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<pb facs="00057126_0001"/>
us oom-<lb/>
 50 years.<lb/>
Pountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Committeespg. 3<lb/>
llluminapg. 12<lb/>
Soco g. 15<lb/>
Vol. 52, No. 48<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
26 April 1977<lb/>
Legislature passes recall bill<lb/>
OLD FRIENDS SGA executives joined a heated Neil Sessoms, Speaker of the Legislature Ricky<lb/>
debate over the recall petition in Monday's Price, Vice-President Reed Warren.<lb/>
Legislature meeting. Left to right: SGA President (Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
One more time<lb/>
Trustees vote to increase<lb/>
dorm rent, activity fees<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The ECU Board of Trustees<lb/>
voted Saturday to increase dorm<lb/>
room rent by $42 due to increas-<lb/>
ing utilities costs.<lb/>
Cliff Moore. Vice Chancellor<lb/>
for Business Affairs, said ECU is<lb/>
presently paying $1 million each<lb/>
year to the Greenville Utilities<lb/>
Commission which furnishes<lb/>
electricity to the campus.<lb/>
Currently, dorm students are<lb/>
paying $390 yearly; on the<lb/>
semester system, they will be<lb/>
paying $432 yearly.<lb/>
Dr. James H. Tucker, Dean of<lb/>
Student Affairs, mentioned that<lb/>
several years ago, there was a<lb/>
Droblem of fillina the dorms.<lb/>
Due to increased enrollment<lb/>
as one factor, Dr. Tucker said,<lb/>
housing is getting scarce.<lb/>
"Many students will live in<lb/>
the dorms because it's cheaper<lb/>
said Dr. Tucker.<lb/>
The Board also voted to<lb/>
increase student activity fees by<lb/>
$9.<lb/>
According to Moore, the $81<lb/>
activity fee is about average with<lb/>
other North Carolina state-<lb/>
supported schools<lb/>
The Board discussed the<lb/>
possibility of part-time students<lb/>
paying student activity fees.<lb/>
Moore said N.C. State and<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill students pay<lb/>
activity fees, regardless of how<lb/>
many semester hours they are<lb/>
taking.<lb/>
Moore also said soccer has<lb/>
been dropped, at least tempor-<lb/>
arily, from the men's sports for<lb/>
the 1977-78 season because of<lb/>
Title IX. There will be eight<lb/>
sports each for men's and wo-<lb/>
men's athletics.<lb/>
Moore also said ECU has<lb/>
signed a five-year contract with<lb/>
Wake Forest University for a<lb/>
football series to begin in 1979.<lb/>
A one-year contract has been<lb/>
signed with Florida State to begin<lb/>
in 1980, according to Moore.<lb/>
There are also plans to sign on<lb/>
a seven-foot center fa the ECU<lb/>
basketball team.<lb/>
Dr. Ed Monroe, Vice Chancel-<lb/>
lor for Health Affairs, said<lb/>
applications are still being taken<lb/>
for entrance to the medical<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Twenty-eight students will be<lb/>
accepted out of about 250 or 300<lb/>
applications.<lb/>
Monroe said North Carolina<lb/>
applicants will be given first<lb/>
priority.<lb/>
Thirty-two students will oe<lb/>
admitted the following year,<lb/>
Monroe said.<lb/>
Thirty-six to forty students<lb/>
will hopefully be admitted to<lb/>
succeeding classes, Monroe said.<lb/>
Another report stated that<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium will not assume<lb/>
the horseshoe shape as was<lb/>
previously thought.<lb/>
Chancellor Leo Jenkins said<lb/>
seats will be added to all four<lb/>
sides, increasing the number of<lb/>
seats by 20.000.<lb/>
Additional stadium construc-<lb/>
tion will include more concession<lb/>
stands, a $500,000 press box, a<lb/>
150-seat chancellor s guest box,<lb/>
and an elevator to the press and<lb/>
guest box sections.<lb/>
Trustees' Chairman Troy W.<lb/>
Pate. Jr. said he will announce<lb/>
the members of the selection<lb/>
committee for the chancellor<lb/>
around May 15.<lb/>
In other, business, Moore<lb/>
commented that the ECU Student<lb/>
Government Association has one<lb/>
of the largest student government<lb/>
budgets in the nation.<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
An article which ap-<lb/>
peared in FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD earlier this month<lb/>
stated that Kent Johnson,<lb/>
former SGA Secretary of<lb/>
International Programs,<lb/>
gave no reason for his<lb/>
resignation from the SGA.<lb/>
Johnson later contacted<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, stating<lb/>
that he had given SGA<lb/>
President Neil Sessoms<lb/>
reason for his resignation.<lb/>
"I felt that my remain-<lb/>
ing on his (Sessoms) ad-<lb/>
ministration would not have<lb/>
been very helpful to him.<lb/>
"I can feel the tension<lb/>
between us, and I don't<lb/>
want to hurt him or his<lb/>
administration in any<lb/>
way said Johnson.<lb/>
Hot debate sees present<lb/>
and past executives at<lb/>
the Speaker's podium<lb/>
By DENNIS LEONARD<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
The SGA Monday night pas-<lb/>
sed a bill calling fa a recall<lb/>
election to be held May 13.<lb/>
According to the SGA Consti-<lb/>
tution, a recall may be held after<lb/>
a petition with 15 per cent of t&amp;e<lb/>
signatures from the entire stu-<lb/>
dent body is obtained.<lb/>
Former Attorney General<lb/>
Karen Harloe addressed the<lb/>
Legislature to state that the<lb/>
petition contains 1,278 signa-<lb/>
tures. Harloe also noted that the<lb/>
petition had been examined by<lb/>
Deans Carolyn Fulghum, Laura<lb/>
Ward, and Caroline Smith.<lb/>
According to SGA President<lb/>
Neil Sessoms, the recall petition<lb/>
is not valid because Harloe is no<lb/>
longer acting Attorney General.<lb/>
"The recall petition is uncon-<lb/>
stitutional because it takes an<lb/>
acting Attorney General to vali-<lb/>
date it said Sessoms. "I fired<lb/>
Harloe and she is not the<lb/>
Attorney General, which is based<lb/>
on Sullivan's precedents the fir-<lb/>
ina of John Jones last Fall.<lb/>
"The SGA Legislature has<lb/>
deteriorated into a political quag-<lb/>
mire and has ceased to serve the<lb/>
students added Sessoms.<lb/>
Former SGA Vice President<lb/>
Greg Pingston also addressed the<lb/>
Legislature with a resolution<lb/>
asking for the resignation of<lb/>
Speaker Ricky Price, the ending<lb/>
of Sullivan's hazing political<lb/>
tactics, and the resumption of the<lb/>
Legislature's law making duties.<lb/>
Pingston's resolution was<lb/>
supported by MRC president and<lb/>
president-elect, WRC president.<lb/>
Student Union president and<lb/>
president-elect, FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD, BUCCANEER, and<lb/>
REBEL editors, the Law Society<lb/>
and Rho Epsilon president, for-<lb/>
mer SGA Vice President and<lb/>
Treasurer and the Panhellenic<lb/>
Council's woman of the year.<lb/>
 I think by the support shown<lb/>
by the organizational leaders on<lb/>
this campus, with no political<lb/>
aspirations, students snould real-<lb/>
ize the political farce that Tim<lb/>
Sullivan and his followers have<lb/>
infested in the SGA said Reed<lb/>
Warren, SGA vice-president.<lb/>
According to Warren, people<lb/>
who have worked with Sullivan<lb/>
have become alienated.<lb/>
"Campus leaders who have<lb/>
crossed paths with Sullivan recog-<lb/>
nize his slimy tactics and selfish<lb/>
political motivations said War-<lb/>
ren.<lb/>
Price could not be reached fa<lb/>
comment.<lb/>
No BUCCANEER;<lb/>
editor blames SGA<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The 1976-77 BUCCANEER<lb/>
has been canceled due to insur-<lb/>
mountable delays caused by the<lb/>
recent robbery of the SGA<lb/>
photography lab.<lb/>
According to BUC Editor<lb/>
Susan Rogerson, several agani-<lb/>
zation photos had to be canceled<lb/>
and others were never taken even<lb/>
though assigned.<lb/>
"By the time the shots could<lb/>
be rescheduled, school would be<lb/>
out and only two people are<lb/>
working this summer said<lb/>
Rogerson.<lb/>
Rogerson places the blame on<lb/>
the SGA legislature and the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee for<lb/>
severely slicing the Buccaneer<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
"The SGA tried to be journal-<lb/>
ists, which they definitely are not.<lb/>
Their budget cuts did not allow<lb/>
fa a quality Buc.<lb/>
"The aiginally appropriated<lb/>
$60,000 was spent elsewhere<lb/>
after the BUC staff walkout, even<lb/>
though a task face had been<lb/>
assigned to restructure the<lb/>
BUC'<lb/>
"We were left with one<lb/>
month's operating expenses plus<lb/>
ten salaried positions. All other<lb/>
expenses, such as postage and<lb/>
printing, had to be financed<lb/>
through subscriptions and ad<lb/>
revenues<lb/>
A section will be reserved in<lb/>
next year's edition covering this<lb/>
year's highlights. Whether a not<lb/>
pictures of the dass of'77 will be<lb/>
printed next year, depends on the<lb/>
new budget.<lb/>
"Part of the blame lies in Tim<lb/>
Sullivan's negative opinion and<lb/>
mistrust of publications and also,<lb/>
in the SGA's ignoiance of the<lb/>
funds and staff necessary to print<lb/>
quality said Rogerson.<lb/>
"The legislature was influen-<lb/>
ced by Craig Hales bias anc<lb/>
Karen Harloe's inability to under<lb/>
stand the answers to the ques-<lb/>
tions she asked during the debate<lb/>
over budget cuts<lb/>
Students who purchased sub-<lb/>
scriptions may pick up their<lb/>
refund checks in the BUC office<lb/>
beginning May 16.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057126_0002"/><lb/>
����������������������H ��W9SMBM<lb/>
S.O.U.LS.<lb/>
SCJ<lb/>
Workshop<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
26 April 1977<lb/>
SG A openings Cabinet jobs<lb/>
Any person applying for SGA<lb/>
Attorney General position or any<lb/>
cabinet post should call the SGA<lb/>
office by 12.00 Thursday, April<lb/>
28. Call 757-6611, ext. 218.<lb/>
, There are SGA Legislator<lb/>
openings in Belk, Clement,<lb/>
Fletcher and one Day Student<lb/>
opening. All those interested can<lb/>
file in Mendenhall 228. A meet-<lb/>
� ing will be held Monday, May 2,<lb/>
at 400 p.m. in Mendenhall 239.<lb/>
College bowl<lb/>
The first annual ECU<lb/>
COLLEGE BOWL Championship<lb/>
Tournament will be held Wed<lb/>
April 27 at 8 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Two teams of ECU students<lb/>
will compete for the champion-<lb/>
ship and over $200 in prize<lb/>
money. A special added event will<lb/>
be presented - the championship<lb/>
team versus four coaches from<lb/>
this year's competing teams.<lb/>
You have seen the College<lb/>
Bowl on television, sponsored by<lb/>
General Electric. Now see this<lb/>
exciting and entertaining com-<lb/>
petition at ECU. There is no<lb/>
admission charge.<lb/>
Happy hours<lb/>
For some FREE HAPPY<lb/>
HOURS, come to Mendenhall and<lb/>
check out the recreation area.<lb/>
Eight Free hours of billiards are<lb/>
given away each week, free<lb/>
playing time in table tennis can<lb/>
be won each day, and free games<lb/>
of bowling are awarded to several<lb/>
lucky bowlers each week.<lb/>
Find out now how you can win<lb/>
some HAPPY HOURS by visiting<lb/>
the recreation area on the ground<lb/>
floor of the Student Center. You<lb/>
don't want to miss it!<lb/>
Billiards<lb/>
Register now for a Spring<lb/>
Quarter Billiards Tournament to<lb/>
be held at 730 p.m. on Wednes-<lb/>
day, May 4 at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Billiards Center.<lb/>
Sponsored by Mendenhail, the<lb/>
jouble elimination competition is<lb/>
Dpen to all ECU students. The<lb/>
participants will play 14.1 con-<lb/>
tinuous, generally called straight<lb/>
xxdI. Trophies will be awarded to<lb/>
he winner and first runner-up.<lb/>
Rules and registration forms are<lb/>
available at the Billiards Center.<lb/>
There will be a $.50 registration<lb/>
ee and Tuesday, May 3 is the<lb/>
�nal day to register. Sign up now,<lb/>
ou might be a winner!<lb/>
Cancellation<lb/>
The ECU Flea Market, sche-<lb/>
duled for Wednesday, April 27,<lb/>
m the mall, has been canceled<lb/>
lue to the limited number of<lb/>
'endors who registered to parti-<lb/>
cipate. Those vendors who did<lb/>
register may collect their deposits<lb/>
at their earliest convenience.<lb/>
Table tennis<lb/>
A Table Tennis Singles<lb/>
Tournament will be held on<lb/>
Tuesday, May 3 at 730 p.m. at<lb/>
Mendenhall. This double elimi-<lb/>
nation tournament, sponsored by<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, is<lb/>
open to all ECU students, faculty<lb/>
and staff. Trophies will be<lb/>
awarded to the winner and the<lb/>
first runner-up. Registration<lb/>
forms and table tennis rules are<lb/>
available at the Billiards Center.<lb/>
There will be a $.50 registration<lb/>
fee and the final day to register is<lb/>
Monday, May 2.<lb/>
Ping-pong club<lb/>
If you enjoy playing table<lb/>
tennis, why not come over to<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center each<lb/>
Tuesday night at 8 p.m. when the<lb/>
Table Tennis Club meets for some<lb/>
friendly competition. Don't think<lb/>
you have to be a pro to participate<lb/>
because the competition is at all<lb/>
levels. So, bring a friend and have<lb/>
some fun.<lb/>
Summer work<lb/>
Good summer jobs available<lb/>
in Chowan County, Edenton,<lb/>
N.C. working with the N.C.<lb/>
Department of Agriculture in a<lb/>
research project in cotton. Call<lb/>
the Career Planning &amp; Placement<lb/>
Service at 757-6050 immediately.<lb/>
BUC staff jobs<lb/>
Anyone interested in an edi-<lb/>
torial or business position on the<lb/>
1978 BUC staff should apply by<lb/>
Friday, May 6 at 500 at the BUC<lb/>
office in the Publications Center.<lb/>
The staff will begin operations the<lb/>
first week of school next fall. For<lb/>
further information, call 757-6501<lb/>
or 6502.<lb/>
Talent show<lb/>
The Gammettes of Sigma<lb/>
Gamma Rho Sorority will be<lb/>
sponsoring a Talent Show. All<lb/>
persons interested in displaying<lb/>
their talents should contact Joyce<lb/>
Mourning at 758-8831.<lb/>
Fun in Son<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ<lb/>
will meet fa fun, fellowship and<lb/>
cnaiiengirj insights from God's<lb/>
Wad. Evayone welcome. Thurs-<lb/>
day 7 p.m Brewster B-102. .<lb/>
The A.A.C.C. Art Exhibition<lb/>
is in the Afro-American Cultural<lb/>
Center April 25-29. Waks are<lb/>
being displayed by students and<lb/>
area artists. The cultural center<lb/>
will be open from 10-4 daily.<lb/>
Sponsored by S.O.U.L.S.<lb/>
NGSL<lb/>
The East Ccudina delegation<lb/>
of the North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature (NCSL) will meet<lb/>
Wednesday, April 27 at 4 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall. Plans fa the upcom-<lb/>
ing membership drive will be<lb/>
among the topics discussed. All<lb/>
members should plan to attend<lb/>
since this will be a very important<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Real training<lb/>
One year ago Real Crisis<lb/>
Center developed a Sexual As-<lb/>
sault Services program. They<lb/>
have trained counselas who offer<lb/>
suppative counseling to victims.<lb/>
There are trained companions<lb/>
available to accompany the victim<lb/>
to the hospital, police station, and<lb/>
court. Also there are trained<lb/>
speakers available fa oanmunity<lb/>
education. A new training session<lb/>
is beginning Tuesday night April<lb/>
26 at 8O0, at the Pitt County<lb/>
Mental Health Centa on Old<lb/>
