<?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="00057133_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 3,500,<lb/>
this issue is 12 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Slapstick reviewed, p. 6<lb/>
Mack tries for WU, p. 10<lb/>
2 All-Americas, p. 11<lb/>
Vol. 52, No. 55<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
15 June 1977<lb/>
SS store nears<lb/>
completion date<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
The renovation of the Student<lb/>
Supply Store should be completed<lb/>
sometime near the first of Au-<lb/>
gust, according to Curtis May,<lb/>
Student Supply Store assistant<lb/>
manager.<lb/>
"We're shooting for some-<lb/>
time around the first of August,<lb/>
not necessarily August 1 said<lb/>
May.<lb/>
"The total project is not<lb/>
behind, but some minor details<lb/>
are<lb/>
The supply store, temporarily<lb/>
moved, will be expanded to<lb/>
include the old snack bar area,<lb/>
and part of the hallway leading to<lb/>
the store entrance.<lb/>
The extra space will be used to<lb/>
display items that the store had<lb/>
no room for previously.<lb/>
"We were just so cramped<lb/>
said May.<lb/>
"Now we'll have more space<lb/>
to put books We'll have more<lb/>
shelf spaoe to put what we have<lb/>
May said that during the<lb/>
end-of-the-quarter book rush, it<lb/>
was hard to keep the shelves<lb/>
stocked with books, even though<lb/>
supply store employes continu-<lb/>
ously stocked them.<lb/>
May said sometimes it ap-<lb/>
peared that they were out of<lb/>
certain books, when there were<lb/>
actually many more in the stock-<lb/>
room.<lb/>
The supply store will be able<lb/>
to display perhaps 200 books of a<lb/>
kind instead of 50, as has been<lb/>
the case in the past, according to<lb/>
May.<lb/>
Everything will be in the<lb/>
general area as it was previously,<lb/>
May said.<lb/>
"The art department will be<lb/>
expanded said May. "It will<lb/>
extend along the wall where he<lb/>
paperbacks were<lb/>
The general offices will be<lb/>
moved to another area in the<lb/>
supply store.<lb/>
The walls and glass of the<lb/>
offices will be removed, and one<lb/>
room will house the paperbacks,<lb/>
both pleasure and classroom<lb/>
paperbacks.<lb/>
The cash registers will face<lb/>
the exit, instead of being at<lb/>
angles.<lb/>
Previously, eight cash regis-<lb/>
ters were used during the book<lb/>
rush, but May said it is hoped<lb/>
THE STUDENT SUPPLY STORE has been<lb/>
temporarily moved while the store area is being<lb/>
expanded. Photo by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
there will be 10 in use during the<lb/>
rushes.<lb/>
Three cash registers will be in<lb/>
use between the book rushes,<lb/>
May said.<lb/>
May said it is hoped that the<lb/>
supply store will be carpeted, but<lb/>
the bid for carpet has not yet been<lb/>
approved.<lb/>
The tile floor had to be<lb/>
scrubbed every day, anr1 waxed<lb/>
once a week, according to May.<lb/>
"It was expensive said<lb/>
May.<lb/>
May said there is a good<lb/>
possibility that carpet will be<lb/>
installed by the time the supply<lb/>
store opens.<lb/>
The area the temporary sup-<lb/>
ply store is now occupying will be<lb/>
a snack bar, said May.<lb/>
The snack bar will be set up<lb/>
like the Croatan.<lb/>
"The money that has been<lb/>
approved right now is $400,000<lb/>
said May.<lb/>
The $400,000 has been allo-<lb/>
cated to the completion of the<lb/>
supply store and part of the snack<lb/>
bar, according to May.<lb/>
"We do not know what the<lb/>
remainder of the cost of the snack<lb/>
bar will be said May.<lb/>
"The health department re-<lb/>
quires stainless steel for sanitary<lb/>
purposes, and that's like buying<lb/>
gold<lb/>
The snack bar cannot be<lb/>
completed until the remainder of<lb/>
the oost is paid, according to<lb/>
May.<lb/>
There will be a service desk in<lb/>
the hallway outside the supply<lb/>
store, said May, where students<lb/>
�can sell back their books.<lb/>
They will probably be able to<lb/>
have their checks okayed there<lb/>
also.<lb/>
There will be two entrances<lb/>
from the lobby, said May.<lb/>
Students can enter the snack<lb/>
bar like they enter the temporary<lb/>
supply store now.<lb/>
A hallway will lead straight to<lb/>
the entrance of the supply store.<lb/>
A short hallway will oonnect<lb/>
the snack bar to the supply store<lb/>
so students will be able to go from<lb/>
one to the other easily, said May.<lb/>
kikikki<lb/>
Nursingplans gradprogram<lb/>
The ECU School of Nursing cate program, will be made part out the program.<lb/>
 �<lb/>
mfMMiAMSSSEm<lb/>
��<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
A NEW MOVIE THEATER will be opening soon on Arlington<lb/>
Boulevard. Photo by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
has plans to start a program<lb/>
leading to Masters of Science in<lb/>
nursing in the fall of 1977.<lb/>
This program will prepare<lb/>
teachers of nursing in medical<lb/>
and surgical nursing, psychiatric<lb/>
mental health nursing, and<lb/>
maternal child health.<lb/>
Later graduate programs in<lb/>
other areas of nursing, i.e.<lb/>
supervision and administration,<lb/>
are expected to be added.<lb/>
It is hoped that the family<lb/>
nurse practitioner program, which<lb/>
is presently offered as a oertifi-<lb/>
of the graduate program.<lb/>
The unique feature of the<lb/>
program is its philosophy that<lb/>
faculty of a practice discipline<lb/>
need to possess high level<lb/>
practive skills in the clinical area<lb/>
of their specialization.<lb/>
The program aims at updating<lb/>
the practice skills, providing<lb/>
indepth study of clinical areas and<lb/>
full understanding of trends and<lb/>
role changes which are quickly<lb/>
overwhelming nursing.<lb/>
Theory and research are em-<lb/>
phasized and integrated through-<lb/>
An R.N. with a degree in a<lb/>
non-nursing discipline will be<lb/>
admitted by supplementing cer-<lb/>
tain requirements for B.S. level<lb/>
nursing knowledge.<lb/>
Also, candidates with a B.S. in<lb/>
nursing and a masters in another<lb/>
discipline can take a second<lb/>
masters in nursing in a shorter<lb/>
span of time.<lb/>
Candidates who wish to only<lb/>
attend summer school can do so<lb/>
through prior planning with the<lb/>
faculty and complete the program<lb/>
through three summer offerings.<lb/>
PTA announces probationary time for TV<lb/>
By BILL HARRINGTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The National PTA has an-<lb/>
nounced a six month probationary<lb/>
period for the national networks<lb/>
starting July 1 to curb what they<lb/>
consider the excessive and harm-<lb/>
ful amount of violence portrayed<lb/>
on television.<lb/>
In an April 15 news release<lb/>
the PTA calls fa "less TV gore<lb/>
ind more diversity and quality<lb/>
in shows<lb/>
The PTA claims that violence<lb/>
on TV makes "many children<lb/>
more aggressive in their behav-<lb/>
ior<lb/>
By January 1, 1978 if there is<lb/>
no "substantial response by the<lb/>
networks" the PTA will oonsider<lb/>
"boyootts of advertisers, pro-<lb/>
grams, and local stations" along<lb/>
with "selected test cases of<lb/>
petition to deny lioensing, and<lb/>
civil litigation acoording to the<lb/>
April 15 news release.<lb/>
Social and organizational<lb/>
psychologist Dr. William F.<lb/>
Grossnickle said that charges<lb/>
such as these have not yet been<lb/>
proven in scientific research.<lb/>
According to Grossnickle,<lb/>
these conclusions may have some<lb/>
basis in fact but are premature at<lb/>
this time.<lb/>
Pirates back down to Toledo<lb/>
See story page 8<lb/>
"A lot of work has been done<lb/>
on this subject, but it's still a very<lb/>
oonfused picture he said. "It<lb/>
bothers me when psychologists<lb/>
come out with these strong<lb/>
positions, as some have<lb/>
"The lab studies and field<lb/>
studies are mixed in their find-<lb/>
ings he said.<lb/>
The PTA has concluded that<lb/>
TV violence can encourage sev-<lb/>
eral forms of aberrant social<lb/>
behavior. They list several exam-<lb/>
ples in their April 15 news<lb/>
release.<lb/>
"Some young people will be<lb/>
incited to commit violent acts in<lb/>
direct imitation of similar behav-<lb/>
ior seen on TV according to the<lb/>
PTA.<lb/>
"Among youth and adults,<lb/>
there is a growing callousness<lb/>
and indifference to violence and<lb/>
the suffering it causes.<lb/>
"Perceptions by children and<lb/>
youth of real life problem solving<lb/>
methods are distorted by TV,<lb/>
which portrays violence as a sure<lb/>
and easy way to solve all<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
"Youth and adults who regu-<lb/>
larly view TV violence are becom-<lb/>
ing more fear'ul of violence<lb/>
occurring in real life.<lb/>
"Continual exposure to televi-<lb/>
sion's parade of murder, rape,<lb/>
arson, assault, and other violence<lb/>
to persons and property dimin-<lb/>
ishes the quality of life for both<lb/>
childre . and adults<lb/>
Dr. Grossnickle finds any<lb/>
definitive conclusions at this time<lb/>
premature without further study.<lb/>
"These are very complex<lb/>
issues and people want very<lb/>
simplistic answers he said.<lb/>
See PTA, page 3.<lb/>
Interpersonal research<lb/>
Unmarried undergraduates between the ages of 18 and 24 who are<lb/>
bothered by self consciousness and lack of confidence around members<lb/>
of the opposite sex, are invited to participate in a research project<lb/>
comparing several methods intended to promote less self<lb/>
consciousness in heterosexual interpersonal situations.<lb/>
Your participation will improve your understanding of the methods<lb/>
by which college people might learn to be more natural, less tense, and<lb/>
less inhibited around members of the opposite sex.<lb/>
If you are interested in participating in this project, and will be in<lb/>
the Greenville area this summer, pelase contact (by mail or by phone,<lb/>
Dor, Marcus, Department of Psychology, ECU, Greenville. N.C. 27834<lb/>
- or leave your name, address, and phone number with the secretary at<lb/>
757-6800.<lb/>
The project requires about one hour per week for six weeks.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057133_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 15 June 1977<lb/>
Honor council Sign lang.<lb/>
Anyone interested in or wish-<lb/>
ing to serve on a summer honor<lb/>
