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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057118_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
Aith a circulation of 8,500.<lb/>
this issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
SGA forumpgs. 8 &amp; 9<lb/>
Nieman honoredpg. 13<lb/>
Hereticpg. 12<lb/>
Vol. 52, No. 4<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
22 March 1977<lb/>
A first for ECU<lb/>
Sullivan seeks re-election<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
For the first time known in<lb/>
ECU'S history, a Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association (SGA) president<lb/>
is running fa a second term.<lb/>
According to Rudolph Alex-<lb/>
ander, Associate Dean of Student<lb/>
Affairs, this is the first time that<lb/>
this has occurred.<lb/>
"I don't recall a president<lb/>
ever being a junior before<lb/>
Alexander said.<lb/>
"To the best of my know-<lb/>
ledge, Tim Sullivan is the first<lb/>
SGA president to be eligible for a<lb/>
second term<lb/>
Section 1-A of Article IV of the<lb/>
SGA Constitution states: The<lb/>
President shall be elected by the<lb/>
qualified voters of the student<lb/>
body for a term not to exceed one<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Section 1-A does not state if a<lb/>
president can run fa a second<lb/>
term, nor does it state that a<lb/>
president cannot run fa a secaid<lb/>
term.<lb/>
According to Sullivan, there is<lb/>
only one interpretation of Section<lb/>
1-A.<lb/>
Sullivan said Section 1-A<lb/>
means that if a president takes<lb/>
office March 20, fa example, his<lb/>
term should end March 20 the<lb/>
following year.<lb/>
Sullivan said he took office<lb/>
last April 12, and the next SGA<lb/>
president will take office April<lb/>
4; therefae, the term will be a<lb/>
little less than a year, which is<lb/>
legitimate.<lb/>
Sullivan said he did not<lb/>
consider the questioning of Sec-<lb/>
tion 1-A newswathy.<lb/>
"I don't think it's newswa-<lb/>
thy. What s news is what I'm<lb/>
going to do<lb/>
SGA Attaney General Karen<lb/>
E. Harloe said, "This prevents<lb/>
someone from being elected at<lb/>
one time of voting fa a two year<lb/>
term<lb/>
In response to a query from<lb/>
Elections Chairperson Frank<lb/>
Saubers, Harloe stated: The<lb/>
phrase "term not to exceed one<lb/>
year simply means that at the<lb/>
time of an election, an executive<lb/>
officer must be voted in fa a ate<lb/>
year term. This does not mean<lb/>
that any incumbent SGA Execu-<lb/>
tive Officer cannot run fa a<lb/>
successive term if he has the<lb/>
proper qualifications. They can;<lb/>
however, they must annually go<lb/>
through namal election proce-<lb/>
dures.<lb/>
US foreign policy expert,<lb/>
advisor to speak at ECU<lb/>
Harlan Cleveland, famer ad-<lb/>
visa to Presidents Kennedy and<lb/>
Johnson and noted expert on U.S.<lb/>
faeign policy, will speak at ECU<lb/>
Friday, March 25.<lb/>
Cleveland will discuss recent<lb/>
faeign policy issues at 5:15 p.m.<lb/>
in the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre. The program is free and<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
During the weekend, Cleve-<lb/>
land will be a featured guest at<lb/>
the intercollegiate Model United<lb/>
Nations Security Council to be<lb/>
hosted by ECU. Student dele-<lb/>
gates from 20 campuses in the<lb/>
eastern U.S. are expected to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Since 1974 Cleveland has been<lb/>
directa of Princeton University's<lb/>
Aspen Program in International<lb/>
Affairs, the latest in a series of<lb/>
careers which have included<lb/>
public executive, diplomat, edu-<lb/>
cata and autha.<lb/>
Cleveland's graduate studies<lb/>
as a Rhodes Scholar at Oxfad<lb/>
University were interrupted by<lb/>
Wald War II. During the war<lb/>
years he waked with New Deal<lb/>
proqrams, beginning as an intern<lb/>
in tneotfioe of Sen. Robert M. La<lb/>
Follette Jr. and later assuming<lb/>
positions in the U.S. Dept. of<lb/>
Agriculture and several wartime<lb/>
econonic agencies.<lb/>
iSee ExPtRl, pg. 5J<lb/>
CONSTRUCTION CREWS ARE hurriedly trying to complete trie<lb/>
renovation of the ECU snack shop and book store, (see stay, pg. 5)<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Elections committee sets<lb/>
guidelines for candidates<lb/>
tu HiNbbUN ihl mall, such dt tnm (xh: have temporarily<lb/>
ed due to unexpected and unwanted Spring chills.<lb/>
 Photo by i - izwa<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Assistant NewsEdita<lb/>
Elections Committee Chair-<lb/>
persais Frank Saubers and Phil<lb/>
Barbee discussed the general<lb/>
election rules with Student<lb/>
Government Association (SGA)<lb/>
candidates in a mandatay candi-<lb/>
date meeting last Wednesday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
AM candidates shall turn in an<lb/>
itemized expense account which<lb/>
will include receipts from sellers.<lb/>
The accounts shall be turned in by<lb/>
March 28 at 5 p.m. and a<lb/>
candidate must turn in an ex-<lb/>
pense account whether a not he<lb/>
has any expense.<lb/>
Any candidate who does not<lb/>
submit an expense account wi 11 be<lb/>
disqualified.<lb/>
Candidates fa SGA president<lb/>
are allowed to spend up to $125<lb/>
on their campaigns and other<lb/>
executive offices are allowed up<lb/>
to $100. This is $25 mae than<lb/>
candidates were allowed to spend<lb/>
in last year's Spring election.<lb/>
Any campaign literature shall<lb/>
not be permitted within 25 feet of<lb/>
any polling place during the hours<lb/>
that the polls are open<lb/>
Banners, any items such as<lb/>
flags, handbills, etc. which are<lb/>
mae than 20 inches in any<lb/>
dimension are to be displayed<lb/>
only on the mall, on the conaete<lb/>
staircase leading to Jones Dam,<lb/>
the wooded area at the bottom of<lb/>
College Hill Drive between 10th<lb/>
St. and Greene Hill Run, and on remain open until 7 p.m. There<lb/>
will be two poll-tenders at each<lb/>
precinct.<lb/>
All polls may be observed by<lb/>
representatives of candidates so<lb/>
long as they do na interfere in<lb/>
the election process.<lb/>
Any student who is unable to<lb/>
vote at a polling place fa any of<lb/>
the following reasons shall be<lb/>
allowed to vote by an absentee<lb/>
ballot:<lb/>
A. An infirmary excuse.<lb/>
B. Absence from ECU fa<lb/>
official business<lb/>
C. Student teaching<lb/>
D. Any other excuse approved<lb/>
by the Elections Chairpersons.<lb/>
In ader to receive an ab-<lb/>
sentee ballot, a written request<lb/>
must be made to the Elections<lb/>
Chairpersons at least 72 hours<lb/>
befae the polls open.<lb/>
No one is allowed in the room<lb/>
where the votes are being count-<lb/>
ed except the Elections Commit-<lb/>
tee, representatives from WECU<lb/>
Radio Station and TV and<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, one represen-<lb/>
tative of each candidate and<lb/>
anyone else deemed necessary by<lb/>
the brick wall behind the Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center.<lb/>
Banners may be attached only<lb/>
by string, rope a tape.<lb/>
Handbills may be displayed<lb/>
anywhere oi campus provided<lb/>
they are not:<lb/>
A. Nailed, tacked a stapled to<lb/>
any tree, shrub a any wooden<lb/>
surface on campus such as<lb/>
bulletin board frames, doas, etc.<lb/>
B. Placed on a in any car on<lb/>
campus a ai any street border-<lb/>
ing campus without the owner's<lb/>
permission.<lb/>
C. Taped to any painted a<lb/>
glass surface a ai any building<lb/>
oi campus. (Varnish and shellac<lb/>
are considered paint.)<lb/>
D. Displayed or attached<lb/>
anywhere on a in campus buses,<lb/>
a ai any bus schedule.<lb/>
Saubers stressed to warn<lb/>
campaign wakers against de-<lb/>
stroying campaign literature of<lb/>
other candidates. I f a campaign<lb/>
waker is found guilty of the act,<lb/>
the candidate will be disqualified.<lb/>
Elections will be held from 9<lb/>
a.m. to 5 p.m. March 30, with<lb/>
three precincts remaining open<lb/>
until 7 p.m.<lb/>
The preancts are as follows:<lb/>
all damitaies, Allied Health,<lb/>
Minges, the Purple, Gold and<lb/>
Brown Routes, and the Student<lb/>
Supply Stae, the Croatan, and<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The Student Supply Stae,<lb/>
Croatan and Mendenhall will<lb/>
the Elections Chairpersons.<lb/>
����������������<lb/>
VOTE<lb/>
MARCH<lb/>
30!<lb/>
�������������<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0002"/><lb/>
I U�MEIW.ifrfBBii!l<lb/>
Camping<lb/>
Visual arts Suggestions<lb/>
22 March 1977<lb/>
Senior shows Seminar<lb/>
All persons who are putting<lb/>
up their senior show this quarter<lb/>
and would like to have their<lb/>
poster run in FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD May do so free of charge.<lb/>
The copy deadlines are Friday<lb/>
5:00 p.m. for the Tuesday paper<lb/>
and Tuesday 500 p.m. for the<lb/>
Thursday paper. These deadlines<lb/>
must be strictly adhered to in<lb/>
order to insure that your poster<lb/>
will get in the paper. Call the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Advertising<lb/>
Department for further details.<lb/>
Beach retreat<lb/>
The Psychology Beach Retreat<lb/>
is set for this weekend-Sat. &amp;<lb/>
Sun. 26-27 March-A students<lb/>
are eligible to attend-it's FREE.<lb/>
Sign-up across from the Psyc<lb/>
office in the Speight Building.<lb/>
Your Psyc professor may give<lb/>
extra credit for attendance.<lb/>
Impulse<lb/>
Dr. Al Finch, coordinator of<lb/>
research and Senior child clinical<lb/>
psychologist at the Virginia Treat-<lb/>
ment Center for children will<lb/>
speak at the 7 p.m. meeting of Psi<lb/>
Chi, Thursday 24 March. Dr.<lb/>
Finch will talk about "Treatment<lb/>
of Impulsive Behavior in emo-<lb/>
tionally disturbed children The<lb/>
place: Speight Building, Room<lb/>
129. All individuals and groups<lb/>
interested in Behavior are invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
FIS<lb/>
Frustrated? Failing? Forlorn?<lb/>
Find Fellowship, Fulfillment, Fe-<lb/>
licity from FIS. Thursday at 7:00<lb/>
p.m. in Brewster B-102 is the<lb/>
setting for singing, sharing and<lb/>
Bible study. Everyone is invited<lb/>
for FUN IN the SON-Fantastic!<lb/>
BUC<lb/>
Remember that if you want a<lb/>
Yearbook next fall you must<lb/>
purchase your subscription this<lb/>
spring. This will be your only<lb/>
chance to have a book printed for<lb/>
you. Subscriptions may be pur-<lb/>
chased at the BUCCANEER office<lb/>
in the publications center. If you<lb/>
have any questions please call us<lb/>
at 757-6501.<lb/>
Remember that the Women's<lb/>
Dorm and the Men's Dorm who<lb/>
buy the most subscriptions will<lb/>
receive a free page in the<lb/>
yearbook. Tyler &amp; Scott have the<lb/>
pages now! Will it stay that way?<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
The ECU League of Scholars<lb/>
will have a very important<lb/>
meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
room 209 Austin. Please try to be<lb/>
there!<lb/>
A special problems seminar<lb/>
will be held during the first<lb/>
summer session at East Carolina<lb/>
University. The topic of the<lb/>
seminar will be the WORLD<lb/>
PRESS AND INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
COMMUNICATIONS. The sem-<lb/>
inar will meet daily at 10:40 a.m.<lb/>
The seminar will include a<lb/>
study of foreign press systems<lb/>
and international communica-<lb/>
tions. Studies will stress the flow<lb/>
of news and information between<lb/>
and among developed, develop-<lb/>
ing, and underdeveloped nations<lb/>
with a special emphasis on the<lb/>
channels, functions, and effects<lb/>
of information interchange in the<lb/>
contemporary world.<lb/>
Restrictions on international<lb/>
communications and the use of<lb/>
international media for propagan-<lb/>
da purposes will also be oonsider-<lb/>
ered.<lb/>
The seminar will be under the<lb/>
instruction of L.J. O'Keefe of the<lb/>
English and Journalism faculty<lb/>
and the course will meet in Room<lb/>
301 of Austin Building.<lb/>
The seminar will oount as<lb/>
credit toward the journalism<lb/>
minor and as elective credit for<lb/>
non-journalism students.<lb/>
Sigma<lb/>
All women interested in Sig-<lb/>
ma Gamma Rho will be meeting<lb/>
in the back lobby of White Dorm,<lb/>
Wednesday, March 23, at 8.00<lb/>
p.m. All interested in SGR are<lb/>
welcome to attend.<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
The films Student Union Com-<lb/>
mittee will present another movie<lb/>
on Saturday. March 25 and 26th.<lb/>
It will be shown in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Theatre at 7O0 and 9O0<lb/>
p.m. The movie is a parody of the<lb/>
old classic, Phantom of the Opera<lb/>
done in a futuristic science fiction<lb/>
setting. The movie is entitled<lb/>
Phantom of the Paradise Admis-<lb/>
sion is I.D. and activity card.<lb/>
SNEA<lb/>
SNEA meeting, Tues. March<lb/>
22,730 p.m. Multipurpose room,<lb/>
Mendenhall. Nominations for<lb/>
officers are scheduled.<lb/>
We offer two-day canoe trips<lb/>
(each Saturday and Sunday) with<lb/>
overnight camping. Everything is<lb/>
furnished except sleeping bag for<lb/>
only $20.00 per person. Transpor-<lb/>
tation furnished from Roanoke<lb/>
Rapids to the beautiful Nottoway<lb/>
River in Virginia. Contact P. G.<lb/>
Luter, III, 106 Western Drive,<lb/>
Roanoke Rapids, N.C. 27870 for<lb/>
reservations a for more infon na-<lb/>
tion phone 537-9042.<lb/>
Car wash<lb/>
Phi Epsilon Kappa fraternity,<lb/>
will sponsor a car wash this<lb/>
Saturday, March 26 from 9 to 3 at<lb/>
the Etna Station on the corner of<lb/>
14th st. and 264-bypass. Cost-$1.<lb/>
The money will be used for a<lb/>
scholarship fund for a P.E. major.<lb/>
Opportunity<lb/>
Screenings begin Wednesday<lb/>
for editor of Ebony Herald,<lb/>
Fountainhead, Rebel, general<lb/>
manager WECU and head photo-<lb/>
grapher. Apply immediately to<lb/>
SGA Vice President Greg Ping-<lb/>
ston, 221 Mendenhall.<lb/>
SGA openings<lb/>
There are now SGA legislator<lb/>
openings in the dorms of Belk,<lb/>
Fleming and Soott as well as one<lb/>
day opening. Come by the SGA<lb/>
office, Mendenhall 228, to file.<lb/>
Screening will be on Wednesday,<lb/>
March 23rd at 5O0 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Kreskin<lb/>
The internationally famed<lb/>
mentalist, THE AMAZING<lb/>
KRESKIN, will appear at Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center on Thurs-<lb/>
day, March 31 at 8O0 p.m.<lb/>
Tickets are $3.00 for the public<lb/>
and may be purchased from the<lb/>
central ticket office in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center. ECU stu-<lb/>
dentsare admitted with their I.D.<lb/>
and activity cards, faculty and<lb/>
staff with their MSC membership<lb/>
cards.<lb/>
Dance trophies<lb/>
To those who helped carry off<lb/>
the Gamma Sigma Sigma danoe-<lb/>
a-thon of Jan. 1977 we would like<lb/>
to give a special thanks. Those<lb/>
couples, whose total p'gings<lb/>
totalled over $900.00 for the<lb/>