Stantoisburg Road behind the<lb/>
new hospital. All interested pa-<lb/>
sons are invited to attend this<lb/>
open meeting. The volunteer<lb/>
positions require diffaent levels<lb/>
of time and commitment, so if<lb/>
you have a little time to voluntea<lb/>
a a lot of time you can fit in.<lb/>
There will be a meeting fa all<lb/>
the pledges of the Society fa<lb/>
Collegiate Journalists on Tues-<lb/>
day, April 26 at 8O0 p.m.<lb/>
Inductions will be discussed.<lb/>
Inductions will be held in Brews-<lb/>
ter Building B-102 on Sunday,<lb/>
May first at 400 p.m.<lb/>
Natural dyer<lb/>
Ellen Craib a natural Dya and<lb/>
Designer from the Carolina<lb/>
Mountains will be giving a slide<lb/>
presentation on Paste Resist,<lb/>
Batik and Indigo Dying. She will<lb/>
be in Jenkins Fine Arts Centa in<lb/>
the Auditaium on the second<lb/>
floa of the new wing. This will<lb/>
take place on Thursday. April 28,<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. Evayone is invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
A two-hour workshop for<lb/>
parents of pre-school children will<lb/>
take place on Tuesday, April 26,<lb/>
2-4 p.m at St. Paul's Episcopal<lb/>
Church, 401 East 4th Street in<lb/>
Greenville. The workshop is<lb/>
sponsaed by the Statewide Pre-<lb/>
kindergarten Screening Program<lb/>
of the D.E.C.<lb/>
Mrs. Ebbie Rogerson will be<lb/>
in charge. The program is open to<lb/>
all parents at no cost.<lb/>
The last part of the program is<lb/>
set aside fa making creative<lb/>
learning games which parents<lb/>
will take home.<lb/>
Further infamatioi can be<lb/>
obtained from the SPSP office at<lb/>
the Developmental Evaluation<lb/>
Clinic in Greenville. The phone<lb/>
number is 757-6921.<lb/>
Symposium Sign language<lb/>
The seventh annual Speech<lb/>
and Hearing Symposium at ECU<lb/>
has been set fa Friday, May 6,<lb/>
and will feature presentatiais by<lb/>
expats on aspects of speech<lb/>
disadas.<lb/>
Sevaal symposium sessions<lb/>
are scheduled fa the Carol Belk<lb/>
Allied Health Auditaium.<lb/>
The purpose of the annual<lb/>
event is to keep students and<lb/>
professia.als abreast of recent<lb/>
developments in the field of<lb/>
speech and hearing sciences.<lb/>
Infamatioi about the symposium<lb/>
is available from Raymond Lin-<lb/>
ville, president of the ECU<lb/>
NSSHA chapta, at the ECU<lb/>
Dept. of Speech, Language and<lb/>
Auditory Pathology, telephone<lb/>
757-6215.<lb/>
Republicans Day of dance<lb/>
The most important meet-<lb/>
ing of the year takes place<lb/>
Wednesday April 27, at 730 in<lb/>
Brewsta B-104. The meeting will<lb/>
consist of nomination and election<lb/>
of offioas fa 1977-78. We urge<lb/>
all pasons intaested to attend<lb/>
this meeting and help decide who<lb/>
our leaders will be fa the coming<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Music trade<lb/>
I am looking fa a partna fa<lb/>
the purpose of exchanging recad<lb/>
albums.<lb/>
I can offa a large choice of<lb/>
recads with first-rate classical<lb/>
music of European oomposas,<lb/>
especially from my country, Cze-<lb/>
choslovakia. Fa example I can<lb/>
offer artists of the quality of<lb/>
Smetana, Devaak, Janacek Mar-<lb/>
tinu etc and also vay interes-<lb/>
ting Czech folk music. I am vay<lb/>
interested in music and wish to<lb/>
obtain some Amaican country<lb/>
and jazz music. My address is<lb/>
MUDr. Petr Vranek, Tuckova 4,<lb/>
611 00 Brno Czechdsavakia.<lb/>
Chapt. X<lb/>
Thae will be an "Extrava-<lb/>
ganza" on Monday, May 2nd<lb/>
from 800 untilat Chapta Ten.<lb/>
Doa prizes to be given away<lb/>
evay half hour. Thae will also be<lb/>
a beer chugging contest, dancing,<lb/>
and a "Miss Legs" contest.<lb/>
Tickets are 25 cents in advance<lb/>
and 60 cents at the doa.<lb/>
Classes in ballet, jazz dance<lb/>
and ethnic dancing will be offaed<lb/>
by professional danosrsat ECU'S<lb/>
'irst annual "Day of Dance"<lb/>
Saturday, May 14.<lb/>
The event is sponsaed by the<lb/>
ECU Department of Drama and<lb/>
Speech and will feature classes<lb/>
taught by Robert Lindgren (bal-<lb/>
let), Frank and Marsha Wagna<lb/>
(jazz danoe) and Donna Whitley<lb/>
(Arabic dance).<lb/>
Participation in the "Day of<lb/>
Danoe" isopen to individuals and<lb/>
groups of danoe students aged 10<lb/>
a olda, fa a fee of $5 pa<lb/>
person.<lb/>
Participants will take master<lb/>
classes in each of the three dance<lb/>
areas and receive tickets to the<lb/>
ECU Dance Theatre's evening<lb/>
production in McGinnins Audi-<lb/>
taium.<lb/>
The Dance Theatre will fea-<lb/>
ture ECU dancas perfaming<lb/>
aiginal chaecgraphy by ECU'S<lb/>
dance faculty.<lb/>
Furtha infamatioi and pre-<lb/>
registration materials are availa-<lb/>
ble from the ECU Department of<lb/>
Drama and Speech, 757-6390.<lb/>
Run-a-thon<lb/>
The Kappa Alpha Or da will<lb/>
be sponsaing a run-a-thoi fa the<lb/>
Arthritic Foundation, Saturday,<lb/>
April 30, from 10 a.m. until 4<lb/>
p.m. in the field behind Pitt<lb/>
Plaza. Give your support to help<lb/>
the fight against Amaica's No. 1<lb/>
crippling disease.<lb/>
ECU will be admitting a small<lb/>
number of deaf students next<lb/>
Semester. The Program fa Hear-<lb/>
ing Impaired Students is search-<lb/>
ing fa studaits who have any<lb/>
knowledge of sign language and<lb/>
who would be interested in<lb/>
improving their skills through<lb/>
beginning and advanced sign<lb/>
language interpreta training.<lb/>
There will be a number of<lb/>
part-time jobs available fa stu-<lb/>
dent interpretas Fall Semesta.<lb/>
Chem seminar<lb/>
Debra Stand 11 Gray, graduate<lb/>
student in the ECU Department<lb/>
of Chemisty, will direct a depart-<lb/>
mental seminar program Tues-<lb/>
day, April 26.<lb/>
Ha topic is "Free Radical<lb/>
Cyclization of the 5-Hexenoyl<lb/>
System and oonoans ha recent<lb/>
research in the 5-hexenoyl sys-<lb/>
tem. The program, scheduled fa<lb/>
ncai in 201 Flanagan Building, is<lb/>
free and open to the public.<lb/>
Debra Gray is the daughter of<lb/>
J.R. Standll of Route 4, Green-<lb/>
ville, and a graduate of Nath Pitt<lb/>
High School in Bethel.<lb/>
Dinner theatre<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Centa<lb/>
announces the final Dinna Thea-<lb/>
tre production of this season, A<lb/>
springtime Festival Of Musical<lb/>
Comedy Nostalgia. The Dinna<lb/>
Theatre runs from Thursday, May<lb/>
5, through Sunday, May 8.<lb/>
Dinna fa the first three pafa-<lb/>
mances is at 7 p.m. with curtain<lb/>
time at 8 p.m . The Sunday dinna<lb/>
begins at 5O0 p.m. with the<lb/>
pafamance at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Student tickets are $5.00 fa<lb/>
both dinna and the show. Tickets<lb/>
fa faculty, staff, and the public<lb/>
are $7.50.<lb/>
Tickets are going fast so get<lb/>
yours now. Come by the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Centa today.<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Students who are to be<lb/>
initiated into Phi Eta Sigma are<lb/>
reminded to come fa the cae-<lb/>
mony to the Multipurpose Room,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Centa, at<lb/>
7:15 p.m. on Thureday� May 5.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057126_0003"/><lb/>
Student Union announces<lb/>
committee chairpersons<lb/>
Will assume<lb/>
banquet<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Student Union President Elect<lb/>
Dennis Ramsey announced today<lb/>
the oommittee chairpersons for<lb/>
the '7778 school year. The new<lb/>
chairpersons will assume their<lb/>
duties after installation at the<lb/>
Student Union banquet April 30.<lb/>
The chairpersons for the nine<lb/>
Student Union committees are as<lb/>
follows: Films Committee-Doris<lb/>
Wilson, a junior majoring in<lb/>
Social Work and Corrections;<lb/>
Popular Entertainment-Lar'v<lb/>
Romich, a junior Psychology<lb/>
major; Lecture Committee�Ron<lb/>
Faust, a junior majoring in<lb/>
Business; Coffeehouse Commit-<lb/>
tee�Larry Surles, a senior Bio-<lb/>
logy major; Artist Series-Gay<lb/>
Bowman, a junior majoring in<lb/>
Music; Art Exhibition-Bill Bass,<lb/>
a senior Art major; Entertainer-<lb/>
M ike Morse, a junior majoring in<lb/>
Psychology; Travel Committee-<lb/>
Bill Martin, a senior Biology<lb/>
major; Theatre Arts-Charlotte<lb/>
Cheatham, a junior majoring in<lb/>
26 April 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Sports medicine<lb/>
conference planned<lb/>
Drama.<lb/>
According to Ramsey, the<lb/>
chairpersons were selected<lb/>
through application and personal<lb/>
interviews with him.<lb/>
His nominations were presen-<lb/>
ted to the Student Union Board of<lb/>
Directors, who approved them at<lb/>
their April 7 meeting.<lb/>
Ramsey said he looked for-<lb/>
ward to working with the new<lb/>
chairpersons next year in bring-<lb/>
ing entertainment to the students<lb/>
of ECU.<lb/>
ECU'S 1977 Sports Medicine<lb/>
Conference has been set for May<lb/>
13-14 in the Carol Belk Allied<lb/>
Health Building.<lb/>
The annual program is de-<lb/>
signed to provide athletic coaches<lb/>
and trainers with necessary skills<lb/>
and techniques fa developing<lb/>
systematic and successful pro-<lb/>
grams fa treatment and rehabili-<lb/>
tation of athletic injuries.<lb/>
Instructional staff includes<lb/>
Drs. James Bowman, William<lb/>
Bost, James Carter and Robert<lb/>
Timmors, physicians, Janet<lb/>
Schweisthal, assistant professa<lb/>
of anatomy at ECU; and Rod<lb/>
Compton, Ronnie Barnes and Liz<lb/>
White of the ECU sports medicine<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057126_0004"/><lb/>
El i i<lb/>
ditonals<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
26 April 1977<lb/>
Ricky's Rules of Order<lb/>
Democracy in student government was dealt<lb/>
another blow Monday night by the words of Speaker<lb/>
Ricky Price. His interpretation of Roberts1 Rules of<lb/>
Order, the parliamentary guide by which the<lb/>
legislature is supposed to operate, and the<lb/>
legislators' complacence in their reaction to the<lb/>
petition for recall against SGA President Neil<lb/>
Sessoms and Vice-President Reed Warren, further<lb/>
compromise the SGA Legislature's credibility as the<lb/>
representative authority of ECU students.<lb/>
The legislature's appropriation of $750 to fund<lb/>
another election for the SGA presidency this spring<lb/>
was based on the assumption Karen Harloe had the<lb/>
authority to validate recall petitions against Sessoms<lb/>
and Warren even though the newly-elected SGA<lb/>
President fired Harloe from the attorney general's<lb/>
position shortly after taking office in March. (Harloe,<lb/>
however, refused to vacate her office.) The<lb/>
legislature was hesitant to take action on the petition<lb/>
until Speaker Price assured them Harloe was still<lb/>
attorney general. Normally a constitutional question<lb/>
such as this would be heard by the Review Board, but<lb/>
apparently Price regards that procedure as too time<lb/>
consuming.<lb/>
Along with the $750 bill, the legislature voted<lb/>
during "new business" to hold another election for<lb/>
the presidency and vice-presidency on May 5. When<lb/>
it was discovered near the end of the meeting, during<lb/>
"announcements that this date was too soon<lb/>
considering the president's right to let a bill become I1.S. $GH3tQ<lb/>
law without signing it in ten days, Price again "<lb/>
assured the legislature that there was no problem,<lb/>
that the bill could be adjusted a little. The new date is<lb/>
May 13, a Friday.<lb/>
Liberal interpretations and frequent adjustments<lb/>
of the operating procedure of Price's legislature this<lb/>
year have made a mockery of that branch of student<lb/>
government. The blame, however, does not belong<lb/>
solely to Price for his blundering manipulation of<lb/>
parliamentary procedure. Also sharing the responsi-<lb/>
bility is a passive, go-along legislature that begs not<lb/>
to be too closely scrutinized.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Founbinheod<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 Coyle<lb/>
Sports EditormAnne Hogge<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association<lb/>
of ECU and is distributed each Tuesday and Thursday during<lb/>
the school year, weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
By TED<lb/>
(LNS)-The Carter Administration is stepping up<lb/>
pressure on Philippine dictator Ferdinand Maroosto<lb/>
accept Washington's terms for the retention of U.S.<lb/>
bases in the former U.S. colony.<lb/>
On Sunday, April 10, both the New York Times<lb/>
and the Washington Post carried articles about a<lb/>
new U.S. Senate Foreign Assistance Sub-Committee<lb/>
report that questions the strategic value of Clark Air<lb/>
Force Base-but not other Pentagon installations in<lb/>
the Philippines.<lb/>
Negotiations with Manila over the future of the<lb/>
bases stalled last December. At that time, former<lb/>
Secretary of State Kissinger claimed he had secured<lb/>
an agreement but that Marcos had reneged on it.<lb/>
Marcos was then said to be seeking $1 billion in<lb/>
rent over five years for the bases. (The U.S.<lb/>
currently pays the Philippine government one dollar<lb/>
a year for its use of Clark, the largest Pentagon base<lb/>
outside the U.S.)<lb/>
Washington now daims that Marcos is demand-<lb/>
ing $1 billion in military aid and credits alone, along<lb/>
with additional economic aid.<lb/>
Following the December negotiations collapse,<lb/>
Marcos announced that he was re-evaluating the<lb/>
usefulness of the bases to the Philippines. In March<lb/>
Francis Underhill, now U.S. Ambassador to<lb/>
Malaysia and former political counsellor in the U.S.<lb/>
Embassy in Manila, urged the closing of all U.S.<lb/>
bases in the Philippines in a so-called "secret<lb/>
report" that found its way to the Wall Street<lb/>
Journal. Public comment of this sort outside an<lb/>
official's area is highly irregular in the tradition-<lb/>
bound State Department.<lb/>
Thus both sides are asserting publicly their<lb/>
disinterest in what is well known that they are se-<lb/>
cretly negotiating about.<lb/>
U.S. NEGOTIA TING POSITION<lb/>
In this context, the significance of the recent<lb/>
Senate report should not be exaggerated. It dearly<lb/>
has more to do with the U.S. 'negotiating<lb/>
position�and driving down the price for the<lb/>
bases-than with a genuine U.S. withdrawal from<lb/>
the Philippines. In all likelihood, the strained U.S.<lb/>
Philippine bases<lb/>
CHANDLER<lb/>
economy will force the dosing of some Philippine<lb/>
installations in any event.<lb/>
However, with more than $4 billion dollars<lb/>
invested in the islands, with more square miles of<lb/>
Pentagon-controlled fadlities there than in the rest<lb/>
of the world combined (exduding the U.S.), and<lb/>
with the CIA's Asian headquarters but lately<lb/>
removed from Bangkok to the Philippine capital, the<lb/>
U.S. is unlikely to be on the verge of walking away<lb/>
from the Philippines.<lb/>
Moreover, the Administration has steadfastly<lb/>
refused to ad against Marcos for his widely-recog-<lb/>
nized violations of human rights-indicating that<lb/>
Carter still hopes to gain from, rather than liquidate<lb/>
the relationship.<lb/>
Neither the Underhill nor the Senate reports<lb/>
address the real stakes at issue in the Philippines-<lb/>
the right of the Filipino people to exerdse genuine<lb/>
