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<pb facs="00057111_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for 51 years. With a<lb/>
circulation of 8,500, this<lb/>
issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountcrinhead<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
10 February 1977<lb/>
Reserve to fund<lb/>
Ficklen Project<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The ECU Board of Trustees<lb/>
voted to free $1.5 million of<lb/>
University Reserve Fund for the<lb/>
Ficklen stadium expansion fund<lb/>
drive in its January meeting.<lb/>
But this money will not be<lb/>
used until the fund drive cam-<lb/>
paign is completed in March,<lb/>
according to Cliff Moore, vice-<lb/>
chancellor of ECU business<lb/>
affairs.<lb/>
The Reserve Fund oomes from<lb/>
student activity fees collected<lb/>
over past years to pay for various<lb/>
student related buildings, such as<lb/>
dormitories.<lb/>
Because the student body has<lb/>
increased over the years, the<lb/>
allocated activity fees have sur-<lb/>
passed the amount needed to pay<lb/>
off the debts for such buildings.<lb/>
These surplus fees make up<lb/>
the Reserve Fund.<lb/>
SGA President Tim Sullivan<lb/>
called for a referendum vote by<lb/>
the student body this past fall to<lb/>
determine whether or not the<lb/>
students would approve this<lb/>
usage of the Reserve Fund.<lb/>
As SGA president, Sullivan is<lb/>
a voting member of the Board.<lb/>
The students voted four to one<lb/>
in favor of releasing the funds for<lb/>
this purpose.<lb/>
However, the Reserve Fund<lb/>
will be used only after outside<lb/>
donations have been spent, accor-<lb/>
ding to Moore.<lb/>
Fund drive donations total<lb/>
$913,800 to date.<lb/>
Moore expects the drive to<lb/>
raise at least $1 million by March<lb/>
in outside donations.<lb/>
Exactly how much of the<lb/>
$1.5 million will be used will be<lb/>
determined after the first con-<lb/>
struction payments are made,<lb/>
Moore said.<lb/>
A Board of Trustees commit-<lb/>
tee is now in the process of<lb/>
selecting architectural and engi-<lb/>
neering firms to oonstruet the<lb/>
project.<lb/>
Moore said the university<lb/>
should be able to advertise for<lb/>
oontract bids prior to the end of<lb/>
the 1977 football season.<lb/>
Actual construction should<lb/>
begin in December after the '77<lb/>
season, he said.<lb/>
This is the first time Reserve<lb/>
Fund has been used for any<lb/>
purpose, according to Moore.<lb/>
"This is the first time a<lb/>
situation has come up that a<lb/>
project hasn't had money appro-<lb/>
priated already fa it he said.<lb/>
Any use of the Reserve Fund<lb/>
must be for a student related<lb/>
project, he added.<lb/>
Educational projects, such as<lb/>
the new medical school, are paid<lb/>
for by the state.<lb/>
Therefore, any project not<lb/>
educationally oriented, like the<lb/>
stadium expansion, must seek<lb/>
independent funding.<lb/>
See FICKLEN, page 7<lb/>
SGA to vote on<lb/>
new media board<lb/>
By LARRY LIE BE RM AN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A bill to create a Communications Board, drafted by Greg Pingston,<lb/>
SGA vice-president, will be presented to the SGA Monday.<lb/>
The Communications Board will select editors of publications and<lb/>
coordinate the student publications, the Photo Lab, and WECU.<lb/>
The board will consist of twelve voting student members. They will<lb/>
include the editors of REBEL, FOUNTAINHEAD, BUCCANEER, and<lb/>
EBONY HERALD. The head photographer and the general manager of<lb/>
WECU. and the treasurer of the SGA, will also be members.<lb/>
The SGA president will appoint two students that are not on the<lb/>
legislature and the Speaker of the legislature will appoint two students<lb/>
who may be legislators The Seaetary of Minaity Affairs will also be<lb/>
on the board.<lb/>
The purpose of the board will be to oversee funds appropriated to<lb/>
campus media by the SGA. It will approve all budgets, contracts,<lb/>
audits, and financial affairs.<lb/>
The board will then submit the individual budgets to the SGA. The<lb/>
board will saeen and approve editas fa each year and serve as<lb/>
grievance committee in case of disputes between editas.<lb/>
The vice-president of the SGA will serve as the non-voting<lb/>
chairperson of the board and will vote in the event of a tie.<lb/>
All advertising revenue that the publications earn will be placed in<lb/>
esaow in a separate bank account. All advertising revenue is sent<lb/>
directly to the SGA now.<lb/>
Two amendments were added, one by the Rules and Judiciary<lb/>
Committee, and one by the Appropriations Committee. The first<lb/>
amendment was several semantical changes in the bylaws and the<lb/>
second was the addition of a code of ethics from the old Publications<lb/>
board.<lb/>
The bill must go back to the Rules and Judiciary committee on<lb/>
Monday to approve an amendment proposed fa bill by the<lb/>
Appropriations Conmittee and then it will go to the legislature the<lb/>
same day.<lb/>
ELECTRICAL POWER LINES suffer an excep-<lb/>
tional load brought on by a bitter Winter. Warmer<lb/>
weather is expected for<lb/>
bring needed relief.<lb/>
this weekend and should<lb/>
Police form Crime Watch<lb/>
By RICHARD DROGOS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Greenville Police Department is getting<lb/>
more eyes, and less airne.<lb/>
The eyes belong to the various citizens of<lb/>
Greenville who have joined Mobile Crime Watch.<lb/>
Mobile Crime Watch is a program under the<lb/>
direction of Doug Jackson, Crime Prevention Offioer<lb/>
fa the GreenviMe Police Department.<lb/>
"I first heard of an idea similar to what we have<lb/>
in Wilmington, N.C at a aime prevention officers<lb/>
meeting said Jackson. "We do a lot of things<lb/>
different from what I heard there, but we have had<lb/>
much success so far.<lb/>
"Asof right now we have 45 people involved in<lb/>
the program said Jackson. "We hope we can have<lb/>
better than a hundred<lb/>
"The Volunteers consist of gas station atten-<lb/>
dants, husband and wife teams, businessmen,<lb/>
teachers and students. All aru interviewed and<lb/>
investigated befae being allowed to join the mobile<lb/>
watch.<lb/>
"We have to be very careful about who we pick<lb/>
to be in the program said Jackson. "A nearby<lb/>
town had trouble with this type program because<lb/>
they took anybody<lb/>
Anaher requirement of all applicants is a<lb/>
driver's license. The citizens use their own cars and<lb/>
gasoline. They also must have a citizen's band radio<lb/>
in their vehicles.<lb/>
"We trained six persons who we call captains<lb/>
said Jackson. "They learn things like what staes<lb/>
have safes and where sane patrolling places are,<lb/>
but they have no authaity to arrest anyone<lb/>
Accading to Jackson, the six persons trained as<lb/>
captains by the Police Department are given six<lb/>
mae persons. These in turn are trained by the<lb/>
captain and assigned to a section of the city. The city<lb/>
is divided into six sections.<lb/>
One captain is B.R. Hardee, circulation manager<lb/>
fa the Daily Reflecta. He enjoys his chance to help<lb/>
out and has already traced a stolen car.<lb/>
"I am glad to have this chance to serve the<lb/>
community said Hardee feel that it is a good<lb/>
deterrent to aime because they do not know when<lb/>
we are out a what we are doing<lb/>
Hardee said that six pasois in his group are<lb/>
rotated so that no one has to go out mae than aice<lb/>
every two weeks.<lb/>
The hours they auise are seaet, because the<lb/>
Mobile Crime Watch likes the element of surprise.<lb/>
Jackson explained that the volunteers are given<lb/>
identification cards because police officers them-<lb/>
selves don't really know who is and who is na a<lb/>
member.<lb/>
"A few of our people have been stopped by<lb/>
patrol cars said Jackson. "That's why we give<lb/>
them I.Ds<lb/>
No statistics are available, Dut Jackson said he<lb/>
believes the Mobile Crime Watch is curtailing<lb/>
aiminal activities in the city.<lb/>
"Last week the patrols were on and there was<lb/>
only one break-in said Jackson. "We had four<lb/>
break-ins last night when there was no patrol<lb/>
Jackson said many area businesses had donated<lb/>
citizen band radios to the aime watchers and said<lb/>
one local business gave the program a 23 channel<lb/>
home-base receiver.<lb/>
"The response has been favaable by evay-<lb/>
one he said. "We were afraid at first that there<lb/>
might be some overzealous people. We have<lb/>
meetings once a month and go over rules and<lb/>
regulations so that no one is misinfamed as to their<lb/>
duties<lb/>
Jackson said that, due to the thaough check<lb/>
every applicant goes through, there are few chances<lb/>
of any overzealous aime watchers.<lb/>
"One guy came in here and applied. We checked<lb/>
him and found out he was a member of the Ku Klux<lb/>
Klan said Jackson.<lb/>
"We also found out that he had been arrested<lb/>
previously fa impersaiating a police officer said<lb/>
Jackson. "Hedidn't get accepted, needless to say<lb/>
Jackson has nominated all 45 aime watchers<lb/>
here fa the Volunteer of the Year award that will be<lb/>
given in the Governa's Mansion this spring.<lb/>
"They have done such an outstanding job said<lb/>
Jackson. "They have saved the city approximately<lb/>
$5,000 in gas and man hours waked<lb/>
Thanks to Jackson and his Mobile Crime Watch,<lb/>
the community of Greenville and its businesses can<lb/>
sleep easier. The eyes are out and watching.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0002"/><lb/>
Coffeehouse WECU<lb/>
Courses<lb/>
Page2<lb/>
10 February 1977<lb/>
Clean air<lb/>
"Clean air" for North Caro-<lb/>
lina: can it be maintained or must<lb/>
it be sacrificed to industrial<lb/>
development? This has become<lb/>
an important issue in many states<lb/>
like ours, where people still enjoy<lb/>
breathing relatively unpolluted<lb/>
air at the same time that industry<lb/>
is being courted aggressively.<lb/>
Participants in our panel discus-<lb/>
sion at this Group Meeting will<lb/>
bring three views of the problem.<lb/>
We will have Jim McColm of the<lb/>
State Office of Air Quality; Anne<lb/>
Taylor, Sierra Club LeConte<lb/>
Chapter Chairman; and Y.J. Lao<lb/>
of the ECU Dept. of Environmen-<lb/>
tal Health. Come to the Group<lb/>
Meeting on Monday, Feb. 14 at 8<lb/>
p.m First Presbyterian Church,<lb/>
14th and Elm, Greenville.<lb/>
WALK<lb/>
There will be a meeting Feb.<lb/>
14 &amp; 9 p.m. at the Baptist Student<lb/>
Center, for those who are interes-<lb/>
ted in planning and working on<lb/>
the WALK this spring. The<lb/>
WALK is a campus-community<lb/>
project where people are spon-<lb/>
sored to walk for different inter-<lb/>
national, national and local deve-<lb/>
lopment projects. We need your<lb/>
support.<lb/>
SGA openings<lb/>
Legislator positions are open<lb/>
in the dorms of Ayoock, Jones,<lb/>
and Belk. Those interested can<lb/>
file in the SGA office, Mendenhall<lb/>
228. The screenings meeting will<lb/>
be held Monday, Feb. 14, at<lb/>
4p.m.<lb/>
Robotics<lb/>
Dr. Holmes from the Engi-<lb/>
neering Department at NCSU will<lb/>
speak on "Robotics" Feb. 10, at 7<lb/>
p.m. to Chi Beta Phi in the lounge<lb/>
on the second floor of the Biology<lb/>
building. Members are urged to<lb/>
attend for next year's officers<lb/>
elections.<lb/>
F.G.<lb/>
Be sure not to miss some very<lb/>
exciting announcements to be<lb/>
made at Forever Generation this<lb/>
week. Share in some fellowship,<lb/>
thoughts, refreshments, and fun<lb/>
Friday night at 730 in Brewster<lb/>
B-103.<lb/>
Bike Freaks<lb/>
If you love to ride your bicycle<lb/>
as much as I do, oome to the<lb/>
organizational meeting of the<lb/>
Greenville "All-Stars" Bicycle<lb/>
Club. We'll be talking about<lb/>
touring, men's and women's<lb/>
racing, equipment, repairing, and<lb/>
clothing at the Methodist Student<lb/>
Union on Monday, Feb. 14, at 8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Disco jam<lb/>
"Aries the most dynamic<lb/>
D.J. in the history of Disco, will<lb/>
be in Wright Auditorium, Satur-<lb/>
day, Feb. 19 at 10 o'clock.<lb/>
"Aries" is from Charlotte and<lb/>
was rated number one by the<lb/>
Carolina School of Broadcasting<lb/>
so don't miss it! Admission is<lb/>
only $1.<lb/>
Meetings<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 23, at 8<lb/>
p.m. there is a conservation<lb/>
committee meeting at Emilie<lb/>
Kane's, 217 Harmoney St<lb/>
Greenville. All interested persons<lb/>
are welcome.<lb/>
Monday, Feb. 28, at 8 p.m.<lb/>
there will be a Ex. Comm.<lb/>
meeting at Grace Smith's, 1903<lb/>
Brook Road, Greenville. All<lb/>
members welcome to attend.<lb/>
Inter-Varsity<lb/>
Due to the spring conference,<lb/>
I.V. will not meet this Sunday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Winner<lb/>
The Cooperative Education<lb/>
Office thanks all students who<lb/>
participated in the Co-op News-<lb/>
letter Name Contest. Due to the<lb/>
many good entries, first and<lb/>
second place winners were cho-<lb/>
sen. Gayle Everett won first place<lb/>
with the name COPE, and will<lb/>
receive a $5 Darryl's gift certifi-<lb/>
cate. Patsy Hinton won second<lb/>
place with the entry the CO-<lb/>
OPERATOR and will receive a $3<lb/>
Darryl's gift certificate. Judges in<lb/>
the contest were Dean Jim<lb/>
Mallory, Dean Carolyn Fulghum,<lb/>
Dean Rudy Alexander, SGA<lb/>
President Tim Sullivan, and<lb/>
Placement Director Furney<lb/>
James.<lb/>
If you want to have a good oT<lb/>
foot-stomping time this weekend,<lb/>
be sure to oome to the Coffee-<lb/>
house to see the Tar River<lb/>
Revelers, a hot group of old-time<lb/>
musicians including a fiddler,<lb/>
banjo, and guitar player. The<lb/>
Green Grass Cloggers will also be<lb/>
on hand to kick up a storm with<lb/>
their unique dancing. The Coffee-<lb/>
house will be in the Multi-<lb/>
purpose room (main floor of<lb/>
Mendenhall) for this occasion.<lb/>
Shows are at 8 and 9 p.m. on<lb/>
Friday and Saturday. Feb. 11 &amp;<lb/>
12, and admission is still only .25.<lb/>
Plenty of eats!<lb/>
Valentines<lb/>
Personalize your valentines<lb/>
this year by sending a singing<lb/>
valentine. The Tri-Sigma sorority<lb/>
will sing the song of your choioe<lb/>
on Feb. 14, to anyone living on<lb/>
campus or in a sorority or<lb/>
fraternity house. Purchase your<lb/>
singing valentine at the old CU on<lb/>
Friday, Feb. 11 or Monday, Feb.<lb/>
14, from 9am. -2p.m. The oost is<lb/>
only .50 and all proceeds will go<lb/>