Eastern Lung Association are to<lb/>
be given a special thanks. In<lb/>
gratitude, Gamma Sig is giving a<lb/>
trophy to each of the participants.<lb/>
Attention: These can be picked up<lb/>
in 337 Cotten Dorm, Monday<lb/>
through Thursday after five.<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Psi Chi<lb/>
The spring initiation of Alpha<lb/>
Epsilon Delta will be Saturday,<lb/>
March 26, at 6 p.m at the Willis<lb/>
Building on the corner of 1st and<lb/>
Reade Streets. The initiation will<lb/>
be followed at 7:30 p.m. by a<lb/>
banquet at the Greenville Golf<lb/>
and Country Club, the oost of<lb/>
which will be $6.50. All AED<lb/>
members are expected to attend<lb/>
the initiation to help weloome new<lb/>
members into the organization.<lb/>
The March Psi-Chi meeting<lb/>
will be Thursday 24, March at 7<lb/>
p.m. -Speight 129. Special guest<lb/>
speakerDr. AI Finch.<lb/>
History<lb/>
History reception fa all inter-<lb/>
ested in history and all enrolled<lb/>
history majors and minors. March<lb/>
28, 3-430 p.m. B-D 304. Most of<lb/>
the history faculty will be present.<lb/>
The Visual Arts Forum will<lb/>
meet Thursday, March 24, 4O0<lb/>
p.m Jenkins Auditorium. Discus-<lb/>
sed in the agenda will be Jenkins'<lb/>
dedication and Visual Arts Sym-<lb/>
posium.<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Delta will meet<lb/>
Tuesday, March 22, at 730 p.m. ,<lb/>
in Flanagan 307. The next<lb/>
speaker in our lecture series will<lb/>
be Dr. Michael Weaver, from<lb/>
Eastern Radiologists, speaking on<lb/>
radiology in general, including<lb/>
several case studies. All interes-<lb/>
ted persons are invited to attend.<lb/>
Conversion<lb/>
Special Ed. Dept. Come by<lb/>
your advisor's office to pick up<lb/>
quarter-semester conversion pac-<lb/>
ket. Spread the word.<lb/>
Oelta Sigma<lb/>
The Sorors of Delta Sigma<lb/>
Theta will have a bake sale,<lb/>
Saturday March 26, 1977 from<lb/>
10-2, at Pitt Plaza Shopping<lb/>
Center. Prooeeds will go to the<lb/>
Heart Fund.<lb/>
Freaks vs. Pigs<lb/>
There will be an Easter Seal<lb/>
Basketball Benefit between the<lb/>
ECU-SGA and the Greenville<lb/>
Polioe, State Highway Patrol,<lb/>
and our own Campus Police. It<lb/>
will be the "Freaks and the<lb/>
Pigs" in a shoot-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 Girls<lb/>
will be performing between<lb/>
games. Student supporters are<lb/>
asked to attend and help Easter<lb/>
Seals and oommunity relations.<lb/>
Tickets will be on sale at the<lb/>
door for $1.00 per person.<lb/>
Free flicks<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/>
Spring grads<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/>
Sculptor<lb/>
Beverly Pepper, internation-<lb/>
ally known sculptor, will give a<lb/>
lecture and slide presentation on<lb/>
contemporary issues in modern<lb/>
sculpture, March 29, 8.O0 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center The-<lb/>
atre. The public is invited to<lb/>
attend, Ms. Pepper's lecture free<lb/>
of charge.<lb/>
Students who utilize the<lb/>
SGA buses are urged to place<lb/>
suggestions in the boxes provi-<lb/>
ded on each bus.<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/>
Slaughter, Brenda Norris, Randy<lb/>
Stalls, Thomas Smith, Cecil<lb/>
Daniels.<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
The Student Union is now<lb/>
accepting applications for chair-<lb/>
persons for the 1977-78 academic<lb/>
year. Chairpersons 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/>
Tests<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 oompleted 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/>
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 oonclude the evening by<lb/>
answering questions. The slide<lb/>
presentation is open to everyone<lb/>
and should prove to be very<lb/>
interesting.<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/>
<pb facs="00057118_0003"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
P�Sw' 1 <lb/>
Tedious process begins in 60 days<lb/>
22 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Trustees took for Dr. Jenkins'successor<lb/>
The tedious process of select-<lb/>
ing a successor to Dr. Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins as ECU chancellor will<lb/>
begin possibly within 60 days,<lb/>
ECU trustees chairman Troy W.<lb/>
Pate Jr. said Tuesday.<lb/>
The first step will be the nam-<lb/>
ing of a 13-member selection com-<lb/>
mittee with membership drawn<lb/>
from the board of trustees, the<lb/>
ECU faculty, the alumni and the<lb/>
student body.<lb/>
Hopefully, Pate said, this<lb/>
committee can be named and<lb/>
begin work on the nationwide<lb/>
9earch by May or June.<lb/>
The selection committee will<lb/>
screen gualified applicants and<lb/>
make recommendations to the full<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustees which, in<lb/>
turn, will submit names of two<lb/>
candidates to William C. Friday,<lb/>
president of the 16-campus Uni-<lb/>
versity of North Carolina system.<lb/>
President Friday will then<lb/>
make a recommendation to the<lb/>
UNC Board of Governors for final<lb/>
approval.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins, president and<lb/>
chancellor of East Carolina since<lb/>
1960, is scheduled to step down in<lb/>
July, 1978.<lb/>
Pate, of Goldsboro and him-<lb/>
self an ECU alumnus, will chair<lb/>
the selection committee. He<lb/>
emphasized the importance of<lb/>
drawing members to serve from<lb/>
within the university family.<lb/>
Pate said "this is a sound<lb/>
process because it recognizes that<lb/>
each institution has unigue needs<lb/>
and programs. Therefore,<lb/>
nominations originate from those<lb/>
close to the University and its<lb/>
operations<lb/>
In remarks to the ECU Faculty<lb/>
Senate, Pate said the choosing of<lb/>
Jenkins successor must be ap-<lb/>
proached in terms of "major<lb/>
challenges in the years ahead<lb/>
"Today we faoe new chal-<lb/>
lenges and new programs. Ex-<lb/>
panding enrollment will not con-<lb/>
tinue at the pace we have seen in<lb/>
the past. Capital improvements<lb/>
are likely to come at a slower<lb/>
pace. In this new era for the<lb/>
university we must turn much of<lb/>
our attention to improving quality<lb/>
rather than in increasing<lb/>
quantity. In many ways this will<lb/>
be a greater challenge than those<lb/>
in the past. The progress we<lb/>
make can be as impressive as in<lb/>
any period in our history. I think<lb/>
the future is bright<lb/>
He said we must seek out the<lb/>
most highly qualified person we<lb/>
can find to lead this multipurpose<lb/>
University which includes a de-<lb/>
gree-granting medical school.<lb/>
Five of the 13 members of the<lb/>
ECU selection committee, he<lb/>
said, will be from the faculty -<lb/>
three to be nominated by the<lb/>
Faculty Senate and two drawn<lb/>
from at-large nominations from<lb/>
any faculty organization on<lb/>
campus and from individuals<lb/>
He urged the faculty to<lb/>
s' engthen the committee by<lb/>
making nominations that would<lb/>
provide broad representation<lb/>
from the major academic areas.<lb/>
Five others of the selection<lb/>
oommittee will be appointed from<lb/>
the ECU Board of Trustees,<lb/>
including Pate as chairman.<lb/>
One member will be the<lb/>
president of the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Assn. (SGA), one the<lb/>
president of the ECU Alumni<lb/>
Assn and one at-large member<lb/>
from the alumni.<lb/>
Pate said "we will seek the<lb/>
ideas and opinions of the faculty<lb/>
and our community friends con-<lb/>
cerning the University and the<lb/>
type of leadership for which we<lb/>
should search. I expect to hold an<lb/>
open meeting or two on the<lb/>
campus so that anyone wishing to<lb/>
be heard will be afforded the<lb/>
opportunity<lb/>
Winston-Salem alumnus named<lb/>
stadium fund drive chairman<lb/>
L. Pat Lane of Winston-Salem<lb/>
has been appointed chairman of<lb/>
the ECU Stadium expansion fund<lb/>
drive in Forsyth, Stokes, Surry<lb/>
and Yadkin counties.<lb/>
"We are extremely fortunate<lb/>
that Mr. Lane has agreed to lead<lb/>
the fund-raising effort in his<lb/>
area said R.L. (Roddy) Jones of<lb/>
Raleigh, General Chairman for<lb/>
the ECU fund drive.<lb/>
Lane "isa very loyal alumnus<lb/>
who has a distinguished record of<lb/>
involvement in civic and com-<lb/>
munity endeavors Jones said<lb/>
Lane is manager of Vessel<lb/>
Accounting, Controller's De-<lb/>
partment, R.J. Reynolds In-<lb/>
dustries. He resides at 430 Friar<lb/>
Tuck Rd Winston-Salem.<lb/>
He received a B.S. - Business<lb/>
Administration degree from ECU<lb/>
in 1967 with a major in Account-<lb/>
ing. He received the MBA degree<lb/>
from UNC-G in 1974 and is a<lb/>
certified public accountant (CPA).<lb/>
The ECU Stadium Expansion<lb/>
campaign is designed to raise at<lb/>
least $2.5 million to increase<lb/>
seating capacity of Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium to nearly 40,000 and<lb/>
make other stadium improve-<lb/>
ments. The campaign has been in<lb/>
progress in the Greenville area<lb/>
for two months and is being<lb/>
expanded statewide.<lb/>
RATE<lb/>
COWBOY REDIJJEpI<lb/>
iJP TIME<lb/>
7t3u � 8:3Q<lb/>
i<lb/>
nd iy through thurday<lb/>
the tedneck salocr<lb/>
liigfiway 118<lb/>
GRkFTON<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
SUNTHRUTHUR<lb/>
11:00 T010:00<lb/>
FRI&amp;SAT<lb/>
11:00 TO11:00<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
U.S.DA choice beef cut fresh daily<lb/>
For the full month of March, No. 12 will be on special<lb/>
Mon- Thur Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
CHOPPED SIRLOIN WITH MUSHROOM GRAVY - ALL FOR<lb/>
TEXAS TOAST WITH MELTED BUTTER<lb/>
BA KED PO TA TO OR FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
EAST10THST.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0004"/><lb/>
;� ") �i . V(B rBJB, jc<lb/>
�wwa,<lb/>
i' 1<lb/>
HUB<lb/>
BnHHaM<lb/>
 . � -<lb/>
mm a I � g<lb/>
Editonals<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
22 March 1977<lb/>
Carter pot plan laudable<lb/>
The Carter Administration's recent request to<lb/>
Congress for the decriminalization of marijuana is an<lb/>
idea long overdue.<lb/>
Dr. Peter Bourne, of the Office of Drug<lb/>
Administration told a Congressional committee this<lb/>
month that the Carter Administration favors making<lb/>
the possession of small amounts of marijuana a civil<lb/>
penalty. Under the revised law, getting busted for a<lb/>
few grams of the weed would be similar to getting a<lb/>
traffic citation.<lb/>
Possessing marijuana has been prohibited by<lb/>
federal law since the 1930s, when the government<lb/>
began to wage an anti-dope propaganda campaign<lb/>
which equated pot with heroin and opium, drugs<lb/>
which have been proven dangerous and addictive.<lb/>
Artists, drop-outs and beatniks during the fifties, and<lb/>
later hippies and freaks in the sixties and seventies<lb/>
experimented with a variety of drugs and found<lb/>
marijuana to be the mildest of the taboo substances,<lb/>
milder than alcohol in many cases.<lb/>
Yet society continued to find pot guilty by its<lb/>
association with other federally outlawed drugs and<lb/>
thousands of adventurous and rebellious Americans<lb/>
were imprisoned for experimenting with marijuana.<lb/>
After millions of dollars worth of research scientists<lb/>
have failed to prove that marijuana is asinsidiousas<lb/>
was onoe believed.<lb/>
Now the Carter administration realizes that<lb/>
sending pot smokers to jail is worse than letting them<lb/>
use the weed. Besides the obvious problems<lb/>
associated with putting convicted marijuana users,<lb/>
who often have no prior police records, in prison with<lb/>
seasoned criminals, there are many reasons not only<lb/>
to decriminalize but to legalize this relatively<lb/>
harmless drug. Testifying before the Congressional<lb/>
committee, U.S. Commissioner of Customs Vernon<lb/>
Acree warned that decriminalizing marijuana might<lb/>
lead to an increase in the amount of the drug<lb/>
smuggled into this country. But, allowing marijuana<lb/>
to be grown domestically, the government could<lb/>
simultaneously choke off foreign supplies by making<lb/>
homeqrown weed less expensive than the imported<lb/>
stuff and oollect a sizeable haul of tax revenues for<lb/>
the U.S. Treasury. It would also improve our overall<lb/>
balance of payments.<lb/>
Perhaps most important or all, decriminalizing<lb/>
and eventually legalizing pot would end the<lb/>
hypocrisy that allows police to selectively arrest,<lb/>
and judges to subjectively sentence to a maximum of<lb/>
five years in prison, people possessing small<lb/>
amounts of marijuana.<lb/>
Fountainhcod<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty yea s<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
A dvertising 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 tor<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
AND VOU (DJUDER UJWI fltf fllUWS SAILING-<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Prof deserves credit for media support<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In the March 15 edition of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, it was repor-<lb/>
ted that ECU publications had<lb/>
won awards at the national<lb/>
convention of the Society of<lb/>
Collegiate Journalist. Before the<lb/>
convention, editor Jim Elliott<lb/>
tried to requisition money from<lb/>
the travel budget of FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD to offset the cost of the<lb/>
trip. SGA Treasurer Tommy<lb/>
Thomason denied the travel re-<lb/>
quisition, even though the money<lb/>
is rightfully within the spending<lb/>
power of FOUNTAINHEAD, on<lb/>
the grounds that the SGA does<lb/>
not pay for convention trips.<lb/>
After Thomason s denial, the<lb/>
delegates had two alternatives<lb/>
left. They could pay fa the<lb/>
convention out of their own<lb/>
pockets, or simply not go, in<lb/>
which case ECU would have<lb/>
lost tne national recognition it<lb/>
deserved.<lb/>
ECU journalism professor Ira<lb/>
L. Baker enabled the delegates to<lb/>
attend the convention by paying<lb/>
ECU shows society's decadence<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Concerning the article, "The<lb/>
Pill Ranks First on the front<lb/>
page of the March 10 issue of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, I feel the<lb/>
moral implications of it are<lb/>
striking evidenoe of a growing<lb/>
degree of ethical decay in Ameri-<lb/>
can society. I fear that a society<lb/>
which gleefully persists in aping<lb/>
Sodom and Gomorrah will not<lb/>
survive, and perhaps more im-<lb/>
portantly, it does not deserve to<lb/>
survive.<lb/>
I submit as a single voice of<lb/>
protest that there is such a thing<lb/>
as decadence and that article<lb/>
embodies it.<lb/>
Sincerely yours,<lb/>
John East<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
P.S. Please understand that I am<lb/>
