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<pb facs="00057108_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for 51 years with a<lb/>
circulation of 8,500, this<lb/>
issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Vol. 52 NorfrK?-2- East Carolina University Greenville, North Carolina 1 February 1977<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Sullivan, p. 3<lb/>
Language, p. 3<lb/>
UNC downed, p. 12<lb/>
BUC price<lb/>
drops to $5<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Subscriptions for the 1976-7?<lb/>
BUCCANEER have been lowere<lb/>
from $10 to $5, according t<lb/>
Susan Rogerson, newly appointee<lb/>
editc<lb/>
SUSAN ROGERSON<lb/>
Rogerson explained that the<lb/>
publishing company fa the BUC<lb/>
determined the book will not be<lb/>
as expensive as expected.<lb/>
"Our contract with the Hunter<lb/>
Publishing Company does not<lb/>
include all the fancy stuff, like<lb/>
color, special effects, that make<lb/>
the books so expensive<lb/>
By lowering the publishing<lb/>
oosts, Rogerson expects the new<lb/>
BUC to be larger. She estimated<lb/>
it will include at least 224 pages.<lb/>
Exactly how many sub-<lb/>
scriptions will be needed to<lb/>
publish at all, Rogerson oould not<lb/>
say. It will depend on the<lb/>
advertising sales, she said.<lb/>
"But I do hope we will sell at<lb/>
least 3,000 subscriptions she<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Rogerson served as assistant<lb/>
BUC editor under Monika Suther-<lb/>
land before the previous staff<lb/>
resigned this fall.<lb/>
"I Game back because I felt<lb/>
that if we didn't have a BUC this<lb/>
year of any kind, the tradition<lb/>
might stop altogether<lb/>
Sutherland's staff resigned<lb/>
because they felt the appropri-<lb/>
ated funds for the BUC were not<lb/>
sufficient for a quality yearbook.<lb/>
The money formally appropri-<lb/>
ated fa the BUC has now been<lb/>
appropriated to other functions.<lb/>
So the new BUC staff is SGA<lb/>
funded fa staff salaries and one<lb/>
month's office operating ex-<lb/>
penses only.<lb/>
After these operating funds<lb/>
run out, all office expenses will<lb/>
have to oome from ad sales and<lb/>
subscriptions, according to<lb/>
Rogerson.<lb/>
Rogerson's staff now consists<lb/>
of advertising and subscriptions<lb/>
managas and their assistants,<lb/>
different sections editas, a copy<lb/>
edita and 11 volunteer staff<lb/>
members.<lb/>
The new staff will begin full<lb/>
operations Monday, Jan. 31 at<lb/>
430 p.m.<lb/>
SGA to hold forum<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Assistant News Edita<lb/>
Four SGA executives will appear Wednesday, Feb. 2, at 730<lb/>
p.m. in Fleming Hall fa an open faum to answer questions from<lb/>
interested students concerning SGA policies and actions.<lb/>
The four executives include Tim Sullivan, SGA president, Karen<lb/>
Harlo�, attaney general, Greg Pingston, vice-president, and Tim<lb/>
McLec  secretary of student affairs.<lb/>
Jane Biddix, Fleming Hall legislata, is spaisaing the faum<lb/>
mainly fa Fleming residents. But the student body is invited.<lb/>
Biddix arranged the faum so the residents she represents may<lb/>
obtain "first-hand answers" to questiois they have been asking<lb/>
her, she said.<lb/>
Most of the residents' questions ooncern the ECU yearbook,<lb/>
BUCCANEER, and SGA appropriated funds in general, accading<lb/>
to Biddix.<lb/>
"I didn't have all the answers, so I thought the questions oould<lb/>
be best waked out this way she said.<lb/>
Although the faum was initiated fa the Fleming residents,<lb/>
Biddix hopes mae of the student body will participate.<lb/>
"I am publicizing this so that we will have a aowd, not just a<lb/>
few she said.<lb/>
Accading to Biddix, the SGA executives have said they will<lb/>
attend the faum oily if a good sized aowd "mae than 20"<lb/>
attends.<lb/>
SGA President Tim Sullivan said he is very much in fava of the<lb/>
infamal meeting, but voiced concern over student interest.<lb/>
Accading to Sullivan, such meetings have been attempted in<lb/>
the past, but with little student participation.<lb/>
However, Biddix said she and the Fleming House Council<lb/>
coadinata feel this type of infamal meeting to be one of the best<lb/>
means in which students may obtain infamatioi about SGA actions<lb/>
and policies.<lb/>
LOCA TED ADJACENT TO Pitt Memorial Hospital,<lb/>
the ECU medical complex will be shared between<lb/>
the University and the County. Photo by Kirk<lb/>
Kingsbury<lb/>
Med school approved<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A survey team representing<lb/>
the Liaison Committee at Medi-<lb/>
cal Education (LCME) will recom-<lb/>
mend that ECU'S medical school<lb/>
be approved fa classes beginning<lb/>
this fall, accading to University<lb/>
of North Carolina (UNC) officials.<lb/>
The LCME is the accrediting<lb/>
agency fa the Amaican Medical<lb/>
Association (AMA) and the Asso-<lb/>
ciation of American Medical<lb/>
Colleges.<lb/>
The survey team inspected the<lb/>
school Jan. 18th and 19th.1<lb/>
The favaable report will be<lb/>
made to the full 15 member<lb/>
LCME in April.<lb/>
In a news conference Thurs-<lb/>
day, Chancella Leo Jenkins said<lb/>
he was pleased with the report.<lb/>
The survey team will recom-<lb/>
mend approval fa a limited<lb/>
number of students, accading to<lb/>
a UNC source.<lb/>
The med-school could be<lb/>
ready fa classes by September if<lb/>
approval is granted in April,<lb/>
accading to ECU officials.<lb/>
The school could operate<lb/>
without accreditation, but grad-<lb/>
uates would have problems ob-<lb/>
taining residency positions.<lb/>
The medical school addition at<lb/>
the new Pitt County Memaial<lb/>
Hospital should be completed this<lb/>
summer, accading to Dr. Wil-<lb/>
liam Laupus, dean of the Medical<lb/>
School.<lb/>
ECU did not seek accredita-<lb/>
tion fa the school na request an<lb/>
oi-stte visit until it felt the school<lb/>
oould meet the strict require-<lb/>
ments, Dr. Laupus said.<lb/>
Members of the survey team<lb/>
were Dr. Andrew Hunt, dean,<lb/>
Michigan State Medical School;<lb/>
Dr. John Stetson, dean, Univer-<lb/>
sity of Flaida at Gainesville, and<lb/>
Dr. Ira Singer, directa of medical<lb/>
research fa the AMA.<lb/>
April deadline to pass<lb/>
Bike path needs property<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Edita<lb/>
The bikeway system which the<lb/>
Greenville Planning Department<lb/>
and the SGA have been waking<lb/>
ai fa eight months will na meet<lb/>
the April deadline, accading to<lb/>
SGA Vice-President Greg Pings-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
Pingston said they are having<lb/>
problems acquiring certain tracts<lb/>
of property which the bikeway<lb/>
would aoss.<lb/>
"John Schofield, Skip<lb/>
Browder (of the Planning De-<lb/>
partment) and myself met with<lb/>
the Property Committee of the<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustees.<lb/>
"We plan on reviewing the<lb/>
entire area with the Board in<lb/>
mid-February<lb/>
The property must be obtain-<lb/>
ed on a 25-year lease a daiated<lb/>
to fulfill the requirements of the<lb/>
Bureau of Outdoa Reaeation.<lb/>
"The city is waking ai the<lb/>
individual land ownas, and the<lb/>
SGA is waking with the Board of<lb/>
Trustees to gain adequate control<lb/>
of land<lb/>
Pingston said that they hope<lb/>
to get the Board's approval in<lb/>
April and short fa a mid-summa<lb/>
deadline.<lb/>
The proposed bikeway would<lb/>
run from the campus to the Allied<lb/>
Health Building and Arlington<lb/>
Boulevard.<lb/>
"It would provide a cheap<lb/>
means of transportatioi, a fam of<lb/>
reaeation fa students and citi-<lb/>
zens, and hopefully ease our<lb/>
parking problems on campus<lb/>
said Pingston.<lb/>
Media Board plans<lb/>
in working stage<lb/>
Plans fa a Communications<lb/>
Board involving all campus media<lb/>
are still in the waking stages,<lb/>
accading to SGA Vice-President<lb/>
Greg Pingston.<lb/>
"A bill providing for the<lb/>
construction of the bylaws has<lb/>
been introduced to the SGA<lb/>
Legislature but has na gone to<lb/>
Rules and Judiciary Committee<lb/>
yet<lb/>
Pingston, who is heading up<lb/>
the project, said that he has met<lb/>
with all SGA parties that would be<lb/>
involved and plans to meet with<lb/>
the heads of the aganizatiens to<lb/>
be involved.<lb/>
"The purpose of this is to get<lb/>
feedback from all concerned<lb/>
parties in hopes of ooming up<lb/>
with a flexible and influential<lb/>
Board to be submitted to the<lb/>
Legislature fa their approval<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0002"/><lb/>
Roxy<lb/>
Coffeehouse Tours<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
1 February 1977<lb/>
Crisis Center Summer work<lb/>
The REAL Crisis Center has a<lb/>
program to counsel victims of<lb/>
rape, and to educate students and<lb/>
the community about rape. If you<lb/>
need a friendly, confidential hand<lb/>
or some information, contact<lb/>
REAL 758-HELP.<lb/>
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 come by so we<lb/>
can place you in an agency.<lb/>
Faculty and graduate students<lb/>
are also welcome.<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Leon Mandell, Professor of<lb/>
Chemistry at Emory University,<lb/>
will present a seminar on "Syn-<lb/>
thetic Organic-Electro Chemis-<lb/>
try" on Feb. 4, at 2 p.m. in rm.<lb/>
201 Flanagan. Refreshments will<lb/>
be served in the conference room<lb/>
at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Art show<lb/>
The ECU Art Faculty Show<lb/>
will be held Feb. 3-28 in the<lb/>
gallery of the ECU School of Art<lb/>
Building, the Leo W. Jenkins<lb/>
Fine Arts Center.<lb/>
The exibition, entitled "New<lb/>
Space is the first to be held in<lb/>
the gallery which is part of the<lb/>
new!y-oonstructed second wing of<lb/>
the art facility.<lb/>
About 30 ECU art faculty will<lb/>
contribute to the show. They will<lb/>
display examples of their works in<lb/>
ceramics, sculpture, painting,<lb/>
print-making, drawing, weaving,<lb/>
jewelry and mixed media.<lb/>
The show opens Feb. 3 at 8<lb/>
p.m. The public is invited. The<lb/>
gallery will also be open Monday-<lb/>
Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.<lb/>
Construction of the spacious<lb/>
gi ,ery was completed early this<lb/>
year. It is located on the second<lb/>
floor of the new wing. The first<lb/>
wing of the building, containing<lb/>
classrooms and studios, was<lb/>
completed two years ago.<lb/>
The Art building will be<lb/>
dedicated this spring in honor of<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins, ECU'S Chan-<lb/>
cellor. The gallerv portion of the<lb/>
building is to be named fa Or.<lb/>
Wellington B. Gray, dean of the<lb/>
ECU School of Art since 1956.<lb/>
Students interested in work-<lb/>
ing full time in the Summer<lb/>
Orientation Program can pick up<lb/>
an application in the Dean of<lb/>
Men's office, Whichard building,<lb/>
room 210. Students working in<lb/>
the program will not be allowed to<lb/>
attend summer school, and must<lb/>
be at least a rising Senior.<lb/>
Rock hounds<lb/>
The recently formed Eastern<lb/>
Carolina Mineralogical Society<lb/>
welcomes all ECU students,<lb/>
faculty and staff to join the<lb/>
society. The society's purpose is<lb/>
to stimulate interest in the field of<lb/>
mineralogy and to gain know-<lb/>
ledge in the intended area by<lb/>
carrying out field trips and other<lb/>
activites associated with miner-<lb/>
als. All interested persons are<lb/>
invited to attend the next meeting<lb/>
on Monday, Feb. 7, in rm. 301 of<lb/>
Graham, at 730 p.m.<lb/>
Dr. Michael O'Connor will be<lb/>
the guest speaker for the evening<lb/>
and will be speaking on the<lb/>
"Geology and Mineralogy of the<lb/>
Wing Hill Garnet Deposit at<lb/>
Rangely, Maine<lb/>
Gamma Phi<lb/>
The Gamma Beta Phi Society<lb/>
will meet at 7 p.m Thursday,<lb/>
Feb. 3, in the Multi-purpose room<lb/>
in MendenhaJI. We are planning<lb/>
our project for the Tutorial<lb/>
program, all members are urged<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi, National House<lb/>
Fraternity, will hold its monthly<lb/>
business meeting and also a<lb/>
formal initiation ceremony on<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 2, at 5:45 p.m.<lb/>
at the Baptist Student Union<lb/>
Auditorium. All brothers are<lb/>
urged to attend. Coat and tie are<lb/>
suggested as appropriate dress.<lb/>
Attention Sam<lb/>
Ail business majors who plan<lb/>
to 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 for 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/>
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/>
Questions?<lb/>
Representative Jim Edwards<lb/>
will discuss issues facing this<lb/>
year's General Assembly, Wed-<lb/>
nesday night, Feb. 2, at 730 p.m.<lb/>
in rm. 244 Mendenhall. The<lb/>
session will be completely open<lb/>
for any questions oonoerning this<lb/>
year's General Assembly. All<lb/>
persons are invited to attend.<lb/>
Johnny Dollar<lb/>
The second annual Johnny<lb/>
Dollar party will take place on<lb/>
Friday, Feb. 4. Bring your own<lb/>
bottle. King Kong will appear in<lb/>
person.<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 overall<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 furtha<lb/>
information from Dr. Wayne<lb/>
Ayers in Flanagan a pre-med<lb/>
advisay office BA-303.<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 coffee; 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 reservation 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/>
Do you like blue grass,<lb/>
country, rock-n-roll, a do you like<lb/>
just plain old boogie music? If you<lb/>
do, the Coffeehouse is the place<lb/>
to be Friday and Saturday, Jan.<lb/>
28 &amp; 29 at 8 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
rm. 15. Admission isonly 25cents<lb/>
and there are plenty of refresh-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Adopt a pet<lb/>
Last year, the Greenville<lb/>
Animal Shelter found homes fa<lb/>
over 300 dogs. Many of these are<lb/>
animals that would have starved<lb/>
to death a died fran disease.<lb/>
The adoption fee is only five<lb/>
dollars fa dogs and two fa cats.<lb/>
Strays are kept fa 3 days if they<lb/>
are scrawny and 7 days if they are<lb/>
healthy, befae they are put to<lb/>
sleep. Dogs that are picked up in<lb/>
violation of Greenville's leash law<lb/>
are kept at a charge to the owner<lb/>
of $1 per day if they are wearing a<lb/>
tag indicating ownership. If the<lb/>
animal is na picked up, the<lb/>
owner is given 24 hours to do so<lb/>
befae the animal is put up fa<lb/>
adoption.<lb/>
This week the dogs at the<lb/>
Animal Shelter include two bird<lb/>
dogs; one brown and white, one<lb/>
white with black spots; two brown<lb/>
and white; one black and white;<lb/>
one brown extremely friendly<lb/>
dog; and four puppies, two of<lb/>
which are very fluffy and may be<lb/>
part collie. There is one huge<lb/>
black and white torn cat, one<lb/>
small black cat, and one small<lb/>
white cat.<lb/>
If you are interested in getting<lb/>
a pet, please check the animal<lb/>
shelter first. These animals need<lb/>
you as badly as you need them.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
