<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057105_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for 51 years. With a<lb/>
circulation of 8,500, this<lb/>
issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
voi ko Nn ?ftfi East Carolina University Greenville, North Carolina 20 January 1977<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
No more concerts, p. 3<lb/>
Cheerleaders help, p. 5<lb/>
77 Football schedule, p. 12<lb/>
Vol. 52No.Ua<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
20 January 1977<lb/>
-bur- yM-t<lb/>
R ElAEMB?R CM5 i<lb/>
IF YOU: VOTt-<lb/>
I. are from an in-State<lb/>
location,<lb/>
2.are not a Freshman<lb/>
or recent Transfer-<lb/>
Student AND<lb/>
3.have property titled<lb/>
in your name, THEN<lb/>
YOU MUST US1 YOUR<lb/>
PROPERTY FOR TAXES<lb/>
IN JANUARY AT THE<lb/>
PITT COUNTY TAX OFFICE<lb/>
FOR QUESTIONS CALL<lb/>
TJHE Tax Supervisor's Off.<lb/>
'i AT: 752-4711<lb/>
AN ECU STUDENT added his own feelings to a taxation notice.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD file photo.<lb/>
M ichaels: Students could<lb/>
be guilty of tax evasion<lb/>
By SAM NEWELL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU students who fail to list<lb/>
their personal property for tax<lb/>
purposes by Jan. 31, may be<lb/>
subject to criminal penalties,<lb/>
according to Phillip Michaels, Pitt<lb/>
County Tax Supervisor.<lb/>
Failure to list personal property<lb/>
for tax purposes is a misdemean-<lb/>
or and carries a maximum $500<lb/>
fine andor a six month penalty<lb/>
under North Carolina General<lb/>
Statues, Michaels said.<lb/>
Michaels said the "personal<lb/>
property" required in this tax<lb/>
listing would indicate such things<lb/>
as cars and tangible household<lb/>
items.<lb/>
"If you can touch it, it can be<lb/>
taxed<lb/>
Michaels said his office was<lb/>
"mostly concerned about big<lb/>
items of value" and that his office<lb/>
usually computes tax value for<lb/>
household items on the basis of<lb/>
rent paid or home value.<lb/>
"When a person files we ask<lb/>
for the amount of rent paid and<lb/>
ask if 110 per cent of annual<lb/>
rental would accurately establish<lb/>
the value of his household<lb/>
belongings he said.<lb/>
"If the lease holder disagrees<lb/>
then we ask fa his opinion of the<lb/>
items' worth. This suggestion is<lb/>
reviewed by an appraiser. If the<lb/>
appraiser disagrees, then a spot<lb/>
appraisal will be conducted pro-<lb/>
bably during February<lb/>
Michaels said insurance<lb/>
coverage does not necessarily<lb/>
determine the estimated value of<lb/>
a person's possessions.<lb/>
Michaels said he was afraid<lb/>
many students were unaware of<lb/>
their responsibility to list for tax<lb/>
purposes.<lb/>
"When we first started en-<lb/>
forcing the policy of taxing<lb/>
students in January 197$ we<lb/>
discovered about 800 violations.<lb/>
Approximately the same number<lb/>
should have filed this year but no<lb/>
more than 25 per cent have done<lb/>
so.<lb/>
"We don't want to scare<lb/>
students but we want to inform<lb/>
them of their liability.<lb/>
"Our offioe hasn't issued any<lb/>
warrants yet but I'm not saying<lb/>
we wouldn't. We prefer to attach<lb/>
a late filing charge of ten per cent<lb/>
of the tax on the items not<lb/>
listed<lb/>
Michaels said the formula for<lb/>
determining property taxes in Pitt<lb/>
County last year was .0092<lb/>
multiplied by the total value of<lb/>
listed items.<lb/>
This means that 92 cents of<lb/>
revenue is generated fa each<lb/>
taxable $100 wath of personal<lb/>
property.<lb/>
He said that those students<lb/>
living in Greenville would pay a<lb/>
city tax computed last year at<lb/>
.0064 in addition to the county<lb/>
tax.<lb/>
He said the bills would be sent<lb/>
to residents in August. The rate<lb/>
fa this year will be determined<lb/>
when the county and city budgets<lb/>
are established this July.<lb/>
Severe weather causes power problems<lb/>
ByBOBTHONEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An electrical service shutoff to<lb/>
ECU is not expected, but other<lb/>
emergency measures will con-<lb/>
tinue in effect until power gener-<lb/>
ating problems are solved, said<lb/>
Charles Hane, Greenville Utili-<lb/>
ties Commissiai (GUC) Director,<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
According to Home, the<lb/>
emergency measures were<lb/>
caused by the shutdown of fiVe<lb/>
Virginia Electric Power Co.<lb/>
(VEPCO) generating plants and<lb/>
by an expected power demand<lb/>
increase, both due to extremely<lb/>
cold weather.<lb/>
Three other VEPCO plants<lb/>
had already been shut down fa<lb/>
maintenance when the cold<lb/>
weather struck.<lb/>
Hane was unable to confirm<lb/>
that ice blocking the water intake<lb/>
of the ceding system at one<lb/>
nuclear plant and that frozen ooal<lb/>
at four other plants were the<lb/>
specific causes of the VEPCO<lb/>
plant shutdowns as repated by<lb/>
the Raleigh News and Observer<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
"All I know is what I read in<lb/>
the papers said Hane. "I<lb/>
simply have na been able to<lb/>
reach the people who would<lb/>
know<lb/>
All three phases of the GUC<lb/>
emergency electric powa distri-<lb/>
bution plan were implemented<lb/>
Monday, and phases one and two<lb/>
are still in effect, said Hane.<lb/>
Phase oie reduces voltage to<lb/>
all customers by five per cent.<lb/>
Phase two calls fa voluntary<lb/>
reductions in the use of electricity<lb/>
by all customers.<lb/>
Phase three, for severe<lb/>
emergencies, drops various cir-<lb/>
cuits from the system fa thirty<lb/>
minute intervals to reduce load by<lb/>
an additional five per cent.<lb/>
"Right now we are in the<lb/>
same position we were yesterday<lb/>
afternoon said Hane.<lb/>
"We have power down five<lb/>
per cent and we earnestly request<lb/>
all customers to continue to<lb/>
restrict their use of electrical<lb/>
power<lb/>
Namally odd weather would<lb/>
inaease power demand, but the<lb/>
power demand charts are show-<lb/>
ing an effective reduction, said<lb/>
Hane.<lb/>
 I think it is very encouraging<lb/>
that people are cooperating to this<lb/>
extent said Hane. "If con-<lb/>
tinued, this demand reduction<lb/>
should match the decrease in<lb/>
supply from VEPCO, and circuit<lb/>
shutdown will not have to be<lb/>
repeated<lb/>
Even if demand should in-<lb/>
aease and it becomes necessary<lb/>
to reimplement phase three, ECU<lb/>
will probably na be affected,<lb/>
Hane said.<lb/>
Sullivan refuses to answer<lb/>
Pub Board by-laws question<lb/>
ByNEILSESSOMS<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
SGA President Tim Sullivan<lb/>
Wednesday refused to comment<lb/>
when asked if the Publications<lb/>
Board should now be operating<lb/>
under the by-laws as they existed<lb/>
before he vetoed proposed<lb/>
amendments last spring.<lb/>
Shatly after his action in May<lb/>
told FOUNTAINHEAD that if the<lb/>
legislature did not override his<lb/>
veto of the proposed by-laws, the<lb/>
SGA PRESIDENT Tim Sullivan<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD file photo.<lb/>
aiginal by-laws would remain in<lb/>
effect, (see FOUNTAINHEAD,<lb/>
May 13, 1976).<lb/>
Ricky Price, speaker of the<lb/>
SGA Legislature, said, however,<lb/>
that after the legislature failed to<lb/>
override Sullivan's veto of the<lb/>
amendments the Publications<lb/>
board would be defunct.<lb/>
Members of the board would<lb/>
have namally been chosen by the<lb/>
legislature in the spring, but the<lb/>
legislature recessed at the end of<lb/>
the school year befae having<lb/>
time to select the board's seven<lb/>
members.<lb/>
The legislature this academic<lb/>
year has taken no action on filling<lb/>
the board. To the contrary, the<lb/>
legislature approved a bill in early<lb/>
January, the intention being to<lb/>
write by-laws creating a new<lb/>
Publications Board.<lb/>
COLD WEA THER IN Greenville caused ECU students to bundle up.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057105_0002"/><lb/>
Co-op Name Dance<lb/>
.<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
20 January 1977<lb/>
Art Exhibit<lb/>
ILLUMINA, the Student<lb/>
Union Art Exhibition committee,<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 hangings and<lb/>
ceramics of Eddie Smith, pottery<lb/>
and preciously assembled boxes<lb/>
of Jim Whalen, weavings and a<lb/>
couple 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/>
BUC Editor<lb/>
Anyone wanting to apply fa<lb/>
the editorial position of the<lb/>
197778 BUC come 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/>
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's a great change<lb/>
of pace.<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/>
Coffee House<lb/>
On Friday night, January 21,<lb/>
the Harvest Coffeehouse will host<lb/>
a singing group from Roberson-<lb/>
ville. The group, under the<lb/>
direction of Bob Rausch, is<lb/>
oomposed of 24 people and they<lb/>
will be perfaming music fran<lb/>
"The Traveling Road" and<lb/>
"Celebrate Life The program<lb/>
begins at 8.15 p.m. and will be<lb/>
conducted in two parts with a<lb/>
brief intermission fa refresh-<lb/>
ments. The program will be held<lb/>
at the Methodist Student Center<lb/>
at 501 East 5th Street and is open<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
iM<lb/>
Crisis Center<lb/>
The REAL Crisis Center has a<lb/>
program to counsel victims of<lb/>
rape, and to educate students and<lb/>
the community about rape. If you<lb/>
need a friendly, confidential hand<lb/>
or some information, contact<lb/>
REAL 758-HELP.<lb/>
Fool's Gold<lb/>
NO, F.G. stands fa Faever<lb/>
Generation. Fun and fellowship,<lb/>
aloig with an enlightening Bible<lb/>
discussion can be yours at FG this<lb/>
Friday night at 7:30 in Room 244<lb/>
Mendenhall. Join us, we're coun-<lb/>
ting on you to be there!<lb/>
RhoEpsilon<lb/>
Rho Epsilon Real Estate Fra-<lb/>
ternity will meet on Tuesday,<lb/>
January 25, at Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center. Plans fa the Winter<lb/>
Quarter Initiation Banquet will be<lb/>
discussed. Everyone's attend-<lb/>
ance is requested.<lb/>
Crafts Show<lb/>
It was announced today by<lb/>
Eastern Carolina Shows that two<lb/>
arts and crafts shows are sche-<lb/>
duled in Greenville fa 1977. The<lb/>
first show will be held in Pitt<lb/>
Plaza shopping oenta 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 enter<lb/>
either show. Those artists and<lb/>
craftsmen who are interested in<lb/>
exhibiting at this show should<lb/>
contact Eastern 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/>
BUC Photos<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/>
Would you like to win a $5 gift<lb/>
certificate to Daryl's? The Coop-<lb/>
erative Education Office needs an<lb/>
aiginal, eye-catching title fa<lb/>
their newsletter.Turn in your idea<lb/>
fa a co-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/>
Gamma Phi<lb/>
A dance with a cause Dance-<lb/>
a-thon. Fa Eastern Lung Asso-<lb/>
ciation-this Saturday. You really<lb/>
should be dancing all night long!<lb/>
Modal U.N.<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi, service to<lb/>
education hona 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 w -<lb/>
answer any questions members BCdCll<lb/>
may have about this year's<lb/>
Tutaial program.<lb/>
The Model United Nations<lb/>
Club will hold a mandatory<lb/>
meeting tonight in Brewster<lb/>
C-101 at 7:30. If you are unable to<lb/>
attend, please call either David<lb/>
Mayo, 758-7578 a Steve Medlin,<lb/>
758-1153.<lb/>
The Hollands College Confer-<lb/>
ence and planning future events<lb/>
fa both this and next year will be<lb/>
covered. A special election will<lb/>
also be held fa vacant posts in<lb/>
the secretariat.<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/>
Maria Ingram<lb/>
Maria Ingram, poet and<lb/>
autha, will lecture and read<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 20 at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
room 103-Biology Auditaium.<lb/>
On Friday, Jan. 21, at 10 a.m.<lb/>
in room 201 Austin, Ms. Ingram<lb/>
will hold a wakshop and discus-<lb/>
sion session.<lb/>
No admission. Public invited.<lb/>
Why go to the beach in<lb/>
January? And why should psy-<lb/>
chology retreat? The answer to<lb/>
these and other stimulating ques-<lb/>
tions such as: win psychology<lb/>
ever oome back? Will be answer-<lb/>
ed on the psychology retreat<lb/>
application fam which is availa-<lb/>
ble in the Psi Chi Library a the<lb/>
Psychology office in the Speight<lb/>
building. Make application now<lb/>
and find out what psychology<lb/>
does when it retreats, (I n case you<lb/>
have to some day)! A shat Psi<lb/>
Chi meeting will proceed the<lb/>
retreat activities at Atlantic<lb/>
Beach, N.C. on Saturday, Jan. 29.<lb/>
Car Wash<lb/>
GiC.G.<lb/>
Campus Crusade fa 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 fa<lb/>
sane fun, fellowship &amp; practical<lb/>
teaching. Everyone's weloome!<lb/>
Craft Classes<lb/>
Register now for a crafts<lb/>
wakshop to be offered by the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Center. Sign up fa Beginning<lb/>
Jewelry, Batik, Beginning Dark-<lb/>
room, Weaving on the Loom,<lb/>
Basic Pot Throwing, a Frame<lb/>
Loom Weaving. Fa details call a<lb/>
visit the Crafts Center during the<lb/>
hours of 2 p.m. until 10 p.m<lb/>
Monday-Friday. Registration<lb/>
deadline fa all wakshops is<lb/>
Friday, Jan. 28.<lb/>
Fa oily $1, you can have the<lb/>
luxury of having someone else<lb/>
wash your car, in freezing cold<lb/>
weather, Saturday, Jan. 22, at<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shell. Sponsaed by<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega little sisters.<lb/>
If you can't dance, come<lb/>
watch. Spedata admission 50<lb/>
cents. Come on out and cheer<lb/>
your dancing friends on. Or<lb/>
better yet, spoisa them.<lb/>
MRC Dance<lb/>
BEOG forms<lb/>
Basic Educational Oppatun-<lb/>
ity Grant applications fa the<lb/>
