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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058061_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity fa over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 4,500,<lb/>
this issue is 12 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Vd. 53, No. 6<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
5 July 1078<lb/>
ON THE INSDF . . .<lb/>
Jobs, . . .p. 2<lb/>
Greeks, . . .p. 3<lb/>
James Cotton, p. 6<lb/>
UNC football, . . .p. 10<lb/>
Dr. Brewer assumes<lb/>
chancellor's duties<lb/>
By JIM BARNES<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Brewer began his<lb/>
term of office as Chancellor of<lb/>
ECU Monday,<lb/>
July 3. He succeeds Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins, who retires from the<lb/>
chancel la's post after 31 years at<lb/>
ECU, 18 of those as Chancellor.<lb/>
Brewer, who is 45 comes to<lb/>
Greenville from Texas Christian<lb/>
University where he served as<lb/>
vice-chancel la and dean. Brewer<lb/>
was chosen by the University<lb/>
of Nath Carolina Board of<lb/>
DR. KEN LEWIS<lb/>
ECUprof<lb/>
speaks on<lb/>
men's equality<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Dr. Ken Lewis of the East<lb/>
Carolina University social work<lb/>
faculty was a keynote speaker at<lb/>
the national convention of Men's<lb/>
Equality Now (MEN) - U.S.A. at<lb/>
Macalaster College on St. Paul,<lb/>
Minn. June 23-25.<lb/>
MEN- U.S.A. isthe American<lb/>
division of MEN International,<lb/>
Inc a ooalition of 140 men's<lb/>
aganizations waking toward<lb/>
equality fa men in such domestic<lb/>
issues as divace, alimony and<lb/>
child custody.<lb/>
Another keynote speaker was<lb/>
Dr. Suzanne Steinmetz, and<lb/>
associate professa at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Delaware, and a recogniz-<lb/>
ed expert on domestic violence.<lb/>
She recently testified at Congres-<lb/>
sional hearings on violence in<lb/>
families.<lb/>
The oonference also included<lb/>
wakshops on resolving family<lb/>
conflicts, legal insurance, child<lb/>
suppat, aganizational operation<lb/>
and interstate ocoperation on<lb/>
child custody.<lb/>
Succeeds retiring<lb/>
Chancellor Leo Jenkins<lb/>
Govanas, which ap-<lb/>
proved his appointment on March<lb/>
10, of this year.<lb/>
Brewer, who holds the Ph.D.<lb/>
in American Histay fran Penn-<lb/>
sylvania, had various teaching<lb/>
positions pria to assuming his<lb/>
duties as chancel la at ECU.<lb/>
Since 1971, Brewer has been a<lb/>
professa and Dean of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences at TCU.<lb/>
Famer Chancel la Jenkins,<lb/>
who has retired to Maehead, will<lb/>
be a special assistant to the<lb/>
govana in the field of commerce<lb/>
and development in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Brewer, the seventh chief<lb/>
administrata in the 71 year<lb/>
histay of ECU, was selected after<lb/>
a seven months' search begun<lb/>
last year. A special selection<lb/>
committee reviewed the applica-<lb/>
tions of several hundred appli-<lb/>
cants befae deciding on Brewer<lb/>
as the new chancella. Pria to his<lb/>
tenure at Texas Christain, Brewer<lb/>
held teaching positions in Penn-<lb/>
sylvania, Texas, Iowa, Ohio and<lb/>
Kentucky.<lb/>
ECU CHANCELLOR THOMAS BREWER<lb/>
Two ECU profs receive promotion<lb/>
ECU News Bueau<lb/>
Two faculty members of the<lb/>
East Carolina University Depart-<lb/>
ment of Sociology and Anthro-<lb/>
pology have received promotions<lb/>
in rank, effective August 28.<lb/>
They are Drs. Robert<lb/>
Bunger and Marty Zusman, who<lb/>
are being promoted from assist-<lb/>
ant to associate professors.<lb/>
Another faculty member, Dr.<lb/>
Paul Tschetter, is being granted<lb/>
tenure.<lb/>
Dr. Bunger recieved the PhD<lb/>
degrees from Northwestern<lb/>
University. He is specialist in<lb/>
social cultural anthropology, kin-<lb/>
ship and marriage, religion, and<lb/>
African studies, and ths autha of<lb/>
a book on Istamization among ths<lb/>
Upper Pokomo published by<lb/>
Syracuse University in 1973.<lb/>
In 1969 he received a<lb/>
Fulbright-Hayes Fellowship to<lb/>
cinduct field research in Africa.<lb/>
Dr. Bunger is a native of<lb/>
Richmond, Va. and an alumnus of<lb/>
Old Dominion UnivasJty. He<lb/>
joined the ECU faculty in 1971.<lb/>
Dr. Zusman, a native of South<lb/>
Bend, Indiana, hotels degrees<lb/>
from Indiana University.<lb/>
His primary interests are<lb/>
deviance, research methods, and<lb/>
statistics. At present, he is<lb/>
involved in researching health<lb/>
needs of eastern North Carolina<lb/>
and the training of medical<lb/>
dectas.<lb/>
The autha of articles in  The<lb/>
Journal of Socail Issues" and<lb/>
aha sociological publications,<lb/>
Dr. Zusman has been an associate<lb/>
editor of the "Westan Sociolog-<lb/>
ical Review<lb/>
He has also served as consul-<lb/>
tant to Indiana's Division of<lb/>
Addiction Services and the city of<lb/>
Fort Wayne, on programs involv-<lb/>
ing human relations and has<lb/>
directed two research projects<lb/>
sponsored by the U.S. Dept. of<lb/>
Health, Education and Welfare<lb/>
He joined the ECU faculty in<lb/>
1976.<lb/>
Dr. Tschetta, who hdds the<lb/>
PhD degree from Michigan State<lb/>
Univastty, is a specialist in<lb/>
population studies. He is current-<lb/>
ly engaging in research on<lb/>
population growth in eastan<lb/>
North Carolina communities.<lb/>
Med school receives<lb/>
$463,380 HEW grant<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
The Department of Family<lb/>
Medicine at the East Carolina<lb/>
University School of Medicine has<lb/>
received a $463,380 grant fron<lb/>
the Department of Health, Educa-<lb/>
tion and Welfare to support a<lb/>
graduate training program that<lb/>
will improve the quality of health<lb/>
care in eastan North Carolina.<lb/>
Dr. James G. Jones, project<lb/>
directa and chairman of the<lb/>
family medicine department, says<lb/>
the purpose of the program 's to<lb/>
provide professional training ex-<lb/>
pa ience fa family practice resi-<lb/>
dents in their first, seoond and<lb/>
third years of training.<lb/>
uones says selection of resi-<lb/>
dents participating in the pro-<lb/>
gram will target physicians who<lb/>
plan to practice in eastan Nath<lb/>
Carolina in an effort "to relieve<lb/>
the present aitical physician<lb/>
manpower shortage<lb/>
"As a result of this training<lb/>
program, our impact on the<lb/>
quality and availability of health<lb/>
cars in the region and state will<lb/>
occur even scona that we had<lb/>
projected says Jones.<lb/>
Thae are now 188 family<lb/>
physicians practicing in eastan<lb/>
Nath Carolina. The grant will<lb/>
help inaease that figure during<lb/>
the next 20 years to 300 a more, a<lb/>
ratio will help inaease that figure<lb/>
during the next 20 years to 300 a<lb/>
more, a ratio of at least one family<lb/>
physician pa 2,000 population.<lb/>
Funds will be used to develop<lb/>
and anhanos training programs,<lb/>
hire additional full-time and<lb/>
part-time faculty and recruit<lb/>
suppat pasonnel such as clinical<lb/>
phamacist, nurse practiHona<lb/>
and nutritionist.<lb/>
WA TERMELON AFFORDS A temporary respite from the hmt. Photo<lb/>
by John H. Grogan<lb/>
�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058061_0002"/><lb/>
2 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 July 1978<lb/>
1<lb/>
� n<lb/>
Job outlook better<lb/>
t for '78 graduates<lb/>
FOR SOME THE days are hotter than for others.<lb/>
Wiener King<lb/>
ENJOY A GREAT<lb/>
DEAL FOR OHiNER<lb/>
$1.29<lb/>
The taste of our famous Footlong Frankfooter<lb/>
really measures up to size.<lb/>
Prepared exclusively for Wiener King<lb/>
from our own special recipe of quality ingredients<lb/>
Try one. With fries and a soft drink,<lb/>
it's a great deal for dinner.<lb/>
1011 Charles Street Greenville<lb/>
"IS?9XA Seat<lb/>
DEAL FOR OWNER<lb/>
2 Footlong Frankfooter, topped .<lb/>
Q with chili, mustard and onions'<lb/>
Q. Small fries, small soft drink.<lb/>
withth<lb/>
Coupon expires July 10, 1978<lb/>
�"I I f� ,<lb/>
lea present Ihncoupon<lb/>
ivv<lb/>
By CANDIS HARRINGTON<lb/>
otdft i-iuporter<lb/>
The job outlook fa college<lb/>
students has improved since last<lb/>
year according to Furney James,<lb/>
director of the placement office.<lb/>
There has been a 10 percent<lb/>
increase in the number of inter-<lb/>
views given and an increase in<lb/>
the interest shown by employers<lb/>
in the business world James<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Of course the proof will be<lb/>
how many are hired he added.<lb/>
About 1.944 students grad-<lb/>
uated during the 1977-78 school<lb/>
year, according to Diana Morris<lb/>
of the department of institutional<lb/>
research<lb/>
"This was the largest grad-<lb/>
uating d ass ever Morris said.<lb/>
Last year, 1,922 students<lb/>
graduated, according to Mans.<lb/>
About 80 percent of the<lb/>
1976-77 graduates who registered<lb/>
with the placement office have<lb/>
found jobs, either through the<lb/>
placement a through other re-<lb/>
sources, James said.<lb/>
About one-haif of the 1977-78<lb/>
graduates are registered with the<lb/>
placement office.<lb/>
"Wewon't know how many of<lb/>
them we've placed until August<lb/>
because people who applied fa<lb/>
jobs in education are still waiting<lb/>
to hear James said.<lb/>
Pranising fields include in-<lb/>
dustrial technology, special educ-<lb/>
ation, and math and science<lb/>
education, James said. People<lb/>
majaing in health professions are<lb/>
in great demand, accading to<lb/>
James.<lb/>
Physical educatiai majas<lb/>
may have difficulty finding jobs<lb/>
unless they can coach a if they<lb/>
played varsity spats, James said.<lb/>
Early childhood education ma-<lb/>
jas should look fa employment<lb/>
in rural areas, accading to James<lb/>
and added that business majas<lb/>
should go to urban areas.<lb/>
