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<pb facs="00057115_0001"/>
Serving the campus<lb/>
community for over 50<lb/>
years. With a circulation<lb/>
of 8,500, this issue is 12<lb/>
pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Vol. 52, No. 39<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
10 March 1977<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Protestp. 6<lb/>
The Southp. 7<lb/>
Lady Pi rates p. 9<lb/>
SGA election rules<lb/>
change this Spring<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
Staff Wrtier<lb/>
The SGA Spring elections<lb/>
committee has made several<lb/>
changes in the general election<lb/>
rules for the upcoming execu-<lb/>
tive officers election March 30.<lb/>
The SGA legislature ap-<lb/>
proved the general election<lb/>
rules, including the changes,<lb/>
presented by the Spring elect-<lb/>
ions committee during their<lb/>
regular meeting on Feb. 21, ac-<lb/>
cording to Frank Saubers, com-<lb/>
mittee oo-chairperson.<lb/>
The new rules increase the<lb/>
amount of money candidates<lb/>
may spend campaigning by $25.<lb/>
Candidates for SGA presi-<lb/>
dent will be able to spend $125.<lb/>
Candidates for SGA vice presi-<lb/>
dent, treasurer and secretary<lb/>
will have a $100 ceiling.<lb/>
The elections oommittee will<lb/>
have increased control over<lb/>
candidates' expenditures, ac-<lb/>
cording to Saubers.<lb/>
"There will be three new<lb/>
voting precincts this year said<lb/>
Saubers. "They will be on the<lb/>
buses; purple, gold, and<lb/>
brown<lb/>
The number of late polls will<lb/>
also increase this year, Saubers<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The late polls will be at<lb/>
Mendenhall, the Croatan, and<lb/>
the Student Supply Store. These<lb/>
polls will remain open until 7<lb/>
p.m. The others will close at 5<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Students may file for execu-<lb/>
tive off ices only from March 3 to<lb/>
March 16. A mandatory meeting<lb/>
of all candidates is set for the<lb/>
night of March 16.<lb/>
Candidates will receive<lb/>
copies of the election rules when<lb/>
they file.<lb/>
"We included the rules with<lb/>
the filing form to give us more<lb/>
bite said Saubers. "Candi-<lb/>
dates will not be able to say they<lb/>
didn't know the rules<lb/>
Campaigning will begin on<lb/>
March 17, according to Phil<lb/>
Barbee, elections committee<lb/>
co-chairperson.<lb/>
Anyone interested in tend-<lb/>
ing a poll fa $2 an hour should<lb/>
submit their name and phone<lb/>
number to the SGA secretary by<lb/>
March 25.<lb/>
Studuntswith questions con-<lb/>
cerning the elections should<lb/>
contact Frank Saubers;<lb/>
758-9823, Phil Barbee;<lb/>
758-8790, or the SGA offioe;<lb/>
757-6611.<lb/>
ECU birth control<lb/>
The PHI ranks first<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Infirmary offers three types of birth oontrol for women<lb/>
students, and can arrange for a fourth type with a private doctor or<lb/>
the Pitt County Health Department, according to Dr. Judy Young,<lb/>
ECU Infirmary physician.<lb/>
According to Young, the pill is the most oommon birth oontrol<lb/>
method used by ECU students and has the lowest pregnancy rate.<lb/>
A student wishing to take the pill is required to attend a<lb/>
conference on sexuality problems and different types of birth<lb/>
oontrol.<lb/>
"We try to present the pros and cons of the different types of<lb/>
birth oontrol said Young.<lb/>
"We emphasize the pill. I think it is the best form of<lb/>
contraceptive tor this age group<lb/>
After attending the conference, the next step is a Pap smear.<lb/>
The oost is$5. A culture fa gonarhea and a breast examination are<lb/>
also per famed.<lb/>
"I generally give the student one pack of pills said Dr. Young.<lb/>
"If she has no problem with that type after a month, then I give<lb/>
her a prescription<lb/>
The infirmary also fits students with diaphragms. The student is<lb/>
given a prescription fa a kit which costsabout $7 a $8, aocading to<lb/>
Young.<lb/>
Another type offered is the maning-after pill.<lb/>
Aocading to Young, the pill should be taken within 72 hours<lb/>
after intercourse and oontinued fa five consecutive days.<lb/>
The student should then begin her period. If she does not, she<lb/>
should have a urine test fa pregnancy.<lb/>
If the test cones back positive, the infirmary can give the<lb/>
student phone numbers to several clinics which perfam abatiais.<lb/>
The clinics most commonly referred to are Raleigh, Chapel Hill,<lb/>
Fayetteville, and Nafolk, Va.<lb/>
These clinics charge between $150-$200.<lb/>
An abatioi can be perfamed in Greenville up to 12 weeks after<lb/>
oonception fa $350.<lb/>
SPRING MA Y NOT BE officially here yet, but most of warm days in quest of an early tan.<lb/>
that never stops ECU coeds from making the Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Student Union to make<lb/>
organizational changes<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Student Unioi oommittees<lb/>
are presently being reagan-<lb/>
ized, aoaading to President-<lb/>
elect Dennis Ramsey.<lb/>
The Union has previously<lb/>
had 12 committees which were<lb/>
responsible fa the program-<lb/>
ming of on-campus entatain-<lb/>
ment. Next year there will only<lb/>
be nine due to changes in<lb/>
aganizatioi, said Ramsey.<lb/>
"We're combining Major<lb/>
Attractions and Special Enter-<lb/>
tainment into one committee<lb/>
next year Ramsey announoed.<lb/>
"The reason fa this change<lb/>
is the shatage of funds created<lb/>
by Maja Attractions this year<lb/>
Aocading to Ramsey, Maja<lb/>
Attractions lost $63,000 in a<lb/>
four-month period between Sep-<lb/>
tember and December.<lb/>
He added there will be two<lb/>
line items in the Popular<lb/>
Entertainment budget, with<lb/>
Major Attractions receiving<lb/>
$25,000 and Special Entatain-<lb/>
ment receiving $15,000.<lb/>
"Special Entertainment pro-<lb/>
vides the free concerts on the<lb/>
mall. It isoonoerned mostly with<lb/>
mina oonoerts.<lb/>
"Maja Attractions is going<lb/>
to be kind of a one shot deal this<lb/>
year. It's hard to get a good<lb/>
show fa less than $20,000<lb/>
Ramsey said that the Unioi<lb/>
is not going to spend the<lb/>
$25,000 until they feel that they<lb/>
have a group that students want<lb/>
to see and that will sell.<lb/>
"We may not have a maja<lb/>
concert at all during first<lb/>
semesta<lb/>
Ramsey said that since<lb/>
money in programming is so<lb/>
tight, Maja Attractiais will be<lb/>
asked to present their proposals<lb/>
fa oonoerts to the Program<lb/>
Board who will then vote on it.<lb/>
"If Maja Attractiais gets<lb/>
back on their feet, next year's<lb/>
president will probably separate<lb/>
Popular Entertainment into<lb/>
Maja Attractiais and Special<lb/>
THE COMMITTEES of the Student Union, located in Mendenhall,<lb/>
will undergo reorganization in the fall.<lb/>
Entertainment again.<lb/>
"If they blow it, they would<lb/>
become inactive<lb/>
Ramsey said that two other<lb/>
changes are also taking place.<lb/>
We're placing Minaity Arts<lb/>
and Video Tape on inactive<lb/>
status<lb/>
Ramsey said that he feels<lb/>
these two oommittees' expendi-<lb/>
tures are not justified by the<lb/>
amount of programming that<lb/>
they do.<lb/>
14All that the Minaity Arts<lb/>
Committee has done is to<lb/>
sponsa Black Arts Week<lb/>
Aocading to Ramsey, he<lb/>
does na feel that the Union<lb/>
needs one committee just to<lb/>
program this one event.<lb/>
He said the Minaity Arts'<lb/>
budget was increased last year<lb/>
without any improvement in<lb/>
programming.<lb/>
Video Tape has been inac-<lb/>
tive sinoe January. We had the<lb/>
same problem here as with<lb/>
Minaity Arts.<lb/>
"Fa the maiey, their pro-<lb/>
gramming has not reached<lb/>
enough people<lb/>
Ramsey added that due to<lb/>
the tight money situation crea-<lb/>
ted by Maja Attractions, the<lb/>
Student Unioi is having to hold<lb/>
all other oommittees at their<lb/>
previous budgets, in spite of the<lb/>
reduction in the number of<lb/>
oommittees.<lb/>
Aocading to Ramsey, the<lb/>
Student Union will be accepting<lb/>
See UNION, pg. 3)<lb/>
Sorry about<lb/>
that!<lb/>
Due to an erro by the<lb/>
printer, the March 8 issue<lb/>
of FOUNTAINHEAD had<lb/>
several pages out of o-<lb/>
der. We apologize.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057115_0002"/><lb/>
EBMHMHHIBHBBHB<lb/>
Car Wash Bahai<lb/>
F.G.<lb/>
The Kappa Alpha brothers<lb/>
and little sisters will hold a car<lb/>
wash Saturday, March 12 at<lb/>
Fifth Street Exxon beginning at<lb/>
10 a.m.<lb/>
First meeting of Bahai asso-<lb/>
ciation will be Mon. March 14<lb/>
7:30 Mendenhall room 238. Free<lb/>
flick "Have You Heard the<lb/>
News, My Friend<lb/>
Page2<lb/>
10 March 1977<lb/>
Gamma Beta Fellowship<lb/>
REAL<lb/>
Phi Eta<lb/>
If you don't feel comfortable<lb/>
with yourself, wtiat would you<lb/>
like to change? How would you<lb/>
like to be? What would you like<lb/>
to do? Maybe we can help. Call<lb/>
the REAL crisis center. 758-<lb/>
HELP. We offer a listening ear,<lb/>
clarification of your values,and<lb/>
numerous agencies of which we<lb/>
have information. 758-HELP.<lb/>
Frat Relays<lb/>
Any Fraternities interested<lb/>
in entering a 440 relay team in<lb/>
the ECU Track Invitational,<lb/>
March 19, contact Curtis Frye at<lb/>
757-6471. The first eight teams<lb/>
to enter wiil be accepted.<lb/>
There will be a meeting of<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma, Freshman Honor<lb/>
Society, on Thursday, March 17,<lb/>
in Mendenhall 221, beginning at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. A speaker will make a<lb/>
presentation on the Peace Com-<lb/>
mittee of Greenville, and the<lb/>
processof election of offioers for<lb/>
1977-78 will be discussed. All<lb/>
members plus all interested<lb/>
students are urged to attend.<lb/>
Kreskin<lb/>
The Amazing Kreskin has a<lb/>
standing offer of $20,000 for<lb/>
anyone who disproves his claim<lb/>
that he uses no confederate or<lb/>
secret assistance of any kind.<lb/>
You will ge the chance to win<lb/>
this money when Kreskin ap-<lb/>
pears here on Thursday March<lb/>
31st at 8 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Theater. Admis-<lb/>
sion for students is by activity<lb/>
card &amp; I.D.<lb/>
Animals<lb/>
Hours of operation for the<lb/>
animal control shelter will<lb/>
change effective 3-7-77. The<lb/>
following hours will be obser-<lb/>
ved. Daily Monday through<lb/>
Friday 800 to 9.00 A.M 12.00<lb/>
to 1 00 p.m. and 4O0 to 6O0<lb/>
p.m. Closed all day Saturday<lb/>
and Sunday. It is felt that the<lb/>
above hours should be adequate<lb/>
for all business at the shelter.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi National Honor<lb/>
Fraternity will hold its monthly<lb/>
business meeting on Wed. Mar.<lb/>
9,1977 at 6O0 p.m. in room 204<lb/>
Austin building. All brothers<lb/>
who plan to attend the March<lb/>
dinner meeting must pay their<lb/>
dinner fee of $3.00 this week.<lb/>
Cheerleading<lb/>
Girls, cheerleading try-outs<lb/>
will be soon. Get in shape. Get<lb/>
involved. Information later.<lb/>
Phi Alpha<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta Honor Society<lb/>
will hold its monthly meeting,<lb/>
Thursday, March 17, at 730<lb/>
p.m. in the Richard C. Todd<lb/>
room, Brewster building. Initia-<lb/>
tions and elections of new<lb/>
officers will be held. All mem-<lb/>
bers make plans to attend.<lb/>
FOA<lb/>
Friends of Animals, Inc.<lb/>
(FOA) reminds you that speying<lb/>
is the best way to prevent<lb/>
unwanted kittens &amp; puppies. A<lb/>
reduced fee is available for<lb/>
persons finding costs difficult to<lb/>
afford. Please oontact Marian<lb/>
Frost, our local FOA representa-<lb/>
tive at 758-2715 or go by 402<lb/>
Maple Street.<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi national<lb/>
honor society will hold its spring<lb/>