1977-78 academic year are now<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 Repat 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 fa the<lb/>
Basic Educational Opportunity<lb/>
Grant before other types of<lb/>
financial assistance can be<lb/>
awarded.<lb/>
WECU<lb/>
On Friday night, from 7-9<lb/>
p.m WECU will be giving away<lb/>
a $5 Stuffy's Sub Certificate.<lb/>
Stay tuned to Big 57 fa more<lb/>
details.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
Black Christian Fellowship<lb/>
meets every Wednesday night at<lb/>
8:30 p.m. in Brewster 203B.<lb/>
Come join us fa a good time of<lb/>
singing, sharing, and Bible study.<lb/>
Home Ec<lb/>
Housing and Management<lb/>
Departmental meeting-Thursday,<lb/>
Jan. 20, at 7 p.m. in Van<lb/>
Landingham Social Room, Home<lb/>
Ec Building. The agenda is job<lb/>
oppatunitiesand desirable skills.<lb/>
Guest speakers will be H &amp; M<lb/>
alumni members; Betty Priddy<lb/>
McKaugh; Brody's Display Man-<lb/>
ager; Jan Richardson Ferree,<lb/>
Gazebo Owner; and Sandra Scho-<lb/>
field, Freeland Interia Deoaa-<lb/>
ta.<lb/>
Angel Flight<lb/>
ECU Angel Flight will hold its<lb/>
spring rush on Jan. 25 and 26.<lb/>
Everyone interested in finding<lb/>
out about Angel Flight please<lb/>
oome to Wright Annex 201 at 6<lb/>
p.m. on the 25 and 26. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served.<lb/>
The MRC is having a dance<lb/>
February 10, at the American<lb/>
Legion building. The group fea- Mlbfaff<lb/>
tured will be "The Embers liflHWI<lb/>
Tickets will be $3 per couple.<lb/>
Proceeds go to the stadium drive.<lb/>
So gals, find you a date from the<lb/>
hill and oome along. Fa mae<lb/>
infamatiai, oontact any dam<lb/>
house council member a dam<lb/>
counsela. Tickets are at first<lb/>
come first serve basis.<lb/>
Need a job?<lb/>
All persons interested in a<lb/>
high-paying position with WECU,<lb/>
oontact the station at 757-6656.<lb/>
This involves sales with a 20<lb/>
commission rate.<lb/>
The naked truth about the<lb/>
psychology retreat is that every<lb/>
one who goes, oomes back with a<lb/>
smile. Applications are available<lb/>
in the Psi Chi Library as well as in<lb/>
the Psychology office in the<lb/>
Speight Building. Make sure you<lb/>
attend and find out why those<lb/>
psychology students are smiling<lb/>
so much! The bus departs ECU at<lb/>
8 a.m. on Saturday, Jan. 29, and<lb/>
returns Sunday, Jan. 30. The<lb/>
total ocet is $11 which includes<lb/>
transportation, lodging, and food.<lb/>
Perhaps that's why they are<lb/>
smiling, but you may never know<lb/>
unless you go<lb/>
t<lb/>
E<lb/>
r<lb/>
r.<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
r<lb/>
c<lb/>
A<lb/>
n<lb/>
c<lb/>
<pb facs="00057105_0003"/><lb/>
20 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Mengescloses to concerts<lb/>
By LOUIS TAYLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In an attempt to prevent<lb/>
further damage to the floor in<lb/>
MingesColiseum, Chancellor Leo<lb/>
Jenkins and Vice-Chancel lor fa<lb/>
Business Affairs C.G. Moore<lb/>
have asked that concerts of the<lb/>
type that lead to the damages be<lb/>
scheduled out of doors.<lb/>
The decision was revealed in a<lb/>
letter, dated Dec. 14, from Moore<lb/>
to Rudolph Alexander, associate<lb/>
dean of Student Affairs and<lb/>
director of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
"Since the complaint centered<lb/>
around rock oonoerts, my action<lb/>
will be not to schedule any more<lb/>
rock concerts in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
until I receive further notice<lb/>
Alexander said.<lb/>
The new policy is centered<lb/>
around a oomplaint from Edgar<lb/>
Hoods, director of activities in<lb/>
Minges, that the floor had<lb/>
sustained heavy damage from<lb/>
cigarette burns during a Decem-<lb/>
ber conoert which featured Leon<lb/>
and Mary Russell, according to<lb/>
Moore.<lb/>
Alexander said he does not<lb/>
think that a strict policy could be<lb/>
set up because of the changing<lb/>
nature of music trends.<lb/>
"Who knows? There may not<lb/>
be rock concerts in five years<lb/>
Alexander said.<lb/>
"Those of us in the enter'ain-<lb/>
ment field are in oonstant com-<lb/>
munication through newsletters,<lb/>
conventions, and the like said<lb/>
Alexander. 'And until such com-<lb/>
municationr.from colleagues indi-<lb/>
cate that damages from rock<lb/>
concerts are a thing of the past,<lb/>
we'll have to stay away from<lb/>
them<lb/>
There is no place out of doors<lb/>
that is isolated enough whereby<lb/>
admissions can be controlled,<lb/>
according to Alexander.<lb/>
There have been oonoerts in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium before, and<lb/>
people cut the fence, and came<lb/>
over, around, and through rt, said<lb/>
Alexander.<lb/>
Alexander said the problem is<lb/>
a relatively new one and that he<lb/>
oould not recall any burn dam-<lb/>
ages before the last few years.<lb/>
"The concerts in question<lb/>
were not crowded said Alexan-<lb/>
der. "I would assume that<lb/>
damages may be greater for<lb/>
shows with bigger crowds<lb/>
When the situation first arose<lb/>
there were conferences with<lb/>
student leaders, and appealed<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD articles for<lb/>
people not to smoke during<lb/>
oonoerts, Alexander said.<lb/>
Students were warned that if<lb/>
the problem persisted, Minges<lb/>
might become unavailable, said<lb/>
Alexander.<lb/>
Student monitors were forth-<lb/>
coming these meetings, accord-<lb/>
ing to Alexander.<lb/>
The monitors worked for one<lb/>
or two shows, but after that the<lb/>
problem arose again, Alexander<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The University spent nearly<lb/>
$10,000 to refinish the floor in the<lb/>
fall, according to Moore.<lb/>
There is a limit to the number<lb/>
of times a floor can be refinished<lb/>
before it must be replaced, said<lb/>
Moore.<lb/>
Alexander said that he had not<lb/>
been able to find any protective<lb/>
covering that was feasible, but he<lb/>
said he is willing to try again.<lb/>
Storage is a problem fa any<lb/>
oovering that is not flexible, said<lb/>
Alexander.<lb/>
The problem did not come<lb/>
solely from students, but it would<lb/>
be unfair to oompletely blame<lb/>
outsiders, according to Alexan-<lb/>
der.<lb/>
Alexander said that he would<lb/>
be willing to oonfer with interes-<lb/>
ted parties on the present situa-<lb/>
tion, but he stressed that the<lb/>
initiative now lies on the stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
"If students are interested in<lb/>
the problem and have ideas as to<lb/>
how it can be resolved, they are<lb/>
mae than weloome to oome and<lb/>
talk with me about it Alexander<lb/>
said.<lb/>
MA YBE THIS IS part of the reason that the floor at Minges is<lb/>
scratched.<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa.<lb/>
Student expelled for two years<lb/>
By LOUIS TA YLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A 23-year-old male ECU stu-<lb/>
dent was found guilty of assault<lb/>
and battery against another ECU<lb/>
student and expelled from school<lb/>
fa two years at the weekly<lb/>
session of the Hona Council<lb/>
Tuesday night.<lb/>
The charges stemmed from a<lb/>
November incident in which the<lb/>
defendant and the assault victim,<lb/>
riding in separate cars, ex-<lb/>
changed wads at a Greenville<lb/>
inter section.<lb/>
Following the exchange, a<lb/>
chase ensued during which the<lb/>
defendant leaned out of the car in<lb/>
which he was riding and broke the<lb/>
outside mirra ai the car in which<lb/>
the victim was riding.<lb/>
When the two cars stopped at<lb/>
a nearby intersection, there was a<lb/>
oonfraitatioi, and the defendant<lb/>
hit the victim in the face with a<lb/>
stick used to break the mirra,<lb/>
according to oarobaated staies<lb/>
at the hearing.<lb/>
The defendant was found<lb/>
guilty of a misdemeana assault<lb/>
in Pitt County Superia Court and<lb/>
was adered to pay damages<lb/>
covering the medical bills of the<lb/>
victim.<lb/>
Public Defender Sandy Peele<lb/>
contended that the victim had<lb/>
threatened the defendant first by<lb/>
pushing him at the intersection.<lb/>
The victim said that he did not<lb/>
push the defendant and that he<lb/>
had actually turned to get back in<lb/>
his car when defendant struck<lb/>
him.<lb/>
Attaney General Karen Har-<lb/>
loe cited two incidents in which<lb/>
the defendant has been befae the<lb/>
Haia Council befae, onoe fa<lb/>
selling a stolen book and onoe fa<lb/>
tempaary larceny of a golf cart.<lb/>
He had been found guilty on both<lb/>
occasions.<lb/>
Accading to the victim, the<lb/>
medical bills had been only<lb/>
partially paid and the mirra ai<lb/>
the car had na been paid fa.<lb/>
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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/>
r<lb/>
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ECU STUDENTSGET 50CUTON PRICES!<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057105_0004"/><lb/>
?y:?:yy&amp;<lb/>
Ell I ? i<lb/>
ditonals<lb/>
20 January 1977<lb/>
Price handicaps law<lb/>
An unlawful deception has been perpetrated on<lb/>
this year's SGA Legislature concerning the existenoe<lb/>
of a Publications Board. Whether out of ignorance for<lb/>
parlimentary procedure or as a premeditated<lb/>
strategy, this legislative misdirection can be blamed<lb/>
on the Speaker of the Legislature, Ricky Price.<lb/>
Until last spring there had been a Publications<lb/>
Board on this campus for several years. In April,<lb/>
1976, the legislature initiated an effort to revise the<lb/>
bylaws under which the board operated. The<lb/>
proposed revisions came in the form of an<lb/>
amendment which was approved by three successive<lb/>
sessions of the legislature. Calling the revised bylaws<lb/>
unresponsive to the needs of the publications,<lb/>
newly-elected SGA President Tim Sullivan vetoed the<lb/>
amendment.<lb/>
By normal legal procedure the Publications Board<lb/>
would have remained in operation under the<lb/>
unamended bylaws after the veto. But, with the<lb/>
terms of the members of last year's board expired<lb/>
and the legislature not having time to override the<lb/>
veto or to screen seven new members,the board went<lb/>
inactive.<lb/>
One of the first orders of business for the<lb/>
newly-elected legislature in the fall should have been<lb/>
to select new members fa the board. Under Price's<lb/>
direction, however, the legislature was never<lb/>
informed of their legal obligations concerning pub<lb/>
board.<lb/>
But Price never had a great respect for the board<lb/>
anyway. He called it a rubber stamp for the<lb/>
publications, believing that campus media should<lb/>
come directly to legislature with their technical<lb/>
budget needs.<lb/>
Price failed to realize that the task of scrutinizing<lb/>
budget proposals and staff setuDs for the publica-<lb/>
tions was too cumbersome a process, too time-<lb/>
consuming for a volunteer legislature with no overall<lb/>
experience in university publications. The campus<lb/>
has experienced firsthand the result of this<lb/>
oversight-the Buccaneer has been eliminated and its<lb/>
poorly conceived substitute must get several hundred<lb/>
subscriptions before publication can begin. And<lb/>
Winter Quarter is half gone!<lb/>
Had Price fulfilled his responsibility to the<lb/>
legislature and a pub board been available in the falj,<lb/>
this mess could probably have been avoided.<lb/>
I<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 Editor Anne Hogge<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, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions:$10.00 annually for non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
ill<lb/>
rorum<lb/>
SGA screenings catted unfair<lb/>
 ???V. ????? ??? . ?  <lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I am writing to vent my<lb/>
feelings at the travesty of the job<lb/>
that our Speaker of the SGA<lb/>
Legislature is doing at the present<lb/>
time. To those of you who have<lb/>
not had the pleasure of meeting<lb/>
this public servant his name is<lb/>
Ricky Price. I have had some<lb/>
dealings with Mr Price the past<lb/>
several years. The last dealing I<lb/>
had with him was this past<lb/>
Monday. The SGA had run a<lb/>
Flash in FountainheadJust before<lb/>
Christmas break announcing<lb/>
some day student legislator posi-<lb/>
tions open. I applied Tuesday<lb/>
Jan. 4. The positions were still<lb/>
open at that time. I waited for the<lb/>
SGA to contact me for the date<lb/>
that screenings would be held.<lb/>
The first week went by with no<lb/>
oontact from the SGA and the<lb/>
second was nearly finished when I<lb/>
decided to find out when screen-<lb/>
ings would be held. On my way to<lb/>
SGA offioes I met a friend, Rob<lb/>
Benton, who had also applied for<lb/>
the openings and received no<lb/>
oontact from the SGA. I reached<lb/>
the SGA office and spoke with<lb/>
Greg Pingston, SGA V.P who<lb/>
looked at an SGA calendar which<lb/>
had Jan. 17, screenings, 4:40. I<lb/>
spoke with Mr. Pingston because<lb/>
he was the only one there. Since<lb/>
my friend and I had received no<lb/>
contact announcing screenings I<lb/>
Voter eligibility survey begun<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
To find out whether Pitt<lb/>
County has allowed all eligible<lb/>
students to register to vote here,<lb/>
SGA wants to get in oontact with<lb/>
all students who fall under the<lb/>
following guidlines:<lb/>
1. Being a resident of North<lb/>
Carolina, but not of Greenville or<lb/>
Pitt County<lb/>
2. Living off-campus<lb/>
3. Being a Junior or Senior or<lb/>
Graduate Student, or someone<lb/>
who has attended East Carolina<lb/>
University for over two years<lb/>
4. Being taxed by Pitt County<lb/>
or Greenville for property (cars,<lb/>
etc.)<lb/>
Student Government feels<lb/>
that if students are taxed by Pitt<lb/>
County, they should receive the<lb/>
benefits of being a resident,<lb/>
including the right to vote. We<lb/>
