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<pb facs="00057119_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 12 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Six-foot ratpg. 6<lb/>
Bev. Pepperpg. 8<lb/>
Pirates reboundpg. 10<lb/>
Vo. 52, No.tfH East Carolina University Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
24 March 1977<lb/>
Impressed by the 'superior quality'<lb/>
Trustees chairman praises Faculty Senate<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Troy W. Pate, Jr chairman of<lb/>
the ECU Board of Trustees, spoke<lb/>
to the Faculty Senate during its<lb/>
meeting Tuesday, which marked<lb/>
the first known time that a<lb/>
Chairman has addressed the<lb/>
Faculty Senate.<lb/>
Dr. Phil Adler, Chairman of<lb/>
the Faculty, introduced Pate after<lb/>
receiving old business.<lb/>
Pate said he has been greatly<lb/>
impressed by the superior quality<lb/>
of the faculty, and that their<lb/>
achievementsare reflected in the<lb/>
programs and in the high ac-<lb/>
ceptance of ECU graduates in<lb/>
numerous professions.<lb/>
"Your efforts provide a de-<lb/>
gree of academic excellence to<lb/>
our programs that we are all very<lb/>
proud of.<lb/>
"We are fortunate to have<lb/>
over 700 on this faculty who can<lb/>
challenge and inspire our stu-<lb/>
dents to seek their full education-<lb/>
al potential<lb/>
Pate discussed the matter of<lb/>
selecting a successor to Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins.<lb/>
"As we approach this task, we<lb/>
should think of the major chal-<lb/>
lenges in the years ahead and<lb/>
seek out the most highly qualified<lb/>
person we can find to lead this<lb/>
multi-purpose University which<lb/>
includes a degree-granting Medi-<lb/>
cal School.<lb/>
"We will solicit candidates<lb/>
from across the nation<lb/>
According to Pate, the Board<lb/>
of Governors has delegated the<lb/>
responsibility and authority to<lb/>
establish a selection committee to<lb/>
the Board of Trustees.<lb/>
The selection committee will<lb/>
be composed of 13 members.<lb/>
Five members will be ap-<lb/>
pointed from the faculty, five will<lb/>
come from the Board of Trustees,<lb/>
one will be the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association (SGA) presi-<lb/>
dent, another, the Alumni Associ-<lb/>
ation president, and another, an<lb/>
at-large member from the alumni.<lb/>
Pate will serve as chairman of<lb/>
the committee, at the request of<lb/>
President William C. Friday at<lb/>
UNC Chapel Hill.<lb/>
The committee will make its<lb/>
recommendations to the ECU<lb/>
Board of Trustees, and after<lb/>
approval, two candidates will be<lb/>
submitted to President Friday.<lb/>
The President will then make<lb/>
a recommendation to the Board of<lb/>
Governors, and upon their ap-<lb/>
proval, the next Chancellor will<lb/>
be named.<lb/>
Pate asked the Faculty Senate<lb/>
to nominate persons fa three of<lb/>
the five faculty positions on the<lb/>
committee. He said he will<lb/>
appoint the remaining two faculty<lb/>
members from at-large nomi-<lb/>
nations.<lb/>
In other business, Dr. Tom<lb/>
Johnson and Conner Atkeson<lb/>
were elected to serve as UNC<lb/>
Faculty Assembly delegate and<lb/>
alternate, respectively.<lb/>
Dr. Johnson is a professor in<lb/>
the Health, Physical Education,<lb/>
Recreation and Stfety Depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Atkeson is a professor in the<lb/>
history department.<lb/>
Senate Nominating Commit-<lb/>
tee members were also elected.<lb/>
They are lone Ryan, Vernre<lb/>
Saieed, Katharine Hodgin,<lb/>
Michael Bassman, and Edward<lb/>
Reep.<lb/>
They will nominate officers for<lb/>
the Faculty Senate for next year.<lb/>
In other action, the Faculty<lb/>
Senate approved several pro-<lb/>
posed changes in various depart-<lb/>
ments presented by the Univer-<lb/>
sity Curriculum Commhtee.<lb/>
Greenville to host<lb/>
bike criterium<lb/>
See MAJOR RACE, pg. 10<lb/>
5�S2<lb/>
CHAIRMAN TROY W. PATE, JR. dressing the Tuesday Faculty<lb/>
Senate meeting. Photo by Jim Elliott)<lb/>
News editor resigns<lb/>
to seek SGA office<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
Neil Sessoms, candidate fa<lb/>
SGA president, is on leave of<lb/>
absence from his news editaship<lb/>
at FOUNTAINHEAD while seek-<lb/>
ing SGA office.<lb/>
 I took a leave of absence the<lb/>
day I filed to run fa SGA<lb/>
president to prevent any conflict<lb/>
of interest said Sessons.<lb/>
Concerning publications, Ses-<lb/>
sons said he and Reed Warren,<lb/>
vice-presidential candidate, sup-<lb/>
pat inaeased independence.<lb/>
"This should assure a BUC-<lb/>
CANEER for next year and<lb/>
provide a mae effective campus<lb/>
newspaper<lb/>
According to Sessoms, in-<lb/>
creased independence will elimi-<lb/>
nate the need fa a subscriptioi<lb/>
fee fa the BUCCANEER. It could<lb/>
be funded from student fees as in<lb/>
the past, he said.<lb/>
"We are going to avoid the<lb/>
kind of situation that we had this<lb/>
year said Sessoms.<lb/>
Sessoms said he plans to<lb/>
provide fa a lump-sum appro-<lb/>
priatioi to the media board at the<lb/>
beginning of the legislative ses-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
"Advertising revenue will<lb/>
supplement this appropriation<lb/>
instead of being reverted to<lb/>
the SGA as it has in the past<lb/>
said Sessoms.<lb/>
Sessoms said fa the press to<lb/>
be an effective check en govern-<lb/>
ment it must na be dependent on<lb/>
that government fa funding.<lb/>
"Politics, in the past, have<lb/>
hampered the newspaper sability<lb/>
to thaoughly infam the student<lb/>
body said Sessons.<lb/>
<lb/>
Sessoms<lb/>
"I have seen the antagonism<lb/>
between SGA and publications as<lb/>
well as between SGA and other<lb/>
student agencies said Sessoms.<lb/>
"The newspaper can and<lb/>
should be a vital link between<lb/>
SGA and the student body he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
OVER lb WOMEN demonstrated at the the new birth place ruling. (See story, pg. T)<lb/>
California Medical Association meeting against<lb/>
�������������������<lb/>
SGA candidates' debate<lb/>
A SGA presidential candidates' debate will be<lb/>
held Tuesday, March 29, in Brewster building C-103<lb/>
from 7-9 p. m. sponsored by the Elections Committee.<lb/>
The presidential candidates to debate are Scott<lb/>
Bright, Neil Sessoms, and Tim Sullivan.<lb/>
��������������<lb/>
<pb facs="00057119_0002"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
mnn<lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
24 March 1977<lb/>
Auditions<lb/>
ECU Coffeehouse will hold<lb/>
auditions Friday and Saturday,<lb/>
March 31st and April 1st. Any<lb/>
group, or organization, or any-<lb/>
body who would like to try out,<lb/>
come by ECU Student Union<lb/>
offioe and apply.<lb/>
Table tennis<lb/>
If you enjoy playing table<lb/>
tennis, why not oome over to<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center each<lb/>
Tuesday night at 800 p.m. when<lb/>
the Table Tennis Club meets for<lb/>
some friendly competition. Don't<lb/>
think you have to be a pro to<lb/>
participate because the competi-<lb/>
tion is at all levels. So, bring a<lb/>
friend and have some fun.<lb/>
Kreskin<lb/>
The world famed mentalist,<lb/>
the AMAZING KRESKIN, will<lb/>
appear at ECU on Thursday,<lb/>
March 31st at 8 p.m. in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center Theater.<lb/>
Admission for ECU students is by<lb/>
ID and activity card.<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Friday March 25th is the last<lb/>
day to apply for chairperson of a<lb/>
Student Union Committee. The<lb/>
committees are: Films, Popular<lb/>
Entertainment. Lecture, Coffee-<lb/>
house, Artist Series, Theatre<lb/>
Arts, Art Exhibition. Entertainer,<lb/>
and Travel. Come and get in-<lb/>
volved in planning the entertain-<lb/>
ment for ECU next year.<lb/>
Fun In Son<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ<lb/>
will meet for fun, fellowship and<lb/>
challenging insights from God's<lb/>
Word. Everyone welcome Thurs-<lb/>
day 7 p.m. Brewster B-102.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Students, sign up today for a<lb/>
mixed-doubles bowling league at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Sign<lb/>
up on the schedule located on the<lb/>
ground floor bulletin board at the<lb/>
Student Center. There will be a<lb/>
Monday and a Tuesday night<lb/>
league meeting weekly at 633<lb/>
p.m. Play will begin Monday,<lb/>
March 28.<lb/>
Circus time<lb/>
A circus troupe of 15 college<lb/>
students will appear on the ECU<lb/>
Mall on March 29th at 1 p.m. The<lb/>
students are now in training in<lb/>
Orlando, Florida and promise to<lb/>
thrill you with their feats. Un-<lb/>
fortunately there are no animal<lb/>
acts! Come join us anyway and<lb/>
have fun. There will be cotton<lb/>
candy, candy apples, and all the<lb/>
fun that a circus can offer. SeeYal<lb/>
there! Sponsored by the Student<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
Ceramics<lb/>
The Ceramics Guild of the<lb/>
School of Art, ECU, will sponsor a<lb/>
workshop on April 4 and 5 with<lb/>
Steven and Susan Kemenyffy<lb/>
from Edinboro (Pa.) State<lb/>
College. Both are nationally ac-<lb/>
claimed ceramists and have ex-<lb/>
hibited widely and have been<lb/>
recognized in several ceramics<lb/>
books and crafts periodicals.<lb/>
On April 6 and 7, the Guild<lb/>
will sponsor a second workshop<lb/>
with Mr. David Keator artist-in-<lb/>
residence at the Penland School<lb/>
of Crafts, Penland, N.C Keator<lb/>
also has a national exhibition<lb/>
reoord and is recognized as one of<lb/>
the finest young craftsmen in<lb/>
porcelain.<lb/>
Visual arts<lb/>
The Visual Arts Forum will<lb/>
meet Thursday, March 24, 4:00<lb/>
p.m Jenkins Auditorium. Dis-<lb/>
cussed in the agenda will be<lb/>
Jenkins' dedication and Visual<lb/>
Arts Symposium.<lb/>
Mile o' money<lb/>
Announcing the Mile<lb/>
O' Money campaign to be held on<lb/>
April 19 - the week we come back<lb/>
from Easter break folks! A mile of<lb/>
U.S. currency is the goal and all<lb/>
organizations, groups, etc. on<lb/>
campus are invited to participate.<lb/>
This mile of money is going to the<lb/>
Heart Fund and is being sponsor-<lb/>
ed by Gamma Sigma Sigma.<lb/>
Come out and join us on "the<lb/>
hill" from 4 o'clock until we're<lb/>
done. That's April 19 - entry<lb/>
blanks and further information to<lb/>
bede ,ied soon. There's a trophy<lb/>
for the organization or group<lb/>
going the farthest with their<lb/>
line of money. You can start<lb/>
collecting soon!<lb/>
Beach retreat Car wash<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/>
offioe in the Speight Building.<lb/>
Your Psyc professor may give<lb/>
extra credit for attendance.<lb/>
The Angels of the Alpha Phi<lb/>
Alpha fraternity will have a car<lb/>
wash, Saturday March 26 from 10<lb/>
a.m. - until, at 1904 Mrytle<lb/>
Avenue. Listen to the latest hiu<lb/>
while you wait. Price $1.25.<lb/>
Money will be used for a schol-<lb/>
ip fund.<lb/>
Vocational<lb/>
The American Vocational<lb/>
Association will be meeting this<lb/>
Tuesday, March 29,1977 in Room<lb/>
205 of the Home Economics<lb/>
Building at 5 00. It has been<lb/>
planned to have three guest<lb/>
speakers representing their pro-<lb/>
spective areas of Home Eco-<lb/>
nomics, Business and Industrial<lb/>
Technology. They will share ideas<lb/>
