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<pb facs="00057106_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for 51 years. With a<lb/>
circulation of 8,500, this<lb/>
issue is 12 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Gilmore, p. 6<lb/>
Rape lecture, p. 7<lb/>
Visit Argentina, p. 8<lb/>
Vol. 52, No.fl<lb/>
3c<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
25 January 1977<lb/>
Task Force<lb/>
picks editor<lb/>
By DAVID NASH<lb/>
SGA Correspondent<lb/>
The SGA, Monday evening, named Susan Roger son as 1977-78<lb/>
BUCCANEER Editor.<lb/>
"She impressed us quite a lot, and she has a lot of good ideas<lb/>
said SGA Vice-President Greg Pingston, chairman of the BUCCA-<lb/>
NEER Task Force.<lb/>
"It was a unanimous vote by the Task Force to bring her in as '77<lb/>
BUC Editor concluded Pingston.<lb/>
Rogerson informed the legislature that, as the situation is now.<lb/>
there will be only senior individual pictures in this year's annual.<lb/>
"We felt the students would rather see student life and student<lb/>
activities rather than the pictures added Vice-President Pingston.<lb/>
"We will have to charge $10 per book, and they will not be as large<lb/>
as usual according to Editor Rogerson.<lb/>
According to Rogerson, a representative of Hunter Publishing Co.<lb/>
will meet with Her on Wednesday to discuss specifics of this year's<lb/>
book.<lb/>
In other business, Tommy Thomason, SGA Treasurer announced to<lb/>
the legislature there was $2,125.00 in overdue emergency loans.<lb/>
The SGA Emergency Loan is an interest-free loan available to<lb/>
students by the SGA.<lb/>
In an effort to instigate payments on the loans, Thomason<lb/>
announced students would work on a commission basis in the Student<lb/>
Fund Accounting Office, calling students with over-due loans,<lb/>
probably on a daily basis.<lb/>
"If the loans have not been paid back by February, I will present<lb/>
this back to you (the legislature) to see if some legal action can be taken<lb/>
or an investigation made on the matter concluded Thomason.<lb/>
In addition, the legislature passed a resolution to the Faculty<lb/>
Senate requesting some type of time limit set regarding the return of<lb/>
test papers to students.<lb/>
"We want to recommend this to the Faculty Senate to think about,<lb/>
and also to think about the effect (the late return of papers) has on the<lb/>
students said Legislator Sam Collier.<lb/>
New Hanover<lb/>
leads black male<lb/>
imprisonment<lb/>
New Hanover County, home<lb/>
of the Wilmington 10, has the<lb/>
highest rate of imprisonment for<lb/>
black men of any Norm Carolina<lb/>
county, according to a newly<lb/>
released study by the North<lb/>
Carolina Social Research Cor-<lb/>
poration.<lb/>
The rate of imprisonment in<lb/>
state prisons for all of New<lb/>
Hanover's black men was 2.3<lb/>
percent on September 16, 1976.<lb/>
Following New Hanover were<lb/>
Henderson, Stanly, Union, Lin-<lb/>
coln, Buncombe, Mecklenburg,<lb/>
Forsyth, Catawba, and Ruther-<lb/>
ford Counties in order.<lb/>
Rates of imprisonment for<lb/>
black men in these counties<lb/>
ranged from 2.2 percent to 1.5<lb/>
percent. Other populous counties<lb/>
with high rates were Governor<lb/>
Jim Hunt's nome county, Wilson,<lb/>
which was11th place; Durham (in<lb/>
15th); Wake (in 19th); Nash<lb/>
(21st); Lenoir (22nd); and Guil-<lb/>
ford (25th).<lb/>
The study shows current rates<lb/>
of imprisonment for both black<lb/>
men and white men fa all 100<lb/>
North Carolina counties on<lb/>
September 16, 1976. The study<lb/>
ind that all but seven counties<lb/>
I. J higher rates of imprisonment<lb/>
fa black men than white; these<lb/>
seven counties were small west-<lb/>
ern counties with virtually non-<lb/>
existent black populations.<lb/>
North Carolina counties vary<lb/>
widely in how heavily they are<lb/>
imprisoning black males, but they<lb/>
vary far less in how heavily they<lb/>
are imprisoning white males.<lb/>
The highest county rates of<lb/>
imprisonment fa white males are<lb/>
oily about 0.5 percent. And<lb/>
there are 84 out of Nath<lb/>
Carolina's 100 counties which<lb/>
have higher rates of imprison-<lb/>
ment fa black men than even the<lb/>
highest county rate of imprison-<lb/>
ment fa white men.<lb/>
Eastern counties were found<lb/>
to have very much higher rates of<lb/>
imprisonment, in general, than<lb/>
western counties; but this ap-<lb/>
pears to be due statistically to the<lb/>
fact that mae blacks live in the<lb/>
east propatioiately than in the<lb/>
west.<lb/>
THE REAL CRISIS Center has set up a program to educate ECU students on the problems of rape.<lb/>
Real Crisis Center offers<lb/>
rape education and aid<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Edita<lb/>
A rape aisis group has been<lb/>
famed at REAL Crisis Center to<lb/>
help educate and aid ECU<lb/>
students in the problems of rape,<lb/>
according to Mary, a REAL<lb/>
spokesman.<lb/>
The group was aganized last<lb/>
spring in response to the rape<lb/>
scare that occurred at that time.<lb/>
However, REAL wakers are<lb/>
coicerned that students are na<lb/>
aware of their services.<lb/>
"We want to let people know<lb/>
that we exist, because people are<lb/>
becoming panicky cva the recent<lb/>
reported rapes said Mary.<lb/>
"It we can't prevent a rape, at<lb/>
least we can help the victim cope<lb/>
with it<lb/>
REAL of fas two maja ser-<lb/>
vices fa rape victims.<lb/>
The first service is a rape<lb/>
victim companion, which may be<lb/>
either male a female.<lb/>
"Their primary function is to<lb/>
be a friend. It's important fa the<lb/>
victim to have someone with<lb/>
them accading to Mary.<lb/>
Wakas at REAL feel that a<lb/>
dose friend is na necessarily what<lb/>
a rape victim needs after such an<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
"Being raped is obviously a<lb/>
traumatic experience, and it is not<lb/>
always easy to face people that<lb/>
you know said Mary.<lb/>
She said that the companiat<lb/>
can undastand the reactions that<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
An article in Thursday's<lb/>
paper entitled "Drinking,<lb/>
Accidents Related left the<lb/>
impression that the wreck<lb/>
in which ECU Student<lb/>
Susan Underhill and six<lb/>
aha young people wae<lb/>
killed was the result of<lb/>
drinking. However, this<lb/>
was not the case. No<lb/>
alcohol had been consumed<lb/>
befae the accident.<lb/>
the girl is undergoing and at the<lb/>
same time ok at the problem<lb/>
voiced n hospital and police<lb/>
procedures so they can let the girl<lb/>
know ahead of time what to<lb/>
expect.<lb/>
"We can help them get into a<lb/>
mae ratiaial state<lb/>
The function of the rape aisis<lb/>
group is to educate students<lb/>
about rape.<lb/>
"The educatas go out to<lb/>
groups to talk about rape. We tell<lb/>
them about some of the myths<lb/>
about rape, such as certain girls<lb/>
are asking fa it and that the way<lb/>
a girl dresses has a la to do with<lb/>
it<lb/>
Accading to Mary, thae is a<lb/>
REAL counsela on call 24 hours a<lb/>
day so students should na be<lb/>
afraid to contact the office at any<lb/>
time.<lb/>
"The reason that we want<lb/>
people to know about us is<lb/>
because we care<lb/>
Research grants<lb/>
total $235,899<lb/>
A total of $235,889 was<lb/>
awarded ECU during December<lb/>
to support several coastal-<lb/>
related research projects and<lb/>
service programs.<lb/>
All funds aiginated from the<lb/>
National Oceanic and Aeronautic<lb/>
Administration Sea Grant pro-<lb/>
gram except fa $28,000 fran<lb/>
Texasgulf, Inc.<lb/>
The Texasgulf award will<lb/>
suppot a study of the ecology of<lb/>
the Pamlico River Estuary to be<lb/>
directed by Dr. William H. Queen<lb/>
of the ECU Institute fa Coastal<lb/>
and Marine Resources.<lb/>
A NOAA grant of $120,938<lb/>
was awarded the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education to continue<lb/>
ECU'S continuing education pro-<lb/>
gram fa commacial fishamen.<lb/>
Otha NOAA funds will sup-<lb/>
pat research projects in biology,<lb/>
chemistry and geology, all of<lb/>
which relate to the environment<lb/>
of the Nath Carolina coast.<lb/>
The largest amount, $41,486, is<lb/>
earmarked fa a study of shae-<lb/>
line erosion and accretion to Le<lb/>
conducted by Dr. Vincent J. Bellis<lb/>
of the ECU biology faculty ana<lb/>
Drs. Michael 0"Gonna and Stan-<lb/>
ley Rigs of the geology faculty.<lb/>
John W. Osbane of Durham<lb/>
has been named Area 36 chair-<lb/>
man fa the ECU stadium fund<lb/>
raising campaign, accading to<lb/>
general chairman R.L. (Roddy)<lb/>
Jones.<lb/>
Osbane will head the fund<lb/>
raising effot in Durham, Orange,<lb/>
Person and Caswell counties,<lb/>
Jones said.<lb/>
A native of Bethel Park,<lb/>
Penn Osbane is a 1969 grad-<lb/>
uate of ECU'S School of Business<lb/>
with a B.S. BA in economics. His<lb/>
ECU alumni activities include<lb/>
being a leada of Pirate Club<lb/>
activities in Fayetteville and<lb/>
Durham fa the past six years,<lb/>
serving on the executive commit-<lb/>
tee and board of directas of the<lb/>
Pirate Club and as a memba of<lb/>
the ECU Athletic Council.<lb/>
The fund-raising drive is<lb/>
designed to raise at least $2.5<lb/>
million to inaease seating capa-<lb/>
city of Ficklen Stadium to nearly<lb/>
40,000 and provide aha stadium<lb/>
facilities.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057106_0002"/><lb/>
Dinner?<lb/>
Alpha Delta Wrestling<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
25 January 1977<lb/>
Crisis Center Alpha Phi<lb/>
The REAL Crisis Center has a<lb/>
program to oounsel 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/>
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 for 1977. The<lb/>
first show will be held in Pitt<lb/>
Plaza shopping center on April 8<lb/>
and 9. The second show has been<lb/>
scheduled to be held in the Evans<lb/>
Street Mall on July 8 and 9. Both<lb/>
shows are open mainly to North<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/>
for exhibitors 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 for instate<lb/>
craftsmen and artists and $25 fa<lb/>
out of state people.<lb/>
BUC staff<lb/>
The 1977 BUCCANEER needs<lb/>
a staff! Money has been appro-<lb/>
priated by the SGA fa salaries fa<lb/>
the following positions: Activities<lb/>
Edita, Athletic Edita, Academic<lb/>
Editor, Organizations Editor,<lb/>
Copy Edita, Advertising Mana-<lb/>
ger, Asst. Ad. Mgr and Sub-<lb/>
scriptions Manager. Anyone<lb/>
wishing to apply fa these posi-<lb/>
tions can do so by ooming to the<lb/>
BUC off ioe from 9-11 a 3-5, a by<lb/>
calling 757-6501 between these<lb/>
hours. Also needed is volunteer<lb/>
help. If there aren't enough<lb/>
applicants by Jan. 28, there will<lb/>
be NO BUC, so apply now!<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'sagreot change<lb/>
of pace.<lb/>
Alpha Phi is sponsaing a<lb/>
FONZ-look-a-like contest Tues<lb/>
Jan. 25, from 830-1 in the Elbo<lb/>
Room. Cost is 25 cents in<lb/>
advance, 50 cents at the doa a<lb/>
25 cents if in 50's dress. Prizes<lb/>
include a $10 gift certificate at the<lb/>
Recad Bar, a case of beer, an<lb/>
Elbo Pass and a $10 gift certifi-<lb/>
cate at 3 Steers a the Raffle<lb/>
winner. The coitest is at 10, the<lb/>
raffle drawing at 1030.<lb/>
Meeting<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Special Entertainment Committee<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 27 at 4 in the<lb/>
