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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057107_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/>
Vol. 52, No. 3d<lb/>
?<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
27 January 1977<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Inauguration, p. 3<lb/>
Suicide, p. 6<lb/>
Shakespeare, p. 8<lb/>
Furman rallies, q. 10<lb/>
Local group<lb/>
seeks peace<lb/>
By MICHAELFUTCH<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
World peace may appear to be almost an impossibility in this<lb/>
insecure and unstable age of technology and warfare. But the<lb/>
Greenville Peace Committee believes it can be attained and has been<lb/>
advocating, demonstrating, and working for world peace for almost<lb/>
seven years here.<lb/>
The committee has made the termination of the B-1 bomber project<lb/>
its current goal.<lb/>
The decision on the production of the B-1, a supersonic manned<lb/>
bomber designed for nuclear and conventional wars, will be made on or<lb/>
before Feb.1, 1977, by President Carter.<lb/>
The committee held a demonstration against the B-1 at noon. Jan.<lb/>
22, on the Greenville downtown mall.<lb/>
There were about 10 persons who participated in the<lb/>
demonstration, according to Carroll A. Webber, committee member.<lb/>
"I thought that folks seemed to be right friendly to us said<lb/>
Webber.<lb/>
Webber said that there were many persons opposed to the<lb/>
committee's view on the B-1, but were willing to talk about it.<lb/>
Reportedly, $3.2 billion has already been spent for research and<lb/>
development of four B-1 test planes. If the program is approved, the<lb/>
total cost of 244 B-1's is expected to be $92 billion, according to the<lb/>
Peach Committee Campaign.<lb/>
"One million dollars means so many jobs, so much housing, ' said<lb/>
Father Charles Mulholland, another member of the committee.<lb/>
Sen. George S. MoGovern. presidential candidate in 1972. sent a<lb/>
letter in support of the peace organization SANE.<lb/>
"The struggle in Congress against excessive military spending<lb/>
offers us a continuing focus for action stated MoGovern. "We will<lb/>
need an informed and aroused citizenry who won't quit until the job is<lb/>
done<lb/>
The Greenville Peace Committee has made it a goal to be a peace<lb/>
witness to the community.<lb/>
"Our goals are to have relationships with people that are not based<lb/>
on power, but on human ideals said Father Mulholland.<lb/>
According to Henry Lofquist, member of the committee, the origin<lb/>
of the group stems from the Vietnam war.<lb/>
"We started about the spring of 1970 said Lofquist. "Lou Paul<lb/>
(wife of famed attorney for Joanne Little, Jerry Paul) started it. There<lb/>
was a meeting every Thursday noon in front of the post office<lb/>
The weekly meetings stirred local interest and the committee<lb/>
continues to meet every Thurs. noon at 610 S. Elm St.<lb/>
"There is a core of about seven persons according to Father<lb/>
Mulholland. "About 12 people can respond on different issues. There<lb/>
is a considerable number of people sympathetic with peace conversion,<lb/>
disarmamet, and related issues<lb/>
The committee has no formal<lb/>
affiliation with any national<lb/>
group.<lb/>
However, there is a viewpoint<lb/>
affiliation with such groups as<lb/>
The Catholic Peace Fellowship,<lb/>
The Fellowship of Reconciliation,<lb/>
and The American Friends Ser-<lb/>
vice Committee, according to<lb/>
Father Mulholland.<lb/>
Father Mulholland expressed<lb/>
his disappointment over the<lb/>
student a thy in 1977, as<lb/>
opposed to the '60s and early<lb/>
'70s.<lb/>
"There has been a radical<lb/>
change; the campus just doesn't<lb/>
seem to be interested in any kind<lb/>
of action said Father Mulhol-<lb/>
land.<lb/>
w9m �<lb/>
FATHER MULHOLLAND<lb/>
The committee has pursued many projects in the past ana has<lb/>
demonstrated publicly on these issues, Mulhollanc said.<lb/>
"We had, from the beginning, urged military withdrawal from<lb/>
Vietnam said Mulholland. "We urged a reduction of military<lb/>
expenditures. Very early on we gave help to conscientious objectors.<lb/>
"Weurged amnesty for all those wl j resisted the Vietnam war. We<lb/>
are a witness to the immorality of any nuclear arms. And we<lb/>
participated in the Continental Walk for peace and Justice said<lb/>
f athet Mulholland.<lb/>
S e p. 6<lb/>
LIGHTS OUT IN Joyner Library yesterday forced a student to study in the hall!<lb/>
Photo by Kirk Kir.gsbury<lb/>
Applicants named for<lb/>
Student Union President<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
Student Union President<lb/>
Barry Robinson Tuesday named<lb/>
the seven studer .s who are in<lb/>
contention fa the 1977-78 Stu-<lb/>
dent Union presidency.<lb/>
These students will be inter-<lb/>
viewed on Monday, Jan. 31 by the<lb/>
Student Union Board of Directors.<lb/>
The new president will be<lb/>
announced in FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
on Thursday, Feb. 3, said<lb/>
Robinson.<lb/>
The applicants were supposed<lb/>
to be screened on Jan. 25 for the<lb/>
purpose of cutting the number to<lb/>
seven, but since only seven<lb/>
people applied the screening was<lb/>
eliminated, according to Robin-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
The newly-elected Student<lb/>
Union president will not take<lb/>
office until May 1.<lb/>
"They'll be going through an<lb/>
orientation period until then<lb/>
I he applicants are as follows.<lb/>
Regina Marie Thompson-age<lb/>
20, Social Work major. Spring<lb/>
Lake, N.C.<lb/>
Richard Thomas Cole-age 22,<lb/>
Parks, Recreation and Conser-<lb/>
vation major, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Larry Andrew Romich�age<lb/>
21, Psychology (Pre-Med) major.<lb/>
Wilson, N.C.<lb/>
Dennis Frederick Ramsey,<lb/>
Jrage 21, Urban and Regional<lb/>
Planning major, Cramerton, N.C.<lb/>
Timothy John MoLeod-age<lb/>
21, History major, Charlotte,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Jay S. Chambers�age 21,<lb/>
Business Administration major,<lb/>
Baltimore, Md.<lb/>
Georgina Elizabeth Langston<lb/>
-age 21, Communication Arts<lb/>
major, Lillington, N.C.<lb/>
Sullivan on bylaws<lb/>
SGA President Tim Sullivan<lb/>
said Tuesday that the reason the<lb/>
Publications Board's original by-<lb/>
laws did not remain in effect after<lb/>
he vetoed revisions last spring<lb/>
was because the original ones<lb/>
were not approved by the SGA<lb/>
legislature for the 1976-77 school<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Ricky Price, speaker of the<lb/>
legislature, stated that bylaws for<lb/>
all SGA sponsored organizations<lb/>
must be approved annually.<lb/>
Sullivan said he did not<lb/>
comment for the article on the<lb/>
Publications Board that appeared<lb/>
in the Jan. 20 issue of FOUN<lb/>
TAINHEAD because he did not<lb/>
have the facts on hand concerning<lb/>
the Board's bylaws.<lb/>
Since Sullivan's veto last<lb/>
spring, no Pub Board has existed.<lb/>
Early in Jan however, SGA<lb/>
Appropriations Committee chair-<lb/>
man Craig Hales introduced a bill<lb/>
to establish a campus Media<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
The bill was sent to the Rules<lb/>
and Judiciary Committee for<lb/>
consideration.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057107_0002"/><lb/>
: �:� ��<lb/>
sss<lb/>
m<lb/>
fc"&amp;;s'<lb/>
"�<lb/>
Crisis Center BUC staff<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
27 January 1977<lb/>
Roxy<lb/>
The Roxy Music Arts &amp; Crafts<lb/>
Center presents the Sweet Soulful<lb/>
Gospel Rumblings of the Sensa-<lb/>
tional Nightingales of Philadel-<lb/>
phia, Pa. This group which<lb/>
epitomizes the Old Roots Black<lb/>
Gospel Circuit are ranked among<lb/>
the nation's best. On the same<lb/>
program will be the Gospel Pearl<lb/>
Family of Greenville and the<lb/>
Men's Fellowship Gospel Chorus<lb/>
of Kinston. The show will be<lb/>
hosted by Andy Herring of<lb/>
Kinston's radio shows, the Gos-<lb/>
pel Hour. This program begins<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 2, at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Donations are $2.50; under 12,<lb/>
$1.<lb/>
Auditions<lb/>
The last auditions for the<lb/>
oomedy review "Over the Top"<lb/>
will be held on the second floor,<lb/>
east wing of the drama building,<lb/>
in room 214 on Friday, Jan. 28, at<lb/>
5 p.m. The show will oonsist of<lb/>
material from Monty Python, The<lb/>
Firesign Theatre, and Beyond the<lb/>
Fringe '64. Only 4 male parts are<lb/>
still open. Auditions will last only<lb/>
an hour or an hour and a half. If<lb/>
you would like to audition but<lb/>
cannot make it, call 758-7876.<lb/>
Free flicks<lb/>
Like to inform ya'll of the<lb/>
fantastic movie weekend coming<lb/>
up this Friday and Saturday.<lb/>
Youse guys gotta be there for<lb/>
"Harry and Tonto the Friday<lb/>
andSaturdayFree Flick this week.<lb/>
Art Carney, who won an academy<lb/>
award for his protrayal of Harry,<lb/>
is absolutely superb. This film is<lb/>
absolutely one of the best movies<lb/>
made in 1974. Keith Rhodes, an<lb/>
esteemed resident of Scott Hall,<lb/>
hails this film as one of the best<lb/>
he's ever seen. It's gotta be<lb/>
good<lb/>
Also, lest you forget, The<lb/>
Walt Disney film festival is<lb/>
coming this Sunday. Featured<lb/>
will be "The Sword in the Stone"<lb/>
and "The World's Greatest Ath-<lb/>
lete" starring Tim Conway. One<lb/>
word concerning the "Sword in<lb/>
the Stonefabulous. Probably<lb/>
one of Disney's best animations,<lb/>
it stars Merlin the Magician,<lb/>
King Arthur, and the famous Ex<lb/>
Calibur, known as "the Singing<lb/>
Sword This absolutely should<lb/>
not be missed by anyone. This<lb/>
feature will start at 4 p.m.<lb/>
"The World's Greatest Ath-<lb/>
lete one of Disney's funniest<lb/>
feature movies, will follow at<lb/>
approximately 525 p.m. Don't<lb/>
miss this fabulous weekend<lb/>
Dlease oome early-the seats wil<lb/>
be gone in a hurry!<lb/>
Volunteers<lb/>
The ECU Student Volunteer<lb/>
Association has been reactivated!<lb/>
The office is located at the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center on 5th<lb/>
St. Office hours are M-W at 1-3<lb/>
p.m. and T-Th at 10 a.m2 p.m.<lb/>
If you have previously filed an<lb/>
application or wish to fill out an<lb/>
application, please oome by so we<lb/>
can place you in an agency.<lb/>
Faculty and graduate students<lb/>
are also weloome.<lb/>
Fun and games<lb/>
That'snotall! F.G. stands fa-<lb/>
Forever Generation. Fun, good<lb/>
Christian Fellowship, and discus-<lb/>
sion combine to make F.G. Jan.<lb/>
28, at 730 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
B-103. Why not share some of<lb/>
your time with us at FG?<lb/>
Alpha Delta<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 overaJI<lb/>
average, a 3.0 science average,<lb/>
participation is 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 Flangan a pre-med<lb/>
advisay office BA-303.<lb/>
Attention Sam<lb/>
All business majas who plan<lb/>
o join the Society for the<lb/>
Advancement of Management<lb/>
this year, please go by Dr.<lb/>
Willoox' office, Rawl 110, and fill<lb/>
out an application fa member-<lb/>
ship. If you plan to renew your<lb/>
membership, leave your name<lb/>
with him. Please do so by Friday,<lb/>
Feb. 5.<lb/>
Forum meets<lb/>
There will be an open faum<lb/>
on recent SGA policies at 730<lb/>
p.m Wednesday, February 2 in<lb/>
the Fleming Hall lobby. Tim<lb/>
Sullivan, Karen Harloe, Greg<lb/>
Pingston, Tim McLood and Jane<lb/>
Biddix will be there to discuss<lb/>
issues involving SGA. Bring a<lb/>
friend (s) and find out what SGA<lb/>