to the Robbie Page Memorial<lb/>
Fund.<lb/>
Dance<lb/>
There will be a Valentine<lb/>
Dinner and Dance at the Baptist<lb/>
Student Union, 511 E. 10th<lb/>
Street, on Saturday, Feb. 12, at 7<lb/>
p.m. Please call for reservations<lb/>
at 756-1460 or 752-4646 by<lb/>
Friday, Feb. 11 at 5 p.m. The oost<lb/>
is $3oouple and $1.50single.<lb/>
New hours<lb/>
Due to the energy crisis, the<lb/>
operating hours of the Students<lb/>
Supply Store and The Croatan are<lb/>
being adjusted effective this<lb/>
Friday, February 11: The Book-<lb/>
store in Wright Building will be<lb/>
closed Saturday mornings, The<lb/>
Croatan will dose at 530 p.m. on<lb/>
Fridays and will be dosed on<lb/>
Saturday mornings.<lb/>
New Hours of Operation<lb/>
for the Bookstore, 8.15 a.m. ur<lb/>
5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays;<lb/>
and new hours for the Croatan,<lb/>
730 a.m. until 9 p.m. Mondays<lb/>
through Thursdays and 730 a.m.<lb/>
until 530 p.m. Fridays.<lb/>
AVA<lb/>
The American Vocational<lb/>
Assodation is holding their mem-<lb/>
bership drive fa all persons<lb/>
interested in Business, INDT, and<lb/>
Home Eoonomics. Memberships<lb/>
will be taken in the Home<lb/>
Economics Building, the Rawl<lb/>
Building and the INDT Building.<lb/>
The regular meeting with a "pot<lb/>
luck" dinner has been re-<lb/>
scheduled for Feb. 15, rm. 205 in<lb/>
the Home Eoonomics Building at<lb/>
5 p.m. This meeting is fa all<lb/>
members and those intaested in<lb/>
AVA.<lb/>
Listen to WECU fa your<lb/>
chance to win a free Big Mac from<lb/>
MacDonalds. The giveaway hap-<lb/>
pens every aher hour, Thats a<lb/>
Big Mac and a Big 57 MUSIC<lb/>
RADIO-WECU!<lb/>
WECU Presents its fourth<lb/>
artists series featuring Elton John<lb/>
Friday night from 7 until 9 p.m.<lb/>
Thats the music of Elton John<lb/>
with Progressive announcer<lb/>
Jessica Scarangella.<lb/>
Drama<lb/>
Don't miss the new East<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse produdion of<lb/>
"PELLEASAND MELISANDE"<lb/>
showing Feb. 11-12; 14-18 in the<lb/>
Studio Theatre. Tickets are avai-<lb/>
lable at the McGinnis Auditaium<lb/>
Box Office, 10-4 daily. Tickets are<lb/>
free fa ECU students with I.D.<lb/>
and Adivity cards, and $2.50 fa<lb/>
the genaal public. It is a fairy<lb/>
tale and a love stay. Dai't miss<lb/>
this unique produdion.<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
These are the Student Union<lb/>
Committee meetings from Feb. 7,<lb/>
thru Feb. 14: Coffeehouse,<lb/>
Tuesday, Feb. 8, in rm. 236<lb/>
M.S.C. at 4 p.m Program<lb/>
Board, Tuesday, Feb. 8, in rm.<lb/>
248 M.S.C. at 4 p.m Theatre<lb/>
Arts, Monday, Feb. 14, in rm. 236<lb/>
M.S.C. at 5 p.m.<lb/>
Bahai Assoc.<lb/>
"Hinduism" will be the topic<lb/>
of discussions sponsaed by the<lb/>
Bahai Assodation on Thursday<lb/>
night, at 730 p.m. in Room 238 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Centa. A<lb/>
filmstrip will be shown followed<lb/>
by discussion. All friends are<lb/>
weloome!<lb/>
Harvest House<lb/>
The Harvest Coffee House<lb/>
presents SonKist, aoontempaary<lb/>
Christian rock group this Friday<lb/>
night, Feb. 11, at 8 p.m. Sonkist<lb/>
will pafam until 11 p.m. The<lb/>
Harvest House is located in the<lb/>
Methodist Student Centa and all<lb/>
are weloome. Admission is free<lb/>
and food is available.<lb/>
Religion<lb/>
Dr. Vida Mallenbaum of the<lb/>
psychology department will speak<lb/>
on the psychology of religion at<lb/>
the Unitarian -Univasalist Fel-<lb/>
lowship meeting Sunday, Feb. 13.<lb/>
The meeting begins with a<lb/>
covaed-dish meal at 12 noon. It is<lb/>
in the Board Room of the First<lb/>
Fedaal Bank building westof Pitt<lb/>
Plaza on the 264 by-pass. The<lb/>
public is invited.<lb/>
East Carolina offers a variety<lb/>
of non-credit continuing educa-<lb/>
tion courses. They are designed<lb/>
fa adults of varied educational &amp;<lb/>
occupational backgrounds who<lb/>
wish to develop their knowledge<lb/>
and abilities concerning a variety<lb/>
of subjeds. Emphasis is placed<lb/>
on flexibility of instrudion so that<lb/>
objedives of individual partidpa-<lb/>
tion might be met to the greatest<lb/>
extent possible.<lb/>
Courses include musical<lb/>
instruments, dance, cooking, rec-<lb/>
reation, photography, art, and<lb/>
otha pradice courses such as<lb/>
speed reading and use of calcula-<lb/>
tas.<lb/>
Fa more infamatiai, write:<lb/>
Nai-Credit Programs, Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, ECU; a<lb/>
nail 757-6143 a 757-6540.<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
Gamma Sigma Sigma service<lb/>
saaity will have its rush Feb. 15,<lb/>
16, and 17. On Feb. 15, Silent<lb/>
Movie will be shown in the back<lb/>
lobby of White Hall at 630. On<lb/>
Feb. 16, thae will be a sundae<lb/>
party in the Panhellenic office at<lb/>
5.00. On Feb. 17, thae will be a<lb/>
salad bar in the back lobby of<lb/>
White Hall at 530. Question and<lb/>
answa sessions are held each<lb/>
night. Come &amp; get invdved in<lb/>
"savice through love and sista-<lb/>
hood<lb/>
Soccer Club<lb/>
Thae will be a meeting of all<lb/>
persons interested in playing<lb/>
soccer with the Greenville Sooca<lb/>
dub during the spring season on<lb/>
Thursday, Feb. 10th at 730 p.m.<lb/>
It will be held in the meeting<lb/>
room of Elm St. gym.<lb/>
the Greenville Soccer Club is a<lb/>
memba of the North Cardina<lb/>
Sooca League and is expeding to<lb/>
sponsa two teams this spring.<lb/>
League playing begins in two<lb/>
weeks so it is impaative that all<lb/>
people make it to this meeting. If<lb/>
you are unable to make this<lb/>
meeting oontad Brad Smith at<lb/>
758-5318 fa all infamatiai.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Moonlight bowling is back.<lb/>
The Mendenhall Student Centa<lb/>
Bowling Centa now offers this<lb/>
unique bowling experience on<lb/>
Friday and Sunday evenings from<lb/>
8 p.m. until dosing. Come by the<lb/>
Center and test your skills unda<lb/>
the moonlight. It's a great change<lb/>
of pace.<lb/>
Free tax help<lb/>
Students of ECU can get free<lb/>
assistance in filing their taxes this<lb/>
year at the Student Organization<lb/>
Booth in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Centa, Matday through Friday,<lb/>
4-6 p.m. Friday, Feb. 11th, is the<lb/>
last day this will be available.<lb/>
Bring your W-2 fams, tax fams,<lb/>
bank statements, etc.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0003"/><lb/>
10 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
City police force trains cadets<lb/>
By MICHAELFUTCH<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
It's not an uncommon experi-<lb/>
ence in this area to notice a<lb/>
teenaged boy riding in the same<lb/>
car with a Greenville policeman.<lb/>
But many times these youths<lb/>
are on the same side of the law as<lb/>
are the officers.<lb/>
These young men are Green-<lb/>
ville Junior Polioe Cadets.<lb/>
"These kids receive the same<lb/>
training that a law enforcement<lb/>
officer receives said Officer<lb/>
Hugh J. Benson, juvenile officer<lb/>
for the Greenville Polioe Depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The cadets are members of<lb/>
the law enforcement post of the<lb/>
Boy Soout Explorer division.<lb/>
According to Benson, the<lb/>
program can meet the needs of<lb/>
the kids between the ages of 14<lb/>
and 18. A cadet must be elected<lb/>
into the program by members of<lb/>
the post.<lb/>
"They receive the same type<lb/>
screening as police off icers said<lb/>
Benson.<lb/>
The program has been in<lb/>
operation since October, 1973,<lb/>
and it has been very successful,<lb/>
said Benson.<lb/>
"They learn how to oontrol<lb/>
traffic Benson said. "They<lb/>
learn patrol and oourtroom pro-<lb/>
cedures, the laws of arrest, and<lb/>
more<lb/>
According to Eric Kingsbury,<lb/>
a 2-year junior cadet and Rose<lb/>
High School student, the program<lb/>
is great for those interested in<lb/>
police work.<lb/>
"We just got finished with riot<lb/>
control Kingsbury said. "We<lb/>
learn how to shoot rifles and guns<lb/>
(rifle course). Some just got<lb/>
through taking a course in<lb/>
self-defense<lb/>
The program is set up for a<lb/>
four-year period. Meetings are<lb/>
held twice a month.<lb/>
The junior cadets are given<lb/>
one-hour of riding time a week in<lb/>
patrol cars for on-the-job training.<lb/>
"We try to give them maxi-<lb/>
mum exposure with a minimum<lb/>
amount of risk said Benson.<lb/>
"No officer has an obligation to<lb/>
work with the cadets<lb/>
The junior cadets are allowed<lb/>
to ride with the juvenile servioes<lb/>
or crime prevention offioers at<lb/>
any time, said Benson. They can<lb/>
also ride with the shift sergeant,<lb/>
the shift lieutenant, and members<lb/>
of the detective division, but only<lb/>
with their permission. This would<lb/>
be allowed on Friday, Saturday,<lb/>
or Sunday.<lb/>
"Their job is to observe and<lb/>
report according to Benson.<lb/>
"The cadets have absolutely no<lb/>
power, only what the public gives<lb/>
them<lb/>
"The cadets sometimes direct<lb/>
traffic, and work ball games<lb/>
Benson said. "They assist polioe<lb/>
offioers. The public accepts what<lb/>
the cadet asks of them<lb/>
Kingsbury said the junior<lb/>
cadets can ask someone to do<lb/>
something - the junior cadet,<lb/>
however, is unable to tell some-<lb/>
one to do something.<lb/>
" The cadet comes to the a i me<lb/>
scene after the act said Benson.<lb/>
"They are not on the scene first.<lb/>
We don't expose the kids to any<lb/>
unnecessary danger<lb/>
Benson added that none of the<lb/>
junior cadets have faced any<lb/>
unnecessary danger while ac-<lb/>
companying an officer.<lb/>
"If there is danger around,<lb/>
the officer will either drop us off<lb/>
far away, or leave us in the car to<lb/>
man the radio said Kingsbury.<lb/>
See CADETS, page 7<lb/>
-ruueet<lb/>
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Pastries,<lb/>
birthday cakes,<lb/>
cookies,<lb/>
and doughnuts.<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY to dorms between<lb/>
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THESE GREENVILLE POLICE Cadets receive the same training as<lb/>
regular officers. They are members of local law enforcement Boy Scout<lb/>
Explorer post.<lb/>
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CHICKEN - BURRITO- TACOS - ENCHILADAS<lb/>
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-3-v  "&amp; i-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0004"/><lb/>
i gf ���.��.<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
10 February 1977<lb/>
Last Oil Age generation<lb/>
This winter Americans are living through their<lb/>
second "energy crisis" of modern time. The first,<lb/>
three years ago, was of neither sufficient magnitude<lb/>
nor duration to convince this industrialized nation<lb/>
that without a serious energy conservation effort we<lb/>
are headed for disaster. Unless measures are taken<lb/>
within the near future to bring more efficiency into<lb/>
this part of the economic system of this country, each<lb/>
subsequent crisis (most assessments of energy<lb/>
resources predict the world's oil supply will run dry<lb/>
in the near future under current usage patterns) will<lb/>
be progressively worse until the time comes when we<lb/>
have a full-scale disaster.<lb/>
President Carter acted recently to curtail the<lb/>
current crisis by redirecting natural gas supplies to<lb/>
where they are most needed. He also indicated to<lb/>
Congress that the administration would like to<lb/>
examine the gas companies' records to make certain<lb/>
that they are not withering additional supplies from<lb/>
the market. If such an audit is done and the<lb/>
companies are found culpable it would not lessen the<lb/>
need for conservation measures. If supplies are<lb/>
hidden because gas companies are waiting for<lb/>
federal price regulation to end, thev too will<lb/>
eventually run out; or if deregulated, become too<lb/>
expensive for the average consumer to utilize.<lb/>
Part of Carter's message to a chilly America is<lb/>
that sacrifice will become a part of our way of life.<lb/>
This country is on the last lap of a century-long<lb/>
energy joyride. Ours will be the generation to live<lb/>
through the waning years of the Petroleum Age. The<lb/>
question is: how gracefully shall we make the break<lb/>
from our life with, and love of, oil? Who should<lb/>
suffer most, or should we all accept with verve the<lb/>
reality of an economy of scarcity?<lb/>
These are questions that will become more<lb/>
pertinent as we approach the dawn of a new century.<lb/>
Economic planning and management must be used to<lb/>
preserve the industrial system in which we live.<lb/>
Alternative, safe methods of energy production must<lb/>
be found. In the meantime, turn down the<lb/>
thermostat, drive the car less, and maybe we can<lb/>
trim the fat from our obese lifestyle.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis C. Leonard<lb/>
News EditorJ. Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Trends EditorPat Coyle<lb/>
Sports EditorAnne Hogge<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association<lb/>
of ECU and is distributed each Tuesday and Thursday during<lb/>
the school year, weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions:$10.00 annually for non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
X will not accepr any Icrte papers,<lb/>
yOUV C- OYrt rT hMrrLa mr�i -��<lb/>
your- ast exam is nroncby, read five<lb/>
chapters -for tomorrowndarmaimosT<lb/>
lnrouqh qradino he esi you fooc be-<lb/>
Qre Unnsmas ;<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Council head slams plaintiff's charge<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
According to the Great<lb/>
Snowball Theory, millions of<lb/>
years from now Earth will be a<lb/>
giant, frozen snowball hurtling<lb/>
through Space at 66,000 miles per<lb/>
hour. When this time arrives,<lb/>
who will really care that Jimmy<lb/>
Carter defeated all comers in 1976<lb/>
or that the great Jerry Brown is<lb/>
alive and well in California or that<lb/>
Tim Sullivan of ECU was onoe<lb/>
acquitted of any and all embezzle-<lb/>
ment charges brought against<lb/>
him by one Robert M. Swaim?<lb/>
Still, upon reading Robert<lb/>
Swaim's humorous letter to this<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Forum, I felt<lb/>
that someone surely should cor-<lb/>
rect Swaim's (and others') ob-<lb/>
viously prejudicial viewpoints.<lb/>
Thus, the purpose of my letter.<lb/>
To begin, the trial and subse-<lb/>
