<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057127_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 12 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Vol. 52, No. 49<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
28 April 1977<lb/>
Moore: Harmful effects of porno<lb/>
depend on the individual's use<lb/>
By BILL HARRINGTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If pornography has any harm-<lb/>
ful effects on society as a whole, it<lb/>
is yet to be scientifically proven,<lb/>
according to several ECU pro-<lb/>
fessors.<lb/>
The number of magazines<lb/>
portraying nudity and sex has<lb/>
been on the increase in this<lb/>
community over the last few<lb/>
years.<lb/>
An ever increasing amount of<lb/>
exposure is given to the genitalia<lb/>
of both sexes in the supposedly<lb/>
"soft-core" publications such as<lb/>
Playboy and Penthouse. Con-<lb/>
cerned citizens wonder both<lb/>
where it will stop, and what effect<lb/>
this type of literature has on<lb/>
society.<lb/>
"The effect of pornographic<lb/>
material depends on the indivi-<lb/>
dual who uses the material said<lb/>
Dr. Charles Moore, ECU Be-<lb/>
havioral scientist.<lb/>
Moore said no proof exists to<lb/>
link pornography with sexual<lb/>
deviance or sex related crime.<lb/>
ECU sociologist Dr. Martin<lb/>
Zusman agreed with Moore.<lb/>
"There is absolutely no evi-<lb/>
dence that it (pornography) has a<lb/>
negative effect,on society said<lb/>
Zusman.<lb/>
"This does not deny the fact<lb/>
that some individual may read<lb/>
pornography and commit a<lb/>
rape he added.<lb/>
According to Zusman, a large<lb/>
amount of exposure to porno-<lb/>
graphic material results in the<lb/>
user losing interest with the<lb/>
subject.<lb/>
"What the studies show is<lb/>
that a massive amount of porno-<lb/>
graphy eventually turns off a<lb/>
massive number of people<lb/>
Zusman said.<lb/>
This has proven to be the case<lb/>
in Denmark, a country where<lb/>
pornography and obscenity laws<lb/>
are much more liberal than in the<lb/>
U.S.<lb/>
A claim often made by the<lb/>
producers of pornography is that<lb/>
it has an inherent therapeutic<lb/>
value. This has not been proven,<lb/>
said Dr. Moore.<lb/>
"Therapeutically, the use of<lb/>
pornographic material to height-<lb/>
en sexual arousal is usually not<lb/>
indicated said Moore.<lb/>
"It's sometimes used as a<lb/>
treatment, but rarely so he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Masters and Johnson don't<lb/>
ever use explicit material like<lb/>
films as therapy<lb/>
Another claim is ,that the<lb/>
availability of pornographic<lb/>
materials acts as a safety valve for<lb/>
such persons as voyeurs.<lb/>
This theory is not valid,<lb/>
according to Dr. Moore.<lb/>
"I can't buy that he said.<lb/>
Both Moore and Zusman<lb/>
stressed the fact that they were<lb/>
commenting on the known<lb/>
scientific effect of pornography on<lb/>
society and not on any moral or<lb/>
legal consequences.<lb/>
The legality of pornography<lb/>
and its corresponding legal defin-<lb/>
ition involve complex questions<lb/>
See PORNO, pg. 6)<lb/>
Moonpie Festival called huge success<lb/>
with 8,000 participating in activities<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
According to Student Union<lb/>
President Barry Robinson, last<lb/>
week's Moonpie Festival was a<lb/>
huge success.<lb/>
"The Moonpie Festival's suc-<lb/>
cess exceeded even our wildest<lb/>
expectations. Judging from pre-<lb/>
liminary estimates, approximate-<lb/>
ly 8,000 participated in the<lb/>
various activities said Robin-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
"We were very fortunate to<lb/>
receive the news coverage we did.<lb/>
Several area newspapers and<lb/>
television stations covered the<lb/>
events, and it was sent out over<lb/>
the UPI wire service.<lb/>
"Because this year's festival<lb/>
was so successful, members of<lb/>
next year's Union have decided to<lb/>
continue presenting some sort of<lb/>
spring festival next year.<lb/>
"I'm sorry to report we have<lb/>
no Moonpies left, but I would like<lb/>
to thank Chattanooga Bakeries<lb/>
for giving us 4,000 Moonpies free<lb/>
of charge Robinson added.<lb/>
Robinson saia tne oniy nega-<lb/>
tive aspect of the festival was the<lb/>
rained-out "Happy the Man"<lb/>
concert on the mall.<lb/>
"Briefly recapping the week's<lb/>
events, our own Bill Martin,<lb/>
chairperson of the Travel com-<lb/>
mittee, won the Moonpie eating<lb/>
contest, and the ECU jazz band<lb/>
was selected as the official band<lb/>
of the Moonpie Festival<lb/>
Entertainment for the entire<lb/>
week cost approximately $2,000,<lb/>
with the Schlitz Movie Orgy being .<lb/>
the most popular event.<lb/>
"The concert on the mall<lb/>
would have been the most<lb/>
popular had it not been rained<lb/>
out. Other events included the<lb/>
Moonpie Olympics, a sculpture<lb/>
contest using Moonpies instead of<lb/>
conventional sculpting material, a<lb/>
Moonpie eating contest, and<lb/>
other assorted demented action<lb/>
Several letters were received<lb/>
from invited oelebrities express-<lb/>
ing their regret at being unable<lb/>
to attend, including Ted<lb/>
Kennedy, Ann Landers, the<lb/>
Carters, Barbara Jordan, and<lb/>
Bob Hope.<lb/>
No answers were received<lb/>
from Pope Paul or Queen Eliza-<lb/>
beth II.<lb/>
"The purpose of the Moonpie<lb/>
Festival was to try and prolong<lb/>
the spirit of Easter break another<lb/>
week, and I think we fulfilled our<lb/>
promise of 'A Moonpie in Every<lb/>
Mouth Robinson said.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD,EBONY HERALD<lb/>
New editors discuss future plans, ideas<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Kim Johnson and Tim Jones<lb/>
were named FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
and EBONY HERALD editors,<lb/>
respectively, in a Communica-<lb/>
tions Board meeting Wednesday,<lb/>
April 20.<lb/>
Johnson, afirst-quar,ter senior<lb/>
history major, plans to make<lb/>
some minor style changes, but<lb/>
nothing major.<lb/>
"FOUNTAINHEAD has final -<lb/>
Kim Johnson<lb/>
Tim Jones<lb/>
ly acquired a professional ap-<lb/>
pearance in layout and style, and<lb/>
I want to keep it that way said<lb/>
Johnson.<lb/>
"I think the paper this year<lb/>
has been the best yet. I hope we<lb/>
can keep the quality of the paper<lb/>
next year up to the point it is<lb/>
now<lb/>
Johnson, a member of the<lb/>
Society for Collegiate Journalists,<lb/>
is interested in expanding the<lb/>
feature writing of the paper.<lb/>
"I don't think it's ever<lb/>
reached its potential. Good fea-<lb/>
ture articles can add a lot of value<lb/>
and interest to a paper she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Johnson plans to establish<lb/>
editorial conferences bi-weekly.<lb/>
In these conferences, the<lb/>
editorial staff would discuss the<lb/>
paper's view on certain issues.<lb/>
 I want my editorials to be the<lb/>
voice of the paper, and not just<lb/>
my own Johnson said.<lb/>
Concerning independence,<lb/>
Johnson said, "I'm very interest-<lb/>
ed in looking into it<lb/>
Johnson also wants to hire<lb/>
more salaried staff writers.<lb/>
"A set salary would provide<lb/>
incentive, as well as responsibi-<lb/>
lity she said.<lb/>
Johnson said she doesn't<lb/>
think the paper can be increased<lb/>
to print three times a week.<lb/>
"We just don't have the staff<lb/>
to do it she said. "And I doubt<lb/>
there would be enough money for<lb/>
it, either<lb/>
The former co-news editor<lb/>
plans to keep salaries the same.<lb/>
Tim Jones, a junior English<lb/>
major, has added a layout editor<lb/>
and changed feature editors in<lb/>
making changes on the EBONY<lb/>
HERALD staff.<lb/>
"I'm trying to start an edit-<lb/>
orial page, and I'm encouraging<lb/>
See EDITORS, pg. 3)<lb/>
o<lb/>
s<lb/>
ECUs LA TEST ERECTION in<lb/>
front of Joyner Library. This<lb/>
flagpole will soon fly Old Glory<lb/>
unless some campus climbing<lb/>
connoisseur heated by spring<lb/>
fever beats the Stars and<lb/>
Stripes up the staff.<lb/>
Photo by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
<pb facs="00057127_0002"/><lb/>
wmmmmmmmmmmmKmmmmamm<lb/>
-3s?s'v'SWSSlw�<lb/>
������ Flashes<lb/>
Phi Alpha<lb/>
FB free flick Free bowling<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
28 April 1977<lb/>
Beta Kappa Opera theatre<lb/>
There will be a Lecture-<lb/>
Business meeting of Beta Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Wed April 27, 1977 at<lb/>
400 p.m. at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center room 221. Topic of lecture<lb/>
will be Careers In Banking.<lb/>
Car wash<lb/>
The Tn-Sigma sorority is<lb/>
sponsoring a car wash on Satur-<lb/>
day, April 30th, at the Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Exxon station, from 9-3. $1.00 per<lb/>
car.<lb/>
I.V. picnic<lb/>
Due to the picnic this Sunday,<lb/>
I.V. will not have its regular<lb/>
Sunday night meeting. The picnic<lb/>
will be at 2 o'clock at Green<lb/>
Springs Park.<lb/>
Give a heart<lb/>
The Alpha Phi'swill be selling<lb/>
lollipops April 25-29 for their<lb/>
national philanthropy the Heart<lb/>
Fund Project. The cost is only 20<lb/>
cents. Help the Alpha Phi's<lb/>
Give a heart!<lb/>
Car clinic<lb/>
The Student National Environ-<lb/>
mental Health Association will be<lb/>
sponsoring an automobile emis-<lb/>
sions clinic in conjunction with<lb/>
Eastern Lung Association. The<lb/>
clinic will be held at Pitt Plaza this<lb/>
Saturday, May 7th from 10:00<lb/>
a.m. to 4:00 p.m. We will be<lb/>
measuring levels of Carbon Mon-<lb/>
oxide and Hydrocarbons which<lb/>
are indicators of your cars'opera-<lb/>
ting condition. The clinic is<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
Model UN<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Model U.N. at 7 p.m. on April 28<lb/>
in 101-C Brewster. Interested<lb/>
persons are welcome to attend.<lb/>
Changed<lb/>
The phone number, for Pro-<lb/>
gram for Hearing Impaired Stu-<lb/>
dents has been changed to<lb/>
757-6729, A-209 Brewster Bldg.<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
There will be an important<lb/>
meeting of the ECU League of<lb/>
Scholars tonight at 730 p.m. in<lb/>
room 209 Austin. Elections for<lb/>
next year will be held, and final<lb/>
plans for scholarship weekend<lb/>
will be made at this meeting.<lb/>
Scholarship Weekend is April<lb/>
30-May 2. Please try to attend<lb/>
this important meeting.<lb/>
On May 6 and 7, Friday and<lb/>
Saturday nights, the East Caro-<lb/>
lina School of Music Opera<lb/>
Theatre will present an Evening<lb/>
of Gilbert and Sullivan at 8 p.m.<lb/>
ECU students are admitted with<lb/>
ID and there is a public donation<lb/>
of 50 cents.<lb/>
Pub positions<lb/>
Applications fa Head Photo-<lb/>
grapher (Publications), and gen-<lb/>
eral manager of WECU are now<lb/>
being accepted by SGA Vice-<lb/>
President, Reed Warren. Last day<lb/>
to apply is May 3rd.<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Students who are to be<lb/>
initiated into Phi Eta Sigma are<lb/>
reminded to oome for the oere-<lb/>
mony to the Multipurpose Room,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, at<lb/>
7:15 p.m. on Thursday, May 5.<lb/>
Baha'is<lb/>
Baha'is meet every Monday<lb/>
evening at 300 Contentnea.<lb/>
Phone 758-8113 for further infor-<lb/>
mation.<lb/>
Big game<lb/>
The Pirates will play their<lb/>
biggest doubleheader of the<lb/>
season this Saturday at The<lb/>
Citadel. If ECU wins both games,<lb/>
