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<pb facs="00057128_0001"/>
Pirates win<lb/>
Baseball, track sweep conference championships<lb/>
East Carolina closed out its association with the Southern<lb/>
Conference Saturday on two winning notes, taking both the<lb/>
baseball and track championships. The Pirate baseball team swept<lb/>
a doubleheader from The Citadel in Charleston to run their record<lb/>
to 30-10 overall, and insure themselves a berth in the NCAA<lb/>
playoffs. The Buc track team overcame some bad breaks Saturday<lb/>
to take their second straight conference championship. Several<lb/>
Pirates set new Southern Conference records in the meet.<lb/>
See stories, page 14<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Vol. 52, No. 5d<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
3 May 1977<lb/>
SGA passes resolution<lb/>
for presiden tial recall,<lb/>
awaits Jenkins'decision<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The SGA Legislature passed a<lb/>
resolution asking for the imme-<lb/>
diate recall of SGA President Neil<lb/>
Sessomsand Vice President Reed<lb/>
Warren. This differed from a bill<lb/>
passed last Monday, which only<lb/>
appropriated money for a recall<lb/>
election.<lb/>
Speaker Ricky Price read a<lb/>
letter from the Review Board<lb/>
stating its ruling that "the office<lb/>
of the Attorney General is never<lb/>
vacant. The incumbent has all<lb/>
duties and powers until the<lb/>
appointee has completed screen-<lb/>
ing procedures and has been<lb/>
approved by the legislature<lb/>
According to Article 5, section<lb/>
2 of the SGA constitution, the<lb/>
Review Board has the final<lb/>
authority to interpret the SGA<lb/>
constitution and the laws passed<lb/>
under it.<lb/>
The letter declared the names<lb/>
on the recall petition to be valid.<lb/>
The actual signatures have not<lb/>
been validated; the names have<lb/>
been certified as being full time<lb/>
students with a course load of at<lb/>
least 12 quarter hours.<lb/>
Acting Attorney General<lb/>
Karen Harloe spoke on the recall<lb/>
petition, outlining the procedure<lb/>
of validation, and stating that the<lb/>
recall petitions were public record<lb/>
and that she would welcome<lb/>
examination of them in her<lb/>
presence. She said, however, that<lb/>
she has been denied access to her<lb/>
office, where the petitions are<lb/>
stored in a safe. She said that the<lb/>
validated signatures constituted<lb/>
15 of the student body, the<lb/>
number required for a recall.<lb/>
Harloe said that her being fired<lb/>
had nothing to do with her<lb/>
competency as Attorney General.<lb/>
Price reported on a meeting<lb/>
Monday morning with Chancellor<lb/>
Leo Jenkins, who has the ultimate<lb/>
authority to approve or deny any<lb/>
act of the Student Government, to<lb/>
discuss Jenkins' overriding the<lb/>
petition for recall. The meeting<lb/>
was also attended by Student<lb/>
Union President Dennis Ramsey,<lb/>
former Student Union President<lb/>
Barry Robinson, past MRC Presi-<lb/>
dent Steve Price, M RC President<lb/>
Donny Hall, legislators Kevin<lb/>
McCourt and Sam Collier, Law<lb/>
Society President Teresa Whise-<lb/>
nant, freshman Robert Swaim,<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi President Randy<lb/>
Doub, Vice-Chancel I or Robert<lb/>
Holt, Buccaneer Editor Susan<lb/>
How the SGA<lb/>
legislators; voted<lb/>
on the resolution<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne yes<lb/>
Katie Rayyes<lb/>
Sam Collierno<lb/>
Debbie Boyceyes<lb/>
Kirby Lashleyabstained<lb/>
Ron Morrisonyes<lb/>
Dalton Densonyes<lb/>
Bobby Narrellyes<lb/>
Phil Barbeeno<lb/>
Chuck Freedmanyes<lb/>
DeniseVioletteyes<lb/>
Dalton Nicholsonyes<lb/>
Chris Cheat hamabstained<lb/>
David Whitsonabstained<lb/>
Valerie Chaff inyes<lb/>
Randy Baileyyes<lb/>
Lynn Shubertno<lb/>
Carolyn Blackwell yes<lb/>
Bill Mizilleyes'<lb/>
Tommy DeJagger abstained<lb/>
Kathy Peeyes<lb/>
TinaPadillayes<lb/>
Ann 0' Brienno<lb/>
Lynda Tayloryes<lb/>
Jeff Judyno<lb/>
Valerie<lb/>
Weathingtonno<lb/>
Lynn Bellyes<lb/>
ReneeHinsonyes<lb/>
Pam Tayloryes<lb/>
Bill Powellyes<lb/>
Bernard Smithno<lb/>
LisaWalkupyes<lb/>
Kevin McCourtno<lb/>
Eric Davidsonyes 1<lb/>
Roqerson and Communications<lb/>
Board member Scott Bright.<lb/>
These students, according to<lb/>
Ramsey, "represented the stu-<lb/>
dents, not Sessoms and Warren,<lb/>
but students who feel that<lb/>
Sullivan is a poor loser and that<lb/>
Neil and Reed rightfully won the<lb/>
election. We feel that most of the<lb/>
legislators no longer speak for the<lb/>
students but rather for them-<lb/>
selves<lb/>
Representing those favoring<lb/>
the recall petition were former<lb/>
SGA President Tim Sullivan,<lb/>
Karen Harloe, and chairman of<lb/>
the Review Board David Dulin.<lb/>
In addition to the recall issue,<lb/>
Robert Swaim asked that Jenkins<lb/>
dissolve the legislature until fall<lb/>
semester. "I don't feel the<lb/>
legislature is representative of its<lb/>
constituency he said.<lb/>
Swaim is a FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor. However,<lb/>
he did not represent FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD at the morning meet-<lb/>
ing, according to Senior Editor<lb/>
Jim Elliott and Co-News Editor<lb/>
Kim Johnson.<lb/>
 Robert acted on his own as a<lb/>
student said Johnson. "No one<lb/>
in this office officially authorized<lb/>
him to represent the paper in this<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
Both Sessoms and Warren<lb/>
said they disagreed with Swaim's<lb/>
request to dissolve the legis-<lb/>
lature.<lb/>
In other business, Sessoms<lb/>
asked the support of the legisla-<lb/>
ture on a bill before the North<lb/>
Carolina General Assembly seek-<lb/>
ing $2.7 million for improvements<lb/>
on the drama building here, and<lb/>
he asked them not to support a<lb/>
bill to increase tuition at public<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
The legislature went into a<lb/>
lengthy discussion on a bill to<lb/>
fund a Library Science retreat,<lb/>
before appropriating $288.<lb/>
Two new legislators were<lb/>
approved by the legislature:<lb/>
David Trevino, a Day legislator,<lb/>
and Diane Thomas, representing<lb/>
Clement dorm.<lb/>
TWO ECU CO-EDS, Sybil Thorton and Barbara Barrow, relive fond<lb/>
memories of the sixties. Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Choosing careers<lb/>
By BOB TH0NEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Career-choice and life-goal<lb/>
questions are becoming increas-<lb/>
ingly serious problems fa East<lb/>
Carolina University students, ac-<lb/>
cording to Dr. H.D. Lambeth, Jr<lb/>
guidance counselor at the ECU<lb/>
Counseling Center.<lb/>
"Students are worried about<lb/>
what they are going to do after<lb/>
they graduate, and the problems<lb/>
get more and more serious the<lb/>
closer students get to grad-<lb/>
uation said Dr. Wilbert R. Ball,<lb/>
also a guidance counselor at the<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
"As these career-choice pro-<lb/>
blems increase, so does the need<lb/>
for access to current vocational<lb/>
information, both for students<lb/>
and guidance professionals<lb/>
said Lambeth.<lb/>
A $57,000 proposal by the<lb/>
federal Health, Education and<lb/>
Welfare department is designed<lb/>
to upgrade the information and<lb/>
services currently available at the<lb/>
center. The proposal is now under<lb/>
federal consideration.<lb/>
"Equally important is the fact<lb/>
that students need to concern<lb/>
themselves early in their edu-<lb/>
cational career with decisions<lb/>
concerning their life styles and<lb/>
their career choices said Lam-<lb/>
beh.<lb/>
"The major problem is one of<lb/>
student apathy in collecting<lb/>
career information and the lack of<lb/>
realistic self-appraisal regarding<lb/>
interests and aptitudes concern-<lb/>
ing their choice<lb/>
Data collected by the General<lb/>
See CAREERS, page 3<lb/>
REPRESENTATIVES OF THE English Department took a proud<lb/>
first place at the ECU College Bowl championship.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057128_0002"/><lb/>
�rasa<lb/>
Phi Eta picnic NSCL<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
3 May 1977<lb/>
Talent show Concert<lb/>
The Gammettes of Sigma<lb/>
Gamma Rho Sorority will be<lb/>
sponsoring a talent show. All<lb/>
persons interested in displaying<lb/>
their talents should contact Joyoe<lb/>
Mourning at 758-8831 by<lb/>
Wednesday, May 4, 1977.<lb/>
Hotdog sale<lb/>
Clement Hall is having a<lb/>
"Hotdog Sale" Wednesday May<lb/>
4th in the lobby from 1-6 p.m.<lb/>
Red pin bowling<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 6:00 p.m you get<lb/>
the chance to bowl for a free<lb/>
game. Make a strike with the red<lb/>
pin as the head pin and you win.<lb/>
Also, Sunday night is Moonlight<lb/>
Bowling" night. A free game is<lb/>
given away each hour between<lb/>
8:00 p.m. and 11 00 p.m. Come<lb/>
early if you want to get a lane<lb/>
'cause you can't afford to miss it!<lb/>
Boxing club<lb/>
All persons interested in a<lb/>
boxing club at ECU contact Ricky<lb/>
McFarland at Rm. 336 Jones<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
There will be a meeting on<lb/>
May 11th, 7 p.m at Memorial<lb/>
Gym. This will be to determine<lb/>
membership. Mr. Vandervere,<lb/>
North Carolina AAU representa-<lb/>
tive for national and Olympic<lb/>
boxing, will help us organize if we<lb/>
have a minimum of ten boxers. Be<lb/>
there<lb/>
Poll tenders<lb/>
All students who worked as<lb/>
Pa, Tenders during the SGA<lb/>
Elections may oome by the SGA<lb/>
Offioe Room 228 Mendenhall and<lb/>
pick up their money.<lb/>
BUC jobs<lb/>
Anyone interested in an<lb/>
editorial or business position on<lb/>
the 1978 BUC staff should apply<lb/>
by Friday, May 6 at 5 p.m. at the<lb/>
BUC offioe in the Publications<lb/>
Center. The staff will begin<lb/>
operations the first week of school<lb/>
next fall. For further information<lb/>
call 757-6501 or 6502.<lb/>
Fashion show<lb/>
Fletcher, Clement, and White<lb/>
Residence Halls are sponsoring a<lb/>
fashion show featuring the new<lb/>
Summer look from Brody' s. Enjoy<lb/>
an ioe cream cone and the sunset<lb/>
at 6 p.m May 3rd, in the<lb/>
amphitheater behind Fletcher<lb/>
On Sunday, May 8 at 3:15<lb/>
p.m. the East Carolina Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra will present its spring<lb/>
concert in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Two music students and a faculty<lb/>
member will be featured soloists.<lb/>
Sheila Marshburn, graduate<lb/>
student, and Larry White, senior,<lb/>
were winners of the annual<lb/>
concerto competition of the<lb/>
School of Music.<lb/>
James Houlik, faculty mem-<lb/>
ber of the ECU School of Music,<lb/>
will play "Concertino for Tenor<lb/>
Saxophone and Chamber<lb/>
Orchestra" by Paul Harvey.<lb/>
The remainder of the program<lb/>
will include the "Overture to<lb/>
Oberon" by Carl Maria von<lb/>
Weber and "Dance Suite" by<lb/>
Beta Bartok. Robert Hause will<lb/>
conduct.<lb/>
No admission will be charged.<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Melvin Druelinger, professor<lb/>
of chemistry at Indiana State<lb/>
University, will present a seminar<lb/>
on "Synthesis and photo-<lb/>
chemistry of oxaziranes: that old<lb/>
familiar strain May 3, 1977 at<lb/>
12CO noon in Room 201 Flanagan<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Pub positions<lb/>
Applications for 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 Alpha<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta meeting<lb/>
Wed May 3, 7:30 in Richard C.<lb/>
Todd Room.<lb/>
Membership applications<lb/>
requirements: 1- Undergraduate,<lb/>
20 quarter hrs. Hist, 2.07 overall,<lb/>
3.1 Hist. 2-Graduate, complete Vi<lb/>
residenoe requirements for mas-<lb/>
ter's degree, 3.50 quality point<lb/>
average or its equivalent. Pick up<lb/>
applications in History office and<lb/>
return them to Brewster A-316.<lb/>
Phi Lambda<lb/>
The Awards Banquet for Phi<lb/>
Beta Lambda will be held May 3,<lb/>
1977 at 530 p.m. at Three Steers<lb/>
Restaurant on Memorial Drive.<lb/>
Chapt. X<lb/>
There will be an "Extrava-<lb/>
ganza" on Monday, May 2nd<lb/>
from 8XX) untilat Chapter Ten.<lb/>
Door prizes to be given away<lb/>
every half hour. There 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 thedoor.<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/>
Senior show<lb/>
Debra Tyler and Judith Burd<lb/>
invite you to a viewing of their<lb/>
senior show, Perspective, in<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery, May 8-15.<lb/>
FGfreefli<lb/>
Do you believe in evolution?<lb/>
Do you believe evolution can<lb/>
explain all the facts of science?<lb/>
If so (a even if not!) you need to<lb/>
see "Footprints in Stone This<lb/>
exciting forty-five minute film<lb/>
deals with scientific evidence<lb/>
against the theory of evolution<lb/>
and in support of the concept of<lb/>
special creation. See "Footprints<lb/>
in Stone" tonight at 7 or 9 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster B-102. Sponsored by the<lb/>
Forever Generation-an ECU<lb/>
Christian fellowship group.<lb/>
Management<lb/>
There will beareorganization-<lb/>
al meeting of the Society for<lb/>
Advancement of Management<lb/>
on Wednesday, May 10, 1977 at<lb/>
3:30 in Rm. 102. If you wish to run<lb/>
for office please attend. All<lb/>
members are urged to support<lb/>
this meeting.<lb/>
Free concert<lb/>
The ECU Stage Band will<lb/>
perform in a free admission<lb/>
ooncert on Wednesday, May 11,<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The ooncert will be held in the<lb/>
Multi-Purpose Room on the first<lb/>
floor and beginsat 8.00 p.m. Free<lb/>
refreshments will also be served.<lb/>
Pom-pom squad<lb/>
A second Pom Pom squad<lb/>
tryout will be held Saturday, May<lb/>
14 for rising freshmen and all<lb/>
interested girls who were unable<lb/>
