<?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="00058055_0001"/>
<lb/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 4,500<lb/>
this issue is 20 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
?? ? ftrMvwille. North Carolina 24 May 1978<lb/>
Vd. No. 53 No. 5<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Paraquat, p. 6<lb/>
Joan Little, p. 3<lb/>
John Hartford, p. 9<lb/>
Women's athletics, p. 15<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
ECU accounting professor<lb/>
Prof Donnalley dies<lb/>
of heart attack<lb/>
By JIM BARNES<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Kenneth G. Donnalley Sr an<lb/>
assistant professor of accounting<lb/>
in the ECU School of Business,<lb/>
died Monday afternoon of a heart<lb/>
attack. He was 61,<lb/>
An ECU faculty member since<lb/>
September of 1968, Donnalley<lb/>
had a history of heart trouble,<lb/>
according to the widow, Judy<lb/>
Donnalley, who is an associate<lb/>
professor of library science at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Born in New Yak City in 1917,<lb/>
Donnalley received the B.A. from<lb/>
City College of New York (CCNY)<lb/>
and the M.A. from Madison<lb/>
College. He also became a<lb/>
Certified Public Accountant while<lb/>
attending Texas State.<lb/>
Mrs. Donnalley told<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD that<lb/>
Donnalley'sbody had been willed<lb/>
to the ECU School of Medicine. A<lb/>
memorial service is scheduled for<lb/>
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at St. Paul's<lb/>
Episcopal Church in Greenville.<lb/>
Speaking fa the Accounting<lb/>
Department, Dean Danny Hines<lb/>
said that the passing of Donnalley<lb/>
sarowed us a great deal. He<lb/>
was thought of very warmly by all<lb/>
faculty and students. Professa<lb/>
Donnalley has made an out stand<lb/>
ing contribution to the depart-<lb/>
ment and to the university<lb/>
Donnalley, who resided at<lb/>
2609 Calvin Way in Greenville, is<lb/>
survived by his widow and two<lb/>
sons, Kenneth G. Donnalley Jr. of<lb/>
Pensaoola, Fla. and Jason K.<lb/>
Donnalley of the home. A third<lb/>
son, James E. Donnalley, is<lb/>
deceased<lb/>
John Hartford<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
man, dry humoristthe only lyricist in current<lb/>
popular music who's fit to be called a poet<lb/>
JOHN HARTFORD WILL appear in concert at the among the Renaissance men of contemporary pop<lb/>
attending Texas State. deceased. "f ? ? 1 <lb/>
ECU professor arrested m bombing<lb/>
" - ?? hM ?K?n when he was arrested. East Tennessee State, where M<lb/>
By JIM BARNES<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
An associate professa of<lb/>
accounting at ECU, J-<lb/>
Marshall Coload, was released<lb/>
late Friday afternoon on a $15.000<lb/>
bond in connection with an<lb/>
explosion and fire last Wednes-<lb/>
day at Tarheel Truck Rentals on<lb/>
Airport Road in Greenville.<lb/>
Aooading to Greenville Pol-<lb/>
ice Chief E. Glenn Cannon,<lb/>
Coload was charged with " use of<lb/>
an explosive a incendiary de-<lb/>
vice a charge carrying a<lb/>
possible prison sentence of 10 to<lb/>
30 years.<lb/>
Lt. A.G. Whitaker arrested<lb/>
Coload at the latter's hone sane<lb/>
six hours after the 915 a.m. fire<lb/>
which sent the manager of the<lb/>
firm, G. Vincent Hawaii, to Pitt<lb/>
Memaial Hospital with first and<lb/>
second - degree burns over both<lb/>
leQHowell was reported in satis-<lb/>
factay conditiai late Sunday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
The motive and exact circum-<lb/>
stances of the incident are still<lb/>
under investigation, but the ex-<lb/>
plosion is believed to have been<lb/>
triggered by a gasoline-filled<lb/>
bottle.<lb/>
Witnesses, including Howell,<lb/>
have placed Colcad at the scene<lb/>
shortly befae the explosion.<lb/>
The explosion occurred just<lb/>
inside the doa to the outer office<lb/>
of the building, a large ware-<lb/>
house-type facility.<lb/>
Howell and his seaetary<lb/>
escaped further injury afta the<lb/>
explosion climbing out a rear<lb/>
office window.<lb/>
Damage to the buUding has<lb/>
not been officially estimated, but<lb/>
two boats and sevaal vehicles<lb/>
were damaged in the resulting<lb/>
fire<lb/>
At a first appearanoe hearing<lb/>
last Friday, Coicad's attaney,<lb/>
Robert E. Maey of Greenville,<lb/>
requested a reduction of his<lb/>
client's bond.<lb/>
Coicad's bond had been set at<lb/>
J. MARSHALL COLOORD<lb/>
$25,000 when he was arrested.<lb/>
After ai brief presentation of<lb/>
characta by Maey, Judge Naris<lb/>
Reed reduced Coicad's bond to<lb/>
$15,000.<lb/>
Bond was met through the<lb/>
efforts of Coicad's friends,<lb/>
arrwng whom were believed to be<lb/>
colleagues from the School of<lb/>
Business.<lb/>
uokxrd did not speak during<lb/>
his brief appearance befae Judge<lb/>
Reed ai Friday. When contacted<lb/>
by FOUNTAINHEAD, Maey<lb/>
stated that his client would have<lb/>
no statement to make when he<lb/>
was released on bond.<lb/>
The next court appearance fa<lb/>
Coload will be at a May 31<lb/>
hearing. The state will argue it's<lb/>
case fa probable cause fa<lb/>
Coicad's arrest in coinectioi<lb/>
with the bonbing.<lb/>
Coload, a native of Cuthbert,<lb/>
Ga, came to ECU in 1967 from<lb/>
East Tennessee State, where ne<lb/>
taught fa nine years. Pria<lb/>
teaching included four years at<lb/>
the University of Miami.<lb/>
Coload served the U.S. Army<lb/>
in Europe from 1943 to 1945 and<lb/>
again in Kaea from 1950-1952.<lb/>
He received his BS in 1950 from<lb/>
the University of Oklahoma and<lb/>
the MBA in 1954 from the<lb/>
University of Geagia<lb/>
A certified public accountant<lb/>
in addition to his post at ECU,<lb/>
Colcad is married and the father<lb/>
of four children. He resides at<lb/>
1738 Beaumont Drive in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
When contacted by<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD fa oanment,<lb/>
Dr. John M. Howell, viae-<lb/>
chanoeila fa academic affairs,<lb/>
stated that he did not want to<lb/>
make oanment ai the case as the<lb/>
legal proceedings were under way<lb/>
and there has yet been no trial.<lb/>
First selected by Media Board<lb/>
White named new editor<lb/>
nrrtof to n?t ptfirted. 90 it is less<lb/>
DOUG WHITE, FOUNTAINHEAD editor. Photoby John Qrogan.<lb/>
By JIM BARNES<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
Doug White, an ECU junia<lb/>
histay maja, has become the<lb/>
first FOUNTAINHEAD edita to<lb/>
be selected by the newly famed<lb/>
ECU Media Board. White, who<lb/>
will serve through the 1978-79<lb/>
3chool year, succeeds Cindy<lb/>
Broome as edita.<lb/>
At 19, the youngest FOUN<lb/>
TAINHEAD staff member, White<lb/>
has held various poeitons with the<lb/>
paper pria to his selection as the<lb/>
edita-in-chief. In his 14 maims<lb/>
with the paper, White has been a<lb/>
staff writer, assistant Trends<lb/>
edita, assistant news edita and<lb/>
news edita.<lb/>
White feels that the Media<lb/>
Board is a welcome addition to<lb/>
the oontinued progress of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD. The Board<lb/>
was aeated this spring in ader to<lb/>
assure freedom of the press by<lb/>
administering the various<lb/>
student-financed publications.<lb/>
According to White, "One of<lb/>
the most important advantages is<lb/>
that it isa lot easier to explain the<lb/>
technical aspects of newspaper<lb/>
operation to nine people than it is<lb/>
to explain it to 50, as it was when<lb/>
we had to go befae the SGA<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
"Another plus is objectivity.<lb/>
Th? Media Board doesn't need<lb/>
publicity Hks 9GA oolitlcans do in<lb/>
ader to get elected, so it is i<lb/>
likely to try and influence the<lb/>
media, especially<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, to serve their<lb/>
own intaests. In the future,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD will cover SGA<lb/>
as equitably and as fairly as we<lb/>
cover any other dub on campus<lb/>
The new edita noted that<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD will have a<lb/>
new look fa the upcoming school<lb/>
year. "FOUNTAINHEAD" has<lb/>
finally achieved a professional-<lb/>
looking layout stated Whits.<lb/>
"The changeover to a broadshsst<lb/>
famat, like The News and<lb/>
Observer will complement this<lb/>
professional look<lb/>
See EDI TOR, p. 3<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0002"/><lb/>
i ?;??<lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 24 May 1978<lb/>
Honor council Speed reading<lb/>
Runners<lb/>
Sign language Courses<lb/>
Applications for Summer<lb/>
School Honor Council are being<lb/>
accepted now in the Student<lb/>
Government Association office,<lb/>
Mendenhall, until May 30.<lb/>
Diet<lb/>
A summer weight control<lb/>
program will be offered here May<lb/>
30-June 21.<lb/>
The program Positively Los-<lb/>
ing Weight will enable partic-<lb/>
ipants to analyze their personal<lb/>
eating habits, develop a balanced<lb/>
weight loss diet and exercise<lb/>
schedule while losing eight to ten<lb/>
pounds by the end of June.<lb/>
Participants will meet Tues-<lb/>
day evenings from 7:30 to 950<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
program is available from the<lb/>
Office of Non-Credit Programs,<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education,<lb/>
ECU, Greenville, N.C. 757-6143.<lb/>
"Speed Heading a non-<lb/>
credit evening program which can<lb/>
enable participants to at least<lb/>
double their reading rates while<lb/>
improving comprehension will be<lb/>
offered through the ECU Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education this<lb/>
summer information is available<lb/>
from the Office of Non-Credit<lb/>
Program, Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education, ECU, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
757-6143.<lb/>
MSC hours<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
will be open Monday through<lb/>
Friday from 8 30 a.m. until 5 p.m.<lb/>
during both sessions of summer<lb/>
school.<lb/>
The center will be dosed on<lb/>
Saturdays and Sundays.<lb/>
Also, Mendenhall will be<lb/>
closed on Monday, May 29 for<lb/>
Memorial Day (a state holiday)<lb/>
and on Tuesday July 4 for<lb/>
Independence Day.<lb/>
The Washington Jaycees will<lb/>
sponsor a 13 mile marathon Sun<lb/>
June 11, as part of the<lb/>
Washington Summer Festival.<lb/>
The marathon will start at 5 30<lb/>
p.m. from Stewart Parkway and<lb/>
run along the water front as much<lb/>
as possible.<lb/>
Persons interested in a list of<lb/>
details should write to: Mayhew<lb/>
Cox, P.O. Box 521, Washington,<lb/>
N.C. 27889.<lb/>
For all runners the following<lb/>
tips should be seriously consider-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
(1) a physical examination is<lb/>
highly suggested.<lb/>
(2) runner should take in<lb/>
consideration the heat of the day,<lb/>
(use a warm-up suit when train-<lb/>
ing.)<lb/>
(3) runner should be able to<lb/>
oomplete 13 miles before the<lb/>
marathon.<lb/>
(4) supplement your diet with<lb/>
carbohydrates at least 10 hours<lb/>
before the marathon.<lb/>
(5) all precautions will be<lb/>
taken as far as emergency<lb/>
equipment on stand-by.<lb/>
(6) run at your own risk. The<lb/>
Washington Jaycees will not be<lb/>
held responsible for any accidents<lb/>
or failure to your health.<lb/>
Welcome back students.<lb/>
Remember Coggins for your car service needs.<lb/>
B.F.Goodrich<lb/>
Car Care Service<lb/>
4 POINT BRAKE CHECK<lb/>
1. Pull Front Wheels, Inspect Linings and Drums.<lb/>
2. Check Greese Seels, Wheel Cylinders for Leakage<lb/>
3. Clean, Inspect end Repack Front Wheel Bearings<lb/>
4. Adjust Brakes on All Four Wheels for Pull Pedal<lb/>
Braking.<lb/>
Reg. Price ? JO - With Cert. Service Only S3.50<lb/>
co?i?S<lb/>
Most U.S. Cars, Toyotas &amp; Oatsuns<lb/>
call for appointment<lb/>
Master Charge, BankAmericard, American Express.<lb/>
Offers as shown at B.F.Goodrich stores. Competitively priced at BF.Goodrich dealers.<lb/>
HFGoodllch Coggins Car Care<lb/>
TIRE CENTER<lb/>
LAltS 8. SfcPVlCI<lb/>
Phone 754-5244<lb/>
330 W. HWY. 364 BYPASS<lb/>
OftCENVf LLC. N.C.<lb/>
The ECU Program fa Hearing<lb/>
Impaired Students will present<lb/>
non-credit sign language classes<lb/>
for interested students, staff, and<lb/>
faculty this summer session.<lb/>
There will be no charge for the<lb/>
sign language classes. Classes<lb/>
will be limited to 25 persons.<lb/>
Classes will begin on Thurs-<lb/>
day, May 25. One class (3-4 00)<lb/>
will be team-taught by Ruth<lb/>
Aleskovsky and Mike Ernest<lb/>
Monday through Thursday each<lb/>
week. This will be an intensive<lb/>
class fa the beginning sign<lb/>
language student.<lb/>
Less intensive beginning and<lb/>
intermediate classes will also be<lb/>
offered.<lb/>
A Basic Course In Manual<lb/>
Communication will be used as<lb/>
the text fa all dasses. It is<lb/>
available at the ECU Student<lb/>
Supply Stae.<lb/>
Sign language class schedules<lb/>
are as follows:<lb/>
Beginning Class 1130 - 12:30<lb/>
TTh Brewster B-104<lb/>
Beginning Class 3:00 - 4:00<lb/>
MTWTh Brewster B-203<lb/>
Intermediate Class 4:00 - 5:00<lb/>
TTh Brewster B-203<lb/>
The ECU Division of Contin-<lb/>
uing education is pleased to<lb/>
present the following Non-Oedit<lb/>
courses that will be offaed this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Scuba - a basic certificate<lb/>
program involving actual ocean<lb/>
dives.<lb/>
Speed Reading - guaranteesto<lb/>
more than double your reading<lb/>
speed while inaeasing compre-<lb/>
hension - a great course fa the<lb/>
business man a wanan and the<lb/>
college a college-bound student<lb/>
Ballet - both an intermediate<lb/>
andabasicooursewill be offered.<lb/>
Jazz Dance - a popular<lb/>
program that fills up fast - an<lb/>
intermediate and a beginning<lb/>
course will be offered.<lb/>
Positively Losing Weight - a<lb/>
balanced and sensible weight loss<lb/>
program lose 8-10 pounds during<lb/>
the course.<lb/>
Pre-registration is required<lb/>
and enrollment limited. To rec-<lb/>
eive descriptive brochures call<lb/>
757-6143 a visit Erwin Hall oi<lb/>
campus, room 319, Non-Credit<lb/>
Programs, Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education, ECU, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834. Don't delay, most courses<lb/>
