<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057102_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for 51 years. With a<lb/>
circulation of 8,500, this<lb/>
issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Course changes p. 7<lb/>
Nixon guilty? p. 10<lb/>
Bucs nipped p. 12<lb/>
VOL. 52, NO. 25  East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
11 JANUARY 1977<lb/>
$6,000 earmarked for staff salaries<lb/>
BUC to cost $8-$12 per student<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
and<lb/>
DAVID NASH<lb/>
The SGA passed a bill Mon-<lb/>
day night appropriating $6000 to<lb/>
provide salaries for a BUC-<lb/>
CANEER staff with the remaining<lb/>
costs coming from ad revenue and<lb/>
student-paid subscriptions.<lb/>
According to SGA Vice-Pres-<lb/>
ident Greg Pingston, the annual<lb/>
would oost each student $8 to $12,<lb/>
depending on the number of<lb/>
subscriptions and the quality of<lb/>
the book.<lb/>
In remarks to the legislature,<lb/>
appropriations oommittee chair-<lb/>
man Craig Hales stated, "We are<lb/>
.more than just representatives,<lb/>
we're students first, last and<lb/>
always.<lb/>
"Any 50 students on this<lb/>
campus will make the same<lb/>
decisions you have made 9 out of<lb/>
10 times.<lb/>
 This is the first year the SGA<lb/>
has cut the budget and show me<lb/>
where we cut the quality said<lb/>
Hales.<lb/>
'The staff, under Monika<lb/>
Sutherland, resigned because of a<lb/>
cut which everyone from our<lb/>
president on down took.<lb/>
"We were fair but Miss<lb/>
Sutherland and her staff wanted<lb/>
us to treat them differently<lb/>
added Chairman Hales.<lb/>
A $7000 deficit in printing cost<lb/>
accumulating from previous years<lb/>
was discovered by the SGA in<lb/>
their routine investigation of the<lb/>
original bill.<lb/>
"Before I pay this, I want to<lb/>
know why earlier SGA treasurer<lb/>
didn't catch this unauthorized<lb/>
spending oommented Hales.<lb/>
 I think we ought to hurry and<lb/>
get this out of our way because<lb/>
we've got more important things<lb/>
to do concluded Hales.<lb/>
A request from the legislature<lb/>
to SGA President Tim Sullivan<lb/>
included an extensive investi-<lb/>
gation of past BUCCANEER<lb/>
finances.<lb/>
Chairman Hales implied that<lb/>
due to past "unauthorized ex-<lb/>
penditures" by the BUCCANEER<lb/>
staff totaling $7,300, an investi-<lb/>
gation is needed.<lb/>
Aocording to amendments to<lb/>
the bill, an investigation by<lb/>
Attorney General Karen Harloe<lb/>
will follow.<lb/>
Sullivan cautioned the legis-<lb/>
lature not to assume mismanage-<lb/>
ment of funds by past BUC staffs<lb/>
until proven.<lb/>
Harloe proposes<lb/>
open meetings<lb/>
By DAVID NASH<lb/>
SGA Correspondent<lb/>
A recommendation which<lb/>
would make all SGA-associated<lb/>
meetings open to the public was<lb/>
presented to the Legislature<lb/>
Monday evening by Attorney<lb/>
General Karen Harloe.<lb/>
KAREN HARLOE<lb/>
In answer to a letter from SGA<lb/>
President Tim Sullivan concern-<lb/>
ing the legality of closed meet-<lb/>
ings, Ms. Harloe quoted � North<lb/>
Carolina statute which r<lb/>
"official bodies  of public<lb/>
interest shall be open to the<lb/>
public<lb/>
"This statute is written very<lb/>
generally, which presents a pro-<lb/>
blem with its interpretation<lb/>
stated Harloe<lb/>
Exemptions to such a ruling<lb/>
include negotiations between an<lb/>
employer and employee, con-<lb/>
ference with a legal counsel<lb/>
where a government body is<lb/>
involved in legal action, among<lb/>
others.<lb/>
"The majority of SGA meet-<lb/>
ings do not fall under these<lb/>
exemptions according to Har-<lb/>
loe.<lb/>
"This new policy is good<lb/>
because the public can see (the<lb/>
legislator's) voting record, why<lb/>
they vote the way they do, and the<lb/>
factual basis for the issues<lb/>
stated Harloe.<lb/>
 The SGA has not been wrong<lb/>
in the past, but abiding by its own<lb/>
by-laws.<lb/>
"I urge you to revise your<lb/>
by-laws concluded Attorney<lb/>
General Harloe.<lb/>
The recommendation will De<lb/>
referred to a oommittee selected<lb/>
by SGA Speaker Ricky Price.<lb/>
SGA APPROVED a plan<lb/>
this year's BUC.<lb/>
Monday night in which students would pay a subscription price of $8-$12 for<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD file photo<lb/>
Sullivan makes two<lb/>
cabinet appointments<lb/>
by KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
SGA President Tim Sullivan<lb/>
announced Monday his nominees<lb/>
for two executive cabinet posts in<lb/>
a regular session of legislature.<lb/>
Jennie Lynn Ingram, a junior<lb/>
majoring in interior design, was<lb/>
nominated for the soon-to-be<lb/>
vacant post of Secretary of<lb/>
Student Welfare.<lb/>
Sullivan made the nomination<lb/>
after receiving present Secretary<lb/>
Ray Hudson's resignation.<lb/>
According to Sullivan, Hudson<lb/>
feels he does nothave enough time<lb/>
to do his job to the best of his<lb/>
abilities.<lb/>
Ingram is most interested in<lb/>
educating the ECU students to<lb/>
the laws and rules of Greenville<lb/>
and ECU, especially concerning<lb/>
consumerism, Sullivan noted.<lb/>
She also intends to prepare a<lb/>
guide for incoming Freshmen as<lb/>
to where they can go for<lb/>
oonsumer complaints and pro-<lb/>
tection, Sullivan said.<lb/>
If approved by the legislature,<lb/>
Ingram will also head up a<lb/>
Consumer Union designed to aid<lb/>
students with complaints towards<lb/>
businesses that consistently re-<lb/>
fuse promised services.<lb/>
Sullivan nominated Kent<lb/>
Johnson, a junior Spanish major.<lb/>
as International Programs chair-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
"Thiscabinet post is designed<lb/>
to help ECU students from<lb/>
foreign countries and ECU stu-<lb/>
dents now in foreign countries<lb/>
Sullivan said.<lb/>
Johnson's duties will include:<lb/>
making certain students living in<lb/>
the international house may re-<lb/>
main there, give advice to the<lb/>
SGA treasurer concerning the<lb/>
foreign student loan program,<lb/>
and waking with advisors to<lb/>
foreign students.<lb/>
The two nominations are now<lb/>
in committee and will be voted on<lb/>
in the next Monday meeting.<lb/>
Police nab bike<lb/>
theft suspects<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Campus and Greenville police<lb/>
arrested three persons for al-<lb/>
legedly stealing a bicycle from<lb/>
Tyler dorm Dec. 28.<lb/>
Arrested were Kelvin Leroy<lb/>
Clark of Blounts Creek, N.C<lb/>
Gino Downing of 1132 Pierce St<lb/>
Washington, N.C. and Terry<lb/>
Smith of 248 Hamilton St<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
According to Francais<lb/>
Eddings, ECU campus polios, a<lb/>
student in Belk dormitory saw the<lb/>
Jtyee suspects cut the chain and<lb/>
lock and then load the bike into a<lb/>
light-colored van.<lb/>
The student then called the<lb/>
campus police.<lb/>
"Through his alertness and<lb/>
concern for the property ot others<lb/>
the subjects were apprehended<lb/>
said Eddings.<lb/>
Pol ice stopped the van con-<lb/>
taining the suspects and the<lb/>
stolen bicycle in front of Fletcher<lb/>
Music Building.<lb/>
According to the arresting<lb/>
officer's report when asked who<lb/>
owned the bicycle, Clark replied it<lb/>
belonged to Smith's sister.<lb/>
Smith, however, denied<lb/>
owneiship, said Clark had stolen<lb/>
the bicycle "in front of the big<lb/>
white dorm up on the hill<lb/>
According to Eddings, Clark<lb/>
was charged with larceny, Smith<lb/>
and Downing were charged with<lb/>
aiding and abeting.<lb/>
All three were jailed under<lb/>
$500 bond.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
WECU Contest Costa Rica Get Naked<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
11 JANUARY 1977<lb/>
Roxy Gathering Skating<lb/>
Gathering of Life" for all<lb/>
Roxy members and people inter-<lb/>
ested in the Roxy's newsletter,<lb/>
film festivals, street theatre,<lb/>
health juice spa, Saturday<lb/>
shoppe, concert committee, art<lb/>
festivalscommittee, and planning<lb/>
committee will be Wednesday,<lb/>
Jan. 12, at 8 p.m. at the Roxy.<lb/>
Covered dish supper, bring some-<lb/>
thing please. Musicians bring<lb/>
instruments. Informal gathering.<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
The ECU Law Society will hold<lb/>
a meeting Thursday, Jan. 20, in<lb/>
Rm 221 Mendenhall at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Greenvilles assistant district<lb/>
attorney Jim Hoover will be the<lb/>
featured speaker. All members<lb/>
are urged to attend as the Wake<lb/>
Forest-Carolina law school trip<lb/>
will be discussed. Anyone inter-<lb/>
ested in law school is welcome to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Lutheran Grp.<lb/>
New meeting night! The<lb/>
Lutheran Student group has<lb/>
changed its meeting time to<lb/>
Wednesdays at 5:30 p.m. For<lb/>
supper and Table-Talk at 1800 S.<lb/>
Elm St. Students needing a ride<lb/>
can call the campus Minister's<lb/>
office, 756-2058 or Home,<lb/>
756-1166 to arrange fa tran3pa-<lb/>
tation.<lb/>
Sigma Theta<lb/>
The Beta Nu Chapter of Sigma<lb/>
Theta Tau, Hona Society fa<lb/>
Nursing, is having a program<lb/>
meeting on Monday, Jan. 17,<lb/>
1977. The guest speaker will be<lb/>
Mrs. Eloise Lewis, Dean of the<lb/>
UNC-G School of Nursing. Dean<lb/>
Lewis will be speaking on "Poli-<lb/>
tics and Power in Nursing The<lb/>
meeting will be held in rm. 101 of<lb/>
the Nursing building at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Members please try to attend.<lb/>
NTE Exam<lb/>
The National Teacher Exam-<lb/>
inations 'NTE) will be given at<lb/>
ECU on Feb. 19. Bulletins of<lb/>
Infamation describing registra-<lb/>
tion procedures and containing<lb/>
registration fams may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the Testing Center,<lb/>
Rooms 106-106, Speight Building,<lb/>
or directly from the National<lb/>
Teacher Examinations, Educa-<lb/>
tional Testing Servioe, Box 911,<lb/>
Princeton, NJ 08540.<lb/>
Ice Skating lessons will be<lb/>
offered Spring quarter through<lb/>
the Physical Education Dept. In<lb/>
ader to take this class, sign up<lb/>
fa P.E. 12 a P.E. 140. You get<lb/>
one hour of aedit while learning a<lb/>
fun and exciting sport. Check the<lb/>
schedule fa times and be sure to<lb/>
pre-register befae the classes are<lb/>
filled.<lb/>
Talent Needed<lb/>
Guitarists and singers,<lb/>
musicians of all sats needed fa<lb/>
Sunday Mass ai campus. If you<lb/>
can help, come to the Biology<lb/>
auditorium at 11.00 a.m. on<lb/>
Sunday. Fa further infamation,<lb/>
call 752-4043.<lb/>
Free Flick<lb/>
Charles Manson, in the news<lb/>
recently, is now eligible for<lb/>
parole. His appeal is also about to<lb/>
be reviewed again by the court<lb/>
system. During this time, we at<lb/>
the Films Committee thought<lb/>
everyone should know a little<lb/>
about "good ole Charlie In this<lb/>
light, we are showing<lb/>
"MANSON" on Wednesday<lb/>
night, Jan. 12, at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
"MANSON" is an extremely<lb/>
frightening film which shows not<lb/>
only films of Manson and his<lb/>
band of merry men, but also<lb/>
interviews with the family, how-<lb/>
ever, it is not a documentary. It is<lb/>
a shocking, revealing, night-<lb/>
marish explanation of what<lb/>
Jharles Manson is. In all fairness<lb/>
nis is not a film fa all to see,<lb/>
many may have nightmares due<lb/>
to the intense subject matter. Fa<lb/>
those who can stomach it,<lb/>
"MANSON" put "HELTER<lb/>
SKELTER" to shame<lb/>
Bahai Film<lb/>
The jungles of South America<lb/>
provide the setting fa the free<lb/>
flick to be shown in Room 238 of<lb/>
Mendenhall, at 7:30 p.m. Thurs-<lb/>
day evening by the Bahai Asso-<lb/>
ciation. The film is entitled the<lb/>
"Green Light Expedition" and<lb/>
the public is invited. Discussion<lb/>
following will be about compara-<lb/>
tive religion.<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta will hold<lb/>
regular monthly meeting Tues-<lb/>
day, 730 p.m. in Richard C. Todd<lb/>
Room, Brewster Building.<lb/>
WECU Radio is giving away<lb/>
Newby' s subs Tuesday-Thursday.<lb/>
Be sure to listen to Big 57 to learn<lb/>
more details about the contest.<lb/>
Republicans<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
College Republicans on Wednes-<lb/>
day, Jan. 12, at 7:30 in BB 104.<lb/>
Business that will be discussed is<lb/>
the club party to be held. Ail<lb/>
present members are asked to<lb/>
bring $3 to pay their dues.<lb/>
Everyone interested is welcome<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
There are a few mae spaces<lb/>
fa students to enroll in the ECU<lb/>
campus in Costa Rica. Applica-<lb/>
tions should be made at oice;<lb/>
however, since enrollment capa-<lb/>
city is expected to be reached<lb/>
shatly. Students fran all depart-<lb/>
ments and all classifications have<lb/>
enrolled, and the first aganiza-<lb/>
tioial meeting is now scheduled<lb/>
fa Tuesday, Jan. 18th.<lb/>
The ECU program in Costa<lb/>
Rica, in its 4th year, overlaps the<lb/>
fall semester at ECU-the dates<lb/>
are July 26th-November 7, 1977.<lb/>
Interested students should see<lb/>
Dr. Cramer in Brewster A222 fa<lb/>
applications and additioial infor-<lb/>
mation.<lb/>
DANCE-A-THON Plications<lb/>
Gamma Sigma Sigma invites<lb/>
you to "Dance the Night Away"<lb/>
at the DANCE-A-THON present-<lb/>
ed fa the Eastern Lung Associa-<lb/>
tion Saturday, Jan. 22, from 8<lb/>
p.m. until 8 a.m. Sponsa Sheets<lb/>
are available at Mendenhall Infa-<lb/>
matiai Desk. Admissiai fa speo-<lb/>
tatas is 50 cents.<lb/>
Auditions<lb/>
Auditions fa the wakshop<lb/>
production "Over the Top" will<lb/>
be held Thursday, Jan. 13, at 8<lb/>
p.m. in one of the rooms on the<lb/>
second floa of the Drama build-<lb/>
ing. Anyone can audition. This is<lb/>
a oomedy review consisting of<lb/>
material by Monty Python, The<lb/>
Firesign Theatre.a nd Beyond the<lb/>
Fringe '64. Fa mae info, call<lb/>
758-7876.<lb/>
French Club<lb/>
French Club meeting. This is<lb/>
a very important meeting-mem-<lb/>
bers are required to attend. We<lb/>
will be discussing the Clemson<lb/>
plays. Brewster Owing, room 301<lb/>
at 3 p.m Thursday, Jan. 13th.<lb/>
New members are welcome.<lb/>
SGA Openings<lb/>
There are legislata positions<lb/>
open in the dams of Tyler, White<lb/>
and Aycock. Interested persons<lb/>
can file in the SGA office,<lb/>
Mendenhall 228. There will be a<lb/>
screenings meeting on Wed .<lb/>
Jan. 12th at 4:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall 239.<lb/>
Crisis Center<lb/>
REAL Crisis Center has open-<lb/>
ings fa volunteer crisis counse-<lb/>
lors, office assistants, fund rais-<lb/>
ers, and publicizers. Fa mae<lb/>
infamatlai contact Mary Larew<lb/>
or Jim Anderson at 758-HELP<lb/>
(4357) a come by 1117 Evans St.<lb/>
Applications to take civil<lb/>
servioe tests fa summer employ-<lb/>
ment must be postmarked no<lb/>
later than January 13, 1977. No<lb/>
applications will be accepted after<lb/>
Jan. 13, 1977. The test is<lb/>
scheduled fa sanetime during<lb/>
Feb. 1977. Come by the Co-opera-<lb/>
tive education office in 313 Rawl<lb/>
today and get your application.<lb/>
Sigma Tau<lb/>
There ill be a Sigma Tau<lb/>
Delta meeting Wednesday, Jan.<lb/>
12 at 7:30 p.m. in room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall. There will be a brief<lb/>
program on the histay of the<lb/>
ECU chapter of Sigma Tau Delta.<lb/>
Afterwards, tryouts for the<lb/>
English College Bowl team will be<lb/>
held. All members are encour-<lb/>
aged to attend.<lb/>
Bowling Tryouts<lb/>
Be a star! Try out fa the ECU<lb/>
English College Bowl Team. It's<lb/>
not hard to be a winner!<lb/>
Graduates<lb/>
ATTENTION: All Winter<lb/>
Quarter Graduates, Undergrad-<lb/>
uate Caps and Gowns will be<lb/>
delivered January 25-27, 1977.<lb/>
Plaoe of delivery is the Students<lb/>
Supply stae.<lb/>
Graduate Caps and Gowns<lb/>
will be delivered January 25-27,<lb/>
1977, also at the Students Supply<lb/>
stae. These Keepsake gowns are<lb/>
yours to keep providing the<lb/>
$10.00 graduation fee has been<lb/>
paid. Fa those receiving the<lb/>
Masters Degree the $10.00 fee<lb/>
pays fa your cap and gown, but<lb/>
there is an extra fee of $7.95 fa<lb/>
your hood. Any questions pertain-<lb/>
ing to caps and gowns should be<lb/>
referred to the Students Supply<lb/>
stae, Wright Building.<lb/>
King Youth<lb/>
There will be a King Youth<lb/>
Fellowship meeting Jan. 11, at<lb/>
7:30p.m in rm. 201 Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Everyone is<lb/>
weloome.<lb/>
Any student interested in the<lb/>
student reauitment committee of<lb/>
the Faculty Senate please see Tim<lb/>
McLecd in Room 228 Mendenhall<lb/>
any day this week between 3 and<lb/>
5 p.m.<lb/>
Get Involved<lb/>
The undertakings and feats of<lb/>
the Student Union are unending.<lb/>
Cosmic rags have surged through<lb/>
the Entertainer Committee's phy-<lb/>
