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<pb facs="00057113_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for 51 years. With a<lb/>
circulation of 8,500, this<lb/>
issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Vol. 52, No. 3fr East Carolina University Greenville, North Carolina 17 February 1977<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Jenkins award, p. 3<lb/>
Musical janitor, p. 11<lb/>
Post season matches, p. 13<lb/>
AFTER THREE DAYS<lb/>
of lorg awaited spring-like<lb/>
weather, unexpected snow<lb/>
covered Greenville Tuesday<lb/>
night. Temperatures plun-<lb/>
ging back below freezing<lb/>
pushed fuel needs back up.<lb/>
Some industrious students<lb/>
took the opportunity to<lb/>
create a new kind of<lb/>
anatomy to be dissected by<lb/>
the warmer afternoon sun.<lb/>
Photo by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
i<lb/>
&amp;HOQLMEMCIKE<lb/>
Campus lacks back-up heating system<lb/>
SHIELA TURN AGE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
(ECU) has no back-up heating<lb/>
system to rely on when the<lb/>
natural gas and oil supply are<lb/>
depleted, according to James J.<lb/>
Lowry, Director of the ECU<lb/>
Physical Plant.<lb/>
"We have a finite amount of<lb/>
fuel, and we are running out<lb/>
Lowry said.<lb/>
Lowry stated, however, that<lb/>
he foresees no problem in obtain-<lb/>
ing fuel for the ECU system.<lb/>
"We don t anticipate any<lb/>
natural gas in the foreseeable<lb/>
future. We haven't had any in<lb/>
Ihicians view the issues<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Several Tarheel political office<lb/>
holders gave their views on issues<lb/>
including drug abuse and college<lb/>
tuition at a Raleigh press confer-<lb/>
ence Tuesday.<lb/>
U.S. Senator Jesse Helms<lb/>
remarked that the high cost of<lb/>
college education was putting a<lb/>
strain on the families of college<lb/>
students with moderate incomes.<lb/>
" I am co-sponsoring a bill that<lb/>
will give a $1000 tax deduction for<lb/>
every child in college or a $250 tax<lb/>
credit, and I think it will pass<lb/>
said Helms.<lb/>
Governor Hunt said that he<lb/>
supports a 6.5 per cent pay<lb/>
increase for University profes-<lb/>
sors.<lb/>
U.S. Senator Robert Morgan<lb/>
observed ECU'S greatest pro-<lb/>
gress was achieving university<lb/>
status.<lb/>
"We have become a regional<lb/>
university said Morgan.<lb/>
Morgan said ECU has chang-<lb/>
ed quite a bit since he graduated.<lb/>
"When I was there we knew<lb/>
everyone on the campus, of<lb/>
course we only had 2,500 people.<lb/>
I get the impression that you folks<lb/>
don't know everyone like we<lb/>
did he added.<lb/>
N.C. Attorney General Rufus<lb/>
Edmisten said that 45 persons<lb/>
were arrested under 147 indict-<lb/>
ments in a Charlotte drug raid<lb/>
last Tuesday.<lb/>
Edmisten, said that most of<lb/>
the indictments were for heroin.<lb/>
"Very few were for pot, we<lb/>
don't fool with that anymore<lb/>
because while you're out chasing<lb/>
the pot smoker the heroin dealer<lb/>
is getting away said Edmisten.<lb/>
Edmisten described this as<lb/>
victory in the Justice Depart-<lb/>
ments "war on drug pushers<lb/>
"They ought to be put under<lb/>
the jail said Edmisten.<lb/>
Edmisten also said that he<lb/>
was opposed to capital punish-<lb/>
ment in rape cases.<lb/>
quite a while he said.<lb/>
"We have a 36, a more, day<lb/>
supply of number six oil on hand.<lb/>
There is no problem as far as<lb/>
denvery goes. We really have<lb/>
nothing to base any expectations<lb/>
on other than the national news<lb/>
JESSE HELMS<lb/>
The three boilers which pro-<lb/>
duce steam to heat ECU buildings<lb/>
burn as much as 14,600 gal Ions of<lb/>
oil per day, Lowry said. The<lb/>
average for last week was 13,300<lb/>
gallons per day.<lb/>
Lowry noted that reduced<lb/>
temperatures in campus build-<lb/>
ings was not a result of any<lb/>
inadequacy in the heating system<lb/>
but an attempt to cooperate with<lb/>
President Carter's energy plan.<lb/>
"The country as a whole is in<lb/>
a crisis. The President has<lb/>
requested that the country cut<lb/>
down on its energy consumption.<lb/>
We are endeavoring in every<lb/>
respect possible to conserve<lb/>
energy he said.<lb/>
ECU began to change from<lb/>
ooal to oil and gas in 1968.<lb/>
"One of the biggest problems<lb/>
with coal was particulate pollu-<lb/>
tion iKed Lowry. "We had<lb/>
problems with the community for<lb/>
years with fall-out from coal dust<lb/>
and soon<lb/>
See HE A TING, pg. 7<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0002"/><lb/>
Legs<lb/>
Crisis Center New hours<lb/>
Page2<lb/>
17 February 1977<lb/>
Internships Skate boards<lb/>
Mr. Jim Caplanides Director<lb/>
of the N.C. Internship Office, has<lb/>
announced plans for the upcom-<lb/>
ing Summer Semester Internship<lb/>
Program in North Carolina State<lb/>
Government.<lb/>
Internships in various state<lb/>
government agencies will begin<lb/>
on May 23 and oontinue for 13<lb/>
weeks throughout the summer.<lb/>
The positions require a 40-hour<lb/>
work week, and interns will be<lb/>
paid $3.12 per hour ($125'1wk.).<lb/>
Applications are now available<lb/>
from the internship Office.<lb/>
Application deadline is March 25.<lb/>
For further information, write<lb/>
orcall:N.C. Internship Office, 401<lb/>
N. Wilminton St Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
27601, (919) 733-5966.<lb/>
ECU Club<lb/>
The ECU Club plans a Spring<lb/>
Luncheon and Fashion Show Feb.<lb/>
26, at 12:30 p.m. at the Greenville<lb/>
Golf and Country Club.<lb/>
As a part of the program,<lb/>
outgoing officers will be honored<lb/>
and plans for the spring bridge<lb/>
benefit will be announced. There<lb/>
will be a salad supper and<lb/>
winners of the Lillian Jenkins<lb/>
Scholarship will be introduced.<lb/>
For reservations, call Mary<lb/>
Jane Hayek, 756-2891 : Betty<lb/>
Grossnickle, 756-0706; or Martha<lb/>
Ferrell, 756-1956. Reservations<lb/>
deadline is Monday, Feb. 21.<lb/>
Senior show<lb/>
"Mud and Metal a joint<lb/>
exhibition of art by ECU School of<lb/>
Art senior May Talbott Carter of<lb/>
Danville, Va. and Roxanne Reep<lb/>
of Nebo is on display through<lb/>
Feb. 18 in the gallery of Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center.<lb/>
The exhibition includes Mary<lb/>
Carter's stoneware and salt-fired<lb/>
ceramics and acrylic and oil<lb/>
paintings, and Roxanne Reep's<lb/>
sculpture, metal jewelry, acrylic<lb/>
paintings and multi-media draw-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
Anyone interested in a skate<lb/>
board contest on the ECU campus<lb/>
contact the Secretary of the<lb/>
Student Union President. The<lb/>
Special Entertainment Committee<lb/>
needs to know if there is an<lb/>
interest here.<lb/>
Cooking<lb/>
An evening class in French<lb/>
cookery will be offered by ECU<lb/>
this spring. The course will oover<lb/>
menus and oooking styles of the<lb/>
major provinces of France. Stu-<lb/>
dents will prepare basic French<lb/>
dishes including crepes, souffles,<lb/>
pates a choux and will sample<lb/>
their own work each night. In<lb/>
addition, the course will provide a<lb/>
general overview of wines, with<lb/>
attention to which wines comple-<lb/>
ment a type of food or a particular<lb/>
menu.<lb/>
Instructor of the French cook-<lb/>
ing class is Mariette Davis-<lb/>
Givotset, a graduate of Iowa in<lb/>
Dijon Universities. The class will<lb/>
meet on Tuesdays, March 15-May<lb/>
3, from 7 to 10 p.m. Only 16<lb/>
persons can be accepted. Early<lb/>
registration is advised.<lb/>
Drama<lb/>
Don't miss the new East<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse production of<lb/>
"PELLEASAND MELISANDE"<lb/>
showing Feb. 11-12; 14-18 in the<lb/>
Studio Theatre. Tickets are avai-<lb/>
lable at the MoGinnis Auditorium<lb/>
Box Off ice, 10-4 daily. Tickets are<lb/>
free for ECU students with I.D.<lb/>
and Activity cards, and $2.50 for<lb/>
the general public. It is a fairy<lb/>
tale and a love story. Don't miss<lb/>
this unique production.<lb/>
Crafts fair<lb/>
The Coastal Plain Arts and<lb/>
Crafts Fair, to be held November<lb/>
10, 11, and 12th, 1977 in Rocky<lb/>
Mount, N.C. is now accepting<lb/>
applications for craftsmen in an 8<lb/>
county area. Craftsmen from the<lb/>
following counties are invited to<lb/>
participate: Wake, Johnston,<lb/>
Wilson, Edgecombe, Halifax,<lb/>
Northampton, Franklin and Nash.<lb/>
Interested craftsmen may obtain<lb/>
application blanks from their<lb/>
county Home Economics Agent or<lb/>
from Mrs. Agnes Safy, Home<lb/>
Economics Extension Agent, Box<lb/>
13, Nashville, N.C. 27856, which<lb/>
must be returned by April 1.<lb/>
F.G.<lb/>
Our special guests this<lb/>
week at Forever Generation will<lb/>
be Dan and Lois Coutcher. You<lb/>
will want to meet these great folks<lb/>
if you haven't already. Dan is<lb/>
assistant director nationally of<lb/>
F.G and he will be bringing the<lb/>
Bible study this Friday night at<lb/>
7:30 in Brewster B-103. Join us,<lb/>
won't you?<lb/>
Communicate<lb/>
Persons who wish to develop<lb/>
their speaking skills are invited to<lb/>
enroll in "Practical Oral Com-<lb/>
munications an evening course<lb/>
to be offered on Thursday eve-<lb/>
nings, March 17-May 12, at ECU.<lb/>
The course would be espe-<lb/>
cially valuable for those whose<lb/>
involvement in civic, business,<lb/>
church or social organizations<lb/>
requires them to be confident,<lb/>
clear and convincing in speaking.<lb/>
Social work<lb/>
Friday, March 11 is the<lb/>
dosing date for applications for<lb/>
the major in Social Work &amp;<lb/>
Correctional Services for Spring<lb/>
Quarter 1977. Application forms<lb/>
may be secured in Carol Belk 312.<lb/>
Two interviews are required to<lb/>
supplement the application. Call<lb/>
756-6961, Mrs. Joyner, to make<lb/>
an appointment.<lb/>
All girls interested in trying<lb/>
out for 1977-78 Pom Pom Squad.<lb/>
Meet in the lobby of Fletcher<lb/>
Music Hall at 5:30 p.m. Thurs<lb/>
Mar. 10. Tryouts will be discus-<lb/>
sed.<lb/>
Courses<lb/>
East Carolina offers a variety<lb/>
of non-credit continuing educa-<lb/>
tion courses. They are designed<lb/>
for adults of varied educational &amp;<lb/>
occupational backgrounds who<lb/>
wish to develop their knowledge<lb/>
and abilities concerning a variety<lb/>
of subjects. Emphasis is placed<lb/>
on flexibility of instruction so that<lb/>
objectives of individual participa-<lb/>
tion might be met to the greatest<lb/>
extent possible.<lb/>
For more information, write:<lb/>
Non-Credit Programs, Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, ECU; or<lb/>
all 757-6143 or 757-6540.<lb/>
Summer work<lb/>
Work this summer in the<lb/>
forests of Germany, on construc-<lb/>
tion in Austria, on farms in<lb/>
Germany, Sweden and Denmark,<lb/>
in industries in France and<lb/>
Germany, in hotels in Switzer-<lb/>
land. Well there are these jobs<lb/>
available as well as jobs in<lb/>
Ireland, England, France, Italy,<lb/>
and Holland are open by the<lb/>
consent of the governments of<lb/>
these countries to American<lb/>
university students coming to<lb/>
Europe the next summer.<lb/>
In most cases, the employers<lb/>
have requested especially for<lb/>
American students. Hence, they<lb/>
are particularly interested in the<lb/>
student and want to make the<lb/>
work as interesting as possible.<lb/>
Please write for further infor-<lb/>
mation and application forms to:<lb/>
American-European Student-<lb/>
Service, Box 34733, FL 9490<lb/>
Vaduz, Liechtenstein (Europe).<lb/>
You don't have to be in a crisis<lb/>
to want to change something in<lb/>
yourself. It's alright to ask for<lb/>
guidance. The REAL House<lb/>
doesn't care what your name<lb/>
ishow you feel about yourself is<lb/>
what's important. Call 758-HELP<lb/>
or come by at 117 Evans St. 24<lb/>
hours a day.<lb/>
Volunteers<lb/>
to help<lb/>
for Pitt<lb/>
Contact<lb/>
Associa-<lb/>
Student<lb/>
by MW<lb/>
Car wash<lb/>
Upsilon Zeta Chapter of<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity will<lb/>
sponsor a car wash, Saturday,<lb/>
Feb. 19, at University Exxon 1101<lb/>
E. Fifth St beginning at 9:00<lb/>
a.m. Proceeds will be donated to<lb/>
charity.<lb/>
Essay contest<lb/>
Any undergraduate student<lb/>
who has taken an English sinoe<lb/>
spring quarter 1976 is eligible to<lb/>
enter the second annual D. Paul<lb/>
Farr Memorial Undergraduate<lb/>
Essay Contest with the possibility<lb/>
of a $50 first prize. All essays<lb/>
need the recommendation of an<lb/>
instructor and must be received in<lb/>
the English Office by March 21,<lb/>
1977, at 5 p.m. For full details,<lb/>
contact the English Office in<lb/>
Austin 122.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi national<lb/>
service to education honor society<lb/>
will meet February 17 at 7:00 in<lb/>
rm. 244 Mendenhall. All contri-<lb/>
butions collected fa the Math &amp;<lb/>
Reading tutorial project should be<lb/>
turned in at the meeting. The<lb/>
upcoming National Convention to<lb/>
be held in April will be discussed.<lb/>
All members are urged to attend.<lb/>
The Executive Board will meet in<lb/>
rm. 243 Mendnehall at 6 XX).<lb/>
WANTED: Volunteers<lb/>
transport the elderly<lb/>
County council on aging<lb/>
ECU Student Volunteer<lb/>
tion at the Methodist<lb/>
Center on 5th St. Come<lb/>
1-3 TTh 10-1.<lb/>
Diamonds<lb/>
Anyone interested in becom-<lb/>
ing a "Diamond Darling" for the<lb/>
Pirate baseball team, oontact Jon<lb/>
Verner at Sports Information at<lb/>
757-6491.<lb/>
Fiber Designs<lb/>
Fiber Designs, an exhibit by<lb/>
Kathryn A. Kuphe of Hickory,<lb/>
N.C. and a student of the ECU<lb/>
School of art is on display through<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 23 at the Kate<lb/>
Lewis Gallery in Whichard Build-<lb/>
ing. The exhibition includes<lb/>
weavings, batiks, and silk-<lb/>
screens.<lb/>
WECU<lb/>
Listen to WECU, 57 AM on<lb/>
your dial, for the best in music,<lb/>
and a chance to win a Big Mac<lb/>
attack hunger defense card from<lb/>
McDonald's and the Big 57.<lb/>
And by the way, the Artist<lb/>
Series, this friday night from 7 to<lb/>
9, will feature the Beatles, "The<lb/>
First Five Years<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 close at 530 p.m. on<lb/>
Fridays and will be closed on<lb/>
Saturday mornings.<lb/>
New Hours of Operation are:<lb/>
for the Bookstore, 8:15 a.m. until<lb/>
5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays;<lb/>
and new hours for the Croatan,<lb/>
7:30 a.m. until 9 p.m. Mondays<lb/>
through Thursdays and 7:30 a.m.<lb/>
until 5:30 p.m. Fridays.<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
The '77 BUCCANEER will be<lb/>
on sale from 12.00 to 300 p.m. in<lb/>
the lobby of Tyler dorm on Friday<lb/>
Feb. 18. Or any afternoon in the<lb/>
publications center.<lb/>
Hurry and buy your Buc<lb/>
before exams. The subscription<lb/>
price is only $5.00.<lb/>
The Men's dorm &amp; the<lb/>
Women's dorm that buys the<lb/>
most subscriptions will each<lb/>
receive a free page in the<lb/>
yearbook for their own use.<lb/>
SGA openings<lb/>
There are legislate openings<lb/>
for Belk Dorm. Come by Men-<lb/>
denhall 228 to file. Screenings<lb/>
will be Monday, Feb. 21st. at<lb/>
