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<pb facs="00057104_0001"/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
?<lb/>
' trij ,<lb/>
Vol. 52, No. ?<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
18 January 1977<lb/>
Accreditation report set for this week<lb/>
LCME to evaluate med school<lb/>
By DENNIS LEONA<lb/>
on Commit i<lb/>
M? LCME<lb/>
School '?'<lb/>
ess in<lb/>
ditation.<lb/>
Aco Dr. Harold C<lb/>
Wiggersof the ECU Med School,<lb/>
man LCME survey t <lb/>
?<lb/>
, . Cl<lb/>
?<lb/>
School<lb/>
? the April<lb/>
ME. said Dr.<lb/>
? progi<lb/>
will oe<lb/>
?<lb/>
the<lb/>
tte staff<lb/>
for first and<lb/>
of<lb/>
?dining ad the<lb/>
School of 'l we hi<lb/>
not filled i in the<lb/>
i ? i ?<lb/>
illi<lb/>
A<lb/>
v<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
-?<lb/>
Thi<lb/>
'JAGSDALE<lb/>
HALL<lb/>
SCHOOL OF<lb/>
MEDICINE<lb/>
THE LCME will make an accreditation report th<lb/>
open as scheduled next fall<lb/>
:??? - wnich will determine if the Med-Schooi will<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD file photo<lb/>
and Gynecology<lb/>
?)l s<lb/>
According to Wiggers, I<lb/>
i School could hand i<lb/>
im of 40 students when<lb/>
ollment begins The LCME<lb/>
probably recommend enro<lb/>
it to be from 28 to 32 students.<lb/>
The facilities at Pitt Hosj,<lb/>
not be ready when the Fa.<lb/>
1977 begins said Wiggf<lb/>
? But the facilities at Pitt will<lb/>
be needed by the med s I<lb/>
years.<lb/>
According to Wiggers.<lb/>
Family Practice Center will be<lb/>
available to incoming students.<lb/>
The clinical faculty facilities<lb/>
should be ready by June or Ju<lb/>
According to Wiggers. the<lb/>
residency programs are to be,<lb/>
possibly by June of 1978.<lb/>
The four-man survey team<lb/>
consists of: Dr. Andrew Hunt.<lb/>
dean of Michigan State Medico<lb/>
:Ool. Dr. John Stetson, deaf<lb/>
Univ. of Florida at Gainsv<lb/>
Medical School: Dr. Ira Singer.<lb/>
director of medical research for<lb/>
the American Medical Associ-<lb/>
ation, and an internist ?rom<lb/>
Nebraska.<lb/>
The survey team will be on the<lb/>
ECU campus January 16-19.<lb/>
Sullivan calls for Union board election<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
An amendment to the Student<lb/>
Union Constitution, calling for a<lb/>
campus-wide election of seven<lb/>
Board of Director positions, was<lb/>
proposed Wednesday by Tim<lb/>
Sullivan, newly chosen chair-<lb/>
person of the Board.<lb/>
The proposal was made at a<lb/>
called meeting of the Student<lb/>
Union Board of Directors last<lb/>
week. However, the meeting was<lb/>
not official, because a quorum of<lb/>
four students and one faculty<lb/>
member was not met.<lb/>
According to the proposed<lb/>
amendment, seven ECU students<lb/>
would be elected by popular vote<lb/>
to fill the positions on the Board.<lb/>
Board members are responsi-<lb/>
ble fa selecting the Student<lb/>
Union president, authorizing<lb/>
establishment of committees, ap-<lb/>
proving presidential appointment<lb/>
of committee chairpersons, ap-<lb/>
proving the budget and estab-<lb/>
lishing and enforcing Student<lb/>
Union policies.<lb/>
Presently, six out of the eight<lb/>
voting positions are held by<lb/>
students.<lb/>
These an SGA President.<lb/>
SGA vice lent, speaker<lb/>
? , , SGA treasurei.<lb/>
Residena ' u<lb/>
Council (MFC) pi<lb/>
the Panhellenii<lb/>
A representative from<lb/>
Chancellor's office and one from<lb/>
the Faculty Senate fill the<lb/>
two seats on the Board.<lb/>
Under the new amendn<lb/>
the latter two positions would<lb/>
become non-voting.<lb/>
The Student Union president<lb/>
and adviser would remain on the<lb/>
Board as non-voting, ex-offiao<lb/>
members.<lb/>
According to Sullivan, the<lb/>
amendment also provides for the<lb/>
Student Union Election<lb/>
Coordinator to be appointed<lb/>
by the Board.<lb/>
In addition, the student body<lb/>
will have the power to recall<lb/>
elected members by presenting a<lb/>
petition with at least 15 per cent<lb/>
of the full-time students.<lb/>
Election of the seven students<lb/>
would take place between the<lb/>
second week in March and the<lb/>
first week in April, said Sullivan.<lb/>
Sullivan said the amendment<lb/>
would not affect the selection of<lb/>
next year's Student Union presi-<lb/>
dent which takes place the end of<lb/>
this month.<lb/>
Sullivan supports the amend-<lb/>
ment for several reasons.<lb/>
"The present board doesn't<lb/>
have the time or. e e as<lb/>
thorough and oons ientious as an<lb/>
nterl unment -<lb/>
be<lb/>
He also said that since the<lb/>
students elected to the Board<lb/>
would not receive their positions<lb/>
offices that they held in<lb/>
other organizations, they would<lb/>
icre loyal to the Union.<lb/>
'This will give direct student<lb/>
input into the Union and it<lb/>
doesn't jeopardize programming<lb/>
with petty politics<lb/>
Sullivan also said that at<lb/>
present there is an overrepre-<lb/>
sentatior, of dorm students and<lb/>
that the amendment would give<lb/>
day students an equal chance to<lb/>
be heard.<lb/>
He also noted that the SGA<lb/>
presently holds three seats on the<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
The amendment would wipe<lb/>
this out<lb/>
Sullivan said that the Board<lb/>
might even be able to set up office<lb/>
hours and salaries if the amend-<lb/>
ment is accepted.<lb/>
See BOARD page 5<lb/>
Registrar dies Monday<lb/>
By DENNIS LEONARD<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
Worth E. Baker, ECU regis-<lb/>
trar, was pronounced dead Mon-<lb/>
day morning at 630 at the Pitt<lb/>
Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
Aocording to the Registrar's<lb/>
Office, Baker had been in declin-<lb/>
ing health since December.<lb/>
Baker had been at ECU since<lb/>
1965 when he was the Director of<lb/>
Housing.<lb/>
Baker assumed his position as<lb/>
Registrar in June of 1963. He<lb/>
remained at that department until<lb/>
his death.<lb/>
According to Mrs. Bobby<lb/>
Austin, administrative assistant.<lb/>
Baker will definitely be missed.<lb/>
"Mr Baker was one-in-a-million<lb/>
and highly regarded by the<lb/>
employees of the Registrar's<lb/>
Ofti e sai : Austin.<lb/>
According to Austin, pi<lb/>
ivenot vi beei<lb/>
vacancy left by Baker's death.<lb/>
"Mr, Baker and I were<lb/>
extremely close and he was not<lb/>
only a boss, but a friend said J.<lb/>
Gilbert Moore, associate regis-<lb/>
trar.<lb/>
According to Dr. John H.<lb/>
Horne, director of admissions, he<lb/>
and Baker had a wonderful and<lb/>
cooperative association. "Both of<lb/>
us felt that admissions and the<lb/>
registrar's office had to work<lb/>
together said Horne.<lb/>
"Mr Baker was always fight-<lb/>
ing fcx students, and always<lb/>
trying to make things better for<lb/>
them added Horne.<lb/>
Before Baker did his under-<lb/>
graduate work at East Carolina<lb/>
Teacher's College, he served as a<lb/>
glider pilot. According to Horne.<lb/>
Baker was one of the first pilots to<lb/>
land at Normandy on the D-Day<lb/>
invasion of WWII<lb/>
WORTH E. BAKER<lb/>
Baker received a B.S in<lb/>
Business Education and Social<lb/>
Studies at ECTC in 1954<lb/>
In 1959, Baker reoeived a<lb/>
master's degree in Admimstr i<lb/>
tion and Principles, from ECC.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
18 January 1977<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Moonlight bowling is back.<lb/>
The Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Bowling Center now offers this<lb/>
unique bowling experience on<lb/>
Friday and Sunday evenings from<lb/>
8 p.m. until closing. Come by the<lb/>
Center and test your skills under<lb/>
the moonlight. It'sa great change<lb/>
of pace.<lb/>
BEOG forms<lb/>
Craft Classes<lb/>
Register now for a crafts<lb/>
workshop to be offered by the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Center. Sign up for Beginning<lb/>
Jewelry, Batik, Beginning Dark-<lb/>
room, Weaving on the Loom,<lb/>
Basic Pot Throwing, or Frame<lb/>
Loom Weaving. For details call or<lb/>
visit the Crafts Center during the<lb/>
hours of 2 p.m. until 10 p.m<lb/>
Monday-Friday. Registration<lb/>
deadline for all workshops is<lb/>
Friday, Jan. 28.<lb/>
Basic Educational Opportun-<lb/>
ity Grant applications fa the fi C C<lb/>
1977-78 academic year are now WiMiwi<lb/>
available at the Financial Aid<lb/>
Office, 201 Whichard Building.<lb/>
All students are encouraged to<lb/>
complete the application as soon<lb/>
as possible and turn in the<lb/>
Student Eligibility Report to the<lb/>
Financial Aid Office as soon as it<lb/>
is received from the Basic Grant<lb/>
Program. Students are reminded<lb/>
that they must first apply for the<lb/>
Basic Educational Opportunity<lb/>
Grant before other types of<lb/>
financial assistance can be<lb/>
awarded.<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ<lb/>
will meet this Thursday night in<lb/>
Brewster D-201 at 7 p.m. This will<lb/>
be the beginning of Leadership<lb/>
Training Class and the topics will<lb/>
be The Uniqueness of Jesus and<lb/>
Devotional Life. Come join us for<lb/>
some fun, fellowship &amp; practical<lb/>
teaching. Everyone's weloome!<lb/>
Art Exhibit<lb/>
Skating<lb/>
Ice skating and roller skating<lb/>
lessons are now being taught at<lb/>
Twin Rinks Recreation Center,<lb/>
220 East 14th Street. Lessons are<lb/>
taught on Saturday from 12:15<lb/>
until 1:15. For more information<lb/>
come by Twin Rinks or call<lb/>
752-8449.<lb/>
Crisis Center<lb/>
Positive relationships are<lb/>
what life is all about. The REAL<lb/>
House volunteers are trained to<lb/>
listen and help with problems<lb/>
such as rape, sexuality, drugs,<lb/>
loneliness, pregnancy, money,<lb/>
studying. If they can't help, they<lb/>
know someone who can. Call<lb/>
758-HELP.<lb/>
Democrats<lb/>
The ECU Young Democrats<lb/>
will meet Wednesday, Jan. 19, at<lb/>
7:30 in room 244 Mendenhall. All<lb/>
interested persons are invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Dates<lb/>
Apply now for Student Union<lb/>
President. Maybe you can start a<lb/>
computer date program or any<lb/>
other program which you feel will<lb/>
be of interest to students. Appli-<lb/>
cations must be turned in by Jan.<lb/>
19. They are available in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center.<lb/>
ILLUMINA, the Student<lb/>
Union Art Exhibition oommittee.<lb/>
is presently exhibiting a collection<lb/>
of art works of four Greenville<lb/>
artists. The show, entitled<lb/>
"Where Four Art Thou? fea-<lb/>
tures dyed wall hangirgs and<lb/>
ceramics of Eddie Smith, pottery<lb/>
and preciously assembled boxes<lb/>
of Jim Whalen, weavings and a<lb/>
oouple of curios of Annie Cable,<lb/>
and drawings and paintings of<lb/>
Mary Lou Strider. The exhibition<lb/>
will await your viewing now until<lb/>
January 23, so "feets, get<lb/>
movin<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
The ECU Law Society will hold<lb/>
a meeting Thursday, Jan. 20 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in 221 Mendenhall. Green-<lb/>
ville District Attorney, Jim<lb/>
Hoover will be the featured<lb/>
speaker. This is a mandatory<lb/>
meeting of all members. Please<lb/>
call 757-6940 from 9-5 and give<lb/>
your excuse if you cannot attend.<lb/>
The Wake Forest-Carolina trip<lb/>
will be discussed.<lb/>
Co-op Name<lb/>
Wogld you like to win a $5 gift<lb/>
certificate to Daryl's? The Coop-<lb/>
erative Education Office needs an<lb/>
original, eye-catching title fa<lb/>
their newsletter.Turn in your idea<lb/>
for a oo-op newsletter name to the<lb/>
Co-op Office in 313 Rawl any day<lb/>
from 8 until 5. All entries must be<lb/>
in by noon, Jan. 28. The winner of<lb/>
the $5 Daryl's gift certificate will<lb/>
be announced in the February 1<lb/>
edition of The Fountainhead<lb/>
? ?llililli<lb/>
Ideal Things Trip<lb/>
Attention all Food, Nutrition,<lb/>
and Institution Management<lb/>
Majors! The Student Dietetic<lb/>
Association oould be a worthwhile<lb/>
organization for you to join. We<lb/>
are presently planning a trip to<lb/>
Atlanta, Ga. If you would like to<lb/>
go, you have to be an SDA<lb/>
member (dues-$1) and help with<lb/>
at least 2 dinners. Contact Mary<lb/>
West at 752-9103 if you would like<lb/>
to join (we would like you to join<lb/>
by Jan. 20). Contact Cathy<lb/>
Sanders at 758-9401 if you plant<lb/>
to help with dinners.<lb/>
The next SDA meeting is Feb.<lb/>
7.<lb/>
Internships<lb/>
If you are an instate student<lb/>
and have been to school three<lb/>
years, you are eligible to apply fa<lb/>
summer intern program in state<lb/>
government. Housing is provided<lb/>
and college aedit is offered.<lb/>
Apply to the Institute of Govern-<lb/>
ment, Chapel Hill, N.C by Feb.<lb/>
1.<lb/>
Gamma Phi<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi, servioe to<lb/>
education hcna society, will hold<lb/>
its regular meeting at 7 p.m<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 20, in room 244<lb/>
Mendenhall. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend. Ms. Anne Posey,<lb/>
Directa of the PTA Tutaial<lb/>
Program will attend to speak and<lb/>
answer any questions members<lb/>
may have about this year's<lb/>
Tutaial program.<lb/>
On Wednesday, Jan. 19, at<lb/>
7:30 p.m Dr. John Kozy will<lb/>
present a paper on ideal things.<lb/>
The lecture is to be given in room<lb/>
221 Mendenhall. Everyone is<lb/>
weloome.<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
Crisp, green garden salad,<lb/>
shrimp and fish with Newburg<lb/>
sauce, fluffy rice, tender peas,<lb/>
hot rolls, and lemon chiffon pie,<lb/>
along with unlimited refills on tea<lb/>
and oof fee. If you would like to<lb/>
enjoy this meal by candlelight,<lb/>
here is your chance! This meal<lb/>
will be served Wednesday, Jan.<lb/>
19, at 630 p.m. in the Institution<lb/>
Management Dining Room (HE-<lb/>
121). Tickets are just $3. Contact<lb/>
Beverly Sangesat 758-9301 a any<lb/>
SDA member fa reservatiais. So<lb/>
get your date a bring your<lb/>
friends to this spectacular dinner!<lb/>
Hairstyles<lb/>
Fletcher Dam will be spai-<lb/>
saing a program on the latest<lb/>