independence and sovereignty within their own<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Clark Air Face Base and Subic Bay Naval Base<lb/>
together occupy an area that would accommodate<lb/>
half a dozen of the smallest European countries.<lb/>
Clark's 130,000 acres pre-empt some of the best<lb/>
plains land in the Central Luzon rice-bowl of<lb/>
Pampanga Province. The bulk of this land is either<lb/>
unused, or used solely for bombing pradice�in a<lb/>
country where peasants have to carve riceland from<lb/>
the mountainsides through tier after tier of<lb/>
ascending terraces.<lb/>
Subic Naval Base has appropriated excellent<lb/>
fishing grounds. Dozens of nearby fishing people<lb/>
are killed each year as undetonated explosives<lb/>
become caught in nets and explode on contad with<lb/>
the small craft.<lb/>
It is significant that the Senate report, which<lb/>
strongly questions the value of Clark unless the U.S.<lb/>
is mediating another Asian land war, staunchly<lb/>
supports the retention of Subic, the only extra-U.S.<lb/>
base with repair fadlities for the U.S. atomic<lb/>
submarine fleet.<lb/>
Nevertheless, the fad that elements in high<lb/>
levels of the U.S. Government are publicly<lb/>
proposing the liquidation of U.S. military bases in<lb/>
other countries is highly significant.<lb/>
iSll<lb/>
W-w .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057126_0005"/><lb/>
����1<lb/>
(����������������H<lb/>
�i 9<lb/>
N.C. judge declares act unconstitutional<lb/>
26 April 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Coirf ruling stabs nuclear po wer industry<lb/>
(LNS)A North Carolina<lb/>
federal district court ruling has<lb/>
sent violent shudders throughout<lb/>
the nuclear power industry.<lb/>
On March 31, Judge James B.<lb/>
McMillan declared unconstitu-<lb/>
tional the Price-Anderson Act,<lb/>
which has allowed power com-<lb/>
panies to avoid shouldering the<lb/>
full financial responsibility for<lb/>
potential nuclear accidents.<lb/>
The Carolina Environmental<lb/>
Study Group, together with some<lb/>
40 individuals, first brought suit<lb/>
against Duke Power Company<lb/>
and the Atomic Energy Com-<lb/>
mission (now the Nuclear Regula-<lb/>
tory Commission) in 1973. Duke<lb/>
Power, which is currently build-<lb/>
ing two nuclear plants near<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C, announced that<lb/>
it plans to appeal the oourt<lb/>
decision directly to the Supreme<lb/>
Court.<lb/>
If Duke loses its appeal and<lb/>
the decision stands, nuclear<lb/>
power companies would be open<lb/>
to unlimited liability claims, and<lb/>
the future development of the<lb/>
industry would be seriously<lb/>
undermined.<lb/>
GOVT SUBSIDIZES NUCLEA R<lb/>
INDUSTRY<lb/>
The Price-Anderson Act was<lb/>
first passed in 1957, just as the<lb/>
nuclear power industry was get-<lb/>
ting off the ground.<lb/>
"The industry oouldn't buy<lb/>
insurance for their plants and<lb/>
they weren't going to build them<lb/>
unless they oould get insurance<lb/>
explained Jeff Knight of Friends<lb/>
of the Earth in Washington, D.C<lb/>
a group that has opposed nuclear<lb/>
power for many years.<lb/>
"The reason they oouldn't get<lb/>
insurance, they said, was because<lb/>
insurance companies had no<lb/>
actual data on which to base<lb/>
rates<lb/>
At that time, a study called<lb/>
"WASH 740" investigated the<lb/>
possible consequences of a nu-<lb/>
clear accident and came up with<lb/>
3,400 deaths, 40,000 injuries and<lb/>
$7 billion in damages.<lb/>
"But when the Price-Ander-<lb/>
son Act passed, it limited nuclear<lb/>
accident liability to $560 million.<lb/>
"And in what amounted to a<lb/>
government subsidy, Congress<lb/>
said that $456 million of that<lb/>
liability would come out of<lb/>
taxpayers' pockets. The company<lb/>
actually involved, in other words,<lb/>
would be liable fa no more than<lb/>
$95 million.<lb/>
"The theory - or at least the<lb/>
expressed theory - at the time<lb/>
was that this law would only be<lb/>
temporary continued Knight.<lb/>
"They said that at some point,<lb/>
after enough operating history for<lb/>
power plants had gone by, they<lb/>
would get rid of the act, and the<lb/>
insurance industry would step<lb/>
in<lb/>
But in 1965, Congress began<lb/>
tooonsider Price-Anderson again,<lb/>
and decided to extend it for<lb/>
another 10 years. At that time, at<lb/>
Atomic Energy Commission<lb/>
(AEC) also began an update of<lb/>
the original WASH 740 study,<lb/>
since larger reactors had begun to<lb/>
be built. That report was never<lb/>
oompleted or released.<lb/>
"It wasn't until 1973 that,<lb/>
under threat of Freedom of<lb/>
Information Act lawsuits, they<lb/>
released all the working papers<lb/>
from that study explained<lb/>
Knight. "It indicated that in<lb/>
1965, the worst consequenoes of a<lb/>
nuclear accident were in the order<lb/>
of 45,000 deaths, 72,000 injuries<lb/>
and at least $17 billion in<lb/>
damages<lb/>
"They had hoped that the<lb/>
numbers would be more reassur-<lb/>
ing than the original WASH<lb/>
numbers, but they were worse<lb/>
ooncluded Knight, who indicated<lb/>
that was one of the major reasons<lb/>
why the study was never re-<lb/>
leased.<lb/>
Along came 1974, and the<lb/>
congressional Joint Committee on<lb/>
Atomic Energy decided to extend<lb/>
the Act another ten years. Many<lb/>
environmental and anti-nuclear<lb/>
groups testified against it in<lb/>
hearings, and although the legis-<lb/>
lation passed, the opposition was<lb/>
able to convinoe Congress to add<lb/>
an amendment - that the Act<lb/>
would not go into effect until<lb/>
another AEC report, commis-<lb/>
sioned in 1973, was completed<lb/>
and Congress was able to study it.<lb/>
The law passed just after<lb/>
Gerald Ford took office, but<lb/>
because of the amendment, he<lb/>
vetoed it. Back in Congress in<lb/>
1975, Price-Anderson again<lb/>
passed - this time without any<lb/>
amendments - to extend until<lb/>
ECU history prof joins team<lb/>
studying Civil War 'Monitor'<lb/>
William N. Still Jr professor<lb/>
of history at ECU, is among a<lb/>
team of experts at work on an<lb/>
intensive study of the wrecked<lb/>
Civil War Union ironclad Moni-<lb/>
tor.<lb/>
The wrecked ship lies topside<lb/>
down under more than 200 feet of<lb/>
water about 16 miles south of<lb/>
here.<lb/>
Dr. Still and other researchers<lb/>
from the University of Delaware<lb/>
and the Massachusetts Institute<lb/>
of Technology were aboard the<lb/>
University of Delaware's research<lb/>
vessel, Cape Henlopen.<lb/>
The team took a series of<lb/>
underwater photographs of the<lb/>
wreck using a horizontal video<lb/>
camera, which makes possible<lb/>
detailed study of the Monitor's<lb/>
deck. The Cape Henlopen posi-<lb/>
tioned itself as dose as eight feet<lb/>
from the wreck, guided by Del<lb/>
Norte radar.<lb/>
Famed for its Hampton Roads<lb/>
battle with the Confederate Mer-<lb/>
rimac, the Monitor sank in a<lb/>
storm while being towed to<lb/>
Beaufort in 1862. The precise<lb/>
location of the wreck was chart-<lb/>
ed in studies done four years ago.<lb/>
Recent on-site studies of the<lb/>
Monitor and the surrounding<lb/>
ocean floor are part of scientists'<lb/>
preparation for underwater dives<lb/>
this summer and eventual salvage<lb/>
of the wreck.<lb/>
Dr. Still is a trustee and<lb/>
historical research director for the<lb/>
Monitor Research and Recovery<lb/>
Foundation, which is coordinating<lb/>
study of the wrecked ship.<lb/>
Ttt<lb/>
<lb/>
Corner of 5th<lb/>
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A number of groups have<lb/>
attempted over the years to gain a<lb/>
court hearing to contest the<lb/>
constitutionality of the Act, but<lb/>
have failed. Finally, the Carolina<lb/>
Environmental Study Group suc-<lb/>
ceeded in the fall of 1976. Judge<lb/>
McMillan's March 31 ruling was<lb/>
the outcome - the first legal<lb/>
challenge to the Act since its<lb/>
advent in 1957.<lb/>
ftiftoky fried kidm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057126_0006"/><lb/>
����HHMflHHmBHMBflBi<lb/>
����IBMBiMMlBHBiMHM�"<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 26 April 1977<lb/>
UNC system awaits HEW civil rights orders<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
According to William C. Fri-<lb/>
day, president of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina system, the state<lb/>
should receive specific directions<lb/>
from the Department of Health,<lb/>
Education, and Welfare (HEW)<lb/>
as to what must be done in order<lb/>
to bring the 16 UNC institutions<lb/>
in compliance with the 1964 Civil<lb/>
Rights Act.<lb/>
"In short, North Carolina<lb/>
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production staff<lb/>
for summer and fall.<lb/>
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should not place itself any longer<lb/>
in the position of attempting to<lb/>
formulate and implement specific<lb/>
commitments in response to<lb/>
vague, confused and unexplained<lb/>
directives from HEW Friday<lb/>
told the UNC Board of Governors.<lb/>
Friday was referring to the<lb/>
April 1 decision of Judge John<lb/>
Pratt in a District of Columbia<lb/>
federal district court.<lb/>
The judge ordered HEW to<lb/>
invalidate higher education dese-<lb/>
gregation plans of North Carolina<lb/>
and five other states and to re-<lb/>
quire these states to prepare de-<lb/>
segregation plans that will oon-<lb/>
form to guidelines to be prepared<lb/>
by HEW this summer.<lb/>
Friday noted that a revised<lb/>
North Carolina plan had been<lb/>
approved by HEW and said that<lb/>
HEWs Office of Civil Rights had<lb/>
pointed the state out as " a model<lb/>
which other affected states might<lb/>
appropriatedly emulate<lb/>
Friday said that North Caro-<lb/>
lina had "carried out faithfully<lb/>
the many commitments made by<lb/>
the university in its 1974 plan. He<lb/>
said the university had received<lb/>
$527,000 from the 1975 General<lb/>
Assembly to implement the plan<lb/>
and that the university had asked<lb/>
the 1977 General Assembly for<lb/>
additional sums.<lb/>
Under the plan, he said, the<lb/>
state's 11 predominantly white<lb/>
institutions now have 5.6 per cent<lb/>
blacks in their enrollments and<lb/>
that the five predominantly black<lb/>
institutions now enroll 8.8 per<lb/>
cent nonblacks.<lb/>
According to Friday, the<lb/>
seven years of litigation has been<lb/>
"characterized by a failure of the<lb/>
parties and the oourt to come to<lb/>
grips with the central issue<lb/>
He said that was what the<lb/>
Civil Rights Act required the state<lb/>
to do "with respect to its<lb/>
predominantly black institutions<lb/>
of higher education. Must the<lb/>
state truly accomplish the goal of<lb/>
eliminating the vestiges of (racial)<lb/>
duality?"<lb/>
To do so, he said, would<lb/>
require the state to bring enroll-<lb/>
ment in the 16 institutions "into<lb/>
conformity with a single stan-<lb/>
dard<lb/>
Or, he said, "must the state<lb/>
preserve these predominantly<lb/>
black institutionsas predominant-<lb/>
ly black institutions for the<lb/>
indefinite future and enhance<lb/>
them?"<lb/>
Friday said that both goals<lb/>
cannot be attained.<lb/>
Impact of recent oil spill<lb/>
lecture scheduled for Friday<lb/>
Dr. Peter Fricke, maritime<lb/>
sociologist, will lecture on the<lb/>
social and environmental impact<lb/>
of the "Argo Merchant" oil spill<lb/>
at ECU Friday, April 29 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Dr. Fricke's presentation,<lb/>
sponsored by the ECU Depart-<lb/>
ment of Sociology and Anthropo-<lb/>
logy and the Institute for Coastal<lb/>
and Marine Resources, is<lb/>
scheduled for Brewster Building,<lb/>
C-103.<lb/>
"We are extending a oordial<lb/>
invitation to all interested persons<lb/>
to attend this timelv lecture<lb/>
said John MaioJo, chairperson of<lb/>
sociology and anthropology.<lb/>
"There are too many oil spills<lb/>
in American waters, which are<lb/>
having detrimental effects upon<lb/>
our coastal environment and<lb/>
economy.<lb/>
The American public should<lb/>
be aware that there are available<lb/>
leg means to prevent the<lb/>
frequent occurrence of oil spills<lb/>
Dr. Maiolo noted that the<lb/>
Fricke presentation would focus<lb/>
on the 1976 spill by the Liberian<lb/>
freighter "Argo Merchant and<lb/>
also examine the role internation-<lb/>
al laws can play in the curtailment<lb/>
of oil spills in the oceans.<lb/>
"A good deal of our economy<lb/>
depends upon our ooastal com-<lb/>
munities and products of the<lb/>
ocean. If the current rate of oil<lb/>
spills oontinues, the results will<lb/>
be disastrous he said.<lb/>
A native of Great Britain, Dr.<lb/>
Fricke is currently a research<lb/>
associate at the Woods Hole<lb/>
Mass. Oceanographic Institute.<lb/>
Come in and visit and bring<lb/>
your friends<lb/>
I 50 I<lb/>
I COUPON I<lb/>
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reasonable prices.<lb/>
3"plantsfrom75<lb/>
5"plantsfrom$1.49<lb/>
10 Opening Special<lb/>
10"Green Spider Plants $7.99<lb/>
<pb facs="00057126_0007"/><lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center<lb/>
dedication held Sunday<lb/>
26 April 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Leo W. Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Center was dedicated to Dr. Leo<lb/>
W. Jenkins Sunday at the dedica-<lb/>
tion program. Approximately 300<lb/>
people attended.<lb/>
Tran Gordley, Associate Dean<lb/>
of the School of Art, presided at<lb/>
the dedication program.<lb/>
Gordley introduced Dr. Well-<lb/>
ington B. Gray, Dean of the<lb/>
School of Art, who presented the<lb/>
Jenkins family. Two Jenkins<lb/>
children were unable to attend.<lb/>
The bronze portrait of Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins was unveiled by Mrs.<lb/>
Suzanne Jenkins Lodge and Mrs.<lb/>
Patricia A. Jenkins Hogan,<lb/>
daughters of Dr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Jenkins.<lb/>
Professor Robert Edmiston<lb/>
sculpted the oortrait.<lb/>
Troy W. Pate, Jr Chairman<lb/>
of the ECU Board of Trustees,<lb/>
said he was honored to accept the<lb/>
bronze portrait of Dr. Jenkins.<lb/>
"The portrait and this magni-<lb/>
ficent facility will serve as a<lb/>
symbol of Leo Jenkins' forceful<lb/>
leadership toward realization of<lb/>
this university as a center for the<lb/>
arts said Pate.<lb/>
Francis A. Ruzicka, Chairman<lb/>
of the Art Department at the<lb/>
University of Georgia, gave the<lb/>
ded catory address.<lb/>
"The new arts center speaks<lb/>
for itself with authority, elo-<lb/>
quence and dignity said<lb/>
Ruzicka.<lb/>
"It represents the vision and<lb/>
tireless efforts of the man whose<lb/>
name it bears<lb/>
Ruzicka said the first time he<lb/>
saw the arts center, studios were<lb/>
occupied and students were busy.<lb/>
"This building already proves<lb/>
to be alive said Ruzicka.<lb/>
The ECU Chamber Singers<lb/>
gave two numbers under the dir-<lb/>
ection of Brett Watson, associate<lb/>
professor of the music depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Rev. R. Roderick Randolph<lb/>
gave the prayer of dedication.<lb/>
A reception, a visual present-<lb/>
ation and a tour of the Fine Arts<lb/>
Center were held following the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
ECU sponsors town gatherings<lb/>
NC local life project planned<lb/>
Town gatherings in Edenton,<lb/>
New Bern and Bath-Belhaven are<lb/>
now being planned in conjunction<lb/>
