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<pb facs="00057098_0001"/>
Serving the campus<lb/>
community for 51 years,<lb/>
with a circulation of<lb/>
8,500. This issue is 16<lb/>
pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Attraction fails, page 3.<lb/>
Peace rally, page 6.<lb/>
Mrs. Jenkins, page 8.<lb/>
Biased officials, page 11<lb/>
9 December 1976<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Vol. 52, No.?1 2<lb/>
Informal guideline<lb/>
used in SG A cuts<lb/>
By JOHN DAY BERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
No formal, written guidelines were used by<lb/>
SGA in determining cuts made in the budgets of two<lb/>
campus publications in Nov the BUCCANEER, and<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, according to SGA Speaker of the<lb/>
House, Ricky Price.<lb/>
"We were simply trying to streamline the<lb/>
budget, and we made cuts wherever we thought<lb/>
they could be made said Price.<lb/>
The SGA denied the BUCCANEER its proposed<lb/>
budget of $66,010 on Nov. 1, alloting the yearbook<lb/>
$61,190.00 after cuts in staff and salaries. The entire<lb/>
BUCCANEER staff quit in response, Editor Monika<lb/>
Sutherland protesting that the yearbook cost<lb/>
$54,000.00 last year for printing alone.<lb/>
"The staff-walkout was a hasty move in my<lb/>
opinion said Price.<lb/>
"I had no prior knowledge that the staff would<lb/>
quit if the cuts were made said Price.<lb/>
When asked if the SGA held an attitude that the<lb/>
BUCCANEER was unimportant and not worth the<lb/>
money spent on it, Price said that he had never<lb/>
heard such an attitude expressed at a legislative<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
"Someone made a comment at a legislative<lb/>
meeting that everybody pays $10 fa the yearbook,<lb/>
and that the money should be returned if the book is<lb/>
not produced this year said Price.<lb/>
This is a false assumption, according to Price.<lb/>
"That would mean an expenditure of $110,000<lb/>
on the BUCCANEER, which is much more money<lb/>
than we actually allocate to it said Price.<lb/>
"Besides, the yearbook has no particular<lb/>
allocation set down for it each year. It must justify<lb/>
itself annually said Price.<lb/>
At its Nov. 15 meeting, the SGA cut the budget<lb/>
of FOUNTAINHEAD $4,000, concentrating on<lb/>
senior editorial personnel salaries, travel expenses,<lb/>
and special projects.<lb/>
"If FOUNTAINHEAD staffers thought the<lb/>
money was being taken from the wrong places, they<lb/>
should have told us so said Price.<lb/>
Fountainhead was specifically requesting $900<lb/>
fa two people to go to a convention this spring<lb/>
said Price.<lb/>
"We canna allow long-term loans like that,<lb/>
because too much interest builds up. If we have the<lb/>
money at the time of the convention, then fine, but<lb/>
we canna allot it to them this far in advance said<lb/>
Price.<lb/>
<lb/>
. 1 <lb/>
RICK Y PRICE, SGA Speaker of the Legislature.<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotler.<lb/>
Pingston: SGA<lb/>
not overspent<lb/>
SGA Atty. Gen. approved<lb/>
ByHEt-ENA WOODARD<lb/>
Assistant News Edna<lb/>
Karen Harloe, a senia fran<lb/>
St. Louis, Mo was reoornmend-<lb/>
ed unanimously fa SGA Attaney<lb/>
General by the Screening and<lb/>
Appointments Committee Wed-<lb/>
nesday, Dec. 8.<lb/>
Aocading to Saeening Com-<lb/>
mittee chairperson Denise Vio-<lb/>
lette, Harloe isa familiar face and<lb/>
a hard waker among members of<lb/>
the SGA.<lb/>
During screening, Harloe dis-<lb/>
cussed her plans and duties as<lb/>
Attaney General.<lb/>
"I have to coadinate all boards -<lb/>
Hona Council, Review Board,<lb/>
and Drug Offense Board. I<lb/>
interpret the Constitution. I want<lb/>
to be aware as much as possible<lb/>
what civil offense predominates<lb/>
downtown and fa students to be<lb/>
very much aware of what sanc-<lb/>
tions are involved when they<lb/>
commit a civil offense she told<lb/>
the Committee.<lb/>
Saeening Committee mem-<lb/>
ber Bobby Harrell asked Harloe<lb/>
what she planned to do about<lb/>
students who were  kicked out of<lb/>
school by the ECU Hona Coun-<lb/>
cil" and later excused and<lb/>
readmitted by Dean James Mal-<lb/>
lay of Student Affairs. Harrell<lb/>
said that he was a famer member<lb/>
of the Hona Counc<lb/>
Harloe answered that her job<lb/>
was to back the decisions of the<lb/>
Hona Council.<lb/>
She later added that Dean<lb/>
Mallay was a firm disciplinarian<lb/>
and a fine man to wak with. "I<lb/>
can't speak directly on how<lb/>
mattas have been handled in the<lb/>
past she said.<lb/>
On Mon Dec. 13, the<lb/>
Saeening Canmittee wil recom-<lb/>
mend Karen Harloe to the SGA<lb/>
Legislature fa a final vae of<lb/>
approval.<lb/>
By DAVID NASH<lb/>
SGA Reporter<lb/>
The SGA Legislature has<lb/>
'definitely na' overspent, aocad-<lb/>
ing to Vice-President Greg Ping-<lb/>
stai, in comments made afta the<lb/>
introduction of two alternatives to<lb/>
the publication of an annual, last<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
 Everything that the SGA has<lb/>
spent has been fa the betterment<lb/>
of the university and the environ-<lb/>
ment of the students said<lb/>
Pingston.<lb/>
 The Appropriations Commit-<lb/>
tee of the legislature has done an<lb/>
outstanding job of deaeasing<lb/>
most appropriations bills that<lb/>
have come to it.<lb/>
"There has been due consid-<lb/>
eration of all appropriation legis-<lb/>
lature that has gone through the<lb/>
legislative process added Ping-<lb/>
ston.<lb/>
Unallocated funds, transfer-<lb/>
red from year to year, were used<lb/>
last summer to purchase addition-<lb/>
al buses fa the transit system,<lb/>
leaving the legislature with funds<lb/>
taken in this year only.<lb/>
Maja appropriations fa the<lb/>
1976-77 school year thus far<lb/>
include, in approximate figures:<lb/>
the SGA Executive Council-<lb/>
$67,000; the Phao Lab-$7,100;<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD-$70,000; Tran-<lb/>
sit System-$120,000; East Caro-<lb/>
lina Playhouse-$32,000; REBEL-<lb/>
$11,000; EBONY HERALD-<lb/>
$5,000; Marching Pirates-<lb/>
$12,000; Model UN-$4,000; ECU<lb/>
School of Musio-$15,000; WECU<lb/>
Radio-$19,000.<lb/>
Total appropriations are<lb/>
approximately $400,000.00.<lb/>
Police dept. raids dorms<lb/>
THE CHRISTMAS TREE in the Student Center was decorated last<lb/>
Thursday by the SGA, Student Union and other students.<lb/>
By ROBERTSWAIM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
During November the Green-<lb/>
ville Police Department and the<lb/>
ECU campus pdioe conducted<lb/>
foursearchesin Jones and Ayoock<lb/>
residence halls.<lb/>
On Nov. 13, six police officers<lb/>
from the Greenville Pdioe De-<lb/>
partment and the ECU campus<lb/>
police searched room 337 in Jones<lb/>
Damitay fa LSD.<lb/>
The police conducted the<lb/>
search while both residents of the<lb/>
room were out to dinner. They left<lb/>
behind a copy of the search<lb/>
warrant.<lb/>
Upon returning, one resident<lb/>
(who asked that his name nd be<lb/>
used) repated the room to be " in<lb/>
shambles<lb/>
"Everything in my desk had<lb/>
been taken out and was strewn all<lb/>
over the top of the desk and the<lb/>
bed. My stereo speakers were in<lb/>
the floa and oie of them was<lb/>
dented he said.<lb/>
Aocading to the resident, his<lb/>
closet was  ransacked<lb/>
The search warrant stated that<lb/>
a pdioe infamant saw drugs in<lb/>
the room pria to the search.<lb/>
The resident said that no one<lb/>
was in the room the day that the<lb/>
infamant repated seeing drugs.<lb/>
Aocading to the resident, the<lb/>
name that appears on the warrant<lb/>
is nd the name of either himself<lb/>
a his roommate.<lb/>
On Nov. 16 the pdioe conduc-<lb/>
ted a search in 358 Jones<lb/>
Damitay at 1 a.m.<lb/>
Aocading to Joe Bason resi-<lb/>
dent of the room, pdioe knocked<lb/>
on his doa, walked in and served<lb/>
him with a search warrant. Bason<lb/>
also said that the warrant did nd<lb/>
have his name on it.<lb/>
"There were two people nam-<lb/>
ed in the warrant, one d them<lb/>
was my dd roommate and the<lb/>
dher one I never hear d<lb/>
Aocading to Bason, the pdioe<lb/>
looked through his drawers,<lb/>
closet, and cldhes and found five<lb/>
peyde buttons.<lb/>
Bason stated that he was<lb/>
arrested and placed in the Pitt<lb/>
County Jail under $2,500 bond.<lb/>
A third search was conducted<lb/>
on Nov. 17 in 489 Aycock<lb/>
Damitay.<lb/>
Aocading to Marshall Harts-<lb/>
field, resident d the room, the<lb/>
pdioe knocked on his doa and<lb/>
then attempted to enter with a<lb/>
pass key. Being unable to open<lb/>
the doa with a pass key the pdioe<lb/>
then kicked down the doa.<lb/>
Hartsfield said the offioers<lb/>
then entered the room and one of<lb/>
them read the search warrant.<lb/>
See SEARCHES, page 6.)<lb/>
Number Change<lb/>
Due to the fact that the<lb/>
October 7, 1976 issue of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, Vol. 52,<lb/>
was inoarectly numbered 8<lb/>
instead of 7, today's issue will<lb/>
be Vd. 52, No. 21, in ader to<lb/>
compensate fa the erra.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0002"/><lb/>
5�� ��.����, ;� � �� <lb/>
- " .� i ;y:<lb/>
HMBHIHHmHHH<lb/>
�HHMBBMHHHBi<lb/>
HHHIHHHHI<lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
IV meeting Nine days<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
9 December 1976<lb/>
BSC dance Home Ec party<lb/>
On Saturday evening, Dec.<lb/>
11 at 7 the Baptist Student<lb/>
Center is having a Christmas<lb/>
banquet and dance. Admission is<lb/>
$1.50 per person. Dress is<lb/>
semi-formal. Everyone is wel-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
Back issues<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD needs at<lb/>
least two of the October 5, 1976<lb/>
issues. Anyone having a oopy for<lb/>
this date please return it to the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD office.<lb/>
National tests<lb/>
Four nationally-standardized<lb/>
tests will be administered at ECU<lb/>
in Jan. All eligible persons who<lb/>
wish to take the tests, whether or<lb/>
not they are enrolled at ECU, may<lb/>
do so.<lb/>
The tests and dates are: The<lb/>
Graduate Record Examination<lb/>
(Jan. 8), the Dental Aptitude Test<lb/>
(Jan. 8), the Graduate Manage-<lb/>
ment Admission Test (Jan. 29),<lb/>
and the Allied Health Professions<lb/>
Admissions lest (Jan. 22).<lb/>
Further information and ap-<lb/>
plication materials are available<lb/>
from the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
Rooms 104-106 Speight Building,<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Bowling<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/>
the moonlight. It's a great change<lb/>
of pace.<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<lb/>
held in the Multi-Purpose Room<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
All ECU students are eligible to<lb/>
participate. A $1 entry fee is<lb/>
required and registration must be<lb/>
completed no later than 12 noon<lb/>
on the day of the tournament.<lb/>
Registration forms are available<lb/>
at the Student Center Billiards<lb/>
Center. Trophies will be awarded.<lb/>
Enter now.<lb/>
Poetry news<lb/>
A grand prize of $1000 is<lb/>
being offered in a new poetry<lb/>
competition sponsored by the<lb/>
World of Poetry, a monthly<lb/>
newsletter for poets. In addition,<lb/>
there are 49 cash and merchan-<lb/>
dise awards.<lb/>
For rules and official entry<lb/>
forms write to: World of Poetry,<lb/>
801 Portofa Dr Dept. 211, San<lb/>
Francisco, California 94127.<lb/>
All Home Ec majors are<lb/>
invited to attend the AHEA Phi U<lb/>
Christmas party which will be<lb/>
held Monday, Dec. 13at 7, in the<lb/>
Home Ec social room. There will<lb/>
be a Christmas craft show and<lb/>
tell, so everyone can show their<lb/>
own Christmas crafts and explain<lb/>
how they were made. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served.<lb/>
Psi Chi party<lb/>
Psi Chi is sponsoring a<lb/>
Christmas Party for Psychology<lb/>
majors, Psi Chi members and<lb/>
Psychology Dept. staff and facul-<lb/>
ty on Wed Dec. 15, at the<lb/>
Cherry Court Apts. Clubhouse<lb/>
from 7-10 p.m. There is no charge<lb/>
for this event, however, a wrap-<lb/>
ped children's toy or book is an<lb/>
admission requirement. Used<lb/>
toys and books are fine as long as<lb/>
they are in usable condition<lb/>
Mark each gift with description to<lb/>
include age group intended for.<lb/>
The party is a fireside social with<lb/>
Christmas goodies such as egg-<lb/>
nog, punch, cookies, etc. Bring<lb/>
your favorite treat! Bring your<lb/>
best friend, and BYOB if desired.<lb/>
Santa will be there! You be there<lb/>
too!<lb/>
i<lb/>
Messiah<lb/>
i<lb/>
Inter-varsity is sponsoring a<lb/>
seminar workshop Saturday<lb/>
morning, Dec. 11, from 9 a.m. to<lb/>
12 noon at the Afro-American<lb/>
Cultural Center. The main topic<lb/>
will be "To Grow or Not to<lb/>
Grow Anyone is weloome to<lb/>
come at 8:30 for coffee and<lb/>
doughnuts.<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
There is a meeting of the ECU<lb/>
Law Society at 7 this Thursday,<lb/>
Dec. 9, in the Multi-Purpose<lb/>
Room in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. David Reid, a Greenville<lb/>
attorney will speak. Anyone in-<lb/>
terested is weloome.<lb/>
Forever<lb/>
Sunday afternoon at 3.15 p.m.<lb/>
the oombined choirs and orches-<lb/>
tra of the ECU School of Music<lb/>
will perform Handel's Messiah.<lb/>
The performance will be held at<lb/>
Wright Auditorium and is free.<lb/>
The public is weloome.<lb/>
Sierra club<lb/>
The phosphate controversy<lb/>
will be discussed at the Sierra<lb/>
Club meeting Dec. 13, 1976. The<lb/>
meeting will be held at 8 p.m. at<lb/>
the First Presbyterian Church,<lb/>
Elm St.<lb/>
If you are interested in<lb/>
learning about North Carolina<lb/>
Phosphate Corporation's plans<lb/>
for a 250 million dollar open pit<lb/>
phosphate mining operation in<lb/>
Beaufort Co please oome!<lb/>
Psi Chi meeting<lb/>
The Dec. meeting of Psi Chi<lb/>
will be Wed Dec. 15 instead of<lb/>
Dec. 14. The meeting will be held<lb/>
at the Psychology Christmas<lb/>
Party. Watch the FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD and the Psi Chi bulletin<lb/>
boards for details.<lb/>
Music therapists<lb/>
Monday night at 8.00 p.m. the<lb/>
Music Therapy Club will present<lb/>
the film "Reach Inside which<lb/>
explores the exciting possibilities<lb/>
of treating handicapped children<lb/>
through music. The meeting is in<lb/>
Room 101 of the Music Building<lb/>
and is open to all interested<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The Forever Generation of<lb/>
ECU is a Christ-centered campus<lb/>
fellowship group. We meet week-<lb/>
ly for a study, discussion, or<lb/>
challenge from the Bible; singing<lb/>
and warm fellowship. We also<lb/>
have get-togethers, cookouts,<lb/>
weekend retreats and other<lb/>
activities. Why not take a break<lb/>
this Friday night and join us at<lb/>
7:30 in Mendenhall 244?<lb/>
Bance,dance<lb/>
GLAD TIDINGS. You can<lb/>
dance all night long. Details are<lb/>
coming.<lb/>
Holiday moods<lb/>
ECU students and faculty are<lb/>