hair styleson Tuesday, Jan. 18, at<lb/>
8 p.m in the lobby. "La KOS-<lb/>
MOTIQUE" BEAUTY SALON<lb/>
will be presenting the program<lb/>
fa all students. A doa prize will<lb/>
also be given Evayone is<lb/>
weloome!<lb/>
RhoEpsilon<lb/>
Rho Epsilon Real Estate Fra-<lb/>
ternity will meet ai Tuesday,<lb/>
January 25, at Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center. Plans fa the Winta<lb/>
Quarter Initiation Banquet will be<lb/>
discussed. Everyone's attend-<lb/>
ance is requested.<lb/>
Dance<lb/>
Since the beginning of Winter<lb/>
Quarter, you've wondered "what<lb/>
da hell" all those signs telling you<lb/>
to "Danoe-the-Night-Away"<lb/>
neant. What it means is that<lb/>
there will be a 12 hour Dance-a-<lb/>
thon Saturday, Jan. 22. Gamma<lb/>
Sig is spoisaing Dance-a-thon to<lb/>
raise funds fa the Eastern Lung<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Couples participating should<lb/>
obtain pledges fa each hour they<lb/>
dance from friends, relatives<lb/>
employers, etc There will be a<lb/>
trophy awarded to the oouple<lb/>
raising the most money and a<lb/>
trophy to the organization ,<lb/>
fraternity, saaity, club, dam,<lb/>
etc showing the most suppat.<lb/>
Pledge sheets and further<lb/>
infamatioi is available at Men-<lb/>
denhall Infamatioi Desk a by<lb/>
calling 752-0712, 752-8453. It's<lb/>
going to be ala of fun, so come at<lb/>
out and "Dance-the-Night-<lb/>
Away<lb/>
Attention members of the<lb/>
young Home Designers League.<lb/>
Anyoie interested in going on the<lb/>
trip to Williamsburg on April<lb/>
22-24 must call Lois by Wed<lb/>
Jan. 26. You may also sign up as a<lb/>
guest. A deposit fa room reser-<lb/>
vations will also have to be made<lb/>
by this date a you will not be able<lb/>
to go. We must have a deposit of<lb/>
$7 befae you can be permanen-<lb/>
tely signed up. Fa mae infama-<lb/>
tioi and to sign up, please call<lb/>
Lois at 758-9481 right away.<lb/>
Coffee House<lb/>
A new year, new shows, new<lb/>
entertainment, and the same<lb/>
price are presented by the ECU<lb/>
Coffeehouse. Jan. 21 and 22 two<lb/>
great locals will perfam. Shows<lb/>
are at 8 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
Retreat<lb/>
W2 Forms<lb/>
The following people need to<lb/>
fill out W2 fams in the Student<lb/>
Fund Accounting Office, Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Union: Linda<lb/>
Cherry, Bill Harrington, Marga-<lb/>
ret Phoenix, Ricky Smith, Louis<lb/>
Tayla, Robert Thonen, Sheilah<lb/>
Turnage, and Sarah Venable.<lb/>
H ever Again<lb/>
Never again will you be able to<lb/>
apply fa President of the Student<lb/>
Union fa 1977-78. The deadline<lb/>
fa applications is Jan. 19. Get<lb/>
your buns on over and pick up an<lb/>
application immediately.<lb/>
Crafts Show<lb/>
It was announoed today by<lb/>
Eastern Carolina Shows that two<lb/>
arts and aafts shows are sche-<lb/>
duled in Greenville fa 1977. The<lb/>
first show will be held in Pitt<lb/>
Plaza shopping center on April 8<lb/>
and 9. The second show has been<lb/>
scheduled to be held in the Evans<lb/>
Street Mall on July 8 and 9. Both<lb/>
shows are open mainly to Nath<lb/>
Carolina arts and craftsmen.<lb/>
Eastern Carolina Shows is mainly<lb/>
interested in promoting show fa<lb/>
Carolina Artists and Craftsmen.<lb/>
There are eighty spaces available<lb/>
fa exhibitas who wish to enta<lb/>
eitha show. Those artists and<lb/>
aaftsmen who are interested in<lb/>
exhibiting at this show should<lb/>
oontact Eastan Carolina Arts and<lb/>
Crafts Promotions Rt. 7 Box 340,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834. The entry<lb/>
fee is $15 per space fa instate<lb/>
aaftsmen and artists and $25 fa<lb/>
out of state people.<lb/>
Applicationsare now available<lb/>
fa the annual psychology retreat.<lb/>
The total oost will be $11 fa the<lb/>
weekend event. A bus will leave<lb/>
the Speight Building at 8 a.m.<lb/>
Saturday, Jan. 29 Sat. night will<lb/>
be spent at the Ramada Inn at<lb/>
Atlantic Beach which is where the<lb/>
retreat will be held. Topics will<lb/>
include psychology related sub-<lb/>
jects such as behavia, persona-<lb/>
lity, and sex. All interested<lb/>
students are eligible; however,<lb/>
Psi Chi members and Psychology<lb/>
majas will be given first oonsid-<lb/>
eration. Apply now to ensure that<lb/>
you will have the benefit of<lb/>
having the SGA pay part of your<lb/>
bill. There isa limit of 50 students<lb/>
who will receive this assistance.<lb/>
The deadline fa applications will<lb/>
be neon on Friday, Jan. 29.<lb/>
Bahai Film<lb/>
Don't faget the free film to be<lb/>
shown at 720 p.m. tonight in<lb/>
Room 238 of Mendenhall on<lb/>
Ecuada, Bolivia, and Peru spai-<lb/>
saed by Bahai Association. Pub-<lb/>
lic is invited.<lb/>
BUC<lb/>
Anyone wanting to apply fa<lb/>
the editorial position of the<lb/>
1977-78 BUC oome by room 228<lb/>
Mendenhall and fill out an<lb/>
application and turn in a resume<lb/>
by Jan. 20, at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Anyone wanting to get their<lb/>
photograph made fa the BUC can<lb/>
do so in room 245 of the old<lb/>
library from 9-12,1-5, the week of<lb/>
Jan. 17-21, Tuesday and Thurs-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi National Hona<lb/>
Fraternity will hold its monthly<lb/>
dinner meeting on Wednesday,<lb/>
Jan. 19, at 6 p.m. at Bonanza<lb/>
Steak pit. Guest speaker will be<lb/>
Dr Robert W. Gowen, Associate<lb/>
Professa of Histay, ECU. All<lb/>
brothas are urped to attend.<lb/>
aJ$i8?ra&amp;?u ? ' aL<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0003"/><lb/>
mmnBH<lb/>
???????1<lb/>
???mVMH<lb/>
18 January 1977 F0UNTA1NHEAD PeggJ.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Honor society sets up sch<lb/>
? It<lb/>
I<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
It's just a small, wooden<lb/>
building behind the A.G. Cox<lb/>
Elementary School in Winterville,<lb/>
N.C. But because 20 ECU stu-<lb/>
dents volunteer their time and<lb/>
energies four afternoons each<lb/>
week, the tiny building has been<lb/>
transformed into an extra study<lb/>
center for approximately 50 child-<lb/>
ren with learning deficiencies in<lb/>
language arts, mathematics, or<lb/>
both.<lb/>
These ECU students are mem-<lb/>
bers of Gamma Beta Phi, an<lb/>
honors and service society for<lb/>
improving education. They alter-<lb/>
nately spend an hour and a half<lb/>
each week tutoring elementary<lb/>
children, grades four through<lb/>
eight, who have fallen behind<lb/>
their classmates in their reading<lb/>
and math studies.<lb/>
The society works through the<lb/>
 Parent-Teachers Association<lb/>
(PTA) Council" Tutorial Reading<lb/>
and Math Program. And, accord-<lb/>
ing to Mrs. Ann Posey who heads<lb/>
up the program, this helps for the<lb/>
special children would not be<lb/>
possible without the socjety' s free<lb/>
service.<lb/>
In the past, such programs<lb/>
were funded through the Federal<lb/>
Emergency School Aid Act.<lb/>
But these funds were cut by 50<lb/>
per cent last year. So the A.G.<lb/>
Cox afternoon tutoring sessions<lb/>
had to be cancelled, according to<lb/>
Mrs. Posey.<lb/>
Now the doors of the small<lb/>
building once again open wide<lb/>
after school hours to receive<lb/>
dozens of elementary students<lb/>
who need and want extra help to<lb/>
catch up with their classmates.<lb/>
And Gamma Beta Phi presi-<lb/>
dent John Edwards feels this is a<lb/>
most rewarding experience.<lb/>
"It's very rewarding to be<lb/>
able to come here and give our<lb/>
time to help these young kids<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
"We're not doing it fa any<lb/>
purpose other than to help and<lb/>
because we just want to. And<lb/>
we're enjoying it very much<lb/>
Most of the children in the<lb/>
program come from either<lb/>
poverty-stricken homes a hones<lb/>
where the parents doi't have<lb/>
time to help them, accading to<lb/>
Edwards.<lb/>
However, Mrs. Posey noted<lb/>
that 400 of the 600 A.G. Cox<lb/>
students qualified, after testing,<lb/>
fa the program.<lb/>
"These kids will just get<lb/>
farther and farther behind if no<lb/>
one helps, Edwards said.<lb/>
So now, if a child at A.G. Cox<lb/>
doesn't understand the work<lb/>
covered in class that day, he can<lb/>
come to the little building after<lb/>
school and get the individual help<lb/>
he needs.<lb/>
How do the parents of these<lb/>
children respond to the program?<lb/>
"We've contacted some<lb/>
parents who didn't even know<lb/>
their children were behind the<lb/>
rest of the class in their school<lb/>
wak said Mrs. Posey.<lb/>
"They seem very happy to<lb/>
have this oppatunity fa their<lb/>
children<lb/>
And the children's response?<lb/>
"Very gcod said Edwards.<lb/>
"This is not as structured as the<lb/>
classroom situation. We can sit<lb/>
down, joke around with them, and<lb/>
it relaxes them so that they want<lb/>
us to wak with them<lb/>
He cited an incident when a<lb/>
little boy in the program met him<lb/>
at the doa.<lb/>
" He ran up to me as I walked in<lb/>
the doa, yelling, 'Come on! I<lb/>
want you to help me with this test<lb/>
I had today<lb/>
Accading to Edwards, that's<lb/>
what makes it all worthwhile.<lb/>
Ironically, very few of the<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi tutas intend to<lb/>
teach after graduation. Fa those<lb/>
who do, this provides excellent<lb/>
practical experience.<lb/>
For the others, such as<lb/>
Edwards, a business maja, it's<lb/>
simply another means of improv-<lb/>
ing education.<lb/>
And 50 young, smiling faces<lb/>
make all the extra time and<lb/>
energy that the kids spend in the<lb/>
little wooden building very worth-<lb/>
while.<lb/>
Indians charge Sault Ste.<lb/>
Marie with discrimination<lb/>
NEW YORK (LNS)-Charges<lb/>
of widespread discrimination a-<lb/>
gainst Native Americans by the<lb/>
City of Sault Ste. Marie, Michi-<lb/>
gan were made public November<lb/>
19. They include the misuse of<lb/>
millions of dollars in federal<lb/>
funds.<lb/>
After a year long study, the<lb/>
Michigan Advisay Canmittee to<lb/>
the U.S. Commission on Civil<lb/>
Rights released its report detail-<lb/>
ing services to Native Americans<lb/>
who were inadequate a non-<lb/>
existent. These included stam<lb/>
and sanitary sewers, street lights,<lb/>
roads, snow-plowing, fire hy-<lb/>
drants, reaeation facilities, side-<lb/>
walks and emergency services.<lb/>
The quality of services in white<lb/>
areas of the city is better, the<lb/>
repot said.<lb/>
Twenty per cent of Sault Ste.<lb/>
Marie's 15,000 residents are<lb/>
Indian and most live in a<lb/>
neighborhood of the city called<lb/>
Mar-Shunk. Last January,<lb/>
twenty-nine Mar-Shunk residents<lb/>
filed a class action suit charging<lb/>
the city with discrimination in 10<lb/>
types of services. The suit asked<lb/>
that the city be barred from<lb/>
spending any federal funds until<lb/>
those services were provided. No<lb/>
trial date has been set.<lb/>
The Civil Rights repot calls<lb/>
fo a state and federal inquiry into<lb/>
city misuse of millions of dollars<lb/>
in federal funds. City officials<lb/>
have violated aiminal laws by<lb/>
signing federal documents each<lb/>
year stating that they had not<lb/>
discriminated in use of the funds,<lb/>
investigatas say.<lb/>
Women's rights<lb/>
cause setback<lb/>
NEW YORK (LNS)-ln a major<lb/>
setback fa the wanen's right<lb/>
movement, the Supreme Court<lb/>
ruled December 7 that employers<lb/>
may refuse to pay disability<lb/>
benefits to women fa pregnancy.<lb/>
The decision, in a case<lb/>
involving women workers at<lb/>
General Electric, was a big<lb/>
victoy fa employers who con-<lb/>
tend that ooverage of childbirth<lb/>
and pregnancy complications add<lb/>
significantly to their oosts.<lb/>
Accading to an article in the<lb/>
December 8 Wall Street Journal,<lb/>
"The ruling reinfoces the grow-<lb/>
ing impression that members of<lb/>
the business oommunity are likely<lb/>
to get a sympathetic hearing<lb/>
when they take aucial cases to<lb/>
the oourt headed by Chief Justice<lb/>
Warren Burger  who was<lb/>
appointed by Nixon<lb/>
The Supreme Court's ruling<lb/>
overruled six previous rulings by<lb/>
U.S. Courts of Appeals. Evoy<lb/>
Court of Appeals that has con-<lb/>
sidered the issue has held that<lb/>
exclusion of pregnancy from<lb/>
disability ooverage violates Title<lb/>
VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.<lb/>
The only permanent professional company touring classic<lb/>
and modern plays in repertory coast to coast.<lb/>
Acting<lb/>
Company<lb/>
c1<lb/>
<lb/>
" Love's Labour's Lost "<lb/>
Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost<lb/>
January 25 and 26 at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
January 26 at 2:15 p.m.<lb/>
Arnold Wesker's The Kitchen<lb/>
January 27 at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Tennessee Williams' Camino Real<lb/>
January 28 and 29 at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
"The Kitchen<lb/>
ECU STUDENTSGET 50CUTON PRICES!<lb/>
REGULAR ADMISSION $6.00 (EVENINGS)<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS $3.00 (EVENINGS)<lb/>
(EVEN LESS FOR MATINEE)<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057104_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
18 January 1977<lb/>
Minority neglect<lb/>
Many of the hassles of foreign students on this<lb/>
campus can be directly traced to unconcern on the<lb/>
part of the university administration for the special<lb/>
problems this minority must endure while studying<lb/>
in the United States.<lb/>
One of the few positive efforts and feeble it is,<lb/>
which the administration has made to give direction<lb/>
to the foreign students program was to establish the<lb/>
Committee on International Student Affairs. Chaired<lb/>
by Col. Blake, assistant to the Chancellor, this<lb/>
committee should take an active role in promoting<lb/>
the foreign students program at this university and<lb/>
assuring it of continued success once that status has<lb/>
been attained. But with the committee meeting only<lb/>
onoe each year it's a wonder the program does not<lb/>