rush at 7O0 in rm. 244<lb/>
Mendenhall on March 10, 1977.<lb/>
Membership is open to anyone<lb/>
with at least 15 hours of oollege<lb/>
credit and in the top 20 of<lb/>
their class. Everyone meeting<lb/>
membership is cordially invited<lb/>
to attend. There will be two<lb/>
pledge meetings, March 14 &amp;<lb/>
March 21 in rm. 244 Menden-<lb/>
hall at 7.O0.<lb/>
Civil Service<lb/>
All students who took the<lb/>
Civil Servioe Employment test<lb/>
should oontact Mrs. G. Hage-<lb/>
dorn or Dr. Betsy Harper in<lb/>
Rawl, room 313 or phone<lb/>
757-6979 before Friday, March<lb/>
11.<lb/>
It is very important that you<lb/>
do so because Dr. Harper and<lb/>
Mrs. Hagedorn will be contact-<lb/>
ing federal agencies during the<lb/>
week of March 14-18 regarding<lb/>
jobs for ECU students.<lb/>
Come on Thursday at 700<lb/>
p.m. to Brewster D-201 for some<lb/>
free Fun in the Son. All<lb/>
Christians on campus are invi-<lb/>
ted to join this time of learning<lb/>
and fellowship.<lb/>
Sharks Teeth Internships<lb/>
Get your car washed and<lb/>
cleaned for $1.50 this Saturday<lb/>
at Jimmy's Aroo Servioe on the<lb/>
oorner of the 264 By-pass and<lb/>
New Bern Highway. A limited<lb/>
number of fossil shark teeth will<lb/>
be given away to the first<lb/>
customers.<lb/>
Hide!<lb/>
There will be an ice cream<lb/>
party for all Hillel members<lb/>
Friday, March 11, at 7 p.m. at<lb/>
the Den (on the corner of 9th<lb/>
and James Sts.)<lb/>
German Club<lb/>
The German Club is hosting<lb/>
an evening of German dancing<lb/>
March 17 at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Coffeehouse from 7:30-10:00<lb/>
p.m. All interested students and<lb/>
faculty are invited to attend.<lb/>
Acct. Society<lb/>
This summer 100 internship<lb/>
positions in North Carolina<lb/>
Government will be available for<lb/>
oollege students.<lb/>
Any oollege student attend-<lb/>
ing school in North Carolina, or<lb/>
who is a resident of North<lb/>
Carolina, is eligible to apply for<lb/>
the program. Preference for<lb/>
internships is generally given to<lb/>
rising juniors, seniors and gra-<lb/>
duate students. Students invol-<lb/>
ved in all areas of study can<lb/>
benefit by participating in the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Interns will be paid $3.12 per<lb/>
hour for their work (40 hr. work<lb/>
week-$125.00 per week).<lb/>
The ECU Cooperative Edu-<lb/>
cation offioe has the information<lb/>
and application blanks which<lb/>
are necessary for students to<lb/>
apply for the summer intern-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
Interested students should<lb/>
oontact the co-op office no later<lb/>
than March 18. See Mr. Doug<lb/>
Kruger, Mrs. G. Hagedorn, or<lb/>
Dr. Betsy Harper in Rawl, room<lb/>
313.<lb/>
Accounting Society March <lb/>
14, 530 in Rawl 130. Sammy (fl'dTlS<lb/>
Fade from Wachovia Compu-<lb/>
ter Center, will speak on "EDP<lb/>
Operations and Controls<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Four ECU students bought<lb/>
their first Mel Bay beginning<lb/>
Guitar book, and declared them-<lb/>
selves the "MEL BA Y Quartet"<lb/>
We agreed to let them perform<lb/>
March 11 &amp; 12th at 8 &amp; 9O0 p.m.<lb/>
to see if they oould live up to<lb/>
their astonishing name.<lb/>
The Coffeehouse is located<lb/>
in rm. 15 Mendenhall, so<lb/>
witness this performance. While<lb/>
you listen, you can enjoy free<lb/>
refreshments. Admission only<lb/>
25 cents.<lb/>
Register now for one of the<lb/>
crafts workshops which are<lb/>
being offered by the Crafts<lb/>
Center of Mendenhall 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/>
For details, call or visit the<lb/>
Crafts Center during the hours<lb/>
of 200 p.m. until 10.00 p.m.<lb/>
Monday throug l Friday. Class<lb/>
space is limited and the regis-<lb/>
tration deadline for all work-<lb/>
shops is Friday, March 11.<lb/>
WECU<lb/>
On Friday from 7-9 p.m. the<lb/>
WECU Artist Series will be the<lb/>
Electric Light Orchestra,<lb/>
brought to you by Bob Bass.<lb/>
Always the best from music<lb/>
Radio AM 57-WECU<lb/>
ECU Bowl<lb/>
The First Annual ECU<lb/>
COLLEGE BOWL Competition<lb/>
is about to begin. Get a team<lb/>
together, find a ooach, and oome<lb/>
and register with the Program<lb/>
Office in Mendenhall 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 Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Theatre on<lb/>
Wednesday, April 27.<lb/>
For further information, call<lb/>
the Student Center Program<lb/>
Offioe 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/>
No sex<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 Mendenhall 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/>
SGA posts<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/>
DebbieGreiner, Refrigerator<lb/>
Manager and Gary Miller, Tran-<lb/>
sit Manager, at the SGA Offioe<lb/>
(757-6611, Ext. 218, Menden-<lb/>
hall 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/>
Only full-time ECU students<lb/>
may apply.<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 750 in<lb/>
Brewster B-103?<lb/>
Parenthood<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/>
Law Society<lb/>
The ECU Law Society will<lb/>
meet Thurs. March 17, in 221<lb/>
Mendenhall. Guest speaker will<lb/>
be consumer advocate John R.<lb/>
Mathis. All members who plan<lb/>
to take the Washington D.C.<lb/>
trip must attend this meeting.<lb/>
Learn sports<lb/>
ECU will offer two evening<lb/>
oourses for the sports-minded<lb/>
this spring: "Baseball Officia-<lb/>
ting" (Mondays, Feb. 28-April<lb/>
4) and "Basic Scuba Certifica-<lb/>
tion" (Tuesdaysand Thursdays,<lb/>
March 10-April 5 For informa-<lb/>
tion call 757-6143 or 757-6148.<lb/>
Marshalls<lb/>
Applications for 1977-78<lb/>
marshalls are being taken in 228<lb/>
Mendenhall, 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/>
Elections<lb/>
Filing for SGA President,<lb/>
Vice President, Secretary and<lb/>
Treasurer will continue thru<lb/>
March 16th at 5.O0 p.m. Fa<lb/>
your name to appear on the<lb/>
ballot, you must file for the<lb/>
office during this time at the<lb/>
SGA offioe, second floor Men-<lb/>
denhall.<lb/>
Umpires<lb/>
There will be a meeting of<lb/>
the Greenville Officials Associa-<lb/>
tion on Thursday, March 10,<lb/>
1977at 6.00 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/>
ECUSVA<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.<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057115_0003"/><lb/>
10 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAO Pag 3<lb/>
Honor frat has new advisor<lb/>
ByNEILSESSOMS<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
Dr. Jack Thornton has been<lb/>
named faculty advisor for Tau<lb/>
chapter of Phi Sigma Pi National<lb/>
Honor Fraternity effective May<lb/>
6.<lb/>
Thornton will replace the<lb/>
retiring Dr. Richard C. Todd<lb/>
who held the position for 27<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi, the oldest<lb/>
fraternal organization at ECU, is<lb/>
based on the tri-pod of scholar-<lb/>
ship, leadership, and fellow-<lb/>
ship. Initiation requirements<lb/>
UNION<lb/>
Continued from pg. 1 <lb/>
include a 3.3 overall average<lb/>
and evidence of leadership<lb/>
abilities.<lb/>
"I was most honored to be<lb/>
selected said Thornton, an<lb/>
associate professor of economics<lb/>
in the ECU School of Business.<lb/>
"I'll have a hard time living up<lb/>
to my predecessor, Dr. Todd.<lb/>
He has sacrificed countless<lb/>
hours to Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Thornton was initiated as a<lb/>
brother Feb. 2 and will assume<lb/>
the faculty advisor position at<lb/>
the fraternity's Founder's Day<lb/>
Banquet May 6. Thornton is<lb/>
acting as co-advisor with Todd<lb/>
until then.<lb/>
"I don't plan to change the<lb/>
direction of the fraternity, just<lb/>
reinforce it Thornton com-<lb/>
mented.<lb/>
Thornton has been at ECU<lb/>
ten years and lives in Greenville<lb/>
with his wife and two daughters.<lb/>
His other activities and<lb/>
positions include faculty advisor<lb/>
to Student Fund Accounting and<lb/>
Omicron Delta Epsilon, Opti-<lb/>
mist Club treasurer, ECU<lb/>
Camera Club President, and<lb/>
Chairman of the Board of a<lb/>
small local, book sales firm.<lb/>
DR. JACK THORNTON<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
applications for chairpersons of<lb/>
the nine oommittees which will<lb/>
be staffed during the 1977-78<lb/>
academic year from March 7-25.<lb/>
Interested students should<lb/>
go by the Student Union Office<lb/>
in Mendenhall and fill out an<lb/>
application.<lb/>
Students will also be re-<lb/>
quired to have a fifteen minute<lb/>
interview with Ramsey, who will<lb/>
make the final selections.<lb/>
The selections will be an-<lb/>
nounced April 1, 1977 and<lb/>
submitted to tne Student Union<lb/>
Board of Directors for final<lb/>
approval on April 7.<lb/>
The oommittees and their<lb/>
responsibilities are:<lb/>
Artist Series - which pre-<lb/>
sents a fine arts concert series<lb/>
and other special attractions to<lb/>
meet the needs of the students<lb/>
who desire fine arts entertain-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Popular Entertainment -<lb/>
which will be responsible for<lb/>
presenting concerts and other<lb/>
entertainment on a major and<lb/>
minor scale.<lb/>
Travel - is responsible tor<lb/>
the travel programs provided to<lb/>
students by the Student Union,<lb/>
Starving Artists<lb/>
Show &amp; Sale<lb/>
Call<lb/>
The Mushroom<lb/>
For Information<lb/>
Call: 752-3815<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
Gents Night<lb/>
Sunday Night<lb/>
Free Draft<lb/>
starting at 9:00 P.M.<lb/>
as long as it lasts<lb/>
GJjefc Tyler<lb/>
In Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Super Friday Special<lb/>
(March 11)<lb/>
Levis<lb/>
�<lb/>
Jeans-<lb/>
Corduroy &amp; Denim<lb/>
sizes 28-36<lb/>
$<lb/>
9.88<lb/>
(regularly 15&amp;$16)<lb/>
Limit 2 pairs per customer<lb/>
(no layaway or alterations.)<lb/>
Lecture Series - selects,<lb/>
plans, promotes, and presents a<lb/>
Lecture Series consisting of<lb/>
widely recognized personalities<lb/>
or topics of interest.<lb/>
Theatre Arts - meets the<lb/>
needs of the students who<lb/>
desire dramatic arts entertain-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Art Exhibition - is responsi-<lb/>
ble for providing a wide variety<lb/>
of art displays and other visual<lb/>
arts programming.<lb/>
Films - provides Friday and<lb/>
Saturday night popular film<lb/>
series of contemporary films; a<lb/>
Wednesday night series which<lb/>
presentsavant gardes, classical,<lb/>
and international films; film<lb/>
festivals; and an annual univer-<lb/>
sity film oontest.<lb/>
Coffeehouse - is responsible<lb/>
for presenting contemporary<lb/>
music artists and other enter-<lb/>
tainers in a relaxed nightclub<lb/>
atmosphere.<lb/>
THE ENTERTAINER- pub-<lb/>
lishes the upcoming programs<lb/>
of the Student Union and is also<lb/>
responsible for coordinating the<lb/>
promotion of the entire Student<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
These positions are open to<lb/>
all full time students. Fa more<lb/>
information call the Student<lb/>
Union Offioe.<lb/>
Sounds<lb/>
to<lb/>
Soothe<lb/>
Tom Jones<lb/>
Say You'll Stay<lb/>
Until Tomorrow<lb/>
including.<lb/>
Come To Me<lb/>
(Theme From<lb/>
The Pink Panther<lb/>
Strikes Again )<lb/>
Anniversary Song<lb/>
When Its Just<lb/>
You And Me<lb/>
Take Me Tonight<lb/>
We Had It All<lb/>
On Sale<lb/>
March<lb/>
11-17<lb/>
ENGELBERT<lb/>
HUMPERDINCK<lb/>
AFTER THE LOVIN'<lb/>
including:<lb/>
Let Me Happen To You The Hungry Years<lb/>
s I Find Is Beautiful! Love Making Love To You<lb/>
This Is What You Mean To Me<lb/>
$ 5.99Tope<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
<pb facs="00057115_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
10 March 1977<lb/>
Bookstore�big business<lb/>
