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<pb facs="00057129_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Republicansp. 3<lb/>
'Brothersp. 9<lb/>
Alston honoredp. 13<lb/>
Vol. 52, No-T<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
5 May 1977<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins vetoes SGA<lb/>
legislature recall bill<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Chancellor Leo Jenkins an-<lb/>
nounced yesterday that the elec-<lb/>
tion of SGA President Neil<lb/>
Sessomsand Vioe President Reed<lb/>
Warren was valid and that there<lb/>
will be no recall election.<lb/>
According to Article III, Sec-<lb/>
tion 13. of the SGA constitution,<lb/>
the chancellor has the authority of<lb/>
final veto power over any legisla-<lb/>
tive act of the SGA.<lb/>
Jenkins said that, "after<lb/>
giving full consideration to the<lb/>
positions presented by both sides<lb/>
during this conference the<lb/>
May 2 meeting and after lengthy<lb/>
consultation with representatives<lb/>
of the administration and the<lb/>
faculty, I am convinced that the<lb/>
central issue which must be<lb/>
addressed is whether Mr. Neil<lb/>
Sessoms and Mr. Reed Warren<lb/>
should remain in offioe without<lb/>
being required to defend their<lb/>
ight to offioe in a recall election.<lb/>
"It is my determination that<lb/>
they are now in office as a result<lb/>
of a valid election, conducted<lb/>
explicitly according to the legisla-<lb/>
ture.<lb/>
"These students are not to be<lb/>
denied their right to serve and<lb/>
carry out their duties and respon-<lb/>
sibilities as the chief executive<lb/>
officers of the SGA simply<lb/>
because their election to office by<lb/>
the voters was by a small<lb/>
plurality Jenkins added.<lb/>
In response to the ruling,<lb/>
Robert Swaim, who brought the<lb/>
case to Jenkins' attention and<lb/>
arranged the May 2 meeting, said<lb/>
that he was very pleased with the<lb/>
ruling.<lb/>
Former SGA President Tim<lb/>
Sullivan was unavailable for<lb/>
comment.<lb/>
"The decision has now been<lb/>
made and we need to get behind<lb/>
Neil and Reed and work for a<lb/>
better SGA according to James<lb/>
H. Tucker, dean of Student<lb/>
Affairs.<lb/>
"That settles it. The matter<lb/>
has been settled by the chancel-<lb/>
lor. I hope all sides accept it in<lb/>
good faith and that the SGA can<lb/>
settle down and take care of the<lb/>
business at hand said Rudolph<lb/>
Alexander associate dean of<lb/>
Student Affairs.<lb/>
"Although Dr. Jenkinshashis<lb/>
authority, to veto any act of the<lb/>
SGA I feel this University would<lb/>
best have been served if the<lb/>
students could have decided the<lb/>
issue in an election as provided by<lb/>
our Student Body Constitution. I<lb/>
hope, for the sake of the student<lb/>
body, it does not become a<lb/>
common practice according to<lb/>
Ricky Price, speaker of the SGA<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
SGA President Neil Sessoms<lb/>
thought Dr. Jenkins' decision was<lb/>
fair and well considered.<lb/>
"He based his decision on<lb/>
facts stated in the constitution<lb/>
and information presented by a<lb/>
wide cross section of sources. I<lb/>
am pleased that Reed and I can<lb/>
now serve the students as we<lb/>
were elected to do said Ses-<lb/>
soms.<lb/>
Student Union President Den-<lb/>
nis Ramsey commended Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins' decision and said he<lb/>
hoped the issue would die.<lb/>
"I hope that Mr. Sullivan and<lb/>
his colleagues will let the issue<lb/>
die and stop playing petty politics<lb/>
so that Sessoms and Warren and<lb/>
the SGA can get on with their<lb/>
business added Ramsey.<lb/>
"I saw no other just course tor<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins to take aocording to<lb/>
Warren. "I'm sure most students<lb/>
are pleased with the decision and<lb/>
I know everybody is glad that the<lb/>
oontroversv is over<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS INSTRUCTING high school<lb/>
students in Computer Science have generated much<lb/>
enthusiasm among the local schools. Left to right:<lb/>
Jay Gleason, Debbie Grafton, Gary Huffman with<lb/>
their advisor, Dr. Milam Johnson. Not pictured is<lb/>
Kathryn Tesh. Photo by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
SU Board cuts two members<lb/>
By ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Student Union Boat d of<lb/>
Directors voted to remove the<lb/>
speaker of the legislature and the<lb/>
SGA treasurer from the board at<lb/>
the April 27 meeting.<lb/>
Of the six voting student<lb/>
members on the board, three are<lb/>
SGA officials.<lb/>
Student Union President<lb/>
Dennis Ramsey said the recent<lb/>
turmoil that the SGA finds itself<lb/>
in was one of the reasons for this<lb/>
action.<lb/>
"We feel that it is totally<lb/>
unfair for the SGA to control half<lb/>
of the voting student members,<lb/>
since we receive no funds from<lb/>
SGA and we are totally independ-<lb/>
ent of them said Ramsey.<lb/>
According to Ramsey the<lb/>
Student Union receives its money<lb/>
directly from student fees and<lb/>
thus it istotally independent from<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
Ramsey said that the SGA<lb/>
president will remain on the<lb/>
board since the SGA is entitled to<lb/>
one seat just like every other<lb/>
organization on campus and<lb/>
because the president is the<lb/>
official representative of the<lb/>
student government.<lb/>
According to Ramsey, one of<lb/>
his major ambitions is to remove<lb/>
petty politics from the Student<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
"We feel that the SGA is<lb/>
incapable of putting its own house<lb/>
in order as has been evidenced<lb/>
over the last oouple of weeks<lb/>
said Ramsey.<lb/>
The bill to remove the speaker<lb/>
and treasurer was drafted by<lb/>
Ramsey and introduced by SGA<lb/>
President Neil Sessoms.<lb/>
"I introduced this bill, be-<lb/>
cause I feel Student Union and<lb/>
SGA are separate organizations.<lb/>
As it was the SGA members on the<lb/>
board had the power to block any<lb/>
constitutional amendment to the<lb/>
Student Union constitution said<lb/>
Sessoms.<lb/>
Sessoms said that he felt the<lb/>
SGA should not have a veto power<lb/>
over the Student Union.<lb/>
The SGA treasurer and<lb/>
speaker of the legislature were<lb/>
unavailable for comment.<lb/>
ECU CHANCELLOR LEO JENKINS<lb/>
ECU soccer team<lb/>
circulates petition<lb/>
for re-establishment<lb/>
By ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Members of the soccer team<lb/>
have circulated a petition calling<lb/>
for the re-establishment of a<lb/>
soccer program, in response to<lb/>
the recent ruling by the ECU<lb/>
Board of Trustees that eliminated<lb/>
soccer from the athletic program.<lb/>
According to the captain of the<lb/>
soccer team, Tom Long, the<lb/>
petition contains some 1,200<lb/>
names.<lb/>
"They (Board of Trustees) say<lb/>
they are having trouble funding<lb/>
the team said Long.<lb/>
Long said that the soccer team<lb/>
only receives $4,400 out of the<lb/>
total athletic budget of over one<lb/>
million dollars.<lb/>
"They just don't realize how<lb/>
popular soccer is said Long.<lb/>
"We're not trying to cut<lb/>
anybody's throat. We just want<lb/>
our sport back said Charlie<lb/>
Hardy co-captain of the team.<lb/>
Athletic director Bill Cain said<lb/>
that he had no comment to make<lb/>
concerning the issue.<lb/>
Long said that he had met<lb/>
with the Assistant vo the Chancel-<lb/>
lor Colonel Blake and discussed<lb/>
the matter.<lb/>
Blake was not available for<lb/>
comment.<lb/>
SGA President Neil Sessoms<lb/>
said that he was disappointed that<lb/>
soccer had been eliminated from<lb/>
the athletic program.<lb/>
"I feel that it was a definite<lb/>
loss to the student body and the<lb/>
athletic program said Sessoms.<lb/>
ECU Playhouse presents<lb/>
first major<lb/>
DANCE THEATRE<lb/>
See story, p.9<lb/>
<pb facs="00057129_0002"/><lb/>
AED beach hip Dinner theatre NSCL<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
5 May 1977<lb/>
Special NTE '77 class gift<lb/>
At the special request of the<lb/>
N.C. State Department of Public<lb/>
Instruction, a special administra-<lb/>
tion of the National Teacher<lb/>
Examinations (NTE) will be given<lb/>
at East Carolina University on<lb/>
May 21, 1977. This administra-<lb/>
tion has been scheduled to<lb/>
provide graduating seniors with<lb/>
an additional opportunity to meet<lb/>
the State's NTE requirement.<lb/>
Special registration materials<lb/>
for the May 21 test must be<lb/>
picked up from Speight-105, East<lb/>
Carolina University and returned<lb/>
to the same office no later than<lb/>
Monday, May 9, 1977, by 4.W<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
If you have any questions,<lb/>
please contact the Testing Cen-<lb/>
ter, Speight Building, Room-105,<lb/>
East Carolina University or call<lb/>
757-6811.<lb/>
Sabbath service<lb/>
The first Sabbath Service of<lb/>
the first Synagogue in the history<lb/>
of Greenville will be held Friday,<lb/>
May 13, 1977 at 8 p.m. at the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center. Oneg<lb/>
Shabbat will follow the Service.<lb/>
All Are Welcome.<lb/>