invited to attend the 11 o'clock<lb/>
morning service at Immanuel<lb/>
Baptist Church this coming Sun-<lb/>
day, Dec. 12, to hear the chancel<lb/>
choir present the cantata, "The<lb/>
Many Moods of Christmas<lb/>
arranged by Robert Shaw and<lb/>
R.R. Bennett. The church is<lb/>
located at 1101 South Elm St<lb/>
opposite Rose High.<lb/>
The choir is under the di-<lb/>
rection of David Rockefeller,<lb/>
senior in the ECU School of Music<lb/>
and student director of the Pirate<lb/>
Marching Band. At the organ will<lb/>
be another ECU music major,<lb/>
Christopher Jenkins.Several ECU<lb/>
students and faculty members are<lb/>
also members of the choir.<lb/>
Allied health<lb/>
The Allied Health Professions<lb/>
Admission Test will be offered at<lb/>
ECU on Saturday, Jan. 22, 1977.<lb/>
Application blanks are to be<lb/>
oompleted and mailed to the<lb/>
Psychological Corporation, P.O.<lb/>
Box 3540, Grand Central Station,<lb/>
New York, New York 10017 to<lb/>
arrive by Dec. 31, 1976.<lb/>
Applications may be obtained<lb/>
from the Testing Center, Rooms<lb/>
105-106, Speight Building, ECU.<lb/>
Cental exam<lb/>
The Dental Aptitude Test will<lb/>
be offered at ECU on Saturday,<lb/>
Jan. 8, 1977. Application blanks<lb/>
are to be oompleted and mailed to<lb/>
Division of Educational Mea-<lb/>
surements, American Dental As-<lb/>
sociation, 211 East Chicago Av-<lb/>
enue, Chicago, Illinois, 60611 to<lb/>
arrive by Dec. 13, 1976. These<lb/>
applications are also available at<lb/>
the Testing Center, Rooms 105-<lb/>
106, Speight Building, ECU.<lb/>
The ECU sororities invite you<lb/>
to attend the 5th annual "Nine<lb/>
Days Of Christmas" sponsored<lb/>
by the Panhellenic Assoc. Each<lb/>
sorority will be serving refresh-<lb/>
ments on the day designated<lb/>
Mon. Dec. 6 Chi Omega, 1501 E.<lb/>
5th St Tues. Dec. 7 Alpha<lb/>
Omicron Pi, 805 Johnston St<lb/>
Wed. Dec. 8 Alpha Xi Delta, 508<lb/>
E. Eleventh St Thurs. Dec. 9<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma, 803 E. Fifth<lb/>
St Fri. Dec. 10 Alpha Kappa<lb/>
Alpha, Panhellenic Office; Mon.<lb/>
Dec. 13 Alpha Phi, 950 E. 10th<lb/>
StTues. Dec. 14 Aipha Delta Pi,<lb/>
1407 E. 5th St Wed. Dec. 15<lb/>
Kappa Delta, 2101 E. 5th St<lb/>
Thurs. Dec. 16 Delta Zeta, 801 E.<lb/>
5th St. Hours of Open House: 10<lb/>
a.m. to 4 p.m.<lb/>
N.C. internships<lb/>
Mr. Jim Caplanides, director<lb/>
of the North Carolina Internship<lb/>
Office, has announoed plans for<lb/>
the upcoming Spring Semester<lb/>
Internship Program in North<lb/>
Carolina State Government.<lb/>
Internships in various state gov-<lb/>
ernment agencies will begin in<lb/>
mid-January and continue<lb/>
throughout the spring semester.<lb/>
Most positions require a 20-hour<lb/>
work week. Most interns will be<lb/>
paid approximately $3.12 per<lb/>
hour, though some positions are<lb/>
designed for academic credit<lb/>
only. Applications must be sub-<lb/>
mitted by December 20.<lb/>
For further information, write<lb/>
or call: N.C. Internship Office,<lb/>
401 N. Wilmington St Raleigh,<lb/>
N.C. 27601,(919)829-5966.<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
The Dec. meeting of Phi Eta<lb/>
Sigma will be a ocokout at the<lb/>
home of Carol Tate (420 Lee<lb/>
Street, Cherry Oaks, Greenville)<lb/>
on Thursday, Dec. 16, from 5:30<lb/>
to 10 p.m. Members may bring<lb/>
guests and members MUST sign<lb/>
up on sheets in Dr. Ebbs' office<lb/>
XAustin 214). The deadline for<lb/>
signing up is 12 noon, Dec. 15.<lb/>
Information conoerning transpor-<lb/>
tation and directions to Miss<lb/>
Tate's home is located in Dr.<lb/>
Ebbs' office. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Management<lb/>
The Graduate Management<lb/>
Admission Test will be offered at<lb/>
ECU on Saturday, Jan. 29,1977.<lb/>
Application blanks are to be<lb/>
oompleted and mailed to Educa-<lb/>
tional Testing Service, Box 966-R,<lb/>
Prinoeton, N.J 08540 to arrive<lb/>
by January 7,1977. Applications<lb/>
are also available at the Testing<lb/>
Center, Rooms 105-106, Speight<lb/>
Building, ECU.<lb/>
Wrestling<lb/>
Come sheer on the wrestling<lb/>
team as they take to the mats for<lb/>
the first match of the year.<lb/>
The wrestlers take on the<lb/>
Athletes in Action, Friday night,<lb/>
8 p.m in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Internships<lb/>
Interested in social service -<lb/>
but uncertain about a career? The<lb/>
most sure-fire way to zero in on<lb/>
career objectives is through<lb/>
practical work experience.<lb/>
Centers for the Handicapped,<lb/>
located near Washington, D.C<lb/>
offers young people a one-year<lb/>
internship working with handi-<lb/>
capped children and adults. Re-<lb/>
cruitment is underway now for<lb/>
interns to start in Jan. 1977.<lb/>
Interested students can obtain<lb/>
more information and an appli-<lb/>
cation at their oollege placement<lb/>
office (or campus library, in some<lb/>
cases) or by writing to Centers for<lb/>
the Handicapped, 649 Lofstrand<lb/>
Land, Rockville, Maryland 20850.<lb/>
Alpha Beta<lb/>
ETA Chapter of Alpha Beta<lb/>
Alpha, ECU'S undergraduate<lb/>
library science fraternity pledged<lb/>
the following new students on<lb/>
Tuesday, November 16: Starr<lb/>
Batten, Middlesex; Darlene Ben-<lb/>
ton, Belvidere; Mary Ann Dela-<lb/>
mar, Gardner; Karen Heiser,<lb/>
China Grove; Linda Mayo, Green-<lb/>
ville; Barbara Thorson, Snow<lb/>
Hill; Norma Tynes, Moyock; Jim<lb/>
Whaley, Kinston; and Sharon<lb/>
Horne of Moorestown, New Jer-<lb/>
sey.<lb/>
Ms. Ludi Johnson is faculty<lb/>
advisor fa the organization.<lb/>
News writers<lb/>
All news writers are reminded<lb/>
that there is a meeting Thursday<lb/>
afternoon at 4:15.<lb/>
The meeting will be in the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD office located<lb/>
in the Publications Center.<lb/>
All interested persons are<lb/>
invited.<lb/>
CINERGY<lb/>
This week's free flick is<lb/>
Nicholas and A lexandra.<lb/>
Based on the historical novel<lb/>
by Robert and Suzanne Massie,<lb/>
the movie centers around the fall<lb/>
ot Russia's last Czar. Beautiful<lb/>
costumes and scenery depict an<lb/>
epic time during the early 20th<lb/>
century.<lb/>
Show times are Friday and<lb/>
Saturday, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.<lb/>
I.D. and activity card is the<lb/>
only admission price.<lb/>
Sports writers<lb/>
There will be a meeting for all<lb/>
present and would be sports<lb/>
writers.<lb/>
The meeting is Thursday at<lb/>
3:15 in the FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
office located in the Publications<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Ceramics sale<lb/>
The Ceramics Guild will hold a<lb/>
Christmas sale on Dec. 15 and 16,<lb/>
from 8-5 at Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Prints on sale<lb/>
On Wednesday Dec. 15, there<lb/>
will be a sale of prints collected by<lb/>
the printmaking department over<lb/>
the past 15 years. All items will<lb/>
be prioed to sell; $.50 to $5.00.<lb/>
The sale will be from 10 a.m. to 5<lb/>
p.m. in Jenkins 1104.<lb/>
F<lb/>
tl<lb/>
a<lb/>
q<lb/>
a<lb/>
a<lb/>
of<lb/>
ar<lb/>
Bt<lb/>
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wi<lb/>
th.<lb/>
so<lb/>
of<lb/>
no<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0003"/><lb/>
�HBHmoDamrannHM<lb/>
9 December 1976 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
'Attractions' fails; other programs profit<lb/>
By LOUIS TA YLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The programming of every<lb/>
Student Union committee except<lb/>
Major Attractions has been very<lb/>
successful so far this year,<lb/>
according to Barry Robinson,<lb/>
Student Union president.<lb/>
During the 79 days of Fall<lb/>
quarter, the Student Union pre-<lb/>
sented 75 shows, Robinson tola<lb/>
committee chairpersons at a<lb/>
program board meeting Tuesday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
Attendance at the shows for<lb/>
which tickets were sold averaged<lb/>
more than 1,000.<lb/>
However, programming suc-<lb/>
cess this year has been a<lb/>
complete reversal from years<lb/>
past, faculty adviser Rudolph<lb/>
Alexander told the board. Alex-<lb/>
ander said that Major Attractions<lb/>
is usually the most successful<lb/>
committee in the Student Union,<lb/>
but this year every show has been<lb/>
a financial failure.<lb/>
The Major Attractions com-<lb/>
mittee is still existent, according<lb/>
to Robinson, but since their<lb/>
budget has been depleted, the<lb/>
committee is non-functioning.<lb/>
Alexander added that he did<lb/>
not fully understand why Major<lb/>
Attractions has not been success-<lb/>
ful this year, but he indicated that<lb/>
he felt there were a number of<lb/>
reasons.<lb/>
The Student Union should<lb/>
initiate early in 1977 a " study that<lb/>
is as scientific as possible" to<lb/>
seek out student wants and needs<lb/>
in the area of major attractions,<lb/>
Alexander continued.<lb/>
Though consensus in the area<lb/>
of pop music may change every<lb/>
six months, the Student Union<lb/>
may be able to "create a dimate<lb/>
that is condusive to more success-<lb/>
ful Major Attractions program-<lb/>
ming, Alexander suggested.<lb/>
Robinson said "the system<lb/>
needs re-evaluating<lb/>
We need a Major Attractions<lb/>
committee said Robinson. But<lb/>
the committee should use its own<lb/>
discretion wisely<lb/>
Perhaps the program board<lb/>
should approve each show separ-<lb/>
ately, rather than leave the<lb/>
decision entirely in the hands of<lb/>
the committee, Robinsor added.<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
�c<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
O<lb/>
BARRY ROBINSON, Student Union President.<lb/>
Low ed. standards called tragic<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ur. Robert Williams, Vice<lb/>
President for Academic Affairs of<lb/>
the UNC system, spoke out<lb/>
against lowering admission re-<lb/>
quirements to increase minority<lb/>
enrollment in the nation's se-<lb/>
condary educational institutions.<lb/>
Dr. Williams, former Provost<lb/>
of ECU, spoke at the 200th<lb/>
anniversary celebration of Phi<lb/>
Beta Kappa held in the ECU<lb/>
Nursing Auditorium, Dec 6.<lb/>
"Education systems must<lb/>
withstand the temptation to dilute<lb/>
the substance of learning to meet<lb/>
some supposed-low learning level<lb/>
of the population in the oonvulted<lb/>
notion that by so doing demo-<lb/>
cracy is vindicated said Dr.<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
According to Dr. Williams,<lb/>
the limitation, alteration or de-<lb/>
basing of education would defeat<lb/>
the object of ctemocracy.<lb/>
"The subtle arguments and<lb/>
the alarming reality of reshaping<lb/>
every educational experience to<lb/>
accommodate the abilities of all of<lb/>
our citizens in the name of<lb/>
ctemocracy is a tragic shame<lb/>
said Dr. Williams.<lb/>
Dr. Williams stated the notion<lb/>
must be resisted that in order to<lb/>
serve a greater population, a<lb/>
lesser educational product must<lb/>
be furnished.<lb/>
"I fail to see the logic in any<lb/>
argument that the nature, the<lb/>
quality or the purpose of edu-<lb/>
cation should be susbtantially<lb/>
altered in the process of extend-<lb/>
ing its privileges to the whole<lb/>
body of citizens said Dr.<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
Sherwin-Williamj<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
Vr-<lb/>
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Saturday, Dec. 11<lb/>
12-5 pm<lb/>
Christmas Gifts You Can Afford<lb/>
Special and Handcrafted<lb/>
Women's Club<lb/>
St. Gabriel's Auditorium<lb/>
1001 Ward St.<lb/>
Rev. H.C. Mulholland<lb/>
Pastor<lb/>
r<lb/>
jrerr<lb/>
r<lb/>
DONATES<lb/>
$5,000<lb/>
TO<lb/>
The Urgent Reason Now<lb/>
ThisisOverton'sWay of Showing Appreciation<lb/>
to E.C.U. Students, Faculty,and Staff.<lb/>
f<lb/>
PARKER AND CHARLESOVERTON present their Stadium Expansion<lb/>
gift to Dr. Leo Jenkins.<lb/>
aSHra<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
PLAINS ELECTION CENTER1 ' 3<lb/>
�-<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
9 December 1976<lb/>
Funny money<lb/>
As part of its rules of conduct the Student<lb/>
Legislature's Appropriations Committee, chaired by<lb/>
Craig Hales, enacted this fall a closed-meeting<lb/>
bylaw. The final votes of its members are still public,<lb/>
but the deliberations of the committee are now held<lb/>
behind closed, but not soundproof, doors. This<lb/>
committee has the power to inflate or decimate the<lb/>
budgets of all student-funded organizations in its<lb/>
meetings which are not only closed to the public and<lb/>
the press, but are also off-limits to groups whose<lb/>
budgets are being discussed. In what amounts to<lb/>
decision-making in a vacuum, the committee is thus<lb/>
preventing organizations from knowing the reasons<lb/>
for any budgetary alterations, except for what the<lb/>
chairman decides to spoon feed to the curious.<lb/>
This modus operand appears to be in flagrant<lb/>
violation of North Carolina's open-meetings statute.<lb/>
Enacted in 1971, this law forbids the closing of<lb/>
meetings of any organized governmental group that<lb/>
has the power to "conduct hearings to "delib-<lb/>
erate andor to "act as (a body) politic and in the<lb/>
public interest The law has exemptions, but these<lb/>
are clearly specified. It is obvious the budgetary<lb/>
hearings of the Appropriations Committee do not fall<lb/>
into the exempted category and, when closed, are in<lb/>
violation of the open-meetings statute.<lb/>
As for student government as a whole being<lb/>
exemplified from the status, there have been,<lb/>
according to legal sources, no judicial rulings which<lb/>
would lend direct precedent. However, at UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill, students became angered over the<lb/>
School of Law's faculty meetings being closed to the<lb/>
public. Earlier this year the issue was taken to court<lb/>
where the closed meetings were ruled unlawful.<lb/>
The election of student legislators involves a<lb/>
much broader constituency than the law school's<lb/>
faculty representatives. For this reason student<lb/>
government should ascribe to no less than that<lb/>
expected of faculty personnel. The only reason for<lb/>
which the Appropriations Committee could want to<lb/>
close its meetings would be that it has something to<lb/>
hide, discussions, for example, that border on the<lb/>
inane and present little indication of intelligent<lb/>
decision-making.<lb/>
Fountainhead, like all other SGA-funded groups<lb/>
was not allowed to hear the committee's actual<lb/>
arguments against its budget. The paper's editor<lb/>
however, could from the hall clearly discern more<lb/>
than the expected amount of gigglinq from these<lb/>
student representatives.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community 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 the 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/>
I<lb/>
IF IT RUNS IN THE FML V.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
��<lb/>
Transition questions need answering<lb/>
