<?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="00058059_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 4,500,<lb/>
this issue is 12 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Vd. S3, No.? East Carolina University Greenville, North Carolina 21 June 1978<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE . . .<lb/>
HoHerin' contest . . .p. 6<lb/>
Health care shortage . . .p. 5<lb/>
Buddy Rich . . .p. 8<lb/>
William and Mary . . .p. 10<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, WECU di<lb/>
Media Board meets<lb/>
By DIANE PAQUETTE<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
AND<lb/>
JIM BARNES<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Media Board approved<lb/>
presscardsfor FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
reporters and discussed the res-<lb/>
ponsibilities of the Media Board<lb/>
secretary at their meeting, Tues-<lb/>
day, June 20.<lb/>
In another matter before the<lb/>
Media Board, John Jeter, general<lb/>
manager of WECU-FM, filed a<lb/>
formal oomplaint before the board<lb/>
concerning a meeting held<lb/>
between Dean Tucker, Mr.<lb/>
Alexander, and Tommy Joe<lb/>
Payne of the Board and Dr. Benz<lb/>
and Mr. Rees of the drama and<lb/>
speech department.<lb/>
Jeter noted that the meeting<lb/>
had concerned WECU operations<lb/>
and that he had not been notified<lb/>
of the meeting. He thanked the<lb/>
board fa looking into the matter.<lb/>
Dr. Benz, professor of com-<lb/>
munications, told<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD that he and<lb/>
Mr. Rees had contacted Dr.<lb/>
Tucker and "asked for a meeting<lb/>
of the Media Board. The Media<lb/>
Board is the prospective licensee<lb/>
of the FM radio station, and we<lb/>
Head photographer<lb/>
felt that since we do teach<lb/>
broadcasting that we might have<lb/>
some sort of input that might be<lb/>
useful. We asked that the meet-<lb/>
ing occur and that we might<lb/>
present our formal willingness to<lb/>
do whatever possible to make the<lb/>
station the best it could possibly<lb/>
be<lb/>
When asked why Jeter was<lb/>
not present at the meeting, Benz<lb/>
replied that "we just asked Dr.<lb/>
Tucker, we wanted to present<lb/>
some ideas to him to my<lb/>
knowledge t here was no excl usion<lb/>
of John, to say, 'we don't want<lb/>
him there or that sort of thing<lb/>
There has been some oonoern<lb/>
by WECU management over a<lb/>
possible conflict between stud-<lb/>
ents and faculty concerning man-<lb/>
agement and programming prac-<lb/>
tices Aooording to board member<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, the radio<lb/>
station is to be a student-run<lb/>
station, operated by student<lb/>
funds. Also, Alexander told<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD that "the pro-<lb/>
gramming (of WECU)will reflect<lb/>
the tastes of the students<lb/>
Earlier, Jeter told<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD that "The<lb/>
thing I want to make known is<lb/>
that since the drama department<lb/>
did not give js any money or<lb/>
didn't help tin applying for the<lb/>
Board names Podeszwa<lb/>
By JEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Media Board approved<lb/>
Pe.e odeswa as head photo-<lb/>
adphet ol the Photo Lab<lb/>
f-uueszwa said that he was<lb/>
' very excited aoout starting the<lb/>
new academic year this fall.<lb/>
"For one reason, th.s year<lb/>
were in much better shape<lb/>
because I'll have three pnoto-<lb/>
grapers this year instead of just<lb/>
two like last year Podeszwa<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He also cited the addition of<lb/>
more equipment to the Photo Lab<lb/>
as a reason for the improvement<lb/>
over last year.<lb/>
"We've always needed cer-<lb/>
tain equipment which we just<lb/>
couldn t afford and now we have<lb/>
it, ' Podeszwa explained. "We<lb/>
used to have to choose a<lb/>
photographer on the basis of what<lb/>
equipment he had. Now we can<lb/>
concentrate more on his abilit-<lb/>
ies. "<lb/>
Podeszwa also said that this<lb/>
year would be off to a better start<lb/>
because all the equipment was<lb/>
intact in the Photo Lab.<lb/>
"There has been a lot of<lb/>
missing camera equipment over<lb/>
the past years Podeszwa said.<lb/>
"Most of this equipment is finally<lb/>
being replaced.<lb/>
Podeszwa brings with him a<lb/>
remarkable portfolio of past<lb/>
photoqraphic experiences.<lb/>
He became interested in<lb/>
photography about 12 years ago<lb/>
and while in high school estab-<lb/>
lished a photography lab in his<lb/>
school and worked on the year-<lb/>
book.<lb/>
After high school Podeszwa<lb/>
said he did odd jobs as newspaper<lb/>
photography and wedding port-<lb/>
raits.<lb/>
AM VAL RECONNAISANCE<lb/>
While serving on a naval ship<lb/>
he talked the Navy into setting up<lb/>
a photo lab on board.<lb/>
I did two cruise books, which<lb/>
is the equilavent of a y Took,<lb/>
and I also did some reinais-<lb/>
sanoe work Podeszwa said.<lb/>
We would be about two<lb/>
miles off a Russian trawler - a<lb/>
supposed Russian trawler he<lb/>
said grinning, "and I would zoom<lb/>
in on it with my lens.<lb/>
Podeszwa said after he got out<lb/>
of theNavy he went :o California<lb/>
tna took a portrait course at<lb/>
Berkley and did port'ios for<lb/>
some models.  I<lb/>
FM license), I don't think they<lb/>
have the right to come in and use<lb/>
the station for classroom pur-<lb/>
poses. This is a student-run<lb/>
station, paid for by student<lb/>
money; they (faculty) don't have<lb/>
the right - they just don't<lb/>
Dean Tucker, Media Board<lb/>
member, expressed the hope<lb/>
after Tuesday's board meeting<lb/>
that the students working with<lb/>
the station, and interested faculty<lb/>
members, would pool their tal-<lb/>
ents and oooperate to make<lb/>
WECU a successful FM station.<lb/>
PRESS CARDS<lb/>
MEDIA SECRETARY<lb/>
Doug White, editor of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD asked for the<lb/>
approval of the press cards that<lb/>
will enable FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
reporters to review movies, re-<lb/>
oords and athletic events without<lb/>
charge.<lb/>
White said the cards will cost<lb/>
$43.41 for 200 and will be funded<lb/>
with money from the printing<lb/>
funds. White feels this will<lb/>
alleviate the problem of some<lb/>
people claiming to be from the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD and receiving<lb/>
free services.<lb/>
The Media Board's secretary<lb/>
PETE PODESZWA<lb/>
He came to ECU in 1976 and is<lb/>
working on his B.F.A. in com-<lb/>
munication arts in the School of<lb/>
Art.<lb/>
HOLLER!N' WAS IN at Spivey's Corner this past weekend. The annual<lb/>
event which attracted a crowd of 11,000 this year, revived once more<lb/>
the folk art of holler in' - even if microphones have now replaced good<lb/>
oe' lung power See story, p.6<lb/>
f Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
will be a state supported position<lb/>
and the board is beginning to<lb/>
formulate a job description. In-<lb/>
cluded in these responsibilties<lb/>
will be the running of the<lb/>
Compugraphic machine which<lb/>
sets the paper's type and general<lb/>
accounting skills<lb/>
Aooording to Rudy Alexander,<lb/>
Assistant Dean of Student Af-<lb/>
fairs this may be revised in the<lb/>
fall when the position is open, he<lb/>
added that everything the Media<lb/>
Board does this summer is<lb/>
tentative and subject to change in<lb/>
the fall.<lb/>
Maintenance costs cited<lb/>
Parking fees to rise<lb/>
ByJOHNMONDS<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
ECU students are in for a big<lb/>
surprise when they go to register<lb/>
their vehicles fa the 1978-79<lb/>
school year.<lb/>
Parking registration fees have<lb/>
risen from $5 for the last year to<lb/>
$10 for next year.<lb/>
Parking decals go on sale July<lb/>
10, but even with the raise in<lb/>
price, a parking space in the<lb/>
immediate area of your class a<lb/>
dorm won't be guaranteed.<lb/>
Joe Caider, director of secur-<lb/>
ity, says the raise in the decal<lb/>
Caider says that the price of<lb/>
the decal from the printer has<lb/>
tripled over the past three or four<lb/>
years The cost of other needed<lb/>
materials has also risen.<lb/>
There is perhaps a bright side<lb/>
to the prioe increase. When<lb/>
registering two oars this fall, the<lb/>
second decal will only cost two<lb/>
dollars.<lb/>
Bicycle decals will also go on<lb/>
sale in July and the cost will be<lb/>
the same as last year. Decals from<lb/>
the 1978-79 year expire Septem-<lb/>
ber 1.<lb/>
Libertarian Party tries for ballot<lb/>
ByDENISEJUPREE<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
Libertarian Party representat-<lb/>
ives, working to get the pan on<lb/>
the ballot in North Carolina, were<lb/>
on campus last week soliciting<lb/>
signatures from registered North<lb/>
Carolina voters.<lb/>
Representative Marion<lb/>
Williams said 10,000 signatures<lb/>
from registered voters were need-<lb/>
ed before the party could be<lb/>
Placed on the North Carolina<lb/>
ballot.<lb/>
"We hit the 10,000 mark<lb/>
Wednesday, but we need 4,000<lb/>
more signatures just to be on the<lb/>
safe side. Technically, we need<lb/>
14,000 signatures to cover our-<lb/>
selves if some of the 10,000<lb/>
signatures are not valid she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Representative Jay Hilgartne.<lb/>