begin the first week in June.<lb/>
Pre-college program open to high<lb/>
school students this summer<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
High school junias who are in<lb/>
the top 15 percent of their classes<lb/>
and have achieved a SATPSAT<lb/>
scae of at least 1,000 are eligible<lb/>
to apply fa participation in a<lb/>
special pre-college summer pro-<lb/>
gram to be offered by ECU.<lb/>
Participating student swill live<lb/>
on campus and enroll in oollege<lb/>
level oourses in a variety of<lb/>
disciplines, including art, anthro-<lb/>
pology, biology, business, drama<lb/>
and speech, economics, faeign<lb/>
languages, histay, hone econo-<lb/>
mics, sociology and industrial<lb/>
technology.<lb/>
"Purpose of the program is to<lb/>
offer an academic challenge to<lb/>
superia students while at the<lb/>
same time providing them a true<lb/>
college living experience said<lb/>
Dr. John Hane, Dean of Admis-<lb/>
sions at ECU.<lb/>
"Because this is our first<lb/>
program of this type, enrollment<lb/>
will be limited to approximately<lb/>
30 students<lb/>
Hane noted that the program<lb/>
will be offered during ECU's<lb/>
second summer session later this<lb/>
year, beginning June 28.<lb/>
Records of all work done in the<lb/>
program will be posted on an<lb/>
academic record by the ECU<lb/>
Registrar and can be fawarded to<lb/>
other colleges upon the student's<lb/>
request.<lb/>
A,1 campus activities will be<lb/>
open to participating students as<lb/>
residents of ECU damitaies,<lb/>
including guidance service semi-<lb/>
nars on such topics as financial<lb/>
aid and scholarship, career oppor-<lb/>
tunities. the health professions,<lb/>
and the language of the deaf.<lb/>
Each student may meet with a<lb/>
professa in the area of his a her<lb/>
academic interest, and may re-<lb/>
quest special counseling to help<lb/>
plan future educational and ca-<lb/>
reer directions.<lb/>
i <lb/>
BIGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
300 Evans, Downtown on the mall. Phone 752-2136<lb/>
Free prescription pick-up and delivery.<lb/>
Prescription dept with medication profiles. Your prescription always at our fingertips, even though you may lose your bode.<lb/>
Old fashion soda fountain. Drinks made the way you like them, freshly squeezed lemonades and orangeades.<lb/>
Milkshakes made with ice cream!<lb/>
Stop by Hargett's Drug Store on your way to the beach for suntan oik, lotions, and sunglasses.<lb/>
Located on Hwy. 43 down the road from Pitt Plaza<lb/>
convalescent supplies<lb/>
?athletic supports<lb/>
?first aid supplies<lb/>
?Timex watches<lb/>
?costume jewelry<lb/>
?greeting cards<lb/>
?school supplies<lb/>
? cosmetics<lb/>
? sundries<lb/>
?toiletries<lb/>
sunglasses by Foster Grant and Treville<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0003"/><lb/>
????B<lb/>
i<lb/>
Federal appeal slated<lb/>
24 May 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
i of Contin-<lb/>
pleased to<lb/>
Non-Credit<lb/>
offered this<lb/>
certificate<lb/>
aual ocean<lb/>
jaranteesto<lb/>
mjc reading<lb/>
ig compre-<lb/>
irse fa the<lb/>
ian and the<lb/>
nd student,<lb/>
it er mediate<lb/>
be offered,<lb/>
a popular<lb/>
i fast - an<lb/>
beginning<lb/>
Aeight - a<lb/>
weight loss<lb/>
mds during<lb/>
 required<lb/>
d. To rec-<lb/>
hures call<lb/>
in Hall on<lb/>
Non-Credit<lb/>
Continuing<lb/>
wille, N.C.<lb/>
3st courses<lb/>
June.<lb/>
igh<lb/>
enrollment<lb/>
roximately<lb/>
e program<lb/>
3 ECUs<lb/>
i later this<lb/>
B.<lb/>
jonein the<lb/>
ed on an<lb/>
the ECU<lb/>
warded to<lb/>
i student's<lb/>
as will be<lb/>
tudents as<lb/>
itories,<lb/>
nee semi-<lb/>
s financial<lb/>
eeroppor-<lb/>
ofessions,<lb/>
3 deaf,<lb/>
leet with a<lb/>
his or her<lb/>
may re<lb/>
ig to help<lb/>
and ca<lb/>
plies<lb/>
xxts<lb/>
plies<lb/>
ches<lb/>
reiry<lb/>
aids<lb/>
plies<lb/>
etics<lb/>
dries<lb/>
fries<lb/>
ville<lb/>
Joan Little loses battle in extradition hearing<lb/>
(LNS) The New Yprk State<lb/>
Court of Appeals upheld an order<lb/>
to extradite Joan Little back to<lb/>
North Carolina from New Yak.<lb/>
The ruling came after lawyers fa<lb/>
Little presented arguments be-<lb/>
fae the court in Albany, N.Y. on<lb/>
a motion to grant an evidentiary<lb/>
hearing in the case.<lb/>
Little and her lawyers have<lb/>
been trying fa the past several<lb/>
months to prevent the extradition<lb/>
and bring witnesses and evidence<lb/>
into court to document haras-<lb/>
sment of Little in the Nath<lb/>
Carolina prison from which she<lb/>
escaped.<lb/>
In a statement released after<lb/>
the decision, William Kunstler,<lb/>
one of Little's lawyers, charges<lb/>
that the Appeals Court "had<lb/>
shirked its human and legal<lb/>
responsibilities" by ntf granting<lb/>
the hearing.<lb/>
ALBANY RALLY<lb/>
"The issue is na the inno-<lb/>
oence a guilt of Joan Little<lb/>
stated the Reverand Timothy<lb/>
Mitchell, a Black minister who<lb/>
traveled to the Albany hearing<lb/>
with a busload of Little's support -<lb/>
ers. "The issue he explained,<lb/>
"is what'sgoing to happen to her<lb/>
if she is sent back to North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Last fall, Little escaped from<lb/>
the Nath Carolina Correctional<lb/>
Facility fa Wanen where she<lb/>
was serving a seven year sent-<lb/>
ence fa allegedly stealing $200<lb/>
wath of goods in a 1973 robbery<lb/>
of a trailer in Washington.<lb/>
An appeal to halt the<lb/>
extradition will now be filed with<lb/>
the federal courts.<lb/>
NOTE: When contacted Tues-<lb/>
day, concerning the above story,<lb/>
W.L. Kautzky, assistant<lb/>
director of prisons for North<lb/>
Carolina, told FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
that the department of prisons<lb/>
had "no comment to make on<lb/>
the matter of Ms. Little's extradi-<lb/>
tion battle.<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Continued from p. 1)<lb/>
' Hopefully, now that the staff<lb/>
iscomf at able with arranging and<lb/>
laying out a page, we can<lb/>
concentrate on improving the<lb/>
content of those pages and<lb/>
provide the students with better<lb/>
coverage.<lb/>
 I hope to expand our cove-<lb/>
rage to include mae local,<lb/>
regional and state news as it<lb/>
relates to the students of ECU.<lb/>
One way of doing this is through<lb/>
the AP wire service which will<lb/>
begin in August.<lb/>
"A recent poll conducted by a<lb/>
graduate marketing class showed<lb/>
that approximately 85 percent of<lb/>
those polled said they wanted<lb/>
mae state and national news.<lb/>
We'll do our best to satisfy that<lb/>
desire<lb/>
The creation of the Media<lb/>
Board effectively removes SGA<lb/>
control over the student press,<lb/>
but White feels that a natural<lb/>
tension should exist between<lb/>
student government and student<lb/>
press. "This relationship bet-<lb/>
ween the student press and the<lb/>
student government should be<lb/>
the same as tha between any<lb/>
government and the media - that<lb/>
is, an adversary relationship<lb/>
said White.<lb/>
"The press should act as a<lb/>
watchdog over governmental ac-<lb/>
tivities and expose caruption and<lb/>
wroigdoing. Of course the press<lb/>
should also give due aedit and<lb/>
praise when government fulfills<lb/>
its duty of serving the people<lb/>
The son of Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Sidney Russel White Jr, of New<lb/>
Bern, White is a 1976 graduate of<lb/>
New Bern Senia High School. He<lb/>
is a member of Phi Alpha Theta,<lb/>
international hona society in<lb/>
histay, and holds membership in<lb/>
the ECU chapter of the Society fa<lb/>
Collegiate Journalists.<lb/>
In addition to his involvement<lb/>
with FOUNTAINHEAD, White<lb/>
has held posts in the Student<lb/>
Union and served as a day<lb/>
student representative in the<lb/>
SGA. After graduation, he plans<lb/>
on entering graduate school.<lb/>
UNIDENTIFIED CASUAL ATHLETE shows "pas de deux"<lb/>
'hile defenders exhibit marked toot drag. <lb/>
Super Sounds for Summer Session<lb/>
NANTUCKET<lb/>
JIMMY BUFFETT<lb/>
FOOHAT<lb/>
Stone Blue<lb/>
Includes Eojy Mftfliy<lb/>
Midnight Modn?ssHighOnlotw<lb/>
Sm?i Horn Ch?ogo<lb/>
$4,99<lb/>
<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058055_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 24 May 1978<lb/>
Killer dope<lb/>
Since 1975, the Mexican government, with aid<lb/>
from the US government has been spraying<lb/>
marijuana fields with the deadly herbicide paraquat.<lb/>
Apparently unable to convince its citizens that<lb/>
marijuana is dangerous the United States government<lb/>
has embarked on a reckless campaign of poisoning a<lb/>
substance regularly used by approximately 15-20<lb/>
million people in this country.<lb/>
Although there is disagreement in scientific<lb/>
circles as to just how toxic paraquat is when<lb/>
consumed through various methods (such as<lb/>
inhaling ingesting, or burning), HEW Secretary<lb/>
Joseph Califano warned that contaminated marijuana<lb/>
could lead irreverisbie lung damage for regular and<lb/>
heavy users, and, conceivably fa other users ps wrII.<lb/>
As if to emphasize their disregard tor the heath of<lb/>
a sizeable portion of the populace, HEW accompani-<lb/>
ed its warning withan announcement that it will stop<lb/>
researching possible paraquat heath risks.<lb/>
And accordinq to the May 18 edition of Rolling<lb/>
Stone, spraying nas already resumed in Mexioo,<lb/>
posbibly more widespread than ever before.<lb/>
The feeling among marijuana users runs from<lb/>
mild concern to unabashed panic .<lb/>
Although no confirmed cases of paraquat<lb/>
poisoning have been reported, heavy users should be<lb/>
aware of the symptoms, which include coughing up<lb/>
blood, cyanosis (blue, gray, or dark purple<lb/>
discoloration of skin), absence of kidney function,<lb/>
and jaundice.<lb/>
No reliable home test kit has yet been developed<lb/>
to detect the chemical, but users may send suspicious<lb/>
samples to Street Pharmacologist, a state supported<lb/>
laboratory in Florida.<lb/>
Samples may be submitted according to the<lb/>
following procedures:<lb/>
1) Wrap one tabelspoon of marijuana in plastic in<lb/>
an envelope along with a) $5 to cover the cost of<lb/>
anaysis (this service is free to samples mailed from<lb/>
Flaida); b) specify the type of test torun: drug content<lb/>
a herbicide c) note oontent and aigin of the sample.<lb/>
2) Make up and assign the sample a random five<lb/>
digit number oie letter of alphabet, and your state<lb/>
oode. (example: NC 49720-K) This is used fa<lb/>
identification to obtain test results.<lb/>
Remember to both enclose the identification oode<lb/>
and to retain your own copy.<lb/>
3) Mark the outside of the envelope "HAND<lb/>
CANCEL"<lb/>
4) Mail the envelope to Street Pharmacologist<lb/>
P.O. Box 610233 Nath Miami Fla. 33161.<lb/>
5) approximately 10 days after postage, results<lb/>
may be obtained by telephoning 305-446-3585 in the<lb/>
afternoon hours.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years.<lb/>
" Were it left to me to decide whether we should have<lb/>
a government without newspapers or newspapers<lb/>
without government, I should not hesitate a moment to<lb/>
prefer the latter<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
EditorDoug White<lb/>
Managing EditorLeigh Coakley<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert M. Swaim<lb/>
MewsEditorsJ?an2ie Williams<lb/>
Jim Barnes<lb/>
Trends EditorSteve Bachner<lb/>
Sports EditorChris Hdloman<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Media Board of ECU and is<lb/>
distributed each Tuesday and Thursday, -isekly during the<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C 27834.<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni $6 annually. <lb/>
WAITED:<lb/>
One cartoonist; must<lb/>
be quick of pen and<lb/>
possess a biting,<lb/>
satirical wit.<lb/>
Inquire at the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
office immediately.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Reader defends Anita Bryant<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Concerning your article on<lb/>
page 14 of the 27 April 1978<lb/>
edition, the article concerning<lb/>
Anita Bryant, you state: "Anita's<lb/>
grace with God seems to be truly<lb/>
heartfelt and genuine "Exactly<lb/>
why this makes her want to<lb/>
launch a campaign against homo-<lb/>
sexuality is not clear<lb/>
Reason: Because she really is<lb/>
"Pledged to God and Jesus<lb/>
She stands as all saved (i.e<lb/>
Born again) Christains should<lb/>
stand; that is on the true,<lb/>
infallible, word of God, the Bible!<lb/>
Romans 1:18-27 says, in part:<lb/>
"For the Wrath of God is<lb/>
revealed from Heaven against all<lb/>
ungodliness and unrighteousness<lb/>
of men, who hold the truth in<lb/>
unrighteousness the men, lea-<lb/>
ving the natural use of the<lb/>
woman, burned in their lust one<lb/>
toward another; men with men<lb/>
working that which is unseem-<lb/>
ly<lb/>
Those are God's words. Not<lb/>
mine. Not Anita Bryant's. "Ye<lb/>
must be born again says Jesus<lb/>
Christ. (John 3:7).<lb/>
John Morgan<lb/>
Nuclear weapons plant lambasted<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Government scientists<lb/>
have discovered low-level radia-<lb/>
tion is far more dangerous than<lb/>
has been thought.<lb/>
Aooording to radiation experts<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Mancuso, in the<lb/>
March 23, issue of Rolling Stone,<lb/>
the corner stone of the nuclear<lb/>
safety program accepted levels of<lb/>
radiation exposure may have to<lb/>
be scrapped. (See also Jack<lb/>
Anderson 4-9-78, 3-27-78.)<lb/>
Extrapolating from a top<lb/>
radiation expert, Dr. John<lb/>
Gofman's figures less than 15<lb/>
pound of radioactive plutonium is<lb/>
enough to give lung cancer to all<lb/>
the people on earth, if each<lb/>
receives an average dose. Pluto-<lb/>
nium remains toxic for 250,000<lb/>
years and burns on oontact with<lb/>
air.<lb/>
At a 1957 Rocky Falts Nudear<lb/>
Weapons Rant fire, 48 pounds of<lb/>
plutonium were ignited and part-<lb/>
ially burned. An undetermined<lb/>
amount of plutonium escaped<lb/>
through damaged radiation fil-<lb/>
ters.<lb/>
Rocky Flats is only 16 miles<lb/>
northwest of Denver, Colorado.<lb/>
In 1969 we almost lost Denver<lb/>
