath seeing in this town is several years old and<lb/>
oontains noactas. It is Walt Disney's version of "Peter Pan and is<lb/>
gentle and at least as involving fa an adult as a child. This particular<lb/>
turn was made while Disney was alive and actively drawing. The cola<lb/>
and flow of the animated characters is startling, as it took over 100,000<lb/>
orawings to animate this film. The voices are perfectly matched, with<lb/>
Wendy, diagrammed from a teenage picture of Julie Andrews. Ths film<lb/>
is released each year around the holiday season and there simply is no<lb/>
better example of animated cinema. I give this film 4 stars fa it sings.<lb/>
the exceptionally sunny weather.<lb/>
Everything seems to be fine until<lb/>
after about two hours and 23<lb/>
minutes you realize that no one<lb/>
has gone out of his way to<lb/>
oonverse with you, in fact it<lb/>
appears that they intentionally<lb/>
keep in the shadows while they<lb/>
pass. What is even wase is the<lb/>
realizatiai that oi oie is going to<lb/>
stop to talk with yoj. You. feel<lb/>
about as impatant as Gerald<lb/>
Fad did ai Nov. 3. You stumble<lb/>
blindly into the Student Union<lb/>
and pick up a copy of The News<lb/>
and Observer fa oompanionship-<lb/>
you are reminded of your loser's<lb/>
stigma when you realize the<lb/>
paper is from yesterday. A loser<lb/>
ban and bred.<lb/>
Doi't feel like a loser when,<lb/>
after an evening of fun and party,<lb/>
you wake up and remember you<lb/>
barfed all over the sheets. It<lb/>
means a deviation from the day's<lb/>
activities with a trip to the<lb/>
laundry because you have only<lb/>
one set of sheets.<lb/>
Losers can associate with this<lb/>
situation: you promenade down-<lb/>
town with your blown-dry hair<lb/>
believing that you look great-it'II<lb/>
be easy to pick up some chick<lb/>
tonight. After about 43 attempts<lb/>
to grab a dance partner, which<lb/>
will hopefully later on be an<lb/>
all-night partner, you realize that<lb/>
maybe you don't look so good in<lb/>
fact, you probably look damn bad.<lb/>
Why else would 43 females turn<lb/>
you down, at least 40 of whom<lb/>
were ugly?<lb/>
A loser gets caught cheating<lb/>
on his Library Science final. A<lb/>
loser is always the last person to<lb/>
be waited on in the CU. A loser<lb/>
goes downtown by himself and<lb/>
oomes back by himself. A loser is<lb/>
somebody who has a party one<lb/>
invites "everyone" tooome, only<lb/>
to have two people show - his<lb/>
roommate and himself. This same<lb/>
loser also realizes that he is $42 in<lb/>
the hole because he bought a keg<lb/>
at The Wine Shop with set-ups<lb/>
included.<lb/>
A loser is someoie who invites<lb/>
a girl to his apartment fa drinks<lb/>
and naices that she is mae<lb/>
occupied with her watch that she<lb/>
is with him. So much fa that<lb/>
earlier fantasy! A loser studies 10<lb/>
hours and 15 minutes on a<lb/>
make-it a break-it histay exam,<lb/>
oily to find out that he has<lb/>
studied the wrong chapters; no<lb/>
hona roll this quarter. A loser<lb/>
buys a fantastic new LP and<lb/>
carries it home to his fantastic<lb/>
stereo to have a na too fantastic<lb/>
needle shread it to pieces.<lb/>
A loser is somebody who is<lb/>
told to button up his shirt because<lb/>
he has no reasons to show off his<lb/>
chest. A real loser is a guy that<lb/>
rids himself of his virginity only to<lb/>
get a social disease in return. A<lb/>
loser realizes that he is out of cash<lb/>
(and down to stems and seeds<lb/>
again too). A loser relies on<lb/>
aloohol to make conversation with<lb/>
a great looking prospect, but goes<lb/>
over the limit and completely<lb/>
turns her off because of his<lb/>
drunken stupa. She tops that by<lb/>
walking out with a football player.<lb/>
To cut this explanation shat,<lb/>
everybody is a loser at times. The<lb/>
only difference between we ECU<lb/>
students and the old friends back<lb/>
home, waking 8-6 shift fa the<lb/>
Etna statioi, is that we're edu-<lb/>
cated losers. You and I are<lb/>
educated to know why we are<lb/>
what we are. But then again,<lb/>
today's loser is tomarow's win-<lb/>
ner. This optimistic ending is fa<lb/>
the benefit of the typical reader,<lb/>
the typical loser, in hopes of<lb/>
shedding that loser's image.<lb/>
Wfe'vegpt<lb/>
what you want.<lb/>
Midnight Black Onyx<lb/>
If beautiful black onyx is important to you,<lb/>
then you'll find just what you're looking for<lb/>
in our wide selection of ring designs for<lb/>
men and ladies. Each of the three shown is<lb/>
set in luxurious 10K gold. Men's onyx and<lb/>
diamond ring $119.95. Ladies' onyx and<lb/>
diamond ring $49.95. Ladies' oval onyx<lb/>
design $44.95<lb/>
Use our Custom Charge Plan, your favorite<lb/>
bank card or layaway.<lb/>
lewel Box<lb/>
J DIAMOND SPECIALISTS FOR OVEfi SO YEARS<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
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Wed. Real House<lb/>
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Thurs. Delias<lb/>
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E.C.U.SpecialHalf Price<lb/>
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Fri. Sat. Sun. Mama's Pride<lb/>
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has moved to a new location<lb/>
on 5th Street near the Mall.<lb/>
108 E. Fifth St.<lb/>
Bring thisad fora 10 discount<lb/>
on any purchase from now<lb/>
until Dec. 15th.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057097_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 7 December 1976<lb/>
Mike Franks provides combination of many genres<lb/>
By MARK LOCK WOOD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Michael Franks represents<lb/>
one of those enigmas we often<lb/>
find in the world of music - that<lb/>
of the artist who can't quite be<lb/>
pinned down to a oertain style<lb/>
because he seems to incorporate<lb/>
so many.<lb/>
Franks has the easygoing<lb/>
lyricism of James Taylor, but you<lb/>
can't necessarily label him in any<lb/>
kind of folkpop-type classifi-<lb/>
cation. He sings in much the<lb/>
bluesjazz style of John Mayall,<lb/>
but you don't want to narrow<lb/>
things down quite that far.<lb/>
Some of his songs exhibit a<lb/>
"kinkiness" and humorous<lb/>
quality that cannot and should not<lb/>
be labeled anything but a very<lb/>
pleasant escape from the every<lb/>
day.<lb/>
So we find with Franks'<lb/>
newest, entitled THE ART OF<lb/>
TEA. The album has something<lb/>
for everyone of even the most<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
111 W. 4th St.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
narrow musical tastes. The pro-<lb/>
fuse quality of the work only<lb/>
serves to enhanoe what has got to<lb/>
be one of the more refreshing<lb/>
albums in the recent (and un-<lb/>
fortunately unproductive) past.<lb/>
Franks begins the album with<lb/>
"Night moves The striking<lb/>
honey-smoothness of the artist's<lb/>
voice immediately affects you in<lb/>
this moving rendition of a love<lb/>
that's "Just a Masquerade<lb/>
Veteran session men Larry Carl-<lb/>
ton (guitar) and Joe Sample<lb/>
(keyboards) provides excellent<lb/>
accompaniment on this mellow<lb/>
tune.<lb/>
 Eggplant the next tune on<lb/>
the album, exhibits a oertain flair<lb/>