they will take their first confer-<lb/>
ence championship since 1967.<lb/>
Everyone who is able is urged to<lb/>
go to Charleston, S.C to attend<lb/>
the game. If you can't, support<lb/>
your Pirates by listening to the<lb/>
game on WOOW 13. The games,<lb/>
broadcast by Jim Woods and Bill<lb/>
Tuoker, will begin Saturday night<lb/>
at 6.15.<lb/>
Wash ft sale<lb/>
There will be a Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
car wash on April 30th. It starts at<lb/>
10OX) a.m. Cars will be washed<lb/>
inside &amp; outside for only $1.00.<lb/>
Furniture, mattresses, clothes,<lb/>
etc will be available at the yard<lb/>
sale. The location for both is 409<lb/>
Elizabeth St. at the Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau fraternity house.<lb/>
Run-a-thon<lb/>
The Kappa Alpha Order will<lb/>
be sponsoring a run-a-thon for 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 America's No. 1<lb/>
crippling disease.<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta meeting,<lb/>
Weci May 3 at 7.030 in Richard<lb/>
C. Todd Room.<lb/>
Membership applications<lb/>
requirements: 1- Undergraduate,<lb/>
20 quarter hrs. Hist, 2.07 overall,<lb/>
3.1 Hist. 2-Graduate, oomplete Va<lb/>
residence requirements for mas-<lb/>
ter's degree, 3.50 quality point<lb/>
average or its equivalent. Pick up<lb/>
applications in History offioe and<lb/>
return them to Brewster A-316.<lb/>
Free concert<lb/>
The ECU Stage Band will<lb/>
perform in a free admission<lb/>
oonoert on Wednesday, May 11,<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The concert will be held in the<lb/>
Multi-Purpose Room on the first<lb/>
floor and begins at 8.00 p.m. Free<lb/>
refreshments will also be served.<lb/>
Phi Eta picnic<lb/>
The May meeting of Phi Eta<lb/>
Sigma, Freshman Honor Society,<lb/>
will take the form of a picnic on<lb/>
Tues May 10, at Green Springs<lb/>
Park, from 5.00-7.00 p.m. Mem-<lb/>
bers who wish to attend must sign<lb/>
up at Dr. Ebbs' office, 214<lb/>
Austin. All members are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Bullets fly<lb/>
The masked marauder will<lb/>
ride by the C.U. at high noon on<lb/>
Fri. April 29th. By-standers are<lb/>
advised to take care as bullets fly.<lb/>
Air quality<lb/>
Brock Nicholson, chief engi-<lb/>
neer of air quality control division<lb/>
of engineering management in<lb/>
the department of natural and<lb/>
economic resources will present a<lb/>
seminar on "Progress of the<lb/>
North Carolina Air Quality Pro-<lb/>
gram and the Prospects fa the<lb/>
Program in the Future April 29,<lb/>
1977 at 3O0 p.m. in room 201<lb/>
Flanagan building. Refreshments<lb/>
will be served in the conference<lb/>
room at 4.00 p.m.<lb/>
Dinner theatre<lb/>
The final Dinner Theatre<lb/>
production of ECU'S Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center will be A Spring-<lb/>
time Festival Of Musical Comedy<lb/>
Nostalgia.<lb/>
The production will run from<lb/>
Thursday, May 5, through Sun-<lb/>
day, May 8. Dinner for the first<lb/>
three performances will be served<lb/>
at 7 p.m with curtain time at 8<lb/>
p.m. The Sunday dinner begins at<lb/>
5 p.m. with performance at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Since seating at each Dinner<lb/>
Theatre performance is limited to<lb/>
100 places, early purchase of<lb/>
tickets is advised.<lb/>
Public tickets, at $7.50 each,<lb/>
are available from the ECU<lb/>
Central Ticket Offioe in Men Jen-<lb/>
hall Student Center, and must be<lb/>
purchased at least 24 hours in<lb/>
advance of the performance.<lb/>
Tickets fa Saturday a Sun-<lb/>
day must be purchased by 4 p.m<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
Ticket reservations and addi-<lb/>
tional infamatioi is available<lb/>
from the Central Ticket Office by<lb/>
telephone, 757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
Billions of years ago the first<lb/>
living cell was spawned in the<lb/>
primadial waste of the ancient<lb/>
eartha was it? There is actually<lb/>
a great deal of evidence indica-<lb/>
ting that life has not oome about<lb/>
by a natural process of evolution,<lb/>
but by the special acts of a<lb/>
supernatural Creata. The film<lb/>
"Footprints in Stone" deals with<lb/>
one aspect of this evidence:<lb/>
fossilized man and dinosaur in the<lb/>
same rock famatioi! You can see<lb/>
this fascinating faty-five minute<lb/>
film next Tuesday, May 3rd, at 7<lb/>
a 9 p.m. in Brewster B-102.<lb/>
"Footprints in Stone" is being<lb/>
sponsaed by The Faever Gener-<lb/>
ation an ECU Christian fellow-<lb/>
ship group.<lb/>
" Red Pin Bowling is fun and<lb/>
exciting and it's here. Find out<lb/>
what everybody's talking about.<lb/>
At Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
on Friday and Saturday nights<lb/>
beginning at 600 p.m you get<lb/>
the chance to bowl fa a free<lb/>
game. Make a strike with the red<lb/>
pin as the head pin and you win.<lb/>
Also, Sunday night isMoonlight<lb/>
Bowling" night. A free game is<lb/>
given away each hour between<lb/>
8O0 p.m. and 11.00 p.m. Come<lb/>
early if you want to get a lane<lb/>
cause you can't affad to miss it!<lb/>
Home Ec displays<lb/>
A group of displays by senia<lb/>
students in the ECU Department<lb/>
of Housing and Management will<lb/>
be on view in ECU'S Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, Thursday, April<lb/>
28.<lb/>
The displays, examples of<lb/>
housing class projects, include<lb/>
floa plans with furniture arran-<lb/>
gements, textile samples, wall<lb/>
elevations, renderings and flow<lb/>
charts.<lb/>
The public is invited to view<lb/>
the exhibition, which will ropen<lb/>
from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Multi-purpose<lb/>
Room.<lb/>
Free billiards<lb/>
If you have some time,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center has<lb/>
the game fa you. Evay person<lb/>
who plays billiards at the Billiards<lb/>
Center fa two a mae hours each<lb/>
week, Monday through Thursday,<lb/>
has a chance to win four free<lb/>
hours of playing time. Two<lb/>
numbers are drawn each week<lb/>
and eight free hours of billiards<lb/>
are given away. So, if you spend a<lb/>
lot of time playing billiards, don't<lb/>
faget to get your name in the pot;<lb/>
if you're usually an "hour-a-so"<lb/>
player, stick around fa awhile<lb/>
and try fa the prize; and, if you<lb/>
don't play very often here's your<lb/>
chance to win a lot of free practice<lb/>
time. Stop by the Billiards<lb/>
Centa, get the details, and have<lb/>
some fun.<lb/>
You can win eight free<lb/>
games of bowling. By being the<lb/>
"champion of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center's Mini-Bowling Tourna-<lb/>
ment you can walk away with it<lb/>
all. If you can bowl the highest<lb/>
3-game scae any time during oie<lb/>
week, you will qualify fa the<lb/>
roll-off on Monday, May 16. Four<lb/>
bowlers will qualify fa the roll-off<lb/>
and one of them oould be you!<lb/>
Drop by the Bowling Center fa<lb/>
mae details and while you're<lb/>
there, give it a try.<lb/>
ILLUMINA<lb/>
ECU'S third annual lllumina<lb/>
Art Show and Competition is on<lb/>
display in the Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center Gallery through April<lb/>
29.<lb/>
Ten categaies are featured in<lb/>
this year's show, including paint-<lb/>
ing, sculpture, photography and<lb/>
ceramics. One thousand dollars in<lb/>
prize money will be awarded,<lb/>
with $100 going to the Best-in-<lb/>
Show item.<lb/>
Best entries in each of the ten<lb/>
categaies will receive a $50 first<lb/>
prize, a $25 second prize and a<lb/>
$15 third prize. All entrants in the<lb/>
lllumina art show are currently<lb/>
enrolled ECU students.<lb/>
The gallery, located on the<lb/>
second floa of Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center is free and open to<lb/>
the public each day and evening.<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/>
Symposium<lb/>
The seventh annual Speech<lb/>
and Hearing Symposium at ECU<lb/>
has been set fa Friday, May 6,<lb/>
and will feature presentation by<lb/>
experts oi aspects of speech<lb/>
disaders.<lb/>
Several 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/>
professionals abreast of recent<lb/>
developments in the field of<lb/>
speech and hearing sciences.<lb/>
<lb/>
Chapt. X<lb/>
There will be an "Extrava-<lb/>
ganza" on Monday, May 2nd<lb/>
from 800 untilat Chapter Ten.<lb/>
Doa prizes to be given away<lb/>
every 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 50 cents at the doa.<lb/>
Talent show S.0J.LS.<lb/>
The Gammettes of Sigma<lb/>
Gamma Rho Saaity will be<lb/>
spaisaing a Talent Show. All<lb/>
persons interested in displaying<lb/>
their talents should oontact Joyce<lb/>
Mourning at 758-8831.<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/>
Sponsaed by S.O.U.L.S.<lb/>
 iSgsj<lb/>
<pb facs="00057127_0003"/><lb/>
Will be offered in Fall<lb/>
28 April 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Pag 3<lb/>
Writing major in the making<lb/>
SCJ inductions Sunday<lb/>
By DEBblE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
Members of the ECU English<lb/>
Department have been working<lb/>
all year to develop a much needed<lb/>
writing major to be included in<lb/>
the 1977-78 catalogue.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the new B.A.<lb/>
Degree in English with a Concen-<lb/>
tration in Writing did not appear<lb/>
in the list of courses this spring,<lb/>
but it will be offered in the fall.<lb/>
The writing program is de-<lb/>
signed for student? who want to<lb/>
become professional writers.<lb/>
Early in the Spring Quarter<lb/>
the university committees gave<lb/>
the final seal of approval to the<lb/>
new degree.<lb/>
Soon after the action took<lb/>
place, student response was<lb/>
markedly enthusiastic, according<lb/>
to Dr. Sally Brett of the ECU<lb/>
English Department who chaired<lb/>
the development oommittee.<lb/>
"The program hasn't been<lb/>
advertised and we're not in the<lb/>
1977-78 catalogue, but still we<lb/>
have students showing up who<lb/>
want to enter the new degree<lb/>
program. They even call it by the<lb/>
correct full name, not 'Writing<lb/>
Program' as we do remarked<lb/>
one professor.<lb/>
According to Brett, ttie stu-<lb/>
dent interest was one of the<lb/>
primary reasons for the develop-<lb/>
ment of the degree.<lb/>
"For many years numerous<lb/>
prospective students have asked<lb/>
me if we had a writing program in<lb/>
the English Department said<lb/>
Dr. Erwin Hester, English De-<lb/>
partment Chairman.<lb/>
"That and the fact that<lb/>
universities and colleges across<lb/>
the nation have reported high<lb/>
interest in and considerable suc-<lb/>
cess with such programs,<lb/>
prompted us to oonsider design-<lb/>
ing a degree in Writing Hester<lb/>
added.<lb/>
EDITORS<lb/>
Continued from pg. 1<lb/>
students to write to the paper<lb/>
said Jones.<lb/>
Jones intends to broaden the<lb/>
news content, and oover more of<lb/>
the Greenville area.<lb/>
The EBONY HERALD has not<lb/>
been hurt financially this year,<lb/>
according to Jones.<lb/>
"As far as I know, there have<lb/>
been no budget cuts of the<lb/>
EBONY HERALD said Jones.<lb/>
"It seemed to operate pretty<lb/>
well on the money appropriated<lb/>
this year<lb/>
Jones, former news editor,<lb/>
would like to print twice a month.<lb/>
He would also like to see the<lb/>
EBONY HERALD have an office,<lb/>
but since the EBONY HERALD<lb/>
uses FOUNTAINHEAD equip-<lb/>
ment, it might pose a problem.<lb/>