The Black Christian Fellow-<lb/>
ship will meet Wednesday night,<lb/>
Feb. 2, at 730 in the Afro-<lb/>
American Culture Center. If you<lb/>
are interested, come on by and<lb/>
check it out and join us in singing,<lb/>
fellowship, and Bible study.<lb/>
Student Dnion<lb/>
The following committee<lb/>
meetings will be held from<lb/>
Monday, Jan. 31, thru Monday,<lb/>
Feb. 7: Tuesday, Feb. 1-Coffee-<lb/>
house, 430 p.m. in rm. 236;<lb/>
Monday, Feb. 7-Theatre Arts, 5<lb/>
p.m. in rm. 236; Wednesday,<lb/>
Feb. 2-Special Entertainment, 4<lb/>
p.m. in rm. 236; and Thursday,<lb/>
Feb. 3Entertainer, 430 p.m. in<lb/>
rm. 238.<lb/>
Forum meets<lb/>
Thae will be an open faum<lb/>
ai 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 McLeod 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/>
If you like to travel, you may<lb/>
be interested in going to Flaida<lb/>
8 days fa $89, a tfie Bahamas 6<lb/>
days fa $289. The price is based<lb/>
on quad occupancy. Reservations<lb/>
are Feb. 1-Mar. 10. There is a $25<lb/>
deposit on the Flaida Tour, and a<lb/>
$100 deposit on the Bahamas<lb/>
cruise. For more information<lb/>
oontact Bill Martin, Travel Chair-<lb/>
person.<lb/>
WRC meets<lb/>
The "Father of Cooperative<lb/>
Education" J. Dudley Dawson,<lb/>
will be oi 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/>
Eta Chi<lb/>
Mrs. Janice Faulkner of the<lb/>
ECU English Department will be<lb/>
the featured speaker at the<lb/>
meeting of the Eta Chi Chapta of<lb/>
Kappa Delta Pi. The meeting will<lb/>
be Feb. 10, at 630 p.m at Three<lb/>
Steers Restaurant. All members<lb/>
are reminded to return their<lb/>
banquet reservations to Mr. Ellen<lb/>
Cheng, Room 133 Speight, by<lb/>
Feb. 7.<lb/>
Founders Day<lb/>
Delta Sigma Theta' s Founders<lb/>
Day Weekend is Friday, Feb. 4.<lb/>
Thae will be a variety show in<lb/>
Wright Auditaium at 8-930 p.m.<lb/>
Thae is a party at Tar Riva<lb/>
Party House with a .25 admission,<lb/>
10-until, on Feb. 5. Any pasons<lb/>
intaested in participating in the<lb/>
variety show, oontact Pam.Cathey<lb/>
a Denise Carta at 752-8062.<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
Thae is an ECU Law Society<lb/>
meeting on Thursday, Feb. 3.<lb/>
Dean Haing of Campbell College<lb/>
Law School will speak. Law<lb/>
Society T-shirts are ready and will<lb/>
be distributed. The meeting is in<lb/>
rm. 221 Mendenhall at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Auditions<lb/>
Auditiois will be held fa the<lb/>
last time fa the comedy review<lb/>
 Ova The Top in the east wing<lb/>
of the Drama building, 2nd flea,<lb/>
roan 214 ai Feb. 3, at 730 p.m.<lb/>
The mataials being used are<lb/>
from Mrjnthy Pythoi, The Fire-<lb/>
sign Theatre, and Beyond the<lb/>
"Fringe '64. This is your last<lb/>
chance to become a memba of a<lb/>
hilarious comedy revue and to<lb/>
play such funny charactas as Mr.<lb/>
D.P. Gumby, Don. G.O.Vonny,<lb/>
and Sir Kenneth Clark. Scripts<lb/>
will be provided fa the reading.<lb/>
If you can't make it but would like<lb/>
to audition, call Gary Carta at<lb/>
758-7876. Sary, but no poofta's<lb/>
allowed.<lb/>
�i<lb/>
� .��!��'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0003"/><lb/>
1 February FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Topic of colonial house restoration<lb/>
City to host Tryon Palace symposiom<lb/>
Restoration and decoration of<lb/>
houses in the colon al period is<lb/>
the chief topic of the ninth annual<lb/>
Tryon Palace Symposium here<lb/>
March 20-2?.<lb/>
Specific aspects of restoration<lb/>
to be discussed at the sympo&amp;dm<lb/>
are historic preservation, fur-<lb/>
nishings, floor ooverings, house-<lb/>
hold textiles and colonial-style<lb/>
Foreign language<lb/>
requirement holds<lb/>
ECU will retain foreign lan-<lb/>
guage requirements for all bache-<lb/>
lor of arts (A.B.) degree pro-<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
ECU trustees voted Wednes-<lb/>
day on a recommendation to this<lb/>
effect by its Academic Programs<lb/>
committee which conducted ex-<lb/>
tensive hearings and study on a<lb/>
request that the present foreign<lb/>
language requirements be drop-<lb/>
ped.<lb/>
Tim Sullivan, president of the<lb/>
Student Government<lb/>
Assn. (SGA), which made the<lb/>
request, said he would vote<lb/>
against retention because "there<lb/>
is still some problem" and added<lb/>
that the request will be submitted<lb/>
again, perhaps in another form.<lb/>
Eddie K. Green of Dunn,<lb/>
Academic Programs chairman,<lb/>
indicated the problem arose be-<lb/>
cause many high schools in the<lb/>
state no longer require foreign<lb/>
language credits for graduation.<lb/>
Most bachelor of science (BS)<lb/>
degree programs at ECU also do<lb/>
not require foreign language<lb/>
credits.<lb/>
Sullivan to face<lb/>
Honor Council<lb/>
SGA President Tim Sullivan<lb/>
will appear before the Honor<lb/>
Council Tuesday evening Feb. 1<lb/>
to face a charge of embezzlement<lb/>
of student government funds,<lb/>
according to SGA Attorney<lb/>
General Karen Harloe.<lb/>
Harloe stated that Sullivan is<lb/>
charged with violating Section 5,<lb/>
Subsection G of the ECU Code of<lb/>
Conduct.<lb/>
According to Harloe, ECU<lb/>
freshman Robert M. Swaim filed<lb/>
the charqe acaisina Sullivan of<lb/>
not returning a refund check of<lb/>
$26.98 to Student Fund Account-<lb/>
ing office when Sullivan dropped<lb/>
out of second session summer<lb/>
school last summer.<lb/>
According to Harloe, who will<lb/>
prosecute the case, two Honor<lb/>
Council members have disquali-<lb/>
fied themselves due to lack of<lb/>
objectivity. One of the members<lb/>
is a fraternity brother of Sulli-<lb/>
van's.<lb/>
Harloe stated two alternates<lb/>
have been selected.<lb/>
landscaping.<lb/>
Symposium sessions will be<lb/>
held in the Tryon Palace Auditor-<lb/>
ium at the corner of Pollock and<lb/>
George Streets, and several tours<lb/>
will be made of the Tryon Palace<lb/>
Complex, which includes the<lb/>
colonial Stanly and Stevenson<lb/>
Houses as well as the Palace<lb/>
itself.<lb/>
Presentation topics and sym-<lb/>
posium speakers are:<lb/>
"Historic Preservation and<lb/>
Restoration, and Urban Plan-<lb/>
ning Nathaniel P. Neblett,<lb/>
historical architect for the Nation-<lb/>
al Trust for Historic Preservation,<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
"Restoration7of a Period<lb/>
House Conover Fitch of Perry<lb/>
Dean Partners, Inc Boston,<lb/>
Mass<lb/>
"Furniture for the Period<lb/>
House Marvin D. Schwartz,<lb/>
lecturer at the Metropolitan<lb/>
Museum of Art, New York;<lb/>
 Floor Coverings in American<lb/>
Houses, 1760-1830 Ruth C.<lb/>
Page, Concord, N.H author,<lb/>
editor and lecturer;<lb/>
"North Carolina Furniture<lb/>
Carolyn J. Weekley, assistant fa<lb/>
special projects, Virginia<lb/>
Museum of Fine Arts;<lb/>
"Household Textiles Rita<lb/>
Adrosko, curator of textiles at the<lb/>
Smithsonian Institution, Wash-<lb/>
ington, D.Cand<lb/>
"Landscaping the Period<lb/>
House Daniel J. Foley, Salem,<lb/>
Mass. landxape architect and<lb/>
author.<lb/>
The symposium will also<lb/>
feature a Sunday evening dinner<lb/>
at the opening session and a<lb/>
social and light buffet Monday<lb/>
evening in the Jones House.<lb/>
Music will be provided by the<lb/>
ECU Collegium Musicum.<lb/>
The annual Tryon Palace<lb/>
Symposium on Colonial Living<lb/>
and the Decorative Arts is<lb/>
presented each spring by the<lb/>
Tryon Palace Commission and<lb/>
Restoration and the ECU Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education, in co-<lb/>
operation with the N.C. Division<lb/>
of Archives and History.<lb/>
The symposium is designed<lb/>
for professionals and lay persons<lb/>
interested in the decorative arts<lb/>
and lifestyles of the colonial<lb/>
period.<lb/>
Tryon Palace was a colonial<lb/>
capitol and the first state capitol<lb/>
of North Carolina. The Palace and<lb/>
its gardens, along with the John<lb/>
Wright Stanly House and the<lb/>
early 19th century Stevenson<lb/>
House comprise the Tryon Palace<lb/>
Restoration Complex.<lb/>
Symposium fee is $51 per<lb/>
person, which includes Sunday<lb/>
and Monday dinners. Since only<lb/>
150 participants can be accepted,<lb/>
early registration is advised.<lb/>
Further information and regis-<lb/>
tration materials are available<lb/>
from "Symposium Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
SGA schedules<lb/>
spring elections<lb/>
SGA executive elections are<lb/>
scheduled for the end of March,<lb/>
according to Greg Pingston, SGA<lb/>
vice-president.<lb/>
"The exact date will be set by<lb/>
the elections chairperson and the<lb/>
SGA president and approved by<lb/>
the Legislature in accordance<lb/>
with the SGA general election<lb/>
rules said Pingston.<lb/>
Applications for elections<lb/>
chairperson are being accepted<lb/>
this week through 5 p.m. Thurs-<lb/>
day, Feb. 10.<lb/>
According to Pingston, the<lb/>
elections chairperson will handle<lb/>
the election and set up the rules.<lb/>
The SGA Executive Council<lb/>
will screen the applications on<lb/>
Friday, Feb. 11, and await the<lb/>
approval of the Legislature.<lb/>
Pingston noted that SGA<lb/>
President Tim Sullivan could have<lb/>
appointed a student to the<lb/>
position of elections-chairperson.<lb/>
However, he decided on the idea<lb/>
of applications in order to give<lb/>
more students a chance at the<lb/>
appointment.<lb/>
 <lb/>
jji-<lb/>
.��!<lb/>
THETREE PEOPLE ARE YOUR FRIENDS<lb/>
AND BECAUSE YOU'RE SO SPECIAL<lb/>
TO US HERE SSOMETHING<lb/>
SPECIAL FOR YOU!<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
(5-7 P.M.)<lb/>
Ourfamous Pizza Our Famous Pizza<lb/>
Special (Small Pizza, One Ingredient<lb/>
Tossed Salad, Crackers, and all the<lb/>
Tea you can drink) Only 1.99<lb/>
TUESDAY ALLYOU CAN EATSPAGHETTI<lb/>
(5-7 P.M.) SPECIAL (Our Delicious Italian<lb/>
Spaghetti with all theTea youcan<lb/>
drink) Only 1.99<lb/>
WEDNESDAY Roast Beef Special (Roast Beef<lb/>
(5-7 P.M. served open-faced with Gravy,<lb/>
French Fries, Tossed Salad, and all the<lb/>
Tea you can drink) Only 1.99<lb/>
WEDNESDAY Makea Friend Nite (Special prices<lb/>
(8-10 P.M.) on your favorite Beverage, Free<lb/>
Peanuts, �r Good-Time Music)<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
(3-5 P.M.<lb/>
T.G.I.F. Spocial (Special Prices<lb/>
on your favorite Beverage &amp;<lb/>
Free Peanuts<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0004"/><lb/>
liZMimzmmmm<lb/>
ditonals<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
1 February 1977<lb/>
After B-1, curb the atom<lb/>
If the track record of the Greenville Peace<lb/>
Committee runs true to form, President Carter will<lb/>
announce sometime this month an end to the<lb/>
controversial B-1 bomber project.<lb/>
Organized in 1970 by Lou Paul, wife of celebrated<lb/>
attorney Jerry Paul, the GPC from its inception urged<lb/>
the pullout of American forces from Vietnam. There<lb/>
were never any mass rallies in Greenville of<lb/>
hundreds of persons calling for an end to the war, but<lb/>
the oommittee persisted in its low-key opposition to<lb/>
this tragic American mistake and eventually the war<lb/>
did end-although several years and thousands of<lb/>
lives too late.<lb/>
After the war was over the oommittee called for<lb/>
amnesty to be granted to those Americans who had<lb/>
resisted the war. Again the committee's position<lb/>
presaged popular opinion and Carter's pardoning of<lb/>
the Vietnam-era draft evaders, one of his first official<lb/>
acts in the office of president in fulfillment of a<lb/>
campaign promise.<lb/>
According to oommittee member Father Charles<lb/>
Mulholland, the GPC has been a consistent opponent<lb/>
to the "immorality of nuclear arms Now that at<lb/>
least two of the primary objectives of the oommittee<lb/>
have been realized, and a third, the fate of the B-1<lb/>
bomber project seemsimminent,the committee can<lb/>
now turn its prescient attention to another equally<lb/>
pertinent issue, the insidious spread of nuclear<lb/>
weapons and their associated technologies.<lb/>
Carter has indicated his opposition to nuclear<lb/>
armaments and will probably act to scale down the<lb/>
U.S. arsenal of these weapons. But an effective<lb/>
nonpro!iteration policy on nuclear arms must also<lb/>
include the control of the technology associated with<lb/>
the "peaceful" use of the atom.<lb/>
One of the waste products of nuclear-powered<lb/>
electrical generating plants is plutonium, an element<lb/>
from which atomic bombs can be made. Unless there<lb/>
are safeguards on this material when the industria-<lb/>
lized countries sell nuclear plants to developing<lb/>
countries, it is impossible to guarantee non-prolifera-<lb/>
tion. And these sales are projected to increase yearly.<lb/>
The GPC should use its foresight to demonstrate<lb/>
to the citizens of Greenville and their representatives<lb/>
in Washington, the dangers of uncontrolled trade<lb/>
in nuclear technology.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Business ManagerTeresa Nhisenant<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/>
I alumni.<lb/>
WO SflVS TffRES fl G-R5 SM�!<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Transit boss explains system<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
This is an open letter from the<lb/>
Transit Manager to inform stu-<lb/>
dents on the type of transit<lb/>
service we are running and the<lb/>
amount of people moved.<lb/>
An average week for transit is<lb/>
to move around 9,000 to 10,000<lb/>
passengers. The oombined aver-<lb/>
age oost per student per day to<lb/>
ride the bus is .07.<lb/>
The transit service has a 150<lb/>
hour operating week. Last week<lb/>
the total time that buses were out<lb/>
of service was 3 hours. Operating<lb/>
time for the week was 147 hours.<lb/>
This is quite excellent sinoe the<lb/>
Not all are students<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Regarding your article in last<lb/>
Tuesday's FOUNTAINHEAD,<lb/>
page 5, concerning the plight of<lb/>
the International House.<lb/>
Nine, count them, nine times<lb/>
you use the term foreign students<lb/>
in your article. Yet I have it on<lb/>
good authority that a foreign<lb/>
professor is living there, paying<lb/>
the same rate as students.<lb/>
Wouldn't it be fairer to charge<lb/>
higher rates to professors who are<lb/>
receiving handsome salaries?<lb/>
Then there would be more income<lb/>
for repairs. That is, if a professor<lb/>
should live there in the first<lb/>
place.<lb/>
It's good that SGA has a new<lb/>
oommittee on International Pro-<lb/>
grams. This one item needs some<lb/>
looking into.<lb/>
in the interest of fairness,<lb/>
I. Wonder<lb/>
Jones Dorm<lb/>
servioe is run by students and<lb/>
they are not professionals.<lb/>
The cause of the missed time<lb/>
was oold weather, one bus would<lb/>
not start, frozen air brake lines<lb/>
and a broken starter.<lb/>
It is the policy of the transit<lb/>
service to give the most oomplete<lb/>
service that is possible. We<lb/>
sometimes fail because of mec-<lb/>
hanical breakdowns. The buses<lb/>
run 10 hours a day, 5 days a week.<lb/>
The drivers nor I can oontrol a<lb/>
mechaniral breakdown. But when<lb/>
one does oocur we try to get<lb/>