to tryout in March. Tryouts will<lb/>
begin at 10 a.m. in room 105B of<lb/>
the music building. Each girl<lb/>
should oome prepared to do a jazz<lb/>
rout i ne and a march rout i ne of her<lb/>
own. If you have questions<lb/>
xmtact Regina 758-8752 or Jo<lb/>
Ellen 752-8270.<lb/>
S.0.U.LS.<lb/>
SOULS presents an  Evening<lb/>
of Mystique and Enchantment<lb/>
May 15, 1977 at 7 p.m. in 240<lb/>
Mendenhall. This is a fashion<lb/>
show being coordinated by<lb/>
Yvonne Williams and Shonita<lb/>
Harris. Come see ECU students<lb/>
in action.<lb/>
Winners<lb/>
Congratulations to Ben Gil-<lb/>
lam, Lowell Oakley, Mike Mer-<lb/>
ritt, the winners of Clement-<lb/>
Jones 7sr Annual Gong Show that<lb/>
was held Thurs. May 28, 1977 at<lb/>
Menttenhafl: <lb/>
The East Carolina delegation<lb/>
of the North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature (NCSL) will hold<lb/>
screenings to fill member open-<lb/>
ings beginning Tuesday, May 3<lb/>
through Thursday, May 5. The<lb/>
screenings will be held at 7:30<lb/>
each night in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Fun In Son<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ<lb/>
will meet for fun, fellowship and<lb/>
challenging insights from God's<lb/>
Word. Everyone weloome. Thurs-<lb/>
day 7 p.m. Brewster B-102.<lb/>
Dance<lb/>
The Delta Sigma Theta Ser-<lb/>
vice Sorority will present Broad-<lb/>
way Entertainment Corp featur-<lb/>
ing Funky Broadway Super Disco<lb/>
Jock.<lb/>
The dance will be held in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium located on<lb/>
campus, on May 28, 1977 from 9<lb/>
p.m. until 1 30 a.m. The dance is<lb/>
open to all high school students,<lb/>
graduates, college students and<lb/>
college graduates. This includes<lb/>
all surrounding areas of Kinston,<lb/>
Williamston, Gddsboro, Green-<lb/>
ville, Winterville, Washington,<lb/>
Ayden, Maury, Mount Olive,<lb/>
Bethel, and Raleigh.<lb/>
Admission is $1 per person.<lb/>
The dance is being held in honor<lb/>
of all graduating students and is<lb/>
to help raise money to contribute<lb/>
to the Delta Sigma Theta Scholar-<lb/>
ship Fund and to the Sickle Cell<lb/>
Anemia Foundation.<lb/>
Everyone's weloome!<lb/>
Just oome on out and have<lb/>
some good clear fun!<lb/>
Prizes will be awarded at the<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
Day camp<lb/>
The ECU physical education<lb/>
department is sponsoring a Day<lb/>
Camp to be held from June 13<lb/>
through July.<lb/>
The camp is for children who<lb/>
are between ages six and 12. The<lb/>
program is geared to physical<lb/>
activities. Swimming is<lb/>
included. There will be children's<lb/>
games, including individual and<lb/>
group sports.<lb/>
Hours are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.<lb/>
Call 757-6000 or 757-6441.<lb/>
Arts &amp; crafts<lb/>
The Farmville Arts Council is<lb/>
sponsoring its first annual arts<lb/>
and crafts fair Sunday, May 8,<lb/>
1977 from 200 p.m. until 5O0<lb/>
p.m. At the J.Y. Monk Memorial<lb/>
Park on highway 258 North. Come<lb/>
and bring the family for a spring<lb/>
afternoon in the park filled with<lb/>
arts and crafts exhibits, contin-<lb/>
uous performances, a unique<lb/>
children's area and a refreshing<lb/>
snack stop.<lb/>
Opera theatre<lb/>
On May 6 and 7, Friday and<lb/>
Saturday nights, the East Caro-<lb/>
lina School of Music Opera<lb/>
Theatre will present an Evening<lb/>
of Gilbert and Sullivan at 8 p.m.<lb/>
ECU students are admitted with<lb/>
ID and there is a public donation<lb/>
of 50o$MftA<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Students who are to be<lb/>
initiated into Phi Eta Sigma are<lb/>
reminded to oome for the cere-<lb/>
mony to the Multipurpose Room,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, at<lb/>
7:15 p.m. on Thursday. May 5.<lb/>
i Sigma Pi<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi National Honor<lb/>
fraternity will hold its monthly<lb/>
business meeting on Wed May<lb/>
4, 1977 at 6.00 p.m. in Room 132<lb/>
Austin building. All brothers<lb/>
must be present as a doughnut<lb/>
sale will be held directly following<lb/>
the meeting. Founder's Day<lb/>
money must be paid that night.<lb/>
Baha'is<lb/>
Baha'is meet every Monday<lb/>
evening at 300 Contentnea.<lb/>
Phone 758-8113 for further infor-<lb/>
mation.<lb/>
Free bowling<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 score any time during one<lb/>
week, you will qualify for the<lb/>
roll-off on Monday, May 16. Four<lb/>
bowlers will qualify for the roll-off<lb/>
and one of them oould be you!<lb/>
Drop by the Bowling Center for<lb/>
more details and while you're<lb/>
there, give it a try.<lb/>
Symposium<lb/>
The seventh annual Speech<lb/>
and Hearing Symposium at ECU<lb/>
has been set for Friday, May 6,<lb/>
and will feature presentations by<lb/>
experts on aspects of speech<lb/>
disorders.<lb/>
Several symposium sessions<lb/>
are scheduled for the Carol Belk<lb/>
Allied Health Auditorium.<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/>
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 Office in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center, and must be<lb/>
purchased at least 24 hours in<lb/>
advance of the performance.<lb/>
Tickets for Saturday or Sun-<lb/>
day must be purchased by 4 p.m<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
Ticket reservations and addi-<lb/>
tional information is available<lb/>
from the Central Ticket Offioe by<lb/>
telephone, 757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
�M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057128_0003"/><lb/>
3 May 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Gay activists protest proposed state law<lb/>
(LNS)Gays in Pennsylvania<lb/>
are organizing against what has<lb/>
been described as one of the most<lb/>
anti-gay pieces of legislation ever<lb/>
to be introduced in the U.S.<lb/>
The proposed state law,<lb/>
Senate Bill 83, would prohibit<lb/>
gays from taking jobs as state<lb/>
polioe, working with juveniles,<lb/>
the handicapped, the mentally<lb/>
retarded or people in institutions<lb/>
for the mentally ill.<lb/>
Penalties prescribed by the<lb/>
bill are dismissal, a $300 fine, and<lb/>
90 days imprisonment.<lb/>
Originally the bill defined a<lb/>
"homosexual" as "one who is<lb/>
inclined to or who practices or<lb/>
engages in sex or erotic acts with<lb/>
a member of one's own sex<lb/>
Undoubtedly this would have<lb/>
been struck down as unconstitu-<lb/>
tional, since in American law<lb/>
only acts are punishable, not a<lb/>
state of being or an inclination. So<lb/>
amendments were added to the<lb/>
bill taking out words like "in-<lb/>
dined to<lb/>
Last year a similar piece of<lb/>
anti-gay legislation was attached<lb/>
as an amendment to an unrelated<lb/>
Pennsylvania bill, and the gay<lb/>
community did not have much<lb/>
time to mobilize resistance. The<lb/>
bill passed the legislature over-<lb/>
whelmingly, but was then vetoed<lb/>
by Governor Milton Shapp.<lb/>
This year's bill also appears to<lb/>
have little chance of success. If it<lb/>
should get through the legisla-<lb/>
ture, Governor Shapp is expected<lb/>
to veto it.<lb/>
Also, this time around Penn-<lb/>
sylvania lesbians and gay men<lb/>
have organized resistance-such<lb/>
as a demonstration of about 40<lb/>
people at the state capital build-<lb/>
ing in Harrisburg March 14.<lb/>
Lobbying of 22 state legislators<lb/>
followed the demonstration.<lb/>
Jack Potter, a Philadelphia-<lb/>
area gay activist, described his<lb/>
session with one legislator,<lb/>
Senator Sweeney, who indicated<lb/>
that he would vote for the bill.<lb/>
The senator said that even if the<lb/>
bill (then unamended) wouldn't<lb/>
stand in oourt, he wanted it to<lb/>
pass as a symbol.<lb/>
Some gay activists did home-<lb/>
work before the lobbying and<lb/>
figured out that, at $700 per<lb/>
investigation, it would cost<lb/>
Pennsylvania $17 million to en-<lb/>
foroe the law in all the appropri-<lb/>
ate job categories.<lb/>
Potter speculates that the bill<lb/>
is intended not so much as a<lb/>
serious attempt to get gays fired<lb/>
from government jobs, but as "a<lb/>
muzzling device and a symbol<lb/>
The reasoning goes that with the<lb/>
law hanging over their heads, gay<lb/>
government employees are more<lb/>
likely to be silent about their<lb/>
sexual preferences and personal<lb/>
lives. Another gay activist de-<lb/>
scribed it partially as "an attempt<lb/>
to stifle the movement<lb/>
The bill's chief champion,<lb/>
Senator Thomas Nolan, Demo-<lb/>
cratic chief in the Senate, has<lb/>
openly stated his desire "to get<lb/>
the queers<lb/>
Potter and other Pennsylvania<lb/>
gays see the effort to pass Senate<lb/>
Bill 83 as part of the backlash that<lb/>
occurred in Pennsylvania ever<lb/>
since Governor Shapp issued a<lb/>
strong pro-gay executive order<lb/>
several years ago. The order<lb/>
prohibited any state agency from<lb/>
discrimination in hiring on the<lb/>
basis of sexual orientation. It<lb/>
further instructed state agencies<lb/>
to take positive actions to oombat<lb/>
discrimination against gays.<lb/>
The top-down order was a rare<lb/>
one. Still Pennsylvania gays are<lb/>
finding they must defend the<lb/>
basic rights it called for-again<lb/>
and again if necessary.<lb/>
CAREERS<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
College on entering freshmen in<lb/>
1973 indicated that, by the Spring<lb/>
of 1974, over 50 per cent had<lb/>
changed their major.<lb/>
"There are many students<lb/>
who have chosen a major but are<lb/>
less than settled and motivated<lb/>
and need to validate or amend<lb/>
their tentative choice said<lb/>
Lambeth.<lb/>
 This causes poorly motivated<lb/>
students, misspent time on trial<lb/>
and error enrollment, and un-<lb/>
profitable use of classroom space<lb/>
and teaching staff while students<lb/>
fumble through Lambeth<lb/>
added.<lb/>
"Many students seem to<lb/>
suffer from tunnel vision said<lb/>
Ball. "They don't think in flexible<lb/>
enough terms.<lb/>
 The degree itself opens more<lb/>
doors than students expect. Two-<lb/>
thirds of the people now working<lb/>
in business were not business<lb/>
majors<lb/>
In the General College data<lb/>
collected on students who intend-<lb/>
ed to major in business, less then<lb/>
39 per cent were continuing in<lb/>
that choice.<lb/>
"What are we looking for?"<lb/>
asks a Sears Company advertise-<lb/>
ment in the College Placement<lb/>
Annual.<lb/>
"Not a particular degree.<lb/>
We're much more interested in<lb/>
the person who earned it<lb/>
"Our major focus at the<lb/>
Counseling Center is not to direct<lb/>
students in their career choices,<lb/>
but to provide assistance in<lb/>
obtaining that which the student<lb/>
has decided he wants according<lb/>
to Dr. George Weigan, director of<lb/>
the Counseling Center.<lb/>
The ECU Counseling Center is<lb/>
located on the third floor of<lb/>
Wright Annex and is open from 9<lb/>
to 5, Monday through Friday.<lb/>
Ktntiidcif fried kidc�n.<lb/>
Americtfc<lb/>
Country Good<lb/>
Metd<lb/>
MONTH OF MAY<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
2-Piece Combination Dinner<lb/>
with slaw or creamed potatoes,<lb/>
and roll all for<lb/>
99<lb/>
2 Locations I 600 S.W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By-Pass) Dine in or<lb/>
Phone 756-6434 take our<lb/>
290C E. 5th St. Take out only<lb/>
Phone 752-5184<lb/>
Open: Sunoay-Thursday 11 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
Friday &amp; Saturday 11 a.m10 p.m.<lb/>
"h's finger lickiri good"<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers<lb/>
2nd Annual<lb/>
Going Crazy Sale! <lb/>
� Floyd Gs Doing It Again<lb/>
May 5,6,7 Thurs. � Fri. � Sat<lb/>
 EntireStock of Diamonds<lb/>
Crazy Sale Price 25 off<lb/>
� All Wedding Bands<lb/>
Crazy Sale Price 25 off<lb/>
Ladies Birthstone, Onyx, Opal, Jade<lb/>
Ring Crazy Sale Price 25 off<lb/>
l All Clocks in Stock<lb/>
Going Crazy Price 12 off<lb/>
Pewter Cuff Braclets<lb/>
Gone Crazy Price $3.00<lb/>
� Floyd G. Special<lb/>
He's Completely Crazy<lb/>
� Pierced Earrings<lb/>
Crazy Days Only Buy 1 Pair,<lb/>
Get 2nd Pair at 12 Price<lb/>
� Gents h Ladies<lb/>
Pendants 8- Braclets<lb/>
You Ask For It<lb/>
We've Gotta Be Crazy 25 off<lb/>
etc.<lb/>
Selection Timer Watch 25 off<lb/>
 Watch Bands � Eastern N. C. Largest Seiko Dealer<lb/>
Crazy, Crazy, Crazy 50 0ver 400 Timer Watches in Stock<lb/>
Free Gifts To Be Given Away Come On Down And GetCrazy With Us<lb/>
Thursday 2 � 5<lb/>
W R Q R Broadcasting Live<lb/>
IF YOU NEED JEWELRY COME TAKE ADVANTAGE OF<lb/>
FLOYD G. &amp; THE GANG DURING THE 2nd ANNUAL<lb/>
GOING CRAZY SALE<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson Jewelrys<lb/>
on the mall<lb/>
Downtown in Greenville<lb/>
758-2502<lb/>
IF IT DON'T TICK-TCCK TO US<lb/>
CRAZY-CRAZY-CRAZY<lb/>
Friday2-5<lb/>
We're Going Country<lb/>
WFAG Broadcasting Live<lb/>
<pb facs="00057128_0004"/><lb/>
.<lb/>
El i � t<lb/>
ditonals<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
3 May 1977<lb/>
Save The American Way<lb/>
As the U.S. begins its entry into the necessary<lb/>
realm of national planning, as is now happening on<lb/>
the energy front, the nation should take a serious<lb/>
look at population control as a logical tenet of any<lb/>
comprehensive strategy to maintain or improve the<lb/>
American lifestyle. Donald Mann, president of<lb/>
Negative Population Growth (NPG) Inc believes the<lb/>
U.S. should make a substantial reduction in<lb/>
population the oornerstone of a national policy on<lb/>
energy conservation.<lb/>
The FebruaryMarch issue of the NPG Newslet-<lb/>
ter warns not only of the impending world energy<lb/>
shortage but of shortages of many of the basic<lb/>
resources on which the industrialized U.S. relies for<lb/>
its sustainment. Among these essential but finite<lb/>
resources is included uranium which, according to<lb/>
analysts quoted in the Newsletter, could run short by<lb/>