Jones said he would like to<lb/>
print articles that relate to whites,<lb/>
also.<lb/>
"Hopefully, at the end of my<lb/>
term, there will be more people<lb/>
with journalism experience said<lb/>
Jones.<lb/>
Jones said this has been their<lb/>
best year so far.<lb/>
MYRTLE BEACH<lb/>
Full time pay, part time hours-<lb/>
Work public relations in the<lb/>
sun for $200.00 plus a week.<lb/>
Send resume plus photo to:<lb/>
Country Club Villas<lb/>
P.O. Box 2588<lb/>
Myrtle Beach,S.C. 29571<lb/>
UNICORN<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
<lb/>
A Different Kind<lb/>
of Animal"<lb/>
Now Serving<lb/>
Breakfast 6:30 � 10am<lb/>
Dinner 5 �11pm<lb/>
Located on Memorial Drive<lb/>
Beside Camelot Inn.<lb/>
Students who enter tne pro-<lb/>
gram will take an equal number<lb/>
(18 semester hours) of hours in<lb/>
writing and literature, in addition<lb/>
to the General College and<lb/>
language requirements for the<lb/>
A.B. degree, according to Brett.<lb/>
There are nine writing<lb/>
courses, including an introduct-<lb/>
ory and an advanced course in<lb/>
poetry, fiction and non-fiction<lb/>
writing, editing and abstracting,<lb/>
and writing for business and<lb/>
industry.<lb/>
The ninth course is a practi-<lb/>
cum in which students gain<lb/>
academic credit for actual job<lb/>
experience in various fields of<lb/>
writing, said Brett.<lb/>
Sixteen outstanding campus<lb/>
journalists will be inducted into<lb/>
the Society for Collegiate Journa-<lb/>
lists, the national honorary jour-<lb/>
nalism fraternity. The induction<lb/>
will take place Sunday, May 1, in<lb/>
Brewster B-102, at 4 p.m.<lb/>
The public is nvited.<lb/>
Following the induction ritual,<lb/>
Dr. John M. Howell, vice-<lb/>
chancellor for academic affairs,<lb/>
will speak. A brief social<lb/>
hour, under the direction of<lb/>
Monika Sutherland, will follow.<lb/>
The following persons will be<lb/>
inducted: Cindy Broome, Kyle<lb/>
Campbell, Michael Futch,<lb/>
Martica Griffin, Debbie Jackson,<lb/>
Jack Lail, Kurk Hickman, Larry<lb/>
Lieberman, Sue Ellen McLeod,<lb/>
Janet Pope, Jessica Scarengella,<lb/>
Neil Sessoms, Bernard Smith,<lb/>
Barry Solomon, Elizabeth<lb/>
Williams and Kay Williams.<lb/>
Dr. Sally Brett of the English<lb/>
Department will receive an<lb/>
honorary membership.<lb/>
MOT<lb/>
Good Things<lb/>
For Gentle People<lb/>
318 Evans St. Mail<lb/>
752-3815<lb/>
THE IRON HORSE<lb/>
TRADING COMPANY<lb/>
Fine Gold<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Silver Jewelry<lb/>
Top of the Mall<lb/>
301 S. Evans Greenville<lb/>
752-2188<lb/>
�<lb/>
K�nt�rk4 fried Chiektn<lb/>
America's<lb/>
Country Good<lb/>
Meal<lb/>
MONTH OF APRIL<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
2-Piece Combination Dinner<lb/>
with slaw or creamed potatoes,<lb/>
and roll all for<lb/>
99<lb/>
2 Locations : 600 S.W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By-Pass) Dine in or ,<lb/>
Phone 756-6434 take out<lb/>
2905 E. 5th St. Take out only<lb/>
Phone 752-5184<lb/>
Open: Sunaay-Thursday 11 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
Friday &amp; Saturday 11 a.m10 p.m.<lb/>
"Rs fingerlickirigood<lb/>
Come in and visit and bring<lb/>
your friends<lb/>
r<lb/>
I 50 I<lb/>
I COUPON I<lb/>
I $2.00 Purchase �<lb/>
THE GREENERY<lb/>
752-1303<lb/>
Located behind Headstrong in The New University Arcade.<lb/>
The newest Plant Store in Greenville and the closest<lb/>
to campus. We feature house plants and accessories at very<lb/>
reasonable prices.<lb/>
3"plantsfrom75<lb/>
5" plants from $1.49<lb/>
10 Opening Special<lb/>
10"Green Spider Plants $7.99<lb/>
�an<lb/>
<pb facs="00057127_0004"/><lb/>
HMMM �: X<lb/>
ditonals<lb/>
Page4<lb/>
April 1977<lb/>
Paper needs professional<lb/>
Hoping to insure its continued financial integrity,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD wishes to commend the Student<lb/>
Government Association Legislature for its valuable<lb/>
legislation this year and beckons that branch of SGA<lb/>
to consider rationally a request from the student<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
In October the legislature appropriated $56,710.00 to<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD for its operating expenses this<lb/>
year. SGA also approved the addition of a full-time<lb/>
professional secretary to the staff. Her job was to do<lb/>
routine secretarial work for the newspaper staff,set<lb/>
copy on the composing machine and act as<lb/>
receptionist for the other publications.<lb/>
In January the student business manager of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD resigned. At the time the<lb/>
collection of advertising revenues was running way<lb/>
behind normal. The Editorial Board of the paper<lb/>
determined that to hire another student business<lb/>
manager would probably only prolong our problems<lb/>
with non-payment from advertisers. Since there was<lb/>
no Communications Board in existence then, the<lb/>
paper secured the permission of the SGA Treasurer<lb/>
to shift with a savings to staff salaries the business<lb/>
duties to the full-time secretary.<lb/>
The results have been tremendous. For the first<lb/>
time ever, we now have a staffer who can assure that<lb/>
bills, both ours?nd those of our advertisers, are paid<lb/>
on time. The paper has been able to budget its<lb/>
revenue much more wisely. And, that person is here<lb/>
during business hours to take messages and<lb/>
classified ads, which, by the way, are now free to<lb/>
ECU students.<lb/>
At the next meeting of the legislature we will<lb/>
have introduced a bill calling for a shift within the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD budget to maintain this position<lb/>
until next October when we will request a new<lb/>
budget. This immediate request calls for no new<lb/>
money from SGA, and its denial could end up costing<lb/>
the paper-and SGA-lost ad revenues amounting to<lb/>
hundreds of dollars.<lb/>
With this line-item change FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
should be able to operate until October with no<lb/>
additional funds from student government. Subtract<lb/>
the nearly $30,000 in ad money we anticipate<lb/>
collecting ana you end up with our net use of student<lb/>
fees for one full year$26,710.<lb/>
'<lb/>
Fountainhead<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 EditorAnne Hogge<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association<lb/>
of ECU and is distributed each Tuesday and Thursday during<lb/>
the school year, weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions:$10.00 annually for non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
0<lb/>
McyGene we donf haue am soccer crew.<lb/>
Lacrosse .basebau or tsKeri-MlTSflPiS<lb/>
rOnJTi<lb/>
Students not first with'kingpin'Sullivan<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
They call this democracy. No<lb/>
way. There are a few people who<lb/>
have run the student government<lb/>
at East Carolina during the past<lb/>
year and they don't want it to<lb/>
change.<lb/>
Tim Sullivan, you say that<lb/>
your slogan is "Students First<lb/>
Well the students voted your can<lb/>
out of office and you hate it. What<lb/>
are you. a damn power monger?<lb/>
The many people who have<lb/>
crossed your path this year would<lb/>
attest to that whole-heartedly.<lb/>
Let us enlighten the students<lb/>
on your political dealings. Last<lb/>
summer, a hall advisor in Scott<lb/>
Dorm (the place you resided<lb/>
during summer school) approach-<lb/>
ed you about the possibilities of<lb/>
the "hill boys" using a bus for a<lb/>
weekend trip to the beach. You<lb/>
asked him could he guarantee you<lb/>
the "hill vote" in the next<lb/>
election. Need I say more? You<lb/>
have proven that everything you<lb/>
do for some group or person is<lb/>
politically motivated.<lb/>
Why did you fire John Jones<lb/>
last fall? Could it be that he was<lb/>
getting ready to bring charges up<lb/>
against you for the $26.98 you did<lb/>
not return to the student fund?<lb/>
When FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
started questioning you on certain<lb/>
things you did politically earlier<lb/>
this year, you hired a hatchet-<lb/>
man, Kent Johnson, to do your<lb/>
dirty work for you. Now, admit it,<lb/>
Johnson was not interested in in-<lb/>
ternational student affairs. If he<lb/>
was, he would not have resigned<lb/>
after you were beaten.<lb/>
But, the Kingpin still has his<lb/>
allies in the SGA. Numero uno<lb/>
happens to be Ricky Price,<lb/>
Speaker of the Legislature. Price<lb/>
has run the legislature like a<lb/>
"kangaroo court" for the last two<lb/>
weeks. There is no democracy or<lb/>
parliamentary procedure being<lb/>
shown by the person who is<lb/>
thought of as being the leader of<lb/>
the legislature.<lb/>
Kingpin, you appointed the<lb/>
elections committee which over-<lb/>
saw the elections. You did not<lb/>
want there to be any runoffs until<lb/>
you lost by five votes. Now you<lb/>
are the one crying foul<lb/>
And talk about campaign<lb/>
violations. The reason Sessoms<lb/>
and Warren won was because<lb/>
they went out and saw the<lb/>
students while you were inter-<lb/>
rupting classes with your visits.<lb/>
We think the students of this<lb/>
university should find out which<lb/>
legislators are joining the Sulli-<lb/>
van-Price party and vote their<lb/>
cans out of office next fall. You<lb/>
and all of your cohorts have<lb/>
wasted time you could have been<lb/>
using to make laws. That's what<lb/>
the legislature's job is.<lb/>
Greg Pingston, last year's<lb/>
vice-president, put it best when<lb/>
he said that Ricky Price should<lb/>
resign to end the political hazing<lb/>
you have caused, Kingpin, so the<lb/>
legislature can start doing their<lb/>
job.<lb/>
Students that are bitohin<lb/>
M ichael Owens<lb/>
Alvin Frazier<lb/>
Marty Stroud<lb/>
Scott Williams<lb/>
L.B. Simpson<lb/>
Terry Barbour<lb/>
DukeBoykin Jr.<lb/>
Larry Wheeler<lb/>
Sigma Nu claims uninvoivement<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I am writing this letter for<lb/>
one clear and simple reason, to<lb/>
emphasize Sigma Nu's Unin-<lb/>
voivement in SGA politics.<lb/>
There are some 45 members<lb/>
of the SOCIAL Fraternity, Sigma<lb/>
Nu. Each is an individual and has<lb/>
varied interests. We have people<lb/>
that are or have been involved in<lb/>
varsity sports, intramurals, the<lb/>
Student Union, FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HFAD.SGA, etc<lb/>
We have five members con-<lb/>
nected directly or indirectly with<lb/>
the SGA. Although some more<lb/>
people participated in the cam-<lb/>
paign, their participation ended<lb/>
election day.<lb/>
Sigma Nu is a social fraternity<lb/>
and therefore functions as one,<lb/>
not as some political club.<lb/>
I know everyone involved in<lb/>
the current controversy person-<lb/>
ally and feel the whole matter has<lb/>
degenerated to a childish scuffle.<lb/>
I'm not interested in belittling<lb/>
either party involved, rather I<lb/>
wish to present a view of the<lb/>
current heretofore unknown, or<lb/>
dreadfully misunderstood. That is<lb/>
Sigma Nu (except for the five<lb/>
involved in SGA) is not involved<lb/>
whatsoever in the current SGA<lb/>
controversy or related matters.<lb/>
The Sigma Nu's had rather be<lb/>
throwing waterballons at girls<lb/>
sunbathing in BIKINIS, than<lb/>
doing anything so childish as<lb/>
scuffling with the SGA. I invite<lb/>
anyone with any questionj (pre-<lb/>