service restored as quick as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
I would like to thank my<lb/>
drivers for doing a fine job and for<lb/>
doing that extra work that must<lb/>
be done when a bus does break<lb/>
down.<lb/>
It is my opinion that a finer<lb/>
servioe can not be found that is<lb/>
run for students by students. To<lb/>
the students who missed a bus<lb/>
due to breakdown I am sorry but<lb/>
these things can not be helped.<lb/>
But I assure you that when a<lb/>
breakdown does oocur my drivers<lb/>
and myself move as fast as we can<lb/>
to get servioe restored.<lb/>
Thank you for your support,<lb/>
Gary Miller<lb/>
P.S. Transit System has two<lb/>
buses that carry students to and<lb/>
from basketball games. One<lb/>
parks at the girls dorm and the<lb/>
other at the top of the hill.<lb/>
Student Union policies need input<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD.�<lb/>
I'd like to thank Jim Elliott for<lb/>
expressing his opinion of ways to<lb/>
better entertain students (Ed-<lb/>
itorial, January 27, 1977). It's<lb/>
good to see that someone has an<lb/>
opinion on that subject.<lb/>
The Student Union has asked<lb/>
for student's opinions all year and<lb/>
hopefully we'll get some now. Do<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
Forum letters should be<lb/>
typed or printed and they must<lb/>
be signed and include the<lb/>
writer's address. Names will<lb/>
be withheld upon request.<lb/>
Letters may be sent to Foun-<lb/>
tainhead or left at the Informa-<lb/>
tion Desk in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
the students want more concerts,<lb/>
more films? We want to serve you<lb/>
in the best possible ways. Do you<lb/>
have a form of alternative or<lb/>
creative programming? Do you<lb/>
want to see more cultural pro-<lb/>
grams? What about theatre?<lb/>
What about travel? What about<lb/>
Coffeehouse?<lb/>
Please let us know! Come by<lb/>
our offices in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center (234), write us a letter, or<lb/>
give us a call. Your opinion does<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
With a new administration to<lb/>
be selected soon, the time is right<lb/>
for new ideas. Committees will<lb/>
soon be programming for the next<lb/>
academic year and we need to<lb/>
know what you want.<lb/>
Barry Robinson<lb/>
Student Union President<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0005"/><lb/>
Wasteful spending criticized<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
As a student and employee of<lb/>
ECU I have come to notice<lb/>
divisions on campus. The people<lb/>
in charge of the divisions are not<lb/>
totally responsible for the waste-<lb/>
fulness of student funds and<lb/>
taxpayers dollars.<lb/>
I have been told by oertain<lb/>
individuals on campus that many<lb/>
things the campus uses is bought<lb/>
on contract with firms delivering<lb/>
bids to the University. Some firms<lb/>
however, do not give out the so<lb/>
Sullivan sees conspiracy<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
This letter will be short, and<lb/>
not too sweet. If you have notioed<lb/>
a pattern in the "ooverage" your<lb/>
student government has gotten<lb/>
from FOUNTAINHEADinthe<lb/>
last month, you are not halluci-<lb/>
nating.<lb/>
When the student legis-<lb/>
lature's appropriation committee<lb/>
refused Editor Jim Elliott's staff<lb/>
salary increase (it totaled $28,000<lb/>
last year) and his $800 "con-<lb/>
vention trip" to Chicago, Mr.<lb/>
Elliott mentioned to the oommit-<lb/>
tee that there were "anti-SGA<lb/>
feelings" on his staff already, and<lb/>
that such cuts would cause these<lb/>
feelings "to surface At first I<lb/>
and others at SGA felt that he<lb/>
meant this bias would surface, as<lb/>
it obviously has, through negative<lb/>
or twisted news and editorial<lb/>
comment, but Mr. Elliott is more<lb/>
resouroeful than that.<lb/>
Jim Elliott has had a<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD reporter on his<lb/>
payroll, Robert Swaim, bring<lb/>
charges of embezzlement against<lb/>
me to the Honor Council this<lb/>
Tuesday. And how much is<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD stating that I<lb/>
"embezzled?" $26.98 is the grand<lb/>
total. Someone might ask why I<lb/>
would steal that kind of money -<lb/>
through an easily-identifiable<lb/>
ECU check - when five months<lb/>
before I had my monthly salary<lb/>
cut $25, but not FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD. So when you read any<lb/>
"articles" on this trial, please<lb/>
recall that we are being enter-<lb/>
tained by Mr. Elliott and his<lb/>
employee.<lb/>
Who knows: this may be more<lb/>
fun than going to Chicago, Jim.<lb/>
Tim Sullivan<lb/>
Student Body Prez<lb/>
KAs rescue damsel in distress<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The purpose of this letter is to<lb/>
let the students here at ECU know<lb/>
that there are still some really<lb/>
nioe people left in this world.<lb/>
What I am referring to is the day<lb/>
of January 17, 1977 when my<lb/>
friend named Herb and some<lb/>
guys from the Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Order, located on Charles and<lb/>
11th, came to my rescue. The<lb/>
story goes as follows:<lb/>
My car was broke down<lb/>
because of all the cold weather we<lb/>
have been experiencing here in<lb/>
Greenville. Jim, my friend, and I<lb/>
tried to push my car with his car<lb/>
to possibly start it. Some how or<lb/>
another our bumpers became<lb/>
locked together. We attempted to<lb/>
un-do the damage but without<lb/>
any luck. A friend of mine named<lb/>
Herb came driving up and<lb/>
stopped to assist us. After several<lb/>
attempts of bouncing on the<lb/>
bumpers, we gave up. Herb<lb/>
decided that he would try to get<lb/>
some assistance from the Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Order which was down the<lb/>
street. In a matter of minutes,<lb/>
five or six guys came out to see<lb/>
what they could do to help. One<lb/>
guy did not even have a coat on<lb/>
and I know it was about 20<lb/>
degrees a so out there at the<lb/>
time. After checking out ta<lb/>
problem, Herb and the Kapn<lb/>
Alpha Order guys picked up m<lb/>
front end of my volkswagon and<lb/>
presto- the bumpers unlocked.<lb/>
They then set my car back down<lb/>
and pushed it until I got it<lb/>
running. During the whole or-<lb/>
deal, these guys did not complain<lb/>
about the coldness or anything.<lb/>
Both Herb and the Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Order were a real blessing<lb/>
sent to me as far as I am<lb/>
concerned. The words "thank<lb/>
you can not express how much I<lb/>
appreciate their patronage. If<lb/>
Herb or any Kappa Alpha Order<lb/>
guy reads this letter, I want you to<lb/>
know that in about two weeks Jim<lb/>
and I shall drop off a small gift to<lb/>
show our appreciation.<lb/>
Most Gratefully Yours,<lb/>
Pamela J. Carter<lb/>
Pirates lose what I?<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In my days as a big city<lb/>
newspaper proofreader there<lb/>
were only two things to look<lb/>
forward to. One was who would<lb/>
get to read the Buchwald column,<lb/>
and the other was watching the<lb/>
Sports Department try to come up<lb/>
with new ways to say "beaten<lb/>
The opposition has been<lb/>
trounced, stomped, mauled,<lb/>
bruised, bombed, whipped, pun-<lb/>
ished, shellacked, romped by,<lb/>
stomped by, roared by, stormed<lb/>
by, demolished, demoralized,<lb/>
mortified, humiliated, and routed<lb/>
into oblivion. Fortunately,<lb/>
nothing so inglorious even befalls<lb/>
the home team.<lb/>
They may be edged, nudged,<lb/>
squeaked by, slipped by, or as the<lb/>
always tactful DAILY REFLECT-<lb/>
OR recently put it "PIRATE<lb/>
RALLY FALLS SHORT imply-<lb/>
ing that the home town boys<lb/>
really should have won but for<lb/>
fate, spiteful officials, or an<lb/>
improperly waxed court.<lb/>
I would be the last to<lb/>
complain; I am entertained by<lb/>
athletic rhetoric but wouldn't you<lb/>
like to see just once, HOME<lb/>
TEAM LOSES ASS IN BOUT<lb/>
WITH STATE.<lb/>
Cecil Frost<lb/>
called bids.<lb/>
My division recently purcha-<lb/>
sed some tools for my use in<lb/>
upkeep and repair of the machin-<lb/>
ery I run. The tools sold for<lb/>
approximately $17. After making<lb/>
the order I discovered that a set<lb/>
containing a larger number of<lb/>
parts sold for $2.50 less in<lb/>
January's sale catalogue from the<lb/>
same oompany which is issued to<lb/>
customers throughout the United<lb/>
States. The same set sold for the<lb/>
regular $17. in another catalogue<lb/>
showing absolutely no discount<lb/>
whatsoever to ECU.<lb/>
Upon inquiring I found that<lb/>
another article bought two to<lb/>
three months prior to my hiring<lb/>
oost approximately $140; to my<lb/>
surprise I found the very same<lb/>
article made by the same oom-<lb/>
pany in another catalogue oosting<lb/>
$49.95. Any mathematician can<lb/>
tell you someone is screwing up.<lb/>
I am not qualified to say that<lb/>
all other divisions and depart-<lb/>
ments on campus do the same but<lb/>
I believe it needs some looking<lb/>
into.<lb/>
Being a student I hate to see<lb/>
my money wasted as much as<lb/>
anyone else. I honestly believe<lb/>
that if the administration of this<lb/>
great school of knowledge would<lb/>
do a little more research they<lb/>
would find they oould cut down<lb/>
spending and increase the<lb/>
amount of money available to<lb/>
other uses in the ECU system.<lb/>
Conoerned<lb/>
1 February FOUNTAINHEAD Paga 5<lb/>
The Wicker Shop<lb/>
Red Oak Shopping Center<lb/>
10 Student Discount<lb/>
on any Wicker � Items<lb/>
with this coupon-<lb/>
We have lamps and<lb/>
accessories ideal for decorating<lb/>
ceramics and ma era me .<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
B<lb/>
ROIMT AllTY<lb/>
HOSPITALITY,<lb/>
a word we highly respect.<lb/>
We practice hospitality at Balentines<lb/>
at all meals. Try us!<lb/>
Serving hours: 11-2 lunch<lb/>
4 45-8 AC dinner<lb/>
Cafeteria Style<lb/>
"DOLLAR DAYS"<lb/>
DAKS ENTIRE STOCK<lb/>
WINTER COATS<lb/>
Now !4 Price<lb/>
(INCLUDESWOOLS,<lb/>
LEATHERS,SUEDES)<lb/>
Vz<lb/>
ON ENTIRE STOCK<lb/>
WINTER AND HOLIDAY<lb/>
DRESSES<lb/>
(STREET LENGTH &amp;<lb/>
LONG LENGTH)<lb/>
LONG SKIRTS AND<lb/>
DISCO TOPS<lb/>
y2 Price<lb/>
LARGE SELECTION<lb/>
SWEATERS<lb/>
 Price<lb/>
SELECTED GROUP<lb/>
JEANS<lb/>
Now Vi Price<lb/>
SALE AT ALL STORES<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 February 1977<lb/>
ECU professor remembers Pearl Harbor<lb/>
By JIMMY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
If one were to ask Dr. Al A.<lb/>
Fahrner of the ECU history<lb/>
department just what he was<lb/>
doing on the morning of Dec. 7,<lb/>
1941, his reply would be, " I was<lb/>
unaware in my underwear<lb/>
Dr. Fahrner was an Ensign<lb/>
assigned to the battleship USS<lb/>
California, at the time of the<lb/>
Japanese surprise attack on the<lb/>
U.S. Naval Base at Pearl Harbor.<lb/>
"I was asleep when it started,<lb/>
but I was awake in a few<lb/>
minutes Fahrner noted. "I was<lb/>
going to skip breakfast that<lb/>
morning so I could sleep-in<lb/>
Fahrner wasn't really in his<lb/>
underwear, but was wearing a<lb/>
pair of short military pajamas<lb/>
when the attack occurred.<lb/>
So many alerts had been<lb/>
issued that when the real thing<lb/>
came Fahrner could only feel<lb/>
shock and surprise.<lb/>
"Finally, the wolf had come<lb/>
said Fahrner.<lb/>
Dr. Fahrner, a personable<lb/>
man with a good sense of humor,<lb/>
talked easily about that day.<lb/>
But war is war and one is able<lb/>
to detect a note of sorrow in<lb/>
Fahrner's words.<lb/>
"When you were close to<lb/>
those people, it wasn't funny at<lb/>
all Fahrner explained.<lb/>
As far as the Japanese war<lb/>
effort was concerned, the histor-<lb/>
ian feels that the attack hurt them<lb/>
more than it helped.<lb/>
"The surprise attack made it<lb/>
easier to unify our nation he<lb/>
Roast Beef<lb/>
Reg. Trtd 1.29<lb/>
Super 26. 2.59<lb/>
,60FGRE&amp;Vu,<lb/>
 Phone 752-6130 '<lb/>
X Phone in orders L,<lb/>
0 for pick up or campus delivery q1<lb/>
said. "The people had a slogan<lb/>
with which they could rally<lb/>
behind the President, Remember<lb/>
Pearl Harbor<lb/>
"The Japanese thought they<lb/>
would win Fahrner noted.<lb/>
"They wanted to immobilize us<lb/>
so they could move through<lb/>
Southeast Asia<lb/>
Fahrner remembers 1942 as a<lb/>
dark year when the U.S. was<lb/>
doing good to hold its own.<lb/>
"In 1943, weT be east of the<lb/>
Mississippi and waving good-bye<lb/>
to St. Louis Fahrner remem-<lb/>
bered a fellow serviceman saying<lb/>
while listening to a Winston<lb/>
Churchill speech one evening in<lb/>
1942.<lb/>
World War II was an era<lb/>
which ended with the beginning<lb/>
of the nuclear age.<lb/>
"Nuclear war woujd be so<lb/>
terrible that it probably won't<lb/>
happen. No one would win<lb/>
Farhner noted.<lb/>
The fact that he experienced<lb/>
the war helps Dr. Fahrner make<lb/>
the war's history oome alive for<lb/>
his students.<lb/>
It makes history realistic,<lb/>
Fahrner explained.<lb/>
And Fahrner succeeds in that<lb/>
if the opinions of his students are<lb/>
correct.<lb/>
"As a professor, he was<lb/>
extremely interesting com-<lb/>
mented a recent student of U.S.<lb/>
history.<lb/>
"All sorts of nice things<lb/>
happen to the people he oomes in<lb/>
contact with noted a history<lb/>
graduate student.<lb/>
Dr. Fahrner did his under-<lb/>
graduate work at Hampden-<lb/>
Sydney College in Virginia. He<lb/>
then went to Midshipman's<lb/>
School and spent seven years on<lb/>
active duty.<lb/>
He achieved reserve status in<lb/>
1947 and received his masters and<lb/>
doctorate from the University of<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
��� . � � "<lb/>
L'H. AL A. FAHRNER<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Freaks and pigs<lb/>
to battle again<lb/>
The Second Annual Freaks<lb/>
versus Pigs basketball game is<lb/>
scheduled for Wednesday, March<lb/>
23, according to Greg Pingston,<lb/>
SGA vice-president.<lb/>
The event is sponsored by<lb/>
Easter Seals and the SGA.<lb/>
There will be two games, men<lb/>
and women, with the women's<lb/>
game being played first.<lb/>
Pingston said that he will<lb/>
coach the men students and that<lb/>
Lieutenant Pate will coach the<lb/>
Highway Patrol.<lb/>
"This is one of my all-time<lb/>
favorite projects, and we have a<lb/>
great time putting on It ought<lb/>
to he a treat fa everyone to<lb/>
see said Pingston.<lb/>
Tickets will go on sale in<lb/>
mid-February fa a dollar.<lb/>
The game will be played in<lb/>
Mingesand is open to all students<lb/>
and the public.<lb/>
AIR FORCE ROTC TWO YEAR<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE AT ECU<lb/>
Animal controllers relate<lb/>
FOR NURSING, PREMED, MATH, COMPUTER SCIENCE<lb/>
CHEMISTRY AND PHYSCS MAJORS<lb/>
After college, what will I<lb/>
do?<lb/>
That's a question a lot of<lb/>
young people ask themselves<lb/>
these days.<lb/>
But a two-year Air Force<lb/>
' ROTC scholarship can help<lb/>
provide the answers. Succes-<lb/>
sful completion of the pro-<lb/>
gram gets you an Air Force<lb/>
commission along with an<lb/>
excellent starting salary, a<lb/>
challenging job, promotion<lb/>