wither from sheer neglect.<lb/>
The administration has contributed to the<lb/>
program by providing a house and a part-time<lb/>
counselor fa the foreign students. Again, however,<lb/>
the attempt has been half-hearted. The house suffers<lb/>
from neglect, students who reside there must bear<lb/>
the costs of expensive repairs, and their oounselor,<lb/>
Ron Scronce, must juggle his duties as full-time<lb/>
advisor at Ayocck dormitory in order to serve the<lb/>
foreign students.<lb/>
At the meeting Thursday called by SGA President<lb/>
Tim Sullivan and Kent Johnson, Chairman fa<lb/>
International Proarams, those attending discussed<lb/>
the problems of foreign students at ECU, Saoice<lb/>
admitted that his primary commitment at Aycock did<lb/>
not allow him enough time to devote adequate<lb/>
attention to the foreign group. There should be a<lb/>
full-time administrator to promulgate this program<lb/>
and handle its needs.<lb/>
Sullivan and the SGA are laying the groundwork<lb/>
for a respectable international students program at<lb/>
ECU by creating the office for international programs<lb/>
and appointing a concerned student to coordinate<lb/>
this most-beneficial activity. It is now up to Johnson<lb/>
tooonvince the administration of the worthiness of<lb/>
this program and to coax it off its frozen assets.<lb/>
There should be at least the same emphasis on<lb/>
student welfare as there is on some of the more<lb/>
grandiose projects on campus.<lb/>
Fbuntainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina oommunity for over fifty years<lb/>
"Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Business ManagerTeresa Whisenant<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis Leonard<lb/>
News EditorsDebbie Jackson<lb/>
J. Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Trends EditorPat Coyle<lb/>
Sports EditorSteve Wheeler<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored by the Student Government<lb/>
Association of ECU and is distributed each Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the school year, weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 757-6366, 757-636 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non-students, $6.00 tor<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
&amp;Xp&amp;vs? yes, but uje.ll oJonth -ihe. pece<lb/>
Feminist apathy criticized<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I think there isan issue on this<lb/>
campus that needs some con-<lb/>
sideration on the part of all<lb/>
students; that is the problem of<lb/>
rape.<lb/>
Last spring a man walked in<lb/>
the shower on a girl in Slay dorm<lb/>
one Saturday afternoon. Luckily a<lb/>
rape did not occur in this case,<lb/>
but there have been other recent<lb/>
incidents that have nbt been so<lb/>
fortunate. At that time, I (with the<lb/>
help of Reba Faison) started to<lb/>
organize a group known as ISHA,<lb/>
to help educate students on this<lb/>
campus as to the problems facing<lb/>
women today. Unfortunately,<lb/>
there has been little to no interest<lb/>
in our group. This is where the<lb/>
problem lies. I understand that<lb/>
people are busy with school work<lb/>
and partying, and that going to<lb/>
meetings is basically a drag. But,<lb/>
it really shocks me to know that<lb/>
not even the women care about<lb/>
women's problems.<lb/>
I witnessed an unbelievable<lb/>
incident the other night on<lb/>
campus. A policeman offered to<lb/>
escort a girl across campus, and<lb/>
all he got for his oonoern were<lb/>
laughs and sneers. I also heard a<lb/>
rumor that a girl cried rape and<lb/>
then laughed when the author-<lb/>
ities came to help. Well girls,<lb/>
don't expect any help when you<lb/>
really need it if you intend to<lb/>
laugh, criticize and insult one of<lb/>
your only methods of protection<lb/>
onthiscampus. Don't criticize the<lb/>
campuspdioe until you're willing<lb/>
to help yourself. It is not a joke.<lb/>
You' re not living in a world where<lb/>
the man is necessarily going to<lb/>
protect you. It's up to you, and<lb/>
until you realize it, you had better<lb/>
stop complaining.<lb/>
Another thing I'd like to add<lb/>
to al I you people who have labeled<lb/>
me as an anti-sex, old-maid<lb/>
feminist-l don't think there is<lb/>
anything wrong with sex. As a<lb/>
matter of fact ISHA sponsored a<lb/>
forum on contraception which few<lb/>
bothered toattend. (Do you really<lb/>
think you know everything about<lb/>
it??) The issue here is that of one<lb/>
human being violating the rights<lb/>
of another human being. Until<lb/>
people start considering the<lb/>
other person s feelings, this<lb/>
world is in trouble.<lb/>
You can start by attending<lb/>
Frederic Storaska's lecture on<lb/>
Wednesday, Jan. 26 at 800 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre (admission is free to<lb/>
students and faculty). It's a<lb/>
matter of responsibility - nothing<lb/>
will get done until people start<lb/>
caring. Any comments or<lb/>
questionson ISHA are welcomed.<lb/>
Cheri Leake<lb/>
Music students rap coverage<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
It is most unfortunate that<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD's only decent<lb/>
coverage of School of Music<lb/>
activities has been the Thanks-<lb/>
giving Day football game fiasco.<lb/>
The ECU Symphonic Wind<lb/>
Ensemble was chosen as Honor<lb/>
Band for Governor Hunt's inau-<lb/>
guration this past Saturday. This<lb/>
was indeed a great honor, as we<lb/>
were the instrumental ensemble<lb/>
for the event. Six people left at<lb/>
730 a.m. for Raleigh, sat for 3<lb/>
hours in 30-degree weather, and<lb/>
played in a manner the rest of the<lb/>
school should at least hear about.<lb/>
Yet the only coverage consisted of<lb/>
one short sentence thrown into a<lb/>
long article about the inaugura-<lb/>
tion. It is nice to have pictures of<lb/>
visiting statesmen, but it would<lb/>
have been nice to have at least<lb/>
one photograph of the Wind<lb/>
Ensemble and a few more details<lb/>
on why we were there. (Besides,<lb/>
we support this paper, not Andy<lb/>
Griffith!) The School of Music<lb/>
deserves better recognition for<lb/>
our achievements than you afford<lb/>
us. Many of us have waited four<lb/>
years just to see our own school<lb/>
realize that we have enough to<lb/>
offer to warrant an occasional<lb/>
paragraph in OUR paper. We<lb/>
don't expect this will change, but<lb/>
it's a shame that the "voice of the<lb/>
school" continues to ignore a<lb/>
good percentage of its students<lb/>
those of us in Fine Arts.<lb/>
Signed,<lb/>
Gail S. Ramee, Elizabeth S.<lb/>
Weeks, Denise Hodges, Janet<lb/>
Whitman, Barbara Hill, Billy<lb/>
Grimmet, David Rockefeller,<lb/>
Mike Lopez, Gary Cassedy, Lisa<lb/>
Schnurr, Carol Cherrix, Catherine<lb/>
Conger, Curtis Pitsenbarqer.<lb/>
Laurie Nicholson, Karen Chaplin,<lb/>
Deborah Fales, Teresa Meeks,<lb/>
Harvey Stokes, Jim Poteat, Keith<lb/>
Henry, Jay Williams, Cyndy<lb/>
Cooley, Freddie McLean, Alan<lb/>
McQuiston, Mike Waddell,<lb/>
Thomas, Amoreno, Lee Brown,<lb/>
Melanie Vaught, Andrea Har-<lb/>
man, Mike Fussell, Bill Frazier,<lb/>
Scott Tate, Tyler Dunlap, Joseph<lb/>
Kasmark, Lee Parker, Marshall<lb/>
Swenz, Jay Downie.<lb/>
will<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0005"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
Repairs and heating bills cause pinch<lb/>
18 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
International House strains budget<lb/>
The current condition of the<lb/>
International House and other<lb/>
problems of foreign students was<lb/>
the topic of a meeting held<lb/>
Thursday in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
The meeting was initiated by<lb/>
the SGA president Tim Sullivan<lb/>
and Kent Johnson, SGA's newly<lb/>
designated chairman for Interna-<lb/>
tional Programs.<lb/>
Dr. Hans Indorf, the SGA<lb/>
adviser, several foreign students<lb/>
and Ron Scronce, counselor at<lb/>
Aycock dorm who also acts as<lb/>
part-time adviser to the foreign<lb/>
students attended.<lb/>
Scronce, whom the university<lb/>
administration has designated<lb/>
Coordinator of International Stu-<lb/>
dent Affairs, explained that the<lb/>
Internationrl House is owned by<lb/>
the university but must be<lb/>
maintained by the students who<lb/>
are living there.<lb/>
He said high heating bills and<lb/>
needed repairs are putting a<lb/>
strain on the International Stu-<lb/>
dent Center account which he<lb/>
oversees.<lb/>
Dr. Indorf suggested that the<lb/>
rent residents pay at the house be<lb/>
raised. Residence at the house<lb/>
which is limited to four students,<lb/>
should be open to American<lb/>
students for two rooms, he added.<lb/>
The house is currently in need<lb/>
of a $250 repair on the roof,<lb/>
according to Scronce.<lb/>
Scronce announceo he is<lb/>
trying to assemble a group of<lb/>
foreign students to attend a<lb/>
general meeting in Raleigh the<lb/>
latter part cf January.<lb/>
THE INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
repairs.<lb/>
HOUSE is experiencing<lb/>
financial woes due to high heating costs &amp; needed<lb/>
Photo by Russ Pogue<lb/>
MRC authorized to fine<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Aocording to James Mallory,<lb/>
Dean of Men, the Men's Resi-<lb/>
dence Council (MRC) has the<lb/>
authority to assess fines against<lb/>
dormitory residents since they are<lb/>
an elected governing body.<lb/>
This year the MRC distributed<lb/>
a list of major and minor offenses<lb/>
and accompanying fines to stu-<lb/>
dents in the men's residence<lb/>
halls.<lb/>
Major offenses include pos-<lb/>
session of fireworks, public<lb/>
drunkenness, and malicious<lb/>
damage to state property.<lb/>
One major offense was listed<lb/>
as "other offenses not specifically<lb/>
covered<lb/>
"That is the kind of thing that<lb/>
would not hold up in court said<lb/>
Mallory when questioned about<lb/>
the vagueness of the last offense.<lb/>
BOARD<lb/>
Continued from p. 1<lb/>
Barry Robinson, Student<lb/>
Union president, doesn't approve<lb/>
of the amendment.<lb/>
"I don't think that the amend-<lb/>
ment will serve any purpose<lb/>
except, possibly, to solve some<lb/>
grievances that certain members<lb/>
of the Board have against me or<lb/>
the Union said Robinson.<lb/>
Robinson said that he does not<lb/>
feel that it will have any effect on<lb/>
the students, because the Board<lb/>
can only act on major policy<lb/>
changes such as accepting the<lb/>
proposed budget ox approving<lb/>
by-laws.<lb/>
"The various committees, not<lb/>
the Board, decide the entertain-<lb/>
ment aocording to Robinson.<lb/>
Robinson said that he is<lb/>
oonoerned that students will tend<lb/>
to run on platforms oonoerning<lb/>
better programming.<lb/>
"One of the legislators ran on<lb/>
a platform of issues regarding<lb/>
concerts in the fall. At that time<lb/>
he had nothing to do with the<lb/>
Union said Robinson.<lb/>
Robinson disagree with the<lb/>
oontention that the amendment<lb/>
will bring more student input into<lb/>
the Union.<lb/>
"I wish that if students have<lb/>
oomplaints they would come to<lb/>
me, and we would put them to<lb/>
work on a committee said<lb/>
Robinson.<lb/>
Aocording to Robinson, the<lb/>
Board is not a functioning body<lb/>
and entertainment ideas are<lb/>
referred to committees in the long<lb/>
run.<lb/>
"I think that the Union is<lb/>
functioning very well as it is<lb/>
now said Robinson.<lb/>
SGA treasurer and Board<lb/>
member Tommy Thomason said<lb/>
that there are a lot of flaws in the<lb/>
amendment.<lb/>
"It's slighting WRC and<lb/>
MRC. They're excluded com-<lb/>
pletely said Thomason.<lb/>
Under Article IV the presi-<lb/>
dents of WRC and MRC would be<lb/>
made x-off icio members.<lb/>
"If that's the way it'll be, I<lb/>
won't accept it said Thomason.<lb/>
Thomason also said that she<lb/>
believes Board members have<lb/>
been slighting the Board because<lb/>
they are so busy with other jobs.<lb/>
Sullivan said that he will call<lb/>
another meeting of the Board this<lb/>
week to discuss the matter<lb/>
further.<lb/>
Mallory said hall advisors are<lb/>
expected to use good judgement<lb/>
when enforcing the rules.<lb/>
"Some of the offenses need<lb/>
clarification said Mallory.<lb/>
Aocording to Frankie Spoon, a<lb/>
Jones dorm hall advisor, fines<lb/>
imposed by hall advisors can be<lb/>
appealed to the house judiciary<lb/>
and from there to the Dean of<lb/>
Men.<lb/>
Some students have quest-<lb/>
ioned the authority of hall advis-<lb/>
ors to levy fines.<lb/>
"A fine is imposed by a oourt<lb/>
of oompetent jurisdiction after the<lb/>
defendant has been lawfully<lb/>
convicted of a criminal offense<lb/>
said University Attorney,Dr.<lb/>
Dave Stevens when asked who<lb/>
has the authority to levy fines.<lb/>
'2 lb. Royal Rib Eye 5teak Dinner<lb/>
Includes a hot baked potato, crisp garden<lb/>
fresh salad, and fresh baked hot roll.<lb/>
Regular $2.79<lb/>
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FISH DINNER<lb/>
3 Pieces of Flounder, cocktail sauce or tarter sauce, lemon<lb/>
wedge, baked potato, cole slaw, and fresh baked roll.<lb/>
Regular $2.39<lb/>
50COff<lb/>
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$1.89<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
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SALAD BAR<lb/>
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With Dinner! STEAK M HUUbfc. MON&amp;THUR<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
??h<lb/>
The Tree House<lb/>
The Tree People Proudly<lb/>
Present the Fine Music of<lb/>
Tuesday- Dana Rich<lb/>
Wednesday- Special Guests &amp;?<lb/>
Special rates on beverages<lb/>
Thursday- Chris Farren<lb/>
Fri.fr Sat TheO'sville<lb/>
Rainbow Band<lb/>
Sun. &amp; Mon Jazz Night with<lb/>
Dukeand John<lb/>
Corner of 5th &amp; Cotanche<lb/>
Tues. Jan.iath MASH<lb/>
Wed. Jan. 19th North Carolina at N.C. State<lb/>
Sat. Jan. 22nd North Carolina at Maryland<lb/>
Sat. at 11:00P.M. Saturday Night Live<lb/>
???? ???? ?  ???. ???<lb/>
iM0MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0006"/><lb/>