not criticizing FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
nor the reporter. I am dissenting<lb/>
vigorously from the ethic re-<lb/>
presented in the report.<lb/>
Birth control article not complete<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In the feature article on<lb/>
ECU Birth Control (March 10)<lb/>
Cindy Broome seems to indicate<lb/>
that coping with an unwanted<lb/>
pregnancy is as easy as picking<lb/>
up the phone to dial an abortion<lb/>
clinic and having $150-$200. We,<lb/>
the staff of Birthright of Green-<lb/>
ville, know that this suggestion<lb/>
does not help the pregnant<lb/>
woman to face the reality of her<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
We offer her a friend, a<lb/>
trained volunteer, who cares to<lb/>
listen and help her explore her<lb/>
feelings; a friend with a loving<lb/>
attitude, free from all judge-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
For further information, ob-<lb/>
tain one of our leaflets from the<lb/>
infirmary or call 758-LOVE(5683).<lb/>
Our service is free.<lb/>
The Staff of Birthright<lb/>
of Greenville<lb/>
tor part of the transportation cost<lb/>
out of his own pocket. The<lb/>
remainder of the cost was absor-<lb/>
bed by the executive council of<lb/>
SCJ through the oooperation of<lb/>
John David Reed from Eastern<lb/>
Illinois University.<lb/>
I would like to take this space<lb/>
to personally thank Mr. Baker fa<lb/>
his never ending suppat and<lb/>
enhancement of journalism on the<lb/>
ECU campus. Without Mr. Ba-<lb/>
Ker s financial input. ECU publi-<lb/>
cations staffs wouia have been<lb/>
denied this recognition they nave<lb/>
waked diligently fa during the<lb/>
past year. It is professors like Mr.<lb/>
baker that continue toconesively<lb/>
bind coth academics and practica-<lb/>
lity into a waking environment,<lb/>
and that's the way it is,<lb/>
Dennis C. Leonard<lb/>
F.S. How iroiic it is to rely on a<lb/>
professa fa suppat when fellow<lb/>
students continue to deny your<lb/>
intentions.<lb/>
Bright to hold forum<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Scott Bright, candidate fa<lb/>
SGA President, will be in the<lb/>
following dams this week. The<lb/>
meetings will consist of question-<lb/>
and-answer sessions on any sub-<lb/>
ject of concern to you. Tuesday<lb/>
night Fletcher at 7.00, Cotton at<lb/>
8.00 and Clement at 9.O0. Wed-<lb/>
nesday night Tyler at 7O0, Jones<lb/>
at 8.O0 and Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Multipurpose Room at<lb/>
900. All dam meetings will be<lb/>
held in the lobbies. Come out and<lb/>
meet a candidate.<lb/>
Scott Bright<lb/>
Campaign Comm.<lb/>
tam<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0005"/><lb/>
IMMHB<lb/>
MNBMMHH<lb/>
;�$&amp;<lb/>
SKW<lb/>
Snack Shop renovations<lb/>
anticipate Fall deadline<lb/>
22 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
By REBECCA BUFF ALOE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Major renovations will hope-<lb/>
fully be completed on the snack<lb/>
shop and book store by August,<lb/>
1977, according to Joseph 0.<lb/>
Clark, manager of the East<lb/>
Carolina University (ECU) Stu-<lb/>
dent Supply Store.<lb/>
"The weather and a delay on<lb/>
some construction materials have<lb/>
held up progress, but we're as<lb/>
anxious as anyone to finish up by<lb/>
August he said.<lb/>
There are three phases of the<lb/>
renovation, according to Clark.<lb/>
These include a new warehouse<lb/>
built behind Wright Annex, the<lb/>
movement of the snack shop to<lb/>
the former recreation area in the<lb/>
old Student Union, and the<lb/>
enlargement of the book store.<lb/>
Some cuts had to be made to<lb/>
bring the oost to $500,000, the<lb/>
allotment made for the renova-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
However, Clark said that he<lb/>
hoped that the deleted items,<lb/>
which included a finished floor for<lb/>
the snack shop, would be added<lb/>
early next fall semester.<lb/>
The biggest problem will be<lb/>
getting the new book store in<lb/>
shape for fall semester, according<lb/>
to Clark.<lb/>
"Usually, we have inventory<lb/>
when school closes Clark noted.<lb/>
"However Memorial Day falls on<lb/>
one of those days, so we' II have it<lb/>
during Easter break<lb/>
The book store will move<lb/>
temporarily probably at the end of<lb/>
May for construction purposes,<lb/>
according to Clark.<lb/>
"We may have to be dosed<lb/>
for two or three days Clark<lb/>
said. "That will be a last resort.<lb/>
States pass gay rights bills<lb/>
(LNS)-Dade County Florida<lb/>
became the first community this<lb/>
year to pass a gay rights bill,<lb/>
followed dosely by the aty of<lb/>
Tucson, Arizona. They are the<lb/>
38th and 39th communities in the<lb/>
United States to pass bills pro-<lb/>
tecting gay people.<lb/>
The Dade County bill, which<lb/>
protects residents jobs and<lb/>
homes from dis. (minatory<lb/>
practices on the basis of sexual<lb/>
orientation, met with the most<lb/>
opposition of the two bills,<lb/>
particularly from religious seg-<lb/>
ments of the community. Notable<lb/>
among this group were Anita<lb/>
Bryant, an ex-Miss America who<lb/>
does orange juice commercials,<lb/>
and Alvin Dark, a baseball<lb/>
celebrity. Dade County indudes<lb/>
the municipalities of Miami,<lb/>
Coconut Grove, Miami Beach and<lb/>
Coral Gables.<lb/>
The Tucson bill, which was<lb/>
passed unanimously by a newly<lb/>
elected 7-member aty coundl, is<lb/>
one of the most comprehensive<lb/>
gay rights bills in the country. It<lb/>
forbids both public and private<lb/>
discrimination on the basis of<lb/>
sexual or affect tonal preference<lb/>
EXPERT<lb/>
ontmued from pg. 1<lb/>
Subsequent appointments<lb/>
have induded directorship of the<lb/>
Unit'J Nations Relief and Re-<lb/>
habilitation Administration's<lb/>
China Program, administrator of<lb/>
the Economic Cooperation Ad-<lb/>
ministration, editor and publisher<lb/>
of the journal "The Reporter<lb/>
dean of Syracuse University's<lb/>
Maxwell Graduate School of<lb/>
Citizenship and Public Affairs,<lb/>
and presidential advisor during<lb/>
the Democratic administrations of<lb/>
John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B.<lb/>
Johnson.<lb/>
He has also been advisor to<lb/>
UN Ambassador Adlai Stevenson<lb/>
and Seaetary of State Dean Rusk,<lb/>
served as President Johnson's<lb/>
ambassador to NATO, and re-<lb/>
presented the U.S. in the North<lb/>
Atlantic Coundl. From 1969 to<lb/>
1974 Cleveland was president of<lb/>
the University of Hawaii's nine-<lb/>
campus system.<lb/>
Among his books are "The<lb/>
Obligations of Power "NATO:<lb/>
The Transatlantic Bargain<lb/>
The Future Executive and<lb/>
The Third Try at World Order:<lb/>
U.S. Policy for an Interdependent<lb/>
World<lb/>
or marital status in the areas of<lb/>
employment, housing, public ac-<lb/>
commodations, aedit, lending,<lb/>
and insurance. It also bars<lb/>
personal discriminatory practices<lb/>
and aiding and abetting such<lb/>
practices.<lb/>
And, unlike most other muni-<lb/>
apalities with gay rights legis-<lb/>
lation, the Tucson bill gives the<lb/>
aty attorney the power to prose-<lb/>
cute, rather than requiring those<lb/>
discriminated against to appeal to<lb/>
the local human rights commis-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
According to Tucson's Gay<lb/>
Coalition, which spearheaded the<lb/>
fight for the bill, one factor which<lb/>
spurred the gay community to<lb/>
adion and influenced members of<lb/>
the coundl to support gay rights,<lb/>
was the recent brutal murder of a<lb/>
gay man by a gang of teenagers.<lb/>
In a controversial sentenang, the<lb/>
judge placed the gang on pro-<lb/>
bation and gave them what<lb/>
amounted to a reprimand.<lb/>
ArmyMaty Store<lb/>
1501 Evans<lb/>
12 P.M5:30 M.<lb/>
Back packs, Jeans,<lb/>
Camping Eqpt, Dishes<lb/>
Little's Chop Shop<lb/>
N.E. Bypass 2 Mi. North of<lb/>
Hastings Ford<lb/>
758-4067<lb/>
We repair all makesand modelsof<lb/>
motorcycles.<lb/>
We sell custompartsandaccessories<lb/>
We do custom painting.<lb/>
We have pick-up service.<lb/>
Coming soon- van accessories<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
Early Eaters Special $1.63<lb/>
Inflation Special<lb/>
Meat and Two Vegetables $1.44<lb/>
$1.44<lb/>
Sec Attendant for Meat of Today<lb/>
11 am to 2pm<lb/>
Lunch<lb/>
4:45pm to 8:00pm<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
USED GOLF 1 CLUB SALE<lb/>
Spalding Root. T. Jones2-9 Irons $50 Exoehent ConditionWilson X-31 2-9 Irons $40<lb/>
Ben Hogan Apex 2-PW lrons$110 'Left handed, 1976 Model)PGA Par-Ex 2-PW Irons $95<lb/>
MacGYegorMT2-PW lrons$50Wilson X-31 2-9 Irons $50<lb/>
PGA Persimmon 2-3-4-5 (Like New) Woods $65PGA Professional 2-PW Irons $50<lb/>
Wilson X-31 1-3-4 (Like New) Woods $45Ben Hogan 2-9 Irons $40<lb/>
Mac Gregor Jack Nicklaus 2-4-5-6-7-9 Irons $15Mac Gregor MT Cast 2-PW (Used only once left handed model) Irons $165<lb/>
MacGregorMT2-PW (Left Hand Model lrons$50H&amp;B Gay Brewer 2-3-5-6-7-8-9 Irons $15<lb/>
Spalding Root. T.Jones 2-4-5-6-7-8-9 Irons $10Wilson Gene Sarazen 2-4-6-8-9 Irons $10<lb/>
Ben Hogan 1975 Model 1-3-4-5 Woods $60Mac Gregor Ruth Jesson 3-5-7 Irons $9<lb/>
Large Selection of Used Putters $5Spalding Johnny Palmer (Only used once) 5-5-7-9 Irons $15<lb/>
Mac Gregor Barbara Rumack 1-3-5 Woods $10Intermediate Jr. Clubs, 4 Irons (New bag, 2 woods; Putter $29<lb/>
Ladies Golf craft Clubs 3 Woods, Putter 3-5-7-9 &amp; SW Irons $35<lb/>
Shag Balls 20 cents each Automatic Bag Shags (Hold 70 bails) Was$23 on Sale for $17.75<lb/>
Complete Repair service for all Golf Clubs Special: Golf-Pride Victory Grips and Mac Gregor Installed $2.90 per grip<lb/>
Wilson and Dunlop Championship Yellow Tennis Balls Regular $4.10 a can NOW$2.75acan All Tennis Rackets On Sale!<lb/>
Gordon D. Fulp Golf Professional Located At Greenville Golf and Country Club Phone 756-0504, Greenville, N.C. Open 7 days a week until dark<lb/>
�"� )���<lb/>
. SHU �'�.  f�<lb/>
��<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0006"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
������������������H<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 22 March 1977<lb/>
SGA names temporary HERALD editor<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Tim Jones is acting editor of<lb/>
the Ebony Herald until the<lb/>
Communication Board approves a<lb/>
permanent editor, Greg Pingston,<lb/>
SGA vice-president announced<lb/>
Monday in the regular SGA<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Saeenings for the position<lb/>
were to take place last week, but<lb/>
the Communications Board lack-<lb/>
ed a quorum of members, Ping-<lb/>
ston said.<lb/>
This problem resulted from<lb/>
the SGA president and Speaker of<lb/>
the Legislature failing to make<lb/>
appointments to the Board.<lb/>
In other business, the Science<lb/>
Education Club was appropriated<lb/>
$250 for a national convention in<lb/>
Cincinnati, Ohio.<lb/>
Eight club members will at-<lb/>
tend the convention.<lb/>
The trip will actually cost<lb/>
almost $900, according to Jerry<lb/>
Everhart, president of the club.<lb/>
The rules were suspended to<lb/>
vote on a ' Model United Nations<lb/>
Financial Clarification bill.<lb/>
The bill provides a line item<lb/>
budget for the upcoming Model<lb/>
UN Security Counal in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
The SGA lost the original line<lb/>
item budget.<lb/>
The $2,954 budget for the<lb/>
Security Council includes $1,000<lb/>
for a speaker and $250 for a band<lb/>
at the Candlewick Inn.<lb/>
The bill passed after much<lb/>
discussion.<lb/>
Vioe president Pingston also<lb/>
announced that any student inter-<lb/>
ested in applying for FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD editor for the 1977-78<lb/>
school year must apply by Friday,<lb/>
April 8 and send, by registered<lb/>
mail, hisher qualifications,<lb/>
knowledge of the Communica-<lb/>
tions Board bylaws and know-<lb/>
ledge of FOUNI AINHEAD oper-<lb/>
ations to the office of the SGA<lb/>
vice president.<lb/>
In other business, a proposal<lb/>
to add a voting precinct in Hawl<lb/>
uunuing for the upcoming SGA<lb/>
elections was defeateo.<lb/>
National Center for Education Stats:<lb/>
Southern collegiate enrollment declines<lb/>
Total collegiate enrollment in<lb/>
the South declined slightly last<lb/>
fall over the record high levels of<lb/>
fall 1975, even though enrollment<lb/>
of women and first-time college<lb/>
students increased markedly.<lb/>
Analyzing preliminary data<lb/>
from the National Center for<lb/>
Education Statistics (NCES), re-<lb/>
searchers with the Southern<lb/>
Regional Education Board<lb/>
(SREB) identify these trends:<lb/>
(Ebaj<lb/>
LADIES<lb/>
IS EXPANDING IT'S<lb/>
LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
TO EVERY<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
AND THURSDAY NIGHT!<lb/>
ANNIES 5D1DE6<lb/>
 Spring<lb/>
i just around the<lb/>
corner but our<lb/>
Spring Bridal fashion<lb/>
are here nou.<lb/>
Eastern Carolmas' most beau-<lb/>
tiful weddings begin at<lb/>
Annie's�yours can too! Come<lb/>
m soon and choose from a fab-<lb/>
ulous selection of gowns and<lb/>
accessories.<lb/>
LORDJKFF<lb/>
TUXEDOS<lb/>
fcv<lb/>
V.IP.<lb/>
For ontullalinn<lb/>
V iihoul Obligation<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
756-1744<lb/>
109 Arlington Blvd<lb/>
GREENVILLE, North Carolina<lb/>
-Enrollment in the South's<lb/>
public college and universities<lb/>
dropped one per cent between fall<lb/>
1975 and fall of 1976, but the<lb/>
region's private institutions gain-<lb/>
ed two per cent more students;<lb/>
-This spelled an overall de-<lb/>
cline of 0.6 per cent in the South's<lb/>
collegiate enrollment, since pub-<lb/>
lic institutions account for the<lb/>
lion's share of regional enroll-<lb/>
ment-about 85 per cent;<lb/>
-Enrollment of women in the<lb/>
South increased dramatically by<lb/>
4.5 per cent between fall of 1975<lb/>
and fall of 1976, while male<lb/>
enrollment dropped by 4.8 per<lb/>
cent; women now aocount fa over<lb/>
47 per cent of all Southern<lb/>
oollegiate enrollment, compared<lb/>
to 40 per cent in 1966;<lb/>
-Due to the largest-ever high<lb/>
school graduating class, first-time<lb/>
college enrollment in fall 1976<lb/>
grew substantially, with increases<lb/>
of seven per cent in Southern<lb/>
public institutions and more than<lb/>
15 per cent in the South's private<lb/>
sector;<lb/>
-The greatest enrollment de-<lb/>
cline came in the South's public<lb/>
two-year oolleges, which were<lb/>
down nearly three per cent from<lb/>
1975 with 24,000 fewer students<lb/>
enrolled.<lb/>
Much the same pattern was<lb/>
reflected nationally, aocording to<lb/>
the NCES data, which shows<lb/>
11,106,000 students enrolled<lb/>
nationwide in fall 1976, a decline<lb/>
of 79,000 from fall 1975. In the 14<lb/>
SREB states, total enrollment was<lb/>
2,828,000 in fall 1976, which is<lb/>
18,000 less than in fall 1975.<lb/>
The leveling enrollments of<lb/>