Those students who obtain<lb/>
jobs can expect to earn an<lb/>
average salary of $10,500 to<lb/>
$11,000 , accading to James.<lb/>
Salaries fa teachers are gang to<lb/>
rise to about $10,000 while some<lb/>
accounting majas may earn<lb/>
$15,000<lb/>
James ated the large number<lb/>
of graduates seeking employment<lb/>
as one reason students have<lb/>
difficulty finding jobs.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
�<lb/>
newswriters: !<lb/>
There will be a j<lb/>
mandatory staff j<lb/>
meeting this<lb/>
Thursday, July 6<lb/>
at 4 p.m. in the I<lb/>
pFOJJNTAINHEAEJ<lb/>
office.Anyone whd<lb/>
vould like to write;<lb/>
news must attend !<lb/>
<lb/>
�ee.<lb/>
�����<lb/>
<pb facs="00058061_0003"/><lb/>
tter<lb/>
tes<lb/>
how many of<lb/>
until August<lb/>
applied for<lb/>
still waiting<lb/>
I.<lb/>
include in-<lb/>
pedal educ-<lb/>
ind science<lb/>
aid. People<lb/>
fessionsare<lb/>
ocording to<lb/>
un majors<lb/>
inding jobs<lb/>
1 or if they<lb/>
James said,<lb/>
ucation ma-<lb/>
employment<lb/>
ig to James<lb/>
ess majors<lb/>
MB.<lb/>
ho obtain<lb/>
earn an<lb/>
;10,500 to<lb/>
to James,<lb/>
e going to<lb/>
wfiile some<lb/>
nay earn<lb/>
je number<lb/>
nployment<lb/>
mts have<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
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�<lb/>
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�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
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�<lb/>
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D<lb/>
9<lb/>
10<lb/>
e:<lb/>
�<lb/>
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�<lb/>
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�<lb/>
i<lb/>
ECU greeks<lb/>
5 July 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Recapturing the popularity they enjoyed in the 50<lb/>
s<lb/>
By DIANE DUPREE<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
A revival has hit ECU. Greek<lb/>
letter organizations, shunned by<lb/>
students during the Sxties, are<lb/>
recapturing the enthusiasm and<lb/>
popularity they enjoyed in the<lb/>
Fifties.<lb/>
Furthermore, these Greek let-<lb/>
ter organizations - also called<lb/>
social sororities and fraternities -<lb/>
are expanding their horizons.<lb/>
Onoe known primarily as social<lb/>
clubs, these organizations now<lb/>
stress service and scholarship<lb/>
also.<lb/>
"Most fraternities' national<lb/>
chapters require them to sponsor<lb/>
worhty projects thoughout the<lb/>
year said JamesB Mallory<lb/>
associate dean of student affairs.<lb/>
Notable projects supported by<lb/>
the fraternities include the Heart<lb/>
Fund, the Cancer Society, the<lb/>
United Fund and, along with<lb/>
ROTC and Panhellenic, the Red<lb/>
Cross blood drives.<lb/>
The best known fund raiser is<lb/>
probably Alpha Phi Omega Frater<lb/>
-nity's Rock-a-thon. Fa three<lb/>
days every year, money is collect-<lb/>
ed at Five Points downtown. This<lb/>
Rock-a-thon is one of the United<lb/>
Fund's major money making<lb/>
projects<lb/>
Sororities also support pro-<lb/>
jects through their national organ<lb/>
-ization. "Each sorority supports<lb/>
a different cause said<lb/>
Jane Smith, assistant dean of<lb/>
women.<lb/>
Some projects supported by<lb/>
ECU sororities include Juvenile<lb/>
Delinquency, Speech and Hear-<lb/>
ing, March of Dimes, Children's<lb/>
hospitals and orphanages.<lb/>
Fa seventeen years, the<lb/>
saaities have doiated moiey at<lb/>
Christmas to the Inbo Orphanage<lb/>
in Kaea. The moiey is used to<lb/>
buy ooal to heat the aphanage.<lb/>
Both aganizat ions concur that<lb/>
their volunteer wak is na just<lb/>
giving money to a wathy cause.<lb/>
Instead it is satisfaction in<lb/>
knowing that you have given<lb/>
yourself to help someone elso<lb/>
While each Greek letter or-<lb/>
ganizatiai is different, a special<lb/>
bond exists between them. "We<lb/>
have good oooperat ion between<lb/>
the two groups. They have ab<lb/>
oaganization called Co-Greek and<lb/>
the men and women wak toge-<lb/>
ther in Greek activities MaJlay<lb/>
related.<lb/>
JL<lb/>
Activities sponsaed by the<lb/>
aganizatiai include Greek Week,<lb/>
a scholarship banquet, and a<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
Unity also exists between each<lb/>
saaity. This is also true of the<lb/>
fraternities. "This cooperation is<lb/>
what makes these aganizatiais<lb/>
unique Mallay said.<lb/>
Bah aganizatiaisfeel that by<lb/>
waking together, everyone is<lb/>
made stronger.<lb/>
The ooadinating body fa the<lb/>
saaities is called Panhellenic.<lb/>
Available at bookstore<lb/>
Panhellenic is composed of two<lb/>
seperate but interacting councils,<lb/>
Senia Panhellenic and Junia<lb/>
Panhellenic. These two councils<lb/>
meet twice monthly to plan ways<lb/>
to accomplish their goals.<lb/>
The policy making council fa<lb/>
fraternities is called Inter-<lb/>
Fraternity Council (IFC). This<lb/>
aganizat ioi has the same role as<lb/>
Panhellenic. It stresses unity<lb/>
between fraternities while acting<lb/>
as a governing body<lb/>
Greek aganizatiois also<lb/>
stress scholarship Thet set their<lb/>
standards high and challenge<lb/>
their members to meet them.<lb/>
Apparently the challenge is<lb/>
met, because the saaity bro-<lb/>
chure states that the scholastic<lb/>
average of saaity warren is aie<lb/>
pant higher than that of aher<lb/>
women at ECU.<lb/>
While aganizatiois s ss<lb/>
scholarship and service, they are<lb/>
probably best known fa their<lb/>
social rote.<lb/>
New undergraduate catalogue<lb/>
By CANDIS HARRINGTON<lb/>
Staff Repater<lb/>
The 1978-79 undergraduate<lb/>
catalogue, which features an<lb/>
aigmal cover design by a senior<lb/>
in communication arts, came out<lb/>
June 6, accading to Myra<lb/>
Cain assistant to the vice-<lb/>
fa academic affairs<lb/>
Semas majaing in oanmun-<lb/>
icatiai arts submitted cover de-<lb/>
signs under the supervision of Dr.<lb/>
Henry Stindt, assistant professa<lb/>
of communicatiai arts, Cain<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The oover, done in burgundy<lb/>
and white, features the Leo<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center and was<lb/>
designed by Nick Eskndge.<lb/>
Materials fa the catalogue<lb/>
was submitted by departments<lb/>
during fall semester, Cam<lb/>
said<lb/>
The catalogue was uumpiled<lb/>
and edited by Cain and<lb/>
Jo Ann Jones, of the English<lb/>
department .<lb/>
The catalogue was sent m<lb/>
February to Coitempaary Litho-<lb/>
graphers of Raleigh to be printed,<lb/>
Cain said<lb/>
Students may obtain copies at<lb/>
the student Supply Stae.<lb/>
VI<lb/>
3LUU<lb/>
omcL<lb/>
27I3E.10th<lb/>
(Near Kings Sandwich)<lb/>
758-1042<lb/>
Customer Appreciation 5-9 p.m. Daily<lb/>
I Your favorite golden BE vE Rag <lb/>
We tried THE VILLA ROMA and<lb/>
we like it, now it's your turn. <lb/>
Dinners � New York Style Pizza � Reg. if � Deluxe 17"1<lb/>
ONLY .ZS<lb/>
<lb/>
�erred with .soup, spaghetti and garlic bread<lb/>
Baked Lasagna 3.25<lb/>
Baked Ziti 3.25<lb/>
Manicotti3.25<lb/>
Eggplant Parmigiana 3.25<lb/>
Baked Zueehini 3.25<lb/>
with meat sauce sauce .35 extra<lb/>
Stuffed Green Peppers 3.50<lb/>
Chicken Caccitori 3.50<lb/>
Chicken Parmigiana 3.75<lb/>
Shrimp Marinaia 3.75<lb/>
Shrimp Scamp! 3.95<lb/>
I miriiiip neampi �).?!� -<lb/>
j.m���.��������5l.9.?fljJtViWn�� �yv<lb/>
50 OFF Any Dinner<lb/>
The Villa Roma<lb/>
mozzarclla<lb/>
onions<lb/>
mushrooms<lb/>
green olives<lb/>
sausage<lb/>
pepperoni<lb/>
ground beef<lb/>
peppers<lb/>
extra cheese<lb/>
Special (any four items)<lb/>
Master (all items)<lb/>
3.65<lb/>
3.95<lb/>
3.95<lb/>
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,60<lb/>
THE VILLA ROMA<lb/>
SI.OOOFF Any Pizza<lb/>
<pb facs="00058061_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page A FOUNTAINHEAD 5 July 1978<lb/>
Save the Roxy<lb/>
The Roxy Music, Arts, and Crafts Center has<lb/>
struggled nobly for the past three years to provide<lb/>
Greenville with alternative entertainment and<lb/>
cultural activity, and for the past three years has<lb/>
succeeded only in losing money on almost every<lb/>
enterprise the Roxy members attempted.<lb/>
This week, however, may well be the Roxy's last.<lb/>
The present owner of the building is foreclosing on a<lb/>
$17,000 bank note which, if paid, would give the<lb/>
Roxy Music, Arts and Crafts Center title to the Roxy<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
It is a shame to see a facility with as much<lb/>
potential as the Roxy go under due in large part to<lb/>
poor business procedures end the community's<lb/>
misunderstanding of the Roxy's purpose.<lb/>
If the Roxy sable to secure a federal or corporate<lb/>
grant for the arts in time to pay off the note, the<lb/>
members of the center must adhere to sound<lb/>
business practices if they hope to survive. This does<lb/>
not necessarily mean they will have to compromise<lb/>
the integrity of the Roxy's programming, only that<lb/>
they will have to weigh more carefully the balance<lb/>
between what they would like to see and what a large<lb/>
paying audience would like to see.<lb/>
Thank you, Ashley Futrell<lb/>
Last week's edition of FOUNTAINHEAD honor-<lb/>
ing retiring Chancellor Leo Jenkins was beset by<lb/>
accidents and mechancial malfunctions from the<lb/>
start. The issue almost didn't get printed because a<lb/>
color separation (used to print full color photographs)<lb/>
did not arrive in time.<lb/>
The delay in receiving the separation caused us to<lb/>
miss our deadline to our printers in Mount Olive, so<lb/>
we were forced to.search the eastern half of the siate<lb/>
to find someone willing to print the paper the next<lb/>
day, in time to be distributed on Jenkins' last day on<lb/>
the job.<lb/>
Fortunately, Ashley Futrell, editor and publisher<lb/>
of The Washington Daily News and a member of the<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustees, agreed, on 12 hours notice,<lb/>