1990 even at current usage patterns. Over 90 per cent<lb/>
of the raw materials, strontium, manganese, cobalt<lb/>
and chromium, must be imported into the U.S. from<lb/>
countries which the Bureau of Mines of the<lb/>
Department of the Interior calls "potentially unstable<lb/>
and hostile to us according to the Newsletter. Add<lb/>
petroleum to the resources that the U.S. is using and<lb/>
importing at an increasing rate and the resulting<lb/>
forecast of America's economic stability in the<lb/>
waning years of the 20th century waxes cloudy.<lb/>
Even without this nation's tendency to view<lb/>
prosperity in terms of improving life through<lb/>
the accumulation of more and more material goods<lb/>
and an increasing consumption of energy, stabilizing<lb/>
the industrial future of the U.S. will be difficult. As<lb/>
many of the developing nations of the world have<lb/>
discovered, economic gains can be nullified and<lb/>
sometimes reversed by population increases. Al-<lb/>
though not a severe problem overall, America's<lb/>
growing population is, and will become more of a<lb/>
factor in this nation's maintaining of itscurrent living<lb/>
standard.<lb/>
Mann is quoted as saying that if present trends<lb/>
continue, the U.S. population by the end of the<lb/>
century will have grown from the present 215 million<lb/>
to some 260 million. If, he contends, we could<lb/>
achieve a population of 200 million with negative<lb/>
population growth, energy requirements for the<lb/>
latter would be 30 per cent less than for the predicted<lb/>
population of 60 million more.<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 at 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/>
L"V�5 m. NIBI, TU IS A WCRDPHONE<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
SGA bickering staffs student business<lb/>
m<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Being a student with a<lb/>
considerable interest in politics, I<lb/>
am slowly becoming involved in<lb/>
this presidential campaign which<lb/>
is totally unbecoming of a student<lb/>
government as large as ours. The<lb/>
only result I see that will stem<lb/>
from this revote is the wasting of<lb/>
precious time that Neil Sessoms,<lb/>
our newly-elected president,<lb/>
could be using to help improve<lb/>
our university. Instead, this ha-<lb/>
rassment on the part of Tim<lb/>
Sullivan is only causing bickering<lb/>
between the SGA, not to mention<lb/>
Can your beach hits<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I met someone last week who<lb/>
was an absolute idiot - an airhead<lb/>
- I mean, not even educable.<lb/>
To my surprise, mixed in with<lb/>
this person's collection of "Beach<lb/>
Hit" records was an astounding<lb/>
number of rock connoisseur<lb/>
albums. Granted, this person<lb/>
didn't know how to boogie worth<lb/>
a damn, but was as familiar with<lb/>
the Rolling Stones as with using a<lb/>
fork!<lb/>
I just couldn't wait to suggest<lb/>
to Pat Coyle and all you other<lb/>
musical-living-in-the-past-snobs<lb/>
that you drop your joyless "I'm<lb/>
cool' facades and enjoy some-<lb/>
thing that has a little relevance<lb/>
for a change.<lb/>
What comes to mind when I<lb/>
hear "This Magic Moment?"<lb/>
Certainly not the beach. Perhaps<lb/>
it's Chapter X or a real sick<lb/>
feeling in my stomach or simply<lb/>
the urge to turn it off.<lb/>
Wink Johnson<lb/>
placing the SGA in a state of<lb/>
limbo. This cannot possibly help<lb/>
the student body: it can only hurt<lb/>
it. The question to be asked now<lb/>
is, how can such a concerned<lb/>
student, as Sullivan claims him-<lb/>
self to be, stand back and<lb/>
intentionally jeopardize the rela-<lb/>
tionship between the student<lb/>
body and the SGA? Sullivan has<lb/>
completed his year in office and<lb/>
has made several accomplish-<lb/>
ments which are worthy of praise.<lb/>
Unfortunately, I am now unable<lb/>
to give him that praise and<lb/>
recognition. I am sorry to say that<lb/>
I have lost all respect for Sullivan<lb/>
after seeing his behavior toward<lb/>
the results of the election and his<lb/>
determination to re-occupy his<lb/>
position as the SGA president. It<lb/>
makes one wonder whether Sulli-<lb/>
van wants the position to aid the<lb/>
students and their affairs, or<lb/>
simply to gain the fame and glory<lb/>
which accompanies the job of<lb/>
acting as president.<lb/>
It is probable that after<lb/>
witnessing this struggle, the<lb/>
students will lose all feelings of<lb/>
'Man 'concert failure<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Whoever was responsible<lb/>
for scheduling the conoert outside<lb/>
knowing full well the probability<lb/>
of rain and therefore causing us to<lb/>
hear but 10 minutes of the<lb/>
wonderful music of 'Happy the<lb/>
Man' can dry our respective<lb/>
seats.<lb/>
Hal. J. Daniel<lb/>
Margaret Haenel<lb/>
Patti Loesche<lb/>
Harley Whitehurst<lb/>
respect that they have for the<lb/>
SGA, and will become very<lb/>
apathetic in their furthur involve-<lb/>
ment in the organization. Surely if<lb/>
Sullivan is at all interested in the<lb/>
well-being of the students, he will<lb/>
realize that the pressure of this<lb/>
irregular debate for a revote is<lb/>
uncalled for and damaging to the<lb/>
overall opinions of the students<lb/>
toward their government.<lb/>
Ricki Gliarmis<lb/>
Seat needs Sessoms<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I would like to recommend<lb/>
that Mr. Sessoms himself repre-<lb/>
sent the student body on the<lb/>
Greenville City Council. Under<lb/>
the administration of Jim Honey-<lb/>
cutt, Student Body president<lb/>
1975-76, the council position was<lb/>
obtained through 8 months of<lb/>
continuous effort. I believe that<lb/>
Mr. Sessoms, the acting Student<lb/>
Body President, and not a repre-<lb/>
sentative, is the person qualified<lb/>
to attend the meetings.<lb/>
I will point out a situation<lb/>
whrethe Greenville City Council<lb/>
has a great deal of power over the<lb/>
students: the Greenville City<lb/>
Council has the authority to<lb/>
prohibit Student Government<lb/>
Transit from operating on city<lb/>
streets.<lb/>
Thus, I believe that good<lb/>
student-city relations are a must.<lb/>
Mr. Sessoms, not his appointee,<lb/>
should establish this relationship.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Anne Carol O'Brien<lb/>
SGA Legislator<lb/>
<pb facs="00057128_0005"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
����<lb/>
mem <lb/>
3 May 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Honor society group attends convention<lb/>
On April 15, 16 and 17, five<lb/>
representatives of Gamma Beta<lb/>
Phi service to education honor<lb/>
society and their advisor attended<lb/>
the national convention in Nash-<lb/>
ville, Tennessee.<lb/>
Those attending were: Johnny<lb/>
Edwards - president of the local<lb/>
chapter, state president, and<lb/>
member of national executive<lb/>
committee; Caryl Halliday;<lb/>
Angela Cashwell; Wade Cline -<lb/>
vice-president elect of local<lb/>
chapter; John Pero - president<lb/>
elect of local chapter, and voting<lb/>
delegate to convention; Mrs.<lb/>
Elizabeth Smith - local chapter<lb/>
advisor, and voting delegate to<lb/>
convention; and her husband Mr.<lb/>
Ralph Smith.<lb/>
A total of 172 student mem-<lb/>
bers and their advisors represent-<lb/>
ing 50 chapters attended the<lb/>
convention.<lb/>
The purposes of the national<lb/>
convention are to discuss consti-<lb/>
tutional amendments and poli-<lb/>
cies, to elect executive officers<lb/>
and members of the national<lb/>
executive committee, and to help<lb/>
chapters work out their problems.<lb/>
During this time committee<lb/>
reports are given and different<lb/>
chapters are able to exchange<lb/>
helpful hints.<lb/>
The national convention helps<lb/>
to increase the interest of Gamma<lb/>
Beta Phi officers and advise them<lb/>
on better ways to run their<lb/>
chapter.<lb/>
Most of those attending the<lb/>
convention arrived Friday, April<lb/>
15, for registration. There was a<lb/>
hospitality room setup with in-<lb/>
formation about Gamma Beta<lb/>
Phi.<lb/>
All voting members of each<lb/>
chapter were supplied with in-<lb/>
formation on issues to be discus-<lb/>
sed at the convention. Friday<lb/>
night most of the voting members<lb/>
met together to discuss some of<lb/>
the issues that would be brought<lb/>
up during the meetings.<lb/>
Saturday morning the first<lb/>
session opened. Everyone was<lb/>
formally welcomed and business<lb/>
began. Introductions of newly<lb/>
inducted chapters and reports by<lb/>
each state director were given.<lb/>
After these reports the Na-<lb/>
tional Executive Secretary, Dr.<lb/>
Aaron Todd, gave his report on<lb/>
ideas and proposals to be discus-<lb/>
sed during the session. At the<lb/>
conclusion of hit. report, awards<lb/>
were presented to outstanding<lb/>
members of Gamma Beta Phi and<lb/>
chapter charters, along with a<lb/>
large framed emblem of Gamma<lb/>
Beta Phi, were presented to the<lb/>
newest chapters.<lb/>
Sunday morning the second<lb/>
session began with continued<lb/>
discussion of policy and constitu-<lb/>
tional matters. After the discus-<lb/>
sion was completed it was deci-<lb/>
ded to continue on with nomina-<lb/>
Teaching<lb/>
Health educator joins ECU<lb/>
Dr. Donald E. Eisley, a<lb/>
community health educator and<lb/>
administrator, has joined the<lb/>
faculty of the ECU School of<lb/>
Allied Health and Social Profes-<lb/>
sions, Department of Community<lb/>
Health.<lb/>
His appointment was an-<lb/>
nounced bv Donald R. Dancy,<lb/>
department chairman.<lb/>
Ensley, an associate profes-<lb/>
sor, teaches Administration of<lb/>
Community Health Services and<lb/>
Community Health Organiza-<lb/>
tions. He is also the coordinator of<lb/>
the department's graduate pro-<lb/>
gram (Masters of Science Ad-<lb/>
ministrative Services).<lb/>
A native of Belhaven, N.C<lb/>
Ensley received his BA from<lb/>
North Carolina Central Univer-<lb/>
sity, the MA and PhD from<lb/>
Michigan State is completing the<lb/>
requirements for a Masters of<lb/>
Public Health degree at the<lb/>
University of North Carolina,<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
A visiting lecturer at Har-<lb/>
vard's Medical School Health<lb/>
Career Summer Program, Ensley<lb/>
has also lectured to the Black<lb/>
Pre-Med Association at Wayne<lb/>
State and to the Michigan Osteo-<lb/>
pathic Society in Detroit.<lb/>
His research includes a study<lb/>
of how the accessibility of health<lb/>
services relate to stroke mortality<lb/>
in North Carolina.<lb/>
tion and election of new officers<lb/>
and members of the national<lb/>
executive committe.<lb/>
There are six members of the<lb/>
executive committee, four stu-<lb/>
dents and two advisors. John<lb/>
Pero was nominated and elected<lb/>
as one of the four student<lb/>
members to be on the committee.<lb/>
When all the offices were<lb/>
filled, Dr. Aaron Todd announced<lb/>
his nominations for state director.<lb/>
All of Dr. Todd's nominations<lb/>
were passed unanimously and<lb/>
Mrs. Smith will be state director.<lb/>
Everyone decided that they<lb/>
should meet together again in<lb/>
April of 1978 at the Airport<lb/>
Sheraton Hotel in Atlanta, Geor-<lb/>
gia. There were a few closing<lb/>
remarks by Dr. Todd claiming the<lb/>
convention a success and the<lb/>
meeting was adjourned around<lb/>
noon.<lb/>
COME.<lb/>
BE THRILLED<lb/>
RF.PF.IJ.ro<lb/>
HOPELESSLY SEDUCED.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
By ANNE RICE<lb/>
The critics called<lb/>
it "Spellbinding<lb/>
"Unrelentingly<lb/>
erotic<lb/>
"Compulsively<lb/>
readable<lb/>
Surrender to<lb/>
the Vampire!<lb/>
$1.95 wherever<lb/>
paperbacks are sold<lb/>
 (JBALLANTINE<lb/>
Attic T-shirts<lb/>
have clASS<lb/>
 fTTJC fshirfs C(rt Quai'qb'e this<lb/>
' tveek to (Ml BCO suderts Cor<lb/>
Only CiytConeperWstow)- Wc are,<lb/>
qoinQ to lose our bait5 0" hiS<lb/>
Sale buivje voan-h ytu to haut an<lb/>
ft-r-tit Tshirt Cor -fht CAarsn Sprmg<lb/>
and hct summer mnon-fhS ahead<lb/>
-7e supply '3 limited) So hurry .<lb/>
FN1<lb/>
(FCSSo STO<lb/>
�L<lb/>
H-<lb/>
990,<lb/>
��<lb/>
<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
<pb facs="00057128_0006"/><lb/>
' '�'��� ���' <lb/>
mm<lb/>
mHHMBB<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 May 1977<lb/>
7re an internship'<lb/>
Newspaper business booms<lb/>
WHAT'S THIS?! Oh, ECU is having freshman orientation again.<lb/>
Math prof selected<lb/>
Virginia Gravely McGrath,<lb/>
assistant professor in the ECU<lb/>
Department of Mathematics, is<lb/>
among 450 faculty members of<lb/>
U.S. colleges and universities<lb/>
receiving appointments as Dan-<lb/>
forth Associates.<lb/>
Each Associate, selected on<lb/>
the basis of dedication to teaching<lb/>
and interest, in scholarship and<lb/>
improvement in student-faculty<lb/>
relationships, is appointed for a<lb/>
six-year term, beginning June 1.<lb/>
The Danforth's program is<lb/>
unique in its inclusion of<lb/>
Associates' spouses in full parti-<lb/>
cipation in program activities.<lb/>
See PROFESSOR, page 7<lb/>
College newspapers across<lb/>
the nation have become big<lb/>
business on some campuses.<lb/>
There have been quite a few<lb/>
changes in the publication of<lb/>
collegiate newspapers. Publish-<lb/>
ing the school paper is no longer<lb/>
the labor of love that it once was.<lb/>
Today the students often are<lb/>
paid for the hours they put in<lb/>
writing news stories or selling<lb/>
ads. "More and more it's like an<lb/>
internship says Lillian Lodge,<lb/>
president of the National Council<lb/>
of College Publications Advisers.<lb/>
"Staffers receive a salary and<lb/>
get their education at the same<lb/>
time. No more working on some<lb/>
non-career job like waiting on<lb/>
tables to earn their tuition<lb/>
money<lb/>
At Michigan State University<lb/>
the lowliest beginner gets $2.45<lb/>
an hour, and the paper's 18<lb/>
student ad salesmen, who work<lb/>