Student Union Lounge. Future<lb/>
bookings will be made.<lb/>
BahaiAssoc.<lb/>
A series of discussions on<lb/>
comparative religion will begin<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 27, at 730 p.m. in<lb/>
Rm. 238 Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center spoisaed by the Bahai<lb/>
Association. A filmstrip on<lb/>
Buddhism will be shown. Guests<lb/>
are weloome.<lb/>
Good men<lb/>
Anyone interested in starting<lb/>
a new national social fraternity on<lb/>
the ECU campus, call 758-8997<lb/>
and ask fa Bob, a 758-0260 and<lb/>
ask fa Jerry a John.<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/>
Co-op Name<lb/>
Would you like to win a $5 gift<lb/>
certificate to Daryl's? The Coop-<lb/>
erative Education Of f ice needs an<lb/>
aiginal, eye-catching title fa<lb/>
their newsletter.Turn in your idea<lb/>
fa a oo-op newsletter name to the<lb/>
Co-op Office in 313 Rawl any day<lb/>
from 8 until 5. All entries must be<lb/>
in by noon, Jan. 28. The winner of<lb/>
the $5 Daryl's gift certificate will<lb/>
be announced in the February 1<lb/>
edition of The Fountainhead.<lb/>
Like going out fa dinner?<lb/>
How about eating in candlelight<lb/>
and listening to music? Then this<lb/>
offer should interest you Stu-<lb/>
dents majaing in Foods, Nutri-<lb/>
tion, and Institutional Manage-<lb/>
ment prepare delicious meals<lb/>
which include an appetizer, en-<lb/>
tree, vegetables, dessert, hot<lb/>
rolls, and unlimited refills on tea<lb/>
a oof fee; and the whole meal oost<lb/>
just $3. Serving time is at 630<lb/>
p.m. in the Inst. Management<lb/>
Dining Room. The dates fa these<lb/>
meals are Feb. 2, Feb. 9, and<lb/>
Feb. 14.<lb/>
Fa reservations fa 1, 2, a all<lb/>
of these days, send your money,<lb/>
include your address to: SDA co<lb/>
Donna Hill, Dept. of Home<lb/>
Economics, ECU, Greenville.<lb/>
Reservations are limited. Make<lb/>
checks payable to SDA. Tickets<lb/>
will be mailed to you.<lb/>
Organ donors<lb/>
The next meeting of Alpha<lb/>
Epsilon Delta will be Tuesday,<lb/>
Jan. 25, 7:30 p.m. in Flanagan<lb/>
307. The speaker fa the evening<lb/>
will be Dr. Schweisthal, chairman<lb/>
of the department of anatomy at<lb/>
ECU'S medical school. The topic<lb/>
fa the evening will be agan<lb/>
donas, and all interested persons<lb/>
are invited to attend.<lb/>
Wall Cheer<lb/>
The Pirates can use all the<lb/>
support you can give. Here's a<lb/>
suggestion: A good way to<lb/>
psych-out Old Dominion (a any-<lb/>
oieelse) when ECU plays them at<lb/>
hone, in Minges, would be to<lb/>
give the "WALL CHEER Here<lb/>
is how to do it: When the visitas<lb/>
are having their names announ-<lb/>
ced and their team introduced;<lb/>
everyone turn and face the<lb/>
bleachers with their backs to the<lb/>
court and cheer real loud,<lb/>
(applause is awfully effective)<lb/>
Everyone get involved. We oould<lb/>
also have balloon night where<lb/>
everyone is given balloons to<lb/>
throw, (not water) The "Wall<lb/>
Cheer" was used at V.P.I, last<lb/>
year and was very successful<lb/>
when they routed Wake Faest.<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
The Jan. meeting of the ECU<lb/>
League of Scholars will take place<lb/>
Wednesday, Jan. 26, at 730 p.m.<lb/>
in Austin 209. Mr. Boudreaux will<lb/>
be present to discuss the future<lb/>
membership of the League. Also,<lb/>
plans will be discussed fa a<lb/>
symposium in the Spring. Please<lb/>
attend!<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/>
Alpha Epsilon Delta, the<lb/>
pre-medical honor society, is<lb/>
preparing fa an initiation in the<lb/>
spring. The requirements for<lb/>
entrance into AED is a 3.0 overall<lb/>
average, a 3.0 science average,<lb/>
participation in a month long<lb/>
pledge period, and a willingness<lb/>
to attend and participate in AED<lb/>
meetings and projects. Any inter-<lb/>
ested persons can get further<lb/>
information from Dr. Wayne<lb/>
Ayers in Flanagan a pre-med<lb/>
advisay office BA-303.<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
East Carolina's NCSL delega-<lb/>
tion was at UNC-Charlrtte this<lb/>
past weekend attending the Jan.<lb/>
Interim-Council. There was a<lb/>
great deal of important infama-<lb/>
tioi exchanged at the meeting so<lb/>
all ECUNCSL'ers are asked to<lb/>
stop by the Multi-Purpose room<lb/>
in Mendenhall at 7:30 p.m. on<lb/>
Jan. 25, to finalize our legislation<lb/>
and begin preparations fa the<lb/>
1977 Session in Raleigh.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Do you like blue grass,<lb/>
oountry, rock-n-roll, a do you like<lb/>
just plain old boogie music? If you<lb/>
do, the Coffeehouse is the place<lb/>
to be Friday and Saturday, Jan.<lb/>
28 &amp; 29 at 8 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
rm. 15. Admission isonly 25cents<lb/>
and there are plenty of refresh-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Acct. Society<lb/>
There is a VITA meeting<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 27, from 7 to 9 in<lb/>
Rawl 204. There will be an<lb/>
introductay lecture on the VITA<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Alpha Phi<lb/>
Gamma<lb/>
There will be a meeting of<lb/>
Alpha Phi Gamma on Wed Jan.<lb/>
26. The meeting will be held at<lb/>
5:00 in the FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
office. All members who wish to<lb/>
make the Nashville trip are urged<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
MRC Dance<lb/>
The MRC is having a dance<lb/>
February 10, at the American<lb/>
Legion building. The group fea-<lb/>
tured will be "The Embers<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, contact any dam<lb/>
house oouncil member a dam<lb/>
oounsela. Tickets are at first<lb/>
come first serve basis.<lb/>
ECU'S wrestling team will<lb/>
host Carolina this weekend in<lb/>
what is to be one of the Pirate's<lb/>
biggest matches of the season.<lb/>
The match will be held this Friday<lb/>
night at 8 p.m. at Minges.<lb/>
Everyone is urged to oome out<lb/>
and suppat the team.<lb/>
Beach<lb/>
ECU'S chapter of the Psycho-<lb/>
logy Hona Society (PSI-CHI) is<lb/>
spaisaing a retreat Saturday,<lb/>
Jan. 29 oi Sunday, Jan. 30 at the<lb/>
Ramada Inn, Atlantic Beach. Its<lb/>
purpose is to learn mae about<lb/>
communication and other psycho-<lb/>
logy subjects in an informal<lb/>
environment. A Bus will leave<lb/>
from in front of Speight at 8 a.m<lb/>
Saturday, Jan. 29 and will return<lb/>
participants to campus Sunday,<lb/>
Jan. 30, at 4 p.m. All interested<lb/>
students should apply no later<lb/>
than noon, Jan. 28.<lb/>
Important!<lb/>
There will be a symposium<lb/>
oommittee meeting Wednesday,<lb/>
Jan. 26 at 5 p.m. in room 228<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. All<lb/>
those interested in attending<lb/>
please call Tim McLeod pria to<lb/>
the meeting.<lb/>
Poetry contest<lb/>
Complete rules fa entering<lb/>
the annual poetry contest spon-<lb/>
sored by the North Carolina<lb/>
Poetry Society, Inc are now<lb/>
available to anyone wishing to<lb/>
submit poems for the 1977<lb/>
competition. Winners will receive<lb/>
cash awards and their poems will<lb/>
be published in the Poetry<lb/>
Society's annual A ward- Winning<lb/>
Poems.<lb/>
There are eleven contest<lb/>
categories which include a variety<lb/>
of subjects and poetic forms<lb/>
ranging from the sonnet to Haiku.<lb/>
Two special contests are reserved<lb/>
fa students, ate fa grades 3-8<lb/>
and the other fa high school and<lb/>
college students.<lb/>
Seven categories have N.C.<lb/>
residency requirements while the<lb/>
other four are open to poets<lb/>
anywhere writing in English. The<lb/>
deadline for submissions is<lb/>
March 5. Membership in the N.C.<lb/>
Poetry Society is not a prerequi-<lb/>
site fa entering the oontest.<lb/>
Anyaie who wishes to receive<lb/>
the complete oontest rules may do<lb/>
so by addressing an inquiry to<lb/>
Isaac S. Lassiter, P.O. Box 552,<lb/>
Canoor, N.C. 27229. PLEASE<lb/>
ENCLOSE A LONG, SELF-AD-<lb/>
DRESSED, STAMPED ENVE-<lb/>
LOPE WITH ANY INQUIRIES.<lb/>
Need a job?<lb/>
All persons interested in a<lb/>
high-paying position with WECU,<lb/>
contact the station at 757-6656.<lb/>
This involves sales with a 20<lb/>
commission rate.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057106_0003"/><lb/>
Historical Assoc.<lb/>
seeks membership<lb/>
25 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
The 43-year-old Southern<lb/>
Historical Association, a national<lb/>
organization which publishes the<lb/>
Journal of Southern History, is<lb/>
actively conducting a campaign to<lb/>
increase membership.<lb/>
Dr. Joseph F. Steelman, pro-<lb/>
fessor of history and director of<lb/>
graduate studies in histay at<lb/>
ECU, is chairman of a 32-member<lb/>
national committee on member-<lb/>
ship for the association. The<lb/>
membership campaign, Steelman<lb/>
said, is directed at graduate<lb/>
students in histay and institu-<lb/>
tional memberships fa municipal<lb/>
and county libraries.<lb/>
Library memberships make<lb/>
the journal generally available to<lb/>
the public, Steelman said.<lb/>
The committee also is seeking<lb/>
sponsoring memberships from<lb/>
businesses, corporations and<lb/>
foundations, he said.<lb/>
Nath Carolina membership<lb/>
applications may be obtained<lb/>
from Dr. David Eliades, professa<lb/>
of histay, Pembroke State Uni-<lb/>
versity, who is directing the<lb/>
membership campaign in the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Nationally, the Southern<lb/>
Histaical Association now has<lb/>
approximately 5,000 members.<lb/>
The quarterly journal, first pub-<lb/>
lished in 1935, has been sponsor-<lb/>
ed successively by Louisiana<lb/>
State Univasity, Vanderbilt Uni-<lb/>
versity, the University of<lb/>
Kentucky and now The Rice<lb/>
University, Houston.<lb/>
The association is devoted to<lb/>
the encouragement of teaching<lb/>
and research in Southern histay<lb/>
and in preservatioi of recads of<lb/>
the South's past.<lb/>
The Journal of Southern<lb/>
histay circulates in ail of the<lb/>
United States and some 25<lb/>
faeign countries. Generally, it<lb/>
carries artides relating to the<lb/>
South and also features an<lb/>
exoellent book review section as<lb/>
well as news and naes about the<lb/>
histaical profession.<lb/>
In addition, the association<lb/>
awards four prizes on a regular<lb/>
basis fa books and articles on<lb/>
Southern histay.<lb/>
Dr. Richard L. Watsot Jr of<lb/>
Duke University, is 1976-77<lb/>
president of the Southan Hista-<lb/>
ical Assoc.<lb/>
SNOW, HUH? Promises, promises.<lb/>
Photo by Russ Pogue)<lb/>
CIA link to Brooklyn<lb/>
professor revealed<lb/>
NEW YORK (LNS)-The<lb/>
Brooklyn College political science<lb/>
department charged in early<lb/>
January that a fellow faculty<lb/>
member had violated academic<lb/>
standards and "would warrant<lb/>
removal" because he had agreed<lb/>
to "oovat intelligence-gathering<lb/>
activity fa the Central' Intelli-<lb/>
gence Agency<lb/>
Michael I. Selzer, a political<lb/>
science professa, is described by<lb/>
colleagues as "a specialist in<lb/>
psychological profiles of political<lb/>
extremists Some of the col-<lb/>
lege's faculty members specu-<lb/>
lated that Selzer's relationship<lb/>
with the Agency involves ex-<lb/>
change of infamatioi pertaining<lb/>
to Selzer's psychohistaical re-<lb/>
search. Selzer once confided to a<lb/>
fellow professa that he had done<lb/>
work fa the CIA in Europe,<lb/>