fa the bizarre (and humorous).<lb/>
This song is an analogy by the<lb/>
lyricist between a myriad of ways<lb/>
to love a woman and the number<lb/>
of ways one can eat an eggplant<lb/>
(?)<lb/>
The man is obviously either<lb/>
daft, or a genius, but only time (or<lb/>
critics) will tell. The song is very<lb/>
happy-go-lucky, with the always<lb/>
surprising Franks talking on<lb/>
another facade as a cynical<lb/>
jokester. The vibes on "Egg-<lb/>
plant" only add to the fun.<lb/>
"Monkey See-Monkey Do"<lb/>
has a mysteriour resemblance to<lb/>
"Gorilla" by none other than<lb/>
James Taylor. Another "Kinky"<lb/>
type of tune, Franks sings of<lb/>
adventure in the zoo and love<lb/>
between two monkeys (?). Of<lb/>
oourse it has a jungle beat, and<lb/>
Springsteen session man David<lb/>
Sanborn on sax provides some<lb/>
good solos.<lb/>
"St. Elmo's Fire" is perhaps<lb/>
the most endearing number of the<lb/>
album, featuring an emotionality<lb/>
that makes for the kind of tune<lb/>
that stays in your head for a long,<lb/>
long time. It's another love song<lb/>
with some excellent orchestration<lb/>
by Carlton and Sample providing<lb/>
some super backup to a quietly<lb/>
pleasant song.<lb/>
"I Don't Know Why I'm So<lb/>
Happy I'm Sad" continues the<lb/>
mood with a predicament most<lb/>
charmingly advocated by Franks.<lb/>
What can you say about lyrics<lb/>
like: "Your laissez-faire and your<lb/>
long chestnut hair drive me<lb/>
aazy"? Again Joe Sample and<lb/>
Larry Carlton provide accompani-<lb/>
ment to a song that's kinky,<lb/>
happy, sad, aazy, etc. etc.<lb/>
Michael Brecker provides the<lb/>
intro to the next song entitled<lb/>
"Jive which sounds very much<lb/>
like John Mayall (you knew it was<lb/>
coming right?). The nightclub<lb/>
style of this song again proves the<lb/>
multi-faceted nature of the ever-<lb/>
refreshing and ever-surprising<lb/>
Michael Franks - you just don't<lb/>
know what to expect next.<lb/>
"Popsicle Toes" should be<lb/>
dedicated to frigid girls. In<lb/>
another cynical note, Franks<lb/>
lashes out at a girl with "Tierra-<lb/>
del Fuegoes" that are "nearly<lb/>
always froze" (would you believe<lb/>
a geography lesson?) Again,<lb/>
Franks' taste for the bizarre<lb/>
oomes to the forefront.<lb/>
"Sometimes I Just Forget to<lb/>
Smile" can only be described as<lb/>
the epitome of the warped simile.<lb/>
To say the least, it is one of the<lb/>
more "interesting" songs of the<lb/>
.album. How a "Rolls Royce<lb/>
Rolls" like "Pharoahs Down the<lb/>
Nile is beyond belief, but that's<lb/>
what makes Michael Franks<lb/>
Michael Franks. This is another<lb/>
number there for the fun of it, and<lb/>
in the process of confusion, it is a<lb/>
most entertaining piece.<lb/>
"Mr. Blue" provides the<lb/>
grand finale, with another poig-<lb/>
nant love song. Sample plays<lb/>
acoustic piano, which along with a<lb/>
symphonic background is all<lb/>
Frank's voice needs to send you<lb/>
into ecstacy - the tenderness of<lb/>
the number is self-explanatory, so<lb/>
nuff said.<lb/>
Michael Franks may be a<lb/>
metamorphic monster, but he is a<lb/>
weloome spectre in a too often<lb/>
repetitious world of music. He is<lb/>
definitely a name to look out for.<lb/>
IVY GIRLS<lb/>
Continued from page 8.<lb/>
The average financial aid award if<lb/>
approximately $3,500 a year.<lb/>
"Yale and Princeton went<lb/>
coed in the late '60s, early<lb/>
'70s-five or six years before we<lb/>
did<lb/>
Yale's male-female ratio is the<lb/>
lowest of the three Ivy League<lb/>
CAN<lb/>
TURN<lb/>
YOUR EDUCATION<lb/>
INTU A PROMOTION<lb/>
Visit me at the East Carolina<lb/>
University Bookstore each Thursday<lb/>
and ask me how you can now step<lb/>
right into a good job after basic<lb/>
training. A job with a good salary.<lb/>
Choice of location. And opportu-<lb/>
nities for immediate advancement.<lb/>
OR<lb/>
CALL ARMY<lb/>
SGT PHIL MURPHY<lb/>
PHONE<lb/>
752-4826<lb/>
colleges: 1.75 men to every<lb/>
woman, says Mrs. Connie Gersik,<lb/>
director of the office of Education<lb/>
of Women. "Men and women<lb/>
equally pursue the popular ma-<lb/>
jors. But more men major in<lb/>
economics or in the sciences than<lb/>
do women, but majors at Yale<lb/>
resemble college majors national-<lb/>
ly<lb/>
Until 1973-74 Yale had a quota<lb/>
on the number of women students<lb/>
it would accept. "The admissions<lb/>
ratio for women that first year<lb/>
was very tough says Mrs.<lb/>
Gersik, "around 10 to 1. The<lb/>
administration was trying very<lb/>
hard to choose women who oould<lb/>
withstand pressure from Yale to<lb/>
succeed academicallywho were<lb/>
personally resilient and very<lb/>
bright. Now we accept proport-<lb/>
tionallya bit more women than<lb/>
men<lb/>
A look back to 1968-69, when<lb/>
women were first admitted to<lb/>
Yale, Mrs. Gersik says, reveals<lb/>
some interesting expectations on<lb/>
the part of young male Yale<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"They were looking for the<lb/>
ideal female in the inooming Yale<lb/>
women students; hoping for a<lb/>
warmth and intellectualism, fear-<lb/>
ing a super-brainy super woman<lb/>
And women were worried they<lb/>
wouldn't measure up to Yale<lb/>
Presbyterian Student Center<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
The Den<lb/>
New Look, New Faces, Same Cook.<lb/>
Supper and Program on Tues. Night<lb/>
Supper $1.50<lb/>
Campus Minister's Hours 9:00 am to 1:00 pm<lb/>
By Phone in Afternoon<lb/>
standards. Now ooeducation isn't<lb/>
an issue at all<lb/>
Are women assuming leader-<lb/>
ship roles? A six-year Yale study<lb/>
shows that in sample groups, only<lb/>
17 per cent70 women out of 409<lb/>
students  were officers and only<lb/>
four women out of 57 - 6 per cent<lb/>
- were presidents of student<lb/>
groups. Three of these held office<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
"The coed is still a pretty<lb/>
recent phenomenon at Yale but<lb/>
leadership roles are increasing.<lb/>
There do seem to be more<lb/>
women, and more women officers<lb/>
 24 per cent - in band, glee<lb/>
club, film, dramatic and arts<lb/>
organizations. In political groups,<lb/>
and the student union, college<lb/>
council, dorm councils, and a-<lb/>
mong class officers and on the<lb/>
Yale Daily News, women number<lb/>
about 13 per cent of the office<lb/>
holders.<lb/>
' Remember - six years ago -<lb/>
1969-70 - there were only 530<lb/>
women at Yale and 4,400 men.<lb/>
Next year there will be 1,900<lb/>
women and 3,300 men.<lb/>
"Women are new to athletics<lb/>
here and doing very well. There<lb/>
were nine new varsity women<lb/>
teams and all were winners<lb/>
Among them: crew, fencing,<lb/>
swimming, gym, tennis, squash,<lb/>
field hockey and Lacrosse. There<lb/>
are intramural competitions, too,<lb/>
between men and women in<lb/>
which women perform well.<lb/>
The class of '70-71 was the<lb/>
first to have women graduates<lb/>
and Alumni Offios forms show<lb/>
both sexes behaving similarly,<lb/>
says Mrs. Gersik. "Fifty-four per<lb/>
cent of men and women grads<lb/>
married, about eight per cent<lb/>
became parents, some 75 per cent<lb/>
have post-graduate degrees,<lb/>
largely in law. More than half the<lb/>
women graduates married Yale<lb/>