fall 1976 follow the unexpected<lb/>
large increases of 1975 when total<lb/>
enrollment grew ,early 13 per<lb/>
cent in the South, as young<lb/>
people confronted a poor job<lb/>
market in that year of recession<lb/>
and chose to enroll in college.<lb/>
EAT FOR JUST<lb/>
zfzf plus tax MonThurs.<lb/>
Crabcakes. slaw, french fries plus<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
Va pound hamburger steak, slaw,<lb/>
french fries and rolls.<lb/>
Fish, slaw french fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat 752-3172<lb/>
2 miles east on highway 264<lb/>
(out 10th St.)<lb/>
Sportsworld<lb/>
A Family Recreation Facility<lb/>
Featuring the New, Modern<lb/>
Roller Skating<lb/>
Tuesdays-Lady's Night 6:30 11:00<lb/>
All ladies admitted for $1.00<lb/>
(includes skate rental)<lb/>
Wednesdays- ECU Nrght 6:30-11:00<lb/>
Free skate rental with<lb/>
presentation of I.D. card<lb/>
Thursday's- Men's Night<lb/>
6:30-1100<lb/>
All men admitted for $1.00<lb/>
(includes skate rental)<lb/>
For more information call 756-6000<lb/>
Many of these students appear to<lb/>
have changed their minds in fall<lb/>
1976 and dropped out of college.<lb/>
The stabilizing enrollments<lb/>
fa the region and the declines in<lb/>
some states and for some types of<lb/>
institutions are basically an ad-<lb/>
justment to the large increases of<lb/>
the year before. Fa example,<lb/>
some state systems note that their<lb/>
two-year projections made in 1974<lb/>
had underestimated the 1975<lb/>
growth, but, with the small shifts<lb/>
of 1976, were now in line with<lb/>
expected changes over the two-<lb/>
year period.<lb/>
The decline in two-year col-<lb/>
lege enrollments particularly in-<lb/>
dicates an adjustment among<lb/>
youth who initially chose an<lb/>
educational a occupational train-<lb/>
ing option and have now returned<lb/>
to a more receptive laba market.<lb/>
The fall-offs fa some institutions<lb/>
and states are also partly attri-<lb/>
butable to the deaease in enroll-<lb/>
ment of veterans, since the<lb/>
number of veterans eligible fa<lb/>
G.I. Bill benefits dropped sub-<lb/>
stantially in 1976.<lb/>
Students plan<lb/>
semester trip<lb/>
to Costa Rica<lb/>
Seventeen ECU students are<lb/>
preparing fa a semester of study<lb/>
at the Universidad Nacional in<lb/>
Heredia, Costa Rica.<lb/>
The semester will begin July<lb/>
26 and end Nov. 4.<lb/>
During their four months in<lb/>
Costa Rica, the students will<lb/>
enroll in special courses in the<lb/>
geography of Mexioo and Central<lb/>
America, tropical biology, Central<lb/>
American histay, Costa Rican<lb/>
health and welfare, field studies<lb/>
in Central America, and conver-<lb/>
sational Spanish.<lb/>
All courses will be taught in<lb/>
English, and those students al-<lb/>
ready possessing some command<lb/>
of the Spanish language will<lb/>
enroll in regular courses at the<lb/>
Universidad Nacional.<lb/>
According to Dr. Robert<lb/>
Cramer of the ECU Department<lb/>
of Geography, ooadinata of the<lb/>
Costa Rican program, the stu-<lb/>
dents will take field trips during<lb/>
the semester to study the physi-<lb/>
cal, cultural and economic con-<lb/>
ditionsof Costa Rica, Panama and<lb/>
Guatemala. Most participants will<lb/>
live with Costa Rican families in<lb/>
ader to introduce them to the<lb/>
customs and lifestyles of the<lb/>
region.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0007"/><lb/>
vMmmiPVMPwmRWP'v<lb/>
���iBBBBHBHI<lb/>
NYCSSsnoops<lb/>
unwed mothers'<lb/>
sexual relations<lb/>
(LNS)New York City's Social<lb/>
Services Department now re-<lb/>
quires mothers applying for aid<lb/>
fa children born out of wedlock to<lb/>
swear that they had sexual<lb/>
relations only with the person<lb/>
named as the father of each child<lb/>
around the "period of con-<lb/>
ception<lb/>
The idea, an official said, was<lb/>
not to question the welfare<lb/>
mother's morality, but to avoid<lb/>
their filing dubious paternity<lb/>
suits.<lb/>
Andrew Byers, in charge of<lb/>
the city's effort to find fathers<lb/>
who leave their families, said<lb/>
mothers for whom the statement<lb/>
would be untrue would not be<lb/>
refused aid. But, Byers said,<lb/>
those who refuse to sign-possibly<lb/>
on the grounds that the question<lb/>
incriminates them, invades their<lb/>
privacy, a establishes grounds<lb/>
fa divace-oould be considered<lb/>
"non-oooperative" and reclass-<lb/>
ified so that only their children,<lb/>
and not themselves, are con-<lb/>
sidered eligible fa welfare.<lb/>
The new requirement is part<lb/>
of a Social Services Department<lb/>
campaign to comply with Title<lb/>
IV-D of the Federal Social<lb/>
Security Act. The Act requires<lb/>
state officials to sue fathers fa<lb/>
child suppat payments if the<lb/>
child is receiving federal welfare<lb/>
payments. Mothers refusing to<lb/>
help locate the fathers are<lb/>
penalized.<lb/>
Harold Wachler, associate<lb/>
counsel fa the Department of<lb/>
Social Services and autha of the<lb/>
new requirement, said that he<lb/>
thought the use of the affidavit<lb/>
was legal and therefae did not<lb/>
clear it with other counsel.<lb/>
However, Ira Glasser, head of<lb/>
the New Yak Civil Liberties<lb/>
Uniai, said the threat of refusal<lb/>
of benefits as a penalty fa not<lb/>
signing the fam might violate the<lb/>
Fourth and Fifth amendment<lb/>
protections against invasion of<lb/>
privacy and self-inaimination.<lb/>
Fa married wonen, admitting an<lb/>
"outside affair" is self-inaimi-<lb/>
nation fa the misdemeana of<lb/>
adultery as well as grounds fa<lb/>
divace, he said.<lb/>
Glasser feels it would be<lb/>
fruitless to make a constitutional<lb/>
case of the right of a welfare<lb/>
recipient to privacy, considering a<lb/>
previous ruling where the court<lb/>
decided that a social waker could<lb/>
search in a house fa a man<lb/>
without a warrant.<lb/>
Said Glasser: "Even without<lb/>
the indignity of it, I regard the<lb/>
new affidavit as a residual fam<lb/>
of slavery. Slaveowners used to<lb/>
claim their slaves were getting<lb/>
complete financial support in<lb/>
return fa giving up sane of their<lb/>
rights. But government subsidies<lb/>
to the rich, to Lockheed a the<lb/>
banks aren't predicated on such a<lb/>
surrender<lb/>
High school teacher wins<lb/>
science education award<lb/>
Betty Sanders Abernathy, a<lb/>
physics teacher at Fike High<lb/>
School in Wilson, is the 1977<lb/>
recipient of the Austin D. Bond<lb/>
Award fa distinguished service<lb/>
in science education.<lb/>
The award was famally pre-<lb/>
sented by ECU Chancella Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins at the Eastern Regional<lb/>
Science Fair Friday on the ECU<lb/>
camp js.<lb/>
Established in 1974 in hona<lb/>
of Dr. Austin D. Bond, famer<lb/>
chairman of science education at<lb/>
ECU, the award has been pre-<lb/>
viously given to teacher Estelle<lb/>
McClees of Kinston, and Dr.<lb/>
Frank W. Eller, retired professa<lb/>
of science education at ECU.<lb/>
Ms. Abernathy is a native of<lb/>
Spring Hope, the daughter of Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Starlin Thomas Sanders<lb/>
of Bailey and the wife of Richard<lb/>
Parker Abernathy.<lb/>
She received the BS and MA<lb/>
degrees at East Carolina and has<lb/>
done additional study at ECU,<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill and the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Maryland. Her pro-<lb/>
fessional career has included<lb/>
teaching positions in Franklin and<lb/>
Nash Counties, an adjunct pro-<lb/>
fessaship at Atlantic Christian<lb/>
College, and an instructaship in<lb/>
adult educatioi at Wilsoi Tech-<lb/>
nical Institute.<lb/>
State pays damages<lb/>
(LNS)Kenneth Donaldson,<lb/>
who was involuntarily confined<lb/>
'r - fifteen years at a Flaida state<lb/>
mental hospital, will receive<lb/>
$20,000 in damages from the<lb/>
doctas who kept him there. A<lb/>
consent judgment signed<lb/>
February 4th by United States<lb/>
District Judge William Staffad,<lb/>
adered each of the two doctas,<lb/>
John G. Gumanis and J.B.<lb/>
O'Connor, to pay $10,000 to<lb/>
Donaldson within 60 days.<lb/>
Donaldsoi is the first mental<lb/>
patient a ex-patient to receive<lb/>
money damages fa violation of a<lb/>
constitutional right by state of-<lb/>
ficials.<lb/>
In June, 1975, the U.S.<lb/>
Supreme Court unanimously held<lb/>
that because Donaldsoi was not<lb/>
"dangerous and wasn't receiv-<lb/>
ing any treatment, his involuntary<lb/>
commitment was unconstitution-<lb/>
al. The damages award  finalizes<lb/>
the meaning of the Supreme<lb/>
Court s decision said Donald-<lb/>
son after the settlement was<lb/>
announced. "Now more state<lb/>
institutional doctas are going to<lb/>
be quicker to respect the Supreme<lb/>
Co irt's ruling<lb/>
When confined, Donaldsor?<lb/>
contacted almost 50 lawyers and<lb/>
three bar associations befae he<lb/>
found an attaney who would take<lb/>
his case. Befae that, his requests<lb/>
fa hearings on his own behalf in<lb/>
state and federal courts were<lb/>
denied eighteen times.<lb/>
22 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
iHt SNACK BAR of the old Student Union is<lb/>
still in a mess as construction crews continue<lb/>
working to complete the renovation by August of<lb/>
this summer. Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
JohnVMayne, Honoraryms.ii.ii- Chairman<lb/>
cure cancer<lb/>
without your help,<lb/>
but don't bet<lb/>
your life on it<lb/>
O<lb/>
The way it stands today, one American out of four will<lb/>
someday have cancer. That means it will strike some member in<lb/>
two out of three American families.<lb/>
To change those statistics we have to bring the promise of<lb/>
research to everyday reality. And to expand our detection program<lb/>
and techniques. And that takes money. Lots of money. Money we<lb/>
won't have � unless you help us.<lb/>
The American Cancer Society will never give up the fight.<lb/>
Maybe we'll find the answers even without your help. But don't<lb/>
bet your life on it.<lb/>
We want to cure cancer in your lifetime.<lb/>
American Cancer Society f.<lb/>
Thi �<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0008"/><lb/>
���HBMHMHHM<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 22 March 1977<lb/>
Vice President<lb/>
ft-<lb/>
HtGG BOYKIN<lb/>
y<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
fOMMY JOE PAYNE<lb/>
Boy kin<lb/>
The new communications<lb/>
board will be the major concern of<lb/>
the Vice President. The board's<lb/>
primary responsibility lies in the<lb/>
oversight and regulation of stu-<lb/>
dent funds appropriated by the<lb/>
legislature fa the BUCCANEER.<lb/>
EBONY HERALD, REBEL,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, Photo Lab,<lb/>
and WECU radio. The Vice<lb/>
President will chair the board, but<lb/>
will only vote in the event of a tie.<lb/>
I am not committed to any of<lb/>
these organizations, nor will I<lb/>
exert favoritism or bias in leading<lb/>
the board toward the goal of<lb/>
establishing and maintaining re-<lb/>
sponsible publications of the<lb/>
highest quality, while providing<lb/>
the sound financial control that<lb/>
student dollars deserve.<lb/>
As a member of the Executive<lb/>
Council, the Vice President must<lb/>
react responsibly to day-to-day<lb/>
issuesand conflicts. In addition, I<lb/>
feel the office should offer<lb/>
realistic alternatives to present<lb/>
SGA policies, to assure that<lb/>
Student Government can remain<lb/>
responsive to student needs.<lb/>
Payne<lb/>
I am Tommy Joe Payne and I<lb/>
am currently a sophomore. I have<lb/>
lived here in Greenville since<lb/>
early childhood.<lb/>
This past year, I served as a<lb/>
Day Student Representative.<lb/>
While in the legislature, I was a<lb/>
member of the Appropriations<lb/>
Committee and served on the<lb/>
BUCCANEER Special Task<lb/>
Force. As a Member of the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee, I<lb/>
gained valuable experience in the<lb/>
field of our school's publications<lb/>
particularly their budgets and<lb/>
their internal business functions.<lb/>
I feel this knowledge would help<lb/>
me immensely in the Vice-Presi-<lb/>
dent's most responsible task:<lb/>
Chairman of the recency resur-<lb/>
rected Media Board. The great<lb/>
steps taken by Greg Pingston<lb/>
toward the overhead walkway<lb/>
must also be carried on with<lb/>
tremendous enthusiasm.<lb/>
The space allotted does not<lb/>
allow me to go into many specifics<lb/>
but I would be more than happy to<lb/>
talk to any student with any<lb/>
problem or suggestion he or she<lb/>
may have. Feel free to call me<lb/>
anytime at 752-4379 or my<lb/>
campaign manager Randy AI ford<lb/>
at 756-2732.<lb/>
SGA CANDIDA<lb/>
� � � � �<lb/>
i<lb/>
600 bHIUHl<lb/>
I am a candidate for the office<lb/>
of SGA President. The issues<lb/>
expressed here came from con-<lb/>
versations with students. These<lb/>
five major issues were chosen as<lb/>
the most important by you the<lb/>
students. I thank FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD for this space to express<lb/>
my platform.<lb/>
The issue of a lack of<lb/>
communication between SGA and<lb/>
the students is a problem that has<lb/>
to be solved before SGA can serve<lb/>
you the students as it should. My<lb/>
solution is to 1) print a complete<lb/>
schedule of SGA activities in the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD; 2) ask legisla-<lb/>
tors to set up office hours; and 3)<lb/>
hold monthly question and an-<lb/>
swer sessions on campus.<lb/>
The bickering between SGA,<lb/>
Student Union, and publications<lb/>
benefits no one, particularly<lb/>
students. I feel there are set<lb/>
boundaries on each organization<lb/>
and the crossing of these causes<lb/>
destructive actions. I would like to<lb/>
see cooperation take place since<lb/>
all are there to serve students and<lb/>
not their egos.<lb/>
The BUCCANEER issue<lb/>
seems to upset most students I<lb/>
have spoken with. They want a<lb/>
BUCCANEER and feel they de-<lb/>
serve it without paying $5.00<lb/>
extra. I feel the same way and will<lb/>
work to have the next BUCCA-<lb/>
NEER funded by advertisements<lb/>
and student fees (SGA) and not<lb/>
subscriptions.<lb/>
Other major issues are park-<lb/>
ing and visitation hours but the<lb/>
lack of space (150 word limit)<lb/>
prevents discussion here.<lb/>
I'm for YOU!<lb/>
-(�<lb/>
Warren<lb/>
Neil Sessoms and I will push<lb/>
for 15 minute breaks between 45<lb/>
minute class periods. We will<lb/>
seek an extended drop period<lb/>
past mid-terms for next Fall.<lb/>
We plan to utilize the vice-<lb/>
president as a direct and respon-<lb/>
sive coordinator between student<lb/>
government and publications.<lb/>
This will help to assure a<lb/>
BUCCANEER. The Vice-Presi-<lb/>
dent will also work for progress in<lb/>
minority affairs.<lb/>
Neil and I will introduce a<lb/>
pre-graduation orientation period<lb/>
for seniors. Professional and<lb/>
personal counseling will be provi-<lb/>