TnCnilMTAIMUCAn. I   .<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The fall of the 1977-78 school<lb/>
year marks the start of the<lb/>
semester system here at ECU.<lb/>
Although a recent poll indicated<lb/>
the students were against the<lb/>
change-over, the staff and ad-<lb/>
ministration pushed the semester<lb/>
system through because it is less<lb/>
work for them (registration, paper<lb/>
work, etc.)<lb/>
As of this letter, the student<lb/>
body has received no word of now<lb/>
this change-over will effect their<lb/>
course curriculum. Tim McLeod<lb/>
secretary of academic affairs, has<lb/>
constantly been assured by the<lb/>
curriculum committee that the<lb/>
students will get the best end of<lb/>
the change-over but it has<lb/>
become increasingly apparent<lb/>
that when Tim asks for written<lb/>
reports, he gets the "run-<lb/>
around The SGA has even<lb/>
passed a resolution asking for an<lb/>
announcement of the change-over<lb/>
process.<lb/>
The curriculum committee has<lb/>
said that students will not have to<lb/>
take more hours, in fact, they say<lb/>
hours may be given to students.<lb/>
The only problem there is that<lb/>
these "given" hours may hurt<lb/>
grade point averages in sequence<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
What courses will be drop-<lb/>
ped? What courses will be added?<lb/>
Who's to decide for each indivi-<lb/>
dual student? Will there be two<lb/>
sessions of summer school?<lb/>
These are only a few of the<lb/>
questions that must be answered<lb/>
and soon.<lb/>
I suggest that all students they may not know any more than<lb/>
especially juniors who hope to<lb/>
graduate on time and can not<lb/>
afford summer school, go to your<lb/>
advisors and find out what you<lb/>
can on the change-over. Although<lb/>
you, maybe they can find out.<lb/>
Prepare now for the change-over!<lb/>
Randy Bailey<lb/>
Jr. Class Vice-President<lb/>
No faith hurts major attractions<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
At present, hardly anyone can<lb/>
complain about the quantity of<lb/>
entertainment. Or, can they? Of<lb/>
course, we've improved in quan-<lb/>
tity-the percentage verifies this<lb/>
fact. But what about the more<lb/>
vital factors-quality, student or<lb/>
public interest, and public know-<lb/>
ledge. Could it be possible that<lb/>
lack of interest in the type of<lb/>
entertainment and poor promo-<lb/>
tion of the events are effecting<lb/>
publicstudent turn outs?<lb/>
The quality is good, at least<lb/>
for the (few) events that I have<lb/>
attended! Like everyone else, I<lb/>
attend (only) what interests me.<lb/>
Studentpublic interest is the<lb/>
major issue. Anyone planning<lb/>
entertainment should consider<lb/>
what interests the majority of the<lb/>
potential audience. Questions<lb/>
such as: What's the latest musical<lb/>
news? What's the most popular<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
Forum letters should be<lb/>
typed or printed and they must<lb/>
be signed and include the<lb/>
writer's address. Names will<lb/>
be withheld upon request.<lb/>
Letters may be sent to Foun-<lb/>
tainhead or left at the Informa-<lb/>
tion Desk in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
music for this age? What groups<lb/>
are hottest in the record world?<lb/>
Record store managers or sales-<lb/>
persons know the answers, if no<lb/>
one cares to ask the student body.<lb/>
Needless to say, public appeal is<lb/>
vital unless we don't want an<lb/>
audience.<lb/>
The problem of public know-<lb/>
ledge can be corrected with<lb/>
proper advertising. If we only<lb/>
print ads in campus publications<lb/>
and place posters on bulletin<lb/>
boards, the general public will not<lb/>
be aware of the entertainment.<lb/>
Using the entertainment page of a<lb/>
local newspaper isn't sufficient,<lb/>
because many people don't look<lb/>
there.<lb/>
And worst of all, relying on a<lb/>
local Greenville local radio station<lb/>
for advertisements is atrocious<lb/>
the public doesn't listen to the<lb/>
station, how will they know<lb/>
what's going on?<lb/>
Other problems are minority<lb/>
entertainment and the cancella-<lb/>
tion of oonoerts. Out of that 93.5<lb/>
per cent, can we say 10 per cent<lb/>
was of interest to blacks? I doubt<lb/>
it seriously!<lb/>
Loss of faith that the group<lb/>
will show up is the results of the<lb/>
cancellation of oonoerts.<lb/>
Joyce Evans<lb/>
408GreenviewDr.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
��  &amp;&amp;&amp;.  ��� ' M �&amp;� I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0005"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
� i j v<lb/>
� � � �  �. <lb/>
 ��.��.<lb/>
9 December 1976 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Major attractions lose more support<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In view of the recent problem<lb/>
concerning lack of attendance at<lb/>
major concerts, I would like to tell<lb/>
you why I do not go to concerts<lb/>
held at Minges Coliseum. After<lb/>
attending the Linda Ronstadt<lb/>
oonoert in the Fall of 1975 I vowed<lb/>
never to return to Minges again.<lb/>
The thing that I found most<lb/>
aggravating and inefficient was<lb/>
the way you must wait outside the<lb/>
Coliseum until the doors are<lb/>
opened at a specific hour. Once<lb/>
they are opened all hell breaks<lb/>
loose as people shove and trample<lb/>
to squeeze through the doors so<lb/>
they may run and get a good seat.<lb/>
The crowd's surge towards the 2<lb/>
or 3 open doors has the impact of<lb/>
a bursting dam and could be quite<lb/>
dangerous. I was "in line" with a<lb/>
friend who had a broken arm in a<lb/>
sling, who suffered excruciating<lb/>
pain from careless bumps and<lb/>
pushes by frenzied persons intent<lb/>
upon getting through the doors<lb/>
before the next guy .Why can't the<lb/>
doors be opened several hours<lb/>
beforehand, so those who wish to<lb/>
come early can do so, entering<lb/>
peacefully, without hassles, and<lb/>
procuring the much sought after<lb/>
good seat. In this manner every-<lb/>
one could avoid the stampede and<lb/>
possibly having to wait outside in<lb/>
inclement weather.<lb/>
Secondly, ECU concerts are<lb/>
the only ones I have experienced<lb/>
with so many rules and re-<lb/>
strictions. In all other auditoriums<lb/>
you are able to carry beverages<lb/>
andor smoke. After all, when<lb/>
you're sitting in one spot for<lb/>
several hours you might want<lb/>
some type of refreshment. Since<lb/>
people break the rules anyway,<lb/>
why not do away with the rules or<lb/>
modify them, such as allowing<lb/>
smoking and drinking in the<lb/>
bleacher areas?<lb/>
Another policy that I fine most<lb/>
inconvenient is that which doesn't<lb/>
not allow a student to buy a<lb/>
student ticket at the door the<lb/>
night of the performance. A good<lb/>
many of our concerts are held on<lb/>
Saturday, and sometimes Sunday<lb/>
nights. It is my understanding<lb/>
that a student must purchase<lb/>
their student ticket by 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Friday or else pay the general<lb/>
admission fee at the door. Many<lb/>
times I do not know on Friday<lb/>
afternoon what I will be doing on<lb/>
Former Buc editor raps comments<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
It appears that a few state-<lb/>
ments must be made concerning<lb/>
the BUCCANEER to darify state-<lb/>
ments made by uninvolved and<lb/>
ignorant parties.<lb/>
First, Mr. Sullivan reportedly<lb/>
told the city council that ECU<lb/>
would have no BUCCANEER due<lb/>
to the resignation of the staff. If<lb/>
Mr. Sullivan knows and has<lb/>
decided there will be no book,<lb/>
why was the Task Force commit-<lb/>
tee formed and why did they<lb/>
make proposals to the legisla-<lb/>
ture? Also if there is no book it<lb/>
will not be because the staff quit<lb/>
but because adequate funds were<lb/>
not made available to the staff.<lb/>
Second, the editorial concern-<lb/>
ing the yearbook stated that<lb/>
"Alternative One would<lb/>
guarantee - a product valued at<lb/>
$48,000 instead of $61,000 This<lb/>
is an error in fact. Alternative<lb/>
One states the SGA would<lb/>
allocate $48,000 and the staff<lb/>
could raise revenue through<lb/>
advertising, rebates, sitting fees<lb/>
and other ways which were not<lb/>
allowed in the past. The total<lb/>
BUC budget would be about<lb/>
$63,000, more than what the<lb/>
SGA originally allocated and a<lb/>
compromise from what the staff<lb/>
originally requested.<lb/>
Third, the second alternative<lb/>
stated that students would pay a<lb/>
subscription price for the book.<lb/>
This means only those that paid in<lb/>
addition to their fees would<lb/>
receive a book. Contrary to the<lb/>
editorial statement 8000 students<lb/>
are not necessary, 200 would be<lb/>
enough to have a book printed.<lb/>
In response to students that<lb/>
say they paid for their books<lb/>
through activity fees - according<lb/>
to the SGA Executive Branch you<lb/>
paid your fees to be spent by the<lb/>
SGA. Nothing guarantees how<lb/>
the money is to be spent or if you<lb/>
are to get a yearbook.<lb/>
The SGA has the right to<lb/>
spend the money on student<lb/>
needs as they see fit. Having<lb/>
done so there is not enough<lb/>
money to pay for a yearbook. If<lb/>
students are to have one they<lb/>
must pay additional fees or do<lb/>
without something the SGA has<lb/>
already allocated money for.<lb/>
Finally, in response to those<lb/>
people that believe that the<lb/>
BUCCANEER is not important to<lb/>
the students, why is it that more<lb/>
people have their picture made<lb/>
(over 3,000 this fall) and more<lb/>
people get a copy of the book<lb/>
(over 6,000 this year) than vote in<lb/>
SGA elections (less then 2,500)?<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Monika Sutherland<lb/>
Former BUC Editor<lb/>
Ticket rip-off<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Athletic Director Bill Cain is a<lb/>
liar when he says that all students<lb/>
who came by for refunds on their<lb/>
ASU-ECU tickets received their<lb/>
money. I called the ticket office,<lb/>
and they said there would be<lb/>
refunds. I went by the ticket office<lb/>
with my tickets, and a sign there<lb/>
said no refunds. The lady in the<lb/>
office said the same thing.<lb/>
What good does it do to<lb/>
announce after the game has<lb/>
been played that refunds were<lb/>
available (even jf they were)?<lb/>
I have been ripped off $14.00<lb/>
because of this game, and I am<lb/>
sure other students have been<lb/>
also. It is more than apparent<lb/>
to me that Bill Cain can only see<lb/>
dollar signsand that by lying he is<lb/>
trying to cover up his and the<lb/>
Athletic Department's greed.<lb/>
This has lowered my opinion of<lb/>
East Carolina University.<lb/>
CharleneAldrich<lb/>
Saturday night, for I choose not to<lb/>
place my weekends on a well<lb/>
ordered schedule. Why should a<lb/>
student have to pay a raised<lb/>
admission price as a penalty for<lb/>
not having strictly organized their<lb/>
weekend?<lb/>
I feel that a student is entitled<lb/>
to buy a ticket at student prices<lb/>
regardless of the time they buy<lb/>
their ticket!<lb/>
I would very much have<lb/>
enjoyed seeing Judy Collins a few<lb/>
weeks ago, but due to the nature<lb/>
of the concerts at Minges, I<lb/>
decided the hassles were not<lb/>
worth it. Perhaps some other<lb/>
students refrain from going to<lb/>
these concerts for a few of these<lb/>
same reasons.<lb/>
Paula (Toni) Jordan<lb/>
�<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057098_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 9 December 1976<lb/>
Physical therapists research rare disease<lb/>
By GEORGE THREE WITTS<lb/>
News Bureau<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A research project by ECU<lb/>
physical therapists may give<lb/>
additional dues to finding an<lb/>
effective treatment for a rare but<lb/>
devastating disease, best known<lb/>
as the killer of Woody Guthrie,<lb/>
America's celebrated folksinger.<lb/>
The disease, a genetic dis-<lb/>
order, labeled Huntington's<lb/>
Disease, affects an estimated<lb/>
15,000 persons and does not<lb/>
appear until the victim reaches<lb/>
his or her mid-thirties. Then a<lb/>
portion of the brain begins to<lb/>
deteriorate and control of the<lb/>
body's physical movements de-<lb/>
creases. At present, no treatment<lb/>
can halt the progress of Hunting-<lb/>
ton's Disease, and even tranqui-<lb/>
This Week At The<lb/>
ELBOROOM<lb/>
The Galaxies'<lb/>
From Va. Beach<lb/>
Remember<lb/>
Fri. Afternoon 3-7 Happy Hour<lb/>
Every Sun. is Ladies Night<lb/>
lizerscan produce relief in only a<lb/>
small percentage of patients.<lb/>
Guthrie died in 1967, after 15<lb/>
years of gradually losing his<lb/>
ability to walk, talk and read. Two<lb/>
of his children have since devel-<lb/>
oped the disease and three others<lb/>
stand a 50-50 chance of having<lb/>
inherited it too.<lb/>
The research at ECU, spon-<lb/>
sored in part by a grant from the<lb/>
N.C. Physical Therapy Associa-<lb/>
tion was directed by Gloria T.<lb/>
Sanders, a physical therapist in<lb/>
the School of Allied Health and<lb/>
Social Professions.<lb/>
Using a neurosurgical proce-<lb/>
dure, Sanders reproduced the<lb/>
symptoms of Huntington's Di-<lb/>
sease in cats, which has been<lb/>
done successfully in only a couple<lb/>
of other recent instances. She<lb/>
then went a step further by<lb/>
devising a measuring technique,<lb/>
which she says has not been done<lb/>
before, to functionally measure<lb/>
the height and distance of the<lb/>
,animal's footsteps.<lb/>
The measuring device, using<lb/>
cameras and a glass calibrated<lb/>
runway, will enable scientists to<lb/>
determine if the symptoms of the<lb/>
disease have been achieved in<lb/>
test animals and will show when a<lb/>
treatment has provided positive<lb/>
results.<lb/>
Sanders explained that the<lb/>
study of the disease has been very<lb/>
difficult because it affects only<lb/>
humans. Animals that display the<lb/>
symptoms of the disease have<lb/>
been unavailable and researchers<lb/>
have had to rely on human<lb/>
autopsy material rather than<lb/>
submit patients to new drugs or<lb/>
surgical procedures.<lb/>
 The thing that we are excited<lb/>
about is that we think that we've<lb/>
got an animal model and a good<lb/>
way of measuring it. Now it's a<lb/>
matter of producing some of these<lb/>
models and trying all kinds of<lb/>
treatment to determine which is<lb/>
the most effective in removing the<lb/>
symptoms<lb/>
Sanders said her interest in<lb/>
this research was generated by<lb/>
her concern for people with<lb/>
cerbral palsy and Huntington's<lb/>
Disease.<lb/>
"For hundreds of years no-<lb/>
body has been able to provide<lb/>
much more than exercise for<lb/>
these people. It's like polio.<lb/>
People used to spend hours and<lb/>
days exercising when all it took<lb/>
was the Salk Vaccine to prevent<lb/>
the disease she said.<lb/>
"If you are really going to<lb/>
help these people you have got to<lb/>
come up with a drug or surgical<lb/>
treatment<lb/>
The details of Sanders' re-<lb/>
search were presented as a poster<lb/>
display at the recent 6th annual<lb/>