ferably female) to stop by the<lb/>
house and we' II discuss them.<lb/>
Kirby Harris<lb/>
P.S. BYOB<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057127_0005"/><lb/>
2BAprH1�77 FOUNTAINHEAD P�Q� 5<lb/>
Trustees forsake minor money sports<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I'm writing this letter in<lb/>
response to the recent action<lb/>
taken by the Ad Hoc Committee<lb/>
of the Board of Trustees. They<lb/>
voted this past weekend to<lb/>
abolish the varsity soccer pro-<lb/>
gram here at ECU. It seems that<lb/>
the Board of Trustees wants the<lb/>
fate of the soccer program to be<lb/>
the same as that of the lacrosse<lb/>
and crew programs. It seems to<lb/>
be the vogue to do away with the<lb/>
so called "minor sports" one by<lb/>
one.<lb/>
When you look at tbe budget<lb/>
of the soccer program, one has to<lb/>
keep from laughing. Our budget<lb/>
ECU means BIGness<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
One continually hears that<lb/>
ECU is the third biggest school in<lb/>
the state and that Brewster<lb/>
building isoneof the BIGGEST in<lb/>
the nation. And that the school is<lb/>
building a BIG name with its BIG<lb/>
football program and now they<lb/>
have to have a BIGGER stadium<lb/>
to seat BIGGER crowds. So they<lb/>
make a BIG hike in fees, and even<lb/>
worse cut funds for certain<lb/>
"small" sports on campus.<lb/>
J.P. Swisher<lb/>
is now only around $4,500 out of a<lb/>
total athletic budget of around<lb/>
$800,000. Most of this money is<lb/>
for traveling expenses. We are<lb/>
the only men's sport that does not<lb/>
give scholarship money. Our<lb/>
budget is only a drop in the<lb/>
bucket compared to the whole<lb/>
athletic budget.<lb/>
You might even argue that we<lb/>
haven't done as well as other<lb/>
sports. This might be true but you<lb/>
have to look a little deeper. Two<lb/>
years ago our team was ranked<lb/>
10th in the south. We also had<lb/>
the best team in the school's<lb/>
history. We did all this with little<lb/>
support from anyone.<lb/>
Tom Long<lb/>
Coaches get bonus, but no soccer<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The Board of Trustees recent-<lb/>
ly decided that East Carolina can<lb/>
no longer afford to field the<lb/>
world's most popular sport,<lb/>
soccer. Soccer is the fastest<lb/>
growing sport in America but just<lb/>
as the sport is growing our<lb/>
progressive sports program de-<lb/>
cides that we can do without it.<lb/>
Our school can affcud to give<lb/>
all the football coaches a Two<lb/>
Thousand dollar bonus each but<lb/>
we can't spend Five Thousand on<lb/>
soccer, it would be too big a strain<lb/>
on our budget.<lb/>
I ask you the students can we<lb/>
really afford to be without a<lb/>
soccer team, can we afford to be<lb/>
the only major school in the state<lb/>
without 90ccer, can we go without<lb/>
the sport of the world? I don't<lb/>
think so. Please join in the fight to<lb/>
save soccer, let it be known how<lb/>
you feel, raise hell, soccer can be<lb/>
saved yet if you the students are<lb/>
behind the team.<lb/>
If you would like any more<lb/>
information about the death of<lb/>
our soccer program please contact<lb/>
Hall Bullock, 316 Umstead Dorm<lb/>
or call 752-8942. Your support will<lb/>
be greatly appreciated.<lb/>
One pissed Goalie,<lb/>
Hal N. Bullock<lb/>
Jim's<lb/>
SERV-A-SET<lb/>
T.V.<lb/>
C.B. HIFI � STEREO<lb/>
Guaranteed Repairs<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Installations<lb/>
CallJimorTommyat 756-7193<lb/>
Located At<lb/>
3103 S. Memorial Dr. Greenville, N.C.<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/>
Southern Pride Car Wash<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
Complete self-service car wash center<lb/>
Can even wash vans, boats, motorcycles, etc.<lb/>
Featuring wash, wax, tire cleaner, and<lb/>
super vacuums 25 cycles<lb/>
Open 24 hours �7 days a week<lb/>
Located at 1300 E. 10th St.<lb/>
(Beside Big Daddy's Chuck Wagon)<lb/>
Rick's Guitar Shop<lb/>
Announces SIDEWALKSALE<lb/>
Friday April 29<lb/>
10 A.M10 P.M.<lb/>
Overstocked items including<lb/>
guitars, banjos, and<lb/>
mandolins<lb/>
 price classic guitar sale<lb/>
Many items below cost<lb/>
Onedayonly<lb/>
Georgetowne Shoppes<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
THE BARN<lb/>
This Sunday May 1 st<lb/>
HAPPYHOUR2-3<lb/>
Super Grit Cowboy Band<lb/>
4-8<lb/>
W R Q R will be broadcasting live 5 � 7<lb/>
There will be 2 watches given<lb/>
away as door prizes<lb/>
(Across from Ventor's in Ayden)<lb/>
THE SEIKO QUARTZ<lb/>
PERPETUAL CALENDAR.<lb/>
Pre-programmed for leap years, 28,30<lb/>
and 31 day months until the year 2009.<lb/>
Model No.<lb/>
DK001M -$225.00.<lb/>
hARDLEX mar resist<lb/>
crystal, adjustable<lb/>
bracelet.<lb/>
Easy-to-read liquid crystal digits provide a<lb/>
continuous readout of hours, minutes, seconds�<lb/>
AM PM and day of the week. Push a button and<lb/>
the year, month and date appear.<lb/>
Both calendar and timekeeping functions can be<lb/>
read anytime�even in total darkness�thanks<lb/>
to Seiko's built-in illumination system.<lb/>
The Seiko Quartz Perpetual Calendar�an<lb/>
extraordinary combination of good looks and<lb/>
unparalleled accuracy that is changing the world's<lb/>
standard of accuracy. Seiko Quartz. $Q<lb/>
SEIKO<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers<lb/>
On the Mall Greenville<lb/>
758-2452<lb/>
"If it don't tick - tock to us<lb/>
M<lb/>
�HMMMMMH<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057127_0006"/><lb/>
�:��� �1-<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 28 April 1977<lb/>
Scholarship Weekend planned for ECU<lb/>
Approximately 100 high<lb/>
school juniors are expected to<lb/>
visit ECU this weekend.<lb/>
Scholarship Weekend, April<lb/>
30-May 2, will hopefully bring<lb/>
students to the highest level of<lb/>
academics to ECU, according to<lb/>
Dr. Charles Stevens, assistant<lb/>
dean in the ECU School of Music,<lb/>
who is in charge of the program.<lb/>
"The pur pose of the Weekend<lb/>
is to introduce them (the stu-<lb/>
dents) to ECU, both to the<lb/>
extracurricular activities and to<lb/>
academics said Stevens.<lb/>
He added that when the<lb/>
students send in their Student<lb/>
Response Forms they list three<lb/>
areas of interest. During the<lb/>
weekend they will have the<lb/>
opportunity to view these areas.<lb/>
"These are students that are<lb/>
the highest level students in the<lb/>
state he added.<lb/>
All nominees have a Prelimi-<lb/>
nary Scholastic Aptitude Test<lb/>
(PSAT) score of at least 1100.<lb/>
"We select 100 students from<lb/>
the state from approximately 800<lb/>
nominations from counselors ad<lb/>
principals<lb/>
Stevens said that many of the<lb/>
students who attend Scholarship<lb/>
Weekend later enroll at ECU.<lb/>
"We feel that the direct<lb/>
success of the program doesn't<lb/>
depend only on how many stu-<lb/>
dents come here later, but also on<lb/>
the public relations that they take<lb/>
back to their high schools<lb/>
Stevens said that in past years<lb/>
the selected students were<lb/>
seniors and that this is the seoond<lb/>
year that only juniors were<lb/>
selected.<lb/>
He added that the program is<lb/>
really too late in the year to<lb/>
benefit seniors, because most of<lb/>
them have decided on a college by<lb/>
this time.<lb/>
ECU Scholarship Weekend is<lb/>
an annual function and is directed<lb/>
by a 31-member committee com-<lb/>
prising faculty and staff mem-<lb/>
bers.<lb/>
In addition, a League of<lb/>
Scholars, consisting of three ECU<lb/>
Discount Drug Center<lb/>
Know Your Pharmacist<lb/>
He'd like you to discover the<lb/>
P"400 ways in which he can help.<lb/>
Fast Services, Discount Prices,<lb/>
High Quality Drugs.<lb/>
3 Locations<lb/>
2814 East lath St. Greenville Next to A&amp;P 758-2181<lb/>
1112 North GreeneSt. Greenville Next to Harris Super Mkt.<lb/>
752-8297<lb/>
1102 W. 3rd St. Ayden Harris Shopping Cir. 746-3824<lb/>
MONOGRAMMING<lb/>
1 DAY SERVICE<lb/>
CREATIVE HANDBAGS<lb/>
WEST END<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
I (E.C.U.<lb/>
Thurs A Special<lb/>
Apr 28 (jy2 price<lb/>
Eaze admission)<lb/>
Fri. Apr. 29<lb/>
MAYSON<lb/>
Sat. Apr. 30<lb/>
MAYSON<lb/>
ECU International Festival<lb/>
Sponsored by.<lb/>
Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures<lb/>
EattCarojinaUniyertit<lb/>
FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1977<lb/>
High School Student Competitions in French, German,<lb/>
Russian, Spanish: Poetry recitation, dramatic skits, talent<lb/>
(Schedule available Brewster A-427)<lb/>
9:00 A.M.<lb/>
9:00 A.M.<lb/>
Seminars<lb/>
The Art of BullfightingBrewster C-306<lb/>
Living and Studying AbroadBrewster C-302<lb/>
French Cooking Demonstration . . . Home Economics 132<lb/>
(Food 2)<lb/>
Composed Folk Music School of Music 105<lb/>
Discovering the French-speaking World . . .Brewster C-301 T a<lb/>
9:30 A.M. International exhibits open Wright Auditorium<lb/>
1 0:00 A.M. Seminars repeated<lb/>
0<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
)<lb/>
i<lb/>
Greenville City &amp; Campus Talent Show . Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Billy and Sandra Stinson (Guitar, Spanish &amp; French songs)<lb/>
Patricia Sullivan (French songs)<lb/>
Jeffrey Krantz (German songs)<lb/>
Dolly Mitchum and Michael Lee (Mexican regional dance)<lb/>
Donna Whitley (Arabic dance)<lb/>
Eastern Cotillion Dance Studio performance<lb/>
1 2:00 Noon One-act play - LA VENDABrewster C 103<lb/>
(Miguel de Unamuno)<lb/>
Presented by ECU students of Spanish<lb/>
1:30 P.M. AFTERNOON PROGRAMMendenhall Theatre<lb/>
Welcome by Chancellor Leo W. Jenkins<lb/>
"Aspects of International Communication<lb/>
Mr. Wilbert C. Petty Lectureperformance<lb/>
Program Policy Officer Mr. Stan Bumgarner<lb/>
United States Information Agency Guitarist and Visiting Artist<lb/>
Washington, D.C. Edgecombe Technical Institute<lb/>
Presentation of Awards<lb/>
students has an active part in<lb/>
implementing the program.<lb/>
These students, for the most part,<lb/>
have attended the weekend in<lb/>
past years.<lb/>
Events planned for the week-<lb/>
end include, recreational activi-<lb/>
ties, tours, films, a jazz concert,<lb/>
class visitation and academic<lb/>
interest discussion groups.<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins, ECU Chan-<lb/>
cellor, will address a banquet<lb/>
Sunday evening.<lb/>
PORNO<lb/>
Continued from pg. 1<lb/>
concerning freedom of expression<lb/>
and press and the Constitution's<lb/>
First Amendment.<lb/>
"The Supreme Court has held<lb/>
that if something is defined as<lb/>
being obscene, then it is not<lb/>
-jrotected by the First Amend-<lb/>
ment said Dr. John East, ECU<lb/>
professor of political science.<lb/>
Dr. East admitted there are<lb/>
problems involved in producing a<lb/>
legal definition of obscenity and<lb/>
pornography, but said this pro-<lb/>
blem is secondary to the moral<lb/>
questions involved.<lb/>
"The legal problems, though<lb/>
important, are not nearly as<lb/>
important as the effect on the<lb/>
morals of society he said.<lb/>
East said he believes that<lb/>
pornography should be more<lb/>
effectively controlled than it is.<lb/>
"I think the line can be drawn,<lb/>
ought to be drawn, and personal-<lb/>
ly, I think it should be more<lb/>
stringently drawn he said.<lb/>
Dr. East said he resents the<lb/>
way sex is portrayed in most<lb/>
pornographic materials.<lb/>
"I'm not a prude on sex he<lb/>
said. "I am opposed to the way<lb/>