sical being and they are asking<lb/>
the students of ECU to get<lb/>
involved. Apply fa the Entertain-<lb/>
er Committee at Mendenhall<lb/>
Infamatioi Desk.<lb/>
PCA Test<lb/>
The Pharmacy College Admis-<lb/>
sion Test will be offered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday,<lb/>
February 12, 1977. Applicatiai<lb/>
blanks are to be oompleted and<lb/>
mailed to PCAT, The Psycholo-<lb/>
gical Caporatioi, P.O. Box 3540,<lb/>
Grand Central Station, New Yak,<lb/>
New Yak 10017 to arrive by<lb/>
January 22, 1977. Applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the Testing<lb/>
Center, Rooms 105-106, Speight<lb/>
Building, East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
There is a Special Entertain-<lb/>
ment Committee meeting in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student lounge on<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 13, at 4XX).<lb/>
Scholarships<lb/>
WRC is sponsaing two $200<lb/>
scholarships: one to an in-state<lb/>
female student and one to an<lb/>
out-of-state female student. The<lb/>
scholarships will be awarded on<lb/>
the basis of: scholastic achieve-<lb/>
ment, need and contributions to<lb/>
ECU. A 2.5 minimum average is<lb/>
required. The in-state scholarship<lb/>
is named after Ruth A. White and<lb/>
the out-of-state scholarship is<lb/>
named after Dean Carolyn Ful-<lb/>
ghum. Applications are available<lb/>
in the R.A's and the counsela's<lb/>
offices in the women's dams.<lb/>
Deadline fa returning applica-<lb/>
tions is January 31, 1977. The<lb/>
scholarships will be presented on<lb/>
Tuesday, February 15th.<lb/>
Portraits<lb/>
WRC is sponsaing a patrait-<lb/>
taking sessioi fa anyaie who is<lb/>
interested. I n ader to have an 8 X<lb/>
10 color portrait made, a certifi-<lb/>
cate must be purchased tor $4.00.<lb/>
These certificates may be pur-<lb/>
chased in the R.A's offices in<lb/>
every women's dams until Jan-<lb/>
uary 21st. The dates fa picture<lb/>
taking are January 11,12, 24 and<lb/>
25 at the Tri-Sigma Music Room<lb/>
on 5th St. The time allotments are<lb/>
from 11am to 7pm fa single<lb/>
poses and from 7pm to 9pm fa<lb/>
group poses on each day.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0003"/><lb/>
11 JANUARY 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Students complain about<lb/>
food, service in Jones<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A group of students recently<lb/>
drew up a list of over 30<lb/>
complaints concerning the quality<lb/>
of food and service in Jones<lb/>
Cafeteria and confronted the<lb/>
cafeteria management.<lb/>
rants do provide free refills.<lb/>
In response to this complaint<lb/>
Hoover stated, "I don't know of<lb/>
anybody who gives refills on<lb/>
coffee or tea<lb/>
When students exceed their<lb/>
allotted amount on meal tickets,<lb/>
they must pay the difference in<lb/>
cash. However, when students<lb/>
three ounces to two ounces. The<lb/>
employee replied, "Do you know<lb/>
how much ham costs?" McCurdy<lb/>
answered, "I know one thing,<lb/>
three ounces of ham doesn't oost<lb/>
$1.15<lb/>
Students oomplain that over-<lb/>
all, they are paying a high price<lb/>
fa poor quality of food.<lb/>
Eat a big oneat<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
CARRY OUT<lb/>
CHANEM'S<lb/>
Pizza &amp; Spaghetti 1 ouse<lb/>
FAST FREE CAM PUS DELIVERY<lb/>
DIAL 758-7400<lb/>
507 Easti4thStreet<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Sunday thru Thursday<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
NOTHING<lb/>
BEATSA PIZZA FROM<lb/>
CHANElOS<lb/>
11 30 AM till 1 AM<lb/>
11:30 AM till 2 AM<lb/>
MEAT SLICING AREA<lb/>
Photo by Russ Pogue<lb/>
RUMRUNNER<lb/>
ONE OF THE CAFETERIA'S famous delicacies.<lb/>
Photo by Russ Pogue)<lb/>
Dive Shop<lb/>
Finally in Greenville<lb/>
a Professional Dive Shop<lb/>
We carry all major linei of<lb/>
equipment and have classes<lb/>
beginning soon. Learn to dive<lb/>
fromthose who know �<lb/>
The Professionals<lb/>
OPEN NOW<lb/>
One of the major complaints<lb/>
concerned a cafeteria employee<lb/>
taking ice from a Men's Resi-<lb/>
dence Council (MRC) ice machine<lb/>
and placing it in the cafeteria,<lb/>
wnere ice is sold for five cents a<lb/>
cup.<lb/>
Cafeteria Manager Tom<lb/>
Hoover stated, "We immediately<lb/>
stopped this. Our ice machines<lb/>
were broken and the university<lb/>
could not fix them<lb/>
Servomation, the operator of<lb/>
the cafeteria, sends out meal plan<lb/>
applications that boast of "inter-<lb/>
national dinners, ice cream<lb/>
sprees, watermelon cuttings, and<lb/>
pig pickin's Students complain<lb/>
they have yet to see any such<lb/>
feast.<lb/>
Hoover admitted that Servo-<lb/>
mation was at fault since they<lb/>
have not provided some items<lb/>
listed on meal plan applications.<lb/>
"That is a very valid oom-<lb/>
plaint said Hoover.<lb/>
Servomation does not provide<lb/>
free refills on coffee or tea, and<lb/>
most students are in disagree-<lb/>
ment with this policy. The<lb/>
majority of off-campus restau-<lb/>
miss a meal, they receive no<lb/>
credit or reimbursement.<lb/>
"That's where we make our<lb/>
money said Hoover. 'If every<lb/>
body ate 90 percent of their<lb/>
meals, we would loose money<lb/>
Many students are unhappy<lb/>
with the vegetables served at<lb/>
lunch. Students complain leftover<lb/>
grits and hash browns from<lb/>
breakfast are served as lunch<lb/>
vegetables.<lb/>
According to Hoover, this is<lb/>
not true.<lb/>
"We do not serve leftovers<lb/>
from breakfast at lunch, said<lb/>
Hoover.<lb/>
Several students would like<lb/>
to see the cafeteria serving hours<lb/>
extended, since some prefer to<lb/>
eit later.<lb/>
Hoover said that there is not<lb/>
enough business to justify ex-<lb/>
tending operating hours.<lb/>
One aggravated student,<lb/>
Wray McCurdy, questioned a<lb/>
cafeteria employee as to why the<lb/>
ham on the ham and cheese<lb/>
sandwiches had been cut from<lb/>
H6tJA22<lb/>
ONSALE<lb/>
AT<lb/>
ROCK NSOUL<lb/>
ALL JAZZ LPS ON SALE<lb/>
$6.98 List LPS For Only $4.44<lb/>
Chick Corea's "My Spainish Heart" only $6.66<lb/>
Also Santana's New "Festival" Only $3.88<lb/>
� BRAND NEW<lb/>
ZZ Top - Tejas (TA Y- has) Only $4.44<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0004"/><lb/>
El k 1 i 8<lb/>
ditonals<lb/>
Page4<lb/>
11 JANUARY 1977<lb/>
Ruling serves democracy<lb/>
SGA Attorney General Karen Harloe's ruling on<lb/>
closed meetings of student organizations should<lb/>
augment the democratic system under which campus<lb/>
groups claim to operate. The burden of responsible<lb/>
behavior now shifts to those who attend these<lb/>
meetings.<lb/>
Harloe's ruling provides for open deliberations of<lb/>
SGA and Student Union standing oommittees,<lb/>
subcommittees and appointed committees. She cited<lb/>
as precedent the 1971 open-meetings law enacted by<lb/>
the N.C. General Assembly and a previous ruling by<lb/>
N.C. Attorney General Robert Morgan which<lb/>
indicated that closed meetings were against the law.<lb/>
Her action was aimed primarily at Rule 17, Section C,<lb/>
of the SGA bylaws which allows standing and<lb/>
subcommittees to go into executive session. During<lb/>
these sessions the press and public are barred and<lb/>
the reasoning behind legislators' decisions is known<lb/>
only by them-not a very healthy attitude for a<lb/>
"government of the people" to have. In her ruling,<lb/>
formally presented to the 9GA Legislature Monday<lb/>
night, Harloe said that to close the meetings of the<lb/>
students' organizations "only undermines the total<lb/>
structure which they have allowed you to build<lb/>
Harloe did not, however, condemn the legislature<lb/>
for being in violation of state law in enacting the<lb/>
executive session bylaw. Outside the legislature's<lb/>
room she confided that it is difficult to determine if<lb/>
students' organizations oome under the jurisdiction<lb/>
of civil law.<lb/>
The rationale fa closing committee meetings,<lb/>
especially at the university level, is to avoid the<lb/>
disturbances which those in attendance could<lb/>
instigate. Making these meetings open is not a free<lb/>
ticket to a free-for-all where it would be impossible to<lb/>
oonduct government business. Even though this is an<lb/>
inherent risk in democracies which must be<lb/>
tolerated.<lb/>
However, there are measures to be taken, short of<lb/>
completely closing a meeting, to protect committee<lb/>
operations from such disturbances. Harloe's ruling<lb/>
addressed itself to this problem and cited a state law<lb/>
which provides penalties for this abuse of free<lb/>
speech. If student government committees face the<lb/>
problem of rowdy onlookers, they should exercise<lb/>
their power to eject them.<lb/>
But, fa freedom's sake, keep the doas open so<lb/>
that the people can hear what government is saying.<lb/>
Rxjntainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina oommunity for over fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Business ManagerTeresa Whisenant<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis Leonard<lb/>
News EditorsDebbie Jackson<lb/>
J. Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Trends EditorPat Coyle<lb/>
Sports EditorSteve Wheeler<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is 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 for non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Transition suggestions offered<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The SGA and Student Welfare<lb/>
Committee formed a select com-<lb/>
mittee on semester change whose<lb/>
members researched material<lb/>
and interviewed those who could<lb/>
give us information concerning<lb/>
the upcoming semester change.<lb/>
We submit these suggestions as a<lb/>
supplement to the information<lb/>
from the Provost printed in the<lb/>
center of this issue of FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD:<lb/>
1. This spring, most sequence<lb/>
courses offered will be end-of<lb/>
sequence courses, which are<lb/>
courses that should be taken<lb/>
finish all sequences if possible.<lb/>
2. Read all the information the<lb/>
Provost releases on semester<lb/>
change, and save it for future<lb/>
reference.<lb/>
Some advice to be gained from<lb/>
the Provost's information is:<lb/>
A. If you haven't completed<lb/>
LIBS 1, HLTH 12, ENGL 2,<lb/>
MATH 64, you will get credit for<lb/>
one semester's work even though<lb/>
you took one quarter's work.<lb/>
B. Do not start any sequences<lb/>
unless you can finish them by<lb/>
summer, such as MATH 63 and<lb/>
64.<lb/>
C. Check the Humanities and<lb/>
Fine Arts, Science, and Social<lb/>
Science requirements in the Gen-<lb/>
eral College. If you are below the<lb/>
minimum number of quarter<lb/>
hours needed to satisfy the<lb/>
semester hour requirements, you<lb/>
may end up taking extra hours.<lb/>
D. Don't take ENGL 3 unless<lb/>
you want to study it. ENGL 3 is<lb/>
not needed (and cannot be used)<lb/>
for the specific English require-<lb/>
ments. ENGL 1 and ENGL 2<lb/>
satisfy the General College<lb/>
English requirements.<lb/>
3. Check with your advisor andor<lb/>
department chairman or dean of<lb/>
school to insure that if there are<lb/>
any state-required courses, your<lb/>
personal schedule will meet the<lb/>
state requirements. In some cases<lb/>
you may get more credit from the<lb/>
university for a course than you<lb/>
earned in class, but still not meet<lb/>
a state law (This applies only to<lb/>
certain courses).<lb/>
4. If you plan to student teach<lb/>
during a semester, do not take<lb/>
your teaching methods course<lb/>
this spring or summer, since<lb/>
methods will be taken the first<lb/>
few weeks of your student<lb/>
teaching semester.<lb/>
5. Sometimes your school or<lb/>
department will determine some<lb/>
credit on semesters. When you<lb/>
finally fill out your senior sum-<lb/>
mary, take great precaution to<lb/>
insure accuracy, for this is where<lb/>
you can get consideration for<lb/>
inequities you feel have oome<lb/>
your way due to the transition.<lb/>
In closing, we encourage the<lb/>
individual advisors to learn all the<lb/>
intricacies of the change-over so<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/>
that they can help the students<lb/>
schedule their courses and meet<lb/>
their requirements more easily.<lb/>
We encourage each student to<lb/>
think for yourself and learn the<lb/>
rules of the game and play by<lb/>
them. The administration and<lb/>
faculty are not out to get us, or to<lb/>
keep us here too many years If<lb/>
anything, the administration and<lb/>
faculty will give us an occasional<lb/>
br�.ak-this is merely a compli-<lb/>
cated change that can be accom-<lb/>
plished if we work together.<lb/>
The members of the SGA<lb/>
Semester Change and Student<lb/>
Welfare Committees.<lb/>
Penpals wanted<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Presently there are over 5,300<lb/>
facilities in this country used to<lb/>
isolate particular individuals from<lb/>
society.<lb/>
Our names are Blaine M alone<lb/>
Top Cat) and Robert Oicles(Owl).<lb/>
We hope to hear from you<lb/>
scon and we will answer all letters<lb/>
received. Please write to one or<lb/>
both of us.<lb/>
Thank you,<lb/>
Blaine M alone<lb/>
No. 19243-101<lb/>
P.O. Brx 4000,<lb/>
Springfield, Mo. 65802<lb/>
or<lb/>
Robert Oicles<lb/>
No. 00675-103<lb/>
P.O. Box 4000<lb/>
Springfield, Mo. 65802<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0005"/><lb/>
Curriculum changes<lb/>
1UANUARY 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
ECU offers new<lb/>
health major<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Asst. News Editor<lb/>
ECU will offer a new Health<lb/>
Professions major field of study,<lb/>
Health Science statistics, begin-<lb/>
ning Spring Quarter, according to<lb/>
Dr. Charles Ash, ECU professor<lb/>
of Vital Statistics.<lb/>
The major is especially de-<lb/>
signed fa students who have an<lb/>
aptitude in mathematics and an<lb/>
interest in human service, Ash<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The program is a bachelor of<lb/>
science degree and will train<lb/>
entry level professionals in the<lb/>
area of biostatisties.<lb/>
Persons with such degrees<lb/>
will be qualified to work in entry<lb/>
level positions in state and locai<lb/>
health departments and federal<lb/>
agencies such as the National<lb/>
Institutes of Health in the field of<lb/>
data acquisition and analysis<lb/>
according to Ash.<lb/>
 Professionals in this field are<lb/>
not simply statistical clerks Ash<lb/>
said.<lb/>
There are jobs available fa<lb/>
such professionals, Ash naed<lb/>
and the pay is generally good.<lb/>
Requirements for the new<lb/>
maja are listed in the ECU<lb/>
catalog.<lb/>
Ash may be contacted fa<lb/>
further infamatiai at the Allied<lb/>
Health building, 757-6961.<lb/>
Persons interested in the<lb/>
major will meet in Brewster<lb/>
D-106, Tuesday, Jan. 11,7-8 p.m.<lb/>
Women novelist<lb/>
course expands<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Assistant News Edita<lb/>
The ECU English Dept. is<lb/>
offering a revised course in<lb/>
women's studies for Spring<lb/>
Quarter, 1977, entitled<lb/>
"Woman's Place: Studies in the<lb/>
Novel<lb/>
Dr. Sally Brett, who also<lb/>
taught "Contempaary Wonen<lb/>
Novelists" last Spring term, will<lb/>
teach this course under the same<lb/>
catalogue number, English 384.<lb/>
Through this oourse, Brett<lb/>
intends to offer students a chance<lb/>
to study authors not usually<lb/>
studied in undergraduate<lb/>
courses: 18th Century women<lb/>
novelists.<lb/>
Last year's course included<lb/>
only modern women authors. This<lb/>
was unsatisfactay, accading to<lb/>
Brett.<lb/>
"We were missing sane of<lb/>
the finest novelists, and we were<lb/>
somewhat ova-spedaJized said<lb/>
Brett.<lb/>
"I had been referring back to<lb/>
Edith Wharton, Charlotte Perkins<lb/>
Gilman, Jane Austen, the<lb/>
Brontes, and aher women who<lb/>
wrote befae the 'modern age<lb/>
and I finally dedded that the<lb/>
heritage of women writers should<lb/>
be studied she added.<lb/>
This Spring, Brett will indude<lb/>
Gilman, Wharton, Edith Sum-<lb/>
mers Kelly, Doris Lessing,<lb/>
Virginia Woolf, Charlotte Bronte,<lb/>
Nina Bowden, and May Sarton.<lb/>
The novels and short staies<lb/>
were seleded on the basis of how<lb/>
well the authas depicted their<lb/>
particular stratum of society, the<lb/>
period of hi stay they lived in,<lb/>
and their individual role in that<lb/>
stratum and period, accading to<lb/>
Brett.<lb/>
"This course is spedalized<lb/>
and it offers a new perspective on<lb/>
literature she said. "And we<lb/>
will not just study the waksof the<lb/>
women, but the women them-<lb/>
selves, also<lb/>
Brett is particularly interested<lb/>
in studying 18th Century women<lb/>
because, she said, she feels these<lb/>
women and their literature have<lb/>
been totally ignaed.<lb/>
"These wanen were writing<lb/>
just as frankly and openly then as<lb/>