ECU republicans<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
ECU College Republicans May<lb/>
10, in Mendenhall Student Union<lb/>
in the Multipurpose Room at 8<lb/>
p.m. The Executive Committee<lb/>
will meet at 7:30. The major topic<lb/>
of discussion will be ways to reach<lb/>
out and get students interested in<lb/>
the organization.<lb/>
All persons interested will be<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
Art show<lb/>
The Annual Student Art Show<lb/>
will be on display in the W.B.<lb/>
Gray Gallery in the Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center from<lb/>
May 4 to May 25. The exhibit will<lb/>
open with a reception at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
on Friday, May 6. Work represen-<lb/>
ted will be the best student work<lb/>
from the seven studio disciplines<lb/>
as well as work from the<lb/>
Foundation Program.<lb/>
The students and faculty are<lb/>
invited to attend both the opening<lb/>
and to view the work during<lb/>
regular s'ery hours, 9-4 Mon-<lb/>
day through Friday.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi, service to<lb/>
education honor society will hold<lb/>
its spring initiation of new<lb/>
members and induction of the<lb/>
1977-78 Executive Board on Wed-<lb/>
nesday May 11, 1977 in Rm. 244<lb/>
Mendenhall. A reception will<lb/>
follow the meeting. All new and<lb/>
ofd members are urged to attend.<lb/>
Anyone having an idea for a<lb/>
Senior Class Gift to leave to ECU<lb/>
please call the SGA office at<lb/>
757-6611 by 5:00 p.m. Monday<lb/>
May 9th and leave your name,<lb/>
phone number, and idea. Get<lb/>
involved, let's hear your voice!<lb/>
FG Bible study<lb/>
This Friday night the Forever<lb/>
Generation will have a Bible<lb/>
study and discussion on "that<lb/>
blessed hopethe return of<lb/>
Christ for his believers. Add to<lb/>
that good singing and informal<lb/>
fellowship, and you've got a good<lb/>
time! Why not join us? That's<lb/>
Friday night at 730 in Brewster<lb/>
B-103.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
A limited supply of announce-<lb/>
ments are now on sale in the<lb/>
Student Supply Store. There are<lb/>
five in a package for $1.50.<lb/>
Fly-High thanks<lb/>
Fly-High-By-Night, Inc.<lb/>
would like to take this opportunity<lb/>
to thank the Masked Marauder<lb/>
for his high quality ride through<lb/>
our midst last week. Your pre-<lb/>
sence was truly felt. Return<lb/>
soon<lb/>
AVA meeting<lb/>
The American Vocational<lb/>
Association will hold a meeting on<lb/>
Tuesday, May 10, 1977. It will<lb/>
be held in Room 205 in the Home<lb/>
Economics Building at 5 p.m.<lb/>
Janet Wodard of West Cra-<lb/>
ven High School and Randall<lb/>
Washington of the Business<lb/>
Department at ECU will be the<lb/>
guest speakers. They will speak<lb/>
on Vocational Education in the<lb/>
school system.<lb/>
Members and all interested<lb/>
persons are urged to attend.<lb/>
Remember members and as-<lb/>
sociates that this weekend is<lb/>
beach-weekend. Contact Smitty<lb/>
or Dr. Ayerc for details.<lb/>
Sign language<lb/>
ECU will be admitting a small<lb/>
number of deaf students next<lb/>
semester. The Program for Hear-<lb/>
ing Impaired Students is search-<lb/>
ing for students who have any<lb/>
knowledge of sign language and<lb/>
who would be interested in<lb/>
improving their skills through<lb/>
beginning and advanced sign<lb/>
language interpreter training.<lb/>
There will be a number of<lb/>
part-time jobs available for stu-<lb/>
dent interpreters Fall Semester.<lb/>
For further information oontact<lb/>
The Program for Hearing Impair-<lb/>
ed Students, 757-6729, A-209<lb/>
Brewster Building.<lb/>
Checks watting<lb/>
The following people have<lb/>
checks waiting for them at<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Rebecca Buf-<lb/>
faloe, Margaret Phoenix, David<lb/>
Robey, John Dayberry, Bill Har-<lb/>
rington. They are on the news<lb/>
desk.<lb/>
Promotion<lb/>
Effective September 1, 1977,<lb/>
Judith D. Donnalley, Assistant<lb/>
Professor in the ECU Department<lb/>
of Library Scienue, will be promo-<lb/>
ted to Associate Professor.<lb/>
Ms. Donnalley came to ECU<lb/>
in 1969 after holding previous<lb/>
positions at Glen Burnie High<lb/>
School, Maryland, the West<lb/>
Virginia Library Commission, the<lb/>
University of Pittsburgh, and<lb/>
Morris Harvey College.<lb/>
She holds degrees from Mor-<lb/>
ris Harvey College and the<lb/>
University of Pittsburgh and has<lb/>
taken additional graduate work at<lb/>
West Virginia University, the<lb/>
University of Southern California,<lb/>
George Peabody College for<lb/>
Teachers and North Carolina<lb/>
State University.<lb/>
Management<lb/>
There will be a reorganization-<lb/>
al meeting of the Society for<lb/>
Advancement of Management<lb/>
on Wednesday, May 10, 1977 at<lb/>
3:30 in Rm. 102.<lb/>
Pariyyard sale Senior show<lb/>
There will be a combination<lb/>
partyyardsaleon Saturday May 7<lb/>
at 113 E 13th St between Forbes<lb/>
and Evans St. Rugs, fans, lamps,<lb/>
sofas, luggage etc<lb/>
It will start when we get up<lb/>
and end when we finish. So bring<lb/>
your wallet and your stash and be<lb/>
there Saturday, I will.<lb/>
Semi-formal<lb/>
Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity<lb/>
presents the 7th annual Black and<lb/>
Gold Ball. Saturday, May 7, 1977<lb/>
at 9XX) p.m2:00 a.m. at the<lb/>
American Legion Hut. Dress is<lb/>
semi-formal, tickets are $3.50<lb/>
single and $6.00 couple.<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/>
SC J meeting<lb/>
There will be a meeting of SCJ<lb/>
on Tuesday, May 10 in Austin<lb/>
room 301 at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Baha'is<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 Office by<lb/>
telephone, 757-6611, ext. 266.<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/>
Poll Tenders during the SGA<lb/>
Elections may come by the SGA<lb/>
Office 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 office 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/>
Baha'i association meets<lb/>
every Monday night in rm. 238<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center at<lb/>
7:30. For information, phone<lb/>
748-8113.<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/>
Fun In Son<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ<lb/>
will meet for fun, fellowship and<lb/>
challenging insights from God's<lb/>
Word. Everyone welcome. Thurs-<lb/>
day 7 p.m. Brewster B-102.<lb/>
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/>
Chem seminar<lb/>
John R. Wasson, visiting sen-<lb/>
ior scientist, UNC-Chapel Hill,<lb/>
will present a seminar on "Trans-<lb/>
Annular Interactions In Inorganic<lb/>
Chemistry" on May 6, 1977 at 2<lb/>
p.m in room 201 Flanagan<lb/>
Building. Refreshments will be<lb/>
served in the conference room.<lb/>
Arts ft crafts<lb/>
The Farmville Arts Council is<lb/>
sponsoring its first annual arts<lb/>
and crafts fair Sunday, May 8,<lb/>
1977 from 2:00 p.m. until 5:00<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/>
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 6O0 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 fj-ee game is<lb/>
given away each hour between<lb/>
800 p.m. and 11100 p.m. Come<lb/>
early if you want to get a lane<lb/>
cause you can't afford to miss it!<lb/>
Concert<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/>
Bela Bartok. Robert Hause will<lb/>
conduct.<lb/>
No admission will be charged.<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/>
<pb facs="00057129_0003"/><lb/>
�HNNRNNNNBNNNNNNNUNMNNRBNWNBWIMHNJBRJillllMNRMNnHRHNWMB<lb/>
Republicans Club elects<lb/>
officers, discusses plans<lb/>
5 May 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
The College Republicans Club<lb/>
of ECU recently met in order to<lb/>
elect offioers for the ooming year.<lb/>
Elected were Scott Bright,<lb/>
president; William Benton, vice<lb/>
prs Richy Smith, secretary; and<lb/>
Bonnie Boswell, treasurer.<lb/>
ECU prof<lb/>
receives<lb/>
Fulbright-<lb/>
Hays award<lb/>
Dr. Hans H. Indorf, associate<lb/>
professor of political science at<lb/>
ECU, has been selected for a<lb/>
Fulbright-Hays award by the<lb/>
Board of Foreign Scholarships<lb/>
and the U.S. Department of State.<lb/>
The award is for consultation<lb/>
in Malaysia on the development<lb/>
of the new division of Southeast<lb/>
Asian Studies at the University of<lb/>
Malaya in Kuala Lumpar. Dr.<lb/>
Indorf will also teach a course on<lb/>
regionalism at the University.<lb/>
Dr. Indorf s specialities are<lb/>
international education, com-<lb/>
parative government and Asian<lb/>
politics.<lb/>
During the summer of 1974,<lb/>
he interviewed government lead-<lb/>
ers in Thailand, Malaysia, Singa-<lb/>
pore, Indonesia and the Philip-<lb/>
pines, as part of his research on<lb/>
regional cooperation in Asia. The<lb/>
project was funded by the Ford<lb/>
Foundation and the U.S. Inform-<lb/>
ation Service.<lb/>
ThomasC. Herndon, a history<lb/>
professor is the advisor for the<lb/>
group.<lb/>
The weekend of April 25-26<lb/>
was an active one for the College<lb/>
Republicans.<lb/>
Friday night, April 25, the<lb/>
former club president, Debra<lb/>
Epps, entertained the members<lb/>
of the North Carolina Federation<lb/>