opportunities, and a secure<lb/>
future with a modern Air<lb/>
Force. If you have two<lb/>
academic years remaining,<lb/>
find out today about the<lb/>
two-year Air Force ROTC<lb/>
Scholarship Program. It's a<lb/>
great way to serve your<lb/>
country and a great way to<lb/>
help pay for your college<lb/>
education.<lb/>
Contact:<lb/>
Capt. Richard Rowan<lb/>
ECU Wright Annex 206<lb/>
757-6598<lb/>
Apply Befae February 15th<lb/>
Air fmtc wm:<lb/>
Gateway � a Great Waff Lite<lb/>
comical experiences<lb/>
By BRENDA NORRIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Lassoing cows, tracking down<lb/>
bulls, rounding up hogs and<lb/>
turkeys, and catching slithering<lb/>
snakes provide quite a challenge<lb/>
fa the Greenville Animal Control<lb/>
officers.<lb/>
The four-member team of the<lb/>
City Animal Shelter on E. Second<lb/>
Street has had some comic<lb/>
experiences in the three years the<lb/>
shelter has been open.<lb/>
Audro Barrett, 33, has been<lb/>
with Animal Control since April of<lb/>
1974. One of his first unusual<lb/>
cases was to catch a loose turkey<lb/>
near Five Points in downtown<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
"I got the bird in the truck and<lb/>
Lautares Jewelers<lb/>
Registered Jewelers Certified Gemologist<lb/>
American Gem Society<lb/>
Diamond Specialists<lb/>
L<lb/>
See George Lautares<lb/>
ECU Class'41<lb/>
took him to the shelter said<lb/>
Barrett. "The owner later came<lb/>
and claimed him<lb/>
This past spring, two hogs<lb/>
jumped out of a farmer's truck<lb/>
while enroute to market. They<lb/>
frolicked with their freedom and<lb/>
evaded polioe and animal oontrol<lb/>
officers behind Baroni'sat Fourth<lb/>
and Reade Streets.<lb/>
The hogs played a little too<lb/>
hard to get and the owner<lb/>
requested that they be shot.<lb/>
Hunting fa an injured bull<lb/>
roaming lost in Lake Ellswath<lb/>
section of town can be a knee-<lb/>
knocking experience.<lb/>
The bull had dented a car and<lb/>
chased an elderly man by the time<lb/>
the animal oontrol aew isolated<lb/>
him in a field.<lb/>
"He had been shot several<lb/>
times when we found him and our<lb/>
.22 caliber rifle finally brought<lb/>
him down said Darrell Hoover,<lb/>
of the Animal Control Depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
In ana her episode, Pet King-<lb/>
dom called the shelter personnel<lb/>
one bright Saturday maning in<lb/>
August when a pythoi escaped<lb/>
from his aquarium.<lb/>
The polioe were called to the<lb/>
scene to hold back the aowd and<lb/>
Barrett tranqualized the snake<lb/>
with a needle.<lb/>
Na all days are filled with<lb/>
such intrique and adventure at<lb/>
the shelter. Accading to the<lb/>
oontrol officers, some are rather<lb/>
boring.<lb/>
"We answer some strange<lb/>
callsandoomplaints said Peggy<lb/>
Carter, 18. "There are an average<lb/>
of 20 to 25 calls a day<lb/>
There is an adventure in<lb/>
having a woman in the depart-<lb/>
ment. Thisrepater's dog, Tasha,<lb/>
will na go to the three male dog<lb/>
catchers, but all Peggy has to do<lb/>
is say "c'mon baby and Tasha<lb/>
jumps right in the truck.<lb/>
According to Barrett, the<lb/>
oontrol officers pick up as many<lb/>
as 150 dogs a week when the<lb/>
shelter first opened. Because of<lb/>
educating the public about the<lb/>
Greenville leash law, they now<lb/>
only pick-up an average of 25<lb/>
dogs a week.<lb/>
"We try to educate the public<lb/>
more than harass it said<lb/>
Barrett.<lb/>
Many people oomplain about<lb/>
the leash law, but from the<lb/>
"ontrd officer's point of view, it is<lb/>
better to keep a dog leashed than<lb/>
to see it mutilated by a car a shot<lb/>
by an angered persoi fa getting<lb/>
into trash cans a rose gardens.<lb/>
  - 1 iV-  �:�. �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0007"/><lb/>
�V<lb/>
�<lb/>
1 Fdbruary FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
N.C. professors boost<lb/>
ERA and salary hikes<lb/>
The North Carolina Confer-<lb/>
ence of the American Association<lb/>
of University Professors NCAA-<lb/>
UP is urging members of the<lb/>
North Carolina General Assembly<lb/>
to ratify the proposed Equal<lb/>
Rights Amendment and to sup-<lb/>
port pay increases for teaching<lb/>
personnel.<lb/>
NCAAUP President Anne Bri-<lb/>
ley of ECU has sent letters on the<lb/>
ERA toevery member of the<lb/>
legislature, on behalf of the<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
The letter reports the 1974<lb/>
passage of a resolution in favor of<lb/>
ERA, which was reaffirmed by<lb/>
the state AAUP at its 1975 and<lb/>
1976 meetings.<lb/>
The AAUP policy is that<lb/>
ratification of the Equal Rights<lb/>
Amendment "will have a positive<lb/>
effect in high education and in<lb/>
society the letter states.<lb/>
In a letter to Sen. Livingstone<lb/>
Stallings(D-Craven), chairman of<lb/>
the Joint Committee to Study<lb/>
Salaries and Other Benefits of<lb/>
Teachers, the AAUP requests the<lb/>
Committee to recommend a ten<lb/>
per cent pay increase for 1977-78<lb/>
and another ten per cent increase<lb/>
for 1978-79.<lb/>
The letter quotes a national<lb/>
salary survey conducted by the<lb/>
Washington office of AAUP<lb/>
which reveals that faculties of the<lb/>
UNC system have lost "purchas-<lb/>
ing power" during the past five<lb/>
years.<lb/>
"A total increase of over 30<lb/>
per cent during the two years of<lb/>
the biennium would be needed to<lb/>
restore purchasing power to 1972<lb/>
levels the letter says. "Yet only<lb/>
20 percent is requested<lb/>
The American Association of<lb/>
University Professors is the prin-<lb/>
cipal professional organization for<lb/>
faculty members in the U.S. Its<lb/>
membership includes teachers,<lb/>
research scholars, professional<lb/>
librarians, counselors and grad-<lb/>
uate students at institutions of<lb/>
higher learning.<lb/>
The N.C. AAUP Conference<lb/>
consists of active local chapters at<lb/>
36 North Carolina oolleges and<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
Tenants and Community<lb/>
struggle to save hotel<lb/>
The International Hotel in San<lb/>
Franciso is symbolic of a system<lb/>
which neglects low-income peo-<lb/>
ple. For nine years, elderly<lb/>
tenants of the International Hotel<lb/>
have been battling to save the<lb/>
only fortress they know, and the<lb/>
only home they can afford.<lb/>
created a unique community in<lb/>
which they feel comfortable, the<lb/>
Four Seas Investment corpor-<lb/>
ation, a company based in Hong<lb/>
' ong and Thailand, has other<lb/>
plans fa the International Hotel.<lb/>
As owners of the hotel and<lb/>
most of the block on which it<lb/>
stands, Four Seas intends to<lb/>
ly the Asian Community Center<lb/>
and the Workers Committee,<lb/>
which share the same building.<lb/>
The judge, in the meantime,<lb/>
ordered an immediate eviction,<lb/>
though temporary stays protected<lb/>
the tenants for awhile. Vowing<lb/>
that "WE WON'T MOVEthe<lb/>
tenants then began pressuring<lb/>
Located in San Francisco's<lb/>
Chinatown, the hotel is all that<lb/>
remains of what used to be<lb/>
Manilatown. Once encompassing<lb/>
many blocks, Manilatown was a<lb/>
striving "hangout" for Filipino<lb/>
immigrants who came to San<lb/>
Francisco. But things have<lb/>
changed since the active days of<lb/>
pre-World War II when Kearny<lb/>
Street, where the hotel still<lb/>
stands, was "the" place. Because<lb/>
of big businesses and corpor-<lb/>
ations, Manilatown has been<lb/>
reduced to a single block.<lb/>
And that single block is now<lb/>
threatened by big business.<lb/>
The 75 tenants, mostly elderly<lb/>
Filipinos and Chinese, can barely<lb/>
afford to pay the $45-a-month<lb/>
rent on their low incomes. The<lb/>
Kearny Street area is the only<lb/>
part of town they are familiar<lb/>
with; friends, cafes and stores are<lb/>
within steps of their homes.<lb/>
While the tenants have<lb/>
"develop" the site into a money-<lb/>
making venture: a multi-story<lb/>
shopping center. Across the<lb/>
street from the International<lb/>
Hotel stands a sign of a previous<lb/>
defeat: the Holiday Inn, which<lb/>
was built years ago in the heart of<lb/>
Chinatown. Protests against its<lb/>
construction did not prevent the<lb/>
huge skyscraper from going up.<lb/>
When Four Seas bought the.<lb/>
International Hotel from Walter<lb/>
Shorestein, one of the largest<lb/>
realtors in California, in 1973, the<lb/>
retired tenants refused to vacate<lb/>
and began the long struggle<lb/>
against eviction.<lb/>
After the International Hotel<lb/>
Tenants Association (IHTA).which<lb/>
formed to organize against evict-<lb/>
ion, lost their suit against Four<lb/>
Seas last year, fresh, eviction<lb/>
notices were again posted.<lb/>
Numerous protests and demon-<lb/>
strations were organized by the<lb/>
IHTA and supporters, particular-<lb/>
the new San Francisco mayor,<lb/>
George Monsoone.<lb/>
The city has the power of<lb/>
eminent domain to buy the hotel<lb/>
fromFour Seas and sell it to the<lb/>
tenants. Although the Board of<lb/>
Supervisors originally refused to<lb/>
buy the building, after numerous<lb/>
demonstrations by tenants and<lb/>
supporters, the Board finally<lb/>
voted to transfer funds to the San<lb/>
Francisco Housing Authority to<lb/>
purchase the building. The Hous-<lb/>
ing Authority filed December 24<lb/>
for immediate possession of the<lb/>
building, stating its intention to<lb/>
lease the hotel to the tenants fa<lb/>
$1.3 million.<lb/>
But the tenants argue that<lb/>
poa people simply cannot affad<lb/>
to buy such a hotel and insist that<lb/>
the money be derived from<lb/>
Community Development Con-<lb/>
tingent Funds, which would not<lb/>
require the tenants to repay the<lb/>
city.<lb/>
Fast, Free Delivery<lb/>
DIME IN<lb/>
JUgr.<lb/>
CARRY OUT<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
Pizza &amp; Spaghetti Houm<lb/>
DIAL 758-7400<lb/>
507 East 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolma<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Sunday thru Thurtday NOTHING 11 30 AM till 1 AM<lb/>
Pnday and Saturday BEATSA PIZA FROM 11 30 AM till 2 AM<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
300 EVANS<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
,  PHONE: 752-2136<lb/>
lf FREE PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
f9aniOl0t piCKUP AND DELIVERY<lb/>
Prescription Dept. with medication<lb/>
profiles: yoor prescription always, at<lb/>
our fingertipseven though yon may<lb/>
lose your HL. bottle.<lb/>
203 East 5th Street � Greenville, N. C.27834<lb/>
ONE RACKBLOUSES<lb/>
4.00 6.00 8.00<lb/>
TOPS<lb/>
14 price<lb/>
Some Just 3.00<lb/>
PANTS<lb/>
50 off<lb/>
Some Just 5.00<lb/>
DRESSES LONG DRESSES<lb/>
PANTSUITS JUMPSUITS<lb/>
Vi Price Some Just 10.00<lb/>
SOCKS 1.00 to 1.50<lb/>
BAGS s.soto 10.00<lb/>
HATS Valuesto 20.00<lb/>
Your Choice 3.00<lb/>
TRAY OF JEWELRY<lb/>
50C to 2.00<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0008"/><lb/>
� wwS<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 February 1977<lb/>
We are now relocated at our<lb/>
newly remodeled store. Same<lb/>
locationonthemallas before.<lb/>
This coupon good for25 off.<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers<lb/>
758-2452<lb/>
"If it don't tick - tock to us<lb/>
EAT FOR JUST<lb/>
VV plus tax MonThurs.<lb/>
Oabrakes. slaw, frenrh fries plus<lb/>
hush puppies.<lb/>
'? pound hamburger steak, slaw,<lb/>
freneh fries and rolls.<lb/>
Fish, slaw freneh fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat. 752-31 72<lb/>
2 miles east on highway 264<lb/>
(out 10th St.<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmfmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
Littles Chop Shop<lb/>
N.E. Bypass 2 Mi. North of<lb/>
Hastings Ford<lb/>
758-4067<lb/>
We repair all makes and models of<lb/>
motorcycles.<lb/>
We sell custom parts and accessories<lb/>
We do custom painting.<lb/>
We have pick-up service.<lb/>
Coming soon- van accessories<lb/>
fhoney'i<lb/>
introducel iis NEW<lb/>
99<lb/>
breakfast<lb/>
<lb/>
Pancakes &amp; Eggi<lb/>
"Free refills on coffee or tea<lb/>
I<lb/>
205 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Phone 756 2186<lb/>
Joyner Library joins<lb/>
computer revolution<lb/>
By LARRY UEBERMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Joyner Library has joined the<lb/>
computer revolution.<lb/>
The library, which students<lb/>
onoe thought of as a dark, dusty,<lb/>
quiet place, has begun to use<lb/>
computer terminals to catalogue<lb/>
books.<lb/>
ECU joined the Southeastern<lb/>
Library Network (SOLINET) in<lb/>
June, 1975.<lb/>
One hundred and twenty<lb/>
schools and public libraries are in<lb/>
library filled out a profile card to<lb/>
inform the computer of the<lb/>
program needed.<lb/>
 Books can be located by five<lb/>
methods in the data base said<lb/>
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Smith, cata-<lb/>
loging director. "First, they can<lb/>
be located by author's name,<lb/>
title, the international standard<lb/>
book number, and Library of<lb/>
Congress card number.<lb/>
"It scared us at first said<lb/>
Smith. "It's a new language, but<lb/>
it's not that hard<lb/>
book in the mail shortly. A<lb/>
program will have to be written<lb/>
first to enable this, Smith said.<lb/>
Now, only monographs<lb/>
(books) can be catalogued be-<lb/>
cause of the computer program,<lb/>
but future cataloging will include<lb/>
audio-visual material, sound re-<lb/>
cor' ngs, maps, manuscripts, and<lb/>
serials, said Smith. The serials<lb/>
computer program may be ready<lb/>
by this Spring.<lb/>
The oost of using the com-<lb/>
puter seemed high at first, said<lb/>
COMPUTER TERMINAL in Joyner Library Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
SOLI NET. ECU hastwooomputer<lb/>
terminals in the cataloging de-<lb/>
partment, which are used to call<lb/>
the data base and get Library of<lb/>
Congress call numbers for new<lb/>
books.<lb/>
SOLI NET is located in Atlanta<lb/>
but has no computer as of yet.<lb/>
Instead, it has a four year contract<lb/>
to use the Ohio College Library<lb/>
Center (OCLC) data base. Nine-<lb/>
teen other library networks also<lb/>
are using the OCLC oomputer<lb/>
now.<lb/>
Over 2.5 million titles are<lb/>
stored in the OCLC oomputer.<lb/>
Joyner librarians save much<lb/>
time by simply calling the com-<lb/>
puter to get the Library of<lb/>
Congress call number of a book<lb/>
rather than create one and later<lb/>
chanae it.<lb/>
The computer is programmed<lb/>
to print the number of cards ECU<lb/>
needs and in the format desired.<lb/>
When ECU joined SOLI NET, the<lb/>
The Library of Congress class-<lb/>
ification system and the oomputer<lb/>
cataloging are both the best for a<lb/>
growing academic library because<lb/>
of the possibilities for expansion<lb/>
and saving time, according to<lb/>
Smith.<lb/>
If the call numcer of a book is<lb/>
not in the data base and ECU has<lb/>
it, then the number can be sent<lb/>
via computer and added to the<lb/>
data base. This reciprocal agree-<lb/>
ment applies to all members of<lb/>
SOLI NET and other library net-<lb/>
works.<lb/>
Some other services will be<lb/>
available from the computer<lb/>
terminals in the future.<lb/>
Interlibrary loans, which are<lb/>
now done manually, oould be<lb/>