want to be sure that is being<lb/>
done; if not, how to get it done.<lb/>
Other students and I will be<lb/>
available to talk with students<lb/>
who meet the four requirements<lb/>
above. We will be at 228<lb/>
Mendenhall Monday and Tues-<lb/>
day nights between 7.00 and 9 00.<lb/>
If you cannot oome by, please call<lb/>
757-6611 during those hours.<lb/>
Tim Sullivan<lb/>
Student Body President<lb/>
took for granted that they would<lb/>
be held Monday Jan. 17.<lb/>
I returned Monday at 450. I<lb/>
asked Mr. Price where the<lb/>
screenings were being held and<lb/>
he said the screenings were held<lb/>
last week and the positions filled.<lb/>
He explained that when he<lb/>
decided to hold screenings that it<lb/>
was too late to contact me by mail<lb/>
since I have no phone. Mr. Price<lb/>
did say he had a notioe on the<lb/>
SGA bulletin board on the 2nd<lb/>
Floor of Mendenhall stating when<lb/>
screenings were to be held. I left<lb/>
SGA offioes without commenting<lb/>
further since it would do no good.<lb/>
It does seem very funny that Rob<lb/>
Benton and myself were not<lb/>
contacted for these screenings.<lb/>
Rob and I were both fighting for<lb/>
the Buccaneer this past fall when<lb/>
Mr. Price was on the other side,<lb/>
Funny isn't it? I did not know that<lb/>
it was a prerequisite to have a<lb/>
phone to be screened for SGA<lb/>
Legislature. I guess this disquali-<lb/>
fies all students who don't have<lb/>
phones. Since Mr. Prioe is the<lb/>
head of the legislative branch of<lb/>
SGA, I feel it would do no good to<lb/>
have an investigation by the<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
Ihe executive branch can do<lb/>
nothing in this matter so ! call<lb/>
upon Attorney General Karen<lb/>
Harloe and the Honor Council to<lb/>
make a full and oomplete investi-<lb/>
gation.<lb/>
Soott R. Bright<lb/>
<pb facs="00057105_0005"/><lb/>
H I I<lb/>
s8??gp5j<lb/>
1<lb/>
20 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Cheerleaders help fund drive<lb/>
By HELENA WOODARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Three ECU cheerleaders,<lb/>
Dawn Williamson, Leigh Davis,<lb/>
and Freida Brown, recently dis-<lb/>
cussed their active involvement in<lb/>
the Ficklen Stadium Fund Drive.<lb/>
According to Mark Tipton,<lb/>
chairman of the Realtors Restau-<lb/>
rant and Motel division of the<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium Drive, the girls<lb/>
were largely responsible for col-<lb/>
lecting $16,000 fa the Drive on<lb/>
their first day out<lb/>
"Wecalled on businessmen in<lb/>
the Greenville community and<lb/>
explained to them what the<lb/>
stadium expansion would do for<lb/>
Greenville said Dawn William-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
"The people we contacted<lb/>
were really cordial and agreeable<lb/>
and wanted to give donations<lb/>
she added. "There is strong<lb/>
community support<lb/>
The cheerleaders, who began<lb/>
working with the drive around<lb/>
Thanksgiving, said that they<lb/>
often average several hours each<lb/>
week, many of them between<lb/>
classes working with the Drive.<lb/>
The cheerleaders were origin-<lb/>
ally asked by Mark Tipton to work<lb/>
with his division of the Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium Drive.<lb/>
The girls, who expressed<lb/>
much enthusiasm fa waking<lb/>
with the Drive said they would<lb/>
continue until the Committee's<lb/>
financial goal is reached.<lb/>
Thegirlscarry bulletins which<lb/>
offer a 5-year plan fa business-<lb/>
men to make donations.<lb/>
Two coeds<lb/>
get $200<lb/>
By JULIE EVERETTE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Women's Residence<lb/>
Council (WRC) will award the<lb/>
annual $200 Ruth A. White and<lb/>
Carolyn Fulgham scholarships<lb/>
this year to two ECU coeds,<lb/>
accading to Nancy Smith, assist-<lb/>
ant Dean of Student Affairs.<lb/>
The Ruth A. White scholar-<lb/>
ship fa in-state students and the<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum scholarship fa<lb/>
out-of-st ate students will be a-<lb/>
warded to a sophomae, junia, a<lb/>
senia female campus resident<lb/>
with a minimum of 2.5 quality<lb/>
point average and a dear judicial<lb/>
recad.<lb/>
The student must also show<lb/>
financial need and be involved in<lb/>
school activities. She must live on<lb/>
campus and have paid her social<lb/>
fee.<lb/>
The scholarship should be<lb/>
applied to educational expenses<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
Any interested and eligible<lb/>
student may obtain an application<lb/>
at her residence hall administra-<lb/>
tor's office a counsela's office.<lb/>
The application should be<lb/>
typed and completed and return-<lb/>
ed to the office of the adrninistra-<lb/>
ta a counsela by Jan. 31.<lb/>
The applications will be fa-<lb/>
warded to the Scholarship Com-<lb/>
mittee who will make the se-<lb/>
lection. Any applicant may be<lb/>
called fa an interview.<lb/>
The scholarships will be a-<lb/>
warded at a WRC meeting in<lb/>
roan 221 Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, Feb. 15 at 500.<lb/>
Much of the information cent-<lb/>
ers around the impact of the<lb/>
University's econonic suppat to<lb/>
Greenville community.<lb/>
Dawn Williamson, a senia<lb/>
Physical Education major, is<lb/>
captain of the ECU cheering<lb/>
squad. She is from Hampton,<lb/>
Virginia. Leigh Davis, a junia, is<lb/>
an Early Childhood Education<lb/>
maja fran Jamestown, N.C. and<lb/>
Freida Brown is a sophomae<lb/>
majaing in Child Development<lb/>
from Beaulaville. N.C.<lb/>
THREE ECU CHEERLEADERS<lb/>
Photo by Russ Pogue).<lb/>
Campus parking<lb/>
needs more money<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
No plans are currently under-<lb/>
way for providing additional<lb/>
campus parking due to a lack of<lb/>
funds, accading to Joseph H.<lb/>
Calder, Directa of Security and<lb/>
Traffic at ECU.<lb/>
"The main problem is that we<lb/>
just don't have the money said<lb/>
Calder.<lb/>
"The state will na supply<lb/>
money fa parking space<lb/>
Accading to Calder, campus<lb/>
parking is a self-suppating pro-<lb/>
ject.<lb/>
"I'm thinking about asking<lb/>
the Board of Trustees to inaease<lb/>
the $5 vehicle registration fee to<lb/>
$25 said Calder.<lb/>
"There are spaces on campus<lb/>
where parking can be improved<lb/>
said Calder.<lb/>
"On the hill, even without the<lb/>
freshmen parking on campus,<lb/>
we' re shat about 75 to 95 spaces.<lb/>
We let the overflow park in the<lb/>
day-student parking lot at the<lb/>
bottom of the hill<lb/>
"I oount the cars in the<lb/>
day-student parking lot, and<lb/>
there are usually betweer 75 and<lb/>
95 cars.<lb/>
"From9a.m. until 2p.m the<lb/>
day-student parking lot is full<lb/>
said Calder<lb/>
Calder also said the dirt<lb/>
parking lots behind Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center and Joyner<lb/>
Library are fa university re-<lb/>
gistered vehicles.<lb/>
"There is plenty of parking<lb/>
space fa the high-rise dam<lb/>
students due to the dirt parking<lb/>
lots said Calder.<lb/>
"There are several houses by<lb/>
the high-rise dorms that the<lb/>
university doesn't own, but the<lb/>
owners are willing to sell. How-<lb/>
over, we don't have the money.<lb/>
Money to buy property fa the<lb/>
university comes from the state,<lb/>
but the state didn't appropriate<lb/>
money fa property acquisition<lb/>
this year said Calder.<lb/>
According to Calder, the<lb/>
university had the money in past<lb/>
years, but the owners weren't<lb/>
willing to sell.<lb/>
"If the state appropriates the<lb/>
money, we can inaease parking<lb/>
by buying mae property said<lb/>
Calder.<lb/>
"Next summer, the area in<lb/>
front of the drama building will<lb/>
become a parking lot. About 100<lb/>
spaces will be available said<lb/>
Calder.<lb/>
"Also, the area between<lb/>
Garrett and the art building will<lb/>
be paved said Calder.<lb/>
Accading to Calder, a nark-<lb/>
ing lot the size of the hill loU ns<lb/>
between $80,000 and $100,00c<lb/>
"The only solution I can see is<lb/>
to inaease registration fees<lb/>
said Calder.<lb/>
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Free refills on coffee or tea.<lb/>
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Phone 756-2186<lb/>
?t?S<lb/>
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REMEMBER<lb/>
Our Famous Monday Night<lb/>
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Every Monday from 5-7 P.M<lb/>
you can enjoy a small pizza<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057105_0006"/><lb/>
y:i. ?  ? . - . - -<lb/>
Page 6 FOUMTAINHEAD 20 January 1977<lb/>
Essential nutrients missing<lb/>
Vegetarian diets can prove dangerous<lb/>
ByBOBTHONEN Nations recently reported on the acids are present in the wrong polished rice and black beans, for casseroles and souj<lb/>
By BOBTHONEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In the search for alternative<lb/>
lifestyles, many young people are<lb/>
making possibly dangerous<lb/>
changes in their diets.<lb/>
Completely vegetarian diets<lb/>
pose particularly serious prob-<lb/>
lems in providing essential nutri-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The Food and Agriculture<lb/>
Organization (FAO) of the United<lb/>
Nations recently reported on the<lb/>
protein quality of combinations of<lb/>
beans with certain other foods.<lb/>
These findings, based on<lb/>
animal tests, point out the<lb/>
difficulty of approaching the<lb/>
protein quality of meat, milk or<lb/>
eggs through combinations of<lb/>
incomplete proteins.<lb/>
Beans, vegetables, grains,<lb/>
nuts and fruits usually contain<lb/>
incomplete protein, in which one<lb/>
or more of the essential amino<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 ONLY<lb/>
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with coupon<lb/>
VALID ONLY ON<lb/>
SALAD BAR<lb/>
With D.nner! STEAKS PHOUSE MON.&amp;THUR<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
CAPTAIN JACK'S<lb/>
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 ONLY k A AA<lb/>
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500 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
acids are present in the wrong<lb/>
proportions.<lb/>
It is possible to improve the<lb/>
quality of incomplete-protein<lb/>
foods by eating two or more of<lb/>
them together, according to the<lb/>
FAO study.<lb/>
What is lacking in one can be<lb/>
partially made up for in another.<lb/>
If beans are eaten in the right<lb/>
proportion with whole-wheat<lb/>
bread, rice or corn the protein<lb/>
content will be of higher quality<lb/>
than beans alone.<lb/>
Incomplete protein combina-<lb/>
tions can net higher-quality pro-<lb/>
tein, but according to the FAO<lb/>
study, seldom provides protein as<lb/>
oomplete as that found in meat,<lb/>
milk or eggs.<lb/>
A popular combination of<lb/>
polished rice and black beans, for<lb/>
example, would require about<lb/>
one-quarter cup of cooked beans<lb/>
combined with four cups of<lb/>
cooked rice to equal the protein in<lb/>
a four-ounce hamburger.<lb/>
However, the protein quality<lb/>
of inoomplete-protein foods can<lb/>
be dramatically increased if small<lb/>
amounts of complete-protein<lb/>
foods are eaten at the same time.<lb/>
According to the FAO study if<lb/>
meat, poultry, fish, eggs, cheese<lb/>
or milk are added to beans, for<lb/>
instance, the protein quality of<lb/>
the entire meal can be increased<lb/>
by about 50 percent.<lb/>
Thus good nutrition, inoom-<lb/>
plete-protein foods should be<lb/>
combined with small amounts of<lb/>
oomplete-protein foods in stews,<lb/>
casseroles and soups or in side<lb/>
dishes.<lb/>
Aocording to the FAO study,<lb/>
this lower-quality protein is not<lb/>
sufficient for growth.<lb/>
Protein is composed of 22<lb/>
amino acids, most of which can be<lb/>
synthesized by the body.<lb/>
Eight of these amino acids,<lb/>
called essential aminoadds, must<lb/>
come from food in the diet.<lb/>
For growth, the body needs<lb/>
food th. supplies all the essential<lb/>
amino c. ids in the proper propor-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Foods that do this are said to<lb/>
contain oomplete, or high-quality,<lb/>
protein.<lb/>
Meat, fish, poultry, eggs and<lb/>
milk all oontain oomplete protein.<lb/>
Drinking, accidents related<lb/>
By BILL HARRINGTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An unfortunate by-product of<lb/>
the increased traffic during a<lb/>
holiday, is the parallel increase in<lb/>
accidents and their resulting<lb/>
fatalities.<lb/>
Drivers who are tired, in a<lb/>
hurry, or recent guests at<lb/>
holiday parties, are often cited by<lb/>
police as the cause for many of<lb/>
these accidents.<lb/>
On December 29, an ECU<lb/>
student, Susan Underhill, and six<lb/>
other young people were killed in<lb/>
a two-car oollision near Shotwell,<lb/>
in Wake County.<lb/>
The Underhill car was travel-<lb/>
ing at 35 mph when it was struck<lb/>
12 Hours of Continuous Blue Grass &amp; Old Time Fiddle Music<lb/>
4th ANNUAL ONE to ONE at the<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
 Plank Road String Band<lb/>
 Blue Grass Experience<lb/>
 Violet Hill Swamp Donkeys<lb/>
 Green Grass Cloggers<lb/>
-c SAT. JAN. 22, 1977 r<lb/>
1:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. at the ATTIC in downtown Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
ADMISSION $2.00<lb/>
1ST ANNUAL AT ATTIC<lb/>
FUTUND FAMILY BAND<lb/>
FBMrt tlVlt SOYS<lb/>
BUII MASS UPttIINCI<lb/>
NOfBUCIl<lb/>
0MM MASS aOMOS<lb/>
2ND ANNUAL AT ATTIC<lb/>
SWAMP MOT STtlNC BAND<lb/>
BUII MASS MPaiENCf<lb/>
FUTUND FAMIIT BAND<lb/>
MIIN MASS CUWMBS<lb/>
3RD ANNUAL AT<lb/>
COWBOY SALOON<lb/>
B1UI MASS fXPIBIINCF<lb/>
MEIN VAUf T BAMBLUS<lb/>
FUTUND FAMIIT BAMS<lb/>
MflN MASS CUMMftS<lb/>
head on by a car traveling on the<lb/>
wrong side of the road at a speed<lb/>
State Police estimate at between<lb/>
65 and 7?T mph.<lb/>
The occupants of this car had<lb/>
just left a party for a short ride.<lb/>
Their 16 year-old driver reported-<lb/>