of College Republicans in her<lb/>
home.<lb/>
Saturday morning the Execu-<lb/>
tive Committee members of the<lb/>
N.C. Federation met in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center.<lb/>
Several new appointments<lb/>
were made to the Executive<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
William Bennet, a rising<lb/>
senior here, was appointed to the<lb/>
position of Sgtat-Arms.<lb/>
Reports were given by the<lb/>
Federation Chairperson and sev-<lb/>
eral other Executive Committee<lb/>
members concerning their pro-<lb/>
tests over Governor Hunt's suc-<lb/>
cession bill.<lb/>
The Executive Committee also<lb/>
voted unanimously to support the<lb/>
liquor by the drink bill which<lb/>
would leave the fund passage up<lb/>
to oounty referendum.<lb/>
The Executive Committee ad-<lb/>
journed shortly after noon and its<lb/>
members went to the beach to<lb/>
spend the remainder of the<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
After the elections, the group<lb/>
discussed plans for the coming<lb/>
year. All persons interested in the<lb/>
Republicans Club are invited to<lb/>
attend the next meeting which is<lb/>
tentatively set for May 10,1977, 8<lb/>
p.m. at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Staff meeting I<lb/>
There will be a mandatory staff<lb/>
meeting for all summer and fall<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
staff members<lb/>
May 18 at 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Be there<lb/>
vuisfiJTie Qardeii Qffltr<lb/>
�V, mJlM W. tt TV<lb/>
T�r<lb/>
OnKvm�<lb/>
VtsSMta<lb/>
Remember your mother<lb/>
on Mother's Day with a gift from<lb/>
the Sunshine Garden Center.<lb/>
Savings on some gift items<lb/>
33y3off.<lb/>
Mother's Day May 8th<lb/>
Send a<lb/>
Big Hug<lb/>
Bouquet<lb/>
John's Flowers &amp;<lb/>
Gifts<lb/>
503 E. 3rd St.<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
SAVE 100.00,200.00,300.00,400.00,500.00 SAVE<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057129_0004"/><lb/>
Ei�i � i<lb/>
ditonals<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
5 May 1977<lb/>
Nuclear reaction<lb/>
International peddlers of nuclear equipment and<lb/>
materials are sure to cringe from the revelations<lb/>
surrounding Canada's bribery of foreign govern-<lb/>
ments in promoting its "Candu" reactor. The affair<lb/>
oonjures memories of the Lockheed scandal in which<lb/>
corporate money was tunneled to foreign officials to<lb/>
induce them to purchase aircrafts from the American<lb/>
firm. Whether this kind of business practice is ethical<lb/>
has been debated in Congress to little avail, but when<lb/>
the advance bribe tactic is used to market the<lb/>
potential means to blow up the world it surely should<lb/>
face legal restrictions.<lb/>
The reactor scandal, in which nearly $18 million<lb/>
was paid to foreign government officials using Israeli<lb/>
and Italian marketing fronts, first surfaced in<lb/>
November when the Canadian auditor-general<lb/>
discovered the expenditure under the guise of a<lb/>
"marketing expense" of the government's Atomic<lb/>
Energy of Canada, Ltd. Hoping to grab a piece of the<lb/>
growing international market in nuclear reactors, the<lb/>
Canadians used middlemen to push their power<lb/>
plants to industrializing nations with voracious<lb/>
energy appetites.<lb/>
These reactors can serve to uplift industrialization<lb/>
in developing countries but can also provide the<lb/>
materials to construct deadly nuclear weapons. In<lb/>
1974 India, using spent nuclear fuel it obtained from<lb/>
a reactor that it bought from Canada, exploded its<lb/>
first nuclear device. World attention began to focus<lb/>
on the need to limit membership in the international<lb/>
"nuclear club<lb/>
The world economy would suffer a heavy setback<lb/>
if trade in nuclear equipment were to suddenly cease.<lb/>
On the other hand, will the smart business sense of<lb/>
western reactor dealers allow them to market these<lb/>
devices without limitations to any country that can<lb/>
come up with the cash or collateral? The world's<lb/>
political responsibility is not of a sufficient average to<lb/>
allow a total free market approach to the nuclear<lb/>
trade.<lb/>
The Canadian fiasco should demonstrate to the<lb/>
competent leaders of the international community<lb/>
that stricter controls are needed to control the<lb/>
unauthorized development of nuclear weapons. The<lb/>
U.S as the major exporter of this product, should be<lb/>
in the forefront of such an effort-in the interest of<lb/>
national security.<lb/>
Fbuntainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis C. Leonard<lb/>
News EditorsKim Johnson<lb/>
Debbie Jackson<lb/>
Trends EditorPat Coyle<lb/>
Sports EditormAnne Hogge<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponr ed 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/>
-��� <lb/>
��t <lb/>
Article lauds Christian careers<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Many of us are wondering what we are going<lb/>
to tell our parents this summer when they pound us<lb/>
with those questions about our future plans, major,<lb/>
etc. Others, some of which are still unsure about our<lb/>
plans and are facing graduation find ourselves<lb/>
sitting in a daze wondering what life will be like<lb/>
outside this comfortable college atmosphere of<lb/>
'untested potential I think this reprint from "The<lb/>
Branch the monthly magazine of Inter-Varsity<lb/>
Christian Fellowship is especially appropriate at this<lb/>
time of the year. It is written by the editor, Janet<lb/>
Tronstad.<lb/>
Scott Ross<lb/>
I remember only too well the first time it dawned<lb/>
on me that I would cease to be a student when I<lb/>
graduated-l panicked and within a week had made<lb/>
reservations on a freighter going to Australia.<lb/>
To realize I would no longer be identified as a<lb/>
student (with a oomfortable, untried potential) and<lb/>
would instead have to measure myself against a<lb/>
not-too-promising job market was an intimidating<lb/>
thing. Nor was I disappointed in my fears when I had<lb/>
my first professional job interview. My B.A. in<lb/>
Sociology qualified me equally as well as the other<lb/>
200 candidates who were qualified for the tnree or<lb/>
four beginning social work jobs.<lb/>
At times like that all you remember is that your<lb/>
grandmother will be disappointed. It is not that you<lb/>
fear you will starve-it's that you fear you II have<lb/>
nothing to say to the "And, what do you do now?"<lb/>
question. You have no oomfortable, easy mold to<lb/>
describe yourself with and you live with the<lb/>
suspicion that you, in the final analysis, could fail.<lb/>
Fortunately, this is not a new problem.<lb/>
At one point in his life Jesus faced a situation<lb/>
that is similar. Before He began His public<lb/>
preaching, Satan made Him what was probably<lb/>
the most professional job offer available-the rule<lb/>
over all the kingdoms of the world. Admittedly, that<lb/>
would be an executive job offer that would make any<lb/>
grandmother proud. The pay would be good and one<lb/>
wouldn't have to improve their typing.<lb/>
Jesus, of oourse, turned the offer down. He<lb/>
became, instead, someone his family did not<lb/>
understand. He did not meet their expectations. In<lb/>
fact, at one point, they decided he was out of his<lb/>
mind and went to bring him home.<lb/>
It was obvious that Jesus was not defining<lb/>
himself by what he could earn and the amount of<lb/>
status he oould gain. Which is not to say that it was<lb/>
not important that Jesus know who He was and what<lb/>
He was worth. Juit prior to the big job offer from<lb/>
Satan, God reaffirms two things to Jesus. First, that<lb/>
He is HisSon, and secondly that He loves him (Mark<lb/>
111).<lb/>
God's response to Jesus is a reminder of how we<lb/>
should approach our job future. First, we must<lb/>
remember who we are in relationship to God and<lb/>
secondly we must remember the value God places<lb/>
on us. We will never find a job that can define us as<lb/>
securely as God defines us nor that illustrates our<lb/>
worth so readily.<lb/>
Ramsey commends 2nd election veto<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The following letter was<lb/>
sent to Dr. Leo Jenkins concern-<lb/>
ing his veto of the SGA recall. I<lb/>
wish to share it with the Student<lb/>
Body.<lb/>
Dear Dr. Jenkins:<lb/>
I would like to commend your<lb/>
decision to veto the SGA Legisla-<lb/>
ture's attempted recall of Presi-<lb/>
dent Neil Sessoms and Vice Pre-<lb/>
sident Reed Warren.<lb/>
As you stated in your decision,<lb/>
Mr. Sessomsand Mr. Warren are<lb/>
now in office as the result of a<lb/>
valid election conducted explicitly<lb/>
according to the rules laid down<lb/>
by the Elections Committee and<lb/>
the SGA Legislature. To deny<lb/>
them their right to serve and<lb/>
complete their term of office<lb/>
would have set a dangerous<lb/>
precedent concerning the finality<lb/>
of future general elections. I am<lb/>
sure that you will be roundly<lb/>
criticized by the same biased<lb/>
group who circulated the recall<lb/>
petition. This is just to let you<lb/>
know, that I support your deci-<lb/>
sion, as do countless other<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Sincerely<lb/>