fanatics destroy it and display it.<lb/>
"I think pornography reduces<lb/>
the sexual function to that of an<lb/>
animal he added.<lb/>
"It is a key sign of uninhibited<lb/>
hedonism in society, in particular<lb/>
with regard to the American<lb/>
family he concluded.<lb/>
While scientific data proving a<lb/>
connection between moral<lb/>
changes in society due to ex-<lb/>
posure to pornography have not<lb/>
yet been conclusive, studies have<lb/>
shown that pornography ap-<lb/>
parently has no sociologically or<lb/>
psychologically ill effects on<lb/>
society.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
NEEDS WRITERS<lb/>
AND PRODUCTION<lb/>
WORKERS. DROP<lb/>
BY OR CALL<lb/>
757-6366.<lb/>
Fo<lb/>
sp<lb/>
Morel<lb/>
40 high s<lb/>
Friday, A<lb/>
annual Int<lb/>
Sponsc<lb/>
partment<lb/>
and Liters<lb/>
feature j<lb/>
lectures,<lb/>
own forek<lb/>
stration ol<lb/>
competiti<lb/>
students c<lb/>
German a<lb/>
At13C<lb/>
Leo Jenkii<lb/>
val's aft<lb/>
Mendenha<lb/>
ducethefe<lb/>
C. Petty, F<lb/>
for Africa<lb/>
Agency, v<lb/>
Formei<lb/>
A<lb/>
ByMH<lb/>
Assista<lb/>
Flock 'n'<lb/>
ville has re<lb/>
name changi<lb/>
Now App<lb/>
has also ad<lb/>
innovative o<lb/>
consumer.<lb/>
"After fc<lb/>
Soul, I decide<lb/>
outdated j<lb/>
owner "Fran<lb/>
"At first<lb/>
ize in rock an<lb/>
scene has br<lb/>
record buyin<lb/>
"The nan<lb/>
limiting us<lb/>
The stor<lb/>
affiliations w<lb/>
Beatles' com<lb/>
Ltd.<lb/>
'Apple Fk<lb/>
tive feeling<lb/>
Ferree als<lb/>
name Peaeh<lb/>
chain based i<lb/>
Apple Flecor<lb/>
'ring<lb/>
Due to so<lb/>
vertising on a<lb/>
Ferree said it<lb/>
Records was i<lb/>
"A lot of<lb/>
know about it,<lb/>
the reaction<lb/>
good<lb/>
Ferree said I<lb/>
also due to a l<lb/>
wanted to try.<lb/>
is<lb/>
<pb facs="00057127_0007"/><lb/>
Foreign Language Dept.<lb/>
sponsors annual festival<lb/>
More than 2500 students from<lb/>
40 high schools will be at ECU<lb/>
Friday, April 29, attending ECU'S<lb/>
annual International Festival.<lb/>
Sponsored by the ECU De-<lb/>
partment of Foreign Languages<lb/>
and Literatures, the festival will<lb/>
feature seminars, illustrated<lb/>
lectures, meetings with ECU'S<lb/>
own foreign students, a demon-<lb/>
stration of French cooking, and<lb/>
competitions for high school<lb/>
students of the French, Spanish,<lb/>
German and Russian languages.<lb/>
At 1:30 p.m ECU Chancellor<lb/>
Leo Jenkins will open the festi-<lb/>
val's afternoon session in<lb/>
Mendenhall Theatre, and intro-<lb/>
duce the festival speaker, Wilbert<lb/>
C. Petty, Program Policy Officer<lb/>
for Africa, U.S. Information<lb/>
Agency, Washington, D.C.<lb/>
Petty's topic is "Aspects of<lb/>
International Communication<lb/>
His presentation will be followed<lb/>
by a lecture-performance of<lb/>
guitar music, given by Stan<lb/>
Bumgarner of Edgecornbe Tech-<lb/>
nical Institute, Tarboro.<lb/>
Morning events include<lb/>
lectures on "Discovering the<lb/>
French-speaking World by Dr.<lb/>
Monique Bras of N.C. Central<lb/>
University; "Composed Folk<lb/>
Music" by Dr. Clyde Hiss of the<lb/>
ECU School of M usic The Art of<lb/>
Bullfighting" by Dr. Joseph A.<lb/>
Fernandez of the ECU Spanish<lb/>
language and literature faculty;<lb/>
"Living and Studying Abroad<lb/>
by Dr. Robert Cramer, director of<lb/>
ECU'S Costa Rica Study Program<lb/>
and a demonstration of French<lb/>
cookery, by Gunter Strumpf of<lb/>
the ECU language faculty.<lb/>
Competitions include poetry<lb/>
contests, skit performances, dis-<lb/>
play booths and talent contests<lb/>
involving the music and dance of<lb/>
several nations.<lb/>
The visiting students will also<lb/>
be guests at the performance of a<lb/>
Spanish play presented by ECU<lb/>
Spanish language and literature<lb/>
students, and see several local<lb/>
musicians and dancers recreate<lb/>
art forms of various oountries.<lb/>
Performers are Billy<lb/>
and Sandra Stinson (guitar,<lb/>
Spanish and French songs),<lb/>
Patricia Sullivan (French songs),<lb/>
Jeffrey Krantz (German songs),<lb/>
Dolly Mitchum and Michael Lee<lb/>
(Mexican regional danoe), Donna<lb/>
Whitley (Arabic dance) and the<lb/>
Eastern Cotillion Dance Studio.<lb/>
COSTA RICA AND<lb/>
FRANCE are represented<lb/>
by Javier Blanco left and<lb/>
Josiane Bonnin, foreign<lb/>
scholarship students at<lb/>
East Carolina University,<lb/>
who will participate in the<lb/>
International Festival to be<lb/>
held Friday, April 29, at<lb/>
ECU- In addition to semi-<lb/>
nars and competitions in<lb/>
French, German, Russian<lb/>
and Spanish, a Greenville<lb/>
city and campus talent<lb/>
show will be presented at<lb/>
11.Wa.m. in Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
Formerly Rock 'n'Soul<lb/>
Apple offers album bargains<lb/>
By MICHAELFUTCH<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Rock 'n' Soul Inc. of Green-<lb/>
ville has recently undergone a<lb/>
name change.<lb/>
Now Apple Records, the store<lb/>
has also added some relatively<lb/>
innovative offers for the record<lb/>
consumer.<lb/>
"After four years of Rock 'n'<lb/>
Soul, I decided that the name was<lb/>
outdated said Apple Records'<lb/>
owner "Frank" Ferree.<lb/>
"At first I decided to special-<lb/>
ize in rock and soul. But the disco<lb/>
scene has brought on a different<lb/>
record buying audienoe.<lb/>
"The name Rock 'n' Soul was<lb/>
limiting us<lb/>
The store's name has no<lb/>
affiliations with the now defunct<lb/>
Beatles' company, Apple Corps<lb/>
Ltd.<lb/>
Apple Records gives a posi-<lb/>
tive feeling according to Ferree.<lb/>
Ferree also said he liked the<lb/>
name Peaches, a record store<lb/>
chain based in Atlanta. For him,<lb/>
Apple Records has the same<lb/>
'ring<lb/>
Due to some misleading ad-<lb/>
vertising on a local radio station,<lb/>
Ferree said many believed Apple<lb/>
Records was a new store.<lb/>
"A lot of people still don't<lb/>
know about it said Ferree. "But<lb/>
the reaction so far has been<lb/>
good<lb/>
Ferree said the changeover was<lb/>
also due to a lot of new things he<lb/>
wanted to try.<lb/>
The discount Top 100 is one<lb/>
such innovation. Any album in<lb/>
the Top 100 (aocording to national<lb/>
charts) will be sold at a discount<lb/>
price. Albums which sell at a<lb/>
$6.98 list price, will be sold in the<lb/>
store fa $4.99. Albums with a<lb/>
$7.98 list price, will be sold fa<lb/>
$5.99.<lb/>
"On special aders that we<lb/>
doi't stock at a $6.98 list price,<lb/>
we will ader and sell fa $3.99<lb/>
said Ferree.<lb/>
Ferree said the Top 100 bargain<lb/>
was due to the recent rise in<lb/>
album prices.<lb/>
"Since many companies have<lb/>
changed to a $7.98 list, and these<lb/>
albums are usually sold in staes<lb/>
at $6.99, people do a lot of<lb/>
thinking befae the purchase<lb/>
said Ferree.<lb/>
Ferree cited the new Fleetwood<lb/>
Mac's "Rumours" as a good<lb/>
example of the rising recad price<lb/>
dilemna which customers are<lb/>
faced with. He said the LP didn't<lb/>
sell very well until it was placed<lb/>
on sale fa $5.49. And then he<lb/>
said it really sold.<lb/>
Another stae innovation is<lb/>
the album rental offer. Customers<lb/>
can rent an album fa 24 hours fa<lb/>
hone recading. The cost fa<lb/>
album rental is $2.00 fa LP's<lb/>
up to a $9.98 list price and<lb/>
$3.00 fa higher priced LP's.<lb/>
The album also has to be returned<lb/>
to the stae in satisfactay oon-<lb/>
dition.<lb/>
Apple Recads is also buying<lb/>
used albums. But Ferree said his<lb/>
decision upon buying the albums<lb/>
will be based upon whether a not<lb/>
he can sell it.<lb/>
Apple Recads had discon-<lb/>
tinued the Rock 'n' Soul free<lb/>
album fa 12 LP receipts offer.<lb/>
"We have cut out the free fa<lb/>
12 and replaced it with the<lb/>
discount Top 100 said Ferree.<lb/>
"Although we're not offering<lb/>
the free fa 12 anymae, we're<lb/>
giving 50 centsaedit toward each<lb/>
receipt<lb/>
When asked what specific<lb/>
album has been his biggest seller,<lb/>
Ferreecited the 1975 "Fleetwood<lb/>
Mac He said th new<lb/>
"Rumours" should do even<lb/>
better.<lb/>
Ferree said Dan Fogleburg's<lb/>
"Souvenirs" has also been a big<lb/>
seller. But one of his most<lb/>
consistent albums has been Pure<lb/>
League's second LP, "Bustin'<lb/>
"Bustin' Out<lb/>
When asked what specific<lb/>
field has sold the most, Ferree said<lb/>
definitely rock.<lb/>
"But mae people are being<lb/>
turned on to jazz all the time<lb/>
said Ferree.<lb/>
So Frank Ferree and Apple<lb/>
Recads is out to give the reoad<lb/>
customer the benefit of the doubt.<lb/>
With the soaring cost of the<lb/>
precious vinyl, what little can be<lb/>
saved is certainly appreciated.<lb/>
"By having the discount Top<lb/>
100, the stae should have an<lb/>
inaease in business said Ferree.<lb/>
"If people can't affad them,<lb/>
they're not going to buy them<lb/>
28 April 1977<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
byPATCOYLE<lb/>
No yearbook?<lb/>
Well, fellow EZU students, we can now claim the distinction of<lb/>
being part of one of the few (a maybe the only) institutes of higher<lb/>
education in the United States not to have a yearbook this year.<lb/>
I'm the first one to fava innovations, and I know that some<lb/>
traditions are fast becoming archaic, empty skeletons. I don't think,<lb/>
however, that the BUCCANEER falls into this categay.<lb/>
But what do I know? I'm just a sentimental senia, who is soft-<lb/>
hearted enough to want a record of the memaiesof the year. I'll miss<lb/>
having the oppatunity, ten a twenty a faty years fron now, to look<lb/>
back at old photos of myself and my friends. I'll be sary na to have<lb/>
written accounts of 1976-77 at ECU to refresh my memory. But what do<lb/>
I know?<lb/>
NO PARTICIPATION<lb/>
After all, there are indeed many of you who apparently don't<lb/>
oonsider a yearbook to be of any importance. That has been proven<lb/>
year after year, when participation in the free picture-taking drive has<lb/>
been minimal. Maybe it simply isn't "0001 to be involved in such<lb/>
antiquated drivel.<lb/>
Apparently the faculty also caught on quickly to the gaucheness of<lb/>
making the effat to be included in the BUC. Faculty participation in<lb/>
individual picture taking was so minimal a few years ago, that the habit<lb/>
has been dropped completely. Who knows? Maybe the professas just<lb/>
dai't want us to remember them years from now.<lb/>
I do wonder what anthropologists in the next centuries will think<lb/>
when they note the incomplete series of ECU yearbooks. Perhaps<lb/>
they' II think that the 1976-77 academic year was canceled due to lack<lb/>
of interest. The sad part is that the non-existence of the BUC would not<lb/>
be the only indication of this lack of interest at ECU. (Check out vaer<lb/>
turnout at elections, not to mention campus interest in many of the<lb/>
Union's activities.)<lb/>
This is not to say that no one exhibited any interest in the welfare of<lb/>
this year's BUC. The aiginal staff this year was very interested;<lb/>
interested and oonoerned enough to refuse to compromise the book the<lb/>
way SGA budgetary decisions would have required.<lb/>
Susan Rogerson and company care. They've sat in dam lobbies<lb/>
and offioes trying to sell subscriptions, while students walked on,<lb/>
spending their money on mae "wathwhile" causes like six-packs and<lb/>
nickel bags.<lb/>
It is understandable that many students, including myself, would<lb/>
indeed resent paying fa sanething that we all assume we'd already<lb/>
paid fa, via student fees. The resentment must na have been very<lb/>