ly obtained his license only two<lb/>
days before.<lb/>
During the reoent Christmas<lb/>
and New Year weekends, North<lb/>
Carolina had 38 highway deaths.<lb/>
According to Highway Patrol<lb/>
Sgt. Glen Swanson, "Our biggest<lb/>
problem is drunken drivers<lb/>
State PoJioe statistics show that<lb/>
alcohol is a contributing factor in<lb/>
at least 50 per cent of all traffic<lb/>
accidents involving fatalities.<lb/>
North Carolina law considers<lb/>
anyone with a blood alcohol<lb/>
oontent of .10 or greater, legally<lb/>
intoxicated. This figure could be<lb/>
reached in someone with a<lb/>
150-160 pound body weight by<lb/>
drinking five or six beers, or five<lb/>
or six one-ounoe drinks in a<lb/>
period of about 45 minutes.<lb/>
Another major factor in many<lb/>
traffic accidents is high rate of<lb/>
speed. This has been minimized<lb/>
somewhat with the lowering of<lb/>
national and statewide speed<lb/>
limits due to the energy crisis.<lb/>
According to polioe, there has<lb/>
been a corresponding drop in<lb/>
speed-related deaths.<lb/>
The State Police urge all<lb/>
drivers to obey the traffic laws,<lb/>
and not to drink and drive.<lb/>
So you think you might<lb/>
just be in lo ve, huh?<lb/>
"One sure sign of being in<lb/>
love is losing interest in everyone<lb/>
else but your partner<lb/>
"Love at first sight is probably<lb/>
the deepest and most enduring<lb/>
type of love<lb/>
"The more love one person<lb/>
feels for another, the more likely<lb/>
that person is to feel jealous<lb/>
"For most people, love oomes<lb/>
onoe in a lifetime<lb/>
If you strongly agree with<lb/>
these statements, chances are<lb/>
that you are a s. 'rry-eyed<lb/>
romantic about love. These and<lb/>
other questions appear in a<lb/>
 Love-Quiz oo-authored by ECU<lb/>
sociologist David Knox which<lb/>
appears in the current issue of<lb/>
"Modern Bride" magazine.<lb/>
Dr. Knox and his collaborator,<lb/>
Dr. Jack Wright of Loyola Uni-<lb/>
versity in New Orleans, devised<lb/>
the 10-item quiz to assist readers<lb/>
in gauging their personal ap-<lb/>
proaches to love.<lb/>
The quiz accompanies a brief<lb/>
article Are You a Romantic or a<lb/>
Realist about Love?" which re-<lb/>
ports results of a similar survey<lb/>
involving 200 persons of both<lb/>
sexes, married and unmarried.<lb/>
"Women and young marrieds<lb/>
were more realistic in their<lb/>
attitudes toward love than men<lb/>
and oouples still in oourtship<lb/>
said the Knox-Wright article.<lb/>
The authors believe women<lb/>
have more realistic attitudes<lb/>
toward love because, traditional-<lb/>
ly, marriage and love "have been<lb/>
their primary oonoern" : women's<lb/>
future financial and social status<lb/>
have been "largely determined"<lb/>
by their husbands.<lb/>
And, obviously, married peo-<lb/>
ple have acquired realistic ideas<lb/>
about love based on experience.<lb/>
The realistic approach to love<lb/>
involves belief in the importance<lb/>
of shared values and similar<lb/>
backgrounds, and the knowledge<lb/>
that "love takes time to deve-<lb/>
lop say the authors.<lb/>
"The problem with 'love at<lb/>
first sight' is that it tends to be<lb/>
based on physical attraction and<lb/>
first impressions?a temporary<lb/>
and deceptive foundation upon<lb/>
which to btild a lifetime relation-<lb/>
ship<lb/>
Drs. Knox and Wright also<lb/>
deplore the widespread myth that<lb/>
jealousy arises out of deep love.<lb/>
Jealousy can actually "destroy<lb/>
love they stress, and is based<lb/>
not on love but on " insecurity and<lb/>
a lack of trust<lb/>
"Realism may not inspire as<lb/>
many popular songs as romanti-<lb/>
cism, but it creates a firmer basis<lb/>
for a mutually rewarding lifetime<lb/>
relationship they conclude.<lb/>
An associate professor of<lb/>
sociology at ECU, Dr. Knox is the<lb/>
author of several research reports<lb/>
in professional journals and<lb/>
articles in popular magazines. His<lb/>
book-length publications include<lb/>
" Marriage: Who? When? Why?"<lb/>
(Prentice-Hall, 1975).<lb/>
<pb facs="00057105_0007"/><lb/>
?nm<lb/>
:? ? . ; ? ? '  ?" <lb/>
20 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Activists call FBI 'secret police'<lb/>
(LNS)Our files reveal the<lb/>
FBI not as a bureau of investi-<lb/>
gation but as a secret police<lb/>
foroe said Judith Clavir in late<lb/>
December, announcing a joint<lb/>
claim with Stewart Albert for $10<lb/>
million in damages from the FBI.<lb/>
The notice of the daim made<lb/>
by the two political activists is<lb/>
thought to be the largest made by<lb/>
individuals in the FBI's history. It<lb/>
is based on evidence from their<lb/>
FBI files showing that the agency<lb/>
systematically and illegally bur-<lb/>
glarized, bugged, tailed and<lb/>
spied on the couple from 1970 to<lb/>
the present.<lb/>
Participating at the press<lb/>
conference with Clavir and Al-<lb/>
bert, former leaders in the Youth<lb/>
International Party and move-<lb/>
ment activists in the '60s, were<lb/>
their lawyers Paul G. Chevigny of<lb/>
the New York Civil Liberties<lb/>
Union and Michael Ratner and<lb/>
William Kunstler, both of the<lb/>
Center for Constitutional Rights.<lb/>
Albert is a contributing editor of<lb/>
Crawdaddy magazine and Clavir'<lb/>
is an assistant professor of<lb/>
sociology at the State University<lb/>
of New York in New Paltz.<lb/>
At the press conference,<lb/>
Clavir exhibited a homing devide<lb/>
that she found in December, 1975<lb/>
on the bumper of the car shared<lb/>
by the two. The FBI admitted<lb/>
having placed the device. The<lb/>
couple's FBI files also indicate<lb/>
that the FBI installed a listening<lb/>
device and stole personal pro-<lb/>
perty during a burglary of their<lb/>
home in 1974. The FBI also<lb/>
wiretapped their telephone be-<lb/>
ginning from at least as early as<lb/>
1968, monitored their mail and<lb/>
bank account, twice installed<lb/>
electronic homing devices in their<lb/>
car, and disseminated inform-<lb/>
ation inside and out of the FBI<lb/>
resulting in the loss of health and<lb/>
employment of the couple.<lb/>
Much of the FBI information<lb/>
on the two has been released<lb/>
within the last six months be-<lb/>
cause of a lawsuit they initiated<lb/>
against Richard Levy, Clarence<lb/>
Kelly, and two FBI agents. The<lb/>
files indicate that the FBI sur-<lb/>
veyed Clavir and Albert on the<lb/>
belief that they were involved in a<lb/>
range of activities from smug-<lb/>
gling then-expatriated Eldridge<lb/>
Cleaver into the U.S to tunnel-<lb/>
ing money to underground politi-<lb/>
cal exiles, and harboring Patricia<lb/>
Hearst.<lb/>
Bank and Post Office officials<lb/>
in Hurley, New York, a small<lb/>
town 100 miles north of New York<lb/>
City where Qavirand Albert have<lb/>
lived since 1973, have admitted<lb/>
that they regularly turned over<lb/>
information to local FBI agents<lb/>
without legal subpoena. Copies of<lb/>
checks and balance sheets from<lb/>
the Kingston Trust Company, and<lb/>
reports of conversations as well as<lb/>
mail cover reports by postal<lb/>
agents in Hurley, were all turned<lb/>
over to the FBI on the basis of<lb/>
informal requests.<lb/>
The only major political acti-<lb/>
vity at Hurley Mountain within<lb/>
recent years as a fund-raising<lb/>
picnic for the Shoshana (Pat<lb/>
Swinton) Defense Committee.<lb/>
Alerted ahead of time, the FBI<lb/>
copied down descriptions and<lb/>
license plates of all 200 cars that<lb/>
arrived. All the plates were run<lb/>
through computers and the own-<lb/>
ers listed in the files.<lb/>
Albert oontinued, "The first<lb/>
thing that happens in a country<lb/>
where democracy is overthrown,<lb/>
as in Chile, for example, was that<lb/>
the DINA (Chilean Secret Police)<lb/>
started rounding up hundreds of<lb/>
people, people on lists like this<lb/>
one.<lb/>
SWALLOW<lb/>
GOLDFISH?<lb/>
Yes, it is going to be<lb/>
done atChapterX<lb/>
Thursday night.<lb/>
Don't Miss It!<lb/>
Ingram appointed<lb/>
By MA RGA RE T PHOENIX<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The SGA Monday night ap-<lb/>
proved Gini Lynn Ingram as the<lb/>
new ECU Secretary of Student<lb/>
Welfare.<lb/>
Ingram replaces Ray Hudson<lb/>
as the student in charge of<lb/>
consumer affairs.<lb/>
She was appointed to the<lb/>
Cabinet position by SGA presi-<lb/>
dent Tim Sullivan. The nomina-<lb/>
tion was approved by the Student<lb/>
Welfare Committee.<lb/>
"I want students to become<lb/>
aware that the off ice exists said<lb/>
Ingram.<lb/>
The junior interior design<lb/>
major plans to let the students<lb/>
know about their legal rights and<lb/>
is in contact vih a Greenville<lb/>
legal firm.<lb/>
 I plan to work with the rights<lb/>
of the arrested, drunk or sober<lb/>
said Ingram.<lb/>
Any person arrested for driv-<lb/>
ing under the influence, shop-<lb/>
lifting, possession of drugs, or<lb/>
any other crime can contact<lb/>
Ingram and receive legal advice.<lb/>
Ingram plans to publish an<lb/>
informative booklet for incoming<lb/>
freshmen, transfers, and other<lb/>
interested students. It will be<lb/>
given out during registration and<lb/>
will be a guide to Greenville<lb/>
restaurants, apartments and<lb/>
banks.<lb/>
A special interest of Ingram's<lb/>
is student insurance rights.<lb/>
She has been in touch with the<lb/>
North Carolina Department of<lb/>
Insurance and next week has a<lb/>
meeting with the president of the<lb/>
Pitt County Life Insurance<lb/>
Agents.<lb/>
Other major concerns of In-<lb/>
gram are student protection on<lb/>
campus and a barrier-free<lb/>
campus for handicapped<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"I plan to map out pathways<lb/>
that are well-lighted and well-<lb/>
policed, and distribute these<lb/>
maps to the students said<lb/>
Ingram.<lb/>
Ingram urged all students<lb/>
with legal or oonsumer problems<lb/>
to contact her office in 224<lb/>
Mendenhall. Her office hours are<lb/>
10-11:30 Monday and Wednes-<lb/>
day, and 1-230 p.m. Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
kotmiS<lb/>
The Tree House<lb/>
The Tree People Proudly<lb/>
 Present the Fine Music of<lb/>
Thur. Chris Farren<lb/>
Fri.&amp;Sat. TheO'sville<lb/>
Rainbow Band<lb/>
Sun. &amp; Mon. evening<lb/>
Jazz with Duke &amp; John<lb/>
Tuesday Mike Edwards<lb/>
NOCOVER CHARGE<lb/>
Corner of 5th &amp; Cotanche<lb/>
<pb facs="00057105_0008"/><lb/>
<lb/>
P?Q?8 FOUNTAINHEAD 20 JantMry 1977<lb/>
BSCto sponsor<lb/>
unique workshop<lb/>
. <lb/>
THE BAPTIST STUDENT UNION is the location for a vocational workshop held on Mondays.<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa).<lb/>
it<lb/>
If it don't tick-tockto us<lb/>
We have temporarily relocated<lb/>
in the rear of Ridgeway Opticians<lb/>
dueto renovations. Weare<lb/>
directly across the street<lb/>
from the old location.<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers<lb/>
Phone: 758-2452<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Baptist Student Center is<lb/>
holding a vocational workshop on<lb/>
Monday nights from 6 p.m. to 9<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
"It's to look at vocations. It<lb/>
deals with more than getting a<lb/>
job. It deals with where you want<lb/>
to live and what kind of people<lb/>
you want to associate with said<lb/>
Bob Clyde, minister and director<lb/>
of the oenter.<lb/>
Clyde said one purpose of the<lb/>
workshop is to bring out people's<lb/>
talents and abilities in relation to<lb/>
obtaining employment.<lb/>
"We are dealing with the<lb/>
person's skills and the values that<lb/>
a person seeks in a job said<lb/>
Clyde.<lb/>
According to Clyde, the pro-<lb/>
gram offers alternatives to the<lb/>
traditional job hunting proce-<lb/>
dures, things other than sending<lb/>
resumes and combing the want<lb/>
ads.<lb/>
"One piece of the puzzle in<lb/>
finding a job is finding a locality<lb/>
that you like said Clyde.<lb/>
Clyde said the program was<lb/>
designed originally by Richard<lb/>
Bolles, author of "What Color is<lb/>
Your Parachute<lb/>
Clyde said that students<lb/>
benefit from the program because<lb/>
when they leave they have a much<lb/>
better insight on how to get a job.<lb/>
Eat a big one at<lb/>
DINE lll<lb/>
.ftfiNBuBS<lb/>
j$lgp.<lb/>
CARRY OUT<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
Pizza &amp; Spaghetti House<lb/>
FAST FREE CAMPUS DELIVERY<lb/>
DIAL 758-7400<lb/>
507 East 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Sunday thru ThuruJay NOTHING 11 30 AM till 1 AM<lb/>
Friday and Saturday BEATSA-PIZZA FROM 11 30 AM till 2 AM<lb/>
t-HANELO'S<lb/>
Two ECU<lb/>
charged<lb/>
By LOUIS TA YLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A freshman girl and male<lb/>
junior were suspended for the<lb/>
remainder of winter quarter in<lb/>
separate book-stealing cases<lb/>
which came before the Honor<lb/>
Council last Tuesday night.<lb/>
The Council ruled the male<lb/>
defendant, who pleaded guilty,<lb/>
will be able to return to school in<lb/>
the spring.<lb/>
Counsel for defense, Chuck<lb/>
New, told the Council this was the<lb/>
Junior's first offense, and he did<lb/>
not realize the oonsequences.<lb/>
"It was a spur of the moment<lb/>
thing said the defedant. "I was<lb/>
going home for the weekend, and<lb/>
I needed a oouple of dollars<lb/>
Attorney General Karen Har-<lb/>
loe contended the defendant was<lb/>
trying to sell the books, which<lb/>
were stolen from the graduate<lb/>
office in Austin, because he had<lb/>
scratched out the name of the<lb/>
owner.<lb/>
Harloe said that a precedent<lb/>
needed to be established as a<lb/>
deterrent. She recommended a<lb/>
sentence of suspension, minimal-<lb/>
ly, through Winter Quarter and<lb/>
maximally through Spring.<lb/>
New asked the Council for<lb/>
leniency, citing a letter from the<lb/>
defendant's hall advisor, attest-<lb/>
ing to the good character of<lb/>
GOLD FISH SWALLOWING<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
If you think you are man or woman<lb/>
enough to swallow a live flipping fish<lb/>
or even to watch<lb/>
BeatChapterX.<lb/>
Thursda y nigh t.<lb/>
students suspended,<lb/>
with book theft<lb/>