Dennis Ramsey<lb/>
Student Union President<lb/>
Forum policy"<lb/>
Forum letters should be typed or printed, signed<lb/>
and include the writer's address or telephone<lb/>
number. Letters are subject to editing for taste and<lb/>
brevity and may be sent to FOUNTAINHEAD or left<lb/>
at the Information Desk in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057129_0005"/><lb/>
5 May 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Jenkins thanked for acting on SGA contro versy<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I wish to thank our Chan-<lb/>
cellor, Leo Jenkins on behalf of<lb/>
the student body of ECU for his<lb/>
decision not to hold another<lb/>
election.<lb/>
To have had another election<lb/>
would have been a slap in the face<lb/>
to everyone who believes in<lb/>
honesty and fair play.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins' ruling proves<lb/>
that in the end, justice prevails.<lb/>
I took the case of the recall<lb/>
before Dr. Jenkins because I and<lb/>
numerous student leaders felt<lb/>
that only from the Chancellor<lb/>
oould we obtain a fair and just<lb/>
ruling.<lb/>
I want to emphasize that Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins did not just step in and<lb/>
overrule the actions of the<lb/>
student government. He was<lb/>
requested to make the final<lb/>
decision by a large group of<lb/>
student leaders: Student Union<lb/>
president, MRC president, Law<lb/>
bociety president, the BUC-<lb/>
CANEER editor etc<lb/>
It was necessary to go to the<lb/>
Chancellor because there is no<lb/>
justice to be found in the student<lb/>
judiciary or legislature. Those two<lb/>
branches of government have<lb/>
become enclaves of tyranny and<lb/>
totalitarianism.<lb/>
Neil Sessoms and Reed War-<lb/>
ren were at the mercy of a biased,<lb/>
narrow minded, and hostile judi-<lb/>
cial system and legislature that<lb/>
were determined to drive them<lb/>
from the office that they were<lb/>
elected to by the students.<lb/>
We can be certain that the<lb/>
small, but vocal, group which has<lb/>
opposed Neil and Reed will raise<lb/>
sin over this ruling. They will ay<lb/>
foul, throw temper tantrums at<lb/>
the next legislature meeting, and<lb/>
just about everything else that<lb/>
you can imagine, however, it will<lb/>
be to no avail, fa the Chancel la<lb/>
is the final authaity, his ruling<lb/>
will stand.<lb/>
We, the students, are very<lb/>
privileged to have a Chancella<lb/>
who is concerned about the well<lb/>
being of the students and their<lb/>
campus aganizations.<lb/>
The administratas who wak<lb/>
under Dr. Jenkins have bent over<lb/>
backwards to be fair throughout<lb/>
all of this turmoil. Their concern<lb/>
was to see that the best interests<lb/>
of the students were praected,<lb/>
and they have fulfilled their<lb/>
obligation to oversee and protect<lb/>
the needs and rights of the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The SGA has had a free reign<lb/>
this year to do practically any-<lb/>
thing that they wanted to. They<lb/>
have, unfatunately, abused and<lb/>
taken advantage of that freedom<lb/>
to no end.<lb/>
We have been fatunate to<lb/>
have concerned, trusting, and<lb/>
friendly university administratas<lb/>
to take the side of students in our<lb/>
recent election. It is sad and<lb/>
tragic that the legislature and<lb/>
judiciary do not represent the<lb/>
student body that they suppos-<lb/>
edly represent.<lb/>
Now that it has been decided<lb/>
External Affairs position defended<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In regard to Ms. O'Brien's<lb/>
letter in Tuesday's FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD suggesting that Mr. Ses-<lb/>
soms himself occupy the City<lb/>
Council seat, let me offer another<lb/>
look. The seat on the Greenville<lb/>
City Council was granted to a<lb/>
student representative, and not<lb/>
as an ex-officio seat fa the SGA<lb/>
President. Last year, Mr. Sullivan<lb/>
nominated himself as ECU'S<lb/>
representative. The correct pro-<lb/>
cedure was followed in the<lb/>
legislature's approval of Mr.<lb/>
Sullivan' auto-nomination.<lb/>
This year's SGA President,<lb/>
Mr. Sessoms, chose to open a<lb/>
cabinet positon fa Seaetary of<lb/>
External Affairs, whose duty it<lb/>
would be to represent ECU in the<lb/>
community. This person will also<lb/>
be the nominee (subject to<lb/>
approval of the legislature) fa the<lb/>
City Council seat.<lb/>
Being the legislata who intro-<lb/>
duced the resolution concerning<lb/>
this year's cabinet nominees, I<lb/>
inquired into the afaementioied<lb/>
Council seat, External Affairs<lb/>
Secretary, and Mr. Sessoms'<lb/>
nominee to the position. I feel his<lb/>
choice was an excellent one-Jerry<lb/>
Cox. Mr. Cox has served as<lb/>
legislata and has perfamed well<lb/>
in this capacity, as well as<lb/>
diligently waking ai standing<lb/>
and select committees.<lb/>
Perhaps Mr. Sessoms is seek-<lb/>
ing to allow fa representatiai by<lb/>
his fellow students.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Sam Collier<lb/>
that Neil and Reed will remain in<lb/>
office we should pledge our<lb/>
wholehearted suppat to their<lb/>
programs and policies to make fa<lb/>
a better student government and<lb/>
a better university.<lb/>
In dosing I would like to note<lb/>
that the recent political conflicts<lb/>
in which I have been personally<lb/>
involved are in no way reiaied<lb/>
to my wak a position with the<lb/>
student newspaper in any way.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057129_0006"/><lb/>
����������<lb/>
�1BHHH<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 May 1977<lb/>
ECU'S 'Project on Local Life'underway<lb/>
ECU'S Project on Local Life in<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina will spon-<lb/>
sor a public gathering in Edenton<lb/>
on Saturday, May 7, 1977, at 2<lb/>
By the way<lb/>
Tuesday's<lb/>
double page<lb/>
spread photos<lb/>
of the Student<lb/>
Union banquet<lb/>
were by Pete<lb/>
Podeszwa<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The public gathering will be<lb/>
held at the courthouse in<lb/>
Edenton. Light refreshments will<lb/>
be served.<lb/>
All interested persons in the<lb/>
Edenton area are enoouraged to<lb/>
attend and take part in the<lb/>
discussions. The principal topics<lb/>
for discussion will be related to<lb/>
these questions: (1) What are the<lb/>
features of the local way of life in<lb/>
Edenton? (2) Are public policies<lb/>
on all levels of government being<lb/>
made with the proper under-<lb/>
standing of local life?<lb/>
The Edenton public gathering<lb/>
was organized with three main<lb/>
purposes in mind: (1) to promote<lb/>
an awareness of the nature and<lb/>
impact of the rural and local-<lb/>
oriented way of life in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina; (2) to find out<lb/>
how public policies on the local,<lb/>
state, and federal levels can be<lb/>
made with more attention to the<lb/>
local way of life affected by such<lb/>
policies; (3) to give the citizens of<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina an op-<lb/>
portunity to present their views<lb/>
on the local way of life and on its<lb/>
relationship to public policymak-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Noted authorities on different<lb/>
aspects of local life will be in<lb/>
Edenton to take part in the public<lb/>
gathering. Professor John<lb/>
Shelton Reed, of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Chapel Hill, will<lb/>
lead a discussion on some key<lb/>
features of local life and on the<lb/>
potentials of this way of life in<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina. Professor<lb/>
S.R. Lichter, of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Greensboro,<lb/>
will lead a discussion on the<lb/>
psychological and political impact<lb/>
of local life. Professor Timothy<lb/>
Hall Breen, of Northwestern<lb/>
University, will lead a discussion<lb/>
on the historical significance of<lb/>
local life in shaping American<lb/>
society. Each discussion leader<lb/>
will present some background<lb/>
information, followed by an in-<lb/>
formal discussion period with the<lb/>
audience. Professor Karl<lb/>
Rodabaugh, of ECU, Coordinator<lb/>
of the Project on Local Life, will<lb/>
serve as moderator.<lb/>
"Some of the most visible<lb/>
features of local life in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina said Roda-<lb/>
baugh, "are a strong attachment<lb/>
to one's home oommunity, a<lb/>
tendency for important influences<lb/>
in shaping one's character to<lb/>
oome from the family and from<lb/>
local friends and neighbors, a<lb/>
m<lb/>
Your challenge is to enter numbers in the empty boxes below so that each<lb/>
vertical column and horizontal row will add up to 100.<lb/>
232910<lb/>
21<lb/>
14 21<lb/>
30<lb/>
28 8<lb/>
31<lb/>
25<lb/>
24<lb/>
19<lb/>
I<lb/>
When there's a challenge,<lb/>
quality makes the difference.<lb/>
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.<lb/>
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.<lb/>
The Pabst challenge:<lb/>
We welcome the chance to prove the quality of<lb/>
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare<lb/>
Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll<lb/>
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best<lb/>
tasting beer you can get. Since 1844 it always has.<lb/>
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C I'l' PABST BR( WINC ' ' MPANY Milluk�. Wi IV1 .(,��,hi III Ni-wafk N J I os Anq.rs Calif Paint fJ<lb/>
habit of oentering one's life on<lb/>
such local institutions as the<lb/>
church congregation, and a<lb/>
strong desire to exercise a<lb/>
significant amount of local power<lb/>
in decision-making and policy-<lb/>
making that affect one's local<lb/>
area.<lb/>
Recent studies show that the<lb/>
formation of good relationships<lb/>
between people is one example of<lb/>
the impact of local life in this<lb/>
region. Because many Eastern<lb/>
North Carolinians live a good part<lb/>
of their lives (by choioe) in a<lb/>
single oommunity, they learn a<lb/>
great deal about the people in<lb/>
their local oommunity.<lb/>
Asa result, they see people as<lb/>
complex individuals, acting in<lb/>
many different roles of life, whose<lb/>
particular traits have been re-<lb/>
vealed through close association<lb/>
with them over a period of time.<lb/>
The habit of seeing people as<lb/>
complex individuals helps East-<lb/>
ern North Carolinians establish<lb/>
and maintain better interpersonal<lb/>
relationships than many other<lb/>
Americans have the opportunity<lb/>
to develop.<lb/>
"Localism is a significant<lb/>
factor in the lives of our com-<lb/>
munities, even in the face of<lb/>
encroaching outside forces said<lb/>
Rodabaugh.<lb/>
"Our citizens and our govern-<lb/>
mental leaders Rodabaugh de-<lb/>
clared, "should give greater<lb/>
consideration to the nature and<lb/>
impact of local life before making<lb/>
important decisions that might<lb/>
affect our way of life<lb/>
Rodabaugh extended special<lb/>
thanks to the members of the<lb/>
Edenton Planning Committee fa<lb/>
making possible the public<lb/>
gathering.<lb/>
"These people have worked<lb/>
hard and should be commended<lb/>
for the keen interest they have<lb/>
shown in preserving the best<lb/>
features of our local way of life<lb/>
said Rodabaugh.<lb/>
The Project on Local Life is<lb/>
supported in part by a grant from<lb/>
the North Carolina Humanities<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
C<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057129_0007"/><lb/>
They stay busy throughout the year<lb/>
5 May 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
The Salvation Army: not just ringing bells<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
Most people associate the<lb/>
Salvation Army with Christmas<lb/>
music, ringing bells, and dona-<lb/>
tion pots, but making people<lb/>
happy during the holiday season<lb/>
is far from all they do.<lb/>
Aocording to Barbara Kirk-<lb/>
man, a case worker for the<lb/>
organization, they stay busy<lb/>
throughout the year.<lb/>
"We are an emergeicy relief<lb/>
fund said Kirkman. She added<lb/>
that when people are waiting for<lb/>
the paper work to be completed at<lb/>
the Welfare office, the Salvation<lb/>
Army can help out with food and<lb/>
medical expenses.<lb/>
They are also available for<lb/>
furniture and clothing in cases<lb/>
where people are burned out of<lb/>
their homes, said Kirkman.<lb/>
Aocording to Kirkman, the<lb/>
Salvation Army is funded half<lb/>
by public donations and half by<lb/>
private donations.<lb/>
This year the Salvation Army<lb/>
received $34,903 from the yearly<lb/>
budget of the United Fund which<lb/>
supplies money to 11 other<lb/>
agencies in Pitt County.<lb/>
"If we don't have funds<lb/>
available we usually know of<lb/>
sources where we can get them<lb/>
she addead.<lb/>
Kirkman calls her organiza-<lb/>
tion the clearing house for local<lb/>
charity organizations, such as<lb/>
churches. Most such organiza-<lb/>
tions will check with the Salvation<lb/>
Army to see what can be done for<lb/>
people in need of help.<lb/>
According to Kirkman, the<lb/>
winter months are the busiest.<lb/>
There is a lot of sickness and a<lb/>
lack of farm work.<lb/>
"The summers do slack up<lb/>
she added.<lb/>
Kirkman said that last year<lb/>
Salvation Army helped 12,709<lb/>
individuals. They also gave out<lb/>
188 food orders and 36 fuel<lb/>
or-ders.<lb/>
She added that this winter was<lb/>
especially bad.<lb/>
"People oouidn't pay their<lb/>
electric bills or social security.<lb/>
We did make an appeal for funds<lb/>
to cover fuel charges from<lb/>
individuals in Hot Line in the<lb/>
DAILY REFLECTOR<lb/>
Kirkman added that the or-<lb/>
ganization did not turn down<lb/>
anyone that came to them for<lb/>
help.<lb/>
They made out 41 fuel orders<lb/>
this February alone. Also, in<lb/>
February and March, they paid 19<lb/>
utility bills, gave out seven<lb/>
prescriptions, and 79 food orders,<lb/>
and referred 25 people to other<lb/>
agencies, such as the Mental<lb/>
Health department.<lb/>
Also, Salvation Army has<lb/>
given out 5,663 garments. In all,<lb/>
1,940 people have been assisted<lb/>
so far this year.<lb/>
Kirkman said that they keep<lb/>
their staff cut to a minimum, with<lb/>
less than 10 people employed.<lb/>
"We try to use most of our<lb/>
money fa welfare and educa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
The local chapter will cele-<lb/>
brate its 50th anniversary on May<lb/>
8, 1977.<lb/>
SchoolofMusic gets scholarship fund<lb/>
A fund for scholarships in the<lb/>
School of Music at ECU was<lb/>
recently endowed by Mrs. Nancy<lb/>
Lay White in memory of her<lb/>
husband, Charles A.White, Sr.<lb/>
Named "The Charles A. and<lb/>
Nancy Lay White Endowment<lb/>
Fund the purpose of the<lb/>
endowment is to provide scholar-<lb/>
ships to worthy students seeking<lb/>
degrees from the ECU School of<lb/>
Music.<lb/>
Mrs. White and her late<lb/>
husband have long been support-<lb/>
ers of the arts in general in the<lb/>
Greenville area and in particular<lb/>
supporters of the music program<lb/>
at East Carolina. Mrs. White is a<lb/>
Students get practical<lb/>
experience in field work<lb/>
Some ECU students are<lb/>
participating in field education<lb/>
placements this spring in 31<lb/>
social work and correctional ser-<lb/>
vice agencies in North Carolina<lb/>
and Virginia.<lb/>
Placements include mental<lb/>
health institutions, agencies and<lb/>
hospitals; alcoholism programs;<lb/>
police departments, juvenile<lb/>
courts; convalescent and day care<lb/>
centers; probation and parole<lb/>
offices; correctional institutions<lb/>
and law offices.<lb/>
Field education placement, a<lb/>
requirement of the ECU Bachelor<lb/>
of Science Professional (BSP)<lb/>
degree program, involves four<lb/>
days each week in the assigned<lb/>
agency, with one day each week<lb/>
on campus, when students attend<lb/>
seminars relevant to their field<lb/>
experiences.<lb/>
The block placement con-<lb/>
tinues for a period of ten weeks.<lb/>
"Through the use of weekly<lb/>
assignments, academic prepar-<lb/>
ation is integrated with the reality<lb/>
demands upon each student to<lb/>
perform in the field setting said<lb/>
program coordinator Ted Gart-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
tftltf0<lb/>
Thursday - Rick Cornfield<lb/>
Friday- Mike Edwards<lb/>
Saturday - Chris Farren<lb/>
Sun Mon &amp; Tues. -<lb/>
O'sville Rainbow Band<lb/>
Remember Mon &amp; Wed pizza special $1.99 5-9 p.m.<lb/>
Mon-Fri 2-5 p.m. Mini-chet special $.99 includes tea<lb/>
752-7483<lb/>
Cornerof5th &amp; Cotanche<lb/>
distinguished musician and<lb/>
teacher in her own right.<lb/>
In speaking of the endow-<lb/>
ment, ECU Chancellor Leo<lb/>
Jenkins said, "Dean Pittman and<lb/>
the faculty and students of the<lb/>
School of Music join me in<lb/>
expressing our gratitude to Mrs.<lb/>
White. It is a particularly appro-<lb/>
priate tribute to a gentleman<lb/>
whose civic consciousness ex-<lb/>
tended to all facets of Greenville's<lb/>
needs, particularly where the arts<lb/>
are concerned<lb/>
White was further remember-<lb/>
ed by a memorial concert per-<lb/>
formed by his daughter, pianist<lb/>
Anna White Hann, in December<lb/>
of last year.<lb/>
Cafeteria<lb/>
Pirate Special<lb/>
Half pound chopped steak served<lb/>
with toss salad, potato, and bread<lb/>
served at both meals.<lb/>
$1.75<lb/>
Serving Hours:<lb/>
11-2lunch 4:45 - 8dinner<lb/>
<pb facs="00057129_0008"/><lb/>
MM<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 May 1977<lb/>
Remember<lb/>
Mother<lb/>
with a gift from the<lb/>
Mushroom.<lb/>
(If you want that check<lb/>
from home!)<lb/>
318 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
752-3815<lb/>
This year<lb/>
show your<lb/>
mother how<lb/>
special she is<lb/>
toyou-<lb/>
giveheratruely<lb/>
unique gift from<lb/>
The Gazebo<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/>
Four ECU students teach<lb/>
computer terminal usage<lb/>
By HELENA VJOODARD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Four ECU MathComputer<lb/>
Science majors are involved in<lb/>
instructing high school students<lb/>
at Rose and D.H. Conley in the<lb/>
use of Beginner's All Purpose<lb/>
Symbolic Instruction Code<lb/>
(BASIC). With the use of a<lb/>
portable computer terminal,<lb/>
these students are helping high<lb/>