4:30.<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/>
wab rated number one by the<lb/>
Carolina School of Broadcasting<lb/>
so don't miss it!<lb/>
French government faces<lb/>
opposition to apartheid<lb/>
PARIS (LNS)-French op-<lb/>
ponents of South African apar-<lb/>
theid, in a late January session,<lb/>
targeted the French gqvernment<lb/>
for its "economic, military and<lb/>
political support" to the racist<lb/>
Pretoria regime.<lb/>
Meeting under the auspice of<lb/>
the Paris-based Investigative<lb/>
Committee on Apartheid, French<lb/>
teachers, writers, journalist ,<lb/>
trade union leaders and religious<lb/>
figures, heard detailed testimony<lb/>
condemning apartheid from<lb/>
South Africans, including an<lb/>
exiled white journalist and a<lb/>
representative of the African<lb/>
National Congress, a South Afri-<lb/>
can liberation organization.<lb/>
The Investigating Committee<lb/>
sharply criticized the government<lb/>
for its consistent United Nations<lb/>
votes in favor of the white<lb/>
minority regime. For instance, on<lb/>
December 19 the French voted in<lb/>
the Security Council, along with<lb/>
Britain and the United States,<lb/>
against a resolution urging con-<lb/>
crete measures to combat<lb/>
apartheid.<lb/>
And in the last General<lb/>
Assembly session, France voted<lb/>
against a resolution-adopted by a<lb/>
strong majority-demanding an<lb/>
embargo on arms sales to South<lb/>
Africa and calling for the halting<lb/>
of all economic and nuclear<lb/>
cooperation with that regime.<lb/>
The fact is, French industry<lb/>
and government have extensive<lb/>
business ties with South Africa.<lb/>
France is South Africa's main<lb/>
arms supplier at a time when<lb/>
Pretoria's arms budget is rapidly<lb/>
expanding: in 1976, it was double<lb/>
what it had been in 1975, and that<lb/>
was already much higher than<lb/>
previous years. French military<lb/>
sales to South Africa in the past<lb/>
total well over $250 million.<lb/>
Pretoria has recently dedared<lb/>
all of Africa south of the equator a<lb/>
"defense zone" in which the<lb/>
South African Army is authorized<lb/>
to intervene whenever and<lb/>
wherever it is considered neces-<lb/>
sary.<lb/>
Despite a 1963 U.N. embargo,<lb/>
France has openly sold Pretoria<lb/>
weapons other countries hestiate<lb/>
to provide directly-<lb/>
including Mirage planes, tanks,<lb/>
helicopters and machine guns.<lb/>
President Giscard d'Estaing an-<lb/>
nounced in March, 1975 that<lb/>
France would cease further arms<lb/>
deliveries to South Africa, except<lb/>
for naval weapons and equip-<lb/>
ment, but the French contribution<lb/>
to Pretoria's military might con-<lb/>
tinue nevertheless.<lb/>
������<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0003"/><lb/>
17 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins receives N.C. service award<lb/>
the<lb/>
the<lb/>
each<lb/>
the<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Leo W. Jen-<lb/>
kins received the N.C. Service<lb/>
Award last Tuesday night at the<lb/>
5th annual N.C. Service Awards<lb/>
banquet in Raleigh.<lb/>
"I am very honored said<lb/>
Jenkins. "I am very conscious of<lb/>
all the people who have worked<lb/>
over the years for what we have<lb/>
accomplished<lb/>
Jenkins said that he feels his<lb/>
work in Eastern N.C. has bene-<lb/>
fited all of N.C.<lb/>
"I envision a large medical<lb/>
center at ECU that can serve as a<lb/>
model for the nation and for the<lb/>
world said Jenkins.<lb/>
Numerous state officials<lb/>
gathered to pay tribute to Jen-<lb/>
kins. Among them were Governor<lb/>
Jim Hunt, U.S. Senator Jesse<lb/>
Helms, U.S. Senator Robert<lb/>
Morgan, former Governor Terry<lb/>
Sanford, and William Friday,<lb/>
president of the UNC system.<lb/>
Jenkins said that when he<lb/>
came to ECU in 1947, Eastern<lb/>
N.C. was a sleeping giant and<lb/>
"this giant was awakened<lb/>
"I would encourage any<lb/>
young person starting out in life<lb/>
to oome to Eastern N.C. of all the<lb/>
places in the world ' said Jen-<lb/>
kins.<lb/>
Jenkins said that he plans to<lb/>
seek political office after he<lb/>
retires in 1978.<lb/>
"I plan to become very active<lb/>
politically and have no intention<lb/>
of getting in a rocking chair<lb/>
said Jenkins.<lb/>
"I have been called a politi-<lb/>
cian and a redneck, I consider<lb/>
both an honor said Jenkins.<lb/>
Jenkins said that he will<lb/>
probably go to his grave as a<lb/>
politician.<lb/>
 I have a great deal of respect<lb/>
for Leo Jenkins said Lt. Gover-<lb/>
nor Jimmy Green.<lb/>
Governor Hunt noted that he<lb/>
had known Jenkins for quite a<lb/>
while since Jenkins had spoken at<lb/>
his high school graduation.<lb/>
"Thanks to him thousands of<lb/>
young people have received a<lb/>
good education at ECU said<lb/>
Governor Hunt.<lb/>
Hunt especially thanked Jen-<lb/>
kins for not running against him<lb/>
in the past election.<lb/>
"I can't tell you how much<lb/>
N.C. owes him said Governor<lb/>
Hunt.<lb/>
U.S. Senator Robert Morgan<lb/>
praised Jenkins for all that he has<lb/>
accomplished.<lb/>
"Leo Jenkins was not born in<lb/>
N.C, but no one is more of a<lb/>
North Carolinian said Morgan.<lb/>
"He fought for causes that<lb/>
benefited all of N.C said<lb/>
Morgan.<lb/>
Troy Pate, chairman of the<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustees, said that<lb/>
Jenkins is very close to his<lb/>
students, many of them even call<lb/>
him by his first name.<lb/>
"One day a car full of students<lb/>
drove by Leo's house and one of<lb/>
them leaned out the window and<lb/>
U.S. SENATOR ROBERT MORGAN and Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins confer at Press Conference before banquet.<lb/>
Photo by Neil Sessoms)<lb/>
LT. GOVERNOR JIMMY GREEN was one of the dignitaries<lb/>
attending the Cystic Fibrosis fund raising dinner honoring Dr.<lb/>
Leo Jenkins. j Pnoto by Neit Sessoms)<lb/>
yelled "Go to Hell Leo<lb/>
Pate.<lb/>
said<lb/>
Mrs. Jenkins was recognized<lb/>
and presented with a bouquet of<lb/>
roses.<lb/>
Jenkins addressed the crowd<lb/>
and thanked all of them for their<lb/>
friendship over the years.<lb/>
"I love all of you and may God<lb/>
bless all of you said Jenkins.<lb/>
When I came tc N.C. in 1947 I<lb/>
was just a young brash yankee<lb/>
marine, said Jenkins. "It is with<lb/>
pride that I call myself a Tar<lb/>
Heel<lb/>
The banquet was sponsored<lb/>
by the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation<lb/>
of N.C. to raise funds for children<lb/>
with lung disease.<lb/>
BANQUET<lb/>
A ward.<lb/>
CHAIRMAN GUS TULLOS awards<lb/>
Chancellor JenKins the fifth annual N. 0. Service<lb/>
Photo by Neil Sessoms<lb/>
N.C. GOVERNOR JAMES HUNT spoke at the banquet praising<lb/>
Jenkins. Photo by Neil Sessoms<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0004"/><lb/>
. . � :� -� �� :� :� ;� x-x-x X;Xv ox x x xxv-<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
WfATHEt<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
17 February 1977<lb/>
Fair price for power<lb/>
The efforts of the oonsumer group Carolina<lb/>
Action to reform utility rates in North Carolina should<lb/>
receive greater popular support than the sparse<lb/>
attendance at Tuesday's forum sponsored by the<lb/>
League of Women Voters. Two bills that Carolina<lb/>
Action are sponsoring in the N.C. Legislature this<lb/>
session attempt to correct a topsy-turvy rate system<lb/>
in which the heaviest users of electricity pay the least<lb/>
per kilowatt hour.<lb/>
These two plans, Lifeline and Fair Share, would<lb/>
reduce the rate per kilowatt hour that residential<lb/>
customers pay. Lifeline guarantees to all users a<lb/>
basic power supply of up to 500 kilowatt hours at a<lb/>
reduced rate. If more electricity than the "Lifeline"<lb/>
amount is used, the customer is penalized with a<lb/>
higher rate. The other plan, Fair Share, seeks to<lb/>
equalize the rate per kilowatt hour of residential,<lb/>
commercial and industrial users. Charges to<lb/>
residential customers for Carolina Power and Light<lb/>
Co. in 1975 accounted for nearly 33 per cent of the<lb/>
companies' revenues even though these consumers<lb/>
used only one-quarter of the power company's total<lb/>
generation. The big users, industry and businesses,<lb/>
are thus having their bills subsidied by residential<lb/>
users. Both these reform measures would encour-<lb/>
age overall conservation and industrial efficiency.<lb/>
For the utility industry, however, efficiency is not<lb/>
required. State law assures the power-generating<lb/>
monopolies a profit, whether or not the utilities<lb/>
exercise sound business practices.<lb/>
The Carolina Action proposals should be enacted<lb/>
by the 1977 N.C. Legislature without its wavering to<lb/>
the lobbying pressures of big business. The next<lb/>
target of the consumer group should be a<lb/>
rearrangement of the utility industry itself, to make it<lb/>
practice the conservation it so fervidly preaches to<lb/>
customers.<lb/>
Cold town, warm heart<lb/>
It snowed in Greenville this year!<lb/>
We've weathered cold temperatures, rain, more<lb/>
cold temperatures, but it finally snowed. And fa that<lb/>
matter, it came at a most appropriate time-after a<lb/>
much too brief warm spell that sorta made more cold<lb/>
almost bearable. Maybe this oT farm village has a<lb/>
heart after all.<lb/>
rountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis C. Leonard<lb/>
News EditorJ. Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Trends EditorPat Coyle<lb/>
Sports EditormAnne 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 tor non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
THERE Will BE ABSOLUTELY NO PRFflPIWlOW-<lb/>
�� �. . -XvXvXvXvv.v.vv.<lb/>
Xvv-v.vXv.<lb/>
rorum<lb/>
BUC staff leaves decision to students<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
We, not only as the staff of<lb/>
the 1977 BUCCANEER, but also<lb/>
as concerned members of the<lb/>
student body at ECU, wish to<lb/>
voice our opinions on the contro-<lb/>
versial BUC issue, and to dear up<lb/>
any misconceptions involving the<lb/>
present conditions under which<lb/>
we are operating.<lb/>
As of February 1, 1977, this<lb/>
staff was allocated $4,350.00 by<lb/>
the SGA with which to pay<lb/>
salaries to ten editorial and<lb/>
business personnel.Later a $25.00<lb/>
allocation for office and printing<lb/>
supplies and a $50.00 allocation<lb/>
for phone bills were passed by<lb/>
the Legisiature.<lb/>
As of February 11, after one<lb/>
week of subscription and adverti-<lb/>
sing campaigns, only 85 students<lb/>
have bought yearbooks, and a<lb/>
mere 100 ads have been sold.<lb/>
This means that the grand total to<lb/>
print 85 books is $520.00. The<lb/>
proposed contract is as follows: 1)<lb/>
9X 12" size; 2) 1,000 copies; 3)<lb/>
224 pages; 4) type on all pages; 5)<lb/>
hardback; 6) silkscreen. Price:<lb/>
$5,998.00. This contract allows<lb/>
for no color, no special effects. All<lb/>
items are subject to change. The<lb/>
proposed contract is only a place<lb/>
to start, a foundation from which<lb/>
to work.<lb/>
To answer the question as to<lb/>
whether or not underclassmen<lb/>
mug shots will be printed, a<lb/>
definite decision has not been<lb/>
reached. However, with such a<lb/>
small budget, it does not seem<lb/>
possible to print the 50 additional<lb/>
pages at $93.00 per four pages<lb/>
that would be necessary to order<lb/>
to print mug shots. The Seniors<lb/>
will not have another chance to<lb/>
appear in the yearbook, hopefully<lb/>
the rest of the student body will.<lb/>
This decision is not one that the<lb/>
staff finds easy to accept, rather<lb/>
one that seems to have no<lb/>
alternative.<lb/>
It is the concensus of this staff<lb/>
that selling ads and subscriptions<lb/>
is not the ideal means by which to<lb/>
procure funds to print. The SGA<lb/>
has made it dear that no more<lb/>
funding will come from them. We<lb/>
are working under unpleasant<lb/>
conditions to say the least.<lb/>
These are the fads: Now you<lb/>
are informed. If there are any<lb/>
other questions, please come by<lb/>
our office or call us. We are<lb/>
located in the Publications Cen-<lb/>
ter. Our numbers are 757-6501,<lb/>
757-6502, and 757-6206.<lb/>
The dedsion as to whether or<lb/>
not there will be a '77 BUC rests<lb/>
in your hands. If you will buy your<lb/>
subscription for only $5.00, you<lb/>
can help to insure that a yearbook<lb/>
will be printed. The choice is<lb/>
yours.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
The 1977 BUCCANEER staff<lb/>
Sullivan defended, liter at ely<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In response to the young Carl<lb/>
Bernstein who brought to surface<lb/>
the embezzlement charges<lb/>
against Tim Sullivan: Return to<lb/>
investigative reporting when the<lb/>
rear of your ears are dry. A good<lb/>
reporter searches out all the<lb/>
pertinent fads before bringing<lb/>
forth serious charges against any<lb/>
party or parties.<lb/>
In retort to FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD: This paper has continual-<lb/>
ly dimbed on Mr. Sullivan's back<lb/>
throughout his campaign for the<lb/>
Presidency and during his ad-<lb/>
ministration. This newspaper ap-<lb/>
pears to have returned to the poor<lb/>
outline it presented in the early<lb/>
1970s. Perhaps Mr. Elliott can<lb/>
swallow his ballooning pride and<lb/>
publish a paper that speaks truth<lb/>
before theory and judiciously<lb/>
weighs the merits<lb/>
person or thing.<lb/>
of any one<lb/>
In conclusion: During my<lb/>
seven year assodation with ECU<lb/>
(still running after that elusive<lb/>
shingle,) certain members of the<lb/>
administration and faculty cannot<lb/>
resist the desire to play the part of<lb/>
demi-godsin their operations.<lb/>
Wouldst thou power-hungry egos<lb/>
finally allow the students to run<lb/>
their own affairs and remain in<lb/>
the background as thoroughly<lb/>
impartial advisors?<lb/>
I fear, alas, that I carry coals<lb/>
to Newcastle.<lb/>
Robert Marion Sullivan<lb/>
(neither relation or<lb/>
ideologically compatible<lb/>
to Master Tim)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0005"/><lb/>
HIH HHI<lb/>
�����������B<lb/>
�IHI ��<lb/>
17 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5 �<lb/>
� � � � ,� � "� �' � ' � �<lb/>
rOnjTTl<lb/>
Former staffer questions antagonists<lb/>
ToFCXJNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
There has been much<lb/>
criticism of FOUNTAINHEAD (or<lb/>
F-head has one writer has been<lb/>
putting it) lately and I am here to<lb/>
ask a few questions myself.<lb/>
First, let me touch on the<lb/>
question of salaries. When I was<lb/>
Sports Editor, I made the total<lb/>
sum of $90 per month. According<lb/>
to the publications' manual,<lb/>
which was put into effect a couple<lb/>
of years ago by the old Pub<lb/>
Board, which was controlled by<lb/>
the SGA, I was to keep at least<lb/>
nine office hours a week, not<lb/>
including writing, travel, or lay-<lb/>
out time. Layout time generally<lb/>
ran seven hours on Mondays and<lb/>
Wednesdays. Writing time often<lb/>
took three or four hours for both<lb/>
papers a week. Considering eight<lb/>