on commission and are called<lb/>
"account executives earn up to<lb/>
$125 a week. The paper also has a<lb/>
$29,900 business manager.<lb/>
Other campus papers are also<lb/>
doing big business. The Daily<lb/>
Texan, the Minnesota Daily, the<lb/>
Ohio State Lantern and the<lb/>
Florida Independent Daily Alliga-<lb/>
tor all have circulations of over<lb/>
25,000 a day. A large number<lb/>
of the more than 100 campus<lb/>
dailies have achieved almost<lb/>
complete independence from<lb/>
their college administrations and<lb/>
are entirely self-supporting.<lb/>
Typical is the Kentucky Ker-<lb/>
nel which last month celebrated<lb/>
its fifth year of independence<lb/>
from the University of Kentucky<lb/>
with a champagne and cake<lb/>
birthday party. It is now the<lb/>
fourth largest daily newspaper in<lb/>
Kentucky.<lb/>
Some campus papers have<lb/>
become so big that they are facing<lb/>
many of the headaches that<lb/>
confront other large businesses.<lb/>
At the University of Iowa the<lb/>
student journalists have formed a<lb/>
union to press their demands for<lb/>
higher wages.<lb/>
According to staffers, the big<lb/>
problem was inequities in pay.<lb/>
"We believed that a number of<lb/>
editors were working just as hard<lb/>
as other editors but were receiv-<lb/>
ing a lot less said editor Rhonda<lb/>
Dickey.<lb/>
Reporters' salaries used to<lb/>
range between $75 and $300 a<lb/>
month. Now they all receive $237<lb/>
a month. The news editor has<lb/>
been cut back to $360 a month<lb/>
from $460.<lb/>
Advertising revenues are<lb/>
soaring. At Michigan State the<lb/>
campusnewspapers'ad revenue is<lb/>
expected to exceed one million<lb/>
dollars this year.<lb/>
About two-thirds of all nation-<lb/>
al advertising placed in campus<lb/>
See NEWSPAPERS, page 7<lb/>
SWHR SQRQ<lb/>
NANCY HEELY<lb/>
SENIOR SHOW<lb/>
MAY 1-7<lb/>
B.FA. COMMUNICATION ARTS<lb/>
BAPTIST STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
RECEPTION MAY6,4:30<lb/>
Prof awarded grant<lb/>
A grant of $2,400 has been<lb/>
awarded Eugene E. Ryan, pro-<lb/>
fessor of philosophy at ECU, by<lb/>
the National Endowment for the<lb/>
Humanities.<lb/>
The award will support Dr.<lb/>
Ryan's research project in the<lb/>
philosophy of the Italian Re-<lb/>
naissance and enable him to<lb/>
participate in a summer seminar<lb/>
on the Italian Renaissance at<lb/>
Brown University in Providence,<lb/>
Rhode Island.<lb/>
The eight-week seminar is an<lb/>
interdisciplinary gathering, in-<lb/>
volving specialists in history,<lb/>
literature and anthropology as<lb/>
well as philosophy.<lb/>
Prof. Ryan previously re-<lb/>
ceived grants from the National<lb/>
Endowment for the Humanities<lb/>
and the Carnegie Corporation for<lb/>
studies of ancient Greek philo-<lb/>
sophy.<lb/>
He holds degrees from St.<lb/>
Mary of the Lake College (Illinois)<lb/>
and Gregorian University in<lb/>
Rome. Before joining the ECU<lb/>
faculty in 1968, he was a member<lb/>
of the philosophy faculty of<lb/>
Marshall University and a tutor at<lb/>
Oxford University, during his<lb/>
post-doctoral study in England.<lb/>
Hntho<lb/>
On the Mall<lb/>
Canvas Wedge<lb/>
Ladies<lb/>
Navy bt Beige<lb/>
Medium width only<lb/>
$12.00<lb/>
"�����<lb/>
<pb facs="00057128_0007"/><lb/>
�i<lb/>
To promote water flow<lb/>
3 May 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Creek may be deepened<lb/>
An environmental impact sur-<lb/>
vey of the Chiood Creek water-<lb/>
shed has resulted in a recommen-<lb/>
dation fa approval of a project to<lb/>
deepen the creek channel.<lb/>
Dr. David S. Phelps, ECU<lb/>
professor of anthropology, made<lb/>
the recommendation after con-<lb/>
ducting a survey which showed<lb/>
that the project would not affect<lb/>
archeological artifacts in the area.<lb/>
Survey work began February<lb/>
15 and continued until the week of<lb/>
March 21. Chiood Creek is a<lb/>
tributary of the Tar River and is<lb/>
located about six miles east of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
The U.S. Department of Agri-<lb/>
culture awarded Dr. Phelps a<lb/>
NEWSPAPERS<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
newspapers is for alooholic bever-<lb/>
ages. These beverage ads have<lb/>
helped fill the vacuum caused<lb/>
when the cigarette companies<lb/>
pulled out about six years ago, as<lb/>
a result of the furor over smoking<lb/>
as a health hazard.<lb/>
In order to reap the benefits of<lb/>
ad revenue from alooholic bever-<lb/>
age advertisements, the Kentuc-<lb/>
ky Kernel last year sued the<lb/>
state's Alooholic Beverage Con-<lb/>
trol Board, which thus far has<lb/>
prevented any firm with a liquor<lb/>
license from advertising in pub-<lb/>
lications affiliated with any Ken-<lb/>
tucky Educational institution.<lb/>
$2,667 grant to finance the survey<lb/>
and make a report. Two graduate<lb/>
students, Jerry Hilliard and<lb/>
David Prewett, assisted Phelps in<lb/>
the study.<lb/>
"Sinoe the program was a<lb/>
survey, there were no major<lb/>
excavations said Phelps.<lb/>
"We did find about 75 sites<lb/>
containing artifacts, but they are<lb/>
located on the higher banks along<lb/>
the creek and won't be affected<lb/>
by the channel project<lb/>
"Federal law requires a sur-<lb/>
vey of an area before any work<lb/>
(dredging) begins, to determine<lb/>
the effects any changes will have<lb/>
on both the culture and history of<lb/>
the area Phelps said.<lb/>
According to Dr. Phelps,<lb/>
artifacts taken from the site so far<lb/>
range in age from about 9,000<lb/>
B.C. to about 1850 A.D.<lb/>
Phelps said the sites may be<lb/>
excavated later, with permission<lb/>
from the landowners, but added<lb/>
that the main purpose of the<lb/>
survey was to locate the sites and<lb/>
determine whether they would be<lb/>
affected by work on the channel.<lb/>
He added that the purpose of<lb/>
channeling the creek is to pro-<lb/>
mote water flow.<lb/>
The creek drains part of<lb/>
eastern Pitt County and sections<lb/>
of neighboring Beaufort County.<lb/>
Need a job?<lb/>
Low pay, late hours,<lb/>
good experience,<lb/>
great company!<lb/>
Come by or call<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
757-6366, 757-6367<lb/>
<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi inducts<lb/>
On April 23, Phi Sigma Pi,<lb/>
national honor fraternity, initi-<lb/>
ated 15 new brothers. To be<lb/>
eligible to pledge Phi Sigma Pi,<lb/>
one must have at least a 3.3 grade<lb/>
point average and show leader-<lb/>
ship abilities. The new brothers<lb/>
were required to meet with and<lb/>
get to know the brothers, attend<lb/>
three pledge meetings and one<lb/>
 business meeting, take a pledge<lb/>
test, and present their philosophy<lb/>
of life.<lb/>
The new brothers are: Mike<lb/>
Armstrong, Forest Boone, Tom<lb/>
Brawner, Bobby Christiansen,<lb/>
PROFESSOR<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
Prof. McGrath's husband, Edgar<lb/>
F. McGrath, is a real estate<lb/>
broker and builder in Washing-<lb/>
ton, NIC.<lb/>
The McGraths will attend<lb/>
regional conferences of Danforth<lb/>
Associates, designed to strength-<lb/>
en their efforts to humanize the<lb/>
educational process.<lb/>
A member of the ECU faculty<lb/>
since i 63, Prof. McGrath has<lb/>
been responsible for major in-<lb/>
novations in ECU'S mathematics<lb/>
curriculum. She has also been<lb/>
active in the campus Faculty<lb/>
Senate and on several faculty<lb/>
committees.<lb/>
She is a graduate of UNC-<lb/>
Greensboroand received the MA<lb/>
dearee from ECU<lb/>
Comingtothe<lb/>
Elbo Room<lb/>
Thursday, May 5<lb/>
THESPONTAINES<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
HarleyHog.&amp;<lb/>
The Rockers 50's Review<lb/>
The<lb/>
Book<lb/>
Barn<lb/>
117 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Mother's Day is this Sunday.<lb/>
We have something for<lb/>
everyone's Mother!<lb/>
Come in and browse.<lb/>
Jeff Fleming, Steve Greer, Doug<lb/>
Jones, Jim Lammert, Mark<lb/>
McCoy, Mike Morse, Leon<lb/>
Owens, Bruce Pearce, Kieran<lb/>
Shanahan, Mike Smith, and Gay<lb/>
Taylor.<lb/>
After the initiation cere-<lb/>
monies, the new brothers were<lb/>
treated to a "chicken pickin"<lb/>
prepared by the famous chef John<lb/>
Brown.<lb/>
ArmyNavy Stora<lb/>
1501 Efans<lb/>
12P.MS:3IP.M.<lb/>
Back packs, Jaans,<lb/>
Camping Eqpt, Dishas<lb/>
OPERATING HOURS<lb/>
11am � 2am<lb/>
706 EVANS ST.<lb/>
PH 752-1828<lb/>
Come in and see our 6FT.T.V.<lb/>
FOR YOUR ENTERTAINMENT.<lb/>
PINBALL AND FOOSBALL<lb/>
This Coupon Good For $.25 Off on<lb/>
Purchase of Sandwich and Soft Drink<lb/>
Trois Amies<lb/>
DENISE STEIX<lb/>
SHERRY AIXGOOD<lb/>
SUZANNE MASKERY<lb/>
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS<lb/>
KATE LEWIS GALLERY,WHICHARD<lb/>
MAY 2-12<lb/>
RECEPTION: MAYO S-OO I'M.<lb/>
����-�������:� �� � tSMS<lb/>
'� �' �:� , . �� '  .<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057128_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 May 1977<lb/>
Student Union hl<lb/>
ECU CHANCELLOR LEO Jenkins presented Larry Romich,<lb/>
chairperson of the Films Committee, with the award for "Most<lb/>
Outstanding Committee" of the year.<lb/>
BARRY ROBINSON WASpresented the "Garie Massie Award" at<lb/>
the SU banquet. Massie, center, was the first ECU Student Union<lb/>
president.<lb/>
THEATRE ARTS COMMITTEE chairperson Charlotte Cheatham<lb/>
and Bo Dudley, Travel Committee member, became "Denise and<lb/>
Danny Drama" for the banquet during the "Rudy Awards"<lb/>
presentations. Cheatham was awarded the Most Outstanding<lb/>
committee chairperson.<lb/>
Dennis Ran<lb/>
at Saturday<lb/>
yn<lb/>
htl<lb/>
ByDOU-ilTE<lb/>
Staff bt<lb/>
Student Union Presidnnis Ra<lb/>
assumed his duties as pint for ti<lb/>
'7778 at the annual St Union<lb/>
Saturday at the Candlew istauran<lb/>
Ramsey was sworn outgo<lb/>
Barry Robinson. Dr. Levins, F<lb/>
Ramsey addressed the gng.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins presentee ollowing<lb/>
Garie Massie A ward, for ost outsi<lb/>
member went to Barry fpn; Mos<lb/>
CommitteeFilms; Mostfanding<lb/>
Charlotte Cheatham Th�rts. '<lb/>
Most Outstanding Co ee memt<lb/>
Bass, Art Exhibition;Pitsenb<lb/>
Series; Chip Hicks, Ener; L<lb/>
rravel;<lb/>
the tor<lb/>
ited. Th<lb/>
us celebi<lb/>
Coffeehouse; Bill Mar<lb/>
Special Entertainment; dte Cheat<lb/>
Arts; Larry Romich, Filrrlnis Ran<lb/>
After a brief interm<lb/>
"Rudy" awards were<lb/>
presentation fell to such<lb/>
Sorority, Kathy Co-Ed, 3 and D<lb/>
Glenda the Witch, the back of<lb/>
and the Conehead fam, siting fn<lb/>
France.<lb/>
The following lucky p; receivec<lb/>
Rudy: the Space Cadet for the f.<lb/>
head most resembles tlt emptin<lb/>
space went to Larry Roriost likei<lb/>
Dennis Ramsey; the Eln Ray au<lb/>
Student Union secretaruis Con<lb/>
Tape and Tacks award, Bass; Bi<lb/>
award, Ruth Morris; South a<lb/>
Proctor; Hot Dog aware rotte Ch<lb/>
Not Long Enough aware ier Neely<lb/>
Seldom Seen award, Cori jshing; B<lb/>
of a Chairperson, Bo L Tried E<lb/>
Make It, Becky Brad<lb/>
award, Georgina Langsl<lb/>
Martin; Hibernation awe<lb/>
After a meal of Corr<lb/>
champagne toasts, the b<lb/>
beach music for dancing<lb/>
Perfect<lb/>
'a World<lb/>
?7 Hamm<lb/>
ns and i<lb/>
mmer Bn<lb/>
BILL MARTIN, GAY Bowman, and Dout<lb/>
southern France while presenting the Sf<lb/>
eft to right) <lb/>
award.<lb/>
1<lb/>
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mmBjmWMmWnmBBRKBmWmWBaKmWmWmMmWBmWMBKKKHBWMKtm<lb/>
folds annual fete<lb/>
3 May 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
iairy installed<lb/>
layi<lb/>
By DOUHITE<lb/>
Staff<lb/>
x<lb/>
sworn<lb/>
lit banquet<lb/>
in Presid(?nnis Ramsey officially<lb/>
Ues as pint for the school year<lb/>
nnual SV Union banquet held<lb/>
Candlewstaurant.<lb/>
 outgoing President<lb/>
. Dr. Leikins, Robinson, and<lb/>
&amp;d the gng.<lb/>
presentee oil owing awards: The<lb/>
yard, for ost outstanding Union<lb/>
) Barry Ron; Most Outstanding<lb/>
is; Most anding Chairperson-<lb/>
ham Thirts.<lb/>
iding Co ee members were: Bill<lb/>
bition;Pitsenbarger, Artist<lb/>
licks, Eerier Larry Surles,<lb/>
Mil Marrravel; Troy Moore,<lb/>
iment; C te Cheatham, Theatre<lb/>
ich, Filmpnis Ramsey, Lecture,<lb/>
the tongue-in-cheek<lb/>
ited. The honors of<lb/>
us celebrities as Suzy<lb/>
and Danny Drama,<lb/>
back of Notre Dame,<lb/>
f in term<lb/>
s were<lb/>
' to such<lb/>
Co-Ed,<lb/>
ch, the i<lb/>
?ad fami siting from southern<lb/>
7 lucky p j received the coveted<lb/>
? Cadet for the person whose<lb/>
mbles ttU emptiness of outer<lb/>
arry Rorjiost likely to Dictate,<lb/>
; the Eli) Ray award went to<lb/>
secretariiis Conway; Scotch<lb/>
s award, Bass; Bionic Person<lb/>
lorris; South award, Fred<lb/>
)g aware rotte Cheatham; the<lb/>
Ih aware ier Neely; Silent and<lb/>
ard, Cortjshmg; Best Imitation<lb/>
n, Bo L Tried But Couldn't<lb/>
y Brad Perfect Attendance<lb/>
3 Langsta World Award, Bill<lb/>
tion awe n Hammond,<lb/>
of Corr ?ns and innumerable<lb/>
ts, the be mmer Breeze, played<lb/>
dancing<lb/>
GEORGINA LANGSTON, "The Entertainer" committee chairper-<lb/>
son and Bill Martin chairperson of the Travel Committee portrayed<lb/>
"Glenda, the good witch of the North" and the "Hunchback of<lb/>
Notre Dame" while presenting the "Rudy Awards Martin was<lb/>
also voted the Most Outstanding Travel Committee member.<lb/>
<lb/>
 "SPtjJL vflBAlMHIKCBK&amp;ll T tJ<lb/>
� 1 MB Bml 1<lb/>
2 � m 1 L ififiSS'�Pf- H<lb/>
' p ' j M<lb/>
iWtjjm.fc Mm<lb/>
CHAIRPERSOM CHEATHAM IS at it again, but this time as<lb/>
"Marilyn Monroe" as she ar Larry Romich, as 'Peter Lorre"<lb/>
presented another of the outrageous "Rudy Awards" to their<lb/>
colleagues.<lb/>
l, and Doui .eft to right) pose as Coneheadsfrom<lb/>
ting the Sf. award.<lb/>
BARRY ROBINSON OFFICIALLY passed on his title of Student<lb/>
Union president to Dennis Ramsey during the SU banquet Saturday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057128_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
