<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057117_0001"/>
ing the campus com-<lb/>
munity fen over 50 ya<lb/>
Will f 8,500,<lb/>
ii<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
A candidate's'forum<lb/>
will be run in Tuesdays<lb/>
edition of FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD<lb/>
Vol. 52, No. 40<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
17 March 1977<lb/>
NC prison system faces trouble<lb/>
The State Paroles Commission<lb/>
is considering 4500 inmates for<lb/>
emergency release to relieve<lb/>
overcrowding in the state prison<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Chairman Jack L. Seism said<lb/>
in an interview that probably<lb/>
fewer than 2,000 could seriously<lb/>
be considered of sufficiently low<lb/>
risk to justify their early release.<lb/>
"We're offering some ideas.<lb/>
We're not advocating anything<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
"We aren't saying, 'do this<lb/>
but if the governor feels the need<lb/>
to reduce the prison population<lb/>
significantly in the near future,<lb/>
there are wavs to do it and<lb/>
minimize the risk to the general<lb/>
public<lb/>
Seism said the broad re-<lb/>
commendations had been sent to<lb/>
Correction Secretary Amos E.<lb/>
Reed, who is considering other<lb/>
options, including housing those<lb/>
charged with minor offenses in<lb/>
county jails.<lb/>
Reed said the commission<lb/>
report is a "possible approach"<lb/>
to relieving overcrowding, one of<lb/>
a number of areas to be explored.<lb/>
Seism said the two groups<lb/>
from which inmates could be<lb/>
selected tor early release were the<lb/>
2,900 misdemeanants and the<lb/>
1,700 committed youthful of-<lb/>
fenders.<lb/>
Currently, the prison system<lb/>
has more than 14,200 inmates in<lb/>
space intended for just over<lb/>
10,000 and is 2,000 above its so<lb/>
called "emergency" housing<lb/>
figure.<lb/>
Seism estimated that if the<lb/>
administration desires to adopt<lb/>
the plan, from one-third to<lb/>
one-half of the misdemeanants<lb/>
would be eligible for early release<lb/>
and a "much smaller percentage<lb/>
of the youthful offenders<lb/>
"That's a seat of the pants<lb/>
estimate from seeing these cases<lb/>
all the time Seism said. He<lb/>
suggested that a realistic figure<lb/>
for potential consideration would<lb/>
be in the 1,300 to 1,900 range.<lb/>
Committed youthful offenders<lb/>
are inmates who were under 21 at<lb/>
the time they were convicted.<lb/>
They are required to be segre-<lb/>
gated from adult inmates, are<lb/>
given special programs, and are<lb/>
eligible for parole from their first<lb/>
day in prison.<lb/>
Excluded from consideration<lb/>
would be drunken drivers, in-<lb/>
mates with mental disorders,<lb/>
those with serious prior felonies<lb/>
and prisoners with recent major<lb/>
departmental infractions, Seism<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We take a dim view of the<lb/>
drunken driver Seism said.<lb/>
"He's a menace. The others<lb/>
would appear to be too risky to<lb/>
consider.<lb/>
If Secretary Reed and Gov.<lb/>
Hunt opt for the proposal, Seism<lb/>
said the commission's staff could<lb/>
devote full time to it for a month<lb/>
and process the approximately<lb/>
4,600 files.<lb/>
Screening at the prison unit<lb/>
and area level, as well as by the<lb/>
commission, should reduce the<lb/>
margin fo. error significantly<lb/>
despite the crash nature of such<lb/>
an effort, Seism said.<lb/>
I <lb/>
RACING THE WIND, ECU<lb/>
student David Perry breez-<lb/>
es to class in bipedal<lb/>
abandon. Seventy degree<lb/>
temperatures in Greenville<lb/>
this week bring to the<lb/>
campus that yearly tradh<lb/>
tion known as Spring Fe-<lb/>
ver Clothes are shed like<lb/>
snakes' skins as students<lb/>
begin capturing the first<lb/>
right rays of a warmer<lb/>
season. If wheels were<lb/>
wings this biker might be<lb/>
bound for the beach, at<lb/>
least in spirit. Photo by<lb/>
Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
a symbol of American pride<lb/>
Student Union plans unique festival<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
A spring festival in honor of<lb/>
the MOON PIE will be held<lb/>
during the week of April 18-23,<lb/>
according to Barry Robinson,<lb/>
ECU Student Union president.<lb/>
"The MOON PIE has long<lb/>
been a symbol of American pride.<lb/>
We've all grown to love and<lb/>
respect the MOON PIE, so we at<lb/>
the Union decided that we should<lb/>
give the MOON PIE its long<lb/>
deserved recognition said<lb/>
Robinson.<lb/>
The MOON PIE festival will<lb/>
hopefully carry over the students'<lb/>
spirits from spring break, ne<lb/>
added<lb/>
Robinson said that he wants<lb/>
everybody to oome out and have a<lb/>
good time.<lb/>
"The MOON PIE festival can<lb/>
best be described as mind-<lb/>
boggling, never to be forgotten or<lb/>
believed said Ken Hammond,<lb/>
Program Director at the Union.<lb/>
"It's going to be a week of<lb/>
insanity. We want everyone to<lb/>
hop, skip, and go wild added<lb/>
Robinson.<lb/>
A few of the events planned<lb/>
for the week are: the Schlitz<lb/>
Movie Orgy, a concert on the mall<lb/>
on Tuesday night, and a MOON<lb/>
PIE eating contest.<lb/>
"We're doing this in con-<lb/>
junction with the Chattanooga<lb/>
Bakery, the makers of MOON<lb/>
PIES said Robinson.<lb/>
Be sure to vote March 30<lb/>
Filing for SGA office ended March 16 at 5<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Presidential candidates include: Neil Ses-<lb/>
soms, Scott Bright, Tim Sullivan and Jack<lb/>
Jenkins.<lb/>
Vice-presidential candidates include: Reed<lb/>
������<lb/>
Warren,GreggBoykin and Tommy Joe Payne.<lb/>
Candidates fa secretary include: Susan<lb/>
Wurmstich, Libby Lefler, Lynne Hewett and<lb/>
Sheila Craddock.<lb/>
Craig Hales is running unopposed or the<lb/>
office of treasurer.<lb/>
������������<lb/>
Robinson added that the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union has invited approxi-<lb/>
mately 50 celebrities to the<lb/>
festival. Included in the list are:<lb/>
Johnny Carson, Barbara Walters,<lb/>
Walter Cronkite, Billy Graham,<lb/>
Pope Paul, Mr. and Mrs. Richard<lb/>
M. Nixon, Pres. and Mrs. James<lb/>
Carter, Queen Elizabeth and Bob<lb/>
Hope.<lb/>
"We don't really expect them<lb/>
to come, but their response<lb/>
letters should be interesting<lb/>
Robinson said that ECU stu-<lb/>
dents should be sure to stock up<lb/>
on RC Cola before April 18.<lb/>
"Also, everyone should get<lb/>
their gastric juices ready for<lb/>
eating MOON PIES all during<lb/>
'hat week<lb/>
<pb facs="00057117_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
� � ' �- � �� � : y'y<lb/>
Spring grads Tests<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
17 March 1977<lb/>
Bible study Essay contest<lb/>
The Memorial Baptist Church<lb/>
Dinners - 6:00 every Wednesday<lb/>
followed by prayer meeting, Bible<lb/>
study and devotion. 50 cents for<lb/>
students. 756-5314, 1510 Green-<lb/>
ville Blvd. Reservations by 10:00<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
Photo contest<lb/>
There will be a $25 prize for<lb/>
best photograph of the interior of<lb/>
W.B. Gray Gallery. Prints must<lb/>
be 8x10. Deadline May 1. Submit<lb/>
to Dr. W.B. Gray. On back of<lb/>
photo list name, address, and<lb/>
whether student or faculty.<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
The following FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD writers have checks wait-<lb/>
ing for them in the newspaper<lb/>
office: Sandra Dupree, Larry<lb/>
Saughter, Brenda Norris, Randy<lb/>
Stalls, Thomas Smith, Cecil<lb/>
Daniels.<lb/>
SCJ<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
pledges of the Society for Collegi-<lb/>
ate Journalists on Thursday at<lb/>
330 in the FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
office. Attendance is mandatory.<lb/>
If you are unable to attend phone<lb/>
757-6366 and leave a number<lb/>
where you can be reached.<lb/>
Graduation<lb/>
Applications Tor undergradu-<lb/>
ate graduation must be made no<lb/>
later than two and one-half<lb/>
quarters before the completion of<lb/>
the requirements for the degree.<lb/>
Applications for graduate<lb/>
graduation must be made no later<lb/>
than one quarter before the<lb/>
completion of the requirements<lb/>
for the degree.<lb/>
ART<lb/>
A special exhibition and sale<lb/>
of Original Oriental Art will be<lb/>
presented on Friday, March 18,<lb/>
1977 at Jenkins Building Rm.<lb/>
1106-1107 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.<lb/>
A representative will be present<lb/>
to answer questions about the<lb/>
work, artists, and the various<lb/>
graphic techniques employed.<lb/>
Prints are shown in open portfo-<lb/>
lios in an informal atmosphere<lb/>
and you are invited to browse<lb/>
through this fascinating and<lb/>
well-described collection.<lb/>
K res kin<lb/>
The amazing Kreskin will<lb/>
appear Thursday, March 31,<lb/>
1977, at 8 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Theatre. Kreskin<lb/>
is the most famed mentalist in the<lb/>
world today. Admission for ECU<lb/>
students is by I.D. and Activity<lb/>
Card. Don't miss this exciting and<lb/>
baffling performer.<lb/>
Any undergraduate student<lb/>
who has taken an English class<lb/>
since spring quarter 1976 is<lb/>
eligible to enter the second<lb/>
annual D. Paul Farr Memorial<lb/>
Undergraduate Essay Contest<lb/>
with the possibility of winning the<lb/>
$50 first prize. All essays need<lb/>
the recommendation of an in-<lb/>
structor and must be received in<lb/>
the English Office by March 21,<lb/>
1977, at 5 p.m. For full details,<lb/>
contact the English Office in<lb/>
Austin 122.<lb/>
Rifle squad<lb/>
Practice for rifle or flag squad<lb/>
will be Monday, March 21 at 5:00<lb/>
in the lobby of Fletcher Music<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
WECU<lb/>
The Artist Series this Friday<lb/>
night from 7-9:00 p.m. will<lb/>
feature the OHIO Players brought<lb/>
to you by Brian Wilson. Always<lb/>
bringing you the best - Music<lb/>
Radio 57-WECU!<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
The Student Union is now<lb/>
accepting applications for chair-<lb/>
persons for the 1977-78 academic<lb/>
year. Chairpe, sons are needed for<lb/>
the following committees:<lb/>
Popular Entertainment (con-<lb/>
certs), Films, Artist Series,<lb/>
Lecture, Coffeehouse, The Enter-<lb/>
tainer, Travel, Theater Arts, and<lb/>
Art Exhibition. Applications are<lb/>
available in the Student Union<lb/>
office at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. The deadline for filing is<lb/>
March 31st.<lb/>
Metal seminar<lb/>
Fred Woell, a nationally<lb/>
known metal craftsman, will be at<lb/>