quent acquittal of Tim Sullivan<lb/>
was not a "sham" nor "a gross<lb/>
miscarriage and mockery of jus-<lb/>
tice The Attorney General,<lb/>
Karen Harloe, stressed every key<lb/>
point: (1) Every Honor Council<lb/>
member received a mimeogra-<lb/>
phed copy of G.S. 14-90, the<lb/>
statute that covers embezzle-<lb/>
ment. (2) The Attorney General<lb/>
acted accordingly by ignoring all<lb/>
hearsay evidence, due to its<lb/>
inadmissability (3) Karen Harloe<lb/>
presented every legitimate shred<lb/>
of evidence that gave Robert<lb/>
Swaim, or anyone else, reason to<lb/>
bring charges against Sullivan.<lb/>
(4) Karen Harloe correctly follow-<lb/>
ed all procedures for prosecution,<lb/>
including the option of a special<lb/>
prosecutor (if one had only been<lb/>
requested). Overall, Karen Har-<lb/>
loe did an excellent job, consider-<lb/>
ing what she had to work with.<lb/>
Also, any allegations that the<lb/>
Honor Council acted incorrectly<lb/>
are based on even flimsier<lb/>
foundations than the charges<lb/>
brought against Tim Sullivan.<lb/>
Altogether, the Public Defen-<lb/>
der Charlie Jennette summed it<lb/>
up best when he wrote, "The trial<lb/>
never should have gone on<lb/>
From all evidence presented,<lb/>
there is no doubt in my mind that<lb/>
Tim Sullivan is only guilty of<lb/>
being FOUNTAINHEAD'S Num-<lb/>
ber 1 enemy. Still, I respect<lb/>
Robert Swaim's right to bring<lb/>
charges, just as I believe that the<lb/>
integrity of East Carolina's judi-<lb/>
cial system has been upheld in<lb/>
this case.<lb/>
Also in reference to Scott R.<lb/>
Bright (who questioned the ethics<lb/>
of Karen Harloe prosecuting her<lb/>
so-called "friend" Tim Sullivan),<lb/>
try inferring with knowledge and<lb/>
experience before criticising a<lb/>
system which you obviously know<lb/>
little about.<lb/>
Jack Jenkins<lb/>
Chairman, Honor Council<lb/>
Coed hits KAs'monkey shine<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The purpose of this letter is to<lb/>
let the students here at ECU know<lb/>
that there are some REALLY<lb/>
horny guys in this world. In<lb/>
respect to the article in the<lb/>
February 3 edition of FOUNT-<lb/>
AINHEAD where the "Damsel in<lb/>
Distress" praised the Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Order, we too were  Dam-<lb/>
sels in Distress but there was<lb/>
no one there to help us because<lb/>
the KAs were the CAUSE of our<lb/>
distress. Our story goes as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
Being sick of Winter Quarter<lb/>
we decided to help our friends<lb/>
Downtown stay in business. After<lb/>
just a few beers, we ran into some<lb/>
KAs who were also patronizing<lb/>
Downtown. Because one of us<lb/>
knew them (THOUGHT we knew<lb/>
them) we asked them to drink a<lb/>
couple of beers with us. We all<lb/>
proceeded to get quite intoxi-<lb/>
cated. Downtown closed, and we<lb/>
all decided to go to the KA house<lb/>
on Charles and 11th. Soon after<lb/>
our arrival, the KAs acted like a<lb/>
bunch of sexually deprived<lb/>
monkeys - let out of their cage.<lb/>
Much to their dismay, we had no<lb/>
bananas to offer (GET THE<lb/>
MESSAGE!?). After unaccount-<lb/>
able occurences, we decided that<lb/>
it was time to leave. A brother<lb/>
took one of us home, while the<lb/>
other was left behind at the zoo.<lb/>
Because of the COMMON<lb/>
courtesy of the Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Order, the other one had to walk<lb/>
home ALONE to the high rise<lb/>
dormitories at approximately 3:00<lb/>
A.M.<lb/>
We feel that the Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Order owes us an apology for<lb/>
taking advantage of us as they<lb/>
did.The ones involved know who<lb/>
they are, and they know who we<lb/>
are.<lb/>
As far as we are ooncerned,<lb/>
KA stands for Kappa Alpo - a<lb/>
bunch of SICK PUPPIES<lb/>
Signed,<lb/>
 Yes, we have no bananas<lb/>
'Absurd ruling'<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Concerning Dr. Jenkins'<lb/>
absurd ruling which discontinues<lb/>
concerts held in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
because of cigarette burns, etc<lb/>
found on the floor: I just hope that<lb/>
this will also apply to the<lb/>
"concerts" given by Dr. Jenkins'<lb/>
tobacco smoking, political-demo-<lb/>
cratic of course-oomrades, e.g.<lb/>
the Jim Hunt for Gov. Rally held<lb/>
in Minges this past summer.<lb/>
Respectfully,<lb/>
Elizabeth A. Weeks<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0005"/><lb/>
Forum<lb/>
10 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page b<lb/>
Council member raps defender firing<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I feel justioe was insulted and<lb/>
the student body slighted when<lb/>
Reed Warren was prevented from<lb/>
defending students before the<lb/>
Honor Council.<lb/>
The circumstances surroun-<lb/>
ding the dismissal of Warren as<lb/>
student Public Defender were, at<lb/>
best, questionable. Aocording to<lb/>
SGA Attorney-General Karen<lb/>
Harloe, and a letter to Warren<lb/>
from SGA President Tim Sullivan,<lb/>
Warren's salary had not been<lb/>
included in the SGA budget,<lb/>
therefore he oould no longer be<lb/>
paid. Warren agreed to work<lb/>
without salary from then on.<lb/>
The letter stipulated Warren<lb/>
could remain at his post without<lb/>
salary if the Administration or the<lb/>
Attorney-General saw the need.<lb/>
The ECU handbook, (pg. 70)<lb/>
states the associate dean reserves<lb/>
Sullivan scores<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I work at SGA and because<lb/>
of this numerous people oome to<lb/>
me with gripes, so I get a chance<lb/>
to meet with students who do not<lb/>
always agree with Tim Sullivan<lb/>
and the SGA.<lb/>
But, even these people are<lb/>
getting a little sick of the constant<lb/>
attacks FOUNTAINHEAD has<lb/>
made on him. And, getting a<lb/>
reporter to file false charges<lb/>
against him before the Honor<lb/>
Council seems ridiculous.<lb/>
The fact that it only took the<lb/>
Honor Council fifteen minutes to<lb/>
oome back with a unanimous<lb/>
verdict of innocent shows every-<lb/>
one how stupid FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD'S charges were.<lb/>
If you are going to be this<lb/>
obvious, why doesn't Jim Elliott<lb/>
keep a scoreboard. His first entry<lb/>
should read: Sullivan-1 FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD-0.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Beverly Barnes<lb/>
SGA Secretary of Information<lb/>
ArmyNavy Store<lb/>
1601 Evans<lb/>
12p.m5:30p.m.<lb/>
Back packs, Field, Flight,<lb/>
j Bomber, &amp; Snorkel Jackets,<lb/>
Jeans<lb/>
the right to replace any Public<lb/>
Defender(s) and only with the<lb/>
majority approval of the Honor<lb/>
Council. However, the Council<lb/>
was not approached before War-<lb/>
ren's dismissal, there was no<lb/>
vote, and the Council was not<lb/>
aware of Warren's firing until<lb/>
afterwards.<lb/>
According to Sullivan's letter,<lb/>
Warren was not fired. However,<lb/>
Attorney-General Harloe stated<lb/>
infrontof the SGA joint judiciary<lb/>
that Sullivan fired Warren before<lb/>
she took off ice. Regardless of who<lb/>
fired Warren, it is apparent that<lb/>
the Handbook was not followed.<lb/>
Two months later, Chuck<lb/>
New, another Public Defender,<lb/>
was fired according to handbook<lb/>
procedure. Several Honor Council<lb/>
members recommended Warren<lb/>
to replaoe New. Warren's name<lb/>
was the only one recommended<lb/>
by any Council member. Warren<lb/>
was still not rehired.<lb/>
The circumstances of War-<lb/>
ren's firing were questionable.<lb/>
He agreed to work without salary.<lb/>
Later, Warren expressed his<lb/>
willingness to be rehired even<lb/>
after his original, dubious dismis-<lb/>
sal. Considering Warren's oom-<lb/>
mendable performance on behalf<lb/>
of the students he defended, his<lb/>
ability, and his enthusiasm, the<lb/>
rational behind Warren's original<lb/>
firing and the oversight in not<lb/>
being rehired, confuses this<lb/>
Honor Council member and<lb/>
should be strongly questioned.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Wayne Stephenson<lb/>
Honor Council Member<lb/>
a- Buy a Sub and get a p<lb/>
 Medium Coke or Pepsi <lb/>
FOR ONLY<lb/>
.05<lb/>
S0FGRE<lb/>
A Phone 752-6130 X<lb/>
 Phone in orders tu<lb/>
h for pick up or campus delivery fl<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
'I Wonder'<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Upon seeing I Wonder's<lb/>
letter of February 1 in your well<lb/>
read Forum pages, I immediately<lb/>
checked into the matter that he<lb/>
brought up. SGA and the Interna-<lb/>
tional Student Association seem<lb/>
to be in oomplete agreement that<lb/>
Dr. Estrella Sdidurn, the profes-<lb/>
sor that lives with the students in<lb/>
the International House, is a<lb/>
great help to the international<lb/>
students, and not a problem as I<lb/>
Wonder would have us believe.<lb/>
Who Wonder" is cannot be<lb/>
found because FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
editor, Jim Elliott, apparently lost<lb/>
the scrap of paper that he had<lb/>
scribbled the true name on. I was<lb/>
unable to contact "I Wonder" for<lb/>
this reason, but have written Dr.<lb/>
Solidum an apology for any<lb/>
embarrassment that the FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD letter may have<lb/>
caused.<lb/>
And to you I Wonder, if you<lb/>
have a legitimate complaint, or<lb/>
sincerely would like to help the<lb/>
causes of the international stu-<lb/>
dents, please come by my office<lb/>
to see me at your convenience.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Kent Johnson<lb/>
Secretary to the Office of<lb/>
International Programs for<lb/>
Student Government Assoc.<lb/>
O<lb/>
Store Hours<lb/>
During Energy Crisis<lb/>
9:30 AM-5:30 PM<lb/>
Monday through Saturday<lb/>
John's Flowers<lb/>
and Gifts<lb/>
503 E. 3rd St.<lb/>
752-311<lb/>
or Pitt Plaza 756-1160<lb/>
Send your favorite girl or guy<lb/>
Valentine Arrangements<lb/>
Blooming Plants<lb/>
Silk Flowers<lb/>
Roses<lb/>
�<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0006"/><lb/>
���IV<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 February 1977<lb/>
Coed pleads guilty to larceny charge<lb/>
By LOUIS TA YLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A 24 year-old ECU female was<lb/>
given one year's suspended sus-<lb/>
pension after pleading guilty to<lb/>
two counts of larceny at the<lb/>
Tuesday session of the ECU<lb/>
Honor Council.<lb/>
The suspended sentence will<lb/>
become active if the girl, a junior<lb/>
transfer from Mount Olive Junior<lb/>
College, is found guilty of any<lb/>
Honor Code violation before the<lb/>
end of Fall semester 1978.<lb/>
The larceny charges stemmed<lb/>
from two separate incidents on<lb/>
Jan. 14, when the girl admittedly<lb/>
took a stereo set, valued at about<lb/>
$260, and a $150 television set<lb/>
from two rooms in White dorm.<lb/>
The girl, five weeks pregnant<lb/>
at the time of the incidents, said<lb/>
she took the items to raise money<lb/>
for an abortion.<lb/>
"I've never been in trouble<lb/>
before the girl said. "It was<lb/>
just an irrational act<lb/>
The defendant said she had<lb/>
returned the stolen property and<lb/>
had explained the situation to the<lb/>
victims, who did not press<lb/>
charges.<lb/>
Defense counsel Charlie Jen-<lb/>
nette said the case was unusual in<lb/>
that the University, not the<lb/>
victims, was bringing the charges<lb/>
against the defendant.<lb/>
The defendant said she was<lb/>
unaware the SGA had a confiden-<lb/>
tial loan which she might have<lb/>
used to solve her problem.<lb/>
Attorney General Karen Har-<lb/>
loe replied that the victims had<lb/>
notified campus police of the<lb/>
missing items at the time of the<lb/>
incident, and the police were<lb/>
required to follow through with<lb/>
the investigation, even though<lb/>
the victims dropped charges.<lb/>
Jennette submitted two letters<lb/>
attesting to the defendant's char-<lb/>
acter and said the Council should<lb/>
consider the girl's present situa-<lb/>
tion and state of mind at the time<lb/>
of the incidents when deciding on<lb/>
a sentence.<lb/>
Harloe reminded the Council<lb/>
that only they would hear this<lb/>
case since criminal charges were<lb/>
dropped. She suggested an active<lb/>
suspension for the remainder of<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
League debates reform<lb/>
Voter group discusses utilities<lb/>
Valentines<lb/>
for<lb/>
Special People<lb/>
Stuffed Animals<lb/>
that say<lb/>
Jr "I love you<lb/>
Felt hearts<lb/>
Wooden Valentine toys<lb/>
Pillows<lb/>
Happily Ever After<lb/>
"Toys for all ages"<lb/>
319EVANSSTREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. 27834<lb/>
(919)752-3636<lb/>
Open 10-5<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Utilities reform will be the<lb/>
topic of discussion at an open<lb/>
meeting of the Greenville League<lb/>
of Women Voters on Tuesday,<lb/>
Feb. 15.<lb/>
TinaPodolak, Research Direc-<lb/>
tor of Carolina Action, will speak<lb/>
on two proposed bills for the 1977<lb/>
session of the North Carolina<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
Carolina Action is a citizens'<lb/>
action organization funded by<lb/>
private contributions.<lb/>
According to Edith Webber,<lb/>
Energy Chairperson of the<lb/>
League of Women Voters, the<lb/>
first proposal would be to esta-<lb/>
blish "lifeline" rates under<lb/>
which enough energy for the<lb/>
basic necessities of life would be<lb/>
guaranteed to all residential<lb/>
customers at a low, fixed cost.<lb/>
The initial cost to residents<lb/>
The Book<lb/>
Barn<lb/>
117 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
rp See us for your<lb/>
C9 VALENTINES<lb/>
Cards, Gifts, Party Goods<lb/>
?<lb/>
V"<lb/>
would be two cents per kilowatt<lb/>
hour for the first 500 kilowatts per<lb/>
month. There would be a higher<lb/>
rate for additional electricity.<lb/>
The second proposal, called<lb/>
"fair share rates would force<lb/>
industrial consumers to pay as<lb/>
much for electricity as do resi-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
Carolina Action maintains that<lb/>
Carolina Power and Light and<lb/>
Duke Power rank among the<lb/>
nation's top ten " over chargers"<lb/>
out of the 150 largest private<lb/>
electric utilities companies.<lb/>
According to Tobi Lippin,<lb/>
director of the Charlotte office of<lb/>
Carolina Action, the two propo-<lb/>
sals together would cut residen-<lb/>
