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<pb facs="00057114_0001"/>
Serving the campus<lb/>
communi'y for 51 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of<lb/>
8,500. this issue is 20<lb/>
pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
SGA meets, pg. 3<lb/>
Deaf troupepg. 11<lb/>
Swimmers winpg. 15<lb/>
Vol. 52, No. 3?<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
8 March 1977<lb/>
REBEL awards<lb/>
presented to 10<lb/>
ByLUKEWHISNANT<lb/>
Special to FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Over $250 in prize money<lb/>
was awarded to the winners of<lb/>
the REBEL'S second annual<lb/>
Literary and Art Contest. The<lb/>
contest was open to all ECU<lb/>
students.<lb/>
First prize in the art com-<lb/>
petition was awarded to Dale<lb/>
Verzaal for his drawing entitled<lb/>
"Birds-7 Verzaal received a<lb/>
first-place plaque and a check<lb/>
for $100.<lb/>
Other winners in the art<lb/>
category were John Morris, $75<lb/>
second place for "O Wretched<lb/>
Man and an unfit led piece by<lb/>
Deborah Coter which won the<lb/>
$50 third prize.<lb/>
Honorable mention prizes of<lb/>
$25 each went to Roxanne Reep<lb/>
for "Container 1 H.A.<lb/>
Giles for "Celestial Ship-<lb/>
??????????<lb/>
wreck Raymond Brown's "I<lb/>
Met That Little Man and Matt<lb/>
Smartt's "Trained Ram<lb/>
The winning artwork was<lb/>
selected from the REBEL Art<lb/>
Show held in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Upstairs Gallery.<lb/>
In the literature division,<lb/>
Allison Thompson's poem<lb/>
 Least Expecting won the first<lb/>
place plaque and $75. Sue<lb/>
Adyelette won $50 for her poem,<lb/>
"Loom and Molly Petty's<lb/>
"Shoeshine Chair" took the $25<lb/>
third place prize.<lb/>
Tom Haines, owner of the<lb/>
Attic, presented the checks to<lb/>
both first place winners. The<lb/>
contest prizes were made pos-<lb/>
sible through donations from<lb/>
the Attic, Art and Camera Shop,<lb/>
Silkscreens Unlimited, and the<lb/>
ECU Literary-Art Magazine.<lb/>
?????????????<lb/>
SGA elections<lb/>
Spring elections for SGA executive offioers will be held March<lb/>
30. Anyone wishing to place his a her name on the ballot must file<lb/>
fa SGA president, vice president, secretary or treasurer by March<lb/>
16, 5 p.m.<lb/>
Filing forms are available at the SGA office, second floor of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The elections committee is asking for the utmost in student<lb/>
participation in the elections.<lb/>
Students may also volunteer to tend the polls for the March 30<lb/>
and receive $2 per hour work. Those interested should call<lb/>
757-6611 (SGA) and leave their names and phone numbers.<lb/>
Remt.Tiber, filing for office ends March 16.<lb/>
? ????????????????????AT<lb/>
Student Welfare<lb/>
studies insurance<lb/>
for ECU students<lb/>
By GINI LINN INGRAM<lb/>
Secretary of Student Welfare<lb/>
The Secretary of Student<lb/>
Welfare, Gini Ingram, and the<lb/>
Student Welfare Committee<lb/>
have been looking into in-<lb/>
surance from the oollege stu-<lb/>
dents' point of view. The<lb/>
committee has studied a new<lb/>
state law regarding the sale of<lb/>
life insurance to the college<lb/>
student.<lb/>
Basic legalities were pre-<lb/>
viously printed in FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD. This North Carolina<lb/>
Department of Insurance rule<lb/>
sets forth minimum standards,<lb/>
outlines detailed information,<lb/>
and sets down-payment stand-<lb/>
ards which must be supplied to<lb/>
the student explaining the na-<lb/>
ture and legal obligations of a<lb/>
promissory note.<lb/>
The rule provides for a<lb/>
ten-day free-look during which<lb/>
the student can return the policy<lb/>
and nullify the contract without<lb/>
cost of obligation.<lb/>
The Secretary of Student<lb/>
Welfare and the Student Wel-<lb/>
fare Committee offered these<lb/>
tips when purchasing insurance<lb/>
Ask for identification. Only<lb/>
lioensed agents are eligible to<lb/>
sell life insurance.<lb/>
If unsure of this type of<lb/>
agreement, ask to keep the<lb/>
policy and get in touch with the<lb/>
Secretary's office.<lb/>
Before going through with<lb/>
such an agreement, make sure a<lb/>
copy is obtained of the Promis-<lb/>
sory Note and all other papers,<lb/>
especially the ones which<lb/>
are signed.<lb/>
Request name and com-<lb/>
pany' s telephone number to re-<lb/>
contact the agent if necessary.<lb/>
A student has 10 days to<lb/>
back out of this agreement if not<lb/>
completely satisfied with the<lb/>
legal contract entered into.<lb/>
Do not give the names of<lb/>
other students as references<lb/>
unless they will undoubtedly<lb/>
respond affirmatively. Many<lb/>
students feel hasseled by such<lb/>
approaches.<lb/>
Any questions regarding in-<lb/>
surance or any other matters<lb/>
should be directed to Gini<lb/>
Ingram, Secretary of Student<lb/>
Welfare, Room 224 Menden-<lb/>
hall, or call the SGA office.<lb/>
TOM HAINES, owner of the ATTIC,<lb/>
presented first-place winners Allison Thomp-<lb/>
son and Dale Verzaal with their prizes.<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podezwa<lb/>
Dave Patton resigns<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dave Patton, head basket-<lb/>
ball ooach at East Carolina for<lb/>
the past three years, announced<lb/>
his resignation Feb. 23 follow-<lb/>
ing the Pirates' 75-72 loss to The<lb/>
Citadel at a news conference in<lb/>
his offioe. The resignation was<lb/>
effective after the Pirates' loss<lb/>
in the semifinals of the Southern<lb/>
Conference tournament to VMI<lb/>
last Tuesday night.<lb/>
Patton had one year remain-<lb/>
ing on a three-year contract,<lb/>
which he had signed following<lb/>
his first year at East Carolina on<lb/>
a one-year pact.<lb/>
"I would like to announce I<lb/>
am resigning as head basketball<lb/>
coach at East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity Patton said, "to accept a<lb/>
fine job opportunity in private<lb/>
business down in Georgia. It<lb/>
presents me with a great<lb/>
position and one which I cannot<lb/>
turn down<lb/>
Patton then reminisced and<lb/>
said he would always<lb/>
 remember the grand old man<lb/>
of East Carolina University,<lb/>
Coach Stas, who gave me my<lb/>
opportunity to be a head coach<lb/>
and for expressing confidence in<lb/>
me<lb/>
"I am very proud of the<lb/>
accomplishments we have made<lb/>
in the basketball program in the<lb/>
years I have been head coach. I<lb/>
DAVE PATTON<lb/>
am extremely pleased with the<lb/>
quality of our young people that<lb/>
will give East Carolina fans<lb/>
many hours of pleasure in the<lb/>
coming years<lb/>
See PATTON, pg. 10<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
looks for<lb/>
new coach<lb/>
A committee has been<lb/>
named by Dr. Leo Jenkins,<lb/>
chancellor of East Carolina<lb/>
University, to oonduct inter-<lb/>
views with prospective coaches<lb/>
for the head basketball coaching<lb/>
job at ECU.<lb/>
The committee of seven<lb/>
includes: Bill Cain, Athletic<lb/>
director for East Carolina; Tim<lb/>
Sullivan, president of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government Association at<lb/>
ECU; C.G. Moore, vice-chancel-<lb/>
lor for business affairs at ECU;<lb/>
Dr. Clinton Prewett, a professor<lb/>
at ECU; Norwood Crawford,<lb/>
president of the Pirate Club;<lb/>
Max R. Joyner, member of the<lb/>
athletic council at ECU and local<lb/>
businessman; and Jack Minges,<lb/>
a local businessman.<lb/>
The committee met on<lb/>
Saturday, Feb. 28 and Saturday<lb/>
and Sunday, March 4-5 to<lb/>
screen prospective coaches for<lb/>
the job.<lb/>
"We are going to make sure<lb/>
we pick the right man when we<lb/>
do Cain said. "We are<lb/>
considering several now but we<lb/>
want the right man<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0002"/><lb/>
Elections Parenthood ECU Bowl<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
8 March 1977<lb/>
Filing for SGA President,<lb/>
Vioe President, Secretary and<lb/>
Treasurer will continue thru<lb/>
March 16th at 5:00 p.m. For<lb/>
your name to appear on the<lb/>
ballot, you must file for the<lb/>
office during this time at the<lb/>
SGA office, second floor Men-<lb/>
denhali.<lb/>
4-H meeting Marshall Phi Beta<lb/>
Two evening oourses de-<lb/>
signed to improve parenthood<lb/>
skills will be offered this spring<lb/>
by East Carolina University.<lb/>
They are "Preparation for Par-<lb/>
enthood" (Wednesdays, March<lb/>
23-May 11) and "Systematic<lb/>
Training for Effective Parent-<lb/>
ing" (Wednesdays, March 16-<lb/>
May 11). Call 757-6143 or<lb/>
757-6148.<lb/>
The Collegiate 4-H Club will<lb/>
meet March 9 at 630 pm in<lb/>
Apartment Two of Green Dormi-<lb/>
tory. All members and prospec-<lb/>
tive members are cordially<lb/>
invited to attend this dinner<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Applications for 1977-78<lb/>
marshallsare being taken in 228<lb/>
Mendenhali, 9-5 daily until the<lb/>
last of March. A person must<lb/>
have a 3.0 or above average and<lb/>
96 quarter hours by the end of<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
No sex<lb/>
SGA posts Weight club<lb/>
The positions of Student<lb/>
Government Transit Manager<lb/>
and SGA Refrigerator Rental<lb/>
Manager are now open for<lb/>
application. For information as<lb/>
to what the jobs entail, see<lb/>
Debbie Greiner, Refrigerator<lb/>
Manager and Gary Miller, Tran-<lb/>
sit Manager, at the SGA Office<lb/>
(757-6611, Ext. 218, Menden-<lb/>
hali Student Center). Applica-<lb/>
tions will be taken until March<lb/>
18th at the SGA Office.<lb/>
Managers need to be selected so<lb/>
they will have at least one<lb/>
month's on-the-job experience.<lb/>
Work will begin by mid-April.<lb/>
ily full-time ECU students<lb/>
may apply.<lb/>
There will be a meeting<lb/>
of the weight lifting club on<lb/>
Wednesday, February 23, at<lb/>
7:00 p.m. in room 145 Minges.<lb/>
Organizing an Intramural<lb/>
Weight Lifting meet. Please<lb/>
oome support the club.<lb/>
Cooking<lb/>
A special program, "Cook-<lb/>
ing for Two will be held<lb/>
Print show<lb/>
The Print Dept. of the School<lb/>
of Art will sponsor an exhibit<lb/>
and sale of approximately 600<lb/>
original prints from the famed<lb/>
Ferdinand Roten Galleries col-<lb/>
lection on Friday, March 11,<lb/>
1977. The event will be held at<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center Room<lb/>
1106. Along with prints by such<lb/>
masters as Picasso, Goya,<lb/>
Renoir and Hogarth, can be<lb/>
seen works by many of today's<lb/>
Tuesday, March 8, 1977, at the American artists, some famous<lb/>
Agricultural Extension Office, and some not yet farrxx 3<lb/>
203 West Third Street, Green-<lb/>
ville, starting at 10 a.m.<lb/>
Mrs. Virginia Credle, Home<lb/>
Economist from Washington,<lb/>
N.C. will present the program.<lb/>
She will be using small appli-<lb/>
ances. Call 758-1196 to register.<lb/>
F.G.<lb/>
Umpires<lb/>
There will be a meeting of<lb/>
the Greenville Officials Associa-<lb/>
tion on Thursday, March 10,<lb/>
1977 at 6 flO in the T.V. Room at<lb/>
Elm Street Gym. Anyone inter-<lb/>
ested in officiating Softball or<lb/>
Junior High Baseball should<lb/>
attend. For further information<lb/>
call 752-5214.<lb/>
What does "FG" mean??<lb/>
"FG" stands for the Forever<lb/>
Generation, an ECU campus<lb/>
organization that meets weekly<lb/>
for a time of Christ-centered<lb/>
Christian fellowship. Our meet-<lb/>
ings include a study or chal-<lb/>
lenge from God's Word, sing-<lb/>
ing, fellowship and prayer. We<lb/>
also have get-togethers, oook-<lb/>
outs, weekend retreats and<lb/>
other fun times. Why not join us<lb/>
this Friday night at 730 in<lb/>
Brewster B-103?<lb/>
ECJSVA<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda is having<lb/>
its Fifth Annual Business Sym-<lb/>
posium on March 16, 1977. All<lb/>
students are invited to attend.<lb/>
The symposium will be held in<lb/>
Mendenhali.<lb/>
Study skills<lb/>
A non-credit study skills<lb/>
class will be offered Spring<lb/>
Quarter. The class will meet<lb/>
everyday beginning Monday,<lb/>
March 7, 1977 at 1.00 p.m. and<lb/>
will be taught by Dr. George<lb/>
Weigand in room 305 Wright<lb/>
Annex (Counseling Center). Do<lb/>
not register for this oourse.<lb/>
St. Paul's<lb/>
Would you like to know more<lb/>
about the worship of the Epls-<lb/>
oopal Church? Ran to attend the<lb/>
regular Wednesday evening<lb/>
530 servioe of Holy Commun-<lb/>
nion for students at St. Paul's<lb/>
Episcopal Church on 4th and<lb/>
Holly streets. Rev. Bill Hadden<lb/>
will celebrate.<lb/>
Learn sports<lb/>
ECU will offer two evening<lb/>
oourses fa the sports-minded<lb/>
this spring: "Baseball Officia-<lb/>
ting" (Mondays, Feb. 28-April<lb/>
4) and "Basic Scuba Certifica-<lb/>
tion" (Tuesdays and Thursdays,<lb/>
March 10-April 5 For informa-<lb/>
tion call 757-6143 or 757-6148.<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
The East Carolina delegation<lb/>
of the North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature was at NCSU Feb.<lb/>
27th for the February Interim-<lb/>
Coundl. The delegation will<lb/>
begin preparations for session<lb/>
and wilt distribute bill books<lb/>
TONIGHT at 730 p.m. room<lb/>
248 in Mendenhali. This is a<lb/>
very important meeting and all<lb/>
student legislators must attend.<lb/>
The ECU Student Volunteer<lb/>
Association has been reacti-<lb/>
vated ! We are located on the top<lb/>
floor of the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center on 5th street. Office<lb/>
hours are M W 1-3 and T Th<lb/>
10-1. Anyone who has pre-<lb/>
viously filled out an application<lb/>
or would like to do volunteer<lb/>
work pjease oome by. Graduate<lb/>
students and faculty are also<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
When you fill-out an applica-<lb/>
tion for a student union chair-<lb/>
person position your sex will<lb/>
make no difference as to whe-<lb/>
ther or not you get the job.<lb/>
These applications will be avail-<lb/>
able in the student union office<lb/>
at Mendenhali Student Center<lb/>
from March 7-25. We need<lb/>
chairpersons for the following<lb/>
committees: Coffeehouse, films,<lb/>
popular entertainment, artist<lb/>
series, lecture series, travel,<lb/>
theater arts, art exhibition, and<lb/>
the Entertainer. Help plan the<lb/>
entertainment offered at ECU<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
The First Annual ECU<lb/>
COLLEGE BOWL Competition<lb/>
is about to begin. Get a team<lb/>
together, find a coach, and oome<lb/>
and register with the Program<lb/>
Office in Mendenhali Student<lb/>
Center on Monday, March 14.<lb/>
Members of the winning team<lb/>
will receive $25.00 each in prize<lb/>
money. The second place team<lb/>
members will receive $10.00<lb/>