Secretary of Academic Affairs Tim McLeod's<lb/>
presentation to the SGA Legislature of a feasibility<lb/>
study on establishing a book-rental program at<lb/>
ECU, superficial though it may be, should be<lb/>
seriously considered. A similar program at<lb/>
Appalachian State University has seemed to prove<lb/>
effective in shaving off the growing cost of<lb/>
textbooks, which in many instances runs more than<lb/>
$100 yearly.<lb/>
With assets of nearly $1 million and a net profit<lb/>
of over $125,000 at the end of last fiscal year the<lb/>
student supply store at this university is, as are<lb/>
most big businesses, greatly concerned with profit,<lb/>
more than with providing students with their books<lb/>
at the least possible oost.<lb/>
For the sake of students' pocketbooks, the time<lb/>
to institute a mone-saving plan for using texts that<lb/>
are required at this university is definitely now. All<lb/>
indications point to higher prices for books and<lb/>
supplies, especially next year when the semester<lb/>
system will give the supply store only two grand<lb/>
opportunities to bloat its already swelling profit<lb/>
margin.<lb/>
The feasibility study indicated that the rental<lb/>
scheme would cost on the average about $21 per<lb/>
quarter-probably slightly more under the semes-<lb/>
ter system. Under the current buy-back plan the<lb/>
supply store purchases used books from students<lb/>
at half the original price and resells them at<lb/>
three-quarters the original cost to students. This<lb/>
system, according to the study, can cost students<lb/>
between $40 and $50 per quarter.<lb/>
One of the major objections to the rental system<lb/>
at Appalachian State, where it is currently<lb/>
undergoing a five-year trial period, oomesfrom the<lb/>
faculty which claims that if stifles academic<lb/>
freedom. Because books become more economical<lb/>
if they are reused, there could be less incentive to<lb/>
utilize a revised text each time a course is taught.<lb/>
Therefore it is possible that books containing dated<lb/>
information would be used. On the other hand, the<lb/>
rental system could prompt professors to select<lb/>
basic texts and update them with paperback<lb/>
selections, for example, National Journal Reprints<lb/>
used in the political science department.<lb/>
Nothing dictates that this university follow the<lb/>
Appalachian plan directly, perhapsanother system<lb/>
would work better here. But the time to find out is<lb/>
now; the Student Welfare Committee of the<lb/>
legislature should form an ad hoc committee<lb/>
immediately to study the possibilities in detail.<lb/>
Fajntainhead<lb/>
Serving trw East Carolina community for ver 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 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
is reviewer too good for da South?<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
As a student at this<lb/>
university, and speaking for<lb/>
other students here, there is a<lb/>
question proposed to which we<lb/>
would like an answer. How<lb/>
much longer must the student<lb/>
population at ECU be subjected<lb/>
to the writings of one David R.<lb/>
Bosnick? Week after week we<lb/>
see disgusting attempts at cin-<lb/>
ema and theatre criticism, and<lb/>
are not only revolted but upset<lb/>
and angered by what we read.<lb/>
At first Mr. Bosnick's reviews<lb/>
were laughed off because they<lb/>
were so ludicrous that they<lb/>
bordered on humor. However,<lb/>
the humor soon died as the<lb/>
reviews continued and it be-<lb/>
came obvious that the FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD seriously consider-<lb/>
ed him a critic.<lb/>
After the production of<lb/>
Richard the Second, in his<lb/>
review dated Dec. 14, 1976,<lb/>
Bosnick states "The flaw in this<lb/>
work is that it chooses to do<lb/>
neither (present a rendition of<lb/>
Shakespearean lines, recreating<lb/>
Shakespeare's characters as he<lb/>
intended, or present a contem-<lb/>
porary interpretation of the<lb/>
characters) but rather vaci-<lb/>
llates between attempting to<lb/>
delineate contemporary flaws<lb/>
(and individuals), and portray<lb/>
the England Shakespeare knew.<lb/>
Does it not seem strange<lb/>
that of all the interpretations of<lb/>
Shakespearean drama, David R.<lb/>
Bosnick would be able to discern<lb/>
which was a correct interpreta-<lb/>
tion, and which was not? Or<lb/>
perhaps Mr. Bosnick is so<lb/>
BUC to reflect year of change<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
This is a year of .change;<lb/>
1977 is the last year ECU will be<lb/>
on the quarter system and the<lb/>
last year Leo Jenkins will be our<lb/>
Chancellor. This is also the year<lb/>
our football team left the<lb/>
Southern Conference as CHAM-<lb/>
PIONS. All around us there is<lb/>
change this year, from Wash-<lb/>
ington, D.C. to Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
This will be your only chance<lb/>
to capture all of the changes<lb/>
here at East Carol ina-THE 1977<lb/>
BUCCANEER. For only $5.00<lb/>
you can pick up this 224 page<lb/>
thriller next fall. The most<lb/>
exciting feature of this limited<lb/>
edition of the BUC is that YOU<lb/>
and your friends are the charac-<lb/>
ters, but only if you buy your<lb/>
subscript ion NOW!<lb/>
Because the funding of the<lb/>
BUCCANEER has been restric-<lb/>
ted this year, we are forced to<lb/>
charge $5.00 per book. That is<lb/>
just a tittle more than two cents<lb/>
per page for a book that you'll<lb/>
want to keep forever-TWO<lb/>
CENTS PER PAGE! If you have<lb/>
any questions concerning the<lb/>
purchase of the 1977 BUCCA-<lb/>
NEER, please feel free to call<lb/>
us. Our number is 757-6501, or<lb/>
oome by the Publications Center<lb/>
which is across from Joyner<lb/>
Library to purchase your sub-<lb/>
scription now. First oome-first<lb/>
served, so if you want one, and<lb/>
we' re sure you will, you' d better<lb/>
hurry. Thank you.<lb/>
Seth Medlin<lb/>
BUCCANEER Stiff<lb/>
versed in Shakespeare that he<lb/>
considers himself an expert.<lb/>
Certainly, that is doubtful.<lb/>
But more recently, Bosnick<lb/>
has raised and lowered his rod<lb/>
of theatrical criticism on the<lb/>
production Pel leas and Meli-<lb/>
sande. Who does this person<lb/>
think that he is? While one<lb/>
understands that a reviewer<lb/>
must deliver criticism, this<lb/>
reviewer delivers what could be<lb/>
interpreted as near slander!<lb/>
He cut down the lighting<lb/>
(because of the "audible click<lb/>
and hum of electricity"), the<lb/>
scenery and the performance of<lb/>
the players. And once again Mr.<lb/>
Bosnick provides the reader<lb/>
with the correct interpretation of<lb/>
the play-his own! One would<lb/>
wonder why, when blessed with<lb/>
such insight into drama Bosnick<lb/>
would settle for the mere job of<lb/>
reviewer! After all with such<lb/>
talent why does he not act, or<lb/>
better yet produce?<lb/>
And as far as cinema goes<lb/>
has there ever been a movie of<lb/>
which our raving reviewer ap-<lb/>
proved? Surely if there has<lb/>
been, it has not been to<lb/>
Greenville. In his recent review<lb/>
of the movie, A Star is Born,<lb/>
with his usual crass style, Mr.<lb/>
Bosnick proceeded to tear down<lb/>
a movie that had received<lb/>
favorable reviews across the<lb/>
nation, and that everyone who<lb/>
saw it loved.<lb/>
Perhaps the problem lies in<lb/>
the assumption that Bosnick is<lb/>
too talented for the South. Fa<lb/>
certainly, if his talent was<lb/>
elsewhere, ECU students could<lb/>
enjoy local entertainment a lot<lb/>
more.<lb/>
T. Boone<lb/>
<pb facs="00057115_0005"/><lb/>
warn<lb/>
����m<lb/>
Scales' verdict 'reversed'<lb/>
10 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
A "jury" of 12 ECU students and interested<lb/>
individuals yesterday found Junius Scales, a<lb/>
self-professed communist leader, not guilty of<lb/>
attempting to violently overthrow the govern-<lb/>
ment of the United States.<lb/>
The verdict was handed down yesterday in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center after a recreation by<lb/>
the Carolina Theatre Company of the controver-<lb/>
sial 1958 trial in Greensboro.<lb/>
Scales, who in 1947 publically proclaimed<lb/>
himself chairman of the North and South Carolina<lb/>
districts of the Communist Party, U.S.A was<lb/>
first found guilty in 1954.<lb/>
He was retried, however, in 1958 because the<lb/>
FBI had withheld prosecution records from the<lb/>
defense. After a two-week trial, Scales was again<lb/>
found guilty of violating the Smith Act and<lb/>
sentenced to six years in prison.<lb/>
The Smith Act makes it illegal to "know-<lb/>
ingly" associate with any organization which has<lb/>
as its goal the foroeful overthrow of the U.S.<lb/>
government.<lb/>
Much of the testimony for the prosecution in<lb/>
the reenacted trial centered on proving that the<lb/>
Communist Party in the U.S. seeks the<lb/>
annihilation of the government in its present<lb/>
form. Once that tenet had been tied to the party's<lb/>
objectives the prosecution then sought to prove<lb/>
that Scales, as a member of the party had actively<lb/>
participated in its ranks knowing of the avowed<lb/>
purposes.<lb/>
The ECU jury was unconvinced. It delib-<lb/>
erated briefly and returned a unanimous verdict<lb/>
of not guilty.<lb/>
The Carolina Theatre Company has been<lb/>
performing the reenacted trial since October<lb/>
1976, on a grant from the N.C. Humanities<lb/>
Commission. Scales was "tried" again last night<lb/>
in the Pitt County Courthouse. According to<lb/>
directa William Dreyer, the play was chosen fa<lb/>
both its theatrical and provocative nature. One of<lb/>
the most touching moments is when Scales'<lb/>
mother takes the stand to testify on behalf of her<lb/>
son. She tells of Junius" leaving home after FBI<lb/>
agents began surveilling him. He wanted to<lb/>
spare the family the experience, she said.<lb/>
Scales received clemency after serving less<lb/>
than a third of his sentence. He is now living in<lb/>
New Yak and waking fa the New York Times as<lb/>
a proofreader. He has not seen the trial's<lb/>
reenactment.<lb/>
Geography Dept. to begin<lb/>
visiting professorship in Fail<lb/>
The ECU Department of<lb/>
Geography will inaugurate a<lb/>
Distinguished Visiting Profes-<lb/>
saship during the fall semester<lb/>
of 1977-78.<lb/>
The program is designed to<lb/>
bring an outstanding scholar in<lb/>
the field of geography to the<lb/>
campus one semester each year,<lb/>
according to Dr. Ennis L.<lb/>
Chestang, chairman of geo-<lb/>
graphy at ECU.<lb/>
Dr. John Fraser Hart, pro-<lb/>
fessor of geography at the<lb/>
University of Minnesota, will be<lb/>
first occupant of the position, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
A native of Staunton, Va<lb/>
Dr. Hart holds the AB in<lb/>
classical languages from Emay<lb/>
University and the PhD in<lb/>
geography from Nathwestern<lb/>
University. Befae joining the<lb/>
Minnesota faculty in 1967, he<lb/>
taught at Indiana and Geagia<lb/>
Universities.<lb/>
Prof. Hart has been a<lb/>
Fulbright Lecturer at the Uni-<lb/>
versitede Lille in France and at<lb/>
Durham University in England.<lb/>
An active member of several<lb/>
professional aganizations, Dr.<lb/>
Hart has been executive officer<lb/>
of the Association of American<lb/>
Geographers and edita of the<lb/>
"Annals of the Association of<lb/>
American Geographers and is<lb/>
currently a counsela fa the<lb/>
AAG and the Canadian agani-<lb/>
zatioi.<lb/>
His publications include nine<lb/>
books and monographs and 87<lb/>
professional papers and articles,<lb/>
in addition to editions of various<lb/>
waks. Amaig his book-length<lb/>
studies are "The Southeastern<lb/>
United States "The Look of<lb/>
the Land and "The British<lb/>
Moaelands: A Problem in Land<lb/>
Utilization<lb/>
During his visit at ECU, ur<lb/>
Hart will direct a seminar fa<lb/>
graduate students and teach a<lb/>