to print our paper. He even went so far as to keep his<lb/>
pressmen working overtime on a Friday afternoon.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD and ECU are lucky to have a<lb/>
man a generous and cooperative as Ashley Futrell<lb/>
sitting on our Board of Trustees.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for war titty year.<lb/>
" Were It left tome to decide whether we should have<lb/>
a government without nawspepers or newspapers<lb/>
without government, I should not hesitate a moment to<lb/>
prefer the letter<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
EditorDoug White<lb/>
Production ManagerLeigh Coakley<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert M. Swaim<lb/>
NewsEditors Jim Barnes<lb/>
Trends EditorSteve Bachner<lb/>
xrts EditorChris Hdloman<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD ;s the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Media Board of ECU and is<lb/>
distributed each Tuesday and Thursday, weekly during the<lb/>
timer<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Editorial offioae: 757-6388, 757-6367, 757-6308<lb/>
Subaoriptione: $10 annually, alumni S6 annually<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
'Big Bear' espouses his philosophy<lb/>
Unedited<lb/>
Dear Fountlonhead,<lb/>
I can no longer can keep this<lb/>
shadowed. As one well knows,<lb/>
repressed tension only disapates<lb/>
the body. My body has disapated<lb/>
as much as it is going to without<lb/>
some release of emotion. It might<lb/>
not do you (readers) any good<lb/>
but, but it does me a hell of a lot<lb/>
of good. This makes me feel<lb/>
better.<lb/>
As a Political Science major,<lb/>
and being part American Indian,<lb/>
which to some people might not<lb/>
have anything in common, my<lb/>
efforts in trying to evolve from<lb/>
this university are being put to a<lb/>
severe test. I am fighting a<lb/>
loosing battle.<lb/>
It has been a year since I<lb/>
ittended summer school, which I<lb/>
received "C's" for a long and<lb/>
tortiousfive weeks of self abuse.<lb/>
This summer is about the same,<lb/>
tourtious but not as tedious. I<lb/>
have fallen.<lb/>
There is just about no way in<lb/>
God's greenery that I may<lb/>
advance through this summer<lb/>
session without taking two " D' s"<lb/>
that I do not want. Of course, I<lb/>
know that Drs: Troutman and<lb/>
Buske attribute said faltering<lb/>
marks to insufficient preparation,<lb/>
but to this I say  .<lb/>
I don't really know what to<lb/>
say. I have been a capable reader<lb/>
throughout my educational<lb/>
career, scored abouve average on<lb/>
everything as tar as my achieve-<lb/>
ment tests are concerned<lb/>
I wanted to make "As but<lb/>
now there is no way to make " A<lb/>
I sometime talk in class, we all<lb/>
have to, remember, but I am<lb/>
hardly ever am acknowledged.<lb/>
What isthis monocratic system of<lb/>
education doing to me9 My moles<lb/>
hurt, my blood pressure is skying,<lb/>
and my feet ache I even doubt<lb/>
now that this will get published.<lb/>
I admire those of you whome<lb/>
are capable to through back<lb/>
knowledge learned without loos-<lb/>
ing your shirt in the exchange.<lb/>
As fa me, there is a loss of<lb/>
pertinent realization that detracts<lb/>
from the answer during the<lb/>
situation What a battle this is.<lb/>
I chose a nonassertive attitude<lb/>
while choosing attitudes. I fell<lb/>
my factst upbringing would only<lb/>
See EDUCATION, p. 5<lb/>
Farren's Nantucket review 'lame and wimpy<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
In tht age of the lame and<lb/>
wimpy, it's no wonder the review<lb/>
of Nantucket's album turned out<lb/>
the way it did. It's correct to<lb/>
assume that people behind the<lb/>
Epic label must have had some<lb/>
confidence in the band them-<lb/>
selves to do album promos in two<lb/>
national magazines ust ihis<lb/>
month. (Not to mention signing<lb/>
Nantucket with no demo tape<lb/>
after their DC. showcase.)<lb/>
It should be interesting to see<lb/>
reviews soon to come out in these<lb/>
same magazine It is obvioub<lb/>
thai C Farran ha� had little<lb/>
exposure to Nantucket other than<lb/>
through the album itself.<lb/>
Need you be told that it was<lb/>
Epic'3 decision exactly what<lb/>
songs would be on the debut<lb/>
album as well as the singles?<lb/>
There were approximately 23<lb/>
songs to be chosen from And<lb/>
lust for your info: over 60,000<lb/>
copies of the album have sold<lb/>
thus far and 40,000 more have<lb/>
recently been shipped<lb/>
The album has completley<lb/>
sold out four times in Greenville<lb/>
alone. It is rated number 183 on<lb/>
the national charts, number 10 In<lb/>
Charlotte, and number 15 in<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
1 he hand has received excel'<lb/>
anl ratings and reviews in<lb/>
Atlanta,Boston, and Connecticut<lb/>
These statistics came from<lb/>
co-manager Bill Cam, and I am<lb/>
sure thai Jet Matthews would<lb/>
have informed you of much more<lb/>
than that had he read and heard<lb/>
about the review<lb/>
As for Tommy writing sixth<lb/>
grade lyrics, I am positive that<lb/>
you are unaware that people such<lb/>
as Rick Derringer have contacted<lb/>
Tommy about writing for them.<lb/>
Tommy s lyrics involve a no frills,<lb/>
natural approach to relationships<lb/>
with women and that is plain to<lb/>
see.<lb/>
And there are few more<lb/>
ledJcated dru<lb/>
eNANTUCKt<lb/>
<pb facs="00058061_0005"/><lb/>
Crosswinds<lb/>
fi-Mwmwi PmiMTifft<lb/>
ERA, Bakke, and Skokie prove the system works<lb/>
By JIM BARNES<lb/>
The Fourth of July. Fire-<lb/>
works, hotdogs, beer, aowds,<lb/>
highways, wave the flag and<lb/>
America First. The holiday will<lb/>
be celebrated in different ways all<lb/>
over America; there will be<lb/>
picnics, ball games, parades,<lb/>
speechs, protests, and lazy after-<lb/>
noons befae the TV.<lb/>
A traditional affair at ost<lb/>
Fourth of July celebrations is the<lb/>
Patriotic Speech. Such speeches<lb/>
usually intone the principles upon<lb/>
which this nation was famed,<lb/>
how hard many people have<lb/>
fought to protect those prmaples,<lb/>
and how vigilant all Americans<lb/>
must be in defending those<lb/>
principles.<lb/>
Most of these speeches,<lb/>
unfatunateiy, are cast in the past<lb/>
tense. That is, they tend to dwell<lb/>
on things in the past: the<lb/>
Saratogas, the Vioksburgs,<lb/>
Versailles, Hiroshima. We lean<lb/>
toward the military vidaies; they<lb/>
are at once exciting and decisive.<lb/>
All nations rally round the flag.<lb/>
But are there other things to<lb/>
remember about the past in<lb/>
America? Are there not events<lb/>
happening today which speak as<lb/>
directly to the principles of our<lb/>
founding fathers as do recol-<lb/>
lections of Iwo Jima?<lb/>
The past year has seen the<lb/>
involvement of several issues<lb/>
which have stretched the intent-<lb/>
ions of the founding fathers to the<lb/>
limit � A consideration of these<lb/>
issues, and what they imply about<lb/>
the flexibility of our system,<lb/>
might give us something to<lb/>
consider on this Independence<lb/>
Day.<lb/>
Fresh from the test of Water-<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
continued from p.4<lb/>
tarnish the the hard thought<lb/>
realities of a higher education.<lb/>
Education is a word. One<lb/>
interpertation of the word is a<lb/>
man of little. Another definition<lb/>
is, the process and methods and<lb/>
learning in schools.<lb/>
The first definition I under-<lb/>
stand. The last one alludes me.<lb/>
"A's" are the primus toafruitfull<lb/>
life in our educational institu-<lb/>
tions. The key to life, liberty, and<lb/>
independence, rest on the fad of<lb/>
making "A's<lb/>
But where the hell do I get<lb/>
one? How much doese it cost?<lb/>
Does it taste good? May I wear<lb/>
it?<lb/>
This tablet is not one to be<lb/>
taken lightly. I continue to belive<lb/>
in hard work as a means to<lb/>
achieve an end.<lb/>
But slavery was replaced by<lb/>
industrialization. The counting of<lb/>
beads replaced by the counting of<lb/>
quality points. My apathy has<lb/>
growned to radicalism. Anarch-<lb/>
ism now haunts my soul. I do like<lb/>
my government.<lb/>
I understand by being part<lb/>
American Indian, I host first<lb/>
amendment rights and individual<lb/>
freedoms that are apparent to<lb/>
every dtisen, but in the same<lb/>
breathe, theses rights can be<lb/>
transfamed into visidous malish-<lb/>
ishness which bring a severe<lb/>
prision sentencs<lb/>
We simply must not sit by in<lb/>
idleness and watch me and my<lb/>
genere, dwindle merely by the<lb/>
fad of our existence. Surely<lb/>
when we were little indiams in the<lb/>
boonies, our needs were easyly<lb/>
taken care of.<lb/>
But the times are changing,<lb/>
and the changes must encompus<lb/>
all americans. Damn the corn, let<lb/>
me grow an "A<lb/>
Big Bear<lb/>
(Crawfad Tyrea Tucker)<lb/>
<lb/>
YOUR<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
DOESN'T<lb/>
STOP<lb/>
HERE<lb/>
Your education doesn't stop with a baccalaureate degree It begins<lb/>
there Once you enter the work! of work, you wtll gam valuable ex<lb/>
penence and really discover what Its all about to use what you learned<lb/>
in college<lb/>
Take the Air Force lor example As a commissioned officer youII be<lb/>
handed executive responsibility on your very first fob YouII manage<lb/>
people and complex systems YouII be expected to perform well, and<lb/>
youll be paid well, too It's worth working for<lb/>
You can get there through the Air Force ROTC program In fact, we<lb/>
have a scholarship plan that will net you $100 a month tax free and<lb/>
pay for all tuition, books and lab fees And that will free you to concen<lb/>
trate on yixir studies so you can get well prepared for where you're<lb/>
headed<lb/>
('hek it out Find out how you can get into a "graduate" program<lb/>