council should sign-up now.<lb/>
1 To find out more information,<lb/>
please call 757-6611, and ask for<lb/>
the Student Government Associ-<lb/>
ation. The sign-up period is June<lb/>
13-24, at Mendenhall, SGA office.<lb/>
Bahai<lb/>
Bahai Association will hold its<lb/>
opening meeting of summer<lb/>
session today at 3:40 in room 238<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Anyone interested in hearing<lb/>
more about the oneness of<lb/>
mankind isencouraqed to attend.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
The City Council of the City of<lb/>
Greenville has scheduled a public<lb/>
hearing on the proposed budget<lb/>
for the City of Greenville and the<lb/>
Greenville Utilities Commission<lb/>
for fiscal year 1977-78. The<lb/>
hearing will be held Thursday,<lb/>
June 16, at 8 p.m in the City<lb/>
Council Chambers of the Munici-<lb/>
pal Building.<lb/>
The proposed budget is avail-<lb/>
able for public inspection in the<lb/>
Office of the City Clerk and at the<lb/>
Sheppard Memorial Library dur-<lb/>
ing normal working hours.<lb/>
Sign lang.<lb/>
Sign language classes for<lb/>
interested students, faculty, and<lb/>
staff members will be offered this<lb/>
summer by the Program for<lb/>
Hearing Impaired Students.<lb/>
Classes began on the first day of<lb/>
summer school (June 7) and will<lb/>
run concurrent with the first<lb/>
summer session on Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
There is no charge for the<lb/>
class and no credit is given. A<lb/>
Basic Course in Manual Com-<lb/>
munication will be the text and is<lb/>
available at the Student Supply<lb/>
Store for $5.20.<lb/>
There will be an intermediate<lb/>
course offered second summer<lb/>
session for those who complete<lb/>
the beginning oourse.<lb/>
Come join us if you are<lb/>
interested in learning American<lb/>
Sign language. Classes are taught<lb/>
at different times during the day,<lb/>
so set aside two hours each week<lb/>
to learn this exciting new<lb/>
language. There is no pre-regis-<lb/>
tration or formal enrollment, so<lb/>
please show up if you want to<lb/>
learn. Classes are informal and<lb/>
easy<lb/>
Schedule of Classes<lb/>
8 a.m9 a.mBrewster B206<lb/>
12noon-1 p.m. -Allied- room 110<lb/>
3 p.m3 p.m. -Joyner - Smoking<lb/>
Lounge (2nd floor)<lb/>
7 p.m8 p.m. - Joyner- Smoking<lb/>
Lounge (2nd floor)<lb/>
For additional in formation<lb/>
you may call 757-6729 or oome by<lb/>
A209 Brewster<lb/>
BUC<lb/>
Anyone who sold subscript-<lb/>
ions to the BUC must return all<lb/>
receipt books and turn in all<lb/>
money now!<lb/>
People want their refund<lb/>
checks and you are holding up the<lb/>
transaction.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Interested in Student Govern-<lb/>
ment? Someone is needed to help<lb/>
with Student Government In-<lb/>
ventory. For information - call the<lb/>
SGA office 757-6611.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Teaching<lb/>
More than 1000 English-<lb/>
language oriented schools and<lb/>
colleges in over 150 foreign<lb/>
countries offer teaching and<lb/>
administrative opportunities to<lb/>
American and Canadian edu-<lb/>
cators.<lb/>
Positions exist in most all<lb/>
fields, on all levels, from kinder-<lb/>
garten to the university. Salaries<lb/>
vary from school to school, but in<lb/>
most cases they are comparable<lb/>
to those in the U.S. Vacancies<lb/>
occur and are filled throughout<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
Foreign language knowledge<lb/>
is seldom required. Some schools<lb/>
overseas do not require previous<lb/>
teacriing experience or certicifi-<lb/>
cation.<lb/>
Graduating seniors are en-<lb/>
couraged to apply.<lb/>
If you are interested in a<lb/>
position with an overseas school<lb/>
or college, contact: FRIENDS OF<lb/>
WORLD TEACHING, 3643 Kite<lb/>
Street, San Diego, Calif. 92103.<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
The National Teacher Exam-<lb/>
inations(NTE) will be given at the<lb/>
Testing Center, ECU, Saturday,<lb/>
July 16, 1977.<lb/>
Scores from the examination<lb/>
are used by states fa certifi-<lb/>
cation of teachers, by school<lb/>
systems for selection and identi-<lb/>
fication of leadership qualities,<lb/>
and by oolleges as part of their<lb/>
graduation requirements.<lb/>
Educational Testing Service,<lb/>
which prepared and administers<lb/>
the tests, says they are designed<lb/>
to measure knowledge gained<lb/>
from professional and general<lb/>
education and in 27 subject-<lb/>
matter fields.<lb/>
Bulletins describing registra-<lb/>
tion procedures and containing<lb/>
registration forms may be obtain-<lb/>
ed from Mr. John S. Childers,<lb/>
�p<lb/>
for sale<lb/>
����-<lb/>
FOR SALE Mclntosh 2100 AMP,<lb/>
105 watts per Chanel. Crown IC<lb/>
150 PRE AMP. Must hear to<lb/>
believe - $600.00 firm. Call<lb/>
758-8683, 11:00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Table and chairs,<lb/>
antique oak ice box, antique desk,<lb/>
dresser, and buffet. Call 752-5170<lb/>
or 757-6736.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Beautiful AKC<lb/>
Pood'e and also beautiful<lb/>
Pekingnese and one German<lb/>
Sheppard puppy (4 months old).<lb/>
Call 747-5591, Snow Hill.<lb/>
FORSALE.AMF10-speed men's<lb/>
bicycle in good working condition.<lb/>
Includes lock and chain - $25.<lb/>
Yamaha Clarinet. Excellent<lb/>
condition. Includes case - $50.<lb/>
Call 758-9378. Ask for Don.<lb/>
YARD SALE - corner of Avery<lb/>
and Holly off E. 1st - Sat. June 18,<lb/>
9 a.m. - antiques, furniture,<lb/>
plants, clothes, etc. '<lb/>
FOR SALE: Nikkormat FTN<lb/>
35mm camera - black body $100.<lb/>
Call 752-1292.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Refrigerator, 512 ft.<lb/>
high, very good oondition. $70.00.<lb/>
Call 758-2801.<lb/>
personal (A<lb/>
for rerri<lb/>
FOR RENT: One bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment for rent. Appliances in-<lb/>
cluded. $100 a month. Call<lb/>
752-4154.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private bedroom, air<lb/>
conditioned, across from campus.<lb/>
Call 758-2585.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate to<lb/>
share rent' on $150.00. Call<lb/>
752-4349. (Utilities are included.)<lb/>
WANTED. Responsible male<lb/>
graduate student seeks efficiency<lb/>
or small apartment beginning<lb/>
middle to late July. Please write<lb/>
2823 B Mayview R�j. Raleigh,<lb/>
N.C. 17607. Will be in chool next<lb/>
2 years.<lb/>
YOGA LESSONS - effortless<lb/>
answer to a beautifully developed<lb/>
body and mind. Night classes for<lb/>
men and women. Call today for<lb/>
your enrollment. 752-5214.<lb/>
Use this<lb/>
free<lb/>
space!<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
IWY<lb/>
Director, Testing Center, ECU,<lb/>
Speight Building, Room 105,<lb/>
telephone 757-6811, or directly<lb/>
from the National Teacher<lb/>
Examinations, Educational Test-<lb/>
ing Service, Box 911, Princeton,<lb/>
N.J. 08540.<lb/>
The deadline for regular re-<lb/>
gistration is June 23, 1977.<lb/>
On-the-spot registration will not<lb/>
be permitted.<lb/>
IWY<lb/>
The International Women's<lb/>
Year Conference will be held in<lb/>
Winston-Salem from Friday, June<lb/>
17 until Sunday, June 19.<lb/>
A chartered bus will leave the<lb/>
Holiday Inn on Memorial Drive at<lb/>
5:30 a.m. Saturday to take a<lb/>
group of Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
people to attend the Saturday<lb/>
session of the conference.<lb/>
The group expects to return at<lb/>
midnight.<lb/>
The bus fare will be no more<lb/>
than $5. The registration fee will<lb/>
be $3, and meals will make the<lb/>
total about $20.<lb/>
The meeting is open to all<lb/>
residents of North Carolina 16<lb/>
years old and older.<lb/>
Madame Helvi Sipila, As-<lb/>
sistant Secretary General of the<lb/>
United Nations, and Dr. Lisa<lb/>
Sergio, International News<lb/>
Analyst, will be present during<lb/>
the meeting Saturday.<lb/>
The Saturday program in-<lb/>
cludes 24 workshops.<lb/>
There will be presentations of<lb/>
resolutions, films, and an art<lb/>
festival.<lb/>
Persons wishes to reserve<lb/>
space on the bus should call Mrs.<lb/>
Lucile Jones of the Greenville<lb/>
School of Commerce, 2310 East<lb/>
Fourth St 752-3177.<lb/>
THESE ECU STUDENTS enjoy a recent watermelon feast on the Mall.<lb/>
Photo by Kirk KingsDury<lb/>
NEWS DESK meeting Monday<lb/>
at 2:00 SHARP.<lb/>
If you want to write for<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD,<lb/>
be there!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057133_0003"/><lb/>
Reports on Burger Court<lb/>
15 June 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Professor addresses meeting<lb/>
By JOYCE EVANS<lb/>
Dr. Tinsley E. Yarbrough,<lb/>
ECU political science professor,<lb/>
addressed a Chicago gathering of<lb/>
political scientists late April on<lb/>
the Burger Court.<lb/>
Dr. Yarbrough's presentation,<lb/>
"The Burger Court and Unspeci-<lb/>
fied Rights was given at the<lb/>
annual meeting of the Midwest<lb/>
Political Science Association.<lb/>
The presentation focused on<lb/>
the Burger Court as a whole. But<lb/>
Dr. Yarbrough also discussed the<lb/>
differences in the Burger and the<lb/>
Court of Chief Justice Earl<lb/>
Warren, previous chief justice.<lb/>
A recent survey conducted by<lb/>
U.S. News and World Report<lb/>
suggests that the bench and bar<lb/>
are happy with the new trends cm<lb/>
the Supreme Court, according to<lb/>
Yarbrough's presentation.<lb/>
The survey of lower oourt<lb/>
judges, state supreme court<lb/>
justices, and eminent attorneys<lb/>
revealed that 98.6 per cent of the<lb/>
respondents believe that the<lb/>
Burger Court is more conserva-<lb/>
tive than the Warren Court.<lb/>
A majority of those surveyed<lb/>
approved of the Burger Court's<lb/>
decisions in all areas but ob-<lb/>
scenity and pornography.<lb/>
 Even if I did not subscribe to<lb/>
the notion that the government<lb/>
has no power to suppress books<lb/>
and films, I could not support the<lb/>
Burger Court's approach in the<lb/>
obscenity field, just as I did not<lb/>
support that of the Warren<lb/>
Court said Yarbrough.<lb/>
The Warren Court never had a<lb/>
majority opinion on what consti-<lb/>
tutes obscenity and never clearly<lb/>
defined obscenity, according to<lb/>
Yarbrough.<lb/>