the defendant.<lb/>
The defendant said he had<lb/>
since paid the victim for the books<lb/>
and had tried to call her several<lb/>
times to apologize.<lb/>
The female was suspended<lb/>
through Spring Quarter after<lb/>
pleading innocent to the charge<lb/>
against her.<lb/>
The freshman, accused in two<lb/>
separate incidents, said that she<lb/>
had found one book between<lb/>
Joyner Library and Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, but she did not<lb/>
remember where she had found<lb/>
the other.<lb/>
The girl said she did not<lb/>
realize she was liable for return-<lb/>
ing the books.<lb/>
Defense Counsel New con-<lb/>
tended that the defendant might<lb/>
be guilty of selling books but not<lb/>
of stealing them. He said fresh-<lb/>
men are sometimes disoriented<lb/>
and urged a sentence of a<lb/>
warning or, at most, a written<lb/>
reprimand.<lb/>
Attorney General Harloe said<lb/>
the defendant had obviously<lb/>
stolen the books and cited the<lb/>
circumstances of their disap<lb/>
pearance. Harloe read a letter<lb/>
from one of the owners stating<lb/>
her book had been taken from the<lb/>
ladies' room in Rawl.<lb/>
Defense presented two letters<lb/>
of character, one from a professor<lb/>
and one from the defendant's hall<lb/>
advisor.<lb/>
In other action, the Council<lb/>
issued a verbal warning to two<lb/>
male freshmen found guilty of<lb/>
stealing a traffic cone.<lb/>
The defendants, both mem-<lb/>
bers of the Men's Residence<lb/>
Council, said they only wanted a<lb/>
parking space so they oould go in<lb/>
Mendenhall and shoot some pool.<lb/>
The defendants were issued a<lb/>
citation and paid a $2 fine for<lb/>
disregarding a barricade after<lb/>
placing the cone in the back seat<lb/>
of a car and covering it with a<lb/>
coat.<lb/>
In a fourth case, the Council<lb/>
found innocent a male student<lb/>
charged with use of vulgar<lb/>
language while intoxicated be-<lb/>
cause the arresting officer failed<lb/>
to appear before the Council.<lb/>
Two of the three suspects<lb/>
accused of stealing a bicycle from<lb/>
Tyler Dormitory last Dec. 28 were<lb/>
acquitted in Pitt County District<lb/>
Court.<lb/>
Gino Downing of 1132 Pierce<lb/>
St Washington, N.C, and Terry<lb/>
Smith of Washington, D.C were<lb/>
arrested with Kelvin Leroy Clark<lb/>
of Blounts Creek, N.C. by campus<lb/>
and Greenville police.<lb/>
Clark pleaded guilty to larceny<lb/>
charges.<lb/>
According to David Reed,<lb/>
defense counsel for Downing and<lb/>
Smith, Clark testified that he had<lb/>
stolen the bicycle without help<lb/>
from Downing or Smith.<lb/>
The two were found not guilty<lb/>
on the basis of Clark's testimony.<lb/>
Editor gives talk<lb/>
By JO ELLEN Rl VENBA RK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Jerry Raynor, Sunday Editor<lb/>
of The Daily Reflector, appeared<lb/>
in Professor Ira L. Baker's<lb/>
introductory Journalism class<lb/>
Tuesday to discuss operations<lb/>
and policies of the paper.<lb/>
A member of The Reflector<lb/>
staff for eight years, Mr. Raynor<lb/>
answered questions about his<lb/>
feelings toward national issues,<lb/>
such as the execution of Gary<lb/>
Gilmore, and about his duties on<lb/>
the job.<lb/>
Mr. Raynor began working<lb/>
with The Reflector in 196b, after<lb/>
having served in the U.S. Army.<lb/>
His previous experience in writ-<lb/>
ing military documents led him to<lb/>
seek a writing career which is<lb/>
concentrated in the area of art,<lb/>
music, books, and the theatre.<lb/>
Most of his time, Mr. Raynor<lb/>
stated, is spent gathering and<lb/>
sorting information and articles,<lb/>
but the most rewarding part of his<lb/>
job is interviewing and talking<lb/>
with people.<lb/>
Mr. Baker and members of<lb/>
Journalism 115 express their<lb/>
appreciation to Mr. Raynor for his<lb/>
visit.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057105_0009"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
Charley Harrison<lb/>
Greenville has wine king<lb/>
By REBECCA BUFF ALOE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Within the last two years,<lb/>
Greenville has acquired not only a<lb/>
unique wine shop, but also a man<lb/>
who has traveled far and wide.<lb/>
Charles Harrison, who is<lb/>
known to his customers as<lb/>
"Charley or more frequently,<lb/>
"the wine man calls himself a<lb/>
wine specialist, but not an expert.<lb/>
To him, his work is never just a<lb/>
job, it is a way of life.<lb/>
Harrison, who was born in<lb/>
Durham, England, started in the<lb/>
hotel business with the British<lb/>
Restaurant and Hotel Associ-<lb/>
ation. However, when he won a<lb/>
scholarship to study wines in<lb/>
France, Charley took the chance.<lb/>
"It blew the hotel business to<lb/>
bits he said in his soft English<lb/>
accent.<lb/>
While in France, Harrison<lb/>
worked from eight to 16 hours a<lb/>
day, six days a week, for 25 cents<lb/>
a day, plus room and board. After<lb/>
returning to England, he finished<lb/>
his contract with the hotel associ-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
Upon graduating as a som-<lb/>
melier, one who is in charge of<lb/>
wines and their service, Harrison<lb/>
worked as a wine steward in<lb/>
London and St rat ford-on-A von.<lb/>
In 1952, he was offered a<lb/>
traveling scholarship to study<lb/>
various wine districts. Upon<lb/>
acceptance, he, along with 16<lb/>
other students and two instruct-<lb/>
ors, went to Germany, Austria,<lb/>
Greece, Israel, South Africa,<lb/>
Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Sicily,<lb/>
Italy, Switzerland, and Spain to<lb/>
learn more about grapes, vine-<lb/>
yards, and wines.<lb/>
After a stint in the British<lb/>
Navy Merchant Service, Harrison<lb/>
worked as a sales representative<lb/>
for an international wine brother.<lb/>
Upon moving to the U.S. in<lb/>
1958 and gaining his citizenship<lb/>
in 1964, Harrison worked for a<lb/>
wine wholesale company based in<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
After his resignation in 1975,<lb/>
Harrison came to Greenville and<lb/>
established the Wine Shop<lb/>
on Tenth Street.<lb/>
As people slowly but steadily<lb/>
became customers, they began to<lb/>
ask the friendly owner why he<lb/>
didn't start some sort of wine<lb/>
course to help them make deci-<lb/>
sions on the various wines in the<lb/>
shop.<lb/>
This year, Harrison held a<lb/>
five-week wine-tasting seminar at<lb/>
a local restaurant. Twenty-four<lb/>
people, including two ECU stu-<lb/>
dents, were introduced to five<lb/>
catagories of wine.<lb/>
Students were taught how to<lb/>
taste the wine properly and<lb/>
instructed how to read wine labels<lb/>
to garner the correct information<lb/>
about the specific wine.<lb/>
Anne Matthews, one of the<lb/>
ECU students said, "Fa the<lb/>
CHARLEY HARRISON<lb/>
Thousand Clo wns'<lb/>
money, it was well worth it. The<lb/>
classes covered a lot of inform-<lb/>
ation<lb/>
The class was such a success<lb/>
that Harrison intends to have<lb/>
another one in January.<lb/>
"If there is enough response,<lb/>
there will be two seminars the<lb/>
owner said.<lb/>
According to Harrison, when a<lb/>
person begins to learn about<lb/>
wine, he should start off with the<lb/>
basics. A beginner I ikes the sweet<lb/>
wines first, then moves to more<lb/>
dry ones.<lb/>
"All ittakesisoommon sense.<lb/>
The thought of a beginner buying<lb/>
a $20 bottle of Organdy is<lb/>
atrocious Harrison says.<lb/>
If customers will keep a<lb/>
?' logbook of the winesthey have<lb/>
tried, along with their likes and<lb/>
dislikes of them, Harrison will be<lb/>
able to predict, with some ac-<lb/>
curacy, what they should try next.<lb/>
Harrison offers many things to<lb/>
his customers. He makes the<lb/>
cheese balls and beef rolls<lb/>
displayed in the store. He also<lb/>
offers the Edenton wines, which,<lb/>
according to him, have received a<lb/>
great reception.<lb/>
"The reason for thisis simple.<lb/>
Scuppernong wine has tradition-<lb/>
ally been very sweet. Edenton<lb/>
wines have eliminated this. They<lb/>
offer a light, dry wine that still<lb/>
retains some of the sweetness<lb/>
but not as much Harrison said.<lb/>
What is such a world traveler<lb/>
doing in Greenville?<lb/>
"It's the only oollege town in<lb/>
five states that doesn't have a<lb/>
wineshop he replied.<lb/>
However, he seems to be<lb/>
happy in his present environ-<lb/>
ment. Special trips to Raleigh and<lb/>
Durham are made weekly to<lb/>
obtain wines not found on the lists<lb/>
of the five distributors that<lb/>
Harrison buys from.<lb/>
Why does he do this?<lb/>
"I feel that this store will<lb/>
eventually be accepted, onoe the<lb/>
people realize what I'm trying to<lb/>
do Harrison replied.<lb/>
To Harrison wine is a condi-<lb/>
ment, not another alcoholic<lb/>
beverage. If he can help people<lb/>
accept the fact, Charley Harrison<lb/>
will feel rewarded.<lb/>
Dinner theatre comes again<lb/>
A THOUSAND CLOWNS, a<lb/>
comedy in three acts by Herb<lb/>
Gardner will be presented by<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center at its<lb/>
Dinner Theatre on February 3<lb/>
through 6, 1977, Made into a<lb/>
successful screenplay several<lb/>
years ago, it has remained quite<lb/>
popular in community and dinner<lb/>
theatres. The story concerns<lb/>
Murray Burns, an unemployed<lb/>
television writer, who is living<lb/>
with his young nephew in a<lb/>
one-room New York apartment.<lb/>
The boy attends a special school<lb/>
for gifted children and his un-<lb/>
orthodox life style is eventually<lb/>
brought to the attention of the<lb/>
Bureau of Child Welfare. Their<lb/>
hilarious interview in the home<lb/>
and Murray Burn's realization<lb/>
that he must either return to his<lb/>
former job as writer for the<lb/>
"Chuckles the Chipmonk" tele-<lb/>
vision show or give up his<lb/>
nephew, forms the basis fa a<lb/>
comedy that is both heart-<lb/>
warming and meaningful.<lb/>
The play will be directed by<lb/>
Stuart Aronson and 'ill feature<lb/>
the Dinner Theatre Players.<lb/>
Aroisoi will team up with his soi<lb/>
Philippe, who plays the part of<lb/>
the boy. Other players include<lb/>
Terry Davis, Charlie Jennett, Bob<lb/>
McCutcheon, and Liz Nichol-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Four perfamances of A<lb/>
THOUSAND CLOWNS have been<lb/>
scheduled. Seating is limited to<lb/>
100 places each perfamance.<lb/>
Tickets are available from the<lb/>
ECU Central Ticket Office and<lb/>
must be purchased at least 24<lb/>
hours in advance of the per-<lb/>
famance. Tickets fa Saturday a<lb/>
Sunday must be purchased on a<lb/>
befae Friday, Feb. 4, by 400<lb/>
p.m. Dinner each night will be at<lb/>
7:00 p.m. and curtain time at 8O0<lb/>
p.m. except on Sunday, when<lb/>
dinner will begin at 5 00 p.m. and<lb/>
curtain time at 6:00 p.m. Tickets<lb/>
are priced at $5.00 fa ECU<lb/>
students and $7.50 fa public.<lb/>
20 January<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
byPATCOYLE<lb/>
Here comes senility<lb/>
As we all know, last week was pre-registration. That in itself is<lb/>
hardly unusual; the unique facta to this pre-registration is that it was<lb/>
my last (I hope).<lb/>
The prospect of being about to enter into my last quarter (I hope) as<lb/>
a oollege student, is frightening, to say the least, but it's nahing<lb/>
compared to the growing feeling I have that I'm (gasp!) getting old.<lb/>
It seems ridiculous to think that I, Pat Coyle, could be aging. I<lb/>
mean, I've been young all my life. The signs are, nevertheless,<lb/>
pointing to the fact that I sure ain't getting any younger.<lb/>
TELLTALE SIGNS<lb/>
The possibility of senility ooming first became apparent to me at the<lb/>
beginning of Fall Quarter. In years past, the first severa, Friday<lb/>
afternoons of the school were times of great merriment, of dreadful<lb/>
overindulgence, of trips downtown to happy hour. Na so this year.<lb/>
I found, to my despair, that by Friday afternoon I was so exhausted<lb/>
that the only activity I could manage was wearily throwing my clahes<lb/>
in the washer and napping as they went through their cycle.<lb/>
This wasn't the only sign that I was about to go ova the hill. Asa<lb/>
veteran dam dwella, I've always loved being involved in various<lb/>
activities with my neighbors on the hall. I can't begin to count how<lb/>
many nights I' ve spent in the past three years running around the dam<lb/>
playing cards and socializing with the aher girls.<lb/>
This year has been different, though. When my hallmates start<lb/>
ooming out of the woodwak at eleven o'clock each night, I r?a only<lb/>
Have no energy to join then, but I find myself pausing in wonda at<lb/>
their ability to stay in school with the proper amounts of study and<lb/>
sleep. Na only am I getting old, I'm turning into a real<lb/>
stick-in-the-mud.<lb/>
ISTHEREACURE?<lb/>
The real panic about my age started, appropriately enough, on my<lb/>
21 st birthday. It was at that time that I realized I no longer have youth<lb/>
as an excuse fa erratic and irresponsible activities. That is what<lb/>
bothers me most of all.<lb/>
Gone are the days when, after I do something silly, people brushed<lb/>
it off by saying  she's only a kid Good Lad. people expect me to be<lb/>
self-sufficient, responsible, all of those things I will probably never be.<lb/>
I figure there's still some hope, though, if I can convince people I'm<lb/>
younger than I really am. Well, maybe I can slide by fa a few more<lb/>
years. I could, fa example, start wearing my hair in pigtails. It might<lb/>
not impress prospective employers, but I imagine it would throw<lb/>
everyone else off the track.<lb/>
Then, of course I could change come of my habits from thenamal<lb/>
senia-in-college stuff to something the younger would enjoy. I oould<lb/>
start hangina around Burger King on Saturday night, fa example.<lb/>
If all else fails, I guess I'll have to change the company I keep. If I<lb/>
meet a freshman guy downtown, I'll swoon and tell him how much I get<lb/>
of f on " older men That should certainly turn the heads of the people<lb/>