with ECU'S Project on Local Life<lb/>
in Eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
The project, funded by a grant<lb/>
from the N.C. Humanities Com-<lb/>
mittee, is designed to promote an<lb/>
understanding of the nature and<lb/>
impact of local life in eastern<lb/>
North Carolina, to facilitate effec-<lb/>
tive future policy-making.<lb/>
Town gatherings will focus on<lb/>
the nature of eastern North<lb/>
Carolina's way of life and the<lb/>
relationship of public policy-<lb/>
making at all levels of govern-<lb/>
ment to the future of the region.<lb/>
Several political leaders have<lb/>
been invited to participate, said<lb/>
project director Karl Rodabaugh,<lb/>
a member of the ECU history<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
The Project on Local Life<lb/>
earlier sponsored a conference on<lb/>
the ECU campus which drew local<lb/>
citizens, public officials and scho-<lb/>
lars.<lb/>
Among the chief topics of<lb/>
discussion at the conference were<lb/>
several visible manifestations of<lb/>
localism: a strong attachment to<lb/>
the home oommunity, a tendency<lb/>
for important influences to origi-<lb/>
nate from one's friends, relatives<lb/>
and neighbors, a habit of center-<lb/>
ing life around local institutions,<lb/>
and a strong desire to exercise a<lb/>
significant amount of local power<lb/>
in decision-making which affects<lb/>
one's local area.<lb/>
Local planning committees are<lb/>
being formed to organize the<lb/>
three town gatherings. Tentative<lb/>
dates for the town meetings are<lb/>
"HI<lb/>
May 7 (Edenton), May 21 (New<lb/>
Bern) and June 11 (Bath-Be, -<lb/>
haven).<lb/>
Persons interested in serving<lb/>
on the local planning oommittees<lb/>
are encouraged to telephone<lb/>
Rodabaugh at the ECU Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education, 757-<lb/>
6148.<lb/>
DR. LEO JENKINS<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
MONOGRAMMING<lb/>
1 DAY SERVICE<lb/>
CREATIVE HANDBAGS<lb/>
WEST END<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
ArmyNavy Stora<lb/>
1501 Eians<lb/>
12 P.M5:30 P.M.<lb/>
Back packs, Jtant,<lb/>
Camping Eqpt,Dishts<lb/>
Permanent<lb/>
Removal of<lb/>
Unwanted Hair<lb/>
Electrolysis<lb/>
Hair Center<lb/>
205 E. Third St.<lb/>
Turnaqe Real Estate<lb/>
Building<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
<pb facs="00057126_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 26 April 1977<lb/>
FABRIC DESIGNS<lb/>
and<lb/>
PRINTS<lb/>
by<lb/>
LAURA JACKSON<lb/>
and<lb/>
BEV JOYNER<lb/>
in<lb/>
MENOENHALL<lb/>
UPPER CASES<lb/>
MAY 1 thru 7, 1977<lb/>
RECEPTION<lb/>
MAY 3<lb/>
at<lb/>
7-30<lb/>
ECU honors 100 co-eds<lb/>
during A war en ess Week<lb/>
ECU honored 100 outstanding<lb/>
women students in its annual<lb/>
Woman's Awareness Week<lb/>
awards osremony this week.<lb/>
Receiving recognition at the<lb/>
ceremony were women nomi-<lb/>
nated by ECU'S academic de-<lb/>
partments and professional<lb/>
schools, student organizations,<lb/>
and athletic teams.<lb/>
Also receiving awards were<lb/>
the women students cited in the<lb/>
current edition of "Who's Who<lb/>
Among Students in American<lb/>
Universities and Colleges" and<lb/>
the 18 campus marshals.<lb/>
Student award recipients in-<lb/>
cluded residents of 34 North<lb/>
Carolina counties and nine other<lb/>
states.<lb/>
A special award was given<lb/>
Lillian Jacobsen Jenkins, wife of<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Leo Jenkins.<lb/>
Mrs. Jenkins is originally<lb/>
from Lavallette, N.J. and a<lb/>
graduate of Trenton State Col-<lb/>
lege. She taught nine years in the<lb/>
New Jersey schools.<lb/>
During her years in Green-<lb/>
ville, Mrs. Jenkins has been<lb/>
active in book and gardening<lb/>
clubs, Girl Scout work and church<lb/>
activities in addition to supervis-<lb/>
ing frequent receptions, lunch-<lb/>
eons, and dinners given in the<lb/>
Jenkins' home for ECU students<lb/>
and faculty members.<lb/>
The awards ceremony was<lb/>
followed by a reception for<lb/>
honorees and guests in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. This<lb/>
and other Women's Awareness<lb/>
Week activities are sponsored by<lb/>
the ECU Women's Residence<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
Names of student award re-<lb/>
cipients, and their areas of<lb/>
achievement follow:<lb/>
AEROSPACE STUDIES: Pamela<lb/>
, Addington; ART: Beverly Joyner,<lb/>
Roxanne Reep, Judith Burd,<lb/>
Deborah Cofer; BIOLOGY:<lb/>
Roslyn Gray, Betsy Jane Hughes,<lb/>
Catherine Anne Newton; BUSI-<lb/>
NESS: Bettie Scott Lane, Jennifer<lb/>
Geer Pardue, Janice Elizabeth<lb/>
Wedel, Ellen Manning Heath,<lb/>
Patricia Ann Jones, Connie Rose,<lb/>
Jenell Budson, Teresa Whise-<lb/>
nant; CHEMISTRY: Frances<lb/>
Doyle; EDUCATION: Billie Barn-<lb/>
hill, Deborah Lynn Strickland,<lb/>
Charlene Daniels; ENGLISH:<lb/>
Mary Beth McAlister; EN-<lb/>
VIRONMENTAL HEALTH:<lb/>
Donna Lynn Campbell; FRENCH :<lb/>
Patricia Coyle; GEOGRAPHY:<lb/>
Laura Rorbury; GEOLOGY:<lb/>
Adrienne Wood; GERMAN:<lb/>
Maria Regina Durham; HEALTH,<lb/>
PHYSICAL EDUCATION,<lb/>
RECREATION AND SAFETY:<lb/>
jeahne<lb/>
BRADY<lb/>
deborah<lb/>
v 'COFER<lb/>
Pai ntings - Drawings - Pri nts<lb/>
kate lewis gallery<lb/>
APRIL 18-29<lb/>
Mary Ellen Fields; HISTORY:<lb/>
Peggy Jo Cobb; HOME<lb/>
ECONOMICS: Sue Harris Taylor,<lb/>
Nancy Darden; LIBRARY<lb/>
SCIENCE: Billie Mann; MATHE-<lb/>
MATICS: Jenny St one Fitzgerald,<lb/>
Pansy Rivenbark, Paula Mae<lb/>
Sutherland; MEDICAL<lb/>
RECORDS: Glenda June Wilsc i ;<lb/>
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY:<lb/>
Susan Allred;n Allred; MUSIC:<lb/>
Catherine Conger; NURSING:<lb/>
Marilyn York Willis; OCCUPA-<lb/>
TIONAL THERAPY: Judith<lb/>
Groff; PHILOSOPHY: Jackie<lb/>
Riley; PHYSICAL EDUCATION:<lb/>
Ginger Sue Parrish; PHYSICS:<lb/>
Carolyn Leona Cline; POLITICAL<lb/>
SCIENCE: Barbara Mathews;<lb/>
PSYCHOLOGY: Susan Mize;<lb/>
SCIENCE EDUCATION: Bonnie<lb/>
Lynn Crissman; SCHOOL OF<lb/>
TECHNOLOGY: Sandra Jo<lb/>
Hylton; SOCIAL WORK AND<lb/>
CORRECTIONAL SERVICES:<lb/>
Rita Whaley; SPEECH, LANG-<lb/>
UAGE, AND AUDIO PATHO-<lb/>
LOGY: Martha Susan Dixon;<lb/>
SPANISH: Linda Price Bell, Paula<lb/>
Jordan; MARCHING PIRATES:<lb/>
Julie Gilbert; MARSHALS,<lb/>
1976-77: Lottie Lorene Carraway,<lb/>
. Donna Lee Compton, Deborah<lb/>
Lynne Corey, Bonnie Lynn Criss-<lb/>
man, Robin Maurer Hammond,<lb/>
Debra Hines, Carolyn Gray<lb/>
Hodges, Diane Elizabeth Kyuer,<lb/>
Linda McQain,Billie Mann, Mary<lb/>
E. Modlin, Leslie Spahr Moore,<lb/>
Cynthia Lynn Mur, Ellen<lb/>
Schrader, Mary Susan Strickland,<lb/>
Mary Ellen Warner, Marilyn York<lb/>
Willis and Donna Louise<lb/>
Woolard; SERVICE SORORITY:<lb/>
Giselle Easters, Gamma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma; SOCIAL SORORITY: Use<lb/>
Turner; STUDENT GOVERN-<lb/>
MENT ASSOCIATION: Karen<lb/>
Harloe; WHO'S WHO IN AMER-<lb/>
ICAN UNIVERSITIES AND<lb/>
COLLEGES: Mary Rebecca<lb/>
Bradshaw, Carol Durham Britton,<lb/>
Debra Lee Bryant, Shelia Grant<lb/>
Bunch, Charlene Daniels,<lb/>
Frances Doyle, Brenda Harper<lb/>
Ernest, Linda Eileen Fisher,<lb/>
Pamela Jean Fisher, Karen<lb/>
Elizabeth Harloe, Mary Catherine<lb/>
Kennedy, Georgina Elizabeth<lb/>
Langston, Karen Elizabeth Lee,<lb/>
Barbara J. Luciani, Susan Dianne<lb/>
McClintock, Barbara Ann<lb/>
Mathews, Nancy Baker Moore,<lb/>
Bonnie Kaye Norris, Barbara<lb/>
Susan Prince, Gail Suzanne<lb/>
Kamee, Beverly Jo Sanges, Lynn<lb/>
Marie Schubert, Sheila Ann Scott,<lb/>
Phyllis Kay Taylor, Linda Leigh<lb/>
Thomason and Teresa Marie<lb/>
Whisenant;<lb/>
WOMEN'S ATHLETICS. Debbie<lb/>
Freeman, Gail Betton, Betsy<lb/>
Adkins, Candy Wedemeyer,<lb/>
Kathy Chandler, Vicky Dianne<lb/>
Loose, Barbara Brantley,<lb/>
Charlotte Layton; WOMEN'S<lb/>
RESIDENCE COUNCIL: Regina<lb/>
Thompaon.<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
Kirk Edgerton, Inter-<lb/>
Fraternity Council presi-<lb/>
dent-elect was quoted in<lb/>
the April 21 FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD edition as saying he<lb/>
does not feel anti-Greek<lb/>
feelings exist on campus.<lb/>
Edgerton actually said he<lb/>
does feel these feelings<lb/>
exist.<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057126_0009"/><lb/>
Students encouraged to vote<lb/>
26 April 1977 FOUNTAINHEAO Page 9<lb/>
Faculty appraisal continues<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
ECU students are presently<lb/>
being encouraged to vote in the<lb/>
second annual Faculty Evalua-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The voting which will con-<lb/>
clude on Wednesday April 27,<lb/>
will provide students with an<lb/>
opportunity to vote for the<lb/>
outstanding undergraduate pro-<lb/>
fessors during Fall, Winter, or<lb/>
Spring Quarters of the 1976-77<lb/>
academic year.<lb/>
According to Dr. Carl Adler of<lb/>
the ECU Physics Department, all<lb/>
faculty are eligible, but the<lb/>
student must have received a<lb/>
grade from the professor which<lb/>
he chooses.<lb/>
"This is the students' chance<lb/>
to find out whom they consider<lb/>
their best teachers said Adler.<lb/>
A list of the ECU faculty may<lb/>
be found in the Thursday April 21<lb/>
edition of FOUNTAINHEAD. A<lb/>
list is also available at the ballot<lb/>
box in the lobby of the old C.U.<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Students may vote either<lb/>
today or tomorrow between 10<lb/>
a.m. and 6 p.m.<lb/>
The students should vote for<lb/>
one to three undergraduate tea-<lb/>
chers and should assign either a<lb/>
10, 8, or 6 to his nomination,<lb/>
depending on the professor's<lb/>
proficiency.<lb/>
Students are asked to use the<lb/>
three digit code number assigned<lb/>
to the teacher when voting and<lb/>
not the name.<lb/>
Adler said that this year's<lb/>
evaluation runs along the same<lb/>
Mnes as last year's study.<lb/>
The student vote will be<lb/>
analyzed by the Faculty Senate<lb/>
Instructional Survey Committee<lb/>
to minimize any bias in the vote<lb/>
which might occur.<lb/>
"The Faculty Senate origina-<lb/>
ted the survey and the SGA<lb/>
supported it said Adler.<lb/>
Announcement of the results<lb/>
of the survey will be in the early<lb/>
Fall of 1977.<lb/>
ECUgrad studies relaxation<lb/>
for tension headache help<lb/>
An ECU clinical psychology<lb/>
graduate student is researching<lb/>
the use of relaxation techniques<lb/>
to treat tension headaches.<lb/>
Angela Robertson is using<lb/>
local subjects for her thesis<lb/>
research probing comparisons of<lb/>
relaxation techniques in treat-<lb/>
ment of tension headaches.<lb/>
Robertson began the nine-<lb/>
week project early spring quarter<lb/>
and is using volunteers gained<lb/>
through ads in FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
and the Daily Reflector.<lb/>
She said most of the 28<lb/>
volunteers are students and all<lb/>
are female.<lb/>
"The few men who responded<lb/>
mainly had migraine headaches<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
"This study is concerned with<lb/>
muscle tension headaches, speci-<lb/>
fically the muscles of the scalp,<lb/>
neck.and shoulders<lb/>
Tension headaches are caused<lb/>
primarily by contractions of these<lb/>
muscles, according to Robertson,<lb/>
and the study is designed to teach<lb/>
and compare methods of relaxing<lb/>
these muscles to cure the head-<lb/>
ache.<lb/>
"The nine weeks are broken<lb/>
into three parts she said.<lb/>
"The first three weeks we<lb/>
establish records of the rate of<lb/>
headaches. Then follow four<lb/>
weeks of treatment, in two<lb/>
thirty-minute sessions per week.<lb/>
The last two weeks are a<lb/>
follow-up period to record the<lb/>
�<lb/>
o<lb/>
F<lb/>
Call<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
effects of treatment<lb/>
Robertson said the volunteers<lb/>
were divided into four groups,<lb/>
one of which only keeps records of<lb/>
its headaches but undergoes no<lb/>
treatment sessions. This is the<lb/>
control group, she said.<lb/>
A second group learns to relax<lb/>
through muscle exercises, while a<lb/>
third group learns a type of<lb/>
self-hypnosis. The fourth group<lb/>
just discusses relaxation.<lb/>
"The study isn't finished yet,<lb/>
so I can't offer any results she<lb/>
said. <lb/>
" I can say I' ve had reports of<lb/>
improvements, but no definite<lb/>
findings<lb/>
Robertson said she may have<lb/>
to conduct the study again<lb/>
because she feels she doen't have<lb/>
enough volunteers, especially<lb/>
men. Her goal is 40 persons.<lb/>
Anyone interested in partici-<lb/>
pating in the study should contact<lb/>
Robertson through the ECU psy-<lb/>
chology department. Robertson<lb/>
particularly needs volunteers this<lb/>
summer and fall.<lb/>
THE CENTRAL FOUNTAIN has been repaired and sparkles once<lb/>
more. Photo by K irk K ingsbury<lb/>
BANGLADESHarea, H. mi. H.12IPepalaooa &amp; Reek (1175 w.)H�ta. a. M) Ml. 1JM<lb/>
71.tU.4M 1.<lb/>
CAM100IAurnI.1M.M0 ISeV111<lb/>
INDIA1.2SI.346HI.M1.0M 2nd.471.7<lb/>
PHILIPPINES11&amp;.I3042 Wl 300 S2ndMM<lb/>
UiAMl MB2142M3M 4M3<lb/>
ASIA<lb/>
21 5N of mW an (16 Ml M0 w m)<lb/>
W of wwM pvputftnM<lb/>
(1I7S 2.4M.MMM"t.J<lb/>
India Ml Ml MO (471.7 pet eg. m.)<lb/>
Iiagladadi 7l,K�.M0(1,3Mni.)<lb/>
PMnfwee 42.MI 3M I3M 4 w. mi<lb/>
Camaedu I.1MM0 (111 ee. iw.l<lb/>
USA 214.2M,0M(M.3p n. m.)<lb/>
ASIAN STUDIES<lb/>
PROGRAM<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Symposium 1977<lb/>
POLITICAL TRENDS IN ASIA: Implications<lb/>
for U. S. RelationsAPRIL 28, 29<lb/>
THURSDAY. Apnl 20<lb/>
Mwmnj Sanion<lb/>
9 Mi in 12�oon<lb/>
IS1Q2<lb/>
EVENING PROGRAM<lb/>
7 Ml 30<lb/>
FRIDAY. Aprl M<lb/>
100012 �<lb/>
OPENING OF SYMPOSIUM<lb/>
Di Leo W Jenkins. Chancellor tali Carolina University<lb/>
IANGLA0ESH AND THE USASIAN RELATIONSHIPS<lb/>
Hit Iiceilency M R Siddiqui. Amcaoadoi ot the Peopiei<lb/>
Republic ol Bangledotfi. Waehington. 0 C<lb/>
POLITICAL PROCESS AS A SOUTH ASIAN PHENOMENON<lb/>
THE INDIAN EXPERIENCE<lb/>
Oi WeJtet Heueer. Onectoi. Cantei fur South Asm Studies<lb/>
University of Virginia. Cherlottesville. Ve<lb/>
100US. RELATIONS: RETROSPECT AN0 PROSPECTS<lb/>
The Honorable Shn R K fiaien. First Secretary (Political).<lb/>
Emoeeey ol Indie. Washington. 0 C<lb/>
REASSESSING NATIONAL POWER Mi MONSOON ASIA<lb/>
Or Clifton Panned. 001 ol Geography.<lb/>
Unrvtnaty ol Georgia. Athene. Ga<lb/>
Special Cultural Program in cooperation with the Greenville<lb/>
Women's Club end the ECU Intatnetionel Student! Aancietion<lb/>
THE STATUS OF WOMEN AND CHANGING SOCI0 POLITICAL CONDITIONS<lb/>
IN THE REPUOLIC OF THE PHILIPPINE!<lb/>
Pro! Joae Oewd Lepui. Prof, ot international Politics and<lb/>
Reletiom. Same Tomes Untverory Philippines<lb/>
AUDIO VISUAL PRESENTATION OF ASIAN TOPICS<lb/>
Location Greenville Women t Club Budding. Perkvwn Drive<lb/>
(behind that tOlhSt Plia Hull<lb/>
SOUTH EAST ASA AND CAM00DLA TODAY<lb/>
ueneral Sak Sutaet hen. Former Pnadent ol Cambodia<lb/>
SOUTH EAST ASM IN WOULD POLITICS IMPLICATIONS FOR US. RELATIONS<lb/>
Prof Joee David Lapui. Ptol of Inteirvetionel Poetics end<lb/>
Reestions. Santo Tomaa University Philippmea<lb/>
CLOSING REMARKS by Oi John M Hovoll. Vice�hencilot tor<lb/>
Academic Attain. Ean Carolina University<lb/>
1 M SPECIAL LECTURE<lb/>
UTELLITE VIEWS OF N.E. ASIA: A NEW LOOK AT SOME POLITICAL<lb/>
AND ECONOMIC PATTERNS AL0NS THE SM040V1ET FRONTIER<lb/>