on how they relate vocational<lb/>
education to their students. Re-<lb/>
freshments will be served. All<lb/>
interested persons are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Pre-reg<lb/>
Pre-reg will run with change<lb/>
of major period this year. Men<lb/>
March 28 - Fri April 8. Advisors<lb/>
should have pre-registration<lb/>
material by Friday.<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma, Freshman<lb/>
Honor Society, will meet on April<lb/>
4 at 7:30 p.m. in the Multi-<lb/>
purpose Room of Mendenhall.<lb/>
Buccaneer pictures will be taken<lb/>
and there will be election of<lb/>
officers for 1977-78 (president,<lb/>
vice president, secretary, trea-<lb/>
surer, historian, and senior ad-<lb/>
visor). Members who wish to run<lb/>
for offioe must see Dr. John D.<lb/>
Ebbs in Austin 214 prior to this<lb/>
meeting and be present at this<lb/>
meeting. All members are urged<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
The Association for World<lb/>
Education, a consortium of indi-<lb/>
viduals, institutions, colleges,<lb/>
and universities dedicated to<lb/>
fostering a global perspective in<lb/>
education, invites American stu-<lb/>
dents and educators to participate<lb/>
in an important summer con-<lb/>
ference on "Building a World<lb/>
Community to be held in<lb/>
Innsbruck, Austria, June 25-29<lb/>
and Paris, France, July 1-5.<lb/>
The working conference,<lb/>
"The Second World Citizens<lb/>
Assembly will bring together<lb/>
individuals from around the world<lb/>
who are actively committed to<lb/>
global peace and cooperation.<lb/>
For scholarship infor.nation or<lb/>
contributions to that fund contact<lb/>
Barbara Stone, A.W.E. Program<lb/>
Office, School of Education, Uni-<lb/>
versity of Connecticut, Storrs, CT<lb/>
06268. General conference in-<lb/>
formation and registration 'n<lb/>
quiries can be sent to World<lb/>
Citizens Assembly, P.O. Box<lb/>
2063, San Francisco, CA 94126.<lb/>
Bike classic<lb/>
The Miller High Life Green-<lb/>
ville Bicycle Classic is happening<lb/>
in Downtown Greenville on Sun-<lb/>
day, March 27th. Racing starts at<lb/>
11 a.m. with all races beginning<lb/>
at the courthouse. The United<lb/>
States Cycling Federation sanct-<lb/>
ioned race is sponsored by John's<lb/>
Bike Shop and the Greenville<lb/>
Jayceei.<lb/>
Juniors, women, veterans,<lb/>
senior III &amp; IV and Senior I &amp; II<lb/>
racers will be competing for<lb/>
$1,500 in prizes. In addition there<lb/>
will be a novice race tor beginners<lb/>
and also competition between the<lb/>
fraternities and sororities.<lb/>
Boxing<lb/>
The TKE 2nd Annual Boxing<lb/>
Tournament will be held April<lb/>
4-6, in Wright Auditorium. Re-<lb/>
gistration for the tourney is from<lb/>
9-5 and begins today, March 24<lb/>
and continues through Tuesday,<lb/>
March 29. For further inform-<lb/>
ation, call 758-4753.<lb/>
Candidates<lb/>
Come to Clement Dorm lobby<lb/>
on Tuesday March 29 to meet the<lb/>
candidates who are running for<lb/>
SGA offices. It startsat 8 p.m so<lb/>
if you're interested in finding out<lb/>
who is running and what they<lb/>
stand for, oome on down to<lb/>
Clement.<lb/>
Bible study<lb/>
The Forever Generation will<lb/>
meet Friday night at 7:30 in<lb/>
Brewster B-103. Why not join us<lb/>
for a time of Bible study and<lb/>
discussion, singing, and Christian<lb/>
fellowship?<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Mike Wells will show off this<lb/>
weekend, Friday and Saturday,<lb/>
March 25 and 26, at 8 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
at ECU Coffeehouse. Mike plays<lb/>
guitar and will possibly sing<lb/>
some. Bring a friend, bring a<lb/>
girlfriend, or "bring your<lb/>
mother" this weekend. Plenty of<lb/>
refreshments. Rm. 15 Menden-<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
WECU<lb/>
This weekend's Artist Series<lb/>
on Friday nite from 7-9 p.m. will<lb/>
feature Billy Joel, brought to you<lb/>
by Geoffry Turner. More of the<lb/>
best in music from WECU.<lb/>
Thanks<lb/>
The Omicron Chapter of Phi<lb/>
Beta Lambda wishes to thank the<lb/>
SGA for funding its Fifth Annual<lb/>
Business Symposium which was<lb/>
held March 16, 1977.<lb/>
Cheering<lb/>
Attention guys and gals!<lb/>
March 31st, 6:00 p.m by the<lb/>
ticket offioe at Minges Coliseum,<lb/>
there will be a meeting to discuss<lb/>
requirements for Varsity Cheer-<lb/>
ing tryouts for 77-78. Any<lb/>
questions rr.y be answered at<lb/>
this time. The first practice<lb/>
session will be April 18th, 5.00 at<lb/>
Minges, and try-outs will be April<lb/>
28th. All interested are urged to<lb/>
come!<lb/>
Dance trophies<lb/>
To those who helped carry off<lb/>
the Gamma Sigma Sigma dance-<lb/>
a-tnon of Jan. 1977 we would like<lb/>
to give a special thanks. Those<lb/>
couples, whose total piedgings<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 toeach of the participants.<lb/>
Attention: These can be picked up<lb/>
in 337 Gotten Dorm, Monday<lb/>
through Thursday after five.<lb/>
Boogie<lb/>
BRICKYARD BOOGIE il<lb/>
Saturday, April 2, 1977. For an<lb/>
entertaining change of pace and<lb/>
relaxing atmosphere truck on out<lb/>
to Waterhole 1. For the small<lb/>
sum of $3.00 you can enjoy Old<lb/>
time string music at its best -<lb/>
PLANK ROAD STRING BAND,<lb/>
pig pickin, one free keg, special<lb/>
prices on beer, door prizes,<lb/>
volleyball, horseshoes, and much<lb/>
more.<lb/>
Fun starts at 1000 a.m so<lb/>
oome on out and spread your<lb/>
blankets and enjoy music in the<lb/>
sun! Tickets and directions avail-<lb/>
able at Rock N Soul (must be<lb/>
purchased in advance). For more<lb/>
info call 752-0257 or 752-0144.<lb/>
Buy beverages on premises only -<lb/>
special prices - NO BYOB.<lb/>
Multi-media<lb/>
The Effective Ambassador is a<lb/>
multi-media presentation by<lb/>
twenty-one hundred - a tribute to<lb/>
the late Paul Little. It premiered<lb/>
at Urbana 76 and is highly on<lb/>
demand on campuses across the<lb/>
nation. Inter-Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship will show The Effect-<lb/>
ive Ambassador this Sunday<lb/>
night, March 27, 800 at the<lb/>
Afro-American Culture Center.<lb/>
You won't want to miss it!<lb/>
Camping<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 or for more informa-<lb/>
tion phone 537-9042.<lb/>
Delta Sigma<lb/>
The Sorors of Delta Sigma<lb/>
Theta will have a bake sale,<lb/>
Saturday March 26. 1977 from<lb/>
10-2. at hiu Hiazd Shopping<lb/>
Center. Proceeds will go to the<lb/>
Heart Fund.<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 printe' for<lb/>
you. Subscriptions may be r-<lb/>
chased at the BUCCANEER offioe<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/>
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, 800 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/>
<pb facs="00057119_0003"/><lb/>
HHHK<lb/>
Addresses retirement assn.<lb/>
24 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Jenkins: senior citizens need involvement<lb/>
A satisfying life for senior<lb/>
citizens can come through in-<lb/>
volvement and placing people<lb/>
above all else, Dr. LeoW. Jenkins<lb/>
suggested Monday.<lb/>
"This is a very appropriate<lb/>
theme for senior citizens�in-<lb/>
volvement he said. "The per-<lb/>
son leads a satisfying life wno<lb/>
places people above all else.<lb/>
"This fights off isolation and<lb/>
loneliness.<lb/>
"This person knows that<lb/>
human value cannot be measured<lb/>
in terms of productivity, or<lb/>
gauged by the esteem of others.<lb/>
This inner need can only be<lb/>
satisfied by human involve-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Dr. Jt ikins, veteran president<lb/>
and ECU nancellor, spoke to the<lb/>
Carteret ounty chapter of the<lb/>
American Association of Retired<lb/>
Persons here.<lb/>
He recalled that some 15 years<lb/>
ago he wrote an article published<lb/>
in the North Carolina Medical<lb/>
Journal about preparing fa the<lb/>
DR. LEO JENKINS<lb/>
ECU hosts<lb/>
contest<lb/>
High School sponsors and<lb/>
students from all over Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina will participate in<lb/>
beginning and advanced typing<lb/>
contests March 28-29 at ECU,<lb/>
according to Mrs. Gennie Hage-<lb/>
dorn of the Business Education<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
The beginning and advanced<lb/>
contests fa technical institute<lb/>
and two-year community college<lb/>
students will be held March 29.<lb/>
Each school iseligible to enter<lb/>
three beginning contestants and<lb/>
three advanced contestants. Stu-<lb/>
dents will compete both as<lb/>
individuals and as teams.<lb/>
mw<lb/>
Good Things<lb/>
For Gentle People<lb/>
318 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
752-3815<lb/>
late years in life.<lb/>
"My perspective is not much<lb/>
different now he said. "In other<lb/>
wads, I do not think age depends<lb/>
entirely on years. It depends on<lb/>
health and mental outlook.<lb/>
"Some men are ban old.<lb/>
Some never grow old.<lb/>
In less than 25 years the<lb/>
number of Americans over 65<lb/>
years of age will be almost 31<lb/>
million, Jenkins said.<lb/>
"This is a great hunk of our<lb/>
society that cannot be allowed to<lb/>
withdraw.<lb/>
"We are in an emerging new<lb/>
society and those of us here today<lb/>
are very much a part of this<lb/>
future<lb/>
Jenkins predicted a so-called<lb/>
"second industrial revolution"<lb/>
which he said "might very well<lb/>
free people's minds and senses in<lb/>
their waking wald and means<lb/>
age may see a stroig friendship<lb/>
between science and religion.<lb/>
"The scientist will probably<lb/>
see God mre clearly, and the<lb/>
theologian will probably look<lb/>
upon science with less sus-<lb/>
picion<lb/>
He also warned that senia<lb/>
citizens "are the target for<lb/>
hucksters, confronted by many<lb/>
peddlers seeking their time, their<lb/>
interestsa their money Actual-<lb/>
ly ne said, the hucksters are<lb/>
"offering bribes<lb/>
Jim's<lb/>
SERV-A-SET<lb/>
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"The Alternative to Downtown"<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
Rick Cornfield<lb/>
Friday, March 26,1977<lb/>
If you haven't been to Lobo's lately,<lb/>
you haven't been to Lobo's.<lb/>
Riverbluff &amp;<lb/>
Putt - Putt<lb/>
c)<lb/>
Hastings Ford �<lb/>
Fast Fare<lb/>
h- 264<lb/>
Lobo's<lb/>
The senior citizen, he said, is<lb/>
looking for challenge-challenges<lb/>
to usefulness, to service and to<lb/>
serenity. This large segment of<lb/>
society should be enoouraged to<lb/>
bark often he said. "You<lb/>
should not sit back and watch<lb/>
various schemes designed to<lb/>
shape your lives.<lb/>
'We at East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity place great emphasis on the<lb/>
second career potential of thou-<lb/>
sands and will oontinue to do<lb/>
so, he said.<lb/>
He said a second career is "a<lb/>
possibility for many opportunities<lb/>
fa further growth, panting out<lb/>
that only one of every five retired<lb/>
people is employed. With an<lb/>
average of only $600 per month<lb/>
income, these people "could use<lb/>
more financial resources He<lb/>
said Social Security laws should<lb/>
be amended to enoourage people<lb/>
to work longer without penalty of<lb/>
lower benefits.<lb/>
Save Money!<lb/>
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Page 4<lb/>
24 March 1977<lb/>
Jenkins plans for future<lb/>