each.<lb/>
Intramural competition<lb/>
begins on March 24. The Finals<lb/>
will be held in the Mendenhali<lb/>
Student Center Theatre on<lb/>
Wednesday, April 27.<lb/>
For further information, call<lb/>
the Student Center Program<lb/>
Office at 757-6611, ext. 213.<lb/>
Official COLLEGE BOWL Com-<lb/>
petition is here. Put yourself or<lb/>
your department or organization<lb/>
on the winning team!<lb/>
Chinese<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Sigma<lb/>
This Wednesday night<lb/>
Mar. 9, all women interested in<lb/>
Sigma Gamma Rho should meet<lb/>
in the Afro American Cultural<lb/>
Center at 9:00 p.m. Why not<lb/>
come and learn more about us?<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
Register now for one of the<lb/>
crafts workshops which are<lb/>
being offered by the Crafts<lb/>
Center of Mendenhali Student<lb/>
Center. Sign up for Beginning<lb/>
Darkroom, Basic Pottery, Floor<lb/>
Loom Weaving, Macrame, Be-<lb/>
ginning Jewelry, Metal Ename-<lb/>
ling, Linoleum Block Printing,<lb/>
or Woodworking. There is a<lb/>
$5.00 quarterly Crafts Center<lb/>
membership fee and personal<lb/>
supplies will not be provided.<lb/>
Fa details, call a visit the<lb/>
Crafts Center during the hours<lb/>
of 2:00 p.m. until 10fl0 p.m.<lb/>
Monday through Friday. Class<lb/>
space is limited and the regis-<lb/>
tration deadline fa all work-<lb/>
shops is Friday, March 11.<lb/>
The International<lb/>
Association of East<lb/>
University is planning a Chinese<lb/>
Dinner Thursday, March 10, to<lb/>
be held at the International<lb/>
House at 306 East Ninth Street.<lb/>
Students, faculty, and the public<lb/>
are welcome to attend. Serving<lb/>
hours will be from 4:30 to 730<lb/>
p.m. The oost per person is<lb/>
$2.50. Food may be taken out a<lb/>
eaten on the premises. To<lb/>
obtain tickets fa the dinner, go<lb/>
by the Counsela's Office in<lb/>
Aycock Residence Hall a The<lb/>
Intanatiaial House.<lb/>
Proceeds from the dinner<lb/>
will be used to help pay fa<lb/>
repairs at the International<lb/>
House and help establish an<lb/>
emergency loan fund fa inter-<lb/>
national students attending<lb/>
ECU. Fa further infamatiai<lb/>
call 758-2977 a 757-S935.<lb/>
Reading<lb/>
Persois who wish to in-<lb/>
orease their reading rates are<lb/>
in ted to enroll in a special<lb/>
ECU evening oourse, "Speed<lb/>
Reading to be offered on<lb/>
Monday and Thursday eve-<lb/>
nings, March 7-April 7. Call<lb/>
757-6143 a 757-6148.<lb/>
CIA payments worldwide<lb/>
Recent revelations of CIA<lb/>
funding abroad confirmed sus-<lb/>
picions held by many that at<lb/>
least a dozen heads of state<lb/>
personally received payments<lb/>
fa their pro-U.S. stances. Less<lb/>
expected was the disclosure that<lb/>
in past years?including the<lb/>
period from 1964 to 1968, and<lb/>
perhaps beyond-the CIA paid<lb/>
Israel a total estimated in the<lb/>
millions of dollars.<lb/>
In the late 1960s, accading<lb/>
to the Wall Street Journal,<lb/>
checks fa several hundred<lb/>
thousand dollars each were<lb/>
frequently delivered by U.S.<lb/>
government officials to the<lb/>
Israeli faeign ministry in Jeru-<lb/>
salem. The matey was then<lb/>
used to finance Israeli "faeign<lb/>
aid" projects in several African<lb/>
countries, among these Uganda<lb/>
and the Central African Repub-<lb/>
lic.<lb/>
The Israeli conduit fa QA<lb/>
funds substantiates a study<lb/>
the payments stopped to Hus-<lb/>
sein, aftar the Washington Post<lb/>
disclosed the operation. And as<lb/>
if to undo damage to Hussein's<lb/>
image as a result of his QA<lb/>
connection, leaks were subse-<lb/>
done sevaal years ago by the quently made to the press that<lb/>
Africa Research Group, which<lb/>
described Israel as playing a key<lb/>
role in attempts to build African<lb/>
regimes friendly to the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
The disclosure of CIA funds<lb/>
to Israel followed closely after a<lb/>
repat in the Washington Post<lb/>
stating that since 1957 Jadan's<lb/>
King Hussein has personally<lb/>
received millions of dollars<lb/>
yearly from the CIA under code<lb/>
name "no beef<lb/>
Carter reportedly ordered<lb/>
almost a dozen heads of state<lb/>
received QA payments. They<lb/>
included West Germany's Willy<lb/>
Brandt, Jomo Kenyatta of Ken-<lb/>
ya, Mobuto Sese Seko of Zaire,<lb/>
and Guyanan Premier Fabes<lb/>
Burnham. Other names inclu-<lb/>
ded tamer Mexican President<lb/>
Luis Echeverria, Venezuelan<lb/>
President Carlos Perez, famer<lb/>
Chilean President Frei, Chiang<lb/>
Kai-shek, the Dalai Lama of<lb/>
Tibet and Archbishop Makarios<lb/>
of Cyprus.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0003"/><lb/>
SGA appropriates retreat,<lb/>
discusses book rentals<lb/>
8 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The SGA legislature appro-<lb/>
priated $351 for a Geology<lb/>
department retreat yesterday in<lb/>
the regular Monday night meet-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The legislature suspended<lb/>
the rules to vote on the<lb/>
appropriation which had not<lb/>
gone through committee.<lb/>
The rules were suspended<lb/>
because the bill was lost earlier<lb/>
and the retreat is planned fa<lb/>
March 19, according to Tim<lb/>
McLeod, secretary of academic<lb/>
affairs.<lb/>
McLeod also presented a<lb/>
report to the legislature on th(<lb/>
feasibility of book rentals at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Under this program students<lb/>
would pay $21 at the beginning<lb/>
of a quarter to cover all<lb/>
hardcover textbooks. Students<lb/>
would return books at the end of<lb/>
the quarter and receive no<lb/>
money back. Paperback books<lb/>
are not included in the program.<lb/>
McLeod studied the rental<lb/>
program at Appalachian State<lb/>
University (ASU), where the<lb/>
rental program is on the third<lb/>
year of a five year trial.<lb/>
The rental program seeks to<lb/>
lessen the high cost of textbooks<lb/>
and cut down on book theft,<lb/>
according to McLeod.<lb/>
Students at ASU seem plea-<lb/>
sed with the program, according<lb/>
to McLeod. He also stated that<lb/>
the ASU faculty resents the<lb/>
program because it infringes on<lb/>
their academic freedom to<lb/>
change texts. Books qnust be<lb/>
used for three years under this<lb/>
plan.<lb/>
Book publishers and book<lb/>
stores are also opposed to the<lb/>
plan. McLeod said the manager<lb/>
of the University Book Ex-<lb/>
change stated the plan would<lb/>
adversely affect his business.<lb/>
A progress report on the<lb/>
Buccaneer was given by Editor<lb/>
Sue Roger son.<lb/>
Rogerson reported that 150<lb/>
BUCS and $225 of ads have<lb/>
been sold. Four thousand BUCS<lb/>
will be printed at a cost of<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
awarded<lb/>
ECU'S Air Force ROTC was<lb/>
represented by three awards<lb/>
given at the Area Arnold Air<lb/>
Society Conclave in Blacksburg,<lb/>
Va. in late Feb.<lb/>
Arnold Air Society is an<lb/>
honorary service organization<lb/>
whose members include select-<lb/>
ed AFROTC cadets.<lb/>
ECU Arnold Air Society<lb/>
Cadet David W. Ruff in of<lb/>
Fayetteville received the Area<lb/>
"Arnie" Award, given to the<lb/>
cadet in the Carolinas and<lb/>
Virginia who has contributed<lb/>
most toward improving relations<lb/>
between Arnold Air Society and<lb/>
its sister organization, Angel<lb/>
Flight.<lb/>
Ruffin is a senior business<lb/>
administration major at ECU<lb/>
and is currently AAS Com-<lb/>
mander for ECU's General<lb/>
Chennault Squadron of Arnold<lb/>
Air Society.<lb/>
$5,998.<lb/>
Anyone wanting to serve as<lb/>
a Marshall must apply by March<lb/>
31, according to Greg Pingston,<lb/>
SGA Vice President. Students<lb/>
must have at least a 3.0 average<lb/>
and 96 credit hours. Pingston<lb/>
emphasized Marshal Is were not<lb/>
women students only.<lb/>
Pingston stated anyone<lb/>
wishing to apply for an Ebony<lb/>
Herald position must do so by<lb/>
March 11, in room 228, Men-<lb/>
denhall.<lb/>
Pjjfi<lb/>
Attention Nursing Students!<lb/>
We now have<lb/>
a wide selection of watches<lb/>
that can meet your<lb/>
everyday nursing needs.<lb/>
Floyd G.Robinson<lb/>
Jewelers<lb/>
Onthe Mall<lb/>
"If it don't tick, tock to us<lb/>
TONITE<lb/>
They're Back Again<lb/>
at the<lb/>
Elbo Room<lb/>
Thru Sunday<lb/>
THE RAISIN<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
SUNTHRUTHUR<lb/>
11:00 T010:00<lb/>
FRI&amp;SAT<lb/>
11:00 T011:00<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
U.S.DA choice beef cut fresh daily<lb/>
For the full month of March, No. 12 will be on special<lb/>
Mon.?Thur Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
CHOPPED SIRLOIN WITH MUSHROOM GRAVY ALLFOR<lb/>
TEXA S TO A ST WITH MEL TED BUTTER V f ?<lb/>
BAKED POTATO OR FRENCH FRIES jL .9<lb/>
EAST10THST.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0004"/><lb/>
Is<lb/>
Page4<lb/>
8 March 1977<lb/>
SGA needs budget plan<lb/>
Spring is the season for those who anticipate<lb/>
the burgeoning of new life in field and forest, and<lb/>
at ECU it is also a time for student government<lb/>
elections and the excitement of the campaign. The<lb/>
contest this year for the jobs of SGA President,<lb/>
Vice-President, Treasurer and Secretary should,<lb/>
like the season suggests, bring forth a plethora of<lb/>
fresh and innovative ideas on how to deal with the<lb/>
problems students face at this university.<lb/>
Money and power are the sweepstakes.<lb/>
Student government each year receives and<lb/>
spends over a third of a million dollars yearly of<lb/>
student fees and associated revenues. This<lb/>
academic year SGA spent over $100,000 on an<lb/>
improved transit system that was bolstered by the<lb/>
addition of two new buses which accounted for<lb/>
nearly half of the system's cost. On the other hand,<lb/>
SGA reduced its appropriation fa the BUCCA-<lb/>
NEER to about 15 per cent of what the yearbook<lb/>
received last year. Staff salaries are being paid for<lb/>
while it is determined whether enough students<lb/>
are willing to spend another $5 for a book that has<lb/>
traditionally received total funding from SGA<lb/>
revenues.<lb/>
Should students reject their having to pay for<lb/>
subscriptions for this year's BUCCANEER, the<lb/>
SGA Legislature has formulated a contingency<lb/>
plan to pay for the yearbook. If the subscription<lb/>
drivefailsand studentsstill demand their BUC, an<lb/>
idea has been floating around the student<lb/>
government offices that would have the major SGA<lb/>
funded budgets recalled for a ten to 20 per cent<lb/>
trimming to pay for the ECU annual. On the face of<lb/>
it this idea demonstrates the lack of coordination<lb/>
used to determine SGA expenditures this year.<lb/>
The feasibility of this plan would certainly be<lb/>
the subject of intense debate should it be formally<lb/>
submitted to the legislature. Such a discussion<lb/>
would be of short term significance, however.<lb/>
The real problem stems from the lack of an<lb/>
overall spending program for SGA. Not that<lb/>
student government should attempt to emulate<lb/>
state or federal budget makers, but prior planning<lb/>
would at least give the legislature a guideline.<lb/>
The SGA elections on March 30 would be the<lb/>
ideal opportunity for farsighted candidates to<lb/>
propose budgets for students to consider when<lb/>
deciding who to ote for. The winning candidate's<lb/>
proposal could be used by the legislature next<lb/>
year. With spending guidelines perhaps future<lb/>
BUCCANEER-style debacles could be avoided.<lb/>
Rxntainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis C. Leonard<lb/>
News EditorsJ. Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Kim Johnson<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 for non-students, $6.00 tor<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I DID lfr REALIZE THERE WAS SUCH ,<lb/>
R TRAMOW FW! MS? TO SETESTER!<lb/>
'Marquee'reviews see worst only<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD: .<lb/>
As one who has enjoyed the<lb/>
art of acting from the viewpoint<lb/>
of an active participant and an<lb/>
enthused observer, I feel I can<lb/>
no longer ignore the great<lb/>
injustice now being shown in<lb/>
"FOUNTAINHEAD I refer,<lb/>
of course, to David Bosnick's<lb/>
column, "Marquee<lb/>
I keep telling myself that one<lb/>
day I will proclaim the existence<lb/>
of an omnipotent being who<lb/>
performs miracles crying, "Da-<lb/>
vid Bosnick liked something<lb/>
I find it impossible to believe<lb/>
that no production has yet<lb/>
caught Mr. Bosnick's fancy. I<lb/>
rather feel that his philosophy<lb/>
is, "If you can't say something<lb/>
bad, say nothing Permit me<lb/>
to give an example.<lb/>
I recently attended the work-<lb/>
shop production of Lady House<lb/>
Blues. I dare say the entire<lb/>
audience, cast, and crew were<lb/>
as aware as I was that Mr.<lb/>
Bosnick, FOUNTAINHEAD's<lb/>
half-of-a-star critic, who has<lb/>
developed the ability to inspire<lb/>
fear and nausea into the heart<lb/>
and stomach of even the staun-<lb/>
chest veteran of the stage on<lb/>
this campus, was in the au-<lb/>
dience awaiting the start of the<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
When the show was over, I<lb/>
had one central thought, "He<lb/>
had to like that Obvious he<lb/>
did, for a review never appeared<lb/>
in the haloed pages of FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD. As I said, if Mr.<lb/>
Bosnick can say nothing bad, he<lb/>
says nothing, and tnere was<lb/>
nothing bad to say about Lady<lb/>
House Blues.<lb/>
Under Marshall McCaden's<lb/>
brilliant direction, the cast quite<lb/>
aptly painted the picture of a<lb/>
woman and her four daughters<lb/>
living through the changes and<lb/>
uncertainties of life in America<lb/>
during World War I. Hazel<lb/>
Stapleton, as the mother, thril-<lb/>
led the audience with her<lb/>
portrayal of a rather crusty,<lb/>
opinionated, yet loving woman<lb/>
bewildered by the changes in<lb/>
her daughters and the new life<lb/>
surrounding them all. Suzanne<lb/>
Howell, Constance Hilliard,<lb/>
Shauna Holmes, and Janet<lb/>
Horton performed equally as<lb/>
well as the four daughters,<lb/>
although Miss Horton's perfor-<lb/>
mance could have been strong-<lb/>
er. Costumes, sets and even the<lb/>
music played before the show<lb/>
and during intermission were<lb/>
perfect, helping to set the tone<lb/>
for the performance. Only the<lb/>
lighting left something to be<lb/>
desired, occasionally jumping too<lb/>
abruptly from bright to dim, as<lb/>
if it had suddenly been remem-<lb/>
bered that only candles were in<lb/>
use on stage, as the sun had<lb/>
already set.<lb/>
Lady House Blues was by far<lb/>
the best production I have seen<lb/>
on this campus since Mark<lb/>