Oi Clifton Panne. Dept ot Geogrephy.<lb/>
University ol Georgu Athene. Ge<lb/>
ALL ARE CORDIALLY INVITED<lb/>
eeHBM lelieeaneam wH at preeiOel m nea 1104 tnmeejr OMa,<lb/>
ler<lb/>
Sponaond by OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES. ASIAN AREA STUDIES. ECU. and funded m part by the<lb/>
STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION. Een Carolina University<lb/>
Fot furrhw Information contact Dr. Avar Singh. Auan Studwt Proejrom Coordinator. Dept of Socwtoffy " AMtwotaokofv. E�et<lb/>
Carolina UnivartitY. QreetnvIHe N.C. 27834 (Rhone: 7B70MJ3. 7M0061I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057126_0010"/><lb/>
Trends<lb/>
MSC1977-78 season to include<lb/>
Montoya and Preservation Hall<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
26 April 1977<lb/>
Marquee<lb/>
by David R. Bosnick<lb/>
'Horse 'doesn 't make it<lb/>
There are very few films whose premise is strong enough to support<lb/>
a sequel. Asa rule the sequels are versions that incorporate the same<lb/>
characters and actions, involving a new set of circumstances and<lb/>
antagonists. The flaw in these sequels lies in their inability to sustain<lb/>
the symbolism of the original. The production falls to a mere vehicle for<lb/>
the reappearance of the characters the actors have created. "The<lb/>
Return of A Man Called Horse" is such a film.<lb/>
"T.R.O.A.M.C.Hcenters its action around the return of Lord<lb/>
John Morgan (Richard Harris) who returns to find his adopted tribe the<lb/>
victim of treachery. To restore his faith in life and gain the good graces<lb/>
of various spirits, he submits himself to the Sun Dance torture of the<lb/>
earlier film. In this era of bigger and better, however, he is joined, not<lb/>
merely by other braves, but also by children. This symbolic piercing<lb/>
and shredding of the breasts was symbolic and affecting in the first<lb/>
movie, but seemed almost passe in this film. The actions of the work<lb/>
rushed towards the actual sacrifice. The Dance is a purging focal point<lb/>
in the original, while in "The Return" it seemed little more than an<lb/>
aggravating (to say the least) ritual.<lb/>
The action of the film itself is trite, as Lad John teaches the tricks<lb/>
he learned in England to his foster tribe and leads a war party of<lb/>
women and children to regain their sacred land. The battle scenes are<lb/>
clumsy and poorly choreographed as is the premise that three women<lb/>
on foot, with tomahawks, could subdue an armed rider.<lb/>
The movie climaxes almost casually as subterfuge and courage (and<lb/>
horrible shooting on the part of the enemy) almost win the day.<lb/>
The best facet in this film is one that generally, when at its finest is<lb/>
an aspect that should go unnoticed. This facet is the photography. The<lb/>
graphics in this film are astonishingly good. There isa particular scene<lb/>
where the Lord Morgan has been fasting for four days in a steamed<lb/>
tent eating peyote. Upon leaving the tent there is a subtle shifting of<lb/>
light that incorporates the actuality of vision restored. This switching<lb/>
lasts only a moment but is indicative of quality of the visual effects.<lb/>
The remainder of the film is less striking. The dialogue is<lb/>
unaffecting and pretentious and Harris's acting requires little more<lb/>
than a gritting of the teeth and an occasional scream. One sees none of<lb/>
the effort of the earlier film; there is no movement to his performance.<lb/>
There is one dreadfully directorial blunder where he stoops to wash his<lb/>
hands after the climactic battle. When he rises, the village is rebuilt,<lb/>
and everyone is happy. It is poorly conceived and timed.<lb/>
This film is sheer entertainment. There is neither the depth nor the<lb/>
innocence of the earlier film. It is an action film involving an<lb/>
established character. It contains some of the best photography of<lb/>
1976. That, combined with an interesting score, merits it two and<lb/>
one-half stars.<lb/>
OTHER FLICKS<lb/>
Pitt Theatre-Joe Panthar-No available for review at this time.<lb/>
Plaza Cinema One-Winnie the Pooh-r an animated version of the<lb/>
A V Milne stories for children one sees the arduous process of<lb/>
animation at its near finest. The voices are exactly right as Edward<lb/>
Evertt Horton and Phil Harris oombine in the audible aspect of this<lb/>
fantasy. This film is not "Bambi or "Snow White, but it is very<lb/>
close. In this reviewer's recognized prejudice for animation, I give it<lb/>
three and one-half stars.<lb/>
The Littlest Horse Thieves� Another in the new version of Disney<lb/>
films involving foolish chases and slapstick comedy. The studios have<lb/>
done little of quality since the death of Disney himself. One star because<lb/>
it is fairly short.<lb/>
Plaza Cinema Two-The Love Truck-Not available fa review at this<lb/>
time.<lb/>
ECU'S Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center announces the MSC Pro-<lb/>
gramming Series fa 1977-78.<lb/>
Spanning a wide range of styles<lb/>
and artists, this Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center sponsaed series<lb/>
is designed to provide Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina audiences and<lb/>
ECU students, faculty and staff<lb/>
with ome of the finest national<lb/>
musical talent available.<lb/>
On Sunday, November 20<lb/>
THE REGIMENTAL BAND OF<lb/>
HER MAJESTY'S GRENADIER<lb/>
GUARDS and the PIPES,<lb/>
DRUMS and DANCERS OF HER<lb/>
MAJESTY'S SCOTS GUARDS<lb/>
will perfam. These two groups<lb/>
will offer an exceptional present-<lb/>
ation honaing the 25th Anniver-<lb/>
sary of Queen Elizabeth's ac-<lb/>
cession to the throne, including<lb/>
the ceremony of the changing of<lb/>
the guard at Buckingham Palace.<lb/>
The THAD JONESMEL<lb/>
LEWIS ORCHESTRA will be in<lb/>
nnnnprt on Thursrlav December<lb/>
1 Trumpeter Thad Jones and<lb/>
drummer Mel Lewis have as-<lb/>
sembled one of the most highly<lb/>
acclaimed jazz achestras around<lb/>
today.<lb/>
On Monday, January 30, the<lb/>
wald renowned flamenco guitar-<lb/>
ist, CARLOS MONTOYA, will<lb/>
perfam. Maitoya is the first<lb/>
flamenoo guitarist to display his<lb/>
artistry in a solo concert. He has<lb/>
been hailed as one of the truly<lb/>
great masters of our time.<lb/>
HEAVY ORGAN with VIRGIL<lb/>
FOX will be featured on Moiday,<lb/>
February 6. Virgil Fox has been a<lb/>
kind of one-man agan renais-<lb/>
sance, perfaming Bach's music<lb/>
with artistry and a theatrical flair.<lb/>
His engagement at ECU several<lb/>
years ago caused such excitement<lb/>
that nearly 2,000 tickets were sold<lb/>
in a single day. Fox travels with<lb/>
REVELATION LIGHTS, the<lb/>
world's first classical music light<lb/>
show.<lb/>
After playing to a sold-out<lb/>
house last January, PRESERVA-<lb/>
TION HALL JAZZ BAND is<lb/>
returning on February 14. This<lb/>
group of New Orleans Dixieland<lb/>
jazz artists had audience mem-<lb/>
bers marching in the aisles.<lb/>
Response to the group was so<lb/>
great that Mendenhall is bringing<lb/>
them back fa 1977-1978.<lb/>
These five MSC productions<lb/>
are sold on an individual ticket<lb/>
basis only. Tickets go on sale<lb/>
across the oounter three weeks<lb/>
pria to each engagement a may<lb/>
beadered by mail. Fa additional<lb/>
infamatioi call the ECU Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhall at<lb/>
757-6611.<lb/>
The 1977-78 Season Brochure<lb/>
for ECU Student Union and<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
activities will be available early<lb/>
this summer. If vou would like to<lb/>
receive a copy, call Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Program Office at<lb/>
757-6611, Ext. 213.<lb/>
THAD JONESMEL LEWIS orchestra, in concert<lb/>
December 1, will be one of the features at<lb/>
Menaenhall next year.<lb/>
O'sville Rainbow band featured<lb/>
at Roxy's 'Greenville Evening'<lb/>
"An Evening in Greenville"<lb/>
will be a program of completely<lb/>
original music featuring the<lb/>
O'sville Rainbow Band, McKeef,<lb/>
and Carole Semione. It will take<lb/>
place on Saturday evening, April<lb/>
30th at 8:30 P.M. at the Roxy<lb/>
Music Arts and Crats Center,<lb/>
629 AlbemarleAve. in Greenville.<lb/>
The O'sville Rainbow Band<lb/>
has played often at the Tree<lb/>
House Restaurant in Greenville<lb/>
and played first set fa the Bat<lb/>
McGrath concert in March.<lb/>
McKeef has recently played at<lb/>
the Bottomline and the Attic in<lb/>
Greenville as well as several clubs<lb/>
in the Raleigh-Chapel Hill area.<lb/>
Carole Semione will be a special<lb/>
guest singing several of her<lb/>
aiginal soigs.<lb/>
Tickets will be on sale at Rock<lb/>
and Soul on Fifth Street, The<lb/>
Recad Bar at Pitt Plaza, and at<lb/>
the doa. Admissiai will be aie<lb/>
dollar fa nai-members and fifty<lb/>
oents fa Roxy members. This is<lb/>
the first of a series of concerts<lb/>
featuring local musicians with an<lb/>
emphasis on aiginal music. It<lb/>
promises to be a very stimulating<lb/>
and exciting evening at the Roxy<lb/>
an evening na to be missed.<lb/>
FAMED POET Samuel Hazo will deliver a reading Friday at 8p.m.<lb/>
at Carol Belk Auditorium as part of the Spring Poetry Festival.<lb/>
 tri .1 ��. �  kiA jfi .� -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057126_0011"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
26 April 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Writer recounts unusual Easter vacation<lb/>
By JEFFREY BLUM BERG<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Ah yes, spring vacation. For<lb/>
some of us, it's finally over. For<lb/>
most of us it will still be with us<lb/>
until the reality of summer is<lb/>
upon us. My vacation was spent<lb/>
at beautiful, peaceful Wrights-<lb/>
vilie Beach where everybody can<lb/>
go and lie around all day, where<lb/>
guys gaze at one and two-piece-<lb/>
clad figures bouncing merrily up<lb/>
and down the beach, and where<lb/>
girls try to "out-tan" the other<lb/>
girls who are in fact trying to<lb/>
out-tan them (it should be noted<lb/>
that "out-burn" is probably a<lb/>
better choice of words).<lb/>
My week consisted of lying in<lb/>
the sun from sunrise to sunset,<lb/>
girl watching of oourse, wasting a<lb/>
fair amount of quarters on pinball<lb/>
machines, never onoe winning a<lb/>
free game, getting stood up by a<lb/>
beautiful buxom blonde, standing<lb/>
up that same blonde myself two<lb/>
days later, and finally getting<lb/>
myself assaulted by some dude<lb/>
who was twice the size of my<lb/>
beautiful but frail body.<lb/>
Yes, until last Thursday night<lb/>
my vacation had been a very<lb/>
enjoyable occasion with only two<lb/>
episodes of real despair. That day<lb/>
was spent just like the other days,<lb/>
with even the additional surprise<lb/>
of finding myself browsing<lb/>
through the chapter in my<lb/>
geology book on shorelines and<lb/>
beaches (what else?).<lb/>
Late on Thursday afternoon,<lb/>
having nothing to do, I decided to<lb/>
walk to the drugstore and buy the<lb/>
latest oopy of my favorite maga-<lb/>
zine, Penthouse. I then hopped<lb/>
into one of the bars, purchased a<lb/>
Coke, which brought a strange<lb/>
look to the well-inebriated bar-<lb/>
tender, and sat myself amongst<lb/>
some chairs surrounding a fairly<lb/>
large table with a burnt out<lb/>
Iightbulb hanging desperately<lb/>
from a cracked ceiling. I then<lb/>
began to read my magazine. I did<lb/>
this for about a half-hour with soft<lb/>
music and distant voices in the<lb/>
background mumbling to each<lb/>
other until two rather loud<lb/>
couples paraded up to the table<lb/>
and perched themselves on the<lb/>
unoccupied chairs. I tried to<lb/>
continue my reading, making it a<lb/>
point not to disturb their drinking<lb/>
and rather earsplitting conver-<lb/>
sation. I oould not help but hear<lb/>
one of the girls blurt out that she<lb/>
hated drinking and smoking while<lb/>
she puffed and slurped her way<lb/>
through one cigarette and beer<lb/>
after ar, jther. This was beginning<lb/>
to get rather humorous. I stifled<lb/>
my laughter many times by<lb/>
forcing myself to oough. As the<lb/>
quartet began to get louder and<lb/>
louder with no crescendo in sight<lb/>
I began to lose my patience with<lb/>
them but did not speak up or lose<lb/>
my oool.<lb/>
Finally, we were all interrupt-<lb/>
ed by another oouple who knew<lb/>
the two ooupler, sitting at the<lb/>
table. This guy who does not even<lb/>
know me turns to me and yells,<lb/>
"who's that curly headed S.O.B.<lb/>
in the corner?' After I turned<lb/>
around to see if there was<lb/>
anybody behind me, I realized<lb/>
this rather obese character was<lb/>
inquiring about me. After regain-<lb/>
ing my oomposure, I retaliated<lb/>
with a verbal assault of my own<lb/>
which was something like, "You<lb/>
make me wish I had a lower I.Q.<lb/>
so I oould enjoy your oompany"<lb/>
and started to walk out the door.<lb/>
However, I could see by the<lb/>
look in his eyes that I was not to<lb/>
get through the door (under my<lb/>
own power anyway). knew that I<lb/>
was in trouble then. He proceed-<lb/>
Make deals at the Flea Market<lb/>
Wednesday, Apr. 27 on Mall<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center is<lb/>
sponsoring the second FLEA<lb/>
MARKET of the year on April 27.<lb/>
The event will be on the Mall<lb/>
from 9:00 a.m. until 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Last December, Wright<lb/>
Auditorium was the site of the<lb/>
FLEA MARKET and featured<lb/>
some beautiful pottery, hand-<lb/>
made jewelry, small plants and<lb/>
much more.<lb/>
Among the biggest FLEA<lb/>
MARKET attractions last<lb/>
December was the sale of un-<lb/>
claimed articles held by the<lb/>
University's Lost and Found<lb/>
Department, located at the In-<lb/>
formation Desk in Mendenhall.<lb/>
This year there are books, gloves,<lb/>
scarves, toboggans, coats,<lb/>
sweaters and many more items.<lb/>
Those who have lost any items<lb/>
are urged to come by the<lb/>
Information Desk and see if it is<lb/>
there. Any unclaimed articles will<lb/>
be sold at bargain prices in the<lb/>
FLEA MARKET.<lb/>
The Spring FLEA MARKET<lb/>
will be all day, Wednesday, April<lb/>
27, on the Mall. Plan to sell<lb/>
stop by and browse. You may f i<lb/>
just what you've been looking<lb/>
at a price you can't refuse.<lb/>
Tonight atthe<lb/>
Elbo Room<lb/>
Greenville's own<lb/>
10th Avenue Band<lb/>
WedThurandFri. SMACK DAB<lb/>
Don't forget Friday 3 - 7<lb/>
Sunday Night is Ladies Night<lb/>
ed to yank me out of the bar by<lb/>
my nose and drag me behind the<lb/>
place. I began to wonder if he was<lb/>
really going to change my face or<lb/>
hit me with a barrage of jokes<lb/>
about my mother. I was desper-<lb/>
ately hoping for the latter.<lb/>
The latter, however, was not<lb/>
the case. He pulled me by my<lb/>
collar and slapped me until either<lb/>
his hand got tired or he just ran<lb/>
out of face to slap. Wheij I opened<lb/>
my eyes to see if the creature had<lb/>
gone, who should I see trying to<lb/>
oomfort me but my beautiful<lb/>
buxom blonde. I must admit I did<lb/>
feel much better within a few<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
If there is a moral to this little<lb/>
anecdote it slips my mind pre-<lb/>
sently. However, if you should<lb/>
ever be physically assaulted<lb/>
during vacation time, it pays off<lb/>
to meet a blonde or any one or<lb/>