like the Air FOB e It s a great way to serve your country, and possibly<lb/>
find your formal ediudtton extended at Air Force expense as well<lb/>
<lb/>
Ccntad : Captain Ashley Lane ECU<lb/>
Wright Annex - Room 206 a call 757-6598<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
Gateway to a great way of life.<lb/>
gate, America became enmeshed<lb/>
in the move fa equal rights fa<lb/>
the sexes, asdemaistrated by the<lb/>
push fa ratification of the Equal<lb/>
Rights Amendment (ERA).<lb/>
Whether a not ERA passes the<lb/>
necessary number of states<lb/>
remains to be seen, but the fad<lb/>
that the citizens are attempting to<lb/>
alter the constitution attests to<lb/>
the flexibility of the document, a<lb/>
waking of the system.<lb/>
Only last week, the Supreme<lb/>
Court issued the Bakke ruling<lb/>
declaring that mandatay admiss-<lb/>
iois quotas could a could not be<lb/>
uncaistitutional, depending upoi<lb/>
their intent and content. Some<lb/>
have charged the Court with<lb/>
indecision; one might also ob-<lb/>
serve that the system is still<lb/>
flexible on these issues, there is<lb/>
still room fa discussion.<lb/>
It was also recently ruled that<lb/>
Nazis could, under constitutional<lb/>
protedion, march on the predom-<lb/>
inately Jewish suburb of Skokie,<lb/>
Illinois. There is perhaps no<lb/>
group in America which is as<lb/>
singularly repulsive as the Nazis;<lb/>
yet under the constitution, this<lb/>
group is allowed the right to<lb/>
publidze their views in peaceable<lb/>
assembly. Once again, like it or<lb/>
not, the system waks.<lb/>
As if the ERA, Bakke, and the<lb/>
Nazis were not enough fa the<lb/>
System in 1978, a)ag comes<lb/>
Proposition 13 in Califania.<lb/>
Hailed by sane as a true<lb/>
tax-payers revolt, the repercuss-<lb/>
ions of Proposition 13 are sure to<lb/>
result in a serious reappraisal of<lb/>
priaities and waste in the<lb/>
Califania budget. And Califania<lb/>
isnot alone in this discontent over<lb/>
property tax; several other states<lb/>
have, a will have, in the waks<lb/>
referenda designed to curb the<lb/>
inflation in property tax rates.<lb/>
The whole purpose of this<lb/>
catalogue is to consider fa a<lb/>
manent aie of the canerstaies<lb/>
of the American Way: the U.S.<lb/>
Constitution. All of the above<lb/>
issues involve elementary<lb/>
principles pertaining diredly to<lb/>
the Constitution. The mere fad<lb/>
that these issues are being<lb/>
debated in 1978 says something<lb/>
about the flexibility of our experi-<lb/>
ment in democracy.<lb/>
In a speech at Harvard<lb/>
Commencement this spring,<lb/>
Alexander Solzhenitsyn dted the<lb/>
Western nations as guilty of<lb/>
maal weakness. It is hard fa<lb/>
aie to dispute the Russian exile<lb/>
on that point; there is probably no<lb/>
NANTUCKET<lb/>
continued from p.4<lb/>
than Kenny Soule with all his<lb/>
decisive and "Choppy rhythms"<lb/>
(which each member of Nantucket<lb/>
admires<lb/>
It is quite obvious that you, C.<lb/>
Farren, should stick to evaluating<lb/>
entities which are not so easily<lb/>
disproven by "John Q. Public" as<lb/>
you put it.<lb/>
So, when a band has struggled<lb/>
as long as these guys have, they<lb/>
deserve mae than to have some<lb/>
unpolished, misinfamed judge-<lb/>
ment placed upon them by a<lb/>
member of the part of the country<lb/>
that should be backing them the<lb/>
most. Take it from there and<lb/>
oompare.<lb/>
DebraPage<lb/>
peopie on earth who has not put<lb/>
its status as a soaety ahead of its<lb/>
status as human beings.<lb/>
Yet Solzhenitsyn's wads ring<lb/>
true: we must never faget the<lb/>
true prindples of demoaacy, of<lb/>
basic humanism. It is far too easy<lb/>
to slip into the mire of conven-<lb/>
ience at the sake of maal<lb/>
pnnaple, far too easy.<lb/>
We are, to an extent, improv-<lb/>
ing. Istherenot a maal pnnaple<lb/>
involved when the courts rule that<lb/>
Nazis may march through a<lb/>
neighbahood of Jews, many of<lb/>
whom are survivas fran Nazi<lb/>
prisoi camps? Though the<lb/>
immediate readion may be anger<lb/>
a disgust, aie must realize that<lb/>
the principle of speech has held<lb/>
up -even in defense of a most<lb/>
despaable group ofAmericans.<lb/>
The Bakke case and the<lb/>
struggle fa the passage of the<lb/>
ERA amendment illustrate anoth-<lb/>
er viability of our system. Each<lb/>
attempts in its own way to redify<lb/>
what is felt to be an injustice,<lb/>
either on racial a sexual grounds.<lb/>
That such issues are still open to<lb/>
debate, that such questions have<lb/>
not been resolved "offidally" a<lb/>
otherwise, speaks to the flexibil-<lb/>
ity of the system.<lb/>
I must agree v ith Scott<lb/>
Reston Reading to<lb/>
Solhenitsyn's speech, Reston<lb/>
commented that the one thing<lb/>
Solzhenitsyn fagot to mention<lb/>
was that at least in America, he<lb/>
was able to make those remarks.<lb/>
A country which will allow tree<lb/>
speech in these times cannot be<lb/>
all bad. Let's remember, and try<lb/>
to keep it that way.<lb/>
STUFFY'S<lb/>
$<lb/>
Jo<lb/>
<lb/>
Good Stuff at Stuffy's<lb/>
25' OFF<lb/>
The Regular Price Of Anyone of<lb/>
Stuffy's Famous Subs<lb/>
(Offer Good From July 5th-July 12th With Coupon)<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058061_0006"/><lb/>
Pag� 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 July 1978<lb/>
James Cotton<lb/>
A simple, soulful musician and a talented composer<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
This Saturday night at 9 p.m.<lb/>
the Roxy Music and Arts Center<lb/>
of Greenville will present its<lb/>
. fourth summer oonoert featuring<lb/>
bluesman James Cotton.<lb/>
Cotton plays the harmonica<lb/>
and sings.<lb/>
He comes from West Helena,<lb/>
Arkansas.<lb/>
Like so many bluesmen before<lb/>
him, James was irresistibly pul-<lb/>
led to Beale Street where he<lb/>
jammed with Sonny Boy<lb/>
Williamson and B.B. Kingand<lb/>
then onto Chicago where he got a<lb/>
steady gig with Muddy Waters<lb/>
before forming his own band.<lb/>
The truths which James<lb/>
Cotton lays down, and the<lb/>
pleasure he offers, are as simple<lb/>
as soul and as universal as the<lb/>
human heart.<lb/>
He sings and plays blues -<lb/>
sometimes down, like being<lb/>
alone, wailing about life gone<lb/>
badand sometimes up, like<lb/>
going into the street, shouting<lb/>
about love.<lb/>
For information on ticket<lb/>
prices call 758-0620 or 752-7483.<lb/>
COTTON'S ALBUM IS DOWN<lb/>
HOME SOUTHERN JAZZ<lb/>
The James Cotton Band's<lb/>
album, 100 Peroent Cotton is a<lb/>
down-home mixture of boogie and<lb/>
blues and southern style jazz.<lb/>
The four members of the black<lb/>
band combine a feeling for deep<lb/>
fat fried music with a rythmic<lb/>
sense that could only come from<lb/>
musicians steeped in the boogie<lb/>
tradition.<lb/>
"Boogie Thing" is a boogie<lb/>
woogie number that is as mellow<lb/>
as it is rythmically compelling.<lb/>
The beat keeps on trucking<lb/>
while Mat Murphy plays guitar<lb/>
and sings classically simple boo-<lb/>
gie woogie lyrics.<lb/>
"One Mae Mile" shows the<lb/>
James Cotton Band's ability to<lb/>
cook and sustain our interest by<lb/>
its driving rythmic arrangements.<lb/>
Another song "All Walks of<lb/>
Life" slides along with super-<lb/>
funky bass and the toughest<lb/>
vocal arrangements this side of<lb/>
Sly and his stoned Family.<lb/>
Mat Murphy plays an acoustic<lb/>
guitar that is both capable of<lb/>
carrying the melody and keeping<lb/>
a back-moving beat.<lb/>
Little Bo plays sax like to-<lb/>
morrow the instrument isgoing to<lb/>
be outlawed.<lb/>
Kenny Johnson is featured on<lb/>
percnssion and by his under-<lb/>
statement in the right plaoss and<lb/>
his carefully controlled emphasis<lb/>
in other places makes for tremen-<lb/>
dous entertainment on the drums.<lb/>
Charles Calmese rounds out<lb/>
the group with his well-inter-<lb/>
preted, heart-felt bass playing.<lb/>
"How Long Can a Fool Go<lb/>
Wrong" is one of the groups most<lb/>
low-key, well modulated numbers<lb/>
on this album.<lb/>
It is subtle and excellently<lb/>
played and confirms the band's<lb/>
ability to pursuade us musically<lb/>
that sultry Southern summers still<lb/>
exist in blues mentality.<lb/>
"It is a feeling that is rural,<lb/>
rhythmic, sensual, like love<lb/>
on a humid summer night<lb/>
among lilacs and wisteria<lb/>
same oollard and po'k chop stuff.<lb/>
His voice is a mixture of Bo<lb/>
Diddly and B. B. King. He's a<lb/>
talent that we're sure will be<lb/>
around for some time to come.<lb/>
As the lyrics to "How Long<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
James Cotton composed five<lb/>
of the ten songs on the album and<lb/>
it is certain that he will continue<lb/>
to entertain us with more of the<lb/>
Can a Fool Go Wrong' say,<lb/>
"How long can a bird sing? As<lb/>
long as it knows its song<lb/>
One of the brightest colas on<lb/>
the groups musical palette is the<lb/>
tremendous harmonica featured<lb/>
on most of the songs. It wails and<lb/>
moans and screams and moves<lb/>
with the speed of a freight-train<lb/>
going down a track in southern<lb/>
Mississippi.<lb/>
The old favaite "Fever" is<lb/>
also featured on this album and<lb/>
James Cotton's interpretation is<lb/>
sensuously believable<lb/>
The band backs him up with<lb/>
funk up to the ears and with<lb/>
soulful singing and handdapping<lb/>
to the sweaty Southern max.<lb/>
This rendition of the blue-nae<lb/>
classic slides and writhes and<lb/>
sways as if it were being sung by<lb/>
a gospel choir under a giant<lb/>
weeping willow tree.<lb/>
The most interestingly unique<lb/>
property of this album is the<lb/>
general feeling arising from the<lb/>
songs selected fa it, the band's<lb/>
interpretation of these songs and<lb/>
James Cotton's knowing and yet<lb/>
somehow appealingly naive ap-<lb/>
proach to the lyrics and music.<lb/>
It is a feeling that is<lb/>
essentially rural, essentially rhy-<lb/>