tial power bills between 15 and 30<lb/>
per cent.<lb/>
Webber urges attendance at<lb/>
the Tuesday night meeting which<lb/>
will be held at 7:30 at the First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church.<lb/>
"This is something that every-<lb/>
body ought to be interested in,<lb/>
because there isn't anyone who<lb/>
doesn't pay utility bills, at least<lb/>
indirectly said Webber.<lb/>
"This is intended as a public<lb/>
meeting and as a public service<lb/>
she added.<lb/>
HAPPY VALENTINE'S<lb/>
Everything for that Special Girl at theA<lb/>
Snooty Fox<lb/>
Tops<lb/>
Jewelry Sundresses<lb/>
Long dresses<lb/>
Bags<lb/>
203 E. 5th St. Greenville 758-4061<lb/>
3Re SazeBo<lb/>
is Having a<lb/>
Valentine's Sate<lb/>
for you -<lb/>
Savings up to 60 �&amp;<lb/>
furniture<lb/>
Bedspreads<lb/>
copper<lb/>
sculptures<lb/>
asRtrays<lb/>
pottery<lb/>
vases<lb/>
jewlery<lb/>
Birdcages<lb/>
placemats<lb/>
zoindcRimes<lb/>
and muci more<lb/>
20lC.S'hSt.<lb/>
�ed. - mon. c�e6.9 $e8.11<lb/>
c<lb/>
r<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
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a<lb/>
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li<lb/>
s<lb/>
a<lb/>
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a<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057111_0007"/><lb/>
Dignitaries to speak at<lb/>
dinner honoring Jenkins<lb/>
10 February 1977 cQUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Governor James B. Hunt Jr<lb/>
and U.S. Senators Jesse Helms<lb/>
and Robert B. Morgan are among<lb/>
the distinguished speakers for the<lb/>
North Carolina Public Service<lb/>
Award banquet saluting Dr. Leo<lb/>
W. Jenkins here Feb. 15.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins, president and<lb/>
chanoellor of East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity fa the past 17 years, is<lb/>
the 1977 recipient of the State-<lb/>
wide Public Service Award. Past<lb/>
recipients of the award have been<lb/>
former Gov. Robert W. Scott, the<lb/>
late Sen. B. Everett Jordan,<lb/>
retired Sen. Sam J. Ervin and R.<lb/>
Philip Hanes Jr.<lb/>
Honorary chairperson for the<lb/>
event at Raleigh's Royal Villa is<lb/>
former governor Terry Sanford,<lb/>
now president of Duke Univer-<lb/>
sity. The banquet chairperson is<lb/>
Mrs. Emily Preyer of Greensboro,<lb/>
wife of Rep. L. Richardson<lb/>
Preyer, D-N.C.<lb/>
Other testimonial speakers<lb/>
will include Rep. Walter B.<lb/>
Jones, D-N.C; William C.<lb/>
Friday, president of the Univer-<lb/>
sity of North Carolina; Troy W.<lb/>
Pate Jr chairman of the East<lb/>
Carolina University board of<lb/>
trustees, and John F. Watlington<lb/>
Jr. of Winston-Salem, former<lb/>
chairman of the board of Wacho-<lb/>
via Bank and Trust Co. and the<lb/>
Wachovia Foundation.<lb/>
Gus Tulloss of Rocky Mount,<lb/>
president of N.C. Public Service<lb/>
Awards Society, said 400 advance<lb/>
reservations had been received.<lb/>
Attending will be civic, business,<lb/>
education and political leaders,<lb/>
many members of the General<lb/>
Assembly and the Council of<lb/>
State, Tulloss said.<lb/>
FICKLEN<lb/>
(Continued from pg.1)<lb/>
Moore said he does not expect<lb/>
the Reserve Fund allotment to<lb/>
affect outside donations.<lb/>
"We will either do all of it or<lb/>
none of it he said. "We must<lb/>
have $2.5 million to expand the<lb/>
stadium. And the Reserve Fund<lb/>
we can get are only up to $1.5<lb/>
million<lb/>
These funds could not be used<lb/>
to offset any future tuition hike,<lb/>
acoording to Moore.<lb/>
"Student fees, even from the<lb/>
past, can not pay student fees<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
And, acoording to Greg Ping-<lb/>
ston, SGA vice-president, these<lb/>
funds are not needed to support<lb/>
the proposed 10th St. overpass<lb/>
CADETS<lb/>
(Continued from pg.3)<lb/>
I n fact, the only danger for the<lb/>
junior cadet appears to be at<lb/>
school.<lb/>
 People think you are there to<lb/>
narc on them said Kingsbury.<lb/>
"A few cadets have gotten in<lb/>
fights. I have gotten in a fight.<lb/>
"There is a lot of resentment<lb/>
at first, but it slackens off. It's a<lb/>
result of misunderstanding<lb/>
According to Officer Benson,<lb/>
the Greenville Police Department<lb/>
has 20 junior cadets. He added<lb/>
the department can accept up to<lb/>
25.<lb/>
The junior cadets have a<lb/>
system of oommand and hier-<lb/>
archy very similar to the police<lb/>
department. Officers include a<lb/>
lieutenant (president), two<lb/>
sergeants (two vice-presidents),<lb/>
and two corporals (a secretary<lb/>
and a treasurer). Officer-holders<lb/>
change each year.<lb/>
"Each cadet buys his own<lb/>
shirt, pants, and necktie said<lb/>
Benson. "Cadets also pay an<lb/>
initial registration fee of $3.50<lb/>
The police department fur-<lb/>
nishes other necessities for the<lb/>
junior cadets.<lb/>
According to Benson, there is<lb/>
a National Organization of Law<lb/>
Enforcement Explorers. But the<lb/>
Greenville junior cadets are not<lb/>
directly affiliated with them.<lb/>
Benson said that none of the<lb/>
junior cadets have yet become<lb/>
Greenville Police Officers. How-<lb/>
ever, he said, two had applied for<lb/>
the post of dispatch officers.<lb/>
project either.<lb/>
' 'We supported the use of the<lb/>
Reserve Funds for the stadium<lb/>
expansion because of the outoome<lb/>
of the referendum vote this fall,<lb/>
and because the Board of Trus-<lb/>
tees has recognized our desire to<lb/>
get something done on the<lb/>
overpass and will contact tne<lb/>
governor and set up a oommittee<lb/>
to look into and push for the<lb/>
overpass he said.<lb/>
"The Board has promised us<lb/>
that if nothing has been done<lb/>
about the overpass by April, it will<lb/>
take some action on it<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
DIAL 758-7400<lb/>
507 East 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Come try our homemade Spaghetti Sauce, Lasagne, Pizza Sauce,<lb/>
Pissa dough, and Italian Sausage.<lb/>
We add our own special spices to the sauces.<lb/>
Our bread is made fresh daily.<lb/>
We deliver anywhere within the city<lb/>
limitsforfree!<lb/>
Energy Crisis Hours<lb/>
Sun. �Thur.<lb/>
11:30- 10:00<lb/>
Fri.&amp;Sat.<lb/>
11:30 � 11:00<lb/>
Here's the challenge. You'll need a wa and a pencil. Start with number 1 in the c ter of the ribbon. Then, as quickly as can, cross out every number, one at a tiIch in �n- nt ou le me crnumerical order. When you've reached imber 60, check your watch. If it took you ss than three minutes, you've met the lallenge.<lb/>
'56247938<lb/>
10375716194635<lb/>
332475121424<lb/>
1325443126052314155J<lb/>
3923151455025<lb/>
13222834534826<lb/>
4927145920<lb/>
5830114082931<lb/>
3664418517 1<lb/>
<lb/>
KlllrRillrj<lb/>
When there's a challenge,<lb/>
quality makes the difference.<lb/>
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.<lb/>
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.<lb/>
The Pabst challenge:<lb/>
We welcome the chance to prove the quality of<lb/>
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare<lb/>
Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll<lb/>
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best<lb/>
tasting beer you can get. Since 1844 it always has.<lb/>
PABST Since 1844.The quality has always come through.<lb/>
�1978 PABST BREWING COMPANY Milwaukee. Wn , Peona Heights, III Newark, N J , Loa Angeles, Calif Pabat, Georgia<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 February 1977<lb/>
Supreme Court ruling<lb/>
affects suspects'rights<lb/>
V<lb/>
v<lb/>
Bargain Hours<lb/>
2-5 8-11<lb/>
Every<lb/>
Mon. Tues. Wed<lb/>
Quarter Fry Chicken<lb/>
French � Fries &amp; Salad<lb/>
Grecian Bread<lb/>
Tea or Coffee<lb/>
$1.99 including tax<lb/>
Spaghetti<lb/>
Salad<lb/>
Grecian Bread<lb/>
Tea or Coffee<lb/>
$1.99 including tax<lb/>
(LNS)-ln yet another broad-<lb/>
ening of law enforcement powers,<lb/>
the United States Supreme Court<lb/>
ruled January 26 to limit sus-<lb/>
pects' protection against self-<lb/>
incrimination. The decision is<lb/>
consistent with earlier rulings by<lb/>
the Berger court which have<lb/>
made evidence admissabie even<lb/>
when it is gained through the<lb/>
violation of constitutional rights,<lb/>
for example illegal searches or<lb/>
entrapment.<lb/>
In its landmark 1966 Miranda<lb/>
decision, the Supreme Court<lb/>
ruled that police must inform<lb/>
arrested people of their rights to<lb/>
remain silent and to have a<lb/>
lawyer. However, the present<lb/>
ruling attacks the Miranda deci-<lb/>
sion broadside by limiting the<lb/>
conditions under which it can be<lb/>
used. The Berger court stated<lb/>
that the Miranda decision dees<lb/>
not apply to people who have<lb/>
gone "voluntarily" to a police<lb/>
station and who are not under<lb/>
arrest.<lb/>
The state of Oregon had asked<lb/>
the Supreme Court to review a<lb/>
ruling in which an Oregon court<lb/>
had ruled that a person convicted<lb/>
of burglary should have been<lb/>
informed of his rights even<lb/>
though he was not under arrest<lb/>
when he confessed.<lb/>
However, the U.S. Supreme<lb/>
Court ruled on the case without<lb/>
hearing any arguments on the<lb/>
issues. In his dissenting opinion,<lb/>
Justice Stevens said that "the<lb/>
issues of this case are too<lb/>
important to be decided sum-<lb/>
marily (without hearing oral<lb/>
opp<lb/>
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After college, what will I do?<lb/>
That's a question a lot of young people<lb/>
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But a two-year Air Force ROTC scholar-<lb/>
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Or Call 757-6597<lb/>
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(Gateway to a Great<lb/>
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arguments)<lb/>
In the Oregon case, the<lb/>
defendant was a parolee who,<lb/>
according to the police officer<lb/>
involved, came voluntarily for<lb/>
questioning. He was told that he<lb/>
was suspected in a burglary, and<lb/>
that his fingerprints had been<lb/>
found on the scene. This was a<lb/>
lie, however, designed to force a<lb/>
confession.<lb/>
The suspect then admitted his<lb/>
guilt; whereupon the police of-<lb/>
ficer read the suspect his M iranda<lb/>
rights and proceeded to tape the<lb/>
suspect's statement.<lb/>
The Oregon court ruled that<lb/>
the man's statements were in-<lb/>
admissable because the inter-<lb/>
rogation had taken place in a<lb/>
"coercive environment" - es-<lb/>
pecially since the defendant was<lb/>
on parole and was being<lb/>
questioned behind the closed<lb/>
doors of the state patrol's offices.<lb/>
"The open question was 'do<lb/>
you have to give Miranda rights<lb/>
in a non-custodial but ouercive<lb/>
situation'?" commented Jesse<lb/>
Berman, a New York criminal<lb/>
lawyer.<lb/>
"Now the cops will know<lb/>
there's one more thing they can<lb/>
do said Berman. "It'sone more<lb/>
chipping away to let the oops say,<lb/>
'we didn't know if we were going<lb/>
to book him or not - we just asked<lb/>
him to come down.lt was only<lb/>
after he told us that we decided to<lb/>
book him<lb/>
"It also encourages cops not<lb/>
to give the warnings Berman<lb/>
continued. "The idea is, the<lb/>
person shouldn't involuntarily<lb/>
incriminate themselves; they<lb/>
should know their rights<lb/>
ECUprof<lb/>
studies skin<lb/>
resistance<lb/>
By LINDA CHERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Charles E. Cliett, ECU<lb/>
psychology professor, has recent-<lb/>
ly completed research indicating<lb/>
that the autonomic function of<lb/>
skin resistance can be voluntarily<lb/>
controlled when a subject listens<lb/>
to a tone.<lb/>
A subject can better control<lb/>
his amount of skin resistance<lb/>
change when he can press a key<lb/>
to turn on the tone, said Cliett.<lb/>
When a person is excited, skin<lb/>
resistance decreases causing a<lb/>
high tone, he stated.<lb/>
When a person is calm, skin<lb/>
resistance increases causing a low<lb/>
tone.<lb/>
However, the pitch of the high<lb/>
tone caused Cliett's subjects to<lb/>
become more excited.<lb/>
This added excitement needed<lb/>
to be controlled, he said.<lb/>
Cliett allowed half of his<lb/>
subjects to control the tone's<lb/>
presence by pressing a key. The<lb/>
remaining subjects were not<lb/>
allowed to control the tone.<lb/>
When Cliett graphically com-<lb/>
pared the two groups, he found<lb/>
that the increased excitement had<lb/>
been decreased by the subjects<lb/>
controlling the tone.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0009"/><lb/>
'<lb/>
10 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAO Page 9<lb/>
Freshman transforms to'Daemeon Markos'<lb/>
By FRANCE!NE PERRY<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Most days he is Bill Robinson,<lb/>
a spectacled, sandy-haired fresh-<lb/>
man at ECU. But on occasional<lb/>
evenings, he dons a smart tuxedo<lb/>
and top hat and becomes "Daem-<lb/>
eon Markos professional magi-<lb/>
cian, who can whip silk scarves<lb/>
from nowhere and pull ordinary<lb/>
ooins from someone's ear.<lb/>
This Jekyll-Hycte transforma-<lb/>
tion is the result of serious study<lb/>
and practice, and fulfillsa lifelong<lb/>
dream fa Bill Robinson.<lb/>
Now 19 years old, Bill recalls<lb/>
his first interest in magic began in<lb/>
early childhood, when he avidly<lb/>
watched the Saturday morning<lb/>
TV show. "MAGIC LAND OF<lb/>
ALAKAZAM featuring magi-<lb/>
cian Mark Wilson.<lb/>
"Mark Wilson inspired me to<lb/>
try some magic of my own, and<lb/>
when I was 12 years old, I<lb/>
Executive<lb/>
salaries to<lb/>
jump in '77<lb/>
The business section of the<lb/>
New York Times reported in<lb/>
mid-January that salaries for new<lb/>
corporate presidents and chief<lb/>
executive officers will be sky-<lb/>
rocketing well into six figures in<lb/>
'77.<lb/>
"Presidents, chief executive<lb/>
officers and top marketing execu-<lb/>
tives are expected to increase<lb/>
their compensation packages fas-<lb/>
ter than other job categories in<lb/>
1977' says Carl W. Menk,<lb/>
president of Boyden Associates,<lb/>
one of the country's largest<lb/>
executive recruiters.<lb/>
The demand is strong now,<lb/>
the Times explains, because<lb/>
many  recession-scarred com-<lb/>
panies, now sensing greater<lb/>
stability in the economy, want to<lb/>
build a strong top management to<lb/>
head into 1980 And it's an<lb/>
executive's market, because peo-<lb/>
ple in their 40's" the prime age<lb/>
for corporate leadersare<lb/>
scarce. (These are Depression<lb/>