the Jenkins Fine Arts Center<lb/>
Wednesday, March 23. He is<lb/>
being sponsored by Craftsmen<lb/>
East, an organization of the<lb/>
Design Department. Wednesday<lb/>
evening at 7:30 in the Jenkins<lb/>
auditorium, he will be giving an<lb/>
unique slide presentation featur-<lb/>
ing dual projectors and sound. He<lb/>
will conclude the evening by<lb/>
answering questions. The slide<lb/>
presentation is open to everyone<lb/>
and should prove to be very<lb/>
interesting.<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
ECU League of Scholars on<lb/>
Tuesday, March 22, at 730 p.m.<lb/>
in room 209 Austin. This is an<lb/>
important meeting, so everyone<lb/>
please try to attend!<lb/>
ATTENTION - Spring grads<lb/>
pick up cap and gown in Student<lb/>
Supply Store on 22, 23 and 24 of<lb/>
March. Announcements also<lb/>
available at $1.50 for 5.<lb/>
Conversion<lb/>
Come by your ad isor' s office<lb/>
to pick up quarter-semester con-<lb/>
version packet. Spread the word.<lb/>
Minerals<lb/>
The rescheduled meeting of<lb/>
the Eastern Carolina Mineralogi-<lb/>
cal Society will take place on<lb/>
Monday, March 21 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Graham 301.<lb/>
The program given by Bob<lb/>
Workman and Ken Gay is entitled<lb/>
"Collecting Localities, in Wake<lb/>
Country Field trip information<lb/>
on the Tar Heel Mineral Club<lb/>
show on March 25, 26, 27 and<lb/>
Crabtree Quarry on April 3 will be<lb/>
distributed. Make plans to at-<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
SGA openings<lb/>
There are legislator openings<lb/>
in Belk, Fleming, Scott and one<lb/>
Day Student opening. All those<lb/>
interested can file in the SGA<lb/>
office, Mendenhall 228. A<lb/>
screenings meeting will be Wed-<lb/>
nesday March 23rd at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Senior recital<lb/>
Sandy Miller, tepor, and<lb/>
Robert Edwards, baritone, will<lb/>
present their senior recital on<lb/>
Monday evening, March 21 at<lb/>
730 p.m. in the A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall. The program will<lb/>
consist of song selections from<lb/>
Schumann's Dichterliebe, Bra-<lb/>
hms' Die schone Magelone, De-<lb/>
bussy's Fetes Galantes, and<lb/>
Vaughan-Williams' Songs of Tra-<lb/>
vel.<lb/>
Mr. Miller and Mr. Edwards<lb/>
are students of Dr. Clyde Hiss,<lb/>
director of the ECU Opera<lb/>
Theater.<lb/>
Five nationally-standardized<lb/>
tests will be offered at ECU<lb/>
during April.<lb/>
They include the Graduate<lb/>
Record Examination (April 23),<lb/>
the ACT Assessment (April 2),<lb/>
the Dental Aptitude Test (April<lb/>
30), the Law School Admission<lb/>
Test-LSAT (April 16), and the<lb/>
Medical College Admission Test<lb/>
MCAT (April 30).<lb/>
Applications for each test<lb/>
should be completed and mailed<lb/>
to national headquarters for the<lb/>
examinations programs three to<lb/>
four weeks before the test date.<lb/>
Further information about<lb/>
the examinations and appli-<lb/>
cation materials are available<lb/>
from the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
105-106 Speight Building, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834.<lb/>
Professor Theodore Kuwa-<lb/>
na, a distinguished scholar from<lb/>
Ohio State University will pre-<lb/>
sent a seminar on "Studies of<lb/>
Electrode Surfaces Including<lb/>
ESCAAUGER Analysis" in the<lb/>
Chemistry Department, ECU, at<lb/>
2:00 p.m. , March 18, in Room<lb/>
201, Flanagan Building. The<lb/>
public is invited to attend.<lb/>
Professor Kuwana is very<lb/>
well known for his work on the<lb/>
development of spectroelectro-<lb/>
chemistry and its application to<lb/>
the study of enzymatic electron<lb/>
transport components, particu-<lb/>
larly the heme proteins of the<lb/>
mammalian respiratory system.<lb/>
He has also made important<lb/>
contributions to the understand-<lb/>
ing of electrode surface pheno-<lb/>
mena by using various electron<lb/>
spectroscopy techniques.<lb/>
Free flicks ministry<lb/>
Here it is! What you've been<lb/>
waiting for.FILM SCHEDULES!<lb/>
Yes, they're here! Everything<lb/>
you ever wanted to know about<lb/>
the film program, but were<lb/>
unable to find out. In it is listed<lb/>
all the fantastic Free Flicks as<lb/>
well as the fabulous Film<lb/>
Festivals. Don't miss your<lb/>
chance to get one.<lb/>
Freaks vs. Pigs<lb/>
There will be an Easter Seal<lb/>
Basketball Benefit between the<lb/>
ECU-SGA and the Greenville<lb/>
Police, State Highway Patrol,<lb/>
and our own Campus Police. It<lb/>
will be the "Freaks and the<lb/>
Pigs" in a shoe -out at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum Wed March 23 at 7<lb/>
p.m. ECU Junior and Senior<lb/>
Varsity cheerleaders will be<lb/>
challenging the rough and tough<lb/>
City employees. Also, for your<lb/>
enjoyment, the ECU Marching<lb/>
Percussion and Pom Pom 3irls<lb/>
will be performing between<lb/>
games. Student supporters are<lb/>
asked to attend and help Easter<lb/>
Seals and community relations.<lb/>
Tickets will be on sale at the<lb/>
door for $1.00 per person.<lb/>
There will be a training<lb/>
session on the evening of March<lb/>
17, at 730 p.m. at Greene<lb/>
County prison unit in Maury.<lb/>
For the fellow prison ministry.<lb/>
The prison ministry is for people<lb/>
of all walks of life, male or<lb/>
female, laymen or clergy, who<lb/>
want to share their Christian<lb/>
faith. Call Price Bowen at<lb/>
747-3677 or 753-5871.<lb/>
Suggestions<lb/>
Students who utilize the<lb/>
SGA buses are urged to place<lb/>
suggestions in the boxes provi-<lb/>
ded on each bus.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
t<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi National<lb/>
Honor Society and service to<lb/>
education organization will meet<lb/>
in Rm. 244 Mendenhall on<lb/>
March 17, 1977 at 7100 p.m. to<lb/>
elect officers for 1977-78 school<lb/>
year. All members are urged to<lb/>
attend and bring quarter dues of<lb/>
$2.00. Refreshments will be<lb/>
served following the meeting.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION SPECIAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE<lb/>
presents a -r-<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE TAMS<lb/>
and<lb/>
BILL DEAL AND i-<lb/>
THE RHONDELS<lb/>
�<lb/>
Papsi and<lb/>
Dew<lb/>
far � dime!<lb/>
THURSDAY, MARCH 17,1977<lb/>
8:00 P.M.<lb/>
WRIGHT AUDITORIUM<lb/>
Admission ECU Students 11.50<lb/>
Puttc 13.00<lb/>
AH tickets at tfc dm � Ml<lb/>
CO<lb/>
<pb facs="00057117_0003"/><lb/>
Carter gives support<lb/>
to decriminalization<lb/>
17 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Last Monday President Carter's ad-<lb/>
ministration asked Congress to decrimina-<lb/>
lize marijuana possession and said it was<lb/>
"carefully re-examining" its position on<lb/>
penalties for possessing cocaine.<lb/>
U.S. Commissioner of Customs Vernon<lb/>
Acree said marijuana decriminalization<lb/>
might increase the amount of the drug<lb/>
smuggles into the oountry.<lb/>
"Without the threat of criminal prose-<lb/>
cution, many who formerly feared involve-<lb/>
ment with marijuana may now become<lb/>
involved said Acree.<lb/>
Dr. Peter Bourne, who heads the Office<lb/>
of Drug Abuse Policy told the same<lb/>
committee that the administration "will<lb/>
continue to discourage marijuana use, but<lb/>
we feel criminal penalties that brand<lb/>
otherwise law-abiding people for life are<lb/>
neither an effective nor an appropriate<lb/>
deterrent<lb/>
Bourne, one of eight administration<lb/>
offidalstestifying at the first of three days<lb/>
of "information hearings" on marijuana,<lb/>
said the administration favors making<lb/>
possession of small amountsof marijuana a<lb/>
dvil penalty, much like a traffic dtation.<lb/>
"Our position is to discourage the<lb/>
abuse of all drugs, induding alcohol and<lb/>
tobacco, as a national policy Bourne<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"At the same time, we believe that the<lb/>
mechanism for discouragement should not<lb/>
be more damaging to the individual than<lb/>
the drugs themselves<lb/>
The Carter administration proposal<lb/>
would remove criminal penalties for<lb/>
possession of small amounts of marijuana<lb/>
for the owner's personal use. It would<lb/>
provide a dvil fine, which would not result<lb/>
in a criminal record.<lb/>
Under current federal law, the maxi-<lb/>
mum penalty for simple possession of<lb/>
marijuana is five years in prison and a<lb/>
$15,000 fine for the first offense and double<lb/>
that for the second offense.<lb/>
Bourne was asked by Rep. Lester<lb/>
Wolff, D-N.Y the committee's chairman,<lb/>
whether the administration oontemp! ited a<lb/>
similar stand on cocaine.<lb/>
"This is an extremely complicated<lb/>
issue and we are in the process now of very<lb/>
carefully re-examining our position on that<lb/>
issue<lb/>
Cocaine, like marijuana, is generally<lb/>
regarded as a non-addidive drug. It is<lb/>
prescribed by physicians for certain<lb/>
maladies.<lb/>
Dr. Robert L. DuPont, director of the<lb/>
National Institute on Drug Abuse, told the<lb/>
oommittee medical research has shown no<lb/>
serious dinical damage from marijuana<lb/>
use.<lb/>
The Carter administration estimates<lb/>
that as many as 35 million Americans have<lb/>
tried marijuana and as many as 11 million<lb/>
people use it on a regular or weekly basis.<lb/>
Wolff said the committee would also<lb/>
hear from law enforcement officers and<lb/>
medical specialists during the hearings.<lb/>
Offidals from Oregon and California, two<lb/>
of the six states which have . decrimina-<lb/>
lized marijuana use, also will testify.<lb/>
Wolff said the committee had no<lb/>
specific legislation before it but would<lb/>
consider "the effed on the states of any<lb/>
serious movement toward decriminaliza-<lb/>
tion by the federal government<lb/>
English prof onlMCTE<lb/>
ByARABVENABLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Keats Sparrow, an ECU English<lb/>
professor, has been appointed as a<lb/>
member of the National Council of<lb/>
Teachers of English.<lb/>
The organization consists of all types of<lb/>
English teachers, induding those of the<lb/>
elementary level through those of the<lb/>
college level. The National Office is located<lb/>
in Illinois.<lb/>
This ooundl has various committees,<lb/>
one of which is The Committee on<lb/>
Technical and Sdentific Writing.<lb/>
The committee is composed of only<lb/>
twelve members in the entire country and<lb/>
Dr. Keats Sparrow has been appointed one<lb/>
of these members by the Executive<lb/>
Committee of the National Coundl of<lb/>
Teachers of English.<lb/>
The Committee on Technical and<lb/>
Sdentific Writing helps to educate teach-<lb/>
ers on the techniques of teaching.<lb/>