is doing fa you-get involved!<lb/>
The REAL Crisis Center has a<lb/>
program to counsel victims of<lb/>
ape, 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/>
WECU Radio<lb/>
WECU Radio will be giving<lb/>
away a Big Mac every other hour.<lb/>
So stay tuned to Big 57 fa more<lb/>
detailsyou may be the next<lb/>
winner!<lb/>
On Friday, from 7-9 p.m the<lb/>
Artist series will feature Crosby,<lb/>
Stills, Nash, and Young.<lb/>
Poetry contest<lb/>
Complete rules fa entering<lb/>
the annual poetry oontest 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 Award-Winning<lb/>
Poems.<lb/>
Anyone who wishes to receive<lb/>
the oomplete contest rules may do<lb/>
so by addressing an inquiry to<lb/>
Isaac S. Lassiter, P.O. Box 552,<lb/>
Canobr, N.C. 27229. PLEASE<lb/>
ENCLOSE A LONG, SELF-AD-<lb/>
DRESSED, STAMPED ENVE-<lb/>
LOPE WITH ANY INQUIRIES.<lb/>
Mr. ECU<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi and Chi Omega<lb/>
pledges are sponsaing a Mr.<lb/>
E.C.U. contest Jan. 31 at the Elbo<lb/>
Room. Entry fee is $1 and the<lb/>
winner receives a free keg.<lb/>
Contestants will be judged on<lb/>
looks. Any E.C.U. male may<lb/>
enter. Come on down and join the<lb/>
fun!<lb/>
Democrats<lb/>
The ECU Young Democrats<lb/>
will meet Feb. 2, at 730 in room<lb/>
244 Mendenhall. Representative<lb/>
Jim Edwards will speak and<lb/>
answer questions concerning im-<lb/>
portant issues in this year's<lb/>
General Assembly.<lb/>
Summer work<lb/>
Students interested in wak-<lb/>
ing full time in the Summer<lb/>
Orientatiai Program can pick up<lb/>
an application in the Dean of<lb/>
Men's office, Whichard building,<lb/>
room 210. Students waking in<lb/>
the program will not be allowed to<lb/>
attend summer school, and must<lb/>
be at least a rising Senior.<lb/>
Yard sale<lb/>
On Saturday, Jan. 29 during<lb/>
.he afternoon, there will be a yard<lb/>
sale in Alpha Phi's parking lot. It<lb/>
is a fund-raising project for<lb/>
pledge class.<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 coming to the<lb/>
BUC office from 9-11 a 3-5, a by<lb/>
calling 757-6501 between these<lb/>
hours. Also needed is vdunteer<lb/>
help. If there aren't enough<lb/>
applicants by Jan. 28, there will<lb/>
be NO BUC, so apply now!<lb/>
Rho Epsilon<lb/>
There will be a Rho Epsilon<lb/>
meeting Feb. 3 in Mendenhall<lb/>
room 221 at 330. This is a<lb/>
mandatay meeting.<lb/>
MRC dance<lb/>
The MRC is having a danoe<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 more<lb/>
infamatiai, oaitact any dam<lb/>
house council member a dam<lb/>
counsela. Tickets are at first<lb/>
come first serve basis.<lb/>
The Company<lb/>
Don't miss John Houseman's<lb/>
The Acting Company, appearing<lb/>
this week in McGinnis Auditor-<lb/>
ium. Toiight, the company will<lb/>
present a new play by Arnold<lb/>
Wesker, "The Kitchen and<lb/>
Friday and Saturday is Tennessee<lb/>
Williams' work of art, "Camino<lb/>
Real Tickets are available at<lb/>
the McGinnis Auditaium Box<lb/>
Office, 10 a.m8 p.m Thursday<lb/>
and Friday, and 1 p.m8 p.m<lb/>
Saturday. Fa mae infamatiai<lb/>
call 757-6390.<lb/>
Dinner?<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 ooffee; and the whole meal cost<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/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Do you like blue grass,<lb/>
oountry, rock-n-roll, a do you like<lb/>
just plain old boogie music? I f 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/>
Founders Day<lb/>
Delta Sigma Theta' s Founders<lb/>
Day Weekend is Friday, Feb. 4.<lb/>
There will be a variety show in<lb/>
Wright Auditaium at 8-9:30 p.m.<lb/>
There is a party at Tar River<lb/>
Party House with a .25 admission,<lb/>
10-until, on Feb. 5. Any persons<lb/>
interested in participating in the<lb/>
variety show, contact Pam.Cathey<lb/>
a Denise Carter at 752-8062.<lb/>
WRC meets<lb/>
The "Father of Cooperative<lb/>
Education" J. Dudley Dawson,<lb/>
will be ai the ECU campus<lb/>
Tuesday through Thursday, Feb.<lb/>
1-3. Dr. Dawson will speak to the<lb/>
Women's Residence Council on<lb/>
Tuesday at 5 p.m. in room 221,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. All<lb/>
interested students are invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
The Saas of Delta Sigma<lb/>
Theta will hold their spring rush<lb/>
Tuesday, Feb. 1, at the A.A.C.C.<lb/>
at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Storytelling<lb/>
The Library Science Depart-<lb/>
ment and the Department of<lb/>
Continuing Education jointly<lb/>
sponsaed a staytelling concert<lb/>
ai Friday, Jan. 21, in Rcom 221 of<lb/>
old Joyner Library. Ludi Johnson<lb/>
assistant professor of library<lb/>
science and staytell ing teacher of<lb/>
the department presented the<lb/>
"Fdktellers Barbara Freeman<lb/>
and Connie Regan entertained<lb/>
approximately one hundred stu-<lb/>
dents, teachers, and librarians<lb/>
with their mountain, fdk, and<lb/>
ghost tales.<lb/>
As professional staytellers,<lb/>
wakshop leaders, and perfa-<lb/>
mers, Barbara and Connie, oous-<lb/>
ins and ooilabaatas on a new<lb/>
booklist, are using a free lance<lb/>
approach to revising the age old<lb/>
art of staytelling. They include<lb/>
flannel boards, and other props,<lb/>
aeative dramatics, book talks,<lb/>
puppets and music in their<lb/>
repertoire. They may be contac-<lb/>
ted through P.O. Box 38487,<lb/>
Atlanta, Geagia 30334.<lb/>
Meeting<lb/>
CRO<lb/>
N.C. i<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Special Entertainment Committee<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 27 at 4 p.m. in the<lb/>
Student Union Lounge. Future<lb/>
bookings will be made.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057107_0003"/><lb/>
Inauguration 77<lb/>
27 Joiuary 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
CROWDS GA THER at the Capitol to hear Jimmy Carter.<lb/>
Photo by Kimberly Doby<lb/>
N.C. INSURANCE COMMISSIONER John Ingram speaks to friend.<lb/>
Photo by Kimberly Doby<lb/>
By KIMBERLY DOBY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Armies of spectators endured<lb/>
the cold and biting winds last<lb/>
Thursday as James Earl Carter<lb/>
became the 39th President of the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
The Inauguration took place<lb/>
on the capitol steps in seven<lb/>
degree temperature and three<lb/>
inches of snow.<lb/>
Afterwards "Hail To The<lb/>
Chief" echoed over the capitol<lb/>
grounds as the new president<lb/>
preceeded to leave the Inaugural<lb/>
stand and make his way down<lb/>
Pennsylvania Avenue to his place<lb/>
at the parade reviewing stand in<lb/>
front of the White House.<lb/>
Carter's unexpected walk<lb/>
down Pennsylvania Avenue sur-<lb/>
prised and delighted the multi-<lb/>
tudes lining the historic street.<lb/>
With his wife and daughter<lb/>
Amy in hand, Carter walked the<lb/>
full length of Pennsylvania Ave-<lb/>
nue to the reviewing stand.<lb/>
There the Carter, Walter<lb/>
Mondale, families and friends<lb/>
anxiously watched for an hour<lb/>
and a half as gala bands and<lb/>
floats from all over the United<lb/>
GEORGE WALLACE watches the parade. Photo by Kimberly Doby<lb/>
States passed.<lb/>
Following the parade, Carter<lb/>
and the family rested for five<lb/>
hours to prepare for the seven<lb/>
inaugural balls to be held in their<lb/>
honor later that night.<lb/>
Carter first attended the ball<lb/>
at the Pension Office Building.<lb/>
The crowd of an estimated<lb/>
thousand cheered and roared as<lb/>
President Carter, the First Lady,<lb/>
and Amy approached the stage.<lb/>
All lightsandeyeswereonhimas<lb/>
he welcomed everyone and once<lb/>
again expressed his hope for a<lb/>
"fresh faith in an old dream<lb/>
It seemed only seconds before,<lb/>
he made his way down from the<lb/>
stand and out the door. The Fifth<lb/>
Dimension began to perform but<lb/>
they were a minor letdown after<lb/>
just minutes before seeing the<lb/>
President of The United States<lb/>
standing in the same place.<lb/>
THE INAGURATION PARADE attracted many on-lookers.<lb/>
Photo by Kimberly Doby<lb/>
for only Y&amp;-iVV you get a<lb/>
SUBWICH<lb/>
of your choice PLUS<lb/>
CHILI AND WALNUT CAKE<lb/>
Beer 40�<lb/>
After 3:00 PM<lb/>
752-835V<lb/>
4th and Reade<lb/>
<pb facs="00057107_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
27 January 1977<lb/>
Concert prestige flickers<lb/>
The Student Union Films Committee announced<lb/>
earlier this month that it has scheduled film festivals<lb/>
for eight Sundays during the remainder of the school<lb/>
year. According to Larry Romich, committee<lb/>
chairperson, these festivals will emphasize films of<lb/>
an "entertaining" rather than "artistic" nature, a<lb/>
break from the usual fare. If this program goes well,<lb/>
then the Student Union Board of Directors should<lb/>
examine the possibility of designating cinema as a<lb/>
"major attraction" when next year's budget is<lb/>
formulated.<lb/>
Major attractions, that is, musical performances<lb/>
which are expected to break-even through ticket<lb/>
sales, have been a major flop this year. The net<lb/>
losses fa those concerts are as follows: Judy Collins,<lb/>
$6,000; Charlie Rich, $15,000; Count Basie, $2,000;<lb/>
Jerry Jeff Walker and Vassar Clements, $5,000; Leon<lb/>
and Mary Russel, $11,000; B.B. King, $10,000.<lb/>
Beginning the year with a budget of nearly $50,000<lb/>
the Major Attractions Committee now has a balance<lb/>
of only slightly more than $1,000. Needless to say,<lb/>
the committee has scheduled no more concerts.<lb/>
The knockout punch, however, was delivered last<lb/>
week by Chancellor Leo Jenkins and Vice-chancel la<lb/>
for Business Affairs Cliff Moore when they<lb/>
recommended that no mae ooncerts be scheduled fa<lb/>
inside Minges Coliseum. They were waried about<lb/>
the hardwood floa being damaged.<lb/>
The directive from Jenkins and Moae recom-<lb/>
mends that concerts be scheduled out-of-doas, but<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, directa of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, said there is no suitable place outside to hold<lb/>
concerts. Ficklen Stadium was not a feasible place,<lb/>
he said, because admissions could not be controlled.<lb/>
Add to all this the fact that to get the committee back<lb/>
on an even keel financially fa next year will take,<lb/>
according to Student Union President Barry<lb/>
Robinson, a $40,000 to $50,000 shot in the arm, and<lb/>
the future appears dim fa big-name concerts on this<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
So, instead of pumping these thousands of dollars<lb/>
into a none too viable entertainment medium, maja<lb/>
attractions, let next year's budget allow fa mae<lb/>
films, possibly every evening. Try to get in to watch a<lb/>
Woody Allen festival and you can see how popular<lb/>
this program is.<lb/>
Fcxintainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Business ManagerTeresa Whisenant<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis Leonard<lb/>
News EditorsDebbie Jackson<lb/>
J. Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Trends EditorPat Coyle<lb/>
Sports Editor Anne Hogge<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored by the Student Government<lb/>
Association of ECU and is distributed each Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the school year, weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
XSn'TrT3Xc3T ORmTU heU HAi� it DcmJN<lb/>
to NO Tv)eAANOJTU3r ThlNK.T aeST<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
vV-XyXy.v.x-v-x :�:�:�:�:<lb/>
y. �:����� �� X;Xx<lb/>
Sho wing SA Tscores irks student<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
As a student at East Carolina<lb/>