simplified by calling up the<lb/>
oomputer and finding out which<lb/>
libraries have the book needed<lb/>
and by requesting it through the<lb/>
terminal. The other library can<lb/>
answer in minutes and have the<lb/>
Smith, but it boils down to about<lb/>
$1.50 to catalogue each book.<lb/>
The oost is around $2,000 a<lb/>
month to use the OCLC oomputer<lb/>
data base. Every call to the<lb/>
oomputer costs $1.27, which is<lb/>
part of the overall oost.<lb/>
"The largest advantage of the<lb/>
computer is that it saves time to<lb/>
use a catalog number that is<lb/>
already on file said Smith.<lb/>
"We hope to use the oom-<lb/>
puter for reclassifying the old<lb/>
books from Dewey (Decimal<lb/>
System) to Library of Congress in<lb/>
the future said Smith. It costs<lb/>
half the regular fee to use the<lb/>
computer for reclassifying old<lb/>
books.<lb/>
Another future possibility may<lb/>
be a Computer Output Microfilr,<lb/>
Catalog (COM). This would be<lb/>
like the serial microfiches we now<lb/>
have, said Smith.<lb/>
Elections chairperson sought<lb/>
By DAVID NASH<lb/>
SGA Correspondent<lb/>
Applications for elections<lb/>
chairperson will be accepted,<lb/>
February 1-10, announced Greg<lb/>
Pingston, SGA Vice-President in<lb/>
last evening's legislature meet-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The candidates will be<lb/>
screened by the Executive Coun-<lb/>
cil and their selection will be<lb/>
submitted to the legislature for<lb/>
approval.<lb/>
The chairperson will be in<lb/>
charge of conducting the elect-<lb/>
tions, setting the dates for filing<lb/>
and elections, and presiding over<lb/>
the actual balloting.<lb/>
"We're shooting for the<lb/>
elections to be held the end of<lb/>
March, but that will be decided<lb/>
by the chairperson said Ping-<lb/>
ston.<lb/>
In remarks to the legislature,<lb/>
SGA President Tim Sullivan<lb/>
commented or the progress of the<lb/>
over-pass at 10th and College Hill<lb/>
Drive, and discussed the recent<lb/>
board of trustees meeting, at<lb/>
which the board went on record in<lb/>
favor of the overpass.<lb/>
A decision on the overpass is<lb/>
due in April.<lb/>
In other business, the legisla-<lb/>
ture appropriated $75.00 to the<lb/>
BUCCANNEER for office ex-<lb/>
penses.<lb/>
Things are looking very<lb/>
optimistic as far as getting the<lb/>
book out on time, and having a<lb/>
quality book said Pingston.<lb/>
According to Pingston, the<lb/>
'7677 BUCCANNEER will now<lb/>
cost approximately $5, and will<lb/>
include underclass pictures.<lb/>
The annual is scheduled to be<lb/>
released in late October.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0009"/><lb/>
Teaching days help sisters<lb/>
run new downtown toy store<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
A big canopy waves over the<lb/>
doorway to greet shoppers with<lb/>
"Happily Ever After and<lb/>
welcoming them into a childlike<lb/>
world of odors, sounds, and<lb/>
laughter.<lb/>
This is no typical store.<lb/>
The atmosphere of Green-<lb/>
ville' s only toy store is more like<lb/>
that of Disneyland than the<lb/>
businesslike, hurried, and slight-<lb/>
ly impersonal air which often<lb/>
confronts the consumer.<lb/>
"Happily Ever After" is on<lb/>
the town Mall and is run by two<lb/>
sisters, Carolyn Creekmore and<lb/>
Linda O'Connors, who both were<lb/>
special education teachers until<lb/>
about three months ago.<lb/>
O'Conner is a young woman<lb/>
with dark curly hair who seems to<lb/>
smile all the time.<lb/>
According to O Connor, they<lb/>
got the idea for the toy store at<lb/>
the end of last September and<lb/>
resigned from their teaching<lb/>
positions, found an empty build-<lb/>
II !<lb/>
ing on the mall downtown, and<lb/>
opened for business by the end of<lb/>
October.<lb/>
Most of the toys are creative<lb/>
and uncomplicated.<lb/>
Paddle balls, marbles, octa-<lb/>
soopes, and handpuppets are a<lb/>
few of the old-fashioned toys to be<lb/>
found there.<lb/>
O'Conner said that she keeps<lb/>
a file fa new ideas. The children<lb/>
often tell her about toys that they<lb/>
have seen elsewhere and would<lb/>
like to have.<lb/>
According to O'Conner, her<lb/>
background with children has<lb/>
been a great help.<lb/>
She previously specialized in<lb/>
learning disabilities in the county<lb/>
school system.<lb/>
"Here, we're trying to reme-<lb/>
diate with pleasure. So many toys<lb/>
are available for this purpose<lb/>
O'Conner noted that the store<lb/>
doesn't carry nationally adver-<lb/>
tised products, because they can<lb/>
be purchased just about any-<lb/>
where.<lb/>
"If parents will dare to try our<lb/>
toys, thev'll love them<lb/>
i i r<lb/>
HAPPILY EVER AFTER, a new toy store on the mall, houses the<lb/>
dreams of every child. Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Prototypes of all the toys are<lb/>
placed within easy roach of small<lb/>
children.<lb/>
O'Conner feels that the child-<lb/>
ren come faithfully every Satur-<lb/>
day because they are allowed to<lb/>
handle the toys, sit on the floor,<lb/>
and play in a playhouse in the<lb/>
back of the store marked "Kids<lb/>
Only<lb/>
One little boy in a hooded blue<lb/>
jacket sat on the floor playing<lb/>
with a wooden soldier while<lb/>
O'Conner talked to him.<lb/>
"We give the kids something<lb/>
to do with the other eleven<lb/>
months of the year after Christ-<lb/>
mas said OConner.<lb/>
In fact, the store seems more<lb/>
like a nice place to spend<lb/>
Saturday afternoon and play than<lb/>
a business.<lb/>
The little boy's blue eyes<lb/>
widened as he picked up a bright<lb/>
orange wooden duck from<lb/>
Greece.<lb/>
 Most of our things are from<lb/>
other countries. Other countries<lb/>
show more care and concern for<lb/>
toys<lb/>
A doll house from Sweden has<lb/>
everything from lights that really<lb/>
work to a shower massage. And<lb/>
there are miniature finger pup-<lb/>
pets from Italy adorning one wall.<lb/>
O'Conner claimed that the<lb/>
store has been quite successful<lb/>
and attributes that to the fact that<lb/>
they offer toys that cannot be<lb/>
found elsewhere in the state.<lb/>
"We had people here at<lb/>
Christmas from Raliegh who were<lb/>
unable to find what they wanted<lb/>
there<lb/>
O'Conner also said that the<lb/>
children and toys are fun to work<lb/>
with.<lb/>
"It has been the most fun and<lb/>
that's the truth. Toys are so<lb/>
pleasant. It doesn't matter if it<lb/>
doesn't fit or if it's not the right<lb/>
odor.<lb/>
The motive for buying toys is<lb/>
pleasure and people who oome to<lb/>
shop are in a really good mood<lb/>
According to 0'Conner, her<lb/>
major motive is to help reinforce<lb/>
basic developmental skills.<lb/>
"We're trying to prove that<lb/>
learning can be fun<lb/>
Any by the looks on the<lb/>
children's faces in "Happily Ever<lb/>
After she'sddng just that.<lb/>
PHYEdept. now offers course<lb/>
in 'good old square dancin'<lb/>
By TERRY DANIELS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Classrooms can be used fa<lb/>
fun and entertainment, at least<lb/>
when used by the East Cardina<lb/>
University Square Dancers.<lb/>
At 7 30 on Tuesday nights, the<lb/>
group changes a classroom in the<lb/>
basement of Memaial Gym into a<lb/>
square dance hall.<lb/>
Nelson Jarvis, the caller, uses<lb/>
a record player, speakers, a<lb/>
miaophone and a odlection of<lb/>
recads to get things rdling.<lb/>
Jarvis, 16, is from Ayden and<lb/>
is the center of the activity.<lb/>
With a miaophone in his right<lb/>
hand with his fod patting to the<lb/>
music, he makes the calls to keep<lb/>
pairs moving.<lb/>
 I started square dandng two<lb/>
years ago said Jarvia "At<lb/>
schod everyone thinks you're<lb/>
square to be a square dancer, but<lb/>
I enjoyed it and was proud d it. I<lb/>
kept at it, and now I'm a caller fa<lb/>
Eastern Nath Cardina<lb/>
After "squaring up where<lb/>
four couples face in to fam a<lb/>
square the calling begins.<lb/>
Couples perfam what seemed to<lb/>
be complicated routines with<lb/>
grace, while responding to each<lb/>
call given. If a call is unclear,<lb/>
Jarvis explains it at the end d the<lb/>
square.<lb/>
"It looks complicated, but it's<lb/>
simple if you know your left from<lb/>
your right said Jarvis. "Clog-<lb/>
ging is hard, but I oould teach<lb/>
anyone to square danoe<lb/>
The ECU Square Dancers is<lb/>
an intramural dass that students<lb/>
can audit.<lb/>
Anyone is welcome to take the<lb/>
dass, which is infamal and has<lb/>
about 10 to 30 students, said<lb/>
Nancy Brown, dass coadinata.<lb/>
"I've been square dandng fa<lb/>
about seven years said Brown.<lb/>
"Being in charge of this dass<lb/>
means I cdled the fees fa<lb/>
refreshments and bring the Kod-<lb/>
aid<lb/>
Acading to Jarvis, the dass<lb/>
learns the basic 75 moves of<lb/>
Western style square dandng.<lb/>
See DANCING, pg. 10<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
1 February 1977<lb/>
Marquee<lb/>
by DAVID R.BOSNICK<lb/>
'A Star'is com<lb/>
Presenting the greatest threat to diabetics since the invention of<lb/>
French pastry, the film "A Star is Ban" opened in Greenville.<lb/>
The only surprise in thisfilm isthat there are simply no surprises in<lb/>
this film. It can be classified as the greatest American resource of<lb/>
blatant symbolism, maudlin phrases and melodramatic conventions.<lb/>
The only tragedy in thisfilm isthat a great star should stoop to doing a<lb/>
mere star vehide and that a talented composer should be made to look<lb/>
like a ctoss between Jim Marison and Dennis the Menace.<lb/>
The songs, which are the only occasional strengths of the film,<lb/>
parallel the emotional situations of the leads and explicate changes in<lb/>
pld direction. It isoperettalike in that there is a great deal of musical<lb/>
narration, and all adion ceases when Kristofferson a Streisand<lb/>
performs.<lb/>
The adion of the film oommenoes with the mental and physical<lb/>
degeneration of John Norman Howard (Kris Kristofferson). On his<lb/>
cocaine and alcohd engendered road-to-ruin, he meets Esther<lb/>
Hoffman (I swear one day she'll play a gentile) (Barbra Streisand), who<lb/>
is an undiscovered 25-ish singer of enamous talent. In no particular<lb/>
ader, they then proceed to : fall in love, he stops drinking, they get<lb/>
married, he goes on tour, she steals the show (unintentional), she<lb/>
becomes great, he resents it, she still loveshim, he starts drinking, she<lb/>
goes on tour, Lassie and this movie bdh die in the process and John, to<lb/>
the tune of Esther's biggest hit, slams his Alfa Romeo into the side d<lb/>
the road, dying that she might live and grow. If anyone is still left in<lb/>
the theater at this time they see the gross finale of Esther doing a<lb/>
medley of John's last songs written to her.<lb/>
And I thought the Indians gave us can.<lb/>
Joan Didion and Frank Pierson combine to aeate tne wast<lb/>
saeenplay since "Abbd and Costello Meet the Godfather The<lb/>
dialogue is pretentious and sentimental. They allow it to run rampant<lb/>
with lines the likes of:<lb/>
"hearing you sing is like hooking a big Marlin"<lb/>
"if you ever die, I'll kill you"<lb/>
"if you love me, I'll hate you"<lb/>
Evocative theatre being obviously nd the intent of thisfilm, there is<lb/>
still little in the lines that can be associated with true affedions and<lb/>
judgments. The gaudy over-publicized love-stay is little mae than a<lb/>
weak vessel fa Miss Streisand's voice and Mr. Kristofferson'ships (a<lb/>
vice-versa).<lb/>
Miss Streisand is non-pareil as a dramatic singer but years on the<lb/>
Schmaltz" circuit have rendered her unable to rock and rdl. Her<lb/>
jagger-like motions are faced and too achestrated and she appears<lb/>
fcolish. Without one of the most magnificent sets of pipes of this<lb/>
generation, these flacid and melodramatic songs would have<lb/>
collapsed of their own weight.<lb/>
Kris Kristofferson simply cannd ad. In the early part of film,<lb/>
where all he must do is stagger around drunk, depressed and stoned,<lb/>
he is adequate. He has been a John Naman befae. He cannd,<lb/>
however, find the necessary emdion in himself to play parts that face<lb/>
him to move from his adual charader. That fs the essenoe of acting<lb/>
and he simply lacks the spark. The songs he is made to perfam<lb/>
subvert what is a genuine musical talent and it is no small surprise that<lb/>
as executive producer, Miss Streisand had a say in the editing<lb/>
This is star oriented cinema at its wast. Miss Streisand evokes<lb/>
none of the emotions of her earlier films and the music is nowhere near<lb/>
as strong. I give this movie ate star, Vz fa a soundtrack that inductee<lb/>
far too much saeaming and Vi fa the excellent phdography.<lb/>
�!<lb/>
Maynard Ferguson<lb/>
coming<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 February 1977<lb/>
Preservation Hall excels at Cajun jazz<lb/>
BySUZYCHESTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Preservation Hall Jazz<lb/>
Band had lousy intonation, no<lb/>
dynamic contrast and a lack of<lb/>
precision in their performance at<lb/>
Mendenhail Student Theatre last<lb/>
Thursday night-and I couldn't<lb/>
care less!<lb/>
Because they had something-<lb/>
call it soul, call it spirit, call it<lb/>
whatever you like-but that<lb/>
"something" turned a potentially<lb/>
dull jazz concert by some antique<lb/>
pro's into a foot-stomping, finger-<lb/>
snapping, hand-dapping, head-<lb/>
nodding, hip-wriggling night of<lb/>
fun.<lb/>
These seven grandfathers in<lb/>
the gray wrinkled suits played<lb/>
New Orleans jazz-nothing re-<lb/>
fined or subtle or sophisticated,<lb/>
just blaring Dixieland straight out<lb/>
of a Bourbon Street saloon.<lb/>
Even the names are straight<lb/>
out of the Dixie past: Alonzo, the<lb/>
scene stealer on drum set with the<lb/>
acrobatic sticks, Chester on bass<lb/>
fiddle with his dassy, swooping<lb/>
pizzicato, Hank the ivory-tinkler<lb/>
with his topless upright, Father<lb/>
Al chomping gum in rhythm with<lb/>
his banjo-strumming, Manny<lb/>
shooting runs out of the barrel of<lb/>
his darinet, one-legged Ernie<lb/>
blasting out old-fashioned trum-<lb/>
pet licks,and last but not least,<lb/>
Preston, sliding the trombone and<lb/>
ducking and bobbing to acknow-<lb/>
ledge the applause and the<lb/>
laughter and the delighted re-<lb/>
sped.<lb/>
"Basie St. Blues "China<lb/>
Boy "You're Nobody's Sweet-<lb/>
heart Nowthe Band zipped<lb/>
through about twenty of those old<lb/>
tunes. A short intro, a raspy<lb/>
vocal, a quick lick by each of the<lb/>
old charmers and a snappy finale<lb/>
of pure homemade musical fun.<lb/>
Even the old Baptist standard<lb/>
"Just A Closer Walk With Thee"<lb/>
fit into the pattern and was<lb/>
strangely appropriate amidst the<lb/>
saloon jingles.<lb/>
Typical was "Rambled" �<lb/>
"He rambled all aroun In an'<lb/>
out of town, 'Til the butcher got<lb/>
him down<lb/>
The sing-along "I Ate Up the<lb/>
Apple Tree" was another crowd-<lb/>
pleaser- "Sittin' with relaxation,<lb/>
Lookin' at the apple temptation, I<lb/>
ate up the apple tree Need I say<lb/>
more?<lb/>
The mischievous spunk of the<lb/>
jazz men spurred the overflowing<lb/>
audience into an equally bold<lb/>
mischief, espedally during the<lb/>
overwhelming favorite "When<lb/>