3 May 1977<lb/>
Aarquee<lb/>
by David R. Bosnick<lb/>
Rocky almost the best<lb/>
Rocky is not the best film of 1976, but it's damned dose. This<lb/>
United Artists film is as much about boxing as "Death of a Salesman"<lb/>
is about mercantilism. It is a consciously murky story of a young boxer<lb/>
who is given a final chance at self-respect. It is pure corn, but it is<lb/>
sincere and well-paced. The scenes contained some of the most<lb/>
poignant brutality since Straw Dogs.<lb/>
Rocky (Sylvester Stallone) is a thirtyish member of the James Dean<lb/>
generation with similar values and mannerisms. He is a collection of<lb/>
shattered dreams who is a " leg-breaker for a seedy loan shark. He is<lb/>
not intelligent enough to moralize about his environment. Therein lies<lb/>
the major beauty of this film; the brute, the animal who cannot<lb/>
perceive his enemies, but merely knows frustration and pain.<lb/>
The film opens with a view of Rocky as the angered animal. It<lb/>
depicts boxing at its smokehouse worst. The initial judgment of the<lb/>
sport is as vulgar as if two men (Rocky and a mindless pug) who hit<lb/>
each other until one is angered sufficiently to win. In the short walk<lb/>
from the arena we learn of the street-wise Rocky and the microcosm of<lb/>
low income Philadelphia; the drugstore shows the ghosts of Rocky s<lb/>
past and future, the celibate unconscious loneliness of the "Italian<lb/>
Stallion<lb/>
There are portions of the film that are strained fa authenticity, not<lb/>
the least of which is why Rocky got chosen at all, but the tumbling fate<lb/>
aside, we quickly see Rocky fall in love with the local pet shop gir'<lb/>
(Talia Shire) and dedicate himself to "taking his best shot We see his<lb/>
condition and confidence soar as Adrian and his manager (Burgess<lb/>
Meredith) combine to convince him, temporarily, that he can win. It is<lb/>
the consequence of his judgment that gives the climax of this film a<lb/>
desperate violent impact. It metamorphoses from a media<lb/>
exploitation; a caging and poking, to a genuine display of justice.<lb/>
Sylvester Stallone is excellent as Rocky. The streets of all major<lb/>
northern cities, are filled with men of that genre. Stallone played the<lb/>
street he knew, with energy and sensitivity. The conception of Stallone<lb/>
as a new Brando is at best premature. (In this film he imitated the guy<lb/>
next door.)<lb/>
Adrian (Talia Shire) was adequate as the ugly girl turned beautiful<lb/>
by love. Burgess Meredith was nominated for an academy award as<lb/>
best supporting actor with his portrayal of Mick, but the performance<lb/>
seemed shallow and ungainly. He was too strong too early. The<lb/>
parallels between him and Rocky never evoked the intended empathy.<lb/>
Paulie(Burt Young) is the soulless Rocky, loneliness compounded<lb/>
with unrelieved frustration. There is an excellent touch, as he is<lb/>
frequently pictured in a Navy Graduation photograph.<lb/>
The final eight minutes of this film are examples of the finest<lb/>
choreography of 1976. There were three ribs broken in the shooting of<lb/>
this scene, and the realism is embracing. A polio Creed (Carl Weathers)<lb/>
is excellent as a parody of Muhammed Ali, and his personal pride and<lb/>
respect for Rocky at the close of the fight are authentic.<lb/>
The end of the movie is its major flaw. So much is made about<lb/>
the work of the animal that Rocky is, that the director (Jerry Adderton)<lb/>
chose a scene that is in Tennessee Williams' "Streetcar Named<lb/>
Desire The caterwauling is too large an attempt at a revival of<lb/>
Brando's Stanley Kowalski. It is a cheap attempt by Adderton at<lb/>
building an image.<lb/>
I give this movie 3 and one-half stars. The half demerit is for the<lb/>
closing nine seconds and K.C. and the Sunshine Band-style theme<lb/>
song.<lb/>
This film is showing at Plaza Cinema II.<lb/>
OTHER FUCKS<lb/>
PLAZA ONE-Breaker Breaker-Chuck Norris, a short white abscess on<lb/>
the scab of Bruce Lee with an eighteen wheeler, finds his brother, who<lb/>
has been kidnapped fa a truokload of T.V. dinners. HehasaC.B. fa a<lb/>
brain. Needless to say<lb/>
PITT-Murder by Death-An interesting Nei! Siinon film previously<lb/>
reviewed in this paper. Two and one-half stars, excellent scene with<lb/>
Nancy Walker as deaf and dumb maid.<lb/>
PARK-Jabberwocky-Not available fa review at this time.<lb/>
Loggins surfaces again<lb/>
with quality solo effort<lb/>
By CHRISFARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Well over a year since the<lb/>
break up of the once immatal<lb/>
group Loggins and Messina,<lb/>
Kenny Loggins has beoome the<lb/>
first of the severed duo to surface<lb/>
his musical talents in an effat<lb/>
that is both quality and filled with<lb/>
surprises.<lb/>
While the trend was being set<lb/>
in the culminating Loggins and<lb/>
Messina album "Native Sons it<lb/>
remains that in "Celebrate Me<lb/>
Home" we are introduced to a<lb/>
much different Loggins sound.<lb/>
Beginning with the premier<lb/>
Loggins and Messina LP, "Sittin<lb/>
In, " which wasaiginally planned<lb/>
as a Loggins solo effat with<lb/>
technical and productive help<lb/>
from Jim Messina, turned into a<lb/>
regular thing because of the<lb/>
group's oompatability; Loggins<lb/>
was and still is best known fa his<lb/>
beautiful acoustic ballads like<lb/>
"Danny's Song" and "House at<lb/>
Pooh Caner<lb/>
However, as the years passed,<lb/>
and the gold albums continued,<lb/>
Loggins' music began to take on a<lb/>
deeper, heavily produced and<lb/>
fuller sound. This can probably be<lb/>
attributed to Messina's influence,<lb/>
since Loggins was always the<lb/>
songwriter and Messina the tech-<lb/>
nician.<lb/>
Such is the case with Cele-<lb/>
brate Me Home, fa the album is<lb/>
comprised of ten full sounding<lb/>
tunes, which vary in style quite a<lb/>
bit, but none of which are<lb/>
particularly reminiscent of the<lb/>
earlier Loggins sound. This is not<lb/>
to insinuate that the album is not<lb/>
good, a that it doesn't sound like<lb/>
Kenny Loggins, quite to the<lb/>
oontrary, fa as a whole it is a<lb/>
much cleaner and polished Log-<lb/>
gins sound.<lb/>
Many of the songs take on a<lb/>
rhythm and blues flava, and<lb/>
while Loggins himself does none<lb/>
of the instrumental work, he takes<lb/>
the oppatunity to stretch his<lb/>
voice to its soulful limits.<lb/>
Most basically and impor-<lb/>
tant of all is the idea that Log-<lb/>
gins' newly-found indepen-<lb/>
dence has allowed him to spread<lb/>
his musical wings over a wide<lb/>
variety of musical styles, and<lb/>
then interpret them in his own<lb/>
special way.<lb/>
From the gospel sound of the<lb/>
title cut, "Celebrate Me Home<lb/>
to the energetic "Lady Luck<lb/>
Loggins' voice actually makes<lb/>
the album. And because of this<lb/>
the overall likeability of the LP is<lb/>
centered around this quality. His<lb/>
vocal versatility is challenged in a<lb/>
tune like "Daddy's Back" where<lb/>
the falsetto smoothness of the<lb/>
verses is superseded only by the<lb/>
melodic rawness of the final<lb/>
chaus.<lb/>
While the album's vocal<lb/>
strengths are fairly apparent,<lb/>
Loggins' ability as a songwriter<lb/>
takes longer to appreciate, but is<lb/>
equally as impressive.<lb/>
Abandoning his overused love<lb/>
themes, we see Kenny touch on<lb/>
other, mae provocative topics,<lb/>
while incapaating them with<lb/>
musical structures, that many<lb/>
would have considered beyond<lb/>
his capabilities.<lb/>
The album is filled with<lb/>
quality right down the line; from<lb/>
Loggins ability to write hooks,<lb/>
that are simple enough to re-<lb/>
member, but far mae advanced<lb/>
than the average top 40 tune, to<lb/>
the full but not overdone produc-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Kenny Loggins is back, and<lb/>
with "Celebrate Me Home" he<lb/>
should prove to any skeptical<lb/>
aitics a fans his ability as a<lb/>
soloist.<lb/>
Dime store fashion buyer<lb/>
says trousers will fall<lb/>
Dresses are up and pants are<lb/>
down, says Ray Smith, of Wool-<lb/>
wath's. Smith ought to know.<lb/>
He's been buying young fashions<lb/>
fa the famer five and ten-oent<lb/>
stae chain since it began mer-<lb/>
chandising clothes 15 years ago.<lb/>
Mae young women, are buy-<lb/>
ing skirts now than since the<lb/>
pants craze changed female<lb/>
fashions in the past decade.<lb/>
Woolwath's sales have climbed<lb/>
165 per cent this year, particular-<lb/>
ly, Smith says, since skirt lengths<lb/>
have standardized at 27 inches.<lb/>
The renewed interest in disco<lb/>
dancing has contributed to the<lb/>
resurgence in skirts.<lb/>
Denims, he says, are as<lb/>
popular, if not mae popular, than<lb/>
ever. But sales in dress slacks<lb/>
have been offset by the inaease<lb/>
in dress sales, pinpointing the<lb/>
change in interest.<lb/>
Along with the waning sales in<lb/>
slacks, there is a diminished<lb/>
interest in the gauze look, parti-<lb/>
cularly the sheer-type gauze<lb/>
impated fran India. Smith says<lb/>
that gauze is95 per cent dead. As<lb/>
demand fa their material grew,<lb/>
Indian manufacturers began<lb/>
skimping on quality while in-<lb/>
creasing prices. But as the gauze<lb/>
material shrank, so did the<lb/>
market. Voile and aepe de chine<lb/>
will replace gauze this year.<lb/>
Woolwath's is a trend follow-<lb/>
er rather than a fashion setter,<lb/>
Smith says. The concern waits to<lb/>
see what is popular, tt ;n re-<lb/>
produces it et a lower price ta the<lb/>
same quality. Consequently,<lb/>
Smith follows the trends careful-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
The kilt is supposed to be<lb/>
making a comeback, he says, but<lb/>
Woolwath's will wait and see.<lb/>
Denims will continue to be<lb/>
popular with both young men and<lb/>
women, but the flare is on its way<lb/>
out and the "drainpipe" is on its<lb/>
way in. The drainpipe is a narrow<lb/>
leg that (lares to two and a half<lb/>
inches at the ankle.<lb/>
"Scrubbed denims will fade<lb/>
with the flare, but detailed<lb/>
denims will become a way of<lb/>
life the retailer insists. The<lb/>
faded look is out, but the<lb/>
pre-shrunk rigid denim is in.<lb/>
MICHAEL TILSON THOMAS and the Buffalo Philharmonic<lb/>
Orchestra will play at ECU on February 28, 1978. The concert is<lb/>
sponsored by the Artists Series Committee.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057128_0011"/><lb/>
JHHHHHHH<lb/>
���MM<lb/>
3 May 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
U.S. fame comes to Cliff Richard<lb/>
Cliff Richard's new hit album<lb/>
is titled "I'm Nearly Famous<lb/>
And he is.<lb/>
Despite the fact that he was<lb/>
England's first rock and roll<lb/>
superstar, preceeding the<lb/>
Beatles, the Stones and everyone<lb/>
else, and has been internationally<lb/>
acclaimed for a solid 18 years, the<lb/>
singer never made it in the U.S.<lb/>
Until now, that is. With a hit<lb/>
single, "Devil Woman scramb-<lb/>
ling up the charts and the<lb/>
aforementioned album close be-<lb/>
hind, Cliff Richard is about to<lb/>
become totally famous.<lb/>
"I needed to have a hit in<lb/>
America for my own sake said<lb/>
the candid, slightly shy and<lb/>
extremely good-looking singer. "I<lb/>
certainly didn't need it for<lb/>
financial reasons and I have more<lb/>
fame than I can cope with. But<lb/>
with America being what it is -<lb/>
the Fatherland or Motherland of<lb/>
rock and roll - I need to have the<lb/>
credibility here. Even just once<lb/>
He's apparently going to have<lb/>
it. At that moment, the radio in<lb/>
his St. Regis suite blared out<lb/>
"Devil Woman and Cliff leaped<lb/>
up from the couch.<lb/>
"That's the first time I ever<lb/>
heard myself in America he<lb/>
shouted excitedly, as his British<lb/>
entourage gathered around the<lb/>
set with equally glowing smiles.<lb/>
He tried to make it in the U.S.<lb/>
in 1960. As England's premiere<lb/>
rook star, he crossed the Atlantic<lb/>
for guest appearances on TV<lb/>
variety shows, had a fairly<lb/>
successful tour, and even had a<lb/>
top 30 record ("Livin' Ddl"). But<lb/>
nothing further happened.<lb/>
"America was full of people<lb/>
like me he recollected. "They<lb/>
didn't need an Englishman, so I<lb/>
got left behind<lb/>
But only in America. He went<lb/>
back to England and subsequent-<lb/>
ly made his mark in Europe, the<lb/>
Far East, the Near East and just<lb/>
about every other corner of the<lb/>
globe, including several Iron<lb/>
Curtain countries. He has record-<lb/>
ed 64 out of 66 hit singles,<lb/>
backed up with 20 original<lb/>
albums, five gold records and 21<lb/>
silver discs. He also expanded his<lb/>
career, triumphing in films, tele-<lb/>
vision and the London stage.<lb/>
Why bother with America<lb/>
now?<lb/>
"Now it doesn't matter what<lb/>
nationality you are, as long as you<lb/>
make a record that's acceptable to<lb/>
a particular public. I had no idea<lb/>
people were going to get so<lb/>
excited about my new album and<lb/>
the single. For the first time in my<lb/>
career, I've had unanimous ac-<lb/>
claim from people who've been<lb/>
knocking me for years and who've<lb/>
ignored me for years he said<lb/>
frankly.<lb/>
When Elton John's Rocket<lb/>
Records expressed interest in<lb/>
distributing "I'm Nearly<lb/>
Famous" in the United States<lb/>
Cliff concludes that perhaps he'd<lb/>
finally "gotten into a thing that<lb/>
would be acceptable to American<lb/>
audiences Rocket, of oourse,<lb/>
has nelped guide Neil Sedaka's<lb/>
spectacular comeback.<lb/>
The "thing" that he's gotten<lb/>
into, Cliff suggested, is actually a<lb/>
return to what he was when he<lb/>
began his career in 1958. Cliff<lb/>
Richard was to England what<lb/>
Elvis Presley was to America. But<lb/>
somewhere along the line, he got<lb/>
himself into a middle-of-the-road<lb/>
bag. Songwriters and publishers<lb/>
would send him the same type of<lb/>
material time after time because<lb/>