Schwarz directed One Flew<lb/>
Over the Cuckoo's Nest as a<lb/>
workshop. Why, then, did Mr.<lb/>
Bosnick fail to review it? Was it<lb/>
simply too good for the "King of<lb/>
the destructive critics" to re-<lb/>
view?<lb/>
Wondering,<lb/>
Lauren M. Brehm<lb/>
Glory grabbing on the overpass<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
As everyone knows, an<lb/>
SGA project is the much-needed<lb/>
Tenth St. overpass. SGA VP<lb/>
Greg Pingston has done the<lb/>
majority of work necessary to<lb/>
accomplish this project yet, until<lb/>
recently the overpass has been<lb/>
at a stalemate due to tight<lb/>
funds. However at the North<lb/>
Carolina Service Award cere-<lb/>
mony honoring Chancellor Leo<lb/>
Jenkins, Robert Swaim convin-<lb/>
ced Governor Hunt and Atty.<lb/>
Gen. Edmisten of the necessity<lb/>
of the overpass and received a<lb/>
definite promise for the over-<lb/>
pass. Mr. Swaim's downfall<lb/>
occurred when he boasted of his<lb/>
efforts. Realizing the impact of<lb/>
achieving the overpass, SGA<lb/>
president Tim Sullivan grabbed<lb/>
the story and rushed to an<lb/>
interview with the Daily Reflec-<lb/>
tor. The front-page story with<lb/>
Mr. Sullivan's claim to fame<lb/>
appeared Sunday, February 27,<lb/>
1977. This dishonorable deed<lb/>
only confirms the already com-<lb/>
mon knowledge that Mr. Sulli-<lb/>
van has no qualms about taking<lb/>
what he thinks should be his,<lb/>
besides SGA elections are in<lb/>
March. But the worst injustice<lb/>
was dealt when Mr. Sullivan did<lb/>
not deign to mention Mr.<lb/>
Pingston, who has worked the<lb/>
most for this project. We know,<lb/>
Mr. Sullivan that politics and<lb/>
glory are your cup of tea, but<lb/>
must you discard all justice?<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Diane Harris<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0005"/><lb/>
ECU College Bowl<lb/>
Mendenhallholds contest<lb/>
8 Marc 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
will sponsor an ECU COLLEGE<lb/>
BOWL intramural competition<lb/>
beginning March 24.<lb/>
Campus participation in<lb/>
COLLEGE BOWL evolved out of<lb/>
the CBS television show of the<lb/>
same name sponsored by<lb/>
General Electric. The show ran<lb/>
from 1959 to 1970.<lb/>
Team registration starts<lb/>
March 14. The first eight teams<lb/>
to register will compete in<lb/>
official intramural play, cul-<lb/>
minating with the finals match<lb/>
on April 27 at 8:00 P.M. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Each winning team member<lb/>
and coach will receive $25.00.<lb/>
The second place team will each<lb/>
receive $10.00.<lb/>
Participation is limited to<lb/>
full-time ECU students, under-<lb/>
graduate or graduate. Each<lb/>
team consists of four players<lb/>
and one alternate, plus a coach,<lb/>
who is exempt from holding<lb/>
ECU student status.<lb/>
As an added attraction, the<lb/>
finals match on April 27 will<lb/>
feature a game between the<lb/>
winning team and four coaches.<lb/>
Admission is free for all<lb/>
COLLEGE BOWL activities.<lb/>
ECU biology students in-<lb/>
terested in participating in the<lb/>
COLLEGE BOWL should con-<lb/>
tact Dr. Prem P. Sehgal in the<lb/>
Department of Biology. In-<lb/>
terested students should contact<lb/>
Mrs. Marie T. Farr.<lb/>
For further information on<lb/>
registration or game times,<lb/>
contact the Program Office,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 213.<lb/>
ECU students attend NECAA<lb/>
Four ECU students attended<lb/>
the National Entertainment and<lb/>
Campus Activities Association<lb/>
(NECAA) national convention in<lb/>
San Antonio, Texas in February.<lb/>
The trip was sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU Student Union.<lb/>
The four student convention<lb/>
delegates have held of f ioe in the<lb/>
ECU Student Union during<lb/>
1976-77. Those attending the<lb/>
convention were Barry Robin-<lb/>
son, Student Union president<lb/>
and a senior music major from<lb/>
Gastonia; Dennis Ramsey of<lb/>
Cramerton, junior political<lb/>
science major and Student<lb/>
Union president-elect; Larry<lb/>
Romich of Wilson, junior pre-<lb/>
medical major and current<lb/>
chairman of the Union's Film<lb/>
Committee; and Robert P. Dud-<lb/>
ley Jr. of Raleigh, sophomore<lb/>
business student and business<lb/>
manager of the Union's publi-<lb/>
cation, "Entertainer<lb/>
The four students were<lb/>
accompanied by S. Rudolph<lb/>
Alexander, Associate Dean of<lb/>
Student Affairs at ECU and<lb/>
Executive Director of Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center, and Ken<lb/>
Hammond, Student Center Pre<lb/>
gram Director.<lb/>
The NECAA national con-<lb/>
vention is designed to offer<lb/>
university programmers an op-<lb/>
portunity to preview entertain-<lb/>
ment possibilities for the oom-<lb/>
ing year, meet with talent<lb/>
representatives, attend lectures<lb/>
and workshops, and exchange<lb/>
information and ideas with other<lb/>
schools concerning entertain-<lb/>
ment activities on the college<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
U.S. Navy seeks math,<lb/>
physics and science related<lb/>
majors for specialized<lb/>
Officer Programs.<lb/>
See the U .S. Navy Officer Officer<lb/>
Information Team on campus<lb/>
March 9-11,1977 or call toll free<lb/>
1-800-662-7568.<lb/>
Pm?<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
ALL DANCE<lb/>
STUDENTS!<lb/>
THE COLLEGE STUDENTS'<lb/>
HEADQUARTERS<lb/>
FOR ALL DANCEWEAR<lb/>
The Classic<lb/>
Capezio<lb/>
We have a<lb/>
complete selection<lb/>
of toe, tap, ballet,<lb/>
and modern dance<lb/>
shoes, and<lb/>
bodywear, in a<lb/>
spectrbm of colors!<lb/>
Capezio's<lb/>
been dancing<lb/>
since 1887r<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
Sound Sovinas<lb/>
BOB SEGER<lb/>
NIGHT MOVES<lb/>
STEVE MILLER<lb/>
Fly Like An Eagle<lb/>
On Sale<lb/>
March 8-12<lb/>
BOZSCAGGS<lb/>
SILK DECREES<lb/>
?<lb/>
? , ? A ? ??<lb/>
L<lb/>
Change In Altitodrs<lb/>
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Also<lb/>
On Sole<lb/>
Al Stewart- Tear of the Cat"<lb/>
Jonathan Edwards- "Sailboat"<lb/>
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Also<lb/>
On Sole<lb/>
George BensonIn Flight"<lb/>
Dachman-Turner<lb/>
Overdrive- "Freeways"<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 8 March 1977<lb/>
Five may die in Georgia<lb/>
(LNS)-Five young black<lb/>
men, four of whom are teena-<lb/>
gers, face the death penalty in<lb/>
southern Georgia. Supporters<lb/>
in the area feel that these men<lb/>
are being held on grossly<lb/>
insufficient evidence. For man-<lb/>
y, this case calls to mind that of<lb/>
the Soottsboro Boys, nine black<lb/>
youths who were falsely accused<lb/>
of rape in 1931 in Alabama.<lb/>
Roosevelt Watson (17),<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
Gents Night<lb/>
2 FREE KEGS<lb/>
Sunday Nights<lb/>
Starts 8:30<lb/>
ll?Jl??lfilill3il8illS<lb/>
Henderson Watson (21), James<lb/>
Edward Jackson, Jr. (17), John-<lb/>
ny B. Jackson (18), and J.D.<lb/>
Davenport (18) were arrested in<lb/>
January of 1976 and charged<lb/>
with armed robbery and mur-<lb/>
der. They are aocused of having<lb/>
robbed the owner of a Dawson,<lb/>
Georgia grocery store and hav-<lb/>
ing shot a white man who was a<lb/>
customer in the store.<lb/>
The victim, who got into an<lb/>
ambulance unaided and lived<lb/>
for six hours after the shooting,<lb/>
was not questioned. The arrest<lb/>
was made on the basis of the<lb/>
store owner's identification of<lb/>
the defendants in spite of the<lb/>
fact that they were not named<lb/>
until five days after the crime<lb/>
took place. The witness origi-<lb/>
nally stated that four men<lb/>
robbed his store, and named<lb/>
only Roosevelt Watson as a<lb/>
participant that he thought he<lb/>
oould reoognize. When the<lb/>
other four men stated that<lb/>
Roosevelt Watson could not<lb/>
have oommitted the aime be-<lb/>
cause he was with them" at the<lb/>
time it happened, they too were<lb/>
arrested.<lb/>
A confession was obtained<lb/>
from Roosevelt Watson after he<lb/>
was forced by local polioe to<lb/>
wade in an icy pond for five<lb/>
hours, in a "search" for the<lb/>
murder weapon which was<lb/>
never found, and threatened<lb/>
with castration and electrocu-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Bail has been set at $100,000<lb/>
for each defendant. Blacks in<lb/>
Terrell Country and some of the<lb/>
local churches have taken up<lb/>
collections to raise bail and<lb/>
help pay legal fees. With a total<lb/>
of a half-million dollars in bond<lb/>
money to raise, only Roosevelt<lb/>
Watson has been released so<lb/>
far. The defendants decided<lb/>
among themselves the order of<lb/>
JUNIORS<lb/>
SENIORS<lb/>
NUCLEAR<lb/>
PROPULSION<lb/>
The leading operator of Nuclear Reactors is currently seeking college juniors<lb/>
and seniors to serve as Nuclear Propulsion Officers on Nuclear Surface Vessels or<lb/>
Nuclear Submarines upon graduation. Interested candidates should be in pursuit of<lb/>
a Baccalaureate Degree with an engineering, pure science or math major and have<lb/>
deomonstrated aoility in math and physics courses. A minimum of one year of<lb/>
college physicsand math through integral calculus with a "B" average or better in<lb/>
technical courses is required. Successful applicants will be paid over $500 monthly<lb/>
during their senior year of college. Upon graduation and oommissioning receive one<lb/>
year of graduate level nuclear training. Nuclear qualified officers will be<lb/>
challenged by the entire spectrum of management and engineering responsibility<lb/>
as practicing nuclear engineers.<lb/>
See the U.S. Navy Officer Information Team on campus 9-11 March 1977 or call<lb/>
Navy toll free number 1-800-662-7568.<lb/>
FANTASTIC!<lb/>
Sale of<lb/>
the year<lb/>
Believe it!<lb/>
it!<lb/>
NOW!<lb/>
AT<lb/>
BARPE,<lb/>
LTD.<lb/>
805 DOONSOMVENUE<lb/>
GREENVILLE N.C<lb/>
C?19) 752-5186<lb/>
THURSDAYS<lb/>
MARCH 10<lb/>
ONE OFTHE NATION'S<lb/>
FASTEST GROWING ROCK GROUPS<lb/>
MOTHERS FINEST<lb/>
RECENT APPEARANCE ON<lb/>
MIDNIGHT SPECIAL<lb/>
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RECENT CONCERT TOUR<lb/>
PETER FRAMPTON<lb/>
the who Also Featuring Hybrid<lb/>
Jolly Roger and Thursdays (R &amp; Nine.) 209E.5thSt. PH 752-4668<lb/>
their release as the bail money<lb/>
is raised.<lb/>
TRIA L TO FOCUS ON RA CISM<lb/>
No court date has been set<lb/>
up for the trial yet, but it is<lb/>
expected to begin in June.<lb/>
"Nothing is really happening<lb/>
legally right now said defense<lb/>
attorney Millard Farmer. "A lot<lb/>
is happening otherwise in the<lb/>
fact that people are beginning to<lb/>
focus on the problems of the real<lb/>
racism that exists in this country<lb/>
but if you talk to the blacks in<lb/>
the areathey say well this<lb/>
ain't nothing, this has been<lb/>
happening for a long time<lb/>
The pretrial motions to be<lb/>
presented include a check on the<lb/>
racial composition of the jury<lb/>
pool which was recently found to<lb/>
underrepresent blacks by 44 per<lb/>
cent. Other motions will oontest<lb/>
the threats made on Roosevelt<lb/>
Watson by polioe.<lb/>
The defense is concerned<lb/>
with the possibility of not having<lb/>
enough time to raise all of the<lb/>
pertinent issues and present all<lb/>
of the facts which are relevant<lb/>
because of the judge's schedule.<lb/>
Judges in Georgia travel a<lb/>
circuit, and the judge for Terrell<lb/>
County has six other oounties in<lb/>
his jurisdiction. Three trials a<lb/>
day is the norm in the situation.<lb/>
GEORGIA DEATH ROW<lb/>
There are presently three<lb/>
teenagers on death row in<lb/>
Georgia. The most recently<lb/>
convicted is Gary Hawes, age<lb/>
16, who was sentenced early in<lb/>
January of this year. Attorney<lb/>
Farmer sees the oonviction as<lb/>
indicative of the general pro-<lb/>
capital punishment attitude in<lb/>
the area. These cases are only<lb/>
75 miles apart says Farmer, "<lb/>
and they are both right here in<lb/>
the buckle of the death belt<lb/>
There are presently 61 peo-<lb/>
ple on death row in the state.<lb/>
Half of them are black although<lb/>
blacks are only 25.9 per cent of<lb/>
the population. There are no<lb/>
whites on death row for killing a<lb/>
black, and there are only three<lb/>
blacks on death row for the<lb/>
murder of a black victim.<lb/>
The state of Georgia played<lb/>
a key role in the recent<lb/>
Supreme Court decision rein-<lb/>
stating the death penalty. After<lb/>
the 1972 U.S. Supreme Court<lb/>
decision against capital pu-<lb/>
nishment, 34 states rewrote<lb/>
their death penalty laws in order<lb/>
to circumvent the decision.<lb/>
Georgia rewrote its law almost<lb/>
immediately; the current statute<lb/>
has been in effect since 1973.<lb/>
The Supreme Court's July, 1976<lb/>
reversal of its previous ruling<lb/>
was based on the fact that it<lb/>
found the Georgia, Florida and<lb/>
Texas laws acceptable.<lb/>
" Something is going to come<lb/>
through and straighten out (the<lb/>
town of) Dawson said Mrs.<lb/>
Watson, mother of Roosevelt<lb/>
and Henderson. "I may be<lb/>
dead and gone, but I know it's<lb/>
got to happen<lb/>
Mr. Jackson, father of John-<lb/>
ny B. and James Edward<lb/>
Jackson Jr was an agricultural<lb/>
laborer on Jimmy Carter's pea-<lb/>
nut farm. Dawson is twenty<lb/>
miles from Rains, the seat of<lb/>
the "New South<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0007"/><lb/>
EBONY editor<lb/>
test<lb/>
8 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Pago) 7<lb/>
sweeps<lb/>
Kenneth Campbell, ECU<lb/>
graduating senior and former<lb/>
editor of the Ebony Herald, was<lb/>
recently honored as the first-<lb/>
place winner of the national<lb/>
Freedom's Journal Essay Con-<lb/>
test at Howard University (HU)<lb/>
in Washington, D.C.<lb/>
The annual event, held at<lb/>
the Mayflower Hotel as a part of<lb/>
the Howard University Com-<lb/>
munications Conference for<lb/>
young Minority Journalists, led<lb/>
Campbell to be interviewed and<lb/>
photographed by The Washing-<lb/>
ton Post newspaper. The Post<lb/>
article appeared Mon. Feb. 22.<lb/>
Campbell, who won a gold<lb/>
medal, had received information<lb/>
about the contest through the<lb/>
office of Lionel C. Barrow, dean<lb/>
of Howard's Communications<lb/>
School. The contest rules called<lb/>
for a 500 word-essay about the<lb/>
black press.<lb/>
Campbell's essay, "The<lb/>
Roles of the Black Press<lb/>
included guidelines for three<lb/>
original roles plus two roles<lb/>
which Campbell would like to<lb/>
see implemented.<lb/>
"Originally Campbell<lb/>
said, "the black press served as<lb/>
a literary outlet for blacks, a<lb/>
sounding board for black spo-<lb/>
kesmanship, and as a protest-<lb/>
advocacy press<lb/>