where he has been researching<lb/>
the psychological recads of Bel-<lb/>
gian and Danish oollabaatas<lb/>
with Nazi occupiers during Wald<lb/>
War II.<lb/>
A spokespason fa "Counter-<lb/>
spy" magazine in Washington,<lb/>
D.C. characterized Selzer's re-<lb/>
lation to the CIA as "standard<lb/>
operating procedure" for the<lb/>
Agency's university connections.<lb/>
In the past year, a Senate<lb/>
oommittee investigation caused a<lb/>
flurry on U.S. campuses when it<lb/>
disclosed that the CIA maintains<lb/>
contacts with individuals on more<lb/>
than a hundred campuses across<lb/>
the oountry.<lb/>
The "Counterspy" spokes-<lb/>
person cited a number of ob-<lb/>
jectives of the CIA in universities,<lb/>
among them, suppating research<lb/>
trips to gather intelligence on<lb/>
faeign oountries, receiving ad-<lb/>
vice on how to manipulate<lb/>
societies to the advantage of the<lb/>
U.S. government, and spying on<lb/>
faeign students.<lb/>
When oontacted by LNS, an<lb/>
official at the CIA headquarters in<lb/>
McLean, Va refused to comment<lb/>
on the Agency's relationship with<lb/>
Selzer, but admitted that the CIA<lb/>
maintains ties with faculty mem-<lb/>
bers at a number of universities.<lb/>
Although he maintained that the<lb/>
connection was not oonsidaed a<lb/>
"covert operation" and was<lb/>
unclassified, he said that he could<lb/>
na release names of univasities<lb/>
a professas with CIA ties unless<lb/>
faced to do so by a successful<lb/>
challenge under the Freedom of<lb/>
Infamatioi Act.<lb/>
Sports wo rid<lb/>
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Featuring the New, Modern<lb/>
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Tuesdays-Lady's Night 6:30-11:00<lb/>
All ladies admitted for $1.00<lb/>
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Wednesdays- ECU Night 6:30-11:00<lb/>
Free skate rental with<lb/>
presentation of I.D. card<lb/>
For more information call 756-6000<lb/>
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Crabcakes. slaw, french fries plus<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
� pound hamburger steak, slaw,<lb/>
french fries and rolls.<lb/>
Fish, slaw french fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat. 752-3172<lb/>
2 miles east on highway 264<lb/>
(out 10th St.)<lb/>
Lautares Jewelers<lb/>
Registered Jewelers Certified Gemologist<lb/>
American Gem Society<lb/>
Diamond Specialists<lb/>
See George Lautares<lb/>
ECU Class'41<lb/>
<pb facs="00057106_0004"/><lb/>
" j. �  � � ' � . � - 'kit tii   �<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
25 January 1977<lb/>
Objectivity and politics<lb/>
The editorial which appeared in FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD on Thursday, Jan. 20, mistakenly criticized<lb/>
SGA Speaker Ricky Price for not informing the<lb/>
legislature of their "legal duty" to screen seven new<lb/>
Publications Board members. Since the constitutions<lb/>
or bylaws of all SGA sponsored organizations require<lb/>
annual approval and the legislature apparently had<lb/>
not given Pub Board's bylaws the yearly okay when<lb/>
amendments to it were vetoed last Spring quarter,<lb/>
then pub board was officially defunct. Contrary to the<lb/>
previous editorial, Price would have been outside his<lb/>
legal authority to have directed the legislature to<lb/>
appoint new board members.<lb/>
Although legally in the clear, Price is nonetheless<lb/>
guilty of not forewarning the legislature of the<lb/>
possible consequences of not reestablishing a<lb/>
publications board. And just about the worst of<lb/>
consequences has occurred, especially to the<lb/>
BUCCANEER, in the absence of a credible authority<lb/>
which should be relatively free from political<lb/>
pressures. Without this technically informed liaison<lb/>
between SGA and the publications the latter must<lb/>
seek their operating funds by direct request from the<lb/>
same student government on which it should be<lb/>
objectively reporting. This applies to the student<lb/>
newspaper more so than to other publications.<lb/>
Such a system is a journalist's nightmare, a<lb/>
tainted experience fa any student contemplating a<lb/>
career with the "socially responsible" press. For<lb/>
student journalists preparing to enter the profes-<lb/>
sional world, a setup in which the media has to<lb/>
politically shake the hand that feeds them, the same<lb/>
hand which may require an editorial slap now and<lb/>
then, provides a firsthand look at First Amendment<lb/>
freedoms gone awry.<lb/>
Granted, there has to be student input into<lb/>
publications which operate with student funds. But<lb/>
this control should be vested in an authority either<lb/>
directly or indirectly chosen by the student body, yet<lb/>
free from daily political manipulation. An authority<lb/>
which is empowered to oversee the day-to-day<lb/>
operation of the publications and to act as a<lb/>
technically informed lobby for both the publications<lb/>
and the SGA. How many more BUCCANEER-type<lb/>
debacles must students suffer before Price realizes<lb/>
that direct SGA control of publications is a mistake?<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community fa over fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Business ManagerTeresa Whisenant<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis Leonard<lb/>
Nevvs 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 Otfkm: 77-636, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscription: SKLWerwHtaHy tor aon-studmth $6.06 tor<lb/>
I<lb/>
"WO TAXATION WITHOUT REPfBENWION <lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Unfair screenings charge denied<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I am writing in response to<lb/>
allegations that the Screenings<lb/>
Committee was unfair in the<lb/>
screening of a day student, Soott<lb/>
Bright. I placed a FLASH in the<lb/>
Fountainhead on Thursday,<lb/>
December 16, 1976, to inform<lb/>
students that there were day<lb/>
student positions open and that a<lb/>
Screenings meeting would be<lb/>
held the week following Christ-<lb/>
mas vacation. I placed another<lb/>
FLASH in Tuesday, January 4th,<lb/>
1977s paper.<lb/>
Speaker Price blasts editor<lb/>
i2i<lb/>
<lb/>
��'<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Mr. Elliott, I see you are a<lb/>
person of your word. You said on<lb/>
November 11, 1976 during a<lb/>
budget hearing of the Appropria-<lb/>
tions Committee, that if the SGA<lb/>
denied your requested salary<lb/>
increases and convention trip and<lb/>
general travel budget: "There<lb/>
already exists anti-SGA feeling<lb/>
among my staff. If you do this<lb/>
(deny te increases it will cause<lb/>
them to surface<lb/>
Comments like that are very<lb/>
revealing, and I think that the<lb/>
students of ECU have a right to<lb/>
know the real reason for your<lb/>
constant, biased coverage of<lb/>
Student Government. You ob-<lb/>
viously resent having to ask for<lb/>
funds from the student body<lb/>
through student government, but<lb/>
the cuts I've made show the type<lb/>
of Editor you are.<lb/>
The major reductions were in<lb/>
salaries, conventions, and travel.<lb/>
When the new SGA Executive<lb/>
officers came in this past Spring<lb/>
they faced a horrible situation.<lb/>
SGA had spent over $n9,000 in<lb/>
salaries last year. Among other<lb/>
things, the SGA President cut his<lb/>
own salary by $25. a month.<lb/>
When you and your ataff like<lb/>
everyone eiee, were asked fa<lb/>
'A�ry cuts, you wjMd have<lb/>
re-<lb/>
thought the world was coming to<lb/>
an end. That, though, was not the<lb/>
worst thing we did, we cut out a<lb/>
little trip to Chicago you and a<lb/>
oouple of staff members had<lb/>
planned. (By the way, not a single<lb/>
SGA person has used student<lb/>
funds to travel out of state, but,<lb/>
then, you are special.)<lb/>
The way you' ve distorted the<lb/>
Buc issue, your obviously hostile<lb/>
Pub Soar abides, and your<lb/>
editorials rnearfirjhe )�, "The<lb/>
anti-SGA feelings (will) surface'<lb/>
They have!<lb/>
Mr. Elliott, you have refused<lb/>
to print letters that criticized you.<lb/>
When I asked you why letters are<lb/>
not printed you said "we cannot<lb/>
print just any old letter or we wW<lb/>
have nine pages of forum<lb/>
Maybe nine pages of what<lb/>
students think is better than one<lb/>
paragraph of what you "know<lb/>
Ricky Price<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
Forum letters should be<lb/>
typed or printed and they must<lb/>
be signed and include the<lb/>
writer's address. Names will<lb/>
be withheld upon request.<lb/>
Letters may be sent to Foun-<lb/>
tainhead or left at. the Informa-<lb/>
tion Desk In (i6mhojt Stu-<lb/>
dent Ceptm. vr fe.<lb/>
I personally contacted 11 out<lb/>
of the 13 applicants to inform<lb/>
them of the meetings to be<lb/>
held on Wednesday, January 5 at<lb/>
7XX) p.m and on Thursday,<lb/>
January 6 at 4XX) p.m. The other<lb/>
two applicants did not have phone<lb/>
numbers on their applications, so<lb/>
we posted a sign on the SGA<lb/>
offioe door and informed the<lb/>
Executive Secretary so that if<lb/>
those without a phone got in<lb/>
contact with the SGA office, the<lb/>
proper information oould be given<lb/>
to them.<lb/>
One of the applicants without<lb/>
a phone was interested enough to<lb/>
find out when the oommittee<lb/>
meeting was and came to the<lb/>
oommittee to be screened. We<lb/>
received no response from Scott<lb/>
Bright.<lb/>
Mr. Bright stated Hi Ms latter<lb/>
that Hob Bent on, another appK-<lb/>
aanUflbived no contact from the<lb/>
SGA Screenings Committee; in<lb/>
fact, Mr. Benton was contacted<lb/>
by fhe and made the meeting and<lb/>
watjreened for the position!<lb/>
WHtJfc WERE YOU, MR.<lb/>
mi Obviously Mr.<lb/>
It not interested in repre-<lb/>
senting the student body, merely<lb/>
In amazing the SGA Screenings<lb/>
CajJWttee<lb/>
The 9GA Screenings Commit-<lb/>
tee has taken the stand that those<lb/>
wfJlre truly interested in a<lb/>
Leplwfor position will get in<lb/>
touch with the SGA offioe to get<lb/>
the proper information.<lb/>
IGNORANCE IS NO EXCUSE!<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
VioMt�tChffcraon<lb/>
1<lb/>
ti.�Ji �<lb/>
:2? -a<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057106_0005"/><lb/>
- '  ' <lb/>
Student government<lb/>
racial quotas overruled<lb/>
25 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The United States Fourth<lb/>
Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled<lb/>
that the use of racial criteria and<lb/>
quotas in student governments<lb/>
cannot be justified under the<lb/>
Constitution and has declared<lb/>
minimum quotas for Blacks at the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill both unlawful and<lb/>
unconstitutional.<lb/>
A three judge panel, speaking<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 6, in the case<lb/>
involving Lawrence A. Uzzell<lb/>
against UNC President William<lb/>
C. Friday, held that the Univer-<lb/>
sity requirement of a minimum<lb/>
number of Black members of the<lb/>
student government oouncil, and<lb/>
the provision for a mandatory<lb/>
majority of Black judges for any<lb/>
University oourt trying a Black<lb/>
student, blatantly fouls the<lb/>
letter and the spirit of both the<lb/>
Civil Rights Acts and the Four-<lb/>
teenth Amendment<lb/>
The plaintiffs, two UNC stu-<lb/>
dents, argued that racial dis-<lb/>
crimination is wrong, not only<lb/>