IHBBHHBHHi<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 January 1977<lb/>
Bell's cafe; family soul food headquarters<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Smells of collard greens,<lb/>
barbecue, and stew beef greet<lb/>
the hungry patrons as they enter<lb/>
long, narrow, two-story white<lb/>
building at 604 Albemarle<lb/>
Avenue. A red sign with white<lb/>
letters proclaims "Bell's Restau-<lb/>
rant, Soul Food Headquarters .<lb/>
Bell's Cafe was established in<lb/>
1920 by Grant Bell. Sr according<lb/>
to Charles Bell, Grant's son and<lb/>
present operator of the restau-<lb/>
rant.<lb/>
"It's a family thing Bell<lb/>
said proudly. "Four generations<lb/>
of Bells can be found here now<lb/>
A portrait of his father stares<lb/>
down from the wall as the large<lb/>
black man with slightly graying<lb/>
hair speaks. His grandson<lb/>
Donald. 17-months-old, wanders<lb/>
around the tables.<lb/>
'It's the oldest eating esta-<lb/>
blishment in town, period, said<lb/>
Bell. "And the oldest under the<lb/>
same management<lb/>
The cafe thrived during the<lb/>
1930s and 40s when the Imperial<lb/>
Tobacco Company down the block<lb/>
employed 600 to 700 persons<lb/>
before the rise of automation,<lb/>
commented Bell.<lb/>
"But the same meal that I get<lb/>
$2 for now was 25 cents then<lb/>
laughed Bell.<lb/>
The menus written on a piece<lb/>
of notebook paper and lies on a<lb/>
counter that separates the eating<lb/>
area from the open door which<lb/>
leads to the kitchen.<lb/>
Chitterlings, pig tails and<lb/>
ears, honey-dipped fried chicken,<lb/>
barbecue, and stew beef are<lb/>
some of the daily main courses.<lb/>
"Stew beef is our speciality<lb/>
says the experienced chef.<lb/>
"Grant (Bell) Sr. always said.<lb/>
stew beef and rice will save your<lb/>
life<lb/>
Collard greens, potato salad,<lb/>
cole slaw, candied yams, and<lb/>
black-eyed peas are among the<lb/>
fresh vegetables served. And only<lb/>
fresh seafood is prepared.<lb/>
The Bells live upstairs and<lb/>
also rent out rooms.<lb/>
It is a 1935 vintage rooming<lb/>
house operation, with nothing<lb/>
modern about it, commented<lb/>
Bell.<lb/>
" We' ve never been held-up or<lb/>
broken into. Living here makes all<lb/>
the difference said Bell.<lb/>
His wife, Delores, frequently<lb/>
oomes out of the kitchen to make<lb/>
sure everything is all right and<lb/>
that everyone gets full. She is a<lb/>
pleasant woman, always checking<lb/>
to see if anyone wants some sweet<lb/>
potato pie, bread pudding with<lb/>
raisins, a banana pudding which<lb/>
she pulls piping hot from the<lb/>
oven.<lb/>
"I had people come in today<lb/>
who have been with us for 50<lb/>
years spoke the deep voice of<lb/>
Bell. "Repeat business is what<lb/>
keeps us going<lb/>
Bell's was integrated before<lb/>
integration was popular. The<lb/>
downtown business dropped off<lb/>
during the civil rights movement<lb/>
of the late 50s and early 60s,<lb/>
according to Bell.<lb/>
Outside, workmen are reno-<lb/>
vating the stores across Albe-<lb/>
marle Avenue.<lb/>
"This year we are getting<lb/>
more business from ECU.<lb/>
Bell remarked that his busi-<lb/>
nesses just the way he wants it.<lb/>
"It's like, when a man comes<lb/>
in, I don't have to show him the<lb/>
menu<lb/>
Son Dwight, 13, sits listening<lb/>
and shyly smiles as his father<lb/>
says he is next in line for<lb/>
management.<lb/>
Bell does little advertising for<lb/>
his cafe.<lb/>
"I've been on this corner for<lb/>
41 years, so I'm not looking for<lb/>
work. I've always had a job<lb/>
Bell works 15 hours a day,<lb/>
seven days a week, and the whole<lb/>
family joins in.<lb/>
"Bell's is like an institution<lb/>
and all old institutions should be<lb/>
preserved<lb/>
His ambition is to "be a<lb/>
legend in his own time Maybe<lb/>
so, but his restaurant definitely is<lb/>
a legend to its patrons.<lb/>
We havetemporarily<lb/>
relocated in the rear of<lb/>
Ridgeway Opticians due<lb/>
to renovations.<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson<lb/>
Jewelers<lb/>
Snitching forces tabor<lb/>
official out of posts<lb/>
NEW YORK (LNS)Sheli<lb/>
Lulkin, a prominent official of the<lb/>
Chicago branch of the American<lb/>
Federation of Teachers has been<lb/>
foroed to resign from all but one<lb/>
of her union posts.<lb/>
Named as a key agent for the<lb/>
Chicago Police Department's<lb/>
Police Intelligence Division-<lb/>
commonly known as the Red<lb/>
Squad-Lulkin surveilled and in-<lb/>
Lautares Jewelers<lb/>
Registered Jewelers Certified Gemologist<lb/>
American Gem Society<lb/>
Diamond Specialists<lb/>
See George Lautares ECU Class'41<lb/>
The<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
presents<lb/>
TUESSAT.<lb/>
From Cin Ohio, Billed as One of the Hottest<lb/>
Groups in the East ? Played in Concert with<lb/>
"Ted Nugent" and "Kiss"<lb/>
"THE RAISIN BAND"<lb/>
Tuesday Night Special<lb/>
No Cover Charge Free Refreshments til 9:30<lb/>
Plus Extra Added Attraction Wed. The 2nd Annual AA<lb/>
"Pretty Legs Contest"<lb/>
DON'T MISS'THE RAISIN BAND" THIS WEEK<lb/>
EVERY SUNDAY IS LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
filtrated a broad list of groups and<lb/>
individuals in the Chicago area<lb/>
since at least 1970.<lb/>
Lulkin was first exposed in the<lb/>
June issue of "Substance" a<lb/>
paper published by a group of<lb/>
rank and file teachers within the<lb/>
Chicago AFT local. But it took<lb/>
months of pressure from rank and<lb/>
file delegates on Chicago Teach-<lb/>
ers Union (CTU) President Robert<lb/>
Healey before she was foroed to<lb/>
resign this December.<lb/>
According to "Substance"<lb/>
editor George Schmidt, Healey<lb/>
has now told the union that he<lb/>
had "consultations with the CTU<lb/>
lawyers and the ACLU" over the<lb/>
issue and Lulkin's resignation,<lb/>
and that reports by Lulkin on the<lb/>
union and other groups "ran into<lb/>
the hundreds<lb/>
Lulkin's involvement in intelli-<lb/>
gence activities was revealed in<lb/>
police documents which came to<lb/>
light when the Chicago Alliance<lb/>
to End Repression sued Chicago<lb/>
police officials for illegal surveil-<lb/>
lance of community groups. A-<lb/>
mong the Red Squad's informants<lb/>
was one "agent 436" who, from<lb/>
the type of information the agent<lb/>
supplied, was determined by AFT<lb/>
teachers to be Lulkin.<lb/>
Sylvia Kushner, the Chicago<lb/>
Peace Council's executive direct-<lb/>
or, has said that after reading the<lb/>
Peace Council's intelligence divi-<lb/>
sion files she has "no doubt<lb/>
whatsoever" about Lulkin's po-<lb/>
lice role.<lb/>
In addition to her union<lb/>
spying, Lulkin reported on many<lb/>
groups in Chicago, including<lb/>
Radical Teachers Against the<lb/>
War, Teachers for a Radical<lb/>
Change in Education, Women for<lb/>
Peace, Teachers for a Free<lb/>
Society and Vietnam Veterans<lb/>
Against the War. She was also<lb/>
elected to the national coordinat-<lb/>
ing committee of the People's<lb/>
Coalition for Peace and Justice<lb/>
and helped organize demonstra-<lb/>
tions at the 1972 presidential<lb/>
conventions in Miami.<lb/>
The information that Lulkin<lb/>
and other informers obtained on<lb/>
such groups did not stop with the<lb/>
local Red Squad. The Chicago<lb/>
Sun-Times of March 24, 1975<lb/>
reported that "police spy files<lb/>
were routinely sent to the FBI and<lb/>
others Alliance attorney Rick<lb/>
Gut man says that the case is<lb/>
particularly important because<lb/>
"not even the Church Committee<lb/>
report on the FBI and the CIA<lb/>
found any evidence that labor<lb/>
unions had been targets<lb/>
In the local and national AFT,<lb/>
Lulkin was identified with mem-<lb/>
bers of the conservative forces led<lb/>
by union head Albert Shanker.<lb/>
Her rise in the Chicago AFT was<lb/>
described as  meteoric and she<lb/>
travelled frequently for the AFL-<lb/>
CIO in Europe and the Middle<lb/>
East. Chicago Reader correspon-<lb/>
dent Nancy Banks reports that<lb/>
"Lulkin was known as a protege<lb/>
of CTU president Healey and<lb/>
when the first suspicions about<lb/>
her activities surfaced last sum-<lb/>
mer, Healey reportedly refused to<lb/>
investigate<lb/>
But eventually the pressure<lb/>
became too great and Healey<lb/>
requested her resignatiorfrom the<lb/>
CTU Executive Board, publicity<lb/>
committee, women's rights com-<lb/>
mittee, professional problems<lb/>
committee, special education ad-<lb/>
visory committee, as well as her<lb/>
positions as chairperson for the<lb/>
Teachers women's rights com-<lb/>
mittee, co-chairperson of the AFT<lb/>
women's rights committee, and<lb/>
AFT representative to the CLUM<lb/>
(Coalition of Labor Union<lb/>
Women) executive board.<lb/>
According to "Substance<lb/>
Lulkin still retains her position on<lb/>
the board of the multi-million<lb/>
dollar Chicago Teachers Union<lb/>
pension fund.<lb/>
?'1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0007"/><lb/>
18 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
N.J. Supreme Court clears Hurricane<lb/>
(LNS)Ten years ago, Rubin<lb/>
Hurricane Carter-a former<lb/>
middleweight boxing champion,<lb/>
and outspoken civil rights acti-<lb/>
vist, was arrested along with a<lb/>
casual friend, John Artis, and<lb/>
charged with the murder of three<lb/>
whites in a Paterson, N.J. tavern.<lb/>
Without the murder weapon<lb/>
ever being discovered, Carter and<lb/>
Artis were found guilty of triple<lb/>
murder by an all white jury in<lb/>
1967, and sentenced to life<lb/>
imprisonment. Alfred Bellow and<lb/>
Arthur Bradley admitted that<lb/>
they were pressured into lying in<lb/>
exchange for the dropping of the<lb/>
robbery charges pending against<lb/>
them at the time.<lb/>
After a long legal fight and a<lb/>
nationwide support campaign,<lb/>
the case was sent to the New<lb/>
Jersey State Supreme Court in<lb/>
January 1976. In a unanimous<lb/>
ruling, the court overturned the<lb/>
convictions, charging the prose-<lb/>
cution with witholding evidence<lb/>
and substantially prejudicing a<lb/>
fair trial.<lb/>
The retrial which began Octo-<lb/>
ber 12 ended December 21 with a<lb/>
reconviction of the two. The<lb/>
verdict means that the two<lb/>
blacks-who have already served<lb/>
nine years in prison-again face<lb/>
life imprisonment when senten-<lb/>
cing takes place January 27.<lb/>
The prosecution's case was<lb/>
based entirely on a "racial<lb/>
revenge' theory as a motive fa<lb/>
the slaying of the three whites.<lb/>
Throughout the retrial, the state<lb/>
maintained that Carter and Artis<lb/>
gunned down the whites in<lb/>
retaliation fa the killing six hours<lb/>
earlier of a black bartender.<lb/>
The only prosecution testi-<lb/>
mony linking Carter and Artis to<lb/>
the scene of the aime was from<lb/>
Alfred Bellow, who had testified<lb/>
against them in the first trial,<lb/>
later recanted, but had now<lb/>
agreed to reverse his stay fa the<lb/>
second time.<lb/>
We didn't have a retrial; we<lb/>
had a rerun Carter declared<lb/>
after the jury announced its<lb/>
verdict It took two of them last<lb/>
timetoconvict us, and this time it<lb/>
took only oneWhy was Bellow<lb/>
able to come into this courtroom<lb/>
and allowed to testify after the<lb/>
amount of lies he told?<lb/>
"The facts were not tried<lb/>
Carter oontinued. "Emotionsof a<lb/>
black-white nature came into<lb/>
be'ng and the objectivity that all<lb/>
juras are supposed to have just<lb/>
went out the window. That motive<lb/>
of revenge took away everybody's<lb/>
sight and therefae people started<lb/>
feeling rather than seeing what<lb/>
they were looking at<lb/>
John Artis stressed the same<lb/>
point: "Once that aspect of racial<lb/>
revenge a racism was entered<lb/>
into it, the juras minds were<lb/>
canpletely taken away fron the<lb/>
facts he told a press conference<lb/>
following the verdict.<lb/>
It's like a nightmarish<lb/>
dreamlike walking through a<lb/>
tunnel that keeps going in circles.<lb/>
When you think you're at the end,<lb/>
you' re right back at the beginning<lb/>
again<lb/>
In his defense summation,<lb/>
85 students take ski trip<lb/>
By LARRY LEI BE RM AN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Sugar Mountain and Appala-<lb/>
chian Ski Mountain were the sites<lb/>
of the ECU ski program from Dec.<lb/>
18 to 23.<lb/>
There were 85 students at the<lb/>
two N.C. ski areas, some credit<lb/>
At the slopes the students<lb/>
attended a boot and binding clinic<lb/>
first. Bindings hold the ski boots<lb/>
to the skis.<lb/>
Then the exam was held on<lb/>
the slopes. A written test was also<lb/>
administered.<lb/>
Fiftv students went to Sugar<lb/>
years ago at ECu and has been<lb/>
very successful, according to<lb/>
Saunders.<lb/>
Jim Cotrell. president of the<lb/>
French-Swiss Ski College at<lb/>
Appalachian Ski Mountain, initi-<lb/>
ated the program through the<lb/>
Phvsical Educational Department<lb/>
ONE GROUP OF ski trip participants.<lb/>
and some non-credit, participa-<lb/>
ting in a one hour credit ski<lb/>
course offered at ECU. This<lb/>
course is sponsored by the<lb/>
Physical Education department.<lb/>
There were five pre-skiing<lb/>
sessions at ECU to help prepare<lb/>
the students by teaching ski<lb/>
terminology, conditioning, cloth-<lb/>
ing, and also to socialize to<lb/>
become familiar with each other,<lb/>
said Mrs. Joe Saunders, program<lb/>
ocordinata.<lb/>
Mountain and it cost them $100<lb/>
fa five days and four nights, ski<lb/>
lessons, equipment and lift fees.<lb/>
Thirty-five students got the same<lb/>
deal at Appalachian Ski Mountain<lb/>
fa $75.<lb/>
The students at Sugar stayed<lb/>
in 6 condominiums. Those that<lb/>
went to Appalachian stayed at the<lb/>
Holiday Inn in Boone. There were<lb/>
approximately the same number<lb/>
of boys as girls.<lb/>
The course was started five<lb/>
five years ago.<lb/>
This is the first year a group<lb/>
has gone to Sugar Mountain and<lb/>
Saunders said she was very<lb/>
pleased with the result.<lb/>
The trip was so successful that<lb/>
an ECU Ski Club has been famed<lb/>
and it is sponsored by<lb/>
the Physical Education Depart-<lb/>
ment and the Spats Club Divi-<lb/>