papers per month, I was making<lb/>
75 cents an hour. This little bit of<lb/>
money (actually token money and<lb/>
nothing else) to watch my grades<lb/>
fall because of the time put in to<lb/>
get a presentable sports section to<lb/>
you, the students.<lb/>
Newspaper work is a skill job.<lb/>
There's more to say than yes or<lb/>
no, as your job requires, Prez.<lb/>
Anyone who has the least bit of<lb/>
knowledge of parliamentary pro-<lb/>
cedures can do your job. But,<lb/>
experience and a will to work are<lb/>
needed to be in newspaper work.<lb/>
Which would you, the stu-<lb/>
dent, rather do? Would you<lb/>
rather work a oouple or three<lb/>
hours a day saying yay or nay to<lb/>
legislation and attend one meet-<lb/>
ing of the legislature a week for<lb/>
$150 a month or slave over a<lb/>
typewriter for 30 or more hours a<lb/>
week for $90 per month?<lb/>
Paper cries 'wolf<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Your attacks on the SGA and<lb/>
Sullivan remind me of the boy<lb/>
who cried wolf. You have been<lb/>
crying wolf so long that you have<lb/>
lost your credibility. Now these<lb/>
people may be wolves but you<lb/>
have not closed the case on them.<lb/>
The tendency now seems to be<lb/>
mud slinging. Thursday's paper I<lb/>
hope ends this with a writer for<lb/>
your paper writing a letter to the<lb/>
editor. A oommunity of 12,000<lb/>
people has many subjects that<lb/>
need to be oovered. There are<lb/>
many organizations in that oom-<lb/>
munity that would pray for<lb/>
one-tenth of the space that has<lb/>
been used for these attacks. Your<lb/>
banner says a circulation of 8500.<lb/>
That means right there that you<lb/>
are missing almost a third of the<lb/>
campus. For a free paper that's<lb/>
pretty bad, especially when I see<lb/>
many copies still in the racks on<lb/>
your next publication date. I feel<lb/>
if you attack the rea. problems on<lb/>
campus and really investigate<lb/>
them thoroughly before printing<lb/>
them, we oould all have a paper to<lb/>
be proud of. I would indeed like tc<lb/>
see a strong publications board<lb/>
that would oontrol such meander-<lb/>
ings by the editor of the campus<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
Johnny Hamilton<lb/>
Now to you Mr. Johnson. Mr.<lb/>
Johnson, if the students will<lb/>
remember, did a fine five-part<lb/>
article on an escaped prisoner<lb/>
from a Mexican jail who had been<lb/>
put there on alleged drug char-<lb/>
ges. The articles were very good,<lb/>
Mr. Johnson, but weren't you a<lb/>
bit biased in your reporting. The<lb/>
series was not an editorial yet I<lb/>
saw nowhere in any of the articles<lb/>
where you retrieved quotes from<lb/>
the Mexican officials who put<lb/>
Steve Wilson in jail. You were<lb/>
even slanderous in your writing of<lb/>
the Drug Enforcement Admini-<lb/>
stration (DEA) agent who<lb/>
allegedly forced the confession<lb/>
out of Wilson and his comrade.<lb/>
Don't get me wrong, I am much<lb/>
on Mr. Wilson's side in this case,<lb/>
but you were most biased in your<lb/>
reporting. And, Mr. Johnson,<lb/>
how about the fit you threw when<lb/>
one editor on the staff rejected<lb/>
your article because of style<lb/>
problems and beina biased.<lb/>
Now, to the favoritism in<lb/>
hiring policies to which you have<lb/>
charged FOUNTAINHEAD. Did<lb/>
you expect your one series on<lb/>
Steve Wilson to gain you an<lb/>
instant editorial position? Bob<lb/>
Woodward and Carl Bernstein<lb/>
cannot rest forever on the merits<lb/>
of their works on Watergate. You<lb/>
must come forward to even be<lb/>
considered for an editorial posi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
So, Mr. Johnson and Mr.<lb/>
Sullivan, would you mind answer-<lb/>
ing these few questions I brought<lb/>
up. I think the students should<lb/>
know the entire story.<lb/>
Asa student,<lb/>
Steve Wheeler<lb/>
Beware city parking<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Those of you who park off<lb/>
campus on the city streets should<lb/>
always remember that you are in<lb/>
jurisdiction of the Greenville City<lb/>
Police for any traffic violations<lb/>
you commit. So use your best<lb/>
judgement and do not park in<lb/>
no-parking areas, usually design-<lb/>
ated by a no-parking sign or a<lb/>
yellow painted street corner.<lb/>
Remember that $25.00 towing fee<lb/>
is pretty heavy on the pocket.<lb/>
J.Jones<lb/>
SGA officer clarifies position<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Someone at the F-Head<lb/>
changed my letter to Forum to<lb/>
make it appear that in my position<lb/>
as Secretary to the Office of<lb/>
International Programs I have<lb/>
something to do with a battle<lb/>
against F-Head.<lb/>
When I wrote my two letters<lb/>
to F-Head Forum I included a<lb/>
post script which remains un-<lb/>
published. That post .script is<lb/>
again included in this letter in the<lb/>
hopes that F-Head will see fit to<lb/>
print it.<lb/>
The F-Head not only added<lb/>
my title to the end of the letter,<lb/>
but also made the headline<lb/>
appear as though SGA has<lb/>
something against the F-Head<lb/>
when nothing so complicated is<lb/>
the case.<lb/>
Following my letter of tne 10th<lb/>
( published the 15th) I called M<lb/>
Elliott at his home. I was greeted<lb/>
by curses and the excuse that he<lb/>
shouldn't print my letter because<lb/>
"I would be slandering myself<lb/>
It appears he intended to slander<lb/>
me instead by changing my letter<lb/>
And so Mr. Elliott, I am<lb/>
looking into charges of slander<lb/>
against your publication, and<lb/>
therefore you. But until then we<lb/>
will see each other in the second<lb/>
meeting of the Media Board,<lb/>
which is open to the public. I sign<lb/>
myself,<lb/>
would dictate that I resign from<lb/>
my SGA offioe for the duration of<lb/>
the proceedings that I introduce<lb/>
against F-Head Editor, as SGA<lb/>
and F-Head are not on the best of<lb/>
terms presently.<lb/>
But, as the F-Head did not see<lb/>
fit to transfer Robert Swaim from<lb/>
his regular reporting beat for the<lb/>
duration of his ill-fated plight<lb/>
against the SGA President, and<lb/>
my offioe has very little to do with<lb/>
the F-Head anyway, I have<lb/>
decided that, until such time as<lb/>
SGA or Mr. Elliott ask me to<lb/>
step down, I will retain my post.<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
a<lb/>
Valentine's Party<lb/>
Thursday� bring your<lb/>
Valentines for special favors.<lb/>
and<lb/>
Super Happy Hour<lb/>
Friday 3:00-7:00<lb/>
a<lb/>
SPEED READING COURSE<lb/>
TO BETAUGHT IN KINSTON<lb/>
The Southern Reading Lab is offering their famous speed<lb/>
reading course to a limited number of qualified people here in<lb/>
the K inston area. The average person who oompletes this course<lb/>
can read 10 times faster, and with substantially improved<lb/>
comprehension and better concentration.<lb/>
This famous oourse has taught many thousands of people to read<lb/>
over 1000 words per minute with the ability to understand and<lb/>
retain what they have read much more effectively. Average<lb/>
graduates can read most novels in less than one hour.<lb/>
For complete details about this famous speed reading oourse be<lb/>
sure to attend one of the free one hour orientation lectures that<lb/>
have been scheduled. These lectures are open to the public,<lb/>
above age 13 (persons under 18 should be accompanied by a<lb/>
parent, if possible,) and the oourse will be explained in complete<lb/>
detail, including class schedules, instruction procedures and a<lb/>
tuition that is much less than similar courses.<lb/>
These meetings will be held at:<lb/>
Executive Conference Room of King's Restaurant, 409 E. New<lb/>
Bern Rd.<lb/>
Tuesday Feb. 15 at 630 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday Feb. 16 at 6:30 p.m. and 830 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday Feb. 17 at 630 p.m. and 830 p.m.<lb/>
Friday Feb. 18 at 6:30 p.m. and 830 p.m.<lb/>
and TWO FINAL MEETINGS on Sat. Feb. 19 at 1:30 p.m. &amp; 330<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Classes are limited and class places will be filled on first<lb/>
oome-first serve basis only. Be sure to attend the earliest<lb/>
meeting possible to insure a class place. Group rates are<lb/>
available upon request.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Kent Johnson<lb/>
February 4,1977<lb/>
Post Script to Forum letter of<lb/>
February 3, 1977:<lb/>
I work for SGA in that I head<lb/>
the Offioe of International Pro-<lb/>
grams (OIP). Normally ethics<lb/>
Coming To The<lb/>
ELBOROOM<lb/>
Thurs. 17th &amp; Fri. 18th from Richmond<lb/>
� PASSAGE<lb/>
EARLY BIRD SPECIAL FREE UNTIL930<lb/>
Tues. 22 &amp; Wed.23 from Va. Beach<lb/>
� HIGH &amp; MIGHTY<lb/>
DON'T MISS'EM<lb/>
Thurs. 24 Your Favorite<lb/>
� THE EMBERS<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0006"/><lb/>
HHBi<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 February 1977<lb/>
Crop dusting: exciting but tricky business<lb/>
By JIMMY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
One may not realize what it<lb/>
takes to make a crop turn a<lb/>
profitable yield, but aside from<lb/>
good weather and proper plant-<lb/>
ing, crop dusting plays an im-<lb/>
portant role.<lb/>
Fred Whitfield has been in the<lb/>
crop spraying business for over 22<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Whitfield, whose business is<lb/>
located in Roanoke Rapids, em-<lb/>
ploys a crew of about six persons<lb/>
during the crop spraying season.<lb/>
The season usually lasts from<lb/>
June to October. And Whitfield<lb/>
has no trouble finding work.<lb/>
"We have enough work to<lb/>
keep us busy from sun-up to<lb/>
sun-down, seven days a week<lb/>
explained Whitfield.<lb/>
Whitfield's business is mainly<lb/>
local, around Roanoke Rapids in<lb/>
North Carolina and Virginia.<lb/>
"I used to plant rice and<lb/>
wheat crops in Mississippi<lb/>
noted Whitfield.<lb/>
Whitfield uses three airplanes<lb/>
for dusting, of which his pride<lb/>
and joy is his Thrush Command-<lb/>
er.<lb/>
"The Thrush Commander can<lb/>
cruise for over four hours and can<lb/>
haul up to 400 gallons of<lb/>
chemicals said Whitfield.<lb/>
The average area that is<lb/>
sprayed on North Carolina farms<lb/>
is 20 acres, according to Tom<lb/>
Birdsong, a local pilot who has<lb/>
worked with crop sprayers the past<lb/>
two years.<lb/>
1 5 lb. Royal Rib Eye 5teak Dinner<lb/>
Includes a hot baked potato, crisp garden<lb/>
fresh salad, and fresh baked hot roll.<lb/>
Regular $2.89<lb/>
50COff<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$2.39<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
OAOie $.�<lb/>
SALAD BAR<lb/>
4 9 p M M- '  VALID ONLY ON<lb/>
With Dinner! STEAK'M HOUSE MON &amp; THUR<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
CAPTAIN JACK'S<lb/>
FISH DINNER<lb/>
3 Pieces of Flounder, cocktail sauce or tarter sauce, lemon<lb/>
wedge, baked potato, cole slaw, and fresh baked roll.<lb/>
Regular $2.39 ONLY<lb/>
50C Off<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
SALAD BAR W0 wL?<lb/>
49P<lb/>
With Dinner!<lb/>
$1.89<lb/>
STEAK<lb/>
jmiQF VAUDONLYON<lb/>
rKJUot MON &amp;THUR.<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd<lb/>
SOMETIMES CHEMICALS GIVE way to<lb/>
other material. Whitfield used this airplane to<lb/>
fly food to Lake Gaston when temperatures<lb/>
dipped below freezing in mid-January. The<lb/>
goats who live near the lake were starving to<lb/>
death. Photo by Jimmy Williams<lb/>
3lvd.<lb/>
And although that doesn't<lb/>
seem a large area, airplanes<lb/>
sometimes run out of fuel in the<lb/>
course of an afternoon.<lb/>
Whitfield has landed twice<lb/>
when his fuel tank was empty.<lb/>
One time he glided back to the<lb/>
airstrip and coasted to the fuel<lb/>
pump. The second time he wasn't<lb/>
so lucky.<lb/>
 I was spraying one day when<lb/>
I noticed my fuel gauge was on<lb/>
empty. There was no way I was<lb/>
going to make it back to the strip,<lb/>
so I started looking for a straight<lb/>
stretch of highway.<lb/>
 Everywhere I looked I could<lb/>
see power lines when, all of a<lb/>
sudden. I spotted a peanut field. I<lb/>
came down to the field so as to be<lb/>
perpendicular to the rows in order<lb/>
to help me stop.<lb/>
"Well, it had rained the night<lb/>
before and that field was so<lb/>
muddy that when I landed, I was<lb/>
able to taxi right out to the<lb/>
highway where I filled up from<lb/>
CLEARANCE SALE<lb/>
Now in progress at HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
RECEIVERS:<lb/>
SonySTR -4800<lb/>
Toshiba SA-220<lb/>
Toshiba SA-320<lb/>
Toshiba SA-420<lb/>
Toshiba SA-520<lb/>
Toshiba SA-620<lb/>
JVCVR-5505<lb/>
JVC VR-5555X<lb/>
JVC4VR-5426X<lb/>
JVC 4VR-5436<lb/>
Pioneer SX-52S<lb/>
Pilot 366<lb/>
Harmon Kardon 330B<lb/>
TURNTABLES.<lb/>
SonyPS-5550<lb/>
SonyPS-2251<lb/>
SonyPS-2700<lb/>
BIC920<lb/>
BIC940<lb/>
BIC960<lb/>
BIC980<lb/>
Toshiba SR-305<lb/>
Toshiba SR-355<lb/>
Sansui40S0C<lb/>
JVC VL-5<lb/>
PE2035<lb/>
Dual 1215S<lb/>
Dual 1216<lb/>
BSR &amp; Glebui n changers<lb/>
ACCESSORIES:<lb/>
Empire 66QEX carl.<lb/>
Tape<lb/>
headphones<lb/>
discwasher<lb/>
parastat<lb/>
Shur"M70EJcart.<lb/>
WAS NOW CASSETTE DECKS:<lb/>
400.00 299.95<lb/>
180.00 149.00<lb/>
200.00 179.00<lb/>
250.00 219.00<lb/>
350.00 299.00<lb/>
450.00 389.00<lb/>
180.00 159.00<lb/>
400.00 345.00<lb/>
400.00 350.00<lb/>
570.00 399.00<lb/>
240.00 135.00<lb/>
580.00 380.00<lb/>
230.00 115.00<lb/>
260.00<lb/>
430.00<lb/>
165.00<lb/>
137.00<lb/>
191.00<lb/>
241.00<lb/>
281.00<lb/>
130.00<lb/>
230.00<lb/>
260.00<lb/>
130.00<lb/>
170.00<lb/>
185.00<lb/>
215.00<lb/>
195.00<lb/>
295.00<lb/>
145.00<lb/>
110.00<lb/>
155.00<lb/>
199.00<lb/>
239.00<lb/>
99.95<lb/>
195.00<lb/>
149.00<lb/>
99.00<lb/>
56 00<lb/>
79.00<lb/>
99.00<lb/>
from 25.00<lb/>
JVCCD-1656230.00195.00<lb/>
Pioneer CT-313A180.0099.00<lb/>
Pioneer CT-5151270.00179.00<lb/>
Fisher CR-501030.00179.00<lb/>
Denon TRC-78950.00140.00<lb/>
TeacA-170240.00199.95<lb/>
Toshiba POW30250.00199.95<lb/>
Toshiba PC-5060320.00279.00<lb/>
SPEAKERS:WASNOW<lb/>
Horizon 800I50.00pair85.00<lb/>
Horizon 1200270.00145.00<lb/>
Horizon 1240360.00195.00<lb/>
Horizon 1010420.00250.00<lb/>
Becker107P270.00185.00<lb/>
KLHCL-4400.00199.95<lb/>
KLH-17200.0098.00<lb/>
Pioneer CS-99A500.00325.00<lb/>
Pioneer PRO-60120.0075.00<lb/>
Orchestral 3045396.00215.00<lb/>
Bravura-2250.00139.00<lb/>
BosbIA-2000250.00149.00<lb/>
BoselA-4000400.00299.00<lb/>
Ultralinear-75230.0090.00<lb/>
Sonic EV-50120.0059.00<lb/>
Bosa 90111615.00499.00<lb/>
60.00 20.00<lb/>
25 percent off<lb/>
25 percent off<lb/>
25 percent off<lb/>
25 percent off<lb/>
40.00 15.00<lb/>
MISCELLANEOUS:<lb/>
Sony TA-1066<lb/>
Pioneer SA-5200<lb/>
Pioneer TX-1000<lb/>
Marantz 3300<lb/>
Marantz2440<lb/>
Sanyo 1600X<lb/>
Kenwood KF-8011<lb/>
JVC NR-1020<lb/>
JVCED-1103<lb/>
170.00<lb/>
140.00<lb/>
300.00<lb/>
450.00<lb/>
300.00<lb/>
140.00<lb/>
220.00<lb/>
150.00<lb/>
50.00<lb/>
135.00<lb/>
115.00<lb/>
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250.00<lb/>
140.00<lb/>
99.00<lb/>
145.00<lb/>
125.00<lb/>
30.00<lb/>
the nursing rig and took-off<lb/>
again.<lb/>
"You think about things like,<lb/>
'What would I do if all of a sudden<lb/>