men. only 11 per cent of the men<lb/>
had Yale wives<lb/>
Princeton's first oo-ed class<lb/>
was graduated in 1970.<lb/>
The ratio of men to women is<lb/>
lowering yearly, with figures<lb/>
given as "roughly three men to<lb/>
one women in senior, junior and<lb/>
sophomore classes, 2 to 1 in<lb/>
freshman class<lb/>
In 1969, says Joseph Reynolds<lb/>
of Prinoeton, "there were mixed<lb/>
quotas for men and women. Two<lb/>
years ago Prinoeton became an<lb/>
equal access institution and the<lb/>
number of women applicants<lb/>
increased. Students come largely<lb/>
from the Pennsylvania-New<lb/>
Jersey-New York area.<lb/>
"The number of women stu-<lb/>
dents in the engineering school is<lb/>
growing steadily, women are<lb/>
elected to oommittees, are not as<lb/>
yet major office holders; no<lb/>
woman holdsoffioeon the college<lb/>
paper, The Princetonian, and the<lb/>
offices they hold in student<lb/>
government do not yet include a<lb/>
presidency<lb/>
B B KING<lb/>
Continued from page 8.)<lb/>
Benson and Dale Pettite's "The<lb/>
Thrill is Gone The song has<lb/>
Answers to Thursday s puzzle.<lb/>
sACR0IL1AcTACM1<lb/>
ACR0pH0B1APAIN<lb/>
LI0NTlAMERSINST<lb/>
ID0SDARMsAnT1<lb/>
VINNIE6 Ni0<lb/>
ATES1 IS,ADrRD0E<lb/>
SYRUPSNAMi:SAKE<lb/>
NAPsLIRA<lb/>
PLAYMATT0II.ER<lb/>
0I:RPR0M01NOME<lb/>
TAMPAPuN0AS<lb/>
VERSTLI.fSN1NA<lb/>
SIN0iiiAB0I.Ic:AL<lb/>
ENIDANTIcIPATE<lb/>
AGAsIE1.TOTAi.1R<lb/>
become a modern classic of blues<lb/>
material and King displayed why<lb/>
with his voioe and his fingers.<lb/>
If there was any fault with the<lb/>
King performance, it was due to<lb/>
the sound, not K ing. He has been<lb/>
playing professionally for 30<lb/>
years, averaging 300 dates each<lb/>
year. That's a lot of blues and it<lb/>
would seem that the man would<lb/>
tire of the work. But B.B. King is<lb/>
a classy performer and always<lb/>
puts on a classy performance. I<lb/>
hooe he's around to play for 30<lb/>
more years the music form which<lb/>
expresses best whot it'sail about.<lb/>
The Donald ByrdBlack-<lb/>
byrdsB B. King concert was<lb/>
sponsored by Major Attractionsof<lb/>
the Student Union.<lb/>
&amp;$iim<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057097_0011"/><lb/>
mi'<lb/>
o<lb/>
is<lb/>
I<lb/>
o<lb/>
e<lb/>
:e<lb/>
e<lb/>
s<lb/>
s<lb/>
r<lb/>
J<lb/>
a<lb/>
e<lb/>
1-<lb/>
s<lb/>
a<lb/>
II<lb/>
u<lb/>
i<lb/>
o<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
Keydets use free throws<lb/>
to topple Pirates, 78-67<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
VMI used a 12-0 spurt in the<lb/>
second half and a 22-9 advantage<lb/>
at the free throw line to turn back<lb/>
East Carolina 78-67 Saturday<lb/>
night at Minges Coliseum in the<lb/>
Southern Conference basketball<lb/>
opener for both teams.<lb/>
The Keydets, an NCAA<lb/>
Eastern Regional finalist from a<lb/>
year ago, used four starting<lb/>
holdovers from that team fa<lb/>
much of their saying to succumb<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
VMI outscored the Pirates<lb/>
12-0 in a five-minute span during<lb/>
the second half of the game,<lb/>
putting the Pirates in a 17-point<lb/>
deficit. The Pirates pulled back to<lb/>
within six. but could get no closer<lb/>
as the Keydets expenenoe show-<lb/>
ed through.<lb/>
The difference in the game<lb/>
was that they just had a little<lb/>
more experience Pirate coach<lb/>
Dave Pattern said following the<lb/>
contest. "They kept doing the<lb/>
things they had to do; things they<lb/>
have done or two years together.<lb/>
As for us, well, we have been<lb/>
doing our things for only six<lb/>
weeks. It will oome fa us, just as<lb/>
we get experience.<lb/>
'I'm just vay proud of this<lb/>
group. They kept giving the<lb/>
effat, they had great hustle and<lb/>
they never quit. We just have to<lb/>
use this as a learning experience<lb/>
and come back from it.<lb/>
"Our defense was not that<lb/>
bad Patton continued. "Our<lb/>
offense will oome as we get mae<lb/>
experience. The offense is always<lb/>
a little ragged early<lb/>
First-year Keydet mentor<lb/>
Charlie Schmaus was surprised at<lb/>
the game the Pirates gave VMI.<lb/>
They (ECU) have a hustling<lb/>
ball club. I was really surprised<lb/>
by their overall quickness.<lb/>
They' re going to be alright befae<lb/>
thisseasai is over<lb/>
The Pirates were called fa 25<lb/>
persaial fouls during the game to<lb/>
just 16 fa the Keydets. VMI sha<lb/>
29 times fran the free throw line<lb/>
to just ten fa the Pirates. The<lb/>
22-9 edge in free throws proved to<lb/>
be the difference fa the Keydets<lb/>
as ECU outscaed them 29-28<lb/>
from the field.<lb/>
The Keydets jumped to a 6-0<lb/>
lead at the start of the game<lb/>
befae Louis Crosby got ECU<lb/>
on the soaeboard with 1515 left<lb/>
to go in the first half on a drive.<lb/>
The lead stayed between four and<lb/>
six points fa most of the half until<lb/>
a controversial play came up with<lb/>
six minutes left in the period.<lb/>
Keydet faward Will Bynum<lb/>
saved a ball fran going out of<lb/>
See KEYDETS, page 12.<lb/>
LAHHY HUNl 35 fights tor rebound against VMI. Photo by Brian<lb/>
Stotler. J<lb/>
Pirates come back<lb/>
for second big win<lb/>
By BILL KEYES<lb/>
Scats FeaturesCarespondent<lb/>
Not at Carmichael Audita-<lb/>
lum, Reynolds Coliseum, na Cole<lb/>
Field House could there have ever<lb/>
been mae exciting basketball<lb/>
than was played in the second<lb/>
half of a game between East<lb/>
Carolina and Western Carolina at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum last Wednes-<lb/>
day night.<lb/>
Though the young Pirates<lb/>
turned the ball over a number of<lb/>
times, made some "freshman<lb/>
mistakes and failed to control<lb/>
the boards in the first half, Coach<lb/>
Dave Patton's team turned things<lb/>
around and wiped out WCU's ten<lb/>
point half-time lead and won by<lb/>
eight.<lb/>
Rebounding was a big key.<lb/>
While WCU's big front line men<lb/>
Geage Dodkin and Ike Mims did<lb/>
a mae than adequate job in<lb/>
helping their team out rebound<lb/>
ECU by a 21-15 advantage, the<lb/>
together on the boards in the<lb/>
second half, grabbing 24 mae<lb/>
rebounds than the Catamounts.<lb/>
Greg Canelius pulled down six,<lb/>
Herb Gray ten, and Larry Hunt<lb/>
nine after he had been completely<lb/>
shut off the boards in the first<lb/>
half.<lb/>
ECU s Coach Dave Patton<lb/>
said, "I'm extremely proud of<lb/>
these kids. Gray got the boards<lb/>
going fa us again, and Canelius<lb/>
made sane things happen fa us<lb/>
underneath<lb/>
After five minutes of see-saw<lb/>
play after the half, the Pirates<lb/>
closed in to a tie game on big<lb/>
baskets by Jim Ramsey, Greg<lb/>
Cornelius, and Louis Crosby.<lb/>
The Crosby basket, which tied<lb/>
the scae at 41-41 with 13:06<lb/>
remaining on the dock, was a<lb/>
sailing slam dunk which hooked<lb/>
the antsy-pantsed fans on rau-<lb/>
oousness.<lb/>
The lead changed hands back<lb/>
and fa?h fa the next three<lb/>
minutes but at the nine minute<lb/>
mark the Catamounts took the<lb/>
lead and held it until 180-pound<lb/>
Herb Gray muscled a lay-in from<lb/>
between WCU defenders Alex<lb/>
Bell (220) and Geage Dodkin<lb/>
(205) totie the scae at 6060 with<lb/>
2:48 remaining. A jumper by<lb/>