meeting of the Society For<lb/>
Neuroscience, in Toronto,<lb/>
Canada.<lb/>
"It (the presentation) gener-<lb/>
ated stimulating, positive feed-<lb/>
back from scientific people who<lb/>
have been doing research in this<lb/>
field for a long time said Dr.<lb/>
Evelyn McNeill, an anatomist and<lb/>
physical therapist at ECU, who<lb/>
assisted Sanders in her study.<lb/>
Also participating in the pro-<lb/>
ject were three ECU physical<lb/>
therapy students: Deborah Brag-<lb/>
unier, Indian Head, Md Char-<lb/>
lotte Metz, Elkm-N.C; and<lb/>
Marsha Murphey, Manassas, Vir-<lb/>
ginia.<lb/>
Is there a special kid in your life<lb/>
that you would like to please<lb/>
at Christmas?<lb/>
Come see us at<lb/>
Happily Ever After<lb/>
"Toys For All Ages"<lb/>
Downtown Mall<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Hours10-9<lb/>
unique and unusual toys<lb/>
SEARCHES<lb/>
 Continued from paae 1.<lb/>
The other five came in and<lb/>
started pulling my things out of<lb/>
the closet and opening my<lb/>
drawers and just generally tear-<lb/>
ing up the room Hartsfield<lb/>
said.<lb/>
According to Hartsfield the<lb/>
police found a pipe that he had<lb/>
made and told him that posses-<lb/>
sion of it was against university<lb/>
rules.<lb/>
"Then they left and took my<lb/>
pipe, leaving all of the clothes and<lb/>
stuff in the floor<lb/>
Hartsfield complained to the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department<lb/>
about the manner in which the<lb/>
search was conducted.<lb/>
"I called Captain Wiggins and<lb/>
told him that I thought he had no<lb/>
probable cause to search my<lb/>
room said Hartsfield.<lb/>
 I also told him that I thought<lb/>
he should pay for the door. He<lb/>
said he wasn't going to do it and<lb/>
then hung up on me<lb/>
This reporter was a witness to<lb/>
a search on Nov. 19, in 442 Jones<lb/>
Dormitory.<lb/>
Officer Wiggins of the ECU<lb/>
campus police opened the door<lb/>
with a pass key, then five officers<lb/>
of the Greenville Police Depart-<lb/>
ment entered the room and began<lb/>
the search.<lb/>
The room was unoccupied at<lb/>
the time of the search.<lb/>
Upon entering the room this<lb/>
reporter observed the officers<lb/>
searching through papers on a<lb/>
desk, under a mattress, and in a<lb/>
closet.<lb/>
When asked who was in<lb/>
charge an officer said, "We're<lb/>
conducting a search, get out of<lb/>
here Another officer added,<lb/>
"yeah, get out of here<lb/>
Captain Jack Russel, chief of<lb/>
detectives of the Greenville Police<lb/>
Department, was questioned by<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD regarding the<lb/>
police department's liability fa<lb/>
the destruction of personal pro-<lb/>
perty that occurs during a search.<lb/>
Captain Russel informed<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD that the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department<lb/>
does not oome on to the ECU<lb/>
campus unless requested to do so<lb/>
by the campus polioe.<lb/>
He added that the detective<lb/>
division of the Greenville Polioe<lb/>
Department does not conduct<lb/>
investigations on the campus.<lb/>
According to Captain Russel,<lb/>
overall policing of the ECU<lb/>
campus is the responsibility of the<lb/>
campus police.<lb/>
When asked by FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD to comment on the search-<lb/>
es Officer Wiggins of the campus<lb/>
polioe refused to comment.<lb/>
�<lb/>
IPHON<lb/>
E: 752-1233<lb/>
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PROGRAMS<lb/>
GPC protests B-1<lb/>
bomber program<lb/>
By RANDY STALLS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Greenville Peace Commit-<lb/>
tee plans to participate in a<lb/>
nationwide demonstration, Jan.<lb/>
22, 1977, to terminate the contro-<lb/>
versial B-1 bomber program,<lb/>
according to Dr. Edith Webber,<lb/>
an ECU English professor and<lb/>
member of the group.<lb/>
The demonstration will be<lb/>
held locally in conjunction with<lb/>
the nationwide Stop The B-1<lb/>
Bomber: National Peace Conver-<lb/>
sion Campaign sponsored by<lb/>
American Friends Service Com-<lb/>
mittee and Clergy and Laity<lb/>
Concerned.<lb/>
According to information re-<lb/>
leased from Webber's group,<lb/>
they will be demonstrating for the<lb/>
complete termination o the B-1<lb/>
bomber program, security for B-1<lb/>
employees facing unemployment,<lb/>
and oonversion of military funds<lb/>
to meet human needs.<lb/>
Research and development of<lb/>
four test B-1's has cost $3.2<lb/>
billion. Rockwell International.<lb/>
the prime contractor for the B-1,<lb/>
will receive another $348 million.<lb/>
Before then President Carter<lb/>
must decide in February whether<lb/>
or not to keep the estimated $92<lb/>
billion B-1 program in the budget.<lb/>
Carter said during the presi-<lb/>
dential campaign the B-1 "should<lb/>
not be funded and would be<lb/>
wasteful of taxpayers' dollars<lb/>
However, he refused to promise<lb/>
definitely to terminate the pro-<lb/>
gram if elected.<lb/>
The Pentagon says the B-1<lb/>
will replace the aging and slower<lb/>
B-52 as part of the U.S. nuclear<lb/>
deterrent, insisting that manned<lb/>
bombers which can oe launched<lb/>
and then recalled are needed fa<lb/>
situations like the Cuban missile<lb/>
crisis.<lb/>
Webber's group upholds that<lb/>
"for a society beset with serious<lb/>
unsolved problems: unemploy-<lb/>
ment, poverty, transportation,<lb/>
housing, health care, education,<lb/>
pollution; the waste of billions on<lb/>
an unnecessary project like this<lb/>
bomber cannot be tolerated<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0007"/><lb/>
�������<lb/>
�HHHHH<lb/>
8S88S  jg SS&amp;. iSS<lb/>
HHMHH<lb/>
9 December 1976 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Agencies stonewalled<lb/>
in SEC investigations<lb/>
Editor's Note: T tis is the<lb/>
second part of an investigation of<lb/>
banks' roles in New York City's<lb/>
recent financial crisis. Reporters<lb/>
Jack Newfield and Paul Du Brul<lb/>
conducted the investigation.<lb/>
Banks Stonewall Investigations<lb/>
In late 1975, two government<lb/>
agendes began to sniff around<lb/>
the city's crisis: the Securities<lb/>
and Exchange Commission and<lb/>
the state legislature's Office of<lb/>
Oversight and Analysis, headed<lb/>
by former investigative reporter<lb/>
Bill Haddad.<lb/>
Immediately the investigators<lb/>
were treated to bank stonewal-<lb/>
ling, and told they would endan-<lb/>
ger the important negotiations<lb/>
being conducted to keep the city<lb/>
and state solvent. One SEC<lb/>
lawyer, say the Voice reporters,<lb/>
received a conference call at his<lb/>
home on a Friday night last<lb/>
spring from several bank lawyers<lb/>
who threatened that if he contin-<lb/>
ued to press his subpoena for the<lb/>
appearance of a high bank<lb/>
official, he would be personally<lb/>
responsible for "flushing New<lb/>
York State down the drain<lb/>
In addition, the aty govern-<lb/>
ment seemingly tried to cover for<lb/>
the banks by issuing a suit<lb/>
against the SEC challenging their<lb/>
right to conduct an investigation<lb/>
concerning municipal-rather<lb/>
than corporate-securities.<lb/>
Haddad's state investigators<lb/>
came up against the same stone<lb/>
wall. The most important infor-<lb/>
mation the banks refused to<lb/>
reveal were day-to- day records of<lb/>
their municipal securities sales<lb/>
during the period in question.<lb/>
They claimed that such informa-<lb/>
tion would blow their position<lb/>
with oompeting banks, but even<lb/>
after Haddad offered to allow the<lb/>
banks to remove their names from<lb/>
the figures, they still refused.<lb/>
Just at this time, another<lb/>
investigation, this time the House<lb/>
Subcommittee on Commerce,<lb/>
Consumer and Monetary Affairs<lb/>
in Washington, was looking into<lb/>
the banks' affect on the "fiscal<lb/>
condition of our cities The<lb/>
subcommittee sent letters to 10<lb/>
major New York City banks<lb/>
requesting the same day-to-day<lb/>
municipal securities sales. Eight<lb/>
banks refused to comply.<lb/>
One bank, Marine Midland,<lb/>
complied in full. "But then<lb/>
remarked Newfield and Du Brul,<lb/>
CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS are a cheerful reminder that vacation<lb/>
time is lust a week away. Photo by Brian Stotler.)<lb/>
Applications taken<lb/>
By LOUIS TAYLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Applications for the office of<lb/>
Student Union President will be<lb/>
taken from Jan. 6 through Jan.<lb/>
19, according to Barry Robinson,<lb/>
who presently holds the position.<lb/>
Interested persons should<lb/>
contact Robinson in his office at<lb/>
234 Mendenhall between Jan. 6<lb/>
and 19.<lb/>
Applications may be picked up<lb/>
at the Student Union Information<lb/>
desk, beginning Jan. 6, said<lb/>
Robinson.<lb/>
"I will be glad to talk to<lb/>
before then added Robinson.<lb/>
One does not have to be a past<lb/>
or present member of the Student<lb/>
Union to qualify for the office.<lb/>
However, he must be a rising<lb/>
upperclassman with at least a 2.0<lb/>
grade point average.<lb/>
A Screening Committee of the<lb/>
Student Union Board of Directors<lb/>
will screen candidates Jan. 24-25<lb/>
to narrow the number of applica-<lb/>
tions down to seven.<lb/>
On Jan. 31 and Feb. 1 the<lb/>
Board of Directors will interview<lb/>
the final seven applicants.<lb/>
The Board will select the<lb/>
President-elect on Feb. 1.<lb/>
"Marine Midland had nothing to<lb/>
hide. Its holdings of city obliga-<lb/>
tions had remained relatively<lb/>
constant through out the period<lb/>
Morgan Guaranty reported<lb/>
promptly, but not in full. Still,<lb/>
their information was interesting.<lb/>
Senior Vice-President Boris S.<lb/>
Berkovitch listed quarterly hol-<lb/>
dings of all state and municipal<lb/>
securities, without noting how<lb/>
much represented New York City<lb/>
or state. The figures showed that<lb/>
the bank had sold $112 million-<lb/>
about 12 of its total municipal<lb/>
holdings-within the six month<lb/>
period in question. No "selloff"<lb/>
of equivalent size had occurred<lb/>
since 1972.<lb/>
The Scenario Unveiled<lb/>
Even though all the details<lb/>
were not yet in place, Haddad laid<lb/>
out the whole scenario in a July 6<lb/>
confidential memorandum to the<lb/>
chairman of the state's Assembly<lb/>
Banking Committee.<lb/>
Newfield and Du Brul report<lb/>
that the Assembly Committee will<lb/>
soon begin issuing subpoenas to<lb/>
the banks fa the records which<lb/>
they have so far managed to keep<lb/>
from the public. The banks have<lb/>
even had some suocess in keeping<lb/>
the story out of the news. On<lb/>
October 20, the New York Times<lb/>
ran a one column article about the<lb/>
SEC's investigation of the bank<lb/>
dumping. A Chase Manhattan<lb/>
official bragged to Newfield and<lb/>
Du Brul that the bank was able to<lb/>
bump the story from page one to,<lb/>
literally, the obituary page.<lb/>
"It is our judgment that the<lb/>
banks, with Chase in the lead, are<lb/>
largely to blame for the last year<lb/>
and a half of pain in New York,<lb/>
conclude Newfield and Du Brul.<lb/>
"The real outrage is that the fate<lb/>
of almost eight million people<lb/>
should depend so fundamentally<lb/>
on the decisions made by a dozen<lb/>
unelected unaccountable white<lb/>
men who control the major<lb/>
banks<lb/>
Little's Chop Shop<lb/>
N.E. Bypass 2 Mi. North of<lb/>
Hastings Ford<lb/>
758-4067<lb/>
We repair all makes and models of<lb/>
motorcycles.<lb/>
We sell custom partsand accessories.<lb/>
We do custom painting.<lb/>
We have pick-up service.<lb/>
Coming soon- van accessories<lb/>
THURSDAYS<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
2 Big Shows<lb/>
From Atlanta<lb/>
Ha Ha Navista Orchestra<lb/>
7 Musicians and 4 Atlanta Belles<lb/>
also<lb/>
Feather (Disco from Charlotte)<lb/>
Thursday, Dec. 9<lb/>
First 100 People Admitted Free.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0008"/><lb/>
Page8<lb/>
9 December 1976<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
byPATCOYLE<lb/>
The Job-hunting routine<lb/>
Fa as long as I can remember, I've eagerly anticipated the fine day<lb/>
when I would set out into the world, education nearly completed,<lb/>
searching for the job and the locality where I'd start out life as an adult<lb/>
career person. Wonder of wonders, that day finally arrived.<lb/>
My roommate and I set out at midnight Thursday, hoping to reach<lb/>
Greenville, S.C. in time for our morning job interviews. Our parents and<lb/>
friends thought we were crazy to drive all night (seven hours, to be<lb/>
exact), and to think we would be coherent enough to thoroughly impress<lb/>
prospective employers.<lb/>
We knew we could do it, though. We armed ourselves with coffee,<lb/>
No-Doz, and top 40 blaring from the radio, we headed to the Southwest.<lb/>
It was a pretty hairy trip, granted, but we managed to stay on the<lb/>
road, and we arrived in "the other Greenville" with enough time to wash<lb/>
our faces before going to knock the interviewers dead.<lb/>
My big interview was at the local NBC TV affiliate, WFBC. I had<lb/>
spent my entire Thanksgiving vacation preparing my "interview outfit<lb/>
and I really looked smart. The only problem I encountered was falling off<lb/>
of my brand new wedgies as I walked over to shake the interviewer's<lb/>
hand. So much for Jane Cool.<lb/>
The gentleman at WFBC was very kind, though. After informing me<lb/>
how impossible it is to break into broadcasting, he proceeded to tell me<lb/>
what a great, rewarding career it is, and how SOMEDAY I might make<lb/>
it. So much for being Barbara Walters.<lb/>
My luck changed, however. I headed over to the local hospital's<lb/>
personnel office in search of my nurse-to-be roommate, and within a few<lb/>
minutes was filling out a job application there. The folks at the hospital<lb/>
were quite nice. After wringing their hands when I told them that<lb/>
geology was the only science I'd ever been able to pass, they decided I<lb/>
would probably work out in their public relations department, or maybe<lb/>
even in personnel itself. They assured me I wouldn't have to wear a whit<lb/>
uniform and support hose, and I departed happily.<lb/>
I never did catch up with my roomie during my visit to the hospital. It<lb/>
seems she was in the process of taking a five-hour walking tour of the<lb/>
grounds. By the time she returned, her feet had expanded at least three<lb/>
sizes.<lb/>
By the time we finally returned to the motel room, it was time for a<lb/>
dinner date at my mother s best friend's home. (Understand that by this<lb/>
time we d been up and on our feet fa almost 36 hours). We enjoyed a<lb/>
nice interval of chit chat with the old family friends, then departed fa<lb/>
the motel, exhausted, anticipating some well-deserved rest.<lb/>
Rest was not in stae, however. We discovered upon our return to the<lb/>
room that two eligible male hospital employees were waiting fa us in the<lb/>
bar downstairs, so purely in the interest of good oowaker relations, we<lb/>
went flying downstairs fa a little spirits and cheer.<lb/>