I had to put down?' But if you<lb/>
keep a cool head and rely on your<lb/>
instincts, everything will be all<lb/>
right Whitfield went on to say.<lb/>
But there are other dangers in<lb/>
crop dusting. Maybe not as<lb/>
exciting, but definitely as<lb/>
dangerous as forced landings is<lb/>
working with toxic chemicals.<lb/>
Chemicals have been con-<lb/>
troversial ever since DDT was<lb/>
removed from the market. And<lb/>
this has had an effect on the crop<lb/>
spraying.<lb/>
"Some are harmful to humans<lb/>
and wildlife, and these are being<lb/>
replaced Whitfield explained.<lb/>
 But these are things we have<lb/>
been doing a long time, trying to<lb/>
get away from poisonous chemi-<lb/>
cals. " Whitfield said. "It is a<lb/>
matter of ethics<lb/>
In the off-season, chemicals<lb/>
sometimes give way to other<lb/>
materials in Whitfield's crop<lb/>
dusters.<lb/>
"I had to use my airplane to<lb/>
fly some food Lake Gaston<lb/>
when it was frozen last week<lb/>
said Whitneld. "There were<lb/>
some goats there starving to<lb/>
death because of the ooid<lb/>
THIS APPARATUS attached to the bottom of the airplane, is<lb/>
used for spraying crops. Photo by Jimmy Williams)<lb/>
uueet<lb/>
vhoppe<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
Pastries,<lb/>
birthday cakes,<lb/>
cookies,<lb/>
and doughnuts.<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY to dorms between<lb/>
6 and 7 wt. a $5.00 minimum order.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0007"/><lb/>
17 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Pag 7<lb/>
�<lb/>
P<lb/>
I<lb/>
ns<lb/>
ng<lb/>
iv e<lb/>
to<lb/>
ni-<lb/>
a<lb/>
3lS<lb/>
ler<lb/>
op<lb/>
to<lb/>
on<lb/>
re<lb/>
to<lb/>
No<lb/>
for Cap-Chur-Sol<lb/>
Animal Shelter tranquilizers questionable<lb/>
By DENNIS LEONARD<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
The Greenville Animal Shelter<lb/>
is presently using a tranquilizing<lb/>
drug with no antidote to catch<lb/>
stray dogs, according to Audro<lb/>
Barrett, animal control officer.<lb/>
"There is not an antidote for<lb/>
Cap-Chur-Sol the tranquilizer<lb/>
said Barrett. "There is not even<lb/>
an antidote for ourselves if we get<lb/>
accidentally injected with the<lb/>
drug<lb/>
According to Barrett, the<lb/>
tranquilizer is used to make dogs<lb/>
dizzy and drowsy.<lb/>
"Cap-Chur-Sol makes the<lb/>
dogs helpless so that we can catch<lb/>
them said Barrett.<lb/>
According to Barrett, the<lb/>
tranquilizer is used as a last<lb/>
resort to catch vicious dogs.<lb/>
According to Karen Beamon,<lb/>
her dog was shot with the<lb/>
tranquilizer while running away<lb/>
from them.<lb/>
"The two men from the<lb/>
Animal Shelter couldn't catch my<lb/>
dog said Beamon. "So they<lb/>
shot her as she was running back<lb/>
to my house.<lb/>
"My dog was on hormone<lb/>
medication when she was shot<lb/>
said Beamon. "The veterinarian<lb/>
felt my dog could have died<lb/>
because the tranquilizer reacted<lb/>
Crafts sale nets $135<lb/>
By JULIE EVERET7E<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Greenville REAL Crisis<lb/>
Center raised nearly $135 in an<lb/>
arts and crafts sale last Saturday,<lb/>
according to Katie Williams,<lb/>
assistant administrator of REAL.<lb/>
The fund-raising project was<lb/>
held at St. James Methodist<lb/>
Church from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m<lb/>
according to Williams.<lb/>
Anita Brehm, of the ECU<lb/>
Department of Elementary Edu-<lb/>
cation, headed the project.<lb/>
"Eight booths were set up<lb/>
said Williams.<lb/>
"We sold art, pottery, plants,<lb/>
leather, and doll's clothes.<lb/>
"Also, the Women's Club of<lb/>
Greenville donated food<lb/>
Williams said.<lb/>
According to Williams, mer-<lb/>
chants from several towns in<lb/>
North Carolina contributed their<lb/>
merchandise to the sale.<lb/>
"We made about $135 said<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
"The money made will be<lb/>
used fa office supplies and the<lb/>
upkeep of REAL Crisis Center.<lb/>
"Our purpose, other than to<lb/>
make money, was to make people<lb/>
aware that we are here and to<lb/>
familiarize them with REAL<lb/>
said Williams.<lb/>
"The radio stations gave us<lb/>
very good publicity said<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
"We especially want to thank<lb/>
WRQRand Big WOW 13.<lb/>
"We appreciate the vol-<lb/>
unteers and their friends who<lb/>
devoted their time to REAL<lb/>
Williams said.<lb/>
"We appreciate also the stu-<lb/>
HEATING<lb/>
Continued from pg. 1<lb/>
One of the problems with coal<lb/>
particulates is that sulfuric acid<lb/>
can form in stacked gases in the<lb/>
atmosphere, according to Lowry.<lb/>
This sulfuric acid comes back<lb/>
to earth when it rains.<lb/>
Lowry noted that this pollution<lb/>
would be reduced by going from<lb/>
coal to gas.<lb/>
Pollution increases, however,<lb/>
when number 6 oil, which is what<lb/>
ECU uses, is burned.<lb/>
The state requires that fuel<lb/>
oils have no higher sulfur content<lb/>
than 1.5 per cent.<lb/>
Lowry stated that he did not<lb/>
know what the sulfur content of<lb/>
the oil burned here is because the<lb/>
state orders it.<lb/>
dents' interest.<lb/>
"We have a lot of good<lb/>
supporters said Williams.<lb/>
with the other medication<lb/>
According to Barrett, the<lb/>
tranquilizer mixed with another<lb/>
medication is usually fatal to the<lb/>
dog.<lb/>
"We are willing to change the<lb/>
drug said Barrett. "But we<lb/>
can't find another tranquilizer to<lb/>
use<lb/>
According to Barrett, since<lb/>
the 24-hour city leash law was<lb/>
adopted in May of 1975, the<lb/>
Animal Shelter has used the<lb/>
tranquilizer to catch stray dogs.<lb/>
"The 24-hour leash law is a<lb/>
city ordinance said Barett.<lb/>
"We have to enforce the law to<lb/>
protect the citizens.<lb/>
"There have been fewer re-<lb/>
ported dog bite cases since the<lb/>
24-hour leash law went into<lb/>
effect said Barrett.<lb/>
"In the past three months<lb/>
there have been 36 reported dog<lb/>
bite cases in Pitt County said<lb/>
Barrett.<lb/>
"I would like to see people<lb/>
enforce the Greenville leash<lb/>
law said Jeanette Fiore, vice-<lb/>
president of the Pitt County<lb/>
Humane Society, "instead of<lb/>
letting their dogs be tranquilized<lb/>
and shot by the Animal Shelter<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
Come down and relax to some<lb/>
good music. We have your<lb/>
favorite beverage.<lb/>
Super Happy Hour<lb/>
Friday3-7<lb/>
Ladies night every Tuesday<lb/>
Your challenge is to discover words of you 90. You may not use two off the same<lb/>
four letters in this pentagon. Discover letters in any one word. Iff you can make<lb/>
them by following the straight lines to 30 words or more, you've met the<lb/>
and from the letters, forming words as challenge.<lb/>
H<lb/>
N<lb/>
D<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/>
.<lb/>
;�j<lb/>
 lab A<lb/>
Bin. <lb/>
PABST Since 1844.The quality has always come through.<lb/>
0197 PABST BRCWIMO COMPANY Milwaukee WAs foa HeHjhrs ill Newark N J Loa An ��� Cab PsM Gsorguj<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 February 1977<lb/>
Tempers flare over utilities rate reforms<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Tempers flared in the base-<lb/>
ment of the First Presbyterian<lb/>
Church Tuesday night.<lb/>
But the argument was net a<lb/>
religious one.<lb/>
The Greenville citizens who<lb/>
met in the chilly room were there<lb/>
to hear Richard Whittington, a<lb/>
spokesman fa Carolina Action,<lb/>
explain utility rate reforms.<lb/>
The open forum was spon-<lb/>
sored by the Greenville League of<lb/>
Women Voters.<lb/>
Despite recent gripes about<lb/>
utility rate increases only 24<lb/>
people attended.<lb/>
Whittington is a farmer from<lb/>
Chatham County who became<lb/>
concerned with utility rates last<lb/>
fall when Carolina Power and<lb/>
Light (CP&amp;L) announced a 15 per<lb/>
cent rate increase.<lb/>
His main purpose was to<lb/>
explain two bills that Carolina<lb/>
Action, a citizens' action organi-<lb/>
zation, will introduce in the 1977<lb/>
session of the North Carolina<lb/>
General Assembly.<lb/>
LIFELINE<lb/>
The first proposal will be to<lb/>
establish 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/>
Whittington explained in his<lb/>
slow, Southern manner that the<lb/>
initial cost to residents would be<lb/>
two cents per kilowatt hour for the<lb/>
first 500 kilowatts per month.<lb/>
He later said that the "500"<lb/>
would probably be decreased to<lb/>
"350" before Lifeline goes to the<lb/>
NPA survey reveals reasons<lb/>
for job application rejections<lb/>
By BOB THONEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A history of job hopping and<lb/>
personality conflicts are among<lb/>
the main reasons otherwise qual-<lb/>
ified applicants for executive and<lb/>
technical positions are rejected,<lb/>
according to a survey by National<lb/>
Personnel Associates (NPA), a<lb/>
network of independent manage-<lb/>
ment-level personnel services in<lb/>
131 cities.<lb/>
"If you are prepared to<lb/>
demonstrate to your prospective<lb/>
employer that your job hopping<lb/>
had a purpose, say more pay or<lb/>
more responsibility, then you may<lb/>
be able to turn a negative element<lb/>
into a posit.ve one said Dr.<lb/>
Phyllis Smith of the ECU Coun-<lb/>
seling Center.<lb/>
"Don't be on the defensive<lb/>
said Dr. H.D. Lambeth, also of<lb/>
the ECU Counseling Center. "Try<lb/>
to demonstrate that your experi- cautioned Marks.<lb/>
ences have led to greater<lb/>
maturity<lb/>
Other common reasons appli-<lb/>
cants don't get jobs they are<lb/>
seeking include an unresponsive<lb/>
or disinterested attitude at the job<lb/>
interview and demonstration of<lb/>
limited growth potential.<lb/>
It is wise to prepare for the<lb/>
interview by practicing answers<lb/>
to questions you're sure to be<lb/>
asked, according to Charles W.<lb/>
Marks, executive director of<lb/>
NPA.<lb/>
" I f you are j udged to have too<lb/>
little growth potential, you should<lb/>
emphasize that you are depend-<lb/>
aoie, work hard, and will still be<lb/>
at the job producing for the<lb/>
xr-car xig after other, more<lb/>
ambit ous employees have gone<lb/>
xi : something else said<lb/>
Marl<lb/>
Avoiding arguing company<lb/>
policy during interviews<lb/>
It- � W .<lb/>
� B '<lb/>
- � � -�.<lb/>
"Demonstrate decisiveness<lb/>
by asking 'May I call you<lb/>
tomorrow?' or 'I want to think<lb/>
about it<lb/>
I want to talk to my wife<lb/>
about this is not good<lb/>
Finally, Marks said, 'Many<lb/>
employers will give a 'stress'<lb/>
interview to learn how you handle<lb/>
pressure. Be prepared for It.<lb/>
Goodluck<lb/>
on exams!<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD will return<lb/>
March 8.<lb/>
Legislature.<lb/>
Whittington added that there<lb/>
would be a higher rate for<lb/>
additional electricity.<lb/>
"Lifeline will be presented<lb/>
before the N.C. Senate and House<lb/>
on Monday, Feb. 21<lb/>
FAIR SHARE<lb/>
The second proposed bill,<lb/>
called Fair Share rates, would<lb/>
force industrial consumers to pay<lb/>
as much for electricity as do<lb/>
residents.<lb/>
"Fair Share will be introduced<lb/>
when we're well on the way with<lb/>
Lifeline Whittington told the<lb/>
shivering crowd.<lb/>
According to Whittington,<lb/>
industrial oonsumers pay only two<lb/>
cents per kilowatt hour, whereas<lb/>
residential oonsumers pay three<lb/>
cents.<lb/>
Under the Fair Share propo-<lb/>
sal, everyone would pay 2.5 cents<lb/>
for the same service.<lb/>
"I say that they (industries)<lb/>
should be forced to run that<lb/>
company the way you or I would<lb/>
have to run a small business,<lb/>
argued Whittington.<lb/>
"There's no way that they can<lb/>
go bankrupt. The state might go<lb/>
bankrupt but the utility compan-<lb/>
ies will never go bankrupt<lb/>
GUARANTEED PROFIT<lb/>
Whittington was referring to a<lb/>
North Carolina law which pro-<lb/>
vides that the state Utilities<lb/>
Commission must allow the utility<lb/>
companies to recognize a "rea-<lb/>
sonable profit<lb/>
The problem lies in deciding<lb/>
on what exactly is a "reasonable<lb/>
profit<lb/>
Whittington explained that<lb/>
the Utilities Commission is not<lb/>
the real villain of the piece.<lb/>
"The N.C. Legislature creates<lb/>
the laws and the Commission just<lb/>
goes by what's on the books<lb/>
Whittington frowned and said<lb/>
that the only thing that Carolina<lb/>
Action has going for it is numbers<lb/>
and the voting public.<lb/>
It seems that the citizens'<lb/>
organization is outnumbered from<lb/>
all sides.<lb/>
FULL-TIME LOBBYISTS<lb/>
Carolina Action has two full-<lb/>
time lobbyists in Raleigh and<lb/>
CP&amp;L has five.<lb/>
'The utilities companies<lb/>
employ lawyers at exhorbitant<lb/>
fees to repair the rate requests. If<lb/>
they were absolutely on the up<lb/>
and up, why would they have to<lb/>
do that?"<lb/>
By this time the audience was<lb/>
becoming disturbed.<lb/>
Whittington said that with<lb/>
Carolina Action's reforms, the<lb/>
average consumer would save<lb/>
between 15 and 30 per cent.<lb/>
According to Whittington, his<lb/>
main concern is that everyone<lb/>
should oonserve energy but this<lb/>
should not just pertain to resi-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
"As long as industries get<lb/>
more energy for less money, they<lb/>
won't stop what they're doing<lb/>
Volunteer Greenvillesponsors<lb/>
wood cutting project Feb. 19<lb/>
By BILL HARRINGTON<lb/>
Volunteer Greenville is spon-<lb/>
soring a wood cutting project<lb/>
Saturday, February 19, to help<lb/>
provide wood fa the needy and<lb/>
elderly who can't get it for<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
According to Susan Mescher,<lb/>
coordinator of Volunteer Green-<lb/>
ville and Saturday's wood cutting<lb/>
project, the agency is concerned<lb/>
with providing volunteers for<lb/>
various social programs in the<lb/>
city.<lb/>
"We have provided over 450<lb/>
volunteers in a year and a half<lb/>
said Mescher.<lb/>
Saturday's wood cutting pro-<lb/>
ject also depends on volunteer<lb/>
labor and equipment, and Green-<lb/>
ville merchants have been quick<lb/>
to answer the call, said Mescher.<lb/>
Krispy Kreme is giving<lb/>
doughnuts, McDonald's will pro-<lb/>
vide lunch, Overton's will donate<lb/>
coffee, and the local Pepsi<lb/>
company is providing drinks for<lb/>
the workers. Also, Bilbroisgiving<lb/>
cups and sugar, and the Pitt<lb/>
County Dealers Association is<lb/>
providing some trucks. The Rent-<lb/>
al Tool Company and U-Ren-Co<lb/>
will each provide a chain saw.<lb/>
According to Mescher, plenty<lb/>
of help is still needed.<lb/>
"We need axes, wedges, just<lb/>
about anything said Mescher.<lb/>
"Just plain saws would be<lb/>
helpful<lb/>
Vehicles to haul the wood in<lb/>
are also needed.<lb/>
" We' re hopi ng to get bet ween<lb/>
one hundred and two hundred<lb/>
loads of wood cut Saturday she<lb/>
said. "We need some trucks<lb/>
Mescher added that the more<lb/>
volunteers on Saturday, the more<lb/>
successful the project would be.<lb/>
She asked for the help of any<lb/>
interested ECU students.<lb/>
"The University is part of our<lb/>