ECU's Ramsey and two foul shas<lb/>
by WCU's Dodkin moved the<lb/>
scae to 62-62, where it stayed<lb/>
until Catamount coach Fred Coa-<lb/>
ley called time-out following an<lb/>
Ike Mims foul on ECU'S Gray as<lb/>
he attempted to lay one in from<lb/>
shat range.<lb/>
Gray oody sank two foul shas<lb/>
after the time-out to give ECU a<lb/>
64-62 lead. Then Ramsey and<lb/>
Hunt followed Gray'sad as they<lb/>
conneded on one-and-one shas<lb/>
after being fouled in WCU's<lb/>
desperation. Ramsey went to the<lb/>
line on two occassions.<lb/>
The game ended with the<lb/>
scae ECU 70-WCU 62, giving the<lb/>
Pirates a perfed 2-0 recad.<lb/>
7 December 1976<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
Intimidation<lb/>
is the word<lb/>
ECU Spotslnfamatioi Di eda Ken Smith announced Thursday all<lb/>
home events will be marked vith the theme 'intimidation<lb/>
? We want to make East Girolina the hardest place to win anything<lb/>
the spats publicist said. 'We want to rattle all teams that oome in here,<lb/>
men sand women's basket bill, wrestling and swimming<lb/>
The first Intimidation Night' was Saturday night when the men's<lb/>
basketball team hosted VMI, Southern Conference defending champion<lb/>
and NCAA quarter-finalist. It was termed a success even though the<lb/>
Keydets defeated the Pirates.<lb/>
"It would have been tough to beat VMI under any drcumstances<lb/>
Smith added. But, with the crowd suppat we had, the game was a la<lb/>
doser than VMI expeded it to be.<lb/>
We have had good suppat fa all the basketball games (4,700<lb/>
average), but it will probably get better. We have an exdting team. They<lb/>
really hustle. The people that oome are impressed with that aer what<lb/>
happened last year. They're real young, and the aowd has helped them<lb/>
tremendously. The aowd helped them hold together in the first two<lb/>
games and they won<lb/>
All winter quarter coaches that have home schedules urge<lb/>
intimidation of the opponents. Swim ooach Ray Scharf wants the<lb/>
natataium full Saturday "when Appalachian cones here to swim<lb/>
Wrestling ooach John Welban said, "We are a very young team this<lb/>
year. Winning isna automatic as it sometimes was ip the past. Athletes<lb/>
in Adioi (Friday night opponent) has an Olympic gold medalist and will<lb/>
be tough. We need the aowd to keep us up in that match and all home<lb/>
matches. This is definitely our toughest home schedule evo<lb/>
Women s basketball ooach Cathrine Bdton said aowd suppat fa<lb/>
the Lady Pirates last year was "great, but we will need even mae in the<lb/>
stands this year.<lb/>
The winter spots are sane of the most popular on ECU's campus as<lb/>
the swimmers have won ten straight league championships and the<lb/>
wrestlers six. The Lady Pirates are perennially one of the top teams in<lb/>
the state and the men cagers are young and exdting this year.<lb/>
Smith said suppat has been good in the past, but even mae is<lb/>
needed this year as "so many of the winter teams are young<lb/>
The wrestling team starts just two senias, while the Lady Pirates are<lb/>
senio-less.<lb/>
The men s squad starts a senia, three sophomaes, and a freshman.<lb/>
The swim team has just two senias ai its team.<lb/>
"We ve go the best fans around, I'm sure of it Smith stated. "I'm<lb/>
sure the Intimidation' fada will be in our fava and be a success.<lb/>
LOUIS CROSBY 12 dunks ball through hoop in the Pirates' 70-62<lb/>
oome-trom-behind victory over Western. Photo by Brian Stotler.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057097_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 7 December 1976<lb/>
Thinclads win in season opener<lb/>
East Carolina's indoor track<lb/>
team opened their 1976-77 season<lb/>
Saturday in good fashion by<lb/>
taking six first places in a<lb/>
quandrangular meet on the State<lb/>
Fairgrounds at Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
State, Duke, and Wake Forest<lb/>
provided the opposition. North<lb/>
Carolina was scheduled to be in<lb/>
the meet but failed to show up.<lb/>
The Pirates took firsts in the<lb/>
60 yard high hurdles, 60 yard<lb/>
dash, long jump, triple jump,<lb/>
mile relay and 880 yard run.<lb/>
Along with these winners the<lb/>
Bucs took several places in these<lb/>
and other events.<lb/>
"This was a great early season<lb/>
performance for our team as-<lb/>
sistant ooach Curtis Frye said<lb/>
after the meet. "It was a brand<lb/>
new facility so we couldn't wear<lb/>
spikes, but the times were<lb/>
surprisingly good<lb/>
Sophomore Marvin Rankins<lb/>
took the high hurdles in a<lb/>
national-qualifying time of 7.3.<lb/>
Rankins will be able to oompete in<lb/>
the NCAA indoor championships<lb/>
in March because of his fine time.<lb/>
Freshman Bobby Phillips finished<lb/>
third in 7.5, while George Jackson<lb/>
placed fourth in 7.8. Another<lb/>
freshman, Eddie Kornegay took<lb/>
fifth for the Bucs with 8.0<lb/>
clocking.<lb/>
Larry Austin, a junior coming<lb/>
off a bad hamstring injury, won<lb/>
the 60 in 6.2. Donnie Mack, also<lb/>
coming off an injury, placed third<lb/>
in 6.3, while freshman Jimmy<lb/>
Rankins placed sixth in 6.5.<lb/>
George Jackson took the long<lb/>
jump with a fine early-season leap<lb/>
of 22-9 12. The Pirates also<lb/>
swept the next four positions as<lb/>
Mike Hodge took second (22-6),<lb/>
Billy Hetcherson third (22-3),<lb/>
Phillips fourth (21-7), and Her-<lb/>
man Mclntyre fifth (21-5).<lb/>
In the triple jump, ECU<lb/>
placed first, second and fourth.<lb/>
Mclntyre won with a jump of<lb/>
48-9, while Jackson took second<lb/>
in 48-9 and Hodge fourth in 47-2<lb/>
12.<lb/>
East Carolina entered two<lb/>
teams in the mile relay and took<lb/>
first and third positions. The A'<lb/>
team of Calvin Alston, Charlev<lb/>
Moss, Robert Franklin and James<lb/>
McCullough won in a time of<lb/>
3:35.0. Ben Dunkenfield, Terry<lb/>
Perry, Phillips and Wayne Cha-<lb/>
son oomprised the 'B' team that<lb/>
ran a time of 3:37.0.<lb/>
Jim Willett, a junior middle<lb/>
distance runner, won the 880 yard<lb/>
run in a time of 202.<lb/>
Two other performances that<lb/>
rate high for the Pirates were Ray<lb/>
Moore's third-plaoe finish in the<lb/>
mile run in 4 28 and Charley<lb/>
Powell'sthTd in the three-mile in<lb/>
15:15. East Carolina is not known<lb/>
for their distance runners and<lb/>
these performances drew praise<lb/>
from Frye.<lb/>
"Our distance people did a<lb/>
fantastic job in the meet. Moore's<lb/>
time in the mile was the best here<lb/>
in a few years. Powell also<lb/>
showed he can really cut it in the<lb/>
three-mile. Willett always does a<lb/>
fine job in the 880 and Saturday<lb/>
was no exoeption<lb/>
The Pirates also took three<lb/>
places in the 440 yard dash with<lb/>
Alston taking second (:51.9),<lb/>
freshman Jay Pirdy third (:52.0),<lb/>
and Franklin fourth (52.2).<lb/>
McCullough, Dunkenfield and<lb/>
Valdez Chavis turned the same<lb/>
trick in the 600 yard run.<lb/>
The Pirates will return to<lb/>
Raleigh Saturday for the N.C.<lb/>
State Invitationals, going against<lb/>
the best athletes in the Carolinas<lb/>
and Virginia. They will be run-<lb/>
ning on the same track which<lb/>
Frye calls "one of the finest on<lb/>