who know me.<lb/>
I'M NOT ALONE<lb/>
The only oomfat I find in this is the fact that the aging malady is<lb/>
one shared by many of my friends. Some of the famer rrxk-n-rollas I<lb/>
know have gone through a sudden change. Instead of running down to<lb/>
the Attic on their free nights, many of my friends have picked up such<lb/>
hobbies as watching T.V reading books, etc One person I know has<lb/>
even taken to aocheting afghans.<lb/>
If what they say about misery loving company is true, then I'm in<lb/>
pretty good shape. The only thing I wary about now is turning 30. I<lb/>
mean, if 21 has messed up my mind ns badly, what will happen in<lb/>
nine years? Well, who says I have to hit 30? If anyone asks you 20 years<lb/>
from now how old I am. just say "she was 29, last time I heard<lb/>
atttic<lb/>
6<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Sutter's Gold Streak<lb/>
<pb facs="00057105_0010"/><lb/>
?M<lb/>
Page 10 FQUNTAINHEAP 20 Jwuary 1977<lb/>
Souvenir of Key West<lb/>
ECU student owns Hemingway's saddle<lb/>
By MARK LOCK WOOD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Mike Moye has realized a<lb/>
dream that any good English<lb/>
major wishes to realize - that of<lb/>
contact with notoriety. The<lb/>
notoriety in thiscase comes in the<lb/>
form of a saddle which Moye says<lb/>
once belonged to Ernest Heming-<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Moye explained how he came<lb/>
across the saddle: "Key West is a<lb/>
writers' island and being an<lb/>
English major (UNC-CH) after I<lb/>
graduated I wanted to go down<lb/>
there Hemingway kept horses<lb/>
in Key West and in thisarea there<lb/>
is a variety of deer called Key<lb/>
deer which Hemingway was<lb/>
reported to have hunted on<lb/>
horseback often while roaring<lb/>
drunk<lb/>
"I returned to Key West in<lb/>
1976 - past September, when I<lb/>
was down there for a return visit,<lb/>
stopped by Delmonioo's (a favor-<lb/>
ite Hemingway "watering<lb/>
place) and mentioned the saddle<lb/>
to Generosa Lopez (the owner) -<lb/>
she was getting ready to renovate<lb/>
the building so she said I could<lb/>
have it<lb/>
Moye further went on to<lb/>
explain that Hemingway often<lb/>
frequented Delmonioo's and was<lb/>
very familiar with Lopez back in<lb/>
the 20s and 30s. "You could look<lb/>
around the bar and see the<lb/>
various animals he killed while<lb/>
over in Africa and other places<lb/>
Hemingway had left various<lb/>
"artifacts" in Delmonioo's due to<lb/>
friendship and lack of space,<lb/>
according to Moye.<lb/>
The "knot wall" was a most<lb/>
interesting aspect of the bar: "On<lb/>
the walls was a huge thing<lb/>
covered with knots - usually after<lb/>
dinner he'd bring some rope on<lb/>
some leather and he would tie<lb/>
these knots  he would give all<lb/>
this to Generosa<lb/>
Film test Sunday<lb/>
On Sunday, there's not one,<lb/>
not two, not even four flicks in the<lb/>
film festival, but three Yes,<lb/>
count them, three films in our<lb/>
annual horror film festival. The<lb/>
first feature at 4CO p.m. called<lb/>
"Mutations" is one of the best<lb/>
flicks about mutations you will<lb/>
never see, which in itself doen't<lb/>
qualify it for an Academy Award.<lb/>
But it really is pretty good.<lb/>
The next feature at 5:35 p.m.<lb/>
is "SSS No, I didn't tell you<lb/>
to be quiet. That's the title,<lb/>
friends. It's a snake flick that<lb/>
can't be missed. Especially for<lb/>
those who are into snakes. And<lb/>
the last fabulous fun-filled feature<lb/>
is "Frenzy This Hitchcock<lb/>
masterpiece is probably some of<lb/>
his finest work. This is a<lb/>
spine-tingling suspense thriller<lb/>
you won't want to miss.<lb/>
So park your posterious at the<lb/>
flicks this weekend. It's going to<lb/>
be a lot of fun The shows will<lb/>
start promptly at the times listed.<lb/>
Come early - We got a lot of folks<lb/>
passing through our cinematic<lb/>
portals.<lb/>
Some background is perhaps<lb/>
needed at this point, as to why<lb/>
Hemingway himself was down in<lb/>
Key West. Mr. Moye most<lb/>
graciously complied He came to<lb/>
Key West in the late 20s to finish<lb/>
writing A FAREWELL TO ARMS<lb/>
which was almost ready for<lb/>
publication - he had that publish-<lb/>
ed while he was down there. He<lb/>
stayed in Key West on a<lb/>
permanent basis for between 12<lb/>
and 15 years. He eventually got<lb/>
sick of the tourists, and he finally<lb/>
left around 1940.<lb/>
When asked about how he<lb/>
knew the origin of the saddle,<lb/>
Moye explained that it wasn't<lb/>
unusual at all for the average Key<lb/>
Wester to be in possession of a<lb/>
Hemingway artifact, and in fact,<lb/>
many of the townspeople had<lb/>
acquired various Hemingway<lb/>
articles in the years when he lived<lb/>
there. Moye added, "The only<lb/>
way to really authenticate any of<lb/>
these objects (including the sad-<lb/>
dle) would be for Hemingway to<lb/>
rise from the grave and say that's<lb/>
mine<lb/>
M oye not only came across the<lb/>
saddle, but also got to know<lb/>
several writers personally, includ-<lb/>
ing the famed playwright Tennes-<lb/>
see Williams. "I lived there (Key<lb/>
West), six months before I got up<lb/>
the nerve to go by his house<lb/>
Afterwards, I was a guest in his<lb/>
home several times and he<lb/>
couldn't have been nicera<lb/>
fantastic host<lb/>
When asked why he left Key<lb/>
West, Moye expressed senti-<lb/>
ments strikingly similar to those<lb/>
Hemingway himself must have<lb/>
felt back in the 20's and 30' s:<lb/>
"there were too many of the<lb/>
'beautiful people' ooming down<lb/>
there and it just wasn't the same;<lb/>
too much Pernod and not enough<lb/>
gin<lb/>
When asked about any plans<lb/>
for the saddle, Moye made it very<lb/>
clear that he had no intentions of<lb/>
selling the article. He further<lb/>
mentioned plans to go back to<lb/>
Key West in February to search<lb/>
fa any further articles that may<lb/>
have been left from the newly<lb/>
renovated Delmonioo's.<lb/>
MIKE MOYE, Englishgradstudent,<lb/>
at Key West, Fla. Photo by KIRK<lb/>
acquired the saddle during a stay<lb/>
KINGSBURY<lb/>
WECUAM57<lb/>
Be sure to listen to these disc jockeys<lb/>
playing your favorite Top 40 hits<lb/>
from 7:00 A.M 5:00 P.M<lb/>
57an<lb/>
east Carolina uni versity-grecnviliejic<lb/>
7-900 a.m.<lb/>
900-11 00 p.m.<lb/>
11-1 00 p.m.<lb/>
1-300 p.m.<lb/>
300-500 p.m.<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Craig Faulkner<lb/>
KyleCambell<lb/>
Chubby Ahshire<lb/>
Chuck Lee<lb/>
Tony Smith<lb/>
Or dean Watson<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Craig Faulkner<lb/>
Ellen Schrader<lb/>
Chubby Abshire<lb/>
JimHollett<lb/>
Chuck Lee<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Joan Shraver<lb/>
KyleCambell<lb/>
Chuck Lee<lb/>
Tony Smith<lb/>
Marc Roberts<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
KathyCaroll<lb/>
George Lewis<lb/>
Chubby Abshire<lb/>
Jeff Triplett<lb/>
Chuck Lee<lb/>
Listen to the best in Progressive music<lb/>
from 5:00 P.M 2:00 A.M. brought to you by:<lb/>
5O0-7O0D.m.<lb/>
7-9O0 p.m.<lb/>
9-11 O0a.m.<lb/>
11-12 a.m.<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
700-900 p.m.<lb/>
9O0 p.m12O0a.m.<lb/>
FRIDAY NITE<lb/>
700-900 p.m.<lb/>
1100-1200 midnight<lb/>
12.00-2:00 a.m.<lb/>
Mon.<lb/>
Renee Edwards<lb/>
John Deaver<lb/>
Joan Shraver<lb/>
MacMcKee<lb/>
Roberta Fountain<lb/>
Woody Jackson with Jazz<lb/>
John Deaver with Soul Show<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
Robbie Lawrence<lb/>
John Deaver<lb/>
KaySummerlin<lb/>
MacMcKee<lb/>
Mary Planoski<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Jessica Scar angel la<lb/>
Cain<lb/>
Paul Lucas<lb/>
MacMcKee<lb/>
Scott McKenzie<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
Or dean Watson<lb/>
John Deaver<lb/>
Carl Griffin<lb/>
MacMcKee<lb/>
Mary Planoski<lb/>
"Artistseries" -Featuring music of Peter Frampton<lb/>
"spotlight on BarbaraFeaturing past and present music of Barbara Striesand.<lb/>
Bob Ross with Beach music<lb/>
B<lb/>
<pb facs="00057105_0011"/><lb/>
20 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
y<lb/>
Event open to public<lb/>
Poetess Ingram lectures here tonight<lb/>
ByTHOMASSMIT,l<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Maria, by Maria Ingram is a<lb/>
fine collection of poetry. Some of<lb/>
the works may be very personal<lb/>
and intensely sensual. Others<lb/>
subtly comment on social mat-<lb/>
ters. All show a great knack of<lb/>
observation; an ability to record<lb/>
and play back memories in a<lb/>
sensitive, realistic manner.<lb/>
The poems take the reader on<lb/>
a journey from rural North<lb/>
Carolina, to Mexioo.and as far as<lb/>
Europe and Asia. There is also a<lb/>
journey along the path from<lb/>
naughty innocence to worldly<lb/>
awareness.<lb/>
Some works portray the life of<lb/>
a young girl in rural surroundings<lb/>
discovering the first pangs of<lb/>
sexuality. In "Me, brought to you<lb/>
by Quaker Oats we see the<lb/>
childwoman with "Mary Jane in<lb/>
my cheeks and "El Producto<lb/>
rings on my fingers" working at a<lb/>
summer job at a gas station.<lb/>
Though she still is part of another<lb/>
world, the adult world calls her<lb/>
forth.<lb/>
During the summer she "Fell<lb/>
in love with the Merita Bread<lb/>
Man Her new passions made<lb/>
her "Heart beat hard and I took<lb/>
Turns,It took two Playtex Moun-<lb/>
tainsbeneath my t-shirt to get<lb/>
me to riselike a sphinxand<lb/>
witness a harder shame put me<lb/>
down<lb/>
Through the experiences of<lb/>
that summer she "learned an-<lb/>
swers and got me a new sunthat<lb/>
didn't bang and I'm told it's<lb/>
better.I do know darkness is<lb/>
darker Her innocence is slightly<lb/>
tarnished but not completely<lb/>
destroyed.<lb/>
This theme also appears in<lb/>
"Backwoods in which a young<lb/>
girl playing near a spring notices<lb/>
that she is being watched from a<lb/>
supposedly inoonspicuous spot.<lb/>
She decides to flirtatiously<lb/>
"hitchmy dress a little;the<lb/>
sun's so warm The poem is<lb/>
playful and spiced with modest<lb/>
sensuality.<lb/>
On other excursions we are<lb/>
carried into the adult world and<lb/>
observe a woman confronting that<lb/>
world; its love, its bare sexuality,<lb/>
its ignorance and injustice.<lb/>
I n " I ndian Rose we hear the<lb/>
tale of a woman,a visitor to a<lb/>
Mexican village question whether<lb/>
her Mexican lover, if she was a<lb/>
native woman on which "babies<lb/>
had warred with fliesat my<lb/>
tallow milkand with the same<lb/>
cocoa fingers that lit candles for<lb/>
virginsI braided my hair into<lb/>
long, thin exclamation points<lb/>
would have still been so excited<lb/>
by her.<lb/>
"A Poem to Soliciting Self-<lb/>
Discovery Groups while watching<lb/>
a Lover I don't know very well<lb/>
dance" is more positive concern-<lb/>
ing love. Set in Greece with the<lb/>
magnificent ancient ruins and the<lb/>
splendor of the Mediterranean as<lb/>
a backdrop, the sudden love affair<lb/>
of a native boy and American girl<lb/>
is displayed. Though their rela-<lb/>
tionship has developed quickly<lb/>
and they can't even understand<lb/>
each other's language, both feel<lb/>
IP<lb/>
"something less absolute, more<lb/>
beautiful than the truth" has<lb/>
been disoovRrfid.<lb/>
Poems such as "The Mexi-<lb/>
cans" and "From the Reserva-<lb/>
tion" point out the ignorant and<lb/>
ethnooentric manner in which we<lb/>
deal with people of cultures<lb/>
different from our own.<lb/>
"The Mexicans" are descri-<lb/>
bed as "a positive, lovable<lb/>
people, Our fingers do not ques-<lb/>
tion their work and they have<lb/>
grace enough to know when it's<lb/>
done Though many Americans<lb/>
view the Mexican lifestyle as<lb/>
simple and inferior, the Mexicans<lb/>
"are humble in our adequacy.<lb/>
No statues of ours beckons the<lb/>
hungry to a promised land. We<lb/>
spread our fishes at the Virgin's<lb/>
feetand she does pretty well by<lb/>
us They are quite satisfied with<lb/>
their lives; and who can say which<lb/>
lifestyle is truly better.<lb/>
The American fixation with<lb/>
the ideal of the noble savaae is<lb/>
MARIA INGRAM<lb/>
Local nightclub plays host to<lb/>
fourth blue grass festival<lb/>
By JO ELLEN Rl VENBA RK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Greenville's Fourth Annual<lb/>
One to One Blue Grass and Old<lb/>
Time Music Festival will be held<lb/>
on Saturday, Jan. 22 at the Attic<lb/>
Originally billed as Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina's first Indoor Blue<lb/>
Grass Festival, this year's festival<lb/>
will again offer twelve-hours of<lb/>
continuous music and dance from<lb/>
1 p.m. to 1 a.m. for a $2<lb/>
admission.<lb/>
The bands featured include<lb/>
the Plank Road String Band, the<lb/>
Blue Grass Experienoe, and the<lb/>
Violet Hill Swamp Donkeys. The<lb/>
Green Grass doggers will also be<lb/>
there and are sure to keep things<lb/>
moving with their energetic and<lb/>
spirited dance performances.<lb/>
An absolute must to see is the<lb/>
Plank Road String Band from<lb/>
Lexington, Va oonsisting of two<lb/>
fiddlers, a guitarist, a bass cellist.<lb/>
and a banjo player.<lb/>
They have played regularly for<lb/>
the Green Grass Cloggers, won<lb/>
third place in the old time band<lb/>
category at the last Fiddler's<lb/>
Convention in Union Grove, and<lb/>
have recorded their first album.<lb/>
The Blue Grass Experienoe is<lb/>
a truly professional band that<lb/>
demonstrates great quality in<lb/>
their performances. They won the<lb/>
Blue Grass Championship in 1972<lb/>
at Union Grove and have recorded<lb/>
several albums.<lb/>
A band featuring four musi-<lb/>
cians who play a variety of<lb/>
instruments, the Violet Hill<lb/>
Swamp Donkeys, have played<lb/>
extensively in the Washington,<lb/>
D.C. area and with the Green<lb/>
Grass Cloggers.<lb/>
"We play the best old time<lb/>
string band street music this side<lb/>
of the Potomac River according<lb/>
to one member of the band.<lb/>
The fiddle player, Steve Hick-<lb/>
man, won the 1976 National<lb/>