women are today.<lb/>
"It is equally as valid to teach<lb/>
these authas and their waks as<lb/>
it is to teach Hawthan and<lb/>
Melville she added.<lb/>
And, accading to Brett, men<lb/>
should be just as interested in this<lb/>
course as women.<lb/>
"Good litaature should ap-<lb/>
peal to men and women alike.<lb/>
Last Spring, I had quite a few<lb/>
men in the other course, and they<lb/>
were vay helpful. If only women<lb/>
read about aha women and their<lb/>
waks, we miss out on the 'male<lb/>
paspective<lb/>
One particular work that stu-<lb/>
dents of this course will read is<lb/>
Char late Pakins Gilman's, "The<lb/>
Yellow Wallpaper<lb/>
Only 25 to 30 pages in length,<lb/>
Brett oonsidas this to be " one of<lb/>
the moot moving books I've read<lb/>
in a long time. It is a masterful<lb/>
handling of narration<lb/>
This course does count to-<lb/>
wards General College litaature<lb/>
credit.<lb/>
Brett warned that students<lb/>
should na be troubled by the<lb/>
300-level course number.<lb/>
"It is merely a designation fa<lb/>
Spedal Topics Seminars in the<lb/>
English Dept she said, "and<lb/>
na necessarily an indicaticn of<lb/>
degree of difficulty<lb/>
The course will meet Tues-<lb/>
days and Thursdays, 3-430 p.m.<lb/>
Brett is na certain if the<lb/>
course will become a regular on<lb/>
the English curriculum. The<lb/>
dedding facta will be the re-<lb/>
sponse the course receives, she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Allied Health plans<lb/>
new M.A. program<lb/>
Health professionals in East-<lb/>
ern Nath Carolina will soon be<lb/>
able to earn master's degrees in<lb/>
public health without leaving<lb/>
their jobs.<lb/>
Beginning March 10, part-<lb/>
time graduate work fa full-time<lb/>
professionals will be offered<lb/>
through an off-campus masta's<lb/>
degree program in health admin-<lb/>
istration provided by the School<lb/>
of Public Health at the Univasity<lb/>
of Nath Carolina at Chapel Hill<lb/>
and co-sponsaed by the ECU I<lb/>
School of Allied Health and Soda!<lb/>
Professions and the Eastan Area<lb/>
Health Education Centa.<lb/>
"We think the health admin-<lb/>
istration masta's degree pro-<lb/>
gram will have positive benefits<lb/>
fa the eastan region of the state.<lb/>
This is an outstanding example of<lb/>
important educational needs be-<lb/>
ing met through the coopaative<lb/>
efforts of many individuals and<lb/>
groups said Dr. Simmons Pat-<lb/>
tasoi, Executive Directa of the<lb/>
Eastern Area Health Education<lb/>
Centa.<lb/>
Dr. Ronald Thiele, Dean, ECU<lb/>
School of Allied Health and Soda!<lb/>
Professions, commented that<lb/>
"We have been intaested in the<lb/>
program fa sevaal years, be-<lb/>
cause it will make the highly<lb/>
spedalized resources of the<lb/>
School of Public Health more<lb/>
accessible to health professionals<lb/>
in eastan North Carolina. The<lb/>
program is the result of a logical<lb/>
relationship between our school<lb/>
and the School of Public Health at<lb/>
Chapel Hill<lb/>
The three-year off-campus<lb/>
program is designed fa profes-<lb/>
sionals who have administrative<lb/>
experience in health and scoial<lb/>
Shots halt<lb/>
Roga J. Barnaby, M.P.H<lb/>
Pitt County Health Director,<lb/>
reported that the Pitt County<lb/>
Health Department was advised<lb/>
by the North Carolina Division of<lb/>
Health Services (NCDHS)<lb/>
December 16 to temporarily<lb/>
terminate swine flu immuni-<lb/>
zations.<lb/>
The reason fa the termination<lb/>
is to allow fa furtha study<lb/>
conoerning a possible inaeased<lb/>
inddence in Gullian-Barre' syn-<lb/>
drome among vacdnees.<lb/>
The dedsion to suspend im-<lb/>
munization resulted from a com-<lb/>
prehensive study by the Centa<lb/>
fa Disease Control in Atlanta of<lb/>
96 individuals from sevaal states<lb/>
who expaienced a tempaary<lb/>
paral<lb/>
service agendes, but who lack<lb/>
famal training in management.<lb/>
Snce 1969, ova 50 professionals<lb/>
have received degrees in similar<lb/>
programs located in Raleigh and<lb/>
Asheville.<lb/>
Classes in the Greenville area<lb/>
will be held evay Thursday from<lb/>
200-500 and 6:30-9:30 p.m. on<lb/>
the ECU campus beginning<lb/>
March 10. Enrollment will be<lb/>
limited to 30 students.<lb/>
Applications fa enrollment in<lb/>
March will be accepted through<lb/>
Jan. 15. Forms are available from<lb/>
Donald R. Dancy, Department of<lb/>
Community Health, ECU School<lb/>
of Allied Health and Social<lb/>
Professions, (Tel. 757-6964) and<lb/>
Lament Natingham, Eastan<lb/>
Area Health Education Centa,<lb/>
(Tel. 757-6162 Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Fa those who would ratha begin<lb/>
the program in August, appli-<lb/>
cations will be accepted through<lb/>
the middle of June.<lb/>
EAT FOR JUST<lb/>
V :J plus tax MonThurs.<lb/>
Crabcakes, slaw, french fries plus<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
Va pound hamburger steak, slaw,<lb/>
french fries and rolls.<lb/>
Fish, slaw french fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat. 752-3172<lb/>
2 miles east on highway 264<lb/>
(out 10th St.)<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
SKIERS!<lb/>
Large selection of<lb/>
ski equipment and clothing<lb/>
SKIS<lb/>
Jackets �r trousers- 20 off,<lb/>
sweaters, tin tlenecks, &amp;<lb/>
capsby Head<lb/>
Bindings by Soloman<lb/>
Ski Poles by Spalding<lb/>
Ski Boots by Caber<lb/>
Gordon D. Fulp<lb/>
Golf Professional<lb/>
756-0504<lb/>
216 COUNTRY CLUB DRIVE<lb/>
GREENVILLE,IM.C. 27834<lb/>
Lautares Jewelers<lb/>
Registered Jewelers Certified Gemologist<lb/>
American Gem Society<lb/>
Diamond Specialists<lb/>
See George Lautares ECU Class '41<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 11 JANUARY 1977<lb/>
Robinson to announce<lb/>
Union president Feb. 1<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
The selection of the Student<lb/>
Union president will be announ-<lb/>
ced on Feb. 1. according to Barry<lb/>
Robinson, acting Student Union<lb/>
president.<lb/>
Applications are being taken<lb/>
now through Jan. 19 and may be<lb/>
picked up at the Information Desk<lb/>
in Mendenhall.<lb/>
All applicants have to fill out<lb/>
applications and write a general<lb/>
information letter to the Student<lb/>
Union Board of Directors said<lb/>
Robinson.<lb/>
The applicants will be inter-<lb/>
viewed by the Board on Jan. 31<lb/>
and Feb. 1.<lb/>
"We're expecting more appli-<lb/>
cants this year than before<lb/>
according to Robinson.<lb/>
"The position has become<lb/>
better known and people have<lb/>
beoome more interested in pro-<lb/>
gramming<lb/>
Robinson said that he feels<lb/>
people want to oomplain but do<lb/>
not want to do anything about the<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
Vim&amp;imuA<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
300 EVANS<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
PHONE: 752-2136<lb/>
FREE PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
fJMftAjJOtfft picKUP AND DELIVERY<lb/>
Prescription Dept. with medication<lb/>
profiles: yonr prescription always at<lb/>
our fingertipseven though yon may<lb/>
lose your R bottle.<lb/>
Home?<lb/>
"It's New"<lb/>
All natural<lb/>
SOFT FROZEN YOGURT<lb/>
in your favorite<lb/>
fruit flavors<lb/>
TASTES GREAT<lb/>
It's even good for you!<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
DAIRY BAR<lb/>
ICE CREAM and<lb/>
SANDWICH SHOPPE<lb/>
<lb/>
"Here's a good way to get<lb/>
involved and let people hear your<lb/>
voioe<lb/>
Aocording to Robinson, the<lb/>
president is in charge of all<lb/>
programming aspects of Union,<lb/>
but he or she does not have the<lb/>
sole right to book programs.<lb/>
"Outside of the Union, the<lb/>
president is co-chairperson of the<lb/>
Homecoming Steering Committee<lb/>
and serves on the Board of<lb/>
Directors of the Afro-American<lb/>
Cultural Center.<lb/>
Robinson said that it is<lb/>
basically an administrative posi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
No experience is required to<lb/>
apply fa the office, said Robin-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
"If anybody wants to come<lb/>
talk to me about the position, I'll<lb/>
be glad to see them<lb/>
STUDENT UNION PRESIDENT BARRY ROBINSON<lb/>
Alabama prison called cruel<lb/>
NEW YORK (LNS)-ln January,<lb/>
1976, a federal court judge ruled<lb/>
that Alabama's prison system<lb/>
violated "any current judicial<lb/>
definition of cruel and unusual<lb/>
punishment The judge then<lb/>
handed down a far-reaching<lb/>
decision calling for the total<lb/>
revamping of the state's prison<lb/>
system within the next year.<lb/>
But 1976 brought little change<lb/>
for Alabama prisoners. "The<lb/>
problem is still getting general<lb/>
compliance by prison officials,<lb/>
and the court's recommendations<lb/>
have substantially not been met<lb/>
Steve Suitts of the Alabama<lb/>
ACLU told LNS.<lb/>
The only optimistic aspect of<lb/>
the whole thing has been cleaning<lb/>
up some of the obvious filth and<lb/>
also in the area of classification of<lb/>
inmates (to determine who should<lb/>
be in what type of prison). But<lb/>
that has come about because the<lb/>
judge has established a classifi-<lb/>
cation team outside the prison<lb/>
system. To get compliance he had<lb/>
to bring in some folks who were<lb/>
not part of the prison bureaucra-<lb/>
cy<lb/>
On December 2 the same<lb/>
federal court judge who originally<lb/>
ruled in the case said that<lb/>
overcrowding had been suffi-<lb/>
ciently reduced to allow addition-<lb/>
al prisoners to oome in to the<lb/>
prisons for the first time in over a<lb/>
year. Some news reports have<lb/>
interpreted this as an indication<lb/>
that Alabama is improving, but<lb/>
Suitts disagrees.<lb/>
Throughout the case, Ala-<lb/>
bama has claimed that the court<lb/>
order would bankrupt the state.<lb/>
OLDE TOWNE INN<lb/>
117 E. 5TH ST. 758-1991<lb/>
Eat a home cooked family style dinner with us.<lb/>
One entree (choose from three) and all the vegetables<lb/>
you can eat - served family style (tea or coffee included)<lb/>
ONLY $22S (PLUS TAX)<lb/>
SUNDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
4:30-7:30 P.M. REAR DINING ROOM<lb/>
The legislature did not act on<lb/>
budget requests in 1976, and<lb/>
prison officials will be asking for<lb/>
three and a half times their<lb/>
budget of last year in the<lb/>
upcoming 1977 session.<lb/>
"Our position is to oppose<lb/>
that request explained Suitts.<lb/>
"There is a substantial percent-<lb/>
age of the prison population<lb/>
which does not need to be in<lb/>
institutional custody and should<lb/>
be released to varying degrees of<lb/>
custody, including work release<lb/>
and that sort of program. That<lb/>
would considerably reduce the<lb/>
amount of money needed<lb/>
Asked if this point of view has<lb/>
any chance of passing in the<lb/>
legislature, Suitts said "it cer-<lb/>
tainly looms as a very large<lb/>
possibility at the moment. In a<lb/>
time when there is very little cash<lb/>
to go around in the state treasury,<lb/>
the argument has more persua-<lb/>
sion than it would ordinarily<lb/>
Wood pulp bread<lb/>
helps dietary woes<lb/>
NEW YORK (LNS)While<lb/>
debate in the medical community<lb/>
rageson about whether inaeased<lb/>
dietary roughage can cure<lb/>
hemorrhoids, prevent colon can-<lb/>
cer and promote lower cholester-<lb/>
ol, here's something new from<lb/>
the folks who bring us Wonder<lb/>
Bread.<lb/>
The ITT-Continental Baking<lb/>
Co. is marketing a new bread<lb/>
called Fresh Horizons, promited<lb/>
as oontaininq "five times more<lb/>
fiber than ordinary white bread<lb/>
The secret ingredient in Fresh<lb/>
Haizons is alpha cellulose - a<lb/>
purified wood pulp.<lb/>
In essence, ITT has aeated a<lb/>
bread made of refined white<lb/>
flour, from which most of the<lb/>
natural wheat flour has been<lb/>
removed through processing. The<lb/>
fiber is then added back into the<lb/>
bread through the purified wood<lb/>
pulp.<lb/>
Tax notice<lb/>
The listing of property fa<lb/>
tax purposes in Pitt County<lb/>
will begin January 3, 1977,<lb/>
and will continue through<lb/>
January 31, 1977.<lb/>
Any person, firm, capa-<lb/>
atiai a aganizatiai owning<lb/>
property in this county as of<lb/>
January 1, 1977, whether real<lb/>
a personal, must list such<lb/>
property within the listing<lb/>
period a be subject to the<lb/>
penalties presaibed by Nath<lb/>
Carolina Law.<lb/>
Property must be listed in<lb/>
the township in which it is<lb/>
located.<lb/>
Persons who have two<lb/>
places that they could dwell on<lb/>
January 1st of this year are<lb/>
taxable at the place at which<lb/>
they have dwelled fa the<lb/>
greater period of time during<lb/>
the previous calendar year. In<lb/>
general, property belonging to<lb/>
students is taxable in Pitt<lb/>
County, if the student is not a<lb/>
freshman a a recent transfer<lb/>
and if he a she is paying<lb/>
in-state tuition. Students from<lb/>
out-of state locations are not<lb/>
taxable in Pitt County if they<lb/>
are just temporarily in Nath<lb/>
Carolina fa the singular pur-<lb/>
pose of attending school.<lb/>
Each persons to list must<lb/>
bring his a her social security<lb/>
number and motor vehicle<lb/>
registration cards to the listing<lb/>
place.<lb/>
fs.<lb/>
HHBJHBJHIHi<lb/>
��� ��<lb/>
� � �� '�<lb/>
� �y-y � � �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0007"/><lb/>
11 JANUARY 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
For semester changeo ver<lb/>
lease<lb/>
That<lb/>
the<lb/>
n has<lb/>
t the<lb/>
oer-<lb/>
large<lb/>
In a<lb/>
cash<lb/>
sury,<lb/>
rsua-<lb/>
ad<lb/>
rresh<lb/>
- or<lb/>
:ed a<lb/>
vhite<lb/>
! the<lb/>
been<lb/>
The<lb/>
3 the<lb/>
wood<lb/>
le<lb/>
ig<lb/>
In<lb/>
to<lb/>
tt<lb/>
a<lb/>
sr<lb/>
g<lb/>
m<lb/>
ot<lb/>
th<lb/>
r-<lb/>
st<lb/>
ty<lb/>
General education and sequence course conversions<lb/>
GENERAL EDUCATION<lb/>
English: A student whooompletesonly ENQL1 or ENQL1<lb/>
and ENQL 3 before September 1,1977 may complete his<lb/>
requirements by taking ENQL 1200. Students who<lb/>
complete ENGL 1 and ENQL 2 before September 1, 1977<lb/>
will be considered to have completed the requirement.<lb/>
Library Science: One quarter hour of Library Science<lb/>
oompletes the requirement.<lb/>
Social Sciences: Students who have completed from 1 to 17<lb/>
quarter hours will take additional courses so as to<lb/>
accumulate a combined equivalent of 13 semester hours.<lb/>
Those who have oompleted 18 quarter hours or more will<lb/>
have satisfied the requirements. (Social Science majors<lb/>
must meet their requirements from outside their major.)<lb/>
Courses must be selected from at least 3 of the following<lb/>
areas: Anthropology, Economics, Geography, History,<lb/>
Political Science, Psychology, or Sociology.<lb/>
Sclenoe: Students who have oompleted from 1 to 8 quarter<lb/>
hours of Sclenoe will take additional courses so as to<lb/>
accumulate a combined equivalent of 6 semester hours<lb/>
(including one laboratory course) to satisfy the require-<lb/>
ment. Those who have oompleted at least 9 quarter hours<lb/>
(including a laboratory course) will have satisfied the<lb/>
requirement. The Sclenoe courses must be selected from<lb/>
the following departments: Biology, Chemistry, Geology,<lb/>
or Physios.<lb/>
Mathematics: A command of mathematics at least<lb/>
equivalent to MATH 66 or alternatively 5 quarter hours of<lb/>
Logic comp'etes the requirement.<lb/>
Humanities and Fine Arts: Students who have oompleted<lb/>
from 1 to 13 quarter hours will take additional courses so<lb/>
as to accumulate a combined equivalent of 10 semester<lb/>
hours. Those who oomplete 14 quarter hours or more will<lb/>
have satisfied the requirement. (Humanitiesand Fine Arts<lb/>
majors must meet their requirements outside their major<lb/>
fields.) Select at least one oourse in Humanities and one<lb/>
course in Fine Arts from the following areas:<lb/>
Humanities: Literature (English or American); Literature<lb/>
in a foreign language or in translation; Philosophy.<lb/>
Fine Arts: Art; Drama or Speech; Music.<lb/>
Health and Physical Educ Students who have completed<lb/>
3 quarter hours in Health and 1 quarter hour in Physical<lb/>
Education will have satisfied the requirement.<lb/>
Use Conversion Table for area requirements. Use<lb/>
Conversion Table for single course if appropriate.<lb/>
Consider a 4.5 quarter hour transferred oourse as 3<lb/>
semester hours instead of the 2 semester hours provided<lb/>
by the Conversion Table.<lb/>
AEROSPACE STUDIES<lb/>
AER011,12,13(U.S. Forces In the Contemporary World)<lb/>
Students completing AERO 11 or AERO 11 and 12 as<lb/>
quarter oourses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
completing AERO 1102 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
AER011L, 12L, 13L (CorpsTraining) Students completing<lb/>
AERO 11L or AERO 11L and 12L as quarter oourses may<lb/>
satisfy the sequence requirement by completing AERO<lb/>