the East Coast<lb/>
BOOKTRADER<lb/>
LOCATED<lb/>
CORNER OF EVANS AND<lb/>
ELEVENTH STS.<lb/>
Trade your paperback<lb/>
books<lb/>
Buy used paperbacks<lb/>
Also Comic Books<lb/>
OPEN TUESDAY-SATURDAY<lb/>
HOURS 9:00-4:00<lb/>
KEYDETS<lb/>
Continued from page 11.<lb/>
bounds and threw it to an<lb/>
off-balance guard, John Krovic.<lb/>
Krovic took three steps without<lb/>
taking a dribble but the official<lb/>
looking at the play called nothing.<lb/>
Pirate ooach Dave Patton jumped<lb/>
up saying traveling should have<lb/>
been called. He was assessed a<lb/>
technical foul, which this year<lb/>
gives the opponent two shots<lb/>
from the free throw line instead of<lb/>
one. Krovic made both shots and<lb/>
the Keydets were awarded the<lb/>
ball and Krovic drove for a<lb/>
basket, resulting in a four-point<lb/>
play. This gave the VMI a<lb/>
nine-point bulge of 27-18.<lb/>
The halftime score stood at<lb/>
36-27. ECU oome out in the<lb/>
second half and immediately<lb/>
trimmed the lead to five on<lb/>
baskets by center Larry Hunt and<lb/>
forward Herb Gray. Gray's basket<lb/>
foMowed a missed shot by Jim<lb/>
Ramsey as Gray took the rebound<lb/>
in the air and stuffed it through<lb/>
the hoop, much to pleasure of the<lb/>
4,700 screaming fans. The lead<lb/>
stayed from five to seven points<lb/>
until the Keydets went on their<lb/>
12-0 surge.<lb/>
The Pirates cut into the lead<lb/>
<lb/>
PHONE: 752-1233<lb/>
CURRY<lb/>
COPY<lb/>
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PROGRAMS<lb/>
until ECU guard Don Whitaker<lb/>
hit from the key to make the score<lb/>
63-57, VMI. The Pirates were led<lb/>
in their surge by Whitaker, Hunt,<lb/>
and Ramsey. However, the ex-<lb/>
perienced Keydets pulled away at<lb/>
the end on free throws.<lb/>
The Keydets' Ron Carter<lb/>
finished the game as the leading<lb/>
scorer with 20, followed by Krovic<lb/>
with 17, and Bynum and center<lb/>
Dave Montgomery with 16<lb/>
apiece. Montgomery also pulled a<lb/>
game-high 11 rebounds.<lb/>
Whitaker, a junior college<lb/>
transfer from Louisburg, N.C,<lb/>
led the Pirates' attack with 17.<lb/>
while Hunt finished with 14 and<lb/>
Ramsey, a freshman from Cary,<lb/>
put 12 points in the hoop. Hunt<lb/>
was the leading ECU rebounder<lb/>
with ten.<lb/>
The Pirates, now 2-1 on the<lb/>
9eason, shot just 41.4 percent for<lb/>
the game to 50.9 fa the Keydets.<lb/>
VMI, also2-1, out-rebounded the<lb/>
Bucs 42-32.<lb/>
ECU will have their road-<lb/>
opener at College Park, Md.<lb/>
tomorrow night against national-<lb/>
ly-ranked Maryland. The Ter-<lb/>
rapins routed the Pirates last year<lb/>
127-84.<lb/>
JIM RAMSE Y 14 drives for basket in 78-67 loss to VMI Saturday night.<lb/>
Photo by Brian Strotler<lb/>
, Mai, ??<lb/>
??? ? iy ? ????:? ??<lb/>
 ?. ?, ? ?????:<lb/>
v:k '4&amp;m ;?li<lb/>
<pb facs="00057097_0013"/><lb/>
7 December 1976 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
Madison in Senior Bowl<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.CEast<lb/>
Carolina University senior de-<lb/>
fensive back, Ernest Madison,<lb/>
from Norfolk, Va has been<lb/>
selected to participate in the<lb/>
Senior Bowl All-Star Football<lb/>
Game in Mobile, Ala.<lb/>
The Senior Bowl will be<lb/>
played on Saturday, January 8, at<lb/>
1200 noon in Ladd Memorial<lb/>
Stadium. The game will be heard<lb/>
nationally on the Mutual Radio<lb/>
Network and seen nationally on<lb/>
the NBC television network.<lb/>
Macison is concluding his<lb/>
third year as a starter for the<lb/>
Pirates at cornerback. Entering<lb/>
the final game with Appalachian<lb/>
State, Madison had snared five<lb/>
pass interceptions this year for 57<lb/>
yards. That ranks Madison se-<lb/>
cond on the East Carolina team<lb/>
and second in the Southern<lb/>
Conference.<lb/>
In addition to the inter-<lb/>
ceptions, Madison has been<lb/>
credited with 11 broken passes,<lb/>
tops on the team. He has 23<lb/>
unassisted tackles and 15 assists<lb/>
in ten games.<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Winter sports<lb/>
Welcome back for another wonderful guarter at good old ECU. Don't<lb/>
mean to get you all choked up this early in the quarter. There is a lot in<lb/>
store for those interested in intramurals during winter quarter.<lb/>
1 here won t be much time for rest fa the true intramural competitor<lb/>
as this quarter s activities get off to a quick start with basketball. The<lb/>
men s season will open play on December 8 and the women will get<lb/>
underway a few aays later on December 13. Registration for men's play<lb/>
dosed hnday while the women will have until December 9 to sign up.<lb/>
tnose will be the only sports starting before Christmas break, but<lb/>
registration fa the men sand women's bowling competition begins on<lb/>
December 13. The registration dates will run through January 6 and play<lb/>
fa botn men and women will begin oi January 10.<lb/>
In men splay a lot begins on January 10, as racquetball singles and<lb/>
doubles begin on that day. Registratioi fa those events won't begin<lb/>
until after Christmas but we will keep you posted as to what is going on.<lb/>
Men s teams interested in competition towards winning the<lb/>
Chancel la s Cup ought to keep in mind that both basketball and bowling<lb/>
count tor points towards the award. Other winter spats included en the<lb/>
Onanceila s Cup itinerary will be swimming and soccer. Neither of<lb/>
tnose spats get underway until late January-early February, though.<lb/>
SPORTS TRIVIA CONTEST<lb/>
We said earlier in the year that we had no idea what the Spats Trivia<lb/>
oontest was going to be. Well, we know a little more about the event nov<lb/>
and we II try to enlighten you a bit.<lb/>
I nere will be competition in two categaies of Spats Trivia. These<lb/>
categaies are pro baseball and East Carolina athletics.<lb/>
bacn team is composed of two men a two women per team and they<lb/>
compete against one another fa the top prize. Registration ends fa this<lb/>
exciting tirst-timeco-recextravaganza on Dec. 9 and the whole affair will<lb/>
oe December 13-14.<lb/>
CHANGblNBASKETBALLSTRUCTURE<lb/>
Inis year s basketball structure of competition will have a slightly<lb/>
new twist, (-a the first time a non-competitive league will be offered<lb/>
wnere those piayers who wish to play just fa the "fun of it" against<lb/>
omer tecims ot lesser talent can do so.<lb/>
i nere wm be the regular competitive league along with two<lb/>
new-competitive leagues. The regular competitive league will continue<lb/>
to be along the lines of the division of fraternity, club, damitay and<lb/>
dub competition with points awarded towards the Chancel la s Cup and<lb/>
an ali-campus champioi decided in the namal fashiai.<lb/>
he Other league will be a stafffacultyover 30 students league<lb/>
which will compete fa a trophy in their own league, but do not qualify<lb/>
fa Chancella s Cup points.<lb/>
Separate trori either of these leagues will be the non-conpetitive<lb/>
program. This program will include all teams wanting to play fa the<lb/>
mere tun ol it, it that feeling does indeed exist, with no pressure on them<lb/>
tor President s Cup points. No trophy will be awarded in this league.<lb/>