thmic, essentially sensual, like<lb/>
love on a humid summer night<lb/>
among lilacs and wisteria.<lb/>
Somehow the album leaves a<lb/>
salty taste in aie's mouth, the<lb/>
taste of having touched some-<lb/>
thing real and human, and having<lb/>
known and loved it.<lb/>
Perhaps the feeling of the<lb/>
album if summed up most<lb/>
succinctly in the wads of the<lb/>
lyrics to "Fatuation" : "I don t<lb/>
mind dyin . I don't mind dyin as<lb/>
long as the women do the kilhn " .<lb/>
The ageless crusaders<lb/>
produce a full record<lb/>
BLUESMAN JAMES COTTON will be featured at<lb/>
the fourth summer oonoert at Greenville's Roxy<lb/>
Music and Arts Center "The truths which James<lb/>
Cotton lays down, and the pleasure he offers, are as<lb/>
simple as soul and as universal as the human<lb/>
heart<lb/>
By CHRIS FARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ageless Crusaders have<lb/>
yet anaher album out, and to<lb/>
those of you who are already fans,<lb/>
nahing mae needs to be said<lb/>
However, to those of you<lb/>
unfamiliar with the group, read<lb/>
on.<lb/>
Not to be confused with the<lb/>
Commodaesa other funk bands,<lb/>
the Crusaders have fa the past<lb/>
ten years been aie of the most<lb/>
innovative, refreshing and talent-<lb/>
ed groups around, drawing from<lb/>
aspects of jazz, soul and rock fa<lb/>
their sound.<lb/>
Made up of five extraadinary<lb/>
musicians, the Crusaders have<lb/>
been among the most critically<lb/>
and commercially overlooked<lb/>
groups fa the past decade.<lb/>
Recently there has been an<lb/>
influx of listeners from the pop<lb/>
idam leaning mae towards the<lb/>
jazz sound and hence the pop-jazz<lb/>
fussion, (i.e. Geage Benson,<lb/>
Chuck Mangiaie)<lb/>
The result has na oily<lb/>
brought commercial success to<lb/>
many deserving jazz stalwarts,<lb/>
but also helped to instigate a sat<lb/>
of musical oneness. Certain al-<lb/>
bums of widespread appeal rate<lb/>
hich on all three of the recad<lb/>
charts.<lb/>
Many consider thisto be a cop<lb/>
out on the part of ihe jazz<lb/>
musicians, and in seme cases it<lb/>
probably is. However, the pop<lb/>
flava of the jazz Crusaders<lb/>
should in no way be labeled a coo<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Their sound is centered a-<lb/>
round the unmatched keyboard<lb/>
playing of Joe Sample, whose<lb/>
liquidy smooth piano lines have<lb/>
graced the platters of nearly<lb/>
everything coming out of the<lb/>
studios these days.<lb/>
Sample also has a recently<lb/>
released solo album, "Rainbow<lb/>
Seeker a superb example of<lb/>
keyboard playing at its finest<lb/>
Other members of the band<lb/>
are Wilton Felder, saxes, "Styx"<lb/>
Hcopa, percussion; Robert<lb/>
Fopwell, bass; and Billy Rogers,<lb/>
<pb facs="00058061_0007"/><lb/>
oser<lb/>
iral,<lb/>
2 love<lb/>
ght<lb/>
ria<lb/>
handclapping<lb/>
lern max.<lb/>
f the blue-note<lb/>
writhes and<lb/>
being sung by<lb/>
nder a giant<lb/>
stingly unique<lb/>
album is the<lb/>
ang from the<lb/>
it, the band's<lb/>
jse songs and<lb/>
�wing and yet<lb/>
ly naive ap-<lb/>
and music,<lb/>
lg that is<lb/>
sentially rhy-<lb/>
sensual, like<lb/>
ummer night<lb/>
steria.<lb/>
aurri leaves a<lb/>
 mouth, the<lb/>
hed some-<lb/>
i, and having<lb/>
jling of the<lb/>
1 up most<lb/>
xds of the<lb/>
"I don't<lb/>
nind dyin' as<lb/>
ithe killm'<lb/>
iers<lb/>
vrd<lb/>
success to<lb/>
z stalwarts,<lb/>
igate a sort<lb/>
Certain al-<lb/>
appeal rate<lb/>
the record<lb/>
s to be a cop<lb/>
�f the jazz<lb/>
me cases it<lb/>
, the pop<lb/>
Crusaders<lb/>
abeled a coo<lb/>
centered a-<lb/>
d keyboard<lb/>
pie, whose<lb/>
lines have<lb/>
of nearly<lb/>
xjt of the<lb/>
a recently<lb/>
"Rainbow<lb/>
example of<lb/>
s finest.<lb/>
I the band<lb/>
es; "Styx<lb/>
Robert<lb/>
lly Rogers,<lb/>
Play It Again, Sam to<lb/>
be shown on Mall as<lb/>
next Tuesday's Flick<lb/>
This Tuesday night at 9, the<lb/>
Student Union will present the<lb/>
Possession of Joel Delaney, a<lb/>
supernatural horror tale starring<lb/>
Shirley MacLaine and Perry<lb/>
King.<lb/>
Next Tuesday night, July 18,<lb/>
Woody Allen's Play It Again Sam<lb/>
will be shown also at 9 p.m. on<lb/>
the Mall.<lb/>
Rain site for the films will be<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Only Woody Allen oould be<lb/>
confronted with such a situation,<lb/>
and cope with it so humorously.<lb/>
Allen plays a neurotic critic<lb/>
whose wife has left him fa<lb/>
"insufficient laughter<lb/>
How he finally suceeds with a<lb/>
woman, and with whom, is the<lb/>
film's basis.<lb/>
In this outrageously funny<lb/>
film, adaptation of Allen's Broad-<lb/>
way play, theparellelstoBogart's<lb/>
WOODY ALLEN<lb/>
CRUSADERS<lb/>
continued from p. 6<lb/>
guitars.<lb/>
A weak link truely cannot be<lb/>
found in this totally solid group.<lb/>
The seven instrumental on<lb/>
the album are just at solid, with<lb/>
every member except Rogers<lb/>
lending a hand in the writing.<lb/>
With a wide variety of<lb/>
rhythms, the album plays like<lb/>
straight forward azz with saxo-<lb/>
phone hooks for easier listening.<lb/>
The Sample tunes are the<lb/>
most immediately appealing, but<lb/>
after a few listenings the album<lb/>
plays like a unit with each song<lb/>
being an integral part of the<lb/>
whole.<lb/>
This album deserves recogni-<lb/>
tion and success.<lb/>
The recording is dean and<lb/>
full: the musicianship flawless,<lb/>
and the music is happy and full of<lb/>
feeling<lb/>
Casablanca are played to the hilt;<lb/>
the film's ending, combining<lb/>
Allen, Diane Keaton, a thick fog,<lb/>
and an airport, is a loving, funny<lb/>
tribute that would make<lb/>
Humphery Bogart proud. This is<lb/>
the work that began the Allen-<lb/>
Keaton personal and professional<lb/>
relationship.<lb/>
Next week's free flick will be<lb/>
The Last Tycoon, starring Robert<lb/>
DeNiro and Robert Mitchum, on<lb/>
the Mall, at 9.<lb/>
poetry<lb/>
5 July 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
UNJIILED<lb/>
By June Schafford<lb/>
i wish i could write poetry<lb/>
Salem 100'sand imagination<lb/>
fragments of earth shattering confessions<lb/>
(why can't i piece them together?)<lb/>
"ah, love is lost<lb/>
(no, that'soorny)<lb/>
i see myself too simply<lb/>
or maybe too oomplexy<lb/>
i can't fit the pictures into the frame<lb/>
(i think i need a larger frame)<lb/>
the rain makes me want to write poetry<lb/>
(it's raining now)<lb/>
the soothing tempo of the raindrops<lb/>
typing out wetness on my window all<lb/>
(surely someone's said that before)<lb/>
i want to be the first!<lb/>
i want them to say "my god, what profundity<lb/>
as the rain comes down<lb/>
i'm sitting here<lb/>
wishing i oould write poetry<lb/>
�m mn<lb/>
SU?Sit SUjVIMSR sals<lb/>
ALL<lb/>
5PJUMS M!) 5UMMIR<lb/>
FASHIONS<lb/>
2550<lb/>
<lb/>
toanx Jbuz.t ctiaff fuunriHz � TSS-Spfa - jMouu: QIO-6.<lb/>
oo<lb/>
�HMMHHHHaaHMKr.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058061_0008"/><lb/>
�����<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 July 1978<lb/>
Travolta again<lb/>
Grease: a fifties film with<lb/>
seventies embeffishirments<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
Special appearances by stars<lb/>
like Eve Arden, Frankie Avalon,<lb/>
Sd Caesar and Sha-Na-Na are of<lb/>
little hlep in justifying the Stig-<lb/>
wood studios latest rock-movie,<lb/>
Grease, as a convincing fifties<lb/>
period piece.<lb/>
Even supercharged cars, lea-<lb/>
ther jacketsandalot of grease fall<lb/>
short of obvious seventies embel-<lb/>
lishments Olivia Newton-John<lb/>
anrt .Inhn Travolta.<lb/>
Original songs like "You're<lb/>
the One that I Want and<lb/>
Hopelessly Devoted to You are<lb/>
catchy but only further reinforce<lb/>
the temperate dimate of the<lb/>
disco-oriented seventies.<lb/>
Music mogul Robert Stig-<lb/>
wood. producer of Grease and the<lb/>
highly successful Saturday Night<lb/>
Fever, has found the talented<lb/>
Travolta a profitable commodity<lb/>
Stigwood pretty much dictates a<lb/>
flamboyant Hollywood infusion<lb/>
that carries over into Travolta's<lb/>
performance as well as the<lb/>
performances, save for Stockard<lb/>
Channing, of the rest of the cast.<lb/>
The Hollywood influence in<lb/>
Grease is part of a trend in a<lb/>
number of summer films-junk<lb/>
filmsthat spat big names and the<lb/>
promise of the kind of entertain-<lb/>
ment available to audiences in the<lb/>
1930'sand 1940's.<lb/>
But the position of Hollywood<lb/>
in the seventies is totally different<lb/>
from what it had been in the<lb/>
great years of the 1930s and<lb/>
1908.<lb/>
The arrival of television took<lb/>
away the unreflecting masses<lb/>
who had traditionally been the<lb/>
movie's main audience. Instead<lb/>
d being abie to assume the<lb/>
interest of habitual filmgoers,<lb/>
producers like Stigwood are mak-<lb/>
ing films like Grease fa audi-<lb/>
ences who will pick and choose.<lb/>
Fa those who choose a<lb/>
Grease filmiation that is devoid<lb/>
of the flava of the fifties, there is<lb/>
at least the prescence of fconafied<lb/>
star Travolta who is on his way to<lb/>
being as big a screen personage<lb/>
as any matinee idol in Holly-<lb/>
wood sheyday.<lb/>
Noeonsideratioi of the Holly-<lb/>
wood influence in contempaary<lb/>
film is possible without reference<lb/>
to its maja stars. As the present<lb/>
vogue in pop music shows, stars<lb/>
like Olivia Newton-John can exist<lb/>
without the cinema.<lb/>
If we think of the entertain-<lb/>
ment wald's stars of the 1960's,<lb/>
it is immediately apparent that a<lb/>
newer twentieth-century techni-<lb/>
cal marvel, the long-playing<lb/>
stereo recad, has been just as<lb/>
efficient at aeating stars as the<lb/>
cinema ever was.<lb/>
The Beatles have made films<lb/>
but, like Grease, they are in no<lb/>
way a product of the true cinema.<lb/>
Once again, pop stars of the day<lb/>
are capturing audiences as fig-<lb/>
ures and stereotyped characters<lb/>