sion, said Saunders. The ECU Ski<lb/>
Club will oomDete with other ski<lb/>
clubs onJan. 28-29 at Beech Mt.<lb/>
Carter's lawyer Myron Beldook<lb/>
called the prosecution's argument<lb/>
that Carter and Artis killed the<lb/>
three whites in racist revenge "a<lb/>
racial hara stay that feeds oi<lb/>
the basest part of us all<lb/>
"It created the old lynching<lb/>
atmosphere explained Artis'<lb/>
defense lawyer Lewis Steel.<lb/>
"There was the specter of two<lb/>
blacks going on a rampage and<lb/>
killing whites fa no reason at<lb/>
allThe jury didn't even ask fa<lb/>
aie single bit of testimony to be<lb/>
read back to them<lb/>
Steel noted that Artis had<lb/>
called six character vitnesses<lb/>
during the course of the trial,<lb/>
among them a minister, his track<lb/>
coach and two professas at a<lb/>
local college. All testified that<lb/>
the defendant was a "model<lb/>
young man<lb/>
'Q<lb/>
Ladies Fall and Winter<lb/>
Shoes<lb/>
25 to 50 Off<lb/>
Little's Chop Shop<lb/>
N.E. Bypass 2 Mi. North of<lb/>
Hastings Ford<lb/>
758-4067<lb/>
We repair all makes and models of<lb/>
motorcycles.<lb/>
We sell custom parts and accessories.<lb/>
We do custom painting.<lb/>
We have pick-up service.<lb/>
Coming soon- van accessories<lb/>
TOrXmkipuHi<lb/>
pmtriptku<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
300 EVANS<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
PHONE: 752-2136<lb/>
FREE PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
PICKUP AND DELIVERY<lb/>
Prescription Dept. with medication<lb/>
profiles: yonr prescription always at<lb/>
onr fingertips, even though yon may<lb/>
lose your RL bottle.<lb/>
RAZZ JAZZ<lb/>
RECORDS<lb/>
6.98 LIST ALBUMS 4,99<lb/>
HEAD EQUIPMENT, JEWELRY, &amp; MORE<lb/>
COTANCHE ST. ACROSS FROM CLEMENT DORM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0008"/><lb/>
w<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAiNHEAD 18 January 1977<lb/>
'?.?.???'<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
w.v<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
v.w<lb/>
THIS IS THE art gallery in<lb/>
the new Jenkins Annex.<lb/>
The gallery rests on a 9,00C<lb/>
square-foot parquet floor<lb/>
made of golden oak. The<lb/>
overhead spotlights are<lb/>
mounted on tracks for easy<lb/>
mobility to achieve desired<lb/>
lighting effects. To the side<lb/>
of the gallery, a kitchen has<lb/>
been installed to prepare<lb/>
food for art receptions. A<lb/>
preparation room for<lb/>
mounting objects to be<lb/>
displayed is also adjacent to<lb/>
the gallery.<lb/>
V.W.<lb/>
?.?&amp;<lb/>
?vfiSR<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
mm<lb/>
5:?:?55:W5ft?5?5SSSSSffiftiS5M?2s<lb/>
;???-?!?-?<lb/>
:???:?:?:?:?:?:?:<lb/>
mm<lb/>
wmmmmmmm<lb/>
I<lb/>
i ? ? ??<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
am<lb/>
?-?-?.?-?-?-?-?-?-<lb/>
???.????<lb/>
Eat a big one at<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
:Wt?jfl S<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
CARRY OUT<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
Pizsa &amp; Spaghetti Houm<lb/>
DIAL758-7400<lb/>
507 East 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
FRESH BAKED BREAD FROM OUR OVENS DAILY<lb/>
FOOTLONG - 2.00<lb/>
V, FOOT - 1.20<lb/>
SUBMARINE<lb/>
Ham, Salami, Sa ce. Cheese, Baked<lb/>
MEATBALL SANDWICH<lb/>
Meatballs &amp; Meat Sauce<lb/>
HOAGIE<lb/>
Ham, Salami, Mustard, Mayonnaise<lb/>
Olive Oil, Lettuce &amp; Tomato<lb/>
VERSUVIAN STEAK<lb/>
Hamburger Steak, Lettuce &amp; Tomato<lb/>
Mustard, Mayonnaise<lb/>
HAM &amp; CHEESE<lb/>
Ham, Cheese, Lettuce, Tomato, Mustard<lb/>
PASTRAMI<lb/>
Pastrami, Pickle &amp; Mustard<lb/>
ROAST BEEF DIP<lb/>
Roast Beef, Mustard, Toma'o<lb/>
Not only Italian food, but we specialize in<lb/>
submarine sandwiches. Tuesday buy 2 of<lb/>
any size sub, receive one Free or buy one and<lb/>
receive a Free Coke.<lb/>
I V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0009"/><lb/>
?iBHiMI<lb/>
Solar energy could solve<lb/>
fuel, economy problems<lb/>
By JIMMY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Solar energy is currently at<lb/>
use in the home of an energy<lb/>
buff in Kinston, N.C.<lb/>
L.L. Smith has been experi-<lb/>
menting with and using solar<lb/>
collectors for the past three years.<lb/>
Smith, who likes to tinker in<lb/>
home heating, found the idea in a<lb/>
professional building magazine<lb/>
which discussed experimental<lb/>
units then in use in Colorado.<lb/>
" If we can heat water, we can<lb/>
use it to heat our homes Smith<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
The idea of a solar collector is<lb/>
simple. Water passes through an<lb/>
air space between weather-tight<lb/>
plexiglass and a blackened<lb/>
absorber plate.<lb/>
The water, warmed by the<lb/>
sun, is transferred through a<lb/>
system of tubes to an insulated<lb/>
storage tank.<lb/>
The heated water is then used<lb/>
to heat the storage tank which is<lb/>
full of water.<lb/>
"I had two tanks (770 total<lb/>
gallons) of water heated to about<lb/>
185 degrees last summer Smith<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Here the water can be used for<lb/>
either home heating or household<lb/>
use.<lb/>
The collectors can rotate slow-<lb/>
ly through the day to follow the<lb/>
path of the sun.<lb/>
Each time the motors turn on<lb/>
to rotate them, the energy used is<lb/>
equivalent to that of a 60-watt<lb/>
light bulb burning for about five<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
I n October the col lectors heat-<lb/>
ed for more than five hours a day<lb/>
on the average, according to<lb/>
Smith.<lb/>
The rotation of the collectors<lb/>
increases their sun-gathering<lb/>
potential 100 per cent, Smith<lb/>
noted.<lb/>
"Hot water by solar energy is<lb/>
feasible according to Dr. Carl<lb/>
G. Adler of the East Carolina<lb/>
University (ECU) physics depart-<lb/>
ment. "But the initial cost is very<lb/>
high<lb/>
Smith, who owns Solar Heat<lb/>
Inc a Kinston firm dealing in<lb/>
solar heating equipment, esti-<lb/>
mated the cost fa materials and<lb/>
installation of a system like his to<lb/>
be around $3,000 per unit.<lb/>
Three units are presently in<lb/>
use at the Smith residence which<lb/>
were $21 for the solar heated unit<lb/>
and $51 for the electrically heated<lb/>
unit.<lb/>
"I aim for homes in the 1,000<lb/>
to 1,200 square foot range<lb/>
Smith explained. "My units are<lb/>
built fa them<lb/>
THE SOLAR COLLECTOR may be<lb/>
has a heated area of 2,400 sq. ft.<lb/>
One unit is used strictly to<lb/>
heat water fa hone use while the<lb/>
other two are used to heat the<lb/>
home itself.<lb/>
"I think I'm saving about 50<lb/>
per cent on my electric bill said<lb/>
Smith. "But more could be saved<lb/>
depending on insulation and the<lb/>
general set-up<lb/>
In a recent analysis of two<lb/>
separately equipped apartments<lb/>
which Smith owns, electric bills<lb/>
a solution to the energy problem.<lb/>
"Solar heating fa the hone<lb/>
would be practical if the unit<lb/>
could be built by the home-<lb/>
owner noted Adla.<lb/>
"Industry would have a much<lb/>
harder time justifying the cost of<lb/>
solar heat Adler went on to say.<lb/>
As electric bills continue<lb/>
rising and as competition be-<lb/>
tween manufacturers become<lb/>
mae fierce, less time will be<lb/>
required to realize a return on an<lb/>
investment in a solar collector.<lb/>
18 January 1977<lb/>
Page9<lb/>
Marqu<lb/>
by DAVID R.BOSNICK<lb/>
Local cinema - the pits<lb/>
By DA VID R. BOSNICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This week there will be no witty oomments on how bad the movie<lb/>
selection is in Greenville, one reason being that the situation is simply<lb/>
not funny, and another that I canna think of any oomments sufficiently<lb/>
sarcastic to do the situation justice.<lb/>
Greenville is admittedly low on the lists that determine who will<lb/>
receive what film, and when. That is certainly part of the problem. A<lb/>
maja facta, however, is that the managers of the theatres involved<lb/>
don't give the audience aedit enough fa knowing good cinema. There<lb/>
is simply no rationale fa a film the likes of "The Cars that Eat<lb/>
People<lb/>
This reviewer does na know whether the films are viewed by the<lb/>
managers of the theatres befae they are presented. Many films are<lb/>
merely chosen off a list and when the name of a certain star appears in<lb/>
the synopsis, the film is adered on the basis of the "star" selling<lb/>
quality. This was almost certainly the case with the flick containing<lb/>
Marty Feldman. The faeign film, which wasaieof hisearly waks was<lb/>
actually extremely soft-cae '60's pan and one is sure this is not what<lb/>
the manager intended. This reviewer noted almost a full house the first<lb/>
night, simply on the basis of Mr. Feldman's name, and almost no<lb/>
crowds thaeafta.<lb/>
Rather than merely oondemn the theatres fa atrocious productions,<lb/>
this reviewa presents an alternative to these financial and cinematic<lb/>
disasters.<lb/>
All film oompanies have huge backlogs of films that are considered<lb/>
to be classics and are rrat often presented fa they are eitha, in black<lb/>
and white, not large scale production films, a explicate an unfamiliar<lb/>
theme. These are the films that are genaally shown in film classes as<lb/>
examples of style.<lb/>
These films could be rented in groups by the theatres at virtually<lb/>
the same, a less the oost of films the like of "Alex and the Gypsy<lb/>
The theatres oould hold "weeks" of certain types of films. On certain<lb/>
New England campuses the local theatres stage "Bogart night"<lb/>
 Dietrich night etc. and present these films. Many of the shows often<lb/>
show the Bogart film "Casablanca" in conjunction with the Woody<lb/>
Allen parody "Play it Again, Sam<lb/>
These univasities, as well as holding a particular night as a star<lb/>
night, often devote the week to a group of topical films; Heartbreak,<lb/>
Western, Silent, Tragedy, etc. There are even some very respectable<lb/>
Shakespearean classics done, containing the likes of Marioe Evans<lb/>
from British Films Cap. Many students, (one must oonfess) would<lb/>
garner a betta knowledge of these classics than if they were to attempt<lb/>
to wade through the aiginal vasioi.<lb/>
This reviewer believes that great films live faever. Though Algiers<lb/>
is gone and almost mystical, "Casablanca" is one of the great<lb/>
romances of all time. Any of the older Bagman films, which<lb/>
occasionally tend towards the risque are examples of great talent<lb/>
emaging. Preminda's epics, Houston's Westan's, Peckinpaw's<lb/>
violence films, all of these are worth presenting, and are betta than<lb/>
maely presenting a film whose maja advertisement is that it involves<lb/>
the greatest on-film collision of all time.<lb/>
Can Bruce Lee kick out the street light of Detroit? Is Burt Reynolds<lb/>
hairia than Sasquatch (which sounds like an exit on the Jasey<lb/>
Turnpike)? Does Bert Lancasta have mae teeth than Gata? The<lb/>
answers to these questions are what Greenville cinema offas as<lb/>
entertainment this week.<lb/>
Pollution cure can pollute<lb/>
FUEL COSTS for home-owners and business could be cut substantially if collectors are used.<lb/>
Photos by Jimmy Williams<lb/>
NEW YORK (LNS)Neigh-<lb/>
bahood residents living near the<lb/>
Califania Carbon Company in<lb/>
Los Angeles complained of being<lb/>
sickened by fumes from the plant.<lb/>
The city charged the company<lb/>
with violating air pollution stand-<lb/>
ards, and this October the Los<lb/>
Angeles firm agreed to a court<lb/>
injunction requiring it to close in<lb/>
six months. The oompany special-<lb/>
izes in making industrial filters to<lb/>
reduce air pollution from<lb/>
factaies.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0010"/><lb/>
??????????????<lb/>
H?<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 January 1977<lb/>
A new way to 'get high'<lb/>
UFM ensures lo w-cost t'lying<lb/>
By BOB THONEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Once the engine is started and<lb/>
warmed up. the pilot picks up the<lb/>
light frame and rests it on the<lb/>
small of his ba<lb/>
The air flowing over the wings<lb/>
lightens the load as he connects<lb/>
the swing seat<lb/>
After a few quick running<lb/>
steps, the airaaft is flying. Then<lb/>
man and machine climb to<lb/>
soaring altitudes from 100 to<lb/>
10.000 feet.<lb/>
The powered airaaft is a<lb/>
low-cost, owner-built, hang glider<lb/>
equipped with a McCulloch en-<lb/>
gine. It was developed by John K.<lb/>
Moody, owner of Ultralight Fly-<lb/>
ing Machines (UFM)<lb/>
It was designed by Moody to<lb/>
make immediate low-cost flying<lb/>
available to the general public.<lb/>
Moody admits that the deve-<lb/>
lopment of a power capacity for<lb/>
hang gliders imposes certain<lb/>
problems for the prospective<lb/>
pilot, however, he says it greatly<lb/>
improves the safety facta.<lb/>
Use of an air speed indicator,<lb/>
an altimeter and an exhaust<lb/>
temperature gauge for fine tuning<lb/>
the engine is recommendedi<lb/>
These instruments are readily<lb/>
available from us or can be<lb/>
purchased locally, said Moody.<lb/>
All other components are<lb/>
provided in a $1.325 kit available<lb/>
from UFM. P.O. Box 21867.<lb/>
Milwaukee. Wise 53221.<lb/>
Many partsor tnecomuitiauun<lb/>
kit are pre-assembled, but the<lb/>
owner must still complete over 51<lb/>
percent of the total building job<lb/>
for it to qualify as owner-built,<lb/>
said Moody.<lb/>
"It should take about 100 to<lb/>
125 hours to complete he said.<lb/>
Once an engine is put on an<lb/>
airaaft of any type, according to<lb/>
the Federal Aviation Agency<lb/>
(FAA), the airaaft then becomes<lb/>
a powered airplane and is subject<lb/>
to FAA regulations.<lb/>
Single-seat, owner-built, air-<lb/>
aaft are registered by the FAA in<lb/>
a special class as experimental<lb/>
airplanes.<lb/>
There are four basic steps to<lb/>
follow before a prospective pilot<lb/>
may legally fly an experimental<lb/>
airplane.<lb/>
First a U.S. Identification<lb/>
Number must be obtained.<lb/>