when it is practiced against<lb/>
Blacks, but also against whites.<lb/>
The decision overruled an<lb/>
earlier opinion of federal District<lb/>
Court Judge Eugene A. Gordon,<lb/>
of Greensboro, N.C which con-<lb/>
tended that the quota provisions,<lb/>
were in no way discriminating<lb/>
toward the plaintiffs<lb/>
Boy-girl problem<lb/>
listed number one<lb/>
Kent, Ohio - (I.P.)Male-<lb/>
female relationships is problem<lb/>
Numero Uno says one Resident<lb/>
Director at Kent State University,<lb/>
and she's supported by others in<lb/>
counseling positions. College age<lb/>
students, they believe, are<lb/>
searching for definition in many<lb/>
ways, and sex roles can become a<lb/>
souroe of real anxiety.<lb/>
Another student problem is a<lb/>
crisis in identity, in personal or<lb/>
goal orientation. Dr. John T.<lb/>
Akamatsu, director of the Psycho-<lb/>
logical Clinic, sees the identity<lb/>
problem as a function of leaving<lb/>
home and ooming to a place<lb/>
where the value system is dif-<lb/>
ferent from the one the student<lb/>
has known.<lb/>
Many students seek non-<lb/>
professional help - an instructor,<lb/>
their academic adviser. A col-<lb/>
league shakes his head and adds,<lb/>
"you've got to decide, without<lb/>
any training, 'What do I tell this<lb/>
student?' Where do we draw the<lb/>
line? It's like playing with fire.<lb/>
It's so damned hard to know what<lb/>
to do with them because you're<lb/>
not trained. We can explore<lb/>
alternatives, but I will not play<lb/>
with a student's mind<lb/>
:<lb/>
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Sun. 11:30 AM -9:00PM<lb/>
Wilson J. Bryan, Jr<lb/>
Secretary of the North Carolina<lb/>
Fund for Individual Rights, hailed<lb/>
the ruling.<lb/>
"The oourt finally states un-<lb/>
equivocally that the provisions of<lb/>
the Civil Rights Acts and the<lb/>
Fourteenth Amendment prohibit<lb/>
discrimination against White as<lb/>
well as Black citizens<lb/>
The ruling will have no effect<lb/>
on ECU since it was never<lb/>
required to have a minimum<lb/>
number of Blacks in student<lb/>
government or the judiciary.<lb/>
" We' ve never been concerned<lb/>
with this. They've never given us<lb/>
any quotas to follow said James<lb/>
H. Tucker, Dean of Student<lb/>
Affairs.<lb/>
According to James Mallory,<lb/>
Dean of Men, Friday's rule never<lb/>
concerned ECU.<lb/>
"We have no quotas said<lb/>
Mallory.<lb/>
News desk: Thurs4:15,<lb/>
staff writers meeting<lb/>
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Auditions tor Sinners and Dane ers<lb/>
Musicians, Actors and ctresses<lb/>
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Musical Croups and Jechnicians ma<lb/>
Write tor more information to<lb/>
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Is it crazy to love marker pens that give you the smoothest, thinnest line in<lb/>
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Not if the pen is a Pilot marker pen.<lb/>
Our Razor Point, at only 69c. gives<lb/>
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59c Finelmer It has the will and fortitude to<lb/>
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So. don't settle for a casual relationship.<lb/>
Get yourself a lasting one,or two, to have<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057106_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 25 January 1977<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
300 EVANS<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
� �� PHONE: 752-2136<lb/>
r2T'lU FREE PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
' �! PICKUP AND DELIVERY<lb/>
Prescription Dept. with medication<lb/>
profiles: jour prescription always, at<lb/>
oar fingertips, even though vow may<lb/>
lose your RL. bottle.<lb/>
Titliest and Topflite Golf Balls regularly $16.50 now $11.50.<lb/>
Large selection of ladies' and men's sweaters Vfc prioe. Men's<lb/>
and boy's Lacoste Shirts reduced for end of season doseout.<lb/>
Many sets of used men's and ladies' golf dubs reduced for<lb/>
quick sale.<lb/>
HEADSKIS<lb/>
CABER BOOTS<lb/>
SALOMON BINDINGS<lb/>
For Men, Women,and Children<lb/>
WE TAKE OLD SKIS ON TRADE<lb/>
216 Country Club Dr.<lb/>
Off of Memorial Dr.<lb/>
Phone 756-0504<lb/>
Gilmore first criminal<lb/>
executed in ten years<lb/>
NEW YORK (LNS)The<lb/>
United States' first execution in<lb/>
over ten years took place January<lb/>
17 when Gary Gilmore was shot<lb/>
before a Utah firing squad. The<lb/>
case had captured nationwide<lb/>
attention over the past few<lb/>
months ever since Gilmore an-<lb/>
nounced his desire to die rather<lb/>
than face a life of imprisonment.<lb/>
Toward the end, the situation<lb/>
took on what many have de-<lb/>
scribed as a "carnival atmos-<lb/>
phere with Gilmore's suidde<lb/>
attempts thwarted by prison<lb/>
authorities and the rights to his<lb/>
story bought up by movie agents.<lb/>
"The exploiters were all around<lb/>
him said one observer LNS<lb/>
spoke to. "There's something<lb/>
very sad about the way his body<lb/>
gets parcelled out and how his<lb/>
story gets parcelled out and the<lb/>
whole thing becomes a kind of<lb/>
oommerdal enterprise<lb/>
In the aftermath of the<lb/>
execution LNS oontaded several<lb/>
groups and individuals outspoken<lb/>
in their opposition to the death<lb/>
penalty. Most people expressed<lb/>
the belief that some psychological<lb/>
barrier had been broken in<lb/>
executing Gilmore that would<lb/>
make it easier for other exe-<lb/>
cutions to follow.<lb/>
"It will all be routine again<lb/>
said Aryeh Neier, executive di-<lb/>
redor of ACLU, which waged a<lb/>
legal battle to try to stop the<lb/>
Gilmore execution. "They will be<lb/>
cyphers rather than real human<lb/>
beings, and it's much easier to<lb/>
execute a cypher<lb/>
In many ways, death penalty<lb/>
critics pointed out, the Gilmore<lb/>
case was able to mobilize the<lb/>
public's emotions in favor of the<lb/>
death penalty. "It's significant<lb/>
because it's dearly a typical case<lb/>
and therefore public opinion is<lb/>
affeded in a way that distorts the<lb/>
nature of the punishment said<lb/>
one legal worker for the NAACP<lb/>
Legal Defense Fund, which has<lb/>
been in the forefront of the fight<lb/>
against the death penalty.<lb/>
 I mean that Gilmore is not by<lb/>
any means a typical death row<lb/>
inmate. Most people on death row<lb/>
do not want to die<lb/>
"My off-the-cuff readion is<lb/>
that Gilmore adually made it<lb/>
easier fa the death penalty to<lb/>
stwoo5'<lb/>
The Tree People give you<lb/>
food for thought.<lb/>
Pizza Salads<lb/>
Sandwiches &amp;<lb/>
Italian Style Dinners<lb/>
WE CARE about what you<lb/>
put in your tummy because<lb/>
nice people eat at the Tree<lb/>
House. What about you?<lb/>
oome back by acquiesdng (to his<lb/>
execution instead of filing for<lb/>
appeals) Daniel Steinbeck of<lb/>
the New York Prisoners Legal<lb/>
Services said. "It probably made<lb/>
it easier to have the first<lb/>
execution one where the prisoner<lb/>
himself asked fa it, rather than<lb/>
some poa black man in the South<lb/>
who's a more likely candidate<lb/>
DEATH PENALTY<lb/>
DISCRIMINA TION<lb/>
Of the approximately 400<lb/>
people now on death row in the<lb/>
U.S almost half of them are<lb/>
black, and all are poa. "Clarence<lb/>
Darrow onoe said that no rich man<lb/>
was ever executed and I suppose<lb/>
that's right ACLU's Neier told<lb/>
LNS.<lb/>
In 1972 a Supreme Court<lb/>
decision effectively voided all<lb/>
existing death penalty statutes on<lb/>
the grounds that they had been<lb/>
"wantonly and freakishly" ap-<lb/>
plied to blacks, other minaities<lb/>
and the poa. But in its July, 1976<lb/>
reversal of this decision the<lb/>
Supreme Court upheld the death<lb/>
penalty in states that provide fa<lb/>
sane fam of independent sen-<lb/>
tendng hearing afer a guilty<lb/>
verdid. Most critics feel that this<lb/>
will not prevent the disaimin-<lb/>
atay application of the death<lb/>
penalty.<lb/>
"Unfortunately the dis-<lb/>
aiminatay impact goes beyond<lb/>
just the issuance of the death<lb/>
penalty explained Vida Goode<lb/>
of the National Conference of<lb/>
Black Lawyers (NCBL). "For<lb/>
example, the way crimes are<lb/>
investigated, who is actually<lb/>
charged with a capital offense,<lb/>
the way juries are oomposed in a<lb/>
capital offense case. Through<lb/>
every step of the judidal process<lb/>
there is much, much work left to<lb/>
be done to insure that minaity<lb/>
group people, women, young<lb/>
people - a basic aoss-sedion of<lb/>
sodety - are well involved in the<lb/>
process and radsm gets elimi-<lb/>
nated<lb/>
Goode dted the example of<lb/>
rape oonvidions in the South. An<lb/>
analysis of 3,000 rape oonvidions<lb/>
in nearly a dozen southern states<lb/>
between 1945 and 1965 revealed<lb/>
that blacks were almost seven<lb/>
times as likely to be executed<lb/>
than were whites found guilty of<lb/>
the same aime. But the dis-<lb/>
ai mi nation goes even beyond<lb/>
that, Goode pointed out, since<lb/>
often whites aren't charged with<lb/>
lower offenses - fa example,<lb/>
assault.<lb/>
DEATH PENALTY AS<lb/>
RETRIBUTION AND<lb/>
DETERRENCE<lb/>
In its 1976 decision, the<lb/>
Supreme Court majaity dted two<lb/>
prindple purposes of the death<lb/>
penalty: retribution and de-<lb/>
terrence. However, even those In<lb/>
fava of the death penalty admit<lb/>
that statistics on its effediveness<lb/>
are inconclusive. During the<lb/>
years when executions did take<lb/>
place in the U.S Neier pointed<lb/>
out, neighboring states with<lb/>
oomparable populations - one<lb/>
with the death penalty and one<lb/>
without the death penalty �<lb/>
would have no difference in aime<lb/>
rates.<lb/>
 Everyone is ooncerped about<lb/>
aime now stressed Goode. "It<lb/>
was an issue that was thrust into<lb/>
national prominence with the first<lb/>
Nixon eledion - his pledge to<lb/>
combat aime on the street, the<lb/>
massive amounts of money that<lb/>
have been poured into police<lb/>
departments, and the national<lb/>
media attention that's been given<lb/>
to sensational aiminal events .<lb/>
"And then the aime statistics<lb/>
themselves, particularly in urban<lb/>
areas, keep getting wase. People<lb/>
are looking fa sanething to<lb/>
believe in that the situation will<lb/>
get better<lb/>
"The real dilemma is that<lb/>
very little analysis has done about<lb/>
aime as it relates to the sodal<lb/>
strudure of our sodety Goode<lb/>
oontinued. "What we (NCBL)<lb/>
have discovered is that aime,<lb/>
even ai a small scale, is usually<lb/>
eccnanically aiented and tied to<lb/>
the economic strudure of this<lb/>
oountryFa example, there's a<lb/>
relationship between crimes<lb/>
against property and the unem-<lb/>
ployment rate in the country.<lb/>
"Furthermae, what people<lb/>
don't realize is that the American<lb/>
culture accepts a relatively high<lb/>
degree of violence as legitimate.<lb/>
It's only when the violence spills<lb/>
over into what are defined as<lb/>
"illegitimate" activities that<lb/>
there's shock, dismay and con-<lb/>
cern<lb/>
"The aiminal justice system<lb/>
has always been removed from<lb/>
the scrutiny of the general<lb/>
population oonduded Gcode.<lb/>
"As long as this continues,<lb/>
people will be the vidims not only<lb/>
of aime, but of that system<lb/>
AFROTC honors<lb/>
cadet airman<lb/>
Sharon Elizabeth Boyd of<lb/>
Rocky Mount, ECU aophomae<lb/>
and cadet in the ECU Air Face<lb/>