who are seen repeatedly on the<lb/>
screen<lb/>
Travolta's character has<lb/>
changed little from Kotter to<lb/>
Saturday Night Fever to Grease.<lb/>
JOHN TRAVOLTA HITS the floor in scene from Robert Stigwoods 'Grease<lb/>
Un like the Valentinosand James<lb/>
Deans who preceeded him, Tra-<lb/>
volta will dominate the cinema fa<lb/>
awhile and be replaced by a<lb/>
similar figure.<lb/>
The cinema is coistantly<lb/>
changing and developing new<lb/>
techniques. Modern methods of<lb/>
shooting, using freer camera<lb/>
work, real settings and more<lb/>
complicated plot lines  demand<lb/>
different qualities.<lb/>
Old stars were a product of a<lb/>
hot-house studio,<lb/>
their names sold seats in movie<lb/>
houses and so film-making was<lb/>
built around their needs and<lb/>
whims as was done fa John<lb/>
Travolta and Olivia Newton-John<lb/>
in Grease.<lb/>
Audiences today are making<lb/>
the same demands again and the<lb/>
stars are being put back up front.<lb/>
The older audience who at one<lb/>
time went to the movies twice a<lb/>
week to see their favaite stars<lb/>
are now staying at home to watch<lb/>
television<lb/>
The younger audience tur ns<lb/>
itsattention to today s pop scene.<lb/>
And films like Grease, no matter<lb/>
how flawed, are bringing the pop<lb/>
scene to the silver screen<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
�ggpf Pizza &amp; Spaghetti<lb/>
507 EAST 14th STREET GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
DIAL 758 7400<lb/>
Nothing beats a Piza from CHANELO'S<lb/>
PIZA SPAGHETTI<lb/>
LASAGNA &amp; SUBMARINES<lb/>
CALL OR COME BY YOU OWE IT TO YOURSELF<lb/>
TAKE A BREAK� DINE IN<lb/>
LUNCHEON SPECIAL<lb/>
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY<lb/>
HOURS 1 1:30A.M. ,TIL 3:30P.M.<lb/>
rReLxx � cHclue. uncfi at<lb/>
Ch J2�LLo 1 (DnLy $1.79<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MONDAY thru THURSDAY1130 a.m. til X00 a m<lb/>
FRIDAY and SATURDAY11:30a.m. til fOOa.m.<lb/>
SUNDAY1130 a.m. til 12:00 p.m.<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
<pb facs="00058061_0009"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
lie is currently u cartoonist for Tin New Yorker<lb/>
a July 1978 FQUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Jt back up front<lb/>
ence who at one<lb/>
movies twice a<lb/>
r favorite stars<lb/>
t home to watch<lb/>
audience tur ns<lb/>
lay s pop scene<lb/>
ease, no matter<lb/>
ringing the pop<lb/>
screen<lb/>
AD<lb/>
i per<lb/>
auav<lb/>
paid<lb/>
It use ll<lb/>
vo on<lb/>
12<lb/>
Steinberg's drawings combine wit and insight<lb/>
By JEf-f- ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Saul Steinberg cannot tx<lb/>
as belonging to any<lb/>
genre already existing<lb/>
He isa frontiersman of genres.<lb/>
irtisl who cannot tx? confined<lb/>
ategot, states Harold<lb/>
in his imminently<lb/>
text tha1 i mpan-<lb/>
the 274 illustrations of<lb/>
This roughly drawn box dreams of<lb/>
becoming a perfectly geometrical<lb/>
square<lb/>
Stetnburg s w<lb/>
first boo1 i " irtist.<lb/>
. ,i Romai i<lb/>
birth but during his life has<lb/>
traveled to a<lb/>
countries Pi locount!<lb/>
fa the internationality of<lb/>
I ron the P<lb/>
I i Manhattan Island to a<lb/>
leserted oountry scene in<lb/>
i ii . teinberg realizes,<lb/>
enetrating insighl<lb/>
' "Cting the most salient char-<lb/>
� s in order to oommunic-<lb/>
� 'esshis impression of<lb/>
their interior reality.<lb/>
Steinberg s compositions<lb/>
cross the borders between art and<lb/>
caricature, illustration, children's<lb/>
art. art brut and satire His work<lb/>
is notably of the present day, yet<lb/>
it has an aura of the old-fashion-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
He is a cartoonist who current-<lb/>
ly may be seen in almost any<lb/>
issue of the New Yorker and who<lb/>
has worked for numerous maga-<lb/>
zines and other periodicals. He<lb/>
frustrates those who would want<lb/>
to draw a strong demarcation<lb/>
between high art and art for the<lb/>
mass media As anyone who has<lb/>
seen his cartoons in the New<lb/>
Yorker will attest, his drawings<lb/>
;ss a wit and intelligent<lb/>
insight into the foibles of modern<lb/>
life much as do the paintings of<lb/>
Paul Klee.<lb/>
Steinberg mentions in the<lb/>
f<lb/>
A<lb/>
'<lb/>
A<lb/>
�<lb/>
' "�<lb/>
��'� <lb/>
A PLAINLY DRAWN, dowager encounters a<lb/>
swinging aty Sally on the streets of New York in this<lb/>
drawing by Steinberg<lb/>
book that to him Drawing is a<lb/>
way of reasoning on paper For<lb/>
instance, he will draw a geometri-<lb/>
cally perfect triangle "having<lb/>
sex" with voluptuous question<lb/>
mark Thus he puns our concept-<lb/>
ion of reason and imagination and<lb/>
makes a statement perhaps on the<lb/>
necessity of both to his creativity.<lb/>
Through forms of representa-<lb/>
tion until recently alien to the<lb/>
museum tradition but present in<lb/>
art since the beginnings of<lb/>
graphic expression, he has forged<lb/>
a means by which to animate<lb/>
areas of the mind outside ior at<lb/>
least very extenuated from) the<lb/>
Great Tradition of art since the<lb/>
Renaissance Also he has incor-<lb/>
porated the stylistic innovations<lb/>
of modern art and used them for<lb/>
his cwn artistic ends. For in-<lb/>
stance, in a drawing called The<lb/>
Party, he uses different ways of<lb/>
drawing, cross-hatching, minimal<lb/>
line drawing, and other, as a<lb/>
means to describe the personalit-<lb/>
ies of the guests<lb/>
The book, Saul Steinberg with<lb/>
its excellent color and black and<lb/>
white reproductions of his work<lb/>
and with its authoritive and<lb/>
entertaining text by Harold<lb/>
Rosenberg adequately serves to<lb/>
introduce a major contemporary<lb/>
artist to a public which might<lb/>
otherwise overlook him<lb/>
Spoleto Festival is granted an award<lb/>
Spoleto Festival USA the<lb/>
world's most comprehensive arts<lb/>
festival, received a special award<lb/>
from Discover America Travel<lb/>
Organizations, Inc. (DATO).<lb/>
Perry L. Weed. Vice President<lb/>
Counsel for Government<lb/>
Attairs at DATO, presented the<lb/>
ifd to Spoleto Festival Pres-<lb/>
ent Theodore S Stern and<lb/>
Artistic Director Gian Carlo<lb/>
Menotti.<lb/>
The award, which was most<lb/>
recently presented during the<lb/>
Bicentennial, praised the Spoleto<lb/>
Festival for "its unique contribu-<lb/>
tion toward fostering greater<lb/>
international understanding and<lb/>
providing an unparalleled oppor-<lb/>
tunity for cultural exchange<lb/>
through the performing and crea-<lb/>
tive i<lb/>
Spoleto Festival U.S.A. is<lb/>
concluding its second annual<lb/>
season in historic Charleston,<lb/>
S.C The 18-day Festival, hailed<lb/>
as the greatest combination of<lb/>
site and talent in the North<lb/>
American continent includes<lb/>
opera, dance, chamber and sym-<lb/>
phonic music, dim, theatre, lec-<lb/>
tures, yazi. country music and<lb/>
visual arts<lb/>
This year s Festival was prais-<lb/>
ed by critics throughout the world<lb/>
and was subject to a two-hour<lb/>
Today Show on NBC television on<lb/>
June 5.<lb/>
Dates for Spoleto Festival<lb/>
USA 1979 have been set for<lb/>
May 25 - June 10, 1979 Further<lb/>
information is available by cont-<lb/>
acting Spoleto Festival U.S.A.<lb/>
P 0 Box 157. Charleston. SC<lb/>
Capezio<lb/>
Danskin<lb/>
TBAPRE,ltd<lb/>
805 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
Greenville. N.C 752-5186<lb/>
jJbilJii Mlii'J9&amp;KU SnUUi. ShbbSb J0lt<lb/>
TULiS.<lb/>
Ihbb'Sb JJUL<lb/>
Tonilc thru L<lb/>
at the<lb/>
Double Entertainment<lb/>
with<lb/>
Disco &amp;<lb/>
Tenth Ave.<lb/>
Sun. - Ladles ATitc<lb/>
Orientation Specials � Sun&amp;Mou.<lb/>
Toes. - �raiyTn�s.<lb/>
bfftUSbU<lb/>
�iMijirje<lb/>
��IBHMHHai<lb/>
<pb facs="00058061_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 July 1978<lb/>
North Carolina defense could be key to season<lb/>
�1ISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
ip<lb/>
This is the sixth m a scries of<lb/>
scouting reports on ECU'S 1978<lb/>
toottkilI op i Vex7 week we<lb/>
will scout the Golden Eagles of<lb/>
hern Mississippi<lb/>
In past years the Tar Heels of<lb/>
North Carolina have never been<lb/>
noted as having a tough defense.<lb/>
The defense was usually ade-<lb/>
quate but never overpowering.<lb/>
Well, last year changes all that as<lb/>
the UNC defense led the nation in<lb/>
scoring and every ACC defensive<lb/>
statistic.<lb/>
There are two reasons why<lb/>
UNC's 1978 opposition should<lb/>
believe that the Tar Heel defense<lb/>
will once again he tough. First of<lb/>
all no less than seven starters<lb/>
return to that unit and secondly<lb/>
 head coach Dick Crum unlike<lb/>
his predicessor Bill Dooley is a<lb/>
tough defensive coach<lb/>
Crum. who led Miami. (Ohio)<lb/>
to three Mid-American Confer-<lb/>
ence titles including last years<lb/>
10-1 team has come mtoa football<lb/>
situation that has plenty of quality<lb/>
players including 38 lettermen<lb/>
and 14 starters.<lb/>
As mentioned before probably<lb/>
the best of those returning<lb/>
starters will be the nationally<lb/>
ranked defensive team. The only<lb/>
real problem area here is trying to<lb/>
replace Dee Hardison and Ron<lb/>
Broadway, both of whom earned<lb/>
Ail-American honors last year.<lb/>
Fighting for the jobs are Bum<lb/>
Rhames a 6 2 245 pound �<lb/>
or and Donnell Thompson a<lb/>
6'4 260 pound sopfi - - Both<lb/>
i players saw lots of action<lb/>
last season so there will be<lb/>
moe at the defensive tackle<lb/>
position. At the flanker positions<lb/>
Ken Sheets a 6'3 230 pound<lb/>
� .�turns along with T.K.<lb/>
McDaniels a 6 4 240 pound<lb/>
 a<lb/>
Summons a 6'4<lb/>
225 pounder will be at the middle<lb/>
guari spot with backup help from<lb/>
Bob Duncan.<lb/>
At one of the linebacking<lb/>
(rations is junior Buddy Curry, a<lb/>
6'3" 220 pounder who was<lb/>
all-ACC and voted UNC's top<lb/>
player in the Liberty Bowl defeat<lb/>