1103 as a semester course.<lb/>
AER0111,112,113(Development of Air Power; Students<lb/>
completing AERO 111a AERO 111 and 112 as quarter<lb/>
courses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oomDletina AERO 2202 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
AER0111L, 112L, 113L (Corps Training) Students<lb/>
completing AER0111L or AER0111L and 112L as quarter<lb/>
courses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
completing AERO 2203 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
AERO 221L, 222L, 223L (Corps Training) Students<lb/>
oompleting AERO 221L or AERO 221L and 222L as quarter<lb/>
courses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting AERO 3303 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
AERO 221, 222, 223 (National Security Forces) Students<lb/>
oompleting AERO 221 or AERO 221 and 222 as quarter<lb/>
courses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting AERO 3302 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
AERO 391, 392, 393 (Military Management and<lb/>
Leadership) Students oompleting AERO 391 or AERO 391<lb/>
and 392 as quarter courses may satisfy the sequence<lb/>
requirement by oompleting AERO 4402 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
AERO 391L, 392L, 393L (Corps Training) Students<lb/>
oompleting AERO 391L or AERO 391L and 392L as quarter<lb/>
courses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting AERO 4403 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
BIOLOGY<lb/>
The Department of Biology reoommends the following<lb/>
oourse selection for students requiring partial sequences<lb/>
under the semester system:<lb/>
BIOL 70, 70L: Students oompleting BIOL 70 and 70L as<lb/>
quarter oourses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting BIOL 1060 (formerly 90, 95) or BIOL 1070<lb/>
(formerly 183, 184) or BIOL 1080 (formerly 181, 182) as a<lb/>
semester oourse.<lb/>
BIOL 70, 70L, 71, 71L: Students completing BIOL 70, 70L,<lb/>
71, 71L as quarter oourses may oomplete the general<lb/>
education sequence requirement by oompleting BIOL 1060<lb/>
or BIOL 1061 or other general education oourses from<lb/>
Chemistry, Geology or Physics.<lb/>
BIOL90or95:Studentsoompleting BIOL 90 or BIOL95 as<lb/>
a quarter oourse may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting BIOL 1050 (formerly 70, 71) and BIOL 1061<lb/>
(formerly 70L, 71L) as semester oourses.<lb/>
BIOL 124, 124L. Students oompleting BIOL 124 and 124L<lb/>
will reoelve no credit fa purposes of oompleting Human<lb/>
Anatomy and Physiology. These hours will oount only as<lb/>
elective hours toward graduation. To satisfy the Human<lb/>
Anatomy and Physiology sequenos requirement, students<lb/>
should take BIOL 2120 and BIOL 2121 (famerly BIOL 124,<lb/>
124L, 125, 125L) as semester oourses.<lb/>
BIOL 181 or 182: Sudents oompleting BIOL 181 or 182<lb/>
may satisfy the sequenoe requirement by oompleting BIOL<lb/>
1070 (famerly 183, 184) as a semester oourse.<lb/>
BIOL 183 a 184: audents oompleting BIOL 183 or 184<lb/>
may satisfy the sequence requirement by oompleting BIOL<lb/>
1080 (famerly 181, 182) as a semester oourse.<lb/>
BIOL181 a 182 and 183 a 184: Students oompleting BIOL<lb/>
181 or 182 and 183 or 184 may satisfy the sequenoe<lb/>
requirement by completing BIOL 1070 (famerly 183,184)<lb/>
or BIOL 1080 (famerly 181, 182).<lb/>
BIOL 380G: Students completing BIOL 380G as a quarter<lb/>
course may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting BIOL 5810 (famerly 381G, 382G) as a<lb/>
semester oourse.<lb/>
BIOL 380G, 381G: Students oompleting BIOL 380G, and<lb/>
381G as quarter oourses have oompleted the biochemistry<lb/>
sequenoe requirement.<lb/>
CHEMISTRY<lb/>
CHEM 24 and 100, anda 101, anda 102 (General<lb/>
Chemistry) Students oompleting CHEM 24 as a quarter<lb/>
course may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting either CHEM 2040 a CHEM 2030 and 2031 as<lb/>
semester oourses.<lb/>
In all other sequences (CHEM 34, 35 &amp; 136;CHEM 64,<lb/>
65, &amp; 66; CHEM 144,145, &amp; 146; CHEM 261, 262, &amp; 263)<lb/>
students having successfully completed only the first<lb/>
quarter will be required to take two semester oourses.<lb/>
Students having successfully oompleted two quarters will<lb/>
be required to take the seoond semester to oomplete the<lb/>
sequenoe.<lb/>
DRAMA AND SPEECH<lb/>
DRAM 21a, b,c (Ballet I) Students oompleting 21a a 21a<lb/>
and 21b as quarter oourses may satisfy the sequenoe<lb/>
requirement by oompleting DRAM 1021 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
Continued on page 8.<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
SHARPE'S<lb/>
FORMAL WEAR<lb/>
for<lb/>
Fraternity &amp;<lb/>
Sorority<lb/>
Occasions<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
Sherwin-Williamsl<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
.113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
�J�SS<lb/>
If you haven't been down to<lb/>
jOL the Tree House lately, now<lb/>
5fc is a good time. We have<lb/>
the finest pizza and salads<lb/>
in town.<lb/>
The Tree people also want<lb/>
you to try their fine Italian<lb/>
dinners.<lb/>
Coffee house music every<lb/>
night.<lb/>
The Tree House -<lb/>
An Alternative Restaurant and Nightclub<lb/>
Corner of Fifth anxl Cotanche<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
6"<lb/>
Wed.&amp;Thur.<lb/>
Super Grit<lb/>
FriSat&amp;Sun.<lb/>
Bull<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 parts and accessories.<lb/>
We do custom painting.<lb/>
We have pick-up service.<lb/>
Coming soon- van accessories<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0008"/><lb/>
���IBI <lb/>
I S�H JWBPjjE �ivrsfl.<lb/>
HPJPPPPJBPJPJf ������������VIBiHHHIBHMBmBHHHHIHBiHBiHHIi<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 11 JANUARY 1977<lb/>
DRAM 22a,b,c (Contemporary Danoe I) Students<lb/>
oompleting 22a or 22a and 22b as quarter courses may<lb/>
satisfy the sequence requirement by oompleting DRAM<lb/>
1022 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 23a, b,c(Jazz Dance I) Students oompleting 23a a<lb/>
23b and 23c as quarter courses may satisfy the sequence<lb/>
requirement by oompleting DRAM 1023 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 121a, b, c (Ballet II) Students oompleting 121a or<lb/>
121 a and 121 b as quarter courses may satisfy the sequence<lb/>
requirement by oompleting DRAM 2041 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 122a, b, c (Contemporary Danoe II) Students<lb/>
oompleting 122a or 122a and 122b as quarter oourses may<lb/>
satisfy the sequence requirement by oompleting DRAM<lb/>
2042 as a semester course.<lb/>
DRAM 131a, b, c (Stage Scenery) Students completing<lb/>
131a may satisfy the sequence requirement by completing<lb/>
DRAM 2001 and 2002 as semester oourses.<lb/>
Students oompleting 131a and 131b may satisfy the<lb/>
sequence requirement by oompleting DRAM 2002 as a<lb/>
semester oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 221a, b, c (Ballet III) Students oompleting 221a or<lb/>
221 a and 221 b as quarter oourses may satisfy the sequence<lb/>
requirement by oompleting DRAM 3061 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 222a, b, c (Contemporary Danoe III) Students<lb/>
oompleting 222a or 222a and 222b as quarter oourses may<lb/>
satisfy the sequence requirements by completing DRAM<lb/>
3062 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 223a, b, c, (Jazz Danoe III) Students completing<lb/>
223a or 223a and 223b as quarter oourses may satisfy the<lb/>
sequence requirements by oompleting DRAM 3063 as a<lb/>
semester oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 230a,b,c (Acting) Students oompleting 230 a or<lb/>
230a and 230b as quarter oourses may satisfy the sequence<lb/>
requirement by oompleting DRAM 3040 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 231a, b, c (Directing) Students completing 231a<lb/>
or 231a and 231b as quarter oourses may satisfy the<lb/>
sequence requirements by oompleting DRAM 3080 as a<lb/>
semester oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 235a, b, c (Advanced Acting) Students oompleting<lb/>
235a a 235a and 235b as quarter oourses may satisfy the<lb/>
sequence requirements by oompleting DRAM 3060 as a<lb/>
semester oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 245 a, b (Stage Lighting) Students oompleting 245a<lb/>
as a quarter course may complete the sequence<lb/>
requirement by taking DRAM 3003.<lb/>
DRAM 246a, b (Scenery Design) Students oompleting 246a<lb/>
as a quarter course may complete the sequence<lb/>
requirement by oompleting DRAM 3005 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 250a, b, c (Costuming) Students oompleting 250a<lb/>
or 250a and 250b as quarter oourses may satisfy sequence<lb/>
requirements by completing DRAM 3008 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 321 a, b, c (Ballet IV) Students oompleting 321a or<lb/>
321a and 321b may satisfy sequence requirements by<lb/>
oompleting DRAM 4081 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 322a, b, c (Contemporary Danoe IV) Students<lb/>
oompleting 322a or 322a and 322b as quarter courses may<lb/>
satisfy sequence requirements by oompleting DRAM 4082<lb/>
as a semester oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 323a, b, c (History of Danoe) Students oompleting<lb/>
323a or 323a and 323b as quarter oourses may satisfy the<lb/>
sequence requirements by oompleting DRAM 4045 as a<lb/>
semester oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 324a, b, c (Dance Composition) Students<lb/>
oompleting 324a or 324a and 324b as quarter oourses may<lb/>
satisfy the sequence requirement by oompleting DRAM<lb/>
4047 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
DRAM 355a, b (History and Literature of the Theatre)<lb/>
Students oompleting 355a as a quarter oourse may satisfy<lb/>
the sequence requirements by oompleting DRAM 4056 as<lb/>
a semester oourse.<lb/>
SPCH 237 a, b (Radio Production) Students oompleting<lb/>
237a or 237a and 237b will have satisfied sequence<lb/>
requirements.<lb/>
SPCH 289a, b (Television Production) Students oompleting<lb/>
SPCH 289a as a quarter oourse may satisfy the sequence<lb/>
requirement by oompleting SPCH 3023 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
ENGLISH<lb/>
ENGL 1, 2, 3 (Freshman Composition) Students<lb/>
oompleting ENGL 1 as a quarter oourse may satisfy the<lb/>
sequence requirement by oompleting ENGL 1200 as a<lb/>
semester oourse.<lb/>
Students oompleting ENGL 1 and 2 will have satisfied<lb/>
sequence requirements.<lb/>
Students oompleting ENGL 1 and 3 as quarter oourses<lb/>
may satisfy the sequence requirement by oompleting<lb/>
ENGL 1200 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
FOREIGN LANGUAGES AND UTERATURES<lb/>
FREN.GERM, LATN, RUSS, SPAN 1, 2, 3, 4. Students<lb/>
oompleting level 1 as a quarter oourse may satisfy the<lb/>
sequence requirement by oom. � ng 1002,1003 and 1004<lb/>
as semester oourses.<lb/>
Students oompleting levels 1 and 2 as quarter oourses<lb/>
may satisfy the sequence requirement by oompleting 1003<lb/>
and 1004 as semester oourses.<lb/>
Students oompleting levels 1, 2, and 3 as quarter<lb/>
courses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting 1004 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION<lb/>
Health Education<lb/>
BIOL 70, 70L, 71, 71L Students oompleting less than the<lb/>
full sequence of BIOL 70, 70L, 71, 71L as quarter courses<lb/>
may satisfy the sequence requirement by oompleting BIOL<lb/>
1050 and 1051 as semester oourses.<lb/>
BIOL 124, 124L, 125, 125L Students oompleting less than<lb/>
the full sequence of anatomy and physiology (BIOL 124,<lb/>
124L, 125, 125L) as quarter courses may satisfy the<lb/>
sequence requirement by oompleting BIOL 2120 and BIOL<lb/>
2121.<lb/>
Physical Education<lb/>
BIOL 124, 124L, 125, 125L Students oompleting BIOL 124<lb/>
and 124L as quarter oourses may satisfy the sequence<lb/>
requirement by oompleting BIOL 2120 and 2121 as<lb/>
semester oourses.<lb/>
GEOGRAPHY<lb/>
B.S. Program<lb/>
GEOG 108, 142 Students oompleting GEOG 142 as a<lb/>
quarter oourse may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
completing GEOG 3007 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
Students oompleting GEOG 108 as a quarter oourse<lb/>
may satisfy the sequence requirement by completing<lb/>
GEOG 2001 and 2002 as semester courses.<lb/>
HISTORY<lb/>
HIST 392, 393, 394 (Honors) Students oompleting 392 as a<lb/>
quarter oourse may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting HIST 4551 as a semester course.<lb/>
LIBRARY SCIENCE<lb/>
LIBS 304G (Introduction to Reference Services and 305G<lb/>
(General Bibliography) Students oompleting 304G or 305G<lb/>
as a quarter oourse may satisfy the sequence requirement<lb/>
by oompleting LIBS 5002 (Introduction to Reference) as a<lb/>
semester oourse.<lb/>
LIBS 306G (Organization of Media: Classification) &amp; LIBS<lb/>
307G (Organization of Media: Descriptive) Students<lb/>
completing 306G or 307G as a quarter oourse may satisfy<lb/>
the sequence requirement by oompleting LIBS 5003<lb/>
(Organization of Media) as a semester oourse.<lb/>
MATHEMATICS<lb/>
MATH 63, 64 (College Algebra I, II) Students oompleting<lb/>
MATH 63asa quarter oourse may satisfy the sequence by<lb/>
oompleting MATH 1063 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
MATH 127, 128 (Basic Concepts of Mathematics I, II)<lb/>
Students completing MATH 127 as a quarter oourse may<lb/>
satisfy the sequence by oompleting MATH 2127 as a<lb/>
semester oourse.<lb/>
MATH 171,172,173,174(Calculus I, II, III, IV) Students<lb/>
oompleting MATH 171 as a quarter oourse may satisfy the<lb/>
sequence by oompleting MATH 2172 2173 as semester<lb/>
oourses.<lb/>
Students oompleting MATH 171 and 172 as quarter<lb/>
oourses may satisfy the sequence by oompleting MATH<lb/>
2172, 2173 as semester oourses.<lb/>
Students oompleting 171, 172, 173 as quarter courses<lb/>
may satisfy the sequence by completing MATH 2173 as a<lb/>
semester oourse.<lb/>
MATH 182, 183, 184 (Integrated Calculus I, II, III)<lb/>
Students completing MATH 182 as a quarter oourse may<lb/>
satisfy the sequence by oompleting MATH 2172, 2173 as<lb/>
semester oourses.<lb/>
Students oompleting 182 and 183 as quarter oourses<lb/>
may satisfy the sequence by oompleting MATH 2173 as a<lb/>
semester oourse.<lb/>
PHYSICS<lb/>
Sequence fa nonscienoe students - PHYS 5, 7, 8, 9, 109<lb/>
(any three satisfy the scienoe requirement for general<lb/>
education)<lb/>
Students oompleting PHYS 5 as a quarter oourse may<lb/>
satisfy the sequence requirement by oompleting PHYS<lb/>
1061, 1070 or 1080, 1081 or 1090, 1091 as semester<lb/>
oourses.<lb/>
Students oompleting PHYS 7 as a quarter oourse may<lb/>
satisfy the sequence requirement by oompleting PHYS<lb/>
1050, 1061 or 1080, 1081 as semester oourses.<lb/>
Students oompleting PHYS 8 and 8L as quarter oourses<lb/>
may satisfy the sequence requirement by oompleting<lb/>
PHYS 1050 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
Students oompleting PHYS9 and 9L as quarter oourses<lb/>
may satisfy the sequence requirement by oompleting<lb/>
PHYS 1050 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
Students oompleting PHYS 5 and 7 as quarter oourses<lb/>
may satisfy the sequence requirement by oompleting<lb/>
PHYS 1080, 1081 or 1090, 1091 as semester oourses.<lb/>
Students oompleting PHYS 5 and 8 as quarter oourses<lb/>
may satisfy the sequence requirement by oompleting<lb/>
PHYS 1070 or 1090, 1091 as semester oourses.<lb/>
Students oompleting PHYS 5, 9, and 9L as quarter<lb/>
courses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting PHYS 1070 or 1090,1091 or 1080, and 1081 as<lb/>
semester oourses.<lb/>
Students oompleting PHYS 5, 109, 109L as quarter<lb/>
courses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting PHYS 1070 or 1080,1081 as semester courses.<lb/>
Students oompleting PHYS 7, 8, and 8L as quarter<lb/>
courses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
completing PHYS 1050 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
Students oompleting PHYS 7, 9, 9L as quarter oourses<lb/>
may satisfy the sequence requirement by completing<lb/>
PHYS 1050 or 1080, and 1081 as semester oourses.<lb/>
Students completing PHYS 8, 8L, 9, and 9L as quarter<lb/>
courses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting PHYS 1050 or 1070 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
Sequence for Scienoe Majors (not requiring calculus) -<lb/>
PHYS 15, 16, 17, 25, 26, 27<lb/>
Students oompleting PHYS 15 or PHYS 15 and 16 as<lb/>
quarter oourses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting PHYS 1261 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
Students oompleting PHYS 25 or PHYS 25 and 26 as<lb/>
quarter oourses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