when water was used to put out a<lb/>
plutonium fire.<lb/>
Water has been prohibited fa<lb/>
putting out plutonium fires due to<lb/>
the potential of a nuclear chain<lb/>
reaction.<lb/>
There have been over 200 fires<lb/>
at Rocky Flats, the last one about<lb/>
10 weeks ago. Eleven thousand<lb/>
acres of land and a water supply<lb/>
near Rocky Flats have been<lb/>
contaminated by plutonium and<lb/>
other radioactive materials.<lb/>
The cancer rate in Denver has<lb/>
already increased.<lb/>
The Governor of Colorado and<lb/>
the Colorado Department of<lb/>
Health oppose the existence of<lb/>
the Rocky Flats Nuclear Weapons<lb/>
Plant.<lb/>
Rocky Flats produces all the<lb/>
plutonium triggers fa all US<lb/>
nuclear bombs, of which we<lb/>
produce three per day.<lb/>
It only takes 218 nuclear<lb/>
bombs to destroy all the maja<lb/>
cities of the Soviet Union; and<lb/>
there are more than this many on<lb/>
one US Poseidon submarine.<lb/>
Write your US Senata, US<lb/>
Congressman, and President<lb/>
Carter asking that the Rocky Flats<lb/>
Nuclear Weapons Rant be shut<lb/>
down, and fa suppat of the<lb/>
Transfer Amendment and the<lb/>
Defense Economic Adjustment<lb/>
Act.<lb/>
The Transfer Amendment<lb/>
would transfer sane military<lb/>
funds into other areas of the<lb/>
economy; the Defense Economic<lb/>
Adjustment Act would set up<lb/>
conversion committees at defense<lb/>
facilities and a fund to provide fa<lb/>
waker security.<lb/>
Fa mae infamatiai call East<lb/>
Lansing Mobilization fa survival<lb/>
(517-351-4648) a Rocky Flats<lb/>
National Action (J03-832-1676).<lb/>
Chuck Will<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
(continued<lb/>
on p. 5<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0005"/><lb/>
?maaHBBHaMHMaMHI<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
24 May 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Parking tickets anger student<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
ToJDW:<lb/>
I would like to thank you on<lb/>
behalf of myself and all of those<lb/>
who have received parking tickets<lb/>
or been towed while attending<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
It is extremely annoying to<lb/>
know that students must surren-<lb/>
der their Constitutional rightsof a<lb/>
trial when they receive a ticket on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The only way to appeal such a<lb/>
ticket is to "ask" fa a $27 ticket<lb/>
so a court date can be scheduled<lb/>
in the Greenville Courthouse.<lb/>
I approached Neil Sessoms<lb/>
about the matter at the beginning<lb/>
of the school year, however, I<lb/>
never heard anymore about the<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
Come on students!<lb/>
Do we have to be subjected to<lb/>
being guilty without even a trial?<lb/>
Think about it.<lb/>
I'd like to see some action<lb/>
taken to set up a panel to hear<lb/>
student appeals. Either that or<lb/>
have more parking spaces avail-<lb/>
able for students.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Toni Trenda<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
3<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
i I<lb/>
' I<lb/>
 I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
Good times are great times for the easy taste of<lb/>
. v-??i ?????? K? v? o 0 ? ? ? n wv?t<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 24 May 1978<lb/>
Paraquat poses health hazard to pot smokers<lb/>
By JEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Secretary of HEW issued<lb/>
a statement last March warning<lb/>
nationwide users of marijuana<lb/>
that irreversible lung damage<lb/>
may result from the inhalation of<lb/>
Paraquat contaminated marijuan-<lb/>
a.<lb/>
HEW Secretary Joseph Cali-<lb/>
fano warned that marijuana con-<lb/>
taminated with the herbicide<lb/>
Paraquat could cause permanent<lb/>
lung damage for regular and<lb/>
heavy users of marijuana.<lb/>
The Secretary issued the<lb/>
warning based on preliminary<lb/>
studies conducted by the National<lb/>
Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA).<lb/>
The NIDA reports that 60<lb/>
percent of the marijuana in this<lb/>
country is shipped from Mexioo.<lb/>
In chemical analyses of 63<lb/>
marijuana samples confiscated in<lb/>
the southwestern U.S. by the<lb/>
Drug Eforcement Administration<lb/>
from October of I976 to late I977.<lb/>
the NIDA found 13 samples (21<lb/>
percent) to be contaminated with<lb/>
Paraquat with an average level of<lb/>
450 parts per million (ppm).<lb/>
The maximum level of<lb/>
contamination that is permitted<lb/>
for domestic use is 0.005 ppm,<lb/>
which is far below the levels<lb/>
found in the marijuana samples<lb/>
tested.<lb/>
The NIDA reports that "a<lb/>
rough estimate can be made that<lb/>
an individual who smokes three to<lb/>
five marijuana cigarettes a day<lb/>
could suffer measurable lung<lb/>
impairment after several months<lb/>
if the marijuana contained a least<lb/>
450 parts per million<lb/>
The report also cautions,<lb/>
however, there could also be risk<lb/>
of lung damage for individuals<lb/>
who use marinuana less often and<lb/>
in smaller amounts.<lb/>
The report also said that<lb/>
although ingestion of a concen-<lb/>
trated solution of Paraquat will<lb/>
cause toxic effects, eating Para-<lb/>
quat contaminated marijuana ap-<lb/>
pears to present no significant<lb/>
health hazard.<lb/>
Paraquat is a herbicide which<lb/>
is sprayed on marijuana plants in<lb/>
Mexioo to destay them under a<lb/>
program operated and funded by<lb/>
the Mexican government.<lb/>
In 1975 the U.S. gave Mexioo<lb/>
$40 million to buy aircraft and to<lb/>
train personnel to spray herbi-<lb/>
cides on poppy fields. The<lb/>
Mexicans, on their own initiative,<lb/>
went on to spray marijuana fields.<lb/>
In 1977, about 22,000 acres of<lb/>
poppies and 9,500 acres of<lb/>
marijuana plants were destroyed<lb/>
by the spraying in Mexioo.<lb/>
The contaminated marijuana,<lb/>
which may be disguised for street<lb/>
sales by mixing it with other<lb/>
marijuana, is not easily detected.<lb/>
The Paraquat, which is spray-<lb/>
ed from the air, sticks to the<lb/>
leaves of the Cannabis plant,<lb/>
drying them out through a heat<lb/>
reaction with the leaves' surface.<lb/>
The plant must sit in the bright<lb/>
sunlight fa several days befae<lb/>
the plant is destroyed.<lb/>
The deteriaat ion stops after<lb/>
the plant is harvested and press-<lb/>
ed into bricks fa shipment. Once<lb/>
harvested, the Paraquat remains<lb/>
largely intact on the plant. The<lb/>
result is that oontaminated mari-<lb/>
juana is mixed into the 3,000 tons<lb/>
of Mexican pot smuggled annual-<lb/>
ly into the U.S.<lb/>
A mimeographed sheet en-<lb/>
titled "Paraquat Fact Sheet" has<lb/>
been approved and run off by the<lb/>
ECU Drug Abuse Control center<lb/>
and will be distributed to summer<lb/>
school students, acoading to<lb/>
James Mai lay, dean of men.<lb/>
Lionel Kendrick, head of the<lb/>
ECU Drug Abuse Control and<lb/>
Dennis Tromba, an ECU psychol-<lb/>
oqy student, waked together to .<lb/>
write and produce the sheet.<lb/>
Kendrick said that the main<lb/>
purpose of the sheet was to clarify<lb/>
the facts about Paraquat because<lb/>
of misinfamatioi and rumor.<lb/>
The sheet explains the facts<lb/>
about Paraquat and the possible<lb/>
effect of smoking oontaminated<lb/>
marijuana acoading to the NIDA<lb/>
repat.<lb/>
The leaflet advised that no<lb/>
home test fa Paraquat has been<lb/>
established with proven reliability<lb/>
at this date, and advises calling<lb/>
REAL Crisis Intervention oenter<lb/>
fa mae infamatiai.<lb/>
See PARAQUAT- p.8)<lb/>
3VM<lb/>
omcL<lb/>
i; r a xn opimmG<lb/>
Monday - Sunday<lb/>
May tt - May 29<lb/>
Starting 4:30 PM<lb/>
VILLA ROMA<lb/>
?713 E. 10th St.<lb/>
730-104<lb/>
ITALIA FEAST<lb/>
Lasagna<lb/>
Eggplant<lb/>
Parmigiana<lb/>
Baked IMl<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Cacciatore<lb/>
Manicotti<lb/>
Stuffed Green<lb/>
Peppers<lb/>
A MYSTERIOUS FORCE which drew people to tne above photo, workmen on campus fall under the<lb/>
ground was ngtiosgjmJkeerMljeltus<lb/>
Garlic Bread<lb/>
Salad<lb/>
ALL TOC CAN EAT! $4.50<lb/>
5 OFF WITH THIS AD<lb/>
Great Mexican Eatery<lb/>
Eat in or take-out<lb/>
?at ?vm aav aaaa ?? ameaamaaam aaam ??? aw aaam am m on mam maam aaam ass 01<lb/>
No. 1 dinner $1.45<lb/>
Free refills on<lb/>
coffee or tea.<lb/>
(offer expires June 4,1978)<lb/>
Before you take the plunge,<lb/>
get a Baylor Aquanaut watch exclusively from Zales<lb/>
Zales handsome and rugged Baylor Aquana4<lb/>
is perfect for water sports and sportsters. $49.95<lb/>
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ZALES<lb/>
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?&amp;&amp;&amp;,?.? ,wj?.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0007"/><lb/>
??????????????MW<lb/>
nra<lb/>
24 May 1978 FQUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
ECU Hunger Coalition's walk raises $1,000<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Over $1,000 was raised in the<lb/>
ECU Hunger Coalition's seventh<lb/>
annual Walk for Development last<lb/>
May 13 according to Patrick<lb/>
O'Neill, one of the walk's coor-<lb/>
dinators.<lb/>
About 80 persons completed<lb/>
the 20 kilometer (12.5 mile)<lb/>
course. They ranged in age from 7<lb/>
to 66 years old.<lb/>
Wlakers were treated to<lb/>
doughnuts, Gatorade, soda, and<lb/>
other snacks at several check-<lb/>
points, in addition to a free lunch<lb/>
at the Baptist Student Union.<lb/>
The lunch was provided by<lb/>
several local businesses, church<lb/>
groups, and women's organiza-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"In the last six years, the walk<lb/>
has raised $15,000. Fifty per cent<lb/>
of the money we earn is spent on<lb/>
local projects to combat hunger,<lb/>
and the other half goes for<lb/>
international projects O'Neill<lb/>
said.<lb/>
One such project is the<lb/>
Campus Minister's Emergency<lb/>
Kitchen Fund, which gives pots,<lb/>
pans, food, baby bottle steriliz-<lb/>
ers, and nutritional advioe to the<lb/>
area's poor.<lb/>
This year's project is the<lb/>
International Caribbean Hunger<lb/>
Project.<lb/>
The coalition also recently<lb/>
sponsored a demonstration of<lb/>
nutritionally balanced meals in<lb/>
Winterville. A group of ECU<lb/>
home economics students prepar-<lb/>
ed the meals and spoke on good<lb/>
nutrition.<lb/>
"A lot of people in the United<lb/>
States aren't really starving, but<lb/>
they're malnourished because<lb/>
they don't know how to properly<lb/>
feed themselves O'Neill said.<lb/>
"Globally, approximately 800<lb/>
million people go to bed hungry<lb/>
every night. That's roughly four<lb/>
times the population of the United<lb/>
States<lb/>
O'Neill said the goal of the<lb/>
coalition is to raise the commu-<lb/>
nity's consciousness and make<lb/>
the community aware of the<lb/>
plight of a large segment of the<lb/>
world's population.<lb/>
"So far this year, we have had<lb/>
two fasts to raise consciousness,<lb/>
and each week we have a member<lb/>
with a sign board on campus<lb/>
displaying facts on world hunger.<lb/>
"Every week we change the<lb/>
sign he said.<lb/>
According to O'Neill, third<lb/>
world people are shocked that<lb/>
Americans feed grain to cattle.<lb/>
"I onoe met a missionary to<lb/>
Tanzania who had returned to the<lb/>
U.S. for several years and who<lb/>
was planning togo back to Africa.<lb/>
"i asked him what the Tan-<lb/>
zanians considered wealth, and<lb/>
what was their idea of being rich.<lb/>
And he siad that they could not<lb/>
conceive of feeding grain to<lb/>
cattle. They thought Americans<lb/>
must be incredibly wealthy to be<lb/>
able to afford to do that.<lb/>
THE LUXURY OF BEEF<lb/>
According to the Oxford Com-<lb/>
mittee for Famine Relief, a group<lb/>
based in Boston, 76 percent of all<lb/>
protein in the U.S. goes toward<lb/>
feeding livestock.<lb/>
One pound of beef and a<lb/>
pound of grain have the same<lb/>
amount of protein, but it takes<lb/>
anywhere from eight to 21 pounds<lb/>
of grain to produoe one pound of<lb/>
beef, according to the committee.<lb/>
"Were not saying to stop<lb/>
eating beef, but we should realize<lb/>
that it's a luxury. Maybe give it<lb/>
up one night a week or some-<lb/>
thing. Alooholic beverages are<lb/>
also big users of grain<lb/>
The Coalition has travelled<lb/>
throughout North Carolina to<lb/>
speak and show films on hunger<lb/>
and starvation. The coalition's<lb/>
programs are available to any<lb/>
organization at no cost, said<lb/>
O'Neill.<lb/>
"The potential fa the walk to<lb/>
become an annual event with<lb/>
mae impact could be realized<lb/>
through wore volunteers<lb/>
O'Neill said.<lb/>
HOW MANY QUIMPLES are seen in this pictured above, you win nothing, but we would still<lb/>
photograph? Do you know a quimple when you see like to hear from you.<lb/>
one? Or forty-three? If you can name the objects<lb/>
Welcome E.C.U. Students!<lb/>
Located 2 blocks from E.C.U. at the corner of 3rd &amp;<lb/>
Jarvis. We have everyday low prices that are more<lb/>
than competitive with any other store, large or<lb/>
small. A free cart service is available to push your<lb/>
groceries home. We accept Master Charge and Visa.<lb/>
We are your hometown food store away from home. We appreciate<lb/>
your business and strive to please in every way possible. Thank you<lb/>
for shopping Overtoil's.<lb/>
The home of Greenville's best meats!<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0008"/><lb/>
PageS FOUNTAINHEAD 24 May 1978<lb/>
Paraquat contamination spurs pot testing<lb/>
Continued from p. 6<lb/>
Dennis Tromba, a student<lb/>
who worked on the fact sheet, put<lb/>
together another two-page leaflet<lb/>
which advises students how and<lb/>
where to send marijuana samples<lb/>
to be tested and plans to<lb/>
distribute the leaflet to students<lb/>
also.<lb/>
Kendrick said that they did<lb/>
not feel that they oould publish<lb/>
such information on the testing<lb/>
centers because they felt they<lb/>
could not legally distribute any-<lb/>
thing condoning the use of an<lb/>
illegal substance.<lb/>
Street Pharmacologist, a test-<lb/>
ing center in Miami, Florida,<lb/>
reports that only 4 out of 1,000<lb/>
samples they had received from<lb/>
the East Coast were found to<lb/>
contain any Paraquat. All of the<lb/>