This committee is espedally useful to<lb/>
new instrudors. It publishes books and<lb/>
artides, sponsors seminars, and makes<lb/>
themselves available for consulting purpo-<lb/>
ses.<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S ONLY PROFESSIONAL<lb/>
WATER SKI DEALER<lb/>
CHOOSE FROM:<lb/>
CONNELLY, JOBE, O'BRIEN, M AH ARAJ AH, E.P<lb/>
20 DISCOUNT<lb/>
OFF MANUFACTURES RETAIL PRICE!<lb/>
LARGE SELECTION OF T-SHIRTS AND WET SUITS<lb/>
COMPETITION SKIS AT SUPERMARKET PRICES<lb/>
Springtime<lb/>
Sap Rising Specials<lb/>
OBRIENV8A<lb/>
mjmjreamcomr<lb/>
bcifoniV<lb/>
Featuring Daily<lb/>
Monday Matinee<lb/>
subwich &amp; chili $1.25<lb/>
Tuesday Thriller<lb/>
Persian Delight $1.50<lb/>
Wednesday Wif esaver<lb/>
subwich &amp;<lb/>
potato salad $1.25<lb/>
Thursday Thrif ter<lb/>
subwich &amp;<lb/>
French Fries $1.25<lb/>
Friday Fantasy<lb/>
J.Quincy Beard $1.40<lb/>
Saturday Sleeper<lb/>
subwich &amp;<lb/>
dessert $1.25<lb/>
Sunday Don't Wake<lb/>
Metil Monday<lb/>
subwich &amp;<lb/>
French Fries $1.25<lb/>
Open 11:00A.M. til<lb/>
7 days a week<lb/>
752-8351<lb/>
<pb facs="00057117_0004"/><lb/>
mamm<lb/>
Etii i <lb/>
ditonals<lb/>
Page4<lb/>
17 March 1977<lb/>
Popularity contest<lb/>
The Instructional Survey Committee's computer-<lb/>
ized poll to rank this university's faculty has been<lb/>
held and the results are now public record. The<lb/>
Alumni Association was able to deliver for the first<lb/>
time in almost five years its Best Prof awards<lb/>
because of it. But has quality education at ECU been<lb/>
served by this cybernetic popularity contest?<lb/>
At preregistration last spring, students were<lb/>
asked to vote for three teachers under whom they had<lb/>
taken courses during the previous year. The faculty<lb/>
and administration voted also. These figures were<lb/>
fed into the oomputer and it regurgitated the names<lb/>
of 49 faculty members who fell "above the first<lb/>
significant deviation<lb/>
It would be pure folly for students to decide which<lb/>
classes to take on the basis of which side of the<lb/>
"deviation' a professor was placed by the<lb/>
overweight calculator in Austin Building. There is<lb/>
more to judging teaching excellence than by a 1-2-3<lb/>
rating.<lb/>
What students and those who pay for their college<lb/>
education deserve is a comprehensive survey that<lb/>
would rate professors in every course that they may<lb/>
teach and the results would be made public.<lb/>
As long as education is to be bougnt, students<lb/>
should be able to be aware of what they are getting<lb/>
for their money. A consumer's guide to education at<lb/>
ECU, updated yearly, would certainly be as<lb/>
worthwhile as the Greenville restaurant guide that<lb/>
the SGA published a oouple of years ago.<lb/>
Police get savoir f aire<lb/>
The Third Annual Halloween Riot was a little late<lb/>
in coming. It was missed during the last season of the<lb/>
jack-o-lantern. Participating merrymakers decided to<lb/>
hold off the traditional festivities until last week<lb/>
when warmer weather blessed Greenville's down-<lb/>
town.<lb/>
htenously, these impromptu gatherings of young<lb/>
people have yet to have plan or purpose. Yet,<lb/>
Greenville police on Halloween two years ago<lb/>
decided to wade like gangbusters into a similar<lb/>
group. They accomplished nothing but to antagonize<lb/>
a lot of people with teargas, arrests and injuries.<lb/>
This last "riot" was handled as all the previous<lb/>
such "riots" should have been. If the town's police<lb/>
have to justify the blocked off streets to local<lb/>
residents then let it be done. Surely they can drive<lb/>
their Coupe de Villes five extra blocks so that we<lb/>
might avoid a repeat of Halloween '75.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving ine East Carolina community tor over fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
A dvertistng ManagerDennis C. Leonard<lb/>
News EditorsKim Johnson<lb/>
Debbie Jackson<lb/>
Trends EditorPat Coyle<lb/>
Sports EditorAnne Hogge<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association<lb/>
of ECU and is distributed each Tuesday and Thursday during<lb/>
the school year, weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
DONT THOSE FOOLS KWOU HAUOWffiV<lb/>
cones onlv once r wear<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
'� '�'�  �'�������:�:������ ��"�;����:��,��:�� .� ��.�.��.�.� ��.��.  , :v:yX:Xv:xXytvXv:vH:tvv<lb/>
independence will better ECU sports<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I cannot disagree more with<lb/>
Steve Wheeler's views of re-<lb/>
entering the S.C. That'sthe worst<lb/>
possible step ECU could take.<lb/>
Not only will the press and other<lb/>
schools feast on such a move (if s<lb/>
called eating crow), it will prove<lb/>
to many that ECU is not the<lb/>
daring and innovative leader in<lb/>
athletics as everyone thought.<lb/>
ECU must crawl before be-<lb/>
Editorial on Stevens one-sided<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
This concerns the editorial<lb/>
that appeared in FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD March 15, 1977, entitled<lb/>
"Worker Dignity Denied It<lb/>
appears that you drew your<lb/>
conclusions from the 60 Minutes<lb/>
documentary which was aired on<lb/>
television March 13, 1977. If so,<lb/>
then your editorial is entirely<lb/>
one-sided.<lb/>
I am from Roanoke Rapids and<lb/>
a student here at ECU. I was<lb/>
employed at a J.P. Stevens Plant<lb/>
my last three years of high school<lb/>
and last summer. I have yet to see<lb/>
an anti-union tactic utilized by<lb/>
J.P. Stevens at this particular<lb/>
plant even though a majority of<lb/>
the company employees voted in<lb/>
1974 to be represented by the<lb/>
Textile Workers Union of Ameri-<lb/>
ca. I took part in this election and<lb/>
noticed no difference in the<lb/>
supervisor's and managerial<lb/>
heads' attitudes and behavior<lb/>
after the union's victory was<lb/>
confirmed.<lb/>
Stevens has a right to refuse<lb/>
to bargain in good faith when the<lb/>
Union has in no way offered any<lb/>
actions or ideas that were to be a<lb/>
benefit to the employees it wants<lb/>
to represent. The company is<lb/>
taking the best interest of its<lb/>
employees into consideration.<lb/>
This company offers some of<lb/>
the best programs in the area<lb/>
when it comes to job security and<lb/>
safety. They have an excellent<lb/>
insurance program. They have a<lb/>
profit sharing program so with<lb/>
the sales topping the $1 billion<lb/>
mark, the employees only stand<lb/>
to benefit. The retirement<lb/>
pension program is also in line<lb/>
with any other large corporation's<lb/>
policy. Furthermore, the oom-<lb/>
pany is always updating its safety<lb/>
precautions.<lb/>
The union's claim that<lb/>
Stevens is more interested in<lb/>
money than its employees is one<lb/>
of stupidity. I suppose the union<lb/>
is a non-profit organization that<lb/>
works for nothing presumably to<lb/>
further employees' rights. The<lb/>
union's demand for higher wages<lb/>
only steps up inflation in the<lb/>
country, and puts the employees<lb/>
in a higher tax bracket. Their<lb/>
most recent great idea was a<lb/>
nationwide boycott of Stevens'<lb/>
products. This proved to be a<lb/>
blunder, since many workers<lb/>
(pro-union and anti-union) are<lb/>
being laid off because of the drop<lb/>
in sales. It seems the only way the<lb/>
union can do any more than the<lb/>
company is already doing for its<lb/>
employees is to get lost.<lb/>
J.P. Stevens is the second<lb/>
largest textile firm in the world. If<lb/>
the company did not respect<lb/>
employee needs and give them<lb/>
proper compensation for their<lb/>
labor, how could it maintain this<lb/>
position over all its competition?<lb/>
Worker dignity cannot be denied<lb/>
or granted because a company<lb/>
will only have as much respect for<lb/>
an employee as that employee has<lb/>
for the company.<lb/>
Johnny D. Carter<lb/>
ginning to walk. Being an in-<lb/>
dependent is not easy. But it is<lb/>
the only logical step. None of the<lb/>
current or new members of the<lb/>
S.C. have the facilities or fan<lb/>
support to warrant ECU remain-<lb/>
ing in any type of association with<lb/>
them. The sooner ECU quits<lb/>
playing the VMI's, Citadel's and<lb/>
Appalachians of the world, the<lb/>
sooner the desired power, pub-<lb/>
licity and prestige will occur.<lb/>
Being independent is not im-<lb/>
possible. Former SC members<lb/>
have done it and have had<lb/>
success. West Virginia pulled out<lb/>
and has been a national football<lb/>
power in recent years. They<lb/>
greatly improved their schedules<lb/>
and revenue intake. Same for<lb/>
VPI. They have a sports schedule<lb/>
I would give my eye teeth for ECU<lb/>
to have. And now they have the<lb/>
facilities to be seriously con-<lb/>
sidered for ACC membership. If<lb/>
they had remained in the SC,<lb/>
would either school be where they<lb/>
are today? Can you imagine the<lb/>
embarrassment to ECU when our<lb/>
new stadium is completed and it<lb/>
is not even half full because of<lb/>
ASU or The Citadel being the<lb/>
competition?<lb/>
There are too many "name"<lb/>
universities in the southeast for a<lb/>
new conference not to be famed.<lb/>
It is truly inevitable. The only<lb/>
question is when. ECU can grow<lb/>
by being independent - and when<lb/>
the time is right - other schools<lb/>
will be less hesitant to join ECU in<lb/>
a new conference. First, ECU's<lb/>
schedules with new teams. Then,<lb/>
the conference we want will<lb/>
simply happen.<lb/>
As a journalist from the<lb/>
Winston-Salem Journal stated<lb/>
after ECU butchered Appalachian<lb/>
in football last fall, "The Pirates<lb/>
are mov i ng onward and upward<lb/>
Warren Everheart<lb/>
 :f�8 ' � ! i '   ?i<lb/>
� ��cvsv <lb/>
 :� .� .  � :w! �<lb/>
8&amp;iM3 Xk<lb/>
����<lb/>
<pb facs="00057117_0005"/><lb/>
niHBHBHI<lb/>
�nHVMBnMnBnnnnnHHHHHMBHfl<lb/>
���<lb/>
 ?yfr ' �s<lb/>
17 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAO Page 5<lb/>
Filipino professor visits ECU<lb/>
Jose Lapuz, professor of Inter-<lb/>
national Relations from the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Santo Domas in the<lb/>
Philippines, is visiting ECU this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Lapuz, who is a consultant on<lb/>
international affairs to his home<lb/>
government, is on a lecture tour<lb/>
of the U.S. until May when he will<lb/>
leave for England. There he will<lb/>
lecture at the London School of<lb/>
Economics.<lb/>
In an interview with FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD Tuesday, Lapuz said<lb/>
his official mission while on tour<lb/>
would be to emphasize the so<lb/>
Police spy on leftist<lb/>