oompleting PHYS 1260 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
Sequence for Science Majors (requiring calculus) - PHYS<lb/>
135, 136, 137<lb/>
ART<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0009"/><lb/>
completing<lb/>
squenoeby<lb/>
atics I, II)<lb/>
ourse may<lb/>
2127 as a<lb/>
') Students<lb/>
satisfy the<lb/>
s semester<lb/>
as quarter<lb/>
ng MATH<lb/>
er courses<lb/>
2173 as a<lb/>
I, M, HI)<lb/>
xjrse may<lb/>
, 2173 as<lb/>
r courses<lb/>
2173 as a<lb/>
8, 9, 109<lb/>
' general<lb/>
urse may<lb/>
lg PHYS<lb/>
semester<lb/>
jrse may<lb/>
g PHYS<lb/>
roourses<lb/>
mpleting<lb/>
r oourses<lb/>
mpleting<lb/>
roourses<lb/>
mpleting<lb/>
ses.<lb/>
' oourses<lb/>
mpleting<lb/>
quarter<lb/>
nent by<lb/>
11061 as<lb/>
quarter<lb/>
nent by<lb/>
oourses.<lb/>
quarter<lb/>
nent by<lb/>
r oourses<lb/>
mpleting<lb/>
ss.<lb/>
s quarter<lb/>
nent by<lb/>
jrse.<lb/>
IcuI us) -<lb/>
id 16 as<lb/>
ment by<lb/>
id 26 as<lb/>
"nent by<lb/>
- PHYS<lb/>
Students completing PHYS 135 as a quarter course<lb/>
may satisfy the sequence requirement by completing<lb/>
PHYS 2350 and 2360 as semester courses.<lb/>
Students completing PHYS 135 and 136 as quarter<lb/>
courses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
completing PHYS 2360 as a semester course.<lb/>
PSYCHOLOGY<lb/>
PSYC 218 and 275 will be oombined into PSYC 3275<lb/>
Students who have had PSYC 218 or 275 should not take<lb/>
PSYC 3275.<lb/>
PSYC 241 and 242 will be oombined into PSYC 3241.<lb/>
Students who have had PSYC 241 or 242 should not take<lb/>
PSYC 3241.<lb/>
SOCIOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY<lb/>
ANTH 121,122 Students completing ANTH 121 or 122 as a<lb/>
quarter oourse may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
completing ANTH 1000 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
ALLIED HEALTH AND SOCIAL PROFESSIONS<lb/>
Occupational Therapy<lb/>
OCCT 334, 344a, 344b, 354 (Qinical Affiliation) Students<lb/>
completing OCCT 334, 344a and 344b under the quarter<lb/>
system may satisfy the sequence by completing OCCT<lb/>
4995 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
Physical Therapy<lb/>
CHEM 34, 35, 36 Students completing CHEM 34 as a<lb/>
quarter oourse may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
completing CHEM 1120,1121, 2620 and 2621 as semester<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
Students completing CHEM 34 and 35 may satisfy the<lb/>
sequence requirement by completing CHEM 2620, 2621 as<lb/>
semester oourses.<lb/>
PHYS 25, 26, 302 Students completing PHYS 25 as a<lb/>
quarter oourse may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
completing PHYS 1250,1251, 3650 and 3651 as semester<lb/>
oourses.<lb/>
Students completing PHYS 25 and 26 as quarter<lb/>
courses may satisfy the sequence requirement by<lb/>
completing PHYS 3650 and 3651 as semester oourses.<lb/>
ART<lb/>
Foundation Drawing Courses:<lb/>
Quarter Course Nos.<lb/>
25,35<lb/>
26,126<lb/>
35,119<lb/>
126,127<lb/>
Semester Course Nos.<lb/>
1030<lb/>
1040<lb/>
1050<lb/>
Will accept to satisfy 1020,1030 sequence: 25 plus 1030 or<lb/>
26 plus 1020.<lb/>
Foundation Art History:<lb/>
Quarter Course Nos.<lb/>
113a, b, c<lb/>
Semester Course Nos.<lb/>
1900,1901<lb/>
Will aocept to satisfy 1900 1901 sequence: 113a plus 1901,<lb/>
113b plus 1901, 113c plus 1900.<lb/>
Foundation design oourses:<lb/>
Quarter Course Nos.<lb/>
15a, 115<lb/>
22<lb/>
Semester Course Nos.<lb/>
1000<lb/>
1010<lb/>
Will accept to satisfy 1000,1010 series: 15a plus 1010,115<lb/>
plus 1000 plus 1010 (w115 used as art elective), 22 plus<lb/>
1000.<lb/>
BUSINESS<lb/>
ACCT 140, 141 (Principles of Accounting) audents<lb/>
completing 140 as a quarter oourse may satisfy the<lb/>
sequence requirement by completing 2401 as a semester<lb/>
course.<lb/>
BUSA 244, 245 (Organization Theory and Interpersonal<lb/>
Relationships) audents completing BUSA 244 as a quarter<lb/>
oourse have satisfied the sequence requirement.<lb/>
ECON 111, 112 (Introduction to Economics) audents<lb/>
completing either ECON 111 a 112 as a quarter oourse<lb/>
have satisfied the sequence requirement.<lb/>
HOME ECONOMICS<lb/>
HOME 103, 104 audents completing either HOME<lb/>
103 (Family Relations) or HOME 104 (Health of the<lb/>
Family) will have satisfied the sequence require-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
HOME 180, 185 audents completing HOME 180<lb/>
(Interior Deoorating) or HOME 185 will have<lb/>
satisfied the sequence requirement.<lb/>
HOME 290, 390, 392 audents completing HOME<lb/>
290 as a quarter oourse may satisfy the sequence<lb/>
requirement by completing HOME 4390 (Manage-<lb/>
ment of Resources) and HOME 4391 (Management<lb/>
of Resources Lab) as semester oourses.<lb/>
audents completing HOME 290 (Home Manage-<lb/>
ment) and either HOME 390 (Home Management<lb/>
Experiences) or HOME 392 (Management of Time<lb/>
and Resources) will have satisfied the sequence<lb/>
requirement.<lb/>
HOME 225, 325 audents completing HOME 225<lb/>
(Advanced Nutrition) asa quarter oourse may satisfy<lb/>
the sequence requirement by completing HOME<lb/>
4500 (Independent Study: Diet and Disease) as a<lb/>
semester course.<lb/>
HOME 327, 330 audents completing HOME 327<lb/>
(Food Purchasing and Cost Control) may satisfy the<lb/>
sequence requirement by completing HOME 4500<lb/>
(Independent audy: Institution Management and<lb/>
Organization) as a semester oourse.<lb/>
Muac<lb/>
Students completing the first quarter of a<lb/>
two-quarter sequence may oomplete the sequence<lb/>
requirement by completing the second semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
audents completing the first quarter or the first and<lb/>
second quarters of a three-quarter sequenoe may<lb/>
oomplete the sequenoe requirement by completing<lb/>
the second semester oourse.<lb/>
TECHNOLOGY<lb/>
Business Education-Basic and DE Majors<lb/>
BUED 1, 2, 3,104, 204 audents completing 1 as a<lb/>
quarter oourse may satisfy the sequenoe require-<lb/>
ment by completing BUED 1002 and 1003 as<lb/>
semester oourses.<lb/>
audentsoompletingl and 2 as quarter oourses may<lb/>
satisfy the sequenoe requirement by completing<lb/>
BUED 1003 as a semseter oourse.<lb/>
Business Education-Comp and OADM Majors<lb/>
BUED 2, 3, 104, 204 audents completing 2 as a<lb/>
quarter oourse may satisfy the sequenoe require-<lb/>
ment by completing BUED 1003 and 2204 as<lb/>
semester oourses.<lb/>
audents completing 2 and 3 as quarter oourses may<lb/>
satisfy the sequenoe requirement by oompleting<lb/>
BUED 2204 as a semester course.<lb/>
BUED 114, 115, 116, 120, 214, 215 audents<lb/>
oompleting 114 as a quarter oourse may satisfy the<lb/>
sequenoe requirement by completing BUED 2116,<lb/>
2120, 3214 as semester oourses.<lb/>
audents oompleting 115 as a quarter oourse may<lb/>
satisfy the sequenoe requirement by oompleting<lb/>
BUED 2116, 2120, 3214 as semester oourses.<lb/>
audents oompleting 116 and 120 (or equivalent) as<lb/>
quarter oourses may satisfy the sequence require-<lb/>
ment by oompleting BUED 3214 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
audents oompleting 214 as a quarter oourse may<lb/>
satisfy the sequenoe requirement by oompleting<lb/>
BUED 3214 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
Industrial and Technical Education-Industrial Tech-<lb/>
nology (BSP)<lb/>
INDT 18,19 (Drawing) audents oompleting 18 as a<lb/>
quarter oourse may satisfy the sequenoe require-<lb/>
ment by oompleting INDT 2030 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
11 JANUARY 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
INDT 115, 116 (Graphics) audents completing 115<lb/>
as a quarter oourse may satisfy the sequence<lb/>
requirement by oompleting INDT 2040 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
I NDT 121,122 (Wood) audents oompleting 121 asa<lb/>
quarter oourse may satisfy the sequenoe require-<lb/>
ment by oompleting INDT 2060 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
INDT 157,158 (Metal) audents oompleting 157 asa<lb/>
quarter oourse may satisfy the sequenoe require-<lb/>
ment by oompleting INDT 2070 as a semester<lb/>
oourse.<lb/>
INDT 270, 271 (Electricity-Electronics) audents<lb/>
oompleting 270 as a quarter oourse may satisfy the<lb/>
sequence requirement by oompleting INDT 2050 as<lb/>
a semester oourse.<lb/>
Industrial and Technical Educaticn-BS Teaching<lb/>
(Concentration Requirements)<lb/>
INDT 18,19, 210, 211, 20,113, 212, 314G (Drawing<lb/>
Concentration) audents oompleting 18 or 18 and 19<lb/>
as quarter oourses may satisfy the sequenoe<lb/>
requirement by oompleting INDT 2030 and 3030 as<lb/>
semester oourses.<lb/>
audents oompleting 18, 19 and 211 as quarter<lb/>
oourses may satisfy the sequenoe requirement by<lb/>
oompleting INDT 2030 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
audents oompleting 18, 19, 211 and one of the<lb/>
following courses: 20, 113, 210, 212, or 314G as<lb/>
quarter oourses have satisfied the concentration<lb/>
requirement.<lb/>
INDT 115, 116, 117, 235, 236, 337G (Graphic<lb/>
Concentration) audents oompleting 115 or 115 and<lb/>
116 as quarter oourses may satisfy the sequenoe<lb/>
requirement by completing INDT 2040 and 3040 as<lb/>
semester oourses.<lb/>
audents oompleting 115, 116, and 117 as quarter<lb/>
oourses may satisfy the sequenoe requirement by<lb/>
oompleting INDT 3040 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
audents oompleting 115, 116, 117 and one of the<lb/>
following oourses: 235, 236 or 337G as quarter<lb/>
oourses have satisfied the concentration require-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
INDT 121, 122, 215, 217, 229, 255, 316G (Wood<lb/>
Concentration) audents completing 121 or 121 and<lb/>
122 as quarter oourses may satisfy the sequenoe<lb/>
requirement by oompleting INDT 2060 and 3060 as<lb/>
semester oourses.<lb/>
audents oompleting 121, 122 and 215 as quarter<lb/>
oourses may satisfy the sequenoe requirement by<lb/>
oompleting INDT 3060 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
audents oompleting 121, 122, 215 and one of the<lb/>
following oourses: 217, 229, 255, or 316G as quarter<lb/>
oourses have satisfied the oonoentration require-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
INDT 157, 158, 159, 165, 260, 325, 358G (Metal<lb/>
Concentration) audents oompleting 157 or 157 and<lb/>
158 as quarter oourses may satisfy the sequence<lb/>
requirement by oompleting INDT 2070 and 3070 as<lb/>
semester oourses.<lb/>
audents oompleting 157, 158 and 15fe as quarter<lb/>
oourses may satisfy the sequenoe requirement by<lb/>
oompleting INDT 3070 as a semester course.<lb/>
audents oompleting 157, 158, 159 and one of the<lb/>
following oourses: 165, 260, 325, or 358G as quarter<lb/>
oourses have satisfied the oonoentration require-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
INDT 270, 271, 272, 370, 371, 3726,373 (Electricity<lb/>
and Electronics Concentration) audents oompleting<lb/>
270 or 270 and 271 as quarter oourses may satisfy<lb/>
the sequence requirement by oompleting INDT 2050<lb/>
and 3050 as semester oourses.<lb/>
audents completing 270, 271 and 272 as quarter<lb/>
oourses may satisfy the sequenoe requirement by<lb/>
oompleting INDT 3050 as a semester oourse.<lb/>
audents oompleting 270, 271, 272 and one of the<lb/>
following oourses: 370, 371, 372G, or 373 as quarter<lb/>
oourses have satisfied the oonoentration require-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0010"/><lb/>
Former Nixon attorney<lb/>
discusses Watergate<lb/>
10<lb/>
11 JANUARY 1977<lb/>
MALCOLM J. HOWARD, local attorney Photo by Rum Pogue<lb/>
HOWARD with his client, Richard M. Nixon, in the White House<lb/>
Photo courtesy of Mac Howard<lb/>
ByDENNISC. LEONARD<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
According to Malcolm J.<lb/>
Howard, a Greenville attorney,<lb/>
former Preeident Richard M.<lb/>
Nixon was probably guilty of<lb/>
violating federal law in the<lb/>
Watergate ooverup.<lb/>
Howard, who served on the<lb/>
Nixon legal defense team, be-<lb/>
lieves that "Nixon probably com-<lb/>
mitted an offense which was<lb/>
Impeachable<lb/>
Howard adds "probably" In<lb/>
relation to Nixon's guilt because<lb/>
the American people will never<lb/>
know If he was guilty. Since Nixon<lb/>
resigned and was later pardoned,<lb/>
no trial will ever be held.<lb/>
 Nixon resigned on the White<lb/>
House tape of June 23, 1972,<lb/>
when Robert Haldeman wanted<lb/>
the CIA to stop the FBI's<lb/>
investigation of the Kenneth<lb/>
Dahlberg-Mexican check issue, at<lb/>
which time Nixon said, 'right,<lb/>
fine explained Howard.<lb/>
"The Preeident probably vio-<lb/>
lated a section of U.S. Code<lb/>
18-1510, which means that any-<lb/>
one who has federal authority and<lb/>
allows one federal agency to<lb/>
intermeddle with another federal<lb/>
agency is guilty of a felony<lb/>
According to Howard, the<lb/>
President's knowledge of Halde-<lb/>
man' s plan to stop the FBI<lb/>
investigation of the Dahlberg case<lb/>
was reason to believe that he<lb/>
interfered with justice.<lb/>
This first hand information<lb/>
about the Watergate coverup trial<lb/>
comes from one or Greenville's<lb/>
meet interesting attorneys.<lb/>
Howard is a native Tarheel<lb/>
and has an impressive record of<lb/>
serving the U.S. government. His<lb/>
latest endeavor was on the Nixon<lb/>
legal defense team for the<lb/>
Watergate trial.<lb/>
Howard began his army ca-<lb/>
reer after graduation from the<lb/>
U.S. Military Academy at West<lb/>
Point, N.Y and later served<lb/>
three tours In Vietnam.<lb/>
After his third tour In Viet-<lb/>
nam, Howard decided to take a<lb/>
leave of absence from the Army,<lb/>
and went to Wake Forest Univer-<lb/>
sity Law School.<lb/>
After graduation from Wake<lb/>
Forest, Howard went back Into<lb/>
the Army and was appointed<lb/>
Secretary of Counsel to the Judge<lb/>
Advocate General's School In<lb/>
Charlotteevllle, Virginia.<lb/>
Howard's next endeavor was<lb/>
as a Legislative Counsel to the<lb/>
Secretary of the Army In Wash-<lb/>
ington, D.C.<lb/>
In 1972, Howard resigned<lb/>
that position, came back to N.C<lb/>
and lost a bid for the First<lb/>
Congressional District seat.<lb/>
Howard then returned to his<lb/>
private law practice until 1973<lb/>
when he was appointed Assistant<lb/>
U.S. Attorney for the Justice<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
Howard modestly noted he<lb/>
never lost a case while serving as<lb/>
an Assistant Attorney.<lb/>
Howard'8 record with the<lb/>
Justice Department brought a-<lb/>
bout a call from Nixon's top legal<lb/>
aid, James D. St. Clair, in 1974.<lb/>
St. Clair hoped that Howard<lb/>
would serve on the Nixon legal<lb/>
defense team.<lb/>
"They were looking for a<lb/>
Southerner with trial experience,<lb/>
so I met with St. Clair. He<lb/>
appointed me to the staff, and<lb/>
Nixon later approved the appoint-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
During trial preparation for<lb/>
the Watergate case, Howard was<lb/>
assigned to work on John Dean's<lb/>
claims and his trial subject was<lb/>
the Watergate coverup Itself.<lb/>
According to Howard, the<lb/>
Nixon defense team was under-<lb/>
staffed with only 11 lawyers and a<lb/>
small staff to work with.<lb/>
"We were working seven days<lb/>
a week, sometimes up Into the<lb/>
morning hours at the White<lb/>
House, trying to put together a<lb/>
According to Howard, the<lb/>
prosecution was well staffed with<lb/>
John Dean's 48 lawyers and Leon<lb/>
Jaworskl's 52 lawyers and his<lb/>
"million dollar research staff.<lb/>
"In round figures there were<lb/>
150 proeecutorial attorneys and<lb/>
200 staffers working against the<lb/>
President<lb/>
Howard feels that the crown-<lb/>
ing blow in the Watergate case,<lb/>
which ultimately led to Nixon's<lb/>
resignation, was the Supreme<lb/>
Court's 5 to 3 decision that Nixon<lb/>
had no absolute protection under<lb/>
executive privilege from releasing<lb/>
his tapes.<lb/>
"When the court ordered the<lb/>
tape of June 23 to be released, it<lb/>
further jeopardized the Presi-<lb/>
dent's case and he was later<lb/>
faced to resign.<lb/>
"The Supreme Court ruled<lb/>
that an executive privilege does<lb/>
not exist when the President<lb/>
wants to retain evidence which is<lb/>
pending in a criminal trial. So<lb/>
Nixon could not rely on an<lb/>
executive privilege for a de-<lb/>
fense<lb/>
After the Nixon resignation,<lb/>
Howard returned to Greenville to<lb/>
settle back into a private law<lb/>
practice. Yet, he is still thinking<lb/>
about one of the most sensations!<lb/>
cases of the century and his role<lb/>
in it.<lb/>
Marquee sorts out Christmas flick list<lb/>
By DAVID R.BOSNICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
What can one say of a cinema<lb/>
season in which the biggest<lb/>
successes were a mechanical<lb/>
shark and a battery operated<lb/>