community she stressed. "If<lb/>
we could get some of the students<lb/>
and fraternities to help us out, we<lb/>
would really appreciate it. Their<lb/>
help is needed<lb/>
Persons interested in helping<lb/>
with this project should meet at<lb/>
Moyewood Center, 1710 W. Third<lb/>
Street, between 830 and 9:00<lb/>
A.M. on Saturday.<lb/>
Anyone having further<lb/>
questions can contact Susan<lb/>
Mescher at her office, 752-4137,<lb/>
or her home 758-2030.<lb/>
Professorspublish anthology<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS couldn't resist making the most<lb/>
Wednesday's white surprise. Photo by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
of<lb/>
By MA RGA RE T PHOENIX<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Two East Carolina University<lb/>
English professors will publish a<lb/>
short story anthology this week.<lb/>
The book, titled "Fiction: the<lb/>
Narrative Art was edited by Dr.<lb/>
Jim Kirkland and Dr.<lb/>
Paul Dowel I and oontains head-<lb/>
notes and discussion questions<lb/>
written by them.<lb/>
It focuses on the oral and<lb/>
written tradition in short stories.<lb/>
i he publishers, Prentice-Hall<lb/>
Inc have set publication for this<lb/>
week across the oountry.<lb/>
"The book will be ideal for<lb/>
freshman English  said Kirk-<lb/>
land, director of freshman com-<lb/>
position at ECU.<lb/>
' Sometimes freshman com-<lb/>
position books tend to be too<lb/>
sophisticated. This book goes<lb/>
from simpler to more difficult<lb/>
stories, with headnotes on theme<lb/>
and technique to help the stu-<lb/>
dent<lb/>
The book oontains fifty-five<lb/>
stories. Forty-three are literary<lb/>
tales, and twelve are folk tales,<lb/>
myths, or legends.<lb/>
Kirkland and Dowell have<lb/>
written questions and brief bio-<lb/>
graphical sketches on each story.<lb/>
In each of the six chapters,<lb/>
there is a variety of stories from<lb/>
different times and cultures.<lb/>
Stories by Nathaniel Hawthorne,<lb/>
Herman Melville, William Faulk-<lb/>
ner, and James Joyce have been<lb/>
collected by Kirkland and Dowell.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0009"/><lb/>
���K<lb/>
County hospital history<lb/>
spans many generations<lb/>
By DENNIS LEONARD<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
When the new Pitt Memorial<lb/>
Hospital isoompleted this Spring,<lb/>
the fifty year dream for a high<lb/>
caliber medical program will be<lb/>
reality.<lb/>
Greenville's oldest living doc-<lb/>
tor, who is now retired and<lb/>
prefers to remain anonymous in<lb/>
this story, has watched the<lb/>
medical profession here prosper<lb/>
throughout these years.<lb/>
"When I came to Greenville in<lb/>
1943 East Carolina University<lb/>
(ECU) had about 700 students<lb/>
said the retired doctor. "The<lb/>
population of Greenville was<lb/>
approximately 13,000<lb/>
According to the aging doctor,<lb/>
the need for a hospital in<lb/>
Greenville was realized by a<lb/>
doctor in the early 1900's.<lb/>
 There were about 15 doctors<lb/>
who oovered all of Pitt County in<lb/>
those days said the retired<lb/>
physician.<lb/>
According to "The Bicenten-<lb/>
nial Book: A Greenville Album<lb/>
it was four local doctors who<lb/>
gathered support for the con-<lb/>
struction of a hospital in 1924.<lb/>
The four physicians were Dr.<lb/>
Karl B. Pace, Dr. Charles O.<lb/>
Laughinghouse, Dr. William I.<lb/>
Wooten, and Dr. E.T. Dickerson.<lb/>
Aocording to the bicentennial<lb/>
book, the four doctors mortgaged<lb/>
their homes to pay the $85,000<lb/>
construction cost of the Pitt<lb/>
Community Hospital.<lb/>
The first hospital was located<lb/>
on the corner of Woodlawn Ave.<lb/>
and Johnston St. They used the<lb/>
second floor of H.L. Hodges<lb/>
Sporting Goods to house patients<lb/>
during construction.<lb/>
"The Pitt Community Hospi-<lb/>
tal was staffed by local doctors<lb/>
with no emphasis on specialized<lb/>
medicine said the elderly M.D.<lb/>
According to the anonymous<lb/>
physician, the hospital did not get<lb/>
its first surgeon until several<lb/>
years after the building was<lb/>
oompleted.<lb/>
"Pitt Community Hospital<lb/>
was reorganized in 1934 in order<lb/>
to qualify fa Duke Foundation<lb/>
funds which were allotted to<lb/>
non-profit institutions said the<lb/>
doctor. "That reorganization con-<lb/>
sisted of changing the name to<lb/>
Pitt General Hospital<lb/>
Pitt General Hospital had a<lb/>
40-bed capacity which included a<lb/>
children's ward.<lb/>
According to the retired doc-<lb/>
tor, the hospital was unchanged<lb/>
until the end of World War II<lb/>
when several doctors returned to<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
"There was a unified effort to<lb/>
improve the medical profession<lb/>
said the elderly doctor.<lb/>
Aocording to the anonymous<lb/>
docta, the Hill-Burton Act of<lb/>
Congress enabled Greenville to<lb/>
get money fa a new hospital.<lb/>
PITT HOSPITAL has evolved from the above, at the corner of<lb/>
Johnston and Woodlawn streets, to the new Pitt Memorial<lb/>
structure below.<lb/>
"The Hill-Burton Act stated<lb/>
that the federal government<lb/>
would pay fa 50 per cent of the<lb/>
oost with the state and county<lb/>
dividing the aher 50 per cent<lb/>
said the retired docta.<lb/>
Accading to the aging physi-<lb/>
cian, plans fa the caistructiai of<lb/>
Pitt County Memaial Hospital<lb/>
were begun in 1949.<lb/>
"With the growth and devel-<lb/>
opment of Pitt Memaial several<lb/>
new dcctas came into Green-<lb/>
ville said the docta. "The era<lb/>
of specialization began in earnest<lb/>
at that time<lb/>
The anonymous docta was<lb/>
instrumental in the development<lb/>
of Pitt Memaial Hospital.<lb/>
He served as Chairman of the<lb/>
Medical Advisory Committee<lb/>
which had to aganize the hiring<lb/>
of hospital personnel.<lb/>
The modest docta was also in<lb/>
charge of writing a constitution<lb/>
fa the Hospital and in charge of<lb/>
bringing it up to standards set by<lb/>
the accreditation conmittee of the<lb/>
American Medical Association.<lb/>
Accading to the docta, the<lb/>
hospital grew at a fast pace so the<lb/>
School of Nursing at ECU was<lb/>
begun to coincide with that<lb/>
progress.<lb/>
"I personally believe that it<lb/>
was the suocess of the nursing<lb/>
school that lead to the develop-<lb/>
ment of the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine said the docta<lb/>
Accading to the aging physi-<lb/>
cian, plans were made in 1972 to<lb/>
build a new hospital that would<lb/>
take care of the inaeasing patient<lb/>
load at Pitt Memaial.<lb/>
The ultra-modern hospital<lb/>
facility that will soon be oomple-<lb/>
ted marks a high point fa the<lb/>
medical profession in Greenville.<lb/>
"I feel the medical profession<lb/>
has mae than kept pace with the<lb/>
caliber of facilities being estab-<lb/>
lished said the docta proudly.<lb/>
Greenville will soon see its<lb/>
third hospital begin operation<lb/>
almost fifty years after the first<lb/>
was begun by four dedicated<lb/>
dcctas.<lb/>
A persai can easily see that<lb/>
the medical profession is proba-<lb/>
bly the most changing aspect of<lb/>
this eastern N.C. city.<lb/>
Tfn<lb/>
1 1; <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�:<lb/>
17 February 1977<lb/>
Page9<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
byPATCOYLE<lb/>
The world of words<lb/>
One of the biggest changes I have had to endure in oollege is the<lb/>
severe alteration of my amount of leisure time. Back in high school, I<lb/>
had mae than enough time to talk on the phone, to watch the tube, and<lb/>
to read books. Fa pleasure.<lb/>
Not so in oollege. The only chance I get to curl up with a good book<lb/>
(a a trashy one) is when I'm home on break.<lb/>
Oh, I read, of oourse. I read mae than ever, as a matter of fact. But<lb/>
face it, there's a Hell of a big difference between Anthology of French<lb/>
Literature and Valley of the Dolls.<lb/>
Recently, however, I ran into a week where I actually had some<lb/>
spare time. I had no problem entertaining myself at first. It was<lb/>
amazing how much I was able to enjoy such activities as staring at the<lb/>
cinder blocks in the wall and plucking my eyebrows. Eventually,<lb/>
though, I began to yearn fa something a bit mae stimulating,<lb/>
something that would be a (non-alcoholic) escape fa me, something<lb/>
like a book.<lb/>
In total bliss, I wandered down to the trusty old Central News,<lb/>
armed with three dollars and great expectations of the reading<lb/>
pleasure awaiting me.<lb/>
I entered the stae and was literally bowled over by the myriad of<lb/>
displaysand racks I encountered. I felt like a kid in a toy stae. I finally<lb/>
settled into the serious business of perusing the shelves.<lb/>
After about 20 minutes of blinding search, I came to the conclusion<lb/>
that I had gotten a little rusty at this book-picking business. My<lb/>
choices, it seemed, ran along the lines of reading either one of those<lb/>
"Dark, Passion, Sweet. Savage books (you know, the kind where the<lb/>
heroine gets raped five times by some Mexican revolutionary befae<lb/>
deciding she'sin love with him, and will pursue him faever, a I oould<lb/>
choose a how-to" book (How to: lose weight, gain weight, enjoy sex,<lb/>
faget sex. cook meat, live without meat, etc.) I was turned off by both<lb/>
types; the instruction books reminded me too much of textbooks, and<lb/>
I ve never been much fa Harlequin Romanoes.<lb/>
Another very popular type of paperback available is the political<lb/>
scandal series. This genre has become immensely popular since<lb/>
Watergate. I could have read about all the president's men. all the<lb/>
president's women, all the president's tapes, and all the president's<lb/>
rapes, etc. Those are fine fa sane, I suppose, but I can generally find<lb/>
out mae juicy infamatioi about the bigwigs in D.C. from Roia Barrett<lb/>
anda my friend Path down the hall.<lb/>
Finally, in desperation, I began pleading to my bookwam friends<lb/>
fa help m finding the ideal book. My friend the Fitzgerald freak<lb/>
recommended Gatsby. Another pal, who is into consciousness-raising,<lb/>
pointed me toward books on that subject, but all "ESP istomeispart<lb/>
of a French verb (and Eastern Standard Time).<lb/>
One fellow made great effats to interest me in the ethereal,<lb/>
fantastic wald of Tolkien, but I found I could identify neither with<lb/>
Bilbo Baggins na with dwarves. (Sary, Hobbit)<lb/>
A well-meaning neighba offered me her oopy of Helter Skelter, but<lb/>
Id already read it, and besic'es, I couldnt take the nightmares it would<lb/>
induce.<lb/>
I asked a dude downtown if he' d read any good books lately, and he<lb/>
offered to take me back to his trailer to show me his Wonder Woman<lb/>
and Green Hanet" comic books. I politely declined, explaining that<lb/>
I'd already seen most of them.<lb/>
My frustration was getting so "omplete that I finally called my<lb/>
mother to see if she had any good books to loan me. She said she had<lb/>
no books, but that shed seen my sister reading some kind of<lb/>
cookbook called Breakfast of Champions (Sary, Vainegut fans.)<lb/>
By this time, I had collected a Dile of barowed books ranging from<lb/>
The Lite and Times of the Pokomo Tribe of Kenya, to Dont Spare the<lb/>
Whip by the Marquis de Sades grandson, to Danny and the Dinosaur<lb/>
(oourtesy of my nephew). I was at wit send.<lb/>
Suddenly, in my bleakest moment, help finally arrived in the form<lb/>
of my professas. Showing their deep concern fa my frustration, they<lb/>
provided me with such wonderful reading material as: A Study of<lb/>
hrench Vocal Chords. Cultural Anthropology, and TV Production<lb/>
Manual. I am suddenly faced with about 1500 pages of literary job to<lb/>
finish by Monday. Oh, for a chance to look at those cinder blocks<lb/>
again<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 February 1977<lb/>
'Pelleas courageous but disappointing<lb/>
By DAVID Ft. BOSNICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Experimental theatre cannot<lb/>
be judged on the (mere) '�spects<lb/>
of its success or failure. One<lb/>
considers the viability of intent<lb/>
and the consideration given to a<lb/>
new or recently revived genre.<lb/>
The Student Workshop produc-<lb/>
tion of Pelleas and Melisande is<lb/>
not a successful production. It is<lb/>
however, a courageous attempt at<lb/>
creation of theatre of process. It<lb/>
fails because there are depths in<lb/>
all aspects of the play, that are<lb/>
beyond explication.<lb/>
Maeterlinck was a philosopher<lb/>
who admitted that his plays were<lb/>
an attempt at inner reflection. His<lb/>
theatric efforts were done with an<lb/>
attempt to crystallize his moods<lb/>
and weave them into a pattern<lb/>
with a sense of emotional flux. It<lb/>
is a sense of intense psychological<lb/>
introspection. When the audience<lb/>
is left to view this series of mood<lb/>
presentations, they must suc-<lb/>
cumb to Maeterlinck's sense of<lb/>
the theatre as a womb. The<lb/>
audience, through the delicate<lb/>
incorporation of special effects<lb/>
must be moved through the<lb/>
scenarios without conscious effort<lb/>
of movement. For the time of the<lb/>
performance, there must be no<lb/>
surfacing for breath.<lb/>
Pelleas and Melisande is<lb/>
often done as an opera. The music<lb/>
is by Debussey and this orches-<lb/>
tration sets the mood for the<lb/>
audience. It provides screening of<lb/>
the actual mechanics of theatre.<lb/>
This noise, the constant annoying<lb/>
reminder that this was a play,<lb/>
removed one from the movements<lb/>
on the stage. When not totally<lb/>
involved in this type of produc-<lb/>
tion, the audienoe becomes mere-<lb/>
ly interested and begins to watch,<lb/>
rather than experience.<lb/>
The lighting for a show of this<lb/>
type must be done with the<lb/>
concept that all is, truly, a<lb/>
shifting of shadows and percept-<lb/>
ions. There can be no sudden<lb/>
shifts, no unrealistic illumination.<lb/>
All tracing must be subtly con-<lb/>
ceived. This necessary effect was<lb/>
not consistently achieved, but<lb/>
was, I believe, constantly attemp-<lb/>
ted. There are limitations to the<lb/>
illusions one can create in this<lb/>
small theatre. The flaws were<lb/>
notioeable when one was able to<lb/>
discern the source of the light,<lb/>
from the annoying shrouds of<lb/>
symbolic crepe overhead. William<lb/>
Devins, the student director of<lb/>
lighting, approximated subtlety<lb/>
wherever possible and there were<lb/>
no glaring errors in perception. It<lb/>
is hard to ask an audience to<lb/>
accept the gentle rise of the<lb/>
moon, when they are submitted to<lb/>
the audible click and hum of<lb/>
electricity.<lb/>
The scenery fa this produc-<lb/>
tion was poorly conceived. When<lb/>
one is confronted with theatre of<lb/>
the mood, the less actual sense of<lb/>
HOT PINK<lb/>
PINK FLOYD<lb/>
ANIMALS<lb/>
including:<lb/>
Pigs On The Wing (Part One)<lb/>
Dogs Pigs (Three Different Ones)<lb/>
SheepPigs On The Wing (Part Two)<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
m-<lb/>
����<lb/>
mM&amp;&amp;-<lb/>
m<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
'7.98 list<lb/>