they were supposedly "right up<lb/>
his street<lb/>
"With the new album, my<lb/>
producer hand-picked the songs<lb/>
without telling anyone who they<lb/>
were for. For the first time, I<lb/>
recorded songs that I wanted to<lb/>
do  not what other people<lb/>
thought was my thing. I never<lb/>
would have been sent 'Devil<lb/>
Woman' five years ago he<lb/>
explained in an impeccable<lb/>
British accent.<lb/>
So now he's a rock and roll<lb/>
singer again, rather than a<lb/>
"performer And while the<lb/>
album and single have met with<lb/>
huge success, he's not quite<lb/>
ready to embark on a U.S. tour<lb/>
yet. At least not until he's had a<lb/>
"minimum of two or three hits<lb/>
so that American audiences will<lb/>
be able to identify with him.<lb/>
He will be touring Russia,<lb/>
however, doing nine concerts<lb/>
apiece in Moscow and Leningrad,<lb/>
and Dfcuxning, he hopes, the first<lb/>
western artist to record in the<lb/>
Soviet Union  if the technicali-<lb/>
ties can be worked out. Come<lb/>
October, he'll celebrate his 18th<lb/>
spectacular year in the business,<lb/>
though his British fans already<lb/>
presented him with a huge cake in<lb/>
the form of Great Britain (com-<lb/>
plete with flags) that read:<lb/>
"Britain's Best<lb/>
Oddly enough, "Britain's<lb/>
Best" almost quit show business<lb/>
nine years ago, because he felt<lb/>
that he wasn't exactly "hysterical<lb/>
about life<lb/>
"I was never suicidal or<lb/>
anything like that, but I felt<lb/>
terribly uncomfortable. I would<lb/>
go out with the band after a<lb/>
concert and invariably, we'd get<lb/>
around to talking about religion<lb/>
he recalled.<lb/>
Cliff was raised a Christian,<lb/>
but "rejected it all" when he was<lb/>
14. At 21, he experienced what he<lb/>
described as a "conversion He<lb/>
began to "check out" various<lb/>
religions and settled upon what<lb/>
he calls "pre-Evangelism The<lb/>
British press often refers to him<lb/>
as the "Pop Evangelist<lb/>
He spends more time appear-<lb/>
ing at oolleges, universities and<lb/>
churches than he does in the<lb/>
concert hall. He brings his guitar<lb/>
and talks about his "conversion"<lb/>
and how it's changed his life. In-<lb/>
termittently, he plays and sings<lb/>
Free concert May 11<lb/>
The ECU Stage Band will per-<lb/>
form in a free concert<lb/>
on Wednesday, May 11, in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. The<lb/>
concert will be held in the<lb/>
Multi-Purpose Room on the first<lb/>
floor and begins at 8:00 P.M.<lb/>
The ECU Stage Band is<lb/>
directed by George Naff, music<lb/>
instructor at the University. The<lb/>
group features the best of the big<lb/>
band sounds of today, played in<lb/>
their own distinctive and enter-<lb/>
taining style.<lb/>
The Multi-Purpose Room at<lb/>
the Student Center offers a<lb/>
relaxed, informal atmosphere for<lb/>
the concert. Seating is limited to<lb/>
150.<lb/>
The ECU Stage Band is<lb/>
sponsored by Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center and is a free<lb/>
admission concert.<lb/>
1H<lb/>
Remember<lb/>
Mother<lb/>
with a gift from the<lb/>
Mushroom.<lb/>
(If you want that check<lb/>
from home!)<lb/>
318 EvansSt. Mall<lb/>
752-3815<lb/>
THURSDAYS<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Bill Deal and the Rhondells<lb/>
Thursday May 5th<lb/>
R&amp;Nlnc.<lb/>
Jolly Roger &amp;� Thursday's<lb/>
752-4668<lb/>
spiritual songs, and then opens<lb/>
the discussion to questions and<lb/>
opinions. The sessions last about<lb/>
two hours.<lb/>
"If I can provoke curiosity and<lb/>
motivate some of the students to<lb/>
probe further with their local<lb/>
churches, then I've done my<lb/>
work he said. "I was going to<lb/>
give up singing because of<lb/>
Evangelical pressures, but now I<lb/>
feel I can do more by being a pop<lb/>
star<lb/>
He sees a greater spiritual<lb/>
emphasis in the world today and<lb/>
reasons that it's because no-<lb/>
body' s been able to find complete<lb/>
happiness in material quests.<lb/>
"You can find a certain<lb/>
amount of artistic satisfaction,<lb/>
but not entire happiness he<lb/>
explained. "The Beatles are a<lb/>
prime example  and the Beach<lb/>
Boys. Or anybody who's chased<lb/>
fame and fortune, grabbed it, and<lb/>
then found dissatisfaction<lb/>
The Library<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
is Ladies Night<lb/>
Free f oosball<lb/>
every afternoon 3-4:30<lb/>
lrtllniilriBi!l5i<lb/>
Jim's<lb/>
SERV-A-SET<lb/>
C.B. HIFI � STEREO T.V.<lb/>
Guaranteed Repairs<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Installations<lb/>
Call Jim or Tommy at 756-7193<lb/>
Located At<lb/>
3103 S. Memorial Dr. Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
GRAHAM GUTTING<lb/>
BFA WOOD DESIGN<lb/>
MAY 1-7 JOYNER LIBRARY<lb/>
<pb facs="00057128_0012"/><lb/>
�I r;V- <lb/>
'rv pgji rv" i r- i m<lb/>
5f � :�' !<lb/>
m ���'� i; a<lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 May 1977<lb/>
Canadian reactor campaign involves bribery<lb/>
(LNS)-The Canadian govern-<lb/>
ment, using Israeli and Italian<lb/>
"marketing firms, ' paid nearly<lb/>
$18 million in bribes to foreign<lb/>
government officials in recent<lb/>
years to promote the sale of its<lb/>
"Candu" nuclear reactor.<lb/>
Canadian reactors, in deadly<lb/>
competition with sales attempts<lb/>
by other Western industrialized<lb/>
countries, have been sold to<lb/>
India, Pakistan, Brazil and<lb/>
South Korea and a new deal is<lb/>
currently being arranged with<lb/>
CD<lb/>
PIRATfE<lb/>
sdvipEDItdE<lb/>
AP3<lb/>
i<lb/>
ITU<lb/>
TIME<lb/>
8:3Q<lb/>
V through thursday<lb/>
precjnecksglocij<lb/>
CK<lb/>
ndfc<lb/>
th<lb/>
highjway 116<lb/>
GRIFT(jN<lb/>
THE<lb/>
GANT ATTITUDE<lb/>
Aj<lb/>
Gant's concern, for fashion and quality is seen<lb/>
once again in this India Madras sport shirt.<lb/>
In 100 cotton. With double-track stitching,<lb/>
epaulets, and fitted body.<lb/>
Comes in blue and white.<lb/>
By Gant Shirtmakers<lb/>
On the Mall in Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Romania.<lb/>
In 1974, the government of<lb/>
India, with the aid of a prototype<lb/>
of the "Candu" reactor, exploded<lb/>
its first nuclear bomb.<lb/>
The bribe scandal first sur-<lb/>
faced in November when the<lb/>
Canadian auditor-general noticed<lb/>
the $18 million 'marketing ex-<lb/>
Dense' of the government's Ato-<lb/>
mic Energy of Canada Ltd.<lb/>
The Canadian government<lb/>
saw a ready market for nuclear<lb/>
materials and virtually ran to line<lb/>
up customers in recent years. For<lb/>
this part of the plan, however,<lb/>
certain middlemen were re-<lb/>
quired.<lb/>
Most notable among these<lb/>
were United Development Inc. of<lb/>
Tel Aviv. Israel, Intercontinental<lb/>
General Trading Establishment of<lb/>
Liechtenstein and Italimpianti, an<lb/>
engineering firm operated by the<lb/>
Italian government.<lb/>
Shaul Eisenberg, head of<lb/>
United, did most of Canada's<lb/>
dirty work. Using the bulk of the<lb/>
$18 million, Eisenberg was able<lb/>
to line the pockets of top officials<lb/>
in both Argentina and South<lb/>
Korea.<lb/>
La Razon, a Buenos Aires<lb/>
newspaper, reported that pay-<lb/>
ments were made to two minis-<lb/>
ters of Isabel Peron: Jose Ber<lb/>
Gelbard, former economics<lb/>
minister, and Adolpho Savino,<lb/>
former defense minister. Savino<lb/>
was at the time a representative<lb/>
of Italimpianti and Gelbard a<lb/>
big-shot with the Argentinian<lb/>
Mafia, "La Cosa<lb/>
Eisenberg's pull with other<lb/>
governments, particularly in<lb/>
Asia, has enabled him to become<lb/>
almost indispensable for any<lb/>
company wanting to expand<lb/>
there. As an adjunct to his<lb/>
business dealings, Eisenberg<lb/>
serves as honorary counsul for<lb/>
Panama in Israel and for Austria<lb/>
in South Korea.<lb/>
The monies given out to<lb/>
Intercontinental and Italimpianti<lb/>
are impossible to traoe because<lb/>
both refuse to have their books<lb/>
audited. United has been<lb/>
gracious enough to allow<lb/>
Canada's auditor-general to re-<lb/>
view its books, but only those<lb/>
which it wishedto give him - and<lb/>
he would have to go to Tel Aviv to<lb/>
see them. An unrestricted audit<lb/>
of all pertinent documents and<lb/>
bank accounts has not been<lb/>
permitted. Thus Canadian tax-<lb/>
payers will never know the full<lb/>
story behind who bribed whom.<lb/>
Buffet andmusical comedy<lb/>
highlight final Dinner Theater<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
announces the final Dinner<lb/>
Theatre production of this season,<lb/>
A SPRINGTIME FESTIVAL OF<lb/>
MUSICAL COMEDY<lb/>
NOSTALGIA. The Dinner<lb/>
Theatre runs from Thursday, May<lb/>
5, through Sunday, May 8.<lb/>
Dinner for the first three per-<lb/>
formances is at 7:00 P.M. with<lb/>
curtain time at 8:00 P.M. The<lb/>
Sunday dinner begins at 5.00<lb/>
MONOGRAMMING<lb/>
1 DAY SERVICE<lb/>
CREATIVE HANDBAGS<lb/>
WEST END<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
P.M. with the performance at<lb/>
6.00 P.M.<lb/>
The Dinner Theatre is direct-<lb/>
ed by Stuart Aronson and spot-<lb/>
lights singers Claire Hurley,<lb/>
Treva Tankard and David Faber<lb/>
plus Paul Tardif on the piano and<lb/>
James L. Rees as the narrator.<lb/>
This intimate, cabaret-style<lb/>
production will include some of<lb/>
the most memorable songs from<lb/>
musicals of the past 20 years<lb/>
which have become classics in<lb/>
American musical theatre.<lb/>
The buffet served prior to the<lb/>
performance will include stuffed<lb/>
whole trout, shisk kebabs,<lb/>
stuffed tomatoes, wild rice,<lb/>
�<lb/>
We've got<lb/>
what you want<lb/>
A Million Dollar Look For Under $40<lb/>
Now you can enjoy all of the excitement<lb/>
and fashion dash of wearing diamond stud<lb/>
earrings and your budget won't even feel<lb/>
the dent! A spark to your jewelry wardrobe<lb/>
you'll wear everywhere with everything<lb/>
and they're yours today for just $39 95<lb/>
Use our Custom Charge Plan, your favorite<lb/>
bank card or layaway<lb/>
Jewel Box<lb/>
On the Mall<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Chinese vegetables, squash<lb/>
casserole, macedoine of fruits,<lb/>
and fresh baked bread plus tea<lb/>
and coffee.<lb/>
Seating for the Dinner Theatre<lb/>
is limited to 100 places each<lb/>
performance. Tickets are avail-<lb/>
able from the ECU Central Ticket<lb/>
Office in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center and must be purchased at<lb/>
least 24 hours in advance of the<lb/>
performance. Tickets for Satur-<lb/>
day or Sunday must be purchased<lb/>
on or before Friday, May 6, by<lb/>
4.00 P.M.<lb/>
Tickets are priced at $5.00 for<lb/>
ECU students and $7.50 for the<lb/>
public. For tickets or additional<lb/>
information, contact the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office at 757-6611, Ext.<lb/>
266.<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
Sherwin-Williams<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<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/>
THE IRON HORSE<lb/>
TRADING CO.<lb/>
TTCTEGOLD<lb/>
AND SILVER<lb/>
JEWELRY<lb/>
TOPOFTHEMALL<lb/>
301 S.EVANS<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
752-2188<lb/>
<pb facs="00057128_0013"/><lb/>
������lMBWBHBBBiBBBBBBBBIMBBBBHBBBBBBBIHMBBHMM<lb/>
3 May 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
for sale �<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/>
Auce. 757-6366 (9-5 weekdays).<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Yamaha, only<lb/>
4300 miles; very good oondition;<lb/>
$550 or best offer. Call 756-4946.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer In-dash<lb/>
AMFM Stereo 8-Traok 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 a 752-8151.<lb/>
FOR SALE: General Electric<lb/>
AMFM Receiver 8-Track Play-<lb/>
er Recorder w speakers $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: Power boosters for<lb/>
your car tape player. An excess of<lb/>
20 wattchannel. $45.00 with<lb/>
speakers and installation (New)<lb/>
60.00. Call 758-4863.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer 828 -65 watts<lb/>
rms, dual 1218. $250.00 for both.<lb/>
Call Erick 758-3018.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Car cover-fits any<lb/>
mid size or sports car. 758-7072.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1971 SL 350 CC; Blue<lb/>
Honda, low mileage, like new,<lb/>
whelmet and new tires, $500.<lb/>
746-6584 after 6.00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Wilson T-2000 tennis<lb/>
racket with brand new Blue Star<lb/>
Strings-$25.00 firm. Call 758-<lb/>
3804 after six and ask for Harry.<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 752-6140 day &amp; night.<lb/>
MUST SELL: '71 Mustang<lb/>
$1,500. Also '69 Valiant $400.<lb/>
doth 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 00.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Collie pups, reg.<lb/>
sable &amp; white. $100.00 firm very<lb/>
reasonable fa pedigree, good<lb/>
looks, good health, &amp; good<lb/>
disposition of these collies. Call<lb/>
482-2341 -Edenton, N.C.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 76 Mustang 11 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 $75.00a best offer. Call<lb/>
Buddy at 756-4916.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Brand new one pair<lb/>
AVID 103. 3 Way floor speakers.<lb/>
$178.00 apiece will sell fa $300 a<lb/>
pair. 150 watt max. Call 758-8988,<lb/>
ask fa Susan a Mike.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Chrysler '69 New-<lb/>
pat. Good oaidition. Call 752-<lb/>
2752 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '69 VW Camper,<lb/>
pop-top, excellent condition. 758-<lb/>
7462 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Standard size refri-<lb/>
gerator $25.00. Good wacking<lb/>
condition. 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/>
Exoellent oondition, low mileage,<lb/>