course on the geography of the<lb/>
U.S. and Canada fa under-<lb/>
graduates. He and Dr. Chestang<lb/>
will instruct a field course in<lb/>
local geography.<lb/>
"Fraser is no stranger to<lb/>
East Carolina noted Dr.<lb/>
Chestang. "He was here as a<lb/>
visiting lecturer in a 1966<lb/>
summer institute, and he is just<lb/>
as much at home wandering<lb/>
through barns, sheds, and pig<lb/>
parlas as he is in the lecture<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
Chestang said Prof. Hart will<lb/>
present one or two public<lb/>
lectures during his semester<lb/>
here.<lb/>
I Wish I Know Now<lb/>
What I Knew Then<lb/>
Delta Phi Delta Annual<lb/>
Art Show and Competition<lb/>
March 13-19<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery and Cases<lb/>
Delta Phi Delta invites any ECU Student to enter a limit of 2 art waks in their<lb/>
Annual Art Show &amp; Conpetition to be held in Mendenhall March 13-19.<lb/>
An entry fee of $1.50 per person will be charged. Waks must be brought to the<lb/>
infamatiai desk at Mendenhall between 3-5 p.m. oi Sunday March 13. They should<lb/>
be picked up the following Sunday same time, same place.<lb/>
All 2-D waks must be properly presented (matted, acetated a framed), ready to<lb/>
hang 3-D waks must be self supporting.<lb/>
Categaies: Ceramics, Communicatioi Arts, Design, Drawing, Interia Design,<lb/>
Painting, Printmaking, Sculpture.<lb/>
Prizes: $50.00 Best in show; $20.00 First place in each categay; $15.00 Second place<lb/>
in each categay; Honaable Mentioi in each categay.<lb/>
Note: A categay must have at least 5 entrants befae that categay will be eligible fa<lb/>
judging and prizes. Entry blanks will be available at the infamatiai booth on Sunday<lb/>
March 13.<lb/>
Greek news and views<lb/>
Editor's Note: Beginning with this issue, FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
will present a Greek column every Thursday to keep Greeks and<lb/>
non-Greeks posted on fraternity and sorority socials, activities,<lb/>
projects, and functions. Phi Kappa Tau President David Wright will<lb/>
write the column relaying news and expressing opinion on Greek<lb/>
oriented affairs. The col' mn will inform non-Greeks as well as<lb/>
Greeks of pertinent, connected affairs.<lb/>
Wright chairs the Inter Fraternity Council's Public Relations<lb/>
Committee. He is a junior from Elizabeth City majoring in Business<lb/>
Administration.<lb/>
By DAVID WRIGHT<lb/>
Greek Carespondent<lb/>
Spring Quarter has traditionally been the highlight of the school<lb/>
year fa Greeks, and this should be an especially memaable one.<lb/>
The Inter Fraternity Council (I.F.C.) and Panhellenic Council, both<lb/>
separately and jointly, have scheduled a full quarter of activities,<lb/>
projects, and social functions.<lb/>
This week got Spring rush underway fa both fraternities and<lb/>
saaities. An inaease in prospective members was noted in most<lb/>
houses. Many Greek observers attribute the rise in rushees to the<lb/>
recent improvement in the Greek image.<lb/>
Along with each house's individual service project, the I.F.C.<lb/>
and Panhellenic will man and,support the Red Cross Blood Drive<lb/>
March 22-24 in Wright Auditaium.<lb/>
This annual event receives full co-Greek backing to aid the<lb/>
oommunity and area.<lb/>
April promises a tight schedule of fraternity and saaity social<lb/>
functions including Spring famals, parant weekends, and several<lb/>
Wednesday night socials. The month's climax should be Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi Field Day the 23rd. An fraternities and saaities spend the day<lb/>
oompeting in athletic contests with the top fraternity and saaity<lb/>
receiving trophies.<lb/>
Most fraternities take a band, dates, and an ample supply of<lb/>
refreshments to the ooast fa beach weekends during May. These<lb/>
two day romps are probably the most eagerly awaited events all<lb/>
Spring by every Greek.<lb/>
Greek Week May 9-14 caps the school year with a full agenda of<lb/>
games, raft races, a banquet, and a sma scale Woodstock at<lb/>
Moser's farm.<lb/>
The I.F.C. and the Panhellenic Council have tallied the vote fa<lb/>
new officers. The officers and their affiliations fa I.F.C. are:<lb/>
president - Kirk Edgertoi, Phi Kappa Phi; vice president - James<lb/>
Thompson, Kappa Alpha; seaetary- Bobby Harrell, Kappa Sigma;<lb/>
and treasurer - Jay Chambers, Phi Kappa Tau.<lb/>
The Panhellenic roster reads: president - Bonnie Brockwell, Chi<lb/>
Omega; first vice president - Sue Lutz, Alpha Omiaon Pi; second<lb/>
vice president - Sue Thantai, Alpha Xi Delta; treasurer - Lynne<lb/>
Hewett - Delta Zeta; carespoiding seaetary - Diane Hutchinsoi,<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi.<lb/>
Sigma Nu ex-president Mike Cunningham was elected vice<lb/>
president fa I.F.C. Area 2 last moith.<lb/>
THE RAISIN BAND!<lb/>
TONITE Thru Sun.<lb/>
At The<lb/>
ELBOROOM<lb/>
� Early Bird Special<lb/>
ToniteThurs. March 10<lb/>
No Cover Charge Until 9:00<lb/>
Doors Open at 8:00<lb/>
Come Early<lb/>
Cip tiiis coupon!<lb/>
And get three games for only $1.25.<lb/>
Bring three friends along. Well let<lb/>
them in on the deal, too.<lb/>
WASHINGTON HWY<lb/>
GREENVILl E. N.C<lb/>
Expires May 30,1977<lb/>
Phone 758-1820<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057115_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAO 10 Mar 1977<lb/>
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SERVING A QUART OF YOUP<lb/>
FAVORITE BEVERAGE 75'<lb/>
Try Our Phone-In<lb/>
8-Take-Out Service 752-1828<lb/>
706 Evans St.<lb/>
(Corner of Evans &amp; 8th St.)<lb/>
Store i-iours - 10:00 a.m. - 2 a.m. Mon-Sat.<lb/>
Sun. - 12:00 p.m. - 2:00 a.m.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
ALL DANCE<lb/>
STUDENTS!<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
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HEADQUARTERS<lb/>
FOR ALL DANCEWEAR<lb/>
The Classic<lb/>
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We have a<lb/>
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shoes, and<lb/>
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Capezios<lb/>
been dancing<lb/>
since 1887.<lb/>
3500 protest<lb/>
J .P. Stevens shuns union<lb/>
NEW YORK (LNS) I was a<lb/>
worker at the J.P. Stevens plant<lb/>
in Statesboro, Georgia Addie<lb/>
Jackson told LNS at a demon-<lb/>
stration outside the annual J.<lb/>
P. Stevens stockholders meet-<lb/>
ing in New York City March 1.<lb/>
"About two weeks before<lb/>
they ruled to have bargaining<lb/>
rights in the plant, J.P. Stevens<lb/>
closed it down. They closed<lb/>
down the entire plant. There<lb/>
was about 385 people eligible to<lb/>
vote for the union. The majority<lb/>
of them now have new jobs. But<lb/>
there's about twenty of us that<lb/>
don't. The ones that were strong<lb/>
for the union, we were put on<lb/>
something they call a blacklist<lb/>
On March 1, 3500 people<lb/>
encircled the J.P. Stevens<lb/>
Tower in mid-town Manhattan<lb/>
to protest against the oompany' s<lb/>
anti-union tactics. Singing "We<lb/>
Shall Overcome the pickters,<lb/>
representing mostly labor and<lb/>
student organizations, carried<lb/>
signs naming J.P. Stevens<lb/>
textile workers fired fa union<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
WORKERS DEMONSTRATED in New York against the second<lb/>
largest textile firm in the world's anti-union tactics. LNS photo<lb/>
1te college-caret? class of People's ap-Ksi<lb/>
lemple invites tXJ "to be our specialuest -mis<lb/>
Sundfli. Id stow our appreciation ofupur vteft<lb/>
we are planning a reat bitf, ftorfe-cco&amp;d<lb/>
PLCWLC<lb/>
in upur honor. The eaef will be at the church,<lb/>
iromediatelu; ftlbuintf trie eeNlce. Join ue at<lb/>
lOarvi, this 6undaij, March rS<lb/>
TgAKtefbKTATlPN PP3lpe.E<lb/>
Eco- Greene 9'Z�am.<lb/>
CoWor 9:15 am.<lb/>
Scort 9;30aw.<lb/>
6A6Tsaai APT&amp; 9'40aw.<lb/>
Cjuabein-fWcfijour apt I)<lb/>
CaII 76B-466fc if td&amp; can tick<lb/>
4ou up S0�eiiere Gle.<lb/>
'KeDPLE's&amp;APrerTl<lb/>
Located on ZM fy-Pte<lb/>
(jieet) next h&amp;dO&amp;k<lb/>
Vt 3ary 81<lb/>
"Fight for the Right to<lb/>
Organize some of the signs<lb/>
read. And "J.P. Stevens: Pro-<lb/>
fits First, People Last "J.P.<lb/>
Stevens Guilty of Brown Lung,<lb/>
Impoverishment, Discrimina-<lb/>
tion and Threats to Freedom<lb/>
The second largest textile<lb/>
firm in the world, J.P. Stevens<lb/>
is waging an all-out campaign to<lb/>
resist unionization at its 85<lb/>
plants (80 in the South) where<lb/>
45,000 workers are employed.<lb/>
The textile workers union<lb/>
won its first election against<lb/>
J.P. Stevens at a plant in<lb/>
Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina<lb/>
during the summer of 1974.<lb/>
Today, a full two and a half<lb/>
years later, the company has yet<lb/>
to sign a oontract with the<lb/>
Amalgamated Clothing and<lb/>
Textile Workers Union.<lb/>
Textiles are America's last<lb/>
major unorganized manufactur-<lb/>
ing industry and the J.P.<lb/>
Stevens battle is the key to the<lb/>
South, where fewer than 10<lb/>
percent of the region's 589,000<lb/>
textile workers are unionized.<lb/>
As picketers demonstrated<lb/>
outside the J.P. Stevens Tower,<lb/>
another 500 people went inside<lb/>
where the annual stockholder's<lb/>
meeting was being held. A<lb/>
number of J.P. Stevens workers<lb/>
had made the long trip to New<lb/>
York from their homes in the<lb/>
South, and hundreds of their<lb/>
supporters brought the mini-<lb/>
mum number of J. P. Stevens<lb/>
charges to enable them to<lb/>
attend and vote at the<lb/>
shareholders meeting.<lb/>
Seven J.P. Stevens workers<lb/>
spoke at the meeting in favor of<lb/>
two -shareholder-resolutions<lb/>
-proposed by five religious<lb/>
organizations. The proposals<lb/>
sought information on J.P.<lb/>
Stevens' discriminatory prac<lb/>
tices on the basis of race and<lb/>
sex, poor working conditions<lb/>
faced by J.P. Stevens em-<lb/>
ployees, and the company's<lb/>
anti-union campaign, particular-<lb/>
ly at its Statesboro and Roanoke<lb/>
Rapids plants.<lb/>
One 20-year employee at the<lb/>
now-closed Statesboro plant<lb/>
testified that he never had a<lb/>
promotion at the oompany be-<lb/>
cause he is black. To which<lb/>
Board Chairman Finley replied,<lb/>
"You had an unusual unfortu-<lb/>
nate experience which most of<lb/>
our employees don't have<lb/>
Another worker from<lb/>
Mississippi told shareholders<lb/>
that he had trained many new<lb/>
employees who then became his<lb/>
supervisors, and that he, too,<lb/>
was never promoted because he<lb/>
is black.<lb/>
As expected, the two pro-<lb/>
union shareholder proposals<lb/>
were defeated by the large<lb/>
stockholders who own thou-<lb/>
sands of shares and are board<lb/>
members of other large banks<lb/>
and corporations. The workers<lb/>
intend to continue their fight for<lb/>
union representation and con-<lb/>
tracts, and their supporters are<lb/>
waging a nationwide boycott<lb/>
against all J.P. Stevens pro-<lb/>
ducts.<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00057115_0007"/><lb/>
Spoleto Festival presents<lb/>
daily chamber music shows<lb/>
CHARLESTON-When the<lb/>
Spoleto Festival comes to<lb/>
Charleston this May 25 to June<lb/>
5, one of its daily highlights will<lb/>
be noontime chamber music<lb/>
concerts at the historic Dock<lb/>
Street Theatre.<lb/>
The concerts provide an<lb/>
unusual opportunity to hear<lb/>
some of the world's most highly<lb/>
acclaimed musicians. Charles<lb/>
Wadsworth and Peter Serkin are<lb/>
co-directors of the chamber<lb/>
music series. Wadsworth is the<lb/>
founder and artistic director of<lb/>
the Chamber Music Society of<lb/>
Lincoln Center, and Serkin is<lb/>
the founder of TASHI, the first<lb/>
chamber music ensemble to<lb/>
appear at a major New York<lb/>
night club.<lb/>
Wadsworth and Serkin, both<lb/>
pianists, will be joined by<lb/>