ded to smooth the difficult<lb/>
transition between university and<lb/>
career life. We feel an SGA<lb/>
president succeeding himself sets<lb/>
a dangerous precedent and Neil<lb/>
and I will push for a constitutional<lb/>
amendment limiting a president<lb/>
to one term. Above all, we will<lb/>
enthusiastically pursue strong<lb/>
student involvement in all facets<lb/>
of SGA.<lb/>
HEEU WAHHLN<lb/>
den<lb/>
Reed<lb/>
will pres!<lb/>
class pei<lb/>
convenie<lb/>
introduc<lb/>
system n<lb/>
extend t<lb/>
mid-terrr<lb/>
to best<lb/>
support i<lb/>
This she<lb/>
CANEEF<lb/>
Reed<lb/>
first stei<lb/>
and harr<lb/>
other sti<lb/>
also give<lb/>
support t<lb/>
To a:<lb/>
oriented<lb/>
will back<lb/>
ment bai<lb/>
fromserv<lb/>
Increasec<lb/>
ranks ar<lb/>
priorities<lb/>
justify la<lb/>
policy de<lb/>
Tre<lb/>
urer<lb/>
 VOTE!March 30 <lb/>
Over the past three years I<lb/>
have been very cloae to the<lb/>
students of this campus. Two<lb/>
years ago I served as Freshman<lb/>
Class Vice President, last year<lb/>
Sophomore Class President, and<lb/>
this year Junior Class President. I<lb/>
have been before the students of<lb/>
this campus in four elections�I<lb/>
know what the students think.<lb/>
The stui<lb/>
cides how <lb/>
and the Ap<lb/>
tee submits,<lb/>
the legislati<lb/>
the Appropr<lb/>
3 years-the<lb/>
I believ)<lb/>
should be ir<lb/>
monies are t<lb/>
�����������������������<lb/>
Lfc6<lb/>
islature d<lb/>
� are sper<lb/>
xis comm<lb/>
t requests<lb/>
e served <lb/>
xnmittee f<lb/>
chairman<lb/>
he studer<lb/>
Df how th<lb/>
nt. I will c<lb/>
 � � �<lb/>
M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0009"/><lb/>
���HHnHanHHHHi<lb/>
 <lb/>
22 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
1<lb/>
Hates forum<lb/>
dent<lb/>
Reed Warren and I, if elected,<lb/>
will press for 15 minutes between<lb/>
class periods to allow for more<lb/>
convenient transitions. With the<lb/>
introduction of the semester<lb/>
system next fall, we will work to<lb/>
extend the drop period beyond<lb/>
mid-term exams. Fa publications<lb/>
to best serve the students, we<lb/>
support increasing independence.<lb/>
This should guarantee a BUC-<lb/>
CANEER.<lb/>
Reed and I will gladly take the<lb/>
first steps to build cooperation<lb/>
and harmony between SGA and<lb/>
other student agencies. We will<lb/>
also give increased attention and<lb/>
support to minority affairs.<lb/>
To assure a fresh, student-<lb/>
oriented viewpoint, Reed and I<lb/>
will back a constitutional amend-<lb/>
ment barring an SGA President<lb/>
from serving more than one term.<lb/>
Increased student involvement<lb/>
ranks amoig, our very highest<lb/>
priorities. Apathy will no longer<lb/>
justify lack of student input into<lb/>
policy determining decisions.<lb/>
nM 6ULUVAN<lb/>
The students at ECU don't ask<lb/>
much from their offioers-just that<lb/>
they try. When I ran fa President<lb/>
last year, I promised better<lb/>
transit, free legal service, cuts in<lb/>
SGA salaries, and better relations<lb/>
with the City. I have kept those<lb/>
promises: SGA buses now serve<lb/>
10,000 student riders a week,<lb/>
almost double the number from<lb/>
last year; twioe as many students<lb/>
receive free legal help as befae;<lb/>
my salary was cut 20; and I now<lb/>
represent ECU on eh City<lb/>
Council, the only such seat in<lb/>
Nath Carolina. Not every at-<lb/>
tempt we've made has been<lb/>
successful, but by any standards<lb/>
this year's SGA has confronted<lb/>
real problems with real answers.<lb/>
I kept my promises this year<lb/>
and got some people mad in the<lb/>
process. Even if it means getting<lb/>
more special interest groups<lb/>
upset, I will do the following: 1)<lb/>
Have a Fall referendum on how<lb/>
the students want to fund the<lb/>
Buccaneer; 2) Continue the<lb/>
SGA bid fa the overpass and<lb/>
community bikepath; 3) Cut SGA<lb/>
salaries again; 4) Infam students<lb/>
on apartments, restaurants,<lb/>
banks, loans, drug and traffic<lb/>
laws through SGA consumer<lb/>
pamphlets; 5) No affirmative vae<lb/>
on maja inaeases in fees oi<lb/>
Board of Trustees without a<lb/>
referendum. Notice how few real<lb/>
issues our opponents mention-<lb/>
they attack emotionally not fac-<lb/>
tually.<lb/>
Everyone can promise. I CAN<lb/>
KEEP MINE.<lb/>
Tre<lb/>
iirer<lb/>
The stu<lb/>
des how j<lb/>
id the Ap<lb/>
�submits.<lb/>
ie legislati<lb/>
ie Appropr<lb/>
years-the<lb/>
I believf<lb/>
lould be ir<lb/>
oniesare t<lb/>
� � <lb/>
L�6<lb/>
istature de-<lb/>
 are spent,<lb/>
xis oommit-<lb/>
t requests to<lb/>
e served on<lb/>
xnmittee fa<lb/>
chairman,<lb/>
he students<lb/>
Df how their<lb/>
nt. I will call<lb/>
Wurmstich<lb/>
As a candidate for SGA<lb/>
Seaetary, one must have exten-<lb/>
sive training and experience in<lb/>
typing and shathand. Fa the<lb/>
past two summers I have waked<lb/>
in a seaetarial position. At the<lb/>
present time I type term papers<lb/>
and repatsfa students on ECU'S<lb/>
campus. I am interested in the<lb/>
position of SGA Seaetary be-<lb/>
cause it is one way to keep well<lb/>
infamed ai the central wakings<lb/>
of our governing campus agani-<lb/>
zatioi. The job of SGA Seaetary<lb/>
requires the minutes and bills of<lb/>
each meeting to be properly<lb/>
recaded each week. The office<lb/>
has no vaing power, but simply<lb/>
requires a dependable, capable<lb/>
person to perfam the required<lb/>
duties. Therefae, previous SGA<lb/>
experience is na as important as<lb/>
accurate office skills. I feel that<lb/>
with my previous background<lb/>
training in these skills and being<lb/>
a ousiness maja, that I would be<lb/>
well qualified fa the position.<lb/>
oUvJMV MUHM6HLH<lb/>
for a comprehensive budget,<lb/>
propose fa more maiey to be<lb/>
sent into the SGA Emerg icy<lb/>
Loan Fund, and will guarantee<lb/>
budget repats to the legislature<lb/>
and to the students regularly.<lb/>
I believe in the SGA of ECU<lb/>
and I will wak hard as Treasurer<lb/>
to infam the students how their<lb/>
money is being spent.<lb/>
Lefler<lb/>
You say you want to know<lb/>
EXACTLY what's going on in<lb/>
SGA, but you don't have the time<lb/>
to get involved? You say you want<lb/>
a seaetary who takes accurate<lb/>
minutes of everything happening<lb/>
in and out of meetings? You say<lb/>
you want a seaetary who firmly<lb/>
believes every student on campus<lb/>
Secretary<lb/>
ihtlLA LHAUUULK<lb/>
l. i hNc htiAtzii<lb/>
has a right to know what happens<lb/>
to their money? You say you want<lb/>
your SGA seaetary to assume the<lb/>
responsibility of infaming stu-<lb/>
dents when specific committee<lb/>
meetings will be held? You say<lb/>
you want your seaetary to have<lb/>
experience in student govern-<lb/>
ment so that she can go straight<lb/>
to wak improving things instead<lb/>
of trying to figure art what's<lb/>
gang on. Well, your search is<lb/>
over, fa LIBBY LEFLER is such a<lb/>
persoi. I was a Dam Rep. this<lb/>
year and feel that if elected to this<lb/>
office, I can make your SGA one<lb/>
which every student can be<lb/>
efficiently served by and proud<lb/>
of.<lb/>
Craddock<lb/>
What does it take to be a good<lb/>
seaetary? It takes time, energy,<lb/>
and ability. Being a Business<lb/>
Education maja, I am confident<lb/>
that I have the ability to be a<lb/>
capable SGA seaetary. I have<lb/>
waked as a seaetary fa the past<lb/>
two summers and am presently<lb/>
seaetary of the ECU Women's<lb/>
Residence Council. I believe this<lb/>
type of experience is vital to this<lb/>
position. I am willing to put my<lb/>
time rnd energy into doing the<lb/>
very best job possible.<lb/>
I may not make a good<lb/>
picture, but with your vae I'll be<lb/>
a good seaetary.<lb/>
Hewett<lb/>
I feel being a seaetary is an<lb/>
impatant position. Many people<lb/>
feel that the seaetary is just there<lb/>
to take minutes. This is a fallacy.<lb/>
The seaetary is a very definite<lb/>
asset to our SGA.<lb/>
During my past two years at<lb/>
East Carolina I have been invol-<lb/>
ved in Student Government. I<lb/>
have also held several executive<lb/>
positions in various campus a-<lb/>
ganizatiais. I am a business ma-<lb/>
ja with a marketing concentra-<lb/>
tion. I know how important it is to<lb/>
have a precise written copy of<lb/>
what has occurred at meetings.<lb/>
During the summers I have<lb/>
worked in several secretarial<lb/>
positions.<lb/>
I believe that I could be an<lb/>
asset to SGA because I want<lb/>
what s good fa Us �the STU-<lb/>
DENTS.<lb/>
<lb/>
Ubtii LthLtH<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
22 March 1977<lb/>
Marquee<lb/>
by DAVID BOSNICK<lb/>
No tears for Billy<lb/>
This film is rated R because the director has the sensitivity of an<lb/>
eggplant and the script was written by an advanced form of Fern. Cry<lb/>
for Me Billy, centers around Billy (Cliff Potts) and an Indian girl<lb/>
(Xochitl) who meet when her family is slaughtered after Billy gives<lb/>
them some water. She has escaped and is running naked around the<lb/>
desert when Billy discovers her. crouching behind some rocks<lb/>
attempting to ambush him.<lb/>
The action of the film centers around Billy, (Cliff Potts) who<lb/>
happens to be the fastest (and gentlest) gun in the west. As he<lb/>
meanders through the desert, dropping subtle hints upon his kindness<lb/>
he comes upon a town where an evil sergeant refuses to give some<lb/>
Indian prisoners water. Billy gives them some, thereby making an<lb/>
enemy (the sergeant).<lb/>
Some of the Indians and Billy discover the beautiful (naked of<lb/>
course) Indian Maiden. They then fall in love, after she learns to trust<lb/>
him. But Billy, in a statement on the order of nature, never fully<lb/>
dresses her. And why dress her when she just has to take them off and<lb/>
cavort later in the film, anyhow?<lb/>
Cliff Potts is poor as Billy. The script is so weak that the lines do not<lb/>
lend themselves to one particular personality. Billy is never defined<lb/>
and the character is shallow and flaccid. The Indian girl (Xochitl) is an<lb/>
idiot for taking this part. She does not have one intelligible line and the<lb/>
one sound she utters is Billy's name, though there is absolutely noway<lb/>
she could have learned it.<lb/>
This is the worst sort of cinema. It is a blatant attempt to satiate<lb/>
man's base instinct and the occasional violenoe and blood are<lb/>
unmotivated. The film is pretentious and shoddy, the music is weak<lb/>
and monotonous, the photography is ordinary. If one is interested in<lb/>
seeing a woman ride a horse, run through a pass, swim, roll in the<lb/>
sand, and eat a fish in the nude, then this film is of some worth. I give<lb/>
this film negative three stars. (Now playing at Plaza Two.)<lb/>
OTHER FLICKS<lb/>
PLAZA ONE-Wzarcte-This is a film intended to be seen when one is<lb/>
stoned. That is a direct quote from the producer. The film (seen<lb/>
without the influence) is not bad, though it is disjointed and the<lb/>
animation is lazy. Much of the time, the movement of the characters is<lb/>
sacrificed for film clips or panoramic murals.<lb/>
The agony of animation is in the movements when all of the<lb/>
separate drawing must be made. The director (Bashkin) avoids this by<lb/>
adding scenes from actual wars, positioning his cartoons, and spinning<lb/>
the camera.<lb/>
The concept behind the film concerns itself with a war between<lb/>
good and evil, magic versus science, Hitler and death versus life. The<lb/>
film is fair, with one excel lent scene commenting upon religion. I give<lb/>
this film two stars, simply because I like animation.<lb/>
PARKf's Alive-A vicious child, symbolizing the pollution of our<lb/>
world, leaps from his mother's uterus, slaughters the delivery team<lb/>
and terrorizes Los Angeles until he is shot attempting to breast-feed<lb/>
from the statue of Liberty. Not a star in the sky.<lb/>
PITT-Once is not Enough-A young girl returns from a life in a<lb/>
sanitarium to the life of a young jetsetter. Her father is Kirk Douglas<lb/>
and she loves him more than the other men she meets. It is a fairly<lb/>
faithful rendition of the book, but with an upbeat ending. I give this<lb/>
film one star, for one should never say anything bad about the dead.<lb/>
Coming soon<lb/>
Buglehead<lb/>
Franks' 'Sleeping Gypsy' LP<lb/>
falls into musical redundancy<lb/>
By CHRISFARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
SLEEPING GYPSY<lb/>
Michael Franks is a musician<lb/>
that sprang into the recording<lb/>
field a year ago and stunned<lb/>
people with his smoothness and<lb/>
professionalism at his own form<lb/>
of cocktail jazz. His sound was<lb/>
new and refreshing, however its<lb/>
classiness appealed to only a<lb/>
small but diverse audience. While<lb/>
his first album never did gain<lb/>
widespread public acceptance it<lb/>
did introduce his name and style<lb/>
to those interested, and received<lb/>
much favorable criticism.<lb/>
Now, after the initial effects of<lb/>
recording have worn off, Franks<lb/>
has released his second album,<lb/>
Sleeping Gypsy, and it seems as<lb/>
though the once so fresh sound<lb/>
has become a little stale. Not that<lb/>
Franks has changed his style, but<lb/>
simply repeated it to the point<lb/>
that the listener finds himself<lb/>
being lulled to sleep by its<lb/>
musical redundancy. Still, the<lb/>
songs are very well written,<lb/>
utilizing key changes and abstract<lb/>
lyrics to retain some kind of<lb/>
spontaneity, and while the lyrics<lb/>
approach cynicism at times one<lb/>
can never be sure of his real<lb/>
meaning, adding to listeners'<lb/>
overall curiosity.<lb/>
Through it all, Franks' real<lb/>
strength as a singer and then as a<lb/>
songwriter is made possible<lb/>
mostly through the efforts of<lb/>
those around him, namely his<lb/>
band and producer. There can be<lb/>
no doubt as to the qualifications<lb/>
of a group comprised of John<lb/>
Guerin on drums, Joe Sample on<lb/>
keyboards, Wilton Felder on<lb/>
bass, and Larry Carlton on guitar,<lb/>
combined with the immaculate<lb/>
production of Tommy Lipuma of<lb/>
George Benson fame. Add to that<lb/>
appearances from Michael<lb/>
Brecker and David Sanborn on<lb/>
the saxes and success would seem<lb/>
inevitable. Yet while Franks has<lb/>
put out perhaps another easy<lb/>
listening mood masterpiece, it<lb/>
seems doubtful that this album<lb/>
will produce such success. Not<lb/>
because the album is not good<lb/>
enough, but because the public<lb/>
apparently is not ready for his<lb/>
particular type of music, leaving<lb/>
Michael Franks as just another<lb/>
sleeping gypsy.<lb/>
AMNESIA<lb/>
Times change, people adapt,<lb/>
and musical trends seem to vary<lb/>
as much as all of the new bands,<lb/>
some of them good and some not<lb/>
so good, that come and then fly by<lb/>
night. However if solid quality is<lb/>
even slightly one of the criteria<lb/>
for determining what makes it,<lb/>
then the Pousette Dart Band<lb/>
should be with us for quite a<lb/>
while. As is often the case, the<lb/>
Pousette Dart Band's release of<lb/>