Call 752-0924, ask fa Maity.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Banaoft 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/>
pats, &amp; term papers-call 756-<lb/>
4180.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES. Ca'l 752-<lb/>
8837 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
TYPI NG: 75 cents per page. CalI<lb/>
Debra Parrington, 756-6031<lb/>
days, and 752-2508 nights.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 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 in MendenhaN 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 oondition, new: paint, tires,<lb/>
chain, etc. $1200.00. Call 752-<lb/>
1442 ask fa David.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Zenith stereo com-<lb/>
plete with speakers-automatic<lb/>
changer exoellent condition! Per-<lb/>
fect size fa dam rcom. $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 fa sale at $500.00<lb/>
Contact Raymond L. Brown,<lb/>
758-7434.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Shure -Dynamic<lb/>
(Unishphere B) Miaophone-$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/>
$20.00. Panasonic Patable 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 distributed in<lb/>
Eastern N.C. Your personal inter-<lb/>
view of 75 wads plus photo could<lb/>
be very successful in obtaining<lb/>
the position you desire and runs 2<lb/>
weeks at $4.50 a 4 weeks at $8.00<lb/>
and we will take the photo fa oily<lb/>
$12.25 Call 758-7487 a write to<lb/>
P.O. Box 16, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4.8 cubic feet refri-<lb/>
gerator call 758-9807.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Advent Speakers<lb/>
$100.00 per pair. Also Garrard<lb/>
automatic turntable $45.00. 758-<lb/>
7022.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1968 Chevelle Mali-<lb/>
bu-Air Cond power windows,<lb/>
4-doa, power steering, power<lb/>
brakes, AM-FM- $750 Call 752-<lb/>
0501.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Uueen waterbed<lb/>
oomplete outfit, 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 coidition $150.00 a<lb/>
best offer. If interested call<lb/>
758-4290.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Bundy clarinet.<lb/>
$125.00. Conn acoustic guitar<lb/>
with hard case $150.00. Call<lb/>
758-9872-Cathy.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Ten Speed "Rally<lb/>
Recad" anda bike rack. Both<lb/>
in exoellent oondition. Call 752-<lb/>
2797 after 6O0p.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/>
condition Phone 756-5733.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 71 VW bus. FM<lb/>
stereo, engine in exoellent oondi-<lb/>
tion, front end needs work<lb/>
$500.00 firm. Call 752-5325 after<lb/>
6O0, ask fa Kevin.<lb/>
torrent<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted:<lb/>
large 2 bedroom apt. 2 blocks<lb/>
from campus. Call 758-9655<lb/>
nights.<lb/>
FOR RENT: One room, 410 B.<lb/>
Student St. Call 752-7032.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private roan-Air<lb/>
Cond4 blocks from campus-<lb/>
Rent fa Summer a 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 a fall, 4<lb/>
blocks from campus. 752-4006<lb/>
after 1 O0 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: House outside city, 3<lb/>
bedroom, 1 Vfe bath, big backyard,<lb/>
available now fa summer. Call<lb/>
Maria at 757-6390.<lb/>
NEEDED: To rent, 1, bedroom<lb/>
apt. fa 2, summer aiwards-$100<lb/>
a nrxxith. Call 758-8062.<lb/>
WANTED: To rent, 1 bedroom<lb/>
apt. fa 2, summer aiwards-$100<lb/>
a maith. Call 758-8062.<lb/>
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: One<lb/>
a two female roommates to share<lb/>
house, walking distance from<lb/>
campus. 752-3402.<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 8.00-<lb/>
5O0.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Sublease 1, bedroom<lb/>
apt. fa June &amp; July. $145 a<lb/>
month; call 752-0701.<lb/>
WANTED: One a two female<lb/>
roommates to share a three<lb/>
bedroom apartment six blocks<lb/>
from campus. Rent $150 plus<lb/>
utilities to be split evenly. Call<lb/>
758-7044 between 5.00 and 7.O0.<lb/>
Available June 1st.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
To share 2 bedroom apartment at<lb/>
Eastbrook fa the summer. Pay<lb/>
halt the rent &amp; utilities. Call<lb/>
752-6393 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
WANTED: Female roommates)<lb/>
needed desperately to share an<lb/>
apartment this summer and lor<lb/>
next year. Low rates. Call Gisele<lb/>
at 752-8453.<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. 1V2 blocks from<lb/>
beach. $185 weekly. 758-3089.<lb/>
NEEDED: 1 a 2 roommates fa<lb/>
Summer. Rent:$53.00 plus utili-<lb/>
ties Oakmait Square Apts. Call<lb/>
756-2050.<lb/>
LOST: PLEASE whoever "picked<lb/>
up" a long, rust-oolaed suede<lb/>
wallet with a leather flaal design<lb/>
on the outer flap (at the Jolly<lb/>
Roger 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/>
LOST: Great Dane female. Gray<lb/>
with white chest and paws. Needs<lb/>
medical attention. Reward. Call<lb/>
758-0341 a Greenville Polioe.<lb/>
LOST: A pair of brown framed<lb/>
glasses�they are in an aange,<lb/>
black-lined case. Need them back<lb/>
desperately. Call Lisa, 758-5066<lb/>
after 6.O0. Reward.<lb/>
i found<lb/>
FOUND: In the Croatan, man's<lb/>
gold ring with brown stone. Call<lb/>
752-4379.<lb/>
FOUND: 1 pair grey hard contact<lb/>
lenses. Found in Minges pool<lb/>
near the end of March. Still there<lb/>
on bulliten board. Ask lifeguard<lb/>
on duty.<lb/>
person d(X<lb/>
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: Con-<lb/>
struction wakers needed fa wak<lb/>
in eastern part of N.C. Interviews<lb/>
will be held on Thursday, May �th<lb/>
at the ECU Placement Office from<lb/>
1p.m5p.m.<lb/>
NEEDED: Tuta fa French IV<lb/>
Level fa first session summer<lb/>
school. Pay to be discussed. Call<lb/>
752-2629.<lb/>
YOGA LESSONS: "You're as<lb/>
young as your body is supple<lb/>
Fa men and wonen! Call 752-<lb/>
5214 after 4O0 p.m.<lb/>
LEARN TO HUSTLE: Socialize<lb/>
while you exercise. Fa men and<lb/>
wonen and couples. Only $10 per<lb/>
month. Classes begin May 2. Call<lb/>
Sunshine today after 400 p.m.<lb/>
752-5214.<lb/>
NEEDED: Ride to New Yurk City<lb/>
on a befae May 24th. Will share<lb/>
expenses. Coitact, Theda Saffo<lb/>
752-4383.<lb/>
WANTED: A married oouple with<lb/>
no children who are college<lb/>
graduates with degrees in the<lb/>
behaviaal sciences a human<lb/>
service delivery fields to wak as<lb/>
teaching-parents in a treatment<lb/>
home fa emotionally disturbed<lb/>
children. Wak 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 couples oontact Children's<lb/>
Treatment Center, Box 1436,<lb/>
Southern Pines, N.C. 28387.<lb/>
Phone 919-692-8811.<lb/>
WANTED: Part time attendant<lb/>
to assist handicap student during<lb/>
summer school of '77. $360.<lb/>
758-8286, Buzzy Pierce.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057128_0014"/><lb/>
��<lb/>
On to playoffs<lb/>
Pirates take crown<lb/>
Page 14<lb/>
3 May 1977<lb/>
Bucs win second<lb/>
straight track title<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
It was getting pretty hairy for<lb/>
the East Carolina track team.<lb/>
Although they trailed host Fur-<lb/>
man by 32 points going into the<lb/>
second day, they were supposed<lb/>
to come back. But then the 440<lb/>
yard relay team was disqualified<lb/>
and it was supposed to be a sure<lb/>
victory. But they came back.<lb/>
It was nip-and-tuck all day<lb/>
Saturday for the Pirates. Every-<lb/>
one was wondering if they had<lb/>
enough to come back and win<lb/>
their second consecutive South-<lb/>
ern Conference Track Champion-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
ECU finished up with 128<lb/>
points to edge out the Paladins by<lb/>
three points. VMI finished third<lb/>
with 84 1 3 points, while William<lb/>
and Mary, winner of the ten<lb/>
championships before the Pirates<lb/>
dethroned them last year, was<lb/>
fourth with 82.<lb/>
New member Marshall finish-<lb/>
ed fifth with 73, followed by<lb/>
Appalachian State with 67 23,<lb/>
Western Carolina with 32, The<lb/>
Citadel with 21 and Davidson with<lb/>
six.<lb/>
The disqualification in the 440<lb/>
relay came when Larry Austin,<lb/>
running the third leg, handed off<lb/>
to anchor man Otis Melvin.<lb/>
Melvin got off to a quick start<lb/>
and had to slow down to take the<lb/>
baton. When he received it, he<lb/>
stepped out of his lane, resulting<lb/>
in the disqualification.<lb/>
"I really felt bad about getting<lb/>
us disqualified in the relay<lb/>
Melvin said following the meet.<lb/>
So I got together with Calvin<lb/>
Alston and Carter Suggs and said<lb/>
that we were going to have to beat<lb/>
the cuy from Western Carolina<lb/>
(John Burson, favorite in the 100<lb/>
meters) when our race came up<lb/>
And beat him they did. Alston<lb/>
won the race in 10.5 seconds,<lb/>
although the automatic timer<lb/>
(which is more accurate) had him<lb/>
in 10.35. Melvin finished second<lb/>
in 10.7 while Burson took third<lb/>
and Suggs fourth.<lb/>
Alston, who was named the<lb/>
meet's outstanding performer,<lb/>
came back to take the 200 meters<lb/>
in a NCAA qualifying time of<lb/>
20.8. The automatic timer had<lb/>
him in 20.62. Melvin again<lb/>
finished second in 21.3 and<lb/>
Suggs, hurting with a sore toe,<lb/>
took third in 21 i to complete the<lb/>
sweep for the Pirates. Alston's<lb/>
time set a new school record.<lb/>
In the other sprint, the 400<lb/>
meters, the Pirates finished<lb/>
2-4-5-6 to claim 15 points to give<lb/>
61 points in the three races. Jay<lb/>
Purdie set a school record of 47.9<lb/>
in the race to take seoond. Terry<lb/>
Perry was fourth for the Pirates in<lb/>
48.0, while Charlie Moss finished<lb/>
fifth in 48.1. James Freeman took<lb/>
sixth in 49.0.<lb/>
Alston had a phenomenal<lb/>
meet. Besides taking the 100 and<lb/>
200, he ran the opening leg of the<lb/>
440 yard relay in 10.17, although<lb/>
running the curve. He also<lb/>
started off the mile relay team in<lb/>
47.3 for another top time.<lb/>
 I just decided I had to do the<lb/>
very best I could in this meet<lb/>
Alston said after receiving the<lb/>
award.  I knew we would have to<lb/>
do everything we oould after the<lb/>
relay disqualification<lb/>
Coach Bill Carson termed<lb/>
Alston's performance as "just<lb/>
great<lb/>
One of the more intense<lb/>
events was the triple jump, as the<lb/>
cunference has five of the top<lb/>
leapers in the South. Herman<lb/>
Mclntyre got revenge on VMI's<lb/>
Malcolm Grimes for Grimes'<lb/>
victory in the indoor meet.<lb/>
Mclntyre set a new conference<lb/>
standard with his leap of 51 -5 34.<lb/>
Grimes took second in 51-2, while<lb/>
teammate Paul Perry finished<lb/>
third in 50-1 34. George Jackson<lb/>
of East Carolina took fourth in 50<lb/>
feet even while Carl Anderson of<lb/>
Furman was close behind at<lb/>
49-9 14. Mike Hodge of ECU<lb/>
took sixth with a leap of 48-1 Vi.<lb/>
Jackson uncorked a jump of 52<lb/>
feet in his last effort, but<lb/>
scratched by with an inch or two.<lb/>
The Pirates' mile relay team<lb/>
of Alston, Moss, Perry and Purdie<lb/>
ran away from the field in<lb/>
notching a new conference record<lb/>
of 3:12.6. Furman, running in the<lb/>
other heat took second in 3.14.3.<lb/>
Marvin Rankins won his<lb/>
specialty, the 110 meter high<lb/>
hurdles in 14.1. David Pate of<lb/>
Furman took second in 14.5,<lb/>
while Grimes finished third in the<lb/>
same time.<lb/>
The Pirates were still three<lb/>
points behind after the mile relay,<lb/>
with only the discus to be<lb/>
completed. In that event, fresh-<lb/>
man Robert Bailey came through<lb/>
with a school record toss of 161-10<lb/>
to finish seoond. Furrnan's best<lb/>
finisher was Brad Hiles at fifth.<lb/>
That gave the Pirates their<lb/>
victory. William and Mary's Mike<lb/>
Sohey broke the conference mark<lb/>
in winning at 162-7.<lb/>
Se TRACK;(&amp;&amp; 16<lb/>
By JEFF BROOKS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Brilliant pitching, backed by<lb/>
almost perfect fielding and clutch<lb/>
hitting, gave the Pirates of East<lb/>
Carolina their first Southern<lb/>
Conference baseball title in ten<lb/>
years, as they defeated The<lb/>
Citadel Bulldogs in an all-impor-<lb/>
tant doubleheader last Saturday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
This year's record-setting<lb/>
team ran their record to 30-10<lb/>
overall and 15-1 in the conference<lb/>
with the two triumphs, and<lb/>
earned a berth in the NCAA<lb/>
Atlantic Regional playoffs set to<lb/>
begin May 20th.<lb/>
With a conference record of<lb/>
13-1 going into the game, the<lb/>
Pirates were looking over their<lb/>
shoulder at Western Carolina,<lb/>
who had closed out their season at<lb/>
14-2. ECU needed to win at least<lb/>
one to tie, and to sweep the<lb/>
powerful Bulldogs to win the title<lb/>
outright.<lb/>
In the first game, Sonny<lb/>
Wooten singled off Bulldog pitch-<lb/>
er Wicters to open the seoond<lb/>
inning. Bobby Supel then walked<lb/>
to put runners on seoond and<lb/>
third.<lb/>
Raymie Styons grounded into<lb/>
a double play, and moved Wooten<lb/>
over to third where he scored on<lb/>
Robert Brinkley's single.<lb/>
The Citadel came back with a<lb/>
run in the fourth to tie the game.<lb/>
The deadlock lasted five more<lb/>
innings until Eddie Gates led off<lb/>
the top of the tenth for the Pirates<lb/>
with a sizzling triple.<lb/>
Bobby Supel came through in<lb/>
the clutch and laid a perfect bunt<lb/>
down the left-field line to score<lb/>
Gates.<lb/>
The single tally proved to be<lb/>
the winning margin as Conaty<lb/>
held the Bulldogs in their half of<lb/>
the tenth, to take his eighth<lb/>
victory of the year.<lb/>
The Pirates started quickly in<lb/>
the second game as Pete Para-<lb/>
dossi doubled to right to open the<lb/>
top of the first.<lb/>
With two outs, Sonny Wooten<lb/>
advanced Paradossi to third with<lb/>