Scottish Open Class Fiddle<lb/>
Championship in Alexandria, Va.<lb/>
As well as being outstanding<lb/>
entertainers and willing teachers,<lb/>
the Green Grass Cloggers have<lb/>
been instrumental in developing<lb/>
interest in the Folk Art revival in<lb/>
this area. Twice winners of the<lb/>
title of World Champion Tradi-<lb/>
tional Cloggers at Union Grove,<lb/>
they are a group of twenty local<lb/>
young people who obviously derive<lb/>
great pleasure from their danc-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
depicted in "From the Reserva-<lb/>
tion A member of theOconoluf-<lb/>
tee Indian Reservation describes<lb/>
how for years Indians there have<lb/>
played the stereotyped Indian<lb/>
role. They had made blankets,<lb/>
beads and baskets. They had<lb/>
tried to affect the speech pattern<lb/>
expected of them. This has gone<lb/>
on "for many years, manyhow-<lb/>
you-say-moons The speaker in<lb/>
the poem is tired of this life of<lb/>
pretense and "to tell you the<lb/>
truthI would rather go to the<lb/>
New Yak and ride a train<lb/>
The remainder of the poems<lb/>
relate personal experiences and<lb/>
observations. They oover areas<lb/>
from the loud, confused happi-<lb/>
ness of a family reunion to sexual<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
111 W. 4th St.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
rites in Babyion. Some poems<lb/>
seem to be daydreams of trying<lb/>
new adventures, while others are<lb/>
firm pieces of the poet's life<lb/>
sculptured by words into perfect<lb/>
forms. All show a deep under-<lb/>
standing of the human environ-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
In this book, Maria Ingram<lb/>
has captured a wide range of life.<lb/>
She touches the reader's senses<lb/>
softly, leaving one sometimes<lb/>
happy, sometimesa little sad, but<lb/>
always pleased with the quality of<lb/>
the work. She is dear, concise,<lb/>
and imaginative. She depends<lb/>
more on intelligence than intellec-<lb/>
tualism. She is what the literary<lb/>
world now sorely needs; a truly<lb/>
oood ooet.<lb/>
JWJHIW<lb/>
Good Things<lb/>
For Gentle People<lb/>
318 Evans 9 Mai<lb/>
f- 752 3815<lb/>
Come Meet<lb/>
STARBUCK<lb/>
Recording Artist For Private<lb/>
Stock Records<lb/>
4:00 Thursday Afternoon<lb/>
Jan. 20th at Rock-N ?Soul<lb/>
ELBOROOM<lb/>
Thur. ?Sat.<lb/>
"The Raisin Band"<lb/>
From Cincinnati, Ohio<lb/>
Also Playing Friday Afternoon<lb/>
3?7 No Cover Charge<lb/>
Every Sunday Is Ladies Night<lb/>
Eat a big one at<lb/>
DINE IIM<lb/>
MfMBuB S<lb/>
jqp.<lb/>
CARRY OUT<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
Pixxa &amp; Spaghetti Hout<lb/>
FAST FREE CAMPUS DELIVERY<lb/>
DIAL 758 7400<lb/>
507 E?t 14th S tract<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Sunday thn Thursday<lb/>
Friday and Siturday<lb/>
NOTHING<lb/>
BEATSA-PIZZA FROM<lb/>
CHANfcLO'S<lb/>
11 30 AM till 1 AM<lb/>
11:30 AM till 2 AM<lb/>
1<lb/>
BBH<lb/>
 , , ,f  A<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057105_0012"/><lb/>
??(???iMBw<lb/>
SteffrSSsPfl"<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 12<lb/>
20 January 1977<lb/>
Ted Nieman-<lb/>
super swimmer<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
For what earthly reason would<lb/>
a human being rise at 6 a.m. and<lb/>
walk to Minges Natatorium in<lb/>
freezing cold to swim 5,000 yards<lb/>
in an hour and a half, then go to<lb/>
dass for four or five hours and<lb/>
then go back to Minges for two<lb/>
more hours and 8,000 more<lb/>
yards? For Ted Nieman, it is to<lb/>
reach a goal; a goal he set himself<lb/>
and a goal he and the coaching<lb/>
staff will be working on to<lb/>
achievea trip to the NCAA<lb/>
Swimming and Diving Champion-<lb/>
ships in Cleveland, Ohio.<lb/>
That is the daily schedule for<lb/>
Nieman, a freshman from Winter<lb/>
Park, Fla who is making a<lb/>
shambles of the East Carolina<lb/>
reoord book. Why would someone<lb/>
put that much time into breaking<lb/>
having a good time all at the same<lb/>
time. And Coach Scharf talked to<lb/>
me and my parents. He was so<lb/>
honest and my parents were very<lb/>
impressed with his thinking and<lb/>
coaching philosophies<lb/>
Since coming to ECU Nieman<lb/>
has broken four pool records,<lb/>
three varsity marks, and four<lb/>
freshman standards. His 1:42.40<lb/>
in the 200 freestyle is sixth best in<lb/>
the nation this year. Two of his<lb/>
pool marks came in Minges<lb/>
Natatorium while the other two<lb/>
came in the slow pool at the<lb/>
University of Maryland. One of<lb/>
the Minges marks broke Greg<lb/>
Buckingham's record set in the<lb/>
1968AAU Championships held in<lb/>
Minges.<lb/>
Nieman has met the coaching<lb/>
philosophies of Scharf since<lb/>
coming to ECU; philosophies that<lb/>
have won 11 consecutive Sou-<lb/>
thern Conference titles.<lb/>
TED NIEMAN<lb/>
records? There are no profes-<lb/>
sional swimming leagues to go to<lb/>
after oollege.<lb/>
"I swim that kind of schedule<lb/>
because I like to do it Nieman<lb/>
said. "I also get a lot out of it<lb/>
(oollege education)<lb/>
East Carolina's swimming<lb/>
team has its winter workout in<lb/>
Winter Park and Nieman said<lb/>
that is what got him interestBd in<lb/>
the school.<lb/>
A business major, Nieman<lb/>
began swimming nine years ago,<lb/>
swimming in age-groups meets.<lb/>
His family moved to Winter Park<lb/>
when he was a sophomore in high<lb/>
school. This afforded him a<lb/>
chance to swim in a good high<lb/>
school program.<lb/>
"I saw the team working out<lb/>
during Christmas one year and I<lb/>
really was interested Nieman<lb/>
went on. " They were working and<lb/>
"This is a very high level<lb/>
program here at ECU Nieman<lb/>
added "I'm just glad to be a part<lb/>
of it. My times have dropped<lb/>
considerably and I expect them to<lb/>
continue to improve<lb/>
Scharf is most impressed with<lb/>
his first-year star.<lb/>
"I wish I had a bunch more<lb/>
like him Scharf said. "He is a<lb/>
very hard worker and does<lb/>
everything asked of him. That's<lb/>
the reason for his early success<lb/>
Nieman has not made any<lb/>
prediction about a possible all-<lb/>
America certificate coming, but<lb/>
Scharf thinks he can do it.<lb/>
"Ted's very capable of scor-<lb/>
ing in the nationals Scharf<lb/>
continued. "I told him he can do<lb/>
it and he's waking towards his<lb/>
goais. His swimming ability has<lb/>
no limits<lb/>
Indians throttle Pirates,<lb/>
ECU scalped 79-54<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina did not let<lb/>
Saturday night's intensity against<lb/>
Appalachian State carry over to<lb/>
Tuesday night for their game with<lb/>
William and Mary. The result:<lb/>
The Indians romped over the<lb/>
Pirates 79-54 in one of the most<lb/>
lopsided games in the Southern<lb/>
Conference this season.<lb/>
The Indians, now 3-2 in tthe<lb/>
conference and 9-6 overall, never<lb/>
trailed in the game and took little<lb/>
time in opening up a large lead.<lb/>
After three minutes had expired<lb/>
the I ndians had already built up a<lb/>
10-1 lead. After that the Pirates<lb/>
never got closer than five points.<lb/>
Head Coach Dave Pat ton<lb/>
called the game "definitely our<lb/>
worst of the year<lb/>
William and Mary was led in<lb/>
the early parts of the game by<lb/>
forward Matt Courage, who had<lb/>
allot his 16 points in the first half.<lb/>
Courage hit on eight of nine field<lb/>
goal attempts during the first<lb/>
twenty minutes.<lb/>
The I ndians stretched the lead<lb/>
to 13 at 24-11 with just under ten<lb/>
minutes to go in the period but<lb/>
would not let up. The Pirates<lb/>
were foroed into turnover after<lb/>
turnover.<lb/>
The Indians went into the<lb/>
locker room at halftime with a<lb/>
40-23 margin. Coach George Ba-<lb/>
lanis' troops came out in the<lb/>
second half ready to oontinue the<lb/>
blowout.<lb/>
William and Mary scored the<lb/>
first five points of the second half<lb/>
to take a 22 point lead at 45-23.<lb/>
But they did not let up there.<lb/>
With things going their way the<lb/>
I ndians doubled the score on ECU<lb/>
several times during the second<lb/>
half before the Pirates caught on<lb/>
to a hot streak. With the score<lb/>
60-29, Patton called for a time<lb/>
out. During the next six minutes<lb/>
the Pirates out-scored the Indians<lb/>
21-11 to cut the margin to 21 at<lb/>
71-51.<lb/>
But, the Indians hit one more<lb/>
hot streak to give them the<lb/>
25-point margin.<lb/>
John Lowenhaut lead William<lb/>
and Mary with 17 points, ten in<lb/>
the first half, along with Cour-<lb/>
age's 16. Ron Satterwaite con-<lb/>
tributed nine to the Indians'<lb/>
cause.<lb/>
Larry Hunt pumped in 17<lb/>
points for the Pirates to lead their<lb/>
soaring. Don Whitaker hit on ten,<lb/>
most of which came from the 20<lb/>
foot mark. Freshman Jim Ramsey<lb/>
added eight.<lb/>
The Pirates were again play-<lb/>
ing with freshman sensation Herb<lb/>
Gray playing hurt. The slick-<lb/>
moving forward was injured in<lb/>
the Richmond game a oouple of<lb/>
weeks ago and has played little<lb/>
since then.<lb/>
The Indians were red hot in<lb/>
the game, hitting of 55 percent of<lb/>
their shots to just 36 percent for<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
The Pirates, who dropped to<lb/>
2-3 in the league and 7-7 overall,<lb/>
will be back in action Saturday<lb/>
night when they travel to Lexing-<lb/>
ton, Va. to face the strong VMI<lb/>
Keydets, who stand 12-1 thus far<lb/>
and beat the Pirates by 11 in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum earlier in the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Major changes in<lb/>
'77 grid schedule<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.CThe<lb/>
East Carolina University football<lb/>
schedule for 1977 features three<lb/>
first-time opponents, five home<lb/>
games and the University's initial<lb/>
appearance in the Oyster Bowl.<lb/>
The Pirates will face for the<lb/>
first time the University of Texas<lb/>
at Arlington, the University of<lb/>
South Carolina and the University<lb/>
of Southwestern Louisiana. The<lb/>
UT-Arlington and Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana games will be at home,<lb/>
while the South Carolina oontest<lb/>
is scheduled for Columbia. S.C.<lb/>
In addition to UT-Arlington<lb/>
and Southwestern Louisiana, the<lb/>
Pirates will face Virginia Military<lb/>
Institute, Southern Illinois Uni-<lb/>
versity and the University of<lb/>
Richmond in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Homecoming is scheduled<lb/>
against Southern Illinois and<lb/>
Band Night against Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana.<lb/>
The Pirates make their initial<lb/>
appearance in the Oyster Bowl on<lb/>
Nov. 12, against William &amp; Mary.<lb/>
East Carolina will be the host and<lb/>
home team in the 1 30 encounter.<lb/>
East Carol ina opens its season<lb/>
on the road against N.C. State on<lb/>
Sept. 3, at 7:00 p.m. Other road<lb/>
opponents include the University<lb/>
of Toledo, South Carolina, The<lb/>
Citadel and Appalachian State<lb/>
University.<lb/>
East Carolina Athletic Direc-<lb/>
tor, Bill Cain, said, "Our sche-<lb/>
dule for 1977 is an indication of<lb/>
the upgrading we are doing with<lb/>
our football scheduling fa the<lb/>
future. The addition of teams like<lb/>
South Carolina, Texas-Arlington<lb/>
and Southwestern Louisiana<lb/>
makes our schedule much tough-<lb/>
er<lb/>
The Pirates will be playing as<lb/>
amaja independent next season,<lb/>
following the withdrawal from the<lb/>
Southern Conference at the end of<lb/>
this school year. This marks the<lb/>
first time a Pirate football team<lb/>
has not been eligible for a<lb/>
conference title since 1964, the<lb/>
first year East Carolina was in the<lb/>
Southern Conference, that being<lb/>
a probationary year. The last true<lb/>
independent status fa ECU was<lb/>
1963, the year pria to ECU'S<lb/>
joining the Southern Conference.<lb/>
This is truly an intersectional<lb/>
schedule, as we will face two<lb/>
Southern Conference teams, two<lb/>
Southland Conference teams, one<lb/>
Mid-American Conference team,<lb/>
one Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
team, one Missouri Valley Con-<lb/>
ference team and four maja<lb/>
independent teams<lb/>
"Next year's schedule should<lb/>
be the toughest in school histay.<lb/>
I, alaig with Coach Dye, am very<lb/>
excited about the changes we've<lb/>
been able to make fa next year.<lb/>
ECU FOOTBALL coach Pat Dye<lb/>
THE SCHEDULE:<lb/>
Sept. 3NCSURaleigh, N.C.7:00pm<lb/>
Sept. 10U. of Texas atGreenville, N.C.7:00pm<lb/>
Sept. 17U. of ToledoToledo, Ohio730pm<lb/>
Sept. 24VMIGreenville, N.C.7:00pm<lb/>
Oct.1U. of S.C.Columbia, S.C.730pm<lb/>
Oct.8U.S. III.Greenville, N.C.130pm<lb/>
Oct.15U.of RichmondGreenville, N.C.7 00pm<lb/>
Oct. 22The CitadelCharleston, S.C.7 00pm<lb/>
Oct. 29SWLa. U.Greenville, N.C.7O0pm<lb/>
Nov. 5ASUBoone, N.C.1:30pm<lb/>
Nov. 12William &amp; MaryNafolk, Va.1:30pm<lb/>
HomeDoming Band Ni(jht Oyster Bowl<lb/>
III<lb/>
<pb facs="00057105_0013"/><lb/>
Freshman basketball standout<lb/>
20 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAP Page 13<lb/>
ECU forward shows potential.<lb/>
follows in father's f<lb/>
? If<lb/>
t steps<lb/>
Comparisons are always hard<lb/>
to make, but if Herb Gray, Jr.<lb/>
inherits any of his father's talent,<lb/>
East Carolina will certainly bene-<lb/>
fit.<lb/>
Herb Gray, Jr. is a forward for<lb/>
the ECU basketball team. He<lb/>
averaged just under eleven points<lb/>
a game through eleven games,<lb/>
while pulling down around five<lb/>
rebounds per game. He has<lb/>
tremendous leaping ability as<lb/>
evidenced by his now famous<lb/>
baseline drive, slam dunk rou-<lb/>
tine.<lb/>
One can only hope that he<lb/>
progresses like his father. Herb<lb/>
Gray, Sr. played college basket-<lb/>
ball at North Carolina A &amp; T. His<lb/>
senior year, he led the nation in<lb/>
rebounding. Following an unsuc-<lb/>
cessful tryout with Atlanta, Herb<lb/>
Gray, Sr. played seven years of<lb/>
semi-pro ball.<lb/>