When we finally had our fill of spirits and cheer, it was after 2 A.M.<lb/>
and we were entering our 44th hour without sleep. Needlass to say, we<lb/>
collapsed into our motel-quality Sealy Posture-pedics, and stayed there<lb/>
until 10 the next maning.<lb/>
Our second day in Greenville was interesting, to say the least. We<lb/>
spend the entire afternoon touring every kind of apartment imaginable.<lb/>
We saw singles' apartments, "luxury" apartments, "reaeational<lb/>
community apartments, ard countless other types, all of which had a<lb/>
few things in common: a club house, a small pool, and sky-high rent. In<lb/>
fact, the only real luxury most of these plaoes had was the rest oost.<lb/>
On the other side of the rainbow, we were really excited to see in the<lb/>
paper that there was a "modern, high-rise with spacious rooms,<lb/>
2-bedroans fa $l50-all utilities included We headed fa "luxurious<lb/>
Caihoun Towers , convinced that this would suit us perfectly. We<lb/>
envisioned a classy address, complete with dcorman. Reality, however,<lb/>
was something else entirely. "Luxurious Caihoun Towers is about 25<lb/>
years old, and it has probably been at least 25 years since any real<lb/>
maintenance service has been perfamed.<lb/>
This place was so depressing that I felt as if I had just walked into the<lb/>
place RatsoRizzolived in "Midnight Cowboy There were wine bottles<lb/>
strewn around the lobby, and the closest thing I saw to a doaman was a<lb/>
quite aged person who was quite probably the one who had strewn the<lb/>
wine bottles around the lobby<lb/>
So much fa our penthouse suite, folks.<lb/>
Actually, we did finally look at a few places that will be suitable fa<lb/>
young wanen of our social position, financial situation, intellectual level,<lb/>
and education. Yes, Peach Blossom Trailer Park, nestled between the<lb/>
Easley Bypass and Gigi's Massage Parla might really be just up our<lb/>
alley<lb/>
Ms. Jenkins ranks wife<lb/>
and mother role as first<lb/>
By SHA RON VA NDUSEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"We entertain approximately<lb/>
4500 people each year, but my<lb/>
primary responsibility is as a wife<lb/>
and mother said Mrs. Lillian<lb/>
Jenkins, ECU'S "first Lady' .<lb/>
"Not that I don't enjoy enter-<lb/>
taining guests she adds, but<lb/>
the past three decades of her life<lb/>
have been spent as a devoted wife<lb/>
to Chanoella Leo Jenkins, and<lb/>
mother to their six children.<lb/>
Obviously proud of her child-<lb/>
ren, Mrs. Jenkins explains that<lb/>
Jim, their oldest, is an anesthetist<lb/>
in St. Louis. Jeff, their second son<lb/>
is now managing a clothing stae<lb/>
in Washington, N.C and<lb/>
Susanne, an ECU graduate, lives<lb/>
in Charlottesville, Va. Patricia,<lb/>
their newlywed, and also a<lb/>
graduate of ECU, lives in Cary,<lb/>
N.C. Sallie is a social waker who<lb/>
lives and waks in Durham, and<lb/>
Jack, their youngest, is presently<lb/>
a sophomae here at ECU.<lb/>
"Of course I enjoy the<lb/>
prestige of meeting all these<lb/>
impatant people, but one of our<lb/>
favaite fams of entertainment<lb/>
oomes around Christmas. Many<lb/>
fraternities and saaities come<lb/>
carroling, and we always invite<lb/>
them in fa refreshments<lb/>
Besides occupying herself<lb/>
with her family and entertain-<lb/>
ment, Mrs. Jenkins enjoys grow-<lb/>
ing and arranging flowers. She<lb/>
has a greenhouse and participates<lb/>
in a garden club.<lb/>
In addition to the garden dub,<lb/>
she actively takes part in a book<lb/>
club, and is a member of the St.<lb/>
James Methodist Church.<lb/>
Mrs. Jenkins also enjoys<lb/>
many other hobbies. She loves<lb/>
the water, and has spent much of<lb/>
her life near it. She collects<lb/>
shells, and hopes to wak with<lb/>
shell aafts during their retire-<lb/>
ment. She considers her greatest<lb/>
achievement in recent months<lb/>
the fact that she has learned to<lb/>
dive. Though she has known how<lb/>
swim fa most of her life, her first<lb/>
"head first splash" was made<lb/>
this past summer.<lb/>
Mrs. Jenkins was born in New<lb/>
Jersey and it was there where she<lb/>
met her husband. She was<lb/>
teaching elementary school in<lb/>
Bridgewater Township, and Mr.<lb/>
Jenkins was teaching in Summer-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Mrs. Jenkins is quick to point<lb/>
out that "even though we are<lb/>
from New Jersey, we oonsider<lb/>
ourselves North Carolinians<lb/>
now<lb/>
MRS. LILLIAN JENKINS Photo by Brian Stotler.<lb/>
ECU School of Music andSU<lb/>
present piano recital Dec. 13<lb/>
Anna Haun, daughter of Mrs.<lb/>
Charles A. White, Sr will<lb/>
present a piano recital Monday<lb/>
evening, December 13 at 8:15<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Theater. The recital spai-<lb/>
saed by the ECU School of M usic<lb/>
and Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
will be given in memay of her<lb/>
father, Charles Alexander White,<lb/>
Sr. The public is most oadially<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
The first half of Monday's<lb/>
recital will feature the popular<lb/>
Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue of<lb/>
Johann Sebastian Bach, followed<lb/>
by the Variations and Fugue on a<lb/>
theme by Haendel, Op. 24 by<lb/>
Hohannes Brahms. The varia-<lb/>
tions are based on a theme taken<lb/>
verbatim from Haendel's aria in<lb/>
his Bb Harpsichad Suite. There<lb/>
arehintsof melodic variation, but<lb/>
the overall basis fa variatiai is<lb/>
mae ooncerned with the har-<lb/>
monic and rhythmic nature of the<lb/>
aria. These variations could be<lb/>
called character variations, evok-<lb/>
ing many moods, a trait typical of<lb/>
romatic piano music. The piece<lb/>
concludes with a magnificent<lb/>
fugue.<lb/>
Following a brief intermis-<lb/>
sion, Ms. Haun will perfam the<lb/>
Sonata in Bb mina Op. 35 by<lb/>
Frederic Chopin. This four move-<lb/>
ment piece includes the well-<lb/>
known Funeral March followed by<lb/>
a sweeping last movement, play-<lb/>
ed with both hands in unison at<lb/>
the octave. The program will<lb/>
conclude with the Toccata Op. 11<lb/>
by Serge Prokofiev. This piece<lb/>
characterizes much of Prokofiev's<lb/>
writing with its perpetual rhyth-<lb/>
mic drive and dynamic ending.<lb/>
Anna Haun holds degrees in<lb/>
piano perfamanoe from the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Illinois and the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Nathern Gdaaoo, where<lb/>
she is currently a doctaal student<lb/>
in the Docta of Arts program and<lb/>
a graduate teaching assistant.<lb/>
She began piano lessons at the<lb/>
age of seven with her mother. She<lb/>
has also studied with Dr. Robert<lb/>
Carter (well-known to Greenvil-<lb/>
lites fa his teaching here at<lb/>
ECU), Mr. Clemens Sandresky,<lb/>
Mr. Stanley Fletcher, Mr. Anis<lb/>
Fuleihan and Dr. Walter Schenk-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
She is presently studying with<lb/>
her husband, Errol Haun, instruo-<lb/>
ta of piano on the faculty of the<lb/>
University of Nathern Colaado.<lb/>
In 1962 she won the state<lb/>
competition of the Nath Carolina<lb/>
MusicTeachersNational Associa-<lb/>
tion. She won the UNC concerto<lb/>
oontest in 1973 and perfamed<lb/>
with the UNC Symphaiy Orches-<lb/>
tra in 1974.<lb/>
i aii uniJiL iiiiiaui��tk<lb/>
ANNA HAUN FOUNTAINHEAD file photo.<lb/>
HH<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0009"/><lb/>
  � .  �<lb/>
TV specials<lb/>
9 December 1976 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Holiday<lb/>
to spirit of the season<lb/>
919<lb/>
ByPATCOYLE<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
The holiday season, despite<lb/>
commercial exploitation, con-<lb/>
tinues to be the only event that<lb/>
allows us all to be kids again, and<lb/>
holiday TV specials add to the<lb/>
fun.<lb/>
Next week the three com-<lb/>
mercial networks, along with PBS<lb/>
are offering a wide variety of<lb/>
special programming ranging<lb/>
from a documentary about the<lb/>
Jewish festival of lights to the<lb/>
traditional animated stories.<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
Sunday is a big night for "us<lb/>
kids with an animated Christ-<lb/>
mas program, plus an old favorite<lb/>
offered on NBC.<lb/>
The cartoon, called "A Tiny<lb/>
Tree is about a crippled girl's<lb/>
relationship with (you guessed it)<lb/>
a tiny tree. Buddy Ebsen is the<lb/>
voice of the badger, and the score<lb/>
is sung by Roberta Flack. This<lb/>
show can be aeen at 7 o'clock on<lb/>
Channel 7.<lb/>
"Tiny Tree" is followed at<lb/>
7 20 on the same cha inel by the<lb/>
newest version of James Barrie's<lb/>
"Peter Pan This one stars Mia<lb/>
Farrow as Peter and Danny Kaye<lb/>
as Captain Hook. It's a feature-<lb/>
length musical, and might be a<lb/>
neat way to slow down after the<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
Monday night offers both<lb/>
cartoons and stars. Again, NBC<lb/>
carries the load. The animated<lb/>
program, "Little Drummer Boy -<lb/>
Bookll oomeson Channel 7at 8<lb/>
o'clock. There probably aren't<lb/>
many people who aren't familiar<lb/>
with this traditional holiday story<lb/>
- and the song that inspired it.<lb/>
At 830, Channel 7 will carry a<lb/>
special starring a celebrity whose<lb/>
shows are as much a part of<lb/>
Christmas as mistletoe. Yes, it's<lb/>
Bob Hope. Hope and his guests<lb/>
(including John Wayne and Neil<lb/>
Sedaka) will mix seasonal<lb/>
material with takeoffs on<lb/>
"Charlie's Angels" and "Happy<lb/>
Days<lb/>
Hope s ribald revelry will be<lb/>
followed by Mr. Mellow himself,<lb/>
Perry Como. The Como Show,<lb/>
Miich starts at 10 o'clock, origi-<lb/>
nates from Austria. This should<lb/>
be a real spirit-builder, oomplete<lb/>
with plenty of snow.<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
ABC oomes up to bat Tuesday<lb/>
night, with one schmaltzy cartoon<lb/>
and one show with a first-class<lb/>
artist.<lb/>
The schmaltz comes on the<lb/>
scene at 8 o' clock on Channel 12,<lb/>
with the animated "Year Without<lb/>
a Santa Claus This one is a<lb/>
"message" story about lack of<lb/>
holiday spirit. Check your blood<lb/>
sugar level and proceed with<lb/>
caution.<lb/>
Things brighten up at 9<lb/>
o'clock, again on Channel 12,<lb/>
when the last year's John Denver<lb/>
holiday special is run again.<lb/>
Called "A Rocky Mountain<lb/>
Christmas the show's guests<lb/>
are Valerie (Rhoda) Harper and<lb/>
Oliva Newton-John. This special<lb/>
is the type you wish wouldn' t end.<lb/>
It'sa must for holiday lovers of all<lb/>
tastes.<lb/>
WEDNESDA Y<lb/>
The pickins' are pretty slim<lb/>
Wednesday night, and even<lb/>
slimmer if your set doesn't pick<lb/>
up an educational channel.<lb/>
NBC (Channel 7) is running<lb/>
"John Davidson's Christmas with<lb/>
the Lennon Sisters" at 8 o'clock.<lb/>
"Dear John"ill also bring on his<lb/>
wife, kids and father to join in the<lb/>
fun. This one should make<lb/>
Planned Parenthood groups go<lb/>
berserk.<lb/>
The PBC offering should be<lb/>
much more worthwhile. Airing at<lb/>
1030, it's a documentary called<lb/>
"Hannukah Edward Asner as<lb/>
host will explain the significance<lb/>
of this lovely 2,000-year-old<lb/>
Jewish tradition.<lb/>
FRIDA Y<lb/>
Nothing special is scheduled<lb/>
for Thursday, but there are two<lb/>
cartoons of interest on Friday.<lb/>
Both "Frosty the Snowman" (8<lb/>
o'clock) and "Twas the Night<lb/>
Before Christmas" (830) will air<lb/>
on Channel 9 (CBS).<lb/>
Both have some interesting<lb/>
voices (Jimmy Durante and Billy<lb/>
De Wolfe on "Frosty Tammy<lb/>
Grimes and Joel Grey on "Twas<lb/>
the Night"). What better way to<lb/>
loosen up for a night of partying.<lb/>
There are, of course, many<lb/>
regular shows with a Christmas<lb/>
theme. So check out the news-<lb/>
paper or TV GUIDE and let the<lb/>
tube help get you in the mood for<lb/>
the holidays.<lb/>
Beg your pardon<lb/>
In printing Michael Futch's<lb/>
"Loser" story in the Tuesday,<lb/>
Dec. 7 issue, we inadvertantly<lb/>
slurred employees of the Etna<lb/>
Gasoline chain. We are sorry if<lb/>
we offended anyone-the story was<lb/>
intended to be humorous, and we<lb/>
assure you that we don't think<lb/>
Etna employes are losers, .any-<lb/>
more than we think Mr. Futch is<lb/>
(which he isn't).<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
Super Happy Hour<lb/>
Friday and Sunday 3 � 6<lb/>
Sunday Night<lb/>
Fudge Ripple Band<lb/>
Top 40 and Disco<lb/>
Sunday, Dec. 12th<lb/>
1pm � 5 pm<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers<lb/>
and WRQR will bring you 5 hrs.<lb/>
of continuous non�stop music.<lb/>
Sponsored By:<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson<lb/>
Jewelers<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
On The Mall<lb/>
'If it don'ttick-tocktous<lb/>
A. BLUE DENIM<lb/>
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� Heavy 14 0z. Denim<lb/>
� Full Cut Thigh and Legs<lb/>
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BY WRANGLER<lb/>
MFGs.SUG. RETAIL 14.50<lb/>
TF SALE<lb/>
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SIZES 29 TO 42 WAIST<lb/>
B. NEW SHIPMENT<lb/>
CORDUROY<lb/>
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BY "WRANGLER"<lb/>
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Waist Sizes 27 To 38<lb/>
GIVE MUSICTHIS CHRISTMAS<lb/>
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RAZZ JAZZ<lb/>
RECORDS<lb/>
APACHE<lb/>
SILVERSMITH<lb/>
COTANCHE AND RE ADE STREETS, ACROSS FROM CLEMENT DORM<lb/>
GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE ALSO<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0010"/><lb/>
��������HHMHMRMnBH<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 9 December 1976<lb/>
Christmas Dinner<lb/>
Turkey &amp; Dressing Cranberry<lb/>
Oven Brown Potatoes Sauce<lb/>
Green Beans &amp; Rolls &amp; Butter<lb/>
Mushrooms Lemon<lb/>
Glazed Carrots MaringuePie<lb/>
Iced Tea<lb/>
Galley Room of Jones Cafeteria<lb/>
Dec. 15- between 5:00 &amp; 7:00 P.M.<lb/>
$2.75- all you can eat<lb/>
Unknown Armatrading<lb/>
shows promise on 3rd LP<lb/>
Unity Star<lb/>
Natural Foods<lb/>
has moved to a new location<lb/>
on 5th Street near the Mall.<lb/>
108 E. Fifth St.<lb/>
Bring this ad for a 10 discount<lb/>
on any purchase from now<lb/>
until Dec. 15th.<lb/>
ByTHOMASSMITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Joan Armatrading is a new<lb/>
and unusual name to most<lb/>
American music listeners. She is<lb/>
a British singersongwriter<lb/>
musician whose work is well<lb/>
known in Europe. When not<lb/>
recording, she is on tour in<lb/>
Europe and in the United States.<lb/>
She was born in the West Indies,<lb/>
and later moved to England. Miss<lb/>
Armatrading's music reflects her<lb/>
varied background.<lb/>
Her third album, Joan Arma-<lb/>
trading, is an excellent example<lb/>
of her musical skills and the many<lb/>
influences on her songs. Her<lb/>
music may be very soft and easy,<lb/>
relatively hard rocking, or a blend<lb/>
of both. Most of her songs deal<lb/>
with deep personal relationships.<lb/>
We hear tales of desperate people<lb/>
searching for love, people who<lb/>