two-piece figure who bounoes<lb/>
merrily up and down the beach.<lb/>
THURSDAY'S<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Razz Ma Tazz<lb/>
Thursday April 28th<lb/>
Bill Deal<lb/>
andtheRhondells<lb/>
Thursday May 5th<lb/>
Joliy Roger &amp; Thursday's<lb/>
R&amp;NInc 752-4668<lb/>
yredime<lb/>
 TIM<lb/>
30-J 8:3(J<lb/>
nqnd i) tfj? oujjh thurday<lb/>
the tednecksalocr<lb/>
liigljway 118<lb/>
grIftqm<lb/>
cn,iaH)t to a Career<lb/>
Management<lb/>
,mpressive record yeaav 9 n ,nn0<lb/>
P�&amp;aS PpSicappiicat.ons<lb/>
S?ananrrn,cat,on<lb/>
SrenSnt 0<lb/>
strongest abilities �<lb/>
Production &amp; sales<lb/>
initial assignments in Southeast<lb/>
ssNo�RrrroEoREEs<lb/>
stating V�urJe�nivements. to<lb/>
� Sonoco Products tompany<lb/>
m<lb/>
; - �- ii' i v � , ,<lb/>
warn<lb/>
' . -  'ttViti Ms<lb/>
<pb facs="00057126_0012"/><lb/>
Wm �iHBB<lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 26 April 1977<lb/>
'Negrophobia' expert tells it all<lb/>
ByTHOMASSMITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In my college career, things<lb/>
have run fairly smoothly for the<lb/>
most part. People have been<lb/>
relatively friendly on the whole.<lb/>
But still, once in a while, I run<lb/>
into someone who casts a shadow<lb/>
on my life.<lb/>
Prime time for such intrusions<lb/>
is during room reservations.<lb/>
During this period, I sometimes<lb/>
run into a strange phenomena<lb/>
SPRING POETRY<lb/>
FESTIVAL<lb/>
this weekend<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
300 EVANS<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
PHONE: 752-2136<lb/>
- m FREE PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
mfifflyMft PICKUP AND DELIVERY<lb/>
Prescription Dept. with medication<lb/>
profiles: your prescription always at<lb/>
oar fingertips even though yon may<lb/>
lose your HL bottle.<lb/>
Little's Chop Shop<lb/>
N.E. Bypass 2 Mi. North of<lb/>
Hastings Ford<lb/>
758-4067<lb/>
We repair all makesand models of<lb/>
motorcycles.<lb/>
We sell custompartsandaccessories<lb/>
We do custom painting.<lb/>
We have pick-up service.<lb/>
Coming soon- van accessories<lb/>
known as "negrophobia<lb/>
This is a strange human trait<lb/>
that primarily consists of power-<lb/>
ful fear and convulsions when<lb/>
certain people come in contact<lb/>
with blacks. They have an irresis-<lb/>
table urge to escape any such<lb/>
contact.<lb/>
As an example, let's say we<lb/>
have a particular male student by<lb/>
the name of George. George<lb/>
wishes to reserve a room in a<lb/>
certain men's dorm, and of<lb/>
course, he wishes to get a first<lb/>
floor suite. Unthinkingly, he signs<lb/>
up for a room without checking to<lb/>
see who he will be sharing it with.<lb/>
George blissfully rushes to see<lb/>
"his" new room. But when he<lb/>
knocks on the door and walks in,<lb/>
he receives a shock. There before<lb/>
him stands one of the most<lb/>
dreaded creatures in the world; a<lb/>
black man who will still be in that<lb/>
room in the fall.<lb/>
Suddenly, the symptoms of<lb/>
negrophobia appear. Sweat beads<lb/>
form on his forehead. George has<lb/>
strange thoughts of what will<lb/>
happen to him if he rooms with a<lb/>
black person. He may catch sickle<lb/>
cell anemia. He may develop<lb/>
rhythm. He might have a power-<lb/>
ful craving for col lard greens,<lb/>
fried chicken, and watermelon.<lb/>
And horror of horrors, he may<lb/>
learn to love "chittlins<lb/>
George immediately tries to<lb/>
escape from the room with as<lb/>
little possible human contact as<lb/>
possible. He flashes the bigot's<lb/>
grin that looks like he has just<lb/>
eaten a fifty pound bag of ten year<lb/>
old bull manure. He quickly exits,<lb/>
declaring everything is "cool" as<lb/>
he leaves. He then makes an<lb/>
angry rush to change his room<lb/>
assignment, stopping in a nearby<lb/>
bathroom to wash off any black<lb/>
"germs" he might have picked<lb/>
up.<lb/>
Quite obviously, negrophobia<lb/>
is a powerful disease. Its cause<lb/>
lies in the existence of ignorance<lb/>
and outright stupidity. There is<lb/>
no quick cure. Only time and<lb/>
enlightenment will rid society of<lb/>
it. But for those who are now its<lb/>
victims, they should know one<lb/>
thing. There's no place to run to<lb/>
and no place to hide. We have<lb/>
arrived, and we ain't goin'<lb/>
nowhere!<lb/>
MSC Dinner Theatre<lb/>
Musical nostalgia coming<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
announces the final Dinner<lb/>
Theatre production of this season,<lb/>
A SPRINGTIME FESTIVAL OF<lb/>
MUSICAL COMEDY<lb/>
NOSTALGIA. The Dinner<lb/>
Theatre runs from Thursday, May<lb/>
5, through Sunday, May 8.<lb/>
Dinner for the first three per-<lb/>
formances is at 7:00 p.m. with<lb/>
curtain time at 8:00 p.m. The<lb/>
Sunday dinner begins at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. with the performance at 6:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The Dinner Theatre is direct-<lb/>
ed by Stuart Aronson and<lb/>
spotlights singers Claire Hurley,<lb/>
Treva Tankard and David Faber<lb/>
plus Paul Tardif on the piano and<lb/>
James L. Rees as the narrator.<lb/>
This intimate, cabaret-style<lb/>
production will include some of<lb/>
the most memorable songs from<lb/>
musicals of the past 20 years<lb/>
which have become classics in<lb/>
American musical theatre.<lb/>
The buffet served prior to the<lb/>
performance will include stuffed<lb/>
whole trout, shish kebabs, stuffed<lb/>
tomatoes, wild rice, Chinese<lb/>
vegetables, squash casserole,<lb/>
macedoine of fruits, and fresh<lb/>
baked bread plus tea and coffee.<lb/>
Seating for the Dinner Theatre<lb/>
is limited to 100 places each<lb/>
performance. Tickets are avail-<lb/>
able from the ECU Central Ticket<lb/>
Office in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center and must be purchased at<lb/>
least 24 hours in advance of the<lb/>
performance. Tickets for Satur-<lb/>
day or Sunday must be purchased<lb/>
on or before Friday, May 6, by<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Tickets are priced at $5.00 for<lb/>
ECU students and $7.50 fa the<lb/>
public. For tickets or additional<lb/>
information, contact the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office at 757-6611, Ext.<lb/>
266.<lb/>
Go see the ILLUMINA Show<lb/>
THE THIRD ANNUAL<lb/>
ILLUMINA ART SHOW AND<lb/>
COMPETITION is on display in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center from<lb/>
April 19 until April 29. The Art<lb/>
Show is located in the Menden-<lb/>
hall Gallery on the Student<lb/>
Center's second floor.<lb/>
Ten different categories are<lb/>
featured in this year's show<lb/>
including painting, sculpture,<lb/>
photography and ceramics. One<lb/>
thousand dollars in prize money<lb/>
will be awarded with $100.00<lb/>
going to the Best-in-Show. Each<lb/>
of the ten categories will feature a<lb/>
$50.00 first prize, a $25.00 second<lb/>
prize and a $15.00 third prize.<lb/>
The competition is open only to<lb/>
currently enrolled ECU students.<lb/>
The judge for the THIRD<lb/>
ANNUAL ILLUMINA ART<lb/>
SHOW is George Berline, paint-<lb/>
ing instructor at North Carolina<lb/>
State University. The awards<lb/>
ceremony will be held on Tues-<lb/>
1ay, April 26, at 8:00 p.m. in the<lb/>
Gallery.<lb/>
The THIRD ANNUAL<lb/>
ILLUMINA ART SHOW AND<lb/>
COMPETITION is free to all. The<lb/>
show is sponsored by the Student<lb/>
Union Art Exhibition Committee,<lb/>
ILLUMINA.<lb/>
Sportsworld<lb/>
A Family Recreation Facility<lb/>
Featuring the New, Modern<lb/>
Roller Skating<lb/>
SPORTSWORLD OF<lb/>
Rocky Mount<lb/>
istakingapplicationsfor summer help.<lb/>
Both full and part time. Apply at Sports World of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Ask for the manager.<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
Tuesday Night is Ladies Night<lb/>
Wednesday Night �<lb/>
O'sville Rainbow Band<lb/>
Thursday Night � Cowboy<lb/>
Night<lb/>
Wear a cowboy hat � free admission<lb/>
AND<lb/>
Free foosball every afternoon 3 � 4:30<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057126_0013"/><lb/>
26 April 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
:vS�:�iia� -yy �y.y'yyyyy �<lb/>
mWmfWmSmff.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 12" X 60" trailer,<lb/>
unfurnished- 2 air cond. gas<lb/>
heat, double sinks in bathroom,<lb/>
plus washer &amp; dryer. 2 bed-<lb/>
room, call 752-9432 ask Mr.<lb/>
Henderson after 6XX) p.m.<lb/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED? Call-<lb/>
Alice. 757-6366 (9-5 weekdays).<lb/>
NEED AVON?: To buy or sell.<lb/>
Call 758-8705.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer In-dash<lb/>
AMFM Stereo 8-Track player-<lb/>
12 watts per channel $95. Call<lb/>
752-5238.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Hang glider, 18 foot,<lb/>
standard. Ask for Dan or leave a<lb/>
message, 757-6704.<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: General Electric<lb/>
AMFM Receiver 8-Track Play-<lb/>
erRecorder wspeakers $125.<lb/>
Call 752-5238.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 Epiphone Acous-<lb/>
tic guitar with hard case,<lb/>
excellent cond. $100.00. Also 1<lb/>
good beginners guitar. Contact<lb/>
758-1382 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: Nikkormat FTN<lb/>
35mm Camera w55mm Macro-<lb/>
Nikkor, 24mm wide-angle nikkor,<lb/>
and 105mm portrait (moderate<lb/>
telephoto) nikkor. Also, 3X tele-<lb/>
extender, filters &amp; more. 752-<lb/>
1292.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dexter Mat Cutter.<lb/>
Cuts mats with straight or bevel<lb/>
edge. $5.00. 752-1292.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fender Princeton<lb/>
amplifier. $150. Write Box 3067,<lb/>
Greenville, or call 1-823-3332.<lb/>
I OR SALE: 35mm Petri Camera<lb/>
$25.00 Kodak EK-6 Color Prints<lb/>
Instantly $40.00. Call 752-7471.<lb/>
FOR SALE: IZOD "Alligator"<lb/>
shirts13.00 &amp; tax (18.00 in<lb/>
stores) These fashionable shirts<lb/>
for men and women are guaran-<lb/>
teed first quality and make great<lb/>
gifts! Available in all sizes,<lb/>
styles, and colors. Unlimited<lb/>
quantities. Save yourself some<lb/>
bucks and call Bob at 752-9291<lb/>
anytime.<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/>
TYPING SERVICES: Term pap-<lb/>
ers, resumes etc. 756-1461.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Reasonable<lb/>
rates. 756-1921.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 9 cubic foot refriger-<lb/>
ator. Super good condition. Great<lb/>
for dorm use or jpartment. Call<lb/>
after 5 00 at 756-0267 or come by<lb/>
and see it at 427 Cotton Dorm. If<lb/>
interested and I'm not there,<lb/>
please leave a message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Schwinn varsity 10<lb/>
speed bike. One year old but like<lb/>
new. $100 firm. Call 758-7486.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1960 Vdkswagon<lb/>
Beetle chassis, body and good<lb/>
transmission. $50.00. Also an<lb/>
assortment of 1200 40 h.p. VW<lb/>
engine parts-real cheap, make an<lb/>
offer. Call 758-2073.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Vintage collection of<lb/>
News &amp; Observers, Daily Reflec-<lb/>
tors and Decatur Daily News.<lb/>
This impressive collection stands<lb/>
6'9" High. Will take best offer.<lb/>
Call 752-6140 day &amp; night.<lb/>
MUST SELL: '71 Mustang<lb/>
$1,500. Also '69 Valiant $400.<lb/>
Both cars are in good shape and<lb/>
are reliable transportation call<lb/>
752-0679.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2 sets of golf clubs<lb/>
with pull carts $25.00 and $55.00.<lb/>
Call 752-7471.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Call 752-<lb/>
8837 after 5 O0.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Collie pups, reg.<lb/>
sable &amp; white. $100.00 firm very<lb/>
reasonable for pedigree, good<lb/>
looks, good health, &amp; good<lb/>
disposition of these collies. Call<lb/>
482-2341-Edenton, N.C.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 10 speed Cortina-$40.<lb/>
Call 758-2599.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '71 Fiat 850 sport,<lb/>
$975 or best offer. 752-2880.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Kay Triple pick-up<lb/>
electric guitar &amp; amp, case<lb/>
included $75.00or best offer. Call<lb/>
Buddy at 756-4916.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Brand new one pair<lb/>
AVID 103. 3 Way floor speakers.<lb/>
$178.00 apiece will sell fa $300 a<lb/>
pair. 150 watt max. Call 758-8988,<lb/>
ask fa Susan a Mike.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Chrysler '69 New-<lb/>
pat. Good conditiai. Call 752-<lb/>
2752 afta 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '66 Honda 300. All<lb/>
there, engine locked. 11,000<lb/>
miles. $30 takes it. 758-8216.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Standard size refri-<lb/>
gerator $25.00. Good wacking<lb/>
oonditioi. 753-2091, John Rouse.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AKC registered<lb/>
poouies; 2 white females; excel-<lb/>
lent bloodline. 752-5717.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1976 360 Honda<lb/>
Excellent oonditioi, low mileage,<lb/>
Call 752-0924, ask fa Matty.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Couch with pull out<lb/>
bed. In good oonditioi $40.00 call<lb/>
758952.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Beautiful German<lb/>
Shepherd puppies $20.00. Call<lb/>
752-5580 after 500.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Letters, re<lb/>
pots, &amp; torn papas-call 756-<lb/>
4180.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Call 752-<lb/>
8837 afta 5 p.m.<lb/>
TYPING: 75 cents per page. Call<lb/>
Debra Parrington, 756-6031<lb/>
days, and 752-2508 nights.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 3 miniature female<lb/>
AKC Dachshund puppies- Red-<lb/>
dish-Brown, shots, 747-2446,<lb/>
Snow Hill.<lb/>
h'OR SALE: Silver rings, phone<lb/>
Roxanne at 752-8694. Or phone<lb/>
Crafts Cento in Mendenhafl and<lb/>
leave message.<lb/>
'FOR SALE: Sofa &amp; Matching<lb/>
chair, good condition, both fo<lb/>
$60.00. Also, rocko fa $15.00.<lb/>
Call 752-8011.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 750oc Suzuki.<lb/>
Mint condition, new: paint, tires,<lb/>
chain, etc. $1200.00. Call 752-<lb/>
1442 ask fa David.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Zenith stoeo com-<lb/>
plete with speakers-automatic<lb/>
chango excellent condition! Po-<lb/>
fect size fo dam room. $65.00<lb/>
Call 758-5090 afta 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Marantz 1040 amp<lb/>
$200 value, selling for $100.<lb/>
752-4009.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Premio Drum set<lb/>
$1300.00 value fo sale at $500.00<lb/>
Contact Raymond L. Brown,<lb/>
758-7434.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Shure -Dynamic<lb/>
(Unishphoe B) Mioophone-$30.<lb/>
Sealy Posturepedic foam set<lb/>
(firm)-$85.00. Colonial bed frame<lb/>
$25.00. Ephiphone classic guitar-<lb/>
$85.00. Jadee 3uitar (exact rep-<lb/>
lica of Gibson Dove)-$120.00.<lb/>
Lawn furniture (Oand new)-ask.<lb/>
Hitachi FM radio (wood cabinet)-<lb/>
$20.00. Panasonic Portable TV<lb/>
(new)-$80.00. Bureau-excel lent<lb/>
shape-$35.00. Call Don 752-1347.<lb/>
NEED A SUMMER JOB OR<lb/>
CAREER? Advotise in the new<lb/>