NEW YORK (LNS) -Reve-<lb/>
lations in U.S. District Court<lb/>
show that the Chicago Police<lb/>
Intelligence Unit (Red Squad)<lb/>
has for more than 40 years spied<lb/>
on hundreds of organizations<lb/>
ranging from the World Council<lb/>
of Churches and the Anti-<lb/>
Defamation League of B'Nai<lb/>
B'rith of the Black Panther<lb/>
Party and anti-war organi-<lb/>
zations.<lb/>
Lawyers for the Allianoe to<lb/>
End Repression and the Ameri-<lb/>
can Civil Liberties Union dis-<lb/>
covered this "subversive file<lb/>
index" while inventorying in-<lb/>
telligence files. The files them-<lb/>
selves, ranging from 100 to 3000<lb/>
pages each, contained "intelli-<lb/>
gence" information supplied by<lb/>
paid and unpaid informants.<lb/>
The full list of Red Squad<lb/>
files dates back to the mid-1930s<lb/>
and includes nearly 1200 organ-<lb/>
izations and individuals. Police<lb/>
destroyed tons of intelligence<lb/>
files after they learned they<lb/>
were being sued in 1975.<lb/>
However, files are still kept on<lb/>
265 groups and publications.<lb/>
Disclosure of this index, an<lb/>
internal police document, also<lb/>
reveals that Chicago Police<lb/>
Superintendent James M.<lb/>
Roohford deliberately lied in<lb/>
March, 1975, when first con-<lb/>
fronted with the scandal. In a<lb/>
press release he stated, "There<lb/>
are more than 2000 community<lb/>
organizations listed in the tele-<lb/>
phone book as operating in<lb/>
ChicagoFewer than 50 of<lb/>
them warrant police attention<lb/>
because of their activities. That<lb/>
is less than 212 percent<lb/>
called "North-South dialogue<lb/>
that is the relationship between<lb/>
the industrialized and developing<lb/>
countries.<lb/>
Lapuz said he will also try to<lb/>
spotlight the issue of American<lb/>
military bases in the Philippines.<lb/>
He has spoken to members of<lb/>
Congress on this subject.<lb/>
According to Lapuz, Philip-<lb/>
pine President Ferdinand Markos<lb/>
seeks a renegotiation of the<lb/>
U.SR.P. (Republicof the Philip-<lb/>
pines) Treaty allowing the U.S. to<lb/>
maintain military bases on the<lb/>
islands. The treaty does not<lb/>
expire until 1991.<lb/>
Lapuz said his personal feel-<lb/>
ing is that the U.S. should pull out<lb/>
completely, that the Philippines<lb/>
are in greater danger of foreign<lb/>
aggression with the Americans<lb/>
there than if the island republic<lb/>
were left to defend itself.<lb/>
The visiting professor agreed<lb/>
that the declining prestige of the<lb/>
U.S. in the wake of the Vietnam<lb/>
War, and good relations between<lb/>
the Philippines and the Peoples'<lb/>
Republic of China have led him to<lb/>
believe his country would be<lb/>
better off without an American<lb/>
presence.<lb/>
Lapuz said that President<lb/>
Markos favors keeping the bases<lb/>
for the present time but that he<lb/>
wants certain changes in the<lb/>
treaty stipulations.<lb/>
These include giving the<lb/>
Philippines jurisdiction of the<lb/>
bases and thus Americans would<lb/>
be subject to local law, charging<lb/>
rent for the land on which the<lb/>
bases are built, and flying the<lb/>
Philippine flag on the base.<lb/>
The flag is symbolic, said<lb/>
Lapuz. American bases in Spain<lb/>
fly the Spanish flag, he added.<lb/>
Professor Lapuz will be lectur-<lb/>
ing to classes at the university<lb/>
this week. On Friday, he will talk<lb/>
to a Diplomatic History of Asia<lb/>
class on Philippine-U.S. relations.<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
news<lb/>
Greek News and Vews .will<lb/>
return next Thursday.<lb/>
Sorry!<lb/>
I<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
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Sunday Night<lb/>
starting at 9:00 P.M.<lb/>
as long as it lasts<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057117_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 March 1977<lb/>
Women's history collection<lb/>
now at Wyoming library<lb/>
(LNS)-The Women's History<lb/>
Library, originated in a small<lb/>
house in Berkeley, California in<lb/>
1968 by concerned individuals<lb/>
who could not wait for public and<lb/>
academic libraries to reorder their<lb/>
priorities to include women as<lb/>
part of their focus according to<lb/>
founder Laura X.<lb/>
Now, nine years later, a<lb/>
significant portion of the Library<lb/>
is available for research through<lb/>
the Archive of Contemporary<lb/>
History at the University of<lb/>
Wyoming.<lb/>
The comprehensiveness of the<lb/>
collection is not duplicated any-<lb/>
where else. Almost four thousand<lb/>
files on subjects ranging from<lb/>
Affirmative Action Programs"<lb/>
to "Women's Studies" fill the<lb/>
Library, in addition to material<lb/>
from around the world.<lb/>
After discovering in 1968 that<lb/>
International Women's Day had<lb/>
begun in the United States in<lb/>
908, Laura X and a group of<lb/>
friends compiled a pamphlet<lb/>
entitled "Women in History<lb/>
They were immediately deluged<lb/>
with donations of material from<lb/>
women, and these materials<lb/>
formed the basis of the Library.<lb/>
The files of the Topical<lb/>
Research Library contain leaflets,<lb/>
manifestos, position papers, term<lb/>
papers, theses and dissertations,<lb/>
diaries, correspondence, articles,<lb/>
newspaper clippings, serials,<lb/>
government agency and project<lb/>
reports and documents.<lb/>
Some of the subjects for which<lb/>
there are numerous files include:<lb/>
employment, legal rights, women<lb/>
in the arts, child care, women and<lb/>
the educational system, sex dis-<lb/>
crimination, women in America<lb/>
and world history, International<lb/>
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women in music, contemporary<lb/>
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and activities, and women's<lb/>
studies courses, poetry, posters<lb/>
and periodicals and magazines by<lb/>
or about women.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins<lb/>
featured on<lb/>
talk show<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Leo Jenkins<lb/>
will be featured on the WCTI-TV<lb/>
program "Take a Look" Sunday,<lb/>
March 20, at 1 p.m.<lb/>
Host Jack Six interviews Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins and his wife, Lillian, as<lb/>
well as students and faculty<lb/>
members at ECU, to reveal the<lb/>
many facets of Dr. Jenkins'<lb/>
personality. Also interviewed<lb/>
are several of Jenkins' friends<lb/>
and associates among North<lb/>
Carolina's business, industry and<lb/>
government leaders.<lb/>
Topics of interviews with Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins include his accomplish-<lb/>
ments as president and chancellor<lb/>
at ECU during the past 27 years<lb/>
and his tentative plans for<lb/>
retirement.<lb/>
"Take a Look" is a regular<lb/>
Sunday afternoon program pro-<lb/>
duced by WCTI-TV (Channel 12),<lb/>
a New Bern television station.<lb/>
BA RE FEE T AND SMILES this could be a new fad, or just another<lb/>
sign that beach days will be here soon! Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
HEREAGAIN!<lb/>
SCRAPS UNBELIEVABLE<lb/>
Backdoor Sale<lb/>
THURSDAY MARCH 17<lb/>
TODAY! 12NOONTIL<lb/>
12 MIDNIGHT<lb/>
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DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
Sculptor<lb/>
visits ECU<lb/>
Internationally known sculptor<lb/>
Beverly Pepper will visit<lb/>
ECU on March 29, where<lb/>
she will present an illustrated<lb/>
lecture at 8 p.m. in the Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center Theatre.<lb/>
The public is invited to attend,<lb/>
free of charge.<lb/>
Ms. Pepper will speak on<lb/>
contemporary issues in modern<lb/>
sculpture, and will show color<lb/>
slides of her work, most of which<lb/>
is large and designed for perma-<lb/>
nent outdoor display.<lb/>
Her ECU appearance will<lb/>
follow similar presentations at<lb/>
Harvard University and the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Georgia, and the formal<lb/>
opening of a Seattle Museum<lb/>
show of her work earlier this<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Beverly Pepper's sculpture is<lb/>
characterized by its large tri-<lb/>
angular and pyramidal forms, and<lb/>
is part of permanent collections in<lb/>
Florence, Stockholm, Sydney and<lb/>
Vienna, as well as many U.S.<lb/>
cities.<lb/>
RAZZ JAZZ<lb/>
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COTANCHE ST. ACROSS FROM CLEMENT DORM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057117_0007"/><lb/>
National Urban League:<lb/>
17 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAP Page 7<lb/>
ii<lb/>
?<lb/>
Unemployment favors blacks<lb/>
(LNS)Actual black job-<lb/>
lessness has remained at the<lb/>
depression-level of one out of<lb/>
every four workers according<lb/>
to a report issued recently by<lb/>
the National Urban League<lb/>
(NUL). The "State of Black<lb/>
America" report concluded that<lb/>
unemployment is the single<lb/>
greatest concern among black<lb/>
people in the country. Eighty-<lb/>
five percent of local affiliates<lb/>
polled in the NUL listed jobless-<lb/>
ness as the major issue.<lb/>
The National Urban League<lb/>
says that, taking into consider-<lb/>
ation the methods that govern-<lb/>
ment sources use to hide large<lb/>
numbers of unemployed, the<lb/>
number of unemployed Blacks is<lb/>
nearly three million.<lb/>
"But the most alarming<lb/>
joblessness rates of all in 1976<lb/>
were those of Black teenagers<lb/>
Officially, two out of every five<lb/>
teenagers who actively sought<lb/>
work were unemployed. Mccoru-<lb/>
ing to the NUL Hidden Unem-<lb/>
ployment Index, dose to 60<lb/>
percent of all Black teenagers<lb/>
who wanted jobs in 1976 could<lb/>
not work. Thus, the jobless<lb/>
picture for Black teenagers was<lb/>
just as bleak throughout 1976 as<lb/>
it was during the peak of the<lb/>
recession in 1975 the report<lb/>
says.<lb/>
The study also revealed that<lb/>
the rate of unemployment for<lb/>
Black male heads of households<lb/>
jumped during 1976 to 6.5<lb/>
percent as compared with 4.3<lb/>
percent during the previous<lb/>
year. It was even more difficult<lb/>
for Black women whose incomes<lb/>
provide the sole financial sup-<lb/>
port for their families. They<lb/>
were unemployed at a rate of 13<lb/>
percent last year.<lb/>
"Since about one-third of<lb/>
Black families are headed by<lb/>
women the report says, "it is<lb/>
clear that millions of Black<lb/>
children are being reared in<lb/>
families with unemployed<lb/>
heads. In fact, today about<lb/>
one-third of all Black children<lb/>
under 18 are in families in which<lb/>
the male or female heads are<lb/>
unemployed<lb/>
"Since being laid off is a<lb/>
primary condition fa unemploy-<lb/>