ROTC detachment, has been the<lb/>
detachment's "Cadet Airman of<lb/>
the Quarter<lb/>
The title, awarded three times<lb/>
each year to an outstanding<lb/>
student in the AFROTC eaps, is<lb/>
based on leadership ability,<lb/>
military bearing, military court-<lb/>
esy and disdpline, and ability to<lb/>
communicate.<lb/>
Cadet Boyd is adive in the<lb/>
campus rtOTC Cda Guard and<lb/>
was a ledger in the recent Red<lb/>
Drive sponsaed by<lb/>
iment. She is the<lb/>
tint Griffin of 106<lb/>
rt, ftecky Mount,<lb/>
graduate of Rocky<lb/>
High School.<lb/>
The detachment also an-<lb/>
nounced eleven cadet appoint-<lb/>
ments for the fall quarter.<lb/>
AFROTC Cadet Caps positions<lb/>
are assigned as part of leadership<lb/>
training and are rotated each<lb/>
quarter during the academic year.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057106_0007"/><lb/>
HIHHIHS<lb/>
� �<lb/>
How-to-<lb/>
lecture<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Frederick Storaska, Executive<lb/>
Director of the National Organiza-<lb/>
tion for the Prevention of Rape<lb/>
and Assault, will deliver a lecture<lb/>
on "How To Say No To a<lb/>
Rapist-And Survive<lb/>
The program will be held in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium at 8 p.m. on<lb/>
Wed. Jan. 26.<lb/>
Storaska's program is de-<lb/>
signed to provide both men and<lb/>
women with a realistic understan-<lb/>
ding of the elements that consti-<lb/>
tute an assault and to give women<lb/>
the psychological preparedness<lb/>
and physical techniques neces-<lb/>
sa y-no-to-rape<lb/>
set for Jan. 26<lb/>
25 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Papa 7<lb/>
sary to thwart any possible future<lb/>
confrontation with rape or ass-<lb/>
ault.<lb/>
Deploring the usual "scare<lb/>
tactics" employed when dealing<lb/>
with rape, Storaska instead cre-<lb/>
ates an atmosphere in his pro-<lb/>
gram that allows this difficult<lb/>
subject to be discussed easily and<lb/>
effectively, according to a Student<lb/>
Union press release.<lb/>
It is this effectiveness of his<lb/>
style oomplimented by his wealth<lb/>
of infamation that is responsible<lb/>
for the confidence he instills in his<lb/>
audience and in their ability to<lb/>
handle the assault situation.<lb/>
The program will challenge<lb/>
several prevailing attitudes and<lb/>
myths among men and women in<lb/>
our society that promote and<lb/>
enoourage rape, such as: women<lb/>
are helpless and cannot deal with<lb/>
rape and assault, a woman who<lb/>
hitchhikes wants to be raped, and<lb/>
one man cannot rape one woman<lb/>
she must have participated.<lb/>
Storaska points out that well<lb/>
over half of all assaults on women<lb/>
are by someone the woman<lb/>
knows.<lb/>
Many of l.iese occur in the<lb/>
dating environment.<lb/>
Storaska's appearance is<lb/>
under the sponsorship of the<lb/>
Student Union Lecture Series<lb/>
Committee. Admission is by ID<lb/>
and Activity cards.<lb/>
Little's Chop Shop<lb/>
N.E. Bypass 2 Mi. North of<lb/>
Hastings Ford<lb/>
758-4067<lb/>
We repair all makes and models of<lb/>
motorcycles.<lb/>
Wesell custom partsand accessories<lb/>
We do custom painting.<lb/>
We have pick-up service.<lb/>
Coming soon- van accessories<lb/>
Measurable properties<lb/>
relate to intelligence<lb/>
By LINDA CHERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina psychology pro-<lb/>
fessor Charles E. Cliett recently<lb/>
completed research indicating<lb/>
intelligence is related to certain<lb/>
measurable physiological pro-<lb/>
perties of the brain.<lb/>
Cliett and master's candidate<lb/>
Harry Youngblood compared the<lb/>
IQs of female oollege students to<lb/>
their reaction times to a noise<lb/>
lasting .04 seconds.<lb/>
According to Cliett, this<lb/>
reaction time oould be measured<lb/>
by a brain wave pattern which<lb/>
varied according to IQ.<lb/>
The subjects' IQs, ranging<lb/>
from 105 to 123, showed a<lb/>
positive correlation to this brain-<lb/>
wave pattern, said Cliett.<lb/>
The subject with an IQ of 105<lb/>
reacted to the noise in 0.96<lb/>
seconds, Cliett stated.<lb/>
The subject with an IQ of 123<lb/>
reacted to the noise in .062<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
According to Cliett, 18-year-<lb/>
old female students were used as<lb/>
subjects in order to control<lb/>
variables (differences).<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
'� lb. Royal Rib Ey� 5t�ak Dinner<lb/>
Includes a hot baked potato, crisp garden<lb/>
fresh salad, and fresh baked hot roll.<lb/>
Regular $2.79 ONLY<lb/>
50COff<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
ft<lb/>
SALAD BAR<lb/>
49P<lb/>
With Dinner!<lb/>
$2.29<lb/>
with coi<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
bOU w. ureenvme bivc<lb/>
STEAK<lb/>
VALID ONLY ON<lb/>
rKJUofc MON &amp; THUR<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<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<lb/>
50C Off<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
1A&amp;AC&amp; FRIEND<lb/>
SALAD BAR r. W 9Wtf' ,k7<lb/>
49P fcllfT!Tr VALID ONLY ON<lb/>
W.thDmner' STEAK O HOUSE MON&amp;THUR<lb/>
$1.89 �<lb/>
lAnth rnnnnn<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd<lb/>
ECU'S VERSION OF the Alaskan Pipeline mil carry drainage water in<lb/>
the low lying area between Joyner and Mendenhall.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057106_0008"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
25 January 1977<lb/>
Crafts give chance<lb/>
to do your thing<lb/>
For all of you non-art majors<lb/>
who have wanted to take a jewel ry<lb/>
course but couldn't get in; for<lb/>
those of you who have been trying<lb/>
since your Freshman year to take<lb/>
SCIE 111: Photography, but<lb/>
always got closed out; and for the<lb/>
would-be potters on the faculty or<lb/>
staff who have always wanted to<lb/>
try throwing a pot but have had<lb/>
no place to try; the Crafts Center<lb/>
has the answer for you.<lb/>
Several short, beginning-level<lb/>
workshops, in various crafts, are<lb/>
being offered at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Crafts Center.<lb/>
The workshops, taught by stu-<lb/>
dents in the School of Art, are<lb/>
available to all students, faculty<lb/>
and staff.<lb/>
All interested persons must<lb/>
register fa the workshops at the<lb/>
Crafts Center during the regular<lb/>
operating hours, 2:00 p.m. until<lb/>
10:00 p.m Monday through<lb/>
Friday. The last day to register is<lb/>
Friday. January 28 and class<lb/>
space is limited.<lb/>
The workshops available this<lb/>
quarter are:<lb/>
BATIK (7100 p.m. -9:00 p.m.<lb/>
February 2, 9, 16. Basic steps to<lb/>
resist dye techniques fa produc-<lb/>
ing designs on fabric. Possibili-<lb/>
ties include: hangings, yardage,<lb/>
pillows, scarves, lampshades.<lb/>
CLASS SIZE: limited to 12<lb/>
persons.<lb/>
BEGINNING DARKROOM<lb/>
(7O0 p.m. - 9.00 p.m.)February<lb/>
1, 8, 15. Basic instruction in<lb/>
darkroom techniques. Students<lb/>
will develop and print their own<lb/>
film. CLASS SIZE: limited to 12<lb/>
persons.<lb/>
BEGINNING JEWELRY (6.00<lb/>
p.m. - 9O0 p.m.) February 3, 10,<lb/>
17. Beginning techniques in<lb/>
metal wak. Materials, tools, and<lb/>
equipment used in jewelry con-<lb/>
struction will be discussed. Pro-<lb/>
ject possibilities include rings,<lb/>
bracelets, earrings.<lb/>
BASIC POT THROWING<lb/>
(700 p.m. - 900 p.m.) February<lb/>
1, 3, 8, 10, 15, 17. Basic<lb/>
instruction in wheel-throwing<lb/>
techniques, glazing, and firing of<lb/>
stoneware. Demonstrations and<lb/>
dasswak will enable the student<lb/>
to aeate hisher own pottery.<lb/>
CLASS SIZE: limited to 8<lb/>
persons.<lb/>
FRAME LOOM WEAVING<lb/>
(6O0 p.m. - 9O0 p.m.) February<lb/>
2, 9, 16. Construct your own<lb/>
frame loom and learn weaving<lb/>
techniques fa a craft that can be<lb/>
fun and inexpensive. CLASS<lb/>
SIZE: limited to 12 persons.<lb/>
WEAVING ON THE LOOM<lb/>
(6O0 p.m. - 9O0 p.m.) February<lb/>
3, 10, 17. Learn to use a<lb/>
four-harnessfloa loom. Making a<lb/>
warp, warping the loom and<lb/>
techniques of weaving will be<lb/>
included in the discussions.<lb/>
CLASS SIZE: limited to 8 per-<lb/>
sons.<lb/>
THE KITCHEN will be one of three plays performed by The Acting<lb/>
Company this week at ECU. The company, led by acclaimed actor John<lb/>
Houseman, will also perform "Love's Labours Lost" bv Shakespeare,<lb/>
and "Cammo Heal" by Williams. Photo by Martha Swope<lb/>
Traveladventure film<lb/>
Come "visit"Argentina<lb/>
Clay Francisco will present his<lb/>
film "All About Argentina" at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre on Monday, February 14,<lb/>
1977, at 8O0 p.m. The film is part<lb/>
of the Travel-Adventure Film<lb/>
Series and is under the sponsa-<lb/>
ship of the East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity Student Union Travel Com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
Francisco opens his film by<lb/>
briefly reviewing the saga of Juan<lb/>
Peron, his rise, exile, return, and<lb/>
the stay of his re-entry into<lb/>
today's Argentina. The film then<lb/>
oovers traditional Guacho, and<lb/>
the Pampa, an almost endless<lb/>
plain without trees a staies-just<lb/>
loamy soil, yards deep.<lb/>
The towering Andes separate<lb/>
Argentina from Chile, and high in<lb/>
the mountains is Bariloche, one of<lb/>
the wff Id's best winter resats. In<lb/>
Alpine, aie finds huge chocolate<lb/>
specialities, artisans, a thriving<lb/>
fashion industry, and lots of night<lb/>
life where the international ski set<lb/>
danoe to the Argentine beat.<lb/>
Clay Francisco is recognized<lb/>
as one of the leaders in the<lb/>
film-lecture industry. His travels<lb/>
have taken him to mae than faty<lb/>
countries. He has filmed detailed<lb/>
stories of the most diverse<lb/>
people, from the primitive Urubu<lb/>
Indians of the Amazon to the<lb/>
turbaned Uzbeks of Central Asia,<lb/>
and the highly complex West<lb/>
Germans. Among his most adven-<lb/>
turous expeditions was a four<lb/>
thousand mile motor journey<lb/>
through Soviet Union. Today he<lb/>
devotes all his time to the<lb/>
Music festival<lb/>
production of film lectures.<lb/>
Tickets fa the program are<lb/>
priced at $1.00 fa the public and<lb/>
are available from the East<lb/>
Carolina University Central Tic-<lb/>
ket Office. East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity students will be admitted by<lb/>
their ID and Activity Cards and<lb/>
East Carolina University faculty<lb/>
and staff members by their<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Membership Card.<lb/>
CLA Y FRANCISCO communicates to penguin friend in this scene from<lb/>
his travel film, "All A bout A rgentina playing Feb. 14 at Mendenhall.<lb/>
Blue Grass draws crowd<lb/>
By JO ELLEN Rl VENBA RK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Although bluegrass and old<lb/>
time music have deaeased in<lb/>
popularity through the years in<lb/>
competition with modern music,<lb/>
there are still many adamant<lb/>
fans; the majaity of which must<lb/>
have been present at the Fourth<lb/>
Annual One to One Blue Grass<lb/>
and Old Time Music Festival at<lb/>
the Attic on Saturday.<lb/>
By 1 a.m a beginning group<lb/>
of about 25 people had grown to a<lb/>
aowd of close to 800.<lb/>
The bands, the Blue Grass<lb/>
Experience, the Plank Road<lb/>
String Band, the the Violet Hill<lb/>
Swamp Donkeys, took turns per-<lb/>
faming; each occasionally play-<lb/>
ing a 'special one' fa the Green<lb/>