Richard Goode (piano), Ida<lb/>
Kavafian (violin), Yo Yo Ma<lb/>
(cello), Daniel Phillips (violin<lb/>
and viola), Robert Routch<lb/>
(French horn), Fred Sherry<lb/>
(cello), and Carol Wincenz<lb/>
(flute).<lb/>
Charles Wadsworth, a native<lb/>
of Newnan, Georgia, has<lb/>
created a unique concept for<lb/>
presenting chamber music. His<lb/>
concept provides an unusually<lb/>
varied and informal program. It<lb/>
has been thrilling audiences at<lb/>
the Spoleto Fesitval in Spoleto,<lb/>
Italy for a number of years. In<lb/>
fact, according to Wadsworth,<lb/>
"the public actually sometimes<lb/>
has fistfights trying to get in<lb/>
Each day's concert is dif-<lb/>
ferent, and the music within a<lb/>
given day's concert is typically<lb/>
very different. "Our philoso-<lb/>
phy says Wadsworth, "is<lb/>
diversity of instrumentation,<lb/>
repertoire, tone, the way ihings<lb/>
are juxtaposed, quick shifts of<lb/>
mood within a program, always<lb/>
keeping the ear alive, and trying<lb/>
to surprise the listener as much<lb/>
as possible The Wadsworth<lb/>
"formula" became so success-<lb/>
ful at Spoleto that it has been<lb/>
imitated in New York and<lb/>
throughout the world.<lb/>
Adding to the informality of<lb/>
the Spoleto Chamber Music<lb/>
Concerts, Wadsworth usually<lb/>
discusses each day's program<lb/>
with the audience. So attending<lb/>
a concert becomes as edu-<lb/>
cational as it is entertaining.<lb/>
Last June, Wadsworth per-<lb/>
formed in Charleston at the<lb/>
Dock Street Theatre with the<lb/>
Chamber Music Society of Lin-<lb/>
coln Center. At that time, he<lb/>
raved about the quality of the<lb/>
theatre and its acoustics.<lb/>
The noontime chamber<lb/>
music concerts are one of many<lb/>
aspects of the Spoleto Festival<lb/>
12-day program in Charleston.<lb/>
There will also be opera, ballet,<lb/>
art exhibits, films, church con-<lb/>
certs, orchestral concerts,<lb/>
lectures, theatre, and mini-<lb/>
festivals featuring storytellers,<lb/>
music, crafts, mime, puppets,<lb/>
and instant theatre.<lb/>
Ticket and program inform-<lb/>
ation and accommodations in-<lb/>
formation may be obtained by<lb/>
contacting Spoleto Festival<lb/>
U.S.A P.O. Box 157, Charles-<lb/>
ton, S.C. 29402 or calling (803)<lb/>
722-2764.<lb/>
CHAMBER MUSIC CONCERTS will be a feature of the Spoleto Arts Festival.<lb/>
Recent Hall and Oates LP<lb/>
explores their beginnings<lb/>
By CHRISFARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
PAST TIMES BEHIND<lb/>
The Philadelphia sound,<lb/>
white or black, falsetto harmon-<lb/>
ies, late 50's, Orlons, Sam and<lb/>
Dave, blue-eyed soul-this is the<lb/>
sound we most closely associate<lb/>
with the music of Daryl Hall and<lb/>
John Oates, and this is the same<lb/>
sound that has brought them<lb/>
national prominenoe as one of<lb/>
todays premiere R &amp; B bands.<lb/>
However, upon studying the<lb/>
roots of these two musicians,<lb/>
the once so obvious stereotype<lb/>
becomes somewhat of a sur-<lb/>
prise.<lb/>
Long before there was ever a<lb/>
"Sara Smile" or a "She's<lb/>
Gone Daryl Hall and John<lb/>
Oates were together merging<lb/>
two totally different musical<lb/>
styles, hoping to produce an<lb/>
original one of their own. This is<lb/>
precisely what the music from<lb/>
PAST TIMES BEHIND deals<lb/>
with. It is a collection of<lb/>
previously unreleased material<lb/>
recorded somewhere around<lb/>
1971, that explores the begin-<lb/>
ninas of the Hall and Oates<lb/>
sound. The music is mainly<lb/>
acoustic with extremely simple<lb/>
production, featuring Hall and<lb/>
Oates on piano and guitar<lb/>
respectively, with bass and<lb/>
drum accompanimemt.<lb/>
It contains none of the horns,<lb/>
synthesizers or overdubbed<lb/>
vocals we would expect to hear<lb/>
on a more recent Hall and Oates<lb/>
album, but instead a more<lb/>
relaxing yet less confident<lb/>
sound. Ironically enough, from<lb/>
this album one can easily sense<lb/>
Hall's classical background and<lb/>
Oates folk roots, and how the<lb/>
music developed to be what it is<lb/>
today. The majority of the songs<lb/>
were written by either Hall or<lb/>
Oates, showing us thai the two<lb/>
had not really come together<lb/>
enough musically to collaborate<lb/>
on anything yet. Its strength lies<lb/>
in itssimplidty and Daryl Hall's<lb/>
voice, which even then was<lb/>
amazing. But more than that, to<lb/>
the true Hall and Oates fan, the<lb/>
album playsasa kind of musical<lb/>
biography. Consequently, PAST<lb/>
TIMES BEHIND is good, yet<lb/>
quite different; so don't be<lb/>
fooled.<lb/>
A PLACE IN THE SUN<lb/>
Pablo Cruise's third and<lb/>
latest album might have found<lb/>
them a place in the sun, but the<lb/>
group has yet to find itself a<lb/>
plaoe on the record charts. Their<lb/>
first two albums were met with<lb/>
critical acclaim and oommerdal<lb/>
indifference, and so the saga of<lb/>
Pablo Cruise seems to continue<lb/>
with A PLACE IN THE SUN.<lb/>
This group of four southern<lb/>
Californians continues to put out<lb/>
what one might dare and label<lb/>
the beach music of the seven-<lb/>
ties, with all of the freshness<lb/>
and smoothness necessary fori<lb/>
gaining popularity. However<lb/>
for some reason popularity is<lb/>
something that has always<lb/>
See REVIEW, page 8<lb/>
10 March 1977<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
byPATCOYLE<lb/>
The South shall rise<lb/>
From the begimting of our nation's development, the area below<lb/>
the Mason-Dixon line has occupied a unique position in the overall<lb/>
pidure of the United States.<lb/>
The British and French who settled in the South brought with<lb/>
them social habits and rules of decorum that thrived under the<lb/>
warm Southern sun.<lb/>
While their Yankee counterparts were worrying about witches<lb/>
and the evils of adultery, the Southerners were worried about the<lb/>
latest version of the minuet and finding a way to keep up with<lb/>
European trends in fashion.<lb/>
FRANKLY, SCARLETT<lb/>
I occupy a rather unusual position in the neverending battle<lb/>
between North and South. I was born down here, but my parents are<lb/>
dyed-m-the-wool Yankees, and I've lived "up there" on occasion.<lb/>
The result has been a sort of chaotic effort on my part to decide<lb/>
whether I'm a Southern Belle, or at least if I could get away with<lb/>
faking it.<lb/>
Southern women are said to have a certain something, an aura<lb/>
of mystery, of seething passions bubbling under a mask of frigid<lb/>
gentility.<lb/>
In the tradition of Scarlett O'Hara, and the women of Tennessee<lb/>
Williams, the Southern lady possesses a gift, a power that enables<lb/>
her to get exadly what she wants without raising her voice, or even<lb/>
lifting a finger.<lb/>
Feminists might find the pidure distasteful, but as one elderly<lb/>
Southern dame put it; "Why should we condescend to merely<lb/>
having equal rights?<lb/>
IDENTITY PROBLEMS<lb/>
This still leaves me with the problem of deeding where my<lb/>
loyalties lie. Ami a Southerner, or am I simply a Yankee born in the<lb/>
South?<lb/>
Over the years I've managed to sustain at least a slight drawl, an<lb/>
accent which varies according to the accents around me.<lb/>
I've also mastered the art of approaching life'stasksat a relaxed<lb/>
pace. A Southern lady simply does not rush around while<lb/>
performing her daily duties.<lb/>
I have, however, had problems with the art of evasiveness. I<lb/>
have to make a oonscious effort to avoid being too blunt, too frank,<lb/>
while in the company of other Southerners. I've found myself<lb/>
making statements and confessions that one simply does not make if<lb/>
one expects to be accepted in a community of Southerners.<lb/>
But that isn't my biggest problem in my efforts to be a true<lb/>
Southerner. My biggest hangups (size nine, to be 'xact) are my<lb/>
feet. Over the years I've noticed that Southern women simply don't<lb/>
have big feet.<lb/>
The way I've got it figured, the only hope I have is to get a job as<lb/>
a bank teller, or some other career where my feet, in all their long<lb/>
glory, will be well hidden.<lb/>
PLAINS TALK<lb/>
After all of these years of talk about the South rising again, it<lb/>
appears that the man from Plains may make that dream a reality.<lb/>
Carter'selection hasturned all attention toward the South. The<lb/>
media has capitalized on the color surrounding Carter, and our<lb/>
national television and publications are suddenly inundated with<lb/>
stories ranging from Rosalynn's opinion on grits, to Miss Lillian's<lb/>
fishing secrets, to brother Billy's beer drinking antics.<lb/>
Most of the nation seems receptive to the personality of the new<lb/>
administration, although some express distaste at the idea of fried<lb/>
chicken and Double Cola being served at state dinners.<lb/>
NOTHING COULD BE FINER<lb/>
Now before you Southerners say I'm poking fun at your<lb/>
traditions, or you Northerners say I'm belittling your heritage, let<lb/>
me say that I am truly fond of the South, but I don't think it's the<lb/>
perfect place.<lb/>
I've never harbored any secret desire fa a return to plantation<lb/>
life, nor do I identify with the concept. While the Civil War was<lb/>
being fought, my ancestors were still digging potatoes in Ireland.<lb/>
I regard the days of separate bathrooms and Klan rallies with<lb/>
distaste bordering on revulsion.<lb/>
What I do like is the fad that the people of the South have such<lb/>
resped for the establishment of traditions and fa the enjoyment of<lb/>
life's gentle pleasures.<lb/>
It's fa these reasons that I am choosing to remain in the South. I<lb/>
may never cultivate a taste fa oollards, a learn to bake a pan of<lb/>
biscuits, but my size nine shoes will remain firmly planted in the<lb/>
warm soil of the South.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057115_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 March 1977<lb/>
Fruitful week for local entertainment<lb/>
By DA VID R. BOSNICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This week in Greenville<lb/>
there shall be the opportunity to<lb/>
observe a large and diverse<lb/>
selection of performances. The<lb/>
campus is hosting three reper-<lb/>
tory companies.<lb/>
THEATRE FOR DEAF<lb/>
The National Theatre for the<lb/>
Deaf will perform one show on<lb/>
the 15th. The company will<lb/>
present works by Gertrude Stein<lb/>
and Chekov. While the players<lb/>
will perform mostly in the art of<lb/>
mime, there will be choreogra-<lb/>
phed readings of the poetry of<lb/>
Frost and Cummings. This is an<lb/>
excellent chance to observe the<lb/>
extent ion of pantomine, as the<lb/>
program will include the physi-<lb/>
cal articulation of children's<lb/>
letters to God.<lb/>
Tonight will mark the final<lb/>
performance of the Rod Rodgers<lb/>
Dance company. The ensemble<lb/>
is a jazz-oriented troupe that<lb/>
presents styles ranging from the<lb/>
older ragtime to today's Afro-<lb/>
Haitian methods.<lb/>
W A VERLY CONSORT<lb/>
On the 16th the Union will<lb/>
present the Waverly Consort, a<lb/>
group of madrigal singers who<lb/>
perform songs ranging from the<lb/>
13th-17th centuries, while cos-<lb/>
tume and choreographed in<lb/>
the style of the era. The songs<lb/>
presented range from pastoral<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
Super Happy Hour<lb/>
$2.25<lb/>
All You Can Drink<lb/>
3:00 P.M7:00 P.M.<lb/>
oyp<lb/>
Sl�<lb/>
BUYASUB&amp;GETA<lb/>
0. COKE OR PEPSI FOR 0<lb/>
o<lb/>
��<lb/>
�sOFGRlfcy. <lb/>
&amp; Phone 752-6130 X<lb/>
A Phone in orders 4f<lb/>
0 for pick up or campus delivery x<lb/>
hymns praising abstinenoe to<lb/>
ribald ballads of ale and lust.<lb/>
The troupe uses instruments<lb/>
authentic of the era and much of<lb/>
the baroque orchestration is<lb/>
original.<lb/>
This week gives the student<lb/>
audience an opportunity to<lb/>
enjoy professional theatre. I<lb/>