With more than a year left in his tenure as ECU<lb/>
Chancellor, Dr. Leo Jenkins has already begun faying<lb/>
the spiritual groundwork for his senior citizenship.<lb/>
Speaking to the Carteret County chapter of the<lb/>
American Association of Retired Persons Monday,<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins opined involvement as the individual's<lb/>
gladiator against isolation and loneliness.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins has lead this University from a<lb/>
glorified teachers' college to a full-fledged institution<lb/>
replete with medical program since his appointment<lb/>
as chancellor. Next year, when Dr. Jenkins reaches<lb/>
mandatory retirement age, he will have served ECU<lb/>
in the top post and the Eastern Carolina Community<lb/>
fa 18 years.<lb/>
Now the venerable academician must prepare for<lb/>
a life without the responsibilities of several hundred<lb/>
faculty members, several thousand students and a<lb/>
yearly budget of several million dollars.<lb/>
In his speech to the Carteret group, Dr. Jenkins<lb/>
alluded to the possibility of a second career, citing<lb/>
it as an opportunity for further growth.<lb/>
Doubtless, the indefatigable chancellor will not<lb/>
relegate himself to a rocking chair after retirement.<lb/>
Whatever endeavor he should choose, let us hope the<lb/>
chief administrator of this University maintains close<lb/>
association and relays frequent advice to this rapidly<lb/>
growing institution of learning.<lb/>
Porno pendulum swings<lb/>
To a deeply religious or extremely naive person<lb/>
the apocalypse must seem near. The "forces of<lb/>
good" would now appear to be mounting the final<lb/>
attack against the obscene purveyors of pornographic<lb/>
smut.<lb/>
The presses recently ground to a halt on Larry<lb/>
Flynt's Hustler magazine fueling the optimism of<lb/>
ambitious district attorneys and anti-porn groups<lb/>
around the country. And just this week two bills were<lb/>
introduced in the North Carolina General Assembly<lb/>
which would make it easier to obtain convictions<lb/>
against alleged pornographers.<lb/>
Despite the obvious scenario, the final battle<lb/>
between good and evil is not on the horizon. The<lb/>
seesawing of society from prudish to progressive may<lb/>
have reached its apogee on the one end and, with the<lb/>
aid of ambitious local officials, will now begin the<lb/>
opposite swing. If so, the forces of a free and open<lb/>
press must be on guard to assure that the perigee is<lb/>
leached long before censorship becomes a reality.<lb/>
rounlainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis C. Leonard<lb/>
News EditorsKim Johnson<lb/>
Debbie Jackson<lb/>
Trends EditorPat Coyie<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 aridret: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
C-MOOSl A ZlOUF�X CANPiPAf<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Pingston offers insight on SGA election<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Attention: ECU Students<lb/>
Spring elections are upon us<lb/>
once again, and candidates are<lb/>
beating the bushes to achieve a<lb/>
majority of the twenty percent of<lb/>
students who will actually vote.<lb/>
This election, however, is<lb/>
quite unique. This isthe first time<lb/>
an incumbent President is seek-<lb/>
ing re-election. This is the first<lb/>
time a Vice President will be<lb/>
running on, and presiding over,<lb/>
the newly created Communi-<lb/>
cations Board. This is also one of<lb/>
the few times that a major office<lb/>
is being sought unopposed - that<lb/>
of Treasurer.<lb/>
So, overall, this election is<lb/>
shaping up to be highly competi-<lb/>
tive, and one in which the student<lb/>
body should be greatly interest-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
The outcome of these elect-<lb/>
ions will affect the transportation<lb/>
system, the legal service, the<lb/>
overpass problem, the semester<lb/>
system and other services that<lb/>
directly involve you, the students.<lb/>
So get out and vote.<lb/>
Maybe I can help you by<lb/>
giving an inside viewpoint of how<lb/>
the races for President and Vice<lb/>
President are developing.<lb/>
Seeking the Presidency are<lb/>
Scott Bright, Tim Sullivan and<lb/>
Neil Sessoms. Scott Bright has<lb/>
been involved in operations of the<lb/>
Buccaneer and was involved in<lb/>
several controversies between<lb/>
himself and the SGA over screen-<lb/>
ings and also between the BUC<lb/>
and the SGA. Neil Sessoms has<lb/>
worked for FOUNTAINHEAD as<lb/>
News Editor and also has had<lb/>
numerous conflicts with the SGA<lb/>
and also with Tim Sullivan<lb/>
directly. Tim Sullivan iswas SGA<lb/>
President and also has served in<lb/>
the Legislature. His administra-<lb/>
tion has achieved a great deal,<lb/>
but has been marred by numer-<lb/>
ous conflicts between public-<lb/>
ations and administrators. To be<lb/>
very blunt, students, there is no<lb/>
love lost between these three. All<lb/>
three are energetic, and seem to<lb/>
have a genuine desire to serve the<lb/>
students. The big difference is<lb/>
technique in implementation of<lb/>
their goals.<lb/>
The Vice President race is also<lb/>
wide open. Greg Boykin, Tommy<lb/>
Joe Payne, and Reed Warren are<lb/>
vying for this position. Greg<lb/>
Boykin has long been a member<lb/>
of the SGA Legislature, as has<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne. Both of these<lb/>
gentlemen are good workers and<lb/>
have served the Legislature ad-<lb/>
mirably. Reed Warren served as<lb/>
public defender in the Student<lb/>
Judicial system. He was fired by<lb/>
President Sullivan in the winter of<lb/>
this year. Reed is running with<lb/>
Neil Sessoms in a coalition. This<lb/>
race shapes up as two SGA<lb/>
members and an ex-public de-<lb/>
fender seeking the number twc<lb/>
spot. How much knowledge of the<lb/>
Communications Board these<lb/>
three possess is questionable.<lb/>
Boykin has been the only one of<lb/>
the three to speak with me about<lb/>
the operations of the newly<lb/>
created Communications Board.<lb/>
The power of the Vice President<lb/>
has been greatly increased and a<lb/>
knowledgeable individual will be<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
That's it as I see it. There are<lb/>
a wide variety of views and issues<lb/>
involved. There are many indivi-<lb/>
duals with contrasting styles. As<lb/>
Vice President this past year I<lb/>
have come in contact with these<lb/>
individuals, some more than<lb/>
others. I have my personal<lb/>
impressions of all these and have<lb/>
related somewhat to these here. I<lb/>
shall endorse none of these, not<lb/>
because I favor none, but because<lb/>
I owe some loyalty to tnose<lb/>
involved and some loyalty to my<lb/>
position as Vice President and as<lb/>
a student.<lb/>
I hope these insights will help<lb/>
you understand the race up-<lb/>
coming. I urge all students to<lb/>
vote, to get involved, and to<lb/>
understand the importance of this<lb/>
wild democratic affair. I have<lb/>
enjoyed my term in office and I<lb/>
hope all you students out there<lb/>
have somewhat benefited from<lb/>
my work this year.<lb/>
Greg Pingston<lb/>
Student Body Vice President<lb/>
F<lb/>
Car<lb/>
To FOUrx<lb/>
observati<lb/>
that on�<lb/>
president<lb/>
The i<lb/>
triousSG<lb/>
Sullivan<lb/>
wisdom<lb/>
new.<lb/>
He se<lb/>
record <lb/>
which is<lb/>
not very<lb/>
In his<lb/>
that he <lb/>
free legc<lb/>
salaries <lb/>
theaty;<lb/>
kept his<lb/>
BULL<lb/>
If the<lb/>
ning any<lb/>
year it is<lb/>
ing and <lb/>
and his s<lb/>
Sullivan.<lb/>
being fr<lb/>
students<lb/>
tune of<lb/>
students<lb/>
promisee<lb/>
that he<lb/>
students<lb/>
Sect<lb/>
To FOUN<lb/>
As<lb/>
secretary<lb/>
students<lb/>
March 30<lb/>
the candi<lb/>
SGA i<lb/>
by which<lb/>
and it is<lb/>
concerni<lb/>
govern th<lb/>
their stud<lb/>
a student<lb/>
to be a<lb/>
which ycx<lb/>
I agret<lb/>
should d<lb/>
vious sec<lb/>
else the<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
To FOUN-<lb/>
We (IS<lb/>
Warren)<lb/>
drop peril<lb/>
between c<lb/>
attainable<lb/>
The ot<lb/>
these obj�<lb/>
and throu<lb/>
ministratk<lb/>
administre<lb/>
the univei<lb/>
not condi<lb/>
cooperati<lb/>
marked irr<lb/>
Other i<lb/>
longer bre<lb/>
periods. v<lb/>
Fori<lb/>
and inc<lb/>
to editn<lb/>
hountai<lb/>
Mendei<lb/>
<pb facs="00057119_0005"/><lb/>
24 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Candidate's promises are nothing new<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I would like to make a few<lb/>
observations about the platform<lb/>
that one candidate for SGA<lb/>
president is running on.<lb/>
The candidate is our illus-<lb/>
triousSGA President, Timothy K.<lb/>
Sullivan, who in his infinite<lb/>
wisdom is promising nothing<lb/>
new.<lb/>
He seems to be riding on his<lb/>
record of past performance,<lb/>
which is somewhat tarnished and<lb/>
not very distinguished either.<lb/>
In his platform, Sullivan says<lb/>
that he promised better transit,<lb/>
tree legal service, cuts in SGA<lb/>
salaries and better relations with<lb/>
the city; Sullivan says that he has<lb/>
kept his promises, to that I say<lb/>
BULL !<lb/>
If the transit system is run-<lb/>
ning any better than it did last<lb/>
year it is because of a hardwork-<lb/>
ing and diligent transit manager<lb/>
and his staff, not because of Tim<lb/>
Sullivan. As for that legal service<lb/>
being free, well it costs the<lb/>
students a pretty penny, to the<lb/>
tune of $800 a month from<lb/>
students' fees. Well Sullivan<lb/>
promised to cut SGA salaries, and<lb/>
that he did. He cut a lot of<lb/>
students out of money that oould<lb/>
have been used to support<lb/>
themselves, money that workers<lb/>
in SGA-funded organizations<lb/>
work hard for. Sullivan did not<lb/>
save very much by cutting<lb/>
salaries. He brags about how he<lb/>
cut his own salary by $25; big<lb/>
deal, what did that $25 cut do for<lb/>
the students, nothing.<lb/>
And talk about better relations<lb/>
with the city, well do you call<lb/>
sitting around plotting how to sue<lb/>
the city of Greenville good<lb/>
relations. Sullivan took credit fa<lb/>
the peaceful Halloween we had<lb/>
this year, you would think he did<lb/>
everything single-handed. Peo-<lb/>
ple, let me tell you who we can<lb/>
thank fa that: Maya Percy Cox,<lb/>
the aty police, and the downtown<lb/>
bar owners.<lb/>
Lo and behold, the president<lb/>
has promised that if re-elected he<lb/>
will oontinue the SGA bid fa the<lb/>
10th St. overpass. I would like to<lb/>
know what the hell he has done<lb/>
fa it thus far. Was it Tim Sullivan<lb/>
who prepared the overpass re-<lb/>
pats, kept the recads, kept the<lb/>
students informed as to the<lb/>
progress of this project? No<lb/>
indeed, it was Greg Pingston who<lb/>
did the bulk of the work. Was it<lb/>
Sullivan who went to Raleigh and<lb/>
asked for and received the<lb/>
Secretary hopeful seeks support<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
As a candidate fa SGA<lb/>
seaetary, I would like to urge all<lb/>
students to go to the polls on<lb/>
March 30th and cast their vote fa<lb/>
the candidates of their choice.<lb/>
SGA is one of the few means<lb/>
by which students have a voice,<lb/>
and it is a very impatant voice<lb/>
concerning the rules which<lb/>
govern them and how they want<lb/>
their student fees to be spent. As<lb/>