an infield single. Attempting to<lb/>
steal on Galloway's next pitch<lb/>
Wooten was almost nailed by<lb/>
Reynolds, the Bulldog catcher.<lb/>
He squirmed out of an almost<lb/>
certain put out, and continued to<lb/>
dance on the basepaths while<lb/>
Paradossi scored from third.<lb/>
The Citadel was able to get a<lb/>
run over on Pirate ace Mickey<lb/>
Britt in the bottom of the first to<lb/>
even the game at one run apiece.<lb/>
With Bobby Supel on deck,<lb/>
Sonny Wooten opened up the<lb/>
Pirates' half of the fourth with a<lb/>
ringing single to left field. Supel<lb/>
then smashed Galloway's first<lb/>
pitch out of the ballpark.<lb/>
His homerun, which was his<lb/>
fifth of the year, was still rising<lb/>
when it went out of sight.<lb/>
Conservative estimates put the<lb/>
distance at about 445 feet.<lb/>
The tape-measure smash gave<lb/>
Britt a 3-1 lead, and the Pirate aoe<lb/>
made the most of it. He allowed<lb/>
the Bulldogs a single marker in<lb/>
the bottom of the fourth, but shut<lb/>
them out the rest of the way as<lb/>
the Pirates vyrapped up a 3-2<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
Britt ran his reoord to 9-0 on<lb/>
the season, as the Pirates closed<lb/>
out their regular season.<lb/>
The new Southern Conference<lb/>
champions are now idle until May<lb/>
20th, when they go to the NCAA<lb/>
Atlantic Regional playoffs.<lb/>
This will be the sixth trip the<lb/>
Bucs have made to the post-sea-<lb/>
son tournament. The Pirates will<lb/>
be underdogs going into the<lb/>
tournament, but with all of the<lb/>
talent on this year's team, don't<lb/>
be surprised by the strong<lb/>
showing, they most certainly will<lb/>
make.<lb/>
MICKEY BRITT<lb/>
RECORDS<lb/>
East Carolina's mighty Pirates<lb/>
baseball team has smashed its<lb/>
way to the Southern Conference<lb/>
championship, toppling innumer-<lb/>
able school records along the<lb/>
way. Finishing up 30 and 10<lb/>
overall, the Pirates have topped<lb/>
the mark for the most records<lb/>
ever by an ECU team. The old<lb/>
record, set in 1967, was 23.<lb/>
The Pirates have received<lb/>
clutch play from every person on<lb/>
the team. Interestingly enough,<lb/>
every person on the team has<lb/>
stolen at least one base this<lb/>
season. The running Bucs have<lb/>
stolen 82 bases in 100 attempts,<lb/>
completely shattering the old<lb/>
1967 record of 57. Amassing the<lb/>
most total bases ever, this year's<lb/>
edition of the baseball team has<lb/>
had 430 total bases against the<lb/>
1968 reoord of 369. Likewise, the<lb/>
more men on base, the more runs<lb/>
scored, and the Pirates have<lb/>
broken that reoord by 29. In<lb/>
games to date, ECU has scored<lb/>
198 runs, versus the record 169<lb/>
scored during 1967.<lb/>
Included in these 30 victories<lb/>
has been a 14 game winning<lb/>
streak (a school reoord) which<lb/>
began on March 26th with an 8-0<lb/>
victory over VMI, and was not<lb/>
stopped until April 13th, when<lb/>
Atlantic Christian edged the Bucs<lb/>
8-4 in the opening game of a<lb/>
twi-night doubleheader.<lb/>
Posting their 26th winning<lb/>
season in their 27th year of<lb/>
baseball competition, the Pirates<lb/>
have received outstanding play<lb/>
from Billy Best, Eddie Gates,<lb/>
Sonny Wooten, Pete Paradossi,<lb/>
and Mrckey Brftt <lb/>
Best, a freshman from Leland,<lb/>
North Carolina, came through<lb/>
with the game-winning hit five<lb/>
times during the winning streak.<lb/>
Three other times during the<lb/>
streak, he scored the winning<lb/>
run. Against Atlantic Christian he<lb/>
smashed a grand-slam home-run<lb/>
to power the Pirates to a 9-3<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
Speedster Eddie Gates leads<lb/>
the Pirates on the basepaths. In<lb/>
the 40 games to date, Gates has<lb/>
stolen a reoord 23 bases. He<lb/>
broke the old mark, which was<lb/>
14 set back in 1959, on April 4th<lb/>
against Campbell College.<lb/>
Senior Sonny Wooten, the<lb/>
team captain, has set a new<lb/>
school reoord for most doubles ina<lb/>
season. He hit his 11th two-<lb/>
bagger of the season several days<lb/>
ago to set the new mark, and to<lb/>
date, he has hit thirteen.<lb/>
Pete Paradossi now holds the<lb/>
ECU record for most hits in a<lb/>
season with 49, completely rip-<lb/>
ping apart the old 1965 mark of 38<lb/>
set by Carlton Barnes. Batting in<lb/>
the number three position, Para-<lb/>
dossi currently sports a .336<lb/>
batting average.<lb/>
Finally Mickey Britt has fash-<lb/>
ioned a perfect 9-0 pitching<lb/>
record en route to several new<lb/>
ECU records. He has broken the<lb/>
1966 record for most victories in a<lb/>
season, which was set by Jim<lb/>
Haynor. He has Droken tne ntern<lb/>
for most consecutive victories by<lb/>
a pitcher; also eight.<lb/>
The Pirates are idle for a<lb/>
week, before they resume prac-<lb/>
tice in preparation fa the NCAA<lb/>
baseball tournament which is<lb/>
slated t'obedin May 20th.<lb/>
r<lb/>
Rl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057128_0015"/><lb/>
3 May 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
Pirates sign acclaimed prospect<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
new head basketball ooach Larry<lb/>
Gillman has wasted no time in<lb/>
recruiting since joining the Pirate<lb/>
staff six weeks ago. And the fruits<lb/>
of his labor have already paid off.<lb/>
Gillman announced Friday the<lb/>
signing of junior college all-<lb/>
America guard Oliver Mack. The<lb/>
6-3, 198 pound New York native<lb/>
has completed two years of<lb/>
all-star play at San Jacinto Junior<lb/>
College in Pasadena, Texas.<lb/>
Chris Keeling, sports writer<lb/>
for The Texian in Pasadena wrote<lb/>
last week: "At this time every<lb/>
major college in the nation is<lb/>
trying to sign him (Oliver)<lb/>
At the time of the signing,<lb/>
schools like San Francisco, Hous-<lb/>
ton, Arizona State, Louisville and<lb/>
others received the announce-<lb/>
ment with Gillman that Oliver had<lb/>
selected East Carolina.<lb/>
Mack is regarded as the top<lb/>
junior college guard in the<lb/>
country this year, being named to<lb/>
the first team junior college<lb/>
all-America list. He was all-Texas<lb/>
Junior College Athletic Associa-<lb/>
tion Conference, leading scoring<lb/>
in the league for two years in a<lb/>
row, this season with 27 points<lb/>
per game.<lb/>
Perhaps his major accolade is<lb/>
being named to he junior college<lb/>
national tournament all-tourna-<lb/>
ment team for two years in a row.<lb/>
Only two other players in the<lb/>
history of the tournament have<lb/>
accomplished this feat.<lb/>
"We're just elated that Oliver<lb/>
has decided to join us here at East<lb/>
Carolina said Gillman. "He will<lb/>
definitely add a new, exciting<lb/>
dimension to our basketball pro-<lb/>
gram. Oliver comes out of two<lb/>
fine programs in Bryant High<lb/>
School in New York, with coach<lb/>
Lou Hacker and San Jacinto<lb/>
Junior College in Pasadena,<lb/>
Texas, with coach Wayne Bal-<lb/>
lard<lb/>
Both years at San Jacinto,<lb/>
Mack was named to the all-tour-<lb/>
nament team in the San Jacinto<lb/>
Classic and the Lee Classic. He<lb/>
scored 1370 points in the confer-<lb/>
ence in two years, averaging 25<lb/>
points per game overall and 27<lb/>
points per game in the confer-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
In addition to his outstanding<lb/>
scoring average, Mack had nine<lb/>
rebounds and six assists per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Mack's San Jacinto Ravens<lb/>
finished second this year in the<lb/>
national junior college tourna-<lb/>
ment, while the Ravens were<lb/>
seventh Mack's rreshman year.<lb/>
Mack played in the National<lb/>
Junior College East-West All-Star<lb/>
game in San Antonio April 1st,<lb/>
and will play in the Texas Junior<lb/>
College All-Star game in Waco,<lb/>
Texas, this Friday.<lb/>
While at Bryant High School<lb/>
in Queens, N.Y Mack was<lb/>
named first team Public School<lb/>
Athletic League with a 25 points<lb/>
per game scoring average and an<lb/>
18 rebounds per game average.<lb/>
Top players in the PSAL in the<lb/>
past include Connie Hawkins,<lb/>
Roger Brown, Steve Sheppard,<lb/>
Ernie Grunfield, Bernard King,<lb/>
Lloyd Free, etc.<lb/>
As a senior at Bryant, Ma<lb/>
was named a consensus all-<lb/>
America, being tabbed by all<lb/>
major publications to their elite<lb/>
lists.<lb/>
"Oliver is one of the true<lb/>
quality players in the United<lb/>
States this year, high school or<lb/>
junior college. He definitely will<lb/>
be a true all-America candidate<lb/>
next season fa us continued<lb/>
Gillman.<lb/>
"Oliver is one of the finest<lb/>
all-round high school athletes I've<lb/>
ever seen. As an example, he<lb/>
high jumped 6'10" as a sopho-<lb/>
more in high school when 15<lb/>
years old.<lb/>
"But not only is Oliver an<lb/>
all-America player, he's a tre-<lb/>
mendous person as well<lb/>
"This certainly brings to front<lb/>
what we said earlier about Coach<lb/>
Gillman's ability as a recruiter<lb/>
said athletic director Bill Cain.<lb/>
"Oliver is the most sought after<lb/>
basketball player to ever come to<lb/>
East Carolina. I'm just elated as<lb/>
well<lb/>
ACCOUNTING AND<lb/>
FINANCE MAJORS<lb/>
LET US HELP YOU TO<lb/>
BECOME ACPA<lb/>
Little's Chop Shop<lb/>
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We repair all makes and models of<lb/>
motorcycles.<lb/>
We sell customparts andaccessories<lb/>
We do custom painting.<lb/>
We have pick-up service.<lb/>
Coming soon- van accessories<lb/>
act<lb/>
CPA<lb/>
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Charlotte<lb/>
704-375-3051<lb/>
COURSES BEGIN MAY 26 &amp; NOV. 24<lb/>
OUR SUCCESSFUL STUDENTS REPPt SI N1<lb/>
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EAT FOR JUST<lb/>
W plus tax MonThurs.<lb/>
Crabcake�. slaw, french fries plus<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
V pound hamburger steak, slaw,<lb/>
french fries and rolls.<lb/>
Fish, slaw french fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat752-3172<lb/>
2 miles east on highway 264<lb/>
(out 10th St.)<lb/>
MYRTLE BEACH<lb/>
Full time pay, part time hours-<lb/>
Work public relations in the<lb/>
sun for $200.00 plus a week.<lb/>
Send resume plus photo to:<lb/>
Country Club Villas<lb/>
P.O. Box 2588<lb/>
Myrtle Beach, S.C. 29571<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
300 EVANS<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
PHONE: 752-2136<lb/>
FREE PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
�U<lb/>
fftOBjMt piCKUP AND DELIVERY<lb/>
fmtmfmm<lb/>
Prescription Dept. with medication<lb/>
profiles: your prescription always at<lb/>
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UNICORN<lb/>
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A Different Kind<lb/>
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Now Serving<lb/>
Breakfast 6:30 - 10am<lb/>
Dinner 5 �11pm<lb/>
Located on Memorial Drive<lb/>
Beside Camelot Inn.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057128_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 May 1977<lb/>
Tennis team sixth<lb/>
By THOMASLIPE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Furman University Pala-<lb/>
dins swept four singles and two<lb/>
doubles spots to win their seoond<lb/>
consecutive Southern Conference<lb/>
tennis crown.<lb/>
Furman compiled 66 points for<lb/>
first, followed by William and<lb/>
Mary and pre-tournament favor-<lb/>
ite Appalachian State, both with<lb/>
57.<lb/>
ECU's Pirates finished with 25<lb/>
to take sixth in the tournev.<lb/>
William and Mary's Marc<lb/>
Abrams copped the number one<lb/>
singles title, defeating Sandy<lb/>
Haltwanger of The Citadel, 7-5,<lb/>
2-$, 7-5.<lb/>
Abram's teammate David<lb/>
Smith beat Davidson's Mike<lb/>
Barnhill 6-4, 7-5, for the number<lb/>
two singles crown.<lb/>
From there on, the picture<lb/>
was all Furman. The Paladin's<lb/>
Jack Jones took the number three<lb/>
crown, and teammates Rick Lov-<lb/>
ett, Langdon Brockington, and<lb/>
John Cleary swept the rest of the<lb/>
six titles.<lb/>
Furman emphasized their<lb/>
superiority by taking the top two<lb/>
doubles titles. Hap Core and<lb/>
Jimmy Wynn won the first<lb/>
doubles spot, and Jones and<lb/>
Brockington took the number two<lb/>
a own.<lb/>
TRACK<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
Appalachian State's Dave<lb/>
Markland set a new conference<lb/>
mark in the javelin, winning in<lb/>
229-8, while Lafan Forbes of East<lb/>
Carolina took third in 206-1V2, his<lb/>
season's best.<lb/>
Andre Gibson of VMI set a<lb/>
new record in the long jump<lb/>
winning in 24-6. East Carolina's<lb/>
George Jackson finished fourth in<lb/>
23-5, while the Pirates' Herman<lb/>
Mclntyre took fifth in 22-11 14<lb/>
and Mike Hodge sixth in 22-8V2.<lb/>
David Anderson of Furman<lb/>
qualified for the NCAA<lb/>
Championships in the 400 meter<lb/>
intermediate hurdles, winning in<lb/>
5017. David Pate, also of Furman,<lb/>
took seoond in 51.9, while Ben<lb/>
Duckenfield of East Carolina<lb/>
broke the school record in finish-<lb/>
ing third in 52.4. Tony McKoy,<lb/>
also of ECU, took fourth in 52.9,<lb/>
his career best.<lb/>
Carson said after the meet he<lb/>
knew his team would have had to<lb/>
fight for the victory, but he did<lb/>
not think they would have the<lb/>
trouble they did.<lb/>
"We ran well in the meet he<lb/>
said. "Furman ran really great,<lb/>
but our guys toughened after the<lb/>
relay. We didn't get any of the<lb/>
breaks and they got them all.<lb/>
"This was the sweetest of the<lb/>
two championships because we<lb/>
had to fight to win. And it was the<lb/>
last<lb/>
It was the last and the Pirates<lb/>
came through to win it.<lb/>
STANDINGS<lb/>
Furman66<lb/>
W&amp; M57<lb/>
Appalachian57<lb/>
Davidson47<lb/>
The Citadel42<lb/>
ECU25<lb/>
VMI11<lb/>
Marshall10<lb/>
BUC TOM DURFEE fell to second-seeded Davis Babb by a 6-1, 6-1<lb/>
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