"The simple fact is that what<lb/>
is obscene varies with the indivi-<lb/>
dual perception, and it is impos-<lb/>
sible to establish clear definitions<lb/>
of obscenity which would not<lb/>
unduly stifle expression he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
But the Burger Court has<lb/>
advanced the remarkable notion<lb/>
that obscenity standards under<lb/>
our nation'sone Constitution may<lb/>
vary from community to com-<lb/>
munity in the United States, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Dr. Yarbrough is a,specialist<lb/>
in constitutional liberties and the<lb/>
Supreme Court. His studies have<lb/>
focused on Justices Hugo L. Black<lb/>
and William O. Douglas as well as<lb/>
the Burger Court as a whole.<lb/>
Two sessions planned<lb/>
Food classes slated here<lb/>
Two summer school Food<lb/>
Service Institutes are being plan-<lb/>
ned at ECU.<lb/>
Dates for the institutes are<lb/>
June 21-24 and June 28-July 1.<lb/>
The institutes are designed for<lb/>
managers of food service pro-<lb/>
grams and for persons expecting<lb/>
to become managers in the near<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Both institutes will feature<lb/>
identical programs.<lb/>
Classroom presentations and<lb/>
discussion sessions will be con-<lb/>
cerned with such topics as<lb/>
merchandising meals, equipment<lb/>
use, breakfast programs, nutri-<lb/>
tion information, and standard-<lb/>
ized recipes and substitutions.<lb/>
Participants will be ji olved<lb/>
in quantity food preparation<lb/>
during two special three-hour<lb/>
laboratory sessions: Quality in<lb/>
Meats and Vegetables Prepara-<lb/>
tion and the Bread and Cereal<lb/>
Group.<lb/>
Other sessions will cover<lb/>
aspects of the manager's super-<lb/>
visory role. They include recruit-<lb/>
ing, selecting and training em-<lb/>
ployes; employe rights and<lb/>
school food service policy;and job<lb/>
descriptions, performance stand-<lb/>
ards and employe evaluations.<lb/>
Instructional staff at each<lb/>
institute will be Richard Farris,<lb/>
ECU's assistant personnel direct-<lb/>
or: Carolyn Mansfield, graduate<lb/>
student in the ECU School of<lb/>
Home Economics; Lee Miller,<lb/>
food service manager at W.H.<lb/>
Robinson Elementary School;<lb/>
Linda Noble and Sandra Smith,<lb/>
area consultants for the N.C.<lb/>
School Food Service Division;<lb/>
PTA<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
Psychologists have trouble<lb/>
even agreeing on a definition of<lb/>
aggression.<lb/>
"Aggressive behavior is so<lb/>
multiply determined that it's<lb/>
making our research difficult and<lb/>
account irg for some contradict cry<lb/>
results Grossnickle said.<lb/>
Grossnickle said a general<lb/>
definition of aggression is a type<lb/>
of behavior in which the goal is to<lb/>
harm or injure another person.<lb/>
We Buy Diamonds and Gold<lb/>
See us for your diamond needs<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers<lb/>
on the mall, Greenville<lb/>
758-2452<lb/>
�Ifitdon'ttick-tocktous"<lb/>
I<lb/>
Donna Ware, director of the Pitt<lb/>
County Schools Food Service; and<lb/>
Dr. Alice Scott, chairperson of the<lb/>
ECU Department of Food, Nutri-<lb/>
tion and Institution Management.<lb/>
The institutes are sponsored<lb/>
by the ECU School of Home<lb/>
Economics and the ECU Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education in co-<lb/>
operation with the N.C. School<lb/>
Food Service Division.<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
institutes is available from the<lb/>
Office of Non-Credit Programs,<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education,<lb/>
ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
SPECIAL CLOSE - OUTS<lb/>
A LL CRAIG CA R TA PE PLA YERS<lb/>
Reduced 20<lb/>
FM CONVERTERS<lb/>
Reg. $29.95 Now $18.00<lb/>
BINOCULARS<lb/>
Reg. $39.95 $29.95<lb/>
PORT A BLE RA DIOS Reduced20<lb/>
PORTABLE CASSETTES Reduced20<lb/>
8 TRACK A ND CA SSETTE BLA NK TA PE<lb/>
Reduced 25<lb/>
'DISCWASHERSReg. $6.95 Now$5.50<lb/>
SOUND GUARD Reg. $b.95 Now$5.50<lb/>
WATTS PARASTAT<lb/>
Reg. $15.00 Now $7.50<lb/>
Harmony House South<lb/>
On the Mali<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Component Stereo<lb/>
System Sale<lb/>
Not Just A Piece Of Stereo Here And There But<lb/>
Component Systems Reduced Hundreds Of Dollars.<lb/>
SAVE-$100-s200-$300-$400-s500-SAVE<lb/>
Power And Performance Matched<lb/>
Component Systems<lb/>
rcv- -<lb/>
Each System Contains<lb/>
� AM FM Receiver � Ca bles<lb/>
� Turntable � Enclosures<lb/>
� Phono Cartridge � Bases<lb/>
� Speakers � Dust Covers<lb/>
� All wires<lb/>
ALSO Free Headphones With very System!<lb/>
Over 100 component systems reduced to our<lb/>
LOWEST PRICE!<lb/>
SONY � PIONEER � B.I.C. � BOSE � TEAC<lb/>
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Harmony House South<lb/>
ON THE MALL DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
<pb facs="00057133_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 15 June 1977<lb/>
Ficklen expands as<lb/>
academics shrink<lb/>
While funds for the expansion of Ficklen stadium<lb/>
are continuing to pour in and seven-foot centers are<lb/>
being signed on for the ECU basketball team,<lb/>
academic scholarship funds are being used to help<lb/>
repay a $400,000 loan secured for the expansion of<lb/>
the Students' Supply Store.<lb/>
Many university officials, as well as generous<lb/>
alumni are obviously under the impression that a<lb/>
school's reputation depends on its athletic program<lb/>
and the success of its sports teams. Fine for the<lb/>
official sand alumni, but the students are paying forj<lb/>
this n sguidance.<lb/>
Aa xdmg to Dr. John H. Home, dean of<lb/>
admiss ons, academic standards, and consequently<lb/>
the school's reputation for academic excellence, are<lb/>
affected by three things: admissions requirements,<lb/>
retention requirements and scholarship funding.<lb/>
However, the ECU students are being led to believe<lb/>
that their school's reputation depends on a student<lb/>
supply store with a 100,000 square-feet sales area<lb/>
and an enormous football stadium equipped with a<lb/>
$500,000 press box, a 150-seat chancellor's guest<lb/>
box, and an elevator, not to mention seven-foot<lb/>
centers.<lb/>
For an institution originally designed for higher<lb/>
education, the officials seem to be doing everything<lb/>
to de-emphasize academics and emphasize athletics.<lb/>
Not a penny has been touched of the athletic<lb/>
scholarship funds to help pay back this supply store<lb/>
expansion loan. And half of the $2.5 million reserve<lb/>
funds were dished out for the stadium expansion. But<lb/>
the scant funds set aside for academic scholarships<lb/>
have been totally wiped out.<lb/>
Not only have these funds been depleted, but<lb/>
when the academic scholarship program is rein-<lb/>
stated, it will be cut from the usual $60,000 to<lb/>
$30-40,000, according to Robert M. Bordreaux,<lb/>
financial aid officer.<lb/>
So the Scholarships, Fellowships and Financial<lb/>
Aid Committee has decided to place extra emphasis<lb/>
on National Merit scholarships which have not been<lb/>
affected by the cut. But according to Suzie St earn,<lb/>
vice-president of the League of Scholars and student<lb/>
member of the committee, the success of this task is<lb/>
not a sure thing. ECU does not have a reputation fa<lb/>
attracting National Merit scholars. And with this<lb/>
further cut in ECU'S reputation for academic<lb/>
importance and excellence, increasing this pro-<lb/>
bability looks extremely doubtful.<lb/>
A school's reputation for academic excellence or<lb/>
non-excellence affects every student of that school's<lb/>
career possibilities. And the school's reputation for<lb/>
either excellence or non-excellence depends on the<lb/>
quality of the students in that school, not on how big<lb/>
a stadium or how many sports heroes it has. By<lb/>
discontinuing the academic scholarship fund pro-<lb/>
gram for an indefinite period of time, ECU is also<lb/>
discontinuing its quest for academic respectability.<lb/>
While a larger stadium and unlimited athletic<lb/>
scholarship funds are helping pack the football and<lb/>
basketball teams with super-stars, more and more<lb/>
ECU graduates are unemployed because graduates<lb/>
from universities with reputations for academic<lb/>
superiority are beating them out of jobs.<lb/>
Almost $1.5 million remains dormant in the<lb/>
Reserve Funds since Ficklen Stadium took its cut.<lb/>
These funds could be used to help pay the supply<lb/>
store's loan and ECU could continue its academic<lb/>
scholarship program.<lb/>
The university officials and alumni are either<lb/>
going to have to get their priorities straightened out,<lb/>
or this school is going to be left with a dozen scholars,<lb/>
a huge book store, and an athletic complex the size of<lb/>
northern New Jersey.<lb/>
Th� Pouotaj,ohm0<lb/>
ru<lb/>
FOR 20 Y�K5 �TEK L0Slr(r 7h� nil S-C?.<lb/>
(LUcrioro, rM soluvaaj hup off Wf ucuy<lb/>
ELECTED S.6.4. mSfATS. ffTfK TW� DtCADte,<lb/>
FICKLEN STADIUM is growing while academic<lb/>
scholarships die a slow death. Displaying plans for<lb/>
the new shrine are L-R, Tom Willis, of ECU<lb/>
Regional Development Institute, Dr. Ray Minges,<lb/>
chairman of Greenville Stadium Drive, Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins and Robert L. Jones, chairman of the<lb/>
expansion committee.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
will<lb/>
continue<lb/>
through<lb/>
summer<lb/>
Forum letters should<lb/>
be typed or printed,<lb/>
signed and include the<lb/>
writer's address or tele-<lb/>
phone number. Letters<lb/>
are subject to editing for<lb/>
taste and brevity and<lb/>
may be sent to<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD or left<lb/>
at the Information Desk<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years.<lb/>
Senior EditorKim Devins<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising ManagerTerri Eloshway<lb/>
News EditorsCindy Broome<lb/>
Kerry Cox<lb/>
Trends EditorDavid Bosnick<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 Wednesday during<lb/>
the summer, and twice weekly during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27934.<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057133_0005"/><lb/>
������ JBHM<lb/>
Students find<lb/>