four contaminated samples were<lb/>
from Florida.<lb/>
The State Bureau of Investiga-<lb/>
tion in Raleigh told FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD that they had no labs<lb/>
within the state that keep statisti-<lb/>
cal data on Paraquat or that even<lb/>
tested for it.<lb/>
A spokesman from Street<lb/>
Pharmocologist .aid that they are<lb/>
testing commeraal home testing<lb/>
kits but they have not found any<lb/>
to be reliable.<lb/>
A REAL Crisis Information<lb/>
center spokesman said that they<lb/>
were unaware of home testing<lb/>
kits being sold in the Greenville<lb/>
area but that they were aware<lb/>
through street sources that a<lb/>
person could send off for one.<lb/>
The National Organization for<lb/>
the Reform of Marijuana Laws<lb/>
(NORML) has filed suit in District<lb/>
Court in Washington, D.C. in an<lb/>
effort to halt U.S. support and<lb/>
assistance fa the spraying of<lb/>
herbicides on marijuana and<lb/>
poppy fields in Mexico.<lb/>
The suit charges that four<lb/>
government agencies-Depart-<lb/>
ment of State, Drug Enforcement<lb/>
Administration, Agency fa Inter-<lb/>
national Development and the<lb/>
Department of Agriculture-failed<lb/>
to prepare an Environmental<lb/>
Impact Statement fa the spraying<lb/>
program, as required by the<lb/>
National Environmental Policy<lb/>
Act of 1969.<lb/>
Despirte knowledge of this<lb/>
hazard, the U.S has provided $30<lb/>
million and 70 airaaft in the last 2<lb/>
to 2 1 2 years to spray marijuana<lb/>
fields with Paraquat and poppy<lb/>
fields with 2,4-D, another herbi-<lb/>
ade, accading to NORML Execu-<lb/>
tive Driecta Keith Stroup in an<lb/>
artical in Focus on Alcohol and<lb/>
I Drugs.<lb/>
"A critical question Stroup<lb/>
said, " is whether the U.S.<lb/>
government should be actively<lb/>
involved in a program they know<lb/>
significantly threatens the health<lb/>
of millions of Americans. We are<lb/>
not challenging their authaity to<lb/>
destay aops; we are challenging<lb/>
the use of a herbicide that<lb/>
damages health<lb/>
Dr. Trenton Davis, chairman<lb/>
of the ECU Environmental Health<lb/>
program, commented that Para-<lb/>
quat is a toxic herbicide, even<lb/>
more powerful than DDT. which<lb/>
has been taken off the market.<lb/>
"The only recommended use<lb/>
in the U.S. of Paraquat is fa<lb/>
spraying Irish potatoes Davis<lb/>
said, refering to a 1978 Nath<lb/>
Carolina Agricultural Chemical<lb/>
Manual.<lb/>
"Accading to a toxicity scale<lb/>
of 6, Paraquat is about a 4 a 5, "<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
OSHA's waker's standards<lb/>
cautions that no mae than 500<lb/>
parts per million be inhaled<lb/>
through the air per day Davis<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We know that acute inges-<lb/>
tion of Paraquat is harmful he<lb/>
said, "but we haven't received<lb/>
any mae EPA repats. There's<lb/>
not enough infamatiai fa a<lb/>
oonclusioi<lb/>
William Durham of the Envi-<lb/>
ronmental Toxioology Division at<lb/>
Pr ' .<lb/>
thO RoQQOr-l Tri-?l.<lb/>
thai in the past the division had<lb/>
done research with Paraquat but<lb/>
thai no tests are being conducted<lb/>
there .it present.<lb/>
"We are ooncerned with<lb/>
Paraquat said Durham. "It isa<lb/>
very toxic herbiade<lb/>
"It has caused alot of poison-<lb/>
ing through people taking it<lb/>
eithei to Mentally a suiadally<lb/>
- death he said<lb/>
But there hasn't been any<lb/>
occupational pasoning that we<lb/>
CONSUMER TESTING WAS the "in" thing on campus this week as area snack bars tested then new<lb/>
ice confection "Fruit Gloop" on willing subjects.<lb/>
REE HOLSE Welcomes Summer School Student<lb/>
en 11:30 a.m. till 1:00 a.m. every nite.<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
ITALIAN<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
-iflMHHBMHBlHaHMHBHHiMHMHIHBMHMMB<lb/>
s<lb/>
A<lb/>
N<lb/>
D<lb/>
W 1<lb/>
<lb/>
H<lb/>
E<lb/>
S<lb/>
li(<lb/>
Di<lb/>
D<lb/>
I<lb/>
N<lb/>
N<lb/>
E<lb/>
R<lb/>
S<lb/>
?$<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0009"/><lb/>
???????????????????h<lb/>
HHM<lb/>
'A Renaissance man<lb/>
24 May 1978 FQUNfTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
u:<lb/>
r new<lb/>
Acclaimed pop musician John<lb/>
Hartford will appear in concert at<lb/>
Greenville's Roxy Theatre Tues-<lb/>
day and Wednesday May 30 and<lb/>
31 for the theatre's first summer<lb/>
concert.<lb/>
Hartford plays the banjo with<lb/>
abandon as well as a hypnotic<lb/>
fiddle. He also creates a unique<lb/>
sound with his six sting guitar.<lb/>
He's been reviewed as "the<lb/>
only lyricist in current populr<lb/>
music who's fit to be called a<lb/>
poet and classified in Dr. at<lb/>
being "among the Renaiss nee<lb/>
men of contemporary pop<lb/>
music<lb/>
Sophisticated word man, dry<lb/>
humorist, artist, poet, nverboat<lb/>
hand - he is "the best me I know<lb/>
how to be<lb/>
Born in New York City, raised<lb/>
m St. Louis by a doctor father and<lb/>
a painter mother. Hartford got his<lb/>
first banjo (beat up, no head) at<lb/>
ten. He learned to play banjo,<lb/>
fiddle, dobro and guitar in that<lb/>
chronology and order of prefer-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
Before becoming a session<lb/>
musician inNashville, John work-<lb/>
ed as a sign painter, commercial<lb/>
artist, riverboat deckhand on the<lb/>
Mississippi and a disc jockey.<lb/>
His Nashville sessions led to a<lb/>
contract with RCA for whom he<lb/>
eventually cut eight albums.<lb/>
He later recorded for Warner<lb/>
Brothers and. most recently, for<lb/>
Flying Fish.<lb/>
Tom Smothers heard one of<lb/>
these albums and flew John to<lb/>
Hollywood to write songs and<lb/>
dialogue and perform on the<lb/>
Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour<lb/>
and the Summer Brothers<lb/>
Smothers Show.<lb/>
This led in turn to regular<lb/>
appearances on The Glenn<lb/>
Campbell Goodtime Hour.<lb/>
inhere Hart fad's fame skyrocket-<lb/>
ed with Campbell's recording of<lb/>
Gentle On My Mind, which<lb/>
won three Grammies and was for<lb/>
two years the most recorded song<lb/>
m the world.<lb/>
Following this period Hartford<lb/>
toured successfully with his own<lb/>
band, attracting a large and<lb/>
devoted following.<lb/>
But he began to reevaluate his<lb/>
own musical development and<lb/>
ultimately concluded that per-<lb/>
forming as a solo would be far<lb/>
more challenging and would force<lb/>
greater development of his tal-<lb/>
ents on banjo and fiddle.<lb/>
Hartford's roots are deep in<lb/>
bluegrass, and his early music<lb/>
was much influenced by Earl<lb/>
Scruggs.<lb/>
As his career has progressed<lb/>
he has developed a very personal<lb/>
style, still bluegrass orient but<lb/>
with off-beat arrangements and<lb/>
lyrics which reflect his own<lb/>
unique, humorous and sophis-<lb/>
ticated perspective.<lb/>
There is no disputing the<lb/>
wisdom of Hartford's decision to<lb/>
work alone.<lb/>
In the ; he quit<lb/>
and John<lb/>
Hn he<lb/>
ting on to<lb/>
she<lb/>
John Hartford comes to Greenville on May 30, 31<lb/>
op musician John ???? J -v FM.<lb/>
"Sophisticated word man, dry humorist<lb/>
He's been reviewed as 'the only lyricist in<lb/>
current popular music who s fit to be<lb/>
called a poet' and classified in print as<lb/>
being 'among the Renaissance men of<lb/>
contemporary pop music<lb/>
9 99<lb/>
the ability to project his personal<lb/>
magnetism across the huge gap<lb/>
between performer and audience.<lb/>
It is becoming more and more<lb/>
difficult to see Hartford in<lb/>
conoert.<lb/>
His professional success has<lb/>
given him the freedom to take<lb/>
time off for his other love -<lb/>
river boats.<lb/>
He spends every moment he<lb/>
can aboard the graceful beauties<lb/>
just as he did in his youth.<lb/>
He spent countless hours<lb/>
memorizing the minute details of<lb/>
our greatest river, the Mississippi<lb/>
a basic requirement fa becoming<lb/>
a licensed riverboat pilot.<lb/>
This love of life on the river is<lb/>
beautifully expressed in his<lb/>
music.<lb/>
When Hartford sings "Skip-<lb/>
pm' in the Mississippi Dew" a<lb/>
"Julia Belle Swaim the wads<lb/>
and music ar true and tender<lb/>
expression of his deepest feel-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
that most of the brain - maps on<lb/>
which you appear are nine years<lb/>
out of date0<lb/>
John: Well, I'm thankful for that.<lb/>
 mean, I can rmember when I<lb/>
didn't even have that. I've been<lb/>
able to get a few jobs with it.<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
In this month's issue of Pickm<lb/>
magazine rock columnist Tom Hill<lb/>
spoke with Hartfad. Below is an<lb/>
excerpt from the interview.<lb/>
Tom: Do you mind the fact<lb/>
Tom: It doesn't bother vou,<lb/>
playing to so few people after<lb/>
those days with the Smothers<lb/>
Brothers and Glen Campbell0<lb/>
John: Well, Bill Monroe's been<lb/>
playing to small audiences all his<lb/>
ACCLAIMED POP MUSICIAN John Hartford will<lb/>
n concert at Greenville's Roxy Theatre May<lb/>
30 and 31.<lb/>
life, so if Bill Monroe cna play to<lb/>
small audiences for 45 years, I<lb/>
can do it for 20 He laughs.<lb/>
Hartford laughs easily and fre-<lb/>
quently. ive always admired the<lb/>
Grand Ole Opry acts that ply the<lb/>
same trade year after year after<lb/>
year It's almost like providing a<lb/>
service-like a blacksmith-some-<lb/>
thing like that And I have fancies<lb/>
toward being that kind of music-<lb/>
am<lb/>
Tom: In the liner notes to your<lb/>
first album. -John Hartford<lb/>
Looks at Life you had a<lb/>
monograph about trapping the<lb/>
counterfeit demon of commer-<lb/>
cial music You had a shot at it,<lb/>
but I feel that you abandon it<lb/>
voluntarily.<lb/>
John: Well, that .as a little<lb/>
pretentious for that time, cause I<lb/>
had thought that they way to be<lb/>
commercial was by being commer-<lb/>
cial, which I guess is still partially<lb/>
true But I have since then<lb/>
concsiouslytneti to be commer-<lb/>
aal.<lb/>
Tom: That surprises me.<lb/>
ohn. I've tried to write another<lb/>
song like ' Gentle on May Mind,<lb/>
but l can't do it. Laughs So I<lb/>
think that was a little pretentious.<lb/>
Tom It sound s to me like your<lb/>
more recent stuff is saying,  7o<lb/>
hell with commercial: I'm gonna<lb/>
do what I want and take my<lb/>
chances<lb/>
John Well, there's this much<lb/>
about it.1've aways been very<lb/>
careful, cause I didn t want to be<lb/>
a success at something that<lb/>
didn't want to be successful at<lb/>
You Know, it seems like vou<lb/>
compromise a uttle bit, ana then<lb/>
you buy it back But I think I m<lb/>
being pretty seit-ndulgent right<lb/>
now. Picking a banc and steering<lb/>
a steamboat-that s what I ve<lb/>
always wanted to do<lb/>
rom Ah-the steamboats What<lb/>
about the steamboats'1<lb/>
TOO "ARTSY-CRAFTS<lb/>
John I've always loved boats,<lb/>
ana when I was in the fith grade I<lb/>
had a teacher who was an expert<lb/>
on steamboats and haa spent her<lb/>
lifeitme pursuing their histories,<lb/>
coileang photographs, interview-<lb/>
ing captains ana everything like<lb/>
that. Her name was Ruth Ferris,<lb/>
ana she infected me with it And<lb/>
for years that's what I wanted to<lb/>
do-be a river man I wanted to<lb/>
work on an old packet boat, but<lb/>
that s ust a romantic fantasy.<lb/>
There was one of two of em left<lb/>
that I got to nde on when I was a<lb/>
kid. Ana then I went and woked<lb/>
on towboats. When I was in high<lb/>
school I worked on towboats for<lb/>
two years till I realized that I was<lb/>
too artsy-craftsy to do that tor<lb/>
the rest of my life. Ana I got off<lb/>
the towboats ana went to playing<lb/>
'idCie m aance halls around St<lb/>
-OUIS.<lb/>
??????????????<lb/>
Fa further infamatiai on the<lb/>
conoert and tickets call 752-7483<lb/>
01 752-8949.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 24 May 1978<lb/>
Free Flick Joseph Andrews<lb/>
to be presented on Mall<lb/>
on Tuesday night, May 30<lb/>
Writers needed<lb/>
for movie, art,<lb/>
record reviews<lb/>
Call<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
This Tuesday night, May 30,<lb/>
the Student Union will present<lb/>
its first free flick of the summer,<lb/>
Joseph Andrews,at 9 p.m on the<lb/>
Mall.<lb/>
The rain site for the film will<lb/>
be Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Based on Henry Feilding's<lb/>
18th Century novel of the same<lb/>
name, Joseph Andrews tells of a<lb/>
young Englishman who "served<lb/>
the Lady Booby but loved the<lb/>
little Fanny<lb/>
The film is done in the<lb/>
tradition of Tom Jones and stars<lb/>
Ann Margaret (as Lady Booby),<lb/>
Peter Firth, Michael Hordern,<lb/>
Beryl Reid, and Jim Dale.<lb/>
Thurs. Concert Hlite at the<lb/>
STAIRCASE<lb/>
Don't miss one of the hottest Top 40<lb/>
groups in the Carolinas.<lb/>
Summer school special Thurs.<lb/>
Vz price admission til 10:00<lb/>
CONE EARLY!<lb/>
Fri. End off Week special 8:30 - 10:00.<lb/>
Sunday is Ladies nite.<lb/>
"ANNIE HALL" is lack in Greenville for it's third run The film won<lb/>
Best Picture at this year's Academy Awards Woody Allen's script<lb/>
co-authored by Marshall Briokman won Best Screenplay and his<lb/>
directorial tour de force earned him another award, this time for Best<lb/>
Director. In the title role. Diane Keaton took the honors as Best<lb/>
Actress. "Annie Hall" depicts Allen's exploits with women Allen has<lb/>
written and appeared in his own television specials and is a frequent<lb/>
contributor roThe New YOrker magazine<lb/>
The<lb/>
Jolly Roger<lb/>
Greenville's First Disco Does it Again-<lb/>
See the All New Fabulous Light Show<lb/>
THURSDAY NIGHT!<lb/>
Doors open at 9:00<lb/>
Watch for Student<lb/>
Orientation Specials<lb/>
Every Sun. &amp; Mon.<lb/>
During the Summer<lb/>
Z09 E 5th St.<lb/>
752-468<lb/>
Art &amp; Camera Shop<lb/>
526 SOUTH COTANCHE STREET GREENVILLE, N. C 27834<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
12 Exp. Color Film<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
? KcdecoJor<lb/>
? OAF<lb/>
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Not Included<lb/>
82.49<lb/>
VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
I MUST ACCOMPANY ORDf R<lb/>
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PON<lb/>
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MUSI ACCOMPANY ORDER<lb/>