Then, the airaaft must be<lb/>
registered, which costs $5.<lb/>
Prior to covering the wings<lb/>
and rudders with fabric, a local<lb/>
FAA inspector must check the<lb/>
structure of the plane.<lb/>
Then, a final FAA inspection<lb/>
must be passed. When passed,<lb/>
the airaaft is issued an Airworth-<lb/>
iness Certificate.<lb/>
In addition, the pilot must<lb/>
pass an FAA approved medical<lb/>
examination and obtain a student<lb/>
pilot's license.<lb/>
Finally, an FAA licensed in-<lb/>
structor must be found to watch<lb/>
the pilot successfully fly. He then<lb/>
endorses the student's pilot li-<lb/>
cense and pilot log book for solo<lb/>
flight.<lb/>
The hours which the pilot<lb/>
spends flying his powered-hang<lb/>
glider as a student pilot can then<lb/>
be applied toward the hours of<lb/>
solo flight time required to obtain<lb/>
a private pilot's license.<lb/>
According to Moody, how-<lb/>
ever, a conventional two-seat<lb/>
airplane must also be used to<lb/>
obtain the flight proficiency re-<lb/>
quired to pass the FAA test.<lb/>
ECU LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
INVITES YOU TO HEAR<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S DISTRICT ATTORNEY<lb/>
JIM HOOVER<lb/>
SPEAK THURSDAY JAN. 20<lb/>
AT 7:00 IN RM. 221 MENDENHALL.<lb/>
ECU LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
ANYONE INTERESTED WELCOME.<lb/>
ALD(<lb/>
?MMM<lb/>
HaanunvBanMi<lb/>
-3W<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0011"/><lb/>
BSQnMnHMMBHHHnHBVnmVBMVHMHBHHMBninMMUQilH<lb/>
HHHHI<lb/>
18 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
f ro?i Shakespeare to Williams<lb/>
Acting Company to perform, teach here<lb/>
By RANDY STALLS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Acting Company will<lb/>
perform at ECU'S McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium January 25-29, 1977,<lb/>
according to East Carolina Play-<lb/>
house.<lb/>
Tickets go on sale January 17<lb/>
for the following performances:<lb/>
Shakespeare's Love Labour's<lb/>
Lost. January 25 and 26 at 8:15<lb/>
p.m. and January 26 at 2:15<lb/>
p.m Arnold Wesher's The<lb/>
Kitchen, January 27 at 8:15 p.m<lb/>
and Tennessee Williams' Camino<lb/>
Real, January 28 and 29 at 8:15<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The Acting Company is the<lb/>
only permanent professional com-<lb/>
pany touring classic and modern<lb/>
plays in repertory coast to coast<lb/>
It offers teaching demonstra-<lb/>
tions and workshops as part of its<lb/>
touring program.<lb/>
Students at ECU will have the<lb/>
chance to take "master classes"<lb/>
from the troupe dunng this year's<lb/>
residency in Greenville.<lb/>
Such areas as mime, stage<lb/>
combat, mask and voice will be<lb/>
covered, according to East<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse.<lb/>
John Houseman formed the<lb/>
oompany in 1972 from the first<lb/>
graduating class of the Juilliard<lb/>
School Drama Division.<lb/>
Houseman, known for his<lb/>
extensive work in American<lb/>
theatre, has been an active<lb/>
director and producer of plays for<lb/>
the past thirty years.<lb/>
Along with Orson Welles, he<lb/>
founded radio s Mercury Theatre.<lb/>
Most reoently he has been seen in<lb/>
films such as "Rollerball<lb/>
Three Days of the Condor and<lb/>
"The Paper Chase fa which he<lb/>
won an Academy Award.<lb/>
The Acting Company has won<lb/>
wide acclaim since its formation.<lb/>
The Company won an Obie Award<lb/>
in its first two seasons of<lb/>
performances on off-Broadway in<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
The Company has received<lb/>
three Tony nominations and six<lb/>
Drama Desk Award nominations.<lb/>
The Acting Company production<lb/>
of The Robber Bridegroom seen<lb/>
last year in Greenville, is current-<lb/>
ly enjoying a successful run on<lb/>
Union sponsors Symphony<lb/>
The highly acclaimed Detroit<lb/>
Symphony Orchestra will perform<lb/>
in concert on Tuesday, February<lb/>
8, 1977, at 8100 o.m. in Wriaht<lb/>
Detroit Symphony includes such<lb/>
legendary names as Richard<lb/>
Strauss. Georges Enesco,<lb/>
Rachmaninoff. Robert r.a3-<lb/>
A LDO CECCA TO will conduct the<lb/>
Auditorium. The Orchestra's ap-<lb/>
pearance is under the auspices of<lb/>
the ECU Student Union Artists<lb/>
Series Committee.<lb/>
The Detroit Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra was founded in 1914,<lb/>
and at present consists of 97<lb/>
members. The Orchestra enjoys a<lb/>
reputation of undisputed ex-<lb/>
cellence, as is evidenced by its<lb/>
many invitations to perform out-<lb/>
side of Detroit. In past years<lb/>
repeated performances have been<lb/>
given in such august places as<lb/>
Carnegie Hall, before the United<lb/>
Nation and at the John F.<lb/>
Kennedy Center fa the Perfam-<lb/>
ing Arts in Washingtai, D.C. The<lb/>
Orchestra is also the resident<lb/>
Symphony at the Meadow Brook<lb/>
Music Festival and at the<lb/>
Worcester Festival in<lb/>
Massachusetts.<lb/>
The roster of great perfamers<lb/>
who have appeared with the<lb/>
Detroit Symphony here<lb/>
desus, and Stravinsky. Con-<lb/>
tempaary artists such as Rubin-<lb/>
stein, Heifetz, and Stern have<lb/>
also perfamed with the Sym-<lb/>
phaiy.<lb/>
Former conductors of the<lb/>
Orchestra were Weston Gales,<lb/>
Ossip Gabrilowitsch, Victor<lb/>
Kolar, Franco Ghione, Karl<lb/>
Krueger. Paul Paray and Sixten<lb/>
Ehrling. Aldo Ceccato became<lb/>
principle conducta of the Detroit<lb/>
Symphony in September 1973 and<lb/>
was appointed Music Directa in<lb/>
May of 1974.<lb/>
Masestro Ceccato entered the<lb/>
conducting field early in his<lb/>
twenties, after a prominent career<lb/>
asa pianist in histeens. A concert<lb/>
in Milan at which he conducted<lb/>
the twelve Vivaldi Opus8 concerti<lb/>
quickly established him as one of<lb/>
the exciting new conducting<lb/>
talents on the European scene.<lb/>
Engagements with the leading<lb/>
achestras and opera houses of<lb/>
Italy followed, including San<lb/>
Carlo in Naples. Venice's La<lb/>
Fenice, LaScala, and the Maggio<lb/>
Musicale in Flaence. Soon he<lb/>
found himself conducting all over<lb/>
Europe. He made his United<lb/>
States debut in 1969.<lb/>
In addition to his work with<lb/>
the Detroit Symphony Orchestra,<lb/>
Ceccato serves as Music Directa<lb/>
of the Meadow Brook Music<lb/>
Festival. He also keeps up a very<lb/>
busy schedule of guest conduct-<lb/>
ing. He has repeatedly conducted<lb/>
every maja American achestra,<lb/>
including Boston, Chicago, Cleve-<lb/>
land, Philadelphia, and New<lb/>
Yak.<lb/>
Tickets fa the ccocert ar<lb/>
available fran the East Carolina<lb/>
University Central Ticket Office<lb/>
and are priced at $2.50 fa East<lb/>
Carolina University students and<lb/>
$6.00 fa the public. All tickets at<lb/>
the dcor will be $6.00.<lb/>
EAT FOR JUST<lb/>
VVCplu? tax MonThurs.<lb/>
Crabeakes, slaw, freneh fries plus<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
V pound hamburger steak, slaw,<lb/>
freneh fries and rolls.<lb/>
Fish, slaw freneh fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
CLIFFS<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat. 752-3172<lb/>
2 miles east on highway 264<lb/>
(out 10th St.)<lb/>
Broadway.<lb/>
The Acting Company is a<lb/>
noi-profit aganizatiai, and re-<lb/>
ceives financial suppat from the<lb/>
National Endowment fa the Arts,<lb/>
and the New Yak State Arts<lb/>
Council plus The Nath Carolina<lb/>
Department of Cultural Re-<lb/>
sources.<lb/>
The New York Times calls The<lb/>
Acting Company the finest re-<lb/>
pertay oompany in New Yak<lb/>
City. The Boston Clnbe terms the<lb/>
company superb. ' hey are the<lb/>
future accading fo The Los<lb/>
Anqeles Times.<lb/>
The Acting Comi ny is com-<lb/>
prised of 20 members from all<lb/>
over the United States. Many of<lb/>
the members are graduates of the<lb/>
Julliard School Drama Division.<lb/>
The average age in the<lb/>
Company is 25. The Artistic<lb/>
Directas are John Houseman and<lb/>
Gerald Freedman.<lb/>
Tickets may be adered by<lb/>
mail fran East Carolina P<lb/>
house (Acting Company). De-<lb/>
partment of Drama. East Carolina<lb/>
University. Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27334.<lb/>
Ticket prices for evening<lb/>
performances are $6.00 ECU<lb/>
Faculty and staff, general public;<lb/>
$3.00 ECU students; and $2.00<lb/>
Group Rate (20 a more).<lb/>
Ticket prices for matinee<lb/>
performances are $3.00 ECU<lb/>
Faculty and staff, general public;<lb/>
$2.00 students; and $1.50 Group<lb/>
Rate.<lb/>
Trio Tickets (one price fa all<lb/>
three shows) are $15.00 ECU<lb/>
Faculty and staff, general public<lb/>
and $7.50 ECU students.<lb/>
McGinnis Box Office opens<lb/>
January 17. 1977 with hours from<lb/>
10O0a.m. to400 p.m. weekdays<lb/>
and one hour befae perfam-<lb/>
ances.<lb/>
W's<lb/>
;X b- REG<lb/>
ROASTBEEF<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
AfT 1.29<lb/>
SUPER Jrrftf' 2.59<lb/>
<lb/>
h<lb/>
<lb/>
O PHONE752-6130 <lb/>
C PHONEINORDERSFOR S<lb/>
PICK UP OR CAMPUS DELIVERY<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Wed.&amp;Thur.<lb/>
FANTASIA<lb/>
FRI. EZRA<lb/>
SAT. BLUEGRASS (1 A.M1 P.M.)<lb/>
PLANKROADSTRING BAND<lb/>
BLUE GRASS EXPERIENCE<lb/>
VIOLET HILL SWAMP DONKEYS<lb/>
GREEN GRASSCLOGGERS<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12<lb/>
18 January 1977<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
The Figures Revised continue as the top-ranked team in the Men's<lb/>
basketball league and the Baptist Student Union still ranks as the top<lb/>
team in women's play as the end begins to near fa regular-season play<lb/>
in intramural basketball.<lb/>
Both men'sand women's play will be completed by the end of the<lb/>
month, at which time the playoffs will begin to determine the<lb/>
all-campus champions. In the men's division there will definitely be an<lb/>
all-campus champion different than last year since the Herb Superbs<lb/>
have been disqualified from the Independent league. It was found that<lb/>
they were using an illegal player.<lb/>
The Herb Superbs are the third team to be disqualified in the<lb/>
Independent league this year and as a result, the intramural<lb/>
department is beginning a belated investigation into all teams in all<lb/>
divisions.<lb/>
Another dispute arose last week when the Phi Sigma Pi Cougars<lb/>
upset the previously-unbeaten Phi Epsilon Kappa Dunkers. The<lb/>
Dunkers protested the loss, saying that the Cougars were using several<lb/>
players from their other team to play the Dunkers. The protest is still<lb/>
pending investigation.<lb/>
With all the flak over ineligibility and the like, play has still been<lb/>
pretty hairy in the men's league, as no less then 40 teams still have a<lb/>
shot at division titles andor playoff spots fa their receptive divisional<lb/>
play.<lb/>
The toughest division by far is the damitay division and the<lb/>
toughest division among that group is the Echo league. In the Echo<lb/>
league, three of this week's top ten teams are grouped. The top-ranked<lb/>
Figures Revised, the second-ranked Nutties Buddies and the<lb/>
sixth-ranked Jones Nuggets are all undefeated in that league with 4-0<lb/>
marks as the final two weeks of play draws near.<lb/>
Another tight division is the Independent league, where the<lb/>
Desperados and the Rockets lead their respective divisions, but they<lb/>
are challenged by no fewer than six teams that have lost only one<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The Dam Bravo league has five teams tied fa the top spot with 2-1<lb/>
recads and the Independent Purple team has six teams tied fa<lb/>
first-place with 3-1 recads.<lb/>
The Fraternity league title is still up fa grabs, following an upset<lb/>
on Sunday that saw the Kappa Sigmas hand the Kappa Alphas their<lb/>
first loss of the year, 41-36. The loss put Kappa Alpha Psi in sole<lb/>
position of first-place with a 4-0 mark, while Kappa Alpha, Sigma Nu<lb/>
and Pi Kappa Phi all stand tied fa second at 3-1. Impatant games still<lb/>
remain in that divisiai as the Kappa Alphas have yet to play the Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Psis a Pi Kappa Phi. The Sigma Nus and the Pi Kapps square<lb/>
off this week.<lb/>
Defense too much for<lb/>
ASU, Bucs win 66-54<lb/>
In women's play the BSU team continued to swamp its opposition,<lb/>
with the latest victay being a 32-12 rout over the previously unbeaten<lb/>
Stardusters. The BSUers have clinched at least a tie fa first in their<lb/>
league and a playoff berth but still have to play White Lightening (4-1)<lb/>
to win their league title outright.<lb/>
I n saaity divisiai play the Tri Sigmas moved out in front with a 7-0<lb/>
mark after handing Alpha Xi Delta its first loss of the year. The Alpha<lb/>
Phis and Alpha Omiaon Pi are still in coitentioi fa the secaid playoff<lb/>
spot, after the Alpha Phis handed the A O Pis their first loss of the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Nock's Nockers hold a hefty head in their league after knocking off<lb/>
both of its closest challengers, the Nibs and the Cottentails, in the<lb/>
same week.<lb/>
In the final women's league, the Goal league, the Jammers 10 hold<lb/>
first place with a 3-0 mark, while the Day Students, Hypertension and<lb/>
Keziah's Cagers are tied fa seoaid with 4-1 marks.<lb/>
Of the leading teams the Stardusters, BSU, Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
and the Day Students are idle this week as the rest of the teams catch<lb/>
up.<lb/>
This week's intramural rankings are interesting. Fa a change,<lb/>
Marty Martinez and myself are in agreement, especially amoig the top<lb/>
five through Friday's games. Martinez still insists that the damitay<lb/>
league is the best and has ranked six teams f ran that divisiai in his top<lb/>
ten. I am more inclined to spread the top ten out, even though i am<lb/>
beginning to see that some of the damitay teams are good after all.<lb/>
Note that Kappa Alpha is ranked third, but that was befae they<lb/>
were upset by the Kappa Sigmas.<lb/>