a student, I would very much like<lb/>
to be an instrument through<lb/>
which your voice is heard.<lb/>
I agree that the SGA seaetary<lb/>
should definitely have had pre-<lb/>
vious seaetarial experience, a<lb/>
else the students would never<lb/>
know what happens in meetings. I<lb/>
believe I fulfill this qualification<lb/>
since I was seaetary fa several<lb/>
clubs during high school. Thus, I<lb/>
will na only know what needs to<lb/>
be done, but how to do it.<lb/>
However, this is not my only<lb/>
qualification. I was a Dorm<lb/>
Representative this year and I am<lb/>
acquainted with the SGA. I<lb/>
served on the Rules and Judiciary<lb/>
Committee and gained invalu-<lb/>
able experience about the consti-<lb/>
tution and the wakings of SGA.<lb/>
Through your suppat and<lb/>
votes, I can put my experience to<lb/>
wak fa YOU, the students.<lb/>
Libby Lefler<lb/>
Candidate fa SGA Seaetary<lb/>
SGA coalition maps out plat form<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
We (Neil Sessoms and Reed<lb/>
Warren) consider an extended<lb/>
drop period and longer breaks<lb/>
between classes very needed and<lb/>
attainable goals.<lb/>
The only way to accomplish<lb/>
these objectives is to wak with<lb/>
and through the university ad-<lb/>
ministration. The present SGA<lb/>
administration's relationship with<lb/>
the university administratas is<lb/>
not conducive to progress and<lb/>
cooperation. Ours will be a<lb/>
marked improvement.<lb/>
Other universities enjoy both<lb/>
longer breaks and extended drop<lb/>
periods. We see two basic ways to<lb/>
start waking towards these ob-<lb/>
jectives: 1 (submit a resolution<lb/>
from the SGA legislature to the<lb/>
administration, the faculty sen-<lb/>
ate, and the board of trustees, a<lb/>
2(submit an affirmative student<lb/>
referendum to the same authai-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
These approaches cannot<lb/>
guarantee the enactment of our<lb/>
proposals. But with a better<lb/>
working relationship with the<lb/>
university administration we feel<lb/>
we will have a firm base to launch<lb/>
these steps.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Neil Sessoms and Reed Warren<lb/>
Candidates fa SGA<lb/>
President and Vice-President<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
Forum letters should be typed or printed, signed<lb/>
and include the writer's address. Lettes are subject<lb/>
to editing for taste and brevity. They may be sent to<lb/>
hountamhead or left at the Information Desk in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
support of the governor, I t.<lb/>
governa, and attaney general?<lb/>
Was it Sullivan who went to<lb/>
Raleigh last wetr and submitted<lb/>
an update repat ai the overpass<lb/>
to the governor, and had a<lb/>
conference with the engineers at<lb/>
DOT about giving the overpass<lb/>
top priaity, and had a meeting<lb/>
with Lt. Governa Jimmy Green<lb/>
concerning the overpass. Hell no,<lb/>
Sullivan did na do any of this, I<lb/>
did it.<lb/>
I might also mention that<lb/>
while I was sitting here typing<lb/>
this letter I was handed a letter<lb/>
from the Office of the Lt.<lb/>
Governa. The letter says that I<lb/>
will be receiving an updated<lb/>
repat from the It. governa's<lb/>
office on the overpass in about<lb/>
two weeks.<lb/>
Well all I have to say is that if<lb/>
Sullivan expects to be re-elected<lb/>
on his previous recad, I feel<lb/>
mighty sary fa that boy, cause<lb/>
he ain't gonna get a whole<lb/>
helluva la of suppat.<lb/>
As I have said befae, to quote<lb/>
Abe Lincoln, You can fool all of<lb/>
the people some of the time, and<lb/>
some of the people all the time,<lb/>
but you can t foot all of the people<lb/>
all the time.<lb/>
Sary Tim,<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
Conoerned Student<lb/>
?<lb/>
Photo Contest<lb/>
1st prize $50.00 in merchandise<lb/>
2nd prize $25.00 in merchandise<lb/>
3rd prize $15.00 in merchandise<lb/>
ENTER YOUR PHOTOS NOW<lb/>
For more information call or come by<lb/>
Jr Cameras<lb/>
vSfiop<lb/>
PS. These are not potatoes<lb/>
526 SOUTH COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C 27834<lb/>
PHONE<lb/>
7520688<lb/>
<pb facs="00057119_0006"/><lb/>
��UHDH<lb/>
t8 , <lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 24 March 1977<lb/>
Diabetic rodent<lb/>
S�7ry ABERNATHY (d) received the 1977 from Leo Jenkins. Dr. Floyd Mattheis looks on.<lb/>
distinguished service award in science education<lb/>
K)H lt)hl THIM.s<lb/>
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Come See Us This Weekend<lb/>
520 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Six-foot rat missing,<lb/>
robbery suspected<lb/>
By JOHN DAY BERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A six-foot, gray rat disappear-<lb/>
ed from Speight building on the<lb/>
ECU campus Tuesday, March 22,<lb/>
and is believed to have been<lb/>
stolen, according to Ed Saunders,<lb/>
publicity chairman for Psi Chi,<lb/>
psychology honor fraternity.<lb/>
"The rat was last seen at 7<lb/>
p.m. on the 22nd, its head<lb/>
sticking from the trunk of an old,<lb/>
white, four-door car parked at<lb/>
a restaurant on the corner of<lb/>
Fifth and Reade Streets said<lb/>
Saunders.<lb/>
The car was attended by a<lb/>
woman in her early 20's, with<lb/>
mid-back length brown hair,<lb/>
according to Saunders.<lb/>
"The rat was wearing tennis<lb/>
shoes, and nothing else at the<lb/>
time of his apparent abduction<lb/>
from the rear lobby of Speight<lb/>
said Saunders.<lb/>
The estimated value of the<lb/>
cardboard rat is $20. It was built<lb/>
by members of Psi Chi to attract<lb/>
attention to the psychology de-<lb/>
partment's Spring retreat to<lb/>
Atlantic Beach, which will be on<lb/>
Saturday, March 26.<lb/>
"The rat's disappearance is<lb/>
really hurting the retreat, since<lb/>
ftettemlini<lb/>
Why watch the NCAA finals<lb/>
on a 19" black and white<lb/>
'alone when you can watch it<lb/>
lifesize at the Bottomline?<lb/>
he was carrying almost all of the<lb/>
advertisements and sign<lb/>
up slips said Saunders.<lb/>
"Besides, he is diabetic, and<lb/>
must have insulin shots regular-<lb/>
ly<lb/>
A reward is being offered by<lb/>
Psi Chi for the return of the rat,<lb/>
which will go unquestioned, or for<lb/>
information leading to its return,<lb/>
according to Saunders.<lb/>
"If we don't get him back<lb/>
soon, I'll report it to the police<lb/>
and have the thief or thieves<lb/>
prosecuted said Saunders.<lb/>
Saunders can be contacted in<lb/>
the psychology office, telephone<lb/>
number 757-6800, or at his home<lb/>
number, 752-6993.<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
3:00 p.m. Daily<lb/>
immMiUmMmiVi<lb/>
Discount Drug Center<lb/>
Know Your Pharmacist<lb/>
He'd like you to discover the<lb/>
PrMcriptkms ways in which he can help.<lb/>
Fast Services, Discount Prices,<lb/>
High Quality Drugs.<lb/>
3 Locations<lb/>
2814 East 10th St. Greenville Next to A&amp;P 758-2181<lb/>
1112 North Greene St. Greenville Next to Harris Super Mkt.<lb/>
752-8297<lb/>
1102 W. 3rd St. Ayden Harris Shopping Cir. 746-3824<lb/>
j<lb/>
<pb facs="00057119_0007"/><lb/>
�����WiWMMBMBBMiHBBB HHHHHBHBH<lb/>
Over 75 rally at Disneyland Hotel<lb/>
24 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Women protest obstetrical delivery ruling<lb/>
(LNS)W omen's health<lb/>
groups throughout California are<lb/>
rallying against a proposed state<lb/>
medical associatkn resolution<lb/>
which would prohibit physicians<lb/>
from attending at births outside<lb/>
of hospitals.<lb/>
Over 75 people demonstrated<lb/>
outside ot the convention hall at<lb/>
the Disneyland Hotel on March 10<lb/>
where the California Medical<lb/>
Association.was holding its an-<lb/>
nual meeting.<lb/>
As a result of the demonstra-<lb/>
tion delegates in the convention<lb/>
hall moved to send the proposal to<lb/>
the Scientific Committee for<lb/>
further consideration, essentially<lb/>
tabling the issue until next year's<lb/>
convention.<lb/>
The resolution, 126-77 "Ob-<lb/>
stetrical Delivery in the Home or<lb/>
Outpatient Facility would ori-<lb/>
ginally have considered physi-<lb/>
cians who attend home or clinic<lb/>
births to be engaging in unpro-<lb/>
fessional conduct.<lb/>
Later the resolution was modi-<lb/>
fied, but the intent-to restrict<lb/>
births to hospitals and to maintain<lb/>
doctors' control-remains the<lb/>
same.<lb/>
Women opposing the resolu-<lb/>
tion say that the doctors support<lb/>
126-77 in ader to justify the use<lb/>
of their technology which increa-<lb/>
ses profits fa doctas, hospitals,<lb/>
pharmaceutical companies and<lb/>
manufacturers of fetal heart<lb/>
monitas.<lb/>
History undergrads<lb/>
finish honors work<lb/>
Six outstanding under-<lb/>
graduates in the ECU Depart-<lb/>
ment of Hi stay have oompleted a<lb/>
year of honas work in the ECU<lb/>
Histay Haias Program, direct-<lb/>
ed by Dr. Richard C. Todd.<lb/>
The students, their research<lb/>
topics, and faculty advisas were:<lb/>
Linda Eileen Fisher, "North<lb/>
Carolina's Pioneer Farm Journal,<lb/>
the Farmers Advocate and Mis-<lb/>
cellaneous Reporter: Its Role in<lb/>
Ante-Bellum Agricultural Re-<lb/>
fam Dr. John C. Ellen, Jr;<lb/>
William Edwin Ross, "The<lb/>
Slave Codes of Colonial Virginia<lb/>
as a Reflection of Virginia Atti-<lb/>
tudes Toward Negro Slaves,<lb/>
1661-1748 Dr. Roy N. Lokken;<lb/>
Seth Jones, "Nath Carolina's<lb/>
Committees of Safety, 1774-<lb/>
1776 Dr. Herbert R. Paschal;<lb/>
Thomas Earl Barwick,<lb/>
"Samuel James Ervin and Civil<lb/>
Liberties. 1953-1957: In Per-<lb/>
spective Dr. Fred D. Ragan;<lb/>
Patrice Ann Chenier, "The<lb/>
Domestic Implications of Tru-<lb/>
man's Containment Policies: Re-<lb/>
publican Senate Response,<lb/>
1953 Dr. Henry C. Ferrell, Jr<lb/>
Edward Burk Johnson, "Rosa<lb/>
Luxemburg and the European<lb/>
Socialist Movement, 1890-1919<lb/>
Dr. Laen K. Campiai.<lb/>
Fisher' swak was singled out<lb/>
fa superia distinction, and she<lb/>
was awarded the ECU Histay<lb/>
Haias Scholarship which carries<lb/>
a stipend of $250. She is a<lb/>
member of Psi Alpha Theta<lb/>
International History Honor<lb/>
Society serving as its seaetary<lb/>
ArmyNavy Store<lb/>
1501 Evans<lb/>
12P.M5:30P.M.<lb/>
Backpacks, Jeans,<lb/>
Camping Eqpt, Dishes<lb/>
201 E. 5th ST.<lb/>
We are having a<lb/>
special<lb/>
Sale on selected<lb/>
pieces of<lb/>
Silver Jewelery<lb/>
� 50 off.<lb/>
If You Like<lb/>
BEACH MUSIC<lb/>
You'll Love<lb/>
PLAYING YOUR FAVORITE<lb/>
BEACH MUSIC<lb/>
EVERY<lb/>
TUESDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT<lb/>
AND<lb/>
ALL DAY SUNDAY<lb/>
FIFTH A COTANCHE STREETS DOWNTOWN<lb/>
They argue most births are<lb/>
normal and that hospital interven-<lb/>
tion in normal birth with the use<lb/>
of drugs, electronic monitoring,<lb/>
forceps and surgery is both<lb/>
unnecessary and dangerous to<lb/>
rr.other and child.<lb/>
Technology should be availa-<lb/>
ble in the event of complicated<lb/>
births, say the health groups, but<lb/>
they stress that complications in<lb/>
home births are no more frequent<lb/>
than those for the general hospi-<lb/>
tal population.<lb/>
The March 10 demonstrations<lb/>
Science Ed.<lb/>
gets NTSA<lb/>
Science education students at<lb/>
ECU have formed the nation's<lb/>
first collegiate chapter of the<lb/>
National Science Teachers<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
ECU'S chapter was officially<lb/>