"The Black press must stop<lb/>
applauding everything black<lb/>
leaders and politicians do and<lb/>
must begin acting as a watchdog<lb/>
on these leaders. Blacks should<lb/>
not vote for a candidate simply<lb/>
because he is black he added.<lb/>
Continuing, Campbell said<lb/>
the time has come for the black<lb/>
press to start criticizing the<lb/>
white press" instead of simply<lb/>
publishing what the white press<lb/>
has neglected to publish-the<lb/>
humanistic side of the black<lb/>
community.<lb/>
Citing an example, the for-<lb/>
mer Herald editor said the black<lb/>
press must report "distortions<lb/>
caused by the white papers'<lb/>
neglect of the humanistic side of<lb/>
the black community<lb/>
"The black press must now<lb/>
be expanded to include black<lb/>
columnists on white newspapers<lb/>
and black reporters in high-level<lb/>
positions who get their work<lb/>
published without revision<lb/>
Campbell has been accepted<lb/>
at UNC-Chapel Hill and (unof-<lb/>
ficially) at the University of<lb/>
Maryland's School of Journa-<lb/>
lism. He also applied to Colum-<lb/>
bia University's School of Jour-<lb/>
nalism.<lb/>
Last summer, Campbell<lb/>
worked as an intern for the<lb/>
Wilmington Delaware News<lb/>
Journal. "My responsibilities<lb/>
included substituting for news<lb/>
room clerk, running errands for<lb/>
newsroom personnel and wri-<lb/>
ting obituaries he said. "I'm<lb/>
not afraid of starting from the<lb/>
bottom and moving up he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Campbell added that he got<lb/>
the job without the benefit of<lb/>
connections. (Expenses for his<lb/>
Washington D.C. trip to the HU<lb/>
Communications Conference<lb/>
were paid by Howard Univer-<lb/>
sity.)<lb/>
Campbell, who officially<lb/>
graduated March 1, has been<lb/>
offered a job as a reporter for<lb/>
the Niagara Falls Gazette, Nia-<lb/>
gara Falls, New York partially<lb/>
as a result of his Washington<lb/>
Post coverage.<lb/>
The Communications Con-<lb/>
ference included four days of<lb/>
seminars, lectures and banquets<lb/>
with participation by many<lb/>
leading black journalists.<lb/>
Some of these celebrities<lb/>
included Dr. Lionel C. Barrow,<lb/>
Mrs. Peggy Pinn, Conference<lb/>
Coordinator, Mr. Vernon Jar-<lb/>
rett, columnist fa the Chicago<lb/>
Tribune, Mrs. Ethel Payne,<lb/>
Washington Correspondent for<lb/>
Sengstack newspapers, and<lb/>
Dorothy B. Gilliam and Robert<lb/>
C. Maynard, both of the Wash-<lb/>
ington Post newspaper.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINA version of the Brown<lb/>
Mountain lights was evident during exam<lb/>
week as students in these dorms stayed up all<lb/>
hours of the night preparing for exams.<lb/>
Save $10.00 to $59.90 if you act now.<lb/>
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There're 74 preprogrammed functions and opera-<lb/>
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Chances are you'll soon discover how really easy<lb/>
it is to program. An SR-56 has 100 steps. Six logical<lb/>
decision functions. Four levels of subroutines. Dec-<lb/>
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Think about it. Can you really afford to put off get-<lb/>
ting your SR-56, now?<lb/>
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Techniques like optimization, iteration, data reduc-<lb/>
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But learning to use it is a hassle, you say. Not true.<lb/>
Prerecorded programs are gathered into software<lb/>
libraries: Electrical Engineering. Math. Statistics.<lb/>
Finance. All you need do is load a mag card, press a<lb/>
few keys and you'll get answers that previously<lb/>
required a computer.<lb/>
You can make your own programs just as easily.<lb/>
In just a couple of hours you'll begin to<lb/>
prove what a powerful asset you have-<lb/>
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And there's not a better time to get an<lb/>
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i c?<lb/>
Texas Instruments will rebate $10 00 ot your original SR-56 purchase price when<lb/>
you: (1) return this completed coupon including serial number (2) along with your<lb/>
completed SR-56 customer intormation card (packed in box and (3) a dated copy<lb/>
of proof of your purchase, verifying purchase between Jan 1 and March 31, 1977<lb/>
? SRM Rebate Offer<lb/>
I P.O. Box 1210<lb/>
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(from back of calculator)<lb/>
IC2<lb/>
Electrical Engineering Statistics Math Finance Choose any two and (1) return<lb/>
this completed coupon including serial number along with (2) your completed<lb/>
SR-52 serialized customer information card (packed in box) and (3) a dated copy<lb/>
of proof of your purchase, verifying purchase between Jan 20 and March 31,1977<lb/>
SR-52 Free Software library Offer<lb/>
I P.O. Box 1211<lb/>
1 Richardson, Tens 750S0<lb/>
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I based upon availability Please allow 30 days for delivery<lb/>
II<lb/>
Otler void where prohibited by law Good in Continental U S only<lb/>
? Suggested retarf price<lb/>
ii 11977 Texas Instruments Incorporated<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
INCORPORATE D<lb/>
65582<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0008"/><lb/>
Pago 10 FCUNTAINHEAD 8 March 1977<lb/>
The Limits of Dissent'<lb/>
to open here March 9<lb/>
AS SPRING QUARTER begins, this lone ECU student strolls by<lb/>
the mall contemplating another start and warm days ahead.<lb/>
Photo by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
hOH LOIELA TlilMiS<lb/>
FOR SPRING<lb/>
Select Group<lb/>
of Spring Slacks<lb/>
only 9-90<lb/>
Find a<lb/>
Matching Top<lb/>
For Under 10.00<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
9:30-6:00 MonSat.<lb/>
"Can a man be convicted for<lb/>
what he believes, as opposed to<lb/>
what he does?<lb/>
This question, raised in the<lb/>
1958 Greensboro trial of Junius<lb/>
Scales, will again be asked in a<lb/>
special dramatic reenactment of<lb/>
the Scales trial scheduled for<lb/>
ECU March 9.<lb/>
"The Limits of Dissent a<lb/>
dramatization of excerpts from<lb/>
the trial, will be presented in<lb/>
ECU'S Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, room 244, at 2 p.m. The<lb/>
campus event is sponsored by<lb/>
the ECU Danforth Associates.<lb/>
A repeat performance has<lb/>
been set for the Pitt County<lb/>
Court House at 8 p.m sponsor-<lb/>
ed by the Greenville-Pitt County<lb/>
League of Women Voters.<lb/>
The public is incited to<lb/>
attend either performance free<lb/>
of charge.<lb/>
Juries of local citizens will be<lb/>
chosen from the audience, to<lb/>
test once again to what extent<lb/>
the First Amendment rights of<lb/>
free speech and assembly can<lb/>
be limited for reasons of internal<lb/>
security.<lb/>
Junius Scales was for many<lb/>
years head of the Communist<lb/>
Party in theCarolinas. His trial<lb/>
was based on the membership<lb/>
provision of the Smith Act,<lb/>
which made it a crime to be a<lb/>
member of any organization<lb/>
with the knowledge that the<lb/>
organization advocates over-<lb/>
throw of the government by<lb/>
force and violence.<lb/>
"The Limits of Dissent" was<lb/>
produced by the Carolina<lb/>
Theatre Company, a profes-<lb/>
sional touring company under<lb/>
the direction of William Dreyer,<lb/>
and scripted from actual trial<lb/>
transcripts by Dr. Lewis Lipsitz<lb/>
of the UNC-Chapel Hill political<lb/>
science faculty.<lb/>
Alcoholism meeting<lb/>
to be held March 9<lb/>
A "Conference on Alcohol-<lb/>
ism" for professionals involved<lb/>
in the treatment or rehabilita-<lb/>
tion of alcoholics will be held<lb/>
here Wednesday, March 9.<lb/>
The conference is sponsored<lb/>
by the Eastern Area<lb/>
Health Education Center<lb/>
(EAHEC) in cooperation with<lb/>
the Walter B. Jones Alcoholic<lb/>
Rehabilitation Center, the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine and the N.C.<lb/>
Dept. of Human Resources.<lb/>
All conference sessions are<lb/>
scheduled for the Greenville<lb/>
Moose Lodge.<lb/>
The conference will empha-<lb/>
PATTON<lb/>
continued from pg. 1<lb/>
Patton then said the basket-<lb/>
ball team was going to be a good<lb/>
team some day. "We had eight<lb/>
freshmen and sophomores out<lb/>
of 11 members on the team.<lb/>
They are young kids he went<lb/>
on. "And all they need is some<lb/>
new direction. They're gonna be<lb/>
mighty good one day. They will<lb/>
have a new start next year with<lb/>
a new man at the wheel<lb/>
Patton then made a plea to<lb/>
the administration, alumni and<lb/>
students to support the basket-<lb/>
ball program in the future.<lb/>
"I would like to ask the<lb/>
administration, fans and stu-<lb/>
dents of East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity to get behind these players<lb/>
and the program, so that it may<lb/>
grow and prosper. There are<lb/>
many things that need improv-<lb/>
ing in our program, but the<lb/>
number one thing is the sup-<lb/>
porter attitude toward basket-<lb/>
ball. Without it, we will never<lb/>
reach the goals all of us want.<lb/>
"The coaching situation is<lb/>
not the problem here Patton<lb/>
continued. "It's how basketball<lb/>
is taken by students, fans, and<lb/>
alumni. I'd like to see them give<lb/>
like these kids did. Our fans<lb/>
completely lost sight that these<lb/>
are young kids. They are gonna<lb/>
be a fine team in the future,<lb/>
with new direction. I just hope<lb/>
the alumni and students will get<lb/>
behind them. That's the only<lb/>
way they'll be the winners our<lb/>
fans want<lb/>
Patton was then asked if<lb/>
there was an ultimatum from the<lb/>
administration to resign or be<lb/>
fired after two successive losing<lb/>
seasons. "No, absolutely not.<lb/>
This was entirely of my own<lb/>
choosing. I'm not saying it<lb/>
would not have happened<lb/>
ALPHABET SALE<lb/>
AT<lb/>
ROCK N SOUL. inc.<lb/>
208 E. 5th ST.<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
ATHRUH<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
I THRUQ<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
RTHRUZ<lb/>
MARCH 8th,9th,&amp;10th<lb/>
$6.98 LIST LPs - 4.79<lb/>
$7.98 LIST LPs - 5.49<lb/>
ALL OTHERS REDUCED!<lb/>
ALLALBUMS&amp;<lb/>
TAPES ON SALE<lb/>
ONEOFTHESE<lb/>
THREE DAYS<lb/>
$7.98 LI ST TAPES<lb/>
-5.79<lb/>
ALL OTHERS REDUCED!<lb/>
L<lb/>
size "various treatment pro-<lb/>
cesses in the fieio of aloohol<lb/>
abuse" and will concentrate on<lb/>
"specific approaches" in the<lb/>
treatment of alcoholics and their<lb/>
families, said Lament D. Not-<lb/>
tingham, EAHEC associate di-<lb/>
rector.<lb/>
"With the growing problems<lb/>
of alcoholism in our modern<lb/>
society, there has been a<lb/>
corresponding increase in the<lb/>
need to transmit relevant in-<lb/>
formation to those persons who<lb/>
are involved with the treatment<lb/>
or rehabilitation of alcoholics<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
(pressure from administration),<lb/>
but it has not come yet<lb/>
When Patton was asked if he<lb/>
would ever consider coaching<lb/>
again, he replied, "If you ever<lb/>
hear of me accepting a coaching<lb/>
job again, how about finding me<lb/>
and shooting me<lb/>
Patton had told the team the<lb/>
day before the game with The<lb/>
Citadel of his decision.<lb/>
"I got halfway through<lb/>
telling them and I couldn't<lb/>
continue. I just broke down. I<lb/>
love these kids. I have all the<lb/>
oonfidence in the world in them.<lb/>
They said they didn't want me<lb/>
to leave<lb/>
When Patton was asked why<lb/>
the announcement was so early,<lb/>
he said he hoped it would help<lb/>
recruiting by getting him out<lb/>
early so they would name a new<lb/>
coach quickly. He also said he<lb/>
could not in good faith recruit<lb/>
knowing he would not be back.<lb/>
Patton, a native of Ashland,<lb/>
Ky joined the East Carolina<lb/>
coaching staff in 1972 as an<lb/>
assistant to Tom Quinn. Follow-<lb/>
ing Quinn'sdismissal at the end<lb/>
of the 1973-74 season, Patton<lb/>
was named head coach.<lb/>
"The General as,he was<lb/>
nicknamed his first year as head<lb/>
coach, directed his first dub to a<lb/>
19-9 record, the best mark at<lb/>
East Carolina in 17 years. His<lb/>
team competed in the now<lb/>
defunct Collegiate Commission-<lb/>
er's Invitational Tournament in<lb/>
Louisville, Ky. Patton was<lb/>
named Southern Conference<lb/>
coach of the year that season.<lb/>
Patton compiled a 40-42<lb/>
mark while at ECU in his three<lb/>
years. Following the 19-9 season<lb/>
in 1974-75, he had teams of<lb/>
11-15 in 1975-76 and 10-18 this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The 36-year old Patton earn-<lb/>
ed both his BS and M.ED,<lb/>
from Georgia Southern.College,<lb/>
where he starred in basketball.<lb/>
He was team captain his senior<lb/>
year and played in two national<lb/>
NAIA tournaments with the<lb/>
Eagles.<lb/>
t v 8&amp;ffi!a?  .????:??<lb/>
-ifMW . . ??- <lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0009"/><lb/>
HHHBHSHNHIH<lb/>
??W m<lb/>
?HHHMBMMMIHHHH<lb/>
Family donates papers to<lb/>
manuscript collection<lb/>
8 March 1977 FOUWTAINHEAD<lb/>
The personal papers of more<lb/>
than three generations of the<lb/>
Rodman family of Washington,<lb/>
N.C has been donated to the<lb/>
ECU Manuscript Collection.<lb/>
The Rodman collection is<lb/>
made up primarily of the<lb/>
correspondence, legal files, and<lb/>
business records of North<lb/>
Carolina Supreme Court<lb/>
Associate Justice William<lb/>
Blount Rodman, Jr and the<lb/>
papers of his father and grand-<lb/>
father.<lb/>
The Rodmans have been<lb/>
among the leading legal families<lb/>
in North Carolina sinoe William<lb/>
Wanton Rodman moved to<lb/>
Washington in 1910 from New<lb/>
York City and married the<lb/>
daughter of John Gray Blount.<lb/>
His son, William Blount Rod-<lb/>
man, Sr. (1817-1893) graduated<lb/>
from U.N.C. and studied law<lb/>
under Judge William Gaston.<lb/>
An active Democrat and se-<lb/>
cessionist, he raised a company<lb/>
of troops during the Civil War<lb/>
and rose to the rank of Colonel<lb/>
before being attached to the<lb/>
Army of Northern Virginia as<lb/>
judge of a military oourt. During<lb/>
Reconstruction he was elected<lb/>
to the 1886 constitutional Con-<lb/>
vention and served as Associate<lb/>
Justice of the North Carolina<lb/>
Supreme Court (1868-1878).<lb/>
Judge Rodman's son,<lb/>
William B. Rodman, II (1862-<lb/>
1946, ikewise was a noted<lb/>
lawyer, political leader, and<lb/>
agriculturist. In 1903 he was<lb/>
appointed to a three man<lb/>
commission to codify all statute<lb/>
laws for the state of North<lb/>
Carolina. Rodman became divi-<lb/>
sion counsel for the Southern<lb/>
Railway in 1905 with authority<lb/>
over all legal matters for the<lb/>