summer work<lb/>
15 June 1977 FOUNTAINHEAO Pfe0�5<lb/>
By HELENA WOODARD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Among 36 ECU applicants,<lb/>
five students have been accepted<lb/>
through a competitive process for<lb/>
summer work positions in state<lb/>
government.<lb/>
The students are junior<lb/>
Debbie Graf ton, Math and Com-<lb/>
puter Science major, junior Glenn<lb/>
Elson, senior Thomas<lb/>
Owens and Ray Hodges, all<lb/>
Communications Art majors, and<lb/>
Sherry Drew, Environmental<lb/>
Health major.<lb/>
The job announcements and<lb/>
subsequent screenings were a<lb/>
joint venture among The North<lb/>
Carolina Internship Office<lb/>
(NCIO), ECU'S Cooperative Edu-<lb/>
cation office and various aca-<lb/>
demic departments. The Co-<lb/>
operative Education Office, which<lb/>
handled most of the applications,<lb/>
sent job descriptions to faculty<lb/>
members who then recommended<lb/>
qualified students to the Co-op<lb/>
office.<lb/>
Grafton and Elson received<lb/>
positions with the Department of<lb/>
Agriculture. "I'll be working with<lb/>
other programmers in gathering<lb/>
statistics and data on crops<lb/>
among other things Grafton<lb/>
said. "It's going to mean so much<lb/>
when I graduate to have this<lb/>
experience she added.<lb/>
Glenn Elson said that he will<lb/>
be designing brochures and<lb/>
pamphlets for various depart-<lb/>
mental programs. His job de-<lb/>
scription called for good verbal<lb/>
and communicative skills.<lb/>
Owens and Hodges, who<lb/>
received work positions in the<lb/>
Museum of Natural History, will<lb/>
work with the director of exhibits<lb/>
and the direr jr of publications at<lb/>
all levels of graphic production.<lb/>
"We're going to get them<lb/>
started on display work. A part of<lb/>
our work will include silk screen-<lb/>
ing. We will also be designing a<lb/>
booklet on the history of the<lb/>
museum said Owens. Their job<lb/>
descriptions called for students<lb/>
knowledgeable in photography,<lb/>
typography, design and layout<lb/>
and other graphic arts techni-<lb/>
ques.<lb/>
Drew will work with the<lb/>
Department of Natural and Eco-<lb/>
nomic Resources. "I will work<lb/>
with the division of Environment-<lb/>
al Management, an air pollution<lb/>
project she said. According to<lb/>
her job description, Drew's work<lb/>
will help in determining causes of<lb/>
such environmental emergencies<lb/>
as fish kills, chemical spills and<lb/>
air stagnation. "I'm really look-<lb/>
ing forward to this job she said.<lb/>
The NCIO, established in<lb/>
1969, was the first state intern-<lb/>
ship office in the country. Its<lb/>
goals were to make North<lb/>
Carolina collegiate curricula more<lb/>
meaningful through the develop-<lb/>
ment of off-campus service-learn-<lb/>
ing job opportunities and to<lb/>
involve students in public service.<lb/>
The results of data from the<lb/>
1976 Summer Internship Program<lb/>
showed that most supervisors felt<lb/>
that the interns were an asset to<lb/>
their state government depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
208 E. 5th St<lb/>
'HOMEOFTHEDISCOUNTTOP100'<lb/>
Featuring:<lb/>
1) Top 100 LP's discounted to $4.99 &amp; $5.99!<lb/>
(Includes all best sellers of today)<lb/>
2) We buy &amp; sell used albums!<lb/>
(Bring in your albums you never listen to &amp; get cash!<lb/>
Must be in good condition!<lb/>
Also, buy used albumsfora couple of bucks!)<lb/>
3) We rent albums for 24 hrs. for recording!<lb/>
(Only $2.00 for up to a $9.98 list LP;<lb/>
$3.00 for higher priced albums)<lb/>
4) A SALE EVERY DAY AT APPLE RECORDS!<lb/>
(Top new releases for $3.99 &amp; $4.99)<lb/>
ALSO THE BEST SELECTION OF HEAD GEAR IN TOWN!<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
SUNTHRUTHUR<lb/>
11:00 T010:00<lb/>
FRI&amp;SAT<lb/>
11:00 T011:00<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
U.S.DA choice beef cut fresh daily<lb/>
For the full month of June , No. 12 will be on special<lb/>
Mon.�Thur Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
CHOPPED SRL OIN WITH MUSHROOM GRA VY ALL FQ R<lb/>
TEXAS TOAST WITH MELTED BUTTER lTTrwX<lb/>
BAKED POTATO OR FRENCH FRIES Ll .29 <lb/>
EAST10THST.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057133_0006"/><lb/>
Trends<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 15 June 1977<lb/>
Ex Libris<lb/>
by DAVID R.BOSNICK<lb/>
Of Editors and Art<lb/>
The only real decision in life is whether or not to<lb/>
oommit suicide. Everything else is just running the<lb/>
bases.<lb/>
-Anonymous<lb/>
One of the privileges of being an editor is the inherent right to<lb/>
change policy. In the last year this section of the paper has changed<lb/>
editors three times, with an accompanying shift in aspect. Two years<lb/>
ago these pages were headed, Entertainment, but that title was<lb/>
thought to be too narrow, that it encompassed too little of campus<lb/>
activities. Trends was chosen as a logo that would report as well as<lb/>
review: a sort of Reader's Digest of current events.<lb/>
For the length of this editorship the emphasis shall be placed upon<lb/>
the arts. The space occupied by this editorial will become Ex Libris, a<lb/>
weekly column which will review a best seller or new release. This<lb/>
column will be accompanied by the New York Times' Best Seller list.<lb/>
In the music genre there shall be a change in the type of music<lb/>
reviewed. This feature will concern itself with the aspects of jazz and<lb/>
classical music, relegating the review of popular music to others. The<lb/>
greatest movements in music are being made in the jazz field and<lb/>
examination and review will be an indication of direction. As little is<lb/>
actually being composed in the classical field, these articles will<lb/>
concern themselves with review of artistic interpretation, rather than<lb/>
creation.<lb/>
The final weekly feature will be an essay or examination on the<lb/>
general human condition. The essay is a lost literary form, not in a<lb/>
small way due to the fact that there are few places to print them. This<lb/>
revival, its premier by David W. Trevinowill display it as the effective,<lb/>
humorous medium, it can be at its best.<lb/>
The name Trends shall remain, but the priorities are changed.<lb/>
These pages will now be standard bearers for the arts, which take such<lb/>
a beating in the frenzied journalistic media.<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
PITT THEATRE<lb/>
Smokey and the Bandit - This is a slick production made for those<lb/>
individuals who judge virility by automobile speed and C.B.output.<lb/>
Burt Reynolds is the macho, but poetic "Bandit and Sally Fields is a<lb/>
former exotic dancer escaping from a poorly conceived marriage. Thjey<lb/>
combine their questionable talents in an attempt to run a truckload of<lb/>
Coors beer from Texarcana to Alabama in 28 hours. The threadbare<lb/>
plot is supported by the,inability of the police of 4 states to apprehend<lb/>
one speeder. It is a harmless film of no substance and no stars.<lb/>
PARK<lb/>
Hard Georgia Road - This offensive film revolves around rape,<lb/>
moonshine and the waifish sexuality of Carol Lynley. The film attempts<lb/>
to draw parallels between Leo Hastings (Gary Conway) as a Nashville<lb/>
Stanley Kowalski and Diana's (Carol Lynley( desire to be raped. It is<lb/>
trashy and humorless. Conway is a fine actor and this reviewer is<lb/>
embarrassed for him. No stars.<lb/>
PLAZA 1<lb/>
Joy Ride<lb/>
Not available for review at this time.<lb/>
PLAZA 2<lb/>
Raggedy Ann and Andy - A delightful animated version of Johnny<lb/>
Gruell's children's classic. The animation is fair but the color and aura<lb/>
of fantasy that surround the subject are authentic. I give this film 2 and<lb/>
one half stars, but add a half if you're an animation fan.<lb/>
Chipkickers coming<lb/>
The BUFFALO CHIPKICK-<lb/>
ERS plays Bluegrass. What else<lb/>
can you call hard-driving banjo,<lb/>
fiddle, guitar, and bass music if<lb/>
it's not Bluegrass? The only<lb/>
problem is that the BUFFALO<lb/>
CHIPKICKERS doesn't look like<lb/>
a bluegrass band. They are not a<lb/>
five-piece middle-aged never-<lb/>
smiling group of guys who play<lb/>
the same old bluegrass songs<lb/>
over and over. They love every<lb/>
show and every song as much as<lb/>
the audience that won't seem to<lb/>
ever let them off the stage<lb/>
without an enoore.<lb/>
The BUFFALO CHIPKICK-<lb/>
ERS is being presented by the<lb/>
Popular Entertainment Commit-<lb/>
tee of the Student Union. The<lb/>
oonoert is scheduled for June 20,<lb/>
1977, at 8:00 p.m. on the Mall.In<lb/>
case of rain, the concert will be<lb/>
moved to Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Admission is free.<lb/>
Best Slapstick<lb/>
Sellers<lb/>
FICTION<lb/>
Falconer, by John Cheever<lb/>
The Tr.sn Birds, by Colleen<lb/>
McCul lough<lb/>
Oliver's Story, by Erich Segal<lb/>
The Crash of '79, by Paul E.<lb/>
Erdman<lb/>
Condominium, by John D. Mac-<lb/>
Donald<lb/>
Trinity, by Leon Uris<lb/>
The Chancellor Manuscript, by<lb/>
Robert Ludlum<lb/>
A Book of Common Prayer, by<lb/>
Joan Didion<lb/>
How to Save Your Own Life, by<lb/>
Erica Jong<lb/>
East Wind, Rain, by N. Richard<lb/>
Nash<lb/>
NON-FICTION<lb/>
Your Erroneous Zones, by Wayne<lb/>
W. Dyer<lb/>
Passages, by Gail Sheehy<lb/>
Haywire, by Brooke Hayward<lb/>
Roots, by Alex Haley<lb/>
Changing, by Liv Ullmann<lb/>
The Gamesman, by Michael<lb/>
Maccoby<lb/>
The Grass is Always Greener<lb/>
Over the Septic Tank, by Erma<lb/>
Bom beck<lb/>
It Didn't Start With Watergate,<lb/>
by Victor Lacky<lb/>
Fishbait: The Memoirs of the<lb/>
Con-<lb/>
gressional Doorkeeper, by<lb/>
William Miller, as told to<lb/>
Frances Spatz Leighton<lb/>
Majesty, by Robert Lacey<lb/>
K V, Jr. 's senile hiccup<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"Slapstick" is Kurt Vonne-<lb/>
gut's latest book and possibly his<lb/>
worst. The techniques are<lb/>
familiar enough, the time-hop-<lb/>
ping, the characters who possess<lb/>
an innocence or superior know-<lb/>
ledge who viewed as ridiculous<lb/>
by the rest of the world and<lb/>
oft-repeated utterances closing<lb/>
the short chapters (in Slaughter-<lb/>
house-Five it was "So it goes"<lb/>
and in Slapstick it's "Hi ho") but<lb/>
the plot is loose and rambling<lb/>
with none of that brilliant drama-<lb/>