recognized in the March issue of<lb/>
"The Science Teacher a<lb/>
journal published by the NSTA.<lb/>
President of the newly-<lb/>
chartered ECU chapter is Jerry<lb/>
Everhart, a graduate student and<lb/>
teaching fellow in the ECU<lb/>
Department of Science Edu-<lb/>
cation.<lb/>
Pamela Fisher and Julia<lb/>
Hughes, both of Wilmington, are<lb/>
vice president and secretary-<lb/>
treasurer, rpspectively.<lb/>
were called by the Feminist<lb/>
Womens' Health Centers in Los<lb/>
Angeles and Orange County,<lb/>
Womencare in San Diego, and the<lb/>
Association for Childbirth at<lb/>
Home.<lb/>
They plan to keep up pressure<lb/>
on the Association's Scientific<lb/>
Committee and encourage people<lb/>
to write or call the California<lb/>
Medical Association expressing<lb/>
opposition to the proposal.<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
Gents IMite<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Starts at 9:00<lb/>
iHlslfiili:fi!3!l!l.ii<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Glass<lb/>
Moon<lb/>
FriSat. &amp; Sun.<lb/>
Bull<lb/>
&amp;VP<lb/>
"Soob6taff"<lb/>
Tee Shirts<lb/>
only �4 00<lb/>
now at Stuffy's<lb/>
DID YOU KNOW<lb/>
THAT<lb/>
HEADSTRONG<lb/>
CLOTHING<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
WILL REOPEN<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
MARCH 28th?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057119_0008"/><lb/>
������(�����MBBlHlHHHMBHHi<lb/>
HBHHHIHHHIHBHHBIHHHBBIBHHIHHiBHHIHHHH<lb/>
��MHHMHHHHHBHBHHiBH<lb/>
������M<lb/>
Trer<lb/>
<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
24 March 1977<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
byPATCOYLE<lb/>
Mary Hart man<lb/>
As if he hasn't done enough fa the comedy-starved audiences of<lb/>
American TV in the past, Norman Lear nas once again come to rescue<lb/>
us from the doldrums of the medium.<lb/>
Lear's latest redemption has come in the form of Mary Hartman, a<lb/>
freckle-faced, pig-tailed paragon of soap-opera womanhood. From her<lb/>
home in Fernwood. Ohio, Mary Hartman has a bird's-eye view, not on-<lb/>
ly of the personal dilemmas of friends, neighbors, and kinfolk, but also<lb/>
of some of the most relevant issues and problems modern Ameri-<lb/>
cans face.<lb/>
Mary is joined daily in her kitchen by Tom, her husband, Heather,<lb/>
her daughter, and a host of other folks, including a neighbor who<lb/>
aspires to sing country music, a sister who actively and indiscriminate-<lb/>
ly practices free love, and a grandfather who in the premiere episodes<lb/>
is picked up for indecent exposure.<lb/>
For all of you who are faithful watchers of "MH2 this brief<lb/>
summary of the storyline is no more than a spring rerun. What Mary<lb/>
Hartman symbolizes goes much deeper.<lb/>
Louise Lasser's characterization of the heroine started as pure<lb/>
parody. Every soap has at least one all-knowing, all-understanding<lb/>
female character The difference between Mary and other soap ladies<lb/>
is exhibited later in the season, when she breaks down. Other soap<lb/>
opera heroines may face a multitude of problems, but they never<lb/>
exhibit more reaction to their woes than a sympathetically wrinkled<lb/>
brow.<lb/>
Here is where Lear shows his insight into the human, female,<lb/>
American condition. He shows his heroine feeling inadequate,<lb/>
frustrated, and guilty, and he has the grace to let her react the way<lb/>
real people are bound to.<lb/>
Non-watchers of Mary Hartman are probably convinced by now that<lb/>
the show is nothing more than an exercise in morbid reality. Not so,<lb/>
"MH2" is, at times, one of the funniest shows around.<lb/>
The humor is, granted, offensive to more sensitive souls. When the<lb/>
country singer gets in a wreck with a station wagon full of drunken<lb/>
nuns, a lot of folks might take offense. But a lot of folks are gonna<lb/>
laugh.<lb/>
In essence this is the major statement Lear is making with Mary<lb/>
Hartman. We have a tendency to take ourselves entirely too seriously,<lb/>
entirely too often. Mary Hartman and company do the same thing. But<lb/>
the end result always seems to be when we realize that we can maintain<lb/>
our dignity and individuality without arching our collective backs at<lb/>
anyone who sees us from a less than serious outlook.<lb/>
You may have noticed that I am way ahead of Channel 12 on the<lb/>
Mary Hartman storyline. This is true, by virtue of the fact that I spent<lb/>
the summer in a more progressive area than Greenville.<lb/>
Way back last year, Mary Hartman debuted here, on WNCT. She<lb/>
exited from Channel 9 less than two weeks later, thanks to the reaction<lb/>
of the "decent community It seems that many of the town's finest<lb/>
citizens felt that Mary and her life were too sordid for our innocent<lb/>
eyes. They supposedly feared that the show would exert a corrupting<lb/>
influence around here.<lb/>
There's nothing more sordid than reality.<lb/>
Beverly Pepper<lb/>
Famed sculptor coming<lb/>
By JOHN DAY BERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
It creeps, it soars, it embraces<lb/>
the earth, and springs into the<lb/>
sky. It's the sculpture of Beverly<lb/>
Pepper, and it stakes its claim in<lb/>
the future.<lb/>
Beverly Pepper, a profes-<lb/>
sional sculptor of international<lb/>
standing, will appear in the<lb/>
Mendenhall auditorium on the<lb/>
ECU campus on Tuesday, March<lb/>
29, at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Pepper will speak of her<lb/>
works, and present slides of them<lb/>
to her audience. The lecture and<lb/>
slide-presentation are free, both<lb/>
fa ECU students, and the public.<lb/>
Pepper began as a painter in<lb/>
the 50's, according to John<lb/>
Mizell, an ECU graduate student<lb/>
in sculpture, who waked as an<lb/>
assistant to Pepper last Fall, in<lb/>
her studio outside of Todi, Italy.<lb/>
"In 1960, 36 dive, elm and<lb/>
mimosa trees were felled in her<lb/>
garden, and she was irresistably<lb/>
tempted to shape them said<lb/>
Mizell.<lb/>
Pepper waked with purely<lb/>
aganic fams fa a while, and<lb/>
then progressed to incaporating<lb/>
metal into her waks, accading to<lb/>
Mizell.<lb/>
'Her works became more<lb/>
geometric in the 60's said<lb/>
Mizell.<lb/>
"She started carving up pre-<lb/>
existing stainless steel fams, and<lb/>
rearranging the elements<lb/>
Pepper's works incorporate<lb/>
cubes, triangles, and rectangles,<lb/>
both open and closed.<lb/>
"Hers is the basic understan-<lb/>
ding of form as monumental not<lb/>
simply in size but in ooncept<lb/>
said Stephen Greene, a well-<lb/>
known art critic.<lb/>
"Perhaps her true aesthetic<lb/>
ancestas were those builders of<lb/>
the pyramids said Greene.<lb/>
Pepper's most recent waks<lb/>
are tremendously big, and are<lb/>
designed to be displayed out-<lb/>
doas. "Excaliber" is a 32' X 40'<lb/>
X 60' steel sculpture, painted<lb/>
black, which is displayed outside<lb/>
the San Diego Federal Court-<lb/>
house Building in San Diego, Cal.<lb/>
"Her Todi studio is like an<lb/>
airplane hangar, said Mizell.<lb/>
"Several persons work at<lb/>
constructing the sculptures, be-<lb/>
cause their size makes it virtually<lb/>
impossible fa aie persai to<lb/>
handle the entire project<lb/>
The waks are constructed in<lb/>
and around the Todi studio, then<lb/>
dismantled, crated, and shipped<lb/>
to their destinations, where they<lb/>
are reassembled, accading to<lb/>
Mizell.<lb/>
"What made the wak so<lb/>
exciting to me was that Pepper<lb/>
made frequent alterations in the<lb/>
aiginal designs, accading to her<lb/>
I See PEPPER, pg. 9)<lb/>
BEVERLY PEPPER S sculpture will be featured in a program at<lb/>
Mendenhall Tuesday, March 29.<lb/>
Various artistic genres<lb/>
make up<lb/>
CHARLESTON, S.CSouth<lb/>
Carolina will be involved in an<lb/>
unpredictable international event<lb/>
this spring when the Spoleto<lb/>
Festival of Two Walds presents<lb/>
its American premiere in Charles-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
When several of the leading<lb/>
representatives of the arts con-<lb/>
verge on Charleston May 25-June<lb/>
5 along with up-and-coming<lb/>
geniuses and the public, no one<lb/>
knows exactly what will happen,<lb/>
and that is the way it always is<lb/>
with the wald's most compre-<lb/>
hensive arts festival.<lb/>
Since its inception 19 years<lb/>
ago in Spoleto, Italy, the Festival<lb/>
has embraced both the great<lb/>
established examples of music,<lb/>
dance, theatre, painting and<lb/>
poetry and the experimental. The<lb/>
Festival has also always included<lb/>
many notewathy American as<lb/>
well as European artists. Thus,<lb/>
the Festival's founder-directa<lb/>
Gian Carlo Menotti envisioned a<lb/>
counterpart in the United States.<lb/>
According to the renowned<lb/>
Italian-born conposer, "I knew<lb/>
Charleston would be the town as<lb/>
soon as I set foot in it<lb/>
Entire sedionsof the Pat City<lb/>
will serve as a stage fa not only<lb/>
scheduled perfamances and ex-<lb/>
hibits but also spontaneous art<lb/>
fams ranging from wandering<lb/>
minstrel and mime shows to<lb/>
� �<lb/>
leto Festival<lb/>
staytelling and gravestone rub-<lb/>
bing.<lb/>
The planned part of the<lb/>
Festival calls for a full-scale<lb/>
production of the "Queen of<lb/>
Spades, an opera by Tchaikov-<lb/>
sky and perfamances of the<lb/>
famous Menotti opera "The<lb/>
Consul<lb/>
Charleston's Dock Street<lb/>
Theatre, setting of the nation's<lb/>
first plays and subscription<lb/>
chamber concerts, will be in<lb/>
constant use throughout the<lb/>
Festival. Daily noontime con-<lb/>
ISee SPOLE TO, pg. 9<lb/>
LiuCK SJ. THEA IRE, a famous Charleston landmark, will house<lb/>
some Spoleto activities.<lb/>
1 EEC �- ����i  �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057119_0009"/><lb/>
24 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Treat in store for Monty Python fanatics<lb/>
By GARY CARTER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This coming Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day night, ECU will have its first<lb/>
taste of the absurd comedy Monty<lb/>
Python is known for. A comedy<lb/>
group that was formed at the<lb/>
drama department of ECU called<lb/>
the Ghana Hardware Co. will be<lb/>
performing various sketches by<lb/>
Monty Python, The Firesign<lb/>
Theatre and Beyond the Fringe<lb/>
'64 under the title "Over the<lb/>
Top<lb/>
The performances will be on<lb/>
March 25th and 26th at 7:30 and<lb/>
9:30 p.m. in the Workshop<lb/>
theatre, second floor of the drama<lb/>
building in room 205. Admission<lb/>
is free.<lb/>
The members of The Ghana<lb/>
Hardware Co. are Rob Maxon,<lb/>
Susan Cole, Mac McKee, and<lb/>
Gary Carter, who organized the<lb/>
group and directed the show,<lb/>
(and is no relation to the author of<lb/>
this article).<lb/>
Gary talked about how the<lb/>
group was formed. "We started<lb/>
out with eight people, but due to<lb/>
some time conflicts, four of them<lb/>
had to drop out. We had to drop<lb/>
some of the larger sketches and<lb/>
bring in a few smaller ones<lb/>
Where did the material come<lb/>
from? "All the Firesign and<lb/>
Fringe material came from re-<lb/>
cords. The Python material was<lb/>
half from records and half from<lb/>
their television program. I have<lb/>
every record they' ve recorded up<lb/>
to the present, and I also have<lb/>
five and a half hours of their<lb/>
television programs on tape<lb/>