On Sole February 18-24<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
earthly trapping there is, the<lb/>
easier one can lose himself in the<lb/>
shifts of sensation. The large and<lb/>
wooden vertical pillars were for<lb/>
the sense of shadow and spacial<lb/>
alteration and this reviewer<lb/>
understands the concepts, but<lb/>
believes that the actual setting<lb/>
could have been distilled further<lb/>
into mere blocks of ascension with<lb/>
the light playing the role of<lb/>
indicator.<lb/>
The lack of silent scenario<lb/>
alteration oould not be overcome<lb/>
by what was the worst aspect of<lb/>
this production; the performance<lb/>
of the players. There is little in<lb/>
drama that is harder to explicate<lb/>
than mood. The dialogue of<lb/>
Maeterlinck is, as he himself<lb/>
wrote, "merely stating the ob-<lb/>
vious These lines seemed to<lb/>
frighten the players as they can<lb/>
emote, but not feel the emotions<lb/>
without vocalizations. They are<lb/>
not merely out of their depth,<lb/>
(though they are) they are out of<lb/>
their genre. This is the type of<lb/>
theatre performed by meditative<lb/>
actors, who draw their strength<lb/>
from themselves. In this theatre<lb/>
of process, there is no light<lb/>
emanating from any of the play-<lb/>
ers, promote reflection or emo-<lb/>
tional interplay.<lb/>
Pelleas (Terry Pickard) never<lb/>
found the use fa his presence on<lb/>
the stage. He flitted about as if<lb/>
constantly frightened, and his<lb/>
intensity surfaced in the form of<lb/>
an alto-grade-schcoler. Pelleas<lb/>
was not intended to be performed<lb/>
as a brawl ing hero, but he was not<lb/>
a frightened boy. Mr. Pickard<lb/>
never understood his role, and<lb/>
was annoyingly weak.<lb/>
Melisande (Paige Weaver) did<lb/>
well at the points where she did<lb/>
not articulate. When given<lb/>
speeches fraught with emotion,<lb/>
her voice merely wavered, and<lb/>
she found it necessary to stretch<lb/>
symbolic words, into multi-sylla-<lb/>
bic sighs. She needed greater<lb/>
definition, reflection, one can<lb/>
waft, but not flutter.<lb/>
The remainder of the cast<lb/>
attempted no interpretation of<lb/>
Maeterlincks' conoept of perfor-<lb/>
mance and in their roles dragged<lb/>
the show from it's foundations in<lb/>
fantasy. Hal Binkley, as Arkel,<lb/>
did all but expire on stage as the<lb/>
aged King, and his constant<lb/>
whistling at the close of words<lb/>
was not the rambling of an aged<lb/>
leige, but the surface pretentions<lb/>
of a poor performer.<lb/>
Upon investigation into the<lb/>
concepts behind this production,<lb/>
this reviewer discovered that<lb/>
much of the basic intent was<lb/>
blocked by an administration that<lb/>
refused to realize that there is<lb/>
birth in experimentation. The<lb/>
only true learning process in<lb/>
theatre, for an actor or director,<lb/>
comes through erroneous if sin-<lb/>
cere attempts at structural and<lb/>
thematic interpretation. When a<lb/>
production is limited by rules that<lb/>
stifle creativity, it smacks of<lb/>
bureaucracy that is threatened<lb/>
and creaks, rocking like a buffoon<lb/>
to student princes.<lb/>
A familiar rip-off<lb/>
"The most unique production in the history of rock and roll<lb/>
entertainment" is leaving a trail of complaints in its wake as it makes<lb/>
the roundsof the campus circuit. "The Beatles Come Together from<lb/>
Group Five Productions of Austin, Tex is billed as a multi-media<lb/>
production. It is that, but some students have voiced objections about<lb/>
what they received for the admission price of $3 or $4: a series of old<lb/>
slides of the Beatles while Beatle records played in the background.<lb/>
The show "probably isn't all it's cracked up to be said an<lb/>
assistant State Attorney in Florida. After complaints, his office<lb/>
investigated the show and got an agreement from the promoters to<lb/>
honor refund requests from anyone wishing to leave the show in the<lb/>
first 45 minutes.<lb/>
THURSDAY'S<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Tuesday, Bill Deal and<lb/>
theRhondells<lb/>
End of Classes Celebration<lb/>
The Jolly Roger &amp; Thursday's<lb/>
R.&amp;N.lnc. 209 E. 5th St. 752-4668<lb/>
RAZZ JAZZ<lb/>
RECORDS<lb/>
6.98 LIST ALBUMS 499<lb/>
HEAD EQUIPMENT, JEWELRY, &amp; MORE<lb/>
COTANCHE ST. ACROSS FROM CLEMENT DORM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0011"/><lb/>
RBnn<lb/>
BPBBBII<lb/>
17 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
11<lb/>
Preston Williams<lb/>
Drama building has its own "harpy<lb/>
uTERRY DANIELS<lb/>
Staff Wrtier<lb/>
Unexpected talent can be<lb/>
found in the ECU drama depart-<lb/>
ment in unexpected places.<lb/>
When the sound of a mouth<lb/>
harp is heard in the halls there,<lb/>
everyone knows that Preston<lb/>
Williams, 59, of the housekeeping<lb/>
department there, is nearby.<lb/>
"I've been playing the harp<lb/>
for 35 years said Williams.<lb/>
"When I was a little boy, I would<lb/>
hear people play and that was<lb/>
when I decided I was going to<lb/>
learn. I remember the first song<lb/>
that I ever got the notes going like<lb/>
I wanted to was the ' Fox Trot<lb/>
I learned to play by listening<lb/>
to other people and by adding my<lb/>
own techniques to what I hear<lb/>
added Williams.<lb/>
"I can hear someone hum-<lb/>
ming a singing a song, and with<lb/>
the tune in my mind, I can go off<lb/>
and play it<lb/>
Williams' family is also in-<lb/>
terested in music and whenever<lb/>
they are together, they enjoy<lb/>
playing.<lb/>
Williams' wife, who works in<lb/>
the Pitt County Social Service<lb/>
department, plays the organ and<lb/>
piano. His son, who is studying<lb/>
art at St. Augustine's College in<lb/>
Raleigh, plays the organ. And his<lb/>
daughter, a seamstress in Farm-<lb/>
ville, sings.<lb/>
E.L. Stocks<lb/>
to head<lb/>
campaign<lb/>
Elbert Lee Stocks, principal of<lb/>
North Tarboro Elementary School<lb/>
for the past 21 years, will be<lb/>
chairman of the ECU Stadium<lb/>
Fund drive in Edgecombe<lb/>
County.<lb/>
"Mr. Elbert Stocks is a<lb/>
distinguished educator and com-<lb/>
munity leader, widely known and<lb/>
loved and respected in all of<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina and his<lb/>
loyalty and enthusiasts support is<lb/>
a real asset to his alma mater,<lb/>
East Carolina University said<lb/>
Thomas Willis, Stadium Fund<lb/>
drive director.<lb/>
Stocks, a native of Ayden,<lb/>
received his M.A. degree at ECU<lb/>
in 1953 and taught in Halifax and<lb/>
Pitt counties before becoming<lb/>
principal at North Tarboro in<lb/>
1956. He is married to the former<lb/>
Hattie Bailey (ECU-1951) of Mar-<lb/>
tin County and they have four<lb/>
daughters.<lb/>
He was a director of the ECU<lb/>
Pirate Club 1974-75, is a past<lb/>
president of the Tarboro Kiwanis<lb/>
Club, member of the First Baptist<lb/>
Church of Tarboro, and a member<lb/>
of NEA and NCAE and the N.C.<lb/>
Division of Principals.<lb/>
The ECU Stadium fund drive<lb/>
is to raise $2.5 million for<lb/>
expansion of Fioklen Stadium to<lb/>
nearly 40,000 seating capacity.<lb/>
The drive in the Greenville-Pitt<lb/>
County area has netted gifts and<lb/>
pledges totaling approximately $1<lb/>
Students enjoy hearing<lb/>
Williams play. This much was<lb/>
obvious during the Christmas<lb/>
season when students there were<lb/>
singing carols in the hall and<lb/>
Williams furnished the back up<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Williams started cleaning in<lb/>
the drama department eight<lb/>
months ago, and he claims the<lb/>
people there are the friendliest.<lb/>
"Getting along with people<lb/>
influences liking your job said<lb/>
Williams. "I've never had a job I<lb/>
did not like. My job here is to<lb/>
clean up after the students and I<lb/>
like it<lb/>
Williams came to Greenville<lb/>
from Grifton when he was 19. The<lb/>
first job he had was with the Pepsi<lb/>
Cola Bottling Company.<lb/>
"I was an amateur boxer<lb/>
when I was 16 and kept at it about<lb/>
three years said Williams. "I<lb/>
thought I could learn more about<lb/>
it at the college (ECU)<lb/>
Williams began working with<lb/>
the grounds crew here at ECU<lb/>
and then worked with the athletic<lb/>
department for 12 years. He<lb/>
works from 4 p.m. to 1230 a.m.<lb/>
in the drama department now.<lb/>
"I enjoy working the night<lb/>
shift best said Williams.<lb/>
"The only unusual thing to<lb/>
happen to me here has been<lb/>
finding a bat in the hall. I've<lb/>
heard about the ghost in the<lb/>
auditorium but I've never seen<lb/>
him<lb/>
When Williams came to ECU<lb/>
to work, the football and baseball<lb/>
fields were behind the old<lb/>
Memorial gym. The tennis courts<lb/>
then were where the nursing<lb/>
building is now. And the drama<lb/>
building was an elementary<lb/>
school.<lb/>
"The students seem to be the<lb/>
same said Williams. "I get<lb/>
along with any of them by<lb/>
showing respect<lb/>
While playing the harp for the<lb/>
"Waterside Mailooes Williams<lb/>
cut a record of spiritual songs.<lb/>
But he admits he best enjoys<lb/>
playing alone.<lb/>
 I broadcasted for Lee's Sport<lb/>
Shop at WGTC in Greenville fa a<lb/>
while said Williams. "The job<lb/>
ended after the sports shop<lb/>
closed<lb/>
Pruning trees part-time is<lb/>
another talent of Williams.<lb/>
"After cutting down a tree<lb/>
growing from under Coach<lb/>
(Clarence) Stasavich's house, I<lb/>
had people asking me all the time<lb/>
to prune trees said Williams.<lb/>
"Tocutdownatree, you ne�d<lb/>
a plan before climbing into the<lb/>
tree. I never take chances<lb/>
Williams, a sports lover, said<lb/>
he used to attend all the<lb/>
ECU games but he says trtwe<lb/>
isn't anything he enjoys more<lb/>
than playing the harp.<lb/>
"Playing the harp requires<lb/>
trusting yourself, as in anything<lb/>
ou do<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057113_0012"/><lb/>
�'�� ��-� - .�.�:�.����- � �  �<lb/>
Page 12<lb/>
17 February 1977<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
byJOHNEVANS<lb/>
Women's basketball ends<lb/>
The Baptist Student Union girls' team has won the women's<lb/>
intramural basketball championship by downing a tough Nock's<lb/>
Nockers squad, 39-38, in Minges Coliseum on Tuesday.<lb/>
As they have had to do all season, the BSUers had to come from<lb/>
behind to beat their opposition with a strong second half defense and<lb/>
the good inside play of Jean Evans.<lb/>
Evans scored 18 points in the championship win and totaled<lb/>
51-points in the three playoff games. In a losing cause, Marsha Person<lb/>
scored 18 for the Nockers despite being double-teamed most of the<lb/>
game. She finished with 41 points in two playoff games, as the Nockers<lb/>
won their semifinal contest by forfeit.<lb/>
The BSU team trailed by 12-4 early in the game, but rallied to score<lb/>
14 straight points for a 16-12 lead. They never trailed after that,<lb/>
although the Nockers rallied to tie the game at 36-36 with just over a<lb/>
minute to play.<lb/>
BSU countered with a basket and a free throw with less than a<lb/>
minute to play and the Nockers final score came at the buzzer, when<lb/>
they trailed by three.<lb/>
BSU will now represent ECU in an Intramural Champions<lb/>
Basketball Tournament to be held in March between Appalachian<lb/>
State. UNC-Wilmington and Atlantic Christian College. East Carolina<lb/>
will host the tournament.<lb/>
The First Intramural Ice Ball championship was also decided on<lb/>
Tuesday as the Intramural Staff (IMS) topped the Greek Freaks, 12-6,<lb/>
at Twin Rinks Rec. Center.<lb/>
I MS shot out to a 9-0 lead at the half and held off the Greek Freaks<lb/>
in the second half. The Freaks, leading scorer Walter LaRogue, had<lb/>
been the regular-season Ice Ball scoring champion, but Tuesday he<lb/>
was held to only four points by the tough I MS defense of Bob Bailey at<lb/>
goalie, Lynne Stout, John Evans, Rose Mary Adkins, David Brown and<lb/>
Gwen Engelkhen. On offense IMS was led by Mike Edmondson with<lb/>
six points and Sonny Gundlach with four points. Janis Smith added the<lb/>
final points for the champions.<lb/>
Greg Troupe and Lindsey Overton won the Intramura! Men's<lb/>
Racquetball Title a few weeks back and we neglected to mention it<lb/>
then.He also reached the finals in the singles' competition.<lb/>
Men's playoffs in basketball began Monday and a few major upsets<lb/>
were recorded. The biggest upset of all found the Rockets downing the<lb/>
Desperados in the semifinals of the Independent league, 49-39. Al<lb/>
MoCrimmons led the seventh-ranked Rockets past the third-ranked<lb/>
Desperados with 17 points.<lb/>
In the fraternity division neither of the pre-tournament favorites for<lb/>
the finals made it. Kappa Sigma nipped Pi Kappa Phi, 50-48, on a sha<lb/>
by Ron Stumpo with four seconds left, and Kappa Alpha raced past<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi, 40-29. Pi Kappa Phi and Kappa Alpha Psi had tied<lb/>
for the regular season fraternity league championship with 9-1 marks,<lb/>
but all that went for naught in the playoffs. In the Kappa Sigma-Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi matchup Stumpo outdueled leading intramural scorer<lb/>
Lennie Blackley. Stumpo hit for 23 points, while Blackley's cold<lb/>
shooting netted only eight points, 20 below his season average. Art<lb/>
Graepel also had 15 fa Kappa Sigma and Steve Harris led Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi with 17 points.<lb/>
The dormitory league is going into its final games on Thursday with<lb/>
about everything as it was expected to be. Through Wednesday's<lb/>
semifinal rounds, only one major upset had been recorded.<lb/>
In that game the Belk TNT upset Belk Lo and Co, 62-47, in a very<lb/>
physical game that found three of the losers' players injured by the<lb/>
TNT's Harold Randolph. After the game Randolph was expelled fa<lb/>
further playoff action fa rough play.<lb/>
In other games, the Figures Revised made it to the final four after<lb/>
surviving a 49-48 scare against the Carolina Stars. The Figures took the<lb/>
lead late in the game, but had to hold their breaths befae a last second<lb/>
shot by the Stars hit the rim and fell away. The Jones Boys, the Nutties<lb/>
Buddies and the Belk TNT's are the other Dam semifinalists. In the<lb/>
club division the Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA) upset the<lb/>
Rugby Leathernuts to reach the finals of that league against the BSU<lb/>
Bullets.<lb/>
Herb Gray leads Pirates in<lb/>
losing effort to Ga. Southern<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina dropped its fifth<lb/>
consecutive game and ninth out of<lb/>
their last ten Monday when they<lb/>
were beaten 64-57 by Geagia<lb/>
Southern at Statesbao, Geagia.<lb/>
The loss, as the last two<lb/>
befae it, was the result of the<lb/>
opposition getting ha at the end<lb/>
when both teams were virtually<lb/>
even. The Pirates had taken a<lb/>
53-52 lead with six minutes to go<lb/>
but could manage just two<lb/>
baskets in the final minutes.<lb/>
ECU, now 8-15 on the season,<lb/>
was again killed by foul shas, a<lb/>
lack of them. The Eagles traveled<lb/>
to the line 19 times, converting 18<lb/>