stroig though, judging from the taal lack of student reponse to the<lb/>
ridiculously low first budget passed by the SGA.<lb/>
So, we can't blame the SGA fa digging the BUC s grave. The lack<lb/>
of negative feedback en the students' part must be an indication that<lb/>
they, the students' representatives, were in fact keeping the customer<lb/>
satisfied.<lb/>
By no means can we really blame the "phao lab thief either. If<lb/>
business had gone on as usual at the BUC this year, the equipment<lb/>
theft wouldn't have that big an effect.<lb/>
I still feel damned angry when I realize that I have somehow been<lb/>
deprived of a recad of this, my last year at East Carolina. But what do I<lb/>
know? I'm just a sentimental fool who happens to feel affection and<lb/>
pride fa this university.<lb/>
9wt$sri ite cjmkzvz dmk to iux!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057127_0008"/><lb/>
� - 9BiHIM<lb/>
S FOUNTAINHEAD 28 April 1977<lb/>
Greenville hosts Spring Poetry Festival<lb/>
Designed to educate in art of poetry<lb/>
ByPATCOYLE<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
Aspiring and established<lb/>
poets will come together in<lb/>
Greenville this weekend for the<lb/>
Spring Poetry Festival.<lb/>
Sponsored jointly by the North<lb/>
Carolina Arts Council, the ECU<lb/>
Poetry Forum, and the North<lb/>
Carolina Poetry Society, the festi-<lb/>
val is designed to both entertain<lb/>
Don't forget<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
is Gentlemen's Night<lb/>
and<lb/>
Tuesday is Ladies Night<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
irtllsA'iIilBiJlilffl<lb/>
and educate people from ECU<lb/>
and the surrounding area in the<lb/>
art of poetry.<lb/>
The program will begin Friday<lb/>
at 11:30 a.m. at the Ramada Inn,<lb/>
with a registration period. Regis-<lb/>
tration fee is set at one dollar for<lb/>
students and four dollars for all<lb/>
others.<lb/>
SEVERAL WORKSHOPS<lb/>
Next will be a workshop at<lb/>
100 p.m entitled "Finding a<lb/>
Publisher The workshop will be<lb/>
directed by Gerda Nischan,<lb/>
author of Red Sky in the Night.<lb/>
The program will outline the<lb/>
proper steps to be taken in having<lb/>
your poetry published, as well as<lb/>
some of the pitfalls to avoid.<lb/>
ArmyNavy Storf<lb/>
ISOIEfam<lb/>
12P.M5:30P<lb/>
Backpacks, Jeans,<lb/>
Camping Eqpt, Dishes<lb/>
SHOWS AT<lb/>
FRIDAY 7:30-900<lb/>
Sat. -SUN. -4:10-5:50<lb/>
7:30-9:10<lb/>
NKIL SIJVMWS<lb/>
Murder bvDe<lb/>
(XMJMHA FKTU8ES mm A KAY STARK Production NIJI. SIMON'S MIIRIIKR BY DKATH"<lb/>
� TRUMAN VAPtm, � IAMF.S 0000 PKIT.R PAJ.K � All: GUMNES6 �<lb/>
IIAVII) NrvTJJiiliiiiE MAfcGIF SMITH � NANCY WALKKK<lb/>
ave<lb/>
oney!<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
MOVIE TICKET<lb/>
GOOD 7 DAYS A WEEK<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
CENTRAL TICKET OFFICE<lb/>
NEXT<lb/>
NETWORK"<lb/>
A 2XX) p.m. workshop direct-<lb/>
ed by Ruby Shackleford will<lb/>
examine "Mini-poems Shackle-<lb/>
ford is a creative writing teacher<lb/>
in the ECU English Department.<lb/>
At 3:00 p.m Sam Ragan, the<lb/>
first North Carolina Secretary of<lb/>
Art Culture and History, will<lb/>
chair a seminar entitled "The<lb/>
essence of poetry. Ragan is<lb/>
President of the North Carolina<lb/>
Historical Association, as well as<lb/>
being editor and publisher of the<lb/>
Southern Pines Pilot .<lb/>
EVENING EVENTS<lb/>
At 8XX) Friday night, there<lb/>
will be a poetry reading by<lb/>
Samuel Hazo. Hazo, Director of<lb/>
the International Poetry Forum, is<lb/>
a respected and accomplished<lb/>
poet, with nine volumes of<lb/>
published verse to his credit. In<lb/>
addition, he has recently sold<lb/>
movie rights for his novel, The<lb/>
Very Fall of the Sun, to Eli<lb/>
Wallach. The Hazo reading will<lb/>
be held in the Carol Belk<lb/>
Auditorium of the Allied Health<lb/>
Building, across from Pitt Plaza.<lb/>
SA TURD A Y A CTIVI TIES<lb/>
The festival will continue on<lb/>
Saturday, beginning with an 8:00<lb/>
a.m. coffee hour at the Ramada<lb/>
Inn, hosted by Sam Ragan.<lb/>
At 10.O0, Dr. Peter Makuck<lb/>
will conduct a seminar "On<lb/>
teaching the writing of poetry<lb/>
Makuck teaches poetry in the<lb/>
English Department of ECU.<lb/>
The final workshop of the<lb/>
festival will be held at 11100, and<lb/>
will be entitled "Getting along<lb/>
with our editor-publisher The<lb/>
proc am will be directed by<lb/>
Char en Swansea, publisher of<lb/>
Red i lay Books. Swansea, who<lb/>
has given a reading here at ECU,<lb/>
is a former poet-in-residence at<lb/>
Stanford University.<lb/>
Toniteand Friday<lb/>
At The<lb/>
Elbo Room<lb/>
SMACK DAB<lb/>
Don't forget Friday 3 � 7<lb/>
Sunday Night is Ladies Night<lb/>
THURSDAY'S<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Razz MaTazz<lb/>
Thursday April 28th<lb/>
Bill Deal<lb/>
andtheRhondells<lb/>
Thursday May 5th<lb/>
Jolly Roger &amp; Thursday's<lb/>
R&amp;Nlnc.<lb/>
752-4668<lb/>
Piral<lb/>
poss<lb/>
By JEFF<lb/>
Assistant S<lb/>
East Carol i<lb/>
Pirates defeatec<lb/>
Atlantic Christi;<lb/>
prelude to their<lb/>
the Citadel tr<lb/>
Charleston. N<lb/>
overall, the Pira<lb/>
their first confe<lb/>
ship since 1967.<lb/>
Monday'sea<lb/>
been the first g<lb/>
header, but the I<lb/>
rained out. A<lb/>
turned out in V<lb/>
the second meet<lb/>
teams this seasc<lb/>
Larry Daugfi<lb/>
route for the<lb/>
mound in pickii<lb/>
victory of the y<lb/>
three defeats,<lb/>
through Daughti<lb/>
another new r<lb/>
already lengthy<lb/>
game marked tl"<lb/>
game of the ye<lb/>
old record of 17<lb/>
Sonny Woote<lb/>
on the board in tl<lb/>
second inning as<lb/>
Tent<lb/>
By THOI<lb/>
Staff!<lb/>
The East (<lb/>
tennis team wou<lb/>
season Monday '<lb/>
Won<lb/>
netti<lb/>
sign<lb/>
The first ever<lb/>
women tennis <lb/>
have been si<lb/>
Averett, wome<lb/>
announced the si<lb/>
Ann Spinazzol<lb/>
Keough to those<lb/>
Spinazzoiaisi<lb/>
America from Alt<lb/>
Keough, a native<lb/>
will transfer fron<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Spinazzoia h<lb/>
number one sin<lb/>
Area High School<lb/>
years and has c<lb/>
record. She was<lb/>
Pennsylvania Mc<lb/>
ing 1974 and<lb/>
ranked number<lb/>
Pennsylvania f<lb/>
under age group<lb/>
currently ranked<lb/>
the 18-and-under<lb/>
Keough was<lb/>
men's tennis tear<lb/>
freshman last ye<lb/>
10-2 record again<lb/>
the other junior<lb/>
currently a sopl<lb/>
team. She atti<lb/>
Marshall High S<lb/>
Va playing nun<lb/>
women's team f<lb/>
She went to<lb/>
championship in <lb/>
years of high son<lb/>
 � . ' BH g<lb/>
<pb facs="00057127_0009"/><lb/>
Pirates beat ACC, prepare for<lb/>
possible SC championship<lb/>
By JEFF BROOKS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina's rampaging<lb/>
Pirates defeated the Bulldogs of<lb/>
Atlantic Christian Monday as a<lb/>
prelude to their showdown with<lb/>
the Citadel this weekend in<lb/>
Charleston. Now 28 and 10<lb/>
overall, the Pirates hope to take<lb/>
their first conference champion-<lb/>
ship since 1967.<lb/>
Monday s contest was to have<lb/>
been the first game of a double-<lb/>
header, but the second game was<lb/>
rained out. A capacity crowd<lb/>
turned out in Wilson to witness<lb/>
the second meeting of these two<lb/>
teams this season.<lb/>
Larry Daughtridge went the<lb/>
route for the Pirates on the<lb/>
mound in picking up his sixth<lb/>
victory of the year against only<lb/>
three defeats. The Pirates,<lb/>
through Daughtridge, added yet<lb/>
another new record to their<lb/>
already lengthy list; Monday's<lb/>
game marked the 18th oomplete<lb/>
game of the year, breaking the<lb/>
old record of 17 set in 1974.<lb/>
Sonny Wooten got the Pirates<lb/>
on the board in the top half of the<lb/>
second inning as he slammed his<lb/>
third homer of the year.<lb/>
Leading 1-0, the Pirates ex-<lb/>
ploded for three more runs in the<lb/>
fifth. Robert Brinkley singled and<lb/>
was advanced by Charlie Stevens'<lb/>
single. Jerry Carraway then mov-<lb/>
ed both runners up with a<lb/>
sacrifice.<lb/>
Pete Paradossi came through<lb/>
in the clutch as always, and<lb/>
singled both runners in. On the<lb/>
very next pitch Paradossi stole<lb/>
second, and when the pitcher<lb/>
threw wide to the plate, he went<lb/>
on to third. Billy Best, then the<lb/>
batter, forced an error as he got<lb/>
on base, scoring Paradossi from<lb/>
third. He died on base, but the<lb/>
Pirates now led, 4-0<lb/>
In the sixth, the Pirates added<lb/>
their fifth run of the bailgame as<lb/>
Wooten led off with a double and<lb/>
was singled to third by Raymie<lb/>
Styons. He scored when Brinkley<lb/>
reached base on a fielder's<lb/>
choice.<lb/>
Atlantic Christian picked up<lb/>
two runs on three hits in their half<lb/>
of the sixth, before the big Pirate<lb/>
lineup came back up fa their last<lb/>
cuts.<lb/>
Billy Best tripled to start<lb/>
things off, unsettling Atlantic<lb/>
Christian'sStutts so much that he<lb/>
walked Pirate speedster Eddie<lb/>
Gates. Gates promptly stole se-<lb/>
cond fa his 23rd stolen base of<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
Sonny Wooten came through<lb/>
with a solid single to right field to<lb/>
soae both runners and make it a<lb/>
7-2 game.<lb/>
Daughtridge handcuffed the<lb/>
Bulldogs in the bottom of the<lb/>
seventh to wrap up victory<lb/>
number 28 of the year fa the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
ECU now has only the week-<lb/>
end doubieheader with the Cita-<lb/>
del remaining in the regular<lb/>
season. The Pirates can gain at<lb/>
least a tie fa the conference<lb/>
championship with a split of the<lb/>
doubieheader, a could win it<lb/>
outright by sweeping both games<lb/>
from the Bulldogs.<lb/>
Western Carolina, 13-2 in the<lb/>
conference was to play at Appala-<lb/>
chian (4-9) Wednesday afternoon.<lb/>
If Western Carolina wins that<lb/>
game, then the Pirates will have<lb/>
to win both games from the<lb/>
Bulldogs to take the title, but<lb/>
should Appalachian defeat the<lb/>
Catamounts, then the Pirates will<lb/>
only have to defeat the Citadel<lb/>
once.<lb/>
Tennis team enters tourney<lb/>
By THOMAS LIPE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina Pirate<lb/>
tennis team wound up its regular<lb/>
season Monday with a 7-2 loss to<lb/>
Women<lb/>
netters<lb/>
signed<lb/>
The first ever grants-in-aid fa<lb/>
women tennis players at ECU<lb/>
have been signed. Cynthia<lb/>
Averett, women's coach, has<lb/>
announced the signings of Debra<lb/>
Ann Spinazzola and Diane<lb/>
Keough to those grants.<lb/>
Spinazzola is a high school all-<lb/>
America from Altonna, Pa while<lb/>
Keough, a native of Vienna, Va<lb/>
will transfer from Chowan Junia<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Spinazzola has been playing<lb/>
number one singles fa Altaina<lb/>
Area High School fa the past four<lb/>
years and has compiled a 47-4<lb/>
recad. She was named Central<lb/>
Pennsylvania Most Valuable dur-<lb/>
ing 1974 and 1976. She was<lb/>
ranked number one in Central<lb/>
Pennsylvania for the 16-and-<lb/>
under age group in 1976 and is<lb/>
currently ranked number three in<lb/>
the 18-and-under division.<lb/>
Keough was the star of the<lb/>
men's tennis team at Chowan as a<lb/>
freshman last year, oompiling a<lb/>
10-2 recad against the men from<lb/>
the other junia oolleges. She is<lb/>
currently a sophomae on the<lb/>
team. She attended George<lb/>
Marshall High School in Vienna,<lb/>
Va playing number one on the<lb/>
women's team fa three years.<lb/>