railroad in this state. He sub-<lb/>
sequently served as general<lb/>
oounsel to the Norfolk Southern<lb/>
Railroad, the Old Dominion<lb/>
Steamship Company, and the<lb/>
Roper Lumber Company. He<lb/>
was also active in Democratic<lb/>
Party politics and the North<lb/>
Carolina National Guard.<lb/>
The third William B. Rod-<lb/>
man (1889-1976) oontinued the<lb/>
law profession of his fore-<lb/>
fathers. After graduating from<lb/>
U.N.C. he was admitted to the<lb/>
North Carolina Bar in 1911. He<lb/>
was a World War I Navy officer,<lb/>
a member of the North Carolina<lb/>
State Senate (1936-1939) and<lb/>
the State House of Representa-<lb/>
tives (1951-1955). He was ap-<lb/>
pointed North Carolina Attorney<lb/>
General in 1955 and resigned<lb/>
that office in 1956 to become<lb/>
Associate Justice of the North<lb/>
Carolina Supreme Court. Judge<lb/>
Rodman became an emergency<lb/>
judge upon retirement in 1965.<lb/>
During a long and productive<lb/>
career, he was senior member of<lb/>
the law firm of Rodman and<lb/>
Rodman and also served as<lb/>
president of the North Carolina<lb/>
State Bar, member of the North<lb/>
Carolina Medical Care Commis-<lb/>
sion, and director of the Bank of<lb/>
Washington and the Beaufort<lb/>
County Savings and Loan.<lb/>
The collection being pre-<lb/>
served at East Carolina oontains<lb/>
the complete personal files of<lb/>
Judge Rodman and his father<lb/>
along with a smaller quantity of<lb/>
material for the original Judge<lb/>
William B. Rodman.<lb/>
All three William B. Rod-<lb/>
mans had extensive farming<lb/>
interests in Beaufort County,<lb/>
and the records of Urwald<lb/>
Plantation reflect cotton and<lb/>
dairy operations over a period of<lb/>
three generations. Also in-<lb/>
cluded is correspondence, land<lb/>
records, and other papers of<lb/>
William Wanton Rodman and<lb/>
various Rodman and Blount<lb/>
relatives of the late 18th and<lb/>
early 19th centuries.<lb/>
Commenting on the acquisi-<lb/>
tion, ECU chancellor, Dr. Leo<lb/>
W. Jenkins, stated that "we at<lb/>
East Carolina University are<lb/>
extremely proud to have a part<lb/>
in preserving the William<lb/>
Blount Rodman Papers. This is<lb/>
one of the most distinguished<lb/>
families in North Carolina and<lb/>
their leadership in the field of<lb/>
law and jurisprudence is one to<lb/>
be greatly admired<lb/>
Don Lennon, directa of the<lb/>
East Carolina Manuscript Col-<lb/>
lection, said the collection oon-<lb/>
tains more than 50 cubic feet of<lb/>
correspondence, legal files,<lb/>
farm records, and business<lb/>
papers. The collection ranges<lb/>
over a span of almost 200 years<lb/>
and oontains significant histori-<lb/>
cal information on antebellum<lb/>
life, Civil War and Reconstruct-<lb/>
ion, politics, law, agriculture,<lb/>
military affairs, railroad deve-<lb/>
lopment, school integration, and<lb/>
a variety of other topics.<lb/>
EXAM WEEK found downtown Greenville practically deserted.<lb/>
Photo by Kirk Kingsbury)<lb/>
ECU sociologist<lb/>
publishes articles<lb/>
An article and two book<lb/>
reviews by ECU sociologist<lb/>
Avtar Singh appear in current<lb/>
issues of professional journals.<lb/>
His article, "Community<lb/>
Structure and Technological<lb/>
Development is included in<lb/>
Vol. X of "Contributions to<lb/>
Asian Studies<lb/>
Dr. Singh reports on his<lb/>
research concerning villages in<lb/>
India, and examines the kinds of<lb/>
social structures and socio-<lb/>
political processes at the local<lb/>
level which directly affect deve-<lb/>
lopment efforts by various plan-<lb/>
ning agencies.<lb/>
The article concludes with<lb/>
recommendations for policy<lb/>
makers and scientists interested<lb/>
in community development and<lb/>
social change.<lb/>
Two book reviews by Dr.<lb/>
Singh appear in the "Inter-<lb/>
national Development Review<lb/>
a quarterly journal published in<lb/>
the Spanish, French and Eng-<lb/>
lish languages and circulated<lb/>
worldwide, and in "Social<lb/>
Forces a journal of the<lb/>
Southern Sociological Society.<lb/>
Both reviews examine recent<lb/>
books about rural social struct-<lb/>
ure and development of rural<lb/>
areas.<lb/>
WHAT IS THIS?<lb/>
Find out at the Jolly Roger<lb/>
Wednesday, March 9:<lb/>
Selectrocution: THE GAME FOR SINGLES.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0010"/><lb/>
Pages FOUNTAINHEAD 8 March 1977<lb/>
College credit available<lb/>
for self-taught persons<lb/>
Individuals, young and old,<lb/>
can earn college credit for what<lb/>
they have learned on their own<lb/>
by taking College-Level Exam-<lb/>
inations offered during the third<lb/>
week of each month at ECU.<lb/>
ECU is one of 1,800,oo) leges<lb/>
and universities participating in<lb/>
the College-Level Examination<lb/>
Program of the College En-<lb/>
trance Examination Board and<lb/>
one of about 1,000 CLEP testing<lb/>
centers in the country.<lb/>
College Board officials re-<lb/>
port that CLEP test-takers turn<lb/>
out in the greatest numbers in<lb/>
the spring and summer months:<lb/>
about 62 percent of all CLEP<lb/>
candidates in 1976 took the test<lb/>
between March and August.<lb/>
Thousands of alumni nation-<lb/>
wide can testify to the benefits<lb/>
of CLEP. Though not an alum-<lb/>
nus of the program, one self-<lb/>
made independent leader, Abe<lb/>
Lincoln, will be demonstrating<lb/>
the principles behind the pro-<lb/>
gram on television and radio,<lb/>
and in magazines starting this<lb/>
month. In a new series of<lb/>
messages, Abe starts college<lb/>
with CLEP credits as a second-<lb/>
year government student, said,<lb/>
humbly, "I've done a lot of<lb/>
studyingsort of on my own<lb/>
The College Board reports<lb/>
that since the program was<lb/>
launched nationally in October,<lb/>
1967, about 420,000 people have<lb/>
taken CLEP tests. In addition,<lb/>
,<lb/>
<lb/>
Buy Any Sub<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
PLAY THE PIN BALL<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
.i-SCGRE&amp;Vu,<lb/>
&amp; Phone 752-6130 Xj<lb/>
A Phone in orders<lb/>
r? for pick up or campus delivery<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<lb/>
J'<lb/>
a nursery<lb/>
On Evans Street Extension<lb/>
Lookforthe Dome!<lb/>
Sale on<lb/>
Tropical Plants:<lb/>
Dracaenas<lb/>
Norfolk Island Pines<lb/>
Schefflera<lb/>
Ming Trees<lb/>
Dieffenbachia<lb/>
and more<lb/>
Open 7 Days a Week<lb/>
more than 100,000 examinations<lb/>
are administered every year<lb/>
through the U.S. military's<lb/>
DANTES (Defense Activity for<lb/>
Nontraditional Education Sup-<lb/>
port) program for servicemen<lb/>
and women aid their depend-<lb/>
ents.<lb/>
There are two types of CLEP<lb/>
examinations. General exam-<lb/>
inations test knowledge of five<lb/>
basic liberal arts areas-English<lb/>
composition, mathematics,<lb/>
humanities, natural sciences,<lb/>
and social sciences - history.<lb/>
Another 47 examinations mea-<lb/>
sure your knowledge of specific<lb/>
subjects such as American<lb/>
history, American literature,<lb/>
introductory accounting, com-<lb/>
puters and data processing,<lb/>
biology, and fundamentals of<lb/>
nursing. The exams oost $20 for<lb/>
one, $30 for two, and $40 for<lb/>
three to five.<lb/>
Further information about<lb/>
CLEP can be obtained from the<lb/>
Testing Center Office, Speight<lb/>
105-106, ECU, telephone 757-<lb/>
6811, or by writing CLEP, Box<lb/>
1903, Radio City Station, New<lb/>
York, N.Y. 10019.<lb/>
ANOTHER REGISTRATION day and students pack Wright<lb/>
Auditorium, Photo by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
Health courses open<lb/>
Two preliminary public<lb/>
health courses offered through<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
Chapel Hill, School of Public<lb/>
Health will be conducted at ECU<lb/>
beginning March 10.<lb/>
The courses, PUBH 100:<lb/>
Ecology of Human Health, and<lb/>
BIOS 100: Public Health Statis-<lb/>
tics, are the initial courses in<lb/>
UNC's Master's degree pro-<lb/>
gram in public health adminis-<lb/>
tration. The courses are being<lb/>
oonducted in cooperation with<lb/>
the ECU School of Allied Health<lb/>
Eastern Area Health Education<lb/>
Center and under the sponsor-<lb/>
ship of the N.C. Area<lb/>
Health Education Center pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Ecology of Human Health,<lb/>
being offered from 2.00-5:00<lb/>
p.m. Thursday afternoons, in-<lb/>
troduces the philosophical and<lb/>
historical context of health and<lb/>
disease in society within the<lb/>
framework of biological, be-<lb/>
havioral, environmental, and<lb/>
social forces. The course in-<lb/>
structor will be Prof. William<lb/>
of Public Health Off-Campus<lb/>
Program.<lb/>
Public Health Statistics, of-<lb/>
fered from 6:00-9:00 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday evenings, is an intro-<lb/>
duction to fundamental pro-<lb/>
cedures in collecting, summar-<lb/>
izing, presenting and analyzing<lb/>
public health data. This course<lb/>
will be taught in collaboration<lb/>
with the School of Public<lb/>
Health, Department of Bio-<lb/>
statistics by Prof. Charles Ash<lb/>
of the faculty of ECU, School of<lb/>
Allied Health and Social Profes-<lb/>
and Social Professions and the Herzog, Director of the School sions.<lb/>
Mb9 11 ISMJC<lb/>
to love<lb/>
a pen?<lb/>
Is it crazy to love marker pens that give you the smoothest, thinnest line in<lb/>
town and feel so right in your hand7 Is it mad to worship pens with clever<lb/>
little metal "collars" to keep their plastic points from getting squishy?<lb/>
Not if the pen is a Pilot marker pen.<lb/>
Our Razor Point, at only 69c, gives<lb/>
the kind of extra-fine delicate line you'll flip .<lb/>
over. And for those times you want a little less<lb/>
line, have a fling with our fine point<lb/>
59c Fmeliner. It has the wilJ and fortitude to<lb/>
actually write through carbons.<lb/>
So, don't settle for a casual relationship.<lb/>
Get yourself a lasting one, or two, to have<lb/>
and to hold at your college book store.<lb/>
Pilot Corp. of America, 41-15 36th St<lb/>
Long Island City, N.Y. 11101<lb/>
pilot<lb/>
marker pens<lb/>
IS? ? '  : ! ' : ? . ; ?:<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0011"/><lb/>
Scores with Rumours<lb/>
8 March 1977 FOUNTAIN HEAD Page 13<lb/>
I<lb/>
Fleet wood Mac continues LPsuccess<lb/>
By JIMMY HAINES<lb/>
and BRANDON TISE<lb/>
With the phenomena' suc-<lb/>
oess of their previous album,<lb/>
FLEETWOOD MAC, ooming up<lb/>
with another album that meets<lb/>
the same high standards was<lb/>
certainly a tall order and one in<lb/>
which the group succeeds.<lb/>
One large success is that the<lb/>
group sounds more like a group<lb/>
now rather than the individual<lb/>
styles which marked theit pre-<lb/>
vious effort. They have success-<lb/>
fully merged their styles into a<lb/>
sound that can be identified as<lb/>
that of FLEETWOOD MAC<lb/>
1977.<lb/>
Their new album<lb/>
RUMOURS, contains many ele-<lb/>
ments that are more reminiscent<lb/>
of the MYSTERY TO ME and<lb/>
BUCKINGHAM-NICKS albums<lb/>
than of the FLEETWOOD MAC<lb/>
album. Christine McVie's em-<lb/>
phasis on strong repeating<lb/>
hooks in songs seems to have<lb/>
diminished when compared to<lb/>
past hits like "Over My Head"<lb/>
but her songwriting talent re-<lb/>
mains on the same high plateau.<lb/>
Likewise, Stevie Nicks em-<lb/>
phasis on hook lines seems to<lb/>
have temporarily fallen by the<lb/>
wayside. If one remembered<lb/>
nothing else from the previous<lb/>
album, "Rhiannon" with its<lb/>
great, simple hook was likely to<lb/>
stick in your mind. However,<lb/>
none of Nicks' contributions to<lb/>
RUMOURS have that same<lb/>
quality. What they do have is<lb/>
the same interesting lyrical<lb/>
qualities that set a mood rather<lb/>
than evoke an image.<lb/>
Lindsey Buckingham has<lb/>
always shown more of a pop<lb/>
style in his writing than any-<lb/>
thing else. From the BUCKING-<lb/>
HAM- NICKS song "Don't Let<lb/>
Me Down Again" to "Monday<lb/>
Morning" from their past al-<lb/>
bum, he has been able to churn<lb/>
out pop material consistently<lb/>
but still write material in several<lb/>
other directions as well.<lb/>
His guitar work on RU-<lb/>
MOUPS has taken the same<lb/>
form as John McVie's bass work<lb/>
or Mick Fleetwood'sdrumming-<lb/>
it may not overpower you and<lb/>
leave you speechless but the<lb/>
coloring of each song is excel-<lb/>
lent; the taste exquisite. Buck-<lb/>
ingham's best work is heard<lb/>
when he uses one or two notes<lb/>
to say what other guitarists<lb/>
oouldn't say with twenty.<lb/>
"Second Hand News" the<lb/>
album's opener is unfortunately<lb/>
not one of its better songs.<lb/>
Lindsey Buckingham, as he<lb/>
shows later in the album is<lb/>
capable of much better than<lb/>
this.<lb/>
 Dreams by Stevie Nicks is<lb/>
a prime example of Bucking-<lb/>
ham, John McVie, and Mick<lb/>
Fleetwood merging in a style<lb/>
that says so much through<lb/>
subtlety. They perfectly comple-<lb/>
ment the mysterious mood<lb/>
which Nicks sets with her<lb/>
ECU professors<lb/>
publish text<lb/>
"Fiction: The Narrative<lb/>
Art by James W. Kirkland<lb/>
and Paul W. Dowell of the tCU<lb/>
English faculty, will be released<lb/>
soon by its publishers, Prentice-<lb/>
Hall of Englewood Cliffs, N.J.<lb/>
The Kirkland-Dowell book is<lb/>
designed as a text for basic<lb/>
college English courses and<lb/>
focuses on the short story and<lb/>
its counterparts in oral tradition,<lb/>
to help students understand,<lb/>
discuss and write about fiction.<lb/>
Each group of stories is<lb/>
grouped by theme and techni-<lb/>
que, and the stories themselves<lb/>
include not only classic and<lb/>
modern stories by recognized<lb/>
authors but myths, legends, and<lb/>
folk tales of the Greek, Hebrew,<lb/>
Babylonian, European, African,<lb/>
American and Chicano tradi-<lb/>
tions. In all, the book includes<lb/>
55 selections.<lb/>
Drs. Kirkland and Dowell<lb/>
have introduced each chapter<lb/>
with brief essays which com-<lb/>
ment on theme and technique<lb/>
used in the stories in the<lb/>
chapter, and the text also<lb/>
includes questions to stimulate<lb/>
thought and discussion.<lb/>
"Fiction: The Narrative Art"<lb/>
is a 448-page paperback, and is<lb/>
adaptable to several teaching<lb/>
approaches and to varieties of<lb/>
student abilities and interests.<lb/>
Dr. Kirkland specialized in<lb/>
American literature and has<lb/>
lectured and published articles<lb/>
in this field. Since 1972 he has<lb/>
been Director of Freshman<lb/>
Composition at ECU. Dr.<lb/>
Dowell, a folklorist, has re-<lb/>
searched and lectured on<lb/>
aspects of the folklore of Mary-<lb/>
land's Eastern Shore. He is<lb/>
director of the ECU Folklore<lb/>
Archive and a past president of<lb/>
the Maryland Folklore Society.<lb/>