times while the Pirates received<lb/>
just six charity tosses, making<lb/>
half of them. East Carolina<lb/>
outscaed the Eagles from the<lb/>
field 27-23.<lb/>
"We have been playing good<lb/>
ball said a disheartened Dave<lb/>
Patton. What do you say to the<lb/>
players? They have played hard<lb/>
in every game; we're shooting the<lb/>
ball better; we're playing good<lb/>
defense; but, we just simply can't<lb/>
get a break. I mean a break we<lb/>
create or a break from the<lb/>
officials. It's like it ain't meant to<lb/>
be fa us<lb/>
Geagia Southern started out<lb/>
in the game ha as a fire-aacker,<lb/>
jumping out to a 25-10 lead with<lb/>
eight minutes left in the half. But,<lb/>
the Pirates started their own rally<lb/>
and cut the margin down to ten<lb/>
quickly. The Eagles then went to<lb/>
the four caners with four minutes<lb/>
left. The Pirates stole a couple of<lb/>
balls and converted to cut the lead<lb/>
to six, 31-25 at the half.<lb/>
Matt Simpkins soaed the first<lb/>
two baskets of the second half and<lb/>
put the Eagles out to a ten-point<lb/>
lead quickly. But, the relentless<lb/>
Pirates kept cutting away at the<lb/>
margin until they pulled ahead<lb/>
53-52 with six minutes left.<lb/>
Geagia Southern took the lead<lb/>
back and salted the win away<lb/>
with good foul sheeting.<lb/>
Simpkins led the winners with<lb/>
18 points while John Fowler<lb/>
added 16. Phil Leisure pumped<lb/>
six long range jumpers fa his 12<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Freshman sensation Herb<lb/>
Gray led the Pirates with 17<lb/>
points while Larry Hunt and Jim<lb/>
Ramsey followed with 13 and ten,<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
The Pirates sha 50 percent<lb/>
from the flea and the same<lb/>
percentage from the charity<lb/>
stripe. The Eagles hit just 41.8<lb/>
percent from the field while<lb/>
converting 18 of 19 from the foul<lb/>
line fa a 94.7 percentage.<lb/>
The Eagles also outrebounded<lb/>
ECU 29-26. The Pirates had<lb/>
pulled 55 retrieves when the<lb/>
Eagles came to Greenville early in<lb/>
the seaon. The Pirates won that<lb/>
one 87-78.<lb/>
The Bucs hosted Furman last<lb/>
night in a pivaable Southern<lb/>
Conference clash and will be<lb/>
entertaining The Citadel Saturday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Intramural basketball<lb/>
Baptists knock Nockers<lb/>
ByJOHNEVANS<lb/>
Special to Fountainhead<lb/>
It was a long, hard road to<lb/>
travel but the Baptist Student<lb/>
Union women's basketball team<lb/>
finally proved their claim as<lb/>
number one by downing Nock's<lb/>
Nockers, 39-38, in Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum.<lb/>
Led by Jean Evans' 18 points<lb/>
and a tough second half defensive<lb/>
effat that cut off Marsha Person,<lb/>
the BSU women raced to their<lb/>
ninth win of the season without a<lb/>
loss, and their third close win in<lb/>
playoff action.<lb/>
BSU had to take 29-28 and<lb/>
39-34 wins to reach the playoffs<lb/>
and Tuesday they were faced to<lb/>
cane fran eight points back early<lb/>
in the game to win. The Nockers<lb/>
ran out to an early 12-4 lead as<lb/>
Person hit fa six quick points<lb/>
against the Nockers' zone. After<lb/>
that start, the BSU team double-<lb/>
teamed Person in a man-to-man<lb/>
defense in an attempt to shut her<lb/>
off ran scaing.<lb/>
Down by eight with 9:40 left to<lb/>
play in the first half, the BSU<lb/>
women slowly pecked away at the<lb/>
Nockers' lead and rjeled off<lb/>
several baskets with their slow,<lb/>
deliberate style of play.<lb/>
Lai Caverly scaed the first<lb/>
of six straight baskets and then<lb/>
Evans hit fa three straight scaes<lb/>
at BSU tied the scae at 12-12<lb/>
with 553 to play. Kim Michael<lb/>
then put them ahead fa the first<lb/>
time at 14-12 with a set sha and,<lb/>
after Persoi and Betsy Johnson<lb/>
missed three free throws, Evans<lb/>
scaed to make it 16-12.<lb/>
The Nockers' free throws<lb/>
shoaing proved costly to them, as<lb/>
they failed to make any of their<lb/>
six free throws in the first half<lb/>
and made only 4 of 11 fa the<lb/>
game. Meanwhile, tt e BSU<lb/>
wonen made five of eignt from<lb/>
the line, all in the aucial second<lb/>
half.<lb/>
After taking the lead BSU<lb/>
never trailed again, but they<lb/>
could never pull ahead by mae<lb/>
than seven points. That lead came<lb/>
after BSU ran off six straight<lb/>
points to build a 28-21 lead with<lb/>
9.53 to play in the game. That<lb/>
tear came after the Nockers had<lb/>
burned BSU fa five straignt<lb/>
points to cut a six-point lead to a<lb/>
single point.<lb/>
Johnson closed the lead to five<lb/>
and Evans stretched it back out to<lb/>
seven then six, with two free<lb/>
throws and 6:41 left. The lead<lb/>
wasn't safe, though, as BSU<lb/>
missed several shas and allowed<lb/>
the Nockers to close within two at<lb/>
32-30, after Person hit two free<lb/>
throws.<lb/>
With four fouls on BSU's<lb/>
Caverly and Helen Turner and<lb/>
four also on the Nockers' Person,<lb/>
both teams became cautious<lb/>
down the stretch. BSU pushed its<lb/>
lead back to six points at 36-30,<lb/>
but Person scaed twice and<lb/>
Johnson rebounded a miss to tie it<lb/>
at 36-all with 1102 left to play.<lb/>
With two time-outs left, the<lb/>
Nockers used bah of them in the<lb/>
final 37 seconds after Lynette<lb/>
Ginn scaed to make it 38-36. The<lb/>
first Nocker time-out followed a<lb/>
missed basket at 26 seconds and<lb/>
their second was used with eight<lb/>
seconds left after the Nockers<lb/>
rebounded a missed throw by<lb/>
Caverly. Caverly did make the<lb/>
first of the one-and-oie and that<lb/>
cushioned the BSUers lead to<lb/>
39-36.<lb/>
The Nockers made their final<lb/>
sha in the closing seconds, but<lb/>
they were still a point shat of<lb/>
the BSU squad.<lb/>
Persoi led the Nockers with<lb/>
18 points despite drawing double<lb/>
coverage most of the game and<lb/>
Johnson added 10 points. June<lb/>
Gaston scaed eight points, but<lb/>
the Nockers got little offense from<lb/>
their aher two players.<lb/>
Evans led BSU with her 18<lb/>
points and Ginn gave an unex-<lb/>
pected lift with eight points.<lb/>
Those points were needed, too, as<lb/>
the BSU leading scorer Kim<lb/>
Michael could scae oily six<lb/>
points.<lb/>
The BSU team will now<lb/>
represent ECU in an Intramural<lb/>
Basketball tournament to be held<lb/>
at ECU next month. Competing in<lb/>
the tournament will be the<lb/>
women's and men's basketball<lb/>
champions from Appalachian<lb/>
State, UNC-Wilmington and At-<lb/>
lantic Christian College.<lb/>
SATTERWAITE L beatsNuby Francis R in the arm<lb/>
wrestling finals of the 176-200 weight class. Photo by Russ<lb/>
Pogue<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0013"/><lb/>
17 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
i At-<lb/>
Championships begin<lb/>
Pirates face grueling schedule<lb/>
ECU WRESTLING COACH John<lb/>
into action against Richmond this<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If you think East Carolina<lb/>
athletics will be stopping just<lb/>
because of the exam break, you<lb/>
better think again. There will be a<lb/>
total of 23 games, meets and<lb/>
matches in the next two and<lb/>
one-half weeks.<lb/>
For starters, this weekend is<lb/>
as full as it can be. The swim<lb/>
team will be down in Greenville,<lb/>
S.C. going for its 21 st consecutive<lb/>
swim title, a record which will<lb/>
probably stand as long as the<lb/>
Southern Conference does; that<lb/>
is, if the Southern even stands for<lb/>
12 more years.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, fresh off<lb/>
their big upset over North Caro-<lb/>
lina on Tuesday night, will be in<lb/>
Rock Hill, S.C. today, tomorrow<lb/>
and Saturday for the Winthrop<lb/>
Invitational women's basketball<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
ECU's men's golf team will<lb/>
begin its 1977 season today at the<lb/>
Coastal Carolina Invitational in<lb/>
Myrtle Beach, S.C. The tourna-<lb/>
W el born will lead his grapplers<lb/>
weekend. Photo by Kip Sloan<lb/>
ment will run through Saturday at<lb/>
the resort town.<lb/>
Saturday will mark the date<lb/>
for a double-header at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. The ECU wrestling<lb/>
team will entertain Richmond,<lb/>
trying to improve its mark to 8-3,<lb/>
at 500 p.m while the ECU's<lb/>
men's basketball team will close<lb/>
its SC schedule against The<lb/>
Citadel immediately afterwards.<lb/>
Friday, the women's gymnas-<lb/>
tics team will travel to Farmville,<lb/>
Va. to meet Longwood College.<lb/>
The start of exam week next<lb/>
week will slow sports on campus<lb/>
very little. On Wednesday, the<lb/>
Pirate basketball team will close<lb/>
out its regular season with a<lb/>
non-conference opponent, Mer-<lb/>
cer. The game will be in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
On Sunday, ECU's track team<lb/>
will travel to the Delaware<lb/>
Invitational fa its final meet<lb/>
befae the conference champion-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
On Thursday, Feb. 24, the<lb/>
wrestling team will close out its<lb/>
regular season when they travel<lb/>
Harold Randolph cut<lb/>
from football team<lb/>
Harold Randolph, a 20-year<lb/>
old Greenville Junior, was dis-<lb/>
missed from the football squad<lb/>
Tuesday for disciplinary reasons.<lb/>
Randolph, who has been a<lb/>
standout at the linebacker posi-<lb/>
tion fa the past two seasons, had<lb/>
been considered to be one of<lb/>
ECU's finest linebackers ever.<lb/>
Acoading to Pat Dye, the<lb/>
Pirate's head football coach,<lb/>
Randolph was dismissed for<lb/>
disciplinary reasons.<lb/>
Dye said Randolph's conduct<lb/>
has not been condusive to the<lb/>
best interest of the football team.<lb/>
to Williamsburg, Va. for a<lb/>
pivotable match-up against Wil-<lb/>
liam and Mary. The Indians are<lb/>
slight favaites to win the SC<lb/>
aown this year, but the Pirates<lb/>
have won it six times in a row and<lb/>
will be waking to keep it in<lb/>
Greenville fa the last year in the<lb/>
Southern.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will go into<lb/>
the NCAIAW state tournament in<lb/>
Raleigh on Feb. 24-26, Thursday<lb/>
through Saturday of next week.<lb/>
They will be seeded fourth in the<lb/>
five team tournament and will<lb/>
faoeUNC-Greensbao in its open-<lb/>
ing game on Thursday.<lb/>
The ECU men's track team<lb/>
will be competing in the Southern<lb/>
Conference indoa championships<lb/>
on Friday, Feb. 25 and Saturday,<lb/>
Feb. 26 at Lexington, Va. The<lb/>
Pirates have never won the indoa<lb/>
title, but won the outdoa champ-<lb/>
ionship last season and have a<lb/>
stronger team this year.<lb/>
Saturday, Feb. 26 will also<lb/>
mark the opening of the Southern<lb/>
Conference basketball tourna-<lb/>
ment. East Carolina will be<lb/>
playing at either Appalachian<lb/>
State or William and Mary,<lb/>
depending on the outcome of a<lb/>
few key games this week.<lb/>
The Southern Conference<lb/>
tournament will continue on<lb/>
Tuesday and Wednesday, Mar. 1<lb/>
and 2, in Roanoke, Va. The<lb/>
winners of the three first round<lb/>
games and VMI will congregate<lb/>
in Roanoke with the ECU-William<lb/>
and MaryAppalachian State win-<lb/>
ner playing VMI and the Furman<lb/>
Citadel winner playing the David-<lb/>
sonWilliam and Mary a Appa-<lb/>
lachian State winner. The winners<lb/>
of those games will meet Mar. 2<lb/>
fa the league championship and<lb/>
berth in the NCAA tournament.<lb/>
The swimming team will be in<lb/>
action again Mar. 2-5 when they<lb/>
travel to Charleston, W. Va. fa<lb/>
the Eastern Intercollegiate<lb/>
Championships, its warm-up fa<lb/>
the nationals.<lb/>
East Carolina will be the host<lb/>
of the Southern Conference<lb/>
wrestling championships in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum on Mar. 4-5.<lb/>
East Carolina has won the last six<lb/>
titles and will try to leave the<lb/>
league a winner once again.<lb/>
Also on Mar. 5, the NCAIAW<lb/>
gymnastics will be held in Mem-<lb/>
aial Gymnasium. All the state's<lb/>
women's teams will be compe-<lb/>
ting.<lb/>
Baseball and tennis will be<lb/>
kicking off its seasons oi that day<lb/>
also, with the netters hosting<lb/>
Salisbury State and the baseball<lb/>
team traveling to Campbell.<lb/>
So, even though you will be<lb/>
studying your behinds off during<lb/>
the next two weeks, you will have<lb/>
a chance to take a little time out<lb/>
and see good spats aoiton until<lb/>
the cob webs are out of your head.<lb/>
Cm<lb/>
RAINBOW WEDGE<lb/>
2716-Wos. Multi Color Nylon Webbing<lb/>
Med. Width 510 Only<lb/>
18 Pair Case<lb/>
$6.00<lb/>
TACOS- ENCHILADAS- TAMALES - RICE - BEANS<lb/>
TOSTADO � TORTILLA - TACOS - KORN DOGS<lb/>
AUTHENTIC TEXAS-STYLE<lb/>
MEXICAN<lb/>
DELICIOUS - NUTRITIOUS<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S<lb/>
GREAT NEW<lb/>
TASTE TREAT<lb/>
- ECONOMICAL<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
TAKE OUT<lb/>
TIPPY'S<lb/>
SUFFICIENT<lb/>
VARIETY<lb/>
TO SUIT EVERYONE.<lb/>
INCLUDING VEGETARIANS<lb/>
US 264 BY-PASS (ADJACENT PEPPI'S PIZZA)<lb/>
OPEN TILL 9:00P.M. EVERY NIGHT<lb/>
756-6737<lb/>
CHICKEN - BURRITO-TACOS- ENCHILADAF<lb/>
SEAFOOD - GUACAMOLE - CHILI CON QUESO - RICE<lb/>
DON'T MISSTHE<lb/>
VALENTINES PARTY<lb/>
AT<lb/>
Chapter �<lb/>
FEATURING A<lb/>
MAKE-OUT CONTEST<lb/>
FOR FUN AND PRIZES<lb/>
FRIDAY NIGHT, FEB. 17<lb/>
FIFTH AND COTANCHE STREETS<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 February 1977<lb/>
Lady Pirates beat Chapei Hill, 68-67,<lb/>
prepare for weekend Winthrop tourney<lb/>
By KIP SLOAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In easily the most emotional<lb/>
game of the women's basketball<lb/>
season, the Lady Pirates pulled<lb/>
together to outplay a frustrated<lb/>
Tarheel squad in front of a crowd<lb/>
of 1500. The Pirates won the<lb/>
match. 68-�<lb/>
"This game really made the<lb/>
season for me said Coach<lb/>
Bolton after the win. "There is<lb/>
something really special about<lb/>
beating Carolina, and this game<lb/>
neant so much to the team<lb/>
ATiTIC<lb/>
Feb.17th<lb/>
Frigid Pink<lb/>
Feb.18th&amp; 19th<lb/>
Super Grit<lb/>
Feb.21st<lb/>
McKeef<lb/>
Feb.22nd,23rd,<lb/>
24th<lb/>
Warehouse<lb/>
Feb.25th &amp;26th<lb/>
Jubal<lb/>
Feb.27th<lb/>
TripleTree<lb/>
March2nd �r 3rd<lb/>
Nantucket<lb/>
March 4th,5th,<lb/>
6th<lb/>
Good Humor<lb/>
March 9th<lb/>
Watch for<lb/>
'Special Event'<lb/>
From the touchoff, Carolina<lb/>
took possession of the ball but<lb/>
failed to score. Seconds later,<lb/>
ECU took the ball to the other end<lb/>
of the oourt and Debbie Freeman<lb/>
sank one from the side to put the<lb/>
first score of the game up.<lb/>
The Pirates had trouble sort-<lb/>
ing out their defense though, and<lb/>
Carolina quickly tied.<lb/>
The score see-sawed between<lb/>
the teams for the next ten<lb/>
minutes, with the Tarheels pul-<lb/>
ling to a 5 point lead by the<lb/>
middle of the first half. Bolton<lb/>
made good use of a couple of<lb/>
time-outs to redirect defenses,<lb/>
and the Pirates began to gain or<lb/>
points.<lb/>
ALL<lb/>
THE<lb/>
HSU.<lb/>
YOU<lb/>
CAN<lb/>
EAT<lb/>
reenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