ment insurance (Ul) benefits,<lb/>
about half of the official 1.5<lb/>
million jobless Blacks were<lb/>
categorically ineligible because<lb/>
they were entering the labor<lb/>
force for the first time (e.g.<lb/>
students), reentering the labor<lb/>
force (especially women), or had<lb/>
quit their last job<lb/>
The Urban League also<lb/>
noted an increase to 54 percent<lb/>
of the proportion of Black<lb/>
families living below the $9,588<lb/>
income level. This level is<lb/>
estimated by the Labor Depart-<lb/>
ment as necessary to maintain a<lb/>
 lower' standard of living for a<lb/>
family of four.<lb/>
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ELECTRONIC SUPERMARKET<lb/>
ON HEMALL DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE 752-3608<lb/>
A Division Of Harmony House South<lb/>
<pb facs="00057117_0008"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
'America's Secret Places'<lb/>
Film features unusual sights<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
17 March 1977<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
byPATCOYLE<lb/>
Luck of the Irish<lb/>
In this age of identity search, of pride in our past, n "Roots I<lb/>
have no problems with my ancestral heritage. Fa as rig as I can<lb/>
remember, my proud parents have drilled into me the fac that I am an<lb/>
Irishman (Inshperson?). And so it is, on March 17, that my thoughts<lb/>
are very much on my Gaelic background.<lb/>
Now. almost everyone has some vague, extremely stereotyped<lb/>
conception of what Irish people are like. They picture us to be<lb/>
rosy-cheeked, red-headed, sturdy folk. It is also generally assumed<lb/>
that the Irish are beer drinking, music singing, high-spirited types.<lb/>
Most of the preceding ideas tend to apply, at least to this Irish<lb/>
reporter. I'm fair of face(they used to say I had the map of Ireland all<lb/>
over my face, not to mention roadmaps in my eyes). I don't happen to<lb/>
have red hair, but with the help of God and Lady Clairol, that is also a<lb/>
possibility. I'm definitely what you might call sturdy, especially in the<lb/>
posterior. And my friends (all two of them) will gladly attest to my<lb/>
enjoyment of bcozino. singing, and other fine forms of revelry.<lb/>
THERE'SMORETOIT<lb/>
These characteristics barely scratch the complex surface of the Irish<lb/>
personality. For example, the Irish are a truly poetic people. Oh sure,<lb/>
other ethnic groups are known for their sensitivity. The French are<lb/>
lovers, the British have mastered xhe fine art of propriety, and the<lb/>
Italianswell, the Italians are experts on pasta.<lb/>
But it's the Irish who are the true poets. Irish men, in particular,<lb/>
have mastered the art of painting pretty, if totally false pictures<lb/>
through the spoken word. They can, as the saying goes, talk their way<lb/>
out of any oorner. If you don't believe me, just look at some famous<lb/>
Irish talkers, such aswell, uh Timmy Sullivan.<lb/>
TRUE OF TEMPER<lb/>
Another Irish characteristic, and one which most of us don't exactly<lb/>
enjoy admitting to, is our temper. I'm sure that somewhere on earth<lb/>
there exists one being with strong Irish blood who doesn't exhibit his<lb/>
background through a flaring temper. I'm not that being, and there are<lb/>
none like that in my immediate family.<lb/>
A true Irishman feels passionately about just about everything,<lb/>
from religious persecution to the price of beer at the local saloon, and<lb/>
he'll usually fight for his beliefs<lb/>
This ability to get angry manifests itself in a variety of ways. Some<lb/>
Irish people I know go the whole route when they're mad. Their faces<lb/>
redden, their voices get progressively louder, and, if sufficiently<lb/>
provoked, they will resort to violence.<lb/>
This isn't true for all of us, primarily because some of us are<lb/>
chicken. For us, anger usually shows more in what we don't say than in<lb/>
what we do. Too, facial expressions can turn from angelic sweetness to<lb/>
a look that would scare a Muslim terrorist out of his mind. Our hands<lb/>
gesture violently, not so much out of violence as out of frustration with<lb/>
poor, thick-headed people who find it so difficult to see things our way.<lb/>
Regardless of how we get angry, the Irish almost always forgive<lb/>
and forget easily, assuming the attitude that today's battle partner will<lb/>
be tomorrow's drinking buddy<lb/>
WHEN IRISH CY�S ARE SMILING<lb/>
This willingness to let bygones be bygones is, to me, one of the<lb/>
nicest facets of my Gaelic heritage. You see, temper or no temper, we<lb/>
Irish people are terribly romantic, and incredibly sentimental, which is<lb/>
probably the main reason the Hallmark Card Co. can make so much<lb/>
money on the sale of St. Patrick's Day favors.<lb/>
We celebrate St. Patrick's Day because it gives us an ironclad<lb/>
excuse to drink beer, and sing songs, and fight, and make up. And<lb/>
we're generous with our holiday. So, when you're preparing to go<lb/>
downtown tonight, wear something green, and plan on buying a round<lb/>
for your friends. True Irishmen will be able to tell if you are one of the<lb/>
clan or not, but they won't care, AS LONG as you agree with<lb/>
everything they say and remember the words to "My Wild Irish<lb/>
Rose<lb/>
Trends meeting<lb/>
Tuesday 3:00<lb/>
James Metcalf will appear at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center on<lb/>
Monday, March 21, to present his<lb/>
travelogue, "America's Secret<lb/>
Places The film, sponsored by<lb/>
the ECU Student Union Travel<lb/>
Committee, will begin at 8:00<lb/>
P.M.<lb/>
"America's Secret Places" is<lb/>
a film about the hidden and<lb/>
sometimes isolated places in the<lb/>
U.S. In his travelogue, Metcalf<lb/>
covers scenic attractions which<lb/>
many tourists do not frequent. He<lb/>
takes the audience from the<lb/>
nesting alligators in the Okefe-<lb/>
nokee National Wildlife Refuge to<lb/>
the Fort Jefferson National<lb/>
Monument and a tour of a World<lb/>
War I air museum.<lb/>
Metcalf s photography is<lb/>
vividly detailed and intriguing as<lb/>
he goes from Death Valley,<lb/>
America's lowest, hottest and<lb/>
driest point, to the Redwood<lb/>
National Park, home of the<lb/>
"World's Tallest Living Thing<lb/>
James Metcalf, a native of<lb/>
Michigan, is one of the most<lb/>
respected personalities in the film<lb/>
lecture industry. He was edu-<lb/>
cated to be a chemist yet earned<lb/>
his way through school in the field<lb/>
of photography. The latter turned<lb/>
out to be his life's work when,<lb/>
shortly after leaving school, he<lb/>
won a scholarship to the Pro-<lb/>
fessional School of Photography<lb/>
at Winona, Indiana.<lb/>
Metcalf has produced a series<lb/>
of lecture films on various<lb/>
countries of the Western Hemi-<lb/>
sphere. He has recently produced<lb/>
educational films for Walt Disney<lb/>
Educational Films, the General<lb/>
Electric Company and Pan Amer-<lb/>
ican World Airways.<lb/>
Tickets for "America's Secret<lb/>
Places" are $1.00 fa the public<lb/>
and may be purchased from the<lb/>
ECU Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. ECU<lb/>
students are admitted with their<lb/>
ID and Activity Card and ECU<lb/>
faculty and staff with their<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Membership Card. For additional<lb/>
information, call 757-6611.<lb/>
JAMES METCALF<lb/>
Pink Floyd returns slowly<lb/>
from creative slump period<lb/>
By MARK LOCK WOOD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Pink Floyd, seemingly from<lb/>
time immemorial, have been<lb/>
synonomous with the word<lb/>
"experimental They were<lb/>
pioneers in the art of improvis-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
When other groups were<lb/>
sticking to basics, Pink Floyd,<lb/>
under the direction of "Mad<lb/>
cap" Syd Barrett and company<lb/>
were reaching out to parts<lb/>
unknown, disdaining the com-<lb/>
mercial for the innovative.<lb/>
When Barrett left early in<lb/>
the group's flowering begin-<lb/>
nings, he was replaced by David<lb/>
Gilmour, who fit in well with the<lb/>
worldly atmosphere the group<lb/>
generated, and subsequent al-<lb/>
bums reflected a musicianship<lb/>
and depth far beyond the<lb/>
supeniciality or many "Top 40<lb/>
groups of the sixties and<lb/>
seventies.<lb/>
It was only with "Dark Side<lb/>
of the Moon" that Pink Floyd<lb/>
gained the notoriety they de-<lb/>
served, partially due to the<lb/>
production wizardry of Alan<lb/>
Parsons, a jack of all trades and<lb/>
great innovator himself, having<lb/>
worked with such far-ranging<lb/>
talents as The Hollies and John<lb/>
Miles.<lb/>
It is only recently that Pink<lb/>
Floyd has disappointed, and this<lb/>
seems partially due to the<lb/>
influence of over influence as<lb/>
one might say of David Gilmour.<lb/>
In their last album "Wish<lb/>
You Were Here" (apparently a<lb/>
referenoe to Syd Barrett) Gil-<lb/>
mour went beyond the limits of<lb/>
his talent with aimless meander-<lb/>
ings and undesirable vocals<lb/>
which made the album by far,<lb/>
Pink Floyd's most disappoint-<lb/>
ing. Another pitfall in the album<lb/>
was a lack of the acoustic work<lb/>
which had so distinguished such<lb/>
albums as "Atom Heart<lb/>
Mother" and "Meddle two of<lb/>
Pink Floyd's most musically<lb/>
successful albums.<lb/>
Thus we come to the point of<lb/>
no return with Pink Floyd's new<lb/>
album entitled "Animals<lb/>
which begins amazingly enough<lb/>
with an acoustic number en-<lb/>
titled "Pigs in the "Wing<lb/>
Immediately one retains a hope<lb/>
that perhaps Pink Floyd has<lb/>
returned to bigger and better<lb/>
things.<lb/>
Unfortunately, however, the<lb/>
number is all too brief, and you<lb/>
are blasted back into reality by<lb/>
what can only be termed<lb/>
another Gilmour dominated<lb/>
tune, entitled "Dogs Grant-<lb/>
ed, Gilmour is improving. Al-<lb/>
though it does surpass "Wish<lb/>
You Were Here" material, one<lb/>
still notes occasional meander-<lb/>
ings on the part of Gilmour.<lb/>
Fortunately, Roger Waters<lb/>
writes his always impeccable<lb/>
lyrics and the song comes out<lb/>
more or less on the plus side.<lb/>
"Pink Man" beginning side<lb/>
two, is more enjoyable, with<lb/>
more vocal emphasis and the<lb/>
more subdued guitar which is<lb/>
actually Gilmour's asset.<lb/>
Waters' vocals excel in this<lb/>
number, which most definitely<lb/>
has impact.<lb/>
Again, the lyrics are except-<lb/>
ional. This number brings back<lb/>
more pleasant memories of the<lb/>
group that Pink Floyd can truly<lb/>
be more subtle, yet powerful.<lb/>
The next song, entitled<lb/>
"Sheep" begins pleasantly<lb/>
enough, with some mellow<lb/>
electric piano and the familiar<lb/>
bass lines of Roger Waters. A<lb/>