A student may play fa whatever league he wishes, but he cannot<lb/>
piay in botn. He will be allowed to switch from one league to the other if<lb/>
ne wants, but he can only do so one time.<lb/>
Let s catch up on some of the late winners in the fall spats:<lb/>
in mnertube water basketball, the Monkberry Moon Delight won the<lb/>
aiampionship after the Necromancers fafeited the title game instead of<lb/>
risking lite and limb against the rough Monkberry team. In the<lb/>
semifinals, the Neaomanoers came from behind to down a much<lb/>
improved Afternoon Delight team, 60-52. Afternoon Delight, which<lb/>
? unshed in a tie fa fifth in the eight-team league during the regular<lb/>
season led the Necromancers at the half 34-28, but a streak of<lb/>
cold-shooting hurt the underdogs in the second half and the<lb/>
Neaanancers came back. Leading the winners were Jim Gaghan with<lb/>
20 points, Jean Evans with I6and Joe Collins with 16. Rick Bright had 34<lb/>
points fa Afternoon Delight and Kim Michael added 18.<lb/>
Madison's career statistics<lb/>
show ten interceptions entering<lb/>
the final game. He had two in<lb/>
1974, three in 1975 and five thus<lb/>
far this year.<lb/>
Madison was born in Fat<lb/>
Benning, Ga is 21-years old and<lb/>
a corrections major at East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
This marks the first East<lb/>
Carolina player ever to be select-<lb/>
ed to play in the Senia Bowl.<lb/>
The 5-11, 175-pounder has<lb/>
been named honaable mentiai<lb/>
all-Southern Conference the last<lb/>
two years.<lb/>
The announcement was made<lb/>
today by Rea Schuessler, Vice-<lb/>
President<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057097_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 7 December 1976<lb/>
Lady tankers enter IMCAIAW Tourney<lb/>
Ti<lb/>
By DAVID ROBEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
With the close of this week<lb/>
will come the termination of the<lb/>
swimming season for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates. The Bucettes will end the<lb/>
season when they travel to Duke<lb/>
this Friday to participate in the<lb/>
two day NCAIAW state champ-<lb/>
ionship meet.<lb/>
The team has had an excellent<lb/>
season. They have gone virtually<lb/>
unbeaten; their times have im-<lb/>
proved vastly and they are a hard<lb/>
working bunch of young ladies.<lb/>
For these reasons it is felt the<lb/>
student body should be aware of<lb/>
who will represent ECU at the<lb/>
sUte meet and in what events<lb/>
they shall be competing in.<lb/>
A good place to begin is with<lb/>
Pinkney<lb/>
selected<lb/>
All-Star<lb/>
i ECU senior defensive back<lb/>
Reggie Pinkney, from Fayette-<lb/>
ville, N.C has been selected to<lb/>
participate in the North-South<lb/>
Shrine All-Star Game in Pontiac,<lb/>
Mich.<lb/>
The North-South Shrine Game<lb/>
will be played on Friday, Dec. 17,<lb/>
at 8CO p.m. Pinkney will play for<lb/>
the south squad under defensive<lb/>
coach Ray Graves from the<lb/>
University of Florida.<lb/>
Pinkney has just oompleted<lb/>
his fourth year as a starter in the<lb/>
Pirate secondary, playing on both<lb/>
the 1973 and 1976 Southern<lb/>
Conference championship teams<lb/>
as a cornerback.<lb/>
The former Reid Ross High<lb/>
School star completed his senior<lb/>
year with six pass interceptions<lb/>
for 197 yards. He set a new school<lb/>
record for a season with the 197<lb/>
yards, as well as, a single game<lb/>
mark with 137 yards against the<lb/>
University of Richmond and a<lb/>
career record with 275 yards in<lb/>
four years. His career inter-<lb/>
ceptions totaled 16.<lb/>
Other defensive statistics<lb/>
showed Pinkney with 33 unassist-<lb/>
ed tackles in 1976, 15 assists, nine<lb/>
broken passes and one fumble<lb/>
recovery.<lb/>
This marks the first East<lb/>
Carolina player ever to be select-<lb/>
ed to play in the North-South<lb/>
Shrine Game<lb/>
one of the best and that's what<lb/>
Cindy Sailor is. Sailor is a natural<lb/>
swimmer with a good style who<lb/>
seems to glide through the water.<lb/>
She has won all her events with<lb/>
the exception of losing to Fur-<lb/>
man. Her event is the 50 yard fly<lb/>
although she also does well in the<lb/>
50 and 200 yard free styles. Saila-<lb/>
has swum her event best in 28.0.<lb/>
She will be trying at this meet to<lb/>
have a time of 27.5 which will<lb/>
allow her to oompete in the<lb/>
nationals.<lb/>
Another swimmer who has<lb/>
done well this year is Sharon<lb/>
Burns of Maryland. Burns will<lb/>
swim in the individual medley,<lb/>
the 50 yard freestyle and probably<lb/>
in one or both of the butterfly<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Ellen Bond will be contribu-<lb/>
ting points to the board Friday<lb/>
and Saturday if she oontinues to<lb/>
swim like she has been. Bond will<lb/>
swim the 50 yard breast stroke,<lb/>
the 400 yard individual medley<lb/>
and the 200 yard individual<lb/>
medley. This last event is an<lb/>
event only swum at state and<lb/>
national meets.<lb/>
Lynn Uteguard who hurt her<lb/>
knee last year and was in a cast<lb/>
during the summer has worked<lb/>
until her knee has improved. She<lb/>
has done well in 100 and 50 yard<lb/>
butterflies and the 100 and 50<lb/>
yard freestyle events.<lb/>
Sharon Nock and Mary Or<lb/>
will both oompete in the 500 yard<lb/>
freestyle. Between the two of<lb/>
them they should put some points<lb/>
on the board.<lb/>
Katherine Wade "looks good<lb/>
in her event said Coach Stevie<lb/>
Chepko. Wade will swim the<lb/>
same event as brother Keith<lb/>
Wade on the men's swim team;<lb/>
the individual medley.<lb/>
Katherine Chandler should<lb/>
so do well in the two freestyle<lb/>
events. Joining her in these<lb/>
events will be Helen (Bennett to<lb/>
her friends) Llewellyn. Laurie<lb/>
Walton shall also swim a freestyle<lb/>
event at the championship.<lb/>
The best baokstroker on the<lb/>
team is Janet Inman and naturally<lb/>
she will represent ECU in the 100<lb/>
and 50 yard backstrokes. Helen<lb/>
Waldrop will be trying to add<lb/>
some points in both backstroke<lb/>
events as well.<lb/>
Karen Crawford who usually<lb/>
competes in three different<lb/>
events will swim in the individual<lb/>
medley, and in the 100 yard<lb/>
freestyle.<lb/>
Last but not least are the two<lb/>
divers who have had an outstan-<lb/>
ding year. Patty Redeen and<lb/>
Cathy Callahan, both walked on<lb/>
the team as freshmen. They' ve i<lb/>
had little previous experience but<lb/>
through alot of work and dedica-<lb/>
tion they have been good divers<lb/>
who have given fellow competi-<lb/>
tors a run for their money.<lb/>
Unfortunately Patty Redeen has<lb/>
had swimmer's ear for the past<lb/>
two weeks which has upset her<lb/>
balance so it is uncertain if she<lb/>
will be able to oompete. Callahan<lb/>
will be there and has an excellent<lb/>
chance to do well on the one-<lb/>
meter board.<lb/>
It is purely through dedication<lb/>
these girls swim six thousand<lb/>
yards a day and represent ECU.<lb/>
The team is trying to move up<lb/>
on ASU who came in fourth last<lb/>
year out of a field of ten. This year<lb/>
there are twelve teams compe-<lb/>
ting. ECU was fifth last year but<lb/>
will be trying to buck ASU for the<lb/>