to Nebraska A battle is shaping<lb/>
up for the other starting backer<lb/>
post with no less than five player,<lb/>
vieing for the position. They are<lb/>
Steve Taylor (6' 3" 220), Rick<lb/>
Downs (6'3" 210), Paul Davis<lb/>
(6'1" 210), Harry Stanbaok (6'4"<lb/>
230) and former tailback Larry<lb/>
redder (5'H" 205)<lb/>
The secondary returns three<lb/>
of f(xjr of its starters. They are<lb/>
junior Ricky Barden a 58 170<lb/>
pounder, and seniors Bobby Cale,<lb/>
6'1" 175 and Bernie Menapace,<lb/>
6'Cr 185. The fourth starting spot<lb/>
will pr ooabiy go to Francis Winter<lb/>
a 60' 185 pound unlor.<lb/>
Thus far it sounds like the Tar<lb/>
Heels will try to win only on<lb/>
mae but that's just not the<lb/>
case The offense whloh will be a<lb/>
veer under coach Crum will<lb/>
feature a traditionally big<lb/>
� -nsive line and one of<lb/>
beat running backs in the<lb/>
nation in I amous Amos<lb/>
Lawreni<lb/>
Last year as a freshman,<lb/>
Lawrence ran for 1.211 yards in<lb/>
10 game! although he started<lb/>
only the last Si He will tx<lb/>
backed up by Doug Paschal a<lb/>
6'2' 215 pound junior and Phil<lb/>
Farns(6'1" 200) At the fullback<lb/>
position will be Ken Mack an<lb/>
unknown until spring practice<lb/>
drills and Billy Johnson and<lb/>
senior Bob Loomis.<lb/>
The line as mentioned before<lb/>
will be big. The charge will be led<lb/>
this season by senior guard Mike<lb/>
Salzano who at 6'4" 250 is a<lb/>
pre-season All-America candid-<lb/>
ate At the other guard slot will be<lb/>
senior John Rushing (6'3' 250),<lb/>
Senior Bobby Hukill (6'5'255)<lb/>
and junior Steve Junkmann (c 4 '<lb/>
255) are back at the tackle<lb/>
positions. Rick Donnalley a 6'3"<lb/>
Sophomore will be at the center<lb/>
position this year He has been<lb/>
oled by the coaching staff as<lb/>
one of UNC's future superstars.<lb/>
The rest" � fw Ip on the line will<lb/>
be provided by Ron Wooten (6"5<lb/>
260) and Lowell Eakin at (6'3"<lb/>
250)<lb/>
At quarterback Matt Kupec<lb/>
returns to run the offense. Last<lb/>
year the 6 1" 185 pounder passed<lb/>
for 175 yards with an outstanding<lb/>
59 completions in 105 attempts<lb/>
and seven touchdowns. He also<lb/>
provides much of the leadership<lb/>
which keeps the Carolina offense<lb/>
steady.<lb/>
A reason for ooncern however<lb/>
is the receiving corp This grrx<lb/>
was wiped out by graduation.<lb/>
Crum knows full well that he must<lb/>
have more balance in his offense<lb/>
if the veer is to be successful.<lb/>
Thus Coach Crum will look at no<lb/>
less than four people at the �.<lb/>
ier position.<lb/>
They are Jim Rouse, 6 2" 185,<lb/>
ert Powell 5'10 180. Carey<lb/>
Casey 6'0" 185 and Wayne<lb/>
fucker 6'2" 200.<lb/>
At thi 'id positi<lb/>
will len Jimmy Rotx- i<lb/>
240, Rick Vanhoy 6'4 220,<lb/>
Mike Chatham 6T 200 and<lb/>
Kenny Rogers 6'4" 250<lb/>
A new place kicker must be<lb/>
found to replace the graduate!<lb/>
Tom Biddle Jeff Hayes a 5' 11"<lb/>
freshman will probably get that<lb/>
job<lb/>
In summing up the outlook for<lb/>
let Heels of North Carolina it<lb/>
appears on the surface that the<lb/>
Heels will have a solid team in all<lb/>
areas with the except ion of the<lb/>
receiving corp. The only problem<lb/>
faang the Heels will be how long<lb/>
it takes them to get their veer<lb/>
attack rolling. Even an experieno-<lb/>
ed veer team like NC State takes a<lb/>
few weeks to get the offense<lb/>
straight. Also UNC must have<lb/>
some balance between the run<lb/>
and the pass soother teams won't<lb/>
"stack" their defense against the<lb/>
running game of Ken Mack and<lb/>
Amos Lawrence The defense<lb/>
may be able to take some of the<lb/>
load itself since it seems to be<lb/>
solid in every area The defensive<lb/>
team should be as good or better<lb/>
than last year with so many<lb/>
returning starters.<lb/>
Utr as ECU �. chances<lb/>
QUARTERBACK MATT KUPEC and tailback Amos 197&amp;<lb/>
Lawrence will lead the Tar Heels new veer attach in<lb/>
��������<lb/>
<lb/>
"X<lb/>
<lb/>
DicJi Crum<lb/>
Matt Kupec<lb/>
against the Tar Heels are ooncer-<lb/>
ned the Pirates must be ready to<lb/>
take advantage of certain situat-<lb/>
ions to come up winner � I i-st of<lb/>
all the Pirates play two games<lb/>
�" tl � Hei Is open with the<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
REGGIE PINKNEY INTERCEPTS<lb/>
Tar Heels. ECU upset UNC 38-17<lb/>
Pirates. The second team (NC<lb/>
State) has one of the best veer<lb/>
attacks In the country so the<lb/>
Pirates should by ready for the<lb/>
UNC veer after seeing State s the<lb/>
week before rhe Pirates must<lb/>
pass during 1975 contest against<lb/>
force UNC into offensive mistakes<lb/>
and the Pirate offense must move<lb/>
with consistancy against the<lb/>
tough Carolina defense All in all<lb/>
the game -iiouid be &amp; exerting at<lb/>
anyone couM hope fa<lb/>
<pb facs="00058061_0011"/><lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
5 July 1978 FQUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
ason<lb/>
K9E<lb/>
f �?<lb/>
�<lb/>
i�<lb/>
rtr -r�<lb/>
nesr against<lb/>
nave mistaken.<lb/>
rise must move<lb/>
against the<lb/>
ense All in all<lb/>
I as�xcitiruj at<lb/>
By Andy Stewart<lb/>
Martinez resigns post<lb/>
"he assistant � t the Inti Department, Marty<lb/>
Martinez handed in his rhuradaj i will be<lb/>
. tl first 3ummei session<lb/>
� en at ECU a total of tl ounting his graduate<lb/>
'�'��' ezhash the intramura departmet t too<lb/>
ip ten departments in the nati t<lb/>
When asked why he decided to resign he oommented, "My<lb/>
rticx � health and personal isonj in asking what he<lb/>
planned to do he said he would go bad- to xado. in dosing<lb/>
Martinez commented, ' It has been a real pleasure here and I am gong<lb/>
to miss it, I got toknowa lot of great jeople and I will miss them all<lb/>
In Softball the top four teams were selected from each league for the<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
The Slrokers defeated Summer Time Blues 17-16 in a seventh<lb/>
inning surge while the Superscnics defeated Delta Sigma Phi 18-14<lb/>
Sigma Ph Epsilon defeated Dead End Kids 16-5 and Lumber and<lb/>
Lightning defeated Laid Back 15-1<lb/>
In the semi-finals, Lumber and Lightning defeated Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilon 15-3 while Strokers defeated Supersonics 19-12.<lb/>
The finals paired Strokers against Lumber and Lightning At the<lb/>
txrttom the the third inning the score was knotted at two a piece In the<lb/>
bottom of the fourth the Strokers scored three runs and went on to win<lb/>
the game 8-6.<lb/>
The final standings are:<lb/>
1 Strokers<lb/>
2. Lumber and Lightning<lb/>
3. Supersonics<lb/>
4 Summer Time Blues<lb/>
5. Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
The intramural department would like to thank all the people who<lb/>
helped officiate the softball games. Also, if you are interested in<lb/>
entering a softball team for second session register in 204 Memorial<lb/>
Gym between June 27-July 5.<lb/>
For those interested in cooling off this summer, there is a good<lb/>
chance that three-on-three water basketball will be here next session.<lb/>
In 3on-3 basketball the playoffs got underway last week. Five<lb/>
teams were selected to compete in the tournament. They took the top<lb/>
teams of each division and the teams that were tied for those positions.<lb/>
Thursday opened with the Scott Pleasures defeating the Rockets by<lb/>
a score of 69-51. The game was a lot doser than the score indicates.<lb/>
Also, in the first round of the playoffs, the Obiters demolished the<lb/>
Bullets by a runaway score of 66-36 with Sam Harrell leading the way<lb/>
At 9:30, the second round got underway with a thrilling overtime<lb/>
victory by the Old and Slow as they defeated the Obiters 54-50.<lb/>
The finals will be played this week in Memorial Gym It will be<lb/>
featuring the Scott Pleasers and the Old and Sow<lb/>
The final top teams are as follows.<lb/>
1 Old and Sow<lb/>
2 Scott Pleasers<lb/>
3 Orbiters<lb/>
4 Rockl<lb/>
5 Bu<lb/>
Pirates' Ramsey transfers<lb/>
- M ROGL RS<lb/>
portsl ditor<lb/>
Jim<lb/>
I '  ed he will<lb/>
ty in<lb/>
easo to ording to a<lb/>
Stay published Monday in the<lb/>
ileigh Tin<lb/>
Ran a - . Jary<lb/>
N.C was a part time starter<lb/>
iring his freshman year under<lb/>
former ECU OOBCh Dave Pattern.<lb/>
Last season, Ramsey started only<lb/>
one game and saw limited playing<lb/>
time under Larry Gillman.<lb/>
Playing time was not the<lb/>
total reason for leaving ECU<lb/>
Ramsey told the Times, "but it<lb/>
was a factor.<lb/>
"There were no conflicts<lb/>
between me and Coach Gillman.<lb/>
He had his ideas about what to do<lb/>
to run a team and I had mine.<lb/>
There was no big argument i just<lb/>
thought it would be better for me<lb/>
to leave and go to Stetson<lb/>
ECU head coach Larry<lb/>
Gillman said Monday that he had<lb/>
not been contacted from anyone<lb/>
at Setson, although he said<lb/>
Ramsey was thinking of transfer-<lb/>
ring, at the end of the year.<lb/>
"I really know nothing about<lb/>
the transfer said Gillman,<lb/>
When Jim left, he knew he<lb/>
wasn t in a good playing situation<lb/>
next season He told me he might<lb/>
be gang to Setson and I told him<lb/>
I would help him wherever he<lb/>
chose to go<lb/>
Although Ramsey will have to<lb/>
sit out the 1978-79 season, he will<lb/>
have two years of eligibility<lb/>
remaining after that Ramsey wi<lb/>
also join former N.C. Sate<lb/>
standout Dirk Ewing, who trans-<lb/>
ferred to Setson last year<lb/>
Jn my mind there is more<lb/>
future for me as a player at<lb/>
Setspn that at ECU. said<lb/>
Ramsey Coach Glen Wilkes<lb/>
told me chances of me playing<lb/>
would be great, but being the<lb/>
kind of man he is he didn t make<lb/>
any promises as far as playing<lb/>
time was ooncerned<lb/>
Last season. Ramsey was the<lb/>
ninth leading soorer on the team<lb/>