University I do have a few rights<lb/>
which I certainly try to exercise.<lb/>
One of these rights is protected<lb/>
by the Buckley Amendment. This<lb/>
states simply that as a student -<lb/>
no information this university has<lb/>
about me can be released without<lb/>
my expressed permission. Now I<lb/>
realize that this is often hard to<lb/>
accomplish considering the large<lb/>
volume of student records this<lb/>
institution must handle and the<lb/>
constant requests that this school<lb/>
gets from future employers.<lb/>
However, there is one particular<lb/>
item that is done every pre-<lb/>
registration period that I take<lb/>
great offense to and will no longer<lb/>
tolerate. Next time you and your<lb/>
advisor fill out your computerized<lb/>
pre-registeration card, look at the<lb/>
top right hand corner. This school<lb/>
prints your S.A.T. scores where<lb/>
anybody who handles that card<lb/>
may see what you scored as a<lb/>
high school junior or senior.<lb/>
There are two things I find<lb/>
disagreeable about this bit of<lb/>
private information about myself<lb/>
being printed. First, this inform-<lb/>
ation is very personal and I feel<lb/>
that it is nobody's business but<lb/>
my own. Achievement tests are<lb/>
under great controversy and the<lb/>
average person is under great<lb/>
misconceptions as to the value of<lb/>
these tests. I certainly don't want<lb/>
to be judged by a person who<lb/>
accident I y sees my scores and<lb/>
interprets them through his own<lb/>
misunderstanding. Secondly -<lb/>
these scores are quite outdated<lb/>
and serve no useful purpose after<lb/>
two to four years of university<lb/>
level work. As a senior I feel quite<lb/>
insulted that someone would even<lb/>
care as to my high school ability<lb/>
when I have performed at a high<lb/>
achievement level at one of the<lb/>
finer universities in the South.<lb/>
I am referring this letter to the<lb/>
campus attorney and just wanted<lb/>
to let off some steam before I<lb/>
went in.<lb/>
G. Paul Slovensky<lb/>
President<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity<lb/>
Jones employees defend food<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Not to be misunderstood<lb/>
as foolish tenderness (although,<lb/>
some forty jobs are indeed<lb/>
provided for students between<lb/>
Mendenhall and Jones Cafeter-<lb/>
ias), the employees of the in-<lb/>
famous Jones also have the right<lb/>
to echo their feelings.<lb/>
Perhaps there is some truth to<lb/>
the stretched allegations submit-<lb/>
ted by Mr. Swaim on the general<lb/>
conditions at Jones. Buthas<lb/>
there been an honest effort made<lb/>
as to the justification of such?<lb/>
As to the quality of food, we<lb/>
the employees eat daily at Jones.<lb/>
Although Mom's Apple Pie is not<lb/>
served as such, a relatively good<lb/>
selection of hot, nutritious mor-<lb/>
sels can be found here. Further-<lb/>
more, there is absolutely no truth<lb/>
in Mr. Swaim's statement con-<lb/>
cerning left-over grits and hash-<lb/>
browns being served as lunch<lb/>
entrees.<lb/>
Prices? The prices are slightly<lb/>
higher than National Fast Food<lb/>
Companys, but it certainly<lb/>
doesn't take a Ph.D. in business<lb/>
to realize that bulk equates lower<lb/>
prices.<lb/>
Thank-you,<lb/>
The student employees:<lb/>
Daniel Dudley, R. Jackson, Dallas<lb/>
Nicholson, Gregory R. Moll, Ben<lb/>
Greene, David DeBerry, Dennis<lb/>
White, Mike Britt, Ricky Barts,<lb/>
Steve Rollyson, Danny V. Nowell,<lb/>
Kathy Glasoock, Sharon Cdtrain,<lb/>
Elaine Murry, Jenny Brickell,<lb/>
Craig Katzman, Jerry Thomas<lb/>
Meg Morgan.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057107_0005"/><lb/>
27 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
at a high<lb/>
ie of the<lb/>
South,<lb/>
ter to the<lb/>
;t wanted<lb/>
before I<lb/>
SI oven sky<lb/>
President<lb/>
Fraternity<lb/>
id<lb/>
ment oon-<lb/>
and hash-<lb/>
as lunch<lb/>
are slightly<lb/>
Fast Food<lb/>
certainly<lb/>
n business<lb/>
jates lower<lb/>
Thank-you,<lb/>
t employees:<lb/>
fcson, Dallas<lb/>
1. Moll, Ben<lb/>
3rry, Dennis<lb/>
Ricky Barts,<lb/>
iy V. Nowell,<lb/>
ron Cdtrain,<lb/>
my Brickell,<lb/>
rry Thomas<lb/>
Student Union plans trips<lb/>
By LOUIS TAYLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Applications for Student<lb/>
Union sponsored tours to the<lb/>
Bahamas and Florida will be<lb/>
taken on a first-come, first-serve<lb/>
basis from Feb. 1 to March 10,<lb/>
Bill Martin, travel committee<lb/>
chairman, announced Tuesday.<lb/>
The Bahamas tour costs $289<lb/>
and requires a non-refundable<lb/>
deposit of $100.<lb/>
The Florida tour costs $89 and<lb/>
requires a $25 deposit, according<lb/>
to Martin.<lb/>
The prices are based on quad<lb/>
occupancy, but there will be triple<lb/>
and double rooms available at<lb/>
slightly higher rates, according to<lb/>
Martin.<lb/>
"Anyone is eligible for either<lb/>
tour said Martin. "But on Feb.<lb/>
1 a person may apply for himself<lb/>
only. After that, one may apply<lb/>
for friends, relatives, neighbors,<lb/>
or anyone else who has the<lb/>
deposit<lb/>
There are only 40 available<lb/>
slots for the Bahamas tour, so<lb/>
Martin urged that anyone who<lb/>
wants to go apply promptly.<lb/>
Those going to the Bahamas<lb/>
will travel roundtrip via Carolina<lb/>
Trailways to Miami and cruise<lb/>
aboard the S.S. Flavia to Nassau<lb/>
and Freeport, Martin said.<lb/>
The boat will dock for four<lb/>
nights and three days, during<lb/>
which each tourist is responsible<lb/>
for himself only, Martin noted.<lb/>
Six meals will be served<lb/>
aboard the ship each day even<lb/>
when the boat is docked, accord-<lb/>
ing to Martin.<lb/>
The Flavia is equipped with<lb/>
two pools and various other<lb/>
facilities for the tourists' comfort,<lb/>
Martin said.<lb/>
According to Martin, this is<lb/>
the first international tour spon-<lb/>
sored by the committee.<lb/>
"We are looking for a big<lb/>
crowd for the Bahamas Martin<lb/>
said. "But I hope the people who<lb/>
don't get slots on the cruise will<lb/>
check into the Florida tour<lb/>
The price of the Florida tour<lb/>
includes bus fare plus lodging at<lb/>
the Save-lnn near Orlando and at<lb/>
the beach-front Holiday Inn at<lb/>
Daytona.<lb/>
The Florida vacationers will<lb/>
visit Disneyworld, Cyprus Gar-<lb/>
dens, Sea World. Busch Gardens,<lb/>
Daytona Beach, and more.<lb/>
The Florida trip is from April<lb/>
8-16 and does not include the<lb/>
price of meals or tickets for the<lb/>
respective tour stops, according<lb/>
to Martin.<lb/>
This is the third time the<lb/>
committee has sponsored a Flor-<lb/>
ida tour, and each one has been<lb/>
relatively successful, Martin<lb/>
noted.<lb/>
One hundred and thirty-five<lb/>
spaces are available for the<lb/>
Florida tour.<lb/>
r<lb/>
it<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
JlOtldU XOUt Spring Vacation<lb/>
April 8 16 1977�� 8 Days $89<lb/>
The third annual Flor.iia tom is uigger and better than ever<lb/>
It now includes' DisneyworkJ, Cyprus Gardens, Sea World.<lb/>
i'i Busch Gjiilns. Daytona 3c�ich. and more. Just ask<lb/>
a friend .vIh. went last year'<lb/>
135 places available<lb/>
H.vi! n, of February ' through March 10.<lb/>
firit COflW, first serve.<lb/>
'I'i  'ion via Carolina Ttaiivvays buses,<lb/>
' , �  pool 'u '  md I �! i" IkttCtl<lb/>
(I<lb/>
<lb/>
The<lb/>
Ultimate<lb/>
Escapes!<lb/>
Bahamas Cruise rv vacation<lb/>
April 10 16.19776 Days $289<lb/>
Cruise to Nassau and Freeport aboard the 16,000 ton Costa<lb/>
Line's SS FLAVIA. Roundtrip to Miami via Carolina<lb/>
Trailways bus. . 4 nights and 3 days cruise. Bask in the<lb/>
Bahamian sun and enjoy tropical delights!<lb/>
Only 40 placet available.<lb/>
Reservations open from February 1 through March 10,<lb/>
first come, hrst serve.<lb/>
"Price include meals OH cruise and in port.<lb/>
T.� SluciirMi Union Trjvii Commiliw presets ltps lor the vacation<lb/>
�ntoymtnl ' students �cu.ty. tt.i dependents. "d a'x<lb/>
Ejnm Ctii" Univwsrty<lb/>
THE STUDENT UNION Travel Committee offers exciting 'get-aways'<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Sociology job outlook explored<lb/>
By BARNIE SIMPSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The job outlook fa sociology<lb/>
majors may not be as grim as one<lb/>
might imagine, according to a<lb/>
booklet published by Dr. John<lb/>
Maiolo and Christa Fteiser of the<lb/>
ECU sociology department.<lb/>
The booklet, "A Guide to<lb/>
Career Alternatives for the<lb/>
Undergraduate Sociology Ma-<lb/>
jor explores the various job<lb/>
possibilities and fields open to<lb/>
sociology graduates and includes<lb/>
the results of a survey of 99<lb/>
manufacturing firms in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The survey probed possible<lb/>
employment of sociology majors<lb/>
with these firms.<lb/>
Jobs involving statistics, com-<lb/>
puter programming, and research<lb/>
methods are the most readily<lb/>
available for sociology majors,<lb/>
according to Reiser.<lb/>
There is not a great need fa<lb/>
sociology teachers, she added.<lb/>
The emphasis is on service -<lb/>
related sciences.<lb/>
According to Reiser, most<lb/>
university level teaching positions<lb/>
require a doctaate degree.<lb/>
Business and community col-<lb/>
leges generally require the mas-<lb/>
ters and bachelas degrees fa<lb/>
teaching positions.<lb/>
Infamatio. fa the booklet,<lb/>
published in the spring of last<lb/>
year, was gathered from local<lb/>
research, studies, and surveys.<lb/>
Included are discussions on<lb/>
the sociologist and sociology as a<lb/>
science.<lb/>
A brief histay of sociology<lb/>
and anthropology at ECU is also<lb/>
included.<lb/>
Dr. Maiolo came to ECU in the<lb/>
fall of 1975 and is now chairman<lb/>
of the sociology department.<lb/>
Ms. Reiser obtained her<lb/>
bachelas and masters degrees<lb/>
from Purdue University and is<lb/>
currently waking ai her docta-<lb/>
ate at N.C. State University.<lb/>
She joined the ECU faculty in<lb/>
the fall of 1974.<lb/>
The booklet is available at the<lb/>
sociology office in Brewster a<lb/>
through the ECU Placement<lb/>
Office.<lb/>
TACOS - ENCHILADAS - TAMALES - RICE - BEANS<lb/>
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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/>
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JUST BRING THIS COUPON TO BOND'S<lb/>
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SWEAT SHIRT. OFFER GOOD THURSDAY JAN.<lb/>
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YOUR SPORTING GOOD HEADQUARTERS.<lb/>
OPEN MON-SAT 9-6 PM FRIDAY TILL 9 PM.<lb/>
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LOTS OF PRIZES AND DANCE CONTESTS<lb/>
COMESHICK!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057107_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 27 January 1977<lb/>
Suicide rate increases in young adults<lb/>
By JOHN DAY BERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Suicide has become an in-<lb/>
creasingly common occurence<lb/>
among 18 to 25-year-olds in the<lb/>
past five years, according to Ben<lb/>
Webb, alcoholism coordinator<lb/>
for the Pitt County Mental Health<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
"The suicide rate fqr this age<lb/>
group has risen 300 per cent in<lb/>
the past five years said Webb.<lb/>
Someone in the United States<lb/>
fWJHlW<lb/>
Good Things<lb/>
For Gentle People<lb/>
318EvansSt. Mall<lb/>
752-3815<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
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111 W. 4th St.<lb/>
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758-0204<lb/>
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Next to Pitt Plaza<lb/>
SEAFOOD<lb/>