rather dynamic piece, it has<lb/>
many of the more palatable<lb/>
qualities of "The Dark Side of<lb/>
the Moon" album, although it<lb/>
still retains some of the spectre<lb/>
of mediocrity found in the<lb/>
"Wish You Were Here" album.<lb/>
However, there does seem to<lb/>
be more depth to the instru-<lb/>
mentation, despite Gilmour's<lb/>
evident 'overzeal<lb/>
" Pigs On the Wing (Part 2)"<lb/>
again returns us to acoustical<lb/>
hopefulness only to have it<lb/>
dashed again in an all too brief<lb/>
farewell.<lb/>
Pink Floyd has improved<lb/>
over previous "pitfalls but not<lb/>
to a truly satisfactory level that<lb/>
can bring the true cult followers<lb/>
back. It is most unfortunate that<lb/>
"Animals" does not reach the<lb/>
heights of early material, but<lb/>
the trend toward "Wish You<lb/>
Were Here" mediocrity does<lb/>
appear to be gradually revers-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057117_0009"/><lb/>
�MnBHMBI<lb/>
ViViViV<lb/>
To entertain March 31<lb/>
17 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
ECU will soon experience Kreskinization<lb/>
Modern science has given the<lb/>
world sanforized and energized,<lb/>
people have been organized and<lb/>
televised, and products have been<lb/>
advertised, but the world has not<lb/>
really experienced anything until<lb/>
it has been "KRESKINIZED<lb/>
"Kreskinized" means to dram-<lb/>
atically introduce an idea into<lb/>
someone's thought pattern by<lb/>
natural and scientific means but<lb/>
in a manner that is dramatic and<lb/>
amazing.<lb/>
ECU will be "Kreskinized" at<lb/>
800 P.M Tuesday, Marcb 31,<lb/>
when the internationally famed<lb/>
mentalist, THE AMAZING<lb/>
KRESKIN, appears in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center Theatre.<lb/>
Kreskin was born George<lb/>
Kresge in Caldwell, New Jersey.<lb/>
At the age of eight he began<lb/>
"fooling around" with magic. By<lb/>
age nine he was performing in a<lb/>
series of half-hour shows as a<lb/>
traveling magician. It was during<lb/>
high school that he decided on the<lb/>
name, Kreskin, a combination of<lb/>
his own name and the names of<lb/>
two of his favorite performers.<lb/>
Harry Keller and Houdini. Kres-<lb/>
kin is now his stage as well as<lb/>
legal name.<lb/>
Aside from more .than 200<lb/>
appearances on the "Mike Doug-<lb/>
las" and "Tonight" shows, Kres-<lb/>
kin has worked with dentists and<lb/>
physicians and acts as a consul-<lb/>
tant to a clinical psychologist. He<lb/>
has been called on to work with<lb/>
witnesses to crimes where a case<lb/>
might hinge on unearthing fagot -<lb/>
en details from someone's sub-<lb/>
xxiscious.<lb/>
Kreskin will baffle the ima-<lb/>
gination of even the most harde-<lb/>
ned skeptic with his abilities as a<lb/>
mentalist. He is able to memorize<lb/>
a shuffled deck of cards in<lb/>
thirty-eight seconds, and reads at<lb/>
the rate of 7090 words per<lb/>
minute.<lb/>
It has been said that THE<lb/>
AMAZING KRESKIN isa phon<lb/>
However, Kreskin has made<lb/>
some challenges which have, so<lb/>
far, silenced his most ardent<lb/>
aitics. Kreskin offers the sum of<lb/>
$20,000 to anyone who can prove<lb/>
his employment of confederates<lb/>
or secret assistance in any phase<lb/>
of his program.<lb/>
Kreskin'smind reading ability<lb/>
even extends to finding the<lb/>
previously hidden payment of his<lb/>
own appearance. If he is unable to<lb/>
find his check, hidden anywhere<lb/>
in the threatre, the fee for his<lb/>
performance is forfeited.<lb/>
The appearance of THE<lb/>
AMAZING KRESKIN is sponsor-<lb/>
ed by the ECU Student Union<lb/>
Lecture Committee. Tickets for<lb/>
the program are priced at $3.00<lb/>
and may be purchased from the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center. Admission<lb/>
for ECU students is with I.D. and<lb/>
Activity Cards. ECU faculty and<lb/>
staff are admitted with their MSC<lb/>
Membership Card. Fa additional<lb/>
infamation call<lb/>
266.<lb/>
757-6611, ext.<lb/>
THE AMAZING KRESKIN will mystify ECU on March 31.<lb/>
Skateboards make 70s comeback<lb/>
ByKIMGARFIELD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The skateboard hasn't yet<lb/>
threatened to replace the bicycle,<lb/>
but it is estimated that 30 million<lb/>
of them will be sold this year in<lb/>
the U.S. and Canada.<lb/>
The skateboard aaze began in<lb/>
California in the sixties but<lb/>
gradually died because the first<lb/>
wheels were made of breakable<lb/>
clay and were, consequently,<lb/>
considered dangerous.<lb/>
Today's more sophisticated<lb/>
models come in a variety of<lb/>
materials, including wood, plas-<lb/>
tic, fiberglass and aluminum.<lb/>
They have wheels that can be<lb/>
compared to the radial tire, fa<lb/>
they have more grip than their<lb/>
predecessas and are able to<lb/>
change shape to conform to<lb/>
different surfaces.<lb/>
Prices also vary, from the<lb/>
inexpensive $10 models that can<lb/>
be found in most department<lb/>
staes to $100 versions, which are<lb/>
more likely available in specialty<lb/>
a seating goods establishments.<lb/>
Newcomers to skateboarding<lb/>
may be dazzled and a bit oonf used<lb/>
by the vast array of different<lb/>
skateboard tops, trucks and<lb/>
wheels that are advertised in the<lb/>
skateboarding and surfing maga-<lb/>
zines and displayed in the shops.<lb/>
The best way to find the right<lb/>
equipment is to start by looking<lb/>
at boards that are simple, reliable<lb/>
and as inexpensive as possible.<lb/>
"The Anybody's Skateboard<lb/>
Book recently published by Ten<lb/>
Speed Press of Berkeley, Califa-<lb/>
nia, devotes an entire section to<lb/>
the fledgling skateboarder who<lb/>
may be too shat ai experienoe<lb/>
(and cash) to take on the hotshot<lb/>
skateboards and the more dan-<lb/>
gerous skating spats. There are<lb/>
also chapters on choosing a<lb/>
making a simple skateboard to<lb/>
start out with, using the board<lb/>
pleasurably and safely, right from<lb/>
the start, and handling the first<lb/>
unhappy landing.<lb/>
Fa the mae advanced skate-<lb/>
boarder, autha Tan Cuthbertsai<lb/>
delved into the techniques and<lb/>
equipment of each of the mae<lb/>
aavanced schools of skateboard-<lb/>
ing: downhill riding, flatland<lb/>
freestyle tricks, and radical riding<lb/>
on weird terrain.<lb/>
201 E. 5th ST.<lb/>
We are having a<lb/>
special<lb/>
Sale on selected<lb/>
pieces of<lb/>
Silver Jewelery<lb/>
� 50 off.<lb/>
Appearing For One Night<lb/>
Only<lb/>
Amherst Recording Artist<lb/>
RafWtf<lb/>
st<lb/>
109 E. Fifth St.<lb/>
AN INVITATION TO A PARTY<lb/>
ANNOUNCING OUR 15th ANNUAL<lb/>
ST. PATRICK'SDAY CELEBRATION<lb/>
TONIGHT THURSDAY MARCH 17th<lb/>
reduoed prices 8-10<lb/>
big surprise at 10:30<lb/>
COME DOWN AND JOIN THE FUN<lb/>
HAVE A HAPPY ST. PADDY'S DAY<lb/>
WE OPEN MON. - SAT. AT 3 SUN. AT 5<lb/>
BatMcGrath<lb/>
At Rory Theatre on March 20<lb/>
2 Shows �7:00 a.m.<lb/>
9:00 p.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057117_0010"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
17 March 1977<lb/>
Bowling tourney results<lb/>
Sometimes for the sake ot space pieces of copy end up on the<lb/>
floor rather than in the paper - bowling results have too often been<lb/>
the victim of this. So without further ado let me square you into<lb/>
what happened in the men's and women's bowling tournaments<lb/>
that were recently completed.<lb/>
I n the men's league the title was won by the Scott Studs and the<lb/>
women's title was won by the Miller Killers.<lb/>
The Studs easily outrolled Belk's Deacons. 1987-1816, for the<lb/>
men's championship. Sandy Lamm, with 541, and Doug Boyette,<lb/>
with 531, rolled the high series fa the Studs, who also got a 493<lb/>
series from Mike Sidelinger. Larry Lamm bowled a 420 series. The<lb/>
Deacons' top bowler was Ricky Meadows with a 511 series. Other<lb/>
scores were Bill Rhyne with 484, Gary Benton with 427 and Doug<lb/>
Hankins with 394.<lb/>
In the women's championship the Miller Killers topped White<lb/>
Lightning 1563-1485. Jeannie Williams led the Miller Killers with a<lb/>
high game of 196 and a 516 series. In addition to winning regular<lb/>
season trophies for high average and high series, Williams was the<lb/>
high bowler in the championships. Jean Byrd led White Lightning<lb/>
with 411 pins.<lb/>
The President Cup Standings leaders were also left out of last<lb/>
week's articles by the scissors.<lb/>
In three divisions the race is pretty one-sided, but in the<lb/>
Fraternity Division the top four teams are within 98 points of one<lb/>
another. That lead is held by Tau Kappa Epsilon with 854 points.<lb/>
Kappa Alpha is second at 848 and Pi Kappa Phi stands third with<lb/>
777. The Kappa Sigs are fourth with 756 points, 21 behind the Pi<lb/>
Kapps.<lb/>
Scott leads the Dormitory Division with 897 points and Aycock is<lb/>
second with 745 points, while Umstead is third with 576 points and<lb/>
Belk is fourth, with 560 points.Phi Epsilon Kappa widened its lead<lb/>
over the Rugby Club in the dub division and the Follies are heavy<lb/>
leaders in the Independent Division.<lb/>
Three sports remain in Spring Quarter point standings. They are<lb/>
Golf. Softball and Wrestling.<lb/>
Wrestling championships begin this Monday with 121<lb/>
competitors in nine classes. The favored team is the Has Beens,<lb/>
which is made up of fovner ECU varsity a high school wrestlers,<lb/>
Scott Dorm is rated second in the team race.<lb/>
Men's and women's softball both start on March 16 with 82<lb/>
men's teams and 42 women's teams signed up to compete. The<lb/>
largest groups are the Dormitory leagues. Men's games will be<lb/>
played at the Allied Health and women's games on the softball<lb/>
fields on College Hill Drive.<lb/>
Registration begins March 16 for Men's Badminton, on March<lb/>
16 for Women's Badminton, runs through March 17 for Co-Rec<lb/>
Volleyball and on March 21 for men's tennis singles and doubles<lb/>
and horseshoes singles and doubles.<lb/>
Pirates blitz<lb/>
Campbell, 9-0<lb/>
By JEFF BROOKS<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
The Pi rates out lasted a persis-<lb/>
tent Campbell College challenge<lb/>
to take a 9-0 win last Thursday at<lb/>
Buie's Creek.<lb/>
Commenting after the match,<lb/>
freshman coach Randy Randolph<lb/>
admitted that "we hadn't expec-<lb/>
ted to do so well. We were very<lb/>
fortunate to win so well every-<lb/>
one just working really hard<lb/>
This was the young Pirates<lb/>
second win of the season, against<lb/>
a single loss. The 16th and 17th<lb/>
found the Pirates on the road<lb/>
against William and Mary and<lb/>
Old Dominion respectively. Re-<lb/>
sults of the Campbell match<lb/>
follow:<lb/>
Tom Durfee (ECU) over Rick<lb/>
Herrins (CC) 6-3, 6-7, 6-2; Jim<lb/>