(See INTRAMURALS, page 13)<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The man who said "good<lb/>
defense will beat good offense all<lb/>
1 day long" oould have gained all<lb/>
the evidence he needed fa prcof<lb/>
Saturday night in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
East Carolina used a sticky<lb/>
man-to-man pressing defense to<lb/>
completely negate Appalachian<lb/>
State's offense in a 66-54 South-<lb/>
ern Conference battle.<lb/>
The win evened the Pirates'<lb/>
league slate at 2-2 and moved<lb/>
them over .500 overall at 7-6. The<lb/>
Mountaineers fell to 3-3 and 6-7<lb/>
in the loss befae 3,100 fans.<lb/>
"We played tremendous team<lb/>
defense out there tonight an<lb/>
elated Head Coach Dave Patton<lb/>
said following the game. "We<lb/>
waked hard in practice and got<lb/>
ready to play. Our defense has<lb/>
been saving us all year and we<lb/>
really got it together tonight<lb/>
The final margin of 12 points<lb/>
was not nearly indicative of the<lb/>
Pirate domination ECU's de-<lb/>
fense held the Mountaineers to<lb/>
just 12 field goals and 29 points<lb/>
through the first 34 minutes of the<lb/>
game and held a 56-29 lead at that<lb/>
point. Patton called off the press<lb/>
and substituted freely in the final<lb/>
minutes when the Apps outscaed<lb/>
the Pirates 25-10.<lb/>
The game was close fa the<lb/>
first eight minutes as the teams<lb/>
were tied at ten. The Pirates then<lb/>
held ASU scaelessfa the next<lb/>
nine minutes and allowed just<lb/>
four mae points in the half. The<lb/>
Mountaineers failed to put a field<lb/>
goal through the basket in those<lb/>
last 12 and one-half minutes.<lb/>
They scaed ai two free throws<lb/>
and a goal-tending call during<lb/>
that period.<lb/>
The Pirate defense was so<lb/>
tight the Apps were faced to<lb/>
move the ball around fa a minute<lb/>
to a minute and a half just to get<lb/>
an open shot from the outside.<lb/>
ECU led by just 11 at 34-23<lb/>
when freshman Kyle Powers was<lb/>
fouled by Tony Searcy. Powers hit<lb/>
the second of two shas. After the<lb/>
inbounds play Powers stole the<lb/>
ball f'om Searcy and laid it in with<lb/>
Searcy once again fouling.<lb/>
Powers made the free toss as the<lb/>
aowd went wild. After a missed<lb/>
ASU shot, Powers came down and<lb/>
hit a 20-footer fron the caner.<lb/>
This stretched the Pirate lead to<lb/>
17.<lb/>
The lead ballooned to its<lb/>
biggest point (27) in the next<lb/>
seven minutes largely because of<lb/>
Greg Canelius' eight points.<lb/>
AS<lb/>
Freshman Jim Ramsey again<lb/>
paced the Pirate scaing attack<lb/>
with 15, ten of which came in the<lb/>
first half. Hunt added 14 along<lb/>
with pulling a game-high 12<lb/>
missed shots. Canelius finished<lb/>
the game with 13 points and 11<lb/>
rebounds. Crosby and Powers<lb/>
ended up with eight points<lb/>
apiece, all of Powers' coming in<lb/>
the second half.<lb/>
JIM RAMSEY drives against ASU<lb/>
"I don't know of any one<lb/>
phase of the game we didn't<lb/>
control Patton added. "We<lb/>
really out-rebounded them. They<lb/>
just didn't get second shots<lb/>
Patton threw praise on<lb/>
Canelius, Powers, Larry Hunt<lb/>
and Louis Crosby.<lb/>
"Canelius played like a man<lb/>
possessed, while Kyle (Powers)<lb/>
stepped in and did a fine job.<lb/>
Larry (Hunt) hit the boards and<lb/>
Lou (Crosby) really played de-<lb/>
fense<lb/>
Powers said he had "gained a<lb/>
lot of confidence and I made up<lb/>
my mind to play well. The<lb/>
coaches have been getting us<lb/>
ready all week. We gave it<lb/>
everything we had defensively<lb/>
and it turned out<lb/>
Center Mel Hubbard was<lb/>
ASU's only double-digit scaer<lb/>
with 14 points, 12 coming in the<lb/>
last six minutes. Hubbard also<lb/>
pulled ten missed shots.<lb/>
East Carolina pulled 40 re-<lb/>
bounds to just 31 for the<lb/>
Mountaineers. The pressing de-<lb/>
fense faced 20 turnovers while<lb/>
the Pirates also stole the ball nine<lb/>
times.<lb/>
There will be no time to look<lb/>
back on this win fa the Pirates as<lb/>
they face their roughest road trip<lb/>
of the season this week. The Bucs<lb/>
will face William and Mary<lb/>
tonight in Williamsburg, Va. and<lb/>
will travel to Lexington, Va. to go<lb/>
up against VMI, now 12-1, on<lb/>
Saturday. Furman will host the<lb/>
Pirates next Monday.<lb/>
DEFENSE WAS THE key to ECUs victory over<lb/>
ASU. Here, Bill Omeen goes for a loose Dan aner<lb/>
forcing a turnover.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0013"/><lb/>
ip<lb/>
???????????"???i<lb/>
18 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
ECU swim team upsets Maryland<lb/>
Tankers whip Terrapins, 61-52<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's swim team<lb/>
traveled to College Park, Md.<lb/>
Saturday and upset the highly-<lb/>
regarded Maryland Terrapins fa<lb/>
the second oonsecutive year. The<lb/>
Last month in the Rjenn State<lb/>
Relays, the Terps ran away with<lb/>
the title as the Pirates finished a<lb/>
lowly eighth. But the ECU aew<lb/>
won ten of 11 swimming events to<lb/>
offset Maryland's strong diving<lb/>
team to win the meet. The final<lb/>
result was in doubt until the last<lb/>
TED Nl EM AN<lb/>
Pirates defeated the Terps 61-52<lb/>
after beating previously unbeaten<lb/>
Maine 62-51 Thursday in Minges<lb/>
Natataium.<lb/>
was<lb/>
event, 400 freestyle relay,<lb/>
completed.<lb/>
The Pirates won the decisive<lb/>
relay by .55 of a second as the<lb/>
IIMTRAMURALS<lb/>
(Continued from page 12)<lb/>
INTRAMURAL TOP TENS<lb/>
MartinezEvans<lb/>
1. 2.Figures Revised Nutties BuddiesFigures Revised Nutties Buddies<lb/>
3. 4 5.Kappa Alpha Kappa Alpha Psi RocketsKappa Alpha Kappa Alpha Psi Rockets<lb/>
6. 7.Jones Nuggets Patti'sB-BallsDesperados BSU Bullets<lb/>
8.BSU BulletsHeartbreak Kids<lb/>
9.Noah and his ArkBelk Assasins<lb/>
10BelkLoandCo.Jones Nuggets<lb/>
Intramural Bowling got underway last week and Howard Parker of<lb/>
the Who's Kidding Who turned in the top game of 222 and the top set<lb/>
of 601, while two other bowlers barely missed the 200 level. Bernard<lb/>
Lucas of the Stagglers bowled a 198 game and Jeff Seidenstein of the<lb/>
King's Pins rolled a 197 game.<lb/>
The highest team pinfall was recaded by the Sigma Nus, who<lb/>
recorded 1716 pins knocked down in a 4-0 sweep of the Lambda Chi<lb/>
Alpha Alley Cats.<lb/>
Three other teams recorded 4-0 sweeps in the first week of play.<lb/>
They were the Gduttes, the Lambda Chi Alpha "A" team and the<lb/>
Who's Kidding Who team.<lb/>
MikeEdmundson leads the Intramural Ice Ball scoring raoe with 12<lb/>
points after two weeks. Edmundson, who plays on the IMS team that<lb/>
owns a 3-0-1 record, was upstaged last week by teammate Sonny<lb/>
Gundlach. Gundlach scaed a season-high ten points in leading IMS to<lb/>
a 14-8 win over the Necromancers.<lb/>
Robert Guy of the Kappa Alpha Checkers led his team to a pair of<lb/>
wins with 11 points, including seven in the Checkers 16-5 win over the<lb/>
Tekes.<lb/>
Still unbeaten after two weeks of competitioi are the Sweepers<lb/>
(4-0), the Sizzlers (3-0), the Checkers (2-0), the Kappa Sigma Pucks<lb/>
(2-0) and IMS (3-0-1).<lb/>
ThiF week the Intramural Foul-Shooting championship will take<lb/>
place on Wednesday, January 19 in Memaial Gym beginning at 5 p.m.<lb/>
team of Mike Coomes, Ted<lb/>
Nieman, John Tuda and John<lb/>
McCauley swam to a 311.17. The<lb/>
Terps finished in 311.72.<lb/>
"This was a tremendous team<lb/>
victay a happy Coach Ray<lb/>
Scharf said. "We beat them last<lb/>
year at our place but they were<lb/>
heavily favaed this year. But<lb/>
everybody we took contributed to<lb/>
the victay<lb/>
The biggest caitributas were<lb/>
Nieman and McCauley, who were<lb/>
triple winners and Tuda, who<lb/>
picked up two wins. Doug Brind-<lb/>
ley, Mark Lovette, Stewart Mann<lb/>
and David Kirkman also register-<lb/>
ed wins.<lb/>
Nieman, in addition to his<lb/>
relay win, set two meet and pool<lb/>
recads. He won the 200 freestyle<lb/>
in 1:43.60 and the 500 freestyle in<lb/>
4:43.67. Just a freshman, Nieman<lb/>
has broken two varsity recads,<lb/>
coe freshman mark, and four pool<lb/>
standards thus far this season.<lb/>
McCauley among the nation's<lb/>
elite in sprint swimming won his<lb/>
specialities, the 50 freestyle<lb/>
( 21.65) and 100 freestyle (:47.54)<lb/>
in addition to the relay.<lb/>
Tudor, a sophomore from<lb/>
Greensbao, beat favaed Bob<lb/>
Hassett in the 200 individual<lb/>
SChonor<lb/>
goes to<lb/>
Crosby<lb/>
ByJONVERNER<lb/>
Special to the Fountainhead<lb/>
Fa possibly the first time in<lb/>
the history of the Southern<lb/>
Conference, the basketball player<lb/>
of the week has been chosen on<lb/>
the basis of his defensive play.<lb/>
Louis Crosby, a sophonae guard<lb/>
from Shelby, N.C is the reci-<lb/>
pient of the hona. This marks the<lb/>
first time this season an ECU<lb/>
player has been named as player<lb/>
of the week.<lb/>
Crosby does not scae much,<lb/>
averaging only 6.1 points per<lb/>
game, but his fate has been<lb/>
defense. During the last week<lb/>
when East Carolina won two of<lb/>
three games, including their first<lb/>
conference wins, Crosby's de-<lb/>
fense was outstanding. In each of<lb/>
the last three games, Crosby was<lb/>
given the assignment of guarding<lb/>
the oppositions' leading scaer.<lb/>
Against Richmond, who downed<lb/>
the Pirates 72-62, Crosby limited<lb/>
the Spiders' Kevin Eastman, a<lb/>
17.4 per game scaer, to four<lb/>
points.<lb/>
In a 51-49 conquest of David-<lb/>
son, Crosby drew the task of<lb/>
guarding John Gerdy, who was<lb/>
the Wildcats' leading scaer, and<lb/>
the second leading scaer in the<lb/>
Southern Conference, at 21.5, to<lb/>
10 points and a four of 17 shooting<lb/>
perfamanoe. In Saturday's66-54<lb/>
win over Appalachian, Crosby<lb/>
took the job of guarding Walter<lb/>
Anderson, who was averaging<lb/>
13.8, points per game. Anderson<lb/>
scaed eight points, was faced<lb/>
into six turnovers, and was<lb/>
limited to one assist.<lb/>
See CROSBY, page 14)<lb/>
medley with a 1 59.09 and swam<lb/>
on the relay win.<lb/>
Brindley took the 1000 free-<lb/>
style in 1010.02 while Lovette<lb/>
won the 200 butterfly with a<lb/>
2:00.19 clocking. Mann won the<lb/>
200 backstroke in exactly two<lb/>
minutes while David Kirkman,<lb/>
senior captain, won the 200<lb/>
breaststroke with a time of<lb/>
217.00.<lb/>
In the Maine meet, the Pirates<lb/>
won ten of the 13 events.<lb/>
M cCauley won two events and ten<lb/>
other ECU swimmers picked up<lb/>
victaies.<lb/>
McCauley teamed with David<lb/>
Moodie, David Kirkman and<lb/>
Ronnie Schnell to win the 400<lb/>
medley relay in 3:02.3. McCauley<lb/>
also won the 50 freestyle in<lb/>
21.62.<lb/>
Thomas Palmgren won the 100<lb/>
freestyle in 1028.62, while Nie-<lb/>
man took the 200 freestyle in a<lb/>
pool and varsity reoad of 1:42.40.<lb/>
Nieman's time is sixth best in the<lb/>
nation this year.<lb/>
Tuda wai the 200 IM with a<lb/>
varsity reoad of 1 58.06 to put<lb/>
him back among the nation's<lb/>
elite. Lovette took the 200 butter-<lb/>
fly with a 2.01.37 clocking while<lb/>
Billy Thane took the 100 free-<lb/>
style in :48.02.<lb/>
Brindley won the 500 freestyle<lb/>
in 4:47.66 while freshman Eero<lb/>
Elovaara won the 200 breast-<lb/>
stroke in 220.08 to close out the<lb/>
Pirate wins.<lb/>
The Pirates host Richmond<lb/>
Saturday fa a breather befae<lb/>
traveling to Carolina next Mon-<lb/>
day and State next Wednesday.<lb/>
Sportsworld<lb/>
A Family Recreation Facility<lb/>
Featuring the New, Modern<lb/>
Roller Skating<lb/>
Tuesdays-Lady's Night 6:30-11:00<lb/>
All ladies admitted for $1.00<lb/>
(includes skate rental)<lb/>
Wednesdays- ECU Night 6:30-11:00<lb/>
Free skate rental with<lb/>
presentation of I.D. card<lb/>
For more information call 756-6000<lb/>
mm<lb/>
E.C.U. NIGHT IS BACK<lb/>
AND BIGGERTHAN EVER.<lb/>
NOT ONE DAY BUTTWO!<lb/>
Every Tuesday and Wednesday<lb/>
All Day At Bonanza<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK DINNER $1.49<lb/>
(Includes your choice of potato a vegetable, Texas Toast<lb/>
and salad from our ail-you-can-eat salad bar)<lb/>
I<lb/>
520 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville,N.C. 27834<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0014"/><lb/>
?MHMBHHHIBMHIHHH<lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 January 1977<lb/>
CROSBY<lb/>
(Continued from page 13)<lb/>
These statistics are impres-<lb/>
sive by themselves, but some<lb/>
LOUIS CROSBY<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
SHARPE'S<lb/>
FORMAL WEAR<lb/>
for<lb/>
Fraternity &amp;<lb/>
Sorority<lb/>
Occasions<lb/>
additional comparisons should be<lb/>
made. When combining the aver-<lb/>
ages of those three men, they<lb/>
would score 52.7 points in the<lb/>
three contests. With Louis Crosby<lb/>
sticking closer to them than their<lb/>
own shadow, the players scored a<lb/>
total of 22 points, or 30.7 points<lb/>
below normal.<lb/>
The spectacular defense has<lb/>
not gone unnoticed by East<lb/>
Carolina head coach Dave Patton.<lb/>
 Louis Crosby has played just<lb/>
absolutely outstanding defense in<lb/>
our last three games said<lb/>
Patton. "Whether he scored a<lb/>
point or not, doesn't matter, Any<lb/>
time a player holds his man, who<lb/>
happens to be the other team's<lb/>
leading scorer, to less than half<lb/>
his average, he has done a super<lb/>
job. He is the main reason we won<lb/>
those two Conference games last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Ttiere is no doubt that<lb/>
Louis Crosby was the finest<lb/>
player in the Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence last week.<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
Sherwin- William<lb/>
113 Grande Ave<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
TONITE IS JOKE NITE<lb/>
AT<lb/>
CHAPTERX<lb/>
BRINGYOUR<lb/>
FUNNIEST JOKE,<lb/>
YOUR FRIENDS AND YOU<lb/>
MAYWIN!<lb/>
WED. IS LADIES NITE<lb/>
THURS GOLDFISH<lb/>
SWALLOWING CONTEST<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
??<lb/>
NQSMT AMTT<lb/>
5<lb/>
Our "Early Eaters Special"<lb/>
At $1.63 is an excellent buy.<lb/>
Practically a full meal served the first<lb/>