DIAL 758-7400<lb/>
507 Easr 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
We deliver anywhere within the city<lb/>
limitsfor free!<lb/>
Energy Crisis Hours<lb/>
Sun. �Thur.<lb/>
11:30 - 10:00<lb/>
Fri.&amp; Sat.<lb/>
11:30 - 11:00<lb/>
With 8 minutes left, guard<lb/>
April Ross relieved Carolina of<lb/>
the ball and took it to the net to tie<lb/>
the score onoe again, 23-23.<lb/>
Freeman and Kerbaugh con-<lb/>
tinued to add points, but again a<lb/>
weak defense against Carolina's<lb/>
shots kept the score close. Debbie<lb/>
Tritt soored on a layup with<lb/>
seconds left to give ECU the lead<lb/>
at the half, 36-35.<lb/>
As the second half got under<lb/>
way, the Pirates tightened up<lb/>
their defense and began to rYiove.<lb/>
With bursts of momentum, the<lb/>
team opened up a nine point rift<lb/>
over the Tarheels. Had the clock<lb/>
run out then, a victory would have<lb/>
been assured, for the Pirates, but<lb/>
12 minutes remained, and Caro-<lb/>
lina became determined to make<lb/>
up the difference.<lb/>
Joan Leggett and Cathy<lb/>
Daniels led the Tarheels back up<lb/>
to a tie score with 3 minutes left,<lb/>
and then pulled to a three point<lb/>
lead with two minutes to go.<lb/>
As always happens in close<lb/>
games, fouls can make the<lb/>
difference between winning and<lb/>
losing, and ECU'S 20 verses<lb/>
UNC's 15 narrowed the gap.<lb/>
With one minute remaining,<lb/>
Debbie Freeman hit from outside<lb/>
to pull the Pirates two points<lb/>
closer, and repeated the feat<lb/>
within seconds to close in to put<lb/>
the Pirates ahead.<lb/>
With two seconds left, the<lb/>
Pirates led by one with a jump<lb/>
ball at Carolina's foul line.<lb/>
Carolina shot and missed and the<lb/>
Pirates won their last home game<lb/>
in style.<lb/>
Debbie Freeman led the<lb/>
Pirates scoring with 30 points,<lb/>
followed by Gail Kerbaugh with<lb/>
17. April Ross with seven and<lb/>
Cathy Suggs with six.<lb/>
Although the winning margin<lb/>
was one point, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
have every reason to take pride in<lb/>
their win. Not only did they<lb/>
win without high scorers Rosie<lb/>
Thompson or Linda McLlean, but<lb/>
even those who played were far<lb/>
from their best shape.<lb/>
Cathy Suggs, who was injured<lb/>
last week in a very physical game<lb/>
against Old Dominion, played<lb/>
much of the game with stitches<lb/>
remaining from a cut lip. To play<lb/>
in a game this rough, with risk of<lb/>
reinjury so likely, says a lot about<lb/>
the dedication of the players to<lb/>
their team.<lb/>
As the UNC crowd slowly left<lb/>
the stands, 11 very ecstatic<lb/>
Pirates whooped it up across the<lb/>
floor, while Coach Bolton smiled<lb/>
contentedly, "I'm very proud of<lb/>
them-they really worked hard to<lb/>
win<lb/>
The Lady Pirates travel to<lb/>
Rock Hill, S.C. today for the<lb/>
Winthrop Tournament, where<lb/>
they face Georgia Southern at<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
LAUY HlhAlt (JAIL KtHBAUUH helped<lb/>
lead her team with 17 points in Tuesday's<lb/>
game against Chapel Hill. The Pirates will<lb/>
compete all weekend in the Winthrop<lb/>
Tournament. Photo by Kip Sloan<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
Gents Night<lb/>
2FREEKEGS<lb/>
Sunday Night<lb/>
starts 8:30<lb/>
ArmyNavy Store<lb/>
1501 Evans<lb/>
12 p.m530p.m.<lb/>
Back packs, Field, Flight,<lb/>
Bomber, &amp; Snorkel Jackets,<lb/>
Jeao�<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Good Things<lb/>
for Gentle People<lb/>
318 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
752-3815<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0015"/><lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
- :<lb/>
17 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 1�<lb/>
�   ���:�:�:�: : : � �<lb/>
for sale<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1977 Cutlass Salon-<lb/>
AMFM stereo, PS, PB, AT,<lb/>
Bucket seats, console. Lt. blue<lb/>
with white landau roof. Orig.<lb/>
prioeover $7000 must sell $5990.<lb/>
Call 752-9006.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Gran Torino-V-8<lb/>
automatic ac baby blue-2-door<lb/>
mustselW300. Call 758-7990or<lb/>
Apt. 20 Green way Apts.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Drafting kit &amp;<lb/>
hotplate. Best offer. Call 758-8062<lb/>
or come by 207 Greene Dorm.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Single bed with 2<lb/>
mattresses in good condition.<lb/>
752-2859.<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: Apartment size refri-<lb/>
gerator for sale, must go before<lb/>
spring quarter. $115. 758-9972.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Tad Davis Imperial<lb/>
Deluxe tennis racket, 1 Jack<lb/>
Kraemer 752-6439. Good price.<lb/>
FOR SALE : 8.000 BTU Coldspot<lb/>
air conditioner - $75.00. 19 cu. ft.<lb/>
Frigidaire refrigerator (needs<lb/>
work) - $50. Black vinyl. Spanish<lb/>
style sofa and chair, (in slight<lb/>
repair) - $50.00. Call 752-5717<lb/>
after 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Waterbed frame,<lb/>
pedestal, handrubbed finish.<lb/>
Price negotiable. Call Woodv<lb/>
756-1540.<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/>
Excellent condition. Call 752-0903<lb/>
after 4:30.<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/>
FOR SALE: 1968 Chev. Impala.<lb/>
35,000 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 condition. 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 Dorm. 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/>
with original boxes. Reasonable.<lb/>
758-3701 evenings.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Yamaha clarinet.<lb/>
Good condition. $90. Call 758-<lb/>
9378.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Marantz 2325 Stereo<lb/>
receiver 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 2O0 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '71 Opel GT Low<lb/>
milage, AC, excellent condition<lb/>
32MPG. Call Mark Hurley at KA<lb/>
House. 758-8999.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: 758-5948.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer receiver 50<lb/>
watts Rmspr. channel, 2 channel.<lb/>
AR-2AX speakers. Excellent con-<lb/>
dition. $350 Call 756-1547.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 10 week old male<lb/>
German Shepherd puppy. $60<lb/>
including collar, leash, &amp; bowl.<lb/>
Call 758-5364.<lb/>
FOR SALE: One New Pioneer<lb/>
Reverberation Amp. Got it for<lb/>
Christmas, must sell wwarranty<lb/>
$95.00. Phone 752-4379.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 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-Thnr5<lb/>
FOR SALE: &amp; Toyota Celica<lb/>
GT. Air-conditioned, AM-Fm<lb/>
stereo 5-speed, luggage rack.<lb/>
Only 5,000 miles, like new<lb/>
condition, metallic blue, white<lb/>
interior. Call 752-8290 after 5<lb/>
p.mask for Carol.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Amplifier - Sound<lb/>
City, Conoord GT-80 (Brand new)<lb/>
2-12" speakers, built-in reverb.<lb/>
Retail price $699. Will sell for<lb/>
$300. Must sell before spring<lb/>
quarter. Call Chris at 756-6252.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 5 speed 27" Sears<lb/>
bicycle. Good condition. Prioe<lb/>
$45.00. 55 lb. Bear Grizzly bow<lb/>
with arrow, tips, and other<lb/>
accessories. Call for information.<lb/>
758-2799.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Needfor school. All<lb/>
in excellent condition: 1969 Fiat<lb/>
124 - 700$, 17" Crosby Radnor<lb/>
hunt saddle with fittings 180$,<lb/>
Konica autoreflex T with f1.4<lb/>
lens 150$, albums - misc. 3.50<lb/>
each. Call 757-6690 only from<lb/>
9-12 p.m. Sun. - Thurs.<lb/>
FOR SALE:Gerrard SLX-2 turn-<lb/>
table. Excellent condition except<lb/>
needs new needle. $30. Call<lb/>
758-5008 after five.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973. TS 185 Suzuki,<lb/>
excellent condition. No reason-<lb/>
able offer refused. Call 758-8999,<lb/>
ask for Phil or 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 forward. Comes 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/>
Aycock Dorm (trash room).<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 Ford Van 240<lb/>
6-cylinder, straight drive, air,<lb/>
carpet, paneling. $1400.00. 752-<lb/>
9520.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Jansport Backpack<lb/>
and Frost line Tent, both Brand<lb/>
new and super light. Also Dynaoo<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: 1970 Firebird runs<lb/>
good, must sell, $1200. Call<lb/>
758-8543 or oome by 201 Jones.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Yahama Guitar, good<lb/>
condition. Excellent for begin-<lb/>
ners. $50.00 contact Nancy<lb/>
through ad in Fountainh�ad<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Yamana &amp;J<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 5:30.<lb/>
MUST SELL: Sunn studifc lead<lb/>
amp hardly used. $175.00. Call<lb/>
Maria 752-9022 for more inform-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New-Clairol "Kind-<lb/>
ness 3-way Hairsetter" with mist<lb/>
or regular oontrol. Pins &amp; Condi-<lb/>
tioning mist treatment included.<lb/>
Only $17.00, call 758-0603.<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: 1973 Yamaha 175-<lb/>
newly rebuilt motor. Call 758-<lb/>
7990 or Apt. 20-Greenway Apts.<lb/>
fa rent (fj)<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Needed<lb/>
to share 2-bedroom trailer.<lb/>
Washer &amp; dryer &amp; air condition-<lb/>
ing. $60month &amp; utilities. Ol<lb/>
758-8160 after 9O0 p.m. or oome<lb/>
by Flanagan 420. Junior, Senior,<lb/>
or Graduate student preferred.<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/>
AVAILABLE: Private room on<lb/>
campus fa female. Call 758-0603<lb/>
for arrangements or questions.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Male to<lb/>
share 3 bedroom trailer. Call<lb/>
Robert at 756-7659.<lb/>
WANTED: 1 or 2 female room-<lb/>
mates to share 2-bedroom. furn-<lb/>
ished apartment. $43.75 per mo.<lb/>
plus utilities. Call 752-7703 after<lb/>
3O0 (Village Green Apts.)<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate. 704<lb/>
East Third St. (2 blocks from<lb/>
campus. Lg. 2 bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment.)<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate for<lb/>
Spring quarter to share 2 bed-<lb/>
room trailer, air cond washer<lb/>
and dryer. Rent $80.00 month -<lb/>
covers everything. Call Martha.<lb/>
752-0973.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: To share<lb/>
Apt. at College Courts with grad.<lb/>
student. Rent $50 per mo. &amp; half<lb/>
utilities. Ph. 752-5489. available<lb/>
March 1.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private room close to<lb/>
campus. Phone 752-4006 after<lb/>
1O0.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Room, 402 Student<lb/>
St. Phone: 752-4814. Quiet; fur-<lb/>
nished; $55 per month; utilities<lb/>
included.<lb/>
!����� <lb/>
lost<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 oftered.<lb/>
LOST: Ladies wrap around swea-<lb/>
ter. Brown with different colored<lb/>
stripes around it and a Navy blue<lb/>
tie belt. Lost in Jolly Rogers. If<lb/>
found call 752-9907 or bring by<lb/>
818 Greene Dorm.<lb/>
LOST: Double-diamond silver<lb/>
pre-engagement ring in bathroom<lb/>
at lower level of Mendenhall<lb/>
Saturday night. Of sentimental<lb/>
value. Rewardno questions<lb/>
asked. Call 752-0187.<lb/>
LOST: Man's silver Waltham<lb/>
wristwatch Feb. 15, 1977. Silver<lb/>
twistoflex watchband. Anyone<lb/>
who knows its whereabouts call<lb/>
756-6450. No Questions asked.<lb/>
found<lb/>
FOUND: Pair of glasses at the<lb/>
track. Call 752-0424.<lb/>
FOUND: Black onyx class ring on<lb/>
Appalachian Trail in West<lb/>
Virginia about six months ago.<lb/>
Contact Appalachian Trail Con-<lb/>
ference, Box 236, Harper's Ferry.<lb/>
W. Va. 25425 - 304-535-6331.<lb/>
FOUND: Gold, 1970, High School<lb/>
ring from TerrySanford H.S.KTR<lb/>
initials. Call 752-7791.<lb/>
personal<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Available<lb/>
758-8284. Ask for Becky after<lb/>
3:00.<lb/>
FOUND: someone who listens<lb/>
and helps. You don't have to be in<lb/>
a crisis to call or come by the<lb/>
REAL crisis center. Counseling<lb/>
and referrals are what they offer.<lb/>
They're free, too. Call 758-HELP.<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 TO BUY : A used guitar<lb/>
case fa my classical guitar. If<lb/>
you ve got what I need call<lb/>
758-2509<lb/>
TORTFIAITS by Jack Srendle<lb/>
752-4272<lb/>
YOGA LESSONS: exercises to<lb/>
calm the mind and slim the body -<lb/>
way of life. Classes faming now.<lb/>
Call Sunshine, 752-5214 after 9O0<lb/>
p.m. on Mond. and Wed after<lb/>
5:30 all other nights.<lb/>
LEARN TO BELLY DANCE! Let<lb/>
this year's resolution be a better<lb/>
figure! Call Sunshine, 752-5214<lb/>
after 9.00 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/>
income tax returns evenings and<lb/>
weekends. Reasonable rates. Call<lb/>
756-4180. Typing services also<lb/>
available.<lb/>
NEEDED. A ride to Boone<lb/>
anytime this Friday. Call Steve<lb/>
752-9601.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0016"/><lb/>
Pae16 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 February 1977<lb/>
�atim<lb/>
ECU WILL BE well , epre-<lb/>
sented during exams as all<lb/>
teams will be in competi-<lb/>
tion. Clockwise from above<lb/>
left: The Lady Pirates will<lb/>
be seeing tournament ac-<lb/>
tion against UNC-G in<lb/>
Raleigh; Pirate grapplers<lb/>
conclude their season on<lb/>
the road against William &amp;<lb/>
Mary in preparation for the<lb/>
conference championships,<lb/>
ECU'S tankers will be com-<lb/>
peting for their 21st con-<lb/>
secutive swim title; and<lb/>
Pirate roundballers will tra-<lb/>
vel to the first round of the<lb/>
conference tournament.<lb/>
Photos by Kip Sloan<lb/>
<lb/>
w<lb/>
Grand Opening<lb/>
Rum Runner Dive &amp; Tackle Shop<lb/>
117W.10thSt.<lb/>
Tackle<lb/>
Lectures and Demonstrations by Moorehead<lb/>
Charterboat Captain and Live Bait<lb/>
Specialist,<lb/>
Garcia Factory Representative,<lb/>
Deepwater Bait Trolling Specialist<lb/>
(Bally Hoo, Ladyfish, Mackerel baits, etc.)<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
Lures Fresh and Salt Water<lb/>
Ray Jefferson Depth Finders $69.95<lb/>
Clark Spoons79<lb/>
Roll-eze 69�<lb/>
A Salt Water Combos Berkley 680 with rod<lb/>
$18.99<lb/>
Garcia 396 with rod $34.99<lb/>
48 Quart Igloo Cooler $18.95<lb/>
Free Line<lb/>
Feb. 18th &amp; 19th . �<lb/>
Diving<lb/>
Lectures and films Friday night by two former<lb/>
Cousteau divers<lb/>
Specials U.S. Divers<lb/>
80 cu. ft. aluminum tanks any<lb/>
color with J valve with standard pack and boot<lb/>
Retail $249.95 Sale Price $149.95<lb/>
Farmer John nylon one side Wetsuits<lb/>
Retail $126.95 Sale Price $69.95<lb/>
Aquarius Regulators<lb/>
Retail $99.95 Sale Price $69.95<lb/>
St eel 71.2 cu. ft. Cylinders with pack and boot<lb/>
Retail$231.95 Sale Price$139.95<lb/>
Free Air to Certified Divers<lb/>
<pb facs="00057113_0017"/>
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