babies�born at a time when the<lb/>
birth rate was low.)<lb/>
Menk says at least a 25<lb/>
increase in salary is required to<lb/>
"motivate an executive to<lb/>
change jobs. Philip E. Beekman,<lb/>
45 years old, left the presidency<lb/>
of the Colgate Palmolive Com-<lb/>
pany for a comparable post at<lb/>
Seagrams and a $100,000 raise, to<lb/>
$275,000 a year.<lb/>
Others have gone for "pack-<lb/>
age deals For instance, Revlon,<lb/>
Inc. lured Michel C. Bergerac<lb/>
from ITT for $325,000 a year fa<lb/>
two years plus $1.5 million up<lb/>
front-an advance bonus.<lb/>
Chief executives' pay at com-<lb/>
panies with sales of $500 million<lb/>
rose from an average $163,000 in<lb/>
1970 to $200,000 in 1975. And at<lb/>
the $1 billion sp'es level, chief<lb/>
execs' pay grew from $201,000 to<lb/>
$243,000 on the average in 1975,<lb/>
aooading to the management<lb/>
oonsultant firm of McKinsey &amp;<lb/>
Co. Other New York Times<lb/>
sources say these average salar-<lb/>
ies will jump to $250,000 and<lb/>
$300,000 respectively in 1977<lb/>
and may well go higher.<lb/>
auditioned my magic act fa a<lb/>
Iccal talent show. Unfortunately,<lb/>
they though my magic was 'too<lb/>
obvious' so I played trx, piano<lb/>
instead<lb/>
Fa the most part, Bill's<lb/>
ambition lay dormant until the<lb/>
summer of 1975 when it was<lb/>
rekindled by a fellow student,<lb/>
who demonstrated a few magic<lb/>
effects on campus<lb/>
"My real interest in magic<lb/>
dates from then he said.<lb/>
Since that time Bill has<lb/>
acquired quite a few magic skills<lb/>
himself through intense reading<lb/>
and study and consulting with<lb/>
practicing magicians in the area<lb/>
of his hometown, Hampton, VA.<lb/>
Hours of practice have been<lb/>
necessary to pafect his slight-<lb/>
of-hand abilities.<lb/>
He has become well known fa<lb/>
his magic in his damitay and<lb/>
around the ECU School of Music,<lb/>
where he is studying fa degrees<lb/>
in music education and music<lb/>
theay; fellow students who don't<lb/>
know his name know him as<lb/>
"Mandrake" a "Magic Man<lb/>
In pursuit of competence as a<lb/>
magician, Bill has spent several<lb/>
hundred dollars fa books and<lb/>
equipment, including stage magic<lb/>
props. This is only a beginning,<lb/>
he says.<lb/>
"A recently-marketed levita-<lb/>
tion effect cost about $1,600 he<lb/>
said ruefully. "A simple head<lb/>
cabinet (through which knives are<lb/>
thrust, apparently into a person's<lb/>
head) costs $60<lb/>
Because of the high cost of<lb/>
equipment needed fa waking<lb/>
most stage magic, Bill has<lb/>
concentrated on "dose-up"<lb/>
magic, which he perfams at<lb/>
parties and aha entertainments.<lb/>
Most close-up magic involves<lb/>
small objects-sponge balls, play-<lb/>
ing cards, matches, coins and<lb/>
shat lengths of rope.<lb/>
"Close-up magic is really the<lb/>
epitome of magic, because the<lb/>
magician has to aeate illusions<lb/>
right inder his audience's<lb/>
noses he said. "This is a real<lb/>
test of skill<lb/>
The elements of good magi-<lb/>
cianship all rest upon the aeation<lb/>
of illusion, and a magician has to<lb/>
have style and personality be-<lb/>
sides the mere ability to aeate<lb/>
effects.<lb/>
One of Bill's favaite magic<lb/>
processes involves "divination. "<lb/>
He boasts to his audience, "I am<lb/>
expert in astrology and invites<lb/>
up to 12 persons to write their<lb/>
zodiac signs on slips of papa to<lb/>
be shuffled in a hat. He then<lb/>
matches each written sign with<lb/>
the person it belongs to.<lb/>
Though the audience doesn't<lb/>
realize it, a good deal of the effect<lb/>
of such magic as this depends<lb/>
upon how it is presented- Per-<lb/>
faming the actual operation is<lb/>
but part of it; divination is<lb/>
successful only if the magician is<lb/>
able to convince ahas that he is<lb/>
all-seeing and all-knowing.<lb/>
Types of magic as categaized<lb/>
by autha Homing Nelms in<lb/>
"Magic and Showmanship" are<lb/>
numerous, and Bill is proficient in<lb/>
most of them. These include<lb/>
"production" (pulling rabbits a<lb/>
aha objects from a hat), "van-<lb/>
ishes" (making anything disap-<lb/>
pear, from coins to live pasons),<lb/>
"transportation' (making objects<lb/>
seem to move invisibly from one<lb/>
place to anotha) and "tranafa-<lb/>
mation" (causing an object to<lb/>
change in cola a physical<lb/>
structure).<lb/>
"Invulnaability" magic ran-<lb/>
ges from the daring escapee made<lb/>
famous by the late Harry Houdini<lb/>
to sticking pins in adinary<lb/>
balloons without making them<lb/>
pop-<lb/>
Like most magicians, amateur<lb/>
and professional, Bill does nd<lb/>
reveal how his illusions are<lb/>
aeated.<lb/>
"If an opaation is explained<lb/>
in detail, you would see how<lb/>
simple it really is, and the' magic"<lb/>
would be lost<lb/>
Skiing isn't just fun,<lb/>
glamour and excitement.<lb/>
It's health, fitness and happiness too.<lb/>
Skiers really know how to live.<lb/>
And knowing how to live is one of the<lb/>
secrets of a long life. To live better<lb/>
to live longer, means taking the simple<lb/>
care to exercise well. Because regular<lb/>
exercise is the only way to keep all of<lb/>
your 600 muscles in shape. Especially<lb/>
the most important one � your heart.<lb/>
Try skiing for winter exercise. It's<lb/>
fun, it's glamorous and it's exciting.<lb/>
You'll find that it's invigorating too.<lb/>
So, check into skiing at a ski area or<lb/>
shop near you. Or go on a hike, ride a<lb/>
bike, play squash, or swing a tennis<lb/>
racket. Join the millions of other<lb/>
healthy people going for the good life.<lb/>
Public Service Advertisement<lb/>
for the President's Council on Physical Fitness<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0010"/><lb/>
Trends<lb/>
10<lb/>
10 February 1977<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
byPATCOYLE<lb/>
Have a heart<lb/>
Are you in the depths of end-of-quarter depression? Do you have<lb/>
the midwinter blahs? Do you feel as if nothing could possibly lift you<lb/>
out of the oold weather funk? Well, help is on the way, in the form of<lb/>
Cupid.<lb/>
That's right folks, Valentine's Day, is for showing how you feel<lb/>
about that "certain someone is Monday. According to history, Feb.<lb/>
14 became the annual holiday for lovers several centuries ago. It<lb/>
started as a oommemoration of St. Valentine, a quite tender-hearted<lb/>
fellow.<lb/>
Valentine's Day, like many of our holidays, has fallen prey to<lb/>
commercialization. In days of yore, the day was marked by hand<lb/>
delivery cf homemade cards. People gathered scraps of paper, lace,<lb/>
and glue, and worked to transform the raw materials into a quaint, but<lb/>
sincere expression of their deepest feelings.<lb/>
Now. however, there are few of us who will receive handmade cards<lb/>
and gifts. Instead, we run down to Central News and select from the<lb/>
countless choices of words, pictures, and attitudes that the greeting<lb/>
card companies think are appropriate expressions of love and<lb/>
friendship.<lb/>
The cards come in an unbelievable variety. If you're truly a<lb/>
romantic type, you can choose one of the dollar models, oomplete with<lb/>
gold foil hearts, sat intone in shades of red and shocking pink, and<lb/>
messages that's enough to put a diabetic into a ooma.<lb/>
If you tend to be less romantic, ya� can always resort to the<lb/>
studio-type greeting. These can be silly, suggestive, or just plain<lb/>
nonsensical. With this type of card, you can't go wrong, especially if<lb/>
you want to let someone know you care without leading them to believe<lb/>
that you care TOO much.<lb/>
The third genre of Valentine's card is a fairly new innovation on the<lb/>
greeting scene. This type of card is for the young moderns, the "with<lb/>
it types, the folks who really are to urbane and swinging to go for the<lb/>
whole Valentine idea, but who hang on to the tradition for tradition's<lb/>
sake. These cards tend to basically say things like "Be my valentine as<lb/>
long as it doesn't interfere with my karma or "Your body language<lb/>
tells me that we could make a good temporary commitment<lb/>
Hmmm<lb/>
SAY IT WITH FLOWERS<lb/>
Of oourse, cards are only one ot the many ways to express that<lb/>
"special feeling Flowers are still an all time favorite (but expensive)<lb/>
Valentine's gift. Each year the florists in Greenville have their hands<lb/>
full delivering floral gifts of all varieties to the women in dorms and<lb/>
apartments.<lb/>
The dorm girls go down to answer the mysterious caller and come<lb/>
back to find all of the other girls flocked around the elevators, anxious<lb/>
to see what cola the roees are, how many carnations there are, etc.<lb/>
The only problem with flowers is the depression one feels watching<lb/>
them die. This problem is being remedied somewhat by the earth<lb/>
children who are opting for plants as an alternative to the traditional<lb/>
long-stemmed red roses.<lb/>
I must oonfess that I've never received a growing plant for<lb/>
Valentine's Day, and maybe it's better that way. What oould be more<lb/>
tragic than bringing such a nice gift of love into my home and watching<lb/>
it wither and die. Over the years I' ve talked to plants. They get bored to<lb/>
death. I've sung to them. I sing off-key. I've even tried playing special<lb/>
music for them, but they never seem to like my taste in music.<lb/>
WHATSIT ALL ABOUT<lb/>
I'd better stop, lest anyone get the impression that I don't like<lb/>
Valentine's gifts, that I think it's all an expensive waste, that I don't<lb/>
believe in romance. Not true. Granted, we spend a tremendous amount<lb/>
of cash on candy, flowers and cards. I don't think many will argue that<lb/>
the whole thing is a little frivolous.<lb/>
But isn't the idea behind the holiday something other than<lb/>
practical? It seems to me that Valentine's Day is based on the idea that<lb/>
romance doesn't have to be practical, that it's nice to do something<lb/>
silly and mushy once in awhile.<lb/>
Valentine's Day serves to enlighten and reassure us about the way<lb/>
people feel toward us, and I doubt that there are many of us who don't<lb/>
enjoy a snot in the arm from someone who thinks we're special.<lb/>
So, oome Monday, I wait for the mail with baited breath, and I'll<lb/>
jump up everytime someone pages over the interoom. And if, by<lb/>
chance, I should happen to be disappointed, I'll go to work next<lb/>
Tuesday on a movement to do away with silly, frivolous Valentine's<lb/>
Day.<lb/>
Jockey's Ridge becomes<lb/>
hang gliders' paradise<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Wind rushes past the helmet-<lb/>
ed pilot strapped beneath the<lb/>
triangular shaped kit above the<lb/>
137 foot sand dune,Jockey's<lb/>
Ridge at Nags Head, N.C.<lb/>
Halfway up the dune novices<lb/>
attempt their first feeble flights<lb/>
under the wachful eye of<lb/>
John Harris, 29 year old instruct-<lb/>
or and president of Kitty Hawk<lb/>
Kites.<lb/>
Kitty Hawk Kites is located<lb/>
across the road from Jockey's<lb/>
Ridge. Hang gliders and other<lb/>
related equipment are sold and<lb/>
lessons are taught daily.<lb/>
"I'm certain it is the largest<lb/>
school on the East coast and<lb/>
maybe in the nation said four<lb/>
year hang gliding veteran John<lb/>
Harris. Harris started hang glid-<lb/>
ing after seeing a wire photo in a<lb/>
Winston Salem newspaper. He<lb/>
made his first flight at Jockey's<lb/>
Ridge.<lb/>
Jockey's Ridge is an ideal<lb/>
place to learn because of the<lb/>
winds and soft sand which makes<lb/>
beginning errors less painful.<lb/>
No serious injuries have oc-<lb/>
curred from hang gliding at Nags<lb/>
Head.<lb/>
"Down here it's safe dark<lb/>
haired, bearded Harris said.<lb/>
 Naturally in the mountains there<lb/>
is more risk<lb/>
He speaks from experience,<lb/>
being the first person to hang<lb/>
glide from Grandfather's<lb/>
Mountain in Linville, N.C.<lb/>
Lessons fa would-be hang<lb/>
gliding pilots begin with a<lb/>
ground school in a small back<lb/>
room at Kitty Hawk Kites. They<lb/>
view a slide show explaining the<lb/>
basics of the spat.<lb/>
Man, fa sane reasai, has<lb/>
always wanted to fly.<lb/>
"I'm a devilish sat of person<lb/>
fascinated with the idea of<lb/>
flight said novice John<lb/>
Guarino, an ECU mathematics<lb/>
graduate student.<lb/>
Harris helps the small class of<lb/>
students slip in the harnesses that<lb/>
link the flyer to the kite. Then<lb/>
thev carry two 40 pound kites<lb/>
aaossthe road toward the dunes.<lb/>
They practice take off techni-<lb/>
ques on level sand befae making<lb/>
the first tries at flight.<lb/>
They are learning to fly a<lb/>
rogallo wing. A Rogallo is a delta<lb/>
shaped a aft usually made of<lb/>
aluminum poles and D?cron<lb/>
sailcloth. It has no moving<lb/>
surfaces and is controlled by the<lb/>
pilot shifting his weight.<lb/>
He shifts his weight by<lb/>
pushing a pulling an inverted Y<lb/>
shaped ooitrol bar under the<lb/>
glider. In flight the pilot is in a<lb/>
prone position with the oontrd<lb/>
bar under him.<lb/>
Pushing the oontrol bar out<lb/>
makes the glider gain altitude and<lb/>
lose speed. Pulling in the oontrol<lb/>
bar results in a loss of altitude<lb/>
and inaeases speed.<lb/>
To change direction the pilot<lb/>
simply shifts his weight in the<lb/>
direction of the desired turn,<lb/>
either left a right.<lb/>
Midway up the giant dune the<lb/>
excited pilas prepare fa the first<lb/>
flight.<lb/>
John Harris calmly goes over<lb/>
last minute instructions.<lb/>
The pi la runs as hard as he<lb/>
can down the slope and into the<lb/>
wind, and the glider lifts off the<lb/>
ground. He overoor.irols and the<lb/>
glider shoots up in trie air and<lb/>
stalls, plunging quickly down-<lb/>
ward with a loud crash of<lb/>
aluminum poles.<lb/>
The first flight lasted only a<lb/>
few snat seconds but the pi la<lb/>
has a taste of flight and sand.<lb/>
"It was like nahingness<lb/>
said David Harris, a Pitt Tech<lb/>
student, of his first flight. "I was<lb/>
running along and then I wasn't<lb/>
on the ground. It was one of the<lb/>
best rushes I've ever had<lb/>
On later flights tha students<lb/>
are able to auise at 20 miles per<lb/>
hour five to ten feet off the<lb/>
ground, fa several hundred feet,<lb/>
in flights lasting close to a<lb/>
minute.<lb/>
During flight the only sounds<lb/>
heard are the wind and John<lb/>
Harris yelling "In" a "Out" to<lb/>
the pilot.<lb/>
They learn to land standing up<lb/>
bv 'flarina' the kite ud and<lb/>
putting their feet down.<lb/>