tic impetus that, say, sent Billy<lb/>
Pilgrim to his chosen life on<lb/>
Tralfamadore.<lb/>
The protagonist is a<lb/>
"neanderthaloid a two meter<lb/>
tall modern man resembling in<lb/>
every way a Neanderthal. He and<lb/>
hiseqully ugly twin sister spend a<lb/>
happy sequestered childhood rov-<lb/>
ing around an old mansion and<lb/>
adjoining orchard owned by their<lb/>
wealthy family. The parents, who<lb/>
constantly have to fight revulsion<lb/>
to love their distinctive progeny<lb/>
take care to visit once a year ano<lb/>
give them a whole squadron of<lb/>
servants. Ostensibly the two are<lb/>
drooling, farting, food-throwing<lb/>
animals, but in reality (ah, Kurt)<lb/>
together their two minds com-<lb/>
prise a "single igenius When<lb/>
they are together the brother and<lb/>
sister have remarkable oognitive<lb/>
powers. Unbeknownst to the<lb/>
servants, the two have learned<lb/>
eight languages and have studied<lb/>
every book in the old mansion's<lb/>
copious library. It's only<lb/>
after overhearing their mother<lb/>
wish for "one spark of humanity"<lb/>
from them that they make their<lb/>
true natures known. This reve-<lb/>
lation effectively ends their bliss-<lb/>
ful childhood.<lb/>
The brother and sister are<lb/>
separated, and without constant<lb/>
proximity to one another, their<lb/>
intellects are reduced to some-<lb/>
thing hovering at just about<lb/>
average. Eliza is sent to an<lb/>
institution for the mentally re-<lb/>
tarded while Wilbur becomes a<lb/>
rather doltish medical student at<lb/>
Harvard. His height makes him a<lb/>
popular basketball player while<lb/>
his size attracts the more daring<lb/>
co-eds.<lb/>
Eliza, properly bitter, suc-<lb/>
ceeds in hacing herself released<lb/>
from the mental institution so she<lb/>
can claim her due share of the<lb/>
family fortune.<lb/>
Before she leaves to<lb/>
make a new home in Macchu<lb/>
Picchu(inthisbooktheSt. Tropez<lb/>
of real life) she and her brother<lb/>
combine in a final five-day<lb/>
orgiastic paraxysm of genius<lb/>
Out of this supreme irrational<lb/>
See VONNEGUT, page 7.<lb/>
Asa torch singer<lb/>
Armatrading impressive<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
The genre of "torch" singing<lb/>
has always enjoyed a critical,<lb/>
rather than popular success.<lb/>
Sadly, such is the case withJoan<lb/>
Armatrading, easily one of the<lb/>
most original singersongwriters<lb/>
to surface in recent years. The<lb/>
fact that an artist of her stature<lb/>
can release three albums and go<lb/>
largely unnotioed by the general<lb/>
record buying public, while tripe<lb/>
the likes of "Disco Duck" can<lb/>
sell a million oopies is a distress-<lb/>
ing comment on America's<lb/>
musical tastes.<lb/>
Armatrading was born in the<lb/>
West Indies, later emigrating to<lb/>
Britain, from where her musical<lb/>
roots stem. On this album, her<lb/>
music encompasses a variety of<lb/>
styles ranging from blues to light<lb/>
jazz, making each distinctively<lb/>
her own. Armatrading's band is<lb/>
oompetent, but the emphasis is<lb/>
on composition rather than the<lb/>
technical expertise of the players.<lb/>
Armatrading's lyrics, often more<lb/>
akin to poetry, espouse the<lb/>
quintessential topic of torch<lb/>
songs, i.e 'he scorned and<lb/>
battered lover, to which she adds<lb/>
a refreshing spirit of independ-<lb/>
ence, a promise to return to the<lb/>
ring, beaten but undefeated.<lb/>
Armatrading's husky voice<lb/>
has the perfect edge to drive<lb/>
home a line with deadly precision:<lb/>
a musical femme fatale, as<lb/>
smokey as she is vulnerable. This<lb/>
is best demonstrated in the<lb/>
album's closing track, "Tall in<lb/>
the Saddle a powerful song<lb/>
which builds, musically and<lb/>
lyrically, until the final intense<lb/>
conclusion. Jerry Donahue's lead<lb/>
guitar sears the listener, slicing<lb/>
through the subdued backdrop<lb/>
with unnerving accuracy, melding<lb/>
with the lyrics:<lb/>
"Say what you willyou can't<lb/>
take the stars at nighttake your<lb/>
lovebut that doesn't stop my<lb/>
lifeyou've been fooling aroundI<lb/>
looked to you for lovethought<lb/>
you walked on holy ground but<lb/>
ohyou're meanTall in the sad-<lb/>
dleone of these daysyou're<lb/>
gonna have to dismountyou<lb/>
don't leave me down-h3artedbut<lb/>
I' m sorry that you have to go' oos<lb/>
we had fun while it lasted<lb/>
You were God's gift to girls<lb/>
you persuadedthen youbeat up<lb/>
on their heartsyou made it, you<lb/>
made itoh, you're mean<lb/>
She masterfully juxtaposes the<lb/>
repetitive, paradoxical lines, de-<lb/>
scribing her lover as mean, all the<lb/>
time declaring how much fun they<lb/>
had.<lb/>
Do not mistake this to be an<lb/>
album of broken heart songs. In<lb/>
"Join the Boys she tells her<lb/>
lover exactly what he can do with<lb/>
his love, advising him to "join<lb/>
Jack and the boysbe in a band<lb/>
while she and her new ac-<lb/>
quaintance will be dancing in the<lb/>
floodlight, succeeding where<lb/>
others have failed.<lb/>
In "Love and Affection" she<lb/>
explores the difference between<lb/>
those two emotions, comparing<lb/>
friendship and love to smiles and<lb/>
laughter, later asking for a mixing<lb/>
of the two, seeking only "to make<lb/>
lovewith affection<lb/>
The characters and situations<lb/>
are cliched ; it is her singular<lb/>
genius which adds new<lb/>
dimensions to old structures. One<lb/>
gets the impression not only that<lb/>
the author feels for her charact-<lb/>
ers, but that she played their<lb/>
roles too often. In "Help Your-<lb/>
self a song telling her lover not<lb/>
to depend on her for everything,<lb/>
that it's too late to save their love,<lb/>
she likens herself to a Cing<lb/>
child, needing immediate con-<lb/>
solation: "don't pick me upwhen<lb/>
the tears are dryon my face<lb/>
The album's best lines appear<lb/>
See ALBUM, page 7.)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057133_0007"/><lb/>
Vonnegut's novel declines<lb/>
15 June 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
 Continued from page 6. <lb/>
roller-derby comes a book de-<lb/>
stined to be "after the Bible and<lb/>
the Joy of Cooking, the most<lb/>
popular book of all time, " "The<lb/>
Cry of the Nocturnal Goat-<lb/>
sucker as well asa plan to issue<lb/>
new middle names to everyone,<lb/>
those with oommon middle names<lb/>
faming new, immense families.<lb/>
The sky turns yellow due to<lb/>
the widespread use of aerosol<lb/>
deodorants and two plagcos, the<lb/>
Albanian Flue and the Green<lb/>
Death, depopulate much of the<lb/>
continental United States. Wilbur<lb/>
is elected President under the<lb/>
slogan "Lonesome No More"<lb/>
refering to the plan he and Eliza<lb/>
constructed for creating a<lb/>
hundred thousand new relatives<lb/>
for everyone according to the<lb/>
newly issued middle names. After<lb/>
the diseases ravage North<lb/>
America Wilbur grows to a ripe<lb/>
old age on Manhattan Island<lb/>
which is now covered with<lb/>
jungle-growth and inhabited by<lb/>
various agrarian families.<lb/>
The lives of Eliza and Wilbur<lb/>
while they are separated richly<lb/>
parodies the neuroses of modern<lb/>
rich and unhappy real people.<lb/>
Eliza during her undeserved<lb/>
sentence in the mental int; Jtion<lb/>
turns into an alcoholic and a dope<lb/>
addict as well as being a chain<lb/>
smoker. (Vonnegut in this in-<lb/>
stance stops at no extreme.)<lb/>
Wilbur while he is President is<lb/>
more often than not blissfully in<lb/>
the euphoria of a drug patented<lb/>
for curbing unsocial behavior.<lb/>
Vonnegut's athletic sci-fi<lb/>
imagination is delightfully active<lb/>
in Slapstick and were it not for the<lb/>
humor produced by such an<lb/>
imagination the book would be a<lb/>
rather joyless experience.<lb/>
It is discovered that the Green<lb/>
Death is caused not by microbes<lb/>
JOAN ARMATRADING �<lb/>
JOAN ARMATRADING<lb/>
ALBUM<lb/>
Continued from page 6.<lb/>
in "Save Me where she de-<lb/>
scribes her romance as "a<lb/>
moth with no flameto persuade<lb/>
melike blood in the rainrunning<lb/>
thin<lb/>
This reviewer's per-<lb/>
sonal dislike of Miss Arma-<lb/>
trading's apparent infatuation<lb/>
with the word persuade and its<lb/>
various forms, the album has no<lb/>
major flaws. The weakest cuts<lb/>
("People" and "Somebody Who<lb/>
Loves You" ; redeem themselves<lb/>
in some way, the former by the<lb/>
sheer spirit of the performance,<lb/>
the latter by an excellent verse<lb/>
thrown in between a mediocre<lb/>
chorus and sub-par lyrics. One<lb/>
failure out of ten is a good record<lb/>
by anyone's standards, especially<lb/>
when that failure is superior to<lb/>
popular contemporary music.<lb/>
Wednesday Si-<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Jazz Night<lb/>
Featuring 'Jazz<lb/>
Chamber'<lb/>
Also watch Sat.<lb/>
Night Live &amp;<lb/>
Monday Night<lb/>
Baseball on T.V.<lb/>
(Birthday Special<lb/>
All setups<lb/>
half price)<lb/>
BYOL<lb/>
ToniteAtThe<lb/>
Elbo Room<lb/>
Tenth Avenue<lb/>
Thurs. Nite<lb/>
The Embers<lb/>
Are Back<lb/>
Remember Every Sun. is Ladies Nite<lb/>
of the normal type, but by the<lb/>
inscrutably wise Chinese who<lb/>
have been experimenting with<lb/>
making themselves exceedingly<lb/>
small in order to live on minute<lb/>
amounts of food. The antidote for<lb/>
trie ingested Orientals is a piece<lb/>
of fish that has died from the<lb/>
pollution left from the "olden<lb/>
days Vonnegut's imagination<lb/>
can at times simply, purely soar.<lb/>
The book, though, as a whole,<lb/>
flounders. Despite the character-<lb/>
istically mixed time sequence,<lb/>
Eliza, who nearly dominates the<lb/>
first half of the book, is rarely<lb/>
referred to in the last half, which<lb/>
leaves one to wonder about her<lb/>
necessity in the plot. Eliza dies<lb/>
midway through the book and<lb/>
becomes one of the story's most<lb/>
blatant untied ends. It is a<lb/>
disappointment because one-<lb/>
senses that Vonnegut missed a<lb/>
chance for some fine irony. The<lb/>
book also lacks the poignant<lb/>
cial statement present in<lb/>
ughterhouse-Five and Cat's<lb/>
adle. When the author does<lb/>
satirize it is done with such<lb/>
heavy-handednessthat the reader<lb/>
feels boredom rather than startled<lb/>
recognition produced. The plan<lb/>
for giving everyone a family of a<lb/>
hundred thousand based on<lb/>