Grass Cloggers.<lb/>
From an 11 a.m. practice<lb/>
befae the festival until the last<lb/>
tune was played, the Green Grass<lb/>
Cloggers danced non-stop. Their<lb/>
routines, especially their famous<lb/>
high kicks which drew extra<lb/>
applause, were a tremendous<lb/>
success with everyone. Even<lb/>
when they weren't perfaming,<lb/>
they were still ai the dance floor<lb/>
keeping the aowd hopping.<lb/>
The Blue Grass Experience, a<lb/>
band that included a cellist-<lb/>
turned-comedian who added<lb/>
humaous introductions to their<lb/>
songs, played a variety of music<lb/>
from old classics such as "Your<lb/>
Cheat in' Heart" and "Hey Good<lb/>
Looking" to popular songs like<lb/>
"Rocky Top<lb/>
The final soig they played<lb/>
was "Dixie a very appropriate<lb/>
song because it reflects the<lb/>
sentiments of all who were there.<lb/>
Unlike a great bit of American<lb/>
music whose aigin can be traced<lb/>
to Britain, this type of music is<lb/>
southern; it's ours and here is<lb/>
where it is loved. After all, as<lb/>
Denes Agay composer said,<lb/>
"Could 'Dixie' have been written<lb/>
in any other part of the wald?"<lb/>
A praninent part of the Plank<lb/>
Road String Band's perfamanoe<lb/>
was a solo by their bass oellist.<lb/>
His description of his perfam-<lb/>
ance as "something that goes<lb/>
round and round; and each time it<lb/>
goes round, you get off on it was<lb/>
extremely true. They also played<lb/>
a special "Green Grass Clogger<lb/>
oommemaation song<lb/>
As well as being a great fiddle<lb/>
player, Steve Hickman of the<lb/>
Violet Hill Swamp Donkeys, is<lb/>
also good at calling. He demon-<lb/>
strated this in several square-<lb/>
dance tunes during which those<lb/>
not familiar with the fam of<lb/>
dancing could participate. The<lb/>
band also offered a fantastic<lb/>
piano player.<lb/>
One thing this repater oould<lb/>
not forget after leaving the<lb/>
festival was the tremendous<lb/>
amount of smiling faces there.<lb/>
What is it about this genre of<lb/>
music that makes it so illusive;<lb/>
that makes everyone so free and<lb/>
spontaneous? As one blue grass<lb/>
lover put it, "It feels like fun, like<lb/>
summertime in the country and<lb/>
sitting on the pach in a rocking<lb/>
chair chewing a piece of grass<lb/>
Maybe it's because this sim-<lb/>
ple, basic talent comes from the<lb/>
hearts of natural, furr-loving<lb/>
people and this is sensed by those<lb/>
listening; a perhaps the answer<lb/>
lies mainly in ourselves, because<lb/>
in our complex society in which<lb/>
everyone seems to have a collage<lb/>
of masks to put on in the<lb/>
maning, seeing the seemingly<lb/>
simplistic nature of the enter-<lb/>
tainers stimulates one to faget<lb/>
the past, faget the future, and<lb/>
live it up now.<lb/>
Editor's Note<lb/>
Marquee, the TRENDS entertainment review column, will nc<lb/>
appear in today's paper. Marquee reviewer David R. Bosnick will,<lb/>
instead, review the Acting Company's perfamance of Love's Labours<lb/>
Lost" in Thursday's paper.<lb/>
We'd like to remind you not to miss the Acting Company's<lb/>
perfamances at ECU. The perfamances give us a rare chance to see<lb/>
top-flight drama.<lb/>
11.<lb/>
52<lb/>
53.<lb/>
55.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057106_0009"/><lb/>
Leisure Learning<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1. physically con-<lb/>
fined<lb/>
6. where letters are<lb/>
numbers<lb/>
11. Roman household<lb/>
deity<lb/>
12. ex-UPS competitor<lb/>
13 opposite of<lb/>
basicity<lb/>
16. delayed for time<lb/>
19. to exist by begging<lb/>
20. college in Virginia<lb/>
21. flat bottomed con-<lb/>
tainer<lb/>
My massacre<lb/>
suspicious<lb/>
Brenda or Ringo<lb/>
compass point<lb/>
string and waxed<lb/>
to the same degree<lb/>
Pope's forte<lb/>
country songstress<lb/>
"A Bell for "<lb/>
loose fitting tunic<lb/>
gas rating<lb/>
UPI competitor<lb/>
marine shelter<lb/>
cause to be (suffix)<lb/>
their multiples are<lb/>
81; 729; 6561<lb/>
villain of TV com-<lb/>
mercials<lb/>
voter's affiliation<lb/>
(abbr.)<lb/>
pressure (abbr.)<lb/>
beetle or bumble-<lb/>
bee<lb/>
loom lever<lb/>
"on a Jet<lb/>
Plane"<lb/>
Rushmore sculp-<lb/>
tor's medium<lb/>
to reach by calcu-<lb/>
lation<lb/>
22<lb/>
23.<lb/>
25<lb/>
27.<lb/>
28.<lb/>
31.<lb/>
32.<lb/>
33.<lb/>
34<lb/>
35<lb/>
38<lb/>
42<lb/>
43<lb/>
46<lb/>
47.<lb/>
50.<lb/>
52.<lb/>
53.<lb/>
55.<lb/>
57.<lb/>
58.<lb/>
60.<lb/>
62.<lb/>
4 monarch's seal<lb/>
5 solid carbon diox-<lb/>
ide (2 wds)<lb/>
6 "Pride &amp; Preju-<lb/>
dice" author<lb/>
7 takes forcibly<lb/>
3. electric fish<lb/>
ship's stabilizer<lb/>
firewood support<lb/>
actor's direction<lb/>
peaceful contem-<lb/>
plation<lb/>
"you in Spanish<lb/>
18. Van Gogh's tragic<lb/>
loss<lb/>
"event" in Latin<lb/>
asphalt<lb/>
type of moulding<lb/>
printer's measure<lb/>
30. cylinder for hold-<lb/>
ing thread<lb/>
35 the Captain's Toni<lb/>
36. wound covering<lb/>
O'Neill drama:<lb/>
"The Hairy "<lb/>
prefix: threefold<lb/>
indigo plant liquid<lb/>
9.<lb/>
10.<lb/>
14.<lb/>
15.<lb/>
17.<lb/>
24.<lb/>
26.<lb/>
28.<lb/>
29.<lb/>
37<lb/>
39.<lb/>
40.<lb/>
63 religious trans-<lb/>
gression<lb/>
64 Hillary's quest<lb/>
65. treat with regard<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1. dry, white wine<lb/>
2 nourishes or sus-<lb/>
tains<lb/>
3. Coward lyric:<lb/>
" � Dogs and<lb/>
Englishmen"<lb/>
amine<lb/>
a first principle<lb/>
64 across is noted<lb/>
for it<lb/>
accountant's<lb/>
trademark<lb/>
48. chemical ending<lb/>
49. unneighborly<lb/>
fence<lb/>
Whitman's<lb/>
"Leaves of"<lb/>
wrestling arena<lb/>
tin (abbr.)<lb/>
56. a coordinating<lb/>
conjunction<lb/>
59. "to see" in Span-<lb/>
ish<lb/>
61. shot of liquor<lb/>
41.<lb/>
44<lb/>
45<lb/>
50.<lb/>
51.<lb/>
54.<lb/>
Verdi's Fastaff<lb/>
Music dept. presents opera<lb/>
Verdi's comic opera "Fal-<lb/>
staff" will be presented by the<lb/>
East Carolina University Opera<lb/>
Theatre Feb. 2, 3, 4 and 5 at 8<lb/>
p.m. each evening in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Music Center Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
The opera is based on the<lb/>
adventures of Sir John Falstaff as<lb/>
adapted from Shakespeare's<lb/>
comedy, "The Merry Wives of<lb/>
Windsor and its action oenters<lb/>
on the well-deserved downfall of<lb/>
the would-be ladies' man, Fal-<lb/>
staff, and the eventual union of a<lb/>
pair of young lovers.<lb/>
The ECU production, sung in<lb/>
English, will feature Alan Jones<lb/>
of Snow Hill as Falstaff, and<lb/>
Jeffrey Krantz of Charlotte as<lb/>
Pistol. Other principal roles and<lb/>
performers include:<lb/>
Ford, Robert Edwards of<lb/>
Wilmington; Mistress Alioe Fad,<lb/>
Lynn Hicks of Hamlet and Joyce<lb/>
Ford of Travelers Rest, S.C. (on<lb/>
alternate evenings); Nanetta, the<lb/>
Fords' daughter, Nancy Thomas<lb/>
of Wilmington and Christy Sluss<lb/>
of Charlotte (on alternate eve-<lb/>
nings) ; Fenton, Steve Walence of<lb/>
Marshallberg;Dr. Caius, Norman<lb/>
Alexander Miller III of Wilming-<lb/>
ton; Mistress Meg Page, Susan<lb/>
Elaine West of Wilmington and<lb/>
Claire Hurley of Dayton, Ohio;<lb/>
Dame Quickly, Susan Hill Pair<lb/>
and Diane Pickett, both of<lb/>
Greenville; Bardolph, William<lb/>
White of Woodbine, Iowa; Fairy<lb/>
Queen, Robin Kinton of Fuquay<lb/>
Varina; Host of the Garter Inn,<lb/>
George Anthony King of White-<lb/>
ville; Robin, Falstaff s page,<lb/>
Jerry Deaton of Silver Springs,<lb/>
Md and Falstaff's servant,<lb/>
William Ballance Jr. of Fremont.<lb/>
Accompanists for the produc-<lb/>
tion are Donna Roman of Utioa,<lb/>
Id<lb/>
Chorus members include:<lb/>
Jane Orrell of Wilmington, Alysa<lb/>
Smith of Wendell, Cindy Barfield<lb/>
of Plymouth, Terry Leggett of<lb/>
Greenville, Gerald Murphy of<lb/>
Oxon Hill, Md Michael McDon-<lb/>
ald of Round Hill, Va Linda<lb/>
Clark of Chesapeake, Va Rhona<lb/>
Katzof Arlington, Va Katherine<lb/>
Bearinger of Hagerstown, Md<lb/>
Jane Harper and Alisa Wether-<lb/>
ington of Kinston, Cynthia Hotton<lb/>
of Henderson, Doug Newell of<lb/>
Roxboro, Stan Benton of Garland,<lb/>
Keith Henry of Raleigh, Peter<lb/>
Ward of Cary and Katherine<lb/>
Griffen of Charlotte.<lb/>
Tickets for "Falstaff" are $2<lb/>
each, with seats reserved. They<lb/>
are available at the campus<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center.<lb/>
$100.00<lb/>
REWARD<lb/>
Redish Brown Male<lb/>
Doberman Answers to Spirit<lb/>
Lost Monday Jan 17<lb/>
Near Ice House on 14th<lb/>
Call Alan 758-3763<lb/>
25 January 1977 FOUWTAlNHEAD Pagt<lb/>
TACOS- ENCHILADAS- TAMALES - RICE - BEANS<lb/>
TOSTADO � TORTILLA - TACOS - KORN DOGS<lb/>
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GREENVILLE'S<lb/>
GREAT NEW<lb/>
TASTE TREAT<lb/>
DELICIOUS - NUTRITIOUS - ECONOMICAL<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
TAKE OUT<lb/>
SUFFICIENT<lb/>
VARIETY<lb/>
TO SUIT EVERYONE,<lb/>
INCLUDING VEGETARIANS<lb/>
TIPPY'S TACO HOUSE<lb/>
US 264 BY-PASS (ADJACENT PEPPI'S PIZZA)<lb/>
OPEN TILL 9:00P.M. EVERY NIGHT<lb/>
756-6737<lb/>
CHICKEN - BURRITO - TACOS - ENCHILADAS<lb/>
SEAFOOD - GUACAMOLE - CHILI CON QUESO - RICE<lb/>
uqstjte Qardeii Cetfttr<lb/>
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OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK<lb/>
UNTIL6<lb/>
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All wicker furniture, baskets,<lb/>
and ceramic pots 26 <lb/>
through January 31<lb/>
Come see your new store.<lb/>
N.C.N0.3 ROCK NIGHTCLUB<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
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A REC<lb/>
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TOP 100 DEC. ISSUES OF BILLBOARD, CASHBOX,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057106_0010"/><lb/>
�DBBHI<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
25 January 1977<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Arm Wrestling tourney<lb/>
Registration forthe Intramural Arm Wrestling tournament will run<lb/>
through February 4. The competition in the four weight classes will<lb/>
begin on February 7 and the championship finals will be held at<lb/>
halftime of the East Carolina varsity basketball game with William and<lb/>
Mary on February 10.<lb/>
This year's competition will feature a special challenge match<lb/>
between two famous personalities from the Greenville area. Their<lb/>
names will be disclosed at a later date, when final arrangements have<lb/>
been made.<lb/>
Once again those dates for registration are from now until Feb. 4, in<lb/>
the Intramural Office in room 204 of Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
A number of other events will be starting in the near future. Re-<lb/>
gistration for women's racquetball doubles closes on Thursday and<lb/>
registration for men's soccer will begin on January 31.<lb/>
It was not originally intended to be women's competition in soooer<lb/>
but the requests have been such that an attempt will be made at a<lb/>
women's league, too. Their registration will begin on January 31 and it<lb/>
will run through Feb. 4. There must be five teams in order to form a<lb/>
women's league, but if five teams don't sign up all teams that have<lb/>
signed up will be allowed to play in the men's leagues.<lb/>
Men's organizations might be reminded that soccer will count as a<lb/>
sport towards the Chancellor's Cup in each division. Team points will<lb/>
be awarded for each team participating.<lb/>