" My Dad is the one who really<lb/>
got me going in basketball said<lb/>
Herb Gray, Jr. "When I was<lb/>
playing he used to use reverse<lb/>
psychology on me. He'd tell me<lb/>
that there would be no way I oould<lb/>
stop a particular player, or that I<lb/>
oouldn't make this move or that<lb/>
shot. That would get me all fired<lb/>
up. I'd want togoout on the oourt<lb/>
and prove that he was wrong<lb/>
It worked. In high school,<lb/>
playing at Bowie High in Seat<lb/>
Pleasant, Md Herb broke 18 of<lb/>
the school's32 records. He broke<lb/>
ten season records, three game<lb/>
records, and five career records.<lb/>
"I'm probably a little more<lb/>
offensive minded than my father<lb/>
was said Herb, Jr. "I look to<lb/>
score. It feels very natural for me.<lb/>
My speed and shooting have<lb/>
always been my strongest areas,<lb/>
even though I haven't been<lb/>
shooting well lately<lb/>
When it oomes to scoring<lb/>
there is definitely a crowd prefer-<lb/>
ence as to the type of shot Herb<lb/>
should take. They call for the<lb/>
dunk when he gets near the<lb/>
basket.<lb/>
"Dunking is fun said Gray.<lb/>
"I don't really think much about<lb/>
it during the game, though,<lb/>
because it's also a habit. I do it in<lb/>
practice all the time, and I jo it a<lb/>
game when I have the chance<lb/>
The lanky 6-7 forward men-<lb/>
tioned that the transition from<lb/>
high school to oollege ball has<lb/>
been about what he expected.<lb/>
As for the future of Herb<lb/>
Gray, like father like son? ECU<lb/>
hopes so.<lb/>
See GRAY,<lb/>
14<lb/>
HERB GRA Y<lb/>
THURSDAY'S<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
STARBUCK Jan. 20th<lb/>
"Moonlight Feels Right<lb/>
ii<lb/>
"I Got To Know"<lb/>
ii<lb/>
Lucky Man"<lb/>
"The Slower You Go"<lb/>
Thursday Jan. 27th "Atlanta Tarns<lb/>
R&amp;Nlnc. 209 E. 5th St. 752-4668<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057105_0014"/><lb/>
???????????????????I<lb/>
?Hn<lb/>
pa9e 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 20 January 1977<lb/>
Gray shows potential<lb/>
with ECU roundballers<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
"I expected it to be hard, and<lb/>
it has been he said. "I've been<lb/>
going up against stronger and<lb/>
better players in college. In high<lb/>
school, I was one of the biggest<lb/>
players around. There were<lb/>
games that you could take it easy,<lb/>
and not do too much.<lb/>
"You can't do that in college.<lb/>
There haven't been any easy<lb/>
games, and you really have to<lb/>
stay alert at both ends of the<lb/>
court<lb/>
When thinking about where<lb/>
he wanted to play college basket-<lb/>
ball, Gray said that he visited<lb/>
places such as Penn St George<lb/>
Washington, and Marshall, but<lb/>
after a visit to ECU, his mind was<lb/>
made up.<lb/>
"When I came here he<lb/>
recalled, "I could see that the<lb/>
players were close and that<lb/>
the people in the program were<lb/>
nice. I thought I would have a<lb/>
chance to start or at least plav a<lb/>
lot. I just felt inside that this was<lb/>
the place to come<lb/>
mmii<lb/>
E.C.U. NIGHT IS BACK<lb/>
AND BIGGERTHAIM EVER<lb/>
NOT ONE DAY BUTTWO!<lb/>
"So far, I can't say that I'm<lb/>
pleased with my performance<lb/>
continued Gray. "I feel like I'm<lb/>
not playing to my full abilities.<lb/>
My shooting has been off, and I<lb/>
haven't been rebounding like I<lb/>
can<lb/>
Teammate Larry Hunt has<lb/>
seen many players at ECU in his<lb/>
years here. He thinks Gray has<lb/>
unlimited potential.<lb/>
"There have been some good<lb/>
players in the past said Hunt,<lb/>
"but Herb's one of the best. He<lb/>
has the potential to be one of the<lb/>
best players around. He has good<lb/>
size and speed, and with a little<lb/>
more strength, he'll be a terror<lb/>
around the basket<lb/>
Coach Dave Patton calls<lb/>
Gray, "one of the fastest players<lb/>
from one end of the court to the<lb/>
other I've ever seen. He has<lb/>
tremendous speed and jumping<lb/>
ability. He is quick enough to get<lb/>
around taller opposition. I think<lb/>
he'll be one of East Carolina's<lb/>
most exciting players ever<lb/>
As fa Gray himself, he will be<lb/>
satisfied if he fulfills his potential,<lb/>
and if the team follows suit.<lb/>
 This team can be a Southern<lb/>
Conference champion he said.<lb/>
"We have talent on this team,<lb/>
and we have desire. I just hope<lb/>
that by playoff time, I'll be in full<lb/>
stride<lb/>
Every Tuesday and Wednesday<lb/>
All Day At Bonanza<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK DINNER $1.49<lb/>
(Includes your choice of potato or vegetable, Texas Toast<lb/>
and salad from our all-you-can-eat salad bar)<lb/>
520 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
? It<lb/>
rts<lb/>
writers<lb/>
needed,<lb/>
if<lb/>
interested<lb/>
call 758-6366<lb/>
J<lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
There is a Full Line of Vending Machines<lb/>
Located in the Lobby of Wright Auditorium<lb/>
WhiletheOld Old Snack Shop in<lb/>
Wright Building is Being Renovated.<lb/>
Tables and Chairs Available<lb/>
Full Time Attendant on Duty<lb/>
Hours 7:30 ? 5:00<lb/>
Mon.? Fri.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Sideline Chat<lb/>
ithSTEVEWHEELER<lb/>
TOUGH GOING<lb/>
East Carolina's men and women basketball teams have had tough<lb/>
times finding the winning formula thus far this season. It can be traced<lb/>
back to one thing, youth. The men have one senior while the women<lb/>
have none.<lb/>
In any team sport a team must have leadership and experience to<lb/>
per form well as a team. When there are few upper classpersons on the<lb/>
team, there is usually less teamwork and more one-on-one operating.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates have been having to go to Debbie Freeman much<lb/>
too often this season. Freeman led the state's scorers last season and<lb/>
has had to put the ball up more often this season.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates other star forward, Rosie Thompson, has not<lb/>
played the last four games because of a stress fracture in her leg.With<lb/>
Thompson out of the line-up, opposing teams have keyed on Freeman<lb/>
and cut most of the Lady Pirates' scoring out. Gale Kerbaugh and April<lb/>
Ross have taken some of the soaring load, but it has not been enough to<lb/>
win.<lb/>
The Lady Pirate starters have been logging 90 percent of the court<lb/>
time thus far and have to be tiring late in games. Tonight, they must<lb/>
travel to Raleigh to face powerful N.C. State, 17th ranked team in the<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
As fa the men, they are having to play with as many as three<lb/>
freshmen and two sophomores in the game at the same time. Larry<lb/>
Hunt, the only senior is averaging over 35 minutes, but when he is out<lb/>
of the line-up, the Pirates are sometimes playing with the three<lb/>
freshman and two sophomores.<lb/>
With this kind of 'ine-up in, the Pirates are one of the youngest<lb/>
teams in the nation. This, in part, explains their woes of winning on the<lb/>
road. The Pirates are 7-7 overall but 1-6 on the road.<lb/>
It will be tough for the Pirates to win this weekend at either VMI or<lb/>
Furman. VMI, defending Southern Confernce champs and Eastern<lb/>
Regional finalist, has run off a 12-1 mark to date and look like the class<lb/>
of the league along with William and Mary.<lb/>
Furman has the top newoomer in the league in Jonathon Moore,<lb/>
who is averaging over 20 points per game. But their success depends<lb/>
on Bruce Grimm, the forward who transferred away from Furman and<lb/>
then back to Furman. He became eligible a couple of weeks ago and<lb/>
has been pumping in around 30 points a game since then. With Grimm<lb/>
in the line-up, the Paladins are a favorite in the conference later in the<lb/>
year along with VMI and William and Mary.<lb/>
Whatever the outlook, the men and women are in for a tough<lb/>
season in this, their building year. They are not playing ball like you<lb/>
see on ACC basketball on TV, but they desparately need the support of<lb/>
all the students on campus.<lb/>
A raucious home crowd can be worth ten points or more to a team.<lb/>
Both the men and women cagers need this kind of support-support<lb/>
they are getting from you the students of this university. Surely, they<lb/>
are not ACC level, not many teams in the nation are, but they need<lb/>
you. Dave Patton has already said it is not his team, it is yours. I am<lb/>
sure the same thing goes fa Catherine Bolton. So suppat them.<lb/>
BOWING OUT<lb/>
With this column, I have already stepped down as Spats Edita of<lb/>
FOUNTAI NHEAD.The administrative duties along with the writing got<lb/>
to be too much fa my grades. I will coitinue to write fa the paper, but<lb/>
will not be keeping office hours.<lb/>
I have turned the duties of Spats Edita over to Anne Hogge, a<lb/>
sophomae from FayetteviDe, who will no doubt do a fine job.<lb/>
So, the next time you see a byline saying "By STEVE WHEELER,<lb/>
Staff Writer" you will know why.<lb/>
Eat a big one at<lb/>
J$?p.<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
CARRY OUT<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
Pizza &amp; Spaghetti House<lb/>
FAST FREE CAMPUS DELIVERY<lb/>
DIAL 758-7400<lb/>
507 East 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Sunday thru Thursday<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
NOTHING<lb/>
BEATSA PIA FROM<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
11:30 AM till 1 AM<lb/>
11 30 AVI till 2 AM<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057105_0015"/><lb/>
20 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
?<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD PHOTOGRAPHER Kirk Kingsbury captures cold-weather<lb/>
bunnies in a high-contrast print.<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: '68 Vdkswagon fast<lb/>
back $350. or best offer. Call<lb/>
752-5267.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1964 Triumph Spit-<lb/>
fire. Will accept best offer - call<lb/>
758-7415 after 200p.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/>
FOR SALE: '66 VW great for in<lb/>
town would need work for trips.<lb/>
$350 or best offer. 752-4479<lb/>
FOR SALE: 10 week old male<lb/>
German Shepherd puppy. $60<lb/>
including collar, leash, &amp; bowl.<lb/>
Call 758-5364.<lb/>
FOR SALE: One New Pioneer<lb/>
Reverberation Amp. Got it for<lb/>
Christmas, must sell wwarranty<lb/>
$95.00. Phone 752-4379.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer Car Stereo.<lb/>
FM and Cassette tape player. ?<lb/>
Like new. .Call Dale 752-0734.<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: 1972 Harley David-<lb/>
son 125 Rapiado. Fair cond.<lb/>
$225.00. Kasino bass amp. $250.<lb/>
Call 758-0250 evenings.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New-Clairol "Kind-<lb/>
ness 3-way Hairsetter" with mist<lb/>
or regular control. Pins &amp; Condi-<lb/>
tioning mist treatment included.<lb/>
Only $20.00, call 758-9225.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pontiac 1966<lb/>
LeMans. Runs good. $250.<lb/>
Yamaha CLarinet. Excellent con-<lb/>
dition. $100. Phone-758-9378.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 3 piece Spanish style<lb/>
living room suit - swivel rocker,<lb/>
chair, couch, black vinyl, 1 yr.<lb/>
old. Good condition. Paid $5.00 -<lb/>
want $2.00. Call 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/>
foment<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1 &amp; 2 bedroom<lb/>
apartments. Newly renovated &amp;<lb/>
new appliances. Call 752-4154.<lb/>
WANTED: 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 for Village Green Apt.<lb/>
$50 per month plus utilities. Call<lb/>
758-0595 after 3.<lb/>
NEEDED: Male roommate to<lb/>
share apartment $47.50 per<lb/>
month plus utilities, must be<lb/>
clean and orderly. Call 752-3853.<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 6.00 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 erf dark brown Frye<lb/>
boots. Lost in Drama dept. dress-<lb/>
ing room. Reward offered for<lb/>
information leading to their<lb/>
whereabouts. 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-colored 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 Ring, S.N.S.H. Class<lb/>
of 75. Lost in Library Dec. 15th.<lb/>
Inside initials R.H. if found<lb/>
please contact Rick Horner in<lb/>
Aycock 115, phone 752-0465<lb/>
Reward.<lb/>
LOST: Brown cowhide wallet.<lb/>
Call-758-9895, 618 Tyler. Lost in<lb/>
the vicinity of Speight or Brews-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
personal<lb/>
found<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
FOUND: A scarf near Clement<lb/>
758-8216<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 or oome by the<lb/>
REAL aisis oenter. Counseling<lb/>
and referrals are what they offer<lb/>
They're free, too. Call 758-HELP.<lb/>
ICE SKATING: lessons 1215-<lb/>
115 Saturdays by Jil! 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. Striaiy 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 month. 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 offioe<lb/>
wak. Must be a veteran, a<lb/>
fulltime ECU student, and must<lb/>
be oonmuting from Washington,<lb/>
N.C. a nearby. Contact Ron<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 afta 900<lb/>
p.m. on Mond. and Wed after<lb/>
5:30 all other nights.<lb/>
LEARN TO BELLY DANCE! Let<lb/>
this year's resolution be a better<lb/>
figure! Call Sunshine, 752-5214<lb/>
after 9 OO p.m. on Mon. and Wed.<lb/>
after 500 p.m. all other nites,<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle.<lb/>
752-4272.<lb/>
?<lb/>
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Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 20 January 1977<lb/>
<lb/>
'M'<lb/>
DEBBIE F RE EM A N goes up for two against UNC-G THE ECU Lady Pirates<lb/>
Photos by Kip Sloan<lb/>
GALE KERBAUGH drives fa two<lb/>
<pb facs="00057105_0017"/>
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