have found it, and those who have<lb/>
lost love and defiantly live on.<lb/>
Miss Armatrading's vocals<lb/>
are quite unique. At times, one<lb/>
senses that her voice is about to<lb/>
grate on the nerves, but it never<lb/>
happens. She is powerful when<lb/>
power is required, and slips easily<lb/>
into quiet, gentle tones when they<lb/>
are needed. The way she moves<lb/>
so comfortably from one to<lb/>
another is amazing. (It is good to<lb/>
be able to report, after seeing<lb/>
HEADSTRONG<lb/>
HOLIDAY<lb/>
FASHIONSARE<lb/>
HERE<lb/>
FRI.<lb/>
Good Things To Wear<lb/>
From Jeans &amp; Shirts<lb/>
To The Finest In Leather Coats<lb/>
AND Suits For The Man Of Today<lb/>
Headstrong Clothing Boutique<lb/>
218 East Fifth St. MonSat. 10-6<lb/>
752 � 5621 Downtown Greenville Fri. Night Open til 9<lb/>
<lb/>
f <lb/>
Presbyterian Student Center<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/>
Miss Armatrading at Dorton<lb/>
Arena in Raleigh November 20,<lb/>
that the voice is not just a creation<lb/>
of studio magic.)<lb/>
It is difficult to choose any<lb/>
song as being the best of the<lb/>
album. Each is an independent<lb/>
entity different from all the<lb/>
others. Each is better than the<lb/>
rest in it's own way. Even so,<lb/>
"Save Me" may be the most<lb/>
unique track on the album. The<lb/>
words alone make this a great<lb/>
tune. Through the use of vivid<lb/>
images, the song tells of a lonely<lb/>
person without anyone to love<lb/>
"like a moth without a flame to<lb/>
persuade" her, begging desper-<lb/>
ately to be saved from her plight.<lb/>
It is probably the most moving<lb/>
tune of all.<lb/>
If this album and her recent<lb/>
concert are good indicators of her<lb/>
true talents, Joan Armatrading<lb/>
promises to become as popular in<lb/>
America as she is in Britain. She<lb/>
hasthe potential todeliver on that<lb/>
promise.<lb/>
(An rltwtbrfljitit (Hbristmas Jfeaet!<lb/>
directed bg (HIarles jHmirr<lb/>
3Ib,e (Celebration Ratum for � bnl but Mtcrad bta Ml M �M Ipfandot o I h;a bathon Enaland wNw Mmmmm dahcattOt ��� b. announMd by harald ttumpau th� CoaXaaum2i"jjL<lb/>
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<lb/>
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3IIe 3fea�ting<lb/>
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flaba of roMi baaf and a �<lb/>
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��owl latntaclKiri auoraniaad lor .<lb/>
H� Owom Mft Hani art rha u�ai'<lb/>
Drrrmhrr 14-15-16, 11176, 7-M p.m.<lb/>
iflrurlrnhali Student Crntrr iHulti-Iuruusr Kiumi<lb/>
Saet (Carolina lluiurraitti<lb/>
AtlVAWt TICKtlS OM.V<lb/>
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Irt.ii m, mmIm. .1 ttt i mtii1 1 it kat OffjM whtrn N Opan Ifom<lb/>
lUOOAM m I DO f M Monday ttwoudh fnUy Tiefc.ti for aaan majhi <lb/>
�Mil !� ,�u. �.��! twlo.t 4 00 � M (�� iK.foui day Uni ma or dan �<lb/>
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Hfi. N J7�J4 Tafepnona itltl 77 fMI I .fit MS<lb/>
ftaaM MHKta � wit artOi.tk.0 tl.muatl ' � 1 IndacaM �<lb/>
- 8<lb/>
�<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
New Jan Hammer<lb/>
ByTHOMASSMITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The latest release by the Jan<lb/>
Hammer Group, "OH YEAH?<lb/>
is a fine jazz album. The group<lb/>
uses a great deal of electronics in<lb/>
an effective manner to produce<lb/>
traditional and modern jazz<lb/>
sounds.<lb/>
Most of the material on the<lb/>
album has a fast-moving, but<lb/>
quiet tone. It is the type of sound<lb/>
that one wants to relax to, or<lb/>
either try to get into the music's<lb/>
quiet intricacies.<lb/>
All tunes, except two, are<lb/>
instrumental. As already men-<lb/>
tioned, much electronic instru-<lb/>
mentation is used. The employ-<lb/>
ment of the moog synthesizer,<lb/>
Polymoog, Oberheim synthesizer,<lb/>
Oberheim four voice synthesizer,<lb/>
and minimoog produce a beyond<lb/>
this world" quality. It is not the<lb/>
formless, non-concrete sound that<lb/>
much experimental jazz has, but<lb/>
still seems a little out of step with<lb/>
this time and dimension.<lb/>
For anyone who is really into<lb/>
electronic jazz, "OH YEAH?'<lb/>
could be a good buy. Also, for the<lb/>
individual who finds experimental<lb/>
jazz vague, this album may give it<lb/>
some direction for you.<lb/>
free: Wright concert<lb/>
NOTICE! As a special holiday treat, the special entertainment<lb/>
committee of the Student Union has proclaimed that the Elephant's<lb/>
Memory Band concert will be sponsored free-of-charge.<lb/>
The concert will be held at 8 o'clock p.m. Thursday in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium. The committee will give refunds to anyone who has<lb/>
already purchased tickets, and they will be available at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office.<lb/>
Merry Christmas from the folks in Special Entertainment!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0011"/><lb/>
5ly<lb/>
re<lb/>
to<lb/>
jr-<lb/>
it.<lb/>
iq<lb/>
nt<lb/>
er<lb/>
in<lb/>
ie<lb/>
at<lb/>
Freeman leads women<lb/>
into 1976-77 campaign<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Special toFOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
When coach Catherine Bolton<lb/>
leads this year's version of the<lb/>
ECU Lady Pirate basketball team<lb/>
on the court for their first game<lb/>
Saturday at Western Carolina, it<lb/>
will be the first time in four years<lb/>
she has not had Susan Manning<lb/>
in the lineup.<lb/>
Manning, who started for four<lb/>
years with the Lady Pirates and<lb/>
served as team captain the last<lb/>
two years, has graduated. Her<lb/>
departure has left the burden of<lb/>
leadership squarely on the<lb/>
shoulders of junior Debbie Free-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
In Freeman, Bolton may have<lb/>
the best woman basketball player<lb/>
to ever play in the state of North<lb/>
Carolina. If the Jacksonville<lb/>
native can get some help from the<lb/>
surplus of sophomores on this<lb/>
year's squad she very easily could<lb/>
improve on her sophomore year,<lb/>
when she was the state's leading<lb/>
scorer. Last year Freeman led all<lb/>
Division I scorers with a 22.7<lb/>
scoring average and finished<lb/>
third in the state with 13.2<lb/>
rebounds a game.<lb/>
"I expect Debbie to be a<lb/>
complete player this year. She<lb/>
will be able to assume the<lb/>
leadership role despite all the<lb/>
pressure put on her from her<lb/>
sophomore year said Bolton.<lb/>
 But the loss of Susan's leader-<lb/>
ship and the inexperience of this<lb/>
year's team is my primary<lb/>
concern. Susan had a steadying<lb/>
effect on the team. Debbie is in<lb/>
the natural position to assume<lb/>
that leadership position and has<lb/>
the capabilities to fulfill the role,<lb/>
but it will have to develop through<lb/>
the season<lb/>
Another thing which will have<lb/>
to develop fa the Lady Pirates<lb/>
will be the younger members of<lb/>
the senior-less team. Despite hav-<lb/>
ing four freshmen and five<lb/>
sophomores on the team, Bolton<lb/>
has a good nucleus to start with.<lb/>
As great as Freeman played<lb/>
last year, she was not the only<lb/>
standout on the women's team.<lb/>
Joining her on the all-State team<lb/>
as a freshman was Rosie Thomp-<lb/>
son. Thompson started off the<lb/>
season slow, but came along fast<lb/>
and finished the season with a<lb/>
19.3 scoring average and a 10.8<lb/>
rebounding average. Bolton will<lb/>
be looking for her to provide<lb/>
needed help to Freeman. In<lb/>
addition, Bolton expects Rosie to<lb/>
be the key to the Pirates' fast<lb/>
break offense.<lb/>
"Rosie is what makes our<lb/>
offense go said Bolton. "She is<lb/>
the only girl I have ever seen that<lb/>
can take the ball off the defensive<lb/>
board, put it on the floor and<lb/>
consistently beat the other team<lb/>
down the oourt. She's really the<lb/>
quickest player I have seen in a<lb/>
long time<lb/>
Thompson's quickness and<lb/>
aggressiveness will be instru-<lb/>
mental to the offense and her<lb/>
rebounding skill will be a big help<lb/>
to the team on defense. Rosie,<lb/>
too, may have the credentials to<lb/>
step in as a team leader.<lb/>
"I would guess that Debbie<lb/>
and Rosie would take turns being<lb/>
the higher scorer and high<lb/>
rebounder this year said<lb/>
Bolton. "I don't think Debbie will<lb/>
feel she has to score all the time.<lb/>
Rosie can set an example for the<lb/>
younger players. She is the most<lb/>
remarkable sophomore I've<lb/>
seen<lb/>
Moving in at the center slot,<lb/>
which Thompson vacates to move<lb/>
to forward, will be a 5-11<lb/>
freshman Linda McClellan.<lb/>
Bolton said McClellan is the only<lb/>
newcomer who has been able to<lb/>
th faster style of play<lb/>
McClellan led her high school<lb/>
team in Greensboro in both<lb/>
rebounding and assists and could<lb/>
be the big center that Bolton has<lb/>
long been looking for.<lb/>
"Linda will be a key to how<lb/>
well we will play said Bolton.<lb/>
"In a lot of ways she will help<lb/>
make up for Susan's loss. She is<lb/>
the steadiest freshman I have<lb/>
coached. She just doesn't make<lb/>
ISee WOMEN, page 16.<lb/>
DEBBIE FREEMAN<lb/>
NO.NAMEItK POS.HT.<lb/>
10Rosie Thompson F5' 9"<lb/>
14GaleKerbaughG5'6"<lb/>
21Mary SawyerG56"<lb/>
24Linda McClellan C5'11"<lb/>
25Regina LacyG5'5"<lb/>
30Patty CollinsF5'8"<lb/>
31April RossG5'T'<lb/>
32Belinda ByrumC5'11"<lb/>
33Kathy SuggsG5'6"<lb/>
44Sheila BoweF5'10"<lb/>
35Debbie Freeman5'8"<lb/>
40Debbie TrittF5'8"<lb/>
suntuuLt<lb/>
Dec. 11wcu1.00 p.m.Greensboro<lb/>
Dec. 18Appalachian5:00 p.m.Home<lb/>
Dec. 21-23Christmas<lb/>
ClassicChapel Hill.N.C.<lb/>
Jan.11UNC-CH7:30 p.m.Away<lb/>
Jan. 14Illinois State7:00 p.m.Harrisonburg, Va.<lb/>
Jan. 15West Chester9:00 p.m.Harrisonburg<lb/>
Jan. 15Madison College12O0NHarrisonburg<lb/>
Jan. 18UNC-G7:00 p.m.Home<lb/>
Jan. 20NCSU7:30 p.m.Away<lb/>
Jan, 25Eton College7.00 p.m.Home<lb/>
Jan. 28UNC-G7O0p.m.Away<lb/>
Jan. 29Appalachian700p.m.Away<lb/>
Feb. 3NCSU7O0p.m.Home<lb/>
Feb. 4Long wood Coll.7O0p.m.Home<lb/>
Feb. 7Old Dominion5:45 p.m.Away<lb/>
Feb. 15UNC-CH7O0p.m.Home<lb/>
Feb. 17-19WinthropTourn.Rock Hill, S.C.<lb/>
Feb. 24-26NCAIAW Div. I TournamentRaleigh, N.C.<lb/>
9 December 1976<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
Sideline Chat<lb/>
with STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Biased officiating!<lb/>
All of East Carolina's athletics have run up against one major<lb/>
problem the past year, officiating.<lb/>
The Pirates have been getting the raw end of officiating in virtually<lb/>
every sporting event this writer has attended since winter quarter last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The basketball last year, granted the fact the Pirates did not perform<lb/>
too wel I, oi ficials called enough fouls on them to foul out players 29 times<lb/>
to just 13 for the opposition. The Pirates attempted just 376 free throws<lb/>
to 493 for their opponents.<lb/>
So far this season, even though the Bucs own a 2-1 record, they have<lb/>
shot 17 less foul shots (63-46) than their opponents.<lb/>
Last Saturday night's game against VMI was another game in which<lb/>
the Pirates got a lot of trivial calls when the Keydets would have to knock<lb/>
an ECU player down to get called fa a foul. Late in the first half with the<lb/>
Keydets up by five, forward Will Bynum saved a ball from going out of<lb/>
bounds by throwing it to an off-balanoe John Krovic. Krovic, on one leg<lb/>
hopped three steps without dribbling the ball. The official, Paul<lb/>
Hausman, was looking directly at Krovic but called nothing. Hausman<lb/>
was very quick, though, to call a technical foul on Pirate coach Dave<lb/>
Patton, who protested the call. Krovic made the two technicals and the<lb/>
ball was awarded to the Keydets, who scored a basket that increased<lb/>
their lead to nine. This was essentially a ax-point play. The Pirates<lb/>
should have had the ball when Krovic traveled.<lb/>
Also, later in the game, Hausman had another no call' against the<lb/>
Keydets. Fa five seconds following the call Hausman had his head<lb/>
turned around with his eyes on the ECU bench instead of where they<lb/>
belonged, in the game.<lb/>
This one example shows how it is when ECU plays against Southern<lb/>
Conference foes. Even in Minges Coliseum where the aowd represents<lb/>
the sixth man, the Pirates are still outnumbered, seven to six.<lb/>
During the football season this year, particularly in conference<lb/>
games, ECU seemed to be getting a great deal of bad calls from off idals.<lb/>
Many times, their opponents got a' no call' when they had committed a<lb/>
penalty.<lb/>
Sometimes when the officials spotted the ball following a play they<lb/>
would take away a foot of yardage from ECU while adding yardage to the<lb/>
opponents faward progress.<lb/>
A school can blackball' officials, meaning they cannot oome to their<lb/>
arena to call games, but what is ECU to do? If the 'blackballed' all the<lb/>
officials that seemed to partisan towards opponents, they would have to<lb/>
play without officials.<lb/>
This writer believesall this hastodo with East Carolina's dominance<lb/>
of the Southern Conference in the past and the fact the Pirates are<lb/>
leaving the Southern. There is no way to prove this and it will probably<lb/>
continue until we are rid of the Southern, who seems to go to the Little<lb/>
Leagues to get their officials.<lb/>
tCU COACH PAT DYE is listed as the top man in line for the<lb/>
coaching job at the University of Miami Fla The Miami Herald<lb/>
reported m their Monday editions that the Hurricanes wanted Dye<lb/>
badly. File photo.i<lb/>
mmmmmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 9 December 1976<lb/>
Experience helps Crosby's play<lb/>
If Louis Crosby is remember-<lb/>
ed fa nothing else during his<lb/>
basketball career at East<lb/>
Carolina, he will certainly be<lb/>
remembered fa his two pants<lb/>
that turned the tide against<lb/>
UNC-Asheville in the Pirates'<lb/>
season opener.<lb/>
With under a minute to go,<lb/>
ECU was leading by one pant,<lb/>
and UNC-A was holding the ball,<lb/>
trying to get a good sha at the<lb/>
basket. One of the Bulldog guards<lb/>
was receiving instructions from<lb/>
the coach, when from nowhere,<lb/>
Louis Crosby appeared to swipe<lb/>
the ball. Here is how Crosby<lb/>
desaibed the play.<lb/>
"We were trying to play tight<lb/>
defense and face them into a<lb/>
turnover he explained. "The<lb/>
guard turned his head to get<lb/>
instructions from the coach.<lb/>
Then, one minute I was there,<lb/>
�<lb/>
We've got<lb/>
what you want:<lb/>
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Dependable Time For Her<lb/>
Two outstanding Seiko designs for ladies<lb/>
from our extensive selection. At left,<lb/>
17 jewel precision cased in a yellow nugget<lb/>
bracelet, $125. At right, contemporary.<lb/>
angular-face design, 17 jewel movement,<lb/>
yellow-tone bracelet, $110. A perfect gift<lb/>
for her this Christmas. Convenient terms<lb/>
available.<lb/>
� f a<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Onthe Mall<lb/>
NEST<lb/>
7:30 P.M.<lb/>
Tuesday,<lb/>
Dec. 14<lb/>