Also in the offing isthe men'sand women's swimming tournament.<lb/>
Registration will open February 7 and run through February 14. The<lb/>
meets will be held on February 17.<lb/>
Bucs fall into 'The Pits<lb/>
lose second straight<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"The Pit VMI's basketball<lb/>
field house, has been called<lb/>
several things in its long exist-<lb/>
ence, among them "Hell, or the<lb/>
place the snakes are, or the<lb/>
dungeon A visiting team play-<lb/>
ing there finds it a very hard place<lb/>
to win.<lb/>
East Carolina journeyed there<lb/>
to place the Southern Conference<lb/>
leader Saturday and came away<lb/>
much the same way other teams<lb/>
do - losing. The Keydets ran<lb/>
their record to 14-1 and a perfect<lb/>
5-0 in the SC with a 67-58 win<lb/>
over the Pirates.<lb/>
The Keydets, NCAA quarter-<lb/>
finalists last year with four<lb/>
returning starters, ran off a lead<lb/>
of 22 midway in the second half<lb/>
before the Pirates ran off one last<lb/>
surge to cup the gap to the final<lb/>
nine points.<lb/>
"If we oould just play 40<lb/>
minutes we'd be OK said Head<lb/>
Coach Dave Pattern following the<lb/>
game. "We only played ball for<lb/>
ten or 12 minutes. We got loose in<lb/>
the last eight minutes and played<lb/>
like we can.<lb/>
"I'm proud of them fa not<lb/>
folding and in coming back like<lb/>
they did. This is the toughest<lb/>
place in the world to play, and we<lb/>
played real well except in<lb/>
spurts. The difference in the<lb/>
game was in the shooting<lb/>
Shooting was definitely the<lb/>
difference in the game as the<lb/>
Keydets hit on 28 of 53 shots from<lb/>
the field for a 52.8 shooting<lb/>
percentage while the Pirates hit<lb/>
just 26 of 67 for only 38.8 percent.<lb/>
Neither team burned up the free<lb/>
throw line as VMI hit just half of<lb/>
their 22 tries while the Pirates<lb/>
connected on six of ten.<lb/>
V<lb/>
j<lb/>
LARRY HUNT<lb/>
The Pirates out-rebounded the<lb/>
Keydets 43-38 with Larry Hunt<lb/>
leading the way with 13. Turn-<lb/>
overs haunted the Pirates all<lb/>
night as they oommitted 20 to just<lb/>
14 for VMI.<lb/>
The game was real dose for<lb/>
the first 12 minutes with VMI<lb/>
leading most of the way by one to<lb/>
three points. The Keydets then<lb/>
hit a hot streak and pulled out to a<lb/>
nine point advantage. The lead<lb/>
fluctuated between five and nine<lb/>
for the remainder of the half with<lb/>
the Keydets going into the locker<lb/>
room with a 35-26 lead.<lb/>
In the first nine minutes of the<lb/>
second half the Keydets stretched<lb/>
their lead out little by little until it<lb/>
reached 22 at 56-34. Patton called<lb/>
a time out and the team re-<lb/>
sponded by shuting VMI out fa-<lb/>
four minutes while they them-<lb/>
selves scored seven points to cut<lb/>
the margin to 15 at 56-41.<lb/>
During the last five minutes of<lb/>
the game the Pirates slowly cut<lb/>
the lead down, largely of the<lb/>
shooting of freshman sharp-<lb/>
shooter Herb Krusen, who had all<lb/>
of his eight points in the final<lb/>
minutes. Billy Dineen's layup at<lb/>
the buzzer cut in to the final<lb/>
margin of nine.<lb/>
Ron Carter led VMI's scoring<lb/>
with 19 points, 13 in the first half,<lb/>
while Will Bynum added 16 and<lb/>
John Krovic13.<lb/>
The Pirates were on the road<lb/>
again last night as they travel-<lb/>
led down to Greenville, S.C. to<lb/>
face the tough Paladins of Fur-<lb/>
man. Tomorrow night they will<lb/>
host Old Dominion, a team which<lb/>
beat Mississippi State in a<lb/>
Christmas tournament.<lb/>
Mississippi State had beat eighth-<lb/>
ranked Wake Forest for the<lb/>
chance to meet Old Dominion.<lb/>
The newest sport around these days is the Ice Ball program and it<lb/>
seems those who are playing this chilly sport are beginning to get the<lb/>
hang of it. Fifteen teams in all are competing in two divisions and the<lb/>
play is really exciting. The best teams so far seem to be the Intramural<lb/>
Staff team in the Dorm-Independent division and the Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Checkers in the Fraternity division.<lb/>
The Intramural Staff team exploded to a 20-2 win over the Follies on<lb/>
Wednesday as Sonny Gundlach increased his scoring lead by scoring<lb/>
10 points. He now has 20 points on the season. The week's high soorer<lb/>
was Daryll Smith of the Tau Kappa Epsilon Slips and Slides. Smith<lb/>
scored 13 points in one game as he led his team to a 17-7 win over the<lb/>
Teke Bruins.<lb/>
The only unbeaten teams beside the Checkers and the I MS are the<lb/>
Sweepers, as upsets have been common so far in the league's short<lb/>
three weeks schedule.<lb/>
Howard Parker continues to be the top bowler in the Intramural<lb/>
Men s Bowling league. Parker hasa high game of 222, a high set of 601<lb/>
and a high average of 200.<lb/>
Parker's counterpart in the women's bowling league is Robin<lb/>
Griffin. Griffin holds down the top performance in the race for high<lb/>
game, high set and high average. Her high game is 192, her high set is<lb/>
455 and her average if 152.<lb/>
The first of four key intramural men's basketball games will be<lb/>
featured prior to Wednesday night's basketball game between Old<lb/>
Dominion and East Carolina. The contest will match fraternity leaders<lb/>
Kaopa Alpha Psi against Kappa Alpha. The KA Psis are 6-0 on the<lb/>
season and have beaten the Kappa Alphas for the past two years. It is<lb/>
always a closely oontested game.<lb/>
For Kappa Alpha Psi, it is a crucial game. They have already beaten<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi, 44-41, and the Kappa Sigmas.<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi is led by the men's fifth-leading scorer in Stephen<lb/>
Smith. Kappa Alpha is led by men's one-on-one champion Robert Guy<lb/>
and Mac Alphin. Game time will be at 6 p.m.<lb/>
In women's basketball play most of the teams will be finishing up<lb/>
their regular season schedule in preparation for the women's playoffs<lb/>
and individual players will be making one last effort at a spot on the<lb/>
two women's intramural all-star teams.<lb/>
Still ranked as the top women'steam are the Baptist Student Union<lb/>
women Paced by intramural scoring leader Kim Michael and strong<lb/>
inside player Jean Evans, the BSU team has romped past every<lb/>
opponent this year. This week they close out their seaoon with a 4 p.m.<lb/>
game on Thursday against the Fleming Flyers. If the BSU team wins, it<lb/>
will finish its season at 6-0 and clinch first-place in the Jump League<lb/>
and a playoff berth.<lb/>
Tankers defeat Richmond,<lb/>
lose to UNCin weekend action<lb/>
By DAVID ROBEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU men's swim was busy<lb/>
this weekend when they hosted<lb/>
the University of Richmond on<lb/>
Saturday and travelled to Chapel<lb/>
Hill on Sunday to take on the<lb/>
Tarheels. The Pirates pulled off<lb/>
an easy win against Richmond,<lb/>
downing them 65-47. However,<lb/>
the tables were reversed when<lb/>
the Bucs travelled to Chapel Hill,<lb/>
with UNC winning the meet<lb/>
65-48.<lb/>
ECU now stands 6-1, but they<lb/>
have not lost a Southern Con-<lb/>
ference meet. ECU stands 4-0<lb/>
against league foes. The loss to<lb/>
Carolina was disappointing after<lb/>
their upset victory over Maryland<lb/>
recently.<lb/>
"This is a tough one, we won<lb/>
all the free styles as expected but<lb/>
we needed a break in the other<lb/>
events and didn't get it Coach<lb/>
Ray Scharf said. "Coming into<lb/>
this meet, they were better on<lb/>
paper and it turned out they were<lb/>
better in the water too. Our kids<lb/>
swam well and I'm proud of them.<lb/>
We just got beat by a better<lb/>
team<lb/>
Several members of the swim<lb/>
team are having an outstanding<lb/>
season thus far and are tearing up<lb/>
the record books. Freshman Ted<lb/>
Nieman is making a name for<lb/>
himself here at ECU. Nieman, a<lb/>
native of Winter Park, Fla. now<lb/>
holds four varsity reoords, four<lb/>
pool marks, and three frosh<lb/>
standards which have been com-<lb/>
piled in a period of two months.<lb/>
Against the Tar Heels, Nieman<lb/>
won the 1000 yard freestyle and<lb/>
the 500 yard freestyle.<lb/>
Another standout is John<lb/>
McCauley who won the 100 yard<lb/>
freestyle, 50 yard freestyle and<lb/>
was in the 400 yard freestyle relay<lb/>
which ECU won. McCauley<lb/>
stands six in the NCAA rankings<lb/>
in the 50 yard freestyle.<lb/>
John Tudor stands 11th in the<lb/>
NCAA in the 200 individual<lb/>
medley. Tudor won the 200 yard<lb/>
freestyle event with a time of<lb/>
1:43.36.<lb/>
ECU won the 400 yard free-<lb/>
style relay with a time of 312.10<lb/>
which was compiled by Mc-<lb/>
Cauley, Nieman, Thorne and<lb/>
Tudor. UNC won the 400 yard<lb/>
medley relay.<lb/>
In other events UNC swept the<lb/>
board by winning the 200 yard<lb/>
individual medley, 200 yard but-<lb/>
terfly, 200 yard backstroke, and<lb/>
the 200 yard breaststroke. ECU<lb/>
won every freestyle event at the<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
In diving, Stewart Mann took<lb/>
second on the three meter while<lb/>
Jim Brunner took second on the<lb/>
one meter board. Craig of UNC<lb/>
won both of the number one spots<lb/>
on the boards.<lb/>
PIRA TE TANKERS suffered a disappointing loss to Carolina Foes<lb/>
<pb facs="00057106_0011"/><lb/>
'<lb/>
�<lb/>
!Sw9<lb/>
Pirates miss Rosie Thompson<lb/>
25 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAO<lb/>
11<lb/>
Lady Pirates lose to State,93-72<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU'S Lady Pirates dropped<lb/>
their tenth game of the season<lb/>
Thursday night when they travel-<lb/>
led to Raleigh to meet the 15th<lb/>
ranked Wolfpack of N.C. State.<lb/>
The 500 fans in Reynolds<lb/>
Coliseum saw their highly touted<lb/>
balldub whip the Lady Pirates by<lb/>
a 93-72 count.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, badly miss-<lb/>
ing injured Rosie Thompson,<lb/>
went to Debbie Freeman and Gale<lb/>
Kerbaugh for almost 75 percent<lb/>
of their shots. Freeman finished<lb/>
the game as the leading soorer<lb/>
with 31 points. She hit on 14 of 28<lb/>
tries from the field and three of<lb/>
six from the foul line. Kerbaugh<lb/>
hit only five of 16 from the field<lb/>
but hit 13 of 16 at the charity<lb/>
stripe for 23 points.<lb/>
The powerful Pack played<lb/>
their starters for only an average<lb/>
of 16 minutes in the game as all<lb/>
15 players saw considerable<lb/>
the Wolfpack.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates dropped to<lb/>
0-10 with the loss.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates return home<lb/>
for a non-conferenoe game to-<lb/>
night in Minges against Elon<lb/>
action. As a matter of fact, all but<lb/>
one of the Lady Wolfpack players<lb/>
saw at least ten minutes of<lb/>
playing time.<lb/>
All-America Cristy Earnhardt<lb/>
led State with 14 points in only 15<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
Freshman center Genia<lb/>
Beasley and Sherri Pickard pop-<lb/>
ped 12 apiece while Donna<lb/>
Andrews added ten.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, however,<lb/>
hit 26 of 39 from the free throw<lb/>
line while State hit seven of 12.<lb/>
The boards were ruled by the<lb/>
Wolfpack as they pulled 54<lb/>
missed shots to just 41 fa the<lb/>
Lady Pirates.<lb/>
East Carolina shot just 38.3<lb/>
percent from the field while the<lb/>