Ratliffe (ECU) over Keigh Cole-<lb/>
man (CC) 6-2, 1-6, 6-4; Doug<lb/>
Gettsinger (ECU) over Dave<lb/>
Fitzpatrick (CC) 6-1, 2-6, 6-3;<lb/>
Mitch Perguson (ECU) over John<lb/>
Millet (CC) 7-5, 7-5; Henry<lb/>
Hostettler (ECU) over Charles<lb/>
Frederick (CC) 6-0, 6-2; Kenny<lb/>
Love (ECU) over Vie Ramsey (CC)<lb/>
6-3, 6-7, 6-1; Doubles Results:<lb/>
Durfee, Gettsinger (ECU) over<lb/>
Herrins, Coleman (CC) 6-3, 6-4;<lb/>
Hostettler, Love (ECU) over<lb/>
Fitzpatrick, Miller (CC) 6-1, 6-4;<lb/>
Ratliffe, Perguson (ECU) over<lb/>
Ramsey, Jim Hance(CC) 7-5, 6-2.<lb/>
Pirate sluggers go<lb/>
2-2 in busy week<lb/>
By DAVID ROBE Y<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The first part of this week was<lb/>
a busy one for ECU'S baseball<lb/>
team as they took on four<lb/>
opponents in three days. Begin-<lb/>
ning this past Saturday the<lb/>
Pirates traveled to Raleigh to<lb/>
clash with the Wolfpack in a<lb/>
double-header.<lb/>
The Pirates took advantage of<lb/>
NCSU's eight errors to win the<lb/>
first game, 7-3. Three of those<lb/>
seven runs were earned while<lb/>
four runs were due to Wolfpack<lb/>
errors.<lb/>
All runs by ECU were scored<lb/>
in the first five innings. Sonny<lb/>
Wooten had two RBI s during the<lb/>
game. Mickey Britt pitched all<lb/>
seven innings, pitching the first<lb/>
complete game of this year.<lb/>
During the second game ot the<lb/>
double-header, ECU committed<lb/>
four errors and NCSU wor, 1.0.<lb/>
One ECU error led to the<lb/>
Wdfpack's only score in the<lb/>
third.<lb/>
Larry Daughtridge and Keith<lb/>
Kurdewan combined to pitch in<lb/>
the loss to the Pack.<lb/>
ECU then took on Elon<lb/>
Sunday, winning 16-8.<lb/>
Eton's coaches wanted to call<lb/>
�off the game due to Saturday's<lb/>
heavy rain, but the field was<lb/>
worked on until it was playable. A<lb/>
strong left field wind produced<lb/>
five homeruns during the game.<lb/>
Five runs were scored by ECU<lb/>
in the first inning. Three were<lb/>
brought in by Eddie Gates as he<lb/>
knocked a homer. ECU held a<lb/>
shut out until the seventh, when<lb/>
Elon picked up four runs. Four of<lb/>
Elon's players scored in the<lb/>
bottom of the seventh.<lb/>
The Pirates scored five in the<lb/>
eighth and three in the ninth.<lb/>
Raymie Styons knocked in the<lb/>
second homerun fa the team.<lb/>
Keith Kurdewan picked up the<lb/>
win in relief, pitching the last two<lb/>
and two-thirds innings. Kurde-<lb/>
wan allowed no base hits.<lb/>
East Conn. State College<lb/>
handed the Pirates a loss Mon-<lb/>
day, edging them 7-3. ECSC<lb/>
picked up five runs in the second<lb/>
and two singles in the fifth and<lb/>
seventh, respectively. The Pirates<lb/>
scored all three of their runs in<lb/>
the seventh.<lb/>
Pete Conaty and Rusty Nelson<lb/>
pitched, with Conaty taking the<lb/>
loss. Hisreoad is now 1-1.<lb/>
The Pirates will see more<lb/>
adioi this Saturday when they<lb/>
play NCSU in a double header<lb/>
here at 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Webornoptimistic<lb/>
3 grapplers attend nationals<lb/>
East Carolina will be send-<lb/>
ing only three wrestlers to the<lb/>
NCAA Championships in Na-<lb/>
man, Oklahona this week, as<lb/>
opposed to six the previous two<lb/>
years. But aocading to Pirate<lb/>
mentor John Welborn, the<lb/>
Pirates stand a good chance to<lb/>
finish higher when the final<lb/>
scae rolls around.<lb/>
"We have just three going<lb/>
this year Welborn said. "But<lb/>
two of these guys have national<lb/>
tournament experience and<lb/>
could very well place<lb/>
Phil Mueller and Paul Os-<lb/>
man went to the nationals last<lb/>
year and each won a couple of<lb/>
matches befae losing out.<lb/>
"I really believe Phil and<lb/>
Paul have excellent chances to<lb/>
place and possibly win at the<lb/>
nationals Welban said. "Our<lb/>
other part id pant, Frank Scha-<lb/>
ede, is a freshman, and even<lb/>
though he will gain a tremen-<lb/>
dous amount of experience<lb/>
against this caliber of competi-<lb/>
tion, I do not exped him to<lb/>
place<lb/>
Mueller is a senia fran<lb/>
Eden, N.C and will be wrest-<lb/>
ling in the 167-pound weight<lb/>
dass. Osman, a junia fran<lb/>
McLean, Va will be vying fa<lb/>
the title at 126, while Schaede, a<lb/>
native of Fairfax, Va will be<lb/>
going in the 150-pound dass.<lb/>
Mueller has a reoad of 28-1<lb/>
fa the year, with the oily loss<lb/>
ooming in the finals of the<lb/>
prestigious Wilkes Open tour-<lb/>
nament. He has a team-leading<lb/>
11 pins on the year, three<lb/>
ooming in the Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence Championships, where he<lb/>
garnered the outstanding wrest-<lb/>
ler honas.<lb/>
Osman has a 24-3-1 reoad<lb/>
ai the seasai. He has not lost in<lb/>
his last 24 matches, with the<lb/>
only blemish being a draw with<lb/>
1976 nationals place winner Bob<lb/>
Sloand of Lehigh.<lb/>
Schaede came on late in the<lb/>
season and has a reoad of 18-7.<lb/>
Weigh-ins are scheduled fa<lb/>
5.00 p.m. Wednesday in the<lb/>
Lloyd Noble Center on the<lb/>
campus of the University d<lb/>
Oklahoma and first-round and<lb/>
second-round matches will take<lb/>
place on Thursday. Quarterfinal<lb/>
and semifinal adion will be on<lb/>
Friday, with the championships<lb/>
to be Saturday at 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
PAUL OSMAN top is expected to do well this<lb/>
week in the NCAA championships. He has not<lb/>
lost in his last 24 matches.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057117_0011"/><lb/>
aglagg m<lb/>
IBe����.�y . '<lb/>
17 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
d<lb/>
Dn<lb/>
is<lb/>
FOR SALE: 12" X 60" trailer,<lb/>
unfurnished- 2 air oond. gas<lb/>
heat, double sinks in bathroom,<lb/>
plus washer &amp; dryer. 2 bed-<lb/>
room, call 752-9432 ask Mr.<lb/>
Henderson after 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Realistic car-tape<lb/>
player 8 mo. old. $20 00<lb/>
752-7852.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Garrard 42M auto<lb/>
matic turntable. Like new $55.<lb/>
Call 758-9216.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Blank-Capital 80<lb/>
minute 8 track tapes. Brand<lb/>
New. $1.50 each. Call 758-9638<lb/>
or 758-4653.<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/>
motor, AMFM stereo radio, 8<lb/>
track tape deck, silver with<lb/>
cranberry interior. First class<lb/>
automobile. $5200.00 Call<lb/>
1-592-6893 or 752-8151.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 Fiat 124<lb/>
Special 4 door, straight drive.<lb/>
Real good around town trans-<lb/>
portation. $375.00. Call 1-592-<lb/>
6893 or 752-8151.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 Epiphone Acous-<lb/>
tic guitar with hard case,<lb/>
excellent oond. $100.00. Also 1<lb/>
good beginners guitar. Contact<lb/>
758-1382 or leave a message.<lb/>
Will be glad to demonstrate<lb/>
FOR SALE: 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 for Bonnie.<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 for John.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 Mazda pickup.<lb/>
B 1600 pistoned engine, camper<lb/>
top, good oondition. Must see to<lb/>
appreciate 756-0267.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AR Turntable good<lb/>
condition, 1V2 years old. In-<lb/>
cludes box and accessories $65<lb/>
or best offer. 752-1654.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Datsun 240Z<lb/>
Red automatic $3800.00. Must<lb/>
sell. Call 758-4262.<lb/>
WANTED: Keyboard player<lb/>
wanted by O's vide Rainbow<lb/>
Band with equipment &amp; vocal<lb/>
talent. 100 serious and ready<lb/>
to work hard and maybe money.<lb/>
Call 758-7543 a 746-4837.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Custom 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/>
TYPING SERVICE: Reasonable<lb/>
rates. 756-1921.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fender Bassman iu<lb/>
amplifier 110 watts RMS very<lb/>
little use. Good for guitar, bass,<lb/>
electric piano. Call 758-7670<lb/>
after 6XX) p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 Firebird, vinyl<lb/>
top, AC, PS, auto, stereo. A-1<lb/>
condition. Call 946-3691 after 6.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 71 Fiat 850 Sport<lb/>
$1350 or best offer. 752-2880.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Old and new Lp's.<lb/>
Fleetwood Mac's and Marshall<lb/>
Tucker's new one $3.00. Played<lb/>
once for recording. More. Call<lb/>
758-7669.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1969 AMU Station<lb/>
Wagon, power steering, auto-<lb/>
matic transmission, radio. Must<lb/>
sell. Asking $450. 752-9243<lb/>
Mike.<lb/>
EUROPE : No-frills student-<lb/>
teacher charter flights Global<lb/>
Travel. 521 Fifth Ave. New York<lb/>
N.Y. 10017(212)379-3532.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Tennis Equipment-<lb/>
1 Wilson Aluminum raoquet-T<lb/>
2000 wcover $25.00<lb/>
FOR SALE: New Pier Simpson<lb/>
CB $40.00 7566687.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pair Omega floor<lb/>
model stereo speakers; 3 ft.<lb/>
columns; 50 watts RMS max;<lb/>
50-18,000 h2; $159.95 each new,<lb/>
will sell both for $250. Less than<lb/>
2weeksold. Call Allen 752-9887<lb/>
after 530.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dorm size refrigera-<lb/>
tor. 7566452.<lb/>
WANTED: Full size refrigerator<lb/>
with freezer area. 7566452.<lb/>
PARTTIME JOB: Earn $250-<lb/>
$500 stuffing 1000 envelopes:<lb/>
homework-sparetime. Details:<lb/>
$1, Self-addressed, stamped<lb/>
envelope (C.R. Kester, 400<lb/>
Marsh Rd Charlotte, N.C<lb/>
28209).<lb/>
FOR SALE: '69 VW bus, fair<lb/>
condition for $1100. Call 758-0250<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Jeunet 10 speed<lb/>
bicyde. 26" frame, 27" wheels.<lb/>
New. Call 758-7571 after 4:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Roth Stradivarius<lb/>
moden 34-size violin. Excellent<lb/>
condition. Contact Brooks at<lb/>
752-2983.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 Toyota Corona<lb/>
Mark II Sta. Wagon, air, auto-<lb/>
matic, good condition. $400 below<lb/>
retail. $1095. Call 756-7059 after-<lb/>
noons and evenings.<lb/>
FOR SALE: BIC 960 turntable.<lb/>
Still under warranty. Call 752-<lb/>
0734.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Call 752-<lb/>
8837 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
TYPI NG: 75 cents per page. CalI<lb/>
Debra Parrington, 756-6031<lb/>
days, and 752-2508 nights.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 VW Beetle,<lb/>
very good condition, must sell,<lb/>
$400.00 below book value. 752-<lb/>
0525.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Silver rings, phone<lb/>
Roxanne at 752-8694. Or phone<lb/>