This workshop production is<lb/>
rather unusual in that most of the<lb/>
performers are not in the drama<lb/>
department, with Gary being the<lb/>
only drama major. Susan, Rob,<lb/>
and Mac have all been in plays at<lb/>
one time or another. The binding<lb/>
force is that all four are hopeless<lb/>
cases of "Pytho-mania "We're<lb/>
not out to win any awards says<lb/>
Susan, "we just want to have<lb/>
some fun with what we re doing,<lb/>
and I think the audience will enjoy<lb/>
that<lb/>
Four shows have been slated<lb/>
because the Workshop Theatre<lb/>
only holds 50 people. "So if<lb/>
you're going to oome, don't all<lb/>
oome to the 7:30 performance on<lb/>
Friday night says Gary. "We<lb/>
want a good crowd at all four<lb/>
performances, and we don't want<lb/>
to turn anyone away due to the<lb/>
lack of seats<lb/>
" ' � lb. Royal Rib Eye Jtwk Mmwr<lb/>
Includes a hot baked potato, crisp garden<lb/>
fresh salad, and fresh baked hot roll.<lb/>
PEPPER<lb/>
I Continued from pg. 8<lb/>
aesthetic judgement said Miz-<lb/>
ell.<lb/>
"You never knew quite what<lb/>
the final product would be until it<lb/>
was completed<lb/>
Pepper's works do not rely on<lb/>
tneir size to make an artistic<lb/>
statement, however.<lb/>
"Put briefly, I wish to make<lb/>
an object that has a powerful<lb/>
physical presence, but is at the<lb/>
same time inwardly turned,<lb/>
seeming capable of intense self-<lb/>
absorption said Pepper, in an<lb/>
issue of "Art Journal.<lb/>
"The works of highly polished<lb/>
stainless steel made in the late<lb/>
1960s achieved this kind of<lb/>
dualism, primarily through the<lb/>
mirrorlike finish of their surfaces.<lb/>
"Those surfaces acted to<lb/>
emphasize the actual density and<lb/>
weight of the steel. At the same<lb/>
time, they made the physical bulk<lb/>
of the sculpture withdraw behind<lb/>
a screen of reflections said<lb/>
Pepper.<lb/>
Pepper's works, on one level,<lb/>
are an attempt to connect the<lb/>
community of everyday life with<lb/>
art.<lb/>
"Since modern art has be-<lb/>
come increasingly large and<lb/>
moved outdoors, it inevitably<lb/>
must mix with the lifeof people in<lb/>
cities and along the highways<lb/>
said Pepper, referring specifically<lb/>
to one of her freeway sculptures.<lb/>
Pepper is'a highly-entertain-<lb/>
ing lecturer, according to Mizell,<lb/>
who attended a lecture given by<lb/>
Pepper in New Orleans.<lb/>
"She's a fireball of a woman,<lb/>
incredibly energetic and dyna-<lb/>
mic said Mizell.<lb/>
"Her lectures and her slide<lb/>
presentations are incredibly in-<lb/>
formative and entertaining<lb/>
Pepper is coming to ECU<lb/>
directly from lecturing engage-<lb/>
ments at Harvard, and at the<lb/>
University of Georgia.<lb/>
In addition to the Mendenhall<lb/>
lecture, Pepper will give an<lb/>
informal presentation to art stu-<lb/>
dents in the art building's audi-<lb/>
torium, at 8p.m on Wednesday,<lb/>
March 30.<lb/>
Regular $2.89<lb/>
50COff<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$2.39<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
SALAD BAR<lb/>
69�<lb/>
With Dinner! STEAK<lb/>
lW<lb/>
J5��- VALID ONLY ON<lb/>
HUUbfc MON.&amp;THUR<lb/>
B Coupon Expires May 31, 1977<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
CAPTAIN JACK'S<lb/>
FISH DINNER<lb/>
3 Pieces of Flounder, cocktail sauce or tarter sauce, lemon<lb/>
wedge, baked potato, cole slaw, and fresh baked roll.<lb/>
50COff<lb/>
SALAD BAR<lb/>
69<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$1.89<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
JlfflTtL�<lb/>
VALID ONLY ON<lb/>
nUUbt MON &amp;THUR<lb/>
STEAK<lb/>
 Coupon Expires May 31, 1977<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
SPOLETO<lb/>
Continued from pg. 8<lb/>
certs, under the direction of<lb/>
Charles Wadsworth and Peter<lb/>
Serkin, will continue a favorite<lb/>
Spoleto tradition. On alternating<lb/>
evenings, Stringberg's plays<lb/>
"The Creditors" and "Miss<lb/>
Julie will be staged, each<lb/>
preceeded by the one-act play<lb/>
"The Stronger starring<lb/>
Geraldine Page and Rip Torn.<lb/>
The Spoleto Festival Orches-<lb/>
tra, conducted by the young<lb/>
American virtuoso Christopher<lb/>
Keene. win render Hayden's<lb/>
I he Creation at the College ot<lb/>
Charleston and will also ac-<lb/>
company several performances by<lb/>
the Eliot Feld Ballet Company.<lb/>
The Ohio Ballet and world-<lb/>
acclaimed Westminster Choir<lb/>
from Princeton. New Jersey are<lb/>
also scheduled to perform at the<lb/>
College. A special Spoleto Festi-<lb/>
val Brass Quintet will open the<lb/>
Festival on May 25 with a fanfare<lb/>
newly composed by Gian Carlo<lb/>
Menotti and play at various sites<lb/>
around the city throughout the<lb/>
Festival.<lb/>
The Gibbes Arts Gallery will<lb/>
feature the unique Serge Lifar<lb/>
Collection of Ballet Set and<lb/>
Costume Designs by such artists<lb/>
as Picasso, Matisse, Miro,<lb/>
Modigliani, Leger, Gris, Ernst,<lb/>
de Chirico and Baraque.<lb/>
The Festival will utilize the<lb/>
city's historic churches and parks<lb/>
for other exhibits and activities,<lb/>
and a grand finale involving<lb/>
several art forms is planned for<lb/>
Middleton Place, the Charleston<lb/>
plantation that boasts America's<lb/>
oldest landscaped gardens.<lb/>
In keeping with the famous<lb/>
Spoleto element of improvisation,<lb/>
local residents are preparing to<lb/>
accommodate a portion of the<lb/>
50,000 visitors expected fa the<lb/>
Festival in private homes, and<lb/>
one citizen committee has even<lb/>
nvented a new mixed drink in<lb/>
iionor of the Festival and pattern-<lb/>
ed after the mint julep.<lb/>
A small official staff directed<lb/>
by Mrs. Christine Reed is work-<lb/>
ing closely with volunteer com-<lb/>
mittees to ensure the Festival<lb/>
runs smoothly. However, with<lb/>
such a variety of art forms<lb/>
celebrated simultaneously by so<lb/>
many people, Spoleto U.S.A. will<lb/>
create itself.<lb/>
Anyone interested in doing<lb/>
volunteer work or receiving pro-<lb/>
gram, ticket and accommodation<lb/>
information should contact<lb/>
Spoleto Festival U.S.A P.O. Box<lb/>
157, Charleston, S.C. 29402 or<lb/>
call (803) 722-2764.<lb/>
aTHURSDAYS<lb/>
MARCH 24 SPIRAL<lb/>
SPRIN<lb/>
APPRECIATION MIGHT<lb/>
FREE ADM.TILL9:00<lb/>
501 ADM. 9:00 TILL 10:00<lb/>
DOOR PRIZES<lb/>
IZOD LACOSTA SHIRTS<lb/>
Regular $18.00 Now $17.00<lb/>
or<lb/>
2 for $35.00<lb/>
3 for $45.00<lb/>
5 for $65.00<lb/>
(Over 1,000 Shirts to Choose From)<lb/>
CANVAS GOLF BAGS<lb/>
WILSON and DUNLOP<lb/>
Championship Yellow Tennis Balls<lb/>
$2.50 per can<lb/>
(with this ad only)<lb/>
TITLEIST<lb/>
TOP-FLITE<lb/>
PRO-STAFF<lb/>
Were $23.00 Now $13.00<lb/>
Golf Balls $12.80 a doz.<lb/>
Gordon D. Fulp<lb/>
Golf Professional<lb/>
Located At<lb/>
Greenville Golf and Country Club<lb/>
Phone 756-0504. Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
Ofxon 7 days a week unt il dark<lb/>
<pb facs="00057119_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
24 March 1977<lb/>
Intramurats<lb/>
byJOHNEVANS<lb/>
Wrestling finals Monday<lb/>
The finals ot the men's wrestling tournament will take place<lb/>
Monday beginning at 6 p.m.<lb/>
From a large field of over 125 wrestlers 24 remain in the running for<lb/>
championship titles.<lb/>
Lined up to do battle in the championship match of the 126 pound<lb/>
class are Phillip Whited and Eric Davidson, twounknownswho came<lb/>
from out of the pack to reach the finals.<lb/>
In the 134 pound class there will be a classic matchup between<lb/>
Michael Avent and Teddie Caudle. Avent won the 126 pound title last<lb/>
year, but moved up a notch this time. Caudle is the brother of former<lb/>
ECU wrestler Eddie Caudle, who has reached the finals in the 150<lb/>
pound class.<lb/>
At 142, Brad Middleton is out to defend his title against Doug Reed<lb/>
and he is favored to make it two Intramural Wrestling titles in a row.<lb/>
In the 150 class. Eddie Caudle will meet Joe Collins in the finals,<lb/>
while Kevin Gaghan and Brad Slocum will provide an interesting<lb/>
matchup at 158 pounds.<lb/>
In the 167 class Alex Chandler and Bobby Williams square off while<lb/>
Steve Satterwaite will wrestle Alan Wilson for the 177 pound title.<lb/>
The two heaviest classes should give some interesting pairings. In<lb/>
the 190 finals Mark Hutchms and Andy Stucky will meet and in the<lb/>
Unlimited Class Judd Larrimore wrestles Steve Hinson in the finals.<lb/>
SOCCER<lb/>
Soccer playoffs begin in earnest this week with Scott and Ayoock<lb/>
dorms seeded first in the Dorm league and Tau Kappa Epsilon the top<lb/>
seed in the Fraternity League.<lb/>
Two dorm playoff games will be played on Monday and Tuesday<lb/>
with the rest of the 10 playoff teams meeting Thursday.<lb/>
Other qualifiers that have been determined are the Rugby Club, Phi<lb/>
Epsilon Kappa and Jones in the Dorm-Club league and the Kappa<lb/>
Alphas and Kappa Sigmas in the fraternity league. Two more fraternity<lb/>
spots will be determined by play on Monday and Tuesday.<lb/>
WOMENSSOFTBALL<lb/>
The women got a head start in Softball action last week, opening<lb/>
their season with an unusually large amount of one-sided games.<lb/>
- In the only close game Bad News Broads nipped the Sun Kissed<lb/>
Lemons, 11-9, as Kim Fesperman blasted a triple and a home run to<lb/>
lead the way.<lb/>
The most one-sided game was the Mac Attackers 36-0 rout of the<lb/>
Bad News Bunch. Kim Michael led the Mac Attackers with four home<lb/>
runs. Clements A team put the swing out of the Tornado with a 28-5<lb/>
rout. The Tornado was plagued with pitching problems as Clement<lb/>
received many free trips to first, and Pam Shennenhouse did get four<lb/>
hits, including 2 doubles and a triple.<lb/>
Alpha Phi stopped the Tri Sigma "B' team 6-2, but the Tri Sig<lb/>
A' team gained a measure of retribution with a 21-4 win over Alpha<lb/>
Omicron Pi. Maraa Goughnour led Sigma's hitting with three hits and<lb/>
a home run.<lb/>
In other Greek play, Alpha Delta Pi topped Delta Zeta II, 17-5,<lb/>
behind the slugging of Jeanne Newman.<lb/>
Hypertension opened their season with a 27-4 rout of the<lb/>
Batwomen. Cynthia Averett blasted two home runs in the game. In the<lb/>
final game of the week, Hits and Runs stomped Clement's C team,<lb/>
25-0.<lb/>
In the weeks to come there will be some tougher games so don't be<lb/>
discouraged by this week's one-sided scores.<lb/>
Due to the large number of teams entered in women's play not<lb/>
every team will play each week.<lb/>
CO-REC VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
Go-Rec volleyball will start Tuesday with 12 teams entered. All<lb/>
games will be played on Tuesday nights in Minges Coliseum with 4<lb/>
games each night at 7:30 and 4 more games each night at 8:30.<lb/>
The pre-season favorites are Lehman's Losers, the defending<lb/>
champions, and the Volley Follies. Lehman's Losers open their title<lb/>
defense with two games Tuesday night.<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
ECU CAME IN 14th in the Pmehurst Invitational instead of 2nd, as<lb/>
was reported in the March 22nd edition.<lb/>
Pack takes doubleheader<lb/>
By JEFF BROOKS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Despite pitching heroics by<lb/>
Pete Conaty, the Pirates were<lb/>
defeated by the Wdfpack of<lb/>
North Carolina State 1-0 in the<lb/>
first game of a double-header<lb/>