Experienced pi las can stay<lb/>
airborne fa laig periods. The<lb/>
recad flight at Jockey's Ridge is<lb/>
an hour and nine minutes.<lb/>
Waldwide, pi las have flown as<lb/>
long as ten hours. Some have<lb/>
flown at altitudes of over two and<lb/>
a-half miles.<lb/>
The most popular type of kite<lb/>
among the over 30,000 hang<lb/>
gliding enthusiasts is the Rogallo<lb/>
wing. It is named fa a retired<lb/>
Natiaial Aeroiautics and Space<lb/>
Administration (NASA) scientist,<lb/>
Francis M. Rogallo, who invented<lb/>
the design.<lb/>
Rogallo now lives a few miles<lb/>
from Nags Head at Kitty Hawk,<lb/>
N.C, where the Wright brahers<lb/>
experimented with gliders and<lb/>
powered airaaft 75 years ago.<lb/>
Rogallo started waking ai a<lb/>
flexible wing in 1949. He was<lb/>
granted a patent fa his design in<lb/>
1951.<lb/>
"In 1958 the government ga<lb/>
real interested said the slim<lb/>
and healthy looking Rogallo.<lb/>
"From '58 to '68 the government<lb/>
worked with it. The money<lb/>
petered out in 1970<lb/>
NASA tested the Rogallo wing<lb/>
as a re-entry vehicle fa space<lb/>
capsules.<lb/>
The Army experimented with<lb/>
a Rogallo to transport heavy<lb/>
loads. The Rogallo was also<lb/>
tested as a directional parachute<lb/>
enabling pilastoflyout of enemy<lb/>
territay a when over water to fly<lb/>
to shae.<lb/>
Nate of these ideas proved<lb/>
feasible.<lb/>
During the late 1960s Cali-<lb/>
fanian water skiers using Rogal-<lb/>
los towed behind boats to ski in<lb/>
the air moved to the cliffs.<lb/>
By the early 1970s hang<lb/>
gliding became a fast growing<lb/>
sport.<lb/>
 I thought a few people would<lb/>
do it said 65 year old Rogallo<lb/>
who can occasional ly be seen atop<lb/>
Jockey's Ridge with his kite.<lb/>
"There were just a few hundred<lb/>
until the last few years.<lb/>
"It wasascience befae, na a<lb/>
fSee GLIDING, pq. 11<lb/>
KITTY HA WK KITES, located across from Jockey's<lb/>
Ridge at Nag's Head, ia fast becoming one of the<lb/>
East Coast's largest and most popular hang-gliding<lb/>
schools. Photo courtesy of Kitty Hawk Kites<lb/>
' �'����' '4 '� ��ir:on:&amp;<lb/>
mmmkWkwamkWkwmmkwmsmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0011"/><lb/>
10 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
'Hotel California'<lb/>
Changes mar ne w Eagles LP<lb/>
By CHRIS FARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Despite heavy personality<lb/>
conflicts, a personel change and<lb/>
lack of ideas, the Eagles have<lb/>
managed to deliver their sixth<lb/>
album "Hotel California nearly<lb/>
a year and a half since their last<lb/>
release, and it is obvious that the<lb/>
storm has had its effect. While<lb/>
"One Of These Nights" was<lb/>
perhaps their most commercially<lb/>
successful album, it was evident<lb/>
to anyone who knew the Eagles<lb/>
that something was missing. The<lb/>
Eagles are a perfect example of a<lb/>
group who has failed to recognize<lb/>
any musical or more importantly<lb/>
social changes over the past few<lb/>
years, and thus to most their<lb/>
"California hippie oowboy" I-<lb/>
mage has simply gotten boring.<lb/>
The departure of Bernie<lb/>
Leadon (and who can blame him<lb/>
considering the ego problems<lb/>
within the band) and the addition<lb/>
of Joe Walsh (yes, the same Jo<lb/>
Walsh, "So what?") does nothing<lb/>
fa the group, and adds yet<lb/>
another hard edge to an already<lb/>
over-guitarized sound. The trade-<lb/>
mark which brought the Eagles<lb/>
success as America's premier<lb/>
country-rock band was their con-<lb/>
sistently smooth songwriting and<lb/>
tight four part harmonies,<lb/>
epitomized in their preOne Of<lb/>
These Nights" period and most<lb/>
specifically in their concept<lb/>
masterpiece  Desperado<lb/>
However, with the coming of<lb/>
success, has unfortunately<lb/>
brought the ooming of stagnation<lb/>
to the Eagles' music. Their songs<lb/>
no longer oontain the innocence<lb/>
and freshness that had once<lb/>
blessed their sound and captured<lb/>
the hearts of millions of teenage<lb/>
girls. Their lastest release instead<lb/>
brings with it eight mediocre<lb/>
songs, a hit single, a pretty album<lb/>
cover, and a first place trophy for<lb/>
Glenn Frey in the Hell's Angel<lb/>
look alike oontest. The songs are<lb/>
for the most part of a very<lb/>
shallow, drawn out and easy-to-<lb/>
forget nature, with no particular<lb/>
strength to hang on to.<lb/>
"Hotel California' is a dis-<lb/>
appointment, however not a<lb/>
catastrophe. "New Kid In Town"<lb/>
is an extremely good song, where<lb/>
its harmonies and easy going<lb/>
style give us an example of the<lb/>
Eagles the way they onoe were,<lb/>
and is possibly one of the best<lb/>
See EAGLES, pg. 12<lb/>
GLIDING<lb/>
Continued from pg. 10<lb/>
sport. Now it's a sport<lb/>
Rogallo believes hang gliding<lb/>
became popular when hang<lb/>
gliders started being commercial-<lb/>
ly produced.<lb/>
"A good new glider cost<lb/>
between $650 and $850 said<lb/>
John Harris. "A used glider cost<lb/>
anywhere from $300 to $700<lb/>
The Rogallo is the most<lb/>
Dopular type of hang glider<lb/>
because it is more portable,<lb/>
cheaper and easier for one man to<lb/>
handle than the other types,<lb/>
according to Harris.<lb/>
It is also the most stable.<lb/>
"It appears simple but is<lb/>
sophisticated Harris said.<lb/>
Hang gliding is a self-regu-<lb/>
lated sport. The United States<lb/>
Hang Gliding Association<lb/>
(USHGA) is the governing body.<lb/>
"There are around 6,000<lb/>
members in the USHGA said<lb/>
Harris, one of the USHGA's 20<lb/>
board of directors.<lb/>
The USHGA established a five<lb/>
level system to rate pilots and<lb/>
sites. The USHGA also certifies<lb/>
instructors. Harris is a Hang<lb/>
three pilot who just hasn't gone to<lb/>
get his Hang four yet. He is a<lb/>
certified instructor also.<lb/>
Fatality statistics show the<lb/>
sport is getting safer. In 1974<lb/>
there were 49 deaths and in 1975<lb/>
only 20.<lb/>
The Federal Aviation Admin-<lb/>
istration (FAA) recently said they<lb/>
were happy with the self-<lb/>
regulation and were not going tc<lb/>
regulate it, according to Harris.<lb/>
Despite the fact that 2,000<lb/>
tourists visit Nags Head a day in<lb/>
the summer season no serious<lb/>
problems have developed be-<lb/>
tween glider enthusiasts and<lb/>
vacationers.<lb/>
"It's one thing we try to<lb/>
watch serious looking Harris<lb/>
said. "As long as it's properly<lb/>
regulated and everybody gives<lb/>
each ether proper consideration<lb/>
there should be no problems<lb/>
As the sun sets behind<lb/>
Jockey's Ridge the tired learners<lb/>
begin carrying the kits back to the<lb/>
store.<lb/>
"I plan to go as often as I<lb/>
possibly can said David Harris.<lb/>
"The experience lived up to<lb/>
my expectations John Guarino<lb/>
said I plan to go further with it.<lb/>
The sky is the limit<lb/>
mym<lb/>
Good Things<lb/>
For Gentle People<lb/>
318 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
752-3815<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Brice Street<lb/>
FriSatSun.<lb/>
ihoney'i<lb/>
introduces iff NEW<lb/>
Pancakei &amp; Eggi<lb/>
"Free refills on coffee or tea.<lb/>
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 m BK3BOY<lb/>
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205Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Phone 756-2186<lb/>
THURSDAY'S<lb/>
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Feb.17<lb/>
Feb. 10<lb/>
T<lb/>
 <lb/>
y.<lb/>
Fabulous Catalinas<lb/>
First 100 FREE<lb/>
Cornelius Brothers<lb/>
and Sister Rose<lb/>
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� TREAT HER LIKE A LADY<lb/>
� I'M SO GLAD (TO BE LOVED BY YOU)<lb/>
� TOO LATE TOTURN BACK NOW<lb/>
� I M NEVER GONNA BE ALONE ANYMORE<lb/>
The Jolly Roger 6r Thursdays (R &amp; N Inc.)<lb/>
209 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Phone 752-4668<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 February 1977<lb/>
Roxy makes down payment with loan<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
. The Roxy Music, Arts, and<lb/>
Crafts Center (RMACC) obtained<lb/>
a $4,OCX) loan to keep it alive.<lb/>
The money will be used as a<lb/>
down payment toward purchase<lb/>
Many events coming up<lb/>
of the Roxy theater.<lb/>
The selling price of the Roxy<lb/>
was $22,000, according to<lb/>
"Shep" Sheppard.<lb/>
The loan helped the Roxy pass<lb/>
a serve obstacle toward financial<lb/>
stability.<lb/>
The Roxy will continue to offer<lb/>
many diverse events.<lb/>
The Red Clay Ramblers, a<lb/>
musical group that was in the<lb/>
original cast of the off-Broadway<lb/>
Tonight at the Elbo Room<lb/>
LIVING PROOF<lb/>
Earlybird special �<lb/>
free admission until 9:30<lb/>
Remember Friday3 � 7<lb/>
Every Sunday is ladies night<lb/>
hit musical, Diamond Studs will<lb/>
appear February 14. Admission is<lb/>
$2 for the public and $1.50 fa<lb/>
RMACC members.<lb/>
Their repertoire includes old<lb/>
dance tunes, hillbilly music of the<lb/>
'20s and30s, blues, ballads,<lb/>
ragtime, early jazz and swing.<lb/>
The five member band plays<lb/>
autoharp, piano, trumpet, banjo,<lb/>
fiddle, harmonica, mandolin,<lb/>
string bass, and guitar.<lb/>
The Ramblers have released<lb/>
three albums; 'The Red Clay<lb/>
Ramblers With Fiddlin' Al Mc<lb/>
Manless 'Stolen Love and their<lb/>
latest 'Twisted Laurel<lb/>
"The most eclectic and in-<lb/>
novative of all the contemporary<lb/>
ensemblestheir musicianship is<lb/>
faultless said the Raleigh News<lb/>
and Observer.<lb/>
Everything You Know is<lb/>
Wrong a 16mm movie by the<lb/>
Firesign Theater will be shown<lb/>
this Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m.<lb/>
and 9:30 p.m. Admission is $1 for<lb/>
the public and 75 cents for<lb/>
RMACC members. A 'juice bar'<lb/>
with homemade bread and juioes<lb/>
is planned.<lb/>
Super Grit Cowboy Band,<lb/>
SuttersGold Streak, and Tumble-<lb/>
weed will appear in a three band<lb/>
bill called the Carolina Medicine<lb/>
Show on February 20. Admission<lb/>
is $3 for the public and $2 for<lb/>
RMACC members.<lb/>
A Junk Trade Festival will be<lb/>
held February 19. This is a 'flea<lb/>
market' type event. Everyone will<lb/>
be able to sell unwanted items.<lb/>
The RMACC is still selling $10<lb/>
memberships. There are 434<lb/>
memberships left. Members re-<lb/>
ceive discounts on allRoxv events.<lb/>
EAGLES<lb/>
Continued from pg. 11<lb/>
things they have ever done, all<lb/>
things oonsidered. Don Henley's<lb/>
voioe continues to be tastefully<lb/>
raw with a smooth edge, and<lb/>
Love<lb/>
Sole<lb/>
Old love. New love. True love.<lb/>
Give the gift of music Prom the Record Bar.<lb/>
Warm, tender sounds or something sweet and hot.<lb/>
Tell your valentine houu you feel with special albums and tapes.<lb/>
Barbra Streisand<lb/>
Kris Kristofferson<lb/>
A Star Is Born<lb/>
including:<lb/>
Love Theme From "A Star Is Born (Evergreen)<lb/>
m<lb/>
v<lb/>
Topes<lb/>
On Sole February 11-17<lb/>
Pitt Plozo<lb/>
10-9 MonSat.<lb/>
outstanding to the overall sound,<lb/>
while Don Felder remains to be<lb/>
one of the most creative of today's<lb/>
rock guitarists. However it<lb/>
wouldn't be such a bad idea if the<lb/>
group decided to give up their<lb/>
hard-guy looks for Lent.<lb/>
The fact remains that the<lb/>
Eagles didn't come to be what<lb/>
they are by a fluke, and songs like<lb/>
"New Kid In Town" prove that<lb/>
they still have some lift left in<lb/>
them. But, audienoe de-<lb/>
mand will not allow you to live<lb/>
from the past for long, and while<lb/>
for anyone but the Eagles "Hotel<lb/>
California" might be considered a<lb/>
gallant attempt, as long as the<lb/>
Eagles are the Eagles we should<lb/>
be satisfied with nothing less than<lb/>
the quality we know they are<lb/>
capable of.<lb/>
East article<lb/>
printed in<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
919 U<lb/>
nAge<lb/>
An article by John East,<lb/>
professor of political science at<lb/>
ECU, appears in the Winter,<lb/>
1977, issue of "Modern Age a<lb/>
quarterly journal of articles and<lb/>
reviews.<lb/>
Dr. East's "Leo Strauss and<lb/>
American Conservatism" is the<lb/>
lead article in the current journal.<lb/>
He discusses the influence of<lb/>
classical and traditional political<lb/>
philosophy upon Strauss, a<lb/>
German-born political scientist at<lb/>
the University of Chicago from<lb/>
1949 to 1968, and relates this to<lb/>
Strauss's distrust of modern<lb/>
ideologies.<lb/>
The Strauss study is the latest<lb/>
in a series of articles Dr. East has<lb/>
published resulting from his<lb/>
recent studies of modern political<lb/>
philosophers.<lb/>
An active researcher, lecturer<lb/>
and writer in addition to his<lb/>
teaching duties at ECU, Dr. East<lb/>
serves on the editorial boards of<lb/>
"Modern Age" and "The Poli-<lb/>
tical Science Reviewer<lb/>
He is also prominent in the<lb/>
Republican party on the national,<lb/>
state and local levels.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0013"/><lb/>
MnmnHViHi<lb/>
10 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Coach Catherine Bolton<lb/>
leads women's athletics<lb/>
ByKURTHICKMAN<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Women's athletics have be-<lb/>
come a large part of oollege<lb/>
athletic programs throughout the<lb/>
nation in recent years.<lb/>
The recent enactment of Title<lb/>
Nine, a law passed by Congress to<lb/>
ensure equal rights for women in<lb/>
oollege, has foroed the re-evalua-<lb/>
tion of woman's athletics on the<lb/>
oollege level.<lb/>
At East Carolina University,<lb/>
the coordination of the woman's<lb/>
athletic program towards com-<lb/>
pliance with Title Nine guidelines<lb/>
is under the direction of Cather-<lb/>
ine Bolton.<lb/>
Bolton, a native of Rich<lb/>
Square, N.C came to ECU in<lb/>
1969.<lb/>
She assumed responsibility as<lb/>
coordinator of the woman's pro-<lb/>
gram in 1975, succeeding Nell<lb/>
Stal lings.<lb/>
"Nell Stallings actually esta-<lb/>
blished the groundwork for the<lb/>
program we now have Bolton<lb/>
said I still go to her when I have<lb/>
a problem concerning my job<lb/>
According to Bolton, her basic<lb/>
duties as coordinator of women's<lb/>
athletics involve oonveying to her<lb/>
superiors where the program<lb/>
needs improvement, and inform-<lb/>
ing them on areas where the<lb/>
program might not comply with<lb/>
Title Nine.<lb/>
"So far, it's been a rather<lb/>
frustrating experience said Bol-<lb/>
ton. "We lack money and this<lb/>
makes it difficult to compete with<lb/>
some of the other programs in the<lb/>
state<lb/>