EAT FOR JUST<lb/>
V: plus tax MonThurs.<lb/>
Crabcakes, slaw, French fries plus<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
y4 pound hamburger steak, slaw,<lb/>
french fries arid rolls.<lb/>
Fish, slawy french fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
GUFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House ana Oyster Bar<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat. 752-3172<lb/>
2 miles east on-highway 264<lb/>
(out 10th St.)<lb/>
repetitive, "And what you had,<lb/>
And what you lost lyric.<lb/>
Stevie Nicks captures the air of<lb/>
subtle mystery that former<lb/>
FLEETWOOD MAC member<lb/>
Bob Welch produced in "Hyp-<lb/>
notized" and "Bermuda Tri-<lb/>
angle" but overdid with his<lb/>
lyrics.<lb/>
"Never Going Back Again"<lb/>
is a Buckingham creation which<lb/>
disolaysan acoustic guitar base<lb/>
whin seems straight from the<lb/>
BUCKINGHAM-NICKS album.<lb/>
This song should be remembe-<lb/>
red for its guitar work only.<lb/>
"Don't Stop" is my favorite<lb/>
Christine McVie song on the<lb/>
album. It is an upbeat rocker<lb/>
with some interesting vocal<lb/>
interplay between Buckingham<lb/>
and McVie. The craftsmanship<lb/>
(which is how McVie's songwri-<lb/>
ting should be described), is<lb/>
again up to her excellent<lb/>
standards and as almost a<lb/>
definitive touch she ends it with<lb/>
a repeating tag (a la "Say That<lb/>
You Love Me").<lb/>
The next song "Go Your<lb/>
Own Way" by Lindsey Bucking-<lb/>
ham should become a FLEET-<lb/>
WOOD MAC standard and has<lb/>
my vote to be their live show<lb/>
closer. The "Go Your Own<lb/>
Way" hook is impossible to<lb/>
forget in this song which seems<lb/>
to get its rhythm guitar from<lb/>
early Badfinger, its lead work<lb/>
from " I' m So Afraid (a Buckin-<lb/>
gham song from the previous<lb/>
album) and its chorus from<lb/>
divine inspiration.<lb/>
The last song on the first<lb/>
side is a live recording of<lb/>
"Songbird" by Christine McVie<lb/>
which displays the opposite<lb/>
Christine McVie from "Don't<lb/>
Stop With a sound more from<lb/>
MYSTERY TO ME it almost<lb/>
seems as if you have intruded<lb/>
into her music roan to acciden-<lb/>
tally share a personal moment<lb/>
and statement.<lb/>
Side Two starts out with a<lb/>
group collaboration called "The<lb/>
Chain which works much<lb/>
better than the McVie-Bucking-<lb/>
ham "World Turning" from the<lb/>
previous album. Towards the<lb/>
end of the song while John<lb/>
McVie is left alone to play a<lb/>
little bass figure, Buckingham's<lb/>
guitar rises from nowhere trying<lb/>
to tear your heart out with a few<lb/>
searing notes and provides a<lb/>
very satisfying finish.<lb/>
"You Make Loving Fun" by<lb/>
Christine McVie is highlighted<lb/>
by some good keyboards-<lb/>
synthesizer work and clean,<lb/>
biting guitar. The song seems to<lb/>
be a logical progression from<lb/>
her work on the previous album<lb/>
successfully improving on work<lb/>
which did not need improve-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"I Don't Want To Know" by<lb/>
Stevie Nicks also sounds as if it<lb/>
was from the BUCKINGHAM-<lb/>
NICKS album with the dual<lb/>
vocals of Buckingham and Nicks<lb/>
giving the song all the life they<lb/>
can. The problem lies in the<lb/>
mediocrity of the song itself, not<lb/>
its performance.<lb/>
See FLEETWOOD, pg. 14<lb/>
ihn Wayne. Honorary Crusade Chairman<lb/>
cure cancer<lb/>
without your help,<lb/>
but don't bet<lb/>
your life on it<lb/>
The way it stands today, one American out of four will<lb/>
someday have cancer. That means it will strike some member in<lb/>
two out of three American families.<lb/>
To change those statistics we have to bring the promise of<lb/>
research to everyday reality. And to expand our detection program<lb/>
and techniques. And that takes money. Lots of money. Money we<lb/>
won't have?unless you help us.<lb/>
The American Cancer Society will never give up the fight.<lb/>
Maybe we'll find the answers even without your help. But don't<lb/>
bet your life on it. .<lb/>
We want to cure cancer in your lifetime.<lb/>
American Cancer Society f.<lb/>
lhi? ipoce contributed by the publiiher as a public ?ivvic?<lb/>
?MHMHHMj<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0012"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 8 March 1977<lb/>
Union Crafts Center offers workshops<lb/>
Before the quarter really<lb/>
gets you bogged down and your<lb/>
schedule starts getting hectic,<lb/>
why not take a short workshop<lb/>
in photography, pottery or mao<lb/>
rame. Register now for a<lb/>
beginning level workshop offer-<lb/>
ed by the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Crafts Center.<lb/>
The workshops are available<lb/>
to all full-time students, faculty<lb/>
and staff. Upon payment of a<lb/>
$5.00 quarterly Crafts Center<lb/>
membership fee, an individual<lb/>
may register for aiy of the<lb/>
available workshops without<lb/>
?i<lb/>
additional charges, excluding<lb/>
costs of personal supplies.<lb/>
All interested persons must<lb/>
register at the Crafts Center<lb/>
during the regular operating<lb/>
hours, 2.00 pm until 10.00 pm,<lb/>
Monday through Friday. The<lb/>
final day to register is Friday,<lb/>
March 11 and class space is<lb/>
limited.<lb/>
The following workshops are<lb/>
now available:<lb/>
BEGINNING DARKROOM<lb/>
(12 hours) Basic instruction in<lb/>
darkroom techniques. Students MACRAME (12 hours)<lb/>
A representativefor U.S. Navy<lb/>
Officer Programs will be in the<lb/>
Placement Office on<lb/>
March 8,1977<lb/>
and atthe Wright Lobby<lb/>
(Old Student Union)<lb/>
9-11 March 1977<lb/>
to discuss officer opportunities<lb/>
in the following areas:<lb/>
Nuclear Power, Aviation,<lb/>
Supply Corps,Surfaceand<lb/>
teaching positions<lb/>
atthe Navy's Nuclear<lb/>
Power School.<lb/>
Interested personsshould<lb/>
register with the<lb/>
Placement Office.<lb/>
will develop and print their own<lb/>
black and white film. I. 2pm-<lb/>
5pm Tuesdays March 15-April 5<lb/>
II. 6pm-9pm Tuesdays March<lb/>
15-April 5.<lb/>
BASIC POTTERY (12 hours)<lb/>
Basic instruction in wheel-<lb/>
throwing techniques, glazing,<lb/>
and firing of stoneware. I.<lb/>
6pm-9pm Wednesdays March<lb/>
16-April 6. II. 6pm-9pm Thurs-<lb/>
days March 17-April 7.<lb/>
FLOOR LOOM WEA VING<lb/>
(Beginning) (12 hours) Learn to<lb/>
use a four-harness floor loom.<lb/>
Making a warp, warping the<lb/>
loom and techniques of weaving<lb/>
will be included. 6pm-9pm<lb/>
Thursdays March 24-April 21<lb/>
FLOOR LOOM WEA VING<lb/>
(Intermediate) (6 hours) Advan-<lb/>
ced weaving techniques for the<lb/>
student with some weaving<lb/>
experience. 6pm-9pm Wednes-<lb/>
days March 16 &amp; 23.<lb/>
Basic techniques used in the art<lb/>
of creative knotting including<lb/>
use of found objects, feathers,<lb/>
and beads. 6pm-9pm Mondays<lb/>
March 14-April 4.<lb/>
BEGINNING JEWELRY<lb/>
(12 hours) Beginning techniques<lb/>
in metalwork. Materials, tools,<lb/>
and equipment used in jewelry<lb/>
construction will be discussed.<lb/>
6pm-9pm Wednesdays March<lb/>
16-April 6.<lb/>
METAL ENAMELING<lb/>
(12 hours) Learn the various<lb/>
techniques of enameling and<lb/>
discover the many possibilities<lb/>
by designing and creating your<lb/>
own enameled metalwork. 6pm-<lb/>
9om Mondays March 14-April 4.<lb/>
LINOLEUM BLOCK PRINTING<lb/>
(12 hours) Learn a simple<lb/>
method of printing to create<lb/>
your own unique designs for<lb/>
such projects as borderprint<lb/>
fabric, napkins, greeting cards,<lb/>
framed prints, etc. 6pm-9pm<lb/>
Tuesday March 15-April 5.<lb/>
WOODWORKING (12 hours)<lb/>
Techniques with handtools. Dis-<lb/>
cussion of operations with small<lb/>
objects, inlay, woodcarving, and<lb/>
decoupage with veneer. Wood<lb/>
preparation for staining andor<lb/>
finishing will also be included.<lb/>
Project ideas are unlimited.<lb/>
6pm-9pm Mondays March 14-<lb/>
April 4.<lb/>
FLEETWOOD<lb/>
Continued from pg. 13<lb/>
"Oh Daddy the final<lb/>
Christine McVie song on the<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
toThe Library<lb/>
THE GREAT<lb/>
KISS-OFF CONTEST<lb/>
over $3,000 in prizes<lb/>
album gets a" BRAVO for the<lb/>
entire band. It is a very well<lb/>
written and performed song. I<lb/>
can't say enough about the<lb/>
tasteful musicianship on this<lb/>
song.<lb/>
The album's closer is Stevie<lb/>
Nicks' "Gold Dust Woman It<lb/>
gives off the same "I told you<lb/>
so" feeling as "Crying in the<lb/>
Night" from the BUCKING-<lb/>
HAM-NICKS album<lb/>
FLEETWOOD MAC is back<lb/>
and stronger than ever with<lb/>
RUMOURS. Look fa everything<lb/>
the previous album was, plus<lb/>
eighteen months of touring,<lb/>
collaboration, and added exper-<lb/>
ience. Throw in the talent and<lb/>
professionalism of each member<lb/>
and never expect, or ACCEPT,<lb/>
anything less than excellence<lb/>
from them.<lb/>
We Got a Sale<lb/>
You Won't Believe<lb/>
BASF 8-Track Cartridges<lb/>
BASF Cassette Tapes<lb/>
BASF<lb/>
STUDIO SERIES<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Studio Cassettes:<lb/>
60 min. - $2.01<lb/>
90 min. - $2.94<lb/>
120 min$3.91<lb/>
Also sale prices on other<lb/>
BASF cassettes,<lb/>
8?tracks, and reels.<lb/>
Studio 8<lb/>
45 min.<lb/>
64 min.<lb/>
90 min.<lb/>
Tracks:<lb/>
$1.97<lb/>
$2.14<lb/>
$2.29<lb/>
PAIR ELECTRONICS AUDIO CENTER<lb/>
107 TRADE ST. NEXT TO TARHEEL TOYOTA)<lb/>
For anything you need in stereo, think Pair Electronics<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0013"/><lb/>
Pirates lose to VMI<lb/>
in semifinal round<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's basketball<lb/>
team was playing the Cinderella<lb/>
roll in the 1977 Southern<lb/>
Conference basketball tourna-<lb/>
ment in Roanoke, Va. last week<lb/>
after knocking off heavily favor-<lb/>
ed William and Mary on the<lb/>
Indians' home court the<lb/>
previous week.<lb/>
But the dream ended in the<lb/>
semifinals of the tourney when<lb/>
top-seeded VMI whipped the<lb/>
Pirates 88-77 before 7,342 fans<lb/>
at the Roanoke Civic Center<lb/>
Tuesday night.<lb/>
The Keydets, now 25-3 after<lb/>
its 69-67 overtime victory over<lb/>
Appalachian State in the finals,<lb/>
jumped out to a quick lead over<lb/>
the Pirates and never relin-<lb/>
quished it.<lb/>
After five minutes of the<lb/>
game, the Keydets led 13-4 by<lb/>
using its fast break to get easy<lb/>
baskets. The lead was stretched<lb/>
to its largest point with four<lb/>
minutes left in the half at 39-22.<lb/>
The Keydets played a sticky<lb/>
zone defense and the Pirates<lb/>
were forced to take many<lb/>
25-footersjust to score. VMI led<lb/>
44-32 at the half after the<lb/>
Pirates rallied briefly near the<lb/>
end of the first half.<lb/>
East Carolina came out in<lb/>
the second half and played<lb/>
tighter defense and quickly<lb/>
lowered the Keydets at 46-40 on<lb/>
the shooting of Jim Ramsey and<lb/>
Kerb Krusen. After calling time<lb/>
out, Coach Charlie Schmaus'<lb/>
troops soared six straight points<lb/>
to extend its lead back up to 12.<lb/>
However, the Pirates came<lb/>
right back to cut the lead back<lb/>
down. Herb Gray followed a<lb/>
missed shot and was fouled. His<lb/>
free toss cut the lead back to<lb/>
nine. Krusen then got a basket<lb/>
off the offensive board to cut<lb/>
the lead to seven.<lb/>
After tournament MVP Dave<lb/>
Montgomery of VMI made a<lb/>
shot from dose range, Pirate<lb/>
center Larry Hunt got a reverse<lb/>
layup, Krusen hit from 26 in the<lb/>
corner and Gray stuffed the ball<lb/>
through on the fast break to cut<lb/>
the margin down to three.<lb/>
But, the Keydets were not to<lb/>
be denied. They came back to<lb/>
score the next 14 points to put<lb/>
the game out of reach.<lb/>
All-Southern Conference<lb/>
Ron Carter led VMI with 22<lb/>
points while Will Bynum added<lb/>
19 and John Krovic 17. Mont-<lb/>
gomery finished the game with<lb/>
14 points and shared game-high<lb/>
rebounding honors with Carter<lb/>
at ten.<lb/>
Jim Ramsey led the Pirates<lb/>
with 22 points and six assists.<lb/>
Krusen hit for 18 points, 16<lb/>
coming from the 25-foot range,<lb/>
while Gray added 13. Billy<lb/>
Dineen, a sophomore from<lb/>
West wood, N.J scored ten<lb/>
points in only nine minutes of<lb/>
playing time on four of four from<lb/>
the field and two of two from the<lb/>
charity stripe. Gray led Pirate<lb/>
rebounders with nine.<lb/>
In the game at William and<lb/>
Mary, the Pirates beat the<lb/>
Indians 79-76 in the same place<lb/>
they had been beaten by 25<lb/>
points earlier in the season.<lb/>
The first half was very dose,<lb/>
with neither team able to gain<lb/>
more than a five-point lead for<lb/>
most of the half. With five<lb/>
minutes left in the half and<lb/>
William and Mary up 27-26, the<lb/>
Pirates went on a tear that put<lb/>
them up by nine. After scoring<lb/>
ten straight points, the Indians<lb/>
traded baskets for most of the<lb/>
remaining minutes. The Pirates<lb/>
led by seven at 40-33 with five<lb/>
seconds left. A pass to Louis<lb/>
Crosby hit him about 27 feet<lb/>
from the basket. Crosby turned<lb/>
and let the ball go just before<lb/>
the buzzer. The ball stripped the<lb/>
nets to give East Carolina a<lb/>
nine-point lead.<lb/>
The second half saw the<lb/>
Pirate lead extend up to 12 at<lb/>
55-43. But then the Pirates hit a<lb/>
lapse, which has generally hurt<lb/>
them all season. The Indians<lb/>
out scored East Carolina 15-2 in<lb/>
the next four minutes to take a<lb/>
58-57 lead.<lb/>
The Indians moved out to a<lb/>
four-point lead and kept it until<lb/>
Crosby hit on a jumper with 2:44<lb/>
left from 22 feet out. After a<lb/>
William and Mary time out, the<lb/>
Pirates were in a tight one-<lb/>
three-one zone. It took the<lb/>
Indians more than a half minute<lb/>
to get off a shot. Mike Enoch<lb/>
ended up taking a 25-footer but<lb/>
missed with ECU taking the<lb/>
rebound.<lb/>
The Pirates worked from the<lb/>
four-corners for a half minute<lb/>
until Ramsey took and missed a<lb/>
five-footer. The Indians got the<lb/>
ball and John Lowenhaupt took<lb/>
a jumper with 1 rl5 to go. He<lb/>
missed but Enoch got the<lb/>
rebound. As he was ooming<lb/>
down he fell on Crosby's back,<lb/>
falling out of bounds and giving<lb/>
the ball to ECU.<lb/>
Working out of the four-<lb/>
corners again, Herb Gray got a<lb/>
chance at a dunk but missed it<lb/>
with the Indians getting the ball<lb/>
back and calling for a time out<lb/>
with 0:47 left.<lb/>
William and Mary worked<lb/>
the ball for thirty seconds<lb/>
against the zone, not getting a<lb/>
good shot. Finally, with 0.17 left<lb/>
Matt Courage, the Indian ?ent-<lb/>
er, (ook a jumper from deep in<lb/>
the corner under pressure.<lb/>
The Pirates got the rebound<lb/>
and Ramsey was fouled with 11<lb/>
seconds left. The nervous fresh-<lb/>
man shot the first of the<lb/>