said the party collected about 800<lb/>
signatures in the Greenville area.<lb/>
"After our three day stay<lb/>
here, we will be moving on to the<lb/>
Raleigh-Durham area. We will be<lb/>
trying to meet the June 15<lb/>
deadline fa the 10,000 signa-<lb/>
tures he said.<lb/>
Aooading to their statement<lb/>
of principles, Libertarians hold<lb/>
that all individuals have the right<lb/>
to exercise sole dominion over<lb/>
their own lives, and have the right<lb/>
to live in whateva manner they<lb/>
choose, so long as they do not<lb/>
faabily interfere with the equal<lb/>
rights a ahersto live in whatever<lb/>
manner thev choose<lb/>
<pb facs="00058059_0002"/><lb/>
???????????BHHM<lb/>
Pane 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 21 June 1978<lb/>
Co-op students receive on-the-job training<lb/>
By HELENA WOODWARD<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
The ECU Office of Cooperat-<lb/>
ive Education is placing an<lb/>
increasing number of students<lb/>
from various on-campus depart-<lb/>
ments in parttime and fulltime<lb/>
lobs according to Mrs. Fredi<lb/>
Sandy" Green, a Co-op coor-<lb/>
dinator.<lb/>
Mrs. Green, the newest mem-<lb/>
ber of the Co-op staff, said the<lb/>
program has been revitalized in<lb/>
the last six months.<lb/>
"The main thrust of the<lb/>
program is to help students<lb/>
acquire on-the-job training and<lb/>
skills. Employers expect both<lb/>
experience and a degree from<lb/>
employees she said.<lb/>
"Our program is unique<lb/>
Mrs. Green continued. "A stud-<lb/>
ent can attend school and work on<lb/>
alternating semesters, and he can<lb/>
get all the benefits of a fulltime<lb/>
emolovfip <lb/>
Mrs. Green cited several<lb/>
examDles of students now work-<lb/>
ing on Co-op jobs. One such<lb/>
student, Richard Harrell, is direc-<lb/>
tor of Parks and Recreation (PRC)<lb/>
in Robersonville, North Carolina.<lb/>
Harrel's job is fulltime in the<lb/>
summer and parttime during the<lb/>
school year.<lb/>
"Several students are design-<lb/>
ing brochures and newsletters at<lb/>
Pitt County Hospital. Other stud-<lb/>
entsare working in artsand crafts<lb/>
at Nags Head. They are getting<lb/>
first-hand experience at mer-<lb/>
chandising continued Mrs.<lb/>
Green.<lb/>
After Co-op students grad-<lb/>
uate, many of them often go on to<lb/>
fulltime positions with the agen-<lb/>
cies with which they worked as<lb/>
undergraduates. Mrs. Green cit-<lb/>
ed ECU Senior Danny V. Nowell<lb/>
as such an example.<lb/>
"It was my first semester<lb/>
working on a Co-op job Nowell<lb/>
said. " My position title was<lb/>
Personnel Management student<lb/>
assistant he added.<lb/>
When Nowell went to work<lb/>
Capezio Danskin<lb/>
New Danskin Swimsuits<lb/>
? AT BARREjJD, Now k Stock<lb/>
805 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 756-0761<lb/>
IRTQ1RVED<lb/>
with Co-op, he had eight hours<lb/>
left to graduate. He is now<lb/>
enrolled in summer school comp-<lb/>
eting six of those hours needed to<lb/>
graduate. Sociology Department<lb/>
Chairman Melvin Williams allow-<lb/>
ed Nowell to complete the two<lb/>
remaining hours in Washington,<lb/>
D.C where later in the summer<lb/>
he will return to work fulltime.<lb/>
"When I return, my position<lb/>
title will change to Personnel<lb/>
Management Specialists<lb/>
Nowell said.<lb/>
"My work involved writing<lb/>
job descriptions, conducting exit<lb/>
interviews, and serving on<lb/>
screening panels. Working with<lb/>
Co-op has given me a chance to<lb/>
gain job experience and to work in<lb/>
a metropolitian area - something<lb/>
I really wanted to do continued<lb/>
Nowell.<lb/>
He added that in worKing for<lb/>
the federal government, he gets<lb/>
health benefits, paid holidays,<lb/>
flexible working hours, and non-<lb/>
competent promotions. Nowell<lb/>
plans to work permanently with<lb/>
the General Accounting Office.<lb/>
When asked if he missed not<lb/>
graduating with his classmates<lb/>
last May 19, Nowell answered<lb/>
that by working with Co-op, he<lb/>
now has an excellent chance of<lb/>
permanent employment - some-<lb/>
thing Spring graduates may not<lb/>
have.<lb/>
 By working with Co-op.I have<lb/>
an early chance with the job<lb/>
markRt hefore the msiaunht of<lb/>
the ring sale.<lb/>
save up to $22?00<lb/>
1978 Spring graduates he said<lb/>
Nowell urges interested stud-<lb/>
ents to apply early with Co-op<lb/>
(Rawl, 313). Minority students<lb/>
should espeaally apply he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Mrs. Green acknowledged<lb/>
that Co-op is "anxious to increase<lb/>
its minority enrollment "We<lb/>
are now waking with the hearing<lb/>
-impaired and other handicapped<lb/>
students she said.<lb/>
"Many students, though, do<lb/>
not wish to leave North Carolina<lb/>
to work on Coop jobs. In the<lb/>
future, our office plans to initiate<lb/>
activitiesto involve more students<lb/>
with Co-op she added.<lb/>
Mrs. Green is one of a<lb/>
three-member coordinating team<lb/>
for Co-op. The other coordinators<lb/>
include Mrs Karen Frye and Dr.<lb/>
Barry Davidson. Dr. Betsy Har-<lb/>
per heads the program.<lb/>
Mrs. Green graduated from<lb/>
the University of California at<lb/>
Berkley with a Masters degree m<lb/>
Sooioinq?, She is now enrolled en<lb/>
a parttime basis in the doctoral<lb/>
pruyram in education at North<lb/>
Carolina State University A<lb/>
Woodrow Wilson fellow, Mrs.<lb/>
Green previously served as assis-<lb/>
tant professor at Concordia Col-<lb/>
lege in Oregon At Oregon State,<lb/>
she taught courses on the black<lb/>
woman and the black family.<lb/>
Math Department<lb/>
selects new chairman<lb/>
By CATHY CARROLL<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
The ECU Math Department<lb/>
after a 2-year search, has a<lb/>
chairman, according to Dr.<lb/>
Kathenne W. Hodgin. chair-<lb/>
person of the search committee.<lb/>
Dr. Robert C. Shock, chosen<lb/>
over about 100 applicants, comes<lb/>
to ECU from Southern Illinois<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Dr. Shock received his PhD<lb/>
from UNC-Chapel Hill, his MA at<lb/>
the University of Arizona, and a<lb/>
B.S. at Bowling Green State<lb/>
University. He has taught at the<lb/>
University of Arizona, Ohio Univ-<lb/>
ersity and Southern Illinois prior<lb/>
to coming to ECU.<lb/>
Dr. Shook is doing research<lb/>
on coal extraction and utilization<lb/>
Listed in Who s Who in the<lb/>
Mideast, his special interests in<lb/>
math include algebra, linear<lb/>
programming and non-linear pro-<lb/>
gramming.<lb/>
Dr. Shook, married and the<lb/>
father of 3 children, will begin<lb/>
work at the end of July.<lb/>
$59.95<lb/>
Only two days left!<lb/>
College jewelry by<lb/>
IRTCTIRVED<lb/>
June 22 &amp; 23<lb/>
World-famous tor<lb/>
diamond and wedding rings<lb/>
Student Supply Store,<lb/>
Wright Building.<lb/>
Official ECU Class ring.<lb/>
Men's traditional Slladlum rings and selected women's fashion rings are an<lb/>
unusual buy at $599$. If you want really outstanding savings, now i. the time to buy<lb/>
your college ring.<lb/>
You can charge your Art Carved college jewelry on<lb/>
Master Charge or Visa<lb/>
f. t .  4<lb/>
<pb facs="00058059_0003"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
to<lb/>
Proposes Child Health Reform Act<lb/>
21 June 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Page<lb/>
mating team<lb/>
coordinators<lb/>
Frye and Dr.<lb/>
Betsy Har-<lb/>
Juated from<lb/>
California at<lb/>
?rs degree in<lb/>
' enrolled on<lb/>
the doctoral<lb/>
n at North<lb/>
iversjty A<lb/>
3llow, Mrs.<lb/>
red asassis-<lb/>
icordia Coi-<lb/>
regon Sate,<lb/>
n the black<lb/>
family.<lb/>
f-<lb/>
nan<lb/>
reen State<lb/>
ught at the<lb/>
Ohio Univ-<lb/>
hncxs prior<lb/>
ig research<lb/>
utilization<lb/>
ho in the<lb/>
nterests in<lb/>
?ra, linear<lb/>
-linear pro-<lb/>
d and the<lb/>
win begin<lb/>
my<lb/>
Helms visits new infant intensive care facility<lb/>
By STUART MORGAN<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C,<lb/>
visited the nearly completed new<lb/>
intensive care aenter at the Pitt<lb/>
Memorial - ECU medical comp-<lb/>
lex June 10 and afterwards held a<lb/>
brief news conference.<lb/>
The 33-bed infant care center<lb/>
facility, which will be completed<lb/>
and officially opened in a few<lb/>
weeks, is designed to offer<lb/>
intensive neonatal care for the<lb/>
newborn in a 29-oounty region of<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
The area has a higher<lb/>
infant mortality rate and a<lb/>
higher inciaence of maternal<lb/>
health problems than other parts<lb/>
of N.C. and other states, accord-<lb/>
ing to ECU health officials.<lb/>
After touring the facility,<lb/>
Helms made a brief statement in<lb/>
which he expressed his conoern<lb/>
for the infant mortality and<lb/>
maternity health care in eastern<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
"The death of 2,400 infants a<lb/>
year in North Carolina is a<lb/>
tragedy we can no longer toler-<lb/>
ate Sonata Helms said. "This<lb/>
nursery facility means that in the<lb/>
future, hundreds of babies who<lb/>
would otherwise not be able to<lb/>
live to see their first birthday, will<lb/>
now see that birthday and many<lb/>
others<lb/>
Helms said newborn care<lb/>
centers like the one at Pitt<lb/>
Memorial have achieved drastic<lb/>
declines in infant deaths as well<lb/>
as in infant retardation and other<lb/>
conditions such as cerebral palsy.<lb/>