their first album last spring met<lb/>
with impassive response, even<lb/>
though it did manage to create a<lb/>
small but avid following. The<lb/>
album was musically solid, mix-<lb/>
ing ringing acoustic guitars and<lb/>
rich, full harmonies, but lacking<lb/>
stability in the songwriting.<lb/>
With a little experience under<lb/>
his belt, Jon Pousette-Dart, the<lb/>
originator and mainstay of the<lb/>
band, has now delivered ten new<lb/>
songs that equal the first album in<lb/>
their production, but surpass it in<lb/>
the writing department. While<lb/>
there are some most notable<lb/>
standouts on the album, none of<lb/>
the songs are weak enough to<lb/>
break the smooth continuity that<lb/>
the album as a whole creates, al-<lb/>
leviating the age old problem of<lb/>
having to periodically skip your<lb/>
needle over the lousy cuts.<lb/>
Besides the consistency of the<lb/>
writing and production, Jon<lb/>
Pousette-Dart's creamy tenor<lb/>
voioe adds yet another steady<lb/>
bright spot to the overall effect.<lb/>
The best cuts are the beautiful "I<lb/>
Think I Know' and the country-<lb/>
flavored "County Line In all,<lb/>
the music is acoustic, clean, and<lb/>
very much worth listening to.<lb/>
Already receiving more FM play<lb/>
than did their first effort, this<lb/>
album might prove to be the<lb/>
break the Pousette-Dart Band has<lb/>
been waiting for, and make<lb/>
Amnesia a very hard album to<lb/>
forget.<lb/>
Spoleto features Lifar exhibit<lb/>
CHARLESTON, S.COne of<lb/>
the world's finest art collections<lb/>
will be on exhibit at Gibbes Art<lb/>
Gallery during the Spoleto Festi-<lb/>
val in Charleston this May<lb/>
25-June 5.<lb/>
The Serge Lifar Collection of<lb/>
Ballet Set and Costume Designs<lb/>
is special not only because it<lb/>
includes oils, watercolors and<lb/>
drawings by such luminaries as<lb/>
Picasso and Matisse, but also<lb/>
because the works originally<lb/>
served as models, blueprints and<lb/>
sets of instructions in the per-<lb/>
forming arts.<lb/>
Serge Lifar, a dancer in the<lb/>
Serge Kiaghilev Ballet Russe,<lb/>
began collecting the art of the<lb/>
theatre and ballet in 1923. These<lb/>
rare documents of the stage are<lb/>
also recognized as some of the<lb/>
finest examples of impression-<lb/>
ism, cubism, surrealism, primitiv-<lb/>
ism "and all the other styles<lb/>
without name or label<lb/>
The Lifar Collection repre-<lb/>
sents a cross-section of the works<lb/>
of the avant garde artists of pre-<lb/>
Revdutionary Russia and of post<lb/>
World War I Paris. As one critic<lb/>
has observed, "Here not only do<lb/>
we find ourselves considering the<lb/>
works of such artists as Picasso<lb/>
and di Chirioobut we are<lb/>
haunted, moreover, by the spirit<lb/>
of the man (Lifar) who so largely<lb/>
inspired and was inspired by<lb/>
them: for most of these drawings<lb/>
are designs fa the later work of<lb/>
the Russian Ballet<lb/>
The works of Miro, Modig-<lb/>
liani, Leger, Gris, Ernest, and<lb/>
Braque are also contained in the<lb/>
129-piece Lifar Collection.<lb/>
Since it involves a conjunction<lb/>
of different art forms, the col-<lb/>
lection mirrors the Spoleto event<lb/>
itself. The Spoleto Festival is the<lb/>
only arts Fesitval that combines<lb/>
music, drama, opera, dance,<lb/>
crafts, film, ballet, poetry and<lb/>
visual arts. For 19 years it has<lb/>
thrilled international audiences<lb/>
in Spoleto, Italy. Beginning this<lb/>
spring, the Festival will add an<lb/>
American season to its annual<lb/>
activities and make Charleston,<lb/>
S.C. its permanent American<lb/>
home. Program, ticket and ac-<lb/>
commodations information may<lb/>
be obtained by contacting Spoleto<lb/>
Festival U.S.A P.O. Box 157,<lb/>
Charleston, S.C. 29402 (803)<lb/>
722-2764.<lb/>
The Lifar Collection is pre-<lb/>
sently owned by Wadsworth<lb/>
Atheneum in Hartford, Conn, and<lb/>
circulated by E.D.O. Exhibition<lb/>
Services in Los Angeles, Gal.<lb/>
In addition to the Lifar<lb/>
Collection, an exhibition of oom-<lb/>
media del Carte and related draw-<lb/>
ings from the Janos Scholz<lb/>
Collection will be shown at the<lb/>
Gibbes Art Gallery during<lb/>
Fesitval.<lb/>
the<lb/>
HICASSU UHA WINGS will be part ot the Serge Utar collection, to<lb/>
be shown at the Spoleto Festival.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0011"/><lb/>
m m f<lb/>
22 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Michigan sponsors prisoners' education<lb/>
ByKIMGARFIELD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A University of Michigan<lb/>
student, enrolled in a university-<lb/>
witnout-walls type program, is<lb/>
earning oollege credits inside the<lb/>
walls of the state penitentiary.<lb/>
Nineteen-year-old Hillary Leff<lb/>
spends one day a week at Jackson<lb/>
prison, teaching reading and<lb/>
spelling to a 40-year-old prisoner<lb/>
indicted for robbery and a 60-year<lb/>
old check forger. She and the 400<lb/>
other students involved in Project<lb/>
Community also attend seminars<lb/>
in the psychology and sociology of<lb/>
prisoners. The credits they earn<lb/>
come under the heading of<lb/>
experiential learning<lb/>
There are four female and four<lb/>
male students directly involved<lb/>
with the Inmate Project (other<lb/>
areas of Project Community in-<lb/>
volve day care and drug rehabili-<lb/>
tation). The girls are not permit-<lb/>
ted inside the high risk ' area of<lb/>
tne prison because the prison<lb/>
administrators fear riots. Their<lb/>
aassroom is set up in what used<lb/>
to be the warden s quarters.<lb/>
And before any of the stu-<lb/>
dents were allowed to enter the<lb/>
inmate Project, they had to be<lb/>
cnecked out by the FBI, have<lb/>
mug shots taken, and be given<lb/>
special passes to enter and leave<lb/>
tne prison.<lb/>
The first day was terrify-<lb/>
ing, Hillary recalls. "Every-<lb/>
thing was dark grey and institu-<lb/>
iionai green. There were guards<lb/>
everywnere. Tne majority of<lb/>
inmates were very young-be-<lb/>
iween 20 and 30�and predom-<lb/>
inantly black.<lb/>
During a prior briefing, the<lb/>
iemaie students were told to<lb/>
dress discreetly, so they wore<lb/>
pants and buiKy sweaters. They<lb/>
were aiso toio tnat it would be<lb/>
naive on their part not to expect<lb/>
some kind ot trouble, and they<lb/>
were warned to stay away from<lb/>
corners and isolated areas.<lb/>
Our initial instincts were<lb/>
very idealistic, Hillary related.<lb/>
We were going to go in there<lb/>
ana help change their lives. But<lb/>
alter tne brieting we were scar-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
As it turned out, they encoun-<lb/>
tered no difficulties other than a<lb/>
;ew romantic letters and love<lb/>
poems from their prisoner-pupils,<lb/>
ine majority of inmates looked<lb/>
orward to tneir visits and "dres-<lb/>
sed up for the occasion.<lb/>
Miiiary s two students were<lb/>
more interested in learning about<lb/>
ninary than in achieving a sixth<lb/>
grace reading level. They wan-<lb/>
ted to know it I lived in the dorm,<lb/>
il I had a boy friend and if I was<lb/>
intodrugs, she explains. "They<lb/>
also wondered how we felt about<lb/>
tnem. Did we think of them as<lb/>
criminals?<lb/>
At first she did. But when that<lb/>
Darner was crossed, they became<lb/>
just people. Friends. The stu-<lb/>
dents would listen to their stories<lb/>
and their complaints, and in<lb/>
addition to tutoring, they would<lb/>
try to brighten their day<lb/>
I he New York-born Hillary,<lb/>
who plans to continue her studies<lb/>
in either law or criminology, also<lb/>
spends time at the juvenile<lb/>
correctional schools and will tutor<lb/>
truants, run-a-ways and prosti-<lb/>
tutes next semester. She hopes<lb/>
,o oe able to take the 13 to<lb/>
17-year-old delinquents on trips<lb/>
to the local theaters; up to now,<lb/>
this has not been permitted.<lb/>
"These girls have been so<lb/>
isolated from the community that<lb/>
they aren t prepared to return to<lb/>
their homes and jobs, she says.<lb/>
' Many of them will simply go on<lb/>
to prisons like Jackson because<lb/>
they re certainly not being train-<lb/>
ed tor constructive lives<lb/>
Hillary Leff says that she's<lb/>
always been involved in social<lb/>
causes of some kind, from peace<lb/>
demonstrations to school contro-<lb/>
versies. Her mother, a Phi Beta<lb/>
Kappa graduate of Columbia<lb/>
University (who s currently atten-<lb/>
ding St. John University Law<lb/>
School) once accompanied her<lb/>
daughter on a peace march in<lb/>
Washington, D.C. because she<lb/>
was too young to go by herself.<lb/>
Her father, Dr. Morton Leff, is a<lb/>
dentist, and active in local politics<lb/>
in New Hyde Park, N.Y.<lb/>
Hillary chose the Ann Arbor<lb/>
campus because of its reputation<lb/>
as a politically active school. She<lb/>
says that there are still people<lb/>
tnere who are concerned about<lb/>
issues and willing to do some-<lb/>
thing about it, even though most<lb/>
of the campuses seem to be<lb/>
apathetic right now<lb/>
Far from being apathetic<lb/>
herself, the young student read<lb/>
every book she could find on<lb/>
prisons and prison refam before<lb/>
getting into the Inmate Project,<lb/>
and would eventually like to help<lb/>
do away with prisons entirely.<lb/>
"If 75 per cent of all prisoners<lb/>
are second timers, then the prison<lb/>
system is not working, she<lb/>
claims. "We visited many of the<lb/>
Michigan prisons and saw the<lb/>
inhumane conditions and the<lb/>
psychological coersions. If you<lb/>
don t help kids when they re<lb/>
young, then they re going to be<lb/>
nardened criminals by the time<lb/>
tney re 30.<lb/>
Like many of the authors of<lb/>
the books she s read, Hillary<lb/>
would like to see young delin-<lb/>
quents placed into a community<lb/>
environment that is supervised by<lb/>
psychologists and social workers<lb/>
rather than by prison guards<lb/>
who ve had maybe two weeks of<lb/>
sociology training, if any.<lb/>
Hillary is spending the sum-<lb/>
mer waking fa the Fad Founda-<lb/>
tion-spaisaed magazine, Correc-<lb/>
tions, a bi-moithly that deals<lb/>
objectively with prisons. Her<lb/>
current job is to transcribe taped<lb/>
interviews of death row inmates<lb/>
fa an upcoming issue on capital<lb/>
punishment.<lb/>
Most of the death row<lb/>
prisoners haven t come to grips<lb/>
with the reality of their situa-<lb/>
tions, she says. They talk<lb/>
about their appeals and the faith<lb/>
they have in their lawyers. Some<lb/>
believe in life after death; others<lb/>
discuss plans fa the future, like<lb/>
getting back with their families<lb/>
and building new hones.<lb/>
Amoig the tapes she s tran-<lb/>
saibing are interviews with jur-<lb/>
ors who ve handed out the death<lb/>
penalty. In Flaida, fa example,<lb/>
a jura decides what penalty is to<lb/>
be given.<lb/>
There s a 15-year-old boy<lb/>
who murdered a little girl and was<lb/>
given the death sentence, she<lb/>
explains. I listened to the<lb/>
rationale of one of the juras. She<lb/>
felt the boy was beyond psycholo-<lb/>
gical help and therefae deserved<lb/>
tne ultimate punishment. And<lb/>
wniie the jura feels badly fa the<lb/>
boy s family, she nevertheless<lb/>
sees him as very sick and better<lb/>
otf dead.<lb/>
Years before a girl gets pregnant, her<lb/>
body should be receiving the nutrients<lb/>
she needs to give her baby the best<lb/>
possible start. Pregnancy is tough enough,<lb/>
without the problems caused by poor diet.<lb/>
There are things that your baby might have<lb/>
to go without. But a healthy start shouldn't<lb/>
be one of them. Write for the book: "Food Is<lb/>
More Than Just Something to Eat<lb/>
If. . mJtm 3<lb/>
SOMl<lb/>
E<lb/>
jU. J.<lb/>
secKemQ-l�c<lb/>
Nutrition<lb/>
Pueblo, Colorado<lb/>
81009<lb/>
Pease send me a free copy of<lb/>
Than Just Something to Eat<lb/>
Name<lb/>
'Food Is More<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
City 8&amp; State.<lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
A Public Service o( This Newspaper 4 The Advertising Council<lb/>
U S Departments ol Agriculture and Health. Education, 4 Welfare Grocery Manufacturers of America<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 22 March 1977<lb/>
'Heretic' mixes science, religion<lb/>
'Exorcist'con tinues<lb/>
It is not unusual for a film<lb/>
production company to seek the<lb/>
advice of experts outside the<lb/>
parameters of the movie industry,<lb/>
particularly when sensitive issues<lb/>
are involved and accurate re-<lb/>
presentation is essential.<lb/>
"Exorcist II: The Heretic a<lb/>
John Boor man-Richard Lederer<lb/>
co-production fa Warner Bros<lb/>
directed by Bcorman and written<lb/>
by William Goodhart. is especial-<lb/>
ly representative of a major<lb/>
project with these kinds of<lb/>
problems. Thus special consult-<lb/>
ants had to be found in ader to<lb/>
make believable those auenes of<lb/>
greatest personal impact.<lb/>
MERRINSREP<lb/>
Briefly, the film deals with the<lb/>
reputation of Father Lankester<lb/>
Mernn (Max Von Sydow), who<lb/>
died exacising the young girl<lb/>
Regan (Linda Blair). Only if the<lb/>
exacism can be verified will<lb/>
Merrm's name be cleared, and<lb/>
Father Philip Lament (Richard<lb/>
Burton) is sent by the Vatican to<lb/>
investigate. At this point Lamont<lb/>
confronts Dr. Tuskin (Louise<lb/>
Fletcher), a psychiatrist treating<lb/>
Regan fa emotional problems. A<lb/>
cooperative situation then grad-<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
is Ladies Night<lb/>
Open at 3:00 pm daily<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
ifilni�iiillrri;fil?i!l<lb/>
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SPICED HAM<lb/>
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HAM &amp; SWISS<lb/>
HAM. SWISS&amp; SALAMI<lb/>
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SERVING A QUART OF YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE<lb/>
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Enjoy your favaite programs en our 6 ft. T.V.<lb/>
daily emerges whereby science<lb/>
and religion wak together fa the<lb/>
benefit of the still struggling girl.<lb/>
The problem became focal:<lb/>
how to visually represent the<lb/>
psychological conflicts these peo-<lb/>
ple experience in the most<lb/>
credible manner in order to<lb/>
provide the rationale fa a con-<lb/>
tinuing sequence of events.<lb/>
PRO'S CONTACTED<lb/>
Directa John Boaman con-<lb/>
tacted the offices of Dr. William<lb/>
J. Baumann in Thousand Oaks,<lb/>
Califania, who is a practicing<lb/>
psychiatrist, physician and<lb/>
surgeon who frequently waks in<lb/>
conjunction with professional<lb/>
hypnaist Henry Prokop Sr. It<lb/>
was Boaman's contentioi that a<lb/>
machine be constructed to repre-<lb/>
sent a dramatized fam of mind-<lb/>
synchrony. However, he wanted<lb/>
the procedures involving hyp-<lb/>
nosis, particularly certain aspects<lb/>
of bio-feedback, age regression,<lb/>
and dream telepathy, to be totally<lb/>
accurate.<lb/>
Thus Henry Prokop was asked<lb/>