one-and-one and it went in. He<lb/>
calmly put the second one<lb/>
through to insure the vidory.<lb/>
The Indians ran down quick-<lb/>
ly and tried a couple of shots,<lb/>
with Courage being fouled by<lb/>
Gray on the exchange. Courage<lb/>
sank both with four seconds left<lb/>
and it was up to the Pirates to<lb/>
get the ball in bounds against<lb/>
pressure.<lb/>
Ramsey threw the ball in to<lb/>
Crosby, who dribbled twice<lb/>
before throwing the ball down to<lb/>
Gray at the other end for an easy<lb/>
dunk at the buzzer to give the<lb/>
Pirates their final margin.<lb/>
Gray hit for 22 points in the<lb/>
game while Crosby added 19.<lb/>
Ramsey finished with 14, but<lb/>
more importantly, nine assists.<lb/>
Senior center Larry Hunt hit for<lb/>
ten. Crosby ended up with<lb/>
seven assists. Gray led all<lb/>
rebounders with nine.<lb/>
Lowenhaupt hit for 18 for the<lb/>
Indians while Courage hit 17,<lb/>
Ron Satterwaite 14 and Enoch<lb/>
12.<lb/>
The Pirates' loss to VMI left<lb/>
them with a 10-18 record for the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
fwelth consecutive title<lb/>
Tankers win championship<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Although most of ECU'S<lb/>
students received ample time to<lb/>
study fa exams, the ECU swim<lb/>
team was hard at work earning<lb/>
its 12th consecutive Southern<lb/>
Conference title and finishing<lb/>
second in the prestigious East-<lb/>
ern Intercollegiate Champion-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
The Pirate tankers had little<lb/>
trouble disposing of competition<lb/>
in the Southern Conference<lb/>
Championships on Feb. 17-19 at<lb/>
Furman University in Green-<lb/>
ville, N.C. East Carolina took 13<lb/>
of the 18 events and showed that<lb/>
they were once again the dass<lb/>
of the conference.<lb/>
The Pirates finished the<lb/>
meet with 598 points, while new<lb/>
member Marshall took second<lb/>
with 304. An improving Furman<lb/>
team took third with 263, while<lb/>
Appalachian State placed fourth<lb/>
with 199. William and Mary was<lb/>
fifth with 198 while Davidson<lb/>
finished sixth with 152. VMI and<lb/>
The Citadel trailed the field with<lb/>
111 and 67, respedively.<lb/>
Freshman phenomenon Ted<lb/>
Nieman walked away with the<lb/>
most outstanding swimmer a-<lb/>
ward by virtue of his vidories in<lb/>
the 200,500 and 1,650 freestyles<lb/>
and by being on the three<lb/>
winning relays fa the Pirates.<lb/>
He set new reoads in the three<lb/>
individual events and in two of<lb/>
the relays with his perfam-<lb/>
ances.<lb/>
John Tuda tcok vidaies in<lb/>
the 200 and 400 individual<lb/>
medleys, as well as a second in<lb/>
the 200 butterfly and the three<lb/>
relays.<lb/>
Freshman Mike Brunner<lb/>
grabbed both the one- and<lb/>
three-meter diving events to be<lb/>
the only other Pirate double<lb/>
winner otha than Tuda and<lb/>
Nieman.<lb/>
Otha ECU wins came by<lb/>
Billy Thane in the 100 free-<lb/>
style, John McCauley in the 50<lb/>
freestyle, and Keith Wade in<lb/>
the 100 butterfly.<lb/>
"I'm happy to get the 12th<lb/>
championship Coach Ray<lb/>
Scharf said following the meet.<lb/>
"But I'm not happy with some<lb/>
of our pafamances. Some of<lb/>
our times were no betta than<lb/>
dual meet times<lb/>
The freestyles were the<lb/>
Pirates biggest events. In the<lb/>
200 free, East Carolina swim-<lb/>
mas took five of the first six<lb/>
places. They took four of the top<lb/>
ten places in the 500 as well as<lb/>
four of the first seven in the 50.<lb/>
They also took five of the top<lb/>
seven spots in the 100 and<lb/>
placed three in the top nine<lb/>
places in the 1,650.<lb/>
In the Eastans, held last<lb/>
weekend on the campus of West<lb/>
Virginia University in Magan-<lb/>
town, W.Va the Pirates had<lb/>
some of their best times eva in<lb/>
pladng second to strong Pitt.<lb/>
Pitt won the meet with 498<lb/>
points, while ECU followed with<lb/>
310 and Syracuse tcok third with<lb/>
279. Maryland took fourth with<lb/>
270, while host West Virginia<lb/>
took fifth with 241.<lb/>
Pitt took seven of the 18<lb/>
events while ECU won four.<lb/>
Maryland, West Virginia and<lb/>
Syracuse each picked off two<lb/>
vidaies while Penn State woi<lb/>
the remaining title.<lb/>
Pitt's Jary Demuro won the<lb/>
most outstanding swimmer<lb/>
award, but he was hard-pressed<lb/>
by Nieman of East Carolina.<lb/>
DeMuro won the 500 and 1,650<lb/>
freestyles, both times edging<lb/>
out Nieman. Nieman finished,<lb/>
second in both races in addition<lb/>
to winning the 200 freestyle and<lb/>
swimming on two winning relay<lb/>
teams fa the Pirates.<lb/>
In winning the200 freestyle,<lb/>
Nieman qualified fa the nation-<lb/>
al NCAA Championships lata<lb/>
this month at Cleveland State.<lb/>
His time of 1.40.87 was two<lb/>
seconds betta than he previous<lb/>
See SWIMMING, pg. 19<lb/>
TED NIEMAN center was named the most outstanding<lb/>
swimmer during the championships.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0014"/><lb/>
Pagie FOUNTAINHEAD 8 March 1977<lb/>
k<lb/>
Grapplers drop sixth title<lb/>
Indians win title. Pirates 2nd<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
William and Mary stopped<lb/>
East Carolina's string con-<lb/>
ference wrestling champion-<lb/>
ships at five last weekend when<lb/>
they took the 1977 Southern<lb/>
Conference Wrestling Champ-<lb/>
ionships in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
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The Indians were slight<lb/>
favorites oomlng into the tour-<lb/>
nament, having defeated the<lb/>
Pirates 19-17 in the last dual<lb/>
meet of the year for both teams.<lb/>
They compiled 94V2, to 83V2 for<lb/>
the Bucs. VMI claimed third<lb/>
with 54 34 while Appalachian<lb/>
State took fourth with 37 V2. New<lb/>
member Marshall took fifth with<lb/>
26 14 while The Qtadel (14<lb/>
34) and Davidson (V?) .finished<lb/>
sixth and seventh, respectively.<lb/>
The Indians crowned four<lb/>
champions while the Pirates had<lb/>
three, VMI two and the<lb/>
Mountaineers one.<lb/>
MUELLER MVP<lb/>
East Carolina's Phil Muel-<lb/>
ler, a 167-pounder, won the<lb/>
conference's most valuable<lb/>
wrestler award. The senior from<lb/>
Eden, N.C. pinned all three of<lb/>
his opponents en route to victory<lb/>
and another trip to the nation-<lb/>
als. In the finals, Mueller<lb/>
overwhelmed Phil Temple of<lb/>
Marshall with a pin in just 38<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
Mueller, now 28-1 on the<lb/>
year, pinned Jeff Stanley of<lb/>
ASU in the opening round in<lb/>
4:27 and Henry Neilley of<lb/>
William and Mary in 6:41 in the<lb/>
semi-finals.<lb/>
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meet girls.<lb/>
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where in the world<lb/>
all the girls are.<lb/>
Mueller was one of five 1976<lb/>
champions that defended their<lb/>
titles successfully. Paul Osman<lb/>
of ECU, won a tough 8-4<lb/>
decision over Jim Polsinelli of<lb/>
Appalachian, a national junior<lb/>
college champ from 1976. Pol-<lb/>
sinelli won t he conference's wi Id<lb/>
card berth into the national<lb/>
championships at Norman,<lb/>
Oklahoma later this month by<lb/>
virtue of his fine wrestling. All<lb/>
ten winners are given automatic<lb/>
berths into the nationals in<lb/>
addition to the wild card choice.<lb/>
William and Mary's 118-<lb/>
pounder, Tom Dursee made it<lb/>
two championships in a row by<lb/>
beating The Citadel's Tom<lb/>
Borrelli, while the Indians' Jim<lb/>
Hicks, at 134, defended his title<lb/>
by beating ECU'S Harry Martin<lb/>
10-2.<lb/>
Heavyweight Ned Stepan-<lb/>
cvich of VMI ran his seasonal<lb/>
mark to 32-0 with a 5-3 decision<lb/>
of East Carolina D.T. Joyner.<lb/>
Stepanovich also won in 1976.<lb/>
Frank Schaede is the Pi-<lb/>
rates' other national qualifier by<lb/>
virtue of his win at 150 over<lb/>
William and Mary's Pat Mo-<lb/>
Gibbon. Schaede is the only<lb/>
freshman to win a title this year.<lb/>
Bob Stark of William and<lb/>
Mary took the 177-pound title<lb/>
winning a close 7-5 decision<lb/>
over VMI's Bob Sherrard. Stark<lb/>
was the 167-pound champ in<lb/>
1974 as a freshman.<lb/>
Craig Cody, Appalachian<lb/>
State's 158-pounder, won an<lb/>
easy 12-4 decision over Greg<lb/>
Fronczak of William and Mary<lb/>
after posting pins in the quarter-<lb/>
finals and semifinals.<lb/>
At 142, William and Mary's<lb/>
Donald Moore won a 4-1 deci-<lb/>
sion over ECU'S Tim Gaghan.<lb/>
VMI's John Vizzi won the<lb/>
190-pound title with a 13-3 win<lb/>
over the Indians Craig Cook.<lb/>
"The meet came out about<lb/>
as I had expected Pirate<lb/>
mentor John Welborn said<lb/>
following the meet. "William<lb/>
and Mary had an experienced<lb/>
team back while we are in a<lb/>
rebuilding year after losing four<lb/>
national performers. But I'm<lb/>
proud of our kids. They gave it<lb/>
their all.<lb/>
"Phil (Mueller) was simply<lb/>
unbelievable. With Phil and<lb/>
Paul (Osman), this mav be our<lb/>
best national team. This is their<lb/>
second trip to the nationals and<lb/>
they have beaten some national-<lb/>
ly ranked wrestlers. They oould<lb/>
be all-Americas.<lb/>
"The entire team sent by the<lb/>
conference oould do well he<lb/>
added. "Cody (from ASU) look-<lb/>
ed mighty strong out there.<lb/>
Hicks (William and Mary) can<lb/>
beat anyone and Stepanovich<lb/>
(VMI) is unbeaten. The South-<lb/>
ern may fare well at Okla-<lb/>
homa<lb/>
The Pirates had three con-<lb/>
solation winners also. Steve<lb/>
Goode, a freshman from the<lb/>
Tidewater, Va. area, beat Mike<lb/>
Oranto of The Citadel 7-2. Jay<lb/>
Dever, a freshman 177-pounder<lb/>
beat ASU's Alfred Ash, 5-3,<lb/>
while John Williams decisioned<lb/>
Marshall's Dan Smith 4-1.<lb/>
?HHMBHHHfl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0015"/><lb/>
8 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 17<lb/>
Pirates end William and<lb/>
Mary's track domination<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina broke William<lb/>
and Mary's 11-year domination<lb/>
of indoor track Feb. 24-25 when<lb/>
they upset the Indians in the<lb/>
1977 Southern Conference In-<lb/>
door Track Championships at<lb/>
the VMI Fieldhouse in Lex-<lb/>
ton, Va.<lb/>
The meet hinged on the final<lb/>
event as William and Mary held<lb/>
a two-point lead. In the mile<lb/>
relay, the last event, the Pirates<lb/>
won while the Indians finished<lb/>
third. This gave East Carolina a<lb/>
razor-thin one-point win over<lb/>
William and Mary, 67-66. VMI<lb/>
made a strong challenge for the<lb/>
title, finishing third with 58 1 3<lb/>
points, while cross country<lb/>
champion Furman took fourth<lb/>
with 33 points. Appalachian<lb/>
State placed fifth with 2512<lb/>
while new members Marshall<lb/>
and Western Carolina took sixth<lb/>
and seventh with 29 56 and 10<lb/>
1 3, respectively. The Citadel<lb/>
(7) and Davidson (1) trailed the<lb/>
field.<lb/>
William and Mary had taken<lb/>
the meet every year since 1965,<lb/>
when VMI won it. East Carolina<lb/>
broke the Indians' outdoor reign<lb/>
as champion last spring.<lb/>
The Pirates won this meet on<lb/>
something they had lacked in<lb/>
the past-depth. They won only<lb/>
four of the 18 events, while<lb/>
William and Mary won six. VMI<lb/>
also won four, while the Apps<lb/>
took two and Furman and<lb/>
Western one each.<lb/>
The Pirates took one-two-<lb/>
three-four in the 440-yard dash,<lb/>
and that could be pointed to as<lb/>
the key to victory. They also<lb/>
took one-three-five in the 600<lb/>
and two-three-five in the 60.<lb/>
"Our depth was definitely<lb/>
the key to winning up there a<lb/>
happy Bill Carson said following<lb/>
the meet. "We did better in<lb/>
some events than we had<lb/>
expected and worse in some.<lb/>
But finishing with three or four<lb/>
in the final five in the sprints<lb/>
really got us the points<lb/>
Calvin Alston led the way in<lb/>
t"1' 440 by winning in 50.6.<lb/>
c -lie Moss, Robert Franklin<lb/>
anu Jay Purdie made it a dean<lb/>
sweep of the first four places in<lb/>
the event to net the Pirates<lb/>
almost a quarter of its points<lb/>
(15).<lb/>
Ben Duckenfield reclaimed<lb/>
his title in the 600 after losing it<lb/>
last year, winning in 1.12.1.<lb/>
James Freeman and Valdez<lb/>
Chavis finished third and fifth,<lb/>
respectively, to give the Pirates<lb/>
ten more points.<lb/>
Otis Melvin and Carter<lb/>
Suggs were the favorites in the<lb/>
60, but John Burron of Western<lb/>
grabbed the event in 6.2.<lb/>
Melvin, a freshman from<lb/>
Fayetteville, N.C took second<lb/>
in the same time while Suggs<lb/>
placed third and James Rankins<lb/>
fifth.<lb/>
Marvin Rankins rook his<lb/>
second consecutive 60 yard high<lb/>
hurdles title, winning in 7-2, to<lb/>
qualify for the nationals for the<lb/>
second straight year indoors.<lb/>
Bobby Phillips placed fifth for<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
This gave the Pirates 40 of<lb/>
its67 points in these four events<lb/>
alone.<lb/>
The Pirates did not do as<lb/>
well as expected in the long and<lb/>
triple jumps. Favored Herman<lb/>
Mdntyre could do no better<lb/>
than second in the triple, losing<lb/>
to the meet's most valuable<lb/>
performer, Malcolm Grimes of<lb/>
VMI. George Jackson, one of<lb/>
the favorites in the long jump,<lb/>
placed third, losing to Andre<lb/>
Gibson and Grimes of VMI.<lb/>
Mike Hodge took fifth.<lb/>
Senior Tom Watson took<lb/>
third in the shot and fourth in<lb/>
the 35-pound weight throw<lb/>
while the East Carolina two mile<lb/>
relay team placed third.<lb/>
James Willett took second in<lb/>
the 880 with a 1 58.1 docking<lb/>
while Keith Urquhart placed<lb/>
fourth in the 1000.<lb/>
See TRACK, pg. 18)<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057114_0016"/><lb/>
? ?  ai,tm<lb/>
iWMHHHmWH<lb/>
??<lb/>
Page 18 FOUNTAINHEAD 8 March 1977<lb/>
Three Pirates receive honors<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Three East Carolina basket-<lb/>
ball players were bestowed<lb/>
honors by the Southern Con-<lb/>
ference Media Association in<lb/>
balloting recently.<lb/>
Senior Larry Hunt was<lb/>
named to the second team<lb/>
all-conference for the second<lb/>
vear in a row. Hunt was first<lb/>
team as a sophomore. He led<lb/>
East Carolina in scoring and<lb/>
rebounding this season with<lb/>
12.4 and 10.1, respectively.<lb/>
Herb Gray and Jim Ramsey<lb/>
made the all-rookie team by<lb/>
virtue of their Dlav over the<lb/>
season. Grav was<lb/>
scoring with an 11.5 average<lb/>
while Ramsey was third with<lb/>
11.3. Gray was the team's<lb/>
unofficial dunk leader, as he<lb/>
carried his lithe body through<lb/>
the air many times over the<lb/>
season to stuff the ball through<lb/>
the nets.<lb/>
Ramsey led the team in<lb/>
