Volume 10 Number 4 October 30, 1978 4 Ghostly Manifestations in a Graveyard This is the time of year that anything can happen when the earthly and the unearthly come together, especially amid the weathered tombstones of a rural burying ground.(See related editorial on Page 2.) Photos by Scott White. System of Prorating Damages Explained Day Students Plan Active Testing Organization Facing Tests Itself By ALLAN DAVIS Residents of a dorm will be prorated for damages done in the lounges and hallways of their dorms at the end of the academic year. “Boarding students leaving before the academic year has been concluded will be charged for the damages that occurred during their enrollment,” Mrs. Alice Vann, director of residence hall life, said. Hallway damages will be totaled up and prorated to the number of oc cupants on that hall. Lounge damages will also be totaled and prorated, but to the number of occupants in that dorm, Jack Hassell, superintendent of buildings and grounds, said. “Damages done to other college pro perty will be charged to the guilty par ties if they can be identified, or pro rated to the students enrolled,” he add ed. Damage repair forms are filled out each week by the head residents of the dorms. Once the damages are repaired, a copy of this form with the prorates listed is given to the director of residence hall life, Hassell explained. If the damages occurred in a dorm room the student will receive a copy of this form and will be billed for damages. But if the damages occurred in the hallway or the lounge, the head resident will receive a copy of this form from the director of residence hall life to be posted on the bulletin board. This form will list the items that were damaged and the cost to repair them, Hassell said. “The cost of the items and the labor used to repair will be included in the prorates.” Residences of each hall were pro rated for the damages which occurred in the lounges of their dorm last year. Broken windows, cracked vending machine glasses, discharged fire ex tinguishers, drapes ripped down, ceil ing tiles knocked-out, cigarette burns on furniture, damage to elevators and missing furniture are just some of the damages which were included in last Exam Schedule In Next Issue The complete fall semester ex- ominotion schedule will be carried In the next Issue of Smoke Signals. Examinations will begin on Fri day, December 15 and will con tinue through Thursday, December 21. year’s prorates to the dorms. Jack Hassel, superintendent of buildings and grounds said. The amount of lounge damages pro rated to each dorm last year was Parker Hall, $3831.28; West Hall, $3227.90; Mixon Hall, $159.43; Belk HaU, $1191.30; Jenkins Hall. $954,63 and East HaU, $662.34. Hallway damages were prorated to the residences occuping that floor. Some of those repairs included in the hallway prorates last year were: clogg ed water fountain; obscenities cleaned off bathroom walls; broken exit lights; bathroom mirrors and toilet tissue holders replaced, ceiling tile knocked out, januned door locks and flooded hallways, Hassell added. Damages for each hailway last year were Parker Hall: first floor, $159.37; second floor, $225.14; Third floor, $791.27; fourth floor, $145.90; fifth floor, $408.37; sixth floor, $151.20; seventh floor, $254.95; eighth floor, $411.62; and the basement, $290. West Hall floors: first south, $146.77; first north, $97; second south, $232.16; second north, $145.11; third south, $232.50 and third north, $169.68. East Hall floors: first, $149.51; se cond, $180.68; third, $105. and Mixon Hall floors: first, $99.18 and second, $189.96. Keep Off R-V Tract At Night An ordinance making trespassing on the property of the the Roberts- Vaughan House during the night hours a misdemeanor was passed by the Mur freesboro Town Council October 24. Persons found guilty of trespassing between 6 p.m. and 9 a.m. will be liable to a fine of $50 or a jail sentence up to 30 days. Dean of students R. Clayton Lewis called this ordinance to the attention of all Chowan students, some of whom have in the past used this property as a gathering place after dark. The ordinance reads: “It shall be unlawful for any person to make entry into the lands and tenements known as the Roberts-Vaughan Village Center owned by the Town of Murfreesboro, North Carolina, between the hours of 6 o’clock p.m. and 9 o’clock a.m. without consent of the Murfreesboro Town Council. Any person violating the provi sions of this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not exceeding fifty dollars ($50.00) or im prisonment not exceeding thirty (30) days. This ordinance shall become ef fective upon passage on October 24, 1978.” The council took the action to eliminate the partying and beer drink ing which had been observed behind the building and in the gazebo on the pro perty. The site will be posted to warn citizens of the new regulation. School Year By SUSAN L. PATE There are many organizations on campus. But there is one that most of the students know very little about. This is the Day Student Organization. There are approximately 87 Day Students enrolled at Chowan this year. These students are planning many ac tivities for the remainder of the ’78-’79 academic year. In the past the organization has been very active. Last year one of their main projects was sponsoring a faculty basketball game. The money which was made from this event was given to the Heather Nelson Trust Fund. This year the Day Students’ main goal is to win the President’s Cup. They also hope to get the Day Students more organized and more involved in campus activities. Another goal is to let the other students know that they exist. The officers of the Day Student Organization are Eric Jackson, presi dent; Jean Sexton, vice president; Cin dy Drake, secretary-treasurer; and the SGA representatives are Robin Minton and Melvin Matthews. By HARRY PICKETT Johnny Frank Johnson stretched his 6-foot-6 inch frame, rocked back on a chair in his basement floor dormitory, and pulled an assorted group of track and field medals from his bulletin board. “I got this one in Tennessee, this one in South Carolina, this one ... .” Johnson has won many track and field medals, ribbons and other awards for his track exploits since he joined the Tarboro High School track team his sophomore year. However, the biggest gem for the 18 year-old is the medal he received in Lincoln, Neb. this summer in the AAU Junior Olympics. Johnny finished fourth out of a field of 30 con testants in the triple jump event. Johnson, the son of a farmer, is here at Chowan on a basketball grant-in-aid. He will play the forward and center positions on the basketball team, posi tions he has played all through high school and will compete in the discus, long jump, and of course, triple jump for Coach Linwood Ferguson’s celebrated