with a 2 6 average He had 20<lb/>
assists and scored in double<lb/>
figures only onoe<lb/>
During his freshman year<lb/>
DUl and Powell<lb/>
place in AA I<lb/>
ECU placed two trackmen in<lb/>
the top 20 of the Senior Men's<lb/>
National AAU 15 kilometer<lb/>
Championships this past weekend<lb/>
in Davis, West Virginia<lb/>
Jim Dill and Charlie Powell,<lb/>
running for the Nrxth Carolina<lb/>
� .k Club ran extremely well,<lb/>
with Dill placing 13th and Powell<lb/>
19th The 15 kilometei uwrse<lb/>
(Aprox 9 4 miles) was very hilly.<lb/>
as Da �.at(xj in the heart of<lb/>
the Appalachian mountains Hie<lb/>
North (arolina I rack (Hub placed<lb/>
4th overall i � a talent packed<lb/>
West Virginia i rack (-i ut won the<lb/>
meet with 51unneiBin the top 10<lb/>
f"he Summil Athleti lub oi Nev<lb/>
44<lb/>
a -j 732-1828 fA<lb/>
p<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
(1) SPICED HAM<lb/>
(2) BOLOGNA A CHEESE<lb/>
(3) HAM &amp; SWISS<lb/>
(4) HAM. SWISS &amp; SALAMI<lb/>
(5) TUNA<lb/>
(6) ROAST BEEF<lb/>
(7) TURKEY<lb/>
(8) CLUB<lb/>
(9) SUPER<lb/>
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(11) HOT PASTROMI<lb/>
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BUM PIE 5 BE ST<lb/>
Come By For The Best<lb/>
Subs In Town<lb/>
Wateh Major Sports Events On<lb/>
(hir6 Ft. TV 706 EVANS SX<lb/>
JIM RAMSEY DURING freshman season against N C State<lb/>
Ramsey was the third leading<lb/>
scorer for the Pirates with a 11 3<lb/>
average. He led the team in<lb/>
assists with 78, scored in double<lb/>
figures 16 times, and was named<lb/>
to the Southern Conference All-<lb/>
Rookie team<lb/>
Ramsey was named the Metro<lb/>
Player of the Year and the Wake<lb/>
County Player of the Year during<lb/>
his senior year at Gary High<lb/>
School<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058061_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 July 1978<lb/>
Butch Estes heads recruiting push at Rice<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
It's been more than a year now<lb/>
sinoe former head basketball<lb/>
coach Dave Patton and his top<lb/>
assistant Butch Estes resigned at<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
After his resignation, Patton<lb/>
chose to leave the coaching<lb/>
profession altogether and is now a<lb/>
salesman for a large ring com-<lb/>
pany in Georgia. However, Estes<lb/>
who was considered at one time<lb/>
for the vacant ECU head job,<lb/>
moved on to Rice University where<lb/>
he recently completed his first<lb/>
season as an assistant coach<lb/>
under Mike Schuler.<lb/>
Even though the Pirates fin-<lb/>
ished with two straight losing<lb/>
seasons before Larry Gillman<lb/>
assumed the head coaching dut-<lb/>
ies last year, it was Patton and<lb/>
Estes who brought the Pirates<lb/>
their finest season in basketball<lb/>
history during the 1974-75<lb/>
season.<lb/>
East Carolina finished with a<lb/>
19-9 reoord, the most number of<lb/>
wins in the school's history, was<lb/>
runnerup to Fur man in the<lb/>
Southern Conference, and partic-<lb/>
ipated m the now defunct Com-<lb/>
missioners Invitational Tour-<lb/>
nament .<lb/>
After that season, I think we<lb/>
had finally gained the respect of<lb/>
the community and everyone was<lb/>
beginning to rally behind us<lb/>
said Estes who was in Greenville<lb/>
last weekend visiting friends.<lb/>
' We had a lot of young kids in the<lb/>
program and within two years wr<lb/>
would have been on really solid<lb/>
ground<lb/>
"I was very sad to leave<lb/>
Greenville because I spent four<lb/>
great years here but I' m also very<lb/>
pleased to have an opportunity<lb/>
like the one I have at Rice. Dave<lb/>
Patton was a super person to work<lb/>
under. He just put a tremendous<lb/>
amount of pressure on himself<lb/>
and the kids and things just didn't<lb/>
work out after that first season<lb/>
Curing his first season at<lb/>
Rice. Estes has concentrated<lb/>
primarily on recruiting. Last year,<lb/>
the Owls finished next to the last<lb/>
in the Southwest Conference,<lb/>
winning only four games while<lb/>
losing 22.<lb/>
"We had no talent whatLoever<lb/>
on the team last year explained<lb/>
Estes. We were pitiful. But<lb/>
we've put a lot of emphasis on<lb/>
reculting. Everyone at Rice as<lb/>
well as the Southeast Conference<lb/>
is committed to building their<lb/>
basketball programs<lb/>
Estes has traveled from coast<lb/>
to coast recruiting players this<lb/>
spring. Rice inked seven prep<lb/>
players to grant-in-aids for the<lb/>
1978-79 season, second only to<lb/>
Oklahoma State who signed nine.<lb/>
Two are from the Washington<lb/>
DC, area, two from California<lb/>
i one each from Chicago,<lb/>
Louisiana and Texas.<lb/>
Bobby Tudor, from Pinevtlle,<lb/>
Louisiana and Brett Burkholder<lb/>
from Lansing, III. are Estes two<lb/>
top selections.<lb/>
Tudor who averaged 23 points<lb/>
a game received honorable men-<lb/>
tion all-american in Street and<lb/>
Smith Magazine, was highly<lb/>
recruited by Duke and other<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
schools. Burkholder is a 6-10, 230<lb/>
pound center who averaged 20<lb/>
points and 15 rebounds a game at<lb/>
Thornton .Fractional North High<lb/>
School.<lb/>
Mike and I are both real<lb/>
eager to start next season with all<lb/>
the talent we've got coming in<lb/>
said Estes. "Everyone at Rice is<lb/>
real enthusiastic about the. pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
"At the beginning of the<lb/>
season we didn't have 1000 fans<lb/>
coming to our games, but by the<lb/>
end of the ear we had crowds of<lb/>
five and six thousand. Texas<lb/>
showed everyone last year that<lb/>
they do play basketball down<lb/>
here. I'm just hoping we can do<lb/>
the same thing. Real soon<lb/>
� j v<lb/>
- . � � i<lb/>
<lb/>
 e<lb/>
511<lb/>
� <lb/>
FORMER ECU ASSISTANT ooach Butch Estes now an assistai<lb/>
Rice University.<lb/>
MSU told to forfeit 19 football games by JNCAA<lb/>
The NCAA Council has re-<lb/>
ARMYNAVY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
"a coan, flaw fllajiti, bom.<lb/>
11 I Cyan Sir Opart<lb/>
nJHU<lb/>
quired Mississippi State Umver<lb/>
sity to forfeit 19 football dames in<lb/>
which an ineligible player, Barry<lb/>
Gillard, partiapated during the<lb/>
1975, 1976 and 1977 season.<lb/>
The forfeits, in accordance<lb/>
with the restitution previsions of<lb/>
 ?tI (!)'<lb/>
TREE HOUSE<lb/>
Sunday at<lb/>
The<lb/>
The Great T-Shirt Give away<lb/>
Good while Supply Last<lb/>
the Associations enforcement<lb/>
procedure, will leave Mississippi<lb/>
State University with a 1975<lb/>
season record of 2-9 and reoords<lb/>
of 0-11 in both the 1976 and 1977<lb/>
seasons. The two victories during<lb/>
1975 occurred in games in which<lb/>
Gillard did nc4 participate while<lb/>
ineligible under NCAA legisla-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Gillard was charged with the<lb/>
loss of eligibility under NCAA<lb/>
rules after the Association's<lb/>
Committee on Infractions found<lb/>
he had been provided clothing at<lb/>
a discount not available to<lb/>
members of the university's<lb/>
student body in general. The<lb/>
oommittee' s finding was accepted<lb/>
by the university and was not<lb/>
appealed to the NCAA Council.<lb/>
The institution then requested<lb/>
restoration of Gillard's eligibility<lb/>
in an appeal before the NCAA<lb/>
Subcommittee on Eligibility<lb/>
Appeals, and Gillard's period of<lb/>
meligibility was reduoed from<lb/>
three years to the remaining<lb/>
contests (nine) in the university's<lb/>
1975 season.<lb/>
The university did not appeal<lb/>
the subcommittee's decision to the<lb/>
NCAA Council and instead joined<lb/>
Gillard in initiating litigation<lb/>
against the Association in a<lb/>
Mississippi State Chancery<lb/>
Court. Gillard then was permitted<lb/>
to participate on the university's<lb/>
intercollegiate football team while<lb/>
ineligible for three years by virtue<lb/>
of a restraining order granted by<lb/>
the chancery court. Throughout<lb/>
this three-year period, Gillard<lb/>
never was charged with the loss<lb/>
of eligibility required by the<lb/>
action of the NCAA Subcommit-<lb/>
tee on Eligibility Appeals, and his<lb/>
eligibility to represent Mississi-<lb/>
ppi State University in intercol-<lb/>
legiate football competition never<lb/>
was restored by the subcommit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
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The NCAA successfully<lb/>
appealed the chancery court<lb/>
decision. Subsequent to the com-<lb/>
pletion of the 1977 season, the<lb/>
Mississippi Supreme Court up-<lb/>
held the actions taken by the<lb/>
NCAA and overturned the chan-<lb/>
cery court order.<lb/>
After the Mississippi Supreme<lb/>
Court's decision, the NCAA<lb/>
Council reviewed the effect of<lb/>
Gillard's participation against<lb/>
other member institutions and<lb/>
voted to invoke several of the<lb/>
Association's restitution previ-<lb/>
sions. The membership has auth-<lb/>
orized the Council to apply these<lb/>
regulations whenever an ineligi-<lb/>
ble student-athlete competes<lb/>
under a court order that is<lb/>
subsequently overturned by the<lb/>
courts.<lb/>
"The restitution provisions<lb/>
were adopted by the membership<lb/>
in the interest of fairness to<lb/>
institutions forced by court order<lb/>
to complete against teams includ-<lb/>
ing an ineligible student-aihlete<lb/>
said President J. Neils<lb/>
Thompson. "The provisions are<lb/>
designed to eliminate any compe-<lb/>
titive advantage or profit an<lb/>
institution might gam while per-<lb/>
mitting an ineligible student-<lb/>
athlete to participate under a<lb/>
court order that is eventually<lb/>
turned<lb/>
undl  policy in im<lb/>
plernenting tl utton pro<lb/>
is not to baa u<lb/>
um on the ii<lb/>
in initi i i inn<lb/>
<pb facs="00058061_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>