gorilla worth twice the asking<lb/>
price of Idaho. Ingmar Bergman<lb/>
where are you?<lb/>
Most studios, in an attempt to<lb/>
take advantage of the freely<lb/>
spend money of the holiday<lb/>
season, released their large bud-<lb/>
get pictures during the Christmas<lb/>
season. In less than two weeks<lb/>
the following films premiered in<lb/>
New York: "Voyage of the<lb/>
Damned "Network "The<lb/>
Enforoer "A Star is Born<lb/>
King Kong" and "Silver<lb/>
Streak This oolumn will synop-<lb/>
size these films in an attempt to<lb/>
save you, in some cases, from an<lb/>
expensive nap.<lb/>
KING KONG<lb/>
The Delaurentis version dees<lb/>
not match up to the original<lb/>
because it can't quite decide<lb/>
whether or not it should take itself<lb/>
seriously. It seems constantly to<lb/>
be saying, "Hey, I know this<lb/>
can't really happen, but go with it<lb/>
anyhow It is certain to win an<lb/>
Oscar fa special effects; how-<lb/>
ever, the acting is almost totally<lb/>
atrocious.<lb/>
Charles Grodin "Heartbreak<lb/>
Kid" plays the 1930ish directa<lb/>
who wants to use Kong as a<lb/>
promo fa a large oil company.<lb/>
Grcdin is a fine acta, yet he<lb/>
seems unable to believe he must<lb/>
play the part of district manager<lb/>
fa Exxai in Bush ciahing.<lb/>
Jeff Bridges, as the young<lb/>
idealistic zoologist who happens<lb/>
to stow away on this expedition (I<lb/>
swear), is sufficiently angry and<lb/>
is a good foil fa the surprisingly<lb/>
talented Jessica Lange, who,<lb/>
while no Fay Wray, manages to<lb/>
play her role with intensity. Kong<lb/>
is played by General Electric.<lb/>
There is much symbolism<lb/>
directed at the maja oil com-<lb/>
panies in their effats at wald<lb/>
monopoly. It is duly noted, and<lb/>
vapid.<lb/>
The film is billed as the great<lb/>
tragedy and love stay of all<lb/>
times. Well, you know how these<lb/>
mixed marriages are, they never<lb/>
wak. Two stars.<lb/>
VOYAGE OF THE DAMNED<lb/>
This production has more<lb/>
"name" stars in it than Sardisat<lb/>
twelve-thirty. It is an epic along<lb/>
the lines of the "Towering<lb/>
Inferno" a "The Poseidon Ad-<lb/>
venture It is loosely based on<lb/>
the actual sailing of a ship<lb/>
containing Jewish war refugees<lb/>
and the plot behind their planned<lb/>
genecide.<lb/>
There are some occasionally<lb/>
good scenes, most of which<lb/>
involve Faye Dunaway, whose<lb/>
famer haughty wonan image is<lb/>
giving way to a fragile beauty<lb/>
concept. She is excellent, the film<lb/>
is not. It supplies quantity rather<lb/>
than quality. One star and a half<lb/>
and bring dramamine.<lb/>
THE ENFORCER<lb/>
If one day Clint Eastwood<lb/>
goes berserk and slaughters the<lb/>
population of New Jersey, one<lb/>
can certainly see the reasons fa<lb/>
his sudden insanity. He has been<lb/>
practicing fa it fa ten years. This<lb/>
is perhaps the most blatantly<lb/>
violent of the Dirty Harry series.<lb/>
One hates to refer to it as a trilogy<lb/>
which brings to mind Oedipus<lb/>
and Tolkien, yet this is deter-<lb/>
mined as the final in the Harry<lb/>
character.<lb/>
, In this production he meets a<lb/>
woman and goes through the<lb/>
usual assatment of disembowel-<lb/>
ments and fractures and per-<lb/>
ferationsand blah, snae. It is not<lb/>
as well structured as its pre-<lb/>
decessors, ("Dirty Harry<lb/>
"Magnum Force") and is a<lb/>
simple cult film. Save your money<lb/>
and just kill your doq. A half a<lb/>
star fa Christmas.<lb/>
A STAR IS BORN<lb/>
That might well be so, but not<lb/>
in this picture. This film is built<lb/>
purely on Streisand's ability to<lb/>
sell tickets. The soundtrack is fair<lb/>
and this film reaffirms the fact<lb/>
that Miss Streisand is an excel-<lb/>
lent dramatic singer. That is all it<lb/>
does, however.<lb/>
It succeeds in making Kris<lb/>
Kristofferson look ridiculous in<lb/>
his attempts to "rock and roll<lb/>
Kristofferson is a talented com-<lb/>
poser, yet has no hand in the<lb/>
musical arrangement of his own<lb/>
numbers. He is made to appear<lb/>
talentless fa the sake of the stay<lb/>
(perhaps necessary), but never to<lb/>
the extent where he is embarras-<lb/>
sing. Kristofferson's acting is<lb/>
stunted and this reviewer cannot<lb/>
wait until he quits this ill advised<lb/>
venture into cinema.<lb/>
The movie is nothing more<lb/>
than a star vehicle fa Miss<lb/>
Streisand with sane sentimental<lb/>
doggerel tossed in as an excuse<lb/>
fa pia. If you like the Big B, one<lb/>
will like the film. Two stars and a<lb/>
half.<lb/>
NETWORK<lb/>
This film is by far the best of<lb/>
the Christmas releases, it Is<lb/>
almost pure satire and black<lb/>
huma, with it's oily flaw being<lb/>
that it is occasionally ponderous.<lb/>
The film isa sardonic look intothe<lb/>
ruthlessnessof monopolies and as<lb/>
statement of how we are not<lb/>
merely tainted by the mass media<lb/>
(T.V.) but totally poisoned.<lb/>
Peter Finch plays the news-<lb/>
man whose breakdown on the air<lb/>
causes him to be exploited as the<lb/>
"messiah of the airways He is<lb/>
manipulated by the network<lb/>
complex, which preys on his<lb/>
weakness and turns a news show<lb/>
into therapy session for the<lb/>
frustated. It is when his state-<lb/>
ments become financially impro-<lb/>
prietousthat he isassasinated, on<lb/>
the air, in an effat to up the<lb/>
ratings.<lb/>
Faye Dunaway is the assistant<lb/>
producer whose idea it was to<lb/>
promote Finch as a madman.<lb/>
William Hdden plays her middle-<lb/>
aged lover and their relations<lb/>
piovide the basis fa much of the<lb/>
satire on relationships.<lb/>
Black huma Is the type that<lb/>
ate laughs at as he realized that<lb/>
what he is observing is more<lb/>
tragic than comic. "Netwak" is<lb/>
cluttered and often hurried, but It<lb/>
is one of the best cinematic<lb/>
satires in years. Three and one<lb/>
half stars, an excellent film.<lb/>
The amount of money spent<lb/>
on the production of these films is<lb/>
approximately twice the asking<lb/>
price of Idaho. Dig in.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0011"/><lb/>
���HMBBWIBQOI<lb/>
�asvHHmHBBmHMHF<lb/>
MIHBiMHIHMiHIMMnnHHiHH<lb/>
Concert set for Thurs Jan. 27<lb/>
11 JANUARY 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Preservation Hall coming soon<lb/>
One of the most exciting<lb/>
concerts of the season is set for<lb/>
Thursday, January 27, at 8:00<lb/>
prn. in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Theatre. The Preservation<lb/>
Hall Jazz Band of New Orleans,<lb/>
Louisiana will be here for a<lb/>
history-making appearance. The<lb/>
band is made up of the people<lb/>
who actually created the music.<lb/>
The men who were there when<lb/>
marches, quadrilles, blues,<lb/>
spirituals, and raqtime all were<lb/>
merged into "Jazz" as it was<lb/>
called at the turn of the century.<lb/>
The youngster in The Pre-<lb/>
servation Hall Jazz Band was<lb/>
born in 1910. Even though all of<lb/>
the members of the band are over<lb/>
60, there is no lapse in the<lb/>
playing, no lessening of the spirit,<lb/>
joy, and happiness that is so<lb/>
much a part of the glory of New<lb/>
Orleans jazz.<lb/>
Preservation Hall in New<lb/>
Orleans was originally a place<lb/>
where these original musicians<lb/>
could get together and play for<lb/>
mostly their own pleasure. Now,<lb/>
it is a place where people from all<lb/>
over the world pack the benches<lb/>
each night to hear the music as it<lb/>
was played when it was created.<lb/>
People from all over the world<lb/>
have made Preservation Hall at<lb/>
726 St. Peter Street a priority on<lb/>
trips to New Orleans. It has<lb/>
become something like a pil-<lb/>
grimage. However, the real<lb/>
pilgrims are the musicians who<lb/>
have been traveling throughout<lb/>
the world to bring the true New<lb/>
Orleans jazz played by the people<lb/>
who have played it 50 years in the<lb/>
Parishes around New Orleans.<lb/>
The Preservation Hall Jazz<lb/>
Band has been quietly taking its<lb/>
place among the leading Ameri-<lb/>
can concert attractions for several<lb/>
years. Each time the tour gets<lb/>
longer, the audiences get bigger.<lb/>
The band members are not<lb/>
concerned with a message, they<lb/>
bring joy and sorrow in their<lb/>
stamps and blues. Feet are not<lb/>
oftenstill while the band is playing<lb/>
and the everlasting youth and<lb/>
vigor of the players leap across<lb/>
the footlights into the hearts of<lb/>
everyone in the audience.<lb/>
A limited number of tickets<lb/>
are available for this concert from<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office. Tickets<lb/>
are priced at $1.50 for ECU<lb/>
students, and $4.00 for the<lb/>
public. All tickets sold at the door<lb/>
will be $4.00. Preservation Hall<lb/>
Jazz Band is under the sponsor-<lb/>
ship of the ECU Student Union<lb/>
Artists Series Committee.<lb/>
"Silver Streak'shines on<lb/>
By PATCOY'LE<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
Virtually all moviegoers have<lb/>
had the experience of entering a<lb/>
flick with certain expectations,<lb/>
only to find that the film In<lb/>
question was something else<lb/>
entirely. "Silver Streak" was, fa<lb/>
me, just such a film.<lb/>
When a movie starring Gene<lb/>
Wilder comes around, we natural-<lb/>
ly expect wild, Mel Brooks-type<lb/>
slapstick. Not so with "Silver<lb/>
Streak<lb/>
Wilder, along with costars<lb/>
Richard Pryor and Jill Clayburgh,<lb/>
sparkle in this comedy-thriller.<lb/>
The action takes place on the Los<lb/>
Angeles-Chicago run of "Am-<lb/>
road<lb/>
Wilder plays an unassuming<lb/>
businessman who, because of his<lb/>
becomes involved in the intrigue<lb/>
surrounding the death of Clay-<lb/>
burgh's boss. The pair spend<lb/>
their trip trying to escape the<lb/>
clutches of the evil Roger Dev-<lb/>
reaux (Patrick McGoohan).<lb/>
During their fight to save<lb/>
themselves and some priceless<lb/>
Rembrandt papers from Dev-<lb/>
reaux, our hero and heroine<lb/>
manage to fall off the train, be<lb/>
held hostage, and finally, for<lb/>
Wilder, to be accused of murder.<lb/>
Pryor enters the scene as an<lb/>
escaped convict who becomes an<lb/>
unwitting accessory to Wilder's<lb/>
escape.<lb/>
"Silver Streak" is filled with<lb/>
action, including a truly sus-<lb/>
penseful scene where Wilder<lb/>
battles a hoodlum atop the<lb/>
speeding train.<lb/>
There is also violence irr.<lb/>
stomach turning genre we will<lb/>
hopefully never get used to.<lb/>
As for sex, well, Gene Wilder<lb/>
fans KNOW there would be an<lb/>
element of sexuality in the film, if<lb/>
at no other place than Wilder's<lb/>
fabulous eyes. The scenes be-<lb/>
tween Wilder and Clayburgh<lb/>
combine sex with an element of<lb/>
irreverent humor.<lb/>
The humor element in "Silver<lb/>
Streak while not as wild as one<lb/>
might expect, is truly satisfying.<lb/>
Pryor s ethnic jokes, along with<lb/>
his rapport with Wilder, would<lb/>
alone make this flick worth<lb/>
seeing.<lb/>
I highly recommend "Silver<lb/>
Streak" to: Gene Wilder fans,<lb/>
Richard Pryor fans mystery fans<lb/>
comedy fans train fans etc,<lb/>
etc etc.<lb/>
Eat a big one at<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
IflfiWKBS<lb/>
J!gjp.<lb/>
CARRY OUT<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
Pizza &amp; Spaghetti Houm<lb/>
FAST FREE CAMPUS DELIVERY<lb/>
DIAL 758-7400<lb/>
507 East 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Sunday thru Thursday<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
NOTHING<lb/>
BEATSA-PIZZA FROM<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
1130 AM till 1 AM<lb/>
11 30 AM till 2 AM<lb/>
"encounter" with Clayburgh, "Silver Streak but not the<lb/>
Home for the holidays?<lb/>
By DAVID NASH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
After a much-needed vacation<lb/>
of two weeks I have oome to the<lb/>
conclusion that one week would<lb/>
have been more than sufficient.<lb/>
A small town really has little<lb/>
to offer after one has experienced<lb/>
the vices that a metropolis the<lb/>
size of Greenville has to offer.<lb/>
For those of you who don't<lb/>
understand, but may have been<lb/>
affected by a disease called<lb/>
"Homeitis please find a few of<lb/>
the symptons here-with listed:<lb/>
You know you've been home<lb/>
too long when:<lb/>
1) The extra pillow on your<lb/>
double bed starts looking erotic,<lb/>
2) You go to a porno movie<lb/>
with your girlfriend or boyfriend<lb/>
and talk though the entire thing,<lb/>
3) You spend more time in the<lb/>
bathroom sneaking a cigarette<lb/>
than you do with your folks,<lb/>
4) You realize, after two<lb/>
months of trying to forget, you<lb/>
really do have a 12-year-old<lb/>
brother,<lb/>
5) The only thing you feel<lb/>
you can communicate with is the<lb/>
NCNB 24 machine,<lb/>
6) You tell everyone "Happy<lb/>
New Year and it's only Christ-<lb/>
mas Eve,<lb/>
7) You begin to believe that<lb/>
Far rah Fawcett-Majors is a good<lb/>
actress,<lb/>
8) You get twelve hours sleep,<lb/>
and feel like you could use twelve<lb/>
more,<lb/>
9) You decide to call the<lb/>
Greenville operator just to see<lb/>
what the weather is like down<lb/>
here,<lb/>
1;) Your new Year's Resolu-<lb/>
tion is to give up sex.<lb/>
If you find yourself stricken<lb/>
with one or more of these<lb/>
symptons while visiting your<lb/>
hometown, there's only one<lb/>
cure, "get the � out of Dodge<lb/>
�<lb/>
Qf GREfAyy<lb/>
? Phone 752-6130<lb/>
'�fe<lb/>
PHONE IN ORDERS FOR PICKUP<lb/>
521 COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
IN GEORGETOWN SHOPPES<lb/>
OPEN- MonThurs. 10:00 to 1:00 a.m.<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. 10 to 2 a.m Sun. 12 to 12<lb/>
v)�s<lb/>
,o<lb/>
ysPl<lb/>
Ct<lb/>
AL<lb/>
Roast Beef<lb/>
Reg.$T0L $129<lb/>
Super $2? $2.59<lb/>
ALLDAYTUESDAY<lb/>
On Campus Deliveries SunThur. 6P.M12A.M.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0012"/><lb/>
�����������������������I MHHHHMMHII HMHBBHM<lb/>
Page 12<lb/>
11 JANUARY 1977<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Arm wrestling contest<lb/>
The Intramural Department has been beseiged with requests as to<lb/>
when the Arm Wrestling contest will begin this quarter. That annual<lb/>
event is scheduled this year fa February 7-10. with the finals to be<lb/>
held at halftime of the East Carolina-William and Mary basketball<lb/>
game. Registration for the tournament will begin on January 27 and<lb/>
run through February 3.<lb/>
Competition will be divided into four weight classes once again this<lb/>
year. The four weight classes will beat 150 pounds and under, 151-175<lb/>
pounds, 176-200 pounds and the unlimited over-200 pounds weight<lb/>
class. Last year's event drew a big field that put on several fine<lb/>
matches, and this year the Intramural Directors are hoping for an even<lb/>
bigger field.<lb/>
In the planning stages are a possible boxing tournament, to be<lb/>
sponsored by the Intramural Department and he Jacksonville AAU,<lb/>
and a two-day basketball and volleyball tournament between the men's<lb/>
and women's campus champions in each sport from Atlantic Christian<lb/>
College, UNOWilmington, ECU and Appalachian State. Last year the<lb/>
ECU campus champions travelled to Appalachian to play their campus<lb/>
champions, and the ASU champions are supposed to come down here<lb/>
early spring quarter to play the ECU champions. It is hoped that the<lb/>
field can be increased to include other schools like the ones mentioned<lb/>
above.<lb/>
These two tournaments are still in the planning stages as we said<lb/>
before, but we will keep you up to date as to what evolves from the<lb/>
planning table.<lb/>
Several more activities are beginning this week in the intramural<lb/>
field. Bowling competition fa men and women and racquetball singles<lb/>
and doubles fa men begin this week also.<lb/>
Scheduled to start later this mait hare both the men 'sand wonen's<lb/>
free-throw shooting contest, the men's arm wrestling and women's<lb/>
racquetball doubles. Registration for the free-throw shooting<lb/>
competition is on the same day that competitiai begins, pria to the<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
Events fa February include men'sand wonen's swimming, co-rec<lb/>
badminton mixed doubles and men's soccer. So there is still plenty of<lb/>
activities left fa this quarter fa those who passed basketball by.<lb/>
Speaking of basketball, both the men'sand women's leagues have<lb/>
finished two weeks of competition and the Figures Revised head both<lb/>
men's top tens and the Baptist Student Union leads the women's top<lb/>
ten.<lb/>
Of the men's teams, this writer's top ten is headed by the Figures,<lb/>
while the remainder of the teams are from the Dam and Independent<lb/>
leagues primarily, with two fraternity teams and one club team making<lb/>
the list.<lb/>
Marty Martinez must be getting some bribes fron the damitay<lb/>
league teams because he has no less than six damitay teams ranked,<lb/>