45 minutesat lunch and<lb/>
dinner every day. Tryus.<lb/>
Serving hours: 11-2 lunch<lb/>
4:45-800 dinner<lb/>
Cafeteria Style<lb/>
Talking Sports<lb/>
with KURT HICKMAN<lb/>
Observations of recent Atlantic Coast Conference basketball games<lb/>
indicate that the off iciating is going to be less stringent this season in<lb/>
the ACC.<lb/>
In the past, ACC officials have blown the whistle against the<lb/>
slightest infractions.<lb/>
Teams from such conferences as the Big Ten, Pacific Eight, and<lb/>
Southeastern, have done much better than ACC teams in post season<lb/>
play. These are conferences where officials let teams go at each other<lb/>
and play basketball the way it should be played  aggressively.<lb/>
In post season play, the officials for the most part have let teams<lb/>
play aggressive basketball, something ACC representatives have not<lb/>
handled well.<lb/>
Perhaps the new trend will toughen the ACC and better prepare its<lb/>
teams fa the competition it must face in the post season.<lb/>
HOCK E Y NEEDS EXPOSURE<lb/>
It s a shame the networks are not televising National Hockey<lb/>
League games in this region of the oountry. In areas where the public is<lb/>
exposed to hockey, the enthusiasm for the sport has steadily increased.<lb/>
Hockey can be a violent game but it also takes a tremendous<lb/>
amount of physical and mental ability. It is an easy sport to appreciate<lb/>
as can be seen by attendance figures in NHL cities and A.C. Nielsen's<lb/>
ratings of sports telecasts.<lb/>
In such sports markets as New Yak. Washington. Philadelphia,<lb/>
and Boston, the hockey teams have better attendance figures than<lb/>
these cities' National Basketball Association teams.<lb/>
According to Nielsen's annual "Look at Sports fa 1976, NHL<lb/>
telecasts delivered mae men per thousand viewing households than<lb/>
such regular weekly spats series as College Basketball (NBC), NBA<lb/>
Basketball (CBS). Wide Wald of Spats (ABC). Golf (ABCCBS<lb/>
NBC). Tennis (NBC). Superstars (ABC) and Bowling (ABC).<lb/>
This spat needs mae exposure. It is highly appreciated by most<lb/>
who have seen it.<lb/>
Second Guessing<lb/>
with BILL KEYES<lb/>
A Pirate athlete wathy of mention today is<lb/>
Herb Gray. The 6-7 freshman faward has impressed coaches, players,<lb/>
fans and writers with his outstanding play in the first few games of this<lb/>
basketball season.<lb/>
Against Western Carolina, the Pirates were faced to fight back<lb/>
from ten point half-time defecit fa their 70-62 victay. As their biggest<lb/>
problem had been their inability to control the boards in the first half,<lb/>
Herb Gray proved to be one of the biggest factas in the turn-around as<lb/>
he teamed with Larry Hunt and Greg Cornelius to help ECU<lb/>
outrebound the Cats 36-12 in the second half.<lb/>
Gray's contribution on the boards was outstanding when one<lb/>
considers that he picked up ten big second half rebounds while playing<lb/>
against bigger opponents. The Cats' Geage Dodkin outweighed Gray<lb/>
by 25 pounds while big Alex Bell outweighed the wiry Pirate faward<lb/>
by 40 big pounds.<lb/>
Gray s big muscle in basket from between two Cat players to tie the<lb/>
game at 60-60 with 2:48 remaining was a big play fa the Pirates. But<lb/>
he has also excited the fans with big plays in other games. Again st<lb/>
VMI, Gray took an offensive rebound in mid-air and jammed it through<lb/>
the hoop. Spectatas were awed.<lb/>
Against the nationally ranked Maryland Terrapins, the Seat<lb/>
Pleasant, Maryland, native led the scaingmpressed theaowdat Cole<lb/>
Field House with two slam dunks while being guarded by<lb/>
hiahlv-reoarded Steve Shephard.<lb/>
HERB GRA Y<lb/>
Despite his outstanding play on the courts, the soft-spoken<lb/>
freshman is quick to give aedit to his teammates and consider others'<lb/>
feelings. Herb Gray is a perfect example of the on-the-court and<lb/>
off-the-court unselfishness which characterizes this season's ECU<lb/>
basketball team and distinguishes them from last year's unsuccessful<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Thinclads<lb/>
perform<lb/>
admirably<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Part of East Carolina's track<lb/>
team was invited to the presti-<lb/>
gious CYO National Invitational<lb/>
Indoor Meet last Friday and<lb/>
perfamed admirably.<lb/>
The mile relay team of Calvin<lb/>
Alston, James McCullough, Otis<lb/>
Melvin and Charley Moss ran to a<lb/>
school record 321.5 while finish-<lb/>
ing second in the college mile<lb/>
relay race.<lb/>
Marvin Rankins ran to a<lb/>
fourth place finish in the 60 yard<lb/>
high hurdles with a 7.3 clocking<lb/>
on the electronic timer, but the<lb/>
sophomae from Windsa has<lb/>
nothing to be ashamed of.<lb/>
Olympians Larry Ship and Willie<lb/>
Davenport and former NCAA<lb/>
finalist James Walker were the<lb/>
only runners to beat Rankins.<lb/>
Larry Austin and Carter Suggs<lb/>
were entered in the 60 yard dash<lb/>
but failed to make the finals.<lb/>
The entire track team will<lb/>
compete against Nath Carolina<lb/>
and South Carolina Saturday in<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
run first<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
meet<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU'S women's track learn<lb/>
ran in their first indoa meet ever<lb/>
Saturday when they competed<lb/>
against Nath Carolina and N.C.<lb/>
State in Chapel Hill. The meet<lb/>
was non-scoring on the team<lb/>
basis.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates took third<lb/>
and 'ourth in the long jump with<lb/>
Minnie McPhatter (15'3 34")<lb/>
and Danna Willifad (15'3 112"),<lb/>
resoectively. McPhatter also ook<lb/>
second in the 440 with a 1 0X).9<lb/>
docking while Cassy Joics<lb/>
1 32.4) placed 'ourth.<lb/>
Willifad copped third in the<lb/>
60 yard low hurdles while the<lb/>
busy McPhatter was fourth in the<lb/>
60 yard dash.<lb/>
Kathy Smith (237) took se-<lb/>
cond in the 880 while Kathy<lb/>
Addison and Linda Christian<lb/>
placed third and fourth, re-<lb/>
spectively, in the mile.<lb/>
"I was real pleased with the<lb/>
girls overall Coach Laurie<lb/>
Arrants said following the meet.<lb/>
"We've been practicing only a<lb/>
month and it's been too cold to<lb/>
run outside fa times. All we've<lb/>
had is conditioning work. This<lb/>
was our first indoa meet ever<lb/>
The Lady Pirates track team<lb/>
will travel with the team to the<lb/>
N.C. State Invitational on Feb. 12<lb/>
and to the Delaware Invitational<lb/>
Feb. 19 befae embarking ait heir<lb/>
outdoa season.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0015"/><lb/>
18 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
JIM RAMSEY shoots over Appalachian State<lb/>
LARRY HUNT attempts to block a VMI Toundballer"<lb/>
i 5 <lb/>
TY EDWARDS goes up for two against ASU<lb/>
I Photos<lb/>
by<lb/>
Fountainhead Photography Staff<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED? Call<lb/>
Alice-758-0497 or 757-6366. Only<lb/>
.50 a page: (exceptions-single<lb/>
spaced pages &amp; outlines) Plenty<lb/>
of experience?I need the money!<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1964 Triumph Spit-<lb/>
fire. Will accept best offer - call<lb/>
758-7415 after 200 p.m.<lb/>
MUST SELL: Sunn studio lead<lb/>
amp hardly used. $175.00. Call<lb/>
Maria 752-9022 for more inform-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Gibson Les Paul<lb/>
guitar with case and an Ampeg<lb/>
Amplifier VT-40 worth over<lb/>
$1,300. All interested people call<lb/>
756-3874.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Furniture &amp; Appli-<lb/>
ances, comfortable chair $9.00,<lb/>
drop-leaf table, hidden drawer<lb/>
$22.00, toaster oven like new<lb/>
$15.00, red 9 X 12 Herculon rug<lb/>
$25.00, Sears 3-speed bike<lb/>
$35.00, 752-4511-5 to 9 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New water distiller.<lb/>
$55. 758-8216.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Mustang II 2&amp;2<lb/>
3 Dr. Air Cond Power steering,<lb/>
Disc brakes 4 speed Manual<lb/>
trans. 4 new tires. Priced right<lb/>
$2,350.00. Call 752-5821 after 4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
If you have something to buy<lb/>
or sell oome to the Red Oak Show<lb/>
and Sell; We sell on consignment<lb/>
anything of value, excluding<lb/>
clothing. Open Mon. - Sat.<lb/>
11.00-600 Sun. 2-6, closed Thurs.<lb/>
Located 3 miles west of<lb/>
Greenville at the intersection of<lb/>
264 and Farmville Highway in the<lb/>
lold Red Oak church building.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Standard Gibson<lb/>
Electric Guitar Grcver Heads,<lb/>
Excellent Condition. 758-7935.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4" X 5" Graphic<lb/>
View II with Schneider Senar 150<lb/>
mm. Dagor 358 15 holders. 4<lb/>
developing tanks and 6 negative<lb/>
holders. $275. Call John 758-<lb/>
1592.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sanyo 8-track car<lb/>
tape player, almost new $75.<lb/>
758-8216.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Craig Cassette Car<lb/>
Deck in dash. Motobecane<lb/>
Mirage 10-speed, weinmanr<lb/>
brakes, santour derrailures. Cal<lb/>
752-0352 after 4.00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 3 piece Spanish style<lb/>
living room suit - swivel rocker,<lb/>
chair, couch, black vinyl, 1 yr.<lb/>
old. Good oondition. Paid $5.00 -<lb/>
want $2.00. CaJI 756-7881 nights<lb/>
and 758-3436 ext. 495 days. Ask<lb/>
for Charlotte.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Great buy 1974<lb/>
Yamaha. DT 125A only 1600<lb/>
miles. Two helmets include, 80<lb/>
miles per gallon. Make me an<lb/>
offer. Call 756-7275 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1 &amp; 2 bedroom<lb/>
apartments. Newly renovated &amp;<lb/>
new appliances. Call 752-4154.<lb/>
tVANTED: Male or Female to<lb/>
share 3 bedroom apartment at<lb/>
Eastbrook; must be Academically<lb/>
Inclined! Call 758-0219.<lb/>
WANTED: One or two female<lb/>
roomates fa Village Green Apt.<lb/>
$50 peT month plus utilities. Call<lb/>
758-0595 after 3.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Apartment available<lb/>
June 1,1977. 2 bedrooms, bath &amp;<lb/>
a half, kitchen &amp; den. See Ron in<lb/>
Apt. 202 Georgetown Apts.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
to share apt. Rent and util.<lb/>
$55mo. Call 752-0081.<lb/>
NEEDED: Roommate for Spring<lb/>
Quarter. Big house. Call Decky or<lb/>
Larry after 6O0 p.m. 752-2859.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private rooms and 2<lb/>
baths for male student. Available<lb/>
on March 1. 758-2585.<lb/>
LOST: 1 pair of dark brown Frye<lb/>
boots.Lost in Drama dept. dress-<lb/>
ing room. Reward offered for<lb/>
information leading to their<lb/>
hereabouts. Call 758-7422. No<lb/>
questions asked.<lb/>
LOST: Class ring, blue stone,<lb/>
inside initial A S. Reward offered.<lb/>
If found see Alvin Simmons in 118<lb/>
Jones.<lb/>
LOST: Rust-oolored lady's wallet<lb/>
on Jan. 5 between Greene and the<lb/>
Croatan. Reward offered. Call<lb/>
752-9383 or return to 402 Greene.<lb/>
LOST: Gold wristwatch with<lb/>
brown face. Call 752-9351. $40<lb/>
reward.<lb/>
LOST: Class Ri ng, S. N. S. H. Class<lb/>
of 75. Lost in Library Dec. 15th.<lb/>
Inside initials R.H. if found<lb/>
please oontact Rick Horner in<lb/>
Aycock 115, phone 752-0465<lb/>
Reward.<lb/>
HELP! I lost a brown deer skin<lb/>
purse in Jenkins Art Bldg. If you<lb/>
have any information on it please<lb/>
call 752-6140 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOUND: A scarf near Clement.<lb/>
758-821R<lb/>
FOUND: A white hat near biology<lb/>
building. 758-8216<lb/>
FOUND: A white and blue hat.<lb/>
758-8216.<lb/>
FOUND: someone who listens<lb/>
and helps. You don't have to be in<lb/>
a aisis to call a oome by the<lb/>
REAL aisis oenter. Counseling<lb/>
and referrals are what they offer.<lb/>
They're free, too. CaJI 758-HELP.<lb/>
personal<lb/>
ICE SKATING: lessons 1215-<lb/>
115 Saturdays by Jill Schwimley<lb/>
at Twin Rinks, 220 E. 14th St.<lb/>
752-8449. ($2.00 hour-includes<lb/>
skates) Any age-beginning, inter-<lb/>
mediate, advanced. Strictly figure<lb/>
skating.<lb/>
WANTED: Someone to sub-lease<lb/>
a duplex at 212 S. Pitt St. fa<lb/>
Spring Quarter. Large enough fa<lb/>
2. $100 a maith. Call 758-7467.<lb/>
BAR MAIDS NEEDED. Anyone<lb/>
looking fa a job as bar maid<lb/>
apply at Louie's Lounge, 200 W.<lb/>
10th St. a call 752-1493.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Parttime office<lb/>
wak. Must be a veteran, a<lb/>
fulltime ECU student, and must<lb/>
be commuting from Washingtai,<lb/>
N.C a nearby. Contact Roi<lb/>
Brown, VA Representative, 206<lb/>
Whichard, in person. No calls.<lb/>
YOGA LESSONS: exercises to<lb/>
calm the mind and slim the body -<lb/>
way of life. Classes faming now.<lb/>
Call Sunshine, 752-5214 after 900<lb/>
p.m. on Mond. and Wed after<lb/>
5:30 all rther nights.<lb/>
LEARN TO BELLY DANCE! Let<lb/>
this year's resolution be a better<lb/>
figure! Call Sunshine, 752-5214<lb/>
after 9 00 p.m. on Mon. and Wed.<lb/>
after 500 p.m. all other nites.<lb/>
"PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle.<lb/>
752-4272.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 January 1977<lb/>
Mark Beverage quit<lb/>
loading trucks and<lb/>
went to school.<lb/>
;<lb/>
Now he's building<lb/>
lasers in a<lb/>
research lab.<lb/>
Mark Beverage didn't like the<lb/>
work he did, so he learned to do the<lb/>
work he liked. You can do the same.<lb/>
There are over one million technical<lb/>
opportunities available in this country<lb/>
right now.<lb/>
Send today for your free record<lb/>
and booklet, "You Can Be More Than<lb/>
You Are" by Tony Orlando and Dawn.<lb/>
You'll hear some great music<lb/>
and find out how you<lb/>
can start a bright,<lb/>
new career by going<lb/>
to technical school.<lb/>
Write<lb/>
Careers<lb/>
P.O. Box 111<lb/>
Washington, !).( 2004 I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057104_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>