According to Title Nine, in<lb/>
women's athletics, a school has a<lb/>
limit of 12 scholarships for team<lb/>
sports and a limit of eight<lb/>
scholarships for individual sports.<lb/>
"With the budget we have<lb/>
here, our limit on scholarships is<lb/>
around three Bolton said.<lb/>
"This is considerably less than,<lb/>
say, North Carolina or North<lb/>
Carolina State can offer. They, for<lb/>
example, have a much greater<lb/>
budget to build around<lb/>
"We also need more coaches<lb/>
here for women's sports Bolton<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Bolton's coaching experience<lb/>
well qualifies her for the respon-<lb/>
sibilities she now has.<lb/>
She has coached basketball,<lb/>
volleyball, golf, tennis, gymnas-<lb/>
tics, and field hockey since<lb/>
coming to ECU.<lb/>
Bolton now serves as ECU's<lb/>
women's head basketball and<lb/>
volleyball coach.<lb/>
She is also an assistant<lb/>
professor of physical education.<lb/>
Her accomplishments at ECU<lb/>
include quadrupling the women's<lb/>
athletic budget, increasing the<lb/>
number of coaches, increasing the<lb/>
number of sports for women, and<lb/>
awarding the first scholarship to a<lb/>
woman athlete, which went to<lb/>
Gail Betton (field hockey), in<lb/>
1975.<lb/>
M iss Bolton is a very competi-<lb/>
tive person. Her intensity and<lb/>
desire to succeed can be seen in<lb/>
that she usually has a serious<lb/>
expression on her face.<lb/>
Her favorite sport to coach is<lb/>
basketball.<lb/>
Under her seven year direction<lb/>
as head basketball coach, ECU<lb/>
has compiled a 83-26 record.<lb/>
This includes a state champ-<lb/>
ionship and a trip to the National<lb/>
Association of Intercollegiate<lb/>
Athletics Women's basketball<lb/>
tournament in 1973.<lb/>
"I really lovetoooach basket-<lb/>
ball Bolton said. "I get goose<lb/>
bumps in the summer thinking<lb/>
about the ooming season<lb/>
Catherine Bolton has accepted<lb/>
a tremendous amount of respon-<lb/>
sibility since ooming to ECU. She<lb/>
has taken it all in stride, and she<lb/>
has succeeded.<lb/>
THE PIRA TES' loss to State broke their eight-game winning streak.<lb/>
Pirate grapplers lose<lb/>
to Wolf pack ,21-15<lb/>
Photo by Russ Pogue)<lb/>
THIS IS CATHERINE BOLTON'S eighth year as women's head<lb/>
basketball coach.<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
There was a lot riding on the<lb/>
balance of the big wrestling<lb/>
match Monday night in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. East Carolina had an<lb/>
eight game winning streak<lb/>
against N.C. State ooming into<lb/>
the match. The Pirates also had<lb/>
not lost to an ACC opponent in<lb/>
the last 17 matches. Wrestling<lb/>
has been a big prestige for East<lb/>
Carolina in the past.<lb/>
But, the Wdfpack came out<lb/>
on top this time. The 2,000 fans<lb/>
were treated to some very close<lb/>
matches before Lynn Morris of<lb/>
State dedsioned D.T. Joyner by a<lb/>
3-2 oount in the heavyweight<lb/>
match to give the match to State<lb/>
by a 21-15 oount.<lb/>
"I'm a little disappointed in<lb/>
losing to State said Pirate coach<lb/>
John Wei born Tuesday. "But,<lb/>
overall, I thought we wrestled<lb/>
real well. There were a couple of<lb/>
turning points that we didn't<lb/>
win<lb/>
There were several turning<lb/>
points, indeed. The Pirate mentor<lb/>
was hoping for at least a draw at<lb/>
142, and a victory at 177, but it<lb/>
was not to be.<lb/>
At 142, Tim Gaghan of ECU<lb/>
and Mike Koob fought probably<lb/>
the toughest match of the night,<lb/>
with Koob winning 2-1 on riding<lb/>
time. Koob had 220 minutes of<lb/>
riding time while Gaghan had<lb/>
1:19. To get a point for riding<lb/>
time, a wrestler must have at<lb/>
least one minute of riding time<lb/>
more than his opponent. Koob<lb/>
had this with just one second to<lb/>
spare.<lb/>
Freshman Jay Dever went up<lb/>
against Lee Guzzo fa the Wdf-<lb/>
pack in the 177-pound match.<lb/>
Dever was on medication all week<lb/>
before the match because of the<lb/>
flu.<lb/>
He said he was ready for the<lb/>
match and gave Guzzo all he<lb/>
could handle before bowing.<lb/>
Trailing 6-2 near the end of the<lb/>
second period, Dever reversed<lb/>
Guzzo and received two more<lb/>
points fa a near pin to tie the<lb/>
soae. During the third period,<lb/>
Dever was on top and rode Guzzo<lb/>
until there were about 20 seconds<lb/>
left, when Guzzo managed an<lb/>
escape. Deva tried desperately<lb/>
fa a takedown in the dosing<lb/>
seconds but Guzzo turned the<lb/>
tables on him and took him down<lb/>
fa a final 9-6 count.<lb/>
State jumped out to a quick<lb/>
9-0 lead with a superia five-pdnt<lb/>
ciedsion by Jim Zenz over John<lb/>
Koenigsand a superia four-pdnt<lb/>
decision by Mike Zito over<lb/>
Charlie MoGimsey.<lb/>
The Pirate fans gd into the<lb/>
adion when the third match of the<lb/>
evening came up. Paul Osman,<lb/>
wrestling fa ECU at 134, was<lb/>
gdng up against Joe Butto. Butto<lb/>
took Osman, who has nd lost in his<lb/>
last 18 matches, down in the first<lb/>
period.<lb/>
Osman escaped to cut<lb/>
Butto's lead to 2-1. Osman<lb/>
escaped at the start of the second<lb/>
period to knd the scae at two.<lb/>
With nodher adion in the second<lb/>
period, Osman started out the<lb/>
third period on top. Buttoescaped<lb/>
at the beginning of the third<lb/>
period to take a 3-2 lead. He was<lb/>
then penalized a pdnt fa stalling<lb/>
to tie the scae aice again. With<lb/>
about 30 seconds left in the<lb/>
match, Osman took Butto down to<lb/>
take a 5-3 lead. Butto escaped late<lb/>
in the match but Osman won 5-4<lb/>
to win the match.<lb/>
After the Koob-Gaghan match<lb/>
at 142, State led 12-3. Frank<lb/>
Schaede, the Pirate 150-pounder,<lb/>
then gained a 7-4 dedsion over<lb/>
Joey Whitehouse to cut the<lb/>
margin to 12-6.<lb/>
The match at 158 was a most<lb/>
exdting one, with Pirate fresh-<lb/>
man Steve Goode going up<lb/>
against defending ACC champion<lb/>
and unbeaten Terry Reese. Goode<lb/>
injured his shoulder in the first<lb/>
period and could do little after-<lb/>
wards. Reese won the match 11 -5,<lb/>
however, the match was dose<lb/>
(7-5) until the final minutes of the<lb/>
third period.<lb/>
Phil Mueller, the Pirates'<lb/>
honaable mention all-America at<lb/>
167, needed to come through<lb/>
with a pin as the Pirates were<lb/>
down by a 15-6 count. He did just<lb/>
that, winning on a fall after 701<lb/>
of wrestling time.<lb/>
Wei born praised Mueller,<lb/>
saying, "We needed a pin from<lb/>
Phil and he gd it<lb/>
After Dever's loss at 177, the<lb/>
Wdfpack led 18-12, meaning the<lb/>
Pirates would have to win the last<lb/>
two bouts to win. At 190, ECU'S<lb/>
John Williams fought a tough<lb/>
match with Joe Lidowski and<lb/>
came out on top 3-1, setting the<lb/>
stage fa the Maris-Joyna battle<lb/>
fa a tie a Wdfpack viday.<lb/>
Maris, d course, came out on<lb/>
top, using his 40 pound weight<lb/>
advantage to beat Joyner 3-2.<lb/>
The Pirates, with the loss, fall<lb/>
to 6-3 on the season while State<lb/>
stands 8-5.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 February 1977<lb/>
Monarchs trip Pirates, 87-78<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina lost its second<lb/>
consecutive road game Monday<lb/>
night, bowing to the Monarchs of<lb/>
Old Dominion 87-78 in a non-<lb/>
conference game played at the<lb/>
ODU Fieldhouse in Norfolk. Va.<lb/>
The loss for the Pirates was<lb/>
their 12th of the season against<lb/>
eight wins and their tenth road<lb/>
loss in 11 games. The win for Old<lb/>
Dominion was their 15th straight<lb/>
and upped their record 19-2, tops<lb/>
in the East Coast Athletic Confer-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
The Pirates lost this game like<lb/>
they have lost many, early in the<lb/>
first half. Old Dominion jumped<lb/>
out to an early 12-point lead and<lb/>
the Pirates never once led.<lb/>
East Carolina rallied about<lb/>
midway in the first half and cut<lb/>
the lead down to two at 32-30 with<lb/>
four minutes left in the half. But,<lb/>
the Monarchs, behind freshman<lb/>
Ronnie Valentine's shooting, pul-<lb/>
led back out to an 11-point lead at<lb/>
halftime, 45-34.<lb/>
In the second half, the Pirates<lb/>
came back to close the gap to four<lb/>
a couple of times, but could not<lb/>
pull the game out.<lb/>
The Pirates desperately mis-<lb/>
sed Larry Hunt for much of the<lb/>
game. The senior pivotman play-<lb/>
ed just 15 minutes in the game,<lb/>
his lowest total since his fresh-<lb/>
man year, because of foul trouble.<lb/>
In victory, Wilson Washington<lb/>
led the Monarchs with 20 points,<lb/>
Joey Carushers added 18 while<lb/>
Valentine copped 17. Jeff Fuhr-<lb/>
mann rounded out the double<lb/>
figure scorers with 12.<lb/>
The Pirates got their best<lb/>
game of the year out of Louis<lb/>
Crosby, sophomore guard from<lb/>
Shelby. Crosby hit on a variety of<lb/>
shots from the perimeter to get<lb/>
his 19 points. He hit on nine of 13<lb/>
shots from the field and one of<lb/>
two from the foul line.<lb/>
Do YouWant A BUCCANEER?<lb/>
Go to the old CU Feb. 10-25 from 12 p.m3 p.m.<lb/>
(Also look in the News Flash<lb/>
section for dorm schedules<lb/>
Wewould like for all organizations on campus<lb/>
to please contact the BUC office for space in<lb/>
the book<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
Freshman Herb Gray contin-<lb/>
ued his hot streak of late and<lb/>
added 13 points on a couple of<lb/>
dunks and a few of outside shots.<lb/>
Gray also pulled a Pirate leading<lb/>
11 rebounds. Hunt, along with<lb/>
freshmen Kyle Powers and Herb<lb/>
Krusen each added 12. Krusen<lb/>
was perfect from the field, hitting<lb/>
six of six.<lb/>
The Pirates shot much better<lb/>
than they have for most of the<lb/>
season, hitting 26 of 79 for 45.6<lb/>
percent. Old Dominion hit 47.8<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
The Pirates lost this game at<lb/>
the foul line, a place they have<lb/>
been losing several this year. The<lb/>
Monarchs got 29 chances from<lb/>
the line, hitting on 21 while the<lb/>
Pirates hit on six of eight. East<lb/>
Carolina committed 20 fouls to<lb/>
just ten for the Monarchs.<lb/>
"Except for the first five<lb/>
minutes of the game, we out-<lb/>
played them said Pirate coach<lb/>
Dave Patton Tuesday. "We really<lb/>
played good basketball. We play-<lb/>
ed like this team can play. The<lb/>
guys got loose after being tight in<lb/>
the early going and got the job<lb/>
done. If we would have been<lb/>
playing that way all year, we<lb/>
wouldn' t have the record now that<lb/>
we do<lb/>
The Pirates face a tough<lb/>
match tonight when they host<lb/>
William and Mary. The Indians<lb/>
were playing good about mid-<lb/>
season when they beat the Pirates<lb/>
in Williamsburg, but have been<lb/>
down on their luck lately. They<lb/>
too, have had trouble winning on<lb/>
the road.<lb/>
THE BUCS host William &amp; Mary tonight at 7:30 In Mlnges.<lb/>
jtaNZB<lb/>
E.C.U. NIGHT IS BACK<lb/>
AND BIGGERTHAN EVER<lb/>
NOT ONE DAY BUTTWO!<lb/>
J<lb/>
U�<lb/>
Every Tuesday and Wednesday<lb/>
All Day At Bonanza<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK DINNER $1.49<lb/>
(Includes your choice of potato or vegetable, Texas Toast<lb/>
and salad from our all-yew-can-eat salad bar)<lb/>
i<lb/>
WJlEl<lb/>
LnfWJ<lb/>
<lb/>
fol<lb/>
520 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
NEED<lb/>
Alice<lb/>
.50 a<lb/>
spacec<lb/>
of expe<lb/>
FOR a<lb/>
$35.00<lb/>
rasset t<lb/>
Dlack a<lb/>
recently<lb/>
conditic<lb/>
and 9 p<lb/>
FOR S<lb/>
preme,<lb/>
lent oor<lb/>
75600<lb/>
FOR S<lb/>
Guitar.<lb/>
$250.00<lb/>
offer. C<lb/>
see on<lb/>
Record !<lb/>
FORSA<lb/>
rebuilt <lb/>
parts. R<lb/>
loss for<lb/>
reasonat<lb/>
756-2459<lb/>
FORSAI<lb/>
months <lb/>
0734.<lb/>
FOR SA<lb/>
Deluxe<lb/>
kreamer<lb/>
FOR SA<lb/>
SR-51A j<lb/>
functions<lb/>
memorie<lb/>
with Op<lb/>
Manual,<lb/>
adaptor.<lb/>
under v<lb/>
bargain<lb/>
752-9905<lb/>
FOR SA<lb/>
albums. Ii<lb/>
Beach Be<lb/>
many ma<lb/>
Come by<lb/>
day after<lb/>
selection.<lb/>
rOR SAL<lb/>
SR-51 a i<lb/>
Adaptor,<lb/>
two open<lb/>
carrying c<lb/>
752-9905 c<lb/>
FOR SALI<lb/>
Contemp.<lb/>
Exoellent (<lb/>
after 430.<lb/>
FOR SAL<lb/>
Reverb Gu<lb/>
Guitar Fu;<lb/>
4 wahs anc<lb/>
and intens<lb/>
reply to: B<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
55,000 littl<lb/>
forth to chi<lb/>
steer neec<lb/>
758-1437 af<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
ODYSSEY<lb/>
feet conditi<lb/>
tion. Call 7!<lb/>
�� �� ��� Mi '�� �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0015"/><lb/>
�������v �������<lb/>
 ?  �. $<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
10 Fetxuary 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
for sale<lb/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED? Call<lb/>
Ahoe-758-0497 or 757-6366. Only<lb/>
� 50 a page: (exceptions-single<lb/>
spaoed pages &amp; outlines) Plenty<lb/>
of expenenoe�I need the money!<lb/>
FOR SALE: Girl's 3 speed bike<lb/>
535.00, channel master auto<lb/>
cassette tape player $30. Zenith<lb/>
olack and white t.v. $40.00. All<lb/>
recently overhauled and in good<lb/>
condition. 752-4511 between 5<lb/>
and 9 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Old Cutlass Su-<lb/>
preme, 1971, one owner, excel-<lb/>
lent condition. $1925.00. Phone<lb/>
756007.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Guild D-5. Acoustic<lb/>
Guitar. Excellent condition<lb/>
$250.00 or you make reasonable<lb/>
offer. Call 756-2459 for Bob, or<lb/>
see on display at Razz Jazz<lb/>
Record Shop.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '71 SuperBeetle with<lb/>
rebuilt engine and mostly new<lb/>
parts. Runs well. Must sell at a<lb/>
loss for $975.00 or you make<lb/>
reasonable offer. Call Bob at<lb/>
756-2459.<lb/>
FOR SALE: BIC 9b0 turntable. 7<lb/>
months warranty left Call 752-<lb/>
0734.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Tad Davis Imperial<lb/>
Deluxe tennis racket, 1 Jack<lb/>
kreamer 752-6439. Good price.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Texas Instruments<lb/>
SR-51A scientific calculator. Trig<lb/>
functions, slopeintercept, three<lb/>
memories much more. Complete<lb/>
with Operating Guide, Owner's<lb/>
Manual, carrying case and AC<lb/>
adaptor. Rechargable and still<lb/>
under warranty. Definitely a<lb/>
bargain at $42.00. Call Jeff at<lb/>
752-9905 or come by 411 Jones.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Collection of 25<lb/>
albums. Including albums by Yes,<lb/>
Beach Boys, Hendrix, ELP and<lb/>