including the top-ranked Figures Revised. While Martinez and I agree<lb/>
on the top team, we agree on little else, especially the caliber of play in<lb/>
the damitay league as compared to the independent leagues and the<lb/>
fraternity leagues.<lb/>
But with the greatest number of teams among the ranks of the<lb/>
damitay divisiai it would seem likely that mae teams would come<lb/>
from that division.<lb/>
Of the top ten teams listed by Martinez from the dam leagues, we<lb/>
feel that oily the Figures Revised, the Nutties Buddies and Belk<lb/>
Assasins are wathy of the top ton, and he hasn't even ranked the<lb/>
Assasins.<lb/>
This week's men's and women's top ten ratings:<lb/>
Free throws, turnovers<lb/>
result in Pirates' defeat<lb/>
MENMENWOMEN<lb/>
MartinezEvansWedemeyer<lb/>
1.Figures RevisedFigures Revised1.BSU<lb/>
2.Nutties BuddiesKappa Alpha2.Nock's Nockers<lb/>
3.RocketsHerbs Superbs3.Day Students<lb/>
4.Kappa AlphaRockets4.AlphaXiDelta<lb/>
(See Intramurals page 14)<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Spats Edita<lb/>
Richmond used ECU's early<lb/>
turnovers to take a slight lead and<lb/>
held it to win 72-62 as the Pirates<lb/>
missed repeatedly on the free<lb/>
throw line Saturday night on the<lb/>
Spiders' home court, Robins<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
"Free throws and officiating<lb/>
lost the game for us again<lb/>
tonight a disgruntled Dave<lb/>
Patton said following the game.<lb/>
"Our turnovers got us behind<lb/>
early and every time we came<lb/>
back, free throws and those<lb/>
officials would hold us back. We<lb/>
missed 15 free throws; add that<lb/>
up. And they (officials) would na<lb/>
give us a break.<lb/>
"All night long, our guys were<lb/>
being harassed inside and no-<lb/>
thing would be called<lb/>
The Pirates held the lead just<lb/>
once in the game. Louis Crosby<lb/>
hit a layup on a drive and was<lb/>
fouled by Mike Dow. Converting<lb/>
on the free toss Crosby gave ECU<lb/>
a short-lived 3-2 lead. The<lb/>
Spiders, starting four senias to<lb/>
just one fa ECU, then ran off six<lb/>
unanswered points to take a<lb/>
five-point advantage.<lb/>
The lead fluctuated between<lb/>
three and ten points fa the<lb/>
remainder of the first half, which<lb/>
Richmond led 40-33.<lb/>
During the second half the<lb/>
Pirates closed the lead to three<lb/>
several times and did not let it go<lb/>
higher than seven until the final<lb/>
five minutes. With the scae<lb/>
62-55, Richmond ran off eight<lb/>
straight points to push the<lb/>
cushion to 15 at 70-55, their<lb/>
largest lead of the contest. The<lb/>
Pirates made one last run at the<lb/>
Spiders but to no avail.<lb/>
Even in defeat, Patton<lb/>
thought his troops played well.<lb/>
"We had the turnovers early and<lb/>
had to play catch-up the rest of<lb/>
the game. It would have helped if<lb/>
their players would not have been<lb/>
chopping our guys up inside<lb/>
The Pirates were hurt during<lb/>
the game by the outside shooting<lb/>
of Richmond, a team that had<lb/>
shot only 43 percent on the<lb/>
season. Seldom-used John Camp-<lb/>
bell hurt the Bucs with five<lb/>
long-range jumpers in the second<lb/>
half. The Spiders hit 46.6 percent<lb/>
fa the game, but most of the<lb/>
misses were from inside ten feet.<lb/>
The Pirates shot 44.4 percent<lb/>
on the game after hitting 52<lb/>
percent in the first half. In that<lb/>
first half the Pirates out-shot the<lb/>
Spiders52 to 46 percent, but had<lb/>
five less field goals. The Spiders<lb/>
had 37 attempts to just 22 fa the<lb/>
Pirates. ECU committed ten<lb/>
turnovers to just three fa the<lb/>
Spiders.<lb/>
Freshman sensation Herb<lb/>
Gray led all scaers with 16<lb/>
points, most on twisting drives to<lb/>
the basket and dunks. Gray,<lb/>
however, hit just two of nine free<lb/>
throws. Larry Hunt added 13<lb/>
points and a game-high 13<lb/>
rebounds. Crosfov and freahman<lb/>
Jim Ramsey rounded out the<lb/>
double figure scaing fa the<lb/>
Pirates with 11 and ten, re-<lb/>
spectively. Sophomore Tyrone<lb/>
Edwards pulled eight rebounds<lb/>
fa the Bucs.<lb/>
The Spiders were led in<lb/>
scaing by Craig Sullivan and Jeff<lb/>
Butler with 14 points apiece. Dow<lb/>
and Campbell added 12 each.<lb/>
Butler pulled nine missed shas<lb/>
fa the winners.<lb/>
The Pirates enjoyed a 42-32<lb/>
lead in rebounds, but still had six<lb/>
less shots.<lb/>
ECU, now 5-6 on the season,<lb/>
will be looking fa their first<lb/>
league victory of the season<lb/>
tonight when they travel to<lb/>
Davidson to meet the Wildcats,<lb/>
who stand 2-10 on the season.<lb/>
The Pirates have lct their first<lb/>
two conference contests.<lb/>
LARRY HUNT shoots over State's Kenny Carr in recent Holiday<lb/>
Doubleheader. Hunt hit 13 points and pulled 13 rebounds against<lb/>
Richmond Saturday night. Photo by John Banks.)<lb/>
Grapplers split against<lb/>
highly-ranked opposition<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Spats Edita<lb/>
East Carolina's wrestling<lb/>
team opened their tough home<lb/>
schedule Thursday night with a<lb/>
hard-fought 24-15 win over West<lb/>
Chester (Pa.) St. then entertained<lb/>
fifth-ranked Lehigh Saturday<lb/>
night, losing 25-8. Wilkes (Pa.)<lb/>
College invaded Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum last night.<lb/>
The Lehigh match was termed<lb/>
"one of the top home matches<lb/>
ever at ECU" by Pirate menta<lb/>
John Welban. All the matches<lb/>
were extremely dose with no pins<lb/>
being registered.<lb/>
In the 188-pound dass, the<lb/>
Engineers' Steve Bastianelli<lb/>
picked up a superia dedsion over<lb/>
freshman John Koenigs 10-0.<lb/>
Lehigh's Lance Leonhardt re-<lb/>
gistered another superia win<lb/>
over Wendell Hardy at 126, 10-2,<lb/>
to give the Engineers an 8-0 lead.<lb/>
Paul Osman, at 134, got the<lb/>
Pirates on the scaeboard when<lb/>
he fought Bob Soand to a draw,<lb/>
10-10. The Pirates' 142 pounder,<lb/>
Frank Schaede decisioned<lb/>
Richard Earl of Lehigh, 6-5, to<lb/>
pull the Pirates to within five,<lb/>
10-5.<lb/>
Lehigh's Pat Scully then de-<lb/>
feated Paul Thap, 9-4, to stretch<lb/>
the Engineer lead to eight, 13-5.<lb/>
At 158, Bill Schneck picked up a<lb/>
hard-fought 7-5 win over the<lb/>
Pirates' Steve Gocde.<lb/>
Phil Mueller then dedsioned<lb/>
the Engineers' Nils Deacon, 3-2,<lb/>
in one of the best matches of the<lb/>
evening. Mueller won the match<lb/>
on riding time. He failed to take<lb/>
Deacon down during the match.<lb/>
He received one point fa an<lb/>
escape, one fa stalling on his<lb/>
opponent, and one fa the riding<lb/>
time. Lehigh led 16-8 at this<lb/>
point.<lb/>
Mark Lieberman, Lehigh's<lb/>
177-pound former NCAA<lb/>
champion, then dedsioned Jay<lb/>
Dever 11-5 in another hard-earn-<lb/>
ed viday. Dever, just a freshmarj,<lb/>
has shown a lot of talent thus far<lb/>
thisseasoi.<lb/>
At 190, the Pirates' John<lb/>
William was beaten by Don<lb/>
McCakel 4-0 and Lehigh heavy-<lb/>
weight Mike Brown beat D.T.<lb/>
(See Wrestling Page 15)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0013"/><lb/>
Patton calls for student<lb/>
involvement in program<lb/>
11 JANUARY 1977 FQUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Pirate basketball mentor Dave<lb/>
Patton is a bit upset at the student<lb/>
support received at home games<lb/>
to date.<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, with a<lb/>
seating capacity of 6,500, has<lb/>
been less than a third full for the<lb/>
last three home games, averaging<lb/>
only around 2,000 in attendance.<lb/>
"The people who have been<lb/>
coming to our games have been<lb/>
doing a fantastic job Patton<lb/>
said recently. "But, we've got to<lb/>
get more out than we've had.<lb/>
We're only getting about a<lb/>
thousand students to the game<lb/>
Opposing teams ooming into<lb/>
Minges have not been intimi-<lb/>
dated by the home crowd. One of<lb/>
the themes for home games this<lb/>
season is'Intimidation<lb/>
"We have to let it be known<lb/>
that when you oome to 'Pirate<lb/>
Country' you are going to see<lb/>
rabid fans who support their team<lb/>
and get on your tails Patton<lb/>
continued.<lb/>
Patton also said, "We've got<lb/>
to get our students raising cain.<lb/>
This gives us an added advantage<lb/>
which everybody else already<lb/>
has<lb/>
Patton indicated he wanted to<lb/>
get students interested in the<lb/>
ECU basketball program.<lb/>
"We've got to get our stu-<lb/>
dents interested in our program.<lb/>
I'm willing to meet with any<lb/>
organization, fraternity, sorority,<lb/>
or honor group to talk about our<lb/>
basketball program and get their<lb/>
views and support.<lb/>
"After all, it's their (stu-<lb/>
dents') team. It'snot mine. I want<lb/>
them to be interested in the<lb/>
Second Guessing<lb/>
team Patton added.<lb/>
The Pirates have one of the<lb/>
youngest teams in the nation this<lb/>
season, with an average age of<lb/>
19.3 years. They are currently<lb/>
starting two freshmen, two soph-<lb/>
omores, and the only senior,<lb/>
Larry Hunt. The Pirates have four<lb/>
frosh on the team, along with four<lb/>
sophomores, two juniors, and a<lb/>
senior.<lb/>
"We've got a very young<lb/>
team Patton stated. "These<lb/>
kids are out there busting their<lb/>
tails. They're really coming a-<lb/>
long. They're gonna be real good<lb/>
pretty scon. But, they can't do it<lb/>
without the support of their<lb/>
peers, the students.<lb/>
"This is definitely a building<lb/>
year for us, with four freshmen<lb/>
and four sophomores playing a<lb/>
See PATTON, page 15.<lb/>
Swimmers<lb/>
with bill keyes ranked in<lb/>
Super Bowlspirits NCAA stats<lb/>
The National Broadcasting Company's pre-Super Bowl coverage<lb/>
took viewers into such places as Clancy's Bar in Oakland where Raiders<lb/>
fans inaeased their spirit with spirits, and the lobby of the Ftegistry<lb/>
Hotel in Bloomington, Minnesota, whete many of the Vikingsr'faithful<lb/>
got together to watch the game.<lb/>
There were many such scenes around the oountry on Super Sunday<lb/>
as football fans congregated to watch the biggest game in the world.<lb/>
But in areas other than California and Minnesota the fans were not<lb/>
quite as partisan.<lb/>
For example, the 80-some peoole who went to the BottomLine in<lb/>
downtown Greenville to watch the game on their ten-foot diagonal<lb/>
Advent television were almost equally divided-half for the Oakland<lb/>
Raiders and half fa the Minnesota Vikings-if they were foroed to make<lb/>
a choice.<lb/>
But the place NBC should have sent their cameras was the<lb/>
Candlewick Inn. A number of my friends were there enjoying hot dogs<lb/>
steamed in beer, hasd'oeuvres, baked chicken, lotsof beer, and lotsof<lb/>
fun as they cheered vigaously fa their favaites. Jimmy Chrysson and<lb/>
Bill Press, the chief .holler-guys fa the Vikings, were joined by guys<lb/>
like John Kessee, Lenny Blakeley, and Carl Griffin. Just as the<lb/>
Candlewick staffers favaed the Raiders, party members who were<lb/>
prime Oakland rooters were Steve Toney, and Randy Alfad (alias<lb/>
Kenny Stabler), while Steve Maris, Eddie Hatch, Bill Parks, Jersey<lb/>
Jack, David Brahm and Lloyed Hines were Oakland rooters also.<lb/>
Though these guys were good friends, there were times when an<lb/>
outsider wouldn't have been able to tell as they carried on heated<lb/>
arguments over oertain plays, calls by officials, and contrasting points<lb/>
of view.<lb/>
I just regret the game wasn't a little closer. Offensively, Kenny<lb/>
Stabler was mae effective than was M innesota' s Fran Tarkenton as he<lb/>
oompleted 12 of 19 passes fa 180 yards, while in the running game<lb/>
Oakland back Clarence Davis was named outstanding player by the<lb/>
Associated Press as he rushed fa a career high 137 yards behind a<lb/>
strong wall of blockers.<lb/>
Following the game, the Raiders'quarterback told reporters who<lb/>
gathered around his cubicle, "Our offensive line beat the hell out of<lb/>
them. (They) made it all work. Minnesota did the things that got them<lb/>
here and stuck with them. We did the things that got us here and stuck<lb/>
with them, too. We just beat them physically Though he expected his<lb/>
team to soae a lot of points, the bearded southpaw from Alabama<lb/>
admitted that he "couldn't imagine dominating the game this way<lb/>
Defensively the Raiders stopped Minnesota in fine style. In the<lb/>
early going, the Vikes had a first and goal from the two-yard line. The<lb/>
first attempt at a touchdown netted a one-yard gain. On second and<lb/>
goal from the one, Tarkenton handed to Brent McClanahan who<lb/>
attempted to go through the middle of the line. The runner was hit by<lb/>
linebacker Phil Vilipiansand then by tackle David Rowe. The resulting<lb/>
fumble was pounced on by Wally Hall. Aggressive defense caused a<lb/>
number of Viking mistakes. Raider fans throughout the oountry<lb/>
relished every bone-shattering tackle that their defensive stars<lb/>
executed and were probably most boisterous when much- aiticized<lb/>
safety Geage Atkinsai perfectly timed hits on Viking receivers.<lb/>
Though I shouldn't mention it, I favaed the Vikings who had a<lb/>
mae conservative image over the Raiders who had an image of being<lb/>
rough-housing cheap-sha artists. But the Oakland Raiders are Wald<lb/>
Champiais now, and thousands of other Vikings rooters (Raider<lb/>
haters) like myself will have to wait a year befae anything .an be done<lb/>
about it. That's what makes the Super Bowl the big game.<lb/>
Two East Carolina swimmers<lb/>
and one ECU relay team are<lb/>
ranked among the nation's best<lb/>
based on early season results.<lb/>
John McCauley, a junia fran<lb/>
Charlotte, is fifth in the nation in<lb/>
the 50-yard freestyle with a time<lb/>
of 21.27. John Tuda, a sopho-<lb/>
more fran Greensboro, is cur-<lb/>
rently ranked 12th in the 200-yard<lb/>
individual medley with a best of<lb/>
1 58.39. The ECU 400-yard free-<lb/>
style relay team of McCauley,<lb/>
Tuda, Ted Niemann and Billy<lb/>
Thane is sixth with a time of<lb/>
309.00, less than five seconds off<lb/>
the best time of the U.S. Naval<lb/>
Academy.<lb/>
Head coach Ray Scharf com-<lb/>
mented on the rankings. "I think<lb/>
the rankings are great. But it's<lb/>
na where they are now that<lb/>
counts. It's where they are at the<lb/>
end of the year that oounts. These<lb/>
are not even national qualifying<lb/>
times, so you can see there's a lot<lb/>
of wak yet to be done. I am<lb/>
pleased, of oourse, to have East<lb/>
Carolina and these individuals in<lb/>
the rankings so high and with<lb/>
these times this early<lb/>
The team had its annual<lb/>
winter wakouts in Winter Park,<lb/>
Fla. again this year and the entire<lb/>
team made some good waves.<lb/>
Tuda, alaig with freshman Ted<lb/>
Niemann, set varsity recads.<lb/>
Tuda knocked five seconds off<lb/>
his 500 freestyle school mark,<lb/>
swimming a 4:38.4. Niemann,<lb/>
who is ironically from Winter<lb/>
Park, ripped eight seconds off the<lb/>
varsity mark in the 1,000 free-<lb/>
style reoad, with a 9:45.8 clock-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"The amazing thing about<lb/>
these records pointed out<lb/>
Scharf, "is that they were swum<lb/>
outdoas where you are always<lb/>
slower, and also, they came after<lb/>
10,000 yard wakouts. With three<lb/>
watches on them, they are official<lb/>
recads, and I think it was rather<lb/>
outstanding what they did<lb/>
The swimmers will be in<lb/>
action again next Thursday when<lb/>
they host the University of Maine.<lb/>
Eat a big one at<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
CARRY OUT<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
Pizza &amp; Spaghetti House<lb/>
FAST FREE CAM PUS DELIVERY<lb/>
DIAL 758-7400<lb/>
507 East 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Sunday thru Thursday NOTHING 1130 AM till 1 AM<lb/>
Friday and Saturday BEATSA PIZZA FROM y y 30 A tln 2 AM<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
j<lb/>
H.L. Hodges<lb/>
All Down Jackets'<lb/>
(goose down filled)<lb/>
Ladies and Mens Sizes<lb/>
New Shipment Just Arrived<lb/>
(ladieshavefurtrim and hood<lb/>
Men's and Ladies Ski Gloves<lb/>
Black Leather<lb/>
Men's Fleece Lined Jackets<lb/>
With Hoods<lb/>
20 Off Tuesday, Wednesday and<lb/>
Thursday With This Ad.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 11 JANUARY 1977<lb/>
Pirates have their own<lb/>
'Wizard of West wood'<lb/>
Billy Dineen is by no means<lb/>
the tallest guard ever to play the<lb/>
game of basketball. But he is<lb/>
probably one of the most hustling<lb/>
players East Carolina fans will<lb/>
ever see.<lb/>
"My game is always based on<lb/>
hustle said the 5-10 sophomore<lb/>
"Being only 5-10,1 oertainly can't<lb/>
rely on my height to help me out,<lb/>
so I have to depend on hustle<lb/>
Dineen, although he says he<lb/>
has nothing against scoring, likes<lb/>
to think of himself as a defensive<lb/>
player.<lb/>
"I like to force my man out of<lb/>
the offense he said, "distract<lb/>