by Boaman to give a demonstra-<lb/>
tion to the technical aew of<lb/>
"Exacist II: The Heretic" re-<lb/>
garding the use and function of<lb/>
the bio-feedback machine. From<lb/>
this information a "mind-<lb/>
synchronizer not unlike a Jules<lb/>
Verne submarine, was formu-<lb/>
lated.<lb/>
"I took my daughter to the<lb/>
sound stage to demonstrate the<lb/>
bio-feedback equipment says<lb/>
Prokop, "and I outlined the<lb/>
relationships between Alpha,<lb/>
Beta, Delta, and Theta waves.<lb/>
But frankly, if you watch a person<lb/>
under bio-feedback, all you are<lb/>
really doing is watching a blip on<lb/>
a screen. This certainly won't be<lb/>
the case with 'The Heretic' and I<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
Sherwin-Williams!<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
understand the necessity for<lb/>
something mae imaginative<lb/>
"Hypnosis isn't anything you<lb/>
can see Dr. Baumann adds,<lb/>
"you have to show what can be<lb/>
done under hypnosis. It's like<lb/>
anesthesia. If you saw a person<lb/>
lying on an operating table and I<lb/>
said they were anesthetized with<lb/>
cyclopropane a sane other kind<lb/>
of chemical that might be used,<lb/>
you wouldn't know whether they<lb/>
were sleeping, whether they were<lb/>
pretending, a whether they were<lb/>
really under the anesthesia of that<lb/>
gas. Now if you took a scalpel and<lb/>
sliced open their abdomen and<lb/>
they didn't move, you'd know<lb/>
they weren't sleeping and you'd<lb/>
know they weren't pretending.<lb/>
You need to understand this<lb/>
relationship with hypnosis. You<lb/>
can't see the state of hypnosis, so<lb/>
it takes a very creative artist-<lb/>
technician to demonstrate what is<lb/>
actually going on<lb/>
STARS HYPNOTiriD<lb/>
In ader that directa John<lb/>
Boorman and actresses Linda<lb/>
Blair and Louise Fletcher (who<lb/>
are directly involved with mind-<lb/>
impulse transference in the film)<lb/>
understand fully the hypnotic<lb/>
process, professional hypnotist<lb/>
Henry Prokop agreed to hypno-<lb/>
tize them individually. Interest-<lb/>
ingly, both Boaman and Fletcher<lb/>
found the experience to be<lb/>
extremely relaxing and reinfac-<lb/>
ing. This was not true, however,<lb/>
fa Linda Blair.<lb/>
 Linda Blair seemed to have a<lb/>
lot of unconscious resistance<lb/>
sayd Prokop, "and I think it was<lb/>
her fear, possibly derived from<lb/>
her role in the aiginal Exacist<lb/>
which contributed to a belief<lb/>
structure that might have helped<lb/>
her in reserve. I think she<lb/>
believes in the possibility of<lb/>
possession<lb/>
Amazingly, Prokop himself<lb/>
cannot unequivocally say whether<lb/>
a not Linda Blair was hypno-<lb/>
tized.<lb/>
"Her acting was absolutely<lb/>
unbelievable says Prokop.<lb/>
"Her hypnotic portrayal was<lb/>
� irtually indistinguishable from<lb/>
Cheryl DieN<lb/>
James Jarvis<lb/>
Senior Show<lb/>
Communication Arts<lb/>
Kate Lewis Gallery<lb/>
Whichard Building<lb/>
March 23-April!<lb/>
Reception 4:00 March 25<lb/>
the real thing. There was also no<lb/>
way to check it, unless you gave<lb/>
her a post-hypnotic suggestion<lb/>
Louise Fletcher's role, iron-<lb/>
ically, created a much more<lb/>
serious problem in so far as the<lb/>
audience was concerned.<lb/>
' It was not my place to teach<lb/>
her hypnotic techniques so that<lb/>
she oould put a person under<lb/>
hypnosis says Prokop, "but<lb/>
quite the reverse. I participated<lb/>
asanadvisa to acting techniques<lb/>
relating, again, to aedibility. I<lb/>
was also there to guard against<lb/>
the use of actual hypnotic tech-<lb/>
niques on the screen because<lb/>
you'd have thirty to faty percent<lb/>
of the people viewing the movie in<lb/>
a state of hypnosis. This would be<lb/>
very unethical, to say the least. It<lb/>
is also illegal, I believe<lb/>
M.D. LIKES ETHICS<lb/>
"I was extremely impressed<lb/>
with the movie industry through<lb/>
this experience Dr. Baumann<lb/>
adds, "and particularly the ethi-<lb/>
cal quality that people like John<lb/>
Boaman do bring to the saeen.<lb/>
As far as our involvement is<lb/>
oonoerned, the various techni-<lb/>
ques that are represented in the<lb/>
film are inter-linked. Likewise,<lb/>
some fams of communication<lb/>
between two people occur mae<lb/>
under hypnosis than in a non-<lb/>
hypnotic state. This is especially<lb/>
true for mind-impulse trans-<lb/>
ference, because hypnosis in-<lb/>
creases what you might call the<lb/>
sensitivity of in-tuneness Bio-<lb/>
feedback is a little different<lb/>
because you're not really in a<lb/>
hypnotic state. You're waking<lb/>
with a tone meter, trying to relax<lb/>
and relate to a machine<lb/>
Henry Prokop adds: "What<lb/>
they do in The Heretic' is use<lb/>
bio-feedback to put a person in<lb/>
what we call Alpha' in ader to<lb/>
enter a hypnotic state. That way<lb/>
through instrumentation, they are<lb/>
able to demonstrate mind linkage<lb/>
which, in my opinion, really does<lb/>
exist<lb/>
Dr. Baumann concludes: "I<lb/>
would like to represent science to<lb/>
our present state of knowledge.<lb/>
We see this observable<lb/>
phenomenon, and the answers<lb/>
aren't in vet <lb/>
mw<lb/>
Good Things<lb/>
For Gentle People<lb/>
318 Evans St. Mail<lb/>
752-3815<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Thur<lb/>
Glass<lb/>
Moon<lb/>
FriSat.ftSiin.<lb/>
Bull<lb/>
Q<lb/>
nHHflUHHHHBHHflBHBHHHBHnUHnHHHI<lb/>
�<lb/>
� � wm ; �� � �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0013"/><lb/>
$M$&amp;BKmmm<lb/>
��<lb/>
22 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
i cu niLMAN center, smiimg has been named f-ebruary s<lb/>
Athlete-ot-the- Month.<lb/>
2nd honor<lb/>
Nieman again<lb/>
'Athlete-of -Month'<lb/>
BySlEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Editor s note. Athlete-ot-the-Month is a monthly feature ot<lb/>
EOUNIAINHEAU whereby the sports staff of FOUNTAINHEAD and<lb/>
the statt ot the Sports Information Office vote on a list of nominees. For<lb/>
tebruary, Fed Nieman won the award going away. This is a second<lb/>
ime this year the freshman from Winter Park, Fla, has garnered the<lb/>
award, j<lb/>
Fed Nieman is a lanky freshman on the ECU campus who looks like<lb/>
anything out an athlete. He has proven this winter to be one ol the best<lb/>
athletes on the lLU campus and was voted FOUNTAINHEAD's<lb/>
Atniete-ot the Month tor tne second time.<lb/>
During f-ebruary. Nieman won three individual events at the<lb/>
Southern Conference Swimming and Diving Championships as well as<lb/>
swimming on the three ECU winning relay teams. He was named MVP<lb/>
to the Championships for his efforts.<lb/>
At the Eastern Intercollegiate Swimming and Diving Champion-<lb/>
snipsat Morganton. W. Va Nieman finished second in the balloting<lb/>
:or MVP. I here ne won the 200 freestyle, and in the process, knocked<lb/>
;wo seconds off tne EUJ varsity record and qualified himself tor this<lb/>
week s NLAA Championships at Cleveland, Ohio. He also finished<lb/>
second in the 500 ano 1650 frees to MVP winner Jerry DeMuro of Pitt<lb/>
ana quaniiea tor the AAU Championships to be held in April.<lb/>
Nieman has every ECU varsity record in the freestyles from the 200<lb/>
to the ibbO. His time of 1 .40.57 in the 200 is four seconds better than it<lb/>
was a year ago. He has gone 4:33. in the 500 free, 11 seconds better<lb/>
man last year s standard. His 9:39.5 in the 1000 free is 14 seconds<lb/>
oettei man 19b sbest. And his time of 16:03 in the 1650 is a whopping<lb/>
. - i xius better man the best of 19?S.<lb/>
, nere is no oneon this campus who has done the job for their sport<lb/>
� iai red has done tor us this year, swim coach Ray Scharf said<lb/>
dunday after hearing of the award. Ted is a most deserving young<lb/>
man. He sone ot the most coachable swimmers I ve ever had.<lb/>
Nieman garner ea tour first place votes and one second place vote in<lb/>
the balloting. Hmshmg second was wrestler Phil Mueller. Mueller had<lb/>
two first piaoe votes and three second place votes. Women's basketball<lb/>
p.ayer bale Kerbaugh took third in the balloting with two first place<lb/>
,otes, Men s basketball player Herb Gray took fourth place in the<lb/>
Oting while teammate Jim Hamsey and wrestler Paul Osman tied for<lb/>
ii hi ine Denoting,<lb/>
Men and women harriers<lb/>
place high in Invitational<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Saturday was a day for records<lb/>
on Bunting Field as both the<lb/>
men's and women's track teams<lb/>
fared well in the ECU Invitation-<lb/>
al. '<lb/>
For the men, it was their<lb/>
second annual event and some of<lb/>
the top times in the nation were<lb/>
turned in in the early season<lb/>
meet. There was no team scoring.<lb/>
It was the first invitational for<lb/>
the Lady Pirates, and they out-<lb/>
distanced North Carolina for the<lb/>
title. ECU finished with 70 points<lb/>
while the Tar Heels garnered<lb/>
5312 for second. North Carolina<lb/>
A&amp;T finished third with 30 while<lb/>
Howard University trailed with<lb/>
23V2.<lb/>
RECORDS BROKEN<lb/>
In the men's division, 13 of<lb/>
the 16 meet records fell while six<lb/>
Bunting Field standards were<lb/>
broken. ECU performers broke<lb/>
one record and tied two more of<lb/>
their varsity records.<lb/>
The women broke 11 of 12<lb/>
track records and the Lady Pirates<lb/>
broke five of their 12 varsity<lb/>
marks.<lb/>
Seton Hall's Calvin Dill led<lb/>
the way in the men's division.<lb/>
The Olympic star from Bermuda<lb/>
won the 100, 220 and anchored<lb/>
Seton Hall to victory in the 440<lb/>
yard relay. His time of 20.89 in<lb/>
the 220 broke the previous track<lb/>
and meet standards, as well as<lb/>
qualifying him for the NCAA<lb/>
Championships later in the<lb/>
Spring. The Seton Hall team in<lb/>
the 440 relay also qualified for the<lb/>
nationals by winning in 40.42. For<lb/>
his efforts, Dill was named the<lb/>
men's outstanding runner in the<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
The field events outstanding<lb/>
performer went to two East<lb/>
Carolina harriers. George Jack-<lb/>
son won the long jump in 23-10<lb/>
and 14 to break the meet mark<lb/>
while Herman Mclntyre won the<lb/>
triple jump in 49-6 14 to also<lb/>
break the old meet record.<lb/>
Sherry James of Howard was<lb/>
the ladies MVP in the running<lb/>
events. She won the 220 in 25.72<lb/>
to break the old track standard<lb/>
and also took the 440 in 58.8 to<lb/>
again break the track mark.<lb/>
ECU s Debbie Freeman won<lb/>
the MVP among the field events<lb/>
performers for women by taking<lb/>
first in the shot and seoond in the<lb/>
javelin and discus.<lb/>
The biggest surprise of the<lb/>
day had to be the Pirates' Marvin<lb/>
Rankins. Rankins, running<lb/>
against two all-Americas from<lb/>
Seton Hall in the 120 high<lb/>
hurdles, swept to victory with a<lb/>
time of 13.68. Seton Hall's big<lb/>
two Reggie Blackshear and Larry<lb/>
Bunting, both placers at the<lb/>
NCAA Championships, took se-<lb/>
cond and third, respectively.<lb/>
Their times were 13.75 and 13.80.<lb/>
All three qualified for the nation-<lb/>
als and Rankins time is a new<lb/>
meet, varsity and track record.<lb/>
Minnie McPhatter of East<lb/>
Carolina took the women's high<lb/>
jump with a leap of five feet even.<lb/>
This bettered the old track<lb/>
standard by two inches.<lb/>
Freshman basketball player<lb/>
Linda McClellan won the discus<lb/>
for the Lady Pirates by throwing<lb/>
112-3 to better the old track mark.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates' Barbara<lb/>
Brant ley was a close seoond in the<lb/>
balloting fa MVP among the<lb/>
runners. She returned in a time of<lb/>
222.65 in the 880. This time is a<lb/>
whopping 36 seconds better than<lb/>
the old varsity mark and 14<lb/>
seconds better than the track<lb/>
standard. She also anchored the<lb/>
ECU mile relay team that ran<lb/>
away from the field with a time of<lb/>
4:12.<lb/>
This time was 30 seconds<lb/>
better than the previous track<lb/>
mark and 21 seconds better than<lb/>
the old varsity mark.<lb/>
Freshman Robert Bailey won<lb/>
the Pirates' other title by throw-<lb/>
ing the discus 150 to easily beat<lb/>
the field.<lb/>
The last race of the day, the<lb/>
men's mile relay, was the most<lb/>
exciting. Delaware State, Howard<lb/>
and East Carolina battled all the<lb/>
way and Delaware State came out<lb/>
on top with a new track record of<lb/>
3:12.0. Howard finished second in<lb/>
3:12.76 while the Pirates tied<lb/>
their old track standard of 3:13.6.<lb/>
The Pirates' Tony McKoy took<lb/>
third in the 440 intermediate<lb/>
hurdles and in the process, tied<lb/>
the varsity record.<lb/>
Other track records for the<lb/>
Lady Pirates included Minnie<lb/>
McPhatter s 440 dash time of<lb/>
1 00.5, Debbie Freeman s 115<lb/>
foot throw in the javelin, and<lb/>
Kathy Addison's mile run in<lb/>
5:34.22.<lb/>
CAM PUS RELAY<lb/>
In a special 440 yard relay,<lb/>
fraternities and independent<lb/>
teams from the ECU campus ran<lb/>
a preliminary to the men's 440<lb/>
relay. It was a close race all the<lb/>
way with Figures Revised win-<lb/>
ning in a time of 43.68. The<lb/>
Chocolate Chips took seoond in<lb/>
43.79, while Alpha Phi Alpha was<lb/>
third in 44.99. Kappa Alpha Psi<lb/>
took fourth and Sig Ep finished<lb/>
fifth.<lb/>
The Chocolate Chips led going<lb/>
into the final leg. Reggie Pinkney<lb/>
was running for the Chooolate<lb/>
Chips and Fred Chavis for the<lb/>
Figures Revised. Chavis caught<lb/>
and passed Pinkney as they<lb/>
crossed the tape.<lb/>
rHcSHMAN HOBEHI BAILEY, shown here<lb/>
tin owing the shot, won the discus throwing event<lb/>
during the ECU<lb/>
Pogue<lb/>
invitational Photo by Russ<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0014"/><lb/>
HP<lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAiNHEAO 22 March 1977<lb/>
Tennis team halts losing streak<lb/>
By JEFF BROOKS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Rebounding sharply from<lb/>
backtobacK losses. East Carolina<lb/>
tripped the Seahawks of UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington 6-3 Saturday at Min-<lb/>
ges.<lb/>
Leading the way for the<lb/>
Pirates were Mitch Perquson,<lb/>
"l�lb. Royal RfeEySteakNmr<lb/>
Includes a hot baked potato, crisp garden<lb/>
fresh salad, and fresh baked hot roll.<lb/>
Regular $2.89<lb/>
50COff<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$2.39<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
SALAD BAR j P '<lb/>
69 c THrT'iC'ir VALID 0NLY ON<lb/>
with Dintipri STEAK M HOUSE mon�,thur<lb/>
Coupon Expires May 31, 1977<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
CAPTAIN JACK'S<lb/>
FISH DINNER<lb/>
3 Pit'i indi'i i ocki.ill sauce oi taitei sauce, lemon<lb/>
wedqe, baked potato, cole slav hesh baked roll.<lb/>
50COff �NLV $1 .89<lb/>
With coi<lb/>
u ith coupon<lb/>
SALAD BAR<lb/>
69� CTPAkl ImOIIOF VAL,D�NLY�N<lb/>
oltAf w rWJUOt MON &amp;THUR<lb/>
Coupon Expires May 31. 1977<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