The Saints Go Marching In<lb/>
The popular piece started with<lb/>
a standing ovation, induded a<lb/>
25-people chain through the<lb/>
aisles led by Manny, Preston and<lb/>
Father Al, and ended up with a<lb/>
free-for-all dance session on the<lb/>
stage.<lb/>
It was fun and it was wild-the<lb/>
third smashing success in a row of<lb/>
Artist Series oonoerts.<lb/>
Artist Series, I don't know<lb/>
how you do it, but keep it up! I<lb/>
can't wait 'til your next produc-<lb/>
tion!<lb/>
DANCING<lb/>
Continued from pg. 9<lb/>
PRESERVATION HALL JAZZ BAND<lb/>
PhotobyEdMidgett<lb/>
After graduating, a danoer should<lb/>
be able to dance under any caller.<lb/>
The dass does an American<lb/>
form of square dandng, accord-<lb/>
ing to Brown. Steps come from<lb/>
different countries and are<lb/>
incorporated into square, drde,<lb/>
and single dandng.<lb/>
"Square dandng is becoming<lb/>
more popular said Jarvis. "At<lb/>
one time it was mostly an adult<lb/>
form of entertainment, but now<lb/>
more younger people are starting<lb/>
to enjoy it<lb/>
Having a good time is what<lb/>
everyone is after while dandng as<lb/>
Jarvis sings the calls to "Honkey<lb/>
Tonk Square Dance Blues<lb/>
The dass consists of about<lb/>
half ECU students and half<lb/>
non-students.<lb/>
" I do it for the enjoyment and<lb/>
to have a good time said a<lb/>
member of the Tar River Twilers<lb/>
of Greenville.<lb/>
"I took square dandng in<lb/>
physical education class and<lb/>
continue to take such dasses<lb/>
because it's good entertainment,<lb/>
and it's a way to meet people<lb/>
while getting some exerdse<lb/>
said an ECU biology student.<lb/>
During the 1800s, square<lb/>
dandng was a form of organized<lb/>
recreation and entertainment. A<lb/>
lack of transportation and sodal<lb/>
groups enhanoed its importance.<lb/>
A barn or flat outside area oould<lb/>
be formed into a dance floor and<lb/>
callers often played the fiddle.<lb/>
In Eastern North Carolina,<lb/>
dubs often meet in different<lb/>
towns every Saturday night,<lb/>
according to Brown.<lb/>
Jarvis' last call is "Grand-<lb/>
mama's Feather Bed<lb/>
This is a fast number that<lb/>
some danoers look puzzled over<lb/>
during the calls.<lb/>
At the end, the dancers pitch<lb/>
in to sweep the floor and put the<lb/>
desks back in order.<lb/>
The danoe floor loses its spirit<lb/>
and is quickly transformed back<lb/>
toadassroom, until next Tuesday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
<lb/>
.faft<lb/>
iT-J!<lb/>
rr �<lb/>
THURSATTHE ELBOW ROOM<lb/>
"THESPONTANES"<lb/>
1st time in Greenville in 2yrs.<lb/>
Featuring Harley Hogg &amp; The Rockers<lb/>
FANTASTIC 50s REVIEW<lb/>
HAVE APPEARED IN CONCERTWITH<lb/>
FLACH CADILLAC<lb/>
FATS DOMINO<lb/>
STEPPENWOLF<lb/>
EARLSCRUGGS<lb/>
PAULANKA<lb/>
LITTLE ANTHONY<lb/>
LYNARDSKYNARD<lb/>
ARCHIEBELL&amp;<lb/>
THEDRELLS<lb/>
WETWILLIE<lb/>
THESHIRELLES<lb/>
BODIDDLEY<lb/>
WHITE WITCH<lb/>
TUES.&amp; WED. 10th AVE<lb/>
REMEMBER FRI.3-7<lb/>
FRI.&amp;SAT. HALF OLD, HALF NEW TOP40&amp;<lb/>
BEACH WEEKEND FEATURING'CROSSROADS'<lb/>
DOING ALL YOUR FAVORITE OLD &amp; NEW TUNES<lb/>
EVERY SUN. IS LADIES NITE<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0011"/><lb/>
1 February FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Bishop andDoheny show ingenuity,<lb/>
'What's Wrong'has plenty wrong<lb/>
By CHRIS FARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
'�CARELESS"<lb/>
Looking like a youthful Bob<lb/>
Dylan and sounding more like<lb/>
Paul Simon than Paul himself,<lb/>
Stephen Bishop has made his<lb/>
debut into the recording field with<lb/>
a pleasant and carefully made<lb/>
album. CARELESS is comprised<lb/>
of 11 original songs which touch<lb/>
on a variety of pop music's styles,<lb/>
but tends to oonoern itself mainly<lb/>
with soft acoustic tunes made to<lb/>
order for Bishop's creamy tenor<lb/>
voice.<lb/>
While shining on guitar and<lb/>
vocals himself, Bishop is aided in<lb/>
his efforts by such names as Eric<lb/>
Clapton, Larry Cariton, Chaka<lb/>
Khan and Art Garfunkel to name<lb/>
a few. Each guest proves their<lb/>
individual virtuosity as is best<lb/>
exemplified by Chaka Khan's<lb/>
vocals at the end of "Save It Fa<lb/>
A Rainy Day" or Art Garfunkel's<lb/>
soothing harmonies throughout,<lb/>
where at times he and Bishop<lb/>
team up to remind us of the old<lb/>
Simon and Garfunkel sound with<lb/>
a new twist.<lb/>
While the arrangements are<lb/>
all fitting and the caliber of<lb/>
performance extremely high, the<lb/>
album as a whole lacks a kind of<lb/>
productive imagination.lt ap-<lb/>
proaches greatness at times but<lb/>
then again it leaves the listener to<lb/>
bridge the gaps and fill the holes<lb/>
with one's own instinctive imag-<lb/>
ination. This is not such a tragic<lb/>
flaw however, and there are<lb/>
definitely enough positive attri-<lb/>
butes to keep CARELESS on most<lb/>
critics' good side. The best cuts<lb/>
are the bouncy "Save It For A<lb/>
Rainy Day" and the gentle title<lb/>
cut "Careless While his name<lb/>
is not well known, Stephen<lb/>
Bishop is a first-rate singer-song-<lb/>
writer, and CARELESS is an<lb/>
album well worth listening to.<lb/>
WHAT'S WRONG WITH<lb/>
THIS PICTURE?<lb/>
Andrew Gold's cover oxioept<lb/>
for WHATSWRONGWITHTHIS<lb/>
PICTURE? is an extremely clever<lb/>
one, asking the reader to find the<lb/>
many oddities contained on the<lb/>
cover photo, such as a floating<lb/>
chair, a hot dog in a hamburger<lb/>
bun, anc an electric guitar<lb/>
plugged into a telephone to name<lb/>
only a few. However the compli-<lb/>
ments stop here, for once the<lb/>
needle is put on the disc it is<lb/>
evident that a more suitable title<lb/>
would be WHAT'S WRONG<lb/>
WITH THIS ALBUM?, tor there<lb/>
are equally as many things wrong<lb/>
with it as the oover photo.<lb/>
Gold came to be known<lb/>
through being the mainstay of<lb/>
Linda Ronstadt's band, and with<lb/>
Linda's growing popularity in the<lb/>
past few years, so came more<lb/>
recognition fa Gold. It got to the<lb/>
point where Gold put out a solo<lb/>
album in the fail of last year<lb/>
simply entitled ANDREW GOLD.<lb/>
The album was musically sound<lb/>
and came off much like a<lb/>
Ronstadt album with a male<lb/>
singing lead vocals, for the<lb/>
musicians and style were pract-<lb/>
ically identical fa both. All in all,<lb/>
except fa the pea lyrics, it was a<lb/>
pretty fair first effort and left<lb/>
good reason to believe that with a<lb/>
little more solo recading exper-<lb/>
ience and some diligent wak in<lb/>
the lyrics department, his second<lb/>
album might really be something<lb/>
to anticipate.<lb/>
With all of this grandeur<lb/>
preceeding, it would be quite an<lb/>
understatement then to call<lb/>
WHAT'S WRONG a disappoint-<lb/>
ment. The music while containing<lb/>
a few bright spas, is basically<lb/>
extremely baing and the lyrics<lb/>
areharible, epitimized in Gold's<lb/>
poetic lines, "I feel down, down<lb/>
on the ground loosely taken for<lb/>
a "Dick and Jane See Spot Run"<lb/>
episode. Gold himself has a part<lb/>
in the producing, arranging,<lb/>
writing and playing. He has<lb/>
previously proven that he is a<lb/>
talented musician along with the<lb/>
other people in his band, but good<lb/>
musicians don't usually sound so<lb/>
great unless they have good<lb/>
music to play, and that is the<lb/>
problem here. Gdd'ssongwriting<lb/>
has simply regressed, and while<lb/>
producer Peter Asher does his<lb/>
best to salvage what he can, the<lb/>
cards are heavily stacked against<lb/>
him. The thing that seems so<lb/>
incongruous is that there is some<lb/>
first-rate mataial on this album,<lb/>
which tells us that Gold is still<lb/>
capable of writing good songs.<lb/>
"Lonely Boy "Must Be Crazy"<lb/>
and "Go Back Home Again" all<lb/>
have qualities of brilliance, how-<lb/>
ever three songs can't carry an<lb/>
album. Through it all however,<lb/>
Gdd's voioe does maintain a<lb/>
steady bright spot on the album<lb/>
and helps to compensate fa sane<lb/>
of theaher weaknesses. Even so,<lb/>
the album would have to be<lb/>
considered a disappointment, but<lb/>
maybe we were expecting too<lb/>
much.<lb/>
HARD CANDY<lb/>
The past few years has seen<lb/>
pop music go through a type of<lb/>
stylistic fusion mixing jazz, rock,<lb/>
soul and folk and making it nearly<lb/>
impossible to put a label on most<lb/>
of today's music. The reason fa<lb/>
this lies mainly in the fact that<lb/>
certain types of music have<lb/>
gained more exposure and be-<lb/>
cause public taste has beoome so<lb/>
widespread.<lb/>
Such is the case with HARD<lb/>
CANDY by Ned Doheny, fa it<lb/>
encompasses a variety of styles<lb/>
with each song adding a new twist<lb/>
to the overall effect. The most<lb/>
redeeming features of the album<lb/>
are Doheny's smooth voioe and<lb/>
the effortless way he presents his<lb/>
songs. The production and song-<lb/>
writing are aspects of the album<lb/>
which take a little more time to<lb/>
appreciate, but are equally as<lb/>
unique in their presentation.<lb/>
Doheny does nearly all of the<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Wed.&amp;Thur. Spike<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. Mayson<lb/>
Sun. Snatch<lb/>
guitar wak and guests like the<lb/>
incomparable Tom Scat and the<lb/>
Eagles' Glenn Frey and Don<lb/>
Henley, help to make the instru-<lb/>
mental end of HARD CANDY<lb/>
extremely impressive. While his<lb/>
style is very diverse, imagine a<lb/>
musician who lies somewhere<lb/>
between Van Morrison and Boz<lb/>
Scaggs and that would most<lb/>
closely resemble Doheny. The<lb/>
best tunes are the haunting "Get<lb/>
It Up Fa Love" and "If You<lb/>
Should Fall but the whole<lb/>
albumdeservesan onen �ar<lb/>
THURSDAYS<lb/>
Greenville's only concert<lb/>
nightclub presents back by<lb/>
popular demand<lb/>
RAZZMATAZZ<lb/>
Feb. 3rd<lb/>
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,w ,vx�i��4tfc�j�iiy��y�jte,ytt�fc�aM.fcy.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12<lb/>
1 February 1977<lb/>
Welborn enjoys<lb/>
winning ways<lb/>
ByKURTHICKMAN<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
A sign above the offioe door<lb/>
reads, "Wrestling Spoken<lb/>
Here<lb/>
This statement sums up the<lb/>
drive and determination of the<lb/>
man who occupies that room.<lb/>
He is John Welborn, East<lb/>
Carolina University's head wrest-<lb/>
ling coach, assistant athletic<lb/>
director, and chairman of the<lb/>
Southern Conference Wrestling<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Since coming to ECU in 1967,<lb/>
Welborn, 38, had coached his<lb/>
team to a phenomenal 86-10-3<lb/>
"I can't come right out and<lb/>
say that our success has foroed<lb/>
some schools to re-evaluate their<lb/>
wrestling programs Welborn<lb/>
said. "It wouldn't be fair to say<lb/>
that outright. I am proud of our<lb/>
success and it does give you a<lb/>
feeling of satisfaction to know<lb/>
that teams make it a goal to beat<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Evidence of ECU's -success<lb/>
under Welborn is clear since the<lb/>
Pirates have been able to upgrade<lb/>
their schedule every year.<lb/>
Already this season, ECU has<lb/>
wrestled three of the nation's<lb/>
traditionally better teams,<lb/>
Lehigh, ranked fifth in the<lb/>
� -<lb/>
JOHN W<lb/>
dual meet record. His teams<lb/>
have won five straight Southern<lb/>
Conference Championships and<lb/>
have sent five teams to the<lb/>
National Collegiate Athletic<lb/>
Association Championships.<lb/>
"Our wrestling program has<lb/>
been a source of pride for<lb/>
everyone involved with ECU ever<lb/>
since John Welborn took over as<lb/>
coach said Bill Cain, ECU'S<lb/>
director of athletics.<lb/>
"He is loyal to East Carolina<lb/>
and he is a class individual<lb/>
Welborn took over a program<lb/>
that had little money to work with<lb/>
and was far from successful.<lb/>
Welborn still has the obstacle<lb/>
of a limited budget, but ECU now<lb/>
has one of the finest wrestling<lb/>
programs in the South.<lb/>
"The formula we use here is<lb/>
really quite simple Welborn<lb/>
said.<lb/>
" I just try to put the best team<lb/>
together with the material we<lb/>
have to work with and with the<lb/>
money we have available. We try<lb/>
to recruit a kid we think can<lb/>
compete on the college level.<lb/>
After that it's just simply a lot of<lb/>
hard work<lb/>
Wei born's hard work has paid<lb/>
off. Since he became head coach,<lb/>
ECU has dominated the sport of<lb/>
wrestling in the Southern Con-<lb/>
ference and the state of North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Many say Welborn's success<lb/>
k,as had a lot to do with the fact<lb/>
?hat athletic programs at some<lb/>
other schools within the state<lb/>
have only recently started to<lb/>
omphasize wrestling.<lb/>
ELBORN<lb/>
national polls, Wilkes and West<lb/>
Chester.<lb/>
"We got West Chester on the<lb/>
schedule five years ago Wel-<lb/>
born said. "That was a great step<lb/>
for our program. Getting Lehigh<lb/>
and Wilkes to compete against us<lb/>
shows the improvement we've<lb/>
made. They wrestle some of the<lb/>
finest teams in the oountry<lb/>
ECU's budget does not enable<lb/>
Welborn to recruit the nation's<lb/>
top notch wrestlers.<lb/>
Welborn recruits mainly in the<lb/>
East, and concentrates his efforts<lb/>
in the states of North Carolina,<lb/>
Virginia, and New Jersey.<lb/>
"These states have provided<lb/>
us with most of our athletes<lb/>
said Welborn. "In the future we<lb/>
may recruit Pennsylvania and<lb/>
New Yak and possibly Ohio<lb/>
ECU lost a wealth of talent<lb/>
last season, and Weiban is in the<lb/>
midst of a rebuilding year.<lb/>
"We have a lot of new faces<lb/>
on our team this year and we will<lb/>
not be favored in as many<lb/>
matches this season as we have<lb/>
been in the past Weiban said.<lb/>
"We will just have to wak that<lb/>
much harder<lb/>
As ECU'S assistant athletic<lb/>
director, he aganizes schedules<lb/>
fa all spots, except football and<lb/>
basketball, and serves as Bill<lb/>
Cain's right-hand man.<lb/>
Hard work usually brings<lb/>
success.<lb/>
In the case of John Weiban,<lb/>
this has to be true.<lb/>
The recad speaks fa itself.<lb/>
Pirates beat Davidson,<lb/>
break losing streak<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina played a near-<lb/>
perfect second hald Saturday<lb/>
night against Davidson and broke<lb/>
a four-game losing streak with a<lb/>
76-56 romp over the Wildcats in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum befae 2,500<lb/>
fans.<lb/>
The Wildcats dominated the<lb/>
Bucs in the first half, running out<lb/>
to an 11 point lead early and<lb/>
holding a five point advantage at<lb/>
the half.<lb/>
But in the second half, the<lb/>
Pirates shot 60 peroent from the<lb/>
floa and outrebounded the Wild-<lb/>
cats 28-5 to roll up the big win.<lb/>
"This is the first time this<lb/>
season we've gotten total pro-<lb/>
duction from everybody in-<lb/>
volved said a happy Dave<lb/>
Pattern after the game. "We<lb/>
played like we have been playing<lb/>
in the first half. But in the second<lb/>
half we ga after 'em. That is the<lb/>
first time this year things have<lb/>
gone our way in the second half<lb/>
The Pirates' defense was so<lb/>
tough in the second half the<lb/>