school students to solve mathe-<lb/>
matical problems using a com-<lb/>
puter.<lb/>
The ECU students include<lb/>
Debbie Grafton, junior student<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS<lb/>
NOW AVAILABLE<lb/>
EARN $2,500<lb/>
INTERVIEWS:<lb/>
MONDAY May 9th 3:00 or 6:00<lb/>
TUESDAY May 10th 3:00 or 6:00<lb/>
Place: Conference Room in PlacemontOffieo<lb/>
(Maimio Jenkins Building)<lb/>
AktfSWS)<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
Cooler, Case and ICE (our choice)$8.00<lb/>
Soup, Sandwich and Soda (fountainDr.Pepper).79<lb/>
Dr. Peppet 16oz. (pi us deposit).15<lb/>
Banfi Riunite Lambrusco15 $2.92<lb/>
St. JacobsLiebfraumilch15 $1.89<lb/>
Beameister Liebfraumilch15$3.19<lb/>
MateusRose15 $3.24<lb/>
Perkeo Liebfraumilchmagnums $3.84<lb/>
SchlitzByTheCase12ozCan $6.99<lb/>
Blue Ribbon By The Case12ozCan $6.80<lb/>
Ice50 lb. Bag $2.00<lb/>
Happy Store 10th and Evans, Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
and director of the program;<lb/>
Kathryn Tesh, senior; Gary Huff-<lb/>
man, junior; and Jay Gleason,<lb/>
senior. Grafton, who works at<lb/>
both Rose and D.J. Conley High<lb/>
teaches while the others monitor<lb/>
the portable terminal.<lb/>
"It hasreally been an exciting<lb/>
experience - I have learned a<lb/>
great deal through the prepara-<lb/>
tion of lessons Grafton said.<lb/>
She added that the program ex-<lb/>
posed many of the high school<lb/>
students to computers for the first<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Grafton is aided at Rose High<lb/>
by Jay Gleason and Gary Huff-<lb/>
man. Students have the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to plan many of their own<lb/>
programs using original ideas.<lb/>
According to Gleason he<lb/>
would like to see more high school<lb/>
students participating in the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
"Unfortunately, we cannot<lb/>
add any new students after about<lb/>
three weeks into the program<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Gleason also added that he<lb/>
would like to see promotion<lb/>
begun for similar projects in the<lb/>
near future.<lb/>
Huffman, who often works<lb/>
with charting and graphs, said<lb/>
volunteer students work with the<lb/>
programs and have shown an<lb/>
active interest in it.<lb/>
"We want to show students<lb/>
the basis of a Computer Science<lb/>
language he said.<lb/>
"Assignment programs are<lb/>
being brought in with a better<lb/>
effort by the students. The<lb/>
schools supply the telephone and<lb/>
electricity while ECU furnishes<lb/>
the terminal Huffman added.<lb/>
Tesh, who works on Mondays<lb/>
and Wednesdays at D.H. Conley,<lb/>
programs in BASIC. Among other<lb/>
assignments, Kathy sets up<lb/>
tables and writes programs while<lb/>
Grafton lectures.<lb/>
"Students are getting a head<lb/>
start on the Computer Science<lb/>
program for oollege Tesh said.<lb/>
"Knowing programmer concepts<lb/>
will help them when they enter<lb/>
college she added.<lb/>
Dr. Milam Johnson, professor<lb/>
of mathematics and computer<lb/>
science and chairman of the<lb/>
computer science program, is<lb/>
working with the students in<lb/>
planning and supervision and is<lb/>
serving as coordinator of the<lb/>
project.<lb/>
"It is a real pleasure to have<lb/>
this contact with the public school<lb/>
system. We hope that it will<lb/>
increase public awareness of<lb/>
oomputersand that it will bring to<lb/>
focus the need in our public<lb/>
schools for exposure to com-<lb/>
puters Dr. Johnson stated.<lb/>
"Our students are having a<lb/>
marvelous opportunity to oom-<lb/>
bine classroom learning with<lb/>
practical application he noted.<lb/>
Dr. Johnson also added that<lb/>
the program was a "cooperative<lb/>
venture between ECU, the North<lb/>
Carolina Internship Office, and<lb/>
Pitt County high schools. A great<lb/>
deal of excitement has been<lb/>
generated among both partici-<lb/>
pants and nonparticipants in the<lb/>
schools he added.<lb/>
"I<lb/>
HHMJMJBMJMBHMJ<lb/>
<pb facs="00057129_0009"/><lb/>
ECU Dance Theatre<lb/>
premieres May 10<lb/>
The East Carolina Dance<lb/>
Theatre will have its premiere<lb/>
production in ECU'S McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium May 10-14 as the final<lb/>
offering by the East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse this season.<lb/>
This will be the first time a<lb/>
dance concert has been part of the<lb/>
Playhouse major production<lb/>
schedule. Like other seasonal<lb/>
attractions the Dance Theatre will<lb/>
have newly designed sets by John<lb/>
Boyt and over sixty costumes<lb/>
created by Maria Jurglanis.<lb/>
Each evening's performance<lb/>
will feature original choreography<lb/>
by ECU's dance faculty in three<lb/>
dance styles: ballet, modern<lb/>
dance and jazz dance.<lb/>
The play will begin with a jazz<lb/>
number entitled "Chez Michele"<lb/>
choreographed by Michele<lb/>
Mennett. The piece uses con-<lb/>
temporary music and is set in a<lb/>
night dub.<lb/>
Following the up-beat pace of<lb/>
"Chez Michele" will be an<lb/>
interpretive modern dance called<lb/>
"Creatures" choreographed by<lb/>
Patricia Pertalion.<lb/>
The final part of the program<lb/>
will be the largest production<lb/>
number. Mavis Ray, Dance<lb/>
Faculty Head, has choreographed<lb/>
a ballet entitled "Degas The<lb/>
pieoe captures the delicate style<lb/>
associated with the master paint-<lb/>
er, Degas, who used dancers as<lb/>
his subjects. Period music will be<lb/>
used as accompaniment and will<lb/>
be performed by an orchestra<lb/>
from ECU's School of Music<lb/>
under the direction of Barry<lb/>
Shank.<lb/>
Performances begin at 8:15<lb/>
each evening. Tickets fa ECU<lb/>
students are free of charge with<lb/>
I.D. and Activity cards. ECU<lb/>
faculty, staff and general public<lb/>
admission is $2.50. Call 757-6390<lb/>
far Information.<lb/>
DANCERS, left to right Michele Mennett, Sara Jo Berman and<lb/>
Debby Wyatt perform as can-can dancers in the East Carolina<lb/>
Dance Theatre performing in McGinnis Auditorium May 10-14.<lb/>
'Brothers'attempts true<lb/>
perspective of prison life<lb/>
Bernie Casey is an actor,<lb/>
painter, and published poet who<lb/>
assumes the role of David Tho-<lb/>
mas, the lead character in the<lb/>
Edward and Mildred Lewis pro-<lb/>
duction of Brothers fa Warner<lb/>
Bros, release.<lb/>
Casey's aedits include lead-<lb/>
ing roles in "The Man Who Fell<lb/>
to Earth "Canbread, Earl and<lb/>
Me "Cleopatra Jones and<lb/>
"Maurie<lb/>
After reading the saipt of<lb/>
"Brahers which his agent sent<lb/>
to him, Casey found himself<lb/>
drawn to both the central charac-<lb/>
ter and the issues in the stay.<lb/>
"I was very impressed with<lb/>
the script. It was an especially<lb/>
moving stay and oie that I was<lb/>
na altogetha unfamiliar with. I<lb/>
also realized that it was a role<lb/>
which enabled me to have a<lb/>
useable knowledge of particular<lb/>
incidents which were applied to<lb/>
the saeenplay.<lb/>
"I then followed my own<lb/>
instincts regarding men who have<lb/>
to endure rather strenuous ha-<lb/>
rassment because they have<lb/>
particular kinds of political points<lb/>
of view. Likewise, in some<lb/>
instances, these men have their<lb/>
own special charisma and can<lb/>
bring forth a rallying of ahers<lb/>
around certain issues, which is a<lb/>
BERNIE CASEY, STAR of new film, "Brothers<lb/>
rather threatening posture to<lb/>
some penal authaities<lb/>
The image of Geage Jackson<lb/>
first oomes to mind when consid-<lb/>
aing the kinds of personalities<lb/>
that Bernie Casey discusses.<lb/>
"Brothers however, is not<lb/>
exclusively George Jackson's<lb/>
stay.<lb/>
"The film is about Geage<lb/>
Jackson indirectly, but it could<lb/>
have been about Eldridge Cleaver<lb/>
a Huey Newtai a a la of aher<lb/>
people who we were cognizant of<lb/>
during that time and who were<lb/>
also in prison fa a�e reasai a<lb/>
ana her.<lb/>
"This is na to say that this is<lb/>
a singularly black statement<lb/>
eitha. There are many men in<lb/>
prison with many diffaent philo-<lb/>
sophies and in the process of<lb/>
serving their time they can<lb/>
become radicalized, and, because<lb/>
of that radicalization, they are<lb/>
watched mae closely.<lb/>
"So, the primary character in<lb/>
'Brothers' is a compilation of a la<lb/>
of people, even though he is a<lb/>
person we have some direct<lb/>
knowledge of<lb/>
The actual process of waking<lb/>
within Nath Dakota State Peni-<lb/>
tentiary was, fa Bernie Casey, an<lb/>
experience which gave his role as<lb/>
David Thomas an immediacy and<lb/>
meaning na aherwise possible.<lb/>
"For six weeks we were<lb/>
See CASEY, page 10<lb/>
5 May 1977<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
byPATCOYLE<lb/>
Parents'lib<lb/>
As Maher's Day draws closer, I am here to fight fa the liberatiai<lb/>
of a highly repressed faction of society, parents.<lb/>
Parents have really been getting a bum rap lately. Along with that<lb/>
nebulous entity known as "the older generation parents have been<lb/>
blamed fa everything fran problems with the environment to the fact<lb/>
that Carolina lost the NCAA title. I think someone should stand up fa<lb/>
their rights.<lb/>
FIFTIES' BABIES<lb/>
Look at it this way; it was a la harder na to become parents back in<lb/>