Crafts Center in Mendenhall and<lb/>
leave messaqe.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sofa &amp; Matching<lb/>
chair, good condition, both for<lb/>
$60.00. Also, rocker for $15.00.<lb/>
Call 752-8011.<lb/>
FOR SALE: A bicyde "under<lb/>
$50" Jeremy Schwartz 758-<lb/>
7691.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 8-track-cassette-<lb/>
reel to reel-can completely erase<lb/>
for rerecord for 25 centsea. Call<lb/>
758-8216 after 11 XX) p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sanyo 8 track, AM,<lb/>
FM stereo $65. Call 758-8216<lb/>
after 11 XX) p.m. 8-t rack-cassette<lb/>
reel to reel-can completely erase<lb/>
for rerecord for 25 cents ea.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4.2 cu. ft. white<lb/>
refrigerator. In excellent condi-<lb/>
tion - great freezer. Best offer.<lb/>
Call 758-9950.<lb/>
Used refrigerator for sale<lb/>
758-9807.<lb/>
WANTED: Used refrigerator and<lb/>
stove (cheap). Need immediately.<lb/>
757-6462 between 8 a.m. and 5<lb/>
p.m. Ask for Mel.<lb/>
NEEP AVON? Call 7586705.<lb/>
v - ,<lb/>
for rent<lb/>
mii<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: 3 bed-<lb/>
room trailer, 2 full bathes,<lb/>
furnished with washerdryer.<lb/>
$37.00 per month &amp; utilities.<lb/>
756-7659.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Mobile home 10 X<lb/>
55, carpeted &amp; A.C washer<lb/>
induded-$120.00 No pets. Call<lb/>
758-3748 after 6XX) p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1107 Evans St.<lb/>
34.75 &amp; utilities per month.<lb/>
Contact Beth in Flanagan 420<lb/>
during a call 758-7675 at niaht.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted,<lb/>
spring andor summer. Com-<lb/>
fortable and dose to campus. Call<lb/>
758-7713.<lb/>
NEEDED: Male roommate to<lb/>
share two bedroom apt. at<lb/>
East brook for the summer. Pay<lb/>
half rent and utilities. Call<lb/>
758-7486.<lb/>
NEEDED: Roommate for Green-<lb/>
way apts. 2 br. - $88 per mo.<lb/>
Contat Joe Grimes Apt. 20 after 4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
NEEDED desperately: The help<lb/>
of anyone presently renting a 2 or<lb/>
3 bedroom house, but who will<lb/>
vacate in May or June. Prefer<lb/>
rent to be about $100. Please call<lb/>
Pam at 752-6856 or 756-5190.<lb/>
Thanks.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Large<lb/>
house, private bedroom. 752-<lb/>
2859.<lb/>
ROOM MAZE 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 Vi utilities.<lb/>
Available April 1. Call 752-7613<lb/>
- Home later in the evenings &amp;<lb/>
early mornings - 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, or oome by after 7 XX) 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/>
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 ocdored Gloria<lb/>
Vanderbilt glasses-l have a navy<lb/>
hooded sweatshirt that's too<lb/>
big-PL�AS� oontad Janet Pope<lb/>
423 Tyler-758-9670. $10.00<lb/>
REWARD.<lb/>
MISSING: Black &amp; white<lb/>
shaggy sheepdog puppy-Female<lb/>
red collar. Missing in Lawson's<lb/>
Trailer Park area. 756-3898 or<lb/>
752-1907 (work).<lb/>
LOST: Ladies gold watch, non-<lb/>
stretch band with guard chain.<lb/>
$5.00 reward. Contact Becky<lb/>
Thompson, 134 Slay Hall. Lost<lb/>
March 11. 758-8588.<lb/>
LOST: 7 mo. old puppy, looks<lb/>
similar to a collie, 5th St. area.<lb/>
Call 752-1669.<lb/>
LOST glasses, brown case. $10<lb/>
reward. 7586895 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
Austin - Bid.<lb/>
LOST: Set of keys on a leather<lb/>
strap somewhere on campus.<lb/>
758-7713.<lb/>
FOUND: Rockwell calculator in<lb/>
Austin 307, March. Call 752-<lb/>
9129.<lb/>
FOUND: 1 lady s ring-iinquire<lb/>
at Austin 134.<lb/>
j personal�<lb/>
FREE Wholesale Jewelry Cat-<lb/>
alog! Exdusive Designers' col-<lb/>
lection! Bargains galore! Box<lb/>
1824, Cleveland, Ohio 44106.<lb/>
BELLY DANCE LESSONS:<lb/>
Announdng the beginning of<lb/>
spring dasses. Spedal rates due<lb/>
to spring festival! Get ready fa<lb/>
summer NOW-the feminine way<lb/>
Call Sunshine aftar 5XX) p.m.<lb/>
752-5214.<lb/>
NEEDED: To hire a babysitter<lb/>
from 630 to 93) p.m. Tues.<lb/>
night. If anyone is interested,<lb/>
call 752-5880. Ask fa Linda.<lb/>
PARTTIME JOB: $2,000.00<lb/>
MONTHLY! SPARETIME! Un-<lb/>
believably, excitingly easy!<lb/>
Send self-addressed and stamp-<lb/>
ed envelope to Box 1824,<lb/>
Cleveland, Ohio 44106.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Become a<lb/>
college campus dealer. Sell<lb/>
brand name stereo components<lb/>
at lowest prices. High profits;<lb/>
NO INVESTMENT REQUIRED.<lb/>
Fa details, contad; FAD Con-<lb/>
poients, Inc. 20 Passaic Ave<lb/>
Fairfield, New Jersey 07006<lb/>
llene Orlowsky 201-227-6864<lb/>
Call Colled.<lb/>
LEARN TO BOOGIE; The<lb/>
bump, the hustle and much<lb/>
much more! The best way to<lb/>
exadse AND sodalize! ONLY<lb/>
$10month! Classes beginning<lb/>
in April. Call Sunshine NOW fa<lb/>
your enrollment! 752-5214 (after<lb/>
5XX)pm)<lb/>
ARABIC DANCE: 'Authentic<lb/>
belly dancing" Donna Whitley<lb/>
752-0928. Expaienced pafa-<lb/>
mer and teacher in Casablanca,<lb/>
Maccco, and Califania. A fun<lb/>
and creative way to keep in<lb/>
shape!<lb/>
RIDERS NEEDED South fa<lb/>
Easta vacation. My destination<lb/>
Jacksonville Fla. via Hwy. 17 and<lb/>
I-95 thru Myrtle Beach, Charles-<lb/>
ton, Savannah, Brunswick, etc.<lb/>
Fa more info call 758-9950.<lb/>
Can't Get<lb/>
Rid Of<lb/>
Those<lb/>
Tradeable<lb/>
Treasures<lb/>
<pb facs="00057117_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 March 1977<lb/>
Pirates host invitational<lb/>
East Carolina's track team will<lb/>
host the second annual ECU<lb/>
Invitational Track &amp; Field meet<lb/>
Saturday at Bunting Track on the<lb/>
ECU campus.<lb/>
"We have several national<lb/>
place winners from the recent<lb/>
NCAA Indoor Championships<lb/>
Bill Carson, coach of the East<lb/>
Carolina team, said. "We could<lb/>
have several outdoor national<lb/>
qualifying times at this meet<lb/>
Participating teams include:<lb/>
East Carolina, North Carolina,<lb/>
North Carolina Central, Seton<lb/>
Hall, Howard, Virginia State,<lb/>
Delaware State and Norfolk State.<lb/>
Also, this year the Lady Pirates<lb/>
will host several teams in con-<lb/>
junction with the ECU Invitation-<lb/>
al. St. Augustine, North Carolina,<lb/>
North Carolina State, Howard and<lb/>
North Carolina A &amp; Twill provide<lb/>
opposition for the Lady Pirates in<lb/>
the meet Two high feature events<lb/>
will also be run, the 100 yard dash<lb/>
and the triple jump.<lb/>
In the men's events, the 100,<lb/>
220 and 440 yard dashes should<lb/>
provide much excitement, as<lb/>
many of the nation's top stars will<lb/>
be running.<lb/>
Calvin Dill of Seton Hall will<lb/>
be the favorite in the 100 yard<lb/>
dash, having turned in a time of<lb/>
9.2 fa the event. East Carolina's<lb/>
Carter Suggs should provide Dill<lb/>
with good competition, as he has<lb/>
been tinned at 9.3 several times.<lb/>
Michael Keyes of Norfolk State<lb/>
has also had a 9.3 to his aedit.<lb/>
Dill is also favaed in the 220,<lb/>
having turned in a 20.5, while<lb/>
Suggs has a 20.6 as his top time.<lb/>
Ed Brown, also of Seton Hall, the<lb/>
Pirates' Calvin Alstoi and Ho-<lb/>
ward's Reggie Sojourner have<lb/>
turned in performances of 20.8<lb/>
and should make it a race to the<lb/>
finish.<lb/>
The 440 could turn several<lb/>
national qualifying times, with<lb/>
several national place winners<lb/>
among the participants. NCAA<lb/>
Division II national champ James<lb/>
Bryant of Delaware State has<lb/>
turned in a time of 46.8, while<lb/>
ArmyNavy Store<lb/>
1501 Fvans<lb/>
12 p.m530 p.m.<lb/>
Back packs, Field. Flight,<lb/>
Bomber, &amp; Snorkel Jackets,<lb/>
Jeans<lb/>
tWJHlW<lb/>
liood Things<lb/>
For Gentle People<lb/>
318 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
752-3815<lb/>
Thur Spike<lb/>
Fri.&amp;Sat<lb/>
Sutter'sGold<lb/>
Track and field<lb/>
teammate Gerald Tullisand Seton<lb/>
Hall's Jim Lewis have 47's to<lb/>
their aedit. Sojourner and Nor-<lb/>
folk State's duo of Sandy Law-<lb/>
rence and David Owens have run<lb/>
47.5, while Carolina's Sam Brown<lb/>
and ECU's Charlie Moss have hit<lb/>
48.0.<lb/>
The 120 high hurdles oould<lb/>
send as many as five oompetitas<lb/>
to the nationals, as the standard<lb/>
fa qualifying is 13.9. Four run-<lb/>
ners have turned in times of<lb/>
better than that already and a<lb/>
fifth is expected to this week.<lb/>
Seton Hall's trio of Joe Myatt,<lb/>
Larry Bunting and Reggie Black-<lb/>
shear lead the way, the first two<lb/>
having turned in times of 13.6,<lb/>
while Blackshear has a 13.7 to his<lb/>
aedit. Defending champ Marvin<lb/>
Rankinsof East Carolina has been<lb/>
13.9, while Geage Smith has<lb/>
been 14.1.<lb/>
vhile Mason of Virginia State<lb/>
and Seton Hall's Tim Soloman<lb/>
lead the way in the 880 with<lb/>
1 50's to their aedit. A pair of<lb/>
Carolina's runners, Don Locker-<lb/>
bie and William Southerland have<lb/>
been 1:53 and should challenge.<lb/>
The relays may show the<lb/>
relative strengths of the compe-<lb/>
ting teams. Seton Hall and East<lb/>
Carolina are expected to qualify<lb/>
fa the nationals in the 440 relay,<lb/>
as both have turned in better than<lb/>
national qualifying time of 40.9.<lb/>
Seton Hall has been 40.5 while<lb/>
the Pirates have been 40.6.<lb/>
Howard has been the distance in<lb/>
14.1, while Norfolk State (41.2)<lb/>
and Virginia State (41.4) are not<lb/>
far behind.<lb/>
Seton Hall, Howard and Dela-<lb/>
ware State are the favaites in the<lb/>
mile relay, with times of 3:12.0,<lb/>
3:12.5, and 3:13, respectively.<lb/>
Trials will begin at 11 00 a.m.<lb/>
and the meet will run all day with<lb/>
the mile relay being the final<lb/>
event at 4:45 p.m.<lb/>
CARTER SUGGSleft will meet Calvin Dill of Seton Hall in the 100<lb/>
yard dash. Dill is favored in the event. Photo by Kip Sloan)<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
Cinema 1<lb/>
PITT-PLAZA CENTER � 756-0088<lb/>
STARTS FRIDAY<lb/>
MARCH 18th<lb/>
From Ralph Bakshi,<lb/>
master of animation, comes an<lb/>
epic fantasy in wondrous color.<lb/>
A vision of the world, 10 million years<lb/>
in the future, where Wizards rule the<lb/>
earth. And the powers of magic prevail<lb/>
over the forces of technology in the<lb/>
final battle for world supremacy.<lb/>
An epic fantasy<lb/>
of peace and magic<lb/>
� ALL <lb/>
� SEATS �<lb/>
MS<lb/>
9m 3:30 P.M. Ji<lb/>
S<lb/>
�sm<lb/>
C 1977 Twentieth Century-Fox<lb/>
mc<lb/>
Color by De Luxe<lb/>
� imiim mi �t Miim � m tnwan<lb/>
20TH CENTURY FOX PRESENTS<lb/>
A RALPH BAKSHI FILM<lb/>
WIZARDS<lb/>
SHOWS DAILY<lb/>
3:15-5:10<lb/>
7:05-9:00<lb/>
<pb facs="00057117_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>