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Present this ad to your waitress, with<lb/>
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and hush puppies. Coupon good any<lb/>
timeto February,1977.<lb/>
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M-Th 11:30-2:00 4:00-9:00<lb/>
Fri&amp;Sat 11:30-10:00<lb/>
Sun 11:30-9:00<lb/>
Reg.Less 10<lb/>
3.252.92<lb/>
3.503.15<lb/>
3.853.46<lb/>
4.503.99<lb/>
commits suicide every 20<lb/>
minutes, according to Dr. Donald<lb/>
A. Treffert, director of the<lb/>
Winnebago Mental Health Insti-<lb/>
tute, in Winnebago, Wisconsin.<lb/>
There are two types of de-<lb/>
pression which often end in<lb/>
suicide, according to Webb. They<lb/>
are chronic depression and acute<lb/>
depression.<lb/>
"The chronic depressive per-<lb/>
son makes a decision early in life<lb/>
that life is just no good said<lb/>
Webb.<lb/>
This person has a preoccupa-<lb/>
tion with finding the negative<lb/>
aspects of life, and cannot handle<lb/>
losses, or changes in his life,<lb/>
according to Webb.<lb/>
"This person spends a lot of<lb/>
time planning how, when, and<lb/>
under what circumstances he<lb/>
would commit suicide said<lb/>
Webb.<lb/>
Upon reaching college, the<lb/>
chronic depressive person im-<lb/>
mediately seeks out things to<lb/>
become depressed about - like<lb/>
boredom, long lines, and loneli-<lb/>
ness - and dwells on these<lb/>
things, according to Webb.<lb/>
"Instead of finding means of<lb/>
coping with the problems of<lb/>
college, or of life in general, the<lb/>
chronic depressive person can be<lb/>
counted on to wallow in self-<lb/>
imposed misery said Webb.<lb/>
"Suicide is often the payoff<lb/>
for this person who has spent a<lb/>
lifetime traveling in that di-<lb/>
rection said Webb.<lb/>
Acute depression develops in<lb/>
the usually healthy person when a<lb/>
crisis arises in that person's life<lb/>
which he or she cannot cope with,<lb/>
according to Webb.<lb/>
"The acute depressive person<lb/>
is used to coping with the<lb/>
problems in life, but in some<lb/>
instances that person simply has<lb/>
not developed the mechanisms<lb/>
for handling griefs said Webb.<lb/>
All persons go through<lb/>
periods of grief when they suffer<lb/>
losses in their lives, according to<lb/>
Webb.<lb/>
"The normal response is a<lb/>
contemplation of the past, pre-<lb/>
sent, and future, which usually<lb/>
lasts about six weeks before the<lb/>
individual regains his perspect-<lb/>
ive said Webb.<lb/>
The suicidal person cannot<lb/>
accept his loss, and becomes<lb/>
acutely depressed, according to<lb/>
Webb.<lb/>
Wftaui�'<lb/>
REMEMBER<lb/>
Our Famous Monday Night<lb/>
Pizza Specials.<lb/>
Every Monday from 5-7 P.M<lb/>
you can enjoy a small pizza<lb/>
with your choice of any one<lb/>
ingredient, tossed salad,<lb/>
and all the iced tea you can<lb/>
drink for only $1.99 (tax<lb/>
included) Coffee House<lb/>
music everynight. No cover<lb/>
Cornerof5th &amp; Cotanche<lb/>
"He develops tunnel vision,<lb/>
and the only thing that is<lb/>
important to him is the resolution<lb/>
of his loss said Webb.<lb/>
It is at this point when the<lb/>
individual must have help, ac-<lb/>
cording to Webb.<lb/>
REAL Crisis Intervention,<lb/>
Inc at 1117 S. Evans St<lb/>
received 35 calls from persons<lb/>
threatening suicide in 1974, ac-<lb/>
cording to Jim Anderson, pro-<lb/>
gram coordinator for REAL.<lb/>
"We ask the person for his<lb/>
name and address, but we do not<lb/>
press him for it if he or she<lb/>
refuses said Anderson.<lb/>
The REAL workers use a<lb/>
technique they call "reflective<lb/>
listening which is a method of<lb/>
listening to the caller, and then<lb/>
feeding back to him his thoughts,<lb/>
feelings, and any solutions he<lb/>
may have hinted at without fully<lb/>
knowing it, according to Ander-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
"We do not want to solve the<lb/>
caller's problems for him, but we<lb/>
do want to direct him towards<lb/>
solving them himself said<lb/>
Anderson.<lb/>
The REAL workers try to get<lb/>
the suicidal caller to come to the<lb/>
center, and they will send out a<lb/>
crisis team to the caller's home if<lb/>
he cannot or will not come to<lb/>
them, according to Anderson.<lb/>
"In person, you can lend any<lb/>
physical support to the person he<lb/>
may need. And he also sees you<lb/>
are willing to spend the time and<lb/>
energy on him said Anderson.<lb/>
Alcoholics, persons having<lb/>
serious marital problems, and<lb/>
persons who have been under a<lb/>
lot of pressure for a long time<lb/>
from their jobs, families, or<lb/>
friends are the most common<lb/>
suicidal callers at REAL, accord-<lb/>
ing to Anderson.<lb/>
"We are a short-term source<lb/>
of help and will only work with<lb/>
suicidal persons for 30 days<lb/>
said Anderson.<lb/>
"After that, we refer the<lb/>
person to Pitt County Mental<lb/>
Health, a to a private psychia-<lb/>
trist if he still needs help said<lb/>
Anderson.<lb/>
The chronically depressed<lb/>
person would be referred else-<lb/>
where as scon as his condition<lb/>
was made dear, according to<lb/>
Anderson.<lb/>
"The only thing that could<lb/>
help the chronic depressive per-<lb/>
son would be good, long-term<lb/>
psychotherapy said Anderson.<lb/>
The suicidal college student<lb/>
has usually lost in a romantic<lb/>
relationship, according to Dr.<lb/>
Wilbur Ball, counselor with the<lb/>
ECU Guidance and Counseling<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
"Although family troubles,<lb/>
poor grades, and a general<lb/>
feeling of being lost may all<lb/>
contribute to the suicidal student's<lb/>
depression, it is usually a roman-<lb/>
tic split-up which is the major<lb/>
problem said Ball.<lb/>
The average college student<lb/>
has broken ties with his family,<lb/>
does not yet identify himself with<lb/>
a job, and tends to center his life<lb/>
around a lover, according to Ball.<lb/>
"When the relationship falls<lb/>
apart, the person's life seems to<lb/>
fail apart said Ball.<lb/>
The important thing to do for<lb/>
the suicidal person in any situ-<lb/>
ation is to rebuild his support<lb/>
system, according to Ball.<lb/>
"We generally try to convince<lb/>
the person that he can and will<lb/>
find new friends and lovers to<lb/>
make up for his loss said Ball.<lb/>
A signal to Ball and the other<lb/>
counselors at the center that the<lb/>
person threatening suicide is in<lb/>
great danger is a display of anger,<lb/>
according to Ball.<lb/>
"The depressed person who is<lb/>
angry, either with himself or with<lb/>
someone else, will generally go<lb/>
through with his suicidal plans<lb/>
said Ball.<lb/>
STUDENTS WAIT for lunch in the dark. Photo by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
PEACE<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Father Mu I hoi I and added that<lb/>
the committee has also supported<lb/>
an unconditional amnesty for<lb/>
draft evaders and deserters from<lb/>
the Vietnam war.<lb/>
"A validity of interest in peace<lb/>
is clear in the world where the<lb/>
U.S. alone has enough weapons<lb/>
to destroy the world 72 times<lb/>
said Father Mulhoiland.<lb/>
"I do feel there will be<lb/>
complete world peace. Anne<lb/>
Frank believed that people are<lb/>
basically good.<lb/>
 People can settle differences<lb/>
without killing one another. The<lb/>
'nstincts for good are not restrict-<lb/>
ed for Americans<lb/>
<pb facs="00057107_0007"/><lb/>
HHHHIHHIIHBi<lb/>
fgsflWHv TTPsft1<lb/>
Teaching jobs expected<lb/>
27 January 1977 FOUMTAINHEAD Papa 7<lb/>
By HELENA WOODARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
There should be lots of<lb/>
openings for teachers with read-<lb/>
ing certificates this summer,<lb/>
according to Furney K. James,<lb/>
ECU Placement Service director.<lb/>
"The North Carolina Legisla-<lb/>
ture is meeting this year. They'll<lb/>
approve a new budget which<lb/>
snould result in job openings for<lb/>
intermediate and secondary<lb/>
teachers of reading he said.<lb/>
He added that students in<lb/>
Education, especially those in<lb/>
English, should get the reading<lb/>
certificate even if its during the<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
 Now is the time for seniors to<lb/>
be lookina for iobs. thouah actual<lb/>
openings won't come up until the<lb/>
summer months he added. "If<lb/>
students begin in time and work<lb/>
at it, most of them will find jobs<lb/>
"Do not wait until after you<lb/>
graduate to begin looking for<lb/>
work warns James. "Ask your-<lb/>
selves now; what am I going to be<lb/>
doing next fall?"<lb/>
James added that in Feb-<lb/>
ruary, March and April several<lb/>
school systems will be recruiting<lb/>
teachers; among them Greens-<lb/>
boro, Moore County, Stanley<lb/>
County, Suffolk, Va. schools,<lb/>
Portsmouth, Va. schools, Cum-<lb/>
berland County schools, Fayette-<lb/>
ville and New Hanover County<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
"Their purpose in coming is to<lb/>
develoo their oersonnel files for<lb/>
ECU PLACEMENT SERVICE Director Furney K. James<lb/>
the summer months James<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He added that most new<lb/>
teachers would not be hired until<lb/>
the summer months for two<lb/>
reasons. Many teachers holding<lb/>
contracts will not resign until they<lb/>
find other joos, and the North<lb/>
Carolina legislature is meeting to<lb/>
approve a new budget this year.<lb/>
"Students muct be persistent<lb/>
and must have the right attitude<lb/>
about the job and themselves. If<lb/>
you won't look for a job, then you<lb/>
won't get one James added.<lb/>
He said that 82 per cent of the<lb/>
people registered with the ECU<lb/>
Placement Service got jobs last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"It's pretty much a mobility<lb/>
thing. Students often won't go<lb/>
where the jobs are. Teaching<lb/>
positions are open in most cases if<lb/>
students will go to rural areas to<lb/>
work he added.<lb/>
As an example of the in-<lb/>
creased job market demand,<lb/>
James presented statistics show-<lb/>
ing that the number of ECU<lb/>
students graduating with a teach-<lb/>
ing certificate in English rose<lb/>
from 17 to 28 in the past two<lb/>
years. And this year it is<lb/>
projected that 35 English teachers<lb/>
will graduate from ECU.<lb/>
He added that the new<lb/>
openings for reading teachers will<lb/>
ease this oversupply for 1977.<lb/>
Other areas showing strong<lb/>
demands for jobs include math,<lb/>
science, industrial arts, and<lb/>
special education.<lb/>
James said that it also helped<lb/>
for a graduate to be able to advise<lb/>
or coach an extracurricular<lb/>
activity in a school such as<lb/>
gymnastics, other sports and<lb/>
school newspapers.<lb/>
 I would be happy to talk with<lb/>
any interested student who comes<lb/>
to my office for advice or help<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
NYC law firms make prof it<lb/>
(LNS)-Some people at least<lb/>
seem to be profiting off of New<lb/>
York City's fiscal crisis. A recent<lb/>
article in the Village Voice reports<lb/>
that several law firms have made<lb/>
huge sums of money for advising<lb/>
the city on how to deal with its<lb/>
monetary woes.<lb/>
In fact, the Municipal As-<lb/>
sistance Corporation (MAC) - a<lb/>
group of bankers and business-<lb/>
men set up to guide the city's<lb/>
economic "recovery" - spend<lb/>
$2,868,459, nearly one-half of its<lb/>
first year's budget, on legal fees<lb/>
alone.<lb/>
In between admonishing in-<lb/>
vestors to make further sacrifices,<lb/>
and assuring that the bond<lb/>
moratorium was perfectly consti-<lb/>
tutional, MAC counsel Simon<lb/>
Rifkind extracted a nifty<lb/>
$1,445,740 fee for his firm of<lb/>
Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton &amp;<lb/>
Garrison; while MAC'S bond<lb/>
counsel, Hawkins, Delafield &amp;<lb/>
Wood made $971,386.<lb/>
Asked if these prices were not<lb/>
unseemingly considering the aus-<lb/>
terity measures forced upon city<lb/>
workers, a MAC spokesperson<lb/>
told Voice reporter Ken Auletta<lb/>
that while "The numbers are<lb/>
astronomical to you and me <lb/>
(they are)  not to the world of<lb/>
finance. Considering the scale of<lb/>
financing MAC has arranged <lb/>
approximately $4 billion - these<lb/>
are not high number a"<lb/>
"I think if you look at our<lb/>
reduction he said, "we certain-<lb/>
ly did help the belt tightening<lb/>
He admitted, however, that this<lb/>
occurred only after oomplaints by<lb/>
state comptroller Arthur Levitt.<lb/>
ThisWeekAtThe<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057107_0008"/><lb/>
HHHHHI<lb/>
iBBHHHBBHBHnmHHM<lb/>
Xo ve s Labours Lost'<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
inor play performed well<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
27 January 1977<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
byPATCOYLE<lb/>
Courtship and marriage<lb/>
One of the best parts of the educational experience is the<lb/>
opportunity general college gives us to experience knowledge outside<lb/>
of our degree area.<lb/>
I like general college so much that I, a senior, am still fulfilling my<lb/>
general requirements. The trouble spot" this quarter is social<lb/>
sciences. So I'm taking SOCI 25, better known as courtship and<lb/>
marriage.<lb/>
SOCI 25 has been thought-provoking, to say the least. A day hasn't<lb/>
gone by that I haven't left the lecture shocked and illuminated by what<lb/>
I'd been tauqht.<lb/>
y OH THOSE ST A TISTICS<lb/>
Since sociology in general relies greatly on statistics, we have<lb/>
learned a great deal through figures.<lb/>
Many of us have been literally floored to learn how much people do,<lb/>
and at what age they start doing it.<lb/>
It didn't really hit us until the day we had a class "purity survey<lb/>
It wasn't the first survey I'd been involved with; there was one<lb/>
taken when I wasa high school senior. The big difference this time was<lb/>
that the results caused us to look around the room for the  prudes<lb/>
instead of looking fa the "swingers<lb/>
CLASS PROJECT<lb/>
One of the highlights of the course was the project we turned in<lb/>
recently. Our projects were structured according to each person's<lb/>
romantic status (married, involved, "just looking").<lb/>
I did the "involved" project, which consisted primarily of asking<lb/>
your potential mate a huge number of questions, then answering<lb/>
another bunch of questions for himher. The questions were in the<lb/>
categories of religion, economics, sex, and miscellaneous.<lb/>
By the time the project was turned in, I felt as if I'd been<lb/>
interrogated by Hitler's best friend. There were some questions I'd<lb/>
never even asked myself, let alone a man.<lb/>
GIVE AND TAKE<lb/>
The only part of the oourse I've really questioned is the section<lb/>
where we learn about getting one s mate to cooperate-to do what you<lb/>
wish heshe would do.<lb/>
The main system advocated is a sort of exchange plan (I cook good<lb/>
dinners three times a week - he tells me he loves me while I plow<lb/>
through the dishes).<lb/>
Thisconcept is also applied to justify some negative behavior in the<lb/>
partner, which is what I'm not so sure about.<lb/>
Oh sure, it applies in some cases, but you wouldn't excuse a guy<lb/>
who makes time with your friends because he has "extrovert<lb/>
tendencies <lb/>
Some people call a person who never phones before he drops in<lb/>
unpredictable I would be more inclined to call him "undepend-<lb/>
able<lb/>
Likewise, a guy who talks and thinks of nothing but sex is regarded<lb/>
by some as a red-blooded male . I tend to think of a guy like that as a<lb/>
pervert.<lb/>
A PROFITABLE EXPERIENCE<lb/>
All in all. I've learned a lot from courtship and marriage. The<lb/>
subject matter is something we all like to talk about, and it's good to<lb/>
hear some mature opinions.<lb/>
The only other thing you could do for us, Dr. Knox and Sara, is find<lb/>
us partners who make As in SOCI 25<lb/>
Leisure Learning Solution<lb/>
By DAVID R. BOSNICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
One wonders if the proper<lb/>
rationale for a particular produc-<lb/>
tion choice is "No one does it<lb/>
much No one plays the French<lb/>
horn through their nose much<lb/>
either, yet few feel the necessity<lb/>
to take that act on tour.<lb/>
Love's Labour's Lost is one of,<lb/>
if not the earliest of Shakespeare's<lb/>
comedies. It is a comedy of<lb/>
dialects, which juxtaposes the<lb/>
language of wit with the true<lb/>
feelings of love. The humor of this<lb/>
work is oontained in the word<lb/>
plays and malapropisms of the<lb/>
dialogue. Inthe1600's many of<lb/>
these puns were lost on the<lb/>
patrons. It is difficult to see why<lb/>
the producer feels contemporary<lb/>
audiences would be more aware<lb/>
of the humorous semantical faux<lb/>
pas. This work is, simply, a<lb/>
building block for Shakespeare,<lb/>
and not a very good one.<lb/>
The story revolves around the<lb/>
oath of 3 young noblemen and<lb/>
their leige. In a common Shakes-<lb/>
pearean play, these lords vow<lb/>
themselves to celibacy and study,<lb/>
with the intent to never "lay eyes<lb/>
upon a woman upon pain of court<lb/>
ridicule and public embarass-<lb/>
ment This pompous resolution<lb/>
loses its attraction with the<lb/>
entrance of the princess and her<lb/>
maids. The lords fall hopelessly in<lb/>
love and dialogue between the<lb/>
male and female "wits" provide<lb/>
most of the humor, and all the<lb/>
serious intent.<lb/>
The players are energetic, if<lb/>
occasionally a bit too pronounced.<lb/>
The only flaw in this production of<lb/>
immense vitality is due to the<lb/>
weaknesses of the play itself.<lb/>
The actorsactresses know<lb/>
through performance and repeti-<lb/>
tion where dialogue is weak. They<lb/>
attempt to facilitate these opaque<lb/>
moments through far too exag-<lb/>
gerated mannerisms: "schtick<lb/>
Schtick is that aspect of a<lb/>
performance that a performer<lb/>
adds as he becomes more familiar<lb/>
with a part. It becomes overdone<lb/>
when the methods take him too<lb/>
far from the actual character<lb/>
intent. This was most noticable in<lb/>
the performance of J.T.Walsh as<lb/>
Berowne, and in Jaquanetta,<lb/>
(Michelle Garrison Walsh's role<lb/>
is the most challenging, in that he<lb/>
is both narrator and player, and it<lb/>
is this huge amount of often weak<lb/>
verbosity that accounts for his<lb/>
impropriety. Jaquanetta, how-<lb/>
ever, is a small role whose<lb/>
dialogue contains phrases that<lb/>
are intended to enforce the<lb/>
concept of her idiocy and promis-<lb/>
cuity. Most of her lines are lost in<lb/>
her constant screaming shuffle.<lb/>
Mary Layne is archetypal of<lb/>
the beauteous princess and plays<lb/>
her role with aplomb.<lb/>
hosaime (Mary lou Rosato) is<lb/>
the female equivalent to Be-<lb/>
rowne. She is a wit, yet there<lb/>
appears little of the preoccious<lb/>
gamesmanship of Berowne and<lb/>
far too much of the matronly<lb/>
shrew. M iss Rosato's is a sirenish<lb/>
interpretation.<lb/>
This play oontains none of<lb/>
Shakespeare's great characteriza-<lb/>
tions. The wit is typical "vehicle"<lb/>
and even the foolish Don Adriano<lb/>
de Armado (Brooks Baldwin) who<lb/>
sounded a bit I ike a cross between<lb/>
Maunoe Chevalier and a piper<lb/>
cub, was the whimsical character<lb/>
of his better plays.<lb/>
The costumes, but for the<lb/>
princesses (too short) were mar-<lb/>
velous, as was the scenery. The<lb/>
music was occasionally a bit too<lb/>
raucous but the harpsioord solos<lb/>
were excellent.<lb/>
The worst of Shakespeare is<lb/>
being presented by one of the<lb/>
best of companies.<lb/>
J. KENNETH CAMPBELL is disturbed from his studies when Mary<lb/>
Layne, the Princess of France, arrives on the scene.<lb/>
1976 - a sleepy year for rock<lb/>
1976 was a sleepy year for<lb/>
contemporary rock and pop mu-<lb/>
sic. The year offered no definite<lb/>
rock work of art, such as ABBEY<lb/>
ROAD, HIGHWAY 61 REVISIT-<lb/>
ED, ZIGGY STARDUST or<lb/>
LAYLA.<lb/>
The majority of the pop music<lb/>
was outrageously tired  as tired<lb/>
as the make-up artist that keeps<lb/>
Dick Clark looking like he's 28.<lb/>
The ideas appear to have been<lb/>
about used us - Bill Haley and<lb/>
Chuck Berry had so much to look<lb/>
forward to, so great a possibility,<lb/>
back in the virginous '50s. It was<lb/>
rock and roll innovators like these<lb/>
two that have lived through the<lb/>
years of music progression, the<lb/>
years of bridging most forms of<lb/>
music, the experimental years,<lb/>
and the years of hype and<lb/>
promotion. But rock and roll has<lb/>
failed.<lb/>
1976 had to have a fix in order<lb/>
to plod along; its pusher was to be<lb/>
some reliable artists from the<lb/>
past.<lb/>
On a popular level, it was Paul<lb/>
McCartney, Stevie Wonder,<lb/>
Fleet wood Mac, and Peter<lb/>
Frampton. It was these musicians<lb/>
that sold the vinyl, made the<lb/>
music news, and except for<lb/>
Wonder, victoriously rode the<lb/>
concert circuit.<lb/>
McCartney and Wings ram-<lb/>
med on in '76; their tour of the<lb/>
States last spring reoeived posi-<lb/>
tive reviews, except for lovely but<lb/>
talentless Linda.<lb/>
McCartney proved that he<lb/>
could still rock and roll, caring<lb/>
less whether or not the Beatles<lb/>
would come together again. Un-<lb/>
like Harrison, a year before,<lb/>
McCartney's live reputation fail-<lb/>
ed to suffer. Wings mixed old<lb/>
with new, attracted the Beatles'<lb/>
cult along with the Wings in-<lb/>
spired, and dropped WINGS<lb/>
OVER AMERICA to a hungry<lb/>
Christmas audience. What really<lb/>
took some gumption was the live<lb/>
remakes of old Beatles' songs,<lb/>
such as "Blackbird" and "The<lb/>
Long and Winding Road Lucki-<lb/>
ly, they click.<lb/>
Stevie Wonder released his<lb/>
first LP in two and a half years.<lb/>
The album, SONGS IN THE KEY<lb/>
OF LIFE, consist of two and a half<lb/>
records. It is a massive collection<lb/>
and because of his huge contract<lb/>
with Motown, the LP retails at a<lb/>
massive price.<lb/>
As usual, Wonder received<lb/>
great reviews; his exceptional<lb/>
talent and popularity will con-<lb/>
tinue to attract blackwhiteAM<lb/>
FM audience. Wonder has been<lb/>
in the music business spotlight<lb/>
since the age of 12 and he knows<lb/>
what he's doing.<lb/>
Fleetwood Mac and Peter<lb/>
Frampton became household<lb/>
names (at least to the finger-<lb/>
popping generation) last year,<lb/>
c'ter years of playing second bill.<lb/>
It was the original Fleetwood<lb/>
Mac, however, that deserves the<lb/>
recognition. Originally Peter<lb/>
Green's Fleetwood Mac, that<lb/>
band released some notable<lb/>
music until Green contracted a<lb/>
green thumb and left the band to<lb/>
live a pastoral life. The original<lb/>
band released some of the finest<lb/>
English blues to date.<lb/>
Frampton became 1976's ver-<lb/>
sion of David Cassidy. Sure the<lb/>
chap is talented, but look how<lb/>
much talent floats around these<lb/>
days. If Frampton had the size<lb/>
and looks of Leslie West, he<lb/>
would have been begging Steve<lb/>
Marriott to reform Humble Pie.<lb/>
But today, instead of rockin' the<lb/>
Fillmore, Frampton's rockin'<lb/>
about every turntable in America.<lb/>
The perfect example of image,<lb/>
Frampton jumped from avid cult<lb/>
to mass appeal. And most have<lb/>
never even heard of Herd.<lb/>