thinclads. Head basketball coach Jerry Smith says that with the addition of Johnson, Chowan College could receive the na tional exposure it has lacked for some time now. Smith believes Johnson has the potiential to be an All-American. “People will look at Johnny and see how good athletes here at Chowan real ly are,” the coach stated. Smith describes the 213-pounder as a “real good kid. Personality-wise, he’s as good as you can get.” The coach believes Chowan was By JAY STEVENS LAWRENCEVILLE, N.J. (CPS) - Camouflaged in the gentry can- tilevered hills of Lawrenceville is one of the most influential unknown cor porations in America. Critics like to characterize it as an unchecked monopoly, a gatekeeper, a cradle-to-grave arbiter of social mobili ty. Forbes Magazine, after noting the 370 acres of prime real estate, the artificial pond, the real ducks, the $3 million con ference center, the tasteful brick buildings, the savvy investments, call ed it one of the hottest little growth companies around. Information officer John Smith calls it a very concerned organization, with a lot of integrity. The IRS calls it non-profit. Most Americans have little to say about the Educational Testing Service (ETS). They know it only as a multiple choice test that stands between them and college, grad school, law school and now more than 50 professions ranging from podiatrist to CIA agent. Last year over a million students took the ETS- designed Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT). Another 800,000 sat down to one of a battery of graduate exams. lucky to sign the Tarboro athlete. Johnson, who led his high school track team to the North Carolina state Cham pionship last spring, had a number of offers from such colleges as East Carolina University, the University of North Carolina at Asheville, and Western Carolina. Johnny said that there were others, “but I can’t think of them . ...” Why did Johnson narrow his choice to Chowan? “Because it is small and I thought I should come to a small college first,” he explained. “I don’t think I’m ready for a four-year school, yet.” Before enrolling at Chowan (College, Johnny was a two-time Northeastern Conference cage star at Tarboro High School. He placed third in the triple jump his junior year there, and wound up as the state champion his senior year. Johnny, who has been active in track for only three years, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Frank Johnson of Tar boro. Before endeavoring in the demanding sport of track and field his sophomore year in high school, Johnson said he’d viewed only one track meet. It certainly didn’t take him long to catch on, because he became a state champion within two years. There’s only two years until all the best athletes in the world will gather in Moscow, Russia, to represent their countries by competing in the XXI Olympiad. It took Johnny Frank Johnson only two years to become a state champion; with two more good years, he could possibly be an Olympic champion. Countless others, from pre-schoolers to auto mechanics, were measured, assessed, and say the critics, judged by an ETS test. These programs, plus grants from government and the private sector, net ted ETS $70 million in 1977, with a profit margin of about $1 million. ETS, in short, is a very successful non-profit company. “For too many students, the decision to take a standardized admission test creates a statistical shadow which follows them through life, often without their knowledge or control,” says Con gressman Michael Harrington (D- Mass). Harrington has introduced a “Truth in Testing” bill designed to open stan dardized testing to public scrutiny and control. California recently passed a similar bill, and one is now pending before the New York legislature. This action comes 30 years after the Carnegie Foundation for the Advance ment of Teaching, the American Coun cil for Education and the College Board Entrance Examination Board (CEEB) established ETS as a separate entity chartered to construct educational tests. Of this triumvirate, CEEB was and is (Continued to Page 4) Student Aid Hike Okayed WASHINGTON, D. C. (CPS) - In a major victory for President Clarter, the Congress adopted the president’s Mid dle Income Assistance Act and, in last- minute politicing before the Oct. 15 adjourmnent, dropped the tuition tax credit legislation Carter opposed. The Middle Income Assistance Plan, offered by the president last February as an alternative to tuition tax credits, adds some $1.2 billion to existing federal student financial aid programs. Specifically, the plan expands the government’s Basic Educational Op portunity Grants, Guaranteed Student Loans, and Work-Study programs. The plan was generally pitched to middle- income families, who presumably want some relief from the rising costs of col lege education. Under the act, which the president is expected to sign into law shortly, dependents of families earning more than $16,000 are eligible for work-study grants for the first time ever. Average grants to families earning $8,000-$16,000 per year will go up by some $200. Tuition tax credits legislation, which would have allowed families to deduct up to $100 in tuition costs from their in come taxes, passed both the House and the Senate last week. As originally in troduced, the bill included the tuition costs of students in elementary and secondary schools as well. Political ex pediency demanded that elementary and secondary school costs be dropped from the bill, which was then passed as an amendment to a larger tax cut bill. House and Senate versions of the larger bill, though, were different. When the bill was referred back to a joint conference conunittee, several representatives insisted on attaching the elementary and secondary school provision to it again. An agreement could not be reached, and while the tax cut bill went on to passage, the tuition tax credit amendment to it was drop ped. Despite the concurrent passage of the Carter plan. Dr. Albert Alford, assis tant commissioner for legislation at the U.S. Office of Education, expects that tuition tax credits may make a com eback in Congress’ next session. “It’s a perermial bill,” he observes, “and there’s no doubt quite a few represen tatives intend to sponsor one again. But after the Middle Income Assistance Plan, I couldn’t tell you if it (tuition tax credits) will have the same push it did this time.” Viewpoints... The bobbing up and down of a fisher man’s cork means different things: to the pessimist it is caused by the untime ly winds of adversity and bad luck. To the optimist it is the beginning of a new opportunity, a fresh challenge, an ex citing adventure, and the real possibili ty of another fish for the frying pan. Interesting People on Campus Johnny Johnson Has Eyes on 1980 Olympic Medal Photo by Wllllom P»opl«* JOHNSON