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PLAZA CAMERA<lb/>
wShli ?? V.J<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0011"/><lb/>
??HnnHi<lb/>
???????????????o<lb/>
24 May 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Spoleto Festival to include 'almost 200 events'<lb/>
Spoleto FestivaJ U.S.A.<lb/>
includes almost 200 events, rang-<lb/>
ing from opera to dance to jazz to<lb/>
theatre and film.<lb/>
Among the highlights of the<lb/>
Festival is the American premiere<lb/>
of Ballets Felix Blaska.<lb/>
Blaska, a renowned dancer<lb/>
and choreographer in Europe,<lb/>
will bring Spoleto Festival U.S.A.<lb/>
what has been called "a fascinat-<lb/>
ing program of modern life<lb/>
expressing dances<lb/>
His famous work "Tu Es<lb/>
Cela" ("You Are That") is a<lb/>
search into religion and primiti-<lb/>
vity of human beings.<lb/>
One critic termed it a sort of<lb/>
mystic and frantic visionan<lb/>
irresistable magic<lb/>
Ballets Felix Blaska will per-<lb/>
form at the Cistern of the College<lb/>
of Charleston.<lb/>
A new raked stage has been<lb/>
constructed for the Cistern, and it<lb/>
will provide excellent visibility for<lb/>
audiences attending the dance<lb/>
program.<lb/>
JANACEKS'GLAGOLITIC<lb/>
MASS" TO BE PERFORMED<lb/>
"The Glagolitic Mass writ-<lb/>
ten by Leos Janacek when he was<lb/>
72 years old, was to honor the<lb/>
meirxxy of Brothers St. Cyril and<lb/>
St. Methodius of Salonika, who<lb/>
brought Christianity to the Czech<lb/>
people when they settled in<lb/>
Moravia.<lb/>
The two-day event is conceiv-<lb/>
ed, produced and directed by<lb/>
Joseph Wishy, who presented the<lb/>
acclaimed Scriabin Day at last<lb/>
year's Spoleto Festival.<lb/>
This year is the 50th anniver-<lb/>
sary of the death of Janacek, the<lb/>
great Czech composer, and one of<lb/>
the most original figures in 20th<lb/>
century opera.<lb/>
They employed the so-called<lb/>
Glagolitic script, which used the<lb/>
idiomatic sounds of Slavonic<lb/>
speech.<lb/>
In recent times, the original<lb/>
Glagolitic script has been replac-<lb/>
ed by Latin characters, and it was<lb/>
from Latin that Janacek based his<lb/>
 M ass<lb/>
The  Mass consists of eight<lb/>
sections, with the thematic mater-<lb/>
ial rich, expressive, full of<lb/>
character, and sometimes folklike<lb/>
in cut.<lb/>
The "Mass" begins and ends<lb/>
with instrumental movements,<lb/>
an "Introduction" and an "In<lb/>
-trada<lb/>
Brass fanfares give these<lb/>
pieces,which frame the work,<lb/>
individual cola.<lb/>
Janacek might have had in<lb/>
mind the fanfares he often heard<lb/>
at the festive masses, played as<lb/>
the priest approached the altar<lb/>
and again, as they left after the<lb/>
conclusion of Mass.<lb/>
The brilliant first perfromance<lb/>
of the "Glagolitic Mass" was on<lb/>
Dec. 5, 1927, in Brno, with<lb/>
Jaroslav Kvapil conducting.<lb/>
Its fame scon spread and in<lb/>
1929-30, performances took place<lb/>
in Geneva, Berlin. New York and<lb/>
later, London.<lb/>
Other special programs at<lb/>
Spoleto honoring Janacek include<lb/>
special dance programs, lectures,<lb/>
and piano recitals by a well-<lb/>
renowned pupil of Janacek.<lb/>
Rudolph Firkusny.<lb/>
The Box Office fa the May<lb/>
25-June 11 Spoleto Festival<lb/>
U.S.A. in Charleston, S.C. open-<lb/>
ed today at theGaillard Municipal<lb/>
Auditaium.<lb/>
Until May 25th, the Box Office<lb/>
will be open from 10 a.m. to 6<lb/>
p.m Monday through Saturday.<lb/>
During the FestivaJ, it will be<lb/>
opened daily from 10 a.m. to 9<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Box Office Manager Dick<lb/>
Robison said today that good<lb/>
seats are still available fa most of<lb/>
the Festival's events.<lb/>
He also announced the addit-<lb/>
ion of two concerts: a June 7 1:30<lb/>
p.m. concert by the Spoleto<lb/>
Festival Brass Quintet at the<lb/>
Garden Theatre and a June 4 3:00<lb/>
p.m. concert by Charleston singer<lb/>
Deanna McBroom at the First<lb/>
Soots Presbyterian Church, a part<lb/>
of the Intermezza Series.<lb/>
Tickets fa both concerts are<lb/>
$2.50.<lb/>
Tickets fa all Janacek Cele-<lb/>
bratiai events, as well as all other<lb/>
perfamances at Spoleto Festival<lb/>
U.S.A. 1978 are available now at<lb/>
the Gaillard Municipal Audita-<lb/>
ium<lb/>
Vietnam: A Guide to Reference<lb/>
Sources is favorably reviewed<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
"Vietnam: A Guide to Refer-<lb/>
ence Sources a recently-<lb/>
published book by ECU Docu-<lb/>
ments Librarian Michael Cotter,<lb/>
has been favaably reviewed in<lb/>
in the April 1 issue of "Library<lb/>
Journal<lb/>
The book was published by<lb/>
the Boston firm of G.K. Hall.<lb/>
Befae he joined the staff of<lb/>
ECU'S Joyner Library in March,<lb/>
Cotter was a member of Harvard<lb/>
Luke Whisnant awarded<lb/>
Russell M. Christman<lb/>
Memorial Scholarship<lb/>
University'sCollege Library staff.<lb/>
He has been a book selection<lb/>
specialist in the area of African<lb/>
and Southeast Asian studies,<lb/>
Chief Documents Librarian and<lb/>
Reference librarian fa Docu-<lb/>
ments at Harvard.<lb/>
Ho is the autha of an article<lb/>
on the scoa histay of the<lb/>
Vietnamese southward movement<lb/>
which appeared in the "Journal<lb/>
of Southeast Asian Histay<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Tight<lb/>
Wed. &amp; Thurs.<lb/>
Robert Rory,<lb/>
&amp; Rickey<lb/>
Fri Sat. &amp; Sun.<lb/>
Coming next week Epic Recording Artist<lb/>
Mollv Hatchet<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Luke Whisnant of Chariate, a<lb/>
junia English maja at ECU, has<lb/>
been awarded the first annual<lb/>
Russell M. Christman Memaial<lb/>
Scholarship by the ECU Dept. of<lb/>
English.<lb/>
The $100 award is given on<lb/>
the basis of academic achieve-<lb/>
ment, outstanding potential in the<lb/>
field of English, and leadership in<lb/>
extra-curricular activities.<lb/>
Whisnant, 20, is majaing in<lb/>
the English department's Writing<lb/>
Program and served as edita of<lb/>
this year's REBEL, the campus<lb/>
literary and art magazine.<lb/>
He has maintained a 3.1<lb/>
academic grade point average<lb/>
and is pursing a mina in<lb/>
philosophy.<lb/>
The East Mecklenburg High<lb/>
School graduate said he plans to<lb/>
apply the scholarship toward<lb/>
academic fees next year.<lb/>
Whisnant, who has had sev-<lb/>
eral of his poems published in<lb/>
various Nath Carolina maga-<lb/>
zines, said he will attend grad-<lb/>
uate school when he completes<lb/>
his studies here.<lb/>
The scholarship was recently<lb/>
established to hona Russell<lb/>
Christman, an instructa in the<lb/>
English department until his<lb/>
death in 1976.<lb/>
Whisnant isthesonof Beth C.<lb/>
Whisnant of 6531 Monroe Rd<lb/>
Charlotte.<lb/>
CLZEUO<lb/>
lll!t iniLts uou to UXOUM4 tnxouan our uniuiu:<lb/>
ubctiom of Ljifti t" tueoxatbn accexiorUi<lb/>
Cowm of$&amp;  Coianekk , downtown, xuuwiEu<lb/>
University<lb/>
Book Exchange<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Summer School Special<lb/>
Coupon Sale $<lb/>
One<lb/>
Dollar<lb/>
Off<lb/>
Gym Shorts ree-2.95<lb/>
with couponf.O$<lb/>
Tennis Shorts r?s- $6.95 and $7-95<lb/>
with coupon $5.9$ ana $6.95<lb/>
T-Shirts ree- $2.95!<lb/>
with coupon $1.9$<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 24 May 1978<lb/>
Milius' Big Wednesday<lb/>
takes surfing seriously:<lb/>
'non-exptoitative prcxhictioii<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
The transition from adolle-<lb/>
scent to adult, the oonfrontive<lb/>
experiences that mark maturity,<lb/>
and the presence of a lifestyle<lb/>
which flows from true events, are<lb/>
the primary ingredients for a<lb/>
special film that writer-director<lb/>
John Milius has been saving for<lb/>
this precise moment.<lb/>
"Big Wednesday an A-<lb/>
Team production for Warner<lb/>
Bros, release, is a reflective look<lb/>
at friendship and the social<lb/>
changes which occured during<lb/>
1960's.<lb/>
The story evolves from the<lb/>
Milius past, the Southern Califor-<lb/>
nia beach atmosphere, and the<lb/>
personalities who symbolized<lb/>
surfing's renaissance.<lb/>
It is an accurate representa-<lb/>
tion taken from over two decades<lb/>
of personal involvement, years<lb/>
that Milius spent riding waves in<lb/>
California at places like Malibu,<lb/>
and in Hawaii at Sunset Beach on<lb/>
Oahu's North Shore.<lb/>
As one of the film industry's<lb/>
most prominent and gifted<lb/>
screenwriters, Milius' credits in-<lb/>
clude "The Life and Times of<lb/>
Judge Roy Bean "Dirty<lb/>
Harry "Magnum Force<lb/>
"Jeremiah Johnson "Evel<lb/>
Knievel and "Apocalypse<lb/>
Now<lb/>
He became a director, he<lb/>
says, to defend his writing.<lb/>
' ? Big Wednesday is his third<lb/>
film, following "Dillinger" and<lb/>
the widely acclaimed "The Wind<lb/>
and the Lion both of which he<lb/>
also wrote.<lb/>
' Big Wednesday is the story<lb/>
of three close friends who are all<lb/>
known surfers sharing a lifestyle<lb/>
on the verge of tremendous<lb/>
change.<lb/>
The film deals directly with<lb/>
those pivotal moments which<lb/>
made the 1960's unique, particu-<lb/>
larly with respect to a system of<lb/>
val ues that are close to the oore of<lb/>
John Milius' creative sensibili-<lb/>
ties. The script, written with<lb/>
friend and fellow surfer Dennis<lb/>
Asberg, emphasizes the need for<lb/>
a code of honor, for loyalty, and<lb/>
for respect.<lb/>
It is a strong, romantic<lb/>
concept, which brings the film to<lb/>
its awesome climax, a day unlike<lb/>
any other, sweeping clean the<lb/>
time that went before.<lb/>
It is an insiaht to John Milius<lb/>
WRITER-DIRECTOR JOHN Milius and actor<lb/>
Jan-Michael Vincent collaborate on "Big Wednes-<lb/>
day a reflective look<lb/>
changes.<lb/>
friendship and social<lb/>
and his pursuit of excellence that<lb/>
"Big Wednesday" is as accurate<lb/>
as it could possibly be, beginning<lb/>
with the initial concept and<lb/>
following through to the complet-<lb/>
ed film.<lb/>
Jan-Michael Vincent plays<lb/>
Matt Johnson, the premier surfer<lb/>
of the group whose life is an<lb/>
extension of his surfing ability,<lb/>
his adolescence, and his dominat-<lb/>
ion of an era.<lb/>
Vincent, who starred in " Baby<lb/>
Blue Marine "White Line<lb/>
Fever "Vigilante Foroe" and<lb/>
"Damnation Alley has been<lb/>
O.<lb/>
ffoorf<lb/>
w<lb/>
<lb/>
Ttt<lb/>
0<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
Buy<lb/>
cujkm ty? Co-t 9W f<lb/>
A Sub &amp; Get Another of the Same For<lb/>
$?&amp;<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
 I2 Price h<lb/>
?J<lb/>
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Offer expires May 28th.<lb/>
Phone in order for pick-up Phone 752-6130 521 Cotanche St. Georgetown SJioppes<lb/>
m<lb/>
?cliccl Kiel's I i ii i is<lb/>
I i- H il<lb/>
n?u ill il ?i I<lb/>
i 4 I II 4 I ? M.<lb/>
i ??n? U vi M?<lb/>
(S?l U Pimi's V M?ll?<lb/>
V?l?<lb/>
liiiltli??i4i<lb/>
II ill ll<lb/>
111 III<lb/>
i IK MM MM!<lb/>
ii I i? I<lb/>
(I ll ? expire Hi II. I?s)<lb/>
surfing since the age of 15, when<lb/>
he would leave school in Hanford,<lb/>
California, and head for the<lb/>
ocean.<lb/>
 Big Wednesday is the third<lb/>
major feature for William Katt,<lb/>
who received outstanding reviewr<lb/>
for his performances in "Carrie"<lb/>
and "First Love<lb/>
In "Big Wednesday" he play;<lb/>
the past of Jack Barlow, the most<lb/>
perspective and sympathetic oi<lb/>
the three friends.<lb/>
Gary Busey plays Leroy, a<lb/>
character who is nicknamed "The<lb/>
Masochist and who is the most<lb/>
uninhibited of the three surfers.<lb/>
A native of Oklahoma whose<lb/>
assert iveness and spontaneous<lb/>
energy are the delight of his<lb/>
friends, Leroy is an especially<lb/>
appropriate role for Busey, who<lb/>
was born in Goose Creek, Texas,<lb/>
and is making his fourth film.<lb/>
His first, "The Gumball<lb/>
Rally was followed by "A Star<lb/>
is Born" and "Straight Time<lb/>
Patti D'Arbanville plays Sally,<lb/>
a girl who comes to the beach<lb/>
area from Chicago and is quickly<lb/>
the focus of Jack's romantic<lb/>
interest.<lb/>
She has been a model and an<lb/>
actress since the age of three,<lb/>
when she became the Ivory Soap<lb/>
Baby, an assignment she held<lb/>
until she was six years old.<lb/>
She has appeared in "Mid-<lb/>
night Cowboy" and "Rancho<lb/>
Deluxe as well as a number of<lb/>
films in England and France.<lb/>
" Big Wednesday" is her first<lb/>
starring opportunity.<lb/>
Lee Puree!I appears as Peggy,<lb/>
Matt's fun-loving and loyal girl-<lb/>
friend.<lb/>
Lee, who recently completed a<lb/>
starring role in "Almost<lb/>
Summer for Universal, has also<lb/>
starred in "Adam at 6 AM<lb/>
"Dirty Little Billy "Kid Blue<lb/>
"Stand Up and Be Counted" and<lb/>
"Mr. Majestyk<lb/>
Other key roles in the film<lb/>
include Sam Melville as Bear, the<lb/>
surfboard shaper and traditiona-<lb/>
list (who starred for four years as<lb/>
Mike Danko on "The Rookies"<lb/>
TV series); Darrell Fetty as<lb/>
Waxer (who oo-starred in<lb/>
"Stunts" and appeared in "The<lb/>
Wind and the Lion"); Barbara<lb/>
Hale, who is actually William<lb/>
Katt'smother, playing his mother<lb/>
in the film, and screenplay<lb/>
co-author Dennis Asberg, making<lb/>
his acting debut as a con-artist<lb/>
named Slick.<lb/>
Surfing is the: 'hread of<lb/>
continuity in "Big Wednesday"<lb/>
and it is an element in the film<lb/>
which has received John Milius'<lb/>
devoted attention<lb/>
This is the first feature which<lb/>
takes surfing seriously. It is<lb/>
non-exploitative in this respect,<lb/>
giving the sport an almost<lb/>
documentary reverence.<lb/>
Two stars of the film.<lb/>
Jan-Michael Vincent and William<lb/>
Katt, both surf, and do their own<lb/>
surfing in the movie.<lb/>
The creative team assembled<lb/>
for the production includes an-<lb/>
ematographer Bruce Surtees,<lb/>
who was nominated for an<lb/>
Academy Award for "Lenny<lb/>
film editor Robert L. Wolfe, who<lb/>
cut "The Wind and the Lion" and<lb/>
was Oscar nominated for "All<lb/>
The President's Men and prod-<lb/>
uction designer Charles Rosen,<lb/>
whose credits include "Taxi<lb/>
Driver" and "The Producers<lb/>
fitV re<lb/>
fm<lb/>
LJut best bock) UJCUJE<lb/>
$17.50 $25.00<lb/>
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JexI to -Kings. ccxidujiJr<lb/>
fpfkonM. 752-7(30<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0013"/><lb/>