the'50s than it is now. In those days, folks ga married, then they ga<lb/>
pregnant (na always in that ader). Whether they were ready a na,<lb/>
they suddenly had the pitter-patter of our little feet to face.<lb/>
With that pitter-patter came docta bills, grocery bills, and all kinds<lb/>
of aher bills, all of which made it pretty hard fa them to run off to<lb/>
Tibet to philosophize atop Mount Evaest.<lb/>
They couldn't oommit mass murders, firebomb buildings, a pick<lb/>
their noses in public because it would set a bad example fa us, little<lb/>
darlings that we were.<lb/>
They oonpletely faga what it was like to stay out all night,<lb/>
because the baby-sitter had to be in by midnight, and the little darlings<lb/>
couldn't sleep unpraected.<lb/>
If we became ill, they had to help us, no matter how much they<lb/>
gagged at the sight of someone gagging.<lb/>
In short, they were stuck. They hung in there, though, because they<lb/>
realized there was a chance that maybe, just maybe, they could raise us<lb/>
to be wathwhile, special human beings.<lb/>
In doing this, they often tried to face us into an ill-fitting, archaic<lb/>
mold. But they were really just trying to make us into the best.<lb/>
They often wondered why we couldn't be like perfect Suzy Jones<lb/>
down the street. In the mean time, we wondered why they oouldn't be<lb/>
mae like perfect Suzy's perfect parents.<lb/>
The older we got, the less we wanted their influence, and the mae<lb/>
we needed it. We scaned their wisdan, choosing instead to listen to<lb/>
the advice of anyone from our best friend to Mick Jagger.<lb/>
The point is that parenthood of adult children can either take the<lb/>
fam of penance fa a sin oonmitted 20 a mae years ago, a it can be<lb/>
a time o, harvest, where the fruits of long labas provide enrichment.<lb/>
IT ALL DEPENDS<lb/>
Granted, a la depends on the parents themselves. If they are jaks,<lb/>
and there are indeed jerky parents in this wald, it's highly unlikely<lb/>
that their children will grow up to be trusting of and respectful to them.<lb/>
But most of the wald's parents aren't jerks. They are, instead,<lb/>
decent people who've made an honest, but na perfect effat to do a<lb/>
good job with their kids.<lb/>
Those of us who have parents I ike that oould do a whole heap fa the<lb/>
cause of parental liberation by taking an extra trip home ones in<lb/>
awhile, and just talking with the folks. Who knows? They might even<lb/>
teach us how to someday be decent parents ourselves.<lb/>
�k<lb/>
<pb facs="00057129_0010"/><lb/>
��������HBBHB<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 May 1977<lb/>
To be held May 6th<lb/>
Music Club sponsors workshop<lb/>
BySUZYCHESTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina Music<lb/>
Therapy Club will sponsor a<lb/>
workshop in Room 105 of the<lb/>
music building on Friday, May<lb/>
6th. The workshop will last from<lb/>
1:00-4:30 p.m. and will include<lb/>
lectures and videotape presenta-<lb/>
tions by outstanding profession-<lb/>
als now working in the field of<lb/>
music therapy, with the goal of<lb/>
providing prospective music<lb/>
therapists with insights into the<lb/>
practical applications of music<lb/>
therapy in a clinical situation.<lb/>
Guest speakers will include<lb/>
Mr. Ben Ramsaur, R.M.T Di-<lb/>
rector of Music Therapy at<lb/>
Caswell Center in Kinston, a<lb/>
center for the mentally retarded;<lb/>
Mrs. Linda Smith, R.M.T Di-<lb/>
rector of M usic Therapy at Cherry<lb/>
Hospital in Goldsboro; and Mike<lb/>
Thompson and Linda Heller,<lb/>
graduate interns in music<lb/>
therapy. Dr. Ruth Boxberger,<lb/>
R.M.T Director of the music<lb/>
therapy degree program at ECU,<lb/>
SCJ meetinc<lb/>
May 10 at 7:00<lb/>
in 301 Austin<lb/>
and Mrs. Rosemary Fischer,<lb/>
Instructor of Music fa Exception-<lb/>
al Children at ECU, will also<lb/>
lecture.<lb/>
Highlights of the Friday after-<lb/>
noon workshop will include a<lb/>
videotape of patients at Caswell<lb/>
Center participating in music<lb/>
activities, and lectures related to<lb/>
specific programs for cerebral<lb/>
palsied, mentally ill and mentally<lb/>
retarded individuals.<lb/>
According to Bob Hedrick,<lb/>
President of the Music Therapy<lb/>
Club, the workshop will provide<lb/>
Music Therapy majors with the<lb/>
opportunity to meet with pro-<lb/>
fessionals who have first-hand<lb/>
experience in establishing music<lb/>
therapy programs. "We're ex-<lb/>
cited about having Ben Ramsaur<lb/>
and Linda Smith come over<lb/>
because they're both ECU grad-<lb/>
uates and they've developed the<lb/>
two most successful music<lb/>
therapy programs in the state,<lb/>
"heir experiences will give us<lb/>
insights into what we majors and<lb/>
prospective majors will face when<lb/>
we get out<lb/>
What is music therapy any-<lb/>
way? In the Journal of Music<lb/>
Therapy, Catherine Dolan de-<lb/>
scribes music therapy as the<lb/>
"applicat;on of music by a<lb/>
theranist seeking specific<lb/>
changes in an individual's be-<lb/>
haviorThe music itself is<lb/>
simply a tool used by the<lb/>
therapist as a means of attaining<lb/>
predefined goalsThe music<lb/>
therapist is particularly interested<lb/>
in the individual's nonmusical<lb/>
behaviors and in his development<lb/>
of motor, social and educational<lb/>
skills rather than in his ability to<lb/>
become a polished musician<lb/>
Music Therapy is an expanding<lb/>
field that can be used for<lb/>
handicapped individuals of all<lb/>
ages.<lb/>
East Carolina offers the only<lb/>
Music Therapy degree in North<lb/>
Carolina, with one of the best<lb/>
programs in the East. Dr. Ruth<lb/>
Boxberger originated the pro-<lb/>
gram in 1967 and the first class,<lb/>
with a total of five students,<lb/>
graduated in 1970. Since then the<lb/>
program has grown to include<lb/>
approximately 80 students, with<lb/>
over half from out of state, and<lb/>
with many from as far away as<lb/>
Missouri, Massachusetts and<lb/>
Florida. This growth reflects the<lb/>
increasing development of career<lb/>
opportunities in the field as well<lb/>
as the excellence of the ECU<lb/>
degree program.<lb/>
The Music Therapy Club is an<lb/>
outgrowth of the degree program<lb/>
and has over 50 members who<lb/>
participate regularly in activities<lb/>
such as the coming workshop.<lb/>
Attic T-shirts<lb/>
have clASS<lb/>
 ffTTIC TshnU rt Qifliqt'e ihii<lb/>
tvetk te all BC0 st"4erHs for<lb/>
Only 991 (� fr �sftwer-) Ufe arc<lb/>
o0lL tc lose oorboits 0 thiS<lb/>
ak bvtvje uwt you te ��� "<lb/>
fZZ.C r-sh,rt t.rtht Wtffriy<lb/>
a.nd hof summer rAorrthS ahead-<lb/>
�fc-t soffly 3 liin.teJo hurry-<lb/>
WED<lb/>
NORTHSTATE<lb/>
FRI EtSAT<lb/>
NANTUCKET<lb/>
MAY8 SUN<lb/>
CRIPLE CREEK<lb/>
CASEY<lb/>
Continued from page 9)<lb/>
probably as confined as the<lb/>
prisoners. Having never been to a<lb/>
penitentiary and never having<lb/>
spent any time in one, it was quite<lb/>
an eye-opening experience which<lb/>
lent itself to my obtaining a very<lb/>
useable knowlege of prison life<lb/>
and the attitudes of the prisoners<lb/>
themselves. It was a very worthy,<lb/>
growing experience, even though<lb/>
the underbelly of prison life is, I<lb/>
think, tension filled.<lb/>
"It seemed to me that even<lb/>
though the prisoners we worked<lb/>
with were very pleasant and<lb/>
accommodating, a certain amount<lb/>
of tension was unavoidably pre-<lb/>
sent. I felt consistently aware of<lb/>
an unspoken assumption that one<lb/>
particular kind of behavior or<lb/>
some incident could possibly be<lb/>
the catalyst for violent reaction.<lb/>
"I had this feeling even<lb/>
though the warden had removed<lb/>
all prisoners with dubious psycho-<lb/>
logical profiles rom our proxi-<lb/>
mity, and we were working with<lb/>
men who were, you might say,<lb/>
more cooled out about the whole<lb/>
thing. It was more of a lark to<lb/>
them even though we were doing<lb/>
a story about prison oppression<lb/>
As far as Bernie Casey is<lb/>
concerned, "Brothers has sped-<lb/>
Coming to<lb/>
The Elbow Room<lb/>
Thurs. May 5<lb/>
THESPONTANES<lb/>
featuring Harley Hog<lb/>
&amp; the Rockers<lb/>
50's Review<lb/>
fie objectives and serves to<lb/>
illustrate a segment of society not<lb/>
often seen or dealt with.<lb/>
"It is a film that one could call<lb/>
apolitical film, but it isalsoafilm<lb/>
that is vastly entertaining. It is a<lb/>
film that sheds light on a subject<lb/>
that a great majority of the<lb/>
American public won't be overly<lb/>
familiar with, and it is one of the<lb/>
few films that we will see that<lb/>
deals with prison life in a very<lb/>
real way.<lb/>
"We have a tendency to think<lb/>
that prison life is like old James<lb/>
Cagney movies or something, but<lb/>
with films like The Glass House'<lb/>
and Brothers' we are getting a<lb/>
true perspective.<lb/>
Tonight at<lb/>
THURSDAY'S<lb/>
Bill Deal and<lb/>
theRhondells<lb/>
752-4668<lb/>
R&amp;Nlnc.<lb/>
Jolly Roger &amp; Thursday's<lb/>
We Buy Diamonds and Gold<lb/>
See us for your diamond needs<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers<lb/>
on the mall, Greenville<lb/>
758-2452<lb/>
"If it don't tick- took to us<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/>
HAVE YOU SEEN BALLET,<lb/>