4&amp;<lb/>
BUY A SUB &amp; GET A MEDIUM<lb/>
COKE OR PEPSI FOR ONLY<lb/>
.10<lb/>
$<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
300 EVANS<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
 PHONE: 752-2136<lb/>
;�2TU FREE PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
f9aftgM0t piCKUP AND DELIVERY<lb/>
Prescription Dcpt- with medicatioa<lb/>
profiles: your prescription always at<lb/>
oar fingertipeven thoajrh you may<lb/>
lose your RL bottle.<lb/>
Henry Hostettler and Mike Mur-<lb/>
rad in singles, with Tom Durfee<lb/>
and Doug Gettsinger, Robert<lb/>
Motten and Murrad, and Kenny<lb/>
Love and Hostettler garnering the<lb/>
doubles victories.<lb/>
The Pirates evened their<lb/>
record at 3-3 a week before<lb/>
tangling with the Davidson Wild-<lb/>
cats.<lb/>
Results:<lb/>
East Carolina vs UNC-Wilming-<lb/>
ton, March 19, 1977<lb/>
Singles: House(W)d. Durfee, (E)<lb/>
6-2, 6-3. Gimbries(W) d. Ratliffe<lb/>
(E) 6-1, 6-0. Shackleford (W) d.<lb/>
Gettsinger (E) 2-6, 6-3, 6-4.<lb/>
Perguson (E) d. Goulding (W)<lb/>
6-3, 6-3. Hostettler (E) d. Sunrall<lb/>
(W) 6-2, 6-3. Murrad (E) d.<lb/>
Carroll (W) 6-3, 6-4.<lb/>
Doubles: Durfee, Gettsinger (E)<lb/>
d. House, Gembries(W) 6-4, 6-4.<lb/>
Murrad, Motten (E) d. Goulding,<lb/>
Shackleford (W) 6-2, 6-7, 6-3.<lb/>
Hostettler, Love (E) d. Carroll,<lb/>
Curry (W) 7-5, 6-4.<lb/>
East Carolina vs William &amp; Mary<lb/>
March 16, 1977<lb/>
angles: Abrams (W) d. Durfee<lb/>
JIM HAILIhht ASS SI kD the Pirates in a losing<lb/>
el tort against William and Mary. kCU meets<lb/>
Uaviason nere hnaay. Photo by Huss Pogue<lb/>
Cm<lb/>
MACRAME SLIDE<lb/>
Wos. Natural Jute<lb/>
Med. Width 510 Only<lb/>
Reg. 12.00<lb/>
Sale 9.00<lb/>
Ymthve<lb/>
@ SeTTlNGi- �<lb/>
UP<lb/>
hioase<lb/>
(E) 6-4, 2-6, 7-6. Rutlidge (W) d.<lb/>
Rathffe (E) 6-1, 6-0. bmith (W) d.<lb/>
Gettsinger (E) 6-3, 6-0. Calloway<lb/>
(W) d. Perguson (E) 6-3, 3-6, 6-3.<lb/>
Keith (W; d. Hostettler (E) 6-4,<lb/>
4-6, 6-3. Mann (W) d. Love (E)<lb/>
6-2, 7-6.<lb/>
Doubles: Durfee, Gettsinger (E)<lb/>
d. Abrams, Calloway (W) 6-1,<lb/>
6-1. Rutlidge, Smith (W) d.<lb/>
Ratliffe, Perguson (E) 6-3, 6-4.<lb/>
Keith, Winter (W) d. Love,<lb/>
Hostettler (E) 6-2, 6-3.<lb/>
East Carolina vs Old Dominion<lb/>
March 17, 1977<lb/>
Singles: Engles (OD) d. Durfee<lb/>
(E) 6-4, 6-3. Nelson (OD) d.<lb/>
Ratliffe (E) 6-2, 6-3. Benjumera<lb/>
(OD) d. Gettsinger 6-2, 6-3. Hitch<lb/>
(OD) d. Perguson (E) 6-1, 6-1.<lb/>
Hostettler (E) d. Croskery (OD)<lb/>
6-2, 6-1. Woolridge (OD) d. Love<lb/>
(E) 3-6, 6-4, 6-3.<lb/>
Doubles: Engles, Nelson (OD) d.<lb/>
Durfee, Gettsinger (E) 6-3, 6-4.<lb/>
Benjumera, Hitch (OD) d. Rat-<lb/>
liffe, Perguson (E) 6-3, 6-1. Love,<lb/>
Hostettlei (E) d. Croskery, Wool-<lb/>
ridge (OD) 4-6, 6-4, 6-4.<lb/>
ECU to Date: 3-3<lb/>
William &amp; Mary 8, East Carolina<lb/>
1. Old Dominion 7, East Carolina<lb/>
2. East Carolina 6, UNC-Wil-<lb/>
mington 3.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0015"/><lb/>
22 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
�mmmmm-<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE: 12" X 60" trailer,<lb/>
unfurnished- 2 air cond. 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/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED? Call<lb/>
Alice. 757-6366 (9-5 weekdays).<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 Aoous-<lb/>
tic guitar with hard case,<lb/>
excellent cond. $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 1 urntable good<lb/>
condition, 1 V&amp; 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 ville Rainbow<lb/>
Band with equipment &amp; vocal<lb/>
talent. 100 serious and ready<lb/>
to work hard and maybe money.<lb/>
Call 758-7543 or 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/>
littlf; use. Good fa guitar, bass,<lb/>
electric piano. Call 758-7670<lb/>
after 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 Firebird, vinyl<lb/>
top, AC, PS, auto, stereo. A-1<lb/>
ooidition. Call 946-3691 after 6.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 71 Fiat 850 Sport<lb/>
$1350 a 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. Rayed<lb/>
once fa recading. Mae. Call<lb/>
758-7669.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1969 AMU Statioi<lb/>
Wagoi, 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 Yak<lb/>
N.Y. 10017(212)379-3632.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Tennis Equipment-<lb/>
1 Wilsai Aluminum racquet-T<lb/>
2000 woover $25.00<lb/>
FOR SALE: New Pier Simpson<lb/>
CB $40.00 758-8687.<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 fa $250. Less than<lb/>
2weeksold. Call Allen 752-9887<lb/>
after 5:30.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dam size refrigera-<lb/>
ta. 758-8452.<lb/>
WANTED: Full size refrigerata<lb/>
with freezer area. 758-8452.<lb/>
PARTTIME JOB: Earn $250-<lb/>
$500 stuffing 1000 envelopes:<lb/>
homewak-sparetime. Details:<lb/>
$1, Self-addressed, stamped<lb/>
envelope (C.R. Kester, 400<lb/>
Marsh Rd Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
28209).<lb/>
FOR SALE: '69 VW bus, fair<lb/>
conditiai fa $1100. Call 758-0250<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Jeunet 10 speed<lb/>
bicycle. 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 Caoia<lb/>
Mark II Sta. Wagoi, air, auto-<lb/>
matic, good oondition. $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/>
TYPING: 75 cents per page. Call<lb/>
Debra Parrington, 756-6031<lb/>
days, and 752-2508 nights.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 VW Beetle,<lb/>
very good oondition, 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 message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sofa &amp; Matching<lb/>
chair, good ooidition, both fa<lb/>
$60.00. Also, rocker fa $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/>
fa rerecad fa 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/>
afta 11 XX) p.m. 8-traok-cassette<lb/>
reel to reel-can completely erase<lb/>
fa rerecad fa 25 cents ea.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4.2 cu. ft. white<lb/>
refrigerata. In excellent condi-<lb/>
tiai - great freezer. Best offer.<lb/>
Call 758-9950.<lb/>
Used refrigerator for sale<lb/>
758-9807.<lb/>
WANTED: Used refrigerata and<lb/>
stove (cheap). Need immediately.<lb/>
757-6462 between 8 a.m. and 5<lb/>
p.m. Ask fa Mel.<lb/>
NEED AVON? Call 758-8705.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Become a<lb/>
college campus dealer. Sell<lb/>
brand name stereo components<lb/>
at lowest prioes. High profits;<lb/>
NO INVESTMENT REQUIRED.<lb/>
Fa details, oontact; FAD Com-<lb/>
ponents, Inc. 20 Passaic Ave<lb/>
Fairfield, New Jersey 07006<lb/>
llene Orlowsky 201-227-6884<lb/>
Call Collect.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Surfboard - 6 2"<lb/>
Nonad yellow wred trim. Only 3<lb/>
yrs. old. Reasonably priced. Call<lb/>
Chip 758-7640.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1965 Fleetwood<lb/>
Cadillac, black, red inter exc.<lb/>
cond. TeleT CB. 8 track. Best<lb/>
offer. Bill 758-8809.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Realistic car-tape<lb/>
player 8 mo. old. $20.00.<lb/>
752-7852.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer SX-939<lb/>
AM FM stereo receiver. 70 w per<lb/>
cnannel RMS at under 0.3 percent<lb/>
narmonic distatioi. Still under<lb/>
warranty. Call 758-8678.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1976 CJ360T Honda.<lb/>
4,000 mnes. Excellent oondition.<lb/>
aii 52-0924. Ask fa Monty.<lb/>
HELP: My roommate LIBBY<lb/>
lEFlER is running for SGA<lb/>
secretary. I know she s qualified<lb/>
ana is very concerned with<lb/>
student affairs. But she needs<lb/>
your vote on March 30th. Please<lb/>
neip.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Stereo - KLH 17<lb/>
speakers $100.00, Sansui Au-555<lb/>
Amp 22w RMSChan. $100.00,<lb/>
casette deck with dolby $100.00,<lb/>
$250.00 takes all. Remington 742<lb/>
JLhOb rifle$175.00. Call 758-4863.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Double bed box<lb/>
springs - mattress free $30.00.<lb/>
Black and white t.v. Solid State<lb/>
$50.00. Econo Travel Motel<lb/>
752-0214.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Couch, fair oondition,<lb/>
oomfatable, $10. Rojking chair,<lb/>
$8. Call 752-1534 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AR 3ax speakers.<lb/>
Excellent condition - call<lb/>
58-0908.<lb/>
torrent<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/>
included-$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 and or summer. Com-<lb/>
fatable and close to campus. Call<lb/>
758-7713.<lb/>
NEEDED: Male roommate to<lb/>
share two bedroom apt. at<lb/>
East brook fa the summer. Pay<lb/>
half rent and utilities. Call<lb/>
758-7486.<lb/>
NEEDED: Roommate fa 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 a<lb/>
3 bedraxn house, but who will<lb/>
vacate in May a June. Prefer<lb/>
rent to be about $100. Please call<lb/>
Pam at 752-6856 a 756-5190.<lb/>
Thanks.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Large<lb/>
house, private bedroom. 752-<lb/>
2859.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTEDXFe-<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 758-1030.<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/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED. 2 bed-<lb/>
room duplex. $50.00 plus 12<lb/>
utilities. Pets o.k. Call 752-5170<lb/>
after 9 p.m. a 757-6736 (9-5) a<lb/>
axne by F-420.<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/>
SUMMER RENT: Graduate stu-<lb/>
dent seeks a oouple of roommates<lb/>
fa the summer in completely<lb/>
furnished apt. $55mo. plus 13<lb/>
of utilities. Call 758-1437.<lb/>
Jmf �<lb/>
lost<lb/>
2<lb/>
LOST: 1 girl who is blind<lb/>
without her glasses-someone<lb/>
picked up a navy blue hooded<lb/>
sweatshirt a oouple of Saturdays<lb/>
ago at the Jolly Roger that had<lb/>
a pair of rose oolaed Glata<lb/>
Vanderbilt glasses-l have a navy<lb/>
hooded sweatshirt that's too<lb/>
big-PLEASE oontact 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 a<lb/>
752-1907 (wak).<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. 758-8895 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
Austin - Biol.<lb/>
LOST: Set of keys on a leatha<lb/>
strap somewhere on campus.<lb/>
758-7713.<lb/>
found<lb/>
FOUND: Rockwell calculata in<lb/>
Austin 307, March. Call 752-<lb/>
9129.<lb/>
FOUND: 1 lady s ring-inquire<lb/>
at Austin 134.<lb/>
personal (I<lb/>
NEEDED: Writers fa FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD. Low pay, long hours<lb/>
but guaranteed advancement.<lb/>
Most of the staff of the oollege<lb/>
newspaper graduate this Spring.<lb/>
We need underclassmen to fill<lb/>
many staff positions. Writers get<lb/>
in on ground floa. Call 757-6366<lb/>
a apply in persoi at FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD office.<lb/>
FREE Wholesale Jewelry Cat-<lb/>
alog! Exclusive Designers' col-<lb/>
lection! Bargains gaiae! Box<lb/>
1824, Cleveland, Ohio 44106.<lb/>
BELLY DANCE LESSONS:<lb/>
Announcing the beginning of<lb/>
spring classes. Special rates due<lb/>
to spring festival! Get ready fa<lb/>
summer NOW-the feminine way<lb/>
Call Sunshine after 5XX) p.m.<lb/>
752-5214.<lb/>
ARABIC DANCE: "Authentic<lb/>
belly dancing" Doina Whitley<lb/>
752-0928. Experienced perfa-<lb/>
mer and teacher in Casablanca,<lb/>
Maccco, and Califania. A fun<lb/>
and aeative way to keep in<lb/>
shape!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0016"/><lb/>
 �  �.  " ��- ���� '��� . .?�.<lb/>
.�� �  �� �.�� . �.<lb/>
� ' � � -Vfv . .  , ��<lb/>
.<lb/>
Page 16 F0UN1 AINHEAD Z2 March 1977<lb/>
2nd Annual Pigs-Freaks game<lb/>
litoi<lb/>
. -<lb/>
1.00<lb/>
Adn �Hai with<lb/>
ity, wi n the ECU<lb/>
I r sity<lb/>
Cheerleadei s, ii th I rsl game.<lb/>
-sen-<lb/>
ted by i e and the highway<lb/>
i H playing against the SGA<lb/>
tks.<lb/>
Dick James of WITN-TV will<lb/>
be the mastei o ceremonies.<lb/>
ECU student Sam Williams and<lb/>
WNCT radio personality Ken<lb/>
Fanner will handle the referee-<lb/>
Half time entertainment will<lb/>
sist of the ECU marching<lb/>
oussion and pom-pom girls,<lb/>
the ECU pep band and eight<lb/>
10-yi I cheer leaders. As an<lb/>
the English De-<lb/>
Dr Stuart Aronson<lb/>
will sing th( tal Anthem.<lb/>
The purpose of the game is to<lb/>
better relations between students<lb/>
and police, and, even more<lb/>
importantly, to work together to<lb/>
p Easter Seals.<lb/>
A non-profit foundation Eas-<lb/>
ps those .Mi are<lb/>
mselves. If only<lb/>
body could<lb/>
e $6,00<lb/>
Sor<lb/>
ught. I<lb/>
i jcod tirm<lb/>
let en<lb/>
Golfers<lb/>
capture<lb/>
2nd at<lb/>
Pinehurst<lb/>
i South'<lb/>
University edged f ast Carolina<lb/>
by three strokes in trie Pinehurst<lb/>
tational March i<lb/>
� it Pinehurst, North Carolina.<lb/>
i I<lb/>
p Tei<lb/>
d in tl �' day<lb/>
e num<lb/>
hing : Wake I <lb/>
n i!ii<lb/>
East Carolina, placing I<lb/>
teent<lb/>
Broga<lb/>
IN LAS! YEAH s game, the Pigs severely defeated the Freaks<lb/>
. � � returning Freaks hope to get even this year<lb/>
ii-i iHt WUMtN s garm "� t-reah a -<lb/>
� s hope to even the score Wed , nigl t<lb/>
ALL THAT JAZZ<lb/>
KtlTH JARRETT<lb/>
HYMNS<lb/>
SPHERES<lb/>
The brilliant performance of Keith Jarrett<lb/>
on a magnificent 18th century<lb/>
baroque organ at Ottobeuren, Germany.<lb/>
ECM-2-IOi6<lb/>
T�r-�<lb/>
If jazz is your kind of music, get Into the Record Bar. Review the history of a great<lb/>
musical form or research the current tre nds by checking out these great releases from<lb/>
Verve and E.C.M. . . .<lb/>
rhe Verve Years Charlie Parkei<lb/>
Pres &amp; Irddy v Oscai Lester Young<lb/>
1st Verve Sessions Billie Holiday<lb/>
azz at the Philharmonic Various Artists<lb/>
Sonny Sntt Sessions Diy Gillespie<lb/>
Genius of Bud Powell Bud Powell<lb/>
Porgy and Bess Ella Fitzgerald 8. Louis Armstro<lb/>
Charlie Parkei Sides Various Artists<lb/>
Bill Evans Trio Bill vans<lb/>
Sessions with Corea Evans Stan Getz<lb/>
( ole Portei Songbook Ella Fitzgerald<lb/>
Verve Years Charlie Parl �<lb/>
And if musical classics are your thing, check out the RSO Records collection of<lb/>
re-released collectors' Kerns like "Blind Faith" by Blind Faith, Clapton" and "Derek<lb/>
and the Dominoes" by Eric Clapton. Or get vintage Cream like "Fresh Cream "Live"<lb/>
Volumes I and 2, "Wheels of Fire "Goodbye" and Disraeli Gears<lb/>
Whatever your taste in music, check out the selection M the Record Bar.<lb/>
Masters of Modern Piano Various Artists<lb/>
ArtuM Zena Keith arrett<lb/>
I )reams Si ' �ar Burti<lb/>
Bright Size I ife Pal Methen<lb/>
Dire tions Untitled ac k Dejohnette<lb/>
Dansere Garbarek<lb/>
Mountainscapes Barrie Phillips<lb/>
Sargasso Sea ohn bercroml<lb/>
Rubisa Patrol Art Lande<lb/>
After the Rain rerje Rypdal<lb/>
Fhe Following Morning Everhard Wei<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
<pb facs="00057118_0017"/>
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