???????BBBHBI<lb/>
?11<lb/>
String Orchestras<lb/>
24 May 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
School-aged musicians from the<lb/>
local area will be featured in<lb/>
performance when two String<lb/>
Project Youth Orchestras and a<lb/>
Suzuki Ensemble present a con-<lb/>
cert Sunday, May 7, at 3 p.m. in<lb/>
ECU'S Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
The program is free and open<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
The Intermediate Orchestra,<lb/>
with youngsters from first<lb/>
through sixth grades participat-<lb/>
ing, will perform "Two Tone<lb/>
Pictures for String Orchestra" by<lb/>
Phillip Gordon and Gordon's<lb/>
arrangement of the "Air" from<lb/>
J.S. Bach's "Peasant Cantata<lb/>
The Youth Orchestra, which<lb/>
includes students from fourth<lb/>
grade through high school, will<lb/>
perform a movement from<lb/>
William Boyce's Symphony No. 8,<lb/>
the Rondeau and Badinerie from<lb/>
the Bach Suite No. 2 in B minor<lb/>
and the Rondeau from Henry<lb/>
PurceM's Suite from Abdelazer.<lb/>
The Suzuki Ensemble, which<lb/>
includes young musicians who<lb/>
began instruction in ECU's<lb/>
annual String Camp and continu-<lb/>
ed their studies the following year<lb/>
in weekly classes at the ECU<lb/>
School of Music, will perform the<lb/>
Suzuki literature familiar to many<lb/>
Greenville parents.<lb/>
These pieces begin with<lb/>
"Twinkle, Twinkle" and range<lb/>
through Book Two of the Suzuki<lb/>
method to the "Two Grenadiers"<lb/>
by Robert Schumann.<lb/>
The String Project began 11<lb/>
years ago as the result of an<lb/>
institutional assistance grant rec-<lb/>
eived by the School of M usic from<lb/>
the Office of Health, Education<lb/>
and Welfare.<lb/>
It is a cooperative venture of<lb/>
ECU and the Greenville City<lb/>
Schools.<lb/>
The Project has reached its<lb/>
goal, the development of a<lb/>
comprehensive program of string<lb/>
instruction in the community for<lb/>
school children of all ages.<lb/>
Two teachers employed by the<lb/>
City Schools provide string and<lb/>
achestra instruction, and ECU<lb/>
offers weekly violin classes and<lb/>
sponsors the orchestras and the<lb/>
summer String Camp.<lb/>
In the waKe of a critically-<lb/>
acclaimed performance in Wash-<lb/>
ington's Kennedy Center for the<lb/>
Performing Arts, the North<lb/>
Carolina Symphony returns home<lb/>
to launch North Carolina Sym-<lb/>
phony Month.<lb/>
Governor James B. Hunt, Jr<lb/>
in proclaiming May "Symphony<lb/>
Month issued a proclamation<lb/>
which reads, in part, "Whereas,<lb/>
the North Carolina Symphony<lb/>
creates joy and excitement in<lb/>
North Carolinians throughout the<lb/>
THE SUZUKI ENSEMBLE includes young music-<lb/>
ians who began instruction in string camp and<lb/>
continued their studies the following year in weekly<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
nation, and whereas, the North<lb/>
Carolina Symphony, being truly<lb/>
the'peoplesorchestra relies on<lb/>
the support and involvement of<lb/>
citizens throughout this state,<lb/>
therefore, I proclaim May, 1978,<lb/>
Carolina Symphony<lb/>
as North<lb/>
Month<lb/>
During the month of May<lb/>
volunteers throughout North<lb/>
Carolina will be conducting the<lb/>
annual membership drive fa the<lb/>
1978-79 Symphony Season, sym-<lb/>
phony officials said.<lb/>
"We are delighted that so<lb/>
many volunteers have expressed<lb/>
such a strong interest in our<lb/>
program and that so many want to<lb/>
particpate Patty Shelley,<lb/>
symphony directa of oanmunity<lb/>
services, said.<lb/>
Subscription tickets to the<lb/>
symphony's 1978-79 season may<lb/>
be purchased from any local<lb/>
symphony volunteer a fran the<lb/>
symphaiy office in Raleigh.<lb/>
Perfaming evening concerts<lb/>
to adults and educational matine-<lb/>
es to N.C. school children, the<lb/>
symphony and its ensembles last<lb/>
year traveled over 20,000 miles<lb/>
and perfamed to audiences num-<lb/>
bering mae than a quarter of a<lb/>
million people.<lb/>
Danskin<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD staff tenter cites<lb/>
sensationalist journalism in area<lb/>
By DAVID LATHAM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Might as well start it off with a<lb/>
bang.<lb/>
Although this stay is not<lb/>
original?it comes from a piece by<lb/>
Dennis Rogers in the News and<lb/>
Observer - I am simply ripping it<lb/>
off as advised.<lb/>
Fa those of you that haven't<lb/>
seen it, the piece is at least wath<lb/>
a shot:<lb/>
A young couple was having a<lb/>
verbal disagreement one morn-<lb/>
ing. A t first their words were hot<lb/>
and heavy, and then a silence fell<lb/>
that was thick as brick. They were<lb/>
boiling over from their spat and<lb/>
stormed through the house, hut-<lb/>
find and puffing, and showing<lb/>
their anger by stomping around<lb/>
and slamming doors. Then the<lb/>
lady had trouble with the zipper<lb/>
in the back of her dress.<lb/>
After walking over to her<lb/>
husband e stopped and point-<lb/>
ed to the hung zipper. He<lb/>
grabbed the zipper tab, slid it<lb/>
quickly to the top, but then<lb/>
realized a way to vent his anger.<lb/>
Up and down the zipper went<lb/>
until it became irrevocably<lb/>
caught. Mad enough already, the<lb/>
lady really blew a fuse when the<lb/>
husband had to cut and ruin the<lb/>
dress to get her out.<lb/>
The lady was too mad now to<lb/>
put into words. She thought and<lb/>
thought all day on how to get her<lb/>
revenge on smart-alecky hubby.<lb/>
But the chance came to her when<lb/>
she arrived home that evening.<lb/>
There on the garage floor, amid<lb/>
the sounds of mechanical work,<lb/>
and sticking out from under the<lb/>
family car, was a pair of legs<lb/>
wearing pants.<lb/>
She quickly saw the opportun-<lb/>
ity, bent down and threw the<lb/>
pants zipper back and forth<lb/>
several times. She stopped, gig-<lb/>
gling to herself over her victory<lb/>
and lightly strolled into the<lb/>
house.<lb/>
When she got to the kitchen,<lb/>
she halted unbelieving that there<lb/>
at the table sat her husband. She<lb/>
took a few moments to compose<lb/>
herself, and then sputtered,<lb/>
"Who is that under the car?"<lb/>
"Oh, that's Bill. He came to<lb/>
help out with the muffler her<lb/>
husband answered. She then let<lb/>
on what had happened.<lb/>
The hubby, but not wife,<lb/>
thought it was funny. He figured<lb/>
the best thing to do would be to<lb/>
go and explain to Bill why wife<lb/>
was toying with his fly. They went<lb/>
to the garage and found Bill's<lb/>
legs still projecting under the car.<lb/>
"Bill'7 said the husband.<lb/>
Nothing.<lb/>
"Biir" echoed the lady, with<lb/>
a tinge of nervousness.<lb/>
Still nothing.<lb/>
The two slowly pulled Bill out<lb/>
from under the car. He was<lb/>
knocked cold and had a nice-sized<lb/>
gash on his forehead, because of<lb/>
his start to see who was fooling<lb/>
with his fly.<lb/>
Even Bill thought it was<lb/>
funny, once the knot on his head<lb/>
had gone down. Guess they all<lb/>
learned how to put a little zip into<lb/>
a family fight.<lb/>
Thank you, Dennis.<lb/>
Capezi<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058055_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAP 24 May 1978<lb/>
ECU String Camp to offer wide curriculum<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
The annual String Camp spon-<lb/>
sored by the ECU School of M usic<lb/>
has been set for June 12-23.<lb/>
The camp offers a comprehen-<lb/>
sive curriculum of music instruct-<lb/>
ion including orchestra, music<lb/>
theory, sight-singing and ear-<lb/>
training, music literature, dass<lb/>
piano, and violin and chamber<lb/>
music performance.<lb/>
The CLOTHES<lb/>
HORSE<lb/>
and SUMMER<lb/>
SPORTSWEAR<lb/>
Faculty fa the String Camp is<lb/>
drawn from the regualr School of<lb/>
Music faculty and consists of<lb/>
those who spedalize in the music<lb/>
education of the young.<lb/>
The camp is open to young-<lb/>
sters from kindergarden through<lb/>
ninth grade, induding those who<lb/>
have had no prior musical in-<lb/>
strudion. Emphasis is placed on<lb/>
learning to hear and sing musical<lb/>
pitch, basic concepts of aural and<lb/>
visual relationships, reading<lb/>
music profidently, learning com-<lb/>
plicated rhythmic strudures,<lb/>
music fundamentals, simple<lb/>
music composition and instruct-<lb/>
ion on individual string instru-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Students in the camp are<lb/>
exposed to a wide range of<lb/>
musical learning opoprtunities;<lb/>
the goal being to develop basic<lb/>
musicanship at all levels.<lb/>
Application deadline is May<lb/>
30.<lb/>
PERCUSSION SYMPOSIUM<lb/>
TO BE HEARD<lb/>
The Seventh International<lb/>
Percussion Symposium will be<lb/>
held at ECU June 25 - July 1.<lb/>
The symposium offers oppor-<lb/>
tunities for students to work with<lb/>
artist percussionists in jazz, sym-<lb/>
phonic, concert and marching<lb/>
music, and for teachers to im-<lb/>
prove their teaching methods and<lb/>
acquire new skills.<lb/>
Five spedfic areas, will be<lb/>
covered in symposium sessions:<lb/>
drum set, mallets, marching<lb/>
percussion, total percussion per-<lb/>
formance and general percussion<lb/>
pedagogy.<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
Percussion Symposium and regis-<lb/>
tration materials are available<lb/>
from "Percussion Symposium<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education,<lb/>
ECU, Greenville N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Great savings.<lb/>
!<lb/>
The Clothes Horse haa great<lb/>
looks in active Sports Wear for<lb/>
either campus or beach wear.<lb/>
You'll find knit shirts by (iant<lb/>
and Izod, swim trunks by<lb/>
Bird well and shorts by Gant<lb/>
and Arthur Richards. Attention<lb/>
to correct fashion and quality is<lb/>
always part of our attitude at<lb/>
The Clothes Horse.<lb/>
218 E. 5th Street in the<lb/>
University Arcade<lb/>
Special<lb/>
3.99<lb/>
Cool, crinkly cotton<lb/>
gauze shirt with<lb/>
tuck in or han<lb/>
Stripes and plaid<lb/>
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Closed Mondays during<lb/>
June, July, and August<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
Athletic<lb/>
short.<lb/>
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piping trim. Knockout<lb/>
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Phone 756-1190 EXT 251<lb/>
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Shop 10 a.m. til 930 p.m.<lb/>
Phone 756-2146<lb/>
Retail Store<lb/>
Shop til 930 p.m.<lb/>
Phone 756-1190<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0015"/><lb/>
??????OBHH<lb/>
HHHRH<lb/>
24 May 1978 FOUNTAIMMEAD Page 15<lb/>
quality in athletic funding<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
On May 2 a formal letter of<lb/>
grievances was sent to Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins by a committee repres-<lb/>
enting ECU's women athletes.<lb/>
In the letter was spelled out a<lb/>
number of areas which the<lb/>
women athletes feel that they do<lb/>
not receive equal treatment with<lb/>
the male athletes here at ECU.<lb/>
The letter calls fa a<lb/>
hearing to be held some time this<lb/>
week for the discussion of the<lb/>
grievances.<lb/>
The following is the letter that<lb/>
was sent to Dr. Jenkins by the<lb/>
students representing the female<lb/>
athletes.<lb/>
Dear Sir:<lb/>
Having exhausted those chan-<lb/>
nels open informally to students,<lb/>
we feel it is our responsibility to<lb/>
submit a formal grievance to the<lb/>
administration at ECU. This<lb/>
grievanoe pertains to the discrim-<lb/>
inatory administration and inad-<lb/>
equate funding of those sports<lb/>
programs provided to women<lb/>
students. In order to insure that<lb/>
equal opportinuty exists in both<lb/>
the oonduct to the women's<lb/>
athletic programs and the prov-<lb/>
ision of athletic scholarships fa<lb/>
women athletes, we request a<lb/>
famal hearing to indicate and<lb/>
oarect any violations of Title IX<lb/>
of the Education Amendments<lb/>
Act of 1972. Some of the factas<lb/>
that will be considered in deter-<lb/>
mining the extent to this alleged<lb/>
discrimination include: (1) pro-<lb/>
vision to supplies and equipment;<lb/>
(2) game and practice schedules;<lb/>
(3) travel and per diem allowance;<lb/>
(4) locker rooms, practice, and<lb/>
competitive facilities; (4) assign-<lb/>
ment and pay of the coaches; (6)<lb/>
publicity and (7) athletic scholar-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
Our nomination fa the first<lb/>
member of the hearing oommittee<lb/>
will be Sonny McLawhan, Jr.<lb/>
Attaney at Law. We request that<lb/>
preparation fa the hearing be<lb/>
initiated and that if at all possible<lb/>
be held the week of May 22,1978.<lb/>
The five signees of the letter<lb/>
are Donna Pendley, Debby<lb/>
Newby, Jill Vaughn,Mike Healy,<lb/>
and April Ross.<lb/>
The outcome of this hearing<lb/>
will no doubt have an effect on<lb/>
Pirate athletics and could have an<lb/>
effect on the athletic programs of<lb/>
the other colleges and universit-<lb/>
ies in the state and maybe the<lb/>
NCAA itself.<lb/>
In speaking with Pirate Ath-<lb/>
letic Directa Bill Cain a few<lb/>
weeks ago anaher side of the<lb/>
issue was brought into play. Cain<lb/>
stated that the ECU was third in<lb/>
the state behind NC State and<lb/>
UNC-Ch in total monies budgeted<lb/>
to women athletics. He also<lb/>
pointed out that the reason that<lb/>
there was not as much money<lb/>
given to women athletics at ECU<lb/>
as there was at State and Carolina<lb/>
was because those schools taal<lb/>
budgets are larger than ECU'S.<lb/>
Cain did feel that the percent-<lb/>
age of the tola! budget given to<lb/>
the women athletics was compar-<lb/>
ative with any aher institution in<lb/>
the state.<lb/>
With the first hearing sched-<lb/>
uled some time this week the next<lb/>
few years should give all the<lb/>
parties involved in these griev-<lb/>
ances an idea of what the future<lb/>
may hold fa ECU athletics, both<lb/>
women'sand men's.<lb/>
PIRATE AD Bill Cain and Dr. Leo Jenkins are to meet with the<lb/>
Grevience oommittee some time this week.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Kathy Andruzzi named new womens coach<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Edito<lb/>
It was announced that Kathy<lb/>