She went to the regional<lb/>
championship in Virginia all three<lb/>
years of high school.<lb/>
NAIA power Atlantic Christian,<lb/>
but is shrugging aside the loss in<lb/>
looking ahead to the Southern<lb/>
Conference tournament.<lb/>
Davidson is hosting the tour-<lb/>
nament, which will run from April<lb/>
28-30th. The Pirates have never<lb/>
finished higher than fifth in the<lb/>
conference, but coming off of<lb/>
such a good season, the netters<lb/>
are confident of doing well.<lb/>
The team will be led in singles<lb/>
by senia Mitch Pergerson and<lb/>
freshman Henry Hostetler. Per-<lb/>
gerson, at the number four<lb/>
singles spot, spats a 10-8 recad<lb/>
and the 1976 ECU tennis MVP is<lb/>
currently ranked second in the<lb/>
conference at that position.<lb/>
Playing number five singles,<lb/>
Hostetler has compiled the best<lb/>
recad on the team at 12-6 and, at<lb/>
one time, led the conference at<lb/>
that position. Both Hostetler and<lb/>
Pergerson should be highly seed-<lb/>
ed at the tournament.<lb/>
In doubles, the Pirates will<lb/>
depend on Tom Durfee and Doug<lb/>
Getsinger, the number one dou-<lb/>
bles team. Durfee and Getsinger<lb/>
have a 10-8 recad and were<lb/>
ranked second in the conference<lb/>
at onetime. Jim Ratliff and Mitch<lb/>
Pergerson also had a good year,<lb/>
finishing with a 9-5 record.<lb/>
First-year coach Randy Ran-<lb/>
dol ph led the team to a 9-9 recad;<lb/>
the best fa the Pirates in ten<lb/>
years. Randolph said he hoped<lb/>
"each man would play up to his<lb/>
potential at the tournament and<lb/>
do as well as he could<lb/>
The road to the top will be a<lb/>
rough one fa the Pirates. Besides<lb/>
Appalachian, the team title will<lb/>
be contested by powerhouses<lb/>
Furman and Davidson.<lb/>
The Mountaineers have play-<lb/>
ers ranked either first a second<lb/>
in all six singles spots and are<lb/>
also number one in all three<lb/>
doubles.<lb/>
Vying fa the top singles title<lb/>
will be Appalachian's Davis Babb<lb/>
and Furman's Hap Cae. Babb<lb/>
teams with number three player<lb/>
Dan Weant to provide the favaed<lb/>
doubles team.<lb/>
Bugs finish 3rd<lb/>
By JEFF BROOKS<lb/>
Assistant Spats Edita<lb/>
East Carolina's Pirates refu-<lb/>
sed to die and finished a very<lb/>
surprising third in the Southern<lb/>
Conference golf tournament com-<lb/>
pleted yesterday in Florence,<lb/>
South Carolina.<lb/>
The Pirates, who sha an 1166<lb/>
during the three day event, were<lb/>
led by Mike Buckmaster, who was<lb/>
seventh overall with a 228.<lb/>
He was followed by Keith<lb/>
Hiller, who shot a 231, David<lb/>
Brogan with a 234 and Donnie<lb/>
Owens with a 236.<lb/>
Individual medalist fa the<lb/>
event was Kenny Gezzell of<lb/>
Furman, who overtook teammate<lb/>
Bobby Bumgardner on the last<lb/>
day to win honas with a 216.<lb/>
Team Scores:<lb/>
Furman1126<lb/>
Marshall1128<lb/>
ECU1166<lb/>
Appalachian1166<lb/>
WCU1199<lb/>
The Citadel1205<lb/>
VMI1231<lb/>
Davidson1243<lb/>
W&amp; M1247<lb/>
28 April<lb/>
Page9<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Equipment available<lb/>
EQUIPMENT ROOM CHECKOUT SCHEDULE<lb/>
Any full-time student at East Carolina is eligible to use the check<lb/>
out equipment at either Minges a Memaial Gyms by checking the<lb/>
equipment out from the Equipment Rooms in each complex.<lb/>
All checked-out items will be due in the same day as they are<lb/>
checked out. There will be a late charge of $1.50 assessed fa all<lb/>
equipment left out overnight plus an additional 25 cents fa each day<lb/>
thereafter.<lb/>
The hours fa operation of the Equipment Rooms will be from 7:45<lb/>
a.m. to 1015 p.m. Monday through Thursday, from 7:45 a.m. to 915<lb/>
p.m. on Friday and 9j00 a.m. to 915 p.m. on Saturdays. On Sunday,<lb/>
the equipment room will be open from 1 to 915 p.m.<lb/>
HA NDBA LL A ND TENNIS COURTS MUST BE RESERVED<lb/>
With the Spring weather enticing us all outdoas it might be wise to<lb/>
remind you that the tennis oourts at Minges and College Hill Drive<lb/>
must be reserved by students. In addition the indoa handball and<lb/>
racquetball courts in Minges Coliseum must also be reserved.<lb/>
This can be done by .going to the Memaial Gym Equipment Room<lb/>
in advance of the day that you wish to use the oourt and sign up fa a<lb/>
free time.<lb/>
Conpetitas in any of the Intramural Tennis play are reminded that<lb/>
they also have to sign up to play on these oourts. The oourts on Elm<lb/>
Street are available fa use oily to ECU students who pay Greenville<lb/>
city taxes, but they must be reserved at the Department of Reaeation.<lb/>
RUGBY CLUBBERS WIN SOCCER Tl TLE<lb/>
The championship in the Intramural Soccer League was decided<lb/>
just befae break as the Rugby Clubsoaed a goal with two minutes left<lb/>
in overtime to defeat previously unbeaten Ayoock Dam, 2-1.<lb/>
The championship game ended a successful first try at Intramural<lb/>
Soccer and it appears that the activity will be repeated as a sport in the<lb/>
Intramural curriculum next year.<lb/>
KARA TE CLUB WINSSTA TE CHAMPIONSHIP<lb/>
The ECU Karate Club won the State championship held in<lb/>
Charlotte and Lumberton in early April. The ECU club was coached by<lb/>
Bill McDonals and came away with 22 trophies.<lb/>
Special recognition was given to four ECU students, Scott<lb/>
McMillian won first place in the Black Belt Middleweight Division, Al<lb/>
Fiae wai the Light Heavyweight Blackbelt fighting division; Shirley<lb/>
Batoi wai the Fam class in the women's white belt division, and<lb/>
Carla Carter won the Sparring.<lb/>
The East Carolina Club will now represent North Carolina in the<lb/>
Southern Coast Championships to be held in Greenville, S.C. later this<lb/>
month.<lb/>
MEN'S, WOMEN'SSOFTBALL<lb/>
Softball play has entered its fourth week in men's play and the<lb/>
teams are beginning to spread out.<lb/>
In men's play Marty Martinez still ranks te Belk Uglies as the<lb/>
Number One team, but I' II have to go with the Q iarley Manson Family.<lb/>
We both agree on the No. 2, 3 and 5 teams as the Scott DJ's, Tau<lb/>
Kappa Epsilon and FCA but the rest of the way we differ greatly.<lb/>
Martinez's sentiments seem to be wtih the Dams, but the<lb/>
Independent, Club and Fraternity leagues are loaded also.<lb/>
In women's play there was a lot of action as Jerk's Rejects,<lb/>
Hypertension and Hits and Runs continued to roll along.<lb/>
The Rejects stomped the Sunkist lemons, 24-1 and Hypertension<lb/>
beat the Bad News Bunch, 22-1, behind Ginny Roberts who had two<lb/>
triples, a home run and a double.<lb/>
The top-ranked Hit! and Runs did not play.<lb/>
In saaity play Alpha Phi, Kappa Delta and Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
remained headlocked as Kappa Delta topped Chi Omega, 12-3, and<lb/>
Alpha Phi dumped Delta Zeta, 13-6.<lb/>
Garrett's Yardapes remained in the top five with a 10-4 win over<lb/>
Jarvis Wildcats and Donna's Demons ripped the Batwomen 15-11 as<lb/>
Doina Walker smacked two home runs.<lb/>
The Mac Attackers beat the Umstead Coeds 13-2 as Salley Burch,<lb/>
Kathy Suggs, Linda McClellan and Denise Seagravesall blasted home<lb/>
runs.<lb/>
Clement "A" lost its first game of the yeer, 6-5 to Fleming's<lb/>
Floozies despite Pam Shannonhouses' two hits.<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057127_0010"/><lb/>
�����HMNHI<lb/>
������M<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 28 April 1977<lb/>
Track team seeks final conference title<lb/>
East Carolina's track team will<lb/>
be looking for its second consecu-<lb/>
tive Southern Conference track<lb/>
championship at Furman Univer-<lb/>
sity in Greenville, S.C this<lb/>
Friday and Saturday.<lb/>
The Pirates won the 1976 title<lb/>
bya 187-134 margin over William<lb/>
and Mary, who had taken the<lb/>
crown for the previous nine years.<lb/>
The Pirates are the favorites for<lb/>
this meet, but will have to<lb/>
withstand strong bids by the host<lb/>
Paladins, William and Mary and<lb/>
VMI.<lb/>
East Carolina returns as<lb/>
champions from seven of 1976's<lb/>
events. George Jackson won the<lb/>
GRAND OPENING OF<lb/>
208 E. 5th ST.<lb/>
THURSDAY � FRIDAY � SATURDAY<lb/>
ALL ALBUMS AND TAPES REDUCED!<lb/>
ALSO:<lb/>
BRING IN YOUR USED ALBUMS FOR CASH MONEY!<lb/>
WE BUY AND SELL USED ALBUMS<lb/>
long jump with a leap of 23' 11 W'<lb/>
last year and has gone 24'3 114"<lb/>
this season. He should get strong<lb/>
challenges from VMI's Andre<lb/>
Gibson and Furman's Carl<lb/>
Anderson.<lb/>
Marvin Rankins captured the<lb/>
120 yard high hurdles in the meet<lb/>
in 13.9. Just a sophomore,<lb/>
Rankins has gone 13.7 twice this<lb/>
season in the 110 meter hurdles<lb/>
and turned in a 13.81 electronical-<lb/>
ly timed race just last week. That<lb/>
is one of the top electronic times<lb/>
in the nation this season.<lb/>
Charlie Moss, who won last<lb/>
year in the 440 with a 48.5<lb/>
clocking, has gone 48.0 this year,<lb/>
but will be pushed hard for the<lb/>
title by Furman's Ken Middleton<lb/>
and a host of his own teammates.<lb/>
Carter Suggs, who has claim-<lb/>
ed the 100 title for the past two<lb/>
years, is getting back to top shape<lb/>
after early season injuries. He<lb/>
will have to go to win this year, as<lb/>
Otis Melvin and Larry Austin,<lb/>
both of ECU. and Western<lb/>
Carolina's John Burson have<lb/>
better times to date.<lb/>
Calvin Alston won last year's<lb/>
220 title with a 21.1 docking and<lb/>
has had an outstanding season<lb/>
thus far this year. He has lost only<lb/>
to nationally ranked Jon Young of<lb/>
Tennessee and Olympians Har-<lb/>
vey Glance and Calvin Dill.<lb/>
Herman Mclntyre, East<lb/>
Carolina's nationally ranked<lb/>
triple jumper, has lost only three<lb/>
times all season, indoors and out.<lb/>
His jump of 52'612" at the<lb/>
State-Record Invitational is one of<lb/>
the ten best in the nation among<lb/>
collegiate jumpers. He lost the<lb/>
indoor title to VMI's Malcolm<lb/>
Grimes, as Mclntyre, Grimes and<lb/>
Anderson all topped the con-<lb/>
ference record.<lb/>
Robert Bailey is the top<lb/>
weight man for the Pirates. The<lb/>
freshman from Pfafftown, N.C<lb/>
has thrown the discus 161'6V2"<lb/>
this season and was named the<lb/>
MVP in the field events at the<lb/>
Mountaineer Relays in Morgan-<lb/>
town, W. Va last weekend.<lb/>
Other Pirates competing in-<lb/>
clude: Ben Duckenfield, Tony<lb/>
McKoy and Jay Purdie in the 400<lb/>
meter intermediate hurdles; Mike<lb/>
Hodge in the long andtriple jump;<lb/>
Mike Harris in the shot, discus<lb/>
and hammer; Lafan Forbes in the<lb/>
javelin and hammer; Alston.<lb/>
James Rankins and Donnie Mack<lb/>
in the 100 and 200; Robert<lb/>
Franklin, Jay Purdie, Terry<lb/>
Perry James Freeman and James<lb/>
McCullough in the 400; Keith<lb/>
Urguhart. James Willett, Mel<lb/>
Duckenfield and Wayne Chaison<lb/>
in the 800; Lynn Phelps and Ray<lb/>
Moore in the 1,500; and Bobby<lb/>
Phillips in the 110 high hurdles.<lb/>
�Mb SazeBo<lb/>
201 E. 5th St.<lb/>
This Mother's Day<lb/>
ml<lb/>
give your Mother<lb/>
that special gift from<lb/>
The Gazebo<lb/>
Cafeteria<lb/>
8<lb/>
���<lb/>
HOSPITALITY<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
Seafood Platter $2.50<lb/>
includes Shrimp, Fish, Crab Balls, Oysters, Scallops, Slaw<lb/>
and French Fries.<lb/>
11am to 2 pm 4:45 pm to 8:00 pm<lb/>
Lunch Dinner<lb/>
<pb facs="00057127_0011"/><lb/>
WPBtft��'<lb/>
28 April 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
wKSMHSHTOB<lb/>
for sale �g)<lb/>
FOR SALE: 12" X 60" trailer,<lb/>