Helms also announced that he<lb/>
introduced to the U.S. Senate<lb/>
Friday legislation to improve the<lb/>
administration of federal mater-<lb/>
nal and infant care programs.<lb/>
The legislation, entitled the<lb/>
"Maternal, Infant and Crippled<lb/>
Children's Health Reform Act<lb/>
would provide that states such as<lb/>
North Carolina, which have high<lb/>
infant mortaltiy rates, be given<lb/>
priority in federal funding; estab-<lb/>
lishing a new office to coordinate<lb/>
maternal and child care pro-<lb/>
4fi<lb/>
A<lb/>
752-1828 ift<lb/>
<lb/>
K<lb/>
<lb/>
(1) SPICED HAM<lb/>
(2) BOLOGNA ? CHEESE<lb/>
(3) HAM &amp; SWISS<lb/>
(4) HAM. SWISS &amp; SALAMI<lb/>
(5) TUNA<lb/>
6) ROAST BEEF<lb/>
(7) TURKEY<lb/>
(S) CLUB<lb/>
(9) SUPER<lb/>
(10) CHEESE<lb/>
(11) HOT PASTROMI<lb/>
(12) HOT CORNED BEEF<lb/>
BUMRESBE8T<lb/>
Come By For The Best<lb/>
Subs In Town<lb/>
Watch Major Sports Events On<lb/>
Our 6 Ft. TV 706 EVans ST<lb/>
Do you have<lb/>
good taste in<lb/>
Music ?<lb/>
UM2<lb/>
&amp;QJN<lb/>
119 E' 5th Street<lb/>
Ladies special Mow. - Fri. 4 - 7 <lb/>
 Ladies night Wed. 8 - n <lb/>
Everybody's night<lb/>
Mon. Sues. 8 - n<lb/>
grams, and provide that doctors<lb/>
with practical experience advise<lb/>
HEW (the Department of Health,<lb/>
Education and Welfare) on policy,<lb/>
new regulations, and determine<lb/>
where the greatest health care<lb/>
needs in this area exist.<lb/>
Dr. Archie Johnson, past<lb/>
president of the N.C. Pediatric<lb/>
Society who accompanied Helms<lb/>
on the tour said the legislation<lb/>
proposed by Helms would provide<lb/>
increased aid to those who need<lb/>
it most and that it could also<lb/>
reduce long-term health costs.<lb/>
"You are either going to pay<lb/>
for ahealthychild early in life<lb/>
said Johnson, "or you are going<lb/>
tr pay thousands of dollars later<lb/>
U special education and rehabil-<lb/>
tation of a retarded or crippled<lb/>
child<lb/>
Helms said the toal cost to the<lb/>
ffideral government of his pro-<lb/>
;osed legislation would be $190<lb/>
million dollars and added that<lb/>
under that legislation during the<lb/>
fiscal year 1978, N.C. would<lb/>
receive nearly seven million dol-<lb/>
lars from HEW.<lb/>
"In all probability, there will<lb/>
be little if any additional expense<lb/>
to the taxpayer and a great deal<lb/>
more service Senator Helms<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Among those present during<lb/>
Helms' visit were Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins, chancellor of ECU, Dr.<lb/>
Archie Johnson; Dr. Edwin<lb/>
Monroe, vice chancellor fa<lb/>
Health Affairs; Dr. Jon Tingle-<lb/>
stad, chairman of the department<lb/>
of pediatrics, ECUSchoolof Med-<lb/>
icine; Dr. William Laupus, dean<lb/>
of ECU School of Medicine; Dr.<lb/>
Darnell Jones, of the ECU<lb/>
department of obstectrics and<lb/>
gynecology, and several other<lb/>
doctors involved in the field of<lb/>
infant and maternal care and<lb/>
crippled children.<lb/>
Wiener King<lb/>
?<lb/>
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from our own special recipe of quality inaredients.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058059_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 21 June 1978<lb/>
De-press the hollerin'<lb/>
The lenth Annual Spivey's Corner Hollerin'<lb/>
Contest went on as planned last Saturday,<lb/>
attempting to preserve the dying art of hollerin' in its<lb/>
pure form.<lb/>
But the oontest was far from pure due to the<lb/>
overabundance of journalists and broadcasters who<lb/>
often threatened to overshadow the contestants in<lb/>
the various events. The occurances last weekend<lb/>
were typical of an ugly trend in modern society, that<lb/>
of the news media taking over the events which they<lb/>
are trying to cover.<lb/>
Nowhere was this interference more evident than<lb/>
in the greased pole climbing oontest. A film crew<lb/>
from the syndicated television series, "Big Blue<lb/>
Marble" was constantly getting in the way of<lb/>
spectators, judges, and fellow media people,<lb/>
obscuring the competition of just aboaut every<lb/>
bystander at one time or another. There were<lb/>
several delays as the show's host Clark Brandon took<lb/>
several takes of his introductory monologue. Later,<lb/>
after the oontest, the directdr filmed a judge<lb/>
greasing the bottom of the pole as if the oontest<lb/>
hadn't happened yet.<lb/>
Onstage, the innumerable television cameras,<lb/>
microphones, and photographers blocked the vision<lb/>
of anyone in the audience who was sitting slightly left<lb/>
or right of center.<lb/>
It seemed as if there were more media people<lb/>
than the general public.<lb/>
The contest was covered by the Associated Press,<lb/>
United Press International, The News and Observor,<lb/>
The Sampson County Independent, The Sun Journal,<lb/>
The Fayetteville Times, The Daily Tar Heel,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, Big Blue Marble, and the BBC.<lb/>
One cameraman was overheard instructing a<lb/>
bluegrass band to "get those people on their feet out<lb/>
there. We need some shots of people dancing in the<lb/>
audience<lb/>
If an event is staged solely for the purpose of<lb/>
ooverage in the media, a so-called media event, is<lb/>
there any reason to oontinue the event, or, more<lb/>
importantly, is there any reason to oontinue covering<lb/>
the event?<lb/>
The news media should be wary of events that<lb/>
may, even with the best initial intentions, evolve into<lb/>
media events which serve only to exploit the<lb/>
journalists and debase the integrity of the event's<lb/>
promoters.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor art fifty years.<lb/>
'Ware it left to me to dedde 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/>
News Editors Jeannie Williams<lb/>
Jim Barnes<lb/>
Trends EditorSteve Bachner<lb/>
Sports EditorChris Hdloman<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD it the student newspaper ot East Cat Jina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Media Board of ECU and is<lb/>
distributed each Tuesday and Thursday, weekly during the<lb/>
inner.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C 27834.<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, ?57-6367, 757-6308.<lb/>
subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Scott resident complains of roaches<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I honestly believe that all the<lb/>
roaches from Ayoock, Jones, and<lb/>
Belk have left their homes and<lb/>
migrated to their summer retreat<lb/>
(Soott Dormitory). I'm also sure<lb/>
that if the Pitt County Health<lb/>
Department paid a visit and saw<lb/>
all these little aitters, they would<lb/>
close the dormitory.<lb/>
I can live with a few, I'm sure<lb/>
that anyone can. But it seems<lb/>
as if their whole entire world<lb/>
population has taken residence in<lb/>
Scott. (Half of the population<lb/>
seems to live in my room.)<lb/>
I have tried everything from<lb/>
killing them by hand to Raid to<lb/>
Black Flag Motels. Nothing<lb/>
seems to work!<lb/>
I keep all my food covered, no<lb/>
dirty dishes, etc. But I still can<lb/>
kill an average of 14 a day, plus<lb/>
not to mention the ones that die in<lb/>
the roach motels. AM my<lb/>
suitemates follow the same<lb/>
guidelines for cleanliness, but<lb/>
also have the same problems.<lb/>
For example, I never<lb/>
feel lonely. When I eat, they all<lb/>
come out to join me. I never sleep<lb/>
alone, either. The other night I<lb/>
got to go to bed with two big<lb/>
brown ones. Wow! Isn't that<lb/>
exciting?<lb/>
Also, since the tennis courts<lb/>
aren't finished yet, I still keep my<lb/>
backhand in shape by taking an<lb/>
old FOUNTAINHEAD and swing<lb/>
away. (I bet Jimmy Connors<lb/>
never got to practice his backhand<lb/>
in this manner.)<lb/>
They also provide the enjoy-<lb/>
ment of trying to step on them to<lb/>
heat that lovely sound when you<lb/>
squash them . . CRUNCH'<lb/>
But the climax of all this fun<lb/>
occurs when you spray Raid on<lb/>
the Grande Roaches (those are<lb/>
the one that are four to six inches<lb/>
long) and watch them run into the<lb/>
wall and give you a disco dance<lb/>
lesson before they die.<lb/>
I guess sinoe there is not much<lb/>
else to do in Greenville, the<lb/>
Housing Office and Maintenance<lb/>
Department want us to keep<lb/>
entertained with these little<lb/>
pests. However, just as the old<lb/>
cliche states, 'too much of<lb/>
anything can be bad fa you I<lb/>
tend to have to agree when it<lb/>
comes to these aitters.<lb/>
Joey Crutchf ield<lb/>
Student criticizes 'fuzzy' bureaucrats<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Whoever was in charge of<lb/>
deciding where to place the stop<lb/>
signs on the main road through<lb/>
the campus must be a real<lb/>
intellectual featherweight. At<lb/>
least half of the signs are either<lb/>
unnecessary a misplaced.<lb/>
It doesn't take a great deal of<lb/>
mental wherewithal to realize that<lb/>
if roads intersect and stop signs<lb/>
must be placed on one of the<lb/>
intersecting roads, it is preferable<lb/>
toUtop the incoming traffic from<lb/>
the less traveled road, rather than<lb/>
impede the larger traffic flow.<lb/>
On both sides of the steam<lb/>
plant small roads intersect the<lb/>
main one. Rather than stop the<lb/>
traffic on the side roads, some<lb/>
fuzzy-thinking bureauaat decid-<lb/>