government-issued middle names<lb/>
is perhaps the book's most<lb/>
ingenious aspect, yet compared to<lb/>
the beautifully constructed anti-<lb/>
religion of Cat's Cradle and the<lb/>
supra-rationality of the Tral-<lb/>
famadorians, the device is weak<lb/>
and simple.<lb/>
The book begins with "the<lb/>
nearest thing to an autobiography<lb/>
I shall ever write" and it is in the<lb/>
brief prologue that Vonnegut<lb/>
achieves the high level of poig-<lb/>
nant and subtle black humor that<lb/>
so distinguishes him as an author.<lb/>
He describes his brother and<lb/>
several other members of his<lb/>
family, including an uncle, Alex<lb/>
Vonnegut, who, although re-<lb/>
putedly not an alcoholic, founded<lb/>
Alcoholic's Anonymous.<lb/>
It would be desireable to say<lb/>
that Slapstick is simply an off<lb/>
novel that reflects only a<lb/>
temporary lapse in the creator of<lb/>
the inimitable Kilgor Trout, but<lb/>
viewed in relation to the last few<lb/>
books Vonnegut has written, it<lb/>
seems more precise to say that<lb/>
Slapstick is but another step down<lb/>
in a decline that has been obvious<lb/>
in his last works. Perhaps Vonne-<lb/>
gut himself sums up the problem<lb/>
most succinctly in the words of<lb/>
the book's protagonist. "It is a<lb/>
thing I often say these days: 'Hi<lb/>
ho It is a kind of senile hiccup. I<lb/>
have lived too long<lb/>
Hi ho.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Choice,<lb/>
Thur.<lb/>
Snatch<lb/>
Fri.&amp;Sat.<lb/>
Triple Tree<lb/>
June 22,23<lb/>
Brice Street<lb/>
a<lb/>
For Lovely Things" y<lb/>
Welcome All<lb/>
Summer School Students<lb/>
Large Selection of Summer Pants $9.90<lb/>
M en's Knit Shirts Still ON LY $4.90<lb/>
All Slogan T-Shirts ONLY $2.98<lb/>
Group Solid T-Shirts Regularly $3.98 Now $1.97<lb/>
LOCATED ON THE MALL<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
free<lb/>
Pizza Special<lb/>
Monday &amp;<lb/>
Wednesday Nights<lb/>
5-9 P.M.<lb/>
Also Wednesday is Free<lb/>
Stage Night<lb/>
If you have some talent,<lb/>
come on down<lb/>
and try out!<lb/>
Special Prices on Beverages!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057133_0008"/><lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 15 June 1977<lb/>
Billy Lee stays<lb/>
Gilman signs<lb/>
three recruits;<lb/>
ioses two vets<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
New head basketball coach at<lb/>
East -Carolina, Larry Gillman,<lb/>
announced the fifth and final<lb/>
recruit for the 1977-78 season on<lb/>
Monday. In the last two weeks, he<lb/>
has also announced the signing of<lb/>
two more recruits and the re-<lb/>
tention of Billy Lee as an assistant<lb/>
coach. Lee served last season<lb/>
under Dave Pattern. Jso it nas<lb/>
been learned that two of last<lb/>
year's players have transferred to<lb/>
Gardner-Webb and a third is<lb/>
expected to be leaving.<lb/>
Roger Carr, a 6-6, 230-pound<lb/>
all-state forward from Garland,<lb/>
N.C Bernard Hill, a 6-7V2,<lb/>
190-pound all-state forward<lb/>
from Ramape, N.Y and Dan<lb/>
Roberts, a 6-1 Vi, 165-pound all-<lb/>
state backcourt operative from<lb/>
Nashville, Ind have signed<lb/>
grants-in-aid with East Carolina<lb/>
in the past two weeks.<lb/>
Carr, a power forward likened<lb/>
to Wake Forest's Rod Griffin,<lb/>
scored over 700 points during his<lb/>
senior year for a 29 point average.<lb/>
He also pulled an average of 19<lb/>
rebounds per game. For four<lb/>
years of interscholastic action,<lb/>
Carr averaged 25 points and 16<lb/>
rebounds per game.<lb/>
Carr was all-conference for<lb/>
three years in the Carolina's 1-A<lb/>
loop, Player of the Year in the<lb/>
conference for two years, all-East<lb/>
fa two years and best all-round<lb/>
athlete at Garland High for two<lb/>
years. He was also an all-league<lb/>
performer playing first base for<lb/>
the baseball team.<lb/>
The lithe Hill led Rockland<lb/>
County in scoring as a senior with<lb/>
a 24.2 average. He also cleaned<lb/>
the boards at 13 per game. He<lb/>
was the Rockland County Player<lb/>
of the Year and Most Valuable<lb/>
Player at Ramape High.<lb/>
Perhaps his greatest honor<lb/>
was being voted MVP in the<lb/>
prestigious Montifiore-Mosholu<lb/>
Easter Tournament in New York<lb/>
City. Schools from New York,<lb/>
New Jersey and Connecticut<lb/>
competed in the tourney.<lb/>
Roberts led the state in<lb/>
Indiana in scoring this season<lb/>
with 33.6 average. He scored 638<lb/>
TYRON EDWARDS<lb/>
LOUIS CROSBY<lb/>
points to set a new school record<lb/>
for points and average. On four<lb/>
occasions, Roberts scored over 40<lb/>
points and was never under 20 in<lb/>
any one game.<lb/>
"Even though we got a late<lb/>
start Gillman noted after the<lb/>
recruiting season was over, "I<lb/>
think we got some very fine<lb/>
players. We are most pleased<lb/>
with all five of our signees<lb/>
Oliver Mack, a 6-3, 198-<lb/>
pound guard from San Jacinto<lb/>
(Tex.) Junior College and Walter<lb/>
Moseley, a 6-1 V2, 175-pound<lb/>
guard from St. John's (Wis.)<lb/>
Military Academy were earlier<lb/>
signees of the young coach. Mack<lb/>
ano Moseley are natives of<lb/>
Queens, N.Y giving Gillman<lb/>
three New Yorkers, one from<lb/>
Indiana and one in-state Tar Heel<lb/>
for his signees.<lb/>
LEE TO STAY AT ECU<lb/>
It was also announced last<lb/>
week that Billy Lee, a graduate<lb/>
assistant under Dave Pattern last<lb/>
year, would remain as a part of<lb/>
the new staff. Herb Dillon, an<lb/>
assistant at North Texas State,<lb/>
was earlier announced as an<lb/>
assistant to Gillman.<lb/>
Lee came to East Carolina last<lb/>
year from New Bern High School,<lb/>
where he had been a highly<lb/>
successful coach for three years.<lb/>
He is a native of Mt. Olive, N.C.<lb/>
"We're happy that Billy has<lb/>
decided to stay on with us said<lb/>
Gillman. "Billy'senthusiasm and<lb/>
knowledge of the state of North<lb/>
Carolina will be a great asset to<lb/>
our program here at East<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
During the 1976-77 season,<lb/>
Lee was primarily in charge of<lb/>
ECU'S defense, something Lee<lb/>
was noted for in high school<lb/>
circles. The 1976-77 Pirate team<lb/>
had the lowest defensive average<lb/>
in the last three years, six points<lb/>
better than the two previous<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Pirates back down to<lb/>
Toledo; will play Duke<lb/>
Piral<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
After a series of unusual events, East Carolina<lb/>
has Duke University on its 1977 football schedule.<lb/>
Toledo, who was originally dropped from the<lb/>
schedule to make room for the Blue Devils, is also<lb/>
back on the schedule. Texas-Arlington was dropped<lb/>
from the Pirates' schedule to make room for both<lb/>
Toledo and Duke.<lb/>
ECU Director of Athletics, Bill Cain, has been<lb/>
trying for the past month to get Duke on the Pirates'<lb/>
1977 schedule. After finally signing a contract will<lb/>
Carl James, Duke's Athletic Director, Cain dropped<lb/>
Toledo from the schedule and moved the game with<lb/>
Texas-Arlington back a week to accommodate the<lb/>
Blue Devils and still keep five home games for the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Toledo's athletic director, Vern Smith, went to<lb/>
Toledo University Board of Control (much the same<lb/>
as the ECU Board of Trustees) because Toledo oould<lb/>
not find a suitable opponent for Sept. 17. On June 2,<lb/>
a report coming out of Toledo said the school would<lb/>
go to court to see that East Carolina was in Toledo<lb/>
on Sept. 17.<lb/>
A souroe in Toledo said attorneys for the Ohio<lb/>
school were in federal court on Friday, June 3, but<lb/>
oould not get through any of process on that day.<lb/>
At the same time, Cain and Smith were talking<lb/>
on the phone about the situation, and Smith said a<lb/>
lawsuit was "imminant He also said the only<lb/>
satisfactory solution was for East Carolina to be in<lb/>
Toledo on Sept. 17.<lb/>
After talking to all parties involved, Cain said<lb/>
nothing could be worked out to satisfy everyone,<lb/>
except for East Carolina and Toledo to meet. "We .<lb/>
have decided to do just that<lb/>
"The University of Texas-Arlington has co-<lb/>
operated with us in a most diligent fashion Cain<lb/>
added, "and has ultimately been a major solution to<lb/>
our problem<lb/>
Bowing to the pressure of Toledo leaves ECU<lb/>
with just four homes games for the upcoming<lb/>
season, with six road dates and the Oyster Bowl to<lb/>
be played on a neutral field.<lb/>
The Pirates will have to open for the first three<lb/>
games on the road now - at State, at Duke and at<lb/>
Toledo - before returning home for VMI.<lb/>
FIRST MEETING<lb/>
The Duke contract, signed May 19, means the<lb/>
Pirates will have played all the Big Four teams after<lb/>
they meet. It will be the first of a reported four game<lb/>
series. Other games are rumored to be in 1979, 1980<lb/>
and 1981.<lb/>
"For some time East Carolina officials have<lb/>
expressed a tremendous interest in playing Duke<lb/>
University in football Carl James, Duke's athletic<lb/>
director said. "We are pleased to have this<lb/>
opportunity to play East Carolina, and I hope the<lb/>
football game will command the great spectator<lb/>
interest that East Carolina coaches and officials have<lb/>
talked about.<lb/>
Cain was elated about getting the game, saying,<lb/>
"I'm certain that we will have a tremendous<lb/>
following when we go up there.<lb/>
"We have been after the game for a long time.<lb/>
It's a game we wanted because it is the culmination<lb/>
of our efforts to play all the Big Four teams<lb/>
The Pirates have played State for the past seven<lb/>
years, Carolina four times since 1972, and played<lb/>
Wake Forest in 1963. Carolina and Wake are<lb/>
expected back on the schedule in 1978.<lb/>
The 1977schedule- Sept. 3, at N.C. State; Sept.<lb/>
10, at Duke; Sept. 17, at Toledo; Sept. 24, VMI; Oct.<lb/>
1, at South Carolina; Oct. 8, Southern Illinois; Oct.<lb/>
15, Richmond; Oct. 22, at The Citadel;Oct. 29,<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana; Nov. 5, at Appalachian,<lb/>
Nov. 12. William and Mary in Ovster Bowl (Norfolk).<lb/>
BILL CAIN<lb/>
Pirates begin summer loop<lb/>
with two wins and one loss<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina started its first<lb/>