Andruzzi, 25 year old head ooach<lb/>
at Wagner College the last two<lb/>
years will become the second<lb/>
womens basketball ooach in ECU<lb/>
histay.<lb/>
Andruzzi replaces Catherine<lb/>
Bolton who coached the womens<lb/>
basketball team fa nine years.<lb/>
Andruzzi is s 1974 graduate of<lb/>
Queens College in New Yak. She<lb/>
was a star piayer on the Queens<lb/>
teams that placed fifth, second<lb/>
and seventh in the Al AW national<lb/>
tournament. Her Wagner College<lb/>
team was invited to attend the<lb/>
Eastern AIAW small college<lb/>
regional tournament this past<lb/>
season.<lb/>
SPEAKER AT CAMPS<lb/>
Andruzzi has also made a<lb/>
name fa herself at dinics and<lb/>
basketball camps over the last<lb/>
three years. She has attended<lb/>
camps in 17 states in those three<lb/>
years.<lb/>
MOST STARTERS BACK<lb/>
Andruzzi will have the nucleus<lb/>
of this past team to wok with<lb/>
next year. This years team won 20<lb/>
games and participated in the<lb/>
AIAW Eastern Regional. They<lb/>
finished seoond in the state<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
An irony to Andruzzi's ap-<lb/>
pointment to the team is the fad<lb/>
that ECU advanced to the Nation-<lb/>
al AIAW Tournament at Queens<lb/>
during her junto year. Queens<lb/>
was the natioial runnerup that<lb/>
year.<lb/>
OUTSTANDING CAREER<lb/>
As an undergraduate,<lb/>
Andruzzi was named the Out-<lb/>
standing Wonan Athlete at<lb/>
a at en Island Community COllege<lb/>
in 1971. She was the redpiant of<lb/>
the Queens College Alumni<lb/>
Award fa Outstanding Contribu-<lb/>
tioi to th life of the college in<lb/>
1972.<lb/>
In 1974 she was named<lb/>
honaable mentiai in the Out-<lb/>
standing College Athlete of<lb/>
American Hall of Fame.<lb/>
New SID to be named sometime this week<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A new spots infomatioi<lb/>
direda is expeded to be named<lb/>
sometime within the next week,<lb/>
aoooding to ECU athletic direda<lb/>
Bill Cain.<lb/>
The vacancy was aeated three<lb/>
weeks ago when Ken Smith<lb/>
resigned to take a position with a<lb/>
firm in Greensboo.<lb/>
Smith, who served as the<lb/>
sports infomatioi direda at<lb/>
ECU fa four years, will leave at<lb/>
the end of May.<lb/>
"Hopefully, a dedsion will<lb/>
oome by the end of this week a<lb/>
the beginning of next week said<lb/>
Cain. "We have made voy<lb/>
thoough search and have inter-<lb/>
viewed some voy qualified cand-<lb/>
idates fa the job<lb/>
Cain said more than 25<lb/>
applications have been received<lb/>
fo the position, although only six<lb/>
candidates have been interview-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Willie Patrick, a student as-<lb/>
sistant at ECU fa two years, and<lb/>
currently Spots Infomatioi Dir-<lb/>
eda at the Univosity of Tenn-<lb/>
essee at Chatanooga, and Walt<lb/>
Atkins, ihe assistant SID at N.C.<lb/>
State have both been interviewed.<lb/>
Other candidates who have<lb/>
been intoviewed are Jimmy<lb/>
Wilder, Sports Infomatioi Dir-<lb/>
ector at The Citadel, BoBo<lb/>
Champion, assistant SID at Mis-<lb/>
sissippi. Bruce Herman, the 9D<lb/>
at Wake Faest and Bill Lloyd<lb/>
an ECU graduate from Kinston.<lb/>
Patrick, a 24-year-old native of<lb/>
Mt. Airy, served as a student<lb/>
assistant undo John Evenson<lb/>
and Ken Smith while completing<lb/>
his undergraduate wok at ECU.<lb/>
Patrick's ECU Swimming<lb/>
Press Guide was voted best in the<lb/>
nation in 1975 and was seleded<lb/>
second in the nation in 1974 by<lb/>
COS DA (College Sports Infama-<lb/>
tion Diredosof Amoica).<lb/>
He also aiginated the popular<lb/>
Diamond Darlings baseball<lb/>
games.<lb/>
The Diamond Darlings were<lb/>
voted the Outstanding Batgirls in<lb/>
the nation.<lb/>
Richmond's football fortunes couM change<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Edito<lb/>
?<lb/>
This is the first in a weekly<lb/>
series of scouting reports on this<lb/>
falls ECU football opponents.<lb/>
This weeks repot is on the<lb/>
Univosity of Richmonds Spidos.<lb/>
Next week we will scout the<lb/>
Wdfpack of NC State.<lb/>
Last years Richmond team<lb/>
had to be a real disappointment to<lb/>
the Spido faithful.<lb/>
Although the Spiders had one<lb/>
of the toughest .schedules any-<lb/>
wfctPe most people had predided<lb/>
at least a 6-5 mark fo Richmond.<lb/>
Such was not the,case how<lb/>
ever as a young Richmond team<lb/>
was shut out in its first two games<lb/>
and went on to have one of the<lb/>
wast seasons in Richmond's long<lb/>
football histay.<lb/>
If last years 3-8 mark wasn't<lb/>
bad enough the defense, which<lb/>
was expeded to be the backbone<lb/>
- WWW A AHi "A ? ? ? '<lb/>
of the Spido team gave up a<lb/>
whopping 354.1 yards pa game<lb/>
in total offense. Meanwhile the<lb/>
Richmond offense managed 239.6<lb/>
total yards pa game. Opponents<lb/>
avoaged 26.6 points pa game<lb/>
and the Spidos only avoaged<lb/>
11.7 pa outing.<lb/>
The Richmond fans feel how-<lb/>
evo that thoe is light at the end<lb/>
of the tunnel. Near the end of last<lb/>
season the Spidos began to come<lb/>
into thoe and play some heads up<lb/>
football. Their best Isle season<lb/>
effort was a 24-27 loss to Hall to<lb/>
Fame Bowl champ Maryland at<lb/>
City Stadium in Richmond.<lb/>
This corning year the Spidos<lb/>
should be an improved team.<lb/>
Richmond will still have a young<lb/>
team with only five senias but<lb/>
they will have 16 startos return-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Coach Jim Tait starting his<lb/>
fifth year as head ooach of the<lb/>
Spidos will have 10 of his 16<lb/>
startos returning to the defen-<lb/>
sive team. This could spell<lb/>
trouble fo the opposition because<lb/>
Richmond had rune startos re-<lb/>
turning to this past seasons<lb/>
defensive team. The Spido de-<lb/>
fense will be a vetoan group this<lb/>
yea.<lb/>
One cannot mention the<lb/>
Spido defense without speaking<lb/>
of ? Jeff Nixon the Spido's Ail-<lb/>
American free safety. Nixon was<lb/>
See NIXON p. 16<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 24 May 1978<lb/>
Nixon leads an experenced Spider defense<lb/>
Confined from p. 15<lb/>
a third-team Associated Press<lb/>
selection in 1976 and was honor-<lb/>
able mention in 1975.<lb/>
Another player on defense<lb/>
that Richmond is depending on to<lb/>
improve their seasonal mark is<lb/>
defensive end Ray Chase. Chase<lb/>
was last years "Most Valuable<lb/>
Player" and led the team in sacks<lb/>
with 10. He finished the season<lb/>
with 107 tackles.<lb/>
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In the linebaoking department<lb/>
the hardnosed play of Orlandus<lb/>
Branch will be saely missed but<lb/>
Ray Kelly, a three year starter,<lb/>
should be able to step right in and<lb/>
offer immediate help. Larry<lb/>
Braun, Dan Coyner, and Milt<lb/>
Ruffin will offer depth to the<lb/>
Spider linebacking brigade.<lb/>
Richmonds large defensive<lb/>
line will return intact this season<lb/>
and should be vastly improved.<lb/>
The line includes Ken Gilliam,<lb/>
who accounted fa 112 tackles<lb/>
from his middle guard position<lb/>
last year, tackles Billy Cheshire<lb/>
and Greg Mitchell whooombined<lb/>
fa 130 tackles and defensive end<lb/>
Jim Coppola who had 72 tackles<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
In the secondary Dave<lb/>
Haynie. a three year starter.<lb/>
Rueben Turner and Glenn Cook<lb/>
return to aid Jeff Nixon in that<lb/>
position. Turner had 91 tackles as<lb/>
a freshman last year and could<lb/>
very well be Richmonds next<lb/>
All-American.<lb/>
Offensively, the Spiders are in<lb/>
need of sane backfield help. As<lb/>
of the end of spring practice<lb/>
Sophanae. Jimmy Shat seemed<lb/>
to be the likely candidate to take<lb/>
over as quarterback. He will be<lb/>
hard pressed however by Junia<lb/>
S<lb/>
RofFlER<lb/>
 Hi?iiii<lb/>
I ill I ? iii is<lb/>
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Greg Gregay and sophanae<lb/>
Pete Smith Gregay is the oily<lb/>
quarterback candidate that saw<lb/>
any varsity action last year.<lb/>
Richmonds explosive run-<lb/>
ningback, Buster Jackson is now<lb/>
gone via graduatioi but the Tait<lb/>
staff is very high oi sophomae<lb/>
Reggie Evans. In this past<lb/>
springs "Red and Blue" game<lb/>
Evans rushed fa 148 yards and<lb/>
two touchdowns in 15 carries.<lb/>
Demetri Kanegay will probably<lb/>
be the starter at tailback this year<lb/>
in the Spiders I famatioi but he<lb/>
will be hard pressed by junia Tim<lb/>
Thacker and sophomaes Jim<lb/>
McCoig and Jesse Williams.<lb/>
Probably the weakest area of<lb/>
the entire Richmond team is the<lb/>
receiving caps. Tight ends Tim<lb/>
Spriggs and Ian Backsterad re-<lb/>
turn along with wide receivers<lb/>
Ken Tweedy and Harvey Jones.<lb/>
This may not be much of an<lb/>
advantage however as last years<lb/>
Richmond team averaged only<lb/>
81.4 yards passing per game.<lb/>
Coach Tait knows full well that his<lb/>
I and Pro Set attacks need mae<lb/>
balance between the pass and run<lb/>
and he has left no stone unturned,<lb/>
trying to beef up the passing<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The offensive line returns<lb/>
tackles Faest Paulsai and Jessee<lb/>
Moae and Center Joe Kroger.<lb/>
Two new guards will need to be<lb/>
found however and the candid-<lb/>
ates fa these spots are Ray<lb/>
Greaser and Ricky Jenkins.<lb/>
The punting will be handled<lb/>
by Kevin Wolf a Mark Phillip<lb/>
and Steve Adams returns fa<lb/>
placekicking duties.<lb/>
As far as experience goes it<lb/>
appears that Richmond will have<lb/>
a better team next year when the<lb/>
Pirates meet the Spiders in the<lb/>
Oyster Bowl at Nafolk Va. But<lb/>
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They are Southern Mississippi,<lb/>
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Nath Cardina-Chapel Hill and<lb/>
William and Mary.<lb/>
On the road the Spiders must<lb/>
meet West Virginia, Wisconsin,<lb/>
Appalachian State, Villianova,<lb/>
UT-Chattanooga and ECU in the<lb/>
Oyster Bowl.<lb/>
In summing up this years<lb/>
Richmond team it appears that<lb/>
the Spiders will be a better team.<lb/>
But fa Richmond being a better<lb/>
team may not be good enough<lb/>
with a schedule like the one just<lb/>
mentioned. There's not a push-<lb/>
over in the bunch. So suffice to<lb/>
say that Richmond will be tough<lb/>
on the Pirates as usual but the<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058055_0017"/><lb/>
??????<lb/>
24 May 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 17<lb/>
J<lb/>
Earline Leggett named to new post<lb/>
It has<lb/>
not been uncommon for ECU to<lb/>
come forth with several firsts in<lb/>
the last few years, particpating as<lb/>
regards the Pirates' athletic pro-<lb/>
gram. This week, another first<lb/>
has taken place, not only for the<lb/>
school but fa the state as well.<lb/>
And maybe fa the entire country.<lb/>
Earline Leggett, business<lb/>
manager fa athletics since 1972,<lb/>
was named this week as Assistant<lb/>
Athletic Directa fa Business.<lb/>
This marks the first time a wanan<lb/>
at ECU, a at any school within<lb/>
the state, has been named to the<lb/>
position of an assistant athletic<lb/>
directa fa an entire athletic<lb/>
program.<lb/>
While the significance of a<lb/>
female being named to such a<lb/>
position is obvious, Leggett down<lb/>
plays that element of the promo-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"I do not think equal rights a<lb/>
Title IX had anything to do with<lb/>
my getting this position said<lb/>
Leggett. "But I do feel that this<lb/>
proves a woman can move into<lb/>
this type position with hard work<lb/>
and a desire to want it bad<lb/>
enough It does prove it can be<lb/>
acheived as a woman<lb/>
"I'm just extremely honaed<lb/>
and very grateful fa the oppat-<lb/>
unity given to me back in 1972 by<lb/>
Coach Stas (late athletic directa<lb/>
Clarence Stasavich) and Mr.<lb/>
Mcore (Clifton G. Moae, ECU<lb/>
Vice Chancella fa Business<lb/>
Affairs;)when they had confi-<lb/>
dence in me to name me business<lb/>
manager<lb/>
A non-college graduate and<lb/>
the athletic department employee<lb/>
with most longevity, Leggett's<lb/>
background paints the picture of<lb/>
success from hard work and<lb/>
loyalty. Her motto in life clearly is<lb/>
hard work and loyalty.<lb/>
In 1963, Leggett joined the<lb/>
athletic staff as personal secre-<lb/>
tary to Stasavich. But from the<lb/>
beginning, it was mae than just<lb/>
being a secretary to Stasavich.<lb/>
Her work included keeping the<lb/>
books, writing grants-in-aid,<lb/>
equipment aders just the<lb/>
standard<lb/>
manager.<lb/>
work of a business<lb/>
But it was na until 1970 that<lb/>
a business managers position was<lb/>
even aeated at ECU. Bill Cain,<lb/>
current athletic directa, received<lb/>
that position. In 1972, Cain was<lb/>
promoted to assistant athletic<lb/>
directa and Leggett finally rec-<lb/>
eived a title appropriate fa her<lb/>
job over the years, business<lb/>
manager fa athletics.<lb/>
A Williamstoi native, Leggett<lb/>
attended Farm Life High School<lb/>
(d ass of 1950). From there, it was<lb/>
right to wak at the din Mathie-<lb/>
son Cap. in Williamstoi. Her<lb/>
duties included secretary to the<lb/>
president, accounting, inventay<lb/>
and adering of irrigation equip-<lb/>
ment and rther assated items.<lb/>
Fa 12 years she waked at Olin<lb/>
Mathieson.<lb/>
During her first four a five<lb/>
years waking, Leggett also at-<lb/>
tended night school at Baker<lb/>
Business School in Greenville,<lb/>
graduating around 1956.<lb/>
"You know. I don't really feel<lb/>
any different about this position<lb/>
a my responsibilities than I did<lb/>
befoe related Leggett. "I feel I<lb/>
was as dedicated years ago to the<lb/>
job as I am now, and I feel I would<lb/>
have continued to wok and strive<lb/>
to do the best job possible without<lb/>
the new title. But it is a nice<lb/>
reward fa the laig years and<lb/>
hours put in<lb/>
WAS IT TITLE X?<lb/>
Was it equal rights and a<lb/>
Title IX that faced such a move<lb/>
by the ECU athletic dept?<lb/>
" No, the fact that M s. Leggett<lb/>
was a female never came into play<lb/>
in this decision explained<lb/>
athletic directa Bill Cain. "Ms.<lb/>
Leggett was in a position and had<lb/>
done an outstanding job there,<lb/>