here Saturday. Conaty held the<lb/>
Pack scoreless until the top of the<lb/>
tenth, striking out fourteen bat-<lb/>
ters along the way. Managing to<lb/>
push across a run in the top of the<lb/>
tenth, the State nine then shut<lb/>
ECU out in the bottom half of the<lb/>
inning to take the opener.<lb/>
The second game bacame a<lb/>
slugfest for the hungry Pack as<lb/>
they scored in the second, fourth,<lb/>
fifth and sixth innings to defeat<lb/>
the Bucs 10-2. Tom Willette was<lb/>
the winning pitcher while Terry<lb/>
Durham was charged with the<lb/>
loss. Highlight of the game was<lb/>
N.C. State's Ray Tanner who hit a<lb/>
grand-slam home run in the<lb/>
fourth inning. Charlie Stevens<lb/>
drove in both of ECU's runs in the<lb/>
second with a single.<lb/>
Playing away and in the rain,<lb/>
ECU defeated ACC power UNC-<lb/>
CH behind the brilliant pitching<lb/>
of Mickey Britt. Allowing only<lb/>
four hits, Britt wasn't scored<lb/>
upon until the fifth when the Tar<lb/>
Heels managed three runs. Sonny<lb/>
Wooten led the Pirates at the<lb/>
plate with a two for four perfor-<lb/>
mance and two RBI's while Best,<lb/>
Stevens, Brinkley and Koryda<lb/>
distinguished themselves on the<lb/>
bases. Scoring one run in the<lb/>
second, and three in the fourth,<lb/>
ECU made the final score 5-3 with<lb/>
another run in the top of the sixth.<lb/>
MICKEY BRITT<lb/>
Bikers wheel into town Sunday<lb/>
for first major competition<lb/>
By KIP SLOAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Greenville will host its first<lb/>
major bicycle race this Sunday, as<lb/>
competitors from North Carolina<lb/>
and surrounding states will com-<lb/>
pete for $1500 worth of prizes and<lb/>
merchandise in the Miller High<lb/>
Life Greenville Bicycle Classic.<lb/>
The race, sanctioned by the<lb/>
United States Cycling Federation,<lb/>
(USCF), will cover the downtown<lb/>
streets of First, Reade, Evans,<lb/>
Second, and Washington in a one<lb/>
kilometer loop.<lb/>
Seven races will be held,<lb/>
starting at 11:15 for the women<lb/>
racers and veterans (racers over<lb/>
40), with the main race of the day<lb/>
(senior I and II classes) starting at<lb/>
4.00.<lb/>
Bicycle racing has become<lb/>
another competitive sport in<lb/>
which the United States is<lb/>
beginning to excel in.<lb/>
In 1976, an American placed<lb/>
6th in the Olympic road race,<lb/>
while another U.S. rider placed<lb/>
10th in the Professional World<lb/>
Championships. These were re-<lb/>
markable achievements, since no<lb/>
American rider in recent times<lb/>
has ever done well in a road race.<lb/>
The main race for senior I and<lb/>
II classes (riders 18-39 yrs. who<lb/>
have shown exceptional ability)<lb/>
will be quite a race to see.<lb/>
As of Wednesday, Bobby<lb/>
Phillips (several time National<lb/>
Champion on the track), and Bill<lb/>
Humpheys (North Carolina State<lb/>
Champion) will be competing,<lb/>
along with other riders from<lb/>
Virginia and Georgia. about 2 hours or less, as raoers<lb/>
This feature event will oover attempt to pull free of the "pack<lb/>
75 kilometers (about 47 miles) in to fight the wind on their own.<lb/>
CYCLIST BILL HUMPHRE Y flies home on his way to the 1976 state<lb/>
championship in (Chapel Hill. Photo by Kip Sloan<lb/>
Golfers 12th in invitational<lb/>
By JEFF BROOKS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina finished 12th in<lb/>
the recent Iron Duke Collegiate<lb/>
Invitational Golf Tournament held<lb/>
March 20th and 21st in Durham.<lb/>
North Carolina St at? was the<lb/>
winner of the event, finishing two<lb/>
strokes ahead of second place<lb/>
UNC-CH. Third place Marshall<lb/>
trailed by 9 strokes wnile Wake<lb/>
Forest finished fourth.<lb/>
Gary Harborough of Wake<lb/>
Forest was the individual medal-<lb/>
ist, taking a second hole, over-<lb/>
time, birdie to clinch the title.<lb/>
East Carolina s David Brogan ties<lb/>
tor 10th with a 219 while<lb/>
Ireshman Donnie Owens was<lb/>
ECU s second lowest with a 22.<lb/>
Coach McClendon noted that<lb/>
he was pleased with freshman<lb/>
play, but the upperclassmen were<lb/>
very inconsistentthey will have<lb/>
to improve.<lb/>
ECU s next match begins<lb/>
today at Furman University, as<lb/>
the Pirates participate in the<lb/>
Furman Intercollegiate Invita-<lb/>
tional.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057119_0011"/><lb/>
WJP�W5�Vh<lb/>
����1 HBBHlBI<lb/>
IIBIBHHHP<lb/>
tiaSfT'tr rutwe<lb/>
24 March 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
for sate �R<lb/>
FOR SALE: 12" X 60" trailer,<lb/>
unfurnished- 2 air oond. gas<lb/>
heat, double sinks in bathroom,<lb/>
plus washer &amp; dryer. 2 bed-<lb/>
room, call 752-9432 ask Mr.<lb/>
Henderson after 6DO 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 Acous-<lb/>
tic guitar with hard case,<lb/>
excellent oond. $100.00. Also 1<lb/>
good beginners guitar. Contact<lb/>
758-1382 or leave a message.<lb/>
Will be glad to demonstrate.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Yamaha 500,<lb/>
DOHC, low mileage, crash bar,<lb/>
sissy bar, luggage straps. Ser-<lb/>
ious inquiries only. $1100.00<lb/>
757-6352 call between 8-5 and<lb/>
ask for Bonnie.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Need a truck and a<lb/>
car? Buy this one vehicle and<lb/>
you will have both. 68 model<lb/>
Oldsmobile. Call 758-0603 $250.<lb/>
firm. Ask for John.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 Mazda pickup.<lb/>
B 1600 pistoned engine, camper<lb/>
top, good condition. Must see to<lb/>
appreciate 756-0267.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AR Turntable good<lb/>
condition, Vh years old. In-<lb/>
cludes box and accessories $65<lb/>
or best offer. 752-1654.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Datsun 240Z<lb/>
Red automatic $3800.00. Must<lb/>
sell. Call 758-4262.<lb/>
WANTED: Keyboard player<lb/>
wanted by O's vide Rainbow<lb/>
Band with equipment &amp; vocal<lb/>
talent. 100 serious and ready<lb/>
to work hard and maybe money<lb/>
Call 758-7543 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 for Steve.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
box-springs.<lb/>
2808.<lb/>
One twin<lb/>
$20.00 Call<lb/>
size<lb/>
758-<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Reasonable<lb/>
rates. 756-1921.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fender Bassman iu<lb/>
amplifier 110 watts RMS very<lb/>
little use. Good for guitar, bass,<lb/>
electric piano. Call 758-7670<lb/>
after 6.00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 Firebird, vinyl<lb/>
top, AC, PS, auto, stereo. A-1<lb/>
condition. Call 946-3691 after 6.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 71 Fiat 850 S; ort<lb/>
$1350 or best offer. 752-2880.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Old and new Lp's.<lb/>
Fleetwood Mac's and Marshall<lb/>
Tucker's new one $3.00. Played<lb/>
once for recording. More. Call<lb/>
758-7669.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1969 AMC Station<lb/>
Wagon, power steering auto-<lb/>
matic transmission, radio. Must<lb/>
sell. Asking $450. 752-9243<lb/>
Mike.<lb/>
EUROPE : No-frills student-<lb/>
teacher charter flights Global<lb/>
Travel. 521 Fifth Ave. New York<lb/>
N.Y. 10017(212)379-3532.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Tennis Equipment-<lb/>
1 Wilson Aluminum racquet-T<lb/>
200C wcover $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 for $250. Less than<lb/>
2 weeks old. Call Allen 752-9887<lb/>
after 530.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dam size refrigera-<lb/>
tor. 758-8452.<lb/>
WANTED: Full size refrigerator<lb/>
with freezer area. 758-8452.<lb/>
PARTTIME JOB: Earn $250-<lb/>
$500 stuffing 1000 envelopes:<lb/>
homework-sparetime. Details:<lb/>
$1, Self-addressed, stamped<lb/>
envelope (C.R. Kester, 400<lb/>
Marsh Rd Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
28209).<lb/>
FOR SALE: 69 VW bus, fair<lb/>
condition for $1100. Call 758-0250<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Jeunet 10 speed<lb/>
bicycle. 26" frame, 27" wheels.<lb/>
New. Call 758-7571 after 4:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Roth Stradivari us<lb/>
moden 34-size violin. Excellent<lb/>
condition. Contact Brooks at<lb/>
752-2983.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 Toyota Corona<lb/>
Mark II Sta. Wagon, air, auto-<lb/>
matic, good condition. $400 below<lb/>
retail. $1095. Call 756-7059 after-<lb/>
noons and evenings.<lb/>
FOR SALE: BIC 960 turntable.<lb/>
Still under warranty. Call 752-<lb/>
0734.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Call 752-<lb/>
8837 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
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 condition, must sell,<lb/>
$400.00 below book value. 752-<lb/>
0525.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Silver rings, phone<lb/>
Roxanne at 752-8694. Or phone<lb/>
Crafts Center in Mendenhall and<lb/>
leave message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sofa &amp; Matching<lb/>
chair, good condition, both for<lb/>
$60.00. Also, rocker for $15.00.<lb/>
Call 752-8011.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 750cc Suzuki.<lb/>
Mint condition, new: paint, tires,<lb/>
chain, etc. $1200.00. Call 752-<lb/>
1442 ask for David.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 8-track-cassette-<lb/>
reel to reel-can completely erase<lb/>
for rerecord for 25 cents ea. Call<lb/>
758-8216 after 11 XX) p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sanyo 8 track, AM,<lb/>
FM stereo $65. Call 7588216<lb/>
after 11 XX) p.m. 8-t rack-cassette<lb/>
reel to reel-can completely erase<lb/>
for rerecord for 25 cents ea.<lb/>
FOR SALE: CB radios $39.95.<lb/>
New. 758-8687.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1966 Buiok Station<lb/>
Wagon. Call Alice, 757-6366, 9 to<lb/>
5 weekdays.<lb/>
WANTED: Used refrigerator and<lb/>
stove (cheap). Need immediately.<lb/>
757-6462 between 8 a.m. and 5<lb/>
p.m. Ask for Mel.<lb/>
NEED AVON? Call 75&amp;8705.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Become a<lb/>
college campus dealer. Sell<lb/>
brand name stereo components<lb/>
at lowest prices. High profits;<lb/>
NO INVESTMENT REQUIRED.<lb/>
For details, contact; 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/>
Nomad 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/>
oond. 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/>
hOH SALE: Pioneer SX-939<lb/>
AMFM stereo receiver. 70 w per<lb/>
channel RMS at under 0.3 percent<lb/>
harmonic distortion. Still under<lb/>
warranty. Call 758-8678.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1976 CJ360T Honda.<lb/>
4,000 miles. Excellent condition,<lb/>
an 752-0924. Ask for Monty.<lb/>
HELP: My roommate LIBBY<lb/>
LEFLER is running for SGA<lb/>
secretary. I know she's qualified<lb/>
and is very concerned with<lb/>
student affairs. But she needs<lb/>
your vote on March 30th. Please<lb/>
neip.<lb/>
FOH SALE: Stereo - KLH 17<lb/>
speakeis $100.00, Sansui Au-555<lb/>
Amp 22w RMSChan. $100.00,<lb/>
casette aeck with dolby $100.00.<lb/>
o2:x).00 takes an. Remington 742<lb/>
ju-ubntieil75.00. Call 758-4863.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Double bea dox<lb/>
springs - mattress free $30.00.<lb/>
Biack and white t.v. Solid State<lb/>
ibO.OO. Econo Travel Motel<lb/>
752-0214,<lb/>
r-OR SALE: Couch, fair condition,<lb/>