week of summer league baseball<lb/>
action off on a winning note by<lb/>
going two and one for the week.<lb/>
The 2-1 record included an<lb/>
opening win over UNC 4-2 and in<lb/>
a Saturday night slugfest the<lb/>
Pirates defeated Campbell Col-<lb/>
lege 16 to9. In the only loss of the<lb/>
week Atlantic Christian squeaked<lb/>
by ECU 7 to 6.<lb/>
In the Carolina game played<lb/>
on June 7, UNC scored its only<lb/>
two runs of the game in the sixth<lb/>
inning. Phil Griffith singled and<lb/>
Mike Fox singled him to third<lb/>
base. Then Fox took second base<lb/>
on a throw in. It was here that<lb/>
Brad Lloyd singled in both<lb/>
Griffith and Fox for the Tar<lb/>
Heels. For ECU, there was 1 run<lb/>
in the sixth as Eddie Gates tripled<lb/>
and Bobby Supel singled him in.<lb/>
See BASEBALL, page 9.)<lb/>
RAYMIE JTYOi IS<lb/>
Sonny<lb/>
man on<lb/>
Confer enc<lb/>
ball team,<lb/>
play prof(<lb/>
the Kansj<lb/>
announoec<lb/>
Wootei<lb/>
BASI<lb/>
Continuec<lb/>
The Pi<lb/>
came in th<lb/>
singled am<lb/>
with two c<lb/>
winning n<lb/>
blasted a <lb/>
CAGI<lb/>
Continuec<lb/>
EDWARl<lb/>
It has a<lb/>
Tyron Edw,<lb/>
both part-t<lb/>
son, have t<lb/>
Webb Coll<lb/>
Reserve gi<lb/>
also expect<lb/>
his home ir<lb/>
Crosby,<lb/>
started twe<lb/>
season anc<lb/>
per game,<lb/>
the Pirates<lb/>
season, fi<lb/>
average an<lb/>
best on the<lb/>
Edward<lb/>
star at Nort<lb/>
Pittsboro, t<lb/>
points for<lb/>
season anc<lb/>
pulled arou<lb/>
game each<lb/>
Dineen<lb/>
in two sea<lb/>
after scorim<lb/>
in high sch<lb/>
Crosby<lb/>
leaving Eas<lb/>
personal cc<lb/>
while Dinee<lb/>
his ailing m<lb/>
Edward?<lb/>
do not see<lb/>
things am<lb/>
did not fit i<lb/>
and that sor<lb/>
a lot of act<lb/>
very little<lb/>
Crosby j<lb/>
Gillman's<lb/>
phies. He h<lb/>
things and<lb/>
the player h<lb/>
said he thot<lb/>
for me to I<lb/>
work things<lb/>
Gillman<lb/>
were in<lb/>
trouble" an<lb/>
for them to<lb/>
their grades<lb/>
at the Boilin<lb/>
Dineen I<lb/>
that he likec<lb/>
least 6-2. "I<lb/>
part of the r<lb/>
frank and it<lb/>
play a lot. Be<lb/>
bedosertor<lb/>
East Caroiin<lb/>
Dineen's<lb/>
bed-ridden<lb/>
months and<lb/>
Dineen to v<lb/>
this spring<lb/>
i nations.<lb/>
The gai<lb/>
recruits and<lb/>
and Crosby<lb/>
six guards,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057133_0009"/><lb/>
����������������IBl<lb/>
 j3WS:r3K"f!?<lb/>
�Dil<lb/>
������������i<lb/>
Pirate first baseman<lb/>
15 June 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Wooten signs with Kmsas City Royals<lb/>
Sonny Wooten, star first base-<lb/>
man on the ECU Southern<lb/>
Conference championship base-<lb/>
ball team, has signed a contract to<lb/>
play professional baseball with<lb/>
the Kansas City Royals, it was<lb/>
announced today.<lb/>
Wooten, a native of Rocky<lb/>
Mount, N.C signed as a free<lb/>
agent. He will report on Monday,<lb/>
June 20, to the Royals Rookie<lb/>
League club at Sarasota, Florida.<lb/>
The team is managed by Billy<lb/>
Scripture.<lb/>
Wooten was the leading hitter<lb/>
on this year's Pirate baseball<lb/>
team, batting at a clip. He<lb/>
led the team in RBI , with 39,<lb/>
which set a new East Carolina<lb/>
record. He also led the team and<lb/>
the Southern Conference in<lb/>
doubles with 14, another school<lb/>
record. He was named to the<lb/>
all-Southern Conference team,<lb/>
BASEBALL<lb/>
Continued from page 8.<lb/>
The Pirates' next scoring<lb/>
came in the ninth as Eddie Gates<lb/>
singled and Bobby Supel walked<lb/>
with two outs. Then in a game<lb/>
winning move, Raymie Styons<lb/>
blasted a home run over the left<lb/>
field fence to win the victory for<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
The winning pitcher was<lb/>
Mickey Britt, who took up where<lb/>
he had left off during the spring.<lb/>
Britt gave up only two hits until<lb/>
the sixth inning.<lb/>
Last Thursday East Carolina<lb/>
took its first summer leaque loss<lb/>
CAGERS<lb/>
Continued from page 8.<lb/>
EDWAHDS, CROSBYLEAVE<lb/>
It has also been learned that<lb/>
Tyron Edwards and Louis Crosby,<lb/>
�both part-time starters last sea-<lb/>
son, have transferred to Gardner-<lb/>
I Webb College, a NAIA power.<lb/>
- Reserve guard Billy Dineen is<lb/>
also expected to transfer closer to<lb/>
I his home in Westwood, N.J.<lb/>
Crosby, a 6-3 Shelby native,<lb/>
started two games his freshman<lb/>
season and averaged 7.9 points<lb/>
per game, while starting rmx-i of<lb/>
the Pirates' 28 games this past<lb/>
season, finishing with a 7.2<lb/>
average and 66 assists, second<lb/>
best on the team.<lb/>
Edwards, a 6-11 center, was a<lb/>
star at Northwood High School in<lb/>
Pittsboro, but averaged only 3.2<lb/>
points for ECU his freshman<lb/>
season and 2.1 last year. He<lb/>
pulled around three rebounds per<lb/>
game each season.<lb/>
Dineen averaged 3.5 and 3.8<lb/>
in two seasons with the Pirates<lb/>
after scoring around 25 per game<lb/>
in high school.<lb/>
Crosby and Edwards are<lb/>
leaving East Carolina because of<lb/>
personal conflicts with Gillman,<lb/>
while Dineen wants to be closer to<lb/>
his ailing mother in New Jersey.<lb/>
Edwards said he and Gillman<lb/>
do not see "eye to eye on some<lb/>
things and "he (Gillman) said I<lb/>
did not fit in with his game plan<lb/>
and that some games I might see<lb/>
a lot of action and some games<lb/>
very little<lb/>
Crosby said it was a matter of<lb/>
Gillman's "coaching philoso-<lb/>
phies. He has his own way to do<lb/>
things and he has a right to get<lb/>
the player he wants Crosby also<lb/>
said he thought it would be best<lb/>
for me to transfer and let him<lb/>
work things out with his people<lb/>
Gillman said both players<lb/>
were in "severe academic<lb/>
trouble" and it might be better<lb/>
for them to transfer and work on<lb/>
their grades until they are eligible<lb/>
at the Boiling Springs school.<lb/>
Dineen was told by Gillman<lb/>
that he liked his guards to be at<lb/>
least 6-2. "If I leave, that will be<lb/>
part of the reason. He was quite<lb/>
frank and it doesn't look like I'll<lb/>
play a lot. Besides, I feel I need to<lb/>
be closer to home, but I really like<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Dineen's mother has been<lb/>
bed-ridden for the past six<lb/>
months and her condition forced<lb/>
Dineen to withdraw from ECU<lb/>
this spring before final exam-<lb/>
inations.<lb/>
The gaining of the five<lb/>
recruits and losses of Edwards<lb/>
and Crosby leaves Gillman with<lb/>
six guards, two centers and six<lb/>
forwards. The guards in addition<lb/>
to Mack, Moseley and Roberts<lb/>
are: sophomore Jim Ramsey,<lb/>
senior Don Whitaker and Dineen.<lb/>
The centers are junior Greg<lb/>
Cornelius and senior Dean Heart-<lb/>
ley. The forwards other than Carr<lb/>
and Hill are: sophomore Herb<lb/>
Gray, junior Wade Henkel, soph-<lb/>
omore Herb Krusen and sopho-<lb/>
more Kyle Powers.<lb/>
CAST<lb/>
BILLY DINEEN<lb/>
of the season oy falling to Atlantic<lb/>
Christian 7-6 The reason for this<lb/>
loss could be told by the fact that<lb/>
the scoring in the first inning by<lb/>
scoring 3 runs. Later the Bulldogs<lb/>
added runs in the fifth and sixth<lb/>
to get the winning total.<lb/>
For the Pirates there were<lb/>
runs scored in the fifth, seventh,<lb/>
eighth, and two in the ninth asthe<lb/>
Pirate rally fell short. The win-<lb/>
ning pitcher was Jimmy Collier<lb/>
and the loser was Billy Davis.<lb/>
In the game played between<lb/>
Campbell and East Carolina<lb/>
Saturday night, offense was the<lb/>
name of the game from the very<lb/>
start. ECU started things off right<lb/>
by scoring five runs in the inning.<lb/>
They later added one in the<lb/>
second, one in the third, four in<lb/>
the fifth, and five in the eighth for<lb/>
a total of 16.<lb/>
Campbell scored six runs in<lb/>
the 1st inning and three in the<lb/>
seventh. Leading hitters in the<lb/>
game were Tommy Warrick, 3 for<lb/>
5, and3RBI's;Macon Moye3for<lb/>
6, 2 doubles and 2 RBI's; Robert<lb/>
Brinkley 3for 6,1 double; Raymie<lb/>
Styons, 2 for 4, 1 home run, 4<lb/>
RBI's, Bobby Supel, 2 for 4, 1<lb/>
home run, a double and 3 RBI's.<lb/>
Summer league head coach<lb/>
Hal Baird says he is not surprised<lb/>
at the performance of the Pirates<lb/>
to date. "It has been about what I<lb/>
expected. Our pitching was a<lb/>
question mark after Mickey Britt,<lb/>
Cip this coipon!<lb/>
And get three games for only $1.25,<lb/>
Bring three friends along. We'll let<lb/>
them in on the deal, too. r<lb/>
WASHINGTON HWY.<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N.C<lb/>
and was named to the Greensboro<lb/>
Daily News aJI-state team. He<lb/>
compiled a two year total of 120<lb/>
total bases, with 56 RBI's and a<lb/>
.313 average. He originally came<lb/>
to East Carolina as a transfer<lb/>
from Louisburg Junior College.<lb/>
"I'm really excited about this<lb/>
and that has turned out to be the<lb/>
case. However, I was really<lb/>
pleased with Bill Sword's show-<lb/>
ing at Campbell. He did a good<lb/>
job in relief. Our offense and<lb/>
defense has been good, too. I<lb/>
can't complain about that. If we<lb/>
can get some good performances<lb/>
from some of our other pitchers,<lb/>
we'll be right in the thick of<lb/>
things<lb/>
opportunity to play for this<lb/>
organization Wooten com-<lb/>
mented. "Ever since I was a little<lb/>
kid, I've dreamed of becoming a<lb/>
professional baseball plater. It's<lb/>
something I've always wanted to<lb/>
do. I'm going to go down there<lb/>
and do the best I can, and it's<lb/>
going to be a real challenge<lb/>
The 6-2, 205 first baseman<lb/>
gave credit to his coaches, Monte<lb/>
Little, Hal Baird and Tony Guzzo<lb/>
for the chance to play pro ball.<lb/>
"They were the ones who did<lb/>
it for me noted Wooten.<lb/>
"Those coaches were behind me<lb/>
all the way. They have been super<lb/>
all year, and they really helped<lb/>
me out a lot<lb/>
See WOOTEN, page 11.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057133_0010"/><lb/>
����HBIHHBHHMBHVB<lb/>
�iBBiMBBMHBBBWHmHIIB<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAO 15 June 1977<lb/>
Pirates lose twice in playoffs<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Unable to hit with men on<lb/>
base, East Carolina lost the first<lb/>
two games in the Atlantic Re-<lb/>
gional of the NCAA playoffs.<lb/>