Merry Christmas<lb/>
and the next, I wasn't He most<lb/>
certainly wasn't. Crosby was on<lb/>
his way downcourt to slam dunk<lb/>
the ball through the basket which<lb/>
aeated an explosion of noise from<lb/>
the East Carolina boosters.<lb/>
"When I first took the ball<lb/>
Crosby said, "I was gang to be<lb/>
very cautious with it since we<lb/>
were only up by one-point. The<lb/>
closer I gd to the basket, I could,<lb/>
tell there was no one else around.<lb/>
When I jumped up, I saw I was<lb/>
high enough, so I thought, why<lb/>
not<lb/>
Louis feels that at the start of<lb/>
the season, he is playing with<lb/>
much more confidence than he<lb/>
was a year ago.<lb/>
"Last year, I was just a<lb/>
freshman he said, "and I was<lb/>
often tight and afraid to do<lb/>
anything.<lb/>
"This year is different,<lb/>
though he continued. "I feel<lb/>
mae relaxed, and the whole team<lb/>
has confidence in itself. We' re all<lb/>
hustling and making things hap-<lb/>
pen. The general attitude and<lb/>
talent oi the squad is different.<lb/>
We're learning to associate with<lb/>
each other on and off the court,<lb/>
and the coaches are instilling a lot<lb/>
of confidence in us<lb/>
When he is not associated<lb/>
with the game of basketball,<lb/>
Crosby desaibes himself as a<lb/>
 nature freak He enjoys camp-<lb/>
ing, hiking, and fishing.<lb/>
"I just like to get away from it<lb/>
all he said. "When I'm out in<lb/>
nature just enjoying life, that's<lb/>
what I really enjoy<lb/>
Coach Dave Patton says of<lb/>
Crosby, "He should be a much<lb/>
improved player with a year of<lb/>
experience. Our team has much<lb/>
mae balance than in the past, so<lb/>
we might not look fa Louis to<lb/>
scae quite as much. He is a<lb/>
winner, though, and I am certain-<lb/>
ly glad to have him on the squad.<lb/>
I'd hate to have to defense him<lb/>
Louis Crosby is definitely a<lb/>
winner. He is an exciting player<lb/>
to watch, as he proved in the<lb/>
UNC-A game. He just may lead<lb/>
the Pirates to the top once again<lb/>
in basketball.<lb/>
LOUIS CROSBY<lb/>
D.T. JOYNER man on top pins North Carolina's Uee Hardison m last year smatch, tile photo. <lb/>
Wrestlers open against<lb/>
CROWS A,A inMinges Friday<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Spats Editor<lb/>
ECU s wrestling team opens its home seasai<lb/>
tomarow (Friday) night when Athletes in Action, a<lb/>
Campus Crusade fa Christ team, invades Minges<lb/>
i'seum with an Olympic gold medalist.<lb/>
The Athletes feature John Peterson, their<lb/>
playercoach, who won a gold medal at the 1976<lb/>
Olymp ;s in the 177-pound division. Peterson also<lb/>
won a silver at the Munich Olympics in 1972. The<lb/>
28-year old veteran won gold medals at the 1973 and<lb/>
1975 World Cup Wrestling Championships.<lb/>
Peterson is entering his fourth year with the<lb/>
Athletes and hascompileda30-1 recad in his first<lb/>
three years.<lb/>
He is joined by 1969 NCAA All-America Reid<lb/>
Lamphere. who also serves as directa fa the team.<lb/>
Lampherewill wrestle at 150 pounds and enters nis<lb/>
fifth season with a 53-16-2 mark with AIA.<lb/>
Mike Whitfield will go at 118, wrestling against<lb/>
the Pirates Wendell Hardy, who has been sidelined<lb/>
thus far with a knee injury.<lb/>
Dave Redd, a 126-pounder, enters his second<lb/>
season with the Athletes'and will face freshman<lb/>
Harry Martin fa the Pirates.<lb/>
Paul Osman, a junia of ECU'S team, will go up<lb/>
against Gary Tayla, a rookie for the Athletes' at<lb/>
134.<lb/>
Senia co-captain Tim Gaghan will tackle another<lb/>
rookie, Dan Moskowitz. fa AIA<lb/>
Veteran Paul Thap will wrestle Lamphere fa<lb/>
the Athletes at 150 pounds, which should be the<lb/>
best match.<lb/>
Rick Greene of AIA will go up against either<lb/>
Paul Prewitt a Steve Goode in the 158-pound<lb/>
bracket.<lb/>
Phil Mueller, winner of two tournaments already<lb/>
for the Pirates this season and has gone through<lb/>
over three years of collegiate competition and only<lb/>
lost seven matches, will face four-year man Tom<lb/>
Kelly at 167. Kelly has amassed a 24-10 mark fa the<lb/>
Athletes in those three years.<lb/>
The 1-pound category for the Pirates will be<lb/>
between Jay Dever, Mark Peters a Mitch Burr to<lb/>
see who goes up against the wald-known Peterson.<lb/>
Senia John Williams, a co-captain fa the<lb/>
Pirates, will face Doug Kilbrovich at 190.<lb/>
Heavyweight D.T. Joyner, who has practiced<lb/>
little due to playing football, will go up against Carl<lb/>
Dambramm.<lb/>
"The Athletes in Actiai are always tough fa<lb/>
us, Welban said. "They ve beaten in most<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The match will begin at 8 p.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0013"/><lb/>
9 December 1976 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
Hunt likes responsibility<lb/>
as 1976-77 team captain<lb/>
Henkel leaves<lb/>
temporarily<lb/>
Larry Hunt is in a unique<lb/>
position with the East Carolina<lb/>
basketball team. He is the only<lb/>
player on the team to have played<lb/>
in every game since his freshman<lb/>
year.<lb/>
This year, however, Hunt has<lb/>
been bestowed an additional<lb/>
honor. He has been elected as<lb/>
captain of the 1976-77 basketball<lb/>
squad. He feels this gives him a<lb/>
special responsibility.<lb/>
�' Being chosen as captain was<lb/>
a really nice honor he said,<lb/>
"but there is some amount of<lb/>
responsibility that goes along<lb/>
with that.<lb/>
'The responsibility lies in the<lb/>
fact that as captain. I have to lead<lb/>
by example Hunt explained. "I<lb/>
have to be a good captain not only<lb/>
for my own pride, but fa the good<lb/>
of the team. Being captain is kind<lb/>
of like being the coach on the<lb/>
floor. I am really looking forward<lb/>
to Iiv ng up to the honor of<lb/>
captain he continued. "I just<lb/>
hope I can live up to it<lb/>
The Shelby senior said that<lb/>
last year was a disappointing<lb/>
season for team members, but<lb/>
that this year would be a different<lb/>
story.<lb/>
"There is one main difference<lb/>
between last year and this year<lb/>
he offered. "Last year, we<lb/>
thought we were good. Then,<lb/>
when we lost our first few games<lb/>
on the road, it shook our<lb/>
confidence, and we suffered a<lb/>
letdown. We were deflated.<lb/>
"As fa myself Hunt said,<lb/>
"I 'uffered an ankle injury early,<lb/>
wh f affected my play over the<lb/>
ent e year. It made me look more<lb/>
upo myself, with my injury,<lb/>
rathur than watching out and<lb/>
playing fa the team.<lb/>
"This year, there is a new<lb/>
attitude ai the team he said.<lb/>
"The new guys are in here<lb/>
waking hard, trying to be good.<lb/>
Now. instead of thinking we are<lb/>
good, we are going to try to be<lb/>
good<lb/>
Hunt said that this being his<lb/>
senia year, he sees his role as a<lb/>
senia being just as impatant as<lb/>
captain.<lb/>
"I've been playing basketball<lb/>
fa a loig time he said, "and<lb/>
with my experience I have<lb/>
learned that this emphasis placed<lb/>
on winning is no great intangible.<lb/>
By that I mean that when you' re a<lb/>
younger player, losses are harder<lb/>
to take. You tend to dwell on your<lb/>
mi stakes and look fa reasons and<lb/>
people to blame.<lb/>
"This is not to say that as you<lb/>
gain experience, it is easier to<lb/>
aocept losing. It's just that you<lb/>
don't dwell on it as much. You try<lb/>
to put it behind and work on<lb/>
towards the next game.<lb/>
"That is one of the main ideas<lb/>
I try to get across to our<lb/>
freshmen, and it's one of the<lb/>
hardest things to accept<lb/>
East Carolina is depending on<lb/>
Larry Hunt to return to the fam<lb/>
he displayed two years ago. when<lb/>
he led the Southern Conference in<lb/>
field goal percentage and was<lb/>
third in rebounding. That year he<lb/>
was also named all-Southern<lb/>
Conference and all-Tournament.<lb/>
ECU head basketball coach<lb/>
Dave Patton said that he was<lb/>
hopeful that Hunt could retain his<lb/>
prowess from his sophomore<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"Wecertainly hope that Larry<lb/>
is recovered from the injury that<lb/>
slowed him down last year said<lb/>
Patton. "I see no reason why he<lb/>
can't be even better than he was<lb/>
two years ago. We look fa him to<lb/>
give up the strong senia leader-<lb/>
ship we need on our very young<lb/>
club.<lb/>
"When Larry ison hisgame<lb/>
Pattoi continued, "he is one of<lb/>
the best big men around. He has<lb/>
a fine shooting touch and can be a<lb/>
strong rebounder<lb/>
Hunt attended Crest High<lb/>
School in Shelby, where he played<lb/>
on the same team with David<lb/>
Thompson, who is still a close<lb/>
friend. During Hunt's senia year<lb/>
at Crest he was named all-Con-<lb/>
ference and all-State and led his<lb/>
team to the state title.<lb/>
He has a brother, Jerry, who<lb/>
played sparingly fa N.C State.<lb/>
His major is therapeutic<lb/>
recreation.<lb/>
Junia faward Wade Henkel<lb/>
has elected to withdraw from<lb/>
school fa the remainder of this<lb/>
year and return next fall with two<lb/>
years eligibility remaining.<lb/>
Henkel was injured pna to<lb/>
preseason practice opening this<lb/>
year and had surgery fa a broken<lb/>
thumb. He would na have been<lb/>
physically able to return to<lb/>
practice fa perhaps another two<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
"Wade elected on his own to<lb/>
drop out of school fa the next two<lb/>
quarters, said Coach Dave Pat-<lb/>
ton, "gohome and wak and then<lb/>
return to school next fall and get<lb/>
in his last two years of eligibility.<lb/>
We were thinking of Wade sitting<lb/>
out this year anyway, since he<lb/>
was so far behind from missing all<lb/>
the preseason wak. Instead, he<lb/>
elected to take this route<lb/>
inkel is a 6-8, 220 faward<lb/>
fron Vienna, Va. He attended<lb/>
GeageC. Marshall High School.<lb/>
Over the last two seasons with the<lb/>
Pirates, Henkel has averaged 7.7<lb/>
points per game and 3.3 rebounds<lb/>
oer game.<lb/>
MADE HENKEL<lb/>
Give A<lb/>
ZIPPER-HOODED<lb/>
SWEATSHIRT<lb/>
ASSORTED SIZES<lb/>
AND COLORS<lb/>
I ��� ' x<lb/>
YOUR<lb/>
SPORTSWEAR<lb/>
HEADQUARTERS<lb/>
PHONE 756-6001<lb/>
SHOP NIGHTLY TIL9 TIL CHRISTMAS<lb/>
218 ARLINGTON BLVD GREENVILLE<lb/>
btNiUH LAHHY HUNT is starting for his fourth season tor the<lb/>
Pirates. Hunt is captain tor this year's team. File photo j<lb/>
POP IN FOR OUR POPCORN SHRIMP<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT $2.99<lb/>
Served with cole<lb/>
slaw, french frk s &amp;<lb/>
hushpuppies. Many<lb/>
other All-You-C an-<lb/>
Eat selections<lb/>
served 7 days a<lb/>
week. A wide<lb/>
variety of broiled<lb/>
and fried seafood<lb/>
available.<lb/>
A - 'hh�ld Food<lb/>
� 419 W M ����<lb/>
�<lb/>
� � �. <lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0014"/><lb/>
����v- �� '<lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 9 December 1976<lb/>
Inri<lb/>
outl<lb/>
� II<lb/>
� It<lb/>
r track has bright<lb/>
k this year<lb/>
ByANNEHOGCE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Coming off last season's out-<lb/>
door Southern Conference<lb/>
championship, ECU's indoor<lb/>
track team has high hopes of<lb/>
capturing the indoor title this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Bill Carson, the Pirates'<lb/>
coach, foresees his team as<lb/>
having "an excellent season.<lb/>
Naturally, I'd like to win the<lb/>
indoor championship. This has<lb/>
been the best fall workout we've<lb/>
ever had, and it shows in the<lb/>
team's performance so far in<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
111 W. 4th St.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
practice. Team rivalry is present.<lb/>
The veterans are having to battle<lb/>
the new guys for a position, so<lb/>
everyone is putting out a lot of<lb/>
effort<lb/>
"But our program can't be<lb/>
measured by whether or not we<lb/>
win the championship. The<lb/>
Southern Conference concen-<lb/>
trates on distance, and we have<lb/>
few distance runners - it's not one<lb/>
of our strong points. I do think we<lb/>
have quite a few people who will<lb/>
be national qualifers<lb/>
Carson's philosophy of indoor<lb/>
track is "to prepare the indoor<lb/>
team fa the outdoor season. I<lb/>
don't want a team that shines<lb/>
indoors and then fades away<lb/>
during the outdoor season<lb/>
Carson feels the Pirates'<lb/>
strong points will be in the long<lb/>
and triple jumps, the mile and<lb/>
two-mile relays, 440, 600, 60-yard<lb/>
dash, 60-yard high hurdles and<lb/>
the shot. The Pirates will not have<lb/>
a pole vaulter.<lb/>
In the 600, Ben and Mel<lb/>
Duckenfield will be returning, the<lb/>
1974 conference champion and<lb/>
runner-up, respectively.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
'I'<lb/>
i Thurs. Delias High<lb/>
A E.C.U. Special<lb/>
 Half Price<lb/>
t J Admission (50)<lb/>
Fri. Sat. Sun. Mama's Pride<lb/>
Mon. Oconee<lb/>
Ladiesfreefrom8:30 to 10:00<lb/>
CM�<lb/>
25 Off<lb/>
Ladies Accessories<lb/>
(Handbags, Scarfs, Belts, etc.)<lb/>
6-9<lb/>
Friday Night<lb/>
109 E. Fifth St.<lb/>
Open 3p.mla.m.<lb/>
Happy Hour every Wed. 4-6<lb/>
Ladies Night every Thurs. Night<lb/>
Traditional Rat 'Happy Hour<lb/>
every Friday 4 p.m.<lb/>
Blue Grass � 'Bitter Creek'<lb/>
9:30 - 12:30<lb/>
irsday Night No Cover Charge<lb/>
Chavis, James MoCul lough and<lb/>
Wayne Chaison will join the<lb/>
Duckenfields in this event.<lb/>
In the 440, freshman Otis<lb/>
Melvin, Carter Suggs, Bobby<lb/>
Franklin and Calvin Alston will be<lb/>
strong. James Freeman, Charlie<lb/>
Moss, Jay Purdy, and Terry Perry<lb/>
will run either the 440 or in the<lb/>
600<lb/>
James Rank ins, Larry Austin<lb/>
and Donnie Mack will run the<lb/>
60-yard dash. Coach Carson feels<lb/>
that "all three are of national<lb/>
caliber and can be depended on to<lb/>
do well<lb/>
The 60-yard high hurdles will<lb/>
be led by Bobby Phillips and<lb/>
Marvin Rankins, whom Carson<lb/>
also feels are potential national<lb/>
qualifiers. Freshman Eddie<lb/>
Kornegay shows strong speed<lb/>
here. Conference long jump<lb/>
champ George Jackson will also<lb/>
be used to hurdle.<lb/>
Ray Moore is the Pirates' top<lb/>
miler. Lynn Phelps, James Dill<lb/>
and Charles Powell will run the<lb/>
two or three mile.<lb/>
Aside from Jackson, other<lb/>
possible long jumpers are Paul<lb/>
Bden, Bobby Phillips, Herman<lb/>
Mclntyre, Mike Hodge, Billy<lb/>
Etcinson and Tony McKoy. Jack-<lb/>
son, Hodge and Mclntyre will<lb/>
also participate in the triple jump.<lb/>
James Willet and Bill White<lb/>
are slated to run the 880. James<lb/>
Green and Keith Urguhart are<lb/>
potential starters for the 1000.<lb/>
Tom Watson will be the<lb/>
Pirates' shot-putter. AI Mc-<lb/>
See TRACK, page 15.)<lb/>
BSU claims<lb/>
volleyball<lb/>
title<lb/>
The Baptist Student Union ran<lb/>
away with the all-campus men's<lb/>
intramural volleyball champion-<lb/>
ship downing the Umstead Vol-<lb/>
lies, 15-6, 15-9, in the champion-<lb/>
ship finals.<lb/>
The BSU Bullets advanced<lb/>
easily through their three-team<lb/>
club bracket by topping Phi<lb/>
Epsilon Kappa 15-6, 15-4 and<lb/>
then proved their superiority in<lb/>