many more. Prices from $2 to $3.<lb/>
Come by room 415 Ayoock any<lb/>
day after 3:00 p.m. now for best<lb/>
selection.<lb/>
rOR SALE: Texas instruments<lb/>
SR-51 a electronic calculator.<lb/>
Adaptor, two owners manuals,<lb/>
two operating guides and two<lb/>
carrying cases included free. Call<lb/>
752-9905 and ask for Jeff.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 74 VW Bug $2200.<lb/>
Contemp. furniture &amp; doublebed<lb/>
Exoellent oondition. Call 752-0903<lb/>
after 430.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fender Princeton<lb/>
Reverb Guitar amp. $150. Electric<lb/>
Guitar Fuzz-Wah-Volume Pedal.<lb/>
4 wans and fuzz sustain, volume,<lb/>
and intensity controls. $60. Send<lb/>
reply to: Box 3067, Greenville.<lb/>
POR SALE: 1968 Chev. Impala.<lb/>
55,000 little old lady back and<lb/>
forth to church miles. Air, power<lb/>
steer needs minor repairs$500.<lb/>
758-1437 after 930 nights.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Brand New ARP<lb/>
ODYSSEY SYNTHESIZER, per-<lb/>
fect oondition. For more informa-<lb/>
tion. Call 758-0794.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Datsun 240Z.<lb/>
Red automatic. Must sell. Call<lb/>
758-4262 after 5.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Waterbed, mattress,<lb/>
frame with braces, liner. $60. Call<lb/>
752-6856.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4.2cub. refrigerator,<lb/>
good condition; excellent for<lb/>
dorm use. $80.00. Call 752-5493.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Toyota Celica<lb/>
S.G 4 speed, excellent cond. 102<lb/>
B Belk Dam. 758-7865.<lb/>
FOR SALE: PE 3060 automatic<lb/>
turntable complete with Stanton<lb/>
681 EE phono cartridge. Also<lb/>
Koss Pro-4-A headphones. All<lb/>
wiih original boxes. Reasonable.<lb/>
758-3701 evenings.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Yamaha clarinet.<lb/>
Good oondition. $90. Call 758-<lb/>
9378.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Marantz 2325 Stereo<lb/>
reciever 125 wchan. 20-20K at<lb/>
.15 T.H.D. and I.M. with<lb/>
walnut case. 752-9100, 11a.m<lb/>
6p.m. Ask for Buz.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Experienced<lb/>
typist. 758-3106 (Jane) before 5.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Peugeot Bicycle,<lb/>
Blue, like new, best offer. 758-<lb/>
7591.<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/>
watts Rms pr. channel, 2 channel.<lb/>
AR-2AX speakers. Exoellent oon-<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: 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-Thiirc:<lb/>
FOR SALE: &amp; Toyota Celica<lb/>
G.T. Air-conditioned, AM-Fm<lb/>
stereo 5-speed, luggage rack.<lb/>
Only 5,000 miles, like new<lb/>
oondition, metallic blue, white<lb/>
interior. Call 752-8290 after 5<lb/>
p.mask fa Carol.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Amplifier - Sound<lb/>
City, Coioad GT-80 (Brand new)<lb/>
2-12" speakers, built-in reverb.<lb/>
Retail price $699. Will sell fa<lb/>
$300. Must sell befae spring<lb/>
quarter. Call Chris at 756-6252.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 5 speed 27" Sears<lb/>
bicycle. Good oondition. Prioe<lb/>
$45.00. 55 lb. Bear Grizzly bow<lb/>
with arrow, tips, and other<lb/>
aocessaies. Call fa infamatiai.<lb/>
758-2799.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Needfa school. All<lb/>
in excellent oondition: 1969 Fiat<lb/>
124 - 700$, 17" Crosby Radna<lb/>
hunt saddle with fittings 180$,<lb/>
Koiica autaeflex T with f1.4<lb/>
lens 150$, aibums - misc. 3.50<lb/>
each. Call 757-6690 only from<lb/>
9-12 p.m. Sun. - Thurs.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Garrard SLX-2 turn-<lb/>
table. Exoellent oondition except<lb/>
needs new needle. $30. Call<lb/>
758-5008 after five.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 TS 185 Suzuki,<lb/>
excellent oondition. No reason-<lb/>
able offer refused. Call 758-8999,<lb/>
ask fa Phil a leave a message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Akai 8-Track Play-<lb/>
backRecord Component. This<lb/>
model has 2 heads, 2 vu meters,<lb/>
and fast faward. Cones with<lb/>
head demagnetizer. $100 nego-<lb/>
tiable.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AKC Weimaraner<lb/>
puppies. Call 758-7790.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 8 Track &amp; Cassette<lb/>
tapes 12.00 ea. Over 30 tapes by<lb/>
various artists. 758-8984, 318<lb/>
Ayoock Dam (trash room).<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 Fad Van 240<lb/>
6-cylinder, straight drive, air,<lb/>
carpet, paneling, $1400.00. 752-<lb/>
9520.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Jansport 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: Telecaster guitar,<lb/>
and J.V.C. Turntable. Call 758-<lb/>
7954.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Wilson T3000 Tennis<lb/>
Racket-$25.00 Lenny House-758-<lb/>
8843.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Yahama Guitar, good<lb/>
condition. Exoellent fa begin-<lb/>
ners. I50.00 contact Nancy<lb/>
through ad in Fountainh�ari<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Yamaha ou<lb/>
Endura. Excellent condition 2500<lb/>
miles $675. 758-9063.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Fiat Spider,<lb/>
AM-FM Stereo, tape player, wire<lb/>
wheels, excellent condition.<lb/>
$3,850 call 756-6768 after 530.<lb/>
MUST SELL: Sunn studio lead<lb/>
amp hardly used. $175.00. Call<lb/>
Maria 752-9022 fa mat infam-<lb/>
atiai.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New-Clairol "Kind-<lb/>
ness 3-way Hairsetter" with mist<lb/>
a regular coitrol. Pins &amp; Condi-<lb/>
tioning mist treatment included.<lb/>
Only $20.00, call 758-9225.<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: Wilson T3000 Tennis<lb/>
Racket- $25.00. Lonny House-<lb/>
758-8843.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Marathon C flute<lb/>
with case. Good oondition. Good<lb/>
price. Call 752-8376.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Needed<lb/>
to snare 2-bedroom trailer.<lb/>
Washer &amp; dryer &amp; air condition-<lb/>
ing. $60month &amp; utilities. Cll<lb/>
758-8160 after 900 p.m. a oome<lb/>
by Flanagan 420. Junia, Senia,<lb/>
a Graduate student prefared.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: To<lb/>
share trailer in Quail Hollow,<lb/>
752-3536.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private room avail-<lb/>
able Spring term. Graduate stu-<lb/>
dent preferred. 756-2459.<lb/>
WANTED: 1 a 2 female room-<lb/>
mates beginning March 1. Call<lb/>
752-9340.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private room and<lb/>
bath. Aaoss from oollege. Mrs.<lb/>
Bob Mauney, Box 207, Green-<lb/>
ville, 758-2585.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Male ECU student<lb/>
fa a two bedroom apartment at<lb/>
Village Green $50 plus utilities.<lb/>
Call 758-3530.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate. 704<lb/>
East Third St. (2 blocks from<lb/>
campus. Lg. 2 bedrcom apart-<lb/>
ment.)<lb/>
FOR RENT: Unfurnished room<lb/>
$35mo. &amp; utilities. See Steve in<lb/>
420 Flanagan.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Room, 402 Student<lb/>
St. Phone: 752-4814. Quiet; fur-<lb/>
nished; $55 per moith; utilities<lb/>
included.<lb/>
WANTED: One a two female<lb/>
roommates for Village Gr. Apt.<lb/>
$50 per month plus utilities. Call<lb/>
758-0595 after 3.<lb/>
NEEDED: Roommate fa Spring<lb/>
Quarter. Big house. Call Decky a<lb/>
Larry after 6O0 p.m. 752-2859.<lb/>
LOST: An opal ring and heart<lb/>
shaped necklace. If found please<lb/>
return to Kathy, 226 Fleming.<lb/>
752-9195. Reward Guaranteed.<lb/>
LOST: A garnet necklace some-<lb/>
where between White and Brew-<lb/>
ster. If found, call 752-8651.<lb/>
Reward of'tfred.<lb/>
LOST: Ladies wrap around swea-<lb/>
ter. Brown with different cdced<lb/>
stripes around it and a Navy blue<lb/>
tie belt. Lost in Jolly Rogers. If<lb/>
found call 752-9907 a bring by<lb/>
818 Greene Dam.<lb/>
LOST: Pumpkin colaed shat<lb/>
coat wfur oollar. Lost at Elbo<lb/>
Room Friday (1-21) No questions<lb/>
asked. Call 758-9728.<lb/>
LOST: Gold high school ring 24 in<lb/>
the middle. A.P.B. on inside.<lb/>
Great personal value. Reward.<lb/>
Contact Beth 758-8845.<lb/>
lOST: Watch-Blue- band, blue<lb/>
face Between Memorial and<lb/>
Ayoock. 758-8624.<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 center. Counseling<lb/>
and referrals are w they offer.<lb/>
They're free, too. Call 758-HELP.<lb/>
FOUND: Gold, 1970, High School<lb/>
ring from TerrySanfad H.S.KTR<lb/>
initials. Call 752-7791.<lb/>
personal<lb/>
WANTED: Someone to oome see<lb/>
Firesiqn Film. Everything You<lb/>
Know is Wrong, at the Roxy on<lb/>
Fri.Feb. 11 and Sat. Feb. 12 800<lb/>
and 930 p.m admission $1.00,<lb/>
75 cents members. Advance<lb/>
tickets at Rook and Soul.<lb/>
WANTED: Chronic tension head-<lb/>
ache suffers to take part in<lb/>
research study. Please leave<lb/>
name, phone no. and the times<lb/>
you can be reached at the<lb/>
Psychology Dept. Robertson's<lb/>
box.<lb/>
WANTED: Qualified surgeon to<lb/>
remove stick from FLPsass. Call<lb/>
D, 758-3239.<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 after 9O0<lb/>
p.m. on Mond. and Wed after<lb/>
530 all aher nights.<lb/>
LEARN TO BELLY DANCE! Let<lb/>
this year's resolution be a better<lb/>
figure! Call Sunshine, 752-5214<lb/>
after 9.O0 p.m. on Mon. and Wed.<lb/>
after 5O0 p.m. all other nites.<lb/>
TAX SERVICES: ECU Business<lb/>
student would like to prepare<lb/>
inoome tax returns evenings and<lb/>
weekends. Reasonable rates. Call<lb/>
756-4180. Typing services also<lb/>
available.<lb/>
WANTED: Ride to Charlotte<lb/>
Friday. May leave at 1 00. Call<lb/>
Lenaa Reeves, 758-4265.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057111_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 February 1977<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Intramural Basketball<lb/>
The top two intramural basketball teams will square off tonight at 6<lb/>
p.m. when the Belk Figures Revised meet the Belk Nutties Buddies in<lb/>
a preliminary game to the ECU-William and Mary game.<lb/>
The two teams are from the same dormitory league division and<lb/>
have been ranked among the top three teams all season long. Tonight<lb/>
they will be battling for the Echo Division championship and a spot in<lb/>
the Dormitory Division playoffs.<lb/>
The top-ranked Figures have scored more points per gane than any<lb/>
other team this season with a 66-point a game average. They stand at<lb/>
6-0 on the season. Earlier this year they set an intramural team scoring<lb/>
record with 99 points in a single game. The Nutties are currently<lb/>
ranked second behind the Figures and are 6-0 on the season. They<lb/>
stand fourth in team scoring with a little over 50 points a game.<lb/>
The Figures are 'ed by Gerald Hall, Ernest Madison, and Fred<lb/>
Chavis and the Buddies are led by Woodrow Stevenson and Ruffin<lb/>
McNeill. An interesting sidelight to the game is that both teams are<lb/>
made up of ECU Varsity football players and a rivalry has been going<lb/>
on all season long between the two teams.<lb/>
Also to be featured at tonight's ECU-William and Mary game will<lb/>
be the finals of the Second Annual Intramural Arm Wrestling-Champ-<lb/>
ionships. The finals in all four weight classes; 150-under, 151-175,<lb/>
176-200 and over 200, will be presented at halftime of the game and<lb/>
awards will be presented. The preliminary and semifinal matches have<lb/>
already taken place earlier this week in the lobby of Memorial Gym.<lb/>
This week's games in the men's intramural basketball league will<lb/>
wind up regular season play. Playoffs in each of the four divisions will<lb/>
begin on Monday and run through the week. The four divisional<lb/>
winners will then play on Feb. 22 and Feb. 23 fa the all-campus<lb/>
championship. The finals will be played as a preliminary on Feb. 23 to<lb/>
the ECU-Mercer basketball game.<lb/>
The top two teams in each of the dormitory, club and independent<lb/>
leagues will qualify for the playoffs, as well as the top four teams from<lb/>
the 11-team Fraternity division.<lb/>
The playoffs in the women's all-campus championships began last<lb/>
week and continued through this week. The finals will be played on<lb/>
Tuesday, Jan. 15as a preliminary to the ECU-North Carolina women's<lb/>
game. That game will start at 5 p.m.<lb/>
First-round winners were the Nock's Nockers, the Day Students,<lb/>
Hypertension and BSU.<lb/>
In the BSU game, the regular-season champions had to go the limit<lb/>
to down Tyler 400, 39-34. Tyler 400 led by 24-18 at the half, but BSU<lb/>
rallied behind the second-half shooting of Jean Evans and Kim Michael<lb/>
to tie the game and then went ahead at 30-28 on a layup by Janet<lb/>
Hoeppel. Evans then made another basket to put BSU up by four and,<lb/>
with two minutes left to play they went into the four oorners against<lb/>
Tyler 400.<lb/>
The strategy worked as Hoeppel and Michael both made crucial<lb/>
free throws down the stretch. Evans led BSU with 18 points and<lb/>
Michael added 14 points. Velma Thomas led the Tyler 400 squad with<lb/>
14 points and got good support from Wanda Whichard.<lb/>
The Nockers won their first round game over the Stardusters, 34-8,<lb/>
as Marsha Person scored 25 points. Hypertension beat Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma and the Day Students beat the Alpha Phis in opening games.<lb/>
In Tuesday's playoff games BSU had to come from behind to beat<lb/>
the Day Students, while.Hypertension moved into the semifinals with a<lb/>
28-13 win over sorority champion Sigma Sigma Sigma. Hypertension<lb/>
will play Nock's Nockers at 5 p.m. this afternoon and the winner will<lb/>
meet BSU for the all-campus championship.<lb/>
LuAnn Davis led Hypertension with nine points, including seven in<lb/>
the second half when they pulled away from their slim 13-8 halftime<lb/>
lead. For BSU it was the second scare in two days, but they hung on to<lb/>
win.<lb/>
The Day Students led at the half, 11-8, and for most of the second<lb/>
half until BSU came on to tie the game. With the score tied late in the<lb/>
game, Lynette Ginn fed Jean Evans for the winning basket and BSU<lb/>
was in the finals, by a narrow 29-27 margin. Evans led the BSU'ers<lb/>
with 15 points and Bernandine Freeman led the Day Students with 10<lb/>
points.<lb/>
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