1976 was the year of hype. It<lb/>
was to be the year of Bruce<lb/>
Springsteen - New York's metal-<lb/>
See MUSIC, page 9<lb/>
�mnoHHI<lb/>
<pb facs="00057107_0009"/><lb/>
27 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
MUSIC<lb/>
 Continued from page 8<lb/>
lie answer to Bobby Dylan. Jon<lb/>
Landau said, "I saw the future of<lb/>
rook and rull and its name is<lb/>
Bruoe Springsteen Springsteen<lb/>
is a great performer, has a strong<lb/>
band, releases good music, but<lb/>
his future was not to be in '76.<lb/>
Patti Smith came about by some<lb/>
strong word of mouth and some<lb/>
Dylan association. Her live per-<lb/>
formances have created a sen-<lb/>
sation, but on vinyl she seems to<lb/>
lose it in the studio.<lb/>
Patti Smith emerged from the<lb/>
saturated New York heavy metal<lb/>
scene - Max's Kansas City,<lb/>
CBGB's, etc. The music these<lb/>
bands play is making quite a<lb/>
headway on the album charts -<lb/>
especially because of its interest<lb/>
to the "pimple people Some<lb/>
critics say this is where pop music<lb/>
is heading to - a return to punk<lb/>
metal rook. Actually, this review-<lb/>
er cannot denote this transition as<lb/>
an improvement or an insult.<lb/>
It is from the New York scene<lb/>
that bands like the Ramones and<lb/>
the Laughing Dogs are attracting<lb/>
the attention of music mags.<lb/>
These bands were trading base-<lb/>
ball cards back when Lou Reed<lb/>
and the Velvet Underground were<lb/>
singing about fairies, sex, and<lb/>
smack. These punk bands move<lb/>
with the times - two years ago<lb/>
they were playing glitter. If only<lb/>
Jagger and Richards knew what<lb/>
kinds of monsters they had<lb/>
created with these three-cord<lb/>
offsprings.<lb/>
Dylan tried to create a 1960ish<lb/>
San Francisco atmosohere with<lb/>
his Rolling Thunder Revue. Con-<lb/>
sisting of such notables as Joan<lb/>
Baez, Joni Mitchell, Roger<lb/>
McGyinn and ex-Spider Mick<lb/>
Ronson, the group toured like a<lb/>
band of gypsys with their music<lb/>
as the message. Many believe<lb/>
that Zimmerman is losing his<lb/>
mystique by his barrage into the<lb/>
limelight. He probably needs the<lb/>
money. The HARD RAINS LP<lb/>
was unnecessary, but the live<lb/>
version of "Shelter From the<lb/>
Storm" ranks with the classic of<lb/>
"Like a Rolling Stone<lb/>
On the FM band it was jazz that<lb/>
kept the airwaves bouncing.<lb/>
Workhorses like Chick Corea,<lb/>
Carlos Santana, and Jeff Beck<lb/>
further dissolved the thin line<lb/>
between jazz and rock. George<lb/>
Benson felt the breeze on about<lb/>
his 53rd album and made the<lb/>
charts with "Masquerade<lb/>
Many bands, like Donald Byrd<lb/>
and the Blackbyrds, fused disco<lb/>
with the jazz form to attract the<lb/>
record buyer.<lb/>
The traditional jazz musicians<lb/>
received due recognition in the<lb/>
past year from jazz fanatics. In<lb/>
England, the big band sound of<lb/>
the '40s (Glenn Miller, Benny<lb/>
Goodman, etc( made a return to<lb/>
the charts. It was definitely a<lb/>
good year for jazz; it was the first<lb/>
time in the history of jazz music<lb/>
that album sales greater than<lb/>
10,000 could be expected.<lb/>
It was jazz and disco that<lb/>
captured the largest record buy-<lb/>
ing audienos in the past year<lb/>
(concerning music forms). Disco<lb/>
continued its popularity with the<lb/>
dance crowd and the top 40<lb/>
charts. This form, with the focus<lb/>
on the simplistic beat, can be<lb/>
cited as a major factor in the<lb/>
monotony of last year's music.<lb/>
Don't be surprised if a disco<lb/>
version of "Old Rugged Cross"<lb/>
enters the charts sometime in the<lb/>
near future - anything is possible<lb/>
in the music industry. There<lb/>
seems to be no limit to its<lb/>
triteness. Give it another year on<lb/>
the charts.<lb/>
A lot of music was piped out in<lb/>
1976; unfortunately the majority<lb/>
was a waste of vinyl. Rock music<lb/>
needs another leader to carry the<lb/>
weight. In the '50s, it was Presley<lb/>
and Berry; the Beatles and<lb/>
Dylan kept us pacified in the<lb/>
emotional '60s; so far the '70s<lb/>
have been leaderless and the<lb/>
music industry has suffered<lb/>
tremendously.<lb/>
Hopefully, 1977 will seek a<lb/>
sense of direction and rock and<lb/>
pop music will be nulled from the<lb/>
mire that it has clumsily fallen<lb/>
into.<lb/>
Marching Pirates aim to please<lb/>
90 hours work -1 hour credit<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A whistle screams, the drum<lb/>
cadence sounds, horns blare, and<lb/>
cymbals crash. The purple and<lb/>
gold uniformed ECU Marching<lb/>
Band goes through the paces of<lb/>
another halftime show.<lb/>
"Halftime shows last from<lb/>
seven to 11 or 12 minutes said<lb/>
George E. Naff, director of the<lb/>
marching band.<lb/>
The marching band practices<lb/>
for an hour and a half every<lb/>
Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday<lb/>
of Fall Quarter, in preparation of<lb/>
each halftime show, according to<lb/>
Naff.<lb/>
On weeks of homes games,<lb/>
the band practices Fridays, and<lb/>
sometimes on Saturday morning.<lb/>
The halftime show progresses<lb/>
as fans run to use the bathroom,<lb/>
get drinks, or discuss key plays as<lb/>
they gaze half-attentively at the<lb/>
geometric configurations forming<lb/>
below on the field.<lb/>
' Students receive one hour of<lb/>
credit for about 90 hours of<lb/>
work the young, neatly bearded<lb/>
Naff said.<lb/>
Including pom-pom girls and<lb/>
majorettes, more than 200 stu-<lb/>
dents are in the band.<lb/>
"We use specialists in march-<lb/>
ing percussion, rifles, flags,<lb/>
design, and music said Naff, as<lb/>
he searched his pockets and desk<lb/>
drawers for a match to light his<lb/>
pipe.<lb/>
"When the audience responds<lb/>
to your brand of entertainment, it<lb/>
is worthwhile Naff said.<lb/>
Half of the money for the band<lb/>
comes from the athletic depart-<lb/>
ment and the rest from the<lb/>
Student Government Association<lb/>
(SGA).<lb/>
This year, additional money<lb/>
was raised by the band members<lb/>
who manned polls during SGA<lb/>
elections. Herbert Carter, chair-<lb/>
man of instrumental music, also<lb/>
raised some money for the band.<lb/>
 Our problems are not related<lb/>
to pulling together shows, our<lb/>
problems are money explained<lb/>
the smartly dressed Naff. "Some<lb/>
university bands spend $50,000 to<lb/>
$60,000 a year. ECU has $15,000<lb/>
to $16,000 a year to work with<lb/>
In the stands, the drums roar<lb/>
as the team makes a good play.<lb/>
The band tries to excite the team<lb/>
and generate enthusiasm among<lb/>
the fans.<lb/>
"There is a certain mount of<lb/>
pride in supporting our school<lb/>
and team said Naff, ECU'S<lb/>
band director for four years.<lb/>
The ECU Marching Band is<lb/>
different from most other univer-<lb/>
sity bands. The ECU band has<lb/>
become more corps style, from<lb/>
the drum and bugle corps. Most<lb/>
others are pageant oriented.<lb/>
Naff left a high school teach-<lb/>
ing job in Tennessee to oome<lb/>
here. He attended East Tennes-<lb/>
see State and the University of<lb/>
South Carolina. He was also with<lb/>
the U.S. Air Force Band in<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
"My rewards oome from my<lb/>
students when they are successful<lb/>
and feel they have done a good<lb/>
job said Naff, "and when<lb/>
people respond to what my<lb/>
students are doing.<lb/>
"When all that happens, I feel<lb/>
good about it. Because it's for<lb/>
them<lb/>
The marching band provides<lb/>
music majors with invaluable<lb/>
experience if they aspire to be<lb/>
band directors.<lb/>
 A great deal of our success is<lb/>
from the interest and support of<lb/>
Everett Pittman, dean of music,<lb/>
and Herbert Carter Naff said.<lb/>
As the game ends, the large<lb/>
square mass of purple and gold<lb/>
filters out of the stands. Students<lb/>
lug their instruments home. Next<lb/>
week they have another show to<lb/>
prepare.<lb/>
'2 lb. Royal Rib Eye Steak Dinner<lb/>
Includes a hot baked potato, crisp garden<lb/>
fresh salad, and fresh baked hot roll.<lb/>
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with coupon<lb/>
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t<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057107_0010"/><lb/>
BnRBHBHMHI<lb/>
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Sports<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
27 January 1977<lb/>
Sideline Chat<lb/>
w'fh STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Vof Ony Ones<lb/>
East Carolina's swim team journeyed up to Chapel Hill last Sunday<lb/>
hoping to upset Carolina, something they have never done. It failed.<lb/>
For the 29th consecutive time, the Tar Heels came out on top.<lb/>
East Carolina has always had a good swimming program, but has<lb/>
just not had quite enough to beat Carolina or State, for that matter.<lb/>
Since the early years of the East Carolina swim team, the Tar Heels<lb/>
and Wolfpack have been a couple of the top teams in the oountry.<lb/>
This year, there wa$ a glimmer of hope. Coach Scharf knew just<lb/>
about all of the freestyle events were winners for ECU. But the sore<lb/>
spot was the odd-strokes (i.e. backstroke, breaststroke, butterfly,<lb/>
and individual medley) and the diving. Carolina took advantage of the<lb/>
sore spots and took one-two in each of these events except in diving.<lb/>
David Kirkman, captain of the swim tean and one of only a few<lb/>
seniors came the closest in the breaststroke. He finished third, but was<lb/>
just .09 of a second out of first. Less than a tenth of a second separated<lb/>
first and third places.<lb/>
Diving was more of a bright spot than was originally expected.<lb/>
Scharf moved Stewart Mann to the boards this week in a hope to keep<lb/>
Carolina from going one-two in those events. This succeeded as Mann<lb/>
took second in the three-meter diving while freshman Jim Brunner took<lb/>
second in the one-meter competition. Mann was third in the one-meter.<lb/>
Scharf sees the diving as a problem for ECU. "We just don't have<lb/>
enough money to hire a top diving coach or recruit top divers out of<lb/>
high school. The divers we get improve a lot, but with a full-time diving<lb/>
coach, who knows?<lb/>
Money is a problem at ECU as at most NCAA colleges. Schools like<lb/>
State and Carolina have more money than they know what to do with.<lb/>
They have in recent years gem out and recruited heavily in swimming<lb/>
and wrestling and other non-revenue sports just to keep schools like<lb/>
ECU from catching up.<lb/>
Of course, in wrestling, State and Carolina have had to do the<lb/>
catching up. Carolina has never beaten East Carolina in wrestling<lb/>
while State has turned the trick just onoe. In the last three years, they<lb/>
have been giving out many full scholarships in wrestling to "upgrade"<lb/>
their program. Really they are just tired of being (embarrassed?) by<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
State and Carolina, with all their money, last year came close to<lb/>
beating the Pirate grapplers. State won the ACC championship last<lb/>
year but lost to ECU.<lb/>
In the future, it will be very hard to go against State or Carolina in<lb/>
revenue or non-revenue sports because of all the money they are<lb/>
pumping into their program to beat "good oT ECTC But, in some<lb/>
sports, they still have the catching up to do.<lb/>
Be Proud<lb/>
Wrestling and swimming are not the only sports with money woet.<lb/>
You can go from the top all the way to the bottom.<lb/>
Our football team, for instance, goes up to Carolina with 22 ball<lb/>
players the Tar Heels turned down (more or less) and gave them a<lb/>