ed to stop traffic on the main<lb/>
road, thereby stopping maybe a<lb/>
thousand cars a day, rather than a<lb/>
few dozen at most.<lb/>
Not that cars on the main road<lb/>
are travelling at any great rate of<lb/>
speed anyway, what with a speed<lb/>
break befae the stop sign on the<lb/>
main raod in one direction, and a<lb/>
speed break and a hill on the<lb/>
other.<lb/>
And the stop signs at the base<lb/>
of the hill (at the top of the main<lb/>
road, near Tenth Street), are<lb/>
equally senseless. Someone<lb/>
(ono9 he negotiates another main<lb/>
road speed break there) entering<lb/>
the parking area near the old gym<lb/>
Memaial Gym and Tenth Street<lb/>
could be served just as well with a<lb/>
yield sign. The stop sign in the<lb/>
other direction, at the entrance to<lb/>
the main road, near the old gym,<lb/>
is absolutely pointless.<lb/>
Someone out there in that<lb/>
gray maze of the wald of the<lb/>
bureauaats must be a lover of<lb/>
bottlenecks, aggravation, and all<lb/>
that is senseless.<lb/>
Ronald Maell<lb/>
<pb facs="00058059_0005"/><lb/>
21 June 1978 FOUNTAlNHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Eastern TV. C. faces health care shortage<lb/>
By CATHY CARROLL<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
Beware Eastern North Carol-<lb/>
inians! You may die sooner than<lb/>
you think.<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina is<lb/>
noted as having "a long way to<lb/>
go" to catch up with the rest of<lb/>
the state and nation in health<lb/>
care, accordion " Or Edwin W<lb/>
Monrnp vice chancellor for<lb/>
health affairs at ECU<lb/>
in a recent newb bureau<lb/>
release, Monore cites the prob-<lb/>
lem being compounded by "hav-<lb/>
ing fewer doctors, fewer nurses,<lb/>
dentists, allied health profess, "ri-<lb/>
als and fewer hospital and<lb/>
nursing home beds<lb/>
Dr. Robert E. Thurber, chair-<lb/>
man of the department of Physio-<lb/>
logy at the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine agrees with Monroe.<lb/>
Thurber stated it isnot the quality<lb/>
of doctors but the quantity. He<lb/>
said the doctors in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina are very qualified.<lb/>
"We just need more like<lb/>
them he said.<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina is low<lb/>
on the list of physicians to patient<lb/>
ratio in comparison to the rest of<lb/>
the nation. It is rated as the 35th<lb/>
worst, with a ratio of 74 medical<lb/>
doctors per 100,000 patients as<lb/>
compared to the national average<lb/>
of 163 medical doctors per<lb/>
100,000 patients.<lb/>
Dr. Thurber stated several<lb/>
major reasons for such a poor<lb/>
ratio . He cited the main prob-<lb/>
lems of the mal-distribution to be<lb/>
the social advantages of the<lb/>
community and the preference of<lb/>
the spouse.<lb/>
Thurber further stated that an<lb/>
effort was being made to change<lb/>
the poor ratio. "It's slow but<lb/>
effective he said. Several ef-<lb/>
forts include an area health<lb/>
educaiton system, which is un-<lb/>
ique to North Carolina, and<lb/>
volunteer organizations such as<lb/>
the heart fund and cerebral palsy<lb/>
association.<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina is also<lb/>
noted for having major heart<lb/>
diseases, and high death rates<lb/>
from heart diseases, high blood<lb/>
pressure, stroke and cancer.<lb/>
Thurber states it was un-<lb/>
known why these statistics were<lb/>
so high in this part of the state.<lb/>
Many people have researched the<lb/>
question, but none have found an<lb/>
answer.<lb/>
Programs are underway in<lb/>
an effort to help bring the current<lb/>
health status of eastern North<lb/>
Carolina up to that of the rest of<lb/>
the state and nation. One such<lb/>
program is EAHEC- Eastern Area<lb/>
Health Education Center, the<lb/>
youngest of the state's nine<lb/>
regional organizations devoted to<lb/>
improving the quality, quantity<lb/>
and distribution of health care<lb/>
professionals.<lb/>
EAHEC was formed in 1974<lb/>
under the leadership of Dr. Erwin<lb/>
Monroe, vioe chancellor for<lb/>
health affairs at ECU. Accordina<lb/>
to a recent news bureau release,<lb/>
included in EAHEC's 23-county<lb/>
service area are Currituck, Cam-<lb/>
den, Pasquotank, Perquimans,<lb/>
Gates. Hertford, Bertir, Chowan,<lb/>
Dare, Tyrell, Martin, Washing-<lb/>
ton, Beaufort, Hyde, Pamlico,<lb/>
Craven, Pitt, Greene, Wayne,<lb/>
Lenoi' Jones Onslow and Cart-<lb/>
eret. making it geographically<lb/>
the largest of the state's nine<lb/>
regional organizations.<lb/>
EAHEC's objectives include<lb/>
continuing education programs,<lb/>
supplying audio-visual equipment<lb/>
to hospitals, and offering techin-<lb/>
cal assistance to those interested<lb/>
in developing their own educat-<lb/>
ional presentations.<lb/>
According to Patterson, the<lb/>
availability of EAHEC's prog-<lb/>
rams isan enticement for physic-<lb/>
ians to locate in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
"In fact Patterson stated,<lb/>
"the number of physicians in our<lb/>
area, particularly those in prim-<lb/>
ary care (family practice, internal<lb/>
medicine, pediatrics, and obstet-<lb/>
rics and gynecology), has in-<lb/>
creased markedly since the<lb/>
EAHEC program began<lb/>
Dr. Thurber cites the problem<lb/>
of eastern North Carolina's health<lb/>
status problem as showing im-<lb/>
provement.<lb/>
The number of physicians in<lb/>
the area is coming up. Graduates<lb/>
are starting to stay in the state<lb/>
Health status is a serious<lb/>
problem in eastern North Carol-<lb/>
ina right now. But with more<lb/>
programs like EAHEC, the health<lb/>
problems of eastern North Carol-<lb/>
ina can be brought up to par with<lb/>
the rest of the state and nation.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058059_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 21 June 1978<lb/>
10th annual Hollerin' Contest<lb/>
DEW ITT HOW ELL, 1978 men's Hollerin' Champ.<lb/>
FRANCES BAREFOOT, WOMEN'S winner, with<lb/>
Peanuts<lb/>
The fine art of hollerin'<lb/>
ByJEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Hooo-eeee!<lb/>
Hollerin' is here to stay.<lb/>
The lost art of hollerin a<lb/>
custom traditional in this area<lb/>
years ago, is on the return.<lb/>
Saturday marked the tenth<lb/>
anniversary of the National Hol-<lb/>
lerin' Contest, held in Spivey s<lb/>
Corner, a rural crossroads com-<lb/>
munity in Sampson County, N.C.<lb/>
The event, held every third<lb/>
Saturday in June, was attended<lb/>
by a crowd of 11,000 who came to<lb/>
hear people whistle, croak, holler,<lb/>
and tell what it was like "in the<lb/>
old days<lb/>
This year's events included a<lb/>
Watermelon Roll, a Greasy Pole<lb/>
Climb, a Conch Shell and Fox<lb/>
Han Blowin' Contest, Whistlin<lb/>
Frog Croakin and a junior, ladies<lb/>
and men's Hollerin' Contest.<lb/>
Judges fa the events included<lb/>
ECU Head Football Coach Pat<lb/>
Dye; Thad Eure, N.C. Secretary<lb/>
of State; Harry Gatton, N.C.<lb/>
Bankers Association; Bruoe Joy-<lb/>
ner, N.C. Cystic Fibrosis Found-<lb/>
ation; and Charles O. Whitley.<lb/>
U.S. Congressman.<lb/>
Drew Carter and Allen Bowl-<lb/>
ing, both ECU students, were the<lb/>
only oollege students among the<lb/>
contestants.<lb/>
Carter placed second in the<lb/>
Conch Shell Contest, having won<lb/>
the event three years ago.<lb/>
Bowling and Carter partici-<lb/>
pated in the Men's Hollerin' but<lb/>
did not place.<lb/>
Cloggers, gospel singers,<lb/>
bluegrass and country music<lb/>
groups provided entertainment to<lb/>
an enthusiastic crowd despite the<lb/>
hot weather.<lb/>
Those who were near enough<lb/>
to the Watermelon Roll were<lb/>
liberally sprayed by the hoses of<lb/>
volunteer firemen as they attemp-<lb/>
ted to keep participants in the<lb/>
roped arena from escaping with<lb/>
the melons by aiming the heavy<lb/>
stream of the hose at their feet.<lb/>
The aowd moved on to the<lb/>
Greasy Pole Climb, which proved<lb/>
to be harder than it looked.<lb/>
Ambitious dimberstneaagain<lb/>
and again to reach the top of the<lb/>
greased pole but it finally took<lb/>
teamwah by a group of Army<lb/>
dentists from Ft. Bragg, N.C, to<lb/>
pile a pyramid of bodies around<lb/>
the pole as Joe Scarpella climbed<lb/>
to the top to reach the ten-dollar<lb/>
prize.<lb/>
The Junia Hollerin' Contest<lb/>
was held on stage as the aowd<lb/>
heard a variety of hollers with<lb/>
some amazing volume produced<lb/>
by boys and girls under age 16.<lb/>
M.trsellaise)<lb/>
The Conch Shell Caitest.<lb/>
which consisted of rowing into a<lb/>
oonch shell and pfooucing bugle-<lb/>
like blast, was won by David<lb/>
Wheel of Goldsbao, N.C. Wheel<lb/>
"played" a variety of 'attack<lb/>
calls' on the oonch shell.<lb/>
The Frog Croakin' Contest<lb/>
was won with an admirable aoak<lb/>
by Randy Gray of La Grange,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
DAN McLAMB. 1977 winner<lb/>
"Percy<lb/>
The winner, Robbie Goodman<lb/>
10, of Clinton, N.C, was a<lb/>
unanimous decision with his<lb/>
"rescue squad" holler, vvhich<lb/>
sounded almost exactly like the<lb/>
siren of an ambulance.<lb/>
"This is the first time I ever<lb/>
oome and the past two a three<lb/>
years I been wantin' to come up<lb/>
here and do what I been wantin<lb/>
to do, and that's my holler<lb/>
Goodman said. "I'm glad I got<lb/>
somebody to carry me this time<lb/>
and his hollerin' pal<lb/>