assists with 78.<lb/>
Ramsey was also named to<lb/>
second team all-tournament. He<lb/>
scored 37 points in the two<lb/>
games and dished off 15 assists.<lb/>
His 15 assists led all players in<lb/>
the tournament, even though he<lb/>
did this in two game while<lb/>
many players took three games<lb/>
to give out less.<lb/>
DJs<lb/>
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LARRY HUNT IS shown with Coach Dave<lb/>
Patton, after being named to the second team<lb/>
all-conference for his second straight year.<lb/>
Photo by Kip Sloan<lb/>
TRACK<lb/>
Continued from pg. 17<lb/>
But it was the mile relay<lb/>
team of Duckenfield, Suggs,<lb/>
Moss, and Melvin that pulled<lb/>
out the victory in the final event.<lb/>
They were timed out in 321.5<lb/>
while Furman took second and<lb/>
the Indians third. Had the<lb/>
Indians taken second, the meet<lb/>
would have ended up in a tie.<lb/>
VMI made the biggest climb<lb/>
Little's Chop Shop<lb/>
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Coming soon- van accessories<lb/>
from fifth in last year's meet to<lb/>
third this year. The Keydets'<lb/>
coach, Wade Williams, was<lb/>
named the conference coach of<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
THREE TO NATIONALS<lb/>
Three of the Pirates per-<lb/>
formers will be running at this<lb/>
weekend's NCAA Champion-<lb/>
ships at the Cobo Arena in<lb/>
Detroit.<lb/>
Marvin Rankins qualified in<lb/>
the 60 yard high hurdles, while<lb/>
Larry Austin and Otis Melvin<lb/>
will be going in the 60.<lb/>
Rankins, just a sophomore,<lb/>
will be making his third trip to<lb/>
the nationals. He went last year<lb/>
indoors and outdoors, in ad-<lb/>
dition to making it this year.<lb/>
Austin qualified for the meet<lb/>
last year indoors, but was<lb/>
injured and could not compete.<lb/>
Carter Suggs, a two-time<lb/>
national performer, failed to<lb/>
make the cutoff in the 60.<lb/>
fertoM?5'<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057114_0017"/><lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
8 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 19<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Championships held<lb/>
The Nutties Buddies and Scott Dorm oopped the last two team<lb/>
titles for winter quarter intramural play. The Nutties won the men's<lb/>
basketball title and the Soott swimmers took the Men's swimming<lb/>
championships just before break.<lb/>
In the men's basketball all-campus finals the Nutties Buddies<lb/>
romped past the Rockets, independent league champs, by a score of<lb/>
101-75. Woodrow Stevenson scored 35 points in the championship<lb/>
game and was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player. He<lb/>
had 65 points for the two games of the All-Campus championships.<lb/>
Joining Stevenson on the All-Tournament team were Ruffin<lb/>
McNeill of the Nutties, Al McCrimmonsand Brad Henderson of the<lb/>
Rockets and David Appiegate of the BSU Bullets.<lb/>
The Nutties reached the finals by topping the club champions,<lb/>
BSU Bullets, by a 94-67 score. Meanwhile the Rockets made the<lb/>
finals of the All-Campus tournament by downing fraternity<lb/>
champion Kappa Alpha 91-73.<lb/>
Baseball and tennis open seasons<lb/>
with sound home victories<lb/>
In the swimming championships, Soott Dorm swept all seven<lb/>
events to outclass its competition. In the process they set records in<lb/>
five of these events. The Outstanding Swimmer Award went to Jeff<lb/>
Neil of Soott. Neil swam to two individual titles in the 50 yard<lb/>
backstroke and the 200 yard freestyle and swam the anchor leg on<lb/>
the winning and record-setting 100 yard freestyle relay team. His<lb/>
time of 29.06 for the 50 yard backstyle was a meet record and the<lb/>
time of 43.29 for Scott's 100 yard freestyle relay team was also a<lb/>
reoord.<lb/>
John Bandy was also involved in three winning performances.<lb/>
Bandy swam on the winning 100 yard freestyle relay and 100 yard<lb/>
medley relay teams and also won the 100 yard Individual Medley<lb/>
with a record setting time of 106.5.<lb/>
Other winners for the Soott team were Alan Poindexter in the<lb/>
100 yard freestyle and Fred Olsen in the 50 yard breaststroke. Both<lb/>
won their events with reoord setting times. Poindexter and Olsen<lb/>
also swam on the two winning relay teams.<lb/>
Finishing behind the Jones Dolphins in third place, were two<lb/>
fraternity teams, Delta Sigma Phi and Kappa Alpha. The top five<lb/>
were rounded out by the Jones Jaws.<lb/>
Gary Smith of Delta Sigma Phi competed in more events than<lb/>
any other swimmer as he swam in four individual events and two<lb/>
team relay events.<lb/>
ByANNEHOGGE<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU'S baseball team swung<lb/>
into action Saturday as they<lb/>
traveled to Buie' s Creek, defeat-<lb/>
ing the Camels of Campbell<lb/>
College, 4-2.<lb/>
The Pirate's first run was<lb/>
soored by Robert Brinkley in the<lb/>
fourth inning. Brinkley got on<lb/>
base on a Campbell error and<lb/>
went to third on a right field<lb/>
single by Rick Koyda. Pete<lb/>
Paradossi got on base and drove<lb/>
Brinkley in.<lb/>
Campbell tied the score in<lb/>
the fifth, with the Pirates<lb/>
regaining the lead in the<lb/>
SWIMMING<lb/>
Continued from pg. 15)<lb/>
school reoord. He also qualified<lb/>
for the AAU Championships in<lb/>
the 200 as well as the 500 and<lb/>
1.650.<lb/>
John McCauley won the 50<lb/>
freestyle in 21.04 to qualify for<lb/>
the NCAA and AAU Champion-<lb/>
ships also.<lb/>
The Pirates' domination of<lb/>
the freestyles was evident at the<lb/>
Easterns as they took both<lb/>
freestyle relays. The team of<lb/>
John Tudor, Billy Thorne,<lb/>
Stewart Mann and Nieman won<lb/>
the 800 free relay in 650.61 to<lb/>
knock nine seconds off the<lb/>
school reoord and qualify them-<lb/>
selves for the national AAU and<lb/>
NCAA Championships. In the<lb/>
400 free relay, Thane, Mo-<lb/>
Cauley, Mike Coomes and Bill<lb/>
Fehling won and also qualified<lb/>
for both national events.<lb/>
seventh. Sonny Wooten hit a<lb/>
d jble to deep center, took third<lb/>
on a ground out by Bobby Supel,<lb/>
and soored on a sacrifice fly to<lb/>
left field by Raymie Styoms.<lb/>
ECU soored two more in the<lb/>
eighth. Paradossi singled with<lb/>
one out, stole second, and<lb/>
soored on an infield fly hit by<lb/>
Eddie Gates. Gates took second<lb/>
on a pass ball situation, and<lb/>
soored on a hit by Wooten.<lb/>
Terry Durham was the win-<lb/>
ning pitcher, with Pete Conaty<lb/>
being credited with a save.<lb/>
Paradossi had the best re-<lb/>
oord of the day, with three hits<lb/>
for five times at bat.<lb/>
The game, the Pirates' sea-<lb/>
son opener, was Campbell's<lb/>
first loss. They had previously<lb/>
beaten Duke.<lb/>
ECU opened it's 1977 tennis<lb/>
season by defeating Salisbury<lb/>
State College (Maryland) here<lb/>
Saturday, 8-1.<lb/>
The Pirates won all of the six<lb/>
singles matches played. In those<lb/>
matches: Tom Durfee defeated<lb/>
Larry Knopf; 6-3, 6-3; Jim<lb/>
Rat I iff beat Chris Thomas, 6-2,<lb/>
7-6; Doug Get singer trounoed<lb/>
Bill Hyle, 6-1, 6-2; Mitch<lb/>
Pegerson defeated Terry Lay-<lb/>
ton, 6-3, 6-7, 6-1; Henry Hos-<lb/>
teller stopped Bryon Edmond-<lb/>
son, 6-2, 1-6, 6-2; and Kenny<lb/>
Love beat Frank Fleming, 6-1,<lb/>
6-3.<lb/>
ECU won two of their three<lb/>
doubles matches. The team of<lb/>
Durfee and Getsinger trounoed<lb/>
Knopf and Thomas, 6-3, 6-2.<lb/>
Hosteller and Love defeated<lb/>
Layton and Edmondson, 6-3,<lb/>
1-6, 6-0. The team of Pegerson<lb/>
and Ratliff lost the Pirates' only<lb/>
match to Hyle and Gene Ma-<lb/>
lone, 6-2, 4-6, 6-4.<lb/>
?.?<lb/>
THE BASEBALL PIRA TES won their first game of the year by<lb/>
defeating Campbell College, 4-2.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Realistic car-tape<lb/>
player 8 mo. old. $20.00.<lb/>
752-7852.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Garrard 42M auto<lb/>
matic turntable. Like new $55.<lb/>
Call 758-9216.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Blank-Capital 80<lb/>
minute 8 track tapes. Brand<lb/>
New. $1.50 each. Call 758-9638<lb/>
or 758-4663.<lb/>
WANTED: To buy a used<lb/>
Yamaha guitar. Call 752-9527<lb/>
after 200 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1976 Mustang II<lb/>
Ghia 11,500 miles, 4 speed, V-6<lb/>
motor, AMFM stereo radio, 8<lb/>
track tape deck, silver with<lb/>
cranberry interior. First class<lb/>
automobile. $5200.00 Call<lb/>
1-592-6893 a 752-8151.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 Fiat 124<lb/>
Special 4 door, straight drive.<lb/>
Real good around town trans-<lb/>
portation. $375.00. Call 1-592-<lb/>
6893 or 752-8151.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 Epiphone Acous-<lb/>
tic guitar with hard case,<lb/>
excellent oond. $100.00. Also 1<lb/>
good beginners guitar. Contact<lb/>
758-1382 or leave a message.<lb/>
Will be glad to demonstrate<lb/>
FOR SALE: Old black &amp; white<lb/>
24" T.V. $20.00 Firm. Call<lb/>
758-8365.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AR Turntable good<lb/>
oondition, 112 years old. In-<lb/>
cludes box and accessories $65<lb/>
or best offer. 752-1654.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Datsun 240Z<lb/>
Red automatic $3800.00. Must<lb/>
sell. Call 758-4262.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Lightweight Frost-<lb/>
line tent; lightweight aluminum<lb/>
camping oookset; Dynaoo Amp.<lb/>
Contact Jim at 1305 South<lb/>
Cotanohe St. upstairs (Near<lb/>
Twin Rinks) Come by anytime.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fender Baseman 10<lb/>
amplifier 110 watts RMS very<lb/>
little use. Good for guitar, bass,<lb/>
electric piano. Call 758-7670<lb/>
after 6O0 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Yamaha 500,<lb/>
DOHC, low mileage, crash bar,<lb/>
sissy bar, luggage straps. Ser-<lb/>
ious inquiries only. $1200.00<lb/>
757-6352 ask for Bonnie.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Custom 260 Base<lb/>
amplifier-$500. Gibson E-B-0<lb/>
Base guitar-$150. Yamaha F-g-<lb/>
140 Acoustic guitar-$60. Call<lb/>
752-0998, ask for Steve.<lb/>
FOR SALE: One twin size<lb/>
box-springs. $20.00 Call 758-<lb/>
2808<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 VW Beatle,<lb/>
very good oondition, must sell,<lb/>
$400.00 below book value. 752-<lb/>
0525.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Drive for less. 66<lb/>
Beetle-good condition, radio,<lb/>
good tires, $425. Call 756-0267.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sofa &amp; Matching<lb/>
chair, good oondition, both for<lb/>
$60.00. Also, rocker for $15.00.<lb/>
Call 752-8011.<lb/>
FOR SALE: A bicycle "under<lb/>
$50" Jeremy Schwartz 758-<lb/>
7691.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Call 752-<lb/>
8837 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
TYH NG: 75 cents per page. Call<lb/>
Debra Parrington, 756-6031<lb/>
days, and 752-2508 nights.<lb/>
furnished. 3.5 miles from cam-<lb/>
pus. Prefer persons that do not<lb/>
smoke cigarettes. Call 756-1839<lb/>
before 11 O0 p.m.<lb/>
LOST: 1 girl who is blind<lb/>
without her glasses-someone<lb/>
picked up a navy blue hooded<lb/>
sweatshirt a couple of Saturdays<lb/>
ago at the Jolly Roger that had<lb/>
a pair of rose colored Gloria<lb/>
Vanderbilt glasses-l have a navy<lb/>
hooded sweatshirt that's too<lb/>
big-PLEASE contact Janet Pope<lb/>
423 Tyler-758-9670. $10.00<lb/>
REWARD.<lb/>
torrent @<lb/>
? . i .?Vl '<lb/>
FOUND: 1 lady's ring-inquire<lb/>
at Austin 134.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED:(Fe-<lb/>
male preferred) to share an<lb/>
Apartment or House, living<lb/>
expenses, and good times start-<lb/>
ing this June '77 in CHAPEL<lb/>
HILL. Interested? Please call<lb/>
Kim Sue at 758-1390.<lb/>
NEEDED: Housemate to share<lb/>
a 3 bedroom house. Rent is<lb/>
$70.00 monthly plus bill Uk-<lb/>
personal<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: To Charlotte<lb/>
THIS weekend Janet Pope-423<lb/>
Tyler 758-9670.<lb/>
WANTED: Chronic headache<lb/>
sufferers to take part in research<lb/>
study. Contact Pay. Dept. leave<lb/>
name A. phora nurnhflr <lb/>
NEEDED: To hire a babysitter<lb/>
from 630 to 930 p.m. Tues.<lb/>
night. If anyone is interested,<lb/>
call 752-5880. Ask fa Linda.<lb/>
PARTTIME JOB: $2,000.00<lb/>
MONTHLY! SPARETIME! Un-<lb/>
believably, excitingly easy!<lb/>
Send self-addressed and stamp-<lb/>
ed envelope to Box 1824,<lb/>
Cleveland, Ohio 44106.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Become a<lb/>
college campus dealer. Sell<lb/>
brand name stereo components<lb/>
at lowest prioes. High profits;<lb/>
NO INVESTMENT REQUIRED.<lb/>
Fa details, oontact; FAD Com-<lb/>
ponents, Inc. 20 Passaic Ave<lb/>
Fairfield, New Jersey 07006<lb/>
llene Orlowsky 201-227-6884<lb/>
Call Collect.<lb/>
FREE : Wholesale Jewelry Cat-<lb/>
alog! Exclusive Designers' col-<lb/>
lection! Bargains galae! Box<lb/>
1824, Cleveland, Ohio 44106.<lb/>
PARTTIME JOS: Earn $250-<lb/>
$500 stuffing 1000 envelopes:<lb/>
homewak-sparetime. Details:<lb/>
$1, Self-addressed, stamped<lb/>
envelope (C.R. Kester, 400<lb/>
Marsh Rd Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
28209).<lb/>
WANTED: Manager fa family<lb/>
recreation facility beginning<lb/>
March 1-long nours-could take<lb/>
maning classes. 758-4005 ask<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0018"/><lb/>
Page 20 FOUNTAINHEAD 8 March 1977<lb/>
8 GOOD REASONS FOR BUYING<lb/>
YOUR TEXTS DOWNTOW<lb/>
1. Low Prices? The University Book Exchange<lb/>
has got thousands of USED TEXTS that<lb/>
save you 25 over the price of new texts.<lb/>
2. Great textbook selection ? The UBE has made<lb/>
an all out effort to have every book used at ECu<lb/>
Quick Service This Spring we will have 8 cash<lb/>
registars to get you tnrough our store quickly!<lb/>
4. Friendly Personnel-80 of our book rush em-<lb/>
ployees are ECU students. They can easily re-<lb/>
late to your textbook needs and problems<lb/>
5. Mastercharge and Bank Americard- New this<lb/>
spring at UBE! We now accept America's top<lb/>
2 charge cards for texts &amp; supplies<lb/>
6. Convenient Location- We're across Cotanche<lb/>
Street from the girl's dorms-down the hill from<lb/>
Greenville's bars<lb/>
7. Extended Hours- The University Book Ex-<lb/>
change will be open from 8:00 AM to 9:00 PM<lb/>
on March 7th &amp; 8th.<lb/>
8. Increased Selection of school supplies, art<lb/>
supplies, and sportswear, including ECU<lb/>
T?Shirts for only $2.95. Let us be your only<lb/>
stop for all your texts &amp;- Supplies.<lb/>
UniverityBook Exchange<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
<pb facs="00057114_0019"/>
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