and we all felt she deserved this<lb/>
promotion. It was incidental that<lb/>
she was a female.<lb/>
"Firther, this is just the<lb/>
beginnng of a series of moves to<lb/>
develop and strengthen our over-<lb/>
all athletic administrative staff.<lb/>
The experience and knowledge<lb/>
and loyalty shown by Ms. Leggett<lb/>
gives us added depth immediate-<lb/>
ly to our key administrative<lb/>
staff<lb/>
TAKES FAME IN STRIDE<lb/>
Fa a woman that's making<lb/>
athletic history, it's interesting to<lb/>
nae her early touch with athle-<lb/>
tics. In 1970, Smith Barrier of the<lb/>
Greensboro Daily News quoted<lb/>
Leggett in a column as saying:<lb/>
When I came here, I had seen<lb/>
twofoaball games in my life, one<lb/>
high school and one over here at<lb/>
ECU when I visited a girl friend.<lb/>
That game I had to at out in the<lb/>
rain and I thought it was terrible.<lb/>
"But since then I've seen<lb/>
football games in rain and snow<lb/>
and a hurricane at William and<lb/>
Mary<lb/>
"I just love this job. You can't<lb/>
help but get involved when you<lb/>
wak around coaches who eat,<lb/>
aeathe and sleep it<lb/>
i<lb/>
L<lb/>
?S<lb/>
ie<lb/>
Coaches Hill and Randolph announce signees<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina wrestling coach<lb/>
Bill Hill has announced the<lb/>
signing of two prep standouts to<lb/>
grants-in-aid.<lb/>
Mark Twigg from Sayre, Pa.<lb/>
and Thomas Robinson from<lb/>
ApaJachin, N.Y. will both attend<lb/>
East Carolina next year.<lb/>
PIRA TE WRESTLING COACH Bih Hill hopes to see much more of this<lb/>
next season from his new recruits.<lb/>
Twigg, a four year letterman<lb/>
at Sayre Area High School<lb/>
compiled an impressive 78-22-1<lb/>
reoad during his prep career and<lb/>
finished with a 35-3 slate during<lb/>
his senia year.<lb/>
Twigg placed first in the<lb/>
regional and sectional tourna-<lb/>
ment last year, took third in the<lb/>
districtsand finished fourth in the<lb/>
state championship.<lb/>
"Mark's a tough canpetita<lb/>
and certainly a blue-chip pros-<lb/>
pect said Hill. "He stands an<lb/>
excellent chance to start in the<lb/>
134 pound weight class since Paul<lb/>
Osman has graduated<lb/>
Robinson, a 126 pounder,<lb/>
prepped at Vestal High School<lb/>
where he finished his senia year<lb/>
with a 28-4 reoad while leading<lb/>
his team to a perfect 14-0 season.<lb/>
Robinson, also a four year<lb/>
letterman put together an 80-22<lb/>
overall reoad during his prep<lb/>
career and was nominated as a<lb/>
high school all-America.<lb/>
"Thomas could also start fa us<lb/>
next season noted Hill.<lb/>
"We've had very little consisten-<lb/>
cy fa the past three years at 126<lb/>
and Thonas should be able to<lb/>
help us out immediately<lb/>
Pirate tennis coach, Randy<lb/>
Randolph, has announced the<lb/>
signing of Keith Zengel to a grant<lb/>
-in-aid.<lb/>
Zengel, a native of Baltimae,<lb/>
Md. was a three-year letterman at<lb/>
Kenwood High School where he<lb/>
played in the number one sin-<lb/>
gles position during both his<lb/>
junia and senia seasais. He is<lb/>
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph<lb/>
Zengel<lb/>
BE SOMEBODY AT<lb/>
PANTANA BOB'S<lb/>
L<lb/>
DAILY AT<lb/>
400 P.M.<lb/>
 tnr<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
aflaiuaa jmcd &amp;hijjji &amp;u3<lb/>
vmmmm mrv<lb/>
<pb facs="00058055_0018"/><lb/>
Page 18 FOUNTAINHEAD 24 May 1978<lb/>
Pirates i<lb/>
ECU foot-<lb/>
bal I has produced 50 wins and but<lb/>
16 losses over the last six years,<lb/>
ranking the Pirates as one of the<lb/>
nation's 15 winningest Division I<lb/>
teams over that period. There is<lb/>
very little reason to believe that<lb/>
this should change for the worse<lb/>
during the 1978 season.<lb/>
Fourteen Pirate starters re-<lb/>
turn from 1977, eight on defense<lb/>
and six on offense, along with the<lb/>
startng punter and snapper of last<lb/>
year. From an experience stand-<lb/>
point, this is the best situation<lb/>
Pat Dye and staff have been in in<lb/>
five years with surrounding fact-<lb/>
ors are all very positive.<lb/>
"I'm personally very excited<lb/>
about this football team said<lb/>
Dye. "We are all looking forward<lb/>
to this year. I think the attitude,<lb/>
enthusiasm and other such sur-<lb/>
rounding factors are all very<lb/>
positive.<lb/>
"It is no secret that myself,<lb/>
our coaches and our players were<lb/>
very disappointed with the way<lb/>
the season ended last year (8-3,<lb/>
and a season ending loss to<lb/>
William and Mary in the Oyster<lb/>
Bowl). By the standards we have<lb/>
tried to establish and reach at<lb/>
East Carolina, 8-3 is not the type<lb/>
season we want<lb/>
Offensively, three of the four<lb/>
leading ground gainers of 1977<lb/>
return to bolster Dye's wishbone<lb/>
attack. Junior fullback Theodore<lb/>
Sutton (5'9 200) led the way last<lb/>
year with 706 yards, junior<lb/>
quarterback Leander Green (5'8"<lb/>
175) had 546 yards in a shared<lb/>
role as signal caller, and senior<lb/>
all-America candidate Eddie -<lb/>
Hicks(6 2  210) had 393 yards in<lb/>
a year that the running backs saw<lb/>
the ball very little. However, one<lb/>
must consider Hicks' entire ca-<lb/>
reer which shows 1586 yards in<lb/>
229 carries for a phenomenal 6.9<lb/>
yards per carry over three years!<lb/>
"We should have the best<lb/>
running backs yet said Dye.<lb/>
"As for our quarterback situa-<lb/>
tion, Leander is a sure winner.<lb/>
We hope that someone else will<lb/>
also establish himself as a winner<lb/>
at quarterback. I would very<lb/>
much like to have a shared role as<lb/>
we did last year so successfully<lb/>
with Leander and Jimmy Souther-<lb/>
land. Also, we need some depth<lb/>
at fullback to go with Sutton<lb/>
The top candidates for the<lb/>
other running back position are<lb/>
Doug Banks (Soph 6'0 203), a<lb/>
transfer from North Carolina that<lb/>
sat out last year; speedstar<lb/>
Anthony Collins (Soph 6'0<lb/>
200), winner of the Outstanding<lb/>
Freshman Award; and Sam Har-<lb/>
rell (St 6'2 210), a strong<lb/>
reserve the last two years that<lb/>
could really break it open in 1978.<lb/>
The offensive line will be the<lb/>
biggest ever under Dye, as size<lb/>
has never been an asset up front<lb/>
before. Senior tackle Mitchell<lb/>
Smith (6'3 250) and senior<lb/>
guard Nelson Smith (61 240)<lb/>
will be the leading forces. Re-<lb/>
serves Mike Heywood (Sr3<lb/>
235), Mitchell Johnston (Sr<lb/>
6'3 245), Matt Mulholland(Sr<lb/>
60 250), Wayne Inman (Jr<lb/>
64 240) and James "Tootie"<lb/>
Bobbins (Soph 65 240) will<lb/>
battle fa the other starting tackle<lb/>
and guard positions.<lb/>
"Up front in the inter ia we<lb/>
have experience except at center,<lb/>
"noted Dye. "Our major pro-<lb/>
blems on offense will be finding<lb/>
winners at center, split end and<lb/>
tight end. We have the material,<lb/>
so it is just a matter of their<lb/>
developing as we hope for<lb/>
Jeff Hagans is the man at<lb/>
center. The 6'1 235 junia<lb/>
native of Greenville, played cen-<lb/>
ter in a reserve role last year.<lb/>
He's the biggest prospect Dye<lb/>
has had fa the center spot since<lb/>
caning to East Carolina. With<lb/>
refined work, Hagans could prove<lb/>
a solid man. Others that could<lb/>
tarn a stroiger nucleus at center<lb/>
are Flat Headley (Soph 6'3<lb/>
235) and walkon Matt Jones<lb/>
'(Soph 63 225).<lb/>
With split end Terry Gallaher,<lb/>
who broke virtually every ECU<lb/>
passing mark, and tight end<lb/>
Barry Johnson graudated, the<lb/>
Pirates will not have veterans to<lb/>
turn to this year in those vital<lb/>
blocking positions of the wish-<lb/>
bone.<lb/>
Billy Flay Washington (Jr<lb/>
6'1 195) will be moved from<lb/>
reserve tight end to split end (4.4<lb/>
speed), while Joe Godette (Jr<lb/>
6'3 215) who started most of<lb/>
last year at offense tackle, will<lb/>
move to tight end. Split end help<lb/>
will come from Vern Davenpat<lb/>
(Jr 6'3 200) and Mike Haw-<lb/>
kins (Soph 5'9 180) a running<lb/>
back last year, being moved to<lb/>
split end.<lb/>
Defensively, only three chan-<lb/>
ges will occur due to graduation.<lb/>
Both linebackers, all-America -<lb/>
Harold Randolph and Harold<lb/>
Fat, alaig with free safety Steve<lb/>
Hale, are gone. Otherwise, one<lb/>
can look across a depth chart from<lb/>
last year and count the remainder<lb/>
of the starters as status quo.<lb/>
Actually, a starter could be put in<lb/>
every position, osat some point in<lb/>
the 1977 season, two other<lb/>
linebackers and anaher free<lb/>
safety did start.<lb/>
"We have the oppatunity to<lb/>
have a fine defensive club in<lb/>
1978 said Dye.<lb/>
"There's mae experience -<lb/>
back than ever befae. But I never<lb/>
thought we were a good defensive<lb/>
team at any time last year, so we<lb/>
do have considerable work to<lb/>
do<lb/>
Three defensive ends, senia<lb/>
all-America candidate Zack Val-<lb/>
entine (6'2 210), junia John<lb/>
Maris (61 195); and senla<lb/>
Fred Chavisffj'? 2) have all<lb/>
started over the last two years<lb/>
and proven strong.<lb/>
Junia Woodrow Stevenson<lb/>
(6'5 230), senia Wayne Poole<lb/>
(511 240), and junia Noah<lb/>
Clark (6'2 225) have all started<lb/>
during the last two seasons at<lb/>
defensive tackle. Clark, however,<lb/>
is being moved to nose guard this<lb/>
season in ader to get all three of<lb/>
the big men in the game at one<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Senia Oliver Feltai (5'9<lb/>
215), a two-year starta at nose<lb/>
guard returns, but will be<lb/>
battling with Clark fa the start-<lb/>
ing nod.<lb/>
In the secondary, senia all-<lb/>
America candidate and two-year<lb/>
starter Gerald Hall, an excellent<lb/>
free and strong safety and punt<lb/>
return specialist, heads a list of<lb/>
three returning startera Caner-<lb/>
backs Willie Holley (Jr 5'11<lb/>
185) and Charlie Carter (Jr<lb/>
5' 10 180) are the aher two.<lb/>
A replacement must be found<lb/>
fa graduated Steve Hale at free<lb/>
safety. Hall likely will play at free<lb/>
safety, with junia Ruffin McNeil<lb/>
(5'11 190) the most likely<lb/>
candidate fa the straig safety<lb/>
position. Others to consider in the<lb/>
secondary plans are James Freer<lb/>
(Jr 5'8 175) and Thomas<lb/>
McLaurin (Jr 5'11 175), both<lb/>
m<lb/>
reserves in the secondary like<lb/>
McNeil last season, along with<lb/>
Wayne Perry (Soph 6'1 185)<lb/>
and Bill Pinkney (Soph 5'10<lb/>
195).<lb/>
Fa the first time since the<lb/>
arrival of Pat Dye, the linebacker<lb/>
position will na be projected as a<lb/>
maja strength However, that is;<lb/>
na to say it will be a weakness.<lb/>
Junia Mike Brewingtai (6'4<lb/>
230) and senia Tanmy Summer<lb/>
(6'1 205) will move to starting<lb/>
roles, replacing the graduated<lb/>
Harold Randolph and Harold<lb/>
Fat. Bah Brewingtai and<lb/>
Summer have played extensively<lb/>
over the previous two years and<lb/>
have at times been starters.<lb/>
i L W<lb/>
Experience, therefae, does exist<lb/>
at linebacka. Depth could be a<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
The kicking game will find<lb/>
senia Rodney Allen (6'1 195)<lb/>
punting again.afta averaging 37.3<lb/>
last year. Junia snapper Gene<lb/>
Winters(5' 11 205) returns to his<lb/>
position. Gerald Hall is back to<lb/>
return punts, an area he has been<lb/>
naed in nationally each of the<lb/>
previous two years. The running<lb/>
backs will provide a strong kickoff<lb/>
return aew. Only a place kicker<lb/>
must be found to replace the<lb/>
graduated Junia Creech. The op<lb/>
candidate will be junia Bill<lb/>
Lamm (57 180).<lb/>
THE DEVELOPMENT OF 9 Ernie Saltmarsh at<lb/>
quarterback and Jeff Hagans at center will affect the<lb/>
type of year the Pirates will have in '78.<lb/>
Something new and exciting is about to come into your life-a<lb/>
n roll bond cdled Normjcket. ITiey've come up the hard way-for the<lb/>
paslfive years they've play d up and down the Eastern seaboard, refin-<lb/>
ing their craft and developing a fanatical foltowing. They've hod the<lb/>
urwnviable task of opening for acts like Yes and Kiss-and they've in-<lb/>
5onvert? ?? most skeptical of autfetKes. In fact, they've<lb/>
Jkpw ? st?9e presence so spectacular that Epic Records signed<lb/>
them on the spot-without a demo tope or finished recording.<lb/>
Now they've finished their first album and it's filled with everything<lb/>
ts tfwr live show<lb/>
excellent musicianship and a tough, nooWs-borred attitude towards<lb/>
rocknroll. In this ogeof the lameand the wimpy, how does thatgrobyoy?<lb/>
Introducing "Nantucket<lb/>
 Oi Wc Beer Mites.<lb/>
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24 May 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 19<lb/>
Pirates dream of 1961 fast becoming reality<lb/>
WHAT STARTED OUT as a dream in1961 is rapidly becoming the<lb/>
states' fourth largest football stadium. Since the opening game<lb/>
defeating Wake Forest in 1963 Ficklen Stadium has undergone many<lb/>
changes. The original capacity of Ficklen was 17,000 in 1963. Later the<lb/>
North side stands were built in 1968 to up the capacity to 20,000. In<lb/>
1975 the new lighting system was added. Now in 1978 the stadium<lb/>
expansion will bring the seating capacity to 35,000 seats. The dream of<lb/>
Pirate fans has finally come true.<lb/>
CUT ME OUT<lb/>
STUOEHT I.DLCARD<lb/>
(EXPIRES SBPT I, 1978)<lb/>
FREE BOTTOMLeSSWW<lb/>
witm thf purchase ?p? awv<lb/>
Platted, shouo oash-et?-<lb/>
IJMIDC SOU - lAb"D 2.&amp;0<lb/>
HUUKo m?5- SAT- 200<lb/>
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Page 2D FOUNTAINHEAD 24 May 1978<lb/>
SUMMER<lb/>
SCHOOL<lb/>
WAREHOUSE<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
We have bought a large supply of<lb/>
Demo &amp; New Equipment from a Nor-<lb/>
thern dealer who needed money!<lb/>
HIS LOSS IS YOUR GAIN!<lb/>
SOOT CRAIG<lb/>
PIOOT)ER YAMAHA<lb/>
SANSUI DYNA<lb/>
KLEHWOOD ROSE<lb/>
OXKYO EMPIRE<lb/>
MARAOTZ<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
SLASHED<lb/>
TEAC<lb/>
AKAI<lb/>
TECHOTC<lb/>
PANASONIC<lb/>
OPTOOTCA<lb/>
II&amp;O<lb/>
BEAT KWXATION NOW<lb/>
IOTEST YOITR TAX CHECH<lb/>
FINANCING<lb/>
TRADES<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
HARNOKY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
ON THE MALL DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
752-3651<lb/>
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