Wake Forest took the Pirates 6-3<lb/>
in the regional opener while the<lb/>
host Gamecocks eliminated the<lb/>
Pirates 4-1 in the consolation<lb/>
round.<lb/>
In the game withthe Demon<lb/>
Deacons, the Pirates' Mickey<lb/>
Britt and Wake's Merle Henkel<lb/>
hooked up in a pitcher's duel until<lb/>
the seventh when the Deacon's<lb/>
second baseman Bob Heley<lb/>
cracked a home run just over the<lb/>
outstretched glove of ECU'S<lb/>
centerfielder Robert Brinkley.<lb/>
With both pitchers tiring, the<lb/>
batters started hitting the ball<lb/>
hard. With the bases loaded and<lb/>
one out in the eighth, Wake<lb/>
Forest's Kenny Baker popped up<lb/>
to rightfielder Eddie Gates. Gates<lb/>
threw to the plate, but the ball<lb/>
was off the mark. First baseman<lb/>
Sonny Wooten cut the ball off and<lb/>
threw a perfect strike to catcher<lb/>
Raymie Styons. Styons had Doug<lb/>
Henley out, but the Demon<lb/>
Deacon runner kicked the ball out<lb/>
of Sytons' glove to score.<lb/>
The Pirates got the run back in<lb/>
the bottom of the inning when<lb/>
Jerry Carraway led the inning off<lb/>
with a walk, took third on Pete<lb/>
(Srcmb �petting<lb/>
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Paradossi's double and came<lb/>
home on a ground out by Gates.<lb/>
Wake Forest started off the<lb/>
ninth with Heley singling to left<lb/>
. and taking second on Charlie<lb/>
Stevens' error. Al Zyshowski then<lb/>
singled him to third, and that was<lb/>
ail for the Pirates' Britt. Senior<lb/>
Terry Durham came in on relief,<lb/>
but was tagged with a run-scoring<lb/>
single by Johnny Pacer. With<lb/>
third baseman Steve Hanson at<lb/>
bat, Styons tried to pick Zyskow-<lb/>
ski off second and the ball endea<lb/>
up in center field, with Zyskowski<lb/>
scoring and Pacer ending up on<lb/>
third.<lb/>
Hanson struck out, but Henley<lb/>
popped a homer over the short<lb/>
right field fence to give the<lb/>
Deacons a 6-1 lead.<lb/>
Bobby Supel opened up the<lb/>
Pirate ninth with a towering<lb/>
homer over the left field fence.<lb/>
With two outs and Stevens on<lb/>
first, Carraway singled and Pete<lb/>
Paradossi walked to load the<lb/>
bases. Henley, the Deacons'<lb/>
designated hitter, came on to<lb/>
pitch and walked Best to score<lb/>
Stevens. Gates came on, and hit a<lb/>
one-one pitch to deep right center<lb/>
field. The aown and both teams<lb/>
thought the ball would clear the<lb/>
short fense, but Wake's Ken<lb/>
Gerrity stuck out his glove at the<lb/>
last minute and the ball right at<lb/>
the wall.<lb/>
Against South Carolina, the<lb/>
Pirates drew first blood on Sonny<lb/>
Wooten's fourth inning line drive<lb/>
home run to left center. The<lb/>
Gamecocks came right back in the<lb/>
bottom of the frame when Steve<lb/>
King walked and Johnny Henkel<lb/>
homered deep over the left field<lb/>
fenos to give South Carolina a one<lb/>
run edge.<lb/>
Gamecock center fieiaer<lb/>
Mookie Wilson drove home the<lb/>
other two USC runs with a single<lb/>
in the fifth and a solo homer in the<lb/>
eighth.<lb/>
Even though the Pirates lost<lb/>
out in two straight, Coach Monte<lb/>
Little was quick to praise part of<lb/>
the Pi rat as' game.<lb/>
"We pitched real well, I<lb/>
thought Little said. "But, we<lb/>
didn't hit the ball with people on<lb/>
base. Our fielding was good, also.<lb/>
We just oouldn't get the men<lb/>
around<lb/>
�Mack to go for�<lb/>
World Univ. try outs<lb/>
Oliver Mack, earlier an-<lb/>
nounced as East Carolina's first<lb/>
basketball signee of the year, has<lb/>
been invited to attend the World<lb/>
University Games Camp in Louis-<lb/>
ville, Ky June 12-29.<lb/>
The purpose of the camp is to<lb/>
select 12 players fa the United<lb/>
States team fa this year's Wald<lb/>
University Games. The team will<lb/>
tour European countries July<lb/>
30-August 25.<lb/>
Mack is one of only a few<lb/>
players from throughout the<lb/>
United States to be invited to the<lb/>
camp.<lb/>
The 6-3, 198-pound guard<lb/>
completed two years at San<lb/>
Jacinto Junior College, being<lb/>
named both years to the Junia<lb/>
College All-Tournament team,<lb/>
something only two other players<lb/>
in the histay of the tournament<lb/>
have done.<lb/>
Mack was also named first<lb/>
team Junia College All-America<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
NOWISTHETIMETO ENROLL<lb/>
IN THE AIR FORCE ROTC4 YEAR PROGRAM<lb/>
and here are some facts that should interest you:<lb/>
 Courses open to college men and women.<lb/>
 Two hours academic credit per semester.<lb/>
 No service obligation now.<lb/>
 Full scholarships available that pay tuition, all fees, plus a $100 a month tax-free allowance.<lb/>
 An Air Force officer commission when you receive your baccalaureate.<lb/>
?The opportunity to get to know the spirit that made our nation great.<lb/>
Talk with our Air Force ROTC representative.<lb/>
Gateway to a Great<lb/>
Air ft�rvc MTC Way of Lite<lb/>
Contact: Captain Ashley Lane<lb/>
ECU Wright Annex 206<lb/>
Phone 757-6597<lb/>
<pb facs="00057133_0011"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
15 June 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Alston, Mclntyre all-Americas<lb/>
East Carolina had its first two<lb/>
track all-Americas crowned June<lb/>
4 in Champaign, III. when Calvin<lb/>
Alston and Herman Mclntyre<lb/>
placed high in their respective<lb/>
events at the NCAA Champion<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
Alston finished fifth in the<lb/>
200 meter dash. He had a time of<lb/>
20.71 in the finals on the<lb/>
electronic timing system tor his<lb/>
best effort ever. Alston said<lb/>
before the nationals that he had<lb/>
two goals, "to place and to beat<lb/>
WOOTEN<lb/>
Continued from page 9.<lb/>
Baird was a pitcher in the<lb/>
Royals organization before join-<lb/>
ing the ECU coaching staff this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"This really made my day<lb/>
exclaimed ECU mentor Monte<lb/>
Little. "Sonny was probably the<lb/>
heart and soul of our team this<lb/>
year. He was the one we looked to<lb/>
to make us go in the tough<lb/>
situations. I am just as happy as I<lb/>
can be for him. If he goes out and<lb/>
does the job for them like I know<lb/>
he can, Sonny Woolen should<lb/>
have a tremendous future in<lb/>
baseball<lb/>
Wooten said that although he<lb/>
was ecstatic about the chance for<lb/>
professional baseball, he was sad<lb/>
to be leaving East Carolina.<lb/>
"I'm going to miss being<lb/>
around there he said. "All the<lb/>
people have been good to me, and<lb/>
East Carolina has been a great<lb/>
plaoe to play ball. That is one of<lb/>
the keys to my success, having<lb/>
always played under good people<lb/>
in college<lb/>
Harvey Glance, Johnny Jones and<lb/>
Calvin Dill three Olympians.<lb/>
He did just that. Glance was<lb/>
knocked out in the trials, while<lb/>
Alston beat both Jones and Dill in<lb/>
the finals.<lb/>
Mclntyre finished seventh in<lb/>
his specialty, the triple jump,<lb/>
with a leap of 53-2V4. He had<lb/>
jumped 53-9V4 in the trials to set<lb/>
a new East Carolina school record.<lb/>
Although only the top six made<lb/>
all-America, Mdntyre made it<lb/>
because there were two foreign-<lb/>
ers ahead of him. He was the fifth<lb/>
best American in the Champion-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
Otis Melvin barely missed<lb/>
making all-America in the 200<lb/>
meters. Melvin had the fifth best<lb/>
time in the competition with his<lb/>
20.63 clocking in the semi-finals,<lb/>
but missed the finals by .02 of a<lb/>
second when William Snoddy of<lb/>
Oklahoma edged him out for<lb/>
fourth place in the, semies.<lb/>
Melvin's time set a new East<lb/>
Carolina school record, Snoddy,<lb/>
incidentally, went on to win the<lb/>
200 meter championship.<lb/>
Marvin Rankins finished 17th<lb/>
in the 110-meter high hurdles<lb/>
when he was timed in 14.34.<lb/>
The Pirates' 400 meter relay<lb/>
team of Alston, Carter Suggs,<lb/>
Larry Austin and Melvin were<lb/>
among the favorites to place, but<lb/>
were disqualified in the trials<lb/>
when Melvin took the baton out of<lb/>
the exchange zone. They were<lb/>
ahead of highly touted Arizona<lb/>
State at the time of the mishap.<lb/>
In the 1,600 meter relay, the<lb/>
team of Alston, Jay Purdie,<lb/>
Melvin and Suggs ran 3:10.2 to<lb/>
finish 11th in the competition.<lb/>
264 By Pass<lb/>
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"I'm just as happy as I can be<lb/>
for the kids that made all-<lb/>
America Coach Bill Carson<lb/>
said. "I really wish Otis could<lb/>
have made it to the finals,<lb/>
though. He was running mighty<lb/>
good.<lb/>
"The relay mistake was kind<lb/>
of disheartening because we<lb/>
would have placed high<lb/>
Supel drafted<lb/>
East Carolina third baseman<lb/>
Bobby Supel was drafted by the<lb/>
Detroit Tigers last week in the<lb/>
12th round of the annual major<lb/>
league baseball draft.<lb/>
Supel finished the 1977 season<lb/>
with a .238 batting average and<lb/>
led the team in home runs with<lb/>
six. He set a new school record for<lb/>
walks with 32. Supel went into a<lb/>
slump at mid-season and saw his<lb/>
batting average drop to .219, but<lb/>
gradually came out of the slump<lb/>
to finish at his .238 dip.<lb/>
After talking with Tiger of-<lb/>
fidals, Supel said he had dedded<lb/>
to come back 'or his senior year at<lb/>
East Carolina and finish his<lb/>
education.<lb/>
CALVIN ALSTON<lb/>
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Happy Father's Day, to Dad and his favorite family from<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057133_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 15 June 1977<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
On<lb/>
June 1 5-<lb/>
BONNIE RAITT<lb/>
Sweet Forgiveness<lb/>
Includes Gamblin'Man Runaway<lb/>
Louise f iome<lb/>
Changes In Latitudes,<lb/>
Changes In Attitudes<lb/>
VAN MOBBISON<lb/>
A Period of Transition<lb/>
Includes Joyous Sound<lb/>
The Eternal Kansas City<lb/>
Gold Wind in August<lb/>
<lb/>
FOREIGNER<lb/>
M<lb/>
-jftfjHK<lb/>
f EELS UKE THE FIRST TIME<lb/>
COLD AS ICE<lb/>
LITTLE FEAT<lb/>
Time Loves a Hero<lb/>
Includes Hi Roller C W Folks Boope<lb/>
NewDelhi FreightTrain<lb/>
s$&amp;<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057133_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>