recommend the Waverly Con-<lb/>
sort for those interested in<lb/>
classical music. I have been less<lb/>
than impressed with the dance<lb/>
company, however.<lb/>
FLICKS<lb/>
Grizzly- This is part of the flood<lb/>
of horror films that have as its<lb/>
star, actual creatures that are<lb/>
imbued with either enormous<lb/>
size or psychotic penchant fa<lb/>
violenoe. In this film the anta-<lb/>
gonist is a huge bear that<lb/>
refuses merely to maul his vic-<lb/>
tims and proceeds to consume<lb/>
them, which is apparently out of<lb/>
character for bears of this<lb/>
region. The film has its grue-<lb/>
some moments and is rampant<lb/>
with beautiful women, their torn<lb/>
blouses and slaughtered lovers.<lb/>
I give this movie one star; one<lb/>
half for its nature photography<lb/>
and half fa the blouse selection.<lb/>
This movie is now appearing at<lb/>
the Park Theatre.<lb/>
The Pink Panther Strikes Again<lb/>
- The fourth in the Pink Panther<lb/>
series. The film centers again<lb/>
around the antics of the ineffi-<lb/>
cient Clouseau whose ineptitude<lb/>
is his greatest weapon. Peter<lb/>
Sellers is excellent as he<lb/>
attempts to save the wald fran<lb/>
the madman (his famer chief)<lb/>
who attempts to rule the wald<lb/>
with a dematerializer. It is an<lb/>
absabing oomedy that mixes<lb/>
some old jokes and exaggerated<lb/>
mannerisms with the basics of<lb/>
slapstick humor. The scene<lb/>
following Clouseau on the para-<lb/>
llel bars is one of the funniest of<lb/>
the year. I give this movie 3 and<lb/>
one-half stars, as the photo-<lb/>
graphy is often poaly conceiv-<lb/>
ed. This film is now appearing<lb/>
at the Plaza Cinema one.<lb/>
The Shaggy D.A. - The latest of<lb/>
the Walt Disney children's<lb/>
films. Dean Jones is a small<lb/>
town district attaney who with<lb/>
the aid of a magic device, is<lb/>
transfamed into an English<lb/>
sheepdog. In various ways this<lb/>
enables him to immobilize the<lb/>
crime cartel and its chief,<lb/>
Keenan Wynn. This film is far<lb/>
below the caliber of Disney's<lb/>
earlier animated features, but is<lb/>
the best of the recent lot. Drop<lb/>
off the kids and walk next doa<lb/>
and see The Pink Panther<lb/>
Strikes Again. I give this film<lb/>
one and a half stars. This film is<lb/>
appearing at the Plaza Cinema<lb/>
Two.<lb/>
The Farmer - This is the wast<lb/>
cinema possible. The thread-<lb/>
bare pia is an excuse fa the<lb/>
staging of unmotivated scenes<lb/>
of violence. The scenes are as<lb/>
follows; The strangling (and<lb/>
consequent aal blood spewing)<lb/>
of a man with piano wire, the<lb/>
sodomizing of a bar girl, the<lb/>
trapping of a man in a huge<lb/>
clothes dryer, the shooting of a<lb/>
man in the genitals then the<lb/>
mouth; burning a man's eyes<lb/>
with acid, setting a man on fire.<lb/>
These is no excuse fa a film of<lb/>
this nature. They are violent<lb/>
epics that attempt to say that<lb/>
justice will be ours, but oontain<lb/>
realistic characters or situa-<lb/>
tions. Yeah, The Farmer gets<lb/>
even, as the poster says; but he<lb/>
gets no stars. Stay home and do<lb/>
something terrible to a small<lb/>
animal.<lb/>
WA VERLY CONSORT brings a taste of days past to ECU next Wednesday.<lb/>
REVIEW<lb/>
Continued from page 7.)<lb/>
The music on A PLACE IN<lb/>
THE SUN shows little change<lb/>
from their two previous albums.<lb/>
The LP is epitomized by bouncy<lb/>
rhythms and beautiful acoustic<lb/>
piano lines, but lacks some kind<lb/>
of stabilizing faoe to oonnect<lb/>
the many talents of the group's<lb/>
individual members. The lead<lb/>
vocals are of a "love it" a<lb/>
"hate it" variety but the<lb/>
fS7<lb/>
Be sure to listen to Music Radio 57, WECU,<lb/>
if playing the best in disco and Top 40:<lb/>
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday<lb/>
7-9a.m.<lb/>
9-11a.m.<lb/>
11-1 p.m.<lb/>
1-3p.m.<lb/>
3-5 p.m.<lb/>
5-7 p.m.<lb/>
J7-9 p.m.<lb/>
9-11 p.m.<lb/>
11-2 a.m.<lb/>
Eric SievrinJoan ShraverRenee EdwardsEllen SchraderRenee Edwards<lb/>
Jim HolletBob RossJim HolletBob RossCathy Carrol<lb/>
BarbraClapsdaleMarc RobertsBob BassJim HolletKyleCambell Cathy<lb/>
Cindy NokesChuck LeeFlash TyndallEllen SchraderFlash Tyndall<lb/>
KyleCambellTony SmithLouise RosebaoughTony SmithJeff Blurr'rg<lb/>
WECU brings you the best in Progressive Music:<lb/>
Rob MaxonJames BurkeJessica ScarangellaCathy CarrollLouise Rosenbao<lb/>
John DeaverJohn DeaverClyde TaylaFam DavisArtist Series<lb/>
Scott McKenzieCathy Carol IBarbra Clapsdale3ob Bass<lb/>
James BurkeMary Anne PlonowskiJoin DeaverMarv Anne Plonowski<lb/>
harmonies are tight and full.<lb/>
The best tunes are the catchy<lb/>
"Can't You Hear The Music"<lb/>
and the sorrowful "Atlanta<lb/>
June however, none of the<lb/>
cuts are particularly weaker a<lb/>
stronger than the others, and<lb/>
the album plays best as a unit.<lb/>
While Pablo Cruise is an<lb/>
unfamiliar name to most, maybe<lb/>
this album will widen their<lb/>
audience, and finally bring them<lb/>
the recognition they seek. So<lb/>
catch a wave, put on your<lb/>
sandals, and get ready for<lb/>
Spring with A PLACE IN THE<lb/>
SUN, and even if you don't like<lb/>
the music, the oover photos will<lb/>
surely put in the mood fa the<lb/>
warm moiths ahead.<lb/>
TRENDS<lb/>
staff<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
3 o'clock<lb/>
SrpSfS &amp;W&amp;0M<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
 Hftfl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057115_0009"/><lb/>
MHMHII<lb/>
Lady Pirates place<lb/>
third in tournament<lb/>
By KIP SLOAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Lady Pirates began their<lb/>
weekend in the NCAIAW tourn-<lb/>
ament in Raleigh against UNC-<lb/>
Greensboro, a team that had<lb/>
beaten them at home earlier this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The Thursday night game<lb/>
was a close one, with Greens-<lb/>
boro gaining a six-point lead at<lb/>
the half.<lb/>
ECU made up the deficit to<lb/>
tie the score within the last<lb/>
minute. With one second on the<lb/>
clock, Gail Kerbaugh hit a layup<lb/>
to put the Pirates ahead, 73-71.<lb/>
Kerbaugh was the high<lb/>
scorer of the game with 23<lb/>
points, followed by Debbie<lb/>
Freeman with 18. Debbie Tritt<lb/>
and Shelia Bowe each added 11<lb/>
to the score.<lb/>
The win in the first round<lb/>
added a lot of enthusiasm to the<lb/>
team, who were determined to<lb/>
give NC State a tough game.<lb/>
The second round began<lb/>
Friday night at State before a<lb/>
crowd of 2,300. ECU played<lb/>
with aggressiveness, but it was<lb/>
a poor defense against State's<lb/>
skill and depth.<lb/>
The entire State bench of<lb/>
fifteen played at one time or<lb/>
another, with four of their<lb/>
players reaching double figures.<lb/>
State led the entire game to<lb/>
pull ahead by 26 points at the<lb/>
half and 46 by the end of the<lb/>
game, beating ECU 81-35.<lb/>
Gail Kerbaugh led ECU<lb/>
scoring again with 11, followed<lb/>
by a cold-weakened Debbie<lb/>
Freeman with eight.<lb/>
There wasn't a lot said after<lb/>
the game, as the Pirates concen-<lb/>
trated on their battle for third<lb/>
against Carolina the next after-<lb/>
noon.<lb/>
For their last game of the<lb/>
year, the Pirates played espe-<lb/>
cially hard. It was the second<lb/>
time in eleven days that these<lb/>
teams had played, with their<lb/>
last match being a win at home<lb/>
for the Pirates, 68-67.<lb/>
The game progressed<lb/>
similar to their earlier meeting,<lb/>
with Carolina leading early and<lb/>
ECU taking hold the second<lb/>
half.<lb/>
At one point, the Pirates lost<lb/>
their lead to Carolina's offense.<lb/>
All but one of ECU'S bench<lb/>
scored during the game, pulling<lb/>
strong as a team to outplay and<lb/>
outshoot a hard-fighting but<lb/>
tiring Carolina defense.<lb/>
The game ended, 76-74 to<lb/>
give the Lady Pirates a third<lb/>
place title in the tournament,<lb/>
their first such honor in recent<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Debbie Freeman and Gail<lb/>
Kerbaugh each scored 16 for the<lb/>
Pirates, with Debbie Tritt and<lb/>
April Ross following with 11<lb/>
each.<lb/>
Extra flavor was added to<lb/>
the victory, since this was the<lb/>
first time since 1971 that the<lb/>
Lady Pirates had beaten Caro-<lb/>
lina twice in the same year (the<lb/>
1971 team won both the State<lb/>
and the Regional Champion-<lb/>
ship).<lb/>
It was quite an accomplish-<lb/>
ment for the Pirates to place<lb/>
third this year, in lieu of the fact<lb/>
that two high-scoring Lady<lb/>
Pirates did not play in the<lb/>
tournament because of injuries-<lb/>
Rosie Thompson and Linda<lb/>
McLlean. That the team was<lb/>
flexible enough to play so many<lb/>
different starting lineups (be-<lb/>
cause of injuries) and adjust fast<lb/>
to new positions says a lot for<lb/>
the entire team. Those that<lb/>
played this year in substitute<lb/>
rdes gained experience and<lb/>
training, and will be valuable to<lb/>
team depth next year.<lb/>
Coach Bolton looks forward<lb/>
to the next season as being a<lb/>
good one, with all present<lb/>
players returning, all injured<lb/>
players recovered, and possibly<lb/>
new material from the outside.<lb/>
Gail Kerbaugh and Debbie<lb/>
Freeman, who both made the<lb/>
All-State Basketball team selec-<lb/>
tion, will return to play both<lb/>
volleyball and basketball. The<lb/>
team ended its year in good<lb/>
spirits and also looks forward to<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
GAIL KERBAUGH14 hit the layup which beat UNC-G, 73-71, and was ECU'S high scorer<lb/>
of the game. Kerbaugh also led the Lady Pirates against State with 11, and had 16against Carolina.<lb/>
Photo by Kip Sloan<lb/>
Fourth place<lb/>
Women gymnasts lose<lb/>
North Carolina swept all four<lb/>
events to take the North Carolina<lb/>
Association of Intercollegiate<lb/>
Athletics for women (NCAIAW)<lb/>
State Gymnastics crown held at<lb/>
East Carolina Saturday.<lb/>
The Lady Tar Heels domi-<lb/>
nated the meet and finished<lb/>
with 123.2 team points. Ap-<lb/>
palachian State was second with<lb/>
102.75 team points. East<lb/>
Carolina's women placed fourth<lb/>
in the five team field with 61.90.<lb/>
North Carolina was led by<lb/>
Tia Walker and Teresa Trice.<lb/>
Walker won the all-around title<lb/>
and also the vaulting competi-<lb/>
tion, while Trice was the meet's<lb/>
only double wi .iner with firsts in<lb/>
the beam and floor exercises.<lb/>
The Tar Heels' Lynn Swisher<lb/>
completed the UNC sweep by<lb/>
winning the uneven parallel<lb/>
bars.<lb/>
Appalachian State's Nancy<lb/>
Bulloch failed to win an event,<lb/>
but did well enough in each<lb/>
event to place second in the<lb/>
overall competition, a spot she<lb/>
also occupied last year. Only<lb/>
third place Western Carolina<lb/>
was able to place a competitor in<lb/>
the top five other than UNC and<lb/>
Appalachian.<lb/>
East Carolina's best per-<lb/>
formance went to Betsy Atkins<lb/>
of High Point. Atkins finished<lb/>
eighth in the overall competition<lb/>
out of 19 competitors that<lb/>
competed in all four events.<lb/>
10 March 1977<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
Sideline Chat<lb/>
with STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Get back in Southern<lb/>
Nearly one year ago, the Board of Trustees of East Carolina<lb/>
University voted to pull the Pirate athletic teams out of the Southern<lb/>
Conference. This, at first, seemed to be the only solution to the<lb/>
problems the NCAA was beginning to pose. But, since that time,<lb/>
the NCAA has voted down legislation that would put the Southern in<lb/>
Division l-A.<lb/>
As a matter of fact, every reason the ECU administration wanted<lb/>
to leave the Southern Conference has more or less fallen through.<lb/>
The NCAA, in its January, 1976 meeting, called for the dividing<lb/>
of Division I (large four-year colleges) into two divisions, called<lb/>