number four spot. It is possible to<lb/>
do better but realistically it will be<lb/>
hard to oust Carolina, State, and<lb/>
Duke who usually oome in one,<lb/>
'wo, three.<lb/>
At 40, Fred Par ham<lb/>
had an accident which cost<lb/>
him his job in the foundry.<lb/>
He went to school<lb/>
and became a<lb/>
technical illustrator.<lb/>
Fred Parham couldn't do the<lb/>
work he did, so he learned to do the<lb/>
work he liked. You can do the same.<lb/>
There are over one million technical<lb/>
opportunities available in this country<lb/>
right now.<lb/>
Send today for your free record<lb/>
and booklet, "You Can Be More Than<lb/>
You Are" by Tony Orlando and Dawn<lb/>
You'll hear some great music<lb/>
and find out how you<lb/>
can start a bright,<lb/>
new career by going<lb/>
to technical school.<lb/>
Write:<lb/>
Careers<lb/>
(Sine!<lb/>
P.O. Box 111<lb/>
Washington, D.C. 20044<lb/>
A Public Service of This Newspaper &amp; The Advertising Council<lb/>
REGGIE PINKNEY<lb/>
B<lb/>
mmaoaaammm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057097_0015"/><lb/>
7 December 1976 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
Tankers'disqualification proves costly<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina's swim team, by<lb/>
virtue of their disqualification in<lb/>
the 200 yard freestyle relay,<lb/>
finished a disappointing eighth in<lb/>
the Penn State Relays held<lb/>
Saturday at University Park, Pa.<lb/>
The Pirates, with some of the<lb/>
top freestylers in the meet,<lb/>
needed to finish just fifth or<lb/>
higher in the relay to claim third<lb/>
place in the meet, one of the top<lb/>
early-season meets In the nation.<lb/>
Maryland, a team the Pirates<lb/>
conquered last year, won the<lb/>
meet with 358 points, while<lb/>
perennially strong Pitt finished<lb/>
second with 312. Kent State and<lb/>
Syracuse tied for third a 184,<lb/>
while John Hopkins took fifth at<lb/>
178. Bucknell and Colgate tied for<lb/>
sixth with 174 points while the<lb/>
Pirates amassed 168 points.<lb/>
Fifteen teams oompeted in the<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
ECU took first in the 500 yard<lb/>
crescendo relay with a time of<lb/>
402.34 to set a new meet and<lb/>
varsity mark. John McCauley,<lb/>
Ted Nieman, John Tudor, Billy<lb/>
Thorne and Steve Ruedlinger<lb/>
comprised the winning team.<lb/>
In the 400 freestyle relay, the<lb/>
team of McCauley, Nieman,<lb/>
Thorne and Tudor finished se-<lb/>
oond in 309.5, just half a second<lb/>
off the national-qualifying<lb/>
standard.<lb/>
The Pirates' team of Nieman,<lb/>
Doug Brindley, Steward Mann,<lb/>
and Tudor took third in the 2000<lb/>
yard freestyle rel-iy with a time of<lb/>
19:39.66.<lb/>
In the 400 yard butterfly relay,<lb/>
the team of Keith Wade, Mark<lb/>
Lovette, Ruedlinger, and Ron<lb/>
Schnell finished fifth with a time<lb/>
of 3:37.7.<lb/>
Mann, Joe Kushy, David<lb/>
Kirkman and Wade teamed up fa<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/>
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/>
FOR SALE: BSR Auto-Mannal<lb/>
turntable equipped with cueing,<lb/>
anti-skate, new stylus. I35.00.<lb/>
409 B-Belk.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Yamaha FG-200<lb/>
Aoooustic Guitar-well cared fa.<lb/>
Case, leather strap, new precision<lb/>
shaler machine heads and many<lb/>
other extras. $135.00. 756-7690.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1969 Fa Fairlane.<lb/>
Good oonditioi. Priced to go. Call<lb/>
756-1906.<lb/>
FOR SALE-1966 Jeep Wagoneer<lb/>
4 wheel Dr. Mech. good, body<lb/>
fair, asking $700, 758-1083.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer Receiva 50<lb/>
watt rms per channel. 3 years old,<lb/>
$300. Ar-2AX speakers $175. Call<lb/>
756-1547.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sony 6046 A 20 watt<lb/>
receiver. 6 mo. old $190.00.<lb/>
758-7884.<lb/>
FOR SALE: One pair of Bose 50 s<lb/>
6 mos. old-Mint Coidition $300.<lb/>
Call 758-2271 after 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
STEREO COMPONENT Repre-<lb/>
sentative fa Large Warehouse a<lb/>
STEREO COMPONENT a stu-<lb/>
dent Representative fa Large<lb/>
Warehouse is on campus. You've<lb/>
heard of Warehouse prices, now<lb/>
they re here. (40-50 lower<lb/>
than any local dealer). Have your<lb/>
components in oie week fron<lb/>
time of ader. Full Factory War-<lb/>
ranty. All Brands available. Call<lb/>
Dave- 758-1382.<lb/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED? Call<lb/>
Alice-758-0497 a 757-6366. Only<lb/>
.50 a page: (exoeptions-single<lb/>
spaced pages &amp; outlines) Plenty<lb/>
of experience?I need the money!<lb/>
1974 SUPERBEETLE. Good con-<lb/>
dition. AM-FM stereo radio.<lb/>
Sunroof. Baby blue oola. Call<lb/>
weekdays 752-2029 a weekends<lb/>
756-4163. Price $2295.00.<lb/>
USED 8 track tapes, variety of<lb/>
rock by Bob Dylan, Elton John,<lb/>
Led Zeppelin and others. $2.50<lb/>
each a lot of 45 fa !85.00.<lb/>
758-1314 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Stereo - Pioneer SX<lb/>
1250,160 watts RMS per channel.<lb/>
Sony TC-580 remote oontrol servo<lb/>
switching reel to reel with mic<lb/>
and line mixing.<lb/>
If you have something to buy<lb/>
a 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 O0-600 Sun. 2-6, closed Thurs.<lb/>
Located 3 miles west of<lb/>
Greenville at the intasection of<lb/>
264 and Farmville Highway in the<lb/>
bid Red Oak church building.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Classical guitar w<lb/>
case. Excellent condition. Rea-<lb/>
sonable price. Call Denise,<lb/>
758-3238.<lb/>
PIONEER RECEIVER, 50 watts<lb/>
rms per channel $300. Phillips GA<lb/>
212 turntable $170. AR-2AX<lb/>
speakas$175. Call 756-1547.<lb/>
FOR SALE-dean furnished traila<lb/>
8 X 38 fa $1,300.00 a best offa.<lb/>
Call 752-9357 at 7-9 a.m. a 5-9<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE-CB Radio and Twin<lb/>
Co Phased Ant. New Pace 2300<lb/>
with Ant. and Slide Mount. Sells<lb/>
fa $270 new fa bah asking $210<lb/>
fa bah. Call 758-0260 Dave,<lb/>
leave name and number.<lb/>
GRADUATE student must sell<lb/>
.64 carat diamoid. $500.00 Call<lb/>
756-5213 after 900 p.m.<lb/>
KINGSIZE BED frame, mattress,<lb/>
boxspring headboaro. Separates<lb/>
to twins. $70.00 752-1509.<lb/>
a sixth place finish in the 400 yard<lb/>
medley relay in 3:46.41.<lb/>
All the times attained were<lb/>
varsity records except the 400<lb/>
freestyle and medley relays.<lb/>
One other varsity mark was<lb/>
broken in the 400 yard breast-<lb/>
stroke relay when the team<lb/>
secured a time of 4 22.6 fa ninth<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Scharf was happy with the<lb/>
times but wished the disqualifi-<lb/>
cation would not have taken<lb/>
place.<lb/>
"I thought we swam really<lb/>
good times fa this early in the<lb/>
season the veteran mentor<lb/>
said. "If we would have made it<lb/>
through the relay (200 freestyle)<lb/>
we would have finished in third<lb/>
place fa the meet.<lb/>
"Maryland did a fine job of<lb/>
recruiting in the off-season.<lb/>
They're really strong. Pitt is<lb/>
always good.<lb/>
"I thought Tuda and Nieman<lb/>
FOR SALE-Electro Comp Elec-<lb/>
tronic Synthesizer. Excellent con-<lb/>