The Whistlin' Contest pro-<lb/>
duced a variety of tunes, come-<lb/>
and-get-it whistles, and bird calls<lb/>
from contestants of all ages.<lb/>
Eric Furman of Garner, N.C.<lb/>
won with his deep-baked possum,<lb/>
sauteed possum, and possum-in-<lb/>
wine sauoe (to the tune of La<lb/>
!0fi ANNUAL<lb/>
 NATIONAL HOL<lb/>
W Hollerin' Ca<lb/>
The Ladies' Hollerin' Contest,<lb/>
next on the agenda, was eagerly<lb/>
anticipated by the aowd.<lb/>
Last year's winner, Iris Turner<lb/>
of Fayetteville, N.C, became<lb/>
practically an overnight cele-<lb/>
brity when she appeared in the<lb/>
Tonight Show with Johnny<lb/>
Carson after winning the title last<lb/>
June.<lb/>
She thanked the aowd fa<lb/>
coming and proceeded to give her<lb/>
winning holler to an appreciative<lb/>
audienre.<lb/>
The women contestants had<lb/>
whoops, calls, and hollers ot<lb/>
ear-splitting intensity; but over-<lb/>
all, Frances Barefoot and her dog<lb/>
"Peanuts were the favaite as<lb/>
she was chosen the 1978 Ladies<lb/>
Hollerin Champ.<lb/>
continued on p. 7<lb/>
??<lb/>
r est i<lb/>
the World<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
A WHISTLIN1 CONTESTANT and his racoon,<lb/>
Pop-atop "<lb/>
COUNTY AND BLUEGRASS bands entertained an enthast,c crowd of 11,000<lb/>
<pb facs="00058059_0007"/><lb/>
?st.<lb/>
d a<lb/>
ile-<lb/>
iid<lb/>
eel<lb/>
iok<lb/>
3St<lb/>
ak<lb/>
je.<lb/>
21 June 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Photos by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
PA T DYE, ECU head football coach, looks on with other judges.<lb/>
continued from p. 6<lb/>
Now we re going to yell loud<lb/>
enough to be heard call the way in<lb/>
Washington, D.C Barefoot<lb/>
said, cradling Peanuts, her Chih-<lb/>
uahua.<lb/>
She proceeded to give a<lb/>
high-pitched holler and Peanuts<lb/>
joined in with her to provide one<lb/>
of the most original and distinct<lb/>
-ive hollers of the day.<lb/>
The Men's Hollerin' Contest<lb/>
was captured by Dewittt Howell<lb/>
of Goldsboro, N.C. with a clear,<lb/>
singsong holler.<lb/>
During the intermission be-<lb/>
fore the judges' decision, former<lb/>
champions entertained with win-<lb/>
ning hollers from past years.<lb/>
Each year a new event is<lb/>
added to the agenda of events.<lb/>
The Frog Croakin' Contest was<lb/>
the new addition this year, while<lb/>
last year's Ham Holler-In was<lb/>
repeated again.<lb/>
The Ham Holler-In consists of<lb/>
ham radio operators who broad-<lb/>
cast messages nationwide the<lb/>
morning of the contest.<lb/>
In 1972 a "Prettiest Possum"<lb/>
contest attracted a "contestant"<lb/>
all the way from Miami. The<lb/>
Florida possum, Beauregarde I,<lb/>
was defeated by a sun-bonneted<lb/>
North Carolina possum from Elm<lb/>
DREW CARTER OF ECU placed second in the<lb/>
Conch Shell Contest.<lb/>
City.<lb/>
The first annual Hollerin<lb/>
Contest in 1969 became widely<lb/>
publicized when the first champ-<lb/>
ion hollerer, Dewey Jackson<lb/>
appeared on NBC s Tonight Show<lb/>
with Johnny Carson.<lb/>
Many of Dewey Jackson's<lb/>
successors also visited the To-<lb/>
night Show and other nationally<lb/>
televised programs.<lb/>
Paul Parker, 87, the 1974<lb/>
Hollerin' champ, made history<lb/>
when he appeared on the Mike<lb/>
ALLEN BOWLING, AN ECU student. oVes a toller.<lb/>
THE ?INCREDIBLE HULK1' holler as done by a<lb/>
tumor contestant<lb/>
THE CROWD HAD just as much fun hollerin' back<lb/>
Douglas Show with comedian Red<lb/>
Skelton and asked who Red<lb/>
Skelton might be. Skelton liked<lb/>
him so much that he asked Parker<lb/>
to appear again later.<lb/>
Last year's winner Dan<lb/>
McLamb, a former Sampson<lb/>
County commissioner, won with<lb/>
the addition of his three-legged<lb/>
dog Percy, who hollered along<lb/>
with him.<lb/>
McLamb, Percy and women's<lb/>
champ Iris Turner were guests on<lb/>
the Tonight Show also.<lb/>
The revival of the lost art of<lb/>
hollerin' was due mainly to the<lb/>
founder, Ermon Godwin, Jr<lb/>
Dunn Banker and Spivey' s Corner<lb/>
resident.<lb/>
Through his efforts, Godwin<lb/>
promoted the hollerin' into an<lb/>
international contest.<lb/>
Christine Godwin, his wife,<lb/>
commented that the Hollerin'<lb/>
Contest has put Spivey s Corner<lb/>
on the map.<lb/>
"We've got a lot of publicity,<lb/>
and I guess we're known all over<lb/>
the United States she said.<lb/>
Ermon Godwin wondered<lb/>
aboui continuity of the contest<lb/>
even in its first year, 1969<lb/>
Godwin's concern was report-<lb/>
ed to have resulted from the fact<lb/>
tha the winners had all been<lb/>
members of the senio generation<lb/>
who remembered when hollerin<lb/>
was the chief means of commun-<lb/>
ication between neighbors, farms<lb/>
and fields, before the telephone<lb/>
was brought in.<lb/>
Ermon said that many of the<lb/>
younger challengers were just<lb/>
screamers saying that true<lb/>
hollerin' is an art that takes<lb/>
practice, understanding and<lb/>
"much doing<lb/>
Despite Godwin's concern, it<lb/>
looks like "the lost art of<lb/>
hollerin " has been sufficiently<lb/>
revived to ensure a continuing<lb/>
interest fa many years.<lb/>
In Godwin's own words, "it<lb/>
will continue as long as the world<lb/>
wants hollerin<lb/>
Hco-eeeel<lb/>
?m<lb/>
maaammmmaam<lb/>
<pb facs="00058059_0008"/><lb/>
age8 FOUNTAIN HEAD 21 June 1978<lb/>
Buddy Rich<lb/>
The acclaimed jazz drummer<lb/>
and his 15-member band<lb/>
come to ECU campus Friday<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Jazz drummer Buddy Rich<lb/>
and his 15-member band will<lb/>
appear at ECU Fn June 30, at 9<lb/>
p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
The performance is scheduled<lb/>
m conjunction with Rich's visit to<lb/>
ECU as part of the Seventh<lb/>
Annual Percussion Symposium,<lb/>
sponsored by the ECU School of<lb/>
Music and the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, in cooper-<lb/>
ation with Ludwig Industries.<lb/>
Tickets, priced at $3 each, will<lb/>
be sold at the door, beginning at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. or may be purchased in<lb/>
advance at selected locations in<lb/>
Greenville, Rocky Mount, Jack-<lb/>
sonville, Kmston, Tarboro. Wil-<lb/>
son and Washington.<lb/>
Before he began traveling<lb/>
with hisown band in 1966, Buddy<lb/>
Rich performed with such notable<lb/>
musicians as Tommy Dorsey,<lb/>
Frank Sinatra and Harry James.<lb/>
In the past 12 years, the Rich<lb/>
band has traveled and performed<lb/>
throughout the world, playing in<lb/>
theatres, concert halls, and disco-<lb/>
theques.<lb/>
Although he is bet known as<lb/>
a jazz drummer, beginning at the<lb/>
age of seven. Buddy Rich is also a<lb/>
dancer, singer and a karate<lb/>
enthusiast who holds a "black<lb/>
belt. He is also a frequent guest<lb/>
on the " Tonight Show' and other<lb/>
television programs.<lb/>
Nantucket's strengths lie in<lb/>
clean, tight vocal harmonies<lb/>
By CHRIS FARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The word is out and spreading<lb/>
fast: Local oand makes good.<lb/>
Yes, after yeas of paying<lb/>
dues, the American dream has<lb/>
actually come true fa these six<lb/>
southern boys, and right here<lb/>
before our very eyes.<lb/>
What inspiration it is to know<lb/>
that it is still possible for anyone<lb/>
to make one. (Yes, anyone).<lb/>
Patterned after the formula<lb/>
MIKE UZZELL, TOMMY Redd, and Kenny iyouie or jrea ounv<lb/>
Nantucket<lb/>
that brought Boston to such<lb/>
national prominrnoe, Nantucket<lb/>
unfortunately lacks in certain<lb/>
areas and makes it only as far as<lb/>
Trenton on their trip to the top.<lb/>
The album is centered around<lb/>
the songwnting of Tommy Reid,<lb/>
who composed all of the cuts on<lb/>
the album. Throughout the album<lb/>
his songs approach success, but<lb/>
invariably seem to end up inches<lb/>
short.<lb/>
These writing flaws are a<lb/>
result of sixth-grade lyrics, and<lb/>
consistently boring verses.<lb/>
The choruses however, are<lb/>
fresh, and alive with full harmon-<lb/>
ies and interesting chord<lb/>
changes, but the monotony of the<lb/>
verses leaves one mentally rush-<lb/>
ing ahead of the verses in order to<lb/>
get to the choruses (and relief)<lb/>
sooner.<lb/>
Side one plays pretty much<lb/>
like one long song, with a steady<lb/>
hard-driving beat throughout.<lb/>
However side two shows us<lb/>
some diversity. The keyboards on<lb/>
"Spring Fever" are a pleasant<lb/>
change from the raunchy guitars,<lb/>
and Eddie Blairs sax solo on<lb/>
"Girl You Blew A Good Thing" is<lb/>
terrific, making one wonder why<lb/>
the sax is not used more<lb/>
throughout the album.<lb/>
The album strengths lie in the<lb/>
groups clean, tight harmonies,<lb/>
and the overall vocal arrange-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The arrangements are truly<lb/>
unique and well performed, and<lb/>
help to round off the edges of the<lb/>
otherwise raw sounding tunes.<lb/>
Most notable in this respect<lb/>
is the vocal on the chorus of<lb/>
"Never Gonna Take Your Lies<lb/>
The weaknesses on the other<lb/>
hand are in the instrumental<lb/>
arrangements, and the unimagin-<lb/>
ative guitar playing.<lb/>
The rhythms are choppy and<lb/>
seem to leave the members of the<lb/>
band waking against each aher,<lb/>
while Mark Downing's guitar<lb/>
licks sound as if they were<lb/>
recaded five years ago.<lb/>
See NANTUCKET Page 9)<lb/>
T<lb/>
<lb/>
JAZZ DRUMMER BUDDY Rich and his 15-member band will a<lb/>