Division I and l-A fa football. Upon hearing of this East Carolina<lb/>
officials started studying the feasibility of getting out of the<lb/>
Southern.<lb/>
When the ECU Board of Trustees met April 6, 1976, they voted<lb/>
to take the committee's recommendation and withdraw from the<lb/>
conference. The Board of Trustees also voted on a measure that<lb/>
would enable the administration of East Carolina to actively seek<lb/>
another, stronger conference to join.<lb/>
On April 13, 1976, FOUNTAINHEAD ran a study which said<lb/>
East Carolina was actively seeking strong independents in the South<lb/>
to pull together and form a new conference, called the Mid-South<lb/>
Conference. Other schools mentioned were South Carolina, Florida<lb/>
State, West Virginia, Virginia Tech, Georgia Tech, Richmond and<lb/>
William and Mary, who like ECU had decided to leave the "dying"<lb/>
Southern.<lb/>
After the chancellor of ECU, Dr. Leo Jenkins, had several<lb/>
meetings with top independents of the South, it became evident that<lb/>
no conference would be formed and the Pirates would have to go<lb/>
independent at the end of the 1976-77 school year.<lb/>
In June, 1976, the NCAA met and promptly voted down<lb/>
legislation which would split Division I. This left the Southern in the<lb/>
top Division.<lb/>
In the meantime, the Southern Conference fielded its strongest<lb/>
football teams ever in 1976 and the situation of the Southern looked<lb/>
better.<lb/>
The Southern Conference fielded six teams for football in 1976<lb/>
and each of these schools finished the season with a .500 record or<lb/>
better. The conference was ranked among the nation's conferences<lb/>
as the seventh best in the U.S. This put the league above peren-<lb/>
nially strong Western Athletic Conference, a league which had a<lb/>
.top ten team (Arizona State) for the past ten years. It also sur-<lb/>
passed the Metro Seven, Missouri Valley Conference, Ohio Valley<lb/>
Conference, and the Ivy League for football excellence.<lb/>
This is the strongest the league has been since West Virginia<lb/>
and Virginia Tech were members in the middle 60s.<lb/>
In basketball, the Southern had a team which made it to the final<lb/>
eight teams of the nation last year (VMI) and made it into the top 20<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
The NCAA holds the Southern in higher regard than the ACC in<lb/>
wrestling. The SC has the ten winners of its wrestling tournament<lb/>
go to the nationals as well as one wil4 card choice from the<lb/>
runner-ups. The ACC lost its wild card this -eason and has just ten<lb/>
competitors to go to the nationals.<lb/>
The Southern can hold its own with the ACC in baseball. East<lb/>
Carolina went 7-6 in the league last year, while handing ACC<lb/>
opponents sevenosses without losing one themselves.<lb/>
In track, East Carolina and William and Mary can do as well as<lb/>
any ACC team except Maryland, a school that emphasizes track to<lb/>
its fullest and does well on the national front annually.<lb/>
This writer is making a oomplete 180 degree turn from the start<lb/>
of thisschcol year. I was one of the biggest supportersof leaving the<lb/>
Southern until recently. But I have changed my mind. I have,<lb/>
through experience, seen that the Southern is not the bad league<lb/>
that I was led to believe in the beginning.<lb/>
Sure, the Southern lacks proper leadership at the top. But that<lb/>
can be changed. And in the past few years, the Southern has lost<lb/>
some of the prestige it had when West Virginia and Virginia Tech<lb/>
were members. But 1976-77 sports year in the Southern will have to<lb/>
go down into history as one of the best ever.<lb/>
The decision to go independent was solely based on football<lb/>
being relegated to Division l-A status, and even that is gone. Even<lb/>
football would have a tough time making it as an independent.<lb/>
This writer thinks it is time for the East Carolina administration<lb/>
to swallow a little pride and jump back into the Southern, belore<lb/>
independence forces the school's athletic program into oblivion.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057115_0010"/><lb/>
�HHMHHBaMBnHmMMHHHHiHHMHHHHHHHHBMHmiH<lb/>
��������DBHHH<lb/>
����i<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINKEAD 10 March 1977<lb/>
Mclntyre leads in triple jump<lb/>
It is said that a young man<lb/>
talks more and says less and<lb/>
that an older man talks less and<lb/>
says more. Herman Mclntyre<lb/>
was a young man last year as a<lb/>
freshman, but seems to have<lb/>
matured to an older man very<lb/>
quickly.<lb/>
Mclntyre has been saying<lb/>
less with his mouth this year<lb/>
and more with ability. The lithe<lb/>
sophomore from Laurinburg is<lb/>
the state's leader in the triple<lb/>
jump at East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
"Last year, all I did was talk<lb/>
when I got around the press<lb/>
about what I was going to<lb/>
jump Mclntyre said recently.<lb/>
"Then I got injured and oould<lb/>
not do what I had said. This year<lb/>
I hope to do better<lb/>
And better he has done. In<lb/>
the Pitt Invitational recently,<lb/>
Mclntyre set a track and meet<lb/>
record in the triple jump. His<lb/>
leap of 50'914" is head and<lb/>
shoulders above the rest of<lb/>
North Carolina's collegiate jum-<lb/>
pers.<lb/>
 I really felt good on the trip<lb/>
up there that Friday he<lb/>
continued. "I just felt like I<lb/>
oould do a good job. On my first<lb/>
jump I just scratched and<lb/>
jumped over 51 feet. The second<lb/>
jump was 52 feet but again I<lb/>
crossed the board. So, I had to<lb/>
make sure I made the finals with<lb/>
the third one. I took easy and<lb/>
got into the finals with 48'6<lb/>
"In my first jump in the<lb/>
finals I hit the 50'914" mark.<lb/>
My teammates said I hit the<lb/>
board early or I would have<lb/>
gotten 51 or 52 feet out of it<lb/>
The 50'9 W jump was good<lb/>
enough for Mclntyre to win the<lb/>
Most Valuable Performer in the<lb/>
field events.<lb/>
"Oh yeah, the award is<lb/>
great. But, what I want to do is<lb/>
qualify for the nationals<lb/>
Mclntyre added. "That is my<lb/>
goal, along with winning the<lb/>
Southern Conference team<lb/>
championship. The indoor<lb/>
championship has eluded us fa<lb/>
ten years now and we want it.<lb/>
We got the outdoor title last<lb/>
year and we want the indoor<lb/>
championship<lb/>
That has been Herman<lb/>
Mclntyre this season, wanting<lb/>
Take your life<lb/>
inyour<lb/>
own hands.<lb/>
Nine out of ten breast cancers are discovered<lb/>
by women themselves.<lb/>
If you're not already examining your breasts<lb/>
because you don't know how, any doctor or qualified<lb/>
nurse will be glad to help you.<lb/>
Breast self-examination is a gentle art of self-<lb/>
defense. It takes only a few minutes a month.<lb/>
It's simpler and faster than putting on your eye<lb/>
make-up. And certainly more important.<lb/>
Think about it before you turn the page.<lb/>
Nothing you can do for yourself is as easy or has<lb/>
as much effect on your future health and happiness.<lb/>
We want to cure cancer in your lifetime.<lb/>
Give to the American Cancer Society.<lb/>
American Cancer Society<lb/>
i<lb/>
SOPHOMORE HERMAN MdNTYRE now leads the state in the<lb/>
triple jump, and set records at the Pitt Invitational.<lb/>
<lb/>
Friday and Saturday Only<lb/>
Sales Final Cash<lb/>
Spring CleaningS<lb/>
A New Look For '77<lb/>
Special1? price rack of<lb/>
tennis shirts, tennis shorts,<lb/>
sweaters, warmups, tennis<lb/>
dresses S much more!<lb/>
Wilson T2000.T3000,<lb/>
T4000 metal tennis rackets<lb/>
- Vi price (already strung)<lb/>
Spalding World Open,<lb/>
La Vitesse and Paucho<lb/>
Gonzales Autograph tennis<lb/>
rackets Vt price - (already<lb/>
strung)<lb/>
Large group of athletic<lb/>
shoes 1000 pair - includes<lb/>
jogging, tennis; casual<lb/>
and baseball<lb/>
Spalding yellow tennis balls<lb/>
$250 a can as supply lasts<lb/>
free Hodges T-shirt with any purchase<lb/>
10� or more as supply lasts.<lb/>
H.L. Hodges<lb/>
210 East 9th Street Downtown Greenville<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
to do what ' i can to help the<lb/>
team. Although track is far from<lb/>
being a team sport like basket-<lb/>
ball, the better each team<lb/>
member does, the better the<lb/>
team does.<lb/>
"I think the long and triple<lb/>
jumps will definitely be a key to<lb/>
the Southern Conference title<lb/>
indoors Mclntyre offered.<lb/>
"We have three guys that can<lb/>
place high in each event and we<lb/>
will have to do our best to help<lb/>
the team win<lb/>
Being from a North Carolina<lb/>
high school, Mclntyre was not<lb/>
exposed to the triple jump until<lb/>
late in his sophomore year and<lb/>
did not start jumping much until<lb/>
his junior year at Scotland High<lb/>
School. He still finished second<lb/>
in the state meet, with ECU<lb/>
teammate George Jackson win-<lb/>
ning that year.<lb/>
During his senior year,<lb/>
Mclntyre was undefeated<lb/>
through the regular season,<lb/>
with a best jump of 49 feet.<lb/>
However, in the state meet,<lb/>
Mclntyre lost by two inches.<lb/>
Last year, Mclntyre was<lb/>
bothered by a heel bruise<lb/>
indoors and outdoors and had a<lb/>
best of 49 feet indoors and 48' 3<lb/>
outdoors. He was not able to<lb/>
oompete in the indoor champ-<lb/>
ionships but finished second in<lb/>
the outdoor meet.<lb/>
Head Coach Bill Carson is<lb/>
happy by the improvement of<lb/>
his star jumper.<lb/>
"Herman is on the edge of<lb/>
being national caliber Carson<lb/>
stated. "He may be able to<lb/>
jump 52 feet indoors and qualify<lb/>
for the nationals.<lb/>
"The main reason for his<lb/>
success this year has been that<lb/>
he has gone to work. He is one<lb/>
of the hardest workers on the<lb/>
team. His performances prove<lb/>
that<lb/>
Herman Mclntyre has in-<lb/>
deed gone to work this year.<lb/>
He's talking less but saying<lb/>
more.<lb/>
FANTASTIC!<lb/>
Sale of<lb/>
the year<lb/>
Believe it!<lb/>
it!<lb/>
NOW!<lb/>
AT<lb/>
BARRE<lb/>
LTD.<lb/>
805 DCWNSON VENUF<lb/>
GREENVILLE N.C<lb/>
?19)752 5186<lb/>
SfiSi Si :�<lb/>
<pb facs="00057115_0011"/><lb/>
�HHOHH<lb/>
�IMBV<lb/>
wtma �<lb/>
2-0 over ait<lb/>
10 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Pirates blank Virginia, 6-0<lb/>
ByJONVERNER<lb/>
Special to FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
ECU baseball coach Monte<lb/>
Little can still claim his undefea-<lb/>
ted status following Tuesday's<lb/>
6-0 win over Virginia Common-<lb/>
wealth at Harrington Field.<lb/>
Larry Daughtridge and Mic-<lb/>
key Britt combined to pitch a<lb/>
two hitter against the Rams,<lb/>
who are still winlesson the year.<lb/>
The Pirates unleashed ten hits<lb/>
on the day, including a 2-run<lb/>
homer by Billy Best. His homer<lb/>
was the first of the year fa<lb/>
ECU, and the first of his career.<lb/>
The scaing started early, as<lb/>
Best singled in the bottom of the<lb/>
first after one out. He then stole<lb/>
second, and stayed there as<lb/>
Eddie Gates drew a waik. A wild<lb/>
pitch moved Best to third. Then,<lb/>
with Sonny Wooten at the plate,<lb/>
Gates took off fa seoaid. As the<lb/>
throw from the VCU catcher<lb/>
headed fa seoaid, the Ram<lb/>
shatstop cut off the throw and<lb/>
threw to the plate too late to<lb/>
catch Best, who scaed on the<lb/>
double steal.<lb/>
In the third inning, Best was<lb/>
once again involved in the<lb/>
scaing. Pete Paradcssi led off<lb/>
the inning with a single, and<lb/>
Best followed with a drive over<lb/>
the right-center field fence to<lb/>
inaease the ECU lead to 3-0.<lb/>
The Pirates added another<lb/>
run in the fourth, as Robert<lb/>
Brinkley singled, moved to<lb/>
second on a faoeout, took third<lb/>
on a passed ball, and came<lb/>
home on Charlie Stevens' sacri-<lb/>
fice fly to right.<lb/>
A triple by Gates in the fifth,<lb/>