him in any way I can. I want to be<lb/>
a burden on him, so he thinks<lb/>
more about me than he does<lb/>
about the offense he's running<lb/>
The Westwood native<lb/>
said that he has had to make a<lb/>
transition from high school to<lb/>
college ball in the type of defense<lb/>
he plays.<lb/>
"In high school, it's every<lb/>
man for himself Dineen ex-<lb/>
plained. "You concentrate on<lb/>
shutting off your man, and let the<lb/>
rest take care of itself. In ooilege,<lb/>
it's different, though. At East<lb/>
Carolina, we're taught to sag in<lb/>
the middle more and worry about<lb/>
stopping teams rather than indi-<lb/>
viduals<lb/>
When he is not playing his<lb/>
brand of tight defense, Billy says<lb/>
that he enjoys being the point<lb/>
guard, the one who is the<lb/>
"quarterback" of the offense.<lb/>
"I enjoy running the show<lb/>
said Dineen. "I enjoy scoring as<lb/>
much as anyone, and if I'm open<lb/>
I'll shoot, but I get just as much<lb/>
satisfaction from making a good<lb/>
pass and setting up an easy shot<lb/>
for a teammate as I do making<lb/>
points myself<lb/>
He noted, however, that there<lb/>
were times when being the floor<lb/>
leader can cause problems.<lb/>
"The hardest situation to get<lb/>
into as the man who runs the<lb/>
offense said Dineen, "is when<lb/>
the plays are not running smooth-<lb/>
ly and the team is stale. That is<lb/>
when you have to be assertive and<lb/>
show leadership to get things<lb/>
moving again<lb/>
What made Billy Dineen up in<lb/>
Westwood, N.J decide to come<lb/>
to East Carolina to play basket-<lb/>
ball?<lb/>
"I was oonfident I oould play<lb/>
college basketball he said,<lb/>
"and I knew I could play on a<lb/>
small ooilege level. I didn't know<lb/>
if I oould play in a major ooilege<lb/>
program or not, though, but I<lb/>
wanted to try. I had to prove to<lb/>
myself that I oould do it - it was a<lb/>
challenge to me.<lb/>
 Now I feel that I can fit into a<lb/>
major program like the one here<lb/>
at ECU and contribute, but I feel<lb/>
comfortable and oonfident as a<lb/>
point guard<lb/>
Billy Dineen is an example of<lb/>
the kind of desire and determin-<lb/>
ation a team needs to be a winner.<lb/>
He is always hustling, playing<lb/>
pressure defense, and doing an<lb/>
admirable job of helping direct<lb/>
the East Carolina offense. In fact,<lb/>
he might be referred to as East<lb/>
Carolina's "Wizard of West-<lb/>
wood<lb/>
V<lb/>
�<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
111 W. 4th St.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
Wrestles gold medalist<lb/>
BILLY DINEEN<lb/>
Dever dream comes true<lb/>
One day last summer, while<lb/>
working as a policeman in New<lb/>
Jersey, Jay Dever was watching<lb/>
the Montreal Olympics. At the<lb/>
time, John Peterson was attemp-<lb/>
ting to win a gold medal in<lb/>
203 East 5th Street � Greenville, N. C.27834<lb/>
JANUARY<lb/>
CLEARANCE<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
FALLANDWINTER<lb/>
PANTS<lb/>
TOPS<lb/>
BLOUSES<lb/>
PANTSUITS<lb/>
DRESSES<lb/>
LONG DRESSES<lb/>
BAGS<lb/>
NOW 'AJOVz PRICE<lb/>
wrestling for the United States.<lb/>
Dever, who had wrestled in high<lb/>
school, was asked by a friend if he<lb/>
would like to wrestle Peterson in<lb/>
the Olympics.<lb/>
"Sure said Dever, wonder-<lb/>
ing if his friend was a candidate<lb/>
for some institution<lb/>
Recently that ques-<lb/>
tion became reality, as the East<lb/>
Carolina wrestling team, of which<lb/>
Dever is a member, faced the<lb/>
Athletes in Action, of which John<lb/>
Peterson is a player -coach. Both<lb/>
men wrestle at the 177-pound<lb/>
weight class, so it happened. Jay<lb/>
Dever, freshman wrestler, faced<lb/>
John Peterson, Olympic gold<lb/>
medalist.<lb/>
"My friends started taking<lb/>
bets on how fast I'd get pinned<lb/>
recalled Dever. "I don't think any<lb/>
of them figured it would go more<lb/>
than the first period<lb/>
It lasted much longer than the<lb/>
first period. In fact, the two<lb/>
wrestlers went through two score-<lb/>
less periods before Peterson<lb/>
prevailed, pinning Dever with 53<lb/>
seconds left in the match.<lb/>
What was the Moorestown,<lb/>
N.J. native thinking about during<lb/>
the second period break when it<lb/>
was a scoreless tie?<lb/>
"There was one main thing I<lb/>
was concentrating on explained<lb/>
Dever. "There was a good-<lb/>
looking girl in the stands and I<lb/>
was thinking about her he<lb/>
admitted.<lb/>
"Seriously, I was thinking<lb/>
that as crazy as it might have<lb/>
seemed, I still had a chance to<lb/>
beat him. Then I got in on him,<lb/>
but didn't keep my head up. He<lb/>
took advantage of that and turned<lb/>
me over<lb/>
Peterson was asked after the<lb/>
match if he was just carrying<lb/>
Dever along.<lb/>
"No way he said. "I just<lb/>
oouldn't get him over, he was so<lb/>
strong<lb/>
Even with his super perfor-<lb/>
mance against Peterson, Jay<lb/>
Dever has not been too satisfied<lb/>
with his progress to date with the<lb/>
ECU wrestling squad.<lb/>
"I'm strong and pretty<lb/>
(See Dever page 15)<lb/>
INTRAMURALS<lb/>
(Continued from page 12)<lb/>
5.Kappa Alpha PsiKappa Alpha Psi5.Hypertension<lb/>
6.BelkLo&amp;Co.BSU6.Cottentails<lb/>
7.Scott SultansNutties Buddies7.The Nibs<lb/>
8.Herb SuperbsDimples8.Stardusters<lb/>
9.Belk Noan &amp; ArkDesperados9.Alpha Omicron Pi<lb/>
10. Jones NuggetsBelk Assasins10Sigma Sigma Sign<lb/>
We have to say we agree with the women's ratings that Candy<lb/>
Wedemeyer has oome up with for the intramural basketball league.<lb/>
The BSU and the Nock'sNockersteams will get their first real tests<lb/>
of the season this week when BSU, winners by scores of 62-14 and 39-0,<lb/>
takeson the No. 8 Stardusters in a battle of unbeatens. Meanwhile, the<lb/>
second-ranked Nockers will meet league rival The Ribs, who are<lb/>
seventh-ranked, on Thursday. The Nibs lost their first game of the<lb/>
season last week, losing to the Cottentails, 34-19. Every other team in<lb/>
the top ten won last week, but only six women's teams remain without i<lb/>
loss. The only loss for three teams came as a result of a forfeit.<lb/>
In the men's leagues 16 teams are still unbeaten. Pi Kappa Phi and<lb/>
the Rockets were dropped from the unbeaten ranks last week. The<lb/>
Rockets lost to the Tri G' s and the Pi Kapps lost to fifth-ranked Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Psi.<lb/>
The Dorm league has seven unbeaten teams, the independent<lb/>
league has five unbeaten teams, and the club and fraternity leagues<lb/>
have two each.<lb/>
So far the favorites for the divisional championships are the Figures<lb/>
Revised and the Nutties Buddies in the dorm league, Kappa Alpha and<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi in the fraternity league, Phi Epsilon Kappa Dunkersand<lb/>
BSU in the club league and the Rockets and the Desperados in the<lb/>
independent league.<lb/>
In the women's leagues the favorites for post-season all-campus<lb/>
play are BSU in the Jump League, Alpha Xi Delta or Alpha Omicron Pi<lb/>
in the Goal League, Nock's Ncckers in the Shot League and the Day<lb/>
Students in the Basket league.<lb/>
Ice Ball got underway last week and two teams took wins, two won<lb/>
by forfeit and two more ended in an exciting 10-10 tie.<lb/>
The 10-10 tie proved the most exciting game of the first week as the<lb/>
Intramural Staff (IMS) tied the team from Scott and White Dams. The<lb/>
action was led by IMS's Keith Edmundson who took the first week<lb/>
scoring honors with six points (three goals worth two points each). The<lb/>
other winne-s in the first week were the Greek Freaks, the Sweepers,<lb/>
the Sizzlers and the Follies.<lb/>
nug ms fiases<lb/>
mmsHBmmammBmmmm<lb/>
��� iSP<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0015"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
11 JANUARY 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
D. T. JOYNER is on his way to a pin over<lb/>
Wast Charter State<lb/>
night win. Photo by Brian Stotler. <lb/>
PATTON<lb/>
(Continued from page 13)<lb/>
Tot. They really need all the<lb/>
support they can get. They aren't<lb/>
ACC level yet but the nucleus is<lb/>
there for the future<lb/>
Patton said the low crowd<lb/>
attendance also has an affect on<lb/>
recruiting.<lb/>
 When a prospect oomes here<lb/>
for a visit and sees a near-empty<lb/>
arena, he's not gonna think about<lb/>
coming here Patton added.<lb/>
Patton said he hopes the fans<lb/>
will revive for Saturday night's<lb/>
league battle with Appalachian<lb/>
State. The Mountaineers are 2-1<lb/>
in the Southern Conference and<lb/>
are currently in second place.<lb/>
PAUL OSM AN registers an 11-� decision over Dave Miller<lb/>
DEVER<lb/>
(Continued from page 14)<lb/>
quick he said, "but there is a<lb/>
lot about wrestling that I don't<lb/>
know yet. It gets really frustrating<lb/>
at times, because I don't know all<lb/>
the things I should. I guess I'm a<lb/>
slow learner<lb/>
Dever feels he is improving,<lb/>
though, and gives credit to head<lb/>
coach John Wei born and assistant<lb/>
coach Mike Waller.<lb/>
"I can't say enough about<lb/>
Mike Waller Dever oontinued.<lb/>
"He finished fifth in the NCAA<lb/>
tournament last year, and he has<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
been working with me a lot this<lb/>
year, so I am improving<lb/>
Dever will oontinue to improve<lb/>
as he gains experience. As for his<lb/>
match against Peterson, he said,<lb/>
"It was a tremendouschal lenge<lb/>
then added with a smile, "How<lb/>
soon do you think I can get a<lb/>
rematch?<lb/>
WRESTLERS<lb/>
(Continued from page 12)<lb/>
Joyner, 9-4.<lb/>
The West Chester State match<lb/>
was one of the most exciting ever<lb/>
fa ECU as no less than five<lb/>
individual matches were decided<lb/>
by three points or less.<lb/>
West Chester took the early<lb/>
lead in the light weight classes.<lb/>
Bob Katz took a superior 15-0<lb/>
decision over freshman John<lb/>
Koenigs of ECU, who was<lb/>
wrestling his first collegiate<lb/>
match ever. Freshman Jorge<lb/>
Leon of West Chester took a 12-4<lb/>
decision over Wendell Hardy in<lb/>
the 126-pound class to give his<lb/>
team a 9-0 lead.<lb/>
The Pirates' Paul Osman ran<lb/>
his season reoord to 14-3 in the<lb/>
134-pound match with an 11 -6 win<lb/>
ever Dave Miller to pull the<lb/>
Pirates within six at 9-3.<lb/>
At 142, West Chester's Nel-<lb/>
son Stratton broke an 8-8 tie in<lb/>
the final minute to decision Paul<lb/>
Gaghan 10-8. This gave West<lb/>
Chester a 12-3 lead in the match.<lb/>
The 150-pound match was one of<lb/>
the most exciting of the night.<lb/>
Paul Thorp decisioned Mike<lb/>
Sherer of West Chester 6-5, but<lb/>
won the match on riding time.<lb/>
The two were tied 5-5 after the<lb/>
match, but a check of riding time<lb/>
gave the victory to Thorp.<lb/>
At 158, the Pirates' Steve<lb/>
Goode lost a heart breaker to Don<lb/>
Meyer by a 3-2 count. Goode It<lb/>
2-1 with less than a minute to g-<lb/>
in the match, but tried to take<lb/>
down his opponent. The move<lb/>
backfired, with Meyer taking<lb/>
Goode down for the victory.<lb/>
Phil Mueller oontinued his<lb/>
winning ways with a pin of Pete<lb/>
Noyior in 1 25. Mueller won his<lb/>
fifteenth against just one loss,<lb/>
that ooming on an injury default.<lb/>
Freshman Jay Dever tied the<lb/>
match up for the Pirates with a<lb/>
4-3 decision of John Licata at 177<lb/>
John Williams took an 8-5 win<lb/>
over Bruce Edwards of West<lb/>
Chester in the 190-pound class to<lb/>
give the Pirates an 18-15 lead.<lb/>
Heavyweight D.T. Joyner in-<lb/>
sured a Pirate win with a pin of<lb/>
Eric Swanson in 425.<lb/>
The Pirates hosted Wilkes<lb/>
(Pa.) College last night but no<lb/>
results were available at press-<lb/>
time. The wrestlers are off until<lb/>
Jan. 21 when they host Appala-<lb/>
chian State.<lb/>
$tudent$ Rent-A-Box -Reduced Rates!<lb/>
Maximize-Your Savings Economize Save<lb/>
CONVENIENT<lb/>
DECORATIVE<lb/>
COMPACT<lb/>
NECESSARY<lb/>
SERVICEABLE<lb/>
ECONOMICAL<lb/>
PORTABLE<lb/>
Household Equipment<lb/>
Campers<lb/>
Garden Hand Tools<lb/>
Canoes<lb/>
Camping Equipment<lb/>
HEALTHY<lb/>
You Can't Afford Not To<lb/>
Rant on annual or session basis<lb/>
the High Cost of Living<lb/>
Call or Contact<lb/>
766-3162<lb/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED? Call<lb/>
Alice-758-0497 or 757-6366. Only<lb/>
.50 a page: (exceptions-single<lb/>
spaced pages &amp; outlines) Plenty<lb/>
of experience�I need the money!<lb/>
STEREO COMPONENT Repre-<lb/>
sentative for Large Warehouse a<lb/>
STEREO COMPONENT a stu-<lb/>
dent Representative for Large<lb/>
Warehouse is on campus. You've<lb/>
heard of Warehouse prioss, now<lb/>
they're here. (40-50 lower<lb/>
than any local dealer). Have your<lb/>
components in one week from<lb/>
time of order. Full Factory War-<lb/>
ranty. All Brands available. Call<lb/>
Dave- 758-1382.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Standard Gibson<lb/>
Electric Guitar Grovar Heads,<lb/>
Excellent Condition. 758-7936.<lb/>
ZOMBIE'S: That has nothing to<lb/>
do with what this is about<lb/>
butApplications for Student<lb/>
Union President will be taken<lb/>
beginning January<lb/>
WANTED: Male, female, black,<lb/>
white, age 18-40. Anyone interes-<lb/>
ted in applying for Student Union<lb/>
President may pick up an applica-<lb/>
tion at Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter Information Desk. Come on<lb/>
and get involved in the progres-<lb/>
sive and growing organization of<lb/>
the Student Union. The applica-<lb/>
tions are available January 6,<lb/>
1977.<lb/>
If you have something to buy<lb/>
or sell oome to the Red Oak Show<lb/>
and Sell; We sell on consignment<lb/>
anything of value, excluding<lb/>
clothing. Open Mon. - Sat.<lb/>
11 :00-6.00 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/>
fold Red Oak church building.<lb/>
WANTED: One or two female<lb/>
roomates for Village Green Apt.<lb/>
$50 per month plus utilities. Call<lb/>
758-0595 after 3.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1 &amp; 2 bedroomLOST: Gold wristwatch with<lb/>
apartments. Newly renovated &amp;brown face. Call 752-9351. $40<lb/>
new appliances. Call 752-4154.reward.<lb/>
WANTED: Male or Female to<lb/>
share 3 bedroom apartment at<lb/>
Eastbrook; must be Academically<lb/>
Inclined! Call 758-0219.<lb/>
LOST: 1 pair of dark brown Frye<lb/>
boots.Lost in Drama dept. dress-<lb/>
ing room. Reward offered for<lb/>
information leading to their<lb/>
whereabouts. Call 758-7422. No<lb/>
questions asked.<lb/>
LOST. Class Ring, S.N.S.H. Class<lb/>
of 75. Lost in Library Dec. 15th.<lb/>
Inside initials R.H. if found<lb/>
please contact Rick Horner in<lb/>
Aycock 115, phone 752-0465<lb/>
Reward.<lb/>
HELP! I lost a brown deer skin<lb/>
purse in Jenkins Art Bldg. If you<lb/>
have any information on it pie<lb/>
call 752-6140 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
LOST: Rust-colored lady's wallet<lb/>
on Jan. 5 between Greene and the<lb/>
Croat an. Reward offered. Call<lb/>
752-9383 or return to 402 Greene.<lb/>
(5) found<lb/>
personal<lb/>
RIDING LESSONS: International<lb/>
balinoed seat taught by qualified<lb/>
profession on your own horse.<lb/>
Hunters, eventing, dressage.<lb/>
Regina Kear 758-4706. Free<lb/>
Kittens.<lb/>
PIANO: AND GUITAR lessons.<lb/>
Daily and evening. Richard J.<lb/>
Knapp, B.A. 756-3908.<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle.<lb/>
752-4272.<lb/>
'EED TYPING? Call Gail Joyner<lb/>
756-1062 fa professional typ-<lb/>
ing and related services. All work<lb/>
guaranteed!<lb/>
Use This<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Space<lb/>
To Get<lb/>
Rid Of<lb/>
Your<lb/>
Valuables<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 11 JANUARY 1977<lb/>
Low, Low, Prices on All ECU Sportswear<lb/>
January Clearance<lb/>
Coupon Sale<lb/>
at the<lb/>
UBE<lb/>
Use the Coupons Below for Great Savings<lb/>
On All our Sportswear<lb/>
$2.00 Savings<lb/>
Zipper Front Hooded<lb/>
Sweatshirts<lb/>
Reg.8.95 Now6.95<lb/>
With This Coupon<lb/>
$1.00 Savings<lb/>
ECUT-Shirts<lb/>
Reg. 2.95 Now 1.95<lb/>
With This Coupon<lb/>
$1.00 Savings<lb/>
ECU Jerseys and<lb/>
Sweatshirts<lb/>
Reg. 5.95 Now 4.95<lb/>
With This Coupon<lb/>
r��<lb/>
r����i<lb/>
$3.00 Savings<lb/>
Unlined Nylon Jackets<lb/>
Reg. 9.95 Now 6.95<lb/>
With This Coupon<lb/>
wm mm mm mm mm m ������l �� amm an h<lb/>
� HHHHBIBiMHBIaMMa<lb/>
$2.00 Savings<lb/>
ECU Sportshirtsand<lb/>
Polo Shirts<lb/>
Reg. 8.95 Now 6.95<lb/>
With This Coupon<lb/>
� �� ������ ���������� HI MB MB MB I<lb/>
$1.00Savi�igs<lb/>
ECU Nities, Gym Shorts,<lb/>
Hotshot Hats, and<lb/>
Crew Hats<lb/>
With This Coupon<lb/>
This Coupon Good For 751<lb/>
Off All Other j<lb/>
Sportswear �<lb/>
Lj<lb/>
University Book Exchange<lb/>
Downtown in Greenville<lb/>
� Large Selection in Navy and Light Blue, Limited Selection in Red and Gray<lb/>
<pb facs="00057102_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>