Pack hit on 49.4 percent of their<lb/>
tries.<lb/>
Linda McClellan, a freshman<lb/>
center, pulled 11 to lead all<lb/>
rebounders while Earnhardt and<lb/>
Beasley grabbed ten apiece fa THE LADY PIRATE'S lost their tenth game of the season last Thursday.<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Game time is 7 p.m.<lb/>
Photo by Kip Sloan<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED? Call<lb/>
Alice-758-0497 a 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 Volkswagon fast<lb/>
back $350. a best offer. Call<lb/>
752-5267.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Collection of 25<lb/>
albums. Including albums by Yes,<lb/>
Beach Boys, Hendrix, ELP and<lb/>
many more. Prices from $2 to $3.<lb/>
Come by room 415 Ayoock any<lb/>
day after 300 p.m. now fa best<lb/>
selection.<lb/>
rOR SALE: Texas instruments<lb/>
SR-51 a electronic calculator.<lb/>
Adapta, two owners manuals,<lb/>
two operating guides and two<lb/>
carrying cases included free. Call<lb/>
752-9905 and ask fa Jeff.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 74 VW Bug $2200.<lb/>
Caitemp. furniture &amp; doubleoed<lb/>
Excellent condition. Call 752-0903<lb/>
after 430.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fender Princeton<lb/>
Reverb Guitar amp. $150. Electric<lb/>
Guitar Fuzz-Wan-Volume Pedal.<lb/>
4 wans and fuzz sustain, volume,<lb/>
and intensity controls. $60. Send<lb/>
reply to: Box 3067, Greenville.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1968 Chev. Impala.<lb/>
55,000 little old lady back and<lb/>
forth to church miles. Air, power<lb/>
steer needsmina repairs$500.<lb/>
758-1437 after 930 nights.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4" X 5" Graphic<lb/>
View II with Schneider Senar 150<lb/>
mm. Daga 358 15 holders. 4<lb/>
developing tanks and 6 negative<lb/>
holders. $275. Call John 758-<lb/>
1592.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Furniture &amp; Appli-<lb/>
ances, oomfatable 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: 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: 1964 Triumph Spit-<lb/>
fire. Will accept best offer - call<lb/>
758-7415 after 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
MUST SELL: Sunn studio lead<lb/>
amp hardly used. $175.00. Call<lb/>
Maria 752-9022 fa mae infam-<lb/>
atiai.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1968 CheyImpala<lb/>
55,000. Little old lady back and<lb/>
forth to church miles.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer receiver 50<lb/>
watts Rms pr. channel, 2 channel.<lb/>
AR-2AX speakers. Excellent con-<lb/>
dition. $350 Call 756-1547.<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 fa<lb/>
.Christmas, must sell wwarranty<lb/>
$95.00. Phone 752-4379.<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 Hairsetta" with mist<lb/>
a 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/>
dd. Good oondition. Paid $5.00 -<lb/>
want $2.00. Call 756-7881 nights<lb/>
and 758-3436 ext. 495 days. Ask<lb/>
fa Chariate.<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: Great buy 1974<lb/>
Yamaha. DT 125A only 1600.<lb/>
miles. Two helmets include, 80<lb/>
miles per gallon. Make me an<lb/>
offer. Call 756-7275 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer Car Stereo.<lb/>
FM and Cassette tape player.<lb/>
Like new. Call Dale 752-0734.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New water distiller.<lb/>
$55. 758-8216.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '66 VW great fa in<lb/>
town would need wak fa trips.<lb/>
$350 a best offer. 752-4479<lb/>
WANTED: A good cook that can<lb/>
cook fa about 20 guys. Good pay.<lb/>
Call Sigma Phi Epsilon at 752-<lb/>
2941. Hours are 4-6 p.m. Sun<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1 &amp; 2 bedroom<lb/>
apartments. Newly renovated &amp;<lb/>
new appliances. Call 752-4154.<lb/>
WANTED: One a two female<lb/>
roomates fa Village Green Apt.<lb/>
$50 per month plus utilities. Call<lb/>
75&amp;0595 afta 3.<lb/>
NEEDED: Male roommate to<lb/>
share apartment $47.50 per<lb/>
month plus utilities, must be<lb/>
clean and aderly. Call 752-3853.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
to share apt. Rent and util.<lb/>
$55mo. Call 752-0081.<lb/>
NEEDED: Roommate fa Spring<lb/>
Quarter. Big house. Call Decky a<lb/>
Larry after 600 p.m. 752-2859.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private rooms and 2<lb/>
baths fa male student. Available<lb/>
on March 1. 758-2585.<lb/>
tVANTED: Male a Female to<lb/>
share 3' bedroom apartment at<lb/>
Eastbrook; must be Academically<lb/>
Inctined! Call 758-0219.<lb/>
LOST: 1 pair of dark brown Frye<lb/>
boots.Lost in Drama dept. dress-<lb/>
ing room. Reward offered fa'<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: Gold wristwatch with<lb/>
brown face. Call 752-9351. $40<lb/>
reward.<lb/>
LOST: Brown cowhide wallet.<lb/>
Call-758-9895, 618 Tyler. Lost in<lb/>
the vicinity of Speight a Brews-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
FOUND: A scarf near Clement.<lb/>
758-8216<lb/>
FOUND: A white hat near biology<lb/>
building. 7583216.<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 crisis to call a cane by the<lb/>
REAL cpsis center. Counseling<lb/>
and referrals are what they offer.<lb/>
They're free, too. Call 758-HELP.<lb/>
personal (J<lb/>
YOGA LESSONS: exacises to<lb/>
calm the mind and slim the body -<lb/>
way of life. Classes faming now.<lb/>
Call Sunshine, 752 d214 after 900<lb/>
p.m. on Mond. and Wed after<lb/>
530 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 900 p.m. on Mon. and Wed.<lb/>
after 5O0 p.m. all other nites.<lb/>
ICE SKATING: lessons 12:15-<lb/>
1.15 Saturdays by Jill Schwimiey<lb/>
at Twin Rinks, 220 E. 14th a.<lb/>
752-8449. ($2.00 hour-includes<lb/>
skates) Any age-beginning, inter-<lb/>
mediate, advanced. Strictly figure<lb/>
skating.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Parttime office<lb/>
wak. Must be a veteran, a<lb/>
fulltime ECU student, and must<lb/>
be oommuting from Washington,<lb/>
N.C. a nearby. Contact Fton<lb/>
Brown, VA Representative, 206<lb/>
Whichard, in person. No calls.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057106_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 25 January 1977<lb/>
Grapplers open league<lb/>
season with victory<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's six-time de-<lb/>
fending Southern Conference<lb/>
champion wrestling team opened<lb/>
their league season Friday night<lb/>
with a big 37-3 win over Appala-<lb/>
chian State in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
before 200 fans.<lb/>
The Mountaineers won the<lb/>
opening match at 118 but could<lb/>
win no more as the Pirates<lb/>
dominated with superior deci-<lb/>
sions and a couple of pins.<lb/>
The pins came at 190 and<lb/>
heavyweight as John Williams<lb/>
pinned Jeff Stanley in 4 50 to win<lb/>
at 190. and D.7. Joyner pinned<lb/>
Steve Reep in the heavyweight<lb/>
division in just a minute.<lb/>
Wendell Hardy picked up a<lb/>
win by injury default over Hank<lb/>
Hardin at 126 while Steve Goode<lb/>
won on a superior decision over<lb/>
Ed Rollins at 158.<lb/>
The best match of the night by<lb/>
far was between Phil Mueller and<lb/>
Frank Cody at 167. The two men<lb/>
could manage but an escape<lb/>
apiece and the score stood 1-1 at<lb/>
the end of the match. However,<lb/>
Mueller had a superior riding<lb/>
time and won the match by a 2-1<lb/>
count.<lb/>
Paul Osman continued his<lb/>
winning ways with a 10-5 win over<lb/>
Andre Massey in the 134 pound<lb/>
class. Osman has not lost in his<lb/>
last 16 matches.<lb/>
Tim Gaghan, Frank Schaede<lb/>
and Jay Dever picked up the other<lb/>
victories for the Pirates to make<lb/>
the final oount.<lb/>
The Pirates must now get<lb/>
ready for an invasion of Minges<lb/>
Coliseum Friday night by 18th<lb/>
ranked North Carolina. The Tar<lb/>
Heels have never beaten East<lb/>
Carolina but will be the favorite<lb/>
come Friday night.<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
Sherwin-William<lb/>
113 Grande Ave<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Good Things<lb/>
For Gentle People<lb/>
318 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
752-3815<lb/>
WRESTLING COACH John Welborn.<lb/>
Photo by Kip Sloan<lb/>
Track team places second in<lb/>
weekendtri-meet event<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU's track team journeyed<lb/>
to Chapel Hill Saturday for a<lb/>
tri-meet with North Carolina and<lb/>
South Carolina. The Pirates came<lb/>
Women<lb/>
gymnasts -<lb/>
third place<lb/>
By DAVID ROBEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU women's gymnasts<lb/>
travelled to Harrisonburg, Va. to<lb/>
meet Madison College and<lb/>
William and Mary this past<lb/>
Saturday. Madison won the meet<lb/>
with 92 points, with William and<lb/>
Mary having 68.75 points and<lb/>
ECU falling to third with 54.30.<lb/>
Coach Stevie Chepko com-<lb/>
mented "that the girls did not do<lb/>
bad at all considering it was the<lb/>
first gymnastics meet fa five of<lb/>
the six girls on the team<lb/>
Betsy Adkins of ECU is the<lb/>
only girl on the team with<lb/>
experience and she made an<lb/>
excellent showing.<lb/>
The team travels to Puke next<lb/>
Sat. to compete with them and<lb/>
U.S.C. also.<lb/>
away from the Tin Can with<lb/>
second place.<lb/>
The Tar Heels won the meet<lb/>
with 81 points while the Pirates<lb/>
garnered 49 and the Gamecocks<lb/>
finished with 16.<lb/>
George Jackson, Herman Mo-<lb/>
Intyre and James Freeman claim-<lb/>
ed victories for ECU. Jackson won<lb/>
the long jump with a leap of 23-8<lb/>
while Mike Hodge (22-4 78) took<lb/>
third and Mclntyre (22-2 58)<lb/>
fourth.<lb/>
Mclntyre took the triple jump<lb/>
with a jump of 49-12 while<lb/>
Jackson took third in 47-1 38 and<lb/>
Hodge fourth with a leap of<lb/>
46-4 V2.<lb/>
Freeman ran to victory in the<lb/>
600 yard run with a time of<lb/>
1.13.16. Pirates Ben Dunkenfield<lb/>
(113.4) and James McCollough<lb/>
(1.13.7) placed third and fourth,<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
Tom Watson (49-5) and Mike<lb/>
Harris (47-7) took second and<lb/>
third in the shot put while Marvin<lb/>
Rankins placed third in the 60<lb/>
yard high hurdles with a time of<lb/>
7.8.<lb/>
Charlie Moss and Calvin<lb/>
Alston did well in the 440 yard<lb/>
dash, taking second and third<lb/>
with times of 51.03 and 51.2,<lb/>
respectively. Keith Urquhard<lb/>
(220.8) placed third in the 1000<lb/>
yard run while teammate James<lb/>
Willett took fourth in 223.4.<lb/>
The Pirates also did well in the<lb/>
60 yard dash with Donnie Mack<lb/>
(6.3) taking second and Otis<lb/>
Melvin placing third in 6.32.<lb/>
James Dill finished in third place<lb/>
in the two miles run with a fine<lb/>
time of 930.6.<lb/>
Pirates Otis Melvin, Larry<lb/>
Austin, Marvin Rankins, Carter<lb/>
Suggs and the mile relay team<lb/>
will travel to the prestigious<lb/>
Knights of Columbus, (Ohio) meet<lb/>
next weekend.<lb/>
E.C.U.IMIGHTISBACK<lb/>
AND BIGGERTHAN EVER<lb/>
NOTONE DAY BUTTWO!<lb/>
!s<lb/>
<lb/>
(<lb/>
e,<lb/>
-<lb/>
ml,<lb/>
r <lb/>
PIRA TE SPRINTER Marvin Rankins.<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 oui all-you-can-eat salad bar)<lb/>
w(<lb/>
f�N�fWlH�IHH.4<lb/>
520 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
<pb facs="00057106_0013"/>
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