produced another run, as he<lb/>
scaed when a shat fly ball to<lb/>
center field and subsequent bad<lb/>
throw was mishandled by VCU.<lb/>
The Pirates added their last<lb/>
run of the day in the sixth, as<lb/>
Brinkley doubled to lead off the<lb/>
inning and scaed ai Sainy<lb/>
Wooten's RBI single.<lb/>
Daughtridge pitched the<lb/>
first five innings for ECU,<lb/>
allowing only two hits, while<lb/>
striking out five. Mickey Britt<lb/>
went the last four and did not<lb/>
allow a runner to reach base.<lb/>
The Pirates are now 2-0 on<lb/>
the year, with a busy weekend<lb/>
ahead. Old Dominion is at<lb/>
Harrington Field today, then<lb/>
Coach Little's aew takes off<lb/>
Saturday fa a doubleheader<lb/>
against N.C. State, and a<lb/>
Sunday game in Elon.<lb/>
THE BASEBALL PIRATES play ODU here today, travel to a doubleheader against State Saturday,<lb/>
and are at Elon College on Sunday. IPhot0 bY KiP Sloan<lb/>
for sale<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/>
a 758-4653.<lb/>
WANTED: To buy a used<lb/>
Yamaha guitar. Call 752-9527<lb/>
after 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1976 Mustang II<lb/>
Ghia 11,500 miles, 4 speed, V-6<lb/>
mota, AMFM stereo radio, 8<lb/>
track tape deck, silver with<lb/>
cranberry interia. First class<lb/>
autornobile. $5200.00 Call<lb/>
1-592-6893 a 752-8151.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 Fiat 124<lb/>
SpeciaJ 4 doa, straight drive.<lb/>
Real good around town trans-<lb/>
portation. $375.00. Call 1-592-<lb/>
6893 a 752-8151.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 Epiphone Acous-<lb/>
tic guitar with hard case,<lb/>
excellent cond. $100.00. Also 1<lb/>
good beginners guitar. Contact<lb/>
758-1382 a leave a message.<lb/>
Will be glad to demonstrate<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Yamaha 500,<lb/>
DOHC, low mileage, crash bar,<lb/>
sissy bar, luggage straps. Ser-<lb/>
ious inquiries only. $1100.00<lb/>
757-6352 call between 8-5 and<lb/>
ask fa Bainie.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Need a truck and a<lb/>
car? Buy this one vehicle and<lb/>
you will have both. 68 model<lb/>
Oldsmobile. Call 758-0603 $250.<lb/>
firm. Ask fa John.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dam size refrigera-<lb/>
ta. 758452.<lb/>
WANTED: Full size refrigerata<lb/>
with freezer area. 758-8452.<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/>
oonditioi, 112 years old. In-<lb/>
cludes box and accessaies $65<lb/>
a 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 cookset; Dynaco Amp.<lb/>
Contact Jim at 1305 South<lb/>
Cotanche St. upstairs. (Near<lb/>
Twin Rinks) Cone by anytime.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fender Bassman 10<lb/>
amplifier 110 watts RMS very<lb/>
little use. Good fa guitar, bass,<lb/>
electric piano. Call 758-7670<lb/>
after 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
WANTED: Keyboard player<lb/>
wanted by O's ville Rainbow<lb/>
Band with equipment &amp; vocal<lb/>
talent. 100 serious and ready<lb/>
to wak hard and maybe moiey.<lb/>
Call 758-7543 a 746-4837.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Custan 250 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 fa Steve.<lb/>
FOR SALE: One twin size<lb/>
box-springs. $20.00 Call 758-<lb/>
2808.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 71 Fiat 850 Sport<lb/>
$1350 a best offer. 752-2880.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Tennis Equipment-<lb/>
1-Wilson Aluminum racquet-T<lb/>
2000 wcover $25.00.1-Banaoft<lb/>
wood racquet wcover and<lb/>
stretch 3r $15.00 1-Double rac-<lb/>
quet .arry case red and white<lb/>
$10.00<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 Firebird, vinal<lb/>
top, AC, PS, auto, stereo. A-1<lb/>
oondition. Call 946-3691 after 6.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New Pier Simpson<lb/>
CB $40.00 758-8687.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 VW Beetle,<lb/>
very good oonditioi, must sell,<lb/>
$400.00 below book value. 752-<lb/>
0525.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Drive fa less. 66<lb/>
Beetle-good condition, radio,<lb/>
good tires, $425. Call 756-0267.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sofa &amp; Matching<lb/>
chair, good condition, both fa<lb/>
$60.00. Also, rocker fa $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/>
TYPING: 75 cents per page. Call<lb/>
Debra Parrington, 756-6031<lb/>
days, and 752-2508 nights.<lb/>
FOR SALE: BIC 960 turntable.<lb/>
Still under warranty. Call 752-<lb/>
0734.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Tennis Equipment-<lb/>
1 Wilson Aluminum racquet-T<lb/>
2000 wcover $25.00<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pair Omega floa<lb/>
model stereo speakers; 3 ft.<lb/>
oolumns; 50 watts RMS max;<lb/>
50-18,000 h2; $159.95 each new,<lb/>
will sell both fa $250. Less than<lb/>
2 weeks old. Call Allen 752-9687<lb/>
after 530.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 8-track-cassette-<lb/>
reel to reel-can completely erase<lb/>
fa rerecad fa 25 cents ea. Call<lb/>
758-8216 after 11 flO p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sanyo 8 track, AM,<lb/>
FM stereo $65. Call 758-8216<lb/>
after 11 00 p.m. 8-track-cassette<lb/>
reel to reel-can completely erase<lb/>
fa rerecad fa 25 cents ea. Call .<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/>
WANTED: Female Roommate,<lb/>
prefer older student interested<lb/>
in a calm, peaceful atmosphere.<lb/>
4 blocks from campus. $47.50<lb/>
per month plus V2 utilities.<lb/>
Available April 1. Call 752-7613<lb/>
- Home later in the evenings &amp;<lb/>
early manings - keep trying<lb/>
please.<lb/>
NEEDED: 4 female roommates-<lb/>
June 1. 758-8452.<lb/>
APARTMENT SUBLEASE: 2<lb/>
bedroom Townhouse at Oak-<lb/>
mont Squares Apartments. Rent<lb/>
$160.00 per month. 3 people<lb/>
maximum. Contact Bill 756-<lb/>
5159, a come by after 7 f)0 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 3 bedroom trailer 2<lb/>
full baths, furnished with wash-<lb/>
er &amp; dryer. $37.00 per month &amp;<lb/>
utilities. Call 756-7659.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1107 Evans St.<lb/>
34.75 &amp; utilities per month.<lb/>
Contact Beth in Flanagan 420<lb/>
during orcall 758-7675 at night.<lb/>
FOUND: Rockwell calculator in<lb/>
Austin 307, March. Call 752-<lb/>
9129.<lb/>
lost<lb/>
2<lb/>
WANTED: To sublease apt. fa<lb/>
summer. Call Rhaida 752-5268.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Large<lb/>
house, private bedroom. 752-<lb/>
2859.<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 oolaed Glaia<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057115_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 March 1977<lb/>
First loss of season for tennis<lb/>
ByANNEHOGGE<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU'S tennis team scored<lb/>
their first defeat of the season<lb/>
Tuesday with a 5-4 loss against<lb/>
High Point College.<lb/>
ECU split half of the singles<lb/>
matches with High Point. Tom<lb/>
Durfee nipped Jeff Apperson<lb/>
6-3, 0-6, 6-2; Jim Ratliff (HP)<lb/>
slipped by Phil Parrish 6-2, 6-4,<lb/>
Pirate Doug Getsinger beat Tom<lb/>
Fitzmaurice 6-4, 6-4; Mitch<lb/>
Pergerson (ECU) lost to William<lb/>
DeGrunt 6-3, 6-2; Henry Hostet-<lb/>
ler (ECU) defeated Chris Brown<lb/>
6-1, 6-2; and Kendall Hardy<lb/>
(HP) beat Kenny Love, 7-5, 2-2,<lb/>
by an injury default.<lb/>
High Point won two of the<lb/>
three doubles matches. In the<lb/>
Southern<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
athletes<lb/>
honored<lb/>
The 1976 Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence football champions of East<lb/>
Carolina University were hon-<lb/>
ored with the annual team<lb/>
letterman banquet February<lb/>
25th, highlighted with the pre-<lb/>
sentation of the school's<lb/>
awards.<lb/>
Senior Cary Godette was<lb/>
given four of nine awards and<lb/>
was named the permanent<lb/>
defensive captain for the 1976<lb/>
Pirate team. The 5-11, 235<lb/>
pound defensive end, from<lb/>
Havelock, N.C was named<lb/>
All-America by the Associated<lb/>
Press this season, as well as,<lb/>
all-Southern Conference and<lb/>
all-state.<lb/>
Awards presented to God-<lb/>
ette included: Most Valuable<lb/>
Player, Outstanding Player,<lb/>
Lansche Outstanding Senior and<lb/>
the Outstanding Defensive<lb/>
Player.<lb/>
The Swindell Memorial<lb/>
Award, for dedication and lead-<lb/>
ership, was presented to Nick<lb/>
Bullock, a senior from Durham,<lb/>
N.C. The former Southern High<lb/>
School player was a noseguard.<lb/>
Wayne Bolt, a junior from<lb/>
Augusta, Ga was awarded the<lb/>
Blocking Trophy, denoting the<lb/>
best blocker on the team. He<lb/>
was named all-Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence as an offensive guard.<lb/>
Another Havelock, N.C,<lb/>
senior, Jake Dove, was given<lb/>
theE.E. Rawl Memorial Award,<lb/>
presented fa character, scho-<lb/>
larship and athletic ability.<lb/>
Dove won all-conference honors<lb/>
as a defensive tackle.<lb/>
The Outstanding Freshman<lb/>
Award was presented to Noah<lb/>
Clark, a 6-3, 235 pound defen-<lb/>
sive lineman from Roberson-<lb/>
ville, N.C, a former Roanoke<lb/>
High School star.<lb/>
A special Coaches Award<lb/>
was given for the first time this<lb/>
year to senior center Tim<lb/>
Hightower of St. Simons Island,<lb/>
Ga. The award was one in<lb/>
nature to an unsung hero award.<lb/>
Williamston, N.Cs Mike<lb/>
Weaver, a senior quarterback,<lb/>
was named the permanent<lb/>
offensive captain for 1976.<lb/>
Pirates only win, Tom Durfee<lb/>
and Doug Getsinger c 'oated<lb/>
Jeff Apperson and William<lb/>
DeGrunt, 4-6, 7-5, 7-6. High<lb/>
Point's Phil Parrish and Tom<lb/>
Fitzmaurice beat Robert Moton<lb/>
and Henry Hostetler, 6-2, 6-4.<lb/>
In the final match, Bill Sherman<lb/>
and Tom Evans edged past<lb/>
Pirates Mitch Pergerson and<lb/>
Jim Ratliff, 6-4, 6-3.<lb/>
Pirate coach Randy Ran-<lb/>
dolph credited the loss to High<lb/>
Point's experience. "They've<lb/>
had five matches now to our<lb/>
two. They are nationally ranked<lb/>
in NAIA and are a good team<lb/>
"The turning point of the<lb/>
match was the injury default. I'll<lb/>
be glad when they come to<lb/>
Greenville later said Ran-<lb/>
dolph.<lb/>
The loss leaves the Pirates<lb/>
with a 1-1 record. They travel to<lb/>
Buie's Creek today to meet<lb/>
Campbell College.<lb/>
i�.<lb/>
 I 'WF<lb/>
I w<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ECU'S TENNIS TEAM now has a record ot<lb/>
William and Mary the 16th.<lb/>
1-1. They travel to Buie's Creik today, ana meet<lb/>
This Is a cryptogram, a form of code language.<lb/>
where letters of the alphabet stand for other<lb/>
letters of the alphabet. For instance, the words<lb/>
A CAT in a cryptogram might be Q TQL.<lb/>
the Q always standing for A, the T for C<lb/>
and the L for T Your challenge is to break the<lb/>
code of the cryptogram below, and discover its<lb/>
hidden message.<lb/>
M BSIZT<lb/>
ECIO VJWNCJOH<lb/>
MZ VWUOISZD CIRF:<lb/>
"KT RISWG LIZ LIK ZMFT<lb/>
ZJOT EIC ESCZDTC HTMCRD<lb/>
IC RILHJGTCMZJIL, ISC<lb/>
QJRZSMWH ATJLN OSRD<lb/>
HVTLZ, THVTRJMWWU<lb/>
ISC ATTCT<lb/>
Blue Ribbon<lb/>
When there's a challenge,<lb/>
quality makes the difference.<lb/>
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.<lb/>
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.<lb/>
The Pabst challenge:<lb/>
We welcome the chance to prove the quality of<lb/>
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare<lb/>
Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll<lb/>
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best<lb/>
tasting beer you can get. Since 1844 it always has.<lb/>
PABST Since 1844.The quality has always come through.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057115_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>