12-10 game. The funny thing about it is that Carolina puts about one<lb/>
and one-half times as much into their football program as ECU does in<lb/>
its entire athletic program.<lb/>
Basketball: East Carolina's basketball budget is less than $100,000<lb/>
annually while Dean Smith's coaches recruit on $300,000<lb/>
dollars a year. That is $300,000 just for recruiting five basketball<lb/>
players a year. That comes out to about $60,000 for each player they<lb/>
ink. No wonder they are in the top ten each year. Slipper Rock could<lb/>
make it on that kind of money.<lb/>
All the way down the line-women's athletics, soccer, tennis, golf,<lb/>
track, cross country-East Carolina is hurting money-wise.<lb/>
The Future<lb/>
What does the future hold?<lb/>
Getting the stadium enlarged would increase revenue quite a bit.<lb/>
Gus Andrews, executive director of the Pirate Club, is setting up<lb/>
organizations in most North Carolina aties in an effort to increase their<lb/>
contribution to the Pirates Club.<lb/>
With all the money uncertainties, ECU still managed 15 wins last<lb/>
year against ACC competition in all sports and that is something to be<lb/>
proud of.<lb/>
And.just think, you are getting more for your money than any<lb/>
Division I school in the state.<lb/>
Furman rallies in second<lb/>
half to beat Bugs, 100-89<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Furman used freshman star<lb/>
Jonathon Moore and transfer<lb/>
Bruce Grimm to stop an East<lb/>
Carolina rally in the second half<lb/>
Monday night. The Paladins wor,<lb/>
the game 100-89 in Memorial<lb/>
Coliseum in Greenville, S.C.<lb/>
Furman had opened up an<lb/>
18-point lead early in the second<lb/>
half, but the Pirates, led by Jim<lb/>
Ramsey, Louis Crosby, Larry<lb/>
Hunt, and Herb Krusen, brought<lb/>
the lead down to just six points<lb/>
with a little under eight minutes<lb/>
left in the oontest. Ramsey had<lb/>
ten points in the stretch while<lb/>
Crosby added six and Hunt and<lb/>
Krusen five apiece.<lb/>
But the Paladins, led by<lb/>
Grimm, Moore and Ron Smith ran<lb/>
the lead back out to the final<lb/>
margin.<lb/>
The game started off good for<lb/>
the Pirates as they were leading<lb/>
12-6 after only two and one-half<lb/>
minutes of play. The Paladins<lb/>
then ran off a string of 11<lb/>
unanswered points to take a 17-12<lb/>
lead. The Pirates never led again.<lb/>
The lead for the remainder of<lb/>
the half fluctuated between three<lb/>
and six points until the last five<lb/>
minutes of the half. With Furman<lb/>
leading 43-37 at that point, they<lb/>
ran off the last eight points of the<lb/>
first half to lead 51-37.<lb/>
The oold stretch at the end of<lb/>
the half seemed to demoralize the<lb/>
Pirates somewhat as they came<lb/>
out in the second half much the<lb/>
same way. Furman scored the<lb/>
first four points of the second half<lb/>
to run up an 18 point lead.<lb/>
That is when the Pirates ran<lb/>
off their surge to cut the lead to<lb/>
six.<lb/>
Ramsey, a freshman from<lb/>
Cary, N.C led the Pirates for the<lb/>
night with 24 points while senior<lb/>
Larry Hunt hit on 22. Louis<lb/>
Crosby had his highest output of<lb/>
the season with 16 points. Herb<lb/>
Krusen added 14 in just 12<lb/>
minutes of playing time.<lb/>
Grimm led Furman with 25<lb/>
points while Moore added 24.<lb/>
Smith finished the game with 17<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Grimm has been saying that<lb/>
anyone trying to guard him<lb/>
one-on-one would either give up<lb/>
the basket to him or allow him to<lb/>
gototfK foul line for free throws.<lb/>
Grimm hit just one of nine shots<lb/>
from the field in the second half<lb/>
as Louis Crosby guarded him<lb/>
closely. For the game, Grimm<lb/>
managed just nine of 23 from the<lb/>
field, less than 40 percent.<lb/>
Moore was much more effect-<lb/>
ive as he hit on ten of 15 from the<lb/>
field to get his points.<lb/>
The Pirates out-shot the Pala-<lb/>
dins55.1 to 54.1 percent from the<lb/>
field but oould not match up at the<lb/>
foul line as the Paladins were<lb/>
whistled for just 18 fouls while the<lb/>
officials called 25 on East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
ECU out-rebounded Furman<lb/>
42-39 as Hunt picked off 13.<lb/>
Moore led the Paladins with 15.<lb/>
The Pirates hosted Old<lb/>
Dominion last night in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. The Monarches came<lb/>
into the game with a 12-2 mark<lb/>
with an upset victory over<lb/>
Mississippi State in the Old<lb/>
Dominion Classic. Mississippi<lb/>
State had beaten Wake Forest the<lb/>
previous night.<lb/>
Saturday, Davidson will in-<lb/>
vade Minges to face the Pirates.<lb/>
ECU beat the Wildcats in David-<lb/>
son 51-49 earlier in the season.<lb/>
Grapplers meet favored<lb/>
Carolina this weekend<lb/>
East Carolina's wrestling<lb/>
team faces probably one of their<lb/>
most formidable opponents Fri-<lb/>
day night when North Carolina<lb/>
invades Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
"The shoe is on the other foot<lb/>
this year said Pirate mentor<lb/>
John Welborn. "Carolina is favo-<lb/>
red in this match, but they've<lb/>
never beaten us in my ten years<lb/>
here<lb/>
In Welborn's early years, the<lb/>
Pirates romped over the Tar<lb/>
Heels, whitewashing them three<lb/>
times. However, the last two<lb/>
years, matches have been very<lb/>
tough. ECU won last year at<lb/>
Chapel Hill 24-13 by taking the<lb/>
last five matches.<lb/>
"Carolina is ranked 19th in<lb/>
the nation Welborn oontinued.<lb/>
"They've got the team and the<lb/>
money up there now and have<lb/>
gone after good competition.<lb/>
They will certainly be up for it<lb/>
Line-ups for the match are not<lb/>
definite, but probables are ready.<lb/>
At 118, ECU'S Wendell Hardy is<lb/>
expected to go up against Soott<lb/>
Conkwright while John Galli will<lb/>
face the Pirates' Paul Osman at<lb/>
126.<lb/>
At 134, Harry Martin is<lb/>
expected to wrestle the Tar<lb/>
Heels' Chris Conkwright while<lb/>
East Carolina's Paul Gaghan will<lb/>
battle Dave Jurgens at 142.<lb/>
Carolina's Jeff Rientgen will<lb/>
faos Frank Schaede at 150 while<lb/>
Pirate freshman Steve Goode will<lb/>
go up against Carter Mario in the<lb/>
158-pound contest.<lb/>
In a oouple of the top matches<lb/>
of the night, ECU'S Phil Mueller<lb/>
will battle Mike Benzel at 167 and<lb/>
the 177-pound bout will match<lb/>
Pirate freshman standout Jay<lb/>
Dever and Dean Brior. John<lb/>
Williams and UNC's Norm WaJ-<lb/>
ker will face off at 190 while<lb/>
Pirate D.T. Joyner will battle Dee<lb/>
Hardison at heavyweight.<lb/>
For the match, Welborn has<lb/>
called for a big turnout by the<lb/>
ECU students and fans.<lb/>
" We are going to need al I the<lb/>
help we can get from our students<lb/>
and fans Welborn said.<lb/>
"There's one thing about the<lb/>
crowd, they're like a helping<lb/>
hand. And as good as Carolina is<lb/>
we'll be needing it<lb/>
Time for the match is 8 p.m.<lb/>
WITH PLENTY OF ACTION in store, Coach Welborn hopes to see a large turnout this weekend<lb/>
<pb facs="00057107_0011"/><lb/>
Women s gymnastic program looks<lb/>
27 January 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
for<lb/>
deserved acceptance and support<lb/>
By JEFF BROOKS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
women's gymnastics team is<lb/>
facing the 1977 season with little<lb/>
experience and depth, but with a<lb/>
great deal of pride, enthusiasm<lb/>
and desire. Little known and<lb/>
recognized on campus, the sport<lb/>
flourishes in the hearts and minds<lb/>
of eight dedicated women and<lb/>
their coach, Steveda Chepko.<lb/>
Ms. Chepko, whose bright<lb/>
smile is a familiar sight around<lb/>
campus, has coached the gym-<lb/>
nastics team here for two years.<lb/>
She views both this year and last<lb/>
year as foundation years for a<lb/>
solid program in the future.<lb/>
The biggest problems so far<lb/>
have been lack of depth, injuries<lb/>
and inexperience. In gymnastics,<lb/>
four events are run in sequence.<lb/>
Vault, uneven parallel bars,<lb/>
balance beam and floor exercises<lb/>
comprise the oomplete program.<lb/>
A participant generally com-<lb/>
petes in her strongest one or two<lb/>
areas, but with ECU'S lack of<lb/>
depth, one girl may compete in<lb/>
three or four events.<lb/>
In the recent meet with<lb/>
Madison, East Carolina was able<lb/>
to oompete with only two people<lb/>
on the uneven parallel bars,<lb/>
instead of six.<lb/>
Injuries have also plagued the<lb/>
team, with two team members<lb/>
injured before the season and<lb/>
another only a week ago.<lb/>
As the season continues,<lb/>
inexperience will undoubtedly<lb/>
surface as a problem. Before this<lb/>
year, only one girl had ever<lb/>
participated in gymnastics be-<lb/>
fore. The remainder of the team<lb/>
has been forced to learn as they<lb/>
go.<lb/>
Putting in three hours a day,<lb/>
seven days a week for practice is<lb/>
grueling, but Coach Chepko says<lb/>
"the team is bearing up well and<lb/>
is really hustling She noted that<lb/>
team captain Betsy Adkins was<lb/>
currently averaging 5.0 tor all<lb/>
events (I0.0 is high score, ranging<lb/>
down to zero.)<lb/>
East Carolina will be home<lb/>
against William and Mary and<lb/>
�� ' : �  .<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Furman on Saturday, Feb. 5th, at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. The meet will<lb/>
begin at 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
The followirg weekend ECU<lb/>
entertains Appalachian State at<lb/>
3XX), also at Minges.<lb/>
The NCAIAW Gymnastics<lb/>
Championships will be hosted<lb/>
by East Carolina this year on<lb/>
March 5th. Defending state<lb/>
champion Western Carolina will<lb/>
be contending with UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill, Meredith, Duke, Queens<lb/>
and Appalachian State, as well as<lb/>
host East Carolina.<lb/>
ROSTER<lb/>
Betsy Adkins<lb/>
Nan Baker<lb/>
Sally Birsch<lb/>
Pam Bite<lb/>
beah Carver<lb/>
Susan Jarrett<lb/>
Karen Johnson<lb/>
Donna Pendley<lb/>
Jan. Athlete-of-<lb/>
Month: Nieman<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Editor's note: FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD each month votes on a list<lb/>
of nominees fa the A thlete-of-the<lb/>
Month award. Members of the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD sports staff<lb/>
and the Sports Information Office<lb/>
vote to determine a winner. This<lb/>
month, Ted Nieman, a freshman<lb/>
swimmer from Winter Park, Fla<lb/>
is the winner and his name is<lb/>
automatically thrown into the hat<lb/>
for the Athlete-of-the-Year award<lb/>
that is voted on in May of this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
People have been seeing a lot<lb/>
of Ted Nieman in FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD lately and if he continues<lb/>
to swim as he has in his first<lb/>
month of college competition they<lb/>
will see a lot more of him.<lb/>
The lanky freshman from<lb/>
Winter Park, Fla. has already<lb/>
broken enough records to have<lb/>
his name permanently carved into<lb/>
the pool floor.<lb/>
Nieman has set four pool, four<lb/>
freshman, and three varsity re-<lb/>
cords since coming to East<lb/>
Carolina and helped in a big way<lb/>
beat ACC power Maryland earlier<lb/>
this month. Coach Ray Scharf is<lb/>
impressed with his young super-<lb/>
star.<lb/>
"I wish I had some more like<lb/>
him. He does everything we ask<lb/>
of him and does it well. He is very<lb/>
coachable. He and John Tudor<lb/>
have a rivalry going and they<lb/>
work together to beat each other's<lb/>
records. As long as they keep<lb/>
doing that, the times are going to<lb/>
continue to fall<lb/>