comfortable, $10. Rocking chair,<lb/>
$8. Call 752-1534 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AR 3ax speakers.<lb/>
Excellent condition - call<lb/>
758-0908.<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: 1 &amp; 2 bedroom<lb/>
apartments, located on Cross St.<lb/>
Newly renovated and new ap-<lb/>
pliances. Call 752-4154<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1107 Evans St.<lb/>
34.75 &amp; utilities per month.<lb/>
Contact Beth in Flanagan 420<lb/>
during or call 758-7675 at niaht.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted,<lb/>
spring andor summer. Com-<lb/>
fortable and dose to campus. Call<lb/>
758-7713.<lb/>
NEEDED: Male roommate to<lb/>
share two bedroom apt. at<lb/>
East brook for the summer. Pay<lb/>
half rent and utilities. Call<lb/>
758-7486.<lb/>
NEEDED: Roommate for Green-<lb/>
way apts. 2 br. - $88 per mo.<lb/>
Contat Joe Grimes Apt. 20 after 4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
NEEDED desperately: The help<lb/>
of anyone presently renting a 2 or<lb/>
3 bedroom house, but who will<lb/>
vacate in May a June. Prefer<lb/>
rent to be about $100. Please call<lb/>
Pam at 752-6856 or 756-5190.<lb/>
Thanks.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Large<lb/>
house, private bedroom. 752-<lb/>
2859.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED Fe-<lb/>
male preferred) to share an<lb/>
Apartment or House, living<lb/>
expenses, and good times start-<lb/>
ing this June '77 in CHAPEL<lb/>
HILL. Interested? Please call<lb/>
Kim Sue at 758-1390.<lb/>
FOR RENT: One female room-<lb/>
mate needed to share 2 bedroom<lb/>
apartment at College View. You<lb/>
will have your own bedroom and<lb/>
can move in on May 1. Rent is<lb/>
$50.00 a month, plus half of<lb/>
utilities. Fa more info call Laurie<lb/>
at 752-6963<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/>
oome by F-420.<lb/>
FOR RbiM r: 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/>
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 colaed Glaia<lb/>
Vanderbilt glasses-l have a navy<lb/>
hooded sweatshirt that's too<lb/>
big-PL�AS� oontad Janet Pope<lb/>
423 Tyler-758-9670. $10.00<lb/>
REWARD.<lb/>
MISSING: Black &amp; white<lb/>
shaggy sheepdog puppy-Female<lb/>
red collar. Missing in Lawson's<lb/>
Trailer Park area. 756-3898 or<lb/>
752-1907 (wak).<lb/>
LOST: Ladies gold watch, non-<lb/>
stretch band with guard chain.<lb/>
$5.00 reward. Contact Becky<lb/>
Thomps n, 134 Slay Hall. Lost<lb/>
March 1 . 758-8588.<lb/>
LOST: Set of keys, brown flap on<lb/>
key ring with (Leo) emblem $5.00<lb/>
reward! Call Johnny, 752-1442.<lb/>
LOST glasses, brown case. $10<lb/>
reward. 758-8895 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
Austin - Bid.<lb/>
LOST: Set of keys on a leather<lb/>
strap somewhere on campus.<lb/>
758-7713.<lb/>
FOUND: Rockwell calculator in<lb/>
Austin 307, March. Call 752-<lb/>
9129.<lb/>
FOUND: 1 lady's ringninquire<lb/>
at Austin 134.<lb/>
personal (a<lb/>
NEEDED Writers fa FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD. Low pay, long hours<lb/>
but guaranteed advancement.<lb/>
Most of the staff of the odlege<lb/>
newspaper graduate this Spring.<lb/>
We need underdassmen 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/>
WANTED: Fa summer employ-<lb/>
ment, boys' dam counsela fa<lb/>
six-weeks summer program fa<lb/>
talented high school students.<lb/>
Must live in dam with students<lb/>
and help with weekend recreat-<lb/>
ional adivities. Program lasts<lb/>
from June 22 until Agu. 2.<lb/>
Contad Paul Carlashkin in<lb/>
Physics 308, 757-6476.<lb/>
NEEDED: Ride to Atlanta (a<lb/>
anywhere nearby) for April's<lb/>
Spring break. I can leave anytime<lb/>
and will share expenses. Call<lb/>
Kathy at 752-8180.<lb/>
FREE Whdesale Jewelry Cat-<lb/>
alog! Exdusive Designers' cd-<lb/>
ledion! Bargains galae! Box<lb/>
1824, Cleveland, Ohio 44106.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057119_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 24 March 1977<lb/>
Five Buc swimmers in nationals<lb/>
Five East Carolina swimmers<lb/>
will leave Wednesday to attend<lb/>
the NCAA Swimming and Diving<lb/>
Championships at Cleveland<lb/>
(Ohio) State University, March<lb/>
24-26.<lb/>
Ted Nieman leads the group,<lb/>
as he will be swimming in three<lb/>
events. His events are the 200<lb/>
freestyle and the two freestyle<lb/>
relays, the 400 and 800. John<lb/>
McCauley will swim in the 50<lb/>
freestyle championships, as well<lb/>
as the 400 free relay. Joining<lb/>
Nieman and McCauley on the 400<lb/>
free relay will be John Tudor and<lb/>
Billy Thorne, Nieman will team<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
scrimmage<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
East Carolina University will<lb/>
hold its first public scrimmage of<lb/>
spring football drills this Satur-<lb/>
day. The Pirates will play in<lb/>
Wilson at Fike High School<lb/>
Stadium at 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Thus far, coach Pat Dye has<lb/>
been most pleased with his club's<lb/>
work in spring practice.<lb/>
"It's been a good spring<lb/>
practice thus far said Dye.<lb/>
"I've been very encouraged by<lb/>
what I've seen. The entire group<lb/>
has really waked hard and had<lb/>
great enthusiasm. In fact, this<lb/>
group has been as enthusiastic as<lb/>
any I've ever been around in the<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
The areas we were most<lb/>
conoerned with are looking fine at<lb/>
this point. The only thing we need<lb/>
is just repetition and game-type<lb/>
experience. I have complete<lb/>
confidence in the talent and<lb/>
ability we have<lb/>
The defensive secondary was<lb/>
one of the maja conoerns. At this<lb/>
point, Charlie Carter (Fr-<lb/>
Fayetteville) has been one of the<lb/>
maja highlightsof spring drillsat<lb/>
corner back. Steve Hale (Jr-<lb/>
Cdumbus, Ga.) at free safety,<lb/>
Willie Holley (Fr-Edenton) and<lb/>
returning safety Gerald Hall<lb/>
(Soph-Edenton) are out front in<lb/>
the other positions.<lb/>
One of the most pleasing<lb/>
aspects of the drills has been the<lb/>
punting of Rodney Allen of<lb/>
Henderson. He's a walkon that's<lb/>
out front fa the open punter<lb/>
position.<lb/>
Sam Harrell (Soph-Ahoskie)<lb/>
has been outstanding at running<lb/>
back, assuring the Pirates of<lb/>
three fine runners next year, with<lb/>
Eddie Hicks (Soph-Henderson)<lb/>
and Willie Hawkins (Jr-Grimes-<lb/>
land) returning.<lb/>
At center, another problem<lb/>
spot, Rickie Holliday (Jr-<lb/>
Williamston) is in the number one<lb/>
spot, but is being pushed hard by<lb/>
Jeff Hagans(Fr-Greenville), Rob<lb/>
Wirthlin (Fr-Montgonery, Ohio)<lb/>
and John Wrape (Soph-Ashe-<lb/>
bao).<lb/>
Saturday's scrimmage is<lb/>
being spoisaed by the Wilsai<lb/>
Pirate Club. Following the scrim-<lb/>
mage a talk will be made by<lb/>
Governa Jim Hunt, and then a<lb/>
barbeque dinner will be held.<lb/>
Tickets fa the entire day are<lb/>
$5.00 fa adults and $3.00 fa<lb/>
youngsters.<lb/>
with Tuda, Thane and Stewart<lb/>
Mann to comprise the 800 team.<lb/>
"I think this is our first legitimate<lb/>
chance to gain all-America status<lb/>
fa sane of our swimmers, said<lb/>
Coach Ray Scharf. "It is one of<lb/>
the fastest pools in the wald, the<lb/>
competitiai isgcod, and we have<lb/>
sane experience which we lacked<lb/>
in the past<lb/>
McCauley was ranked ninth in<lb/>
the United States last year befae<lb/>
the natiaials at Princeton, but<lb/>
failed to make the top 12 (which<lb/>
gives a swimmer all-America<lb/>
status).<lb/>
"John's a junia now and has<lb/>
been to the nationals twice<lb/>
Scharf added. "The jitters should<lb/>
not work against him this year<lb/>
A breakdown of the Pirates<lb/>
shows two junias, two sopho-<lb/>
maes and a freshman bound fa<lb/>
the natiaials.<lb/>
Four of our guys have been<lb/>
to the nationals befae Scharf<lb/>
continued. "And Nieman (fresh-<lb/>
man), is a cool perfamer. I don't<lb/>
think any pressure will hamper<lb/>
him<lb/>
Nieman was probably the top<lb/>
perfamer ai the ECU team this<lb/>
year. He holds four varsity<lb/>
records in individual events (200,<lb/>
500, 100 and 1650 frees) and has<lb/>
swum on the recad 800 freestyle<lb/>
team (650.61). He has been<lb/>
named the top athlete on the ECU<lb/>
campus twice by the school paper<lb/>
and is likely to walk off with the<lb/>
MVP award fa swimming.<lb/>
"I am anxious to swim at the<lb/>
Cleveland State pod Nieman<lb/>
said recently. "I hear it's one of<lb/>
the fastest around. I'm hoping to<lb/>
knock a second off the 200 free<lb/>
time I had at the Easterns<lb/>
(1:40.87). If I do that I'll be<lb/>
happy. But I don't think that will<lb/>
give me all-America status. But,<lb/>
only about 30 people are qualified<lb/>
fa the natiaials, so who knows,<lb/>
anything can happen<lb/>
When asked if he would be<lb/>
under a lot of pressure, being a<lb/>
freshman at the nationals, Nie-<lb/>
man said, "I'll probably be a little<lb/>
shaky going up on Wednesday,<lb/>
but I'll be loosened up by Friday<lb/>
when I swim<lb/>
Scharf thinks the relays are<lb/>
the most promising for East<lb/>
Carolina to place in.<lb/>
"I think we can knock five a<lb/>
six seconds off our 800 (free relay)<lb/>
time Scharf said. "That should<lb/>
be good enough to place. We'd<lb/>
have to knock four seconds off the<lb/>
400 (free relay) time (307.14) to<lb/>
make it. But with the good<lb/>
competition and the faster pool,<lb/>
who knows. Just maybe we can do<lb/>
Nieman is the only one of the<lb/>
five Pirate qualifiers who is not a<lb/>
resident of Nath Carolina. He<lb/>
hails from Winter Park, Fla<lb/>
while Mann and McCauley are<lb/>
from Charlotte, and Tuda and<lb/>
Thane are Gi oensbao residents.<lb/>
"I think it says a lot fa the<lb/>
caliber of freestyle swimmers that<lb/>
come out of Nath Carolina<lb/>
Scharf said. "McCauley is always<lb/>
ranked in the top 20 of sprint<lb/>
swimmers and the others have<lb/>
shown they can go with the best<lb/>
of them<lb/>
East Carolina, while NCAA<lb/>
Division II and NAIA in the late<lb/>
50's and early 60's, won two<lb/>
national championships and had<lb/>
82 all-America swimmers. But,<lb/>
since 1968, when ECU entered<lb/>
Division I, they have failed to gain<lb/>
an all-America. Maybe this is the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Hidden in this diagram are the names of<lb/>
twenty foods or snacks that go great with<lb/>
a cold Pabst. They may be spelled forwards<lb/>
or backwards, vertically or horizontally, even<lb/>
diagonally, but are always in a straight line.<lb/>
The first one has been circled to get you<lb/>
going. Your challenge is to discover and<lb/>
circle the other nineteen!<lb/>
1<lb/>
When there's a challenge,<lb/>
quality makes the difference.<lb/>
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.<lb/>
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.<lb/>
The Pabst challenge:<lb/>
We welcome the chance to prove the quality of<lb/>
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare<lb/>
Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll<lb/>
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best<lb/>
tasting beer you can get. Since 1844 it always has.<lb/>
PABST Since 1844.The quality has always come through.<lb/>
ipooj uoppiH<lb/>
<pb facs="00057119_0013"/>
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