dition. Fa infamatiai &amp; price<lb/>
call 756-7484<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: 1 block from<lb/>
campus. Furnished, clean &amp;<lb/>
reasonable rent. 752-4814.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Apts. 1 &amp; 2<lb/>
bedrooms, newly renovated, new<lb/>
appliances provided; call 752-<lb/>
4154. Available Dec. 15th.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Unfurnished room<lb/>
1107 Evans St. $34.00 &amp; utilities<lb/>
month. Contact Steve- 758-7675<lb/>
after 6 a Rm. 420 Flanagan.<lb/>
RENT: Private and semi-private<lb/>
rooms with kitchen privileges-<lb/>
available Winter-Spring tarns.<lb/>
756-2459.<lb/>
FOR RENT: To mature pason.<lb/>
Huge room in faculty house, quiet<lb/>
neighborhood. Details discussed<lb/>
Jackie. Day-757-6962 Night-<lb/>
758-4899.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Efficiency apartment<lb/>
fa 2 - utilities furnished aaoss<lb/>
from college, 758-2585. Com-<lb/>
pletely furnished with air cond-<lb/>
itioning.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom Univa-<lb/>
sity Townhouse. $195.00 per<lb/>
month. Central air, pod. Avail-<lb/>
able now. 758-3089 afta 5 p.m.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
To share two bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment; two blocks from campus,<lb/>
704D East Third 9. If I'm not<lb/>
home leave your name and phone<lb/>
number, so I can call you back.<lb/>
ROOMATE NEEDED: Traila is<lb/>
fully carpeted, furnished, central<lb/>
air, washa &amp; drya, queen size<lb/>
bed with linens. $90.00 pa mo.<lb/>
induding utilities. Call 758-7884.<lb/>
did a great job Saturday Scharf<lb/>
added They are in better shape<lb/>
than the rest of the team because<lb/>
they swam ail summer. Doug<lb/>
Brindley did a good job coming<lb/>
back from a six-week bout with<lb/>
mono<lb/>
The Pirates' next meet will be<lb/>
Saturday in Minges Natataium<lb/>
when they host Appalachian Sate.<lb/>
Scharf is asking for a good<lb/>
turnout of students fa the meet,<lb/>
dubbing it "hopefully our first<lb/>
'Intimidation Meet a term<lb/>
Pirate coaches are using to get<lb/>
good crowds to make opponents<lb/>
think Greenville is the hardest<lb/>
place in which to win.<lb/>
Lady Pirates face<lb/>
alumni Wednesday<lb/>
Women's basketball coach<lb/>
Cathrine Bdton announced Fri-<lb/>
day the Lady Pirates would nd<lb/>
hdd their traditional Purple-Gdd<lb/>
game, opting fa an Oldie-Gddie<lb/>
game to be played in Minges<lb/>
Cdiseum Wednesday night at 6<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
This game will feature the<lb/>
Lady Pirates as the Gdd team<lb/>
gdng against a aew of famer<lb/>
playas called the Oldies<lb/>
The Lady Pirates return two<lb/>
all-State performers and are<lb/>
expected to oontinue their win-<lb/>
ning tradition. Debbie Freeman<lb/>
led all soaas in Nath Cardina<lb/>
last year with a 23.7 avaage and<lb/>
was third in rebounds with a 13.2<lb/>
per game mark. Rosie Thompson<lb/>
scored at a 19.3 dip and pulled<lb/>
down 10.8 missed shots per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
? '?'?'? :????' -<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
MALE roommate needed, two-<lb/>
bedroom apt. at East brook-Call<lb/>
Pat a David at 758-5671 between<lb/>
4 and 7 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED-Prefer<lb/>
someone quiet and reasonably<lb/>
dean. Excellent location, rent is<lb/>
$53.00 monthly. Call Forrest<lb/>
Suggs 758-7736 after 4 00 p.m.<lb/>
HOUSEMATE needed fa vacan-<lb/>
cy December 10th. Call 756-1839<lb/>
befae 10O0p.m.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate fa<lb/>
large condominum. $50.00<lb/>
month. Freedom of house in<lb/>
exchange fa light housekeeping<lb/>
duties. Pcol, tennis courts and<lb/>
sauna available. Board na in-<lb/>
duded. 756-5423.<lb/>
lost<lb/>
2<lb/>
LOST- Tortise-shell glasses in a<lb/>
black padded case. Lost on<lb/>
Thursday of last week. Please<lb/>
oontad Smitty 756-5394.<lb/>
LOST: Checkbook with dark<lb/>
brown textured oova, Biff a<lb/>
Karen Brean, on Od. 20 in the<lb/>
vidnity of Austin. 758-4126.<lb/>
LOST: Contad Lenses in a green<lb/>
case. Between Brewster and<lb/>
Rawl. Reward, Albert McMicken,<lb/>
758-5074.<lb/>
LOST-Silva watch with mesh<lb/>
band. Lost between Clement<lb/>
Dam and Mr. Ribs Restaurant.<lb/>
Reward Offaed. Call 758-8230.<lb/>
HELP! I lost a brown dea skin<lb/>
purse in Jenkins Art Bldg. If you<lb/>
have any infamatiai on it please<lb/>
call 752-6140 afta 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOUND-Female kitten nearing<lb/>
adulthood, found near Rawl buil-<lb/>
ding on the evening of Thursday,<lb/>
December 2nd. Is mostly gray,<lb/>
with intersperced tan, and with<lb/>
white neck and feet. Has black<lb/>
stripes on face and legs. Owna<lb/>
can daim by callina 752-0055<lb/>
personal (A<lb/>
i<lb/>
j<lb/>
RIDING LESSONS: Intanational<lb/>
balanced seat taught by qualified<lb/>
professional on your own hase.<lb/>
Hunters, eventing, dressage.<lb/>
Regina Kear 758-4706. Free<lb/>
Kittens.<lb/>
WANTED: Good quantity (20<lb/>
guys) oook. SunThurs. 430-630<lb/>
p.m. Good pay. Call Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilonat 752-2941.<lb/>
NEED TYPING? Call Gail Joyna<lb/>
at 756-1062 fa professional typ-<lb/>
ing and related savices. All wak<lb/>
guaranteed!<lb/>
PIANO AND GUITAR lessons<lb/>
Daily and evenings. Richard J.<lb/>
Knapp, B.A. 756-3908.<lb/>
Do you have problems? Do<lb/>
you need a caring listena? Call<lb/>
758-2047.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female student with<lb/>
auto2hrs. Gaily from 1 30 to 330<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/>
12and1 M-F only.<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle.<lb/>
752-4272.<lb/>
FOUND: Man's watch at dub<lb/>
football game Sunday, Od. 10. on<lb/>
intramural field. Call 752-8825.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
COMING!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057097_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 7 December 1976<lb/>
Studying Is Not What It Used<lb/>
To Be In The Library<lb/>
Q<lb/>
aial<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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waL.<lb/>
s<lb/>
d<lb/>
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n<lb/>
)<lb/>
,D<lb/>
55<lb/>
?<lb/>
' fl<lb/>
? I<lb/>
52<lb/>
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:ap<lb/>
ia<lb/>
a<lb/>
13<lb/>
yi<lb/>
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in hi<lb/>
1 Mi<lb/>
aLUli<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
A<lb/>
Si I<lb/>
J<lb/>
<lb/>
:d<lb/>
3 i :<lb/>
2<lb/>
- i<lb/>
- r5i<lb/>
1&amp;?JrS,l L Ll?<lb/>
r<lb/>
y<lb/>
IV'<lb/>
L<lb/>
i-?H<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
:<lb/>
idid r7<lb/>
'n<lb/>
 - -ii<lb/>
For a different approach to your entertainment,<lb/>
visit the Library,<lb/>
a comfortable atmosphere.<lb/>
THE LIBRARY<lb/>
Open 1 a.m. ? 1 p.m.<lb/>
Every Day<lb/>
Super Happy Hour<lb/>
Fri.andSun. 3:00-6:00<lb/>
Ladies Night ? Tues.<lb/>
519CotancheSt.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057097_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>