Carolina Bargain Trada, a buy<lb/>
sell trade magazine published in<lb/>
Greenville and distributed in<lb/>
Easton N.C. Your pasonal into-<lb/>
view of 75 wads plus photo oould<lb/>
be very successful in obtaining<lb/>
the position you desire and runs 2<lb/>
weeks at $4.50 o 4 weeks at $8.00<lb/>
and we will take the photo fo only<lb/>
$12.25 Call 758-7487 a write to<lb/>
P.O. Box 16, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4.8 cubic feet refri-<lb/>
gerator call 758-9807.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Brand new Takara<lb/>
10-speed bike, never ridden. Call<lb/>
John O'Neal at 756-4136. Best<lb/>
reasonable offer.<lb/>
, FOR SALE: 1968 Chevelle Mali-<lb/>
bu-Air Cond power windows,<lb/>
4-doo, powa steaing, powa<lb/>
brakes, AM-FM-$750 Call 752-<lb/>
0501.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Uueen waterbed<lb/>
complete outfit, evo hing need-<lb/>
ed except the water. VJ5.00 firm<lb/>
call 752-6856, 756-5190. ALSO:<lb/>
silver gray fox fur blanket spread<lb/>
and double pillow $45.00<lb/>
FOR SALE: '62 Comet, 6 cylin-<lb/>
der, good condition $150.00 o<lb/>
best offer. If interested call<lb/>
758-4290.<lb/>
FOR SALE: By oiginal owno,<lb/>
1972 Chevrolet Impala, 4-doo<lb/>
hardtop, PWR steaingbrakes,<lb/>
air conditioning, almost new<lb/>
radial tires, 57,000 miles. Call<lb/>
756-3717 afta 600 nm<lb/>
FOR SALE: Ten Speed "Rally<lb/>
Record" anda bike rack. Both<lb/>
in excellent conditiai. Call 752-<lb/>
2797 afta 600 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Bic 980 turntable.<lb/>
Still undo warranty. $125, 752-<lb/>
0321.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 74 VW AMFM,<lb/>
37,500 miles, 4-speed like new<lb/>
condition Phone 756-5733.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 71 VW bus. FM<lb/>
stoeo, engine in excellent condi-<lb/>
tion, front end needs work<lb/>
$500.00 firm. Call 752-5325 afta<lb/>
600, ask fo Kevin.<lb/>
for rent<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted:<lb/>
large 2 bedroom apt. 2 blocks<lb/>
from campus. Call 758-9655<lb/>
nights.<lb/>
FOR RENT. 110 B. Student St.<lb/>
Call 752-7931<lb/>
FOR RENT: ivate room-Air<lb/>
Cond4 bloc s from campus-<lb/>
Rent fa Sumn ter a Fall session-<lb/>
Call 752-4006 afta 12.<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: Private room, air<lb/>
conditioned, summo o fall, 4<lb/>
blocks from campus 752-4006<lb/>
afta 1 00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: House outside city, 3<lb/>
bedroom, 1 bath, big backyard,<lb/>
available now fa summa. Call<lb/>
Maria at 757-6390.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Want a nice duplex<lb/>
to rent fa the summa? Phaie<lb/>
758-7713.<lb/>
WANTED: To rait, 1 bedroom<lb/>
apt. fo 2, summo oiwards-$100<lb/>
a moith. Call 758-8062.<lb/>
HOUSEMATE NEEDED: Fo a 3<lb/>
bedroom house. Only mature<lb/>
posois need apply! Call 756-<lb/>
1839.<lb/>
NEEDED: Roommate fa Green-<lb/>
way apts. 2 br. - $88 per mo.<lb/>
Contat Joe Grimes Apt. 20 after 4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Needed<lb/>
to share 12 X 70 traila located at<lb/>
Shady Knolls Traila Park. Fur-<lb/>
nished with private bedroom and<lb/>
bath. Rent-negotiable. One-half<lb/>
utilities. Call 757-6825 from 800-<lb/>
500.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Needed<lb/>
fa 2 bedroom aptcall 756-5530<lb/>
afta '4 O0 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED:(Fe-<lb/>
male prefared) to share an<lb/>
Apartment or House, living<lb/>
expenses, and good times start-<lb/>
ing this June '77 in CHAPEL<lb/>
HILL. Intoested? 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. Rait is<lb/>
$50.00 a month, plus half of<lb/>
utilities Fo more info call Laurie<lb/>
at 752-6963.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Room-<lb/>
mate needed immediately, rent<lb/>
$55.00month &amp; utilities.<lb/>
Private roan, can be furnished.<lb/>
Biking distance to campus. Call<lb/>
758-1636.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Beach Cottage at<lb/>
Emoald Isle. To faculty, 3<lb/>
bedrooms, ac, washo, garage,<lb/>
fenced yard. 112 blocks from<lb/>
beach. $185 weekly. 758-3089.<lb/>
NEEDED: 1 o 2 roommates fo<lb/>
Summo. Ftent:$53.00 plus utili-<lb/>
ties Oakmoit Square Apts. Call<lb/>
756-2050.<lb/>
�r� '<lb/>
lost<lb/>
�2<lb/>
LOST: 1 girl who is blind<lb/>
without her glasses-someone<lb/>
picked up a navy blue hooded<lb/>
sweatshirt a oouple of Saturdays<lb/>
ago at the Jolly Rogo that had<lb/>
a pair of rose cdoed Gloia<lb/>
Vandobilt glasses-l have a navy<lb/>
hcoded sweatshirt that's too<lb/>
big-PLEAS� contact Janet Pope<lb/>
423 Tyler-758-9670. $10.00<lb/>
REWARD.<lb/>
LOST: Brown leather wallet,<lb/>
$5.00 reward. Richard Smith. Call<lb/>
758-7531.<lb/>
LOST: A pair of aown framed<lb/>
glasses-they are in an oange,<lb/>
black-lined case. Need them back<lb/>
despoately. Call Lisa, 758-5066<lb/>
afta 6 O0. Reward.<lb/>
LOST: Set of keys, brown flap on<lb/>
key ring with (Leo) emblem. $5.00<lb/>
rewa-d! Call Johnny. 752-1442.<lb/>
IpersonoKS<lb/>
WANTED: A married couple with<lb/>
no children who are college<lb/>
graduates with degrees in the<lb/>
behavioal sciences a human<lb/>
service delivoy fields to wok as<lb/>
teaching-parents in a treatment<lb/>
home fo emotionally disturbed<lb/>
children. Wok schedule: seven<lb/>
and one-half days on duty, six and<lb/>
one-half days off in rotation with<lb/>
anotho couple. These are N.C.<lb/>
State Merit positions. Salary<lb/>
range $9,300 to $10,152, depend-<lb/>
ing on prior experience and<lb/>
educational background. Intoes-<lb/>
ted couples contact Children's<lb/>
Treatment Center, Box 1436,<lb/>
Southern Pines, N.C. 28387.<lb/>
Phone 919-692-8811<lb/>
ASTROLOGY: Astrological charts<lb/>
professionally and accurately con-<lb/>
structed. Call 756-0201 between<lb/>
6-8 p.m.<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS: Married coup-<lb/>
les only. Beach life guardregis-<lb/>
tration dak canbinatiai (man &amp;<lb/>
wife); and, grounds keeparegis-<lb/>
tration dak combinatiai. Travel<lb/>
trailer with gas, water, and<lb/>
eledridty furnished-June, July,<lb/>
Aug. SaJto Path Family Camp<lb/>
Ground, P.O. Box 721, Moehead<lb/>
City, N.C. 28557.<lb/>
WANTED: Part time attendant<lb/>
to assist handicap student during<lb/>
summer school of '77. $360.<lb/>
758-8286, Buzzy Race.<lb/>
ENERGY: Discova how you can<lb/>
reduce tension and have greato<lb/>
energy. Learn the Transcendental<lb/>
Meditation technique. Find out<lb/>
more about TM this Thursday at<lb/>
800 at Planto's National Bank,<lb/>
Washingtoi St. Downtown.<lb/>
WANTED: Full time News Edito<lb/>
fo weekly papa, The Standard<lb/>
Laconic, in Snow Hill-Call<lb/>
747-3883, Snow Hill.<lb/>
EARN $2500: This summer.<lb/>
Summo jobs are available now.<lb/>
Interviews Tuesday 300 a 600<lb/>
in Rawl 130.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057126_0014"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 14<lb/>
26 April 1977<lb/>
Sideline Chat<lb/>
wifh STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Buc track teams tops<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Basketball recruiting is hitting its big stages around the nation right<lb/>
now and there are more rumors going around about who is going where<lb/>
and who is not.<lb/>
It was supposed to be that N.C. State had Wayne McKoy in the<lb/>
bag. but the 6-9 Long Island (N.Y.) Lutheran graduate opted for St.<lb/>
Johns. Albert King was supposed to be putting on the pale blue of<lb/>
Carolina, but he has not signed yet. He was rumored last week to have<lb/>
signed with UCLA, but he has not.<lb/>
There's only one thing for sure, Gene Banks is going to Duke. He<lb/>
HAS signed.<lb/>
On the home front, new ooach Larry Gil I man has had some<lb/>
impressive recruits here in Greenville. Recruits that can (or are<lb/>
supposed to) turn around a losing program.<lb/>
There has been a two-time junior oollege all-America guard on<lb/>
campus; a juoo all-America center; two all-Metro (D.C.) players, one<lb/>
5-11 and one 6-5; and a high school all-America from Milwaukee.<lb/>
Gillman does not oonsider his late start in the recruiting race a<lb/>
disadvantage.<lb/>
"All those schools signing people on the first day a so after the<lb/>
signing date (April 13) are not being selective he said. "We are<lb/>
being as selective as possible.<lb/>
Anybody we sign will be capable of playing a lot of basketball next<lb/>
year. We are making sure of that<lb/>
Gillman said he plans to have everybody signed by May 1. He said<lb/>
he would take the best three or four players he can get, regardless of<lb/>
size.<lb/>
"I'm looking fa strength and quickness in recruits he added.<lb/>
"That's what wins basketball games. There was a deficiency of<lb/>
quickness on last year's team<lb/>
Just who the Pirates sign is rumor right now, but in another week<lb/>
everyone should know.<lb/>
TRACK STRONG<lb/>
Coach Bril Carson of the ECU men's track team and Coach Laurie<lb/>
Arrants of the Lady Pirates have built quite strong teams at East<lb/>
Carolina this season.<lb/>
Carson's troops ran away (excuse the pun) with the Mountaineer<lb/>
Relays in Morgantown, W. Va. last weekend, winning eight of 17<lb/>
events. The Pirates' Marvin Rankins and Robert Bailey took MVP<lb/>
honors, Rankins in the running events and Bailey in the field events.<lb/>
Rankins turned an electronically timed 13.81 in the 120 yard high<lb/>
hurdles, which is one of the top times in the nation this year. Bailey<lb/>
won the discus with a throw of 159-10, his second best effort of the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Arrants' squad defeated North Carolina 115-113 in the South<lb/>
Carolina Lady Invitational. That marks the second time the Lady<lb/>
Pirates have beaten the Tar Heels in a big meet.<lb/>
Kathy Smith took the only victory for the Lady Pirates in the 800<lb/>
meter run, but it was the depth that won the meet. East Carolina had as<lb/>
many as three women to place in some events.<lb/>
CHAMPIONSHIPS SLA TED<lb/>
The Pirates men's team will compete in the Southern Conference<lb/>
Track Championships this weekend, looking for their second straight<lb/>
win. The ladies are idle this week.<lb/>
The Southern Conference Golf Tournament started yesterday at<lb/>
Florence. S.C. and will run until tomorrow, while the Southern<lb/>
Conference Tennis Tournament will be held Thursday through<lb/>
Saturday at Davidson College.<lb/>
Coach Monte Little's baseball team is 13-1, leading the league,<lb/>
with only a double-header at The Citadel on Saturday left. The Pirates<lb/>
could win the title outright by taking both games and could clinch a tie<lb/>
with a split with the Bulldogs. Western Carolina (11-2) is in second<lb/>
while The Citadel (10-2) is third. Coach Little is to be congratulated for<lb/>
, r TfWSe9!yiyart' tnevP�r�tiir spfrt5vtoam<lb/>
ECU thinclads win<lb/>
Mountaineer Relay<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's track team<lb/>
literally ran away with the<lb/>
Mountaineer Relays in Morgan-<lb/>
town, W. Va. Saturday, winning<lb/>
eight of the 17 events and picking<lb/>
up both most valuable performer<lb/>
' awards.<lb/>
Marvin Rankins and freshman<lb/>
Robert Bailey led the way by<lb/>
picking up MVP awards for<lb/>
running and field events, re-<lb/>
spectively.<lb/>
Rankins won the 120 yard high<lb/>
hurdles in 13.81. That is one of<lb/>
the fastest electronic times in the<lb/>
nation this season for the event.<lb/>
Bailey threw the discus 159-10<lb/>
to win and placed third in the shot<lb/>
put with a heave of 47-4 to<lb/>
capture the field events honor.<lb/>
Larry Austin showed the best<lb/>
form he has had in two years in<lb/>
capturing the 100 yard dash in<lb/>
9.5. James Rankins finished third<lb/>
in the race in 9.7.<lb/>
Herman Mdntyre won the<lb/>
triple jump, getting back on the<lb/>
winning trail after losing in the<lb/>
Dogwood Relays last week. His<lb/>
jump of 50-2 was the second best<lb/>
effort ever on the West Virginia<lb/>
University track.<lb/>
Lafan Forbes, who has been in<lb/>
a slump sinoe the first outdoor<lb/>
meet of the year, came back<lb/>
Saturday to win the javelin with a<lb/>
toss of 192-6.<lb/>
The Pirates won three relays<lb/>
in the meet: the 440 relay, 880<lb/>
relay and mile relay.<lb/>
In the 440 yard race, Calvin<lb/>
Alston, Otis Metvin, Larry Austin<lb/>
and Carter Suggs teamed up to<lb/>
set a new relays and track record<lb/>
of 40.55.<lb/>
The same four runners ran to<lb/>
a new relays mark in the 880 with<lb/>
a time of 1 26.32.<lb/>
In the mile relay, the Pirates<lb/>
fielded two teams and they<lb/>
finished one-two. Alston, Melvin,<lb/>
Charlie Moss and Jay Purdie<lb/>
made up the winning team as<lb/>
they went the distance in 3:12.86.<lb/>
The team of Ben Duckenfield,<lb/>
James Freeman, Terry Perry and<lb/>
Suggs took second with a 3:14.46<lb/>
clocking. West Virginia, which<lb/>
was in second until Suggs got the<lb/>
baton, finished third in 3:14.83.<lb/>
Duckenfield and Tony McKoy<lb/>
finished second and third, re-<lb/>
spectively, in the 440 yard<lb/>
intermediate hurdles. Ducken-<lb/>
field was timed in 54.34 while<lb/>
McKoy had a 54.52 to his credit.<lb/>
The Pirates finished third in<lb/>
both the sprint medley and two<lb/>
mile relays with times of 3:31.27<lb/>
and 754.11, respectively.<lb/>
The Pirates will be competing<lb/>
in the Southern Conference<lb/>
Championships Friday and Sat-<lb/>
urday at Furman University in<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. They will be<lb/>
looking for their second con-<lb/>
secutive titie �-�� mm, ����<lb/>
PIRA TE SPRINTER JAMES FREE MA N was on one of two ECU teams<lb/>
competing in the mile relay Saturday.<lb/>
Coach Stasavich<lb/>
A 0<lb/>
Former East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity Athletic Director, the late<lb/>
Clarence Stasavich, has received<lb/>
two more honors, being inducted<lb/>
into the Sports Hall of Fame at<lb/>
Lnoir-Rhyne College and into<lb/>
the Helms Hall of Fame for<lb/>
Athletic Directors.<lb/>
The induction into the Lenoir-<lb/>
Rhyne College Sports Hall of<lb/>
Fame was Friday night, April 15,<lb/>
the first induction of members to<lb/>
the newly created Hall of Fame.<lb/>
Three others were inducted with<lb/>
Stasavich as the initial members.<lb/>
Stasavich coached at Lenoir-<lb/>
Rhyne for 16 years, winning nine<lb/>
Carolina Conference titles, with<lb/>
his 1960 team winning the NAIA<lb/>
national title. His overall record<lb/>
was 120-37-7 at Lenoir-Rhyne.<lb/>
The Helms Hall of Fame<lb/>
induction will be Monday, June<lb/>
20, at Caesar's Palace in Las<lb/>
Vegas, Nev. Stasavich will be one<lb/>
of 15 athletic directors inducted<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Stasavich is already a member<lb/>
of the Helms Hall of Fame for<lb/>
football coaches and the North<lb/>
Carolina Sports Hall of Fame.<lb/>
While serving for 13 years as<lb/>
East Carolina's Athletic Director,<lb/>
Stasavich engineered the greatest<lb/>
growth period to date in Pirate<lb/>
-athettOft�-wasp8Mun�iMi in<lb/>
recently<lb/>
ECU'S entrance into the Southern<lb/>
Conference and into the NCAA<lb/>
Division I major oollege status.<lb/>
He assisted in the development of<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium, Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum, Scales Field House and the<lb/>