Wildcatsshot only 30 percent and<lb/>
committed 11 turnovers. The<lb/>
Bucs pressed all over the court<lb/>
and Davidson could not break it<lb/>
effectively. Davidson mentor<lb/>
Dave Pritchett called that the key.<lb/>
"Their press sure won the<lb/>
game fa them. We could not<lb/>
break it. And it hurt our rebound-<lb/>
ing. We did not get an offensive<lb/>
rebound in the second half<lb/>
Patton too thought the de-<lb/>
fense was the key saying, "We<lb/>
have been living and dying by the<lb/>
defense this year. So goes the<lb/>
defense, so goes East Carolina<lb/>
The Pirates started out very<lb/>
slowly as the Wildcats ran out to a<lb/>
17-6 lead. ECU came back to<lb/>
make it 17-16 befae Davidsai<lb/>
lenathened their lead back out<lb/>
BILLY DINEEN<lb/>
The scae stood 32-27 at the half.<lb/>
With Davidson leading 36-31<lb/>
early in the second half, the<lb/>
Pirates ran off ten oonsecutive<lb/>
points to take a 41-36 lead. The<lb/>
Wildcats dosed the gap to one at<lb/>
41-40 befae the Pirates ran off<lb/>
six more unanswered points.<lb/>
East Carolina gradually<lb/>
lengthened the lead out to the<lb/>
final margin of 20.<lb/>
Davidson's John Gerdy, the<lb/>
Southern Conference's leading<lb/>
scaer, finished the game with 21<lb/>
points to lead all scorers. Marvin<lb/>
Lively added 12 fa the Wildcats.<lb/>
Herb Gray, caning off several<lb/>
sub-par perfamances, led the<lb/>
Pirates with 15 points while Jim<lb/>
Ramsey added 14 and Larry Hunt<lb/>
13. Billy Dineen ran the offense to<lb/>
near perfection, hitting on four<lb/>
long-range jumpers, dishing off<lb/>
five assists and not making a<lb/>
turnover.<lb/>
The Pirates outrebounded<lb/>
Davidson 51-22 in the game. Hunt<lb/>
led with 15 while Greg Canelius<lb/>
pulled 13 and Gray eight. No<lb/>
Wildcat had ever five retrieves.<lb/>
After shooting 30 percent<lb/>
during the first half, the Pirates<lb/>
finished the game with a 45.1<lb/>
percentage. Davidson shot 58<lb/>
peroent fa the first half but<lb/>
ended up with just 44 percent of<lb/>
their shas going through the<lb/>
hoop fa the gme.<lb/>
East Carolina will not play<lb/>
again until Saturday night when<lb/>
they travel to Cullowee to face<lb/>
Western Carolina. The Pirates<lb/>
came from behind earlier this<lb/>
year to defeat the Catamounts<lb/>
70-62 in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Pirate grapplers whip<lb/>
favored Tarheels, 22-14<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The old saying 'On any given<lb/>
day' was put into proper per-<lb/>
spective Friday night by the East<lb/>
Carolina wrestling team. The<lb/>
Pirates were heavy underdogs to<lb/>
lose their first match eva to<lb/>
North Carolina. They just wot<lb/>
not allow that to happen, taking a<lb/>
22-14 win over the 19th ranked<lb/>
Tar Heels befae 2,500 saeaming<lb/>
fans in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
"I'm just as elated as I can be<lb/>
to beat Carolina this year said a<lb/>
very happy John Weiban follow-<lb/>
ing the intense match. "They've<lb/>
put all kinds of money into their<lb/>
program and built it up enough to<lb/>
be ranked in the top 20. I really<lb/>
didn't think we had much of a<lb/>
chance. They were the big<lb/>
favaite and we just out-wrestled<lb/>
them.<lb/>
"I'm really tickled to death.<lb/>
This was definitely a team<lb/>
victay. It ranks among the best of<lb/>
wins fa East Carolina. Two years<lb/>
ago, ve beat Cal-Poly and they<lb/>
were ranked seventh in the<lb/>
nation. This one rates with that<lb/>
one, only this one is much<lb/>
sweeter because it was<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
There were three turning<lb/>
points in the match, in the 142,<lb/>
158 and 177 pound weight<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
At 142, Tim Gaghan was<lb/>
leading Tim Reaume by a 4-3<lb/>
count when he injured his arm<lb/>
with just 1.17 left in the match.<lb/>
After an injury time out, Gaghan<lb/>
told Weiban he wanted to keep<lb/>
going. Reaume used Gaghan's<lb/>
injury to reverse him to take a 5-4,<lb/>
lead. Obviously in pain, Gaghan<lb/>
managed to escape with just 17<lb/>
seconds in the match to insure a<lb/>
tie. Welborn said Gaghan<lb/>
"snowed a lot of guts continuing<lb/>
with the injured arm<lb/>
Another big turning point<lb/>
came when Steve Goode beat<lb/>
Mike Benzei in the 158 pound<lb/>
class. Benzei is a highly touted<lb/>
wrestler who usually goes at 167,<lb/>
but made weight at 158 fa this<lb/>
match. Benzei had a 9-2 mark<lb/>
coming into this match, but<lb/>
Goode gave him a sound beating,<lb/>
10-3.<lb/>
Jay Dever, the Pirates 177<lb/>
pounder, has been known to get<lb/>
up fa the big matches. But trying<lb/>
to think of him beating an ACC<lb/>
champion sounds a little far-<lb/>
fetched. Dever, however, proved<lb/>
everybody wrong again. Dever<lb/>
and Dean Bria fought to no<lb/>
scae in the first period. With<lb/>
Bria ai top in the second period,<lb/>
Dever quickly escaped and took<lb/>
Bria down. This gave him three<lb/>
points, enough fa victay. Bria<lb/>
managed to escape in the second<lb/>
and third periods, but Dever won<lb/>
the match 3-2. Bria came in with<lb/>
a 13-2 mark.<lb/>
Paul Osman showed a lot of<lb/>
determination in his match at 134.<lb/>
Osman injured his ankle in<lb/>
practice on Tuesday. Weiban<lb/>
listed him a doubtful all week and<lb/>
even on Friday was not sure his<lb/>
star could move enough to win.<lb/>
Osman was steadfast in that he<lb/>
was going to wrestle. And wrestle<lb/>
he did. He stopped Chris Conk-<lb/>
wright with a 7-3 decision.<lb/>
Conkwright came in with a 13-2<lb/>
record and was confident of<lb/>
victay until Osman got a hold of<lb/>
him.<lb/>
Otha Pirate victaies were<lb/>
Phil Mueller with a superia<lb/>
decision over Carter Mario at 167,<lb/>
9-1, John Williams' superia 19-8<lb/>
win over Nam Walker at 190, and<lb/>
heavyweight D.T. Joyner's 7-0<lb/>
win over Charlie Quaile.<lb/>
Carolina's victaies came at<lb/>
118, 126, and 150. Scott Conk-<lb/>
wright, braher of Chris, punea<lb/>
out a 9-2 decision over Wendell<lb/>
Hardy in the opening match. Joe<lb/>
Galli pinned the Pirates' John<lb/>
Koenigs in the 126 pound match<lb/>
in 1 39 while the Tar Heels' Jeff<lb/>
Reintgen, who came in with a<lb/>
16-1 recad, scaed with a 13-6<lb/>
decision of Frank Schaede in the<lb/>
150 pound weight class.<lb/>
See WRESTLING, page 13)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0013"/><lb/>
Fayetteville Freshman<lb/>
1 February FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
Powers plays with desire<lb/>
Kyle Powers, former star for<lb/>
Pine Forest High School, was a<lb/>
determined young man when he<lb/>
enrolled at ECU last fail. His<lb/>
objective was to prove some<lb/>
people wrong about his basketball<lb/>
playing ability on the major<lb/>
college level.<lb/>
That determination, which has<lb/>
resulted in hustle with reckless<lb/>
abandon, has produced to a great<lb/>
degree the results Powers had in<lb/>
mind when basketball practice<lb/>
opened for the Pirates on Oct. 15.<lb/>
The timid, youthful faced<lb/>
forward has started the last five<lb/>
games for East Carolina, eight of<lb/>
the 17 games played this year,<lb/>
including the season's opener.<lb/>
That is far more than most folks<lb/>
had expected, according to<lb/>
Powers, and perhaps more than<lb/>
he himself had expected.<lb/>
"Lots of folks back home<lb/>
didn't think I oould oome up here<lb/>
and play noted Powers. "Most<lb/>
thought I should be at a smaller<lb/>
school. In fact, some of the other<lb/>
college coaches asked me when<lb/>
recruiting me if I wanted to come<lb/>
here and sit out for two years. I<lb/>
guess I was a little brainwashed<lb/>
myself with all that talk.<lb/>
"I fully expected to play here,<lb/>
but I figured it would be later in<lb/>
the season when most of my<lb/>
playing time came. Starting that<lb/>
first game was a real surprise, but<lb/>
one that I think I earned with my<lb/>
preseason play. It s good to be<lb/>
playing as much as I am, and I do<lb/>
like the starting role. I think I play<lb/>
better as a starter than as a man<lb/>
off the bench<lb/>
While statistics do not reflect<lb/>
his true role in the East Carolina<lb/>
attack, they are edging up<lb/>
weekly. Through 17 games,<lb/>
Powers is averaging 4.1 points<lb/>
per game and 1.7 rebounds per<lb/>
game. Maybe that's nothing to<lb/>
brag about, but something that<lb/>
could be far better if his shooting<lb/>
touch would just return.<lb/>
"I don't understand what's<lb/>
happened to my shooting he<lb/>
moaned. "I've looked at it on<lb/>
film, I've practiced on itbut the<lb/>
ban just is not going down for me.<lb/>
Right now, I'm only shooting 35<lb/>
percent from the floor and I'm a<lb/>
far better shooter than that. In<lb/>
high school offense was my game.<lb/>
It was the defense I was worried<lb/>
about here. But it seems every-<lb/>
thing has been just the opposite<lb/>
from what I expected<lb/>
Despite his shooting being<lb/>
less than expected, Pirate Coach<lb/>
Dave Patton definitely is pleased<lb/>
KYLE POWERS<lb/>
with the way Powers is playing<lb/>
overall and the positive attitude<lb/>
he has displayed from day one.<lb/>
"Kyle is playing with more<lb/>
maturity right now than at<lb/>
anytime this year noted Patton.<lb/>
"This maturity is the reason Kyle<lb/>
is playing so well for us. I just<lb/>
wish all of our players would start<lb/>
with the maturity that Kyle is<lb/>
showing<lb/>
While some may have<lb/>
questioned his immense desire to<lb/>
attend East Carolina, Kyle was<lb/>
making an impression on Dave<lb/>
Patton that strongly re-enforced<lb/>
Patton's own feelings about his<lb/>
signing Kyle.<lb/>
" Kyle came into my off ice one<lb/>
day before we had decided to give<lb/>
him a grant-in-aid. He said that<lb/>
whether he got the scholarship or<lb/>
not, he was going to attend East<lb/>
Carolina, that he would make the<lb/>
team and that he would contri-<lb/>
bute even as a starter.<lb/>
"That's when I knew Kyle<lb/>
Powers was my kind of player.<lb/>
His positive attitude and his great<lb/>
desire to play for East Carolina<lb/>
oonvinoed me that we would make<lb/>
WRESTLING<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
The crowd, in a big way,<lb/>
helped each Pirate wrestler in<lb/>
their matches. Welborn said,<lb/>
"The supporters really helped us<lb/>
in this one. We're going to need<lb/>
the same kind of support from the<lb/>
students and wrestling from the<lb/>
kids next Monday night against<lb/>
State. Heck, they're defending<lb/>
ACC champs<lb/>
The Pirates now stand 6-2 in<lb/>
dual meets this year while<lb/>
Carolina drops to 7-4. N.C. State<lb/>
will invade Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Monday night, Feb. 5 to bat .<lb/>
the Pirates. The Wolf pack has<lb/>
beaten ECU just once in the<lb/>
series between the two schools.<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
In last Thursday's FOUNTAINHEAD it was reported that Ted<lb/>
-Nieman was January's Athlete-of-the-Month. Nieman was actually the<lb/>
Athlete-of-the-Month for December.<lb/>
the right decision by giving him a<lb/>
grant-in-aid. And we did<lb/>
If one had to tab the outstand-<lb/>
ing mark of Kyle Powers on the<lb/>
basketball court for ECU, it likely<lb/>
would be the same thing Kyle<lb/>
says is his biggest asset.<lb/>
" Hustle-that's what I got<lb/>
going fa me right now states<lb/>
Powers very firmly. "It was<lb/>
hustle that got me the starting<lb/>
role in the opening game and it<lb/>
was hustle that got me back into<lb/>
the starting role five games ago<lb/>
And Patton fully agrees. "Oh,<lb/>
yes, very definitely it was the way<lb/>
Kyle came on and got after it in<lb/>
preseason that earned him his<lb/>
position. Through his hustle,<lb/>
Kyle learned quickly about de-<lb/>
fense, the one item lacking from<lb/>
his game. Man-to-man defense is<lb/>
a great deal hustle and that's<lb/>
what Kyle had played too little<lb/>
of in high school<lb/>
While the early season games<lb/>
favored Powers, a slump set in.<lb/>
The seventh game found Powers<lb/>
on the bench all night. And that<lb/>
was the last game before Christ-<lb/>
mas break, a long time for Powers<lb/>
to think and ponder what had<lb/>
happened.<lb/>
"I just went through a let-<lb/>
down explained Powers. "I<lb/>
guess my offense wasn't there,<lb/>
and for me at the time, if my<lb/>
offense was not there, my game<lb/>
was gone. Then I decided I was<lb/>
tired of not playing. I told myself<lb/>
that I had to forget about the<lb/>
offense and regain my con-<lb/>
fidence. So I just started working<lb/>
harder and once again that has<lb/>
paid off<lb/>
Over the last five games, the<lb/>
toughest stretch of the season to<lb/>
date for the Pirates, Kyle has<lb/>
averaged 27 minutes per game<lb/>
playing time.<lb/>
The latest dividends came on<lb/>
Wednesday night against Old<lb/>
Dominion University. He scored<lb/>
a career high 13 points, hitting<lb/>
seven of eight from the line. He<lb/>
also had two assists and only<lb/>
three turnovers in 29 minutes of<lb/>
play.<lb/>
For Kyle Powers, hustle has<lb/>
become a way of life at ECU. In<lb/>
fact, Kyle has hustled himself<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
Sherwin-William<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
right into a starting berth with the<lb/>
purple and gold.<lb/>
For those who said it oouldn't<lb/>
be done, Kyle Powers has done it!<lb/>
ArmyNavy Store<lb/>
1501 Evans<lb/>
12 pm -5.30 pm<lb/>
Back packs F eld, Flight.<lb/>
Bomber, &amp; Snorkel Jackets.<lb/>
Jeans<lb/>
1HI ,<lb/>
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Good Things<lb/>
For Gentle People<lb/>
318 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
752-3815<lb/>
Fast, Free Delivery<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
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NOTHING<lb/>
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11 30 AM till 1 AM<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057108_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 February 1977<lb/>
�ff<lb/>
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Tuesdays-Lady's Night 6:30-11:00<lb/>
All ladies admitted for $1.00<lb/>
(includes skate rental)<lb/>
Wednesdays- ECU Night 6:30-11:00<lb/>
Free skate rental with<lb/>
presentation of I.D. card<lb/>
For more information call 756-6000<lb/>
Fast, Free Delivery<lb/>
DINE M<lb/>
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Fr�tov and Saturday BEATSA-fV-SA FROM 11 30 A' till 2 AM<lb/>
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NOT ONE DAY BUTTWO!<lb/>
Every Tuesday and Wednesday<lb/>
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(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/>
Pirates shellacked by<lb/>
Old Dominion ,86-74<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Old Dominion picked up their<lb/>
15th victory of the season against<lb/>
just two losses Wednesday night<lb/>
with an 86-74 win over East<lb/>
Carolina in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
The Monarchs used a 19 point<lb/>
surge to take the lead in the first<lb/>
half of the regionally televised<lb/>
game and never relinquished it<lb/>
afterwards.<lb/>