unfurnished- 2 air cond. gas<lb/>
heat, double sinks in bathroom,<lb/>
plus washer &amp; dryer. 2 bed-<lb/>
room, call 752-9432 ask Mr.<lb/>
Henderson after 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED? Call<lb/>
Ance. 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/>
er Recorder 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/>
FOR 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: 1974 Yamaha 250<lb/>
Enduro. Excellent condition, fast<lb/>
and clean. Best reasonable offer.<lb/>
758-2808 or 758-8975.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Yamaha 350 Rd.<lb/>
motorcycle, good oondition. 758-<lb/>
7715.<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 Volkswagon<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 752-8140 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 OO.<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 oollies. Call<lb/>
482-2341 -Edenton, N.C.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 76 Mustang II Silver<lb/>
ac 4 speed 15,500 miles. Like<lb/>
new. $3,800. 752-7651.<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 for $300 a<lb/>
pair. 150 watt max. Call 758-8988,<lb/>
ask for Susan or Mike.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Chrysler '69 New-<lb/>
port. Good oondition. Call 752-<lb/>
2752 after 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 waoking<lb/>
oondition. 753-2091, John Rouse.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AKC registered<lb/>
poodles; 2 white females; excel-<lb/>
lent bloodline 752-5717.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1976 360 Honda<lb/>
Excellent condition, low mileage,<lb/>
Call 752-0924, ask for Monty.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Bancroft woodfiber-<lb/>
glass tennis racket with cover and<lb/>
press. Phone 752-8706, 104-B<lb/>
leave message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Beautiful German<lb/>
Shepherd puppies $20.00. Call<lb/>
752-5580 after 5.00.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Letters, re-<lb/>
ports, &amp; term papers-call 756-<lb/>
4180.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES. Call 752-<lb/>
8837 after 5 pm.<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/>
FOR SALE: Silver rings, phone<lb/>
Roxanne at 752-8694. Or phone<lb/>
Crafts Center n Mendenhafl and<lb/>
leave message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sanyo AMFM 8-<lb/>
track stereo with Garrard turn<lb/>
table and 2 speakers, $125 00<lb/>
Call 758-9153.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 750cc Suzuki.<lb/>
Mint condition, new: paint, tires,<lb/>
chain, etc. $1200.00. Call 752-<lb/>
1442 ask for David.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Zenith stereo com-<lb/>
plete with speakers-automatic<lb/>
changer excellent condition! Per-<lb/>
fect size for dorm room. $65.00<lb/>
Call 758-5090 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Marantz 1040 amp<lb/>
$200 value, selling for $100.<lb/>
752-4009.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Premier Drum set<lb/>
$1300.00 value for sale at $500.00<lb/>
Contact Raymond L. Brown,<lb/>
758-7434.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Shure -Dynamic<lb/>
(Unishphere B) Microphone-$30.<lb/>
Sealy Posturepedic foam set<lb/>
(firm)-$85.00. Colonial bed frame<lb/>
$25.00. Ephiphone classic guitar-<lb/>
$85.00. Jadee Guitar (exact rep-<lb/>
lica of Gibson Dove)-$120.00.<lb/>
Lawn furniture (brand new)-ask.<lb/>
Hitachi FM radio (wood cabinet)-<lb/>
$20.0C. 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? Advertise in the new<lb/>
Carolina Bargain Trader, a buy<lb/>
sell trade magazine published in<lb/>
Greenville and distribute in<lb/>
Eastern N.C. Your personal inter-<lb/>
view of 75 words plus photo oould<lb/>
be very successful in obtaining<lb/>
the position you desire and runs 2<lb/>
weeks at $4.50 or 4 weeks at $8.00<lb/>
and we will take the photo for only<lb/>
$12.25 Call 758-7487 or 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-door, power steering, power<lb/>
brakes, AM-FM- $750 Call 752-<lb/>
0501.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Uueen waterbed<lb/>
oompleteoutfit, everything need-<lb/>
ed except the water. $65.00 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 or<lb/>
best offer. If interested call<lb/>
758-4290.<lb/>
FOR SALE: By original owner,<lb/>
1972 Chevrolet Impala, 4-door<lb/>
hardtop, PWR steeringbrakes,<lb/>
air conditioning, almost new<lb/>
adial tires, 57,000 miles. Call<lb/>
756-3717 after 6.00 nm<lb/>
FOR SALE: Ten Speed "Rally<lb/>
Record" and or bike rack. Both<lb/>
in exoellent oondition. Call 752-<lb/>
2797 after 600 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Bic 960 turntable.<lb/>
Still under warranty. $125, 752-<lb/>
0321.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 74 VW AMFM,<lb/>
37,500 miles, 4-speed like new<lb/>
oondition Phone 756-5733.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 71 VW bus. FM<lb/>
stereo, engine in excellent condi-<lb/>
tion, front end needs work<lb/>
$500.00 firm. Call 752-5325 after<lb/>
6.O0, ask for Kevin.<lb/>
NEEDED: 1 or 2 roommates for<lb/>
Summer. Rent:$53.00 plus utili-<lb/>
ties Oakmont Square Apts. Call<lb/>
756-2050.<lb/>
2<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted:<lb/>
large 2 bedroom apt. 2 blocks<lb/>
from campus. Call 758-9655<lb/>
nights.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 410 B. Student a.<lb/>
Call 752-7032.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private room-Air<lb/>
Cond4 blocks from campus-<lb/>
Rent for Summer or Fall session-<lb/>
Call 752-4006 after 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, summer or fall, 4<lb/>
blocks from campus. 752-4006<lb/>
after 1 O0 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: House outside city, 3<lb/>
bedroom, 1 Vi bath, big backyard,<lb/>
available now for summer. Call<lb/>
Maria at 757-6390.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Want a nice duplex<lb/>
to rent for the summer? Phone<lb/>
758-7713.<lb/>
WANTED: To rent, 1 bedroom<lb/>
apt. for 2, summer onwards-$100<lb/>
a month. Call 758-8062.<lb/>
HOUSEMATE NEEDED: For a 3<lb/>
bedroom house. Only mature<lb/>
persons need apply! Call 756-<lb/>
1839.<lb/>
WANTED: Roommate to share<lb/>
trailer at Shady Knolls Trailer<lb/>
Court. $50.00 per month. Call<lb/>
758-2853.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Needed<lb/>
to share 12 X 70 trailer located at<lb/>
Shady Knolls Trailer Park. Fur-<lb/>
nished with private bedroom and<lb/>
bath. Rent-negotiable. One-half<lb/>
utilities. Call 757-6825 from 8O0-<lb/>
5O0.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Needed<lb/>
fa 2 bedroom aptcall 756-5530<lb/>
after 4O0 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED:(Fe-<lb/>
male preferred) to share an<lb/>
Apartment or House, living<lb/>
expenses, and good times start-<lb/>
ing this June '77 in CHAPEL<lb/>
HILL. Interested? Please call<lb/>
Kim Sue at 758-1390.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE WANlcD:<lb/>
To share 2 bedroom apartment at<lb/>
Eastbrook for the summer. Pay<lb/>
half the rent &amp; utilities. Call<lb/>
752-8393 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
To share 2 bedroom apt. at<lb/>
Eastbrook for the summer. Pay<lb/>
half rent and utilities. Call<lb/>
758-7486.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Room-<lb/>
mate needed immediately, rent<lb/>
$55.00month &amp; utilities.<lb/>
Private room, can be furnished.<lb/>
Biking distance to campus Call<lb/>
758-1636.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Beach Cottage at<lb/>
Emerald Isle. To faculty, 3<lb/>
bedrooms, ac, washer, garage,<lb/>
fenced yard. 1 blocks from<lb/>
beach. $185 weekly. 758-3089.<lb/>
LOSi : PLtASE whoever "picked<lb/>
up" a long, rust-colored suede<lb/>
wallet with a leather floral design<lb/>
on the outer flap (at the Jolly<lb/>
Rogef Wednesday, April 20,<lb/>
1977) please return. I need the<lb/>
identification cards that were<lb/>
inside it. A reward is offered. Call<lb/>
752-9205.<lb/>
STOLEN HELMETS: Anyone<lb/>
having any information or anyone<lb/>
who saw two black males steal the<lb/>
two helmets off the motorcycle<lb/>
parked beside the Jolly Roger in<lb/>
the Stop Shop parking lot on<lb/>
Friday night, April 22, 1977<lb/>
please contact Steve in 145<lb/>
Umstead or call 758-9539.<lb/>
LOST: A pair of brown framed<lb/>
glasses-they are in an orange,<lb/>
black-lined case. Need them back<lb/>
desperately. Call Lisa, 758-5066<lb/>
after 6O0. Reward.<lb/>
 person al(A<lb/>
WANTED: A married couple with<lb/>
no children who are college<lb/>
graduates with degrees in the<lb/>
behavioral sciences or human<lb/>
service delivery fields to work as<lb/>
teaching-parents in a treatment<lb/>
home for emotionally disturbed<lb/>
children. Work schedule: seven<lb/>
and one-half days on duty, six and<lb/>
one-half days off in rotation with<lb/>
another 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. Interes-<lb/>
ted oouples 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 guard regis-<lb/>
tration clerk combination (man &amp;<lb/>
wife); and, grounds keeper regis-<lb/>
tration clerk combination. Travel<lb/>
trailer with gas, water, and<lb/>
electricity furnished-June, July,<lb/>
Aug. Salter Path Family Camp<lb/>
Ground, P.O. Box 721, Morehead<lb/>
City, N.C. 2857.<lb/>
WANTED: Part time attendant<lb/>
to assist handicap student during<lb/>
summer school of '77. $360.<lb/>
758-8286, Buzzy Pierce.<lb/>
ENERGY: Discover how you can<lb/>
reduce tension and have greater<lb/>
energy. Learn the Transcendental<lb/>
Meditation technique. Find out<lb/>
more about TM this Thursday at<lb/>
8O0 at Ranter's National Bank,<lb/>
Washington St. Downtown.<lb/>
WANTED: Full time News Editor<lb/>
for weekly paper, The Standard<lb/>
Laconic, in Snow Hill�Call<lb/>
747-3883, "Snow Hill.<lb/>
EARN $2500: This summer.<lb/>
Summer jobs are available now.<lb/>
Interviews Tuesday 3.00 or 600<lb/>
in Rawl 130.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057127_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 28 April 1977<lb/>
Here's how you can<lb/>
get off to a sound<lb/>
financial start.<lb/>
master cmm?<lb/>
f-K.Tf PBiNKff .V�0<lb/>
fOk<lb/>
t<lb/>
kL<lb/>
The Wachovia Grad Plan gives you a package of all the banking<lb/>
services you'll need, including:<lb/>
� A Simple Interest Loan for a car or any major purchase.<lb/>
� A Wachovia Free Way Account<lb/>
for no-service-charge checking,<lb/>
� A Wachovia Ready<lb/>
ReservAccount. It backs<lb/>
up your checking account<lb/>
with a reserve of cash.<lb/>
� A Master Charge Card.<lb/>
� A Wachovia Banking Card<lb/>
(with Check Guarantee) that can<lb/>
be used at Teller n.<lb/>
� Your own Wachovia Personal Banker.<lb/>
� Newcomer information and relocation assistance<lb/>
How do you get it? Simple. If you're getting your degree this year,<lb/>
have accepted a full-time job with a salary of at least $7200, and are<lb/>
going to live or work in a North Carolina community, you may already<lb/>
qualify. So drop by your nearest Wachovia office and ask a Wachovia<lb/>
Personal Banker about the Grad Plan. Do it this week, and get a<lb/>
sound start on your financial future.<lb/>
It's the Wachovia<lb/>
Grad Plan.<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
<pb facs="00057127_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>