Bunting Track and Field.<lb/>
Stasavich was inducted into<lb/>
the East Carolina Sports Hall of<lb/>
Fame last fall, the only member<lb/>
to be inducted for 1976, the third<lb/>
year of induction.<lb/>
Stasavich served East Caro-<lb/>
lina from 1962 until his death in<lb/>
the fall of 1975.<lb/>
CLARENCE STASAVICH<lb/>
� �� . � : � ' �  �<lb/>
ftRf<lb/>
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1 'j . ' �<lb/>
��<lb/>
'WBmWsSB&amp;Gm w m,<lb/>
BSSBSBl �.<lb/>
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Sit, ,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057126_0015"/><lb/>
26AprlM977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
Men's soccer dropped to comply with Title IX<lb/>
BvTHOMASUPE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In a surprise move, East<lb/>
Carolina University dropped its<lb/>
men's soccer program and insti-<lb/>
tuted a women's softball program<lb/>
instead. This action was taken to<lb/>
comply with a federal directive<lb/>
known as Title IX, which is<lb/>
intended to prevent sexual dis-<lb/>
crimination in interoollegiate ath-<lb/>
letics.<lb/>
In response to the actions<lb/>
influenced by the Title IX direc-<lb/>
tive, ECU Athletic Director, Bill<lb/>
Cain, stated that "we have to<lb/>
provide equal and effective inter-<lb/>
oollegiate programs for both men<lb/>
and women. It's the job of each<lb/>
institution to provide coaching<lb/>
facilities, meals, and travel ex-<lb/>
penses for each program. We<lb/>
have until the fall semester of<lb/>
1978 to meet these guidelines<lb/>
To oomply with this directive,<lb/>
an ad hoc committee on athletics<lb/>
has been meeting for several<lb/>
months with the Board of Trus-<lb/>
tees to provide student athletes at<lb/>
Tennis team defeats Seahawks, 6-3<lb/>
By THOMASLIPE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's men's tennis<lb/>
team went on the road to<lb/>
Wilmington Friday to faoe the<lb/>
Seahawks of UNC-Wilminaton.<lb/>
Once again, led by the play of<lb/>
Mitch Pergerson, the Pirates<lb/>
came away with a 6-3 victory.<lb/>
Pergerson, the 1976 team MVP,<lb/>
won both singles and doubles to<lb/>
paoe the Pirates.<lb/>
Singles:<lb/>
House (W) d. Durfee (E) 2-6, 7-5,<lb/>
7-6.<lb/>
Hostetler (E) d. Currie (W) 6-1,<lb/>
6-2<lb/>
Love (E) d. Carroll (W) 7-5, 6-4<lb/>
Gemborys(W) d. Ratliffe(E) 6-2,<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
Getsinger (E) d. Shackleford (W)<lb/>
6-1, 7-5<lb/>
Pergerson (E) d. Gaulding (W)<lb/>
6-2, 6-7, 6-3<lb/>
Doubles:<lb/>
Durfee-Getsinger (E) d. House-<lb/>
Gemborys (W) 4-6, 6-1, 6-1<lb/>
Goulding-Shackleford (W) d.<lb/>
Hostetler-Love 6-4, 1-6, 6-3<lb/>
Ratliffe-Pergerson (E) d. Currie-<lb/>
Carroll (W) 6-2, 6-1<lb/>
Lady Pirates recruit new talent<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This year's women's basket-<lb/>
ball team was riddled with<lb/>
injuries and had one of those<lb/>
seasons that coaches would just<lb/>
as soon forget.<lb/>
And forget is what Miss<lb/>
Catherine Bolton seems to be set<lb/>
on doing as she goes out and<lb/>
recruits new talent for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
Bolton's recruiting has alrea-<lb/>
dy reaped ts benefits as she has<lb/>
signed one player who oould be<lb/>
the best basketball player ever to<lb/>
play for the Lady Pirates.<lb/>
Her name is Lydia Rountree<lb/>
and the 56" high schooler has<lb/>
won virtually every award that<lb/>
oould be given to a North Caroli-<lb/>
na high school paper. Miss Roun-<lb/>
tree, while playing for Elm City<lb/>
High School in Elm City, helped<lb/>
lead her team to the State<lb/>
Basketball championship, and in<lb/>
the process was named to the<lb/>
All-State team by the Raleigh<lb/>
News and Observer and the<lb/>
Greensboro Daily News.<lb/>
She was also the Most Valua-<lb/>
ble Player in her league, as well<lb/>
as one of the selections on the<lb/>
State All-Tournament team.<lb/>
Her selection to the All-State<lb/>
team marked the second time in<lb/>
her career she has received that<lb/>
honor. Her appearance on the<lb/>
all-Conference team was the third<lb/>
time she's been so honored.<lb/>
In Rountree, Bolton will have<lb/>
a player who can help round out<lb/>
an already strong Pirate lineup,<lb/>
barring injuries. At ECU Roun-<lb/>
tree oould play a guard or small<lb/>
forward position with ease and<lb/>
help take some of the burden off<lb/>
of ECU'S all-time leading scorer,<lb/>
Debbie Freeman. And if Rosie<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
Sherw in-William �<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
L<lb/>
Thompson returns and Gale Ker-<lb/>
baugh remains healthy, then<lb/>
Rountree will be in the privileg-<lb/>
ed oompany of three All-State<lb/>
performers who have averaged 20<lb/>
points a game during their college<lb/>
careers.<lb/>
And Bolton feels that Roun-<lb/>
tree can fit right in as a starter for<lb/>
the Pirates in her very first<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"Lydia has a chance to start<lb/>
right away said Bolton, "and<lb/>
she surely should be ready to be a<lb/>
starter by the middle of the year if<lb/>
she doesn't start right away. It is<lb/>
pretty hard to oome in as a<lb/>
freshman and start, but she is one<lb/>
of the most complete high school<lb/>
athletes I have ever seen. She is<lb/>
also a very fine sprinter and we<lb/>
will use her on the track team,<lb/>
also<lb/>
The fact that ECU has a<lb/>
women's track team was one of<lb/>
the factors that led to Rountree<lb/>
choosing East Carolina over seve-<lb/>
ral other schools who tried to woo<lb/>
her services. She was state<lb/>
champion in the 100 yard dash<lb/>
during her freshman year and the<lb/>
last two years she was second in<lb/>
the state behind Olympic Silver<lb/>
Medal winner Kathy McMillan.<lb/>
She also finished second in the<lb/>
220 two years in a row and she is<lb/>
expected to take both events in<lb/>
the State Track Meet this year. In<lb/>
1975, she made it to the national<lb/>
finals of the Junior Olympics.<lb/>
"Lydia is a super athlete<lb/>
added Bolton. "She is an outstan-<lb/>
ding sprinter, a super softball<lb/>
player and a good basketball<lb/>
player. She is quick and she has<lb/>
outstanding hands. I am very<lb/>
happy that she has chosen to<lb/>
come to East Carolina<lb/>
Rountree isn't the only top-<lb/>
notch high school recruit that<lb/>
Bolton has signed to a Grant-ln-<lb/>
Aid. Also in the fold is Marcia<lb/>
Girvan, a 6-1 center from Wood-<lb/>
bridge, Virginia.<lb/>
While Rountree brings a<lb/>
strong ballhandler and outside<lb/>
shooter to the ECU dub, Girvan<lb/>
will bring the elusive six-footer<lb/>
that Bolton has long been looking<lb/>
for. Her addition will make the<lb/>
Pirates stronger inside, where<lb/>
they already have the 5-10<lb/>
Thompson and 5-11 Linda<lb/>
McClellan, who was the ECU<lb/>
center this past season.<lb/>
Girvan played on the state<lb/>
runners-up in high school and led<lb/>
her team in scoring and rebound-<lb/>
ing. In her junior year her school,<lb/>
Garfield, won the state champ-<lb/>
ionship and also captured State<lb/>
and Regional titles. Girvan was<lb/>
honored with all-district and<lb/>
all-tournament honors in her<lb/>
state during her senior year.<lb/>
In addition to her abilities on<lb/>
the basketball court, Girvan<lb/>
should also be an asset to the<lb/>
Lady Pirate track program as a<lb/>
high jumper.<lb/>
"Both girls are good enough<lb/>
to play a lot their very first year<lb/>
said Bolton, "and they will also<lb/>
help us in track. This gives us two<lb/>
very fine athletes with which to<lb/>
work with in future years. They<lb/>
should be an asset to our<lb/>
program<lb/>
dp this coition!<lb/>
And get three games for only $1.25.<lb/>
I Bring three friends along. We'll let<lb/>
I them in on the deal too. r <lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J ExpiresMay30,1977<lb/>
WASHINGTON HWY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N C<lb/>
East Carolina the provisions<lb/>
directed for by Title IX for both<lb/>
men and women.<lb/>
To meet these needs, an equal<lb/>
number of sports for both men<lb/>
and women were recommended<lb/>
to the Board of Trustees. This<lb/>
recommendation spelled out that<lb/>
these sports should be provided<lb/>
with equal travel expenses, sche-<lb/>
duling, housing, scholarship<lb/>
funds, adequate coaching and<lb/>
equipment; everything to make<lb/>
them competitive on an intercol-<lb/>
legiate athletic basis.<lb/>
The committee felt that, with<lb/>
the equal number of sports, that<lb/>
adequate funds oould better be<lb/>
provided for both sports.<lb/>
It was suggested that there be<lb/>
eight sports for both men and<lb/>
women. To do this, men's soccer<lb/>
has been deleted and replaced<lb/>
with women's soft ball. Also drop-<lb/>
ped were women's golf (lack of<lb/>
interest), the rifle team, and<lb/>
women's junior varsity basket-<lb/>
ball.<lb/>
With these changes, the fol-<lb/>
lowing interoollegiate sports will<lb/>
now be offered: Men: Football,<lb/>
basketball, baseball, swimming,<lb/>
track (indoor and outdoor), wrest-<lb/>
ling, tennis, golf.<lb/>
Women: Field hockey, volley-<lb/>
ball, gymnastics, swimming,<lb/>
track (indoor and outdoor), ten-<lb/>
nis, softball, basketball.<lb/>
EAT FOR JUST<lb/>
W plus tax MonThurs.<lb/>
Crabcakes. slaw, french fries plus<lb/>
hnshpuppies.<lb/>
Va pound hamburger steak, slaw,<lb/>
french fries and rolls.<lb/>
Fish, slaw french fries, hnshpuppies.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat752-3172<lb/>
2 miles east on highway 264<lb/>
(out 10th St.)<lb/>
C�<lb/>
the Mall<lb/>
RAINBOW SURFER THONG<lb/>
4 Layer Sole<lb/>
Men's &amp;� Women's<lb/>
$4.00<lb/>
Phone 758-1820<lb/>
Sportsworld<lb/>
A Family Recreation Facility<lb/>
Featuring the New, Modern<lb/>
Roller Skating<lb/>
Tired of downtown?<lb/>
Make us your place<lb/>
of entertainment.<lb/>
Wednesdays- ECU Night 6:30-11:00<lb/>
Free skate rental with<lb/>
presentation of I.D. card<lb/>
For more information call 756-6000<lb/>
<pb facs="00057126_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 26 April 1977<lb/>
Golfers look good in final match<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
golf team will be making its final<lb/>
appearance in the Southern Con-<lb/>
ference golf championships April<lb/>
25-27. at tnt Country Club of<lb/>
South Carolina in Florence.<lb/>
The Pirates have not won a<lb/>
golf title since 1972, that being<lb/>
one of three league titles for East<lb/>
Carolina. With ECU leaving the<lb/>
Southern this year, this is the last<lb/>
chance to regain the title.<lb/>
"Our play has been so incon-<lb/>
sistent this year that our finish in<lb/>
the championship is really a big<lb/>
Women win Invitational<lb/>
East Carolina's women got<lb/>
back on the winning track Satur-<lb/>
day by defeating UNC in the<lb/>
South Carolina Women's Track<lb/>
Invitational.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates won only one<lb/>
event but managed to scrape<lb/>
together 115 points to win the<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
ECU's sole victory came in the<lb/>
800 meter event. Kathy Smith<lb/>
took the honor, winning with a<lb/>
time of 222.5. Two other Pirates<lb/>
placed in the competition, with<lb/>
Barbara Brantley taking second<lb/>
and Joy Forbes placing.fourth.<lb/>
Debbie Freeman was second<lb/>
in the javelin toss with a throw of<lb/>
1031?. Debbie Knight took third<lb/>
with a 98.0 throw.<lb/>
In the discus event, Linda<lb/>
McLellan was second with 116.2.<lb/>
Freeman was third at 11512.<lb/>
Kathy Addison took second in<lb/>
the 1500 meter event with a time<lb/>
of 5:10.07. Linda Christian was<lb/>
third with a time of 5:30.0.<lb/>
Other Pirates placing in the<lb/>
invitational were: Freeman, who<lb/>
was third in the shot; Cassy<lb/>
Jones, third in the 400 meter;<lb/>
Janette Woodfield, third in the<lb/>
200 meter; and Carolyn Moss,<lb/>
sixth in the 100 meter.<lb/>
Pirate coach Laurie Arrants<lb/>
felt her team performed extreme-<lb/>
ly well in the meet, especially<lb/>
despite adverse weather condi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
question mark said coach Mac<lb/>
McLendon. "If we play near our<lb/>
potential we certainly will be in<lb/>
the thick of things<lb/>
Defending champion Furman<lb/>
University and newcomer Mar-<lb/>
shall University are tabbed by<lb/>
McLendon as the favorites.<lb/>
Seven Pirates will represent<lb/>
East Carolina over the 7,000 yard,<lb/>
par 72 course. They are: Keith<lb/>
Hiller, Mike Buckmaster, David<lb/>
Brogan, DonnieOwens, Phil Bell,<lb/>
Frank Acker, and John Abraham.<lb/>
Brogan leads the team in<lb/>
stroke average with a 76.3 mark.<lb/>
He's followed by Hiller at 77.3,<lb/>
Acker at 78.8 and Buckmaster at<lb/>
79.1. As a team, the Pirates<lb/>
av found.<lb/>
As of Monday, the Pirates<lb/>
placed third in the overall team<lb/>
standings with a 383. Marshall<lb/>
had the lead with 372, followed by<lb/>
Furman with 373. Following ECU<lb/>
are Appalachian, WCU, Citadel,<lb/>
VMI, Davidson, and W &amp; M.<lb/>
Bobby Bumgardener of Fur-<lb/>
man was the Monday's individual<lb/>
leader with a 70. There was a<lb/>
four-way tie for second at 72.<lb/>
Pirate Mike Buckmaster<lb/>
scored a 73 for the day, while<lb/>
fellow Buc Frank Acker held<lb/>
down a 75.<lb/>
With seven Pirates breaking<lb/>
80, coach Mac McLendon feels<lb/>
his team played "their best round<lb/>
of golf all year<lb/>
Pirates take two from Indians<lb/>
By JEFF BROOKS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina's high-flying<lb/>
baseball team got back into the<lb/>
win column over the weekend<lb/>
with a doubleheader sweep over<lb/>
William and Mary. Earlier the<lb/>
Pirates had lost to Pembroke<lb/>
State Wednesday, and dropped a<lb/>
heartbreaker Thursday to UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
Pembroke State put together<lb/>
nine runs in the seventh inning to<lb/>
defeat the Pirates 12-8 at Pem-<lb/>
broke on Wednesday. Coming<lb/>
back home, the Pirates hosted the<lb/>
Seahawks of UNC-W in a Thurs-<lb/>
day afternoon game at Harrington<lb/>
field.<lb/>
Bobby Supple homered in the<lb/>
ninth inning to tie the game for<lb/>
the courageous Pirates, before<lb/>
UNC-W managed to puoh across<lb/>
a run in the tenth to take the<lb/>
game from ECU 4-3.<lb/>
The Bucs got back on track<lb/>
Saturday when they hosted the<lb/>
Indians of William and Mary in a<lb/>
twi-night doubleheader. Mickey<lb/>
Britt pitched brilliantly in the<lb/>
opener as the Pirates won 6-1.<lb/>
Eddie Gates and Raymie Styons<lb/>
led the hitting attack for the<lb/>
Pirates in helping Britt to his<lb/>
eighth victory of the year against<lb/>
no losses. Gates went two fa<lb/>
three including a first inning<lb/>
homer, while Styons went two for<lb/>
two.<lb/>
Pete Conaty ran his record to<lb/>
7-2 as the Pirates took the<lb/>
nightcap 5-3. The game was<lb/>
interrupted by a power failure in<lb/>
the third inning, but when the<lb/>
lights came back on, the Pirates<lb/>
took command. Sonny Wooten<lb/>
had two hits for the Bucs, driving<lb/>
in two runs while Scott Seydon<lb/>
went two for three and drove in<lb/>
the winning run.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057126_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>