"We really played terrible<lb/>
tonight said a dejected Pirate<lb/>
coach Dave Patton following the<lb/>
game. "We just cannot get<lb/>
everybody playing together in any<lb/>
one night. Tonight they were just<lb/>
better than we thought<lb/>
The Monarchs, in first place in<lb/>
the East Coast Athletic Con-<lb/>
ference, fell behind the Pirates by<lb/>
ten points in the early going and<lb/>
looked as if the Pirates might be<lb/>
able to pull off the upset.<lb/>
After Louis Crosby's jumper<lb/>
from the corner put the Pirates on<lb/>
top 16-6, freshman star Ronny<lb/>
Valentine hit two quick baskets to<lb/>
close the gap to six. Kyle Powers<lb/>
then hit on a jumper and that was<lb/>
all the scoring ECU oould manage<lb/>
for five minutes. In those five<lb/>
minutes, Ronny Valentine and<lb/>
Wilson Washington hit on a<lb/>
variety of shots until the Monarch<lb/>
lead reached 11 at 29-18.<lb/>
One of the factors in ODU's<lb/>
success was Pirate center Larry<lb/>
Hunt having to sit on the bench<lb/>
with three fouls. The lead reached<lb/>
14 points a oouple of times and<lb/>
stood at 44-30 at the half.<lb/>
The Pirates cut the lead down<lb/>
to ten early in the second half at<lb/>
58-48 before the Monarchs went<lb/>
on a 23-7 tear to open up their<lb/>
biggest lead at 81-55.<lb/>
East Carolina outscored the<lb/>
Monarchs 19-5 for the remainder<lb/>
of the game mainly because of<lb/>
Greg Cornelius. The sophomore<lb/>
transfer continually drove to the<lb/>
22 turnovers to just 13 for ODU.<lb/>
The Monarchs picked off 54<lb/>
rebounds to just 47 for the<lb/>
Pirates. Washington led Old<lb/>
GREG CORNELIUS scores two against ODU.<lb/>
basket late in the game and<lb/>
picked up a couple of three point<lb/>
plays.<lb/>
Valentine ended up being the<lb/>
game's leading scorer with 25<lb/>
points while Washington added<lb/>
18 for Old Dominion.<lb/>
Cornelius led the Pirates with<lb/>
21 points while Hunt added 14.<lb/>
Freshman forward Kyle Powers<lb/>
hit 14 to round out the double-<lb/>
figure scorers for East Carolina.<lb/>
Bad shooting hampered the<lb/>
Pirates once again as they shot<lb/>
only 36.4 percent to 45.7 for the<lb/>
Monarchs. ECU also committed<lb/>
Dominion with 14 while Valentine<lb/>
grabbed ten. Hunt with 15 and<lb/>
Cornelius with 13 led ECU.<lb/>
The Monarchs, who earlier<lb/>
won a tournament which included<lb/>
undefeated Wake Forest and<lb/>
Mississippi State, were the fourth<lb/>
team in a row the Pirates faced<lb/>
which has been a big winner. East<lb/>
Carolina had faced VMI, William<lb/>
and Mary, and Furman, the<lb/>
Southern Conference's three<lb/>
leading teams, on the road in<lb/>
succession.<lb/>
The oombined record<lb/>
of the four was 48-16.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD fall<lb/>
athletes announced<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Cary Godette, Susan Helmer,<lb/>
Jill Dill, Kathy Zwigard, Tom<lb/>
Long, Gale Kerbaugh, Cathy<lb/>
Callahan, and Heather Jones<lb/>
head up FOUNTAINHEAD's list<lb/>
of Fall sports stars on ECU'S<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Godette won the football<lb/>
award by about two to one over<lb/>
Pete Conaty in the voting by<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD'S sports staff<lb/>
and the Sports Information Of-<lb/>
fice. Behind Conaty came line-<lb/>
backer Harold Randolph running<lb/>
back Eddie Hicks, defensive end<lb/>
Zack Valentine, quarterback Mike<lb/>
Weaver, and defensive backs<lb/>
Ernest Madison and Reggie Pink-<lb/>
ney.<lb/>
Godette was named third<lb/>
team all-America by the Associ-<lb/>
ated Press and has been all-<lb/>
conference for three years in the<lb/>
Southern Conference. He led the<lb/>
team in quarterback sacks and<lb/>
tackles for loss of yardage this<lb/>
season. The Pirates finished with<lb/>
the third best defensive in the<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
Helmer was named Athlete-<lb/>
of-the-Month in October for her<lb/>
fine efforts in tennis. Helmer<lb/>
finished the season with a fine<lb/>
14-2 record and led her team to a<lb/>
fine 10-3 season. She was the only<lb/>
nominee from women's tennis.<lb/>
Dill came through in the<lb/>
clutch in cross country and<lb/>
finished 15th in the conference<lb/>
meet. This enabled the ECU team<lb/>
to finish fifth in the conference,<lb/>
their best finish in quite a few<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Zwigard dosed out the field<lb/>
hockey season as the team's<lb/>
leading scorer and landed a berth<lb/>
on the second team all-Souh<lb/>
squad. She won over Gail Betton,<lb/>
a first team all-South member, in<lb/>
very close balloting. Linda<lb/>
Christian, a defensive specialist<lb/>
on the team, was also nominated.<lb/>
Tom Long has been one of the<lb/>
top defensive players on the<lb/>
soccer team for quite a while and<lb/>
this year garnered all-Southern<lb/>
Conference accolades for the first<lb/>
time. He was picked the top<lb/>
soccer player over Pete Angus by<lb/>
a large margin. Angus finished<lb/>
the season as the ai! time leading<lb/>
scorer at ECU and was picked<lb/>
second team all-Southern Con-<lb/>
ference by the coaches.<lb/>
Gale Kerbaugh showed that<lb/>
all volleyball players did not have<lb/>
to be real tall. At 5-6, Kerbaugh<lb/>
led the Lady Pirates in volleyball<lb/>
even though they suffered<lb/>
through a losing season. She was<lb/>
the only nominee.<lb/>
Cathy Callahan won the award<lb/>
for women's swimming for her<lb/>
work in the diving events. She<lb/>
finished third in the three-meter<lb/>
dicing at the state meet in<lb/>
December. That was highest<lb/>
finish of any swimmer or diver on<lb/>
the team. She won over Cindy<lb/>
Sailor and Patti Redeen.<lb/>
Heather Jones, a freshman<lb/>
from Cary, N.C, rounds out the<lb/>
fall sports stars with her good<lb/>
year in women s gent. Jones led<lb/>
the golf team throughout most of<lb/>
the year and finished eighth in<lb/>
the state tournament. She won<lb/>
the award over Marsha Person.<lb/>
All of the Fall sports stars, by<lb/>
virtue of their being selected, will<lb/>
be in the running for the<lb/>
Athlete-of-the-Year to be voted<lb/>
upon in May.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0015"/><lb/>
FRESHMAN HERB GRAY<lb/>
puts in two against four<lb/>
Davidson defenders in last<lb/>
Saturday night's game.<lb/>
Gray led the Pirates with 15<lb/>
points and had eight re-<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
Phto by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
1 February FOUNTAINHEAD Pttga 15<lb/>
Track team breaks<lb/>
5 indoor records<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's indoor track<lb/>
team traveled up to the Pitt<lb/>
Invitational this weekend and<lb/>
came away with some sterling<lb/>
performances.<lb/>
Marvin Rankins and Herman<lb/>
Mclntyre won an event each for<lb/>
the Pirates, but the Bucs set three<lb/>
school records, one meet mark,<lb/>
and one track record in what<lb/>
Head Coach Bill Carson called the<lb/>
"best indoor performances in a<lb/>
large meet we've ever had<lb/>
Rankins won the 50 yard high<lb/>
hurdles with a fine time of 6.2<lb/>
while Mclntyre shattered the<lb/>
school, meet, and track record<lb/>
with a 50-911A jump in the triple<lb/>
jump on Friday. For his efforts<lb/>
Mclntyre was named the out-<lb/>
standing performer in the field<lb/>
events for the meet.<lb/>
Other top performances in-<lb/>
cluded Otis Mel vin's second place<lb/>
in the 50 yard dash with a time of<lb/>
5.4 and James Freeman being<lb/>
runner-up in the 600 yard run in<lb/>
111.7. Freeman's time set a new<lb/>
school record.<lb/>
James McCollough finished<lb/>
third in the 600 with a time of<lb/>
1:12.5, while George Jackson also<lb/>
took third in the triple jump with a<lb/>
49 foot effort.<lb/>
Calvin Alston finished fourth<lb/>
in the 440 yard dash, eclipsing the<lb/>
previous school mark with a 50.1<lb/>
clocking. Charlie Moss, who<lb/>
finished fifth in the same race,<lb/>
had a 50.1 in the semi-finals but<lb/>
could manage just a 50.2 in the<lb/>
finals.<lb/>
The Pirate mile relay team<lb/>
rounded out the placers by<lb/>
finishing fourth with a time of<lb/>
322.0.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
tor sale (&amp;<lb/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED? Call<lb/>
Alice-758-0497 a 757-6366. Only<lb/>
.50 a page: (exceptions-single<lb/>
spaced pages &amp; outlines) Plenty<lb/>
of experience�I need the money!<lb/>
FOR SALE: '68 Volkswagon fast<lb/>
back $350. 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 3CO p.m. now for best<lb/>
selection.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Texas instruments<lb/>
SR-51 a electronic calculator.<lb/>
Adaptor, two owner, manuals,<lb/>
two operating guides and two<lb/>
carrying cases included free. Call<lb/>
752-9905 and ask for Jeff.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 74 VW Bug $2200.<lb/>
Contemp. furniture &amp; doublebed<lb/>
Exoellent condition. 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 wans and fuzz sustain, volume,<lb/>
and intensity oontrols. $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 niahts.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Peugeot Bicycle,<lb/>
Blue, like new, best offer. 758-<lb/>
7591.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Brand New ARP<lb/>
ODYSSEY SYNTHESIZER, per-<lb/>
fect condition. Fa more informa-<lb/>
tion. Call 758-0794.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 19" color t.v. $100.00<lb/>
Electric heater 3 speed $20.00.<lb/>
752-7471.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Experienced<lb/>
typist. 758-3106 (Jane) before 5.<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, exoellent condition<lb/>
32 MPG. Call Mark Hurley at KA<lb/>
House. 758-8999.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: 758-5948.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer receiver 50<lb/>
wattsRmspr. 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 9p.m<lb/>
12p.m Sun-Thiir�<lb/>
WANTED: A good oook that can<lb/>
cook fa about 20 guys. Good pay.<lb/>
Call Sigma Phi Epsiloi at 752-<lb/>
2941. Hours are 4-6 p.m. Sun<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Janspat Backpack<lb/>
and Frostline Tent, both Brand<lb/>
new and super light. Also Dynaco<lb/>
Amp. contact Jim at 1305 S.<lb/>
Cotanche St (near Twin Rinks)<lb/>
upstairs. Come by anytime.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Wilson T3000 Tennis<lb/>
Racket-$25.00 Lonny 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. Exoellent fa begin-<lb/>
ners. I50.00 contact Nancy<lb/>
through ad in Fountainhpan<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Yamaha �)<lb/>
Endura. Exoellent oondition 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: 2 Tennis Rackets, 1<lb/>
10-speed bike. Cheap 752-6439.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '66 VW great fa in<lb/>
town would need wak fa trips.<lb/>
$350 a best offer. 752-4479<lb/>
MUST SELL: Sunn studio lead<lb/>
amp hardly used. $175.00. Call<lb/>
Maria 752-9022 fa more infam-<lb/>
atiat.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New-Clairol "Kind-<lb/>
ness 3-way Hairsetta" with mist<lb/>
a regular oontrol. Pins &amp; Condi-<lb/>
tioning mist treatment included.<lb/>
Only $20.00, call 758-9225.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Texas Inst jments<lb/>
SR-51 A scientific calculata. Trig<lb/>
functions, slopeinteroept, three<lb/>
memaies much more. Canplete<lb/>
with Operating Guide, Owner's<lb/>
Manual, carrying case and AC<lb/>
adapta. Rechargable and still<lb/>
under warranty. Definitely a<lb/>
bargain at $42.00. Call Jeff at<lb/>
752-9905 a come by 411 Jones<lb/>
found<lb/>
WANTED: One a two female<lb/>
roommates for Village Gr.Apt.<lb/>
$50 pa month plus utilities. Call<lb/>
758-0595 afta 3.<lb/>
NEEDED: Male roommate to<lb/>
share apartment $47.50 per<lb/>
month plus utilities, must be<lb/>
dean and adaly. Call 752-3853.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
to share apt. Rent and util.<lb/>
$55mo. Call 752-0081.<lb/>
NEEDED: Roommate fa Spring<lb/>
Quarter. Big house. Call Decky a<lb/>
Larry afta 6.00 p.m. 752-2859.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private roans and 2<lb/>
baths fa male student. Available<lb/>
on March 1. 758-2585.<lb/>
LOST: Ladies wrap around swea-<lb/>
ter. Brown with diffaent oolaed<lb/>
stripes around it and a Navy blue<lb/>
tie belt. Lost in Jolly Rogas. If<lb/>
found call 752-9907 a bring by<lb/>
818 Greene Dam.<lb/>
LOST: Pumpkin oolaed shat<lb/>
ooat wfur collar. Lost at Elbo<lb/>
Room Friday (1-21) No questions<lb/>
asked. Call 758-9728.<lb/>
L.OST: Watch-Blue band, blue<lb/>
face Between Memorial and<lb/>
Aycock. 75&amp;6S24.<lb/>
LOST: Brown cowhide wallet.<lb/>
Cal 1-758-9895, 618 Tyla. Lost in<lb/>
the vicinity of Speight a Brews-<lb/>
ta.<lb/>
LOST: A brownish-green scarf.<lb/>
Very old and has holes. Of great<lb/>
sentimental value. Arah VenaWe,<lb/>
Call 758-6120, Clement Hall.<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 aisis to call a cane by the<lb/>
REAL aisis centa. Counseling<lb/>
and refaralsare what they offa.<lb/>
They're free, too. Call 758-HELP.<lb/>
personal (X<lb/>
NEEDED: Someone to sub lease<lb/>
apartment March-to August, 127<lb/>
Avay, Apt. 6, 758-4771 afta<lb/>
430.<lb/>
"PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle.<lb/>
752-4272.<lb/>
YOGA LESSONS: exacises to<lb/>
calm the mind and slim the body -<lb/>
way of life. Classes faming now.<lb/>
Call Sunshine, 752-5214 afta 9O0<lb/>
p.m. ai Maid, and Wed afta<lb/>
530 all aha nights<lb/>
LEARN TO BELLY DANCE! Let<lb/>
this year's resolution be a betta<lb/>
figure! Call Sunshine, 752-5214<lb/>
afta 930p.m. onMon.andWed.<lb/>
afta 530 p.m. all aha nites.<lb/>
TAX SERVICES: ECU Business<lb/>
student would like to prepare<lb/>
income tax returns evenings and<lb/>
weekends Reasonable rates. Call<lb/>
756-4180. Typing services also<lb/>
available.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: To Charlotte<lb/>
Friday. Can leave anytime, Janet<lb/>
Pope 423 Tyla, 758-9670.<lb/>
NOTES NEEDED: Despaately<lb/>
need oomplete &amp; legible notes fa<lb/>
HIST 50, (unda Dr. Still fall<lb/>
quarta) to clear up an incom-<lb/>
plete! Please call 758-6700 NOW,<lb/>
if you can help! Will pay fa good<lb/>
notes!<lb/>
NEEDED: Twin bed with mat-<lb/>
tress. 752-9340.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 February 1977<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
SUN THRU THUR<lb/>
11:00 TO 10:00<lb/>
FRJ &amp;SAT<lb/>
11:00 TO 11:00<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
U.S.DA choice beef cut fresh daily<lb/>
For the full month of February, No. 12 will be on<lb/>
special Mon.�Thur Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
CHOPPED SIRL OIN<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
MUSHROOM GRAVY<lb/>
TEXAS TOAST WITH<lb/>
MELTED BUTTER<lb/>
BAKED POTATO<lb/>
OR FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
ALL<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
1.29<lb/>
EAST 10TH ST.<lb/>
FOR TAKE OUT PHONE 758:2712<lb/>
<pb facs="00057108_0017"/>
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