at ECU Friday, June 30, at 9 p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
Not a cop-out<lb/>
Arabesque is mature,<lb/>
unadulterated jazz<lb/>
BY JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Edita<lb/>
John Klemmer's new album,<lb/>
Arabesque, is not a oop-out.<lb/>
Arabesque is an album full of<lb/>
mature, fa-real jazz, without any<lb/>
impurities added like rock a<lb/>
disco.<lb/>
An arabesque is "a oomplex<lb/>
and anate design of intertwined<lb/>
flaal, foliate, and geometrical<lb/>
figures<lb/>
John Klemmer's jazz then is<lb/>
an arabesque of music, it is a<lb/>
oomplex and anate r'esign of<lb/>
intertwined tena sax, Fender<lb/>
Rhodes, piano, electric bass<lb/>
drums and acoustic guitar.<lb/>
The arrangements are fully<lb/>
developed and compelling. They<lb/>
succeed in carrying out interest<lb/>
throughout.<lb/>
Klemmer himself plays the<lb/>
tena saxophone with wit and<lb/>
intensity. His saxophone sputters<lb/>
in time, flies oooly through the<lb/>
aystal air of the string accompan-<lb/>
iments and then soars off into a<lb/>
brilliant solo.<lb/>
It is saxophone with a sense of<lb/>
huma, aie who has lived through<lb/>
life in the seventies and can still<lb/>
laugh and be optimistic.<lb/>
If you met this saxophone in<lb/>
the park.you would probably ask it<lb/>
over fa dinner.<lb/>
Klemmer is admirably and<lb/>
excitingly accompanied by Pat<lb/>
Rebillot s Fender Rhodes and by<lb/>
Roger Kellaway's piano. Both<lb/>
musicians equal Klemmer in the<lb/>
freshness of their sound.<lb/>
The instrumentalists on<lb/>
Arabesque play a pure, modern<lb/>
jazz, as aocesible as it is<lb/>
oompositionally oomplex.<lb/>
Klemmer's jazz is not nostal-<lb/>
gic fa the days of Basie,<lb/>
Ellington, Brubeck, and the MJQ<lb/>
but it is the latest development in<lb/>
their great tradition.<lb/>
The album begins with the<lb/>
dreamy first few measures of the<lb/>
song, "Paradise<lb/>
After that glimpse of the<lb/>
Arcadia of jazz the song picks up<lb/>
a beat bought somewhere in New<lb/>
Yak and proceeds to cook like<lb/>
Mama Leonia until the end.<lb/>
K lemmer' s sax would melt the<lb/>
fat off a cab-driver's neck, while<lb/>
Rebilia's Fender Rhodes en-<lb/>
hnces the sax as well as glows in<lb/>
i wn perfamance by virtue of<lb/>
i ? impeccable rhythmic com-<lb/>
plexr .<lb/>
II variety is the spioe of life<lb/>
then variation is the spice of<lb/>
music. Roger Kellaway seems to<lb/>
play jazz piano with this in mind<lb/>
and his perfamances are full of<lb/>
drama, dash and romance.<lb/>
Arabesques main fault is that<lb/>
it is little too much of a good<lb/>
See ARABESQUE Page 9<lb/>
<pb facs="00058059_0009"/><lb/>
urn<lb/>
21 June 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
ear<lb/>
PRINTS BY GEORGE Rouault are currently on exhibit in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Gallery. Rouault outlined bright color<lb/>
fields in black, a technique called "dassonism which reflects his<lb/>
early training in designing stained glass-windows. His work combines<lb/>
coloristic expression with somber subects resulting in a unique sense<lb/>
of the tragedy of living in the contemporary world. The Rouault show<lb/>
is the first in a series of exhibits which the committee will present,<lb/>
according to Jeff Fleming, chairperson of the Student Union Art<lb/>
Exhibition Committee Shows scheduled for the upcoming year<lb/>
include the colorist Josef Alber's photographs of the Lower East Side<lb/>
from the Jewish Museum, the annual REBEL show, and the lllumnia<lb/>
ShOY<lb/>
Nicholson and Dunaway star<lb/>
Chinatown on Mall Tuesday<lb/>
This Tuesday night, June 27,<lb/>
the Student Union Films Commit-<lb/>
tee will present its fifth Free Flick<lb/>
of the summer, Chinatown, at 9<lb/>
p.m. on the Mall.<lb/>
Set in seedy Southern Calif-<lb/>
ornia of the 1930's, Chinatown<lb/>
JACK NICHOLSON<lb/>
ARABESQUE<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
thing. The arrangements of all<lb/>
the songs on this album are<lb/>
distressingly similar, if equally<lb/>
stirring.<lb/>
It would have been a good<lb/>
idea fa K lemmer to do a song al I<lb/>
by himself, or one with just his<lb/>
sax and piano.<lb/>
A little change in the instru-<lb/>
mentation of the songs would<lb/>
have added diversion to the<lb/>
album. John Klemmer is so good<lb/>
we long for him to develop a<lb/>
three-dimensional style.<lb/>
Each song on the album is a<lb/>
speeding statement on the energy<lb/>
of new jazz. Perhaps a slower<lb/>
number would be the needed tail<lb/>
on this wildly flying kite.<lb/>
John Klemmer realizes that<lb/>
true jazz bass must be felt more<lb/>
than heard and his arrangements<lb/>
are never too bassy. Nor are his<lb/>
drums ever instruments of tor-<lb/>
ture.<lb/>
The sax, Fender Rhodes,<lb/>
piano, bass and percussion are<lb/>
finely orchestrated and directed<lb/>
toward Klemmer's brilliant jazz<lb/>
ends.<lb/>
Arabesque is not a oop-out. It<lb/>
does impugn our intelligence with<lb/>
one formulaic, "sure-fire hit on<lb/>
the whole album.<lb/>
The album is polished but not<lb/>
glossy. It is original and yet<lb/>
recognizable<lb/>
Arabesque clearly deserves a<lb/>
place on the summit of jazz of this<lb/>
decade.<lb/>
reverberates with the subtle<lb/>
eroticism of the love affair<lb/>
between Jack Nicholson as the<lb/>
small-time shamus and Faye<lb/>
Dur ;vay as his big-time client.<lb/>
As with the film-noir detective<lb/>
movies it styles itself after, the<lb/>
mood in Chinatown is pervasive,<lb/>
ominous and shadowy.<lb/>
Director Roman Polanski div-<lb/>
erges from the traditional genre<lb/>
by wearing throughout his beau-<lb/>
tifully oonoeived movie a moralis-<lb/>
tic, if highly complex, tale of<lb/>
values corrupted by greed and the<lb/>
lust for power.<lb/>
The film was nominated for<lb/>
ten Academy Awards.<lb/>
Rain site fa the film will be<lb/>
Wright Auditaium.<lb/>
Next week's Free Flick on the<lb/>
Mall is the supernatural hara<lb/>
tale The Possession of Joel<lb/>
Delaney, starring Shirley<lb/>
MacLaine and Perry King (Andy<lb/>
Warhol's Bad).<lb/>
FA YE DUNA WA Y<lb/>
NANTUCKET<lb/>
 Continued from page 8<lb/>
Alas, what I say is inoonseq-<lb/>
uentail, fa its really up to you,<lb/>
John Q. Public.<lb/>
Already receiving consider-<lb/>
able airplay along the east coast,<lb/>
their debut album just may have<lb/>
what it takes to bring them the<lb/>
national prominence they seek.<lb/>
SUBURBAN<lb/>
BEAUTY SALON<lb/>
Style and Cut Treatment<lb/>
Vi Price, Reg. $13.00, NOW $6.50<lb/>
Located on East 10th Street<lb/>
Next to Kings Sandwich<lb/>
Phone 752-7630<lb/>
Toni U The Boys Are Back<lb/>
THE TENTH AVENUE BAND<lb/>
Don't<lb/>
Em Tonitc<lb/>
at the<lb/>
Thurs. Concert XI tc From Charlotte<lb/>
THE SPONTAJVES<lb/>
Featuring Their Harley Hog<lb/>
&amp; The Rockers 50' Review<lb/>
Fri&amp;Sat End Of Week Customer Appreciation 9-11<lb/>
Sun-Ladies ite &amp; Orientation Specials<lb/>
YOUR EDUCATION<lb/>
DOESN'T STOP HERE<lb/>
Your education doesn't stop with a baccalaureate degree. It<lb/>
begins there Once you enter the world of work, you will gain<lb/>
valuable experience and really discover what it's all about to use<lb/>
what you teamed in college<lb/>
Take the Air Force for example As a commissioned officer you'll<lb/>
be handed executive responsibility on your very first job You'll<lb/>
manage people and complex systems You'll be expected to per<lb/>
form well, and you'll be paid well, too It's worth working for<lb/>
You i an gel there through the Air Force ROTC program In fact.<lb/>
we have a scholarship plan that will net vou $100 a month tax free<lb/>
and pay for .ill tuition. Books and lab fees And that will free vou to<lb/>
i mi. entrateon you studies so you can get well prepared for where<lb/>
you're headed<lb/>
( heck it (mm Iin out how. you can get Into a 'graduate pro<lb/>
gram like the Air Force It a great way to serve you i ountr<lb/>
possibly find your fomial edu anon extended .it Air I on e expense<lb/>
Vv iTos( ymnxczz<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
Gateway to a great way of le.<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058059_0010"/><lb/>
Pag?10 FOUNTAINHEAD 21 June 1978<lb/>
W&amp;M to be tough<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
This is the fifth in a series of<lb/>
scouting reports on ECUs 1978<lb/>
football opponents. Next week we<lb/>
again<lb/>
will scout the Tar Heels of North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
One thing that seems to stick<lb/>
out in the minds of people who<lb/>
saw last year's Oyster Bowl<lb/>
encounter with William and Mary<lb/>
was the fact that it was cold But<lb/>
if the weather was a bi bizarre<lb/>
what happened on the field<lb/>
against the Indians made most<lb/>
Pirate fans forget they were oold<lb/>
IN LAST YEARS encounter the Indians of William<lb/>
and Mary won a 21-17 victory over ECU ruining the<lb/>
Pirates bowl chances for last year. In this<lb/>
photograph Harold Randolph and Tommy Summer<lb/>
put the stop on W&amp;M's tailback.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Wayne Newnam 's 'Purple Gold<lb/>
Rush 'aids football promotion<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
"CarolinaFever "Run With<lb/>
Dunn and "The Purple Gold<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
Every year college football<lb/>