Nieman won by a large margin<lb/>
in the voting over wrestlers Paul<lb/>
Osman and Phil Mueller and<lb/>
teammate Tudor. Other nominees<lb/>
included: Debbie Freeman and<lb/>
Rosie Thompson from the wo-<lb/>
men's basketball; Marvin Ran-<lb/>
kins from track; and Larry Hunt,<lb/>
Jim Ramsey and Herb Gray from<lb/>
men's basketball.<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
111!111vShhhhmbhhh<lb/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED? Call<lb/>
Alice-758-0497 or 757-6366. Only<lb/>
.50 a page: (exoeptions-single<lb/>
spaced pages &amp; outlines) Plenty<lb/>
of experience�I need the money!<lb/>
FOR SALE: '68 Volkswagon fast<lb/>
back $350. or 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 Aycock any<lb/>
day after 3.00 p.m. now for best<lb/>
selection.<lb/>
r'OR SALE: Texas instruments<lb/>
SR-51 a electronic calculator.<lb/>
Adaptor, two owners manuals,<lb/>
two operating guides and two<lb/>
carrying cases included free. Call<lb/>
752-9905 and ask I or Jeff.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 74 VW Bug $2200.<lb/>
Contemp. furniture &amp; doublebed<lb/>
Excellent oondition. Call 752-0903<lb/>
after 430.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fender Princeton<lb/>
Reverb Guitar amp. $150. Electric<lb/>
Guitar Fuzz-Wah-Volume Pedal.<lb/>
4 wahs 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 needs minor 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: 4" X 5" Graphic<lb/>
View II with Schneider Xenar 150<lb/>
mm. Dagor 358 15 holders. 4<lb/>
developing tanks and 6 negative<lb/>
holders. $275. Call John 758-<lb/>
1592.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 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/>
FOR SALE: '71 Opel GT Low<lb/>
milage, AC, excellent oondition<lb/>
32 MPG. Call Mark Hurley at KA<lb/>
House. 758-8999.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: 758-5948.<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 Rmspr. 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 for<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: 1969 Red Fiat 124<lb/>
Excellent Cond. 75,000 miles<lb/>
$200 take up $36mo. payments-<lb/>
$550 left call 757-6690 �?.m<lb/>
12p.m. Sun-Thnrc<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pontiac 1966<lb/>
LeMans. Runs good. $250.<lb/>
Yamaha CLarinet. Excellent oon-<lb/>
dition. $100. Phone-758-9378.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Wilson T3000 Tennis<lb/>
Racket-$25.00 Lenny House-758-<lb/>
8843.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Telecaster guitar,<lb/>
and J.V.C. Turntable. Call 758-<lb/>
7954.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Yahama Guitar, good<lb/>
oondition. Excellent for begin-<lb/>
ners. 150.00 contact Nancy<lb/>
through ad in Fountainhfiart<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Yamana zou<lb/>
Endura. Excellent condition 2500<lb/>
miles $675. 758-9063.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Fiat Spider,<lb/>
AM-FM Stereo, tape player, wire<lb/>
wheels, excellent condition,<lb/>
$3,850 call 756-6768 after 530.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer Car Stereo.<lb/>
FM and Cassette tape player.<lb/>
Like new. Call Dale 752-0734.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2 Tennis Rackets, 1<lb/>
10-speed L � Cheap 752-6439.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '66 VW great for in<lb/>
town would need work for trips.<lb/>
$350 or best offer. 752-4479<lb/>
WANTED: A good cook that can<lb/>
cook for about 20 guys. Good pay.<lb/>
Call Sigma Phi Epsilon at 752-<lb/>
2941. Hours are 4-6 p.m. Sun<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
MUST SELL: Sunn studio lead<lb/>
amp hardly used. $175.00. Call<lb/>
Maria 752-9022 for more inform-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New-Clairol "Kind-<lb/>
ness 3-way Hairsetter" with mist<lb/>
or regular control. Pins &amp; Condi-<lb/>
tioning mist treatment included.<lb/>
Only $20.00, call 758-9225.<lb/>
WANTED: One or two female<lb/>
roomates for Village Green Apt.<lb/>
$50 per month plus utilities. Call<lb/>
758-0595 after 3.<lb/>
NEEDED: Male roommate to<lb/>
share apartment $47.50 per<lb/>
month plus utilities, must be<lb/>
dean and orderly. Call 752-3853.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
to share apt. Rent and util.<lb/>
$55mo. Call 752-0081.<lb/>
NEEDED: Roommate for Spring<lb/>
Quarter. Big house. Call Decky or<lb/>
Larry after 6XX) p.m. 752-2859.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private rooms and 2<lb/>
baths for male student. Available<lb/>
on March 1. 758-2585.<lb/>
lost<lb/>
2<lb/>
LOST: Ladies wrap around swea-<lb/>
ter. Brown with different colored<lb/>
stripes around it and a Navy blue<lb/>
tie belt. Lost in Jolly Rogers. If<lb/>
found call 752-9907 or bring by<lb/>
818 Greene Dorm.<lb/>
LOST: Pumpkin oolored short<lb/>
coat wfur collar. Lost at Elbo<lb/>
Room Friday (1-21) No questions<lb/>
asked. Call 758-9728.<lb/>
LOST: Gold wristwatch with<lb/>
brown face. Call 752-9351. $40<lb/>
reward.<lb/>
LOST: Brown oowhide wallet.<lb/>
Call-758-9895, 618 Tyler. Lost in<lb/>
the vicinity of Speight or Brews-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
FOUND: Pair of glasses at the<lb/>
track. Call 752-0424.<lb/>
FOUND: someone who listens<lb/>
and helps. You don't have to be in<lb/>
a crisis to call or oome by the<lb/>
REAL crisis center. Counseling<lb/>
and referrals are what they offer.<lb/>
They're free, too. Call 758-HELP.<lb/>
personal<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: To Charlotte<lb/>
Friday. Can leave anytime, Janet<lb/>
Pope 423 Tyler, 758-9670.<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle.<lb/>
752-4272.<lb/>
YOGA LESSONS: exercises to<lb/>
calm the mind and slim the body -<lb/>
way oi life. Classes forming now.<lb/>
Call Sunshine, 752-5214 after 9XX)<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 9XX) p.m. on Mon. and Wed.<lb/>
after 5XX) p.m. all other nites.<lb/>
TAX SERVICES: ECU Business<lb/>
student would like to prepare<lb/>
inoome tax returns evenings and<lb/>
weekends. Reasonable rates. Call<lb/>
756-4180. Typing services also<lb/>
available.<lb/>
NOTES NEEDED: Desperately<lb/>
need oomplete &amp; legible notes for<lb/>
HIST 50, (under Dr. Still fall<lb/>
quarter) to clear up an incom-<lb/>
plete! Please call 758-8700 NOW,<lb/>
if you can help! Will pay fa good<lb/>
notes!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057107_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 27 Janaury 1977<lb/>
First win of season<lb/>
Lady Pirates beat �1011,88-72<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU'S Lady Pirates picked up<lb/>
their first win of the season<lb/>
Tuesday with a big 88-72 win over<lb/>
the Golden Girls of Elon College.<lb/>
After the win in Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum, the Lady Pirates now stand<lb/>
1-10.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates jumped out<lb/>
to a quick lead and never<lb/>
relinquished it. At halftime, they<lb/>
had built up a 40-22 advantage.<lb/>
In the second half the Golden<lb/>
Girls came back to within ten<lb/>
when Coach Catherine Bolton<lb/>
inserted her subs. The starters<lb/>
came back and pushed the lead to<lb/>
the final margin.<lb/>
"I'm very happy we won<lb/>
one Bolton said following the<lb/>
game. "However, we didn't play<lb/>
an excellent game. But we did<lb/>
show more hustle and team unity<lb/>
than we have in a while. I was real<lb/>
proud of the way we played near<lb/>
the end when we were chal-<lb/>
lenged. We played like a confi-<lb/>
dent unit. Hope it's a sign of what<lb/>
is to come<lb/>
Gale Kerbaugh led the Lady<lb/>
Pirates with a career high 30<lb/>
points. She hit on 12-18 shots<lb/>
from the field, oontinually driving<lb/>
through the Elon defense for<lb/>
baskets. She also hit six of seven<lb/>
from the foul line and ran the<lb/>
offense superbly.<lb/>
Debbie Freeman followed<lb/>
with 14 points, 17 rebounds, and<lb/>
seven assists. Bolton said Free-<lb/>
man played her "most complete<lb/>
game since coming to ECU. She<lb/>
was a tremendous value to the<lb/>
team<lb/>
Freshman center Linda Mo-<lb/>
del Ian added 13 points and eight<lb/>
rebounds and played what Bolton<lb/>
terms "her best game<lb/>
Kathy Suggs, a 5-6 replace-<lb/>
ment for injured forward Rosie<lb/>
Thompson, scored ten points and<lb/>
pulled 14 big rebounds, 11 in the<lb/>
first half.<lb/>
Guard April Ross finished the<lb/>
game with ten points.<lb/>
Sandra Gray led the Golden<lb/>
Girls with 16 points and nine<lb/>
c<lb/>
8<lb/>
A<lb/>
-Q<lb/>
O<lb/>
O<lb/>
5<lb/>
rebounds, while Janet Fleming<lb/>
added 15 and Jackie Myers 12.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates shot the best<lb/>
they have shot all season, hitting<lb/>
39 of 83 for 47 percent. Elon shot<lb/>
just 38 percent.<lb/>
ECU also ruled the back-<lb/>
boards with 63 rebounds to j ust 38<lb/>
for the Golden Girls.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will be on<lb/>
the road this weekend as they<lb/>
face UNC-Greensboro Friday<lb/>
night and Appalachian State<lb/>
Saturday night.<lb/>
In other developments, Coach<lb/>
Bolton announced Tuesday night<lb/>
that Rosie Thompson, star for-<lb/>
ward on the team, will be out for<lb/>
the remainder of the season with<lb/>
a stress fracture in her leg.<lb/>
mim<lb/>
E.C.U. NIGHT IS BACK<lb/>
AND BIGGERTHAN EVER<lb/>
NOT ONE DAY BUTTWO!<lb/>
GAIL KERBAUGH, high scorer in Tuesday's game.<lb/>
Buc swimmers lose to<lb/>
fifth-ranked State, 73-40<lb/>
By DAVID ROBEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU's men's swim team was<lb/>
outclassed this past Tuesday<lb/>
when they traveled to Raleigh to<lb/>
take on N.C. State. The Wolf-<lb/>
pack, who stands fifth in the<lb/>
nation, handed the Pirates a<lb/>
disappointing loss 73-40.<lb/>
Ted Nieman who usually wins<lb/>
the 1,000 yard freestyle had to<lb/>
take second Dlace to Kevin<lb/>
Weldon of N.C.S.U. who set a new<lb/>
ACC record in the event.<lb/>
John McCauley came through<lb/>
and won the 50 and the 100 yard<lb/>
freestyles.<lb/>
John Tudor, another standout<lb/>
this year, did well in his event.<lb/>
Tudor won the 500 yard freestyle<lb/>
while Nieman took second. Both<lb/>
broke the former ECU varsity<lb/>
record by two seconds.<lb/>
State won both tne 400 medley<lb/>
and 800 yard freestyle relays. In<lb/>
diving, Jim Brunner took third on<lb/>
the one meter board and the three<lb/>
meter board.<lb/>
ArmyNavy Store<lb/>
1501 Evans<lb/>
12p.m5a0p.m.<lb/>
Back packs, Field, Flight,<lb/>
Bomber, &amp; Snorkel Jackets,<lb/>
Jeans<lb/>
State won the butterfly,<lb/>
breaststroke, and backstroke<lb/>
events. The individual medley<lb/>
also fell to the Wolf pack when<lb/>
Duncan Goodhew won the event.<lb/>
ECU now stands 6-2 overall<lb/>
and 2-0 against Southern Con-<lb/>
ference foes. The win for State<lb/>
makes them 6-0 overall. The<lb/>
Pirates' next meet is on Feb. 5<lb/>
when they host Duke University.<lb/>
Every Tuesday and Wednesday<lb/>
All Day At Bonanza<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK DINNER $1.49<lb/>
(Includes your choice of potato or vegetable, Texas Toast<lb/>
and salad from our all-you-can-eat salad bar)<lb/>
520 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
GWK<lb/>
TT '? -<lb/>
fcG<lb/>
Qfi<lb/>
8<lb/>
�&amp;"<lb/>
?S<lb/>
Buy a Sub and get a<lb/>
Medium Coke or Pepsi<lb/>
FORONLY<lb/>
.05<lb/>
Offer Available From2-5 P.M.<lb/>
and7-10P.M.<lb/>
aLS 4t Pr,one 752-�130 VV P"?<lb/>
Ad Xj Phone in orders Ad<lb/>
0 fur pick up or campus Jeiivu , iE<lb/>
<pb facs="00057107_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>