the other leagues by winning the<lb/>
all-campus title.<lb/>
In other divisional finals, Tau<lb/>
Kappa Epsilon avenged an open-<lb/>
ing game loss to Pi Kappa Phi by<lb/>
defeating the all-campus champ-<lb/>
ions 10-15, 15-13, 15-11. The loss<lb/>
marked the first time in three<lb/>
years that the Pi Kapp team had<lb/>
lost a volleyball match- a streak<lb/>
that had extended to 30 matches<lb/>
through the fraternity champion-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
The Tekes then met the BSU<lb/>
team in the semifinals of the<lb/>
all-campuschampionshipsand<lb/>
lost by a score of 15-6, 15-9.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the Umstead Vdlies<lb/>
were knocking off the Volley<lb/>
Follies in the other semifinal<lb/>
match 16-14, 15-8. The Follies<lb/>
had won the Independent champ-<lb/>
ionship.<lb/>
In women'splay Hypertension<lb/>
finished the year unbeaten with a<lb/>
championship two-set victory<lb/>
over the Air Force Sweethearts.<lb/>
CALVIN ALSTON<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
Dec. 11<lb/>
Jan. 8<lb/>
Jan.14<lb/>
Jan. 22<lb/>
Feb. 5<lb/>
Feb. 12<lb/>
Feb. 20<lb/>
Feb. 25 &amp; 26<lb/>
March 11 &amp; 12<lb/>
N.C. State Open Meet Raleigh<lb/>
East Coast Invitational Richmond, Va.<lb/>
CYO National Invitational College Park. MD.<lb/>
UNC&amp; USC Invitational Chapel Hill<lb/>
VMI Winter Relays Lexington, Va.<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Delaware Invitational<lb/>
SC Champion ship<lb/>
NCAA Nationals<lb/>
Raleigh<lb/>
Neward, Del.<lb/>
Lexington, Va.<lb/>
Detroit, Mich.<lb/>
Talking Sports<lb/>
with KURT HICKMAN<lb/>
Newcomers Contribute<lb/>
College basketball teams in this area are getting extensive help from<lb/>
inexperienced talent so far this season.<lb/>
ECU coach Dave Patton has not hesitated to use people like Jim<lb/>
Ramsey, Greg Cornelius, Herb Grav, Kyle Powers, Don Whitaker and<lb/>
Herb Krusen, all of whom did not play fa the Pirates last year.<lb/>
lo prove his confidence in these newcomers, Patton has turned to<lb/>
them in clutch situations and they have performed well. Although their<lb/>
basketball talents were virtually untested at the major college level<lb/>
before now, these players have helped to improve this year s squad over<lb/>
the 1975-76 edition.<lb/>
N.C. State, North Carolina, Duke, Wake Forest, Virginia and<lb/>
Maryland have also utilized new talent repeatedly.<lb/>
NCSU goes with Clyde Austin, Tony Warren, Brian Walker, and<lb/>
Hawkeye Whitney while UNC uses Mike OK or en.<lb/>
Both Wake Forest and Duke have great prospects in Frank Johnson<lb/>
and Mike Gminski.<lb/>
Virginia can look to Joe Perry and Mike Owens while Maryland has<lb/>
Bih Bryant, Jo Jo Hunter, and Mike Davis.<lb/>
AN ADMIRABLE DECISION<lb/>
Dave Cowens, the former center of the Boston Celtics, has to be<lb/>
respected for his recent decision to take an unpaid leave of absence from<lb/>
the team because of personal problems.<lb/>
C vens decided to leave the Celtics fa an indefinite period of time<lb/>
because he felt he was unable togive basketball 100 per cent fa reasons<lb/>
he is not sure of.<lb/>
In these times of high paid athletes, Dave Coweris is no exception as<lb/>
his salary was repated at $280,000.<lb/>
Vet Cowens felt that if he were to finish the season he would be<lb/>
stealing from tho Celtics because of his inability to concentrate on his<lb/>
play.<lb/>
No man has ever played a spat with as much intensity as Cowens. It<lb/>
is a welcome sight to see an athlete take the oourse of action that he did.<lb/>
tim<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0015"/><lb/>
9 December 1976 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
mm mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
MARVIN RA NKINScenter is shown here winning the hurdles in last year s ECU Invnationals. File photo.<lb/>
TRACK<lb/>
Continued from page 14.<lb/>
Crimmon will high jump.<lb/>
Only two injuries now plague<lb/>
the Pirates. Runner Rickey Bizzell<lb/>
is out with a back injury. Mike<lb/>
Harris, who throws the 35-pound<lb/>
weight, is recovering from a knee<lb/>
operation. Carson hopes both will<lb/>
be back with the team scon.<lb/>
Carson feels "the strong<lb/>
competition will oome from Mar-<lb/>
shall, Furman, Appalachian, and<lb/>
William and Mary, who is favor-<lb/>
ed. If those four battle it out<lb/>
between themselves, then we<lb/>
have a good chance of collecting<lb/>
the most total points and being<lb/>
the conference champ. I really<lb/>
have confidence in this team. I<lb/>
think we have some 'blue chip'<lb/>
people, those who anybody in the<lb/>
nation would want. Bobby Phil-<lb/>
lips, Otis Melvin and Billy<lb/>
Etchinson fit into this category<lb/>
All of the Pirates' meets will<lb/>
be held away, but Coach Carson<lb/>
hopes those who can oome out<lb/>
and support the team will.<lb/>
One thing which will help<lb/>
Carson this season is incoming<lb/>
freshmen. "We have quite a few<lb/>
good prospects this season. The<lb/>
freshmen are the largest and<lb/>
most talented group I've seen so<lb/>
far. Winning the Southern Con-<lb/>
ference championship last season<lb/>
probably aided us in getting<lb/>
about seven new team mem-<lb/>
bers<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
WRITERS<lb/>
MEETING<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
3:15<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
for sale �,<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 a write 800 Heath St<lb/>
14.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Refridgerator, excel-<lb/>
lent working oondition; separate<lb/>
freezer oompartment. 758-0096.<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/>
Acooustic Guitar-well cared for.<lb/>
Case, leather strap, new precision<lb/>
shaler machine heads and many<lb/>
other extras. $135.00. 758-7690.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Rare Austin-Healey<lb/>
100-6. A classic roadster in very<lb/>
good condition needs a new<lb/>
home. Give yourself a great<lb/>
Christmas present. Can be seen at<lb/>
Parkview Manor Apt1 2605 E.<lb/>
10th St. or call 758-4876evenings.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer Receiver 50<lb/>
watt rms per channel. 3 years old,<lb/>
$300. Ar-2AX speakers $175. Call<lb/>
756-1547.<lb/>
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 Condition $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 one week from<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 ahers. $2.50<lb/>
each a lot of 45 fa !85.00.<lb/>
758-1314 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Care stereo 8-track<lb/>
tape player aiginal equipment,<lb/>
under dash mount excellent con-<lb/>
dition. $40.00. Call 752-8654 a,<lb/>
752-8907.<lb/>
If you have something to buy<lb/>
a sell oane to the Red Oak Show<lb/>
and Sell; We sell on consignment<lb/>
anything of value, excluding<lb/>
clothing. Open Mon. - Sat.<lb/>
11 00-600 Sun. 2-6, closed Thurs.<lb/>
Located 3 miles west of<lb/>
Greenville at the intersection of<lb/>
264 and Farmville Highway in the<lb/>
old Red Oak church building.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Classical guitar w<lb/>
case. Excellent oondition. 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/>
speakers $175. Call 756-1547.<lb/>
FOR SALE-dean furnished traila<lb/>
8 X 38 fa $1,300.00 a best offer.<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 Paoe 2300<lb/>
with Ant. and Slide Mount. Sells<lb/>
fa $270 new fa both asking $210<lb/>
fa both. Call 758-0260 Dave,<lb/>
leave name and number.<lb/>
GRADUATE student must sell<lb/>
.64 carat diamond. $500.00 Call<lb/>
756-5213 after 9.00 p.m.<lb/>
KINGSIZE BED frame, mattress,<lb/>
boxspring headboard. Separates<lb/>
to twins. $70.00 752-1509.<lb/>
FOR SALE-Electro Comp Elec-<lb/>
tronic Synthesizer. Excellent con-<lb/>
dition. Fa infamatiai &amp; prioe<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/>
afta 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/>
neighbahood. 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 Univer-<lb/>
sity Townhouse. $195.00 per<lb/>
month. Central air, pool. Avail-<lb/>
able now. 758-3089 afta 5 p.m.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOM ATE NEEDED:<lb/>
To share two bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment; two blocks from campus,<lb/>
704D East Third St. If I'm not<lb/>
home leave your name and phone<lb/>
number, so I can call you back.<lb/>
ROOM ATE NEEDED Traila is<lb/>
fully carpeted, furnished, central<lb/>
air, washa &amp; drya, queen size<lb/>
bed with linens. $90.00 pa mo.<lb/>
including utilities. Call 758-7884.<lb/>
MALE roommate needed, two-<lb/>
bedroom apt. at Eastbrook-Call<lb/>
Pat a David at 758-5671 between<lb/>
4 and 7 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED-Prefa<lb/>
saneaie quiet and reasonably<lb/>
clean. Excellent location, rent is<lb/>
$53.00 monthly. Call Forrest<lb/>
Suggs 758-7736 afta 400 p.m.<lb/>
HOUSEMATE needed fa vacan-<lb/>
cy December 10th. Call 756-1839<lb/>
befae 10:00 p.m.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate fa<lb/>
large condominum. $50.00<lb/>
month. Freedom of house in<lb/>
exchange fa light housekeeping<lb/>
duties. Pool, tennis courts and<lb/>
sauna available. Board not in-<lb/>
cluded. 756-5423.<lb/>
lost<lb/>
m<lb/>
LOST- Tatise-shell glasses in a<lb/>
black padded case. Lost on<lb/>
Thursday of last week. Please<lb/>
contact Smitty 756-5394.<lb/>
LOST: Gray and black male tabby<lb/>
with white paws and bushy tail.<lb/>
Wearing a white flea collar. Lost<lb/>
around Bell Arthur off Stanton-<lb/>
burg Hwy. Phone: 758-2390.<lb/>
Reward offaed.<lb/>
LOST: Contact Lenses in a green<lb/>
case. Between Brewster and<lb/>
Rawl. Reward, Albert McMicken,<lb/>
758-5074.<lb/>
LOST-Sllva 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 a it please<lb/>
call 752-6140 afta 5 p.m.<lb/>
found (D<lb/>
FOUND-Female kitten nearing<lb/>
adulthood, found near Rawl buil-<lb/>
ding on the evening of Thursday,<lb/>
Decemba 2nd. Is mostly gray,<lb/>
with interspaced tan, and with<lb/>
white neck and feet. Has black<lb/>
stripes on face and legs. Owner<lb/>
can daim by callina 752-0055<lb/>
personal<lb/>
FOUND: Man's watch at dub<lb/>
football game Sunday, Od. 10. oi<lb/>
intramural field. Call 752-8825.<lb/>
RIDING LESSONS: Intanational<lb/>
balanced seat taught by qualified<lb/>
profest'onal on your own hase.<lb/>
Hunters, eventing, dressage.<lb/>
Regina Kear 758-4706. Free<lb/>
Kittens.<lb/>
WANTED: Good quantity (20<lb/>
guys) cook. SunThurs. 430-6:30<lb/>
p.m. Good pay. Call Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilon at 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/>
RAND-AND GUITAR lessois.<lb/>
Daily and evenings. Richard J.<lb/>
Knapp, B.A. 756-3908.<lb/>
WANTED: Female roommate to<lb/>
share 3-bedroom traila. Canple-<lb/>
tely furnished, washa and drya,<lb/>
1V2 baths. Rent $50 a month plus,<lb/>
utilities. Located at Shady Knoll.<lb/>
Call afta 4 p.m. 758-9577.<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle.<lb/>
752-4272.<lb/>
WANTED: Cook &amp; Kitchen help-<lb/>
a fa nearby yacht dub. Hard<lb/>
wak, low pay, bad hours, but call<lb/>
anyway. 946-1514.<lb/>
WANTED: To buy a used sofa at<lb/>
least 72 inches in dark plaid a<lb/>
colas? Call afta 6 o'dock. Call<lb/>
756-3670.<lb/>
RIDERS NEEDED: To Greens-<lb/>
baoWinston-Salon area leaving<lb/>
Friday Dec. 24th. Returning<lb/>
C nday Dec. 28th.<lb/>
RIDERS NEEDED: Tq Atlanta:<lb/>
(via Columbia, S.C.) leaving<lb/>
Monday Dec. 27th returning<lb/>
Sunday Jan. 2nd. Call 752-8654,<lb/>
a 752-8907.<lb/>
��fl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 9 December 1976<lb/>
WOMEN<lb/>
I Continued from page 11.)<lb/>
mistakes. She isn't a spectacular<lb/>
player but she picks up the<lb/>
rebounds and makes the passes<lb/>
when they are needed<lb/>
With the front-line in good<lb/>
hands, Bolton turns to her<lb/>
backcourt. Point guard Ellen<lb/>
Garrison has graduated, turning<lb/>
the reins over to a trio of<lb/>
returning sophomores.<lb/>
Bolton will alternate three<lb/>
women at the two guard slots in<lb/>
the hopes of getting more points<lb/>
and a better defensive game from<lb/>
the guards.<lb/>
April Ross will return after<lb/>
having an off-and-on year last<lb/>
season. Despite her freshman<lb/>
inconsistency, Ross still finished<lb/>
as the team's number three<lb/>
scorer with an 8.5 average.<lb/>
Joining her will be Gale<lb/>
Kerbaugh and Kathy Suggs.<lb/>
Kerbaugh provided a surprise at<lb/>
times last year and has the<lb/>
outside shot to score and Suggs,<lb/>
who played sparingly in 1975-76,<lb/>
has improved enough to be a<lb/>
starter.<lb/>
"Last year I didn't oount on<lb/>
our guards for many points<lb/>
pointed out Bolton But this year<lb/>
I want them to score more and to<lb/>
take a lot of the pressure off Rose<lb/>
and Debbie on defense. With<lb/>
what we have to work with I am<lb/>
oonfident we can do the job<lb/>
After the first team Bolton will<lb/>
have to change her playing<lb/>
strategy. Without top-notch for-<lb/>
ward to rest Freeman and<lb/>
Thompson Bolton said she will<lb/>
platoon a second team when her<lb/>
first team players look tired.<lb/>
"Our new girls haven't been<lb/>
able to pick up our running<lb/>
offense yet said Bolton. "So we<lb/>
will insert an entire new squad<lb/>
and slow down the tempo of the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"I think this will help us in<lb/>
two areas added Bolton. "It<lb/>
will rest our starters and at the<lb/>
same time it will slow down play.<lb/>
The other team will have to<lb/>
readjust when we start running<lb/>
again<lb/>
Operating on that second<lb/>
team will be guards Mary Sawyer<lb/>
and Regina Lacy, forwards<lb/>
Debbie Tritt, Patty Collins and<lb/>
Sheila Bowe and center Belinda<lb/>
Byrum. Byrum is the only one<lb/>
with ECU experience, having<lb/>
played on the jayvee team for two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The women open their 20-<lb/>
game schedule on Saturday<lb/>
against Western Carolina and<lb/>
play their first home game on<lb/>
December 18 against Appala-<lb/>
chian State.<lb/>
You're too<lb/>
busy to write home<lb/>
and ask for a<lb/>
college ring.<lb/>
So ArtCarved has<lb/>
done if tor you.<lb/>
c<lb/>
7r<lb/>
Dear Mother and Dad,<lb/>
I'd love an ArtCarved College Ring for:<lb/>
D My birthday<lb/>
? Not flunking<lb/>
Z2 Winning the game against<lb/>
? Making all mv 8 o'clock classes this<lb/>
weekmonth semester<lb/>
? Getting on the dean's list<lb/>
? Finally sending out my laundrv<lb/>
other reason)<lb/>
Love,<lb/>
RING DAYS<lb/>
That's when the ArtCarved representative will be here<lb/>
,to help vou select your custom-made college ring<lb/>
It s also the day you can charge anv ArtCarved ring<lb/>
on Master Charge or BankAmeru ard<lb/>
TUESDAY THRU WEDNESDAY<lb/>
DEC. 13-14th UNTIL 5:00 pm<lb/>
IN THE WRIGHT BUILDING AND<lb/>
ANY DAY IN THE STUDENT SUP.<lb/>
PLY STORE<lb/>
KirRVED<lb/>
College Rings by<lb/>
World-famoiJ for diamond and wedding nngs<lb/>
GALE KERBAUGH<lb/>
<pb facs="00057098_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>