promoters across the nation labor<lb/>
hour in end working on these<lb/>
colorful slogans in promoting the<lb/>
coming gridiron season.<lb/>
Last year North Carolina fans<lb/>
were struck with "Carolina<lb/>
Fever The slogan was so<lb/>
successful that the Tar Heels are<lb/>
using it again and are already<lb/>
selling season tickets at a record<lb/>
pace, At Duke, the Blue Devils<lb/>
will "Run with Dunn<lb/>
At East Carolina, Pirate fans<lb/>
are urged to stake their daim in<lb/>
"The Purple Gold Rush Oddly<lb/>
enough, the idea popped into<lb/>
Wayne Newman's head one even-<lb/>
ing while taking a shower.<lb/>
"I concentrated for two or<lb/>
three days on an appropriate<lb/>
theme for the coming season<lb/>
explained the personable director<lb/>
of sports promotions at ECU. "I<lb/>
went through a dictionary trying<lb/>
to find some expressive words<lb/>
that would incorporate the theme<lb/>
around the school colors and the<lb/>
expansion of the new stadium.<lb/>
"Suddenly it just came into<lb/>
my mind. I liked the idea of<lb/>
playing off the land rush since it<lb/>
concentrated with our school<lb/>
odors. I got some reactions from<lb/>
some other people and everybody<lb/>
seemed to like it<lb/>
Although the primary purpose<lb/>
of a promotions program is to sell<lb/>
more tickets, Newnam also feels<lb/>
the slogan should enoompass<lb/>
several other ideas.<lb/>
"The total exposuce of the<lb/>
ECU athletic program is also<lb/>
important said Newnam.<lb/>
"We've had some great years in<lb/>
football over the past few seasons<lb/>
and we want all our alumni and<lb/>
the community to know it<lb/>
And whether it's ticket flyers,<lb/>
programs, schedule cards or<lb/>
bumper stickers, Newnam is<lb/>
responsible for designing and<lb/>
selling the items at ECU athletic<lb/>
events.<lb/>
"They're so many different<lb/>
things you can do in promotions<lb/>
and get a lot exposure noted<lb/>
Newnam Everybody likes bum-<lb/>
per stickers and colorful items<lb/>
which are attractive. I like to<lb/>
concentrate more with art rather<lb/>
than using photographs so it<lb/>
appears as something a little bit<lb/>
different than other schools.<lb/>
Newnam has designed an<lb/>
attractive football ticket flyer and<lb/>
has distributed more than 150,000<lb/>
across eastern North Carolina. He<lb/>
has also re-designed the football<lb/>
program and will have 20,000<lb/>
copies on sale at games this fall.<lb/>
Newnam has also conoentrat-<lb/>
ed on radio and television adver-<lb/>
tising in an effort to sell tickets,<lb/>
something which has never been<lb/>
done before at ECU.<lb/>
"With a new stadium, a<lb/>
successful football program and<lb/>
ECUs move towards big time<lb/>
athletics, promotions is becoming<lb/>
more and more important to the<lb/>
program explained Newnam<lb/>
"Just like it says, we want<lb/>
everybody to join "The Purple<lb/>
Gold Rush<lb/>
by the end of the game.<lb/>
The Pirates were defeated by<lb/>
the Indians 21-17 in a heartbreak-<lb/>
ing defeat. The game featured<lb/>
some of the most questioned calls<lb/>
by the refs you would ever see.<lb/>
And who oould forget former<lb/>
Pirate head coach Jim Johnsons<lb/>
gallent effort to keep W&amp;M's<lb/>
Tom Rozantz out of the endzone<lb/>
with a 'arkle from thp sidelines.<lb/>
Well, putting last year's game<lb/>
aside we will look at a William<lb/>
and Mary team that returns the ?<lb/>
bulk of last years starters (13).<lb/>
The Indians also have most of the<lb/>
lettermen back (37). This spells<lb/>
trouble for the opposition because<lb/>
the Indians will onoe again be a<lb/>
formidable team to contend with.<lb/>
The big reason that William<lb/>
and Mary will be very hard to<lb/>
beat is their quarterback, Tom<lb/>
Rozantz. Rozantz has been start-<lb/>
ing atquarterback for the Indians<lb/>
fa the last three years and has<lb/>
seen the downs (a 2-9 record in<lb/>
1975) and the ups (7-4 and 6-5<lb/>
logs in the last two years) so<lb/>
Rozantz knows how to win He i, -i<lb/>
pre-season All-American in most<lb/>
publications.<lb/>
Last year Rozantz mixed his<lb/>
plays so well that the Pirates were<lb/>
unable to stop the Indians when<lb/>
they needed to. Rozantz has<lb/>
always been 'ough on the Pirate<lb/>
secondary so most people expect<lb/>
more of the same this year.<lb/>
Another reason the Indians<lb/>
are expecting to be on the<lb/>
warpath again this year is be-<lb/>
cause both receivers are brck<lb/>
from last year. They are Jim<lb/>
Manderfield and Ken Cloud.<lb/>
These two latched on to almost all<lb/>
of Rozantz passes last year.<lb/>
Coach Ken Hutcherson who is<lb/>
soouting the Indians calls these<lb/>
two "super and probably the best<lb/>
anywhere in the country<lb/>
Other starters returning to the<lb/>
William and Mary offense are<lb/>
Hank Zimmerman, and Mark<lb/>
Braun at the guards, Steve Kuhn<lb/>
and Allen Goode at the tackles,<lb/>
and Jim Kruis at the fullback.<lb/>
The William and Mary def-<lb/>
ense lost all of the secondary but<lb/>
returns its linebackers and part of<lb/>
the line.<lb/>
The big play man fa the<lb/>
Indians on defense is Jim Ryan a<lb/>
6'1" 210 pounder. At the other<lb/>
linebacker position Melvin Martin<lb/>
returns.<lb/>
Part of William anc Mary's<lb/>
large, (240 pound average), line<lb/>
returns this time around. At the<lb/>
defensive end Rolfe Carawan<lb/>
returns. Middle guard Dave<lb/>
O'Neill returns also. In the<lb/>
defensive backfield expect to see<lb/>
Joe Agee, Scott Hays, Keith<lb/>
Potts, and Ken Smith.<lb/>
The defense on the Indians is<lb/>
rated by coach Hutcherson as<lb/>
having aveage speed but excel-<lb/>
lent technique to make up fa lack<lb/>
of speed.<lb/>
In commenting on the Indians<lb/>
as a whole coach Hutcherson felt<lb/>
that in ader to stop the Indians<lb/>
you have to stop Rozantz. That<lb/>
has proved very hard fa the<lb/>
Pirates the last two years.<lb/>
In summing up the chances<lb/>
fa William and Mary in '78 it<lb/>
appears that the Indians will go as<lb/>
far as their defense will allow<lb/>
them to go. The offense should be<lb/>
explosive with Rozantz back at<lb/>
the controls. Also the coaching<lb/>
staff of coach Jim Root is<lb/>
probably one of the best any-<lb/>
where.<lb/>
As far as Pirate's chances<lb/>
against the Indians is concerned<lb/>
the Indians must play in Ficklin<lb/>
Stadium fa the first time in two<lb/>
years so at least the Pirates will<lb/>
have the Indians on the home<lb/>
turf. Anaher motivation fa the<lb/>
Pirates is the fact that the game<lb/>
will be Honecoming. The Indians<lb/>
are no doubt the toughest Home-<lb/>
coming opponent the Pirates have<lb/>
had in seven years so the game<lb/>
will be a real thriller. Fa ECU to<lb/>
win Rozantz has to be stopped<lb/>
and the Pirate offense must be<lb/>
consistent. If na the Pirates oould<lb/>
'oseheir scalps onoe again to the<lb/>
maians of William and Mary.<lb/>
JIM ROOT A football player under Woody Hayes and Ara<lb/>
Parseghian at Miami of Ohio enters his seventh season at William and<lb/>
Mary Root has brought W&amp;M to greatness since he replaced Lou<lb/>
Holtz in 1972.<lb/>
ByAt<lb/>
St<lb/>
As we ti<lb/>
week we se<lb/>
two teams i<lb/>
the Stroker<lb/>
Lightening.<lb/>
4-0.<lb/>
Looking<lb/>
we saw th<lb/>
defeated De<lb/>
while the St<lb/>
Back by a sc<lb/>
and Lighten<lb/>
Supersonics<lb/>
The Nads de<lb/>
22-1.<lb/>
In Tuesd<lb/>
Fid<lb/>
ByCHF<lb/>
Sp<lb/>
Progress<lb/>
Stadium is a<lb/>
of last Tuesc<lb/>
had been or.<lb/>
some last mi<lb/>
All the<lb/>
completed ,r<lb/>
the tadiur<lb/>
side ot the sti<lb/>
finished and<lb/>
completed b<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Currently<lb/>
being built ui<lb/>
stadium. Tht<lb/>
the stadium<lb/>
within a few<lb/>
The press<lb/>
on schedule,<lb/>
installed and<lb/>
scon. Most o<lb/>
(Sra<lb/>
Pcrs<lb/>
?V1<lb/>
Forei<lb/>
lYiasc<lb/>
1604 1<lb/>
<lb/>
And g<lb/>
LI<lb/>
<pb facs="00058059_0011"/><lb/>
21 June 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pag? 11<lb/>
Two teams remain Undefeated in intramurals<lb/>
By ANDY STEWART<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
As we turn to uoftball for this<lb/>
week we see that there are still<lb/>
two teams undefeated. They are<lb/>
the Strokers and Lumber and<lb/>
Lightening. Both hold records of<lb/>
4-0.<lb/>
Looking at last weeks games<lb/>
we saw the Dead End Kids<lb/>
defeated Delta Sigma Phi 11-9,<lb/>
while the Strokers defeated Laid<lb/>
Back by a score of 10-3. Lumber<lb/>
and Lightening barely got by the<lb/>
Supersonics by the score of 12-10.<lb/>
The Nads demolished Once Again<lb/>
22-1.<lb/>
In Tuesday night's action the<lb/>
Strokers defeated Delta Sigma by<lb/>
a score of 8-2 while the Super-<lb/>
sonics barely edged by Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilon and Friends by one run,<lb/>
8-7. In the night cap there was a<lb/>
real thriller. Summer Times Blues<lb/>
rallied in the sixth inning by<lb/>
scoring 8 runs to tie Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Cold Beer 16-16. Then Summer<lb/>
Time Blues scored three more<lb/>
runs to make the score 19-16 and<lb/>
that is where it remained.<lb/>
In softball we have two polls<lb/>
selected by the two graduate<lb/>
umpires Ginger and Leigh.<lb/>
Leigh<lb/>
1. Lumber and Lightening (4-0)<lb/>
2. Strokers (4-0)<lb/>
3. Summer Time Blues (3-1)<lb/>
4. Super sonics (3-1)<lb/>
5. Dead End Kids (3-1)<lb/>
Ginger<lb/>
1. Lumber and Lightening (4-0)<lb/>
2. Strokers (4-0)<lb/>
3. Supersonics(3-1)<lb/>
4. Dead End Kids (3-1)<lb/>
5. Summer Time Blues (3-1)<lb/>
Turning to 3-on-3 basketball<lb/>
we only have one undefeated<lb/>
team. Old and Slow at 6-0.<lb/>
The teams seem to be pretty<lb/>
well balanced in both leagues.<lb/>
There is still one more night of<lb/>
Dlav left and with the record so<lb/>
ever, anything could happen.<lb/>
There will only be two teams<lb/>
sel ted out of each division to<lb/>
play in the playoffs.<lb/>
Looking at the tor. teams e<lb/>
rww ?<lb/>
1. Scott Reasers(5-1)<lb/>
2. Old and Sow (6-0)<lb/>
3. Marantha (4-2)<lb/>
4. Rockets (5-1)<lb/>
5. Bullets (4-2)<lb/>
6. Oreo's(3-2)<lb/>
7. Rover Todds (4-2)<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium enters final construction<lb/>
8. Orbiteers (4-3)<lb/>
9. Omega (4-3)<lb/>
10. Laid Back (3-2)<lb/>
Any team is capable of<lb/>
defeating another but it looks like<lb/>
your best bet would be the Scott<lb/>
Pleasers and Old and Slow in the<lb/>
finals.<lb/>
With this being the final week<lb/>
of intramurals there looks to be<lb/>
alot of excitement. In softball and<lb/>
basketball the tournaments will<lb/>
be made up of teams that can<lb/>
defeat each other on any given<lb/>
night. It should be very interest-<lb/>
ing to see if the teams with<lb/>
unscored reoordscan remain that<lb/>
way or will some team that just<lb/>
made it to the playoffs come<lb/>
around and blow the other team<lb/>
off the oourt or field (according to<lb/>
what the case may be.)<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Progress on ECU's Ficklin<lb/>
Stadium is coming along well. As<lb/>
of last Tuesday all the steel work<lb/>
had been oompleted except for<lb/>
some last minute welding.<lb/>
All the seating has been<lb/>
comnietfd m the pressbox side of<lb/>
the siadiur 'art of the student<lb/>
side ot the stadium seating is now<lb/>
finished and ah seating should be<lb/>
completed by the end of next<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Currently new sidewalks are<lb/>
being built under and around the<lb/>
stadium. The actual painting of<lb/>
the stadium is expected to start<lb/>
within a few weeks.<lb/>
The pressbox is ooming along<lb/>
on schedule. The elevator is now<lb/>
installed and will be operational<lb/>
soon. Most of the first floor press<lb/>
area has been completed. All of<lb/>
the windows have been put into<lb/>
the front of the pressbox with the<lb/>
exception of a few on the second<lb/>
floor.<lb/>
The second floor, which will<lb/>
include the radio booths, will be<lb/>
cornpleted by University personel<lb/>
in time for the home opener<lb/>
against Western Carolina.<lb/>
The new scoreboard will be<lb/>
installed sometime just before the<lb/>
beginning of the season.<lb/>
The stadium except fa a few<lb/>
small details is expected to be<lb/>
finished ahead of schedule on or<lb/>
about the end of Julv.<lb/>
ARMYNAVY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
snorfc?4. tankar lack, r<lb/>
partial, cofTtbootv, w h. Cfc<lb/>
dWm. 191 S. Evm Mm Opan<lb/>
ll:3M:M<lb/>
1978 NCAA COLLEGE FOOTBALL TELEVISION SCHEDULE<lb/>
September 2<lb/>
September 9<lb/>
September 16<lb/>
September 23<lb/>
September 30<lb/>
L<lb/>
Nebraska at Alabama National<lb/>
UCLA at Washington National<lb/>
Penn State at Ohio State Regional<lb/>
Baylor at Georgia Regional<lb/>
San Jose State at Stanford Regional<lb/>
Idaho State at Northern Arizona Regional<lb/>
Syracuse at North Carolina St. Regional<lb/>
Michigan at Notre Dame Regional<lb/>
Yale at Brown Regional<lb/>
Florida State at Miami (Florida) Regional<lb/>
Colorado State at Brigham Young Regional<lb/>
- and -<lb/>
Southern Cal at Alabama National<lb/>
North Carolina at Pittsburgh Regional<lb/>
Nebraska at Indiana Regional<lb/>
Tennessee at Auburn Regional<lb/>
Washington at Oregon State Regional<lb/>
Alcorn State at South Carolina State Regional<lb/>
Boise State at Montana StateRegional<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058059_0012"/><lb/>
12 FQUNTAINHEAD 21 June 1978<lb/>
The NCAA<lb/>
mpic Committe afti<lb/>
The Association has rejoined<lb/>
the United States Olympic Com-<lb/>
mittee, an organization from<lb/>
which it withdrew six years ago.<lb/>
Aftor discussions which span-<lb/>
ned several months, the NCAA<lb/>
applied for admission for USOC<lb/>
Group B April 3. The USOC's<lb/>
Board of Delegates granted the<lb/>
application April 14 at a meeting<lb/>
in Lake Buena Vista, Florida.<lb/>
The NCAA was represented<lb/>
by President J. Neils Thompson;<lb/>
Dave Maggard, chairman of the<lb/>
International Relations Commit-<lb/>
tee; and Micnael Scott of the legal<lb/>
firm Cox, Langford and Brown.<lb/>
The Association's decision to<lb/>
renew its membership came after<lb/>
a significant reorganination of the<lb/>
USOC. Notably, multi-sport<lb/>
organizations such as the NCAA<lb/>
and the Amateur Athletic Union<lb/>
may not serve as national govern-<lb/>
ing bodies for international pur-<lb/>
poses. Henoeforth, such govern-<lb/>
ing bodies will be required to be<lb/>
autonomous organizations and to<lb/>
meet detailed standards set forth<lb/>
in the revised USOC Consitution.<lb/>
Also, new procedures have<lb/>
been established by which a<lb/>
national governing body's control<lb/>
of a sport can be challenged and<lb/>
the challenge heard by an impart-<lb/>
ial board of arbitrators. The<lb/>
United States Wrestling Federat-<lb/>
ion has already commenced a<lb/>
challenge against the right of the<lb/>
Wrestling Division of the AAU to<lb/>
be the national governing body<lb/>
for the sport (NCAA NEWS,<lb/>
<lb/>
Be Somebody<lb/>
OPEN DAILY<lb/>
at 4:00<lb/>
Pantana Bob's ?sb<lb/>
i,<lb/>
GORDON FULPf<lb/>
PRO SHOP<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
March 1) although that contest is<lb/>
being conducted under previous<lb/>
USOC procedures.<lb/>
Serious discussions concern-<lb/>
ing the Associaiton's rejoining of<lb/>
the USOC began late in 1977. In a<lb/>
February 15,1978, letter to USOC<lb/>
Executive Director F. Don Miller,<lb/>
NCAA Executive Director Walter<lb/>
Byers identified the bases upon<lb/>
which the NCAA would rejoin the<lb/>
USOC.<lb/>
The USOC would not seek or<lb/>
win it attempt to exercise (excpet<lb/>
with referenoeto trials for the Pan<lb/>
American or Olympic Games),<lb/>
direct or indirect jurisdiction over<lb/>
domestic amateur athletic comp-<lb/>
etition.<lb/>
The USIC would vigorously<lb/>
enforce the new criteria for USOC<lb/>
Group A membership (national<lb/>
governing body) and will not<lb/>
simply rely fa such enforcement<lb/>
on the oomplaint and franchise<lb/>
arbitration procedures now con-<lb/>
tained in the USOC Constitution.<lb/>
"We cannot overemphasize the<lb/>
importance of this consideration<lb/>
to the NCAA and, in our<lb/>
judgement, to the integrity of the<lb/>
vertical structure' principle of<lb/>
the USOC 1977 reorganization<lb/>
Byers said.<lb/>
GORDON FULP<lb/>
PRO SHOP<lb/>
Greenville Country Club<lb/>
The UOSC would replace<lb/>
current Sections 6 through 9 of<lb/>
Article II of its Constitution with a<lb/>
statement of circumstances in<lb/>
which a USOC member will not<lb/>
interfere with competitive athletic<lb/>
opportunity. Essentially, "protec-<lb/>
ted" competition will now include<lb/>
the Olympic and Pan American<lb/>
Games, world championships,<lb/>
international competition involv-<lb/>
inr and fficial national team and<lb/>
ceitai qualifying events.<lb/>
In granting development<lb/>
funds to Group A members that<lb/>
are not financially self-sufficient,<lb/>
the USOC would maintain a<lb/>
distinction between those which<lb/>
are in such state (a) because of<lb/>
the nature of and US interest in<lb/>
the particular spon. on the one<lb/>
hand, and (b) because of the<lb/>
ineffective discharge oi me Group<lb/>
A responsibility, on the other<lb/>
hand.<lb/>
The USOC would give particu-<lb/>
lar attention to the need for<lb/>
appointment to its various com-<lb/>
mittees of additional knowledg-<lb/>
able representatives of the school<lb/>
-college membership.<lb/>
"I am confident that the<lb/>
NCAA'saffiliation with the USOC<lb/>
will do much to enhance our<lb/>
? mutual interests in improving<lb/>
upon the United States' posture<lb/>
in international amateur sports<lb/>
Miller said.<lb/>
The breakway from the USOC<lb/>
occurred October 25, 1972, fol-<lb/>
lowing the Munich Olympics. The<lb/>
NCAA, which had attempted to<lb/>
make changes within the USOC<lb/>
for approximately 10 years, con-<lb/>
cluded that any further attempts<lb/>
were futile and withdrew. At the<lb/>
time, the NCAA claimed the<lb/>
USOC did not serve the needs of<lb/>
the athlete, amateur ports or the<lb/>
national interest.<lb/>
Pointed USOC rejection of<lb/>
the college' interests isdifficult to<lb/>
understand, said then NCAA<lb/>
President Earl Ramer, "and we<lb/>
will not accept membership in the<lb/>
USOC as it is now constituted. As<lb/>
an organization, the NCAA will<lb/>
not contriDuie to or support the<lb/>
program of the USOC. Each<lb/>
member of the NCAA and the<lb/>
saff members and student-<lb/>
?iietics of each member, of<lb/>
course, are free to determine<lb/>
heir own policies and positions in<lb/>
light ol ihe record of the United<lb/>
States Olympic organization<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058059_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>