OR MODERN DANCE, OR JAZZ DANCE?<lb/>
COME TO SEE THE EAST CAROLINA DANCE THEATRE<lb/>
I IN McGINNIS AUDITORIUM MAY 10-14 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
I AND YOU CAN SEE ORIGINAL CHOREOGRAPHY IN ALL<lb/>
I THREE STYLES DURING ONE EVENING'S PRESENTATION<lb/>
I TIC<lb/>
TICKETS FOR ECU STUDENTS ARE FREE OFCHARGEWimD. &amp; ACTIVITY CARD<lb/>
COME BY THE McGINNIS BOX OFFICE 10:00a.m. -4:00p.m. TO PICK UP YOUR RESERVED TICKETS.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057129_0011"/><lb/>
Re-unites with former band member<lb/>
5 May 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Ex-Focus guitarist teams on 'Eli' album<lb/>
Nearly a year and a half have<lb/>
passed since the release of the<lb/>
last album by Focus, "MOTHER<lb/>
FOCUS an August '75 release<lb/>
in the U.S. and Canada on ATCO<lb/>
Records. Since then, it has<lb/>
become widespread news that<lb/>
Jan Akkerman, the gifted guitar-<lb/>
ist who was with the group since<lb/>
he founded it in 1970, departed<lb/>
Focus because of conflicting<lb/>
opinions over the future direction<lb/>
the group's music would take.<lb/>
While "ELI" in no way<lb/>
attempts to fill this 'void' left<lb/>
since Jan's split from his mates in<lb/>
Focus, it will inevitably be spoken<lb/>
of in the same breaths. Primarily<lb/>
because it re-unites Jan with<lb/>
singer-songwriter Kaz Lux; the<lb/>
two had been the nucleus of a<lb/>
legendary Dutch band known as<lb/>
Brainbox in the late 1960's,<lb/>
without question the first pro-<lb/>
gressive pop rockers from Hol-<lb/>
land to gain notoriety outside<lb/>
their own country. By late 1969,<lb/>
JAN AKKERMAN AND KAZ LUZ<lb/>
Ektachrome<lb/>
SLIDE<lb/>
slide presentation<lb/>
Jenkins bldg.rm.IC27<lb/>
may 11 800 p.m.<lb/>
7 terry fordham<lb/>
senior show<lb/>
bfa interior design<lb/>
PROCESSED BY KODAK<lb/>
Jan had departed the group along<lb/>
with its drummer Pierre van der<lb/>
Linden, teamed up with Thijs<lb/>
(and a succession of bassists over<lb/>
'he years), and Focus was born in<lb/>
early 1970.<lb/>
"I left Brainbox, too admits<lb/>
Kaz, "but I didn't do much for a<lb/>
year or so. I wrote a lot of songs,<lb/>
practiced on the guitar, and got a<lb/>
recording contract with EMI that<lb/>
resulted in two albums, both<lb/>
recorded in England, kazimierz<lb/>
Lux C.S produced by Mike<lb/>
Vernon and I'm the Worst<lb/>
Partner I Know I couldn't<lb/>
believe it, it went so fast He<lb/>
played as a solo folksinger-type<lb/>
throughout Holland, and his<lb/>
records were received warmly by<lb/>
the European critics. "Still, I was<lb/>
looking for something elseit<lb/>
became WEA Holland<lb/>
Working with that qompany's<lb/>
Managing Director Giovanni<lb/>
Hans' Tonino, Kaz began to<lb/>
settle into work on his next solo<lb/>
album, for which his old friend<lb/>
Jan Akkerman had promised to<lb/>
contribute three songs. But when<lb/>
the actual recording began, a new<lb/>
concept arose that evolved into<lb/>
'ELI The story, as it is<lb/>
beautifully delineated on the<lb/>
inner sleeve, was written by Kaz,<lb/>
co-produced by Jan (with Richard<lb/>
DeBcxsof Ladybird Productions),<lb/>
and brings together such Brain-<lb/>
box and Focus alumni as Pierre<lb/>
van der Linden and keyboardists<lb/>
Jasper van't Hof and Rick van der<lb/>
Linden, as well as numerous<lb/>
session players and backup<lb/>
singers.<lb/>
What unfolds is a complex<lb/>
portrait of the hopelessly prosaic<lb/>
life of poor Eli the woodcutter,<lb/>
whoisjolted by the "GUARDIAN<lb/>
ANGEL' as he sleeps and<lb/>
dreams(the exquisite instrument-<lb/>
al �'TRANQUILIZERS"). In<lb/>
deathlike slumber, the "NAKED<lb/>
ACTRESS" introduces Eli to a<lb/>
man who sells' him the city of<lb/>
Amsterdam. Now rich, famous<lb/>
and in sin, he meets the play-<lb/>
wright ��STRINDBERG. whose<lb/>
own pain inevitably awakens the<lb/>
woodcutter who, in turn, realizes<lb/>
the irony of this -FAIRYTALE<lb/>
Deceptively simple, the story's<lb/>
nuances open themselves to a<lb/>
myriad explanation - no doubt<lb/>
you' 11 have one al I your own!<lb/>
METRO-GOUWYN MAYER prwnti<lb/>
FAYE WILLIAM PETER ROBERT<lb/>
OUNAWAY HOLDEN FINCH DUVALL<lb/>
Start<lb/>
?rd�y<lb/>
NETWORK<lb/>
PADDY CHAYEFSKY<lb/>
PITT<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
SNOW<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
7:00-9:15<lb/>
OSE ADC DISCOUNT TICKETS<lb/>
AVAILABLE CENTRAL TICKET OFFICE<lb/>
<pb facs="00057129_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 May 1977<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
<lb/>
FOR SALE: 12" X 60" trailer,<lb/>
unfurnished- 2 air cond. gas<lb/>
heat, double sinks in bathroom,<lb/>
plus washer &amp; dryer. 2 bed-<lb/>
room, call 752-9432 ask Mr.<lb/>
Henderson after 6XX) p.m.<lb/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED? Call<lb/>
Alice. 757-6366 (9-5 weekdays).<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Yamaha, only<lb/>
4300 miles; very good condition;<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. $52�00 Call<lb/>
1-592-6893 or 752-8151.<lb/>
FOR SALE: General Electric<lb/>
AMFM Receiver 8-Track Play-<lb/>
erRecorder wspeakers $125.<lb/>
Call 752-5238.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 Epiphone Acous-<lb/>
tic guitar with hard case,<lb/>
excellent cond. $100.00. Also 1<lb/>
good beginners guitar. Contact<lb/>
758-1382 or leave a message.<lb/>
Will be glad to demonstrate.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Yamaha 500.<lb/>
DOHC, low mileage, crash bar,<lb/>
sissy bar, luggage straps. Ser-<lb/>
ious inquiries only. $1100.00<lb/>
757-6352 call between 8-5 and<lb/>
ask for Bonnie.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Nikkormat FTN<lb/>
35mm Camera w55mm Macro-<lb/>
Nikkor, 24mm wide-angle nikkor,<lb/>
and 105mm portrait (moderate<lb/>
telephoto) nikkor. Also, 3X tele-<lb/>
extender, filters &amp; more. 752-<lb/>
1292.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dexter Mat Cutter.<lb/>
Cuts mats with straight or bevel<lb/>
edge. $5.00. 752-1292.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fender Prinoeton<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 XX) 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 706-1461<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE. Reasonable<lb/>
rates. 756-1921.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Yamaha 250<lb/>
Enduro. Excellent condition, fast<lb/>
and dean. Best reasonable offer.<lb/>
758-2808 or 758-8975.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Yamaha 350 Rd.<lb/>
motorcycle, good condition. 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/>
Both cars are in good shape and<lb/>
are reliable transportation call<lb/>
752-0679.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2 sets of golf clubs<lb/>
with pull carts$25.00 and $55.00.<lb/>
Call 752-7471.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Call 752-<lb/>
8837 after 5 00.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Collie pups, reg.<lb/>
sable &amp; white. $100.00 firm very<lb/>
reasonable for pedigree, good<lb/>
looks, good health, &amp; good<lb/>
disposition of these collies. Call<lb/>
482-2341 -Edenton. N.C.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 76 Mustang II Silver<lb/>
ac 4 speed 15,500 miles. Like<lb/>
new. $3,800. 752-7651.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '71 Fiat 850 sport.<lb/>
$975 or best offer. 752-2880.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Kay Triple pick-up<lb/>
electric guitar &amp; amp, case<lb/>
included $75.00or best offer. Call<lb/>
Buddy at 756-4916.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Brand new one pair<lb/>
AVID 103. 3 Way floor speakers.<lb/>
$178.00 apiece will sell for $300 a<lb/>
pair. 150 watt max. Call 758-8988,<lb/>
ask for Susan or Mike.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Chrysler '69 New-<lb/>
port. Good condition. 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/>
Excellent condition, low mileage,<lb/>
Call 752-0924, ask for Monty.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Bancroft woodfiber-<lb/>
glass tennis racket with cover and<lb/>
press. Phone 752-8706, 104-B<lb/>
leave message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Beautiful German<lb/>
Shepherd puppies $20.00. Call<lb/>
752-5580 after 5 O0.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Letters, re-<lb/>
ports, &amp; term papers-call 756-<lb/>
4180.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Call 752-<lb/>
8837 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
TYPI NG: 75 cents per page. Call<lb/>
Debra Parrington, 756-6031<lb/>
days, and 752-2508 nights.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 3 miniature female<lb/>
AKC Dachshund puppies- Red-<lb/>
dish-Brown, shots, 747-2446,<lb/>
Snow Hill.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Silver rings, phone<lb/>
Roxanne at 752-8694. Or phone<lb/>
-Crafts Center in Mendenhafl and<lb/>
leave message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sanyo AMFM 8-<lb/>
track stereo with Garrard turn<lb/>
table and 2 speakers, $12f.00.<lb/>
Call 758-9153.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 750cc Suzuki.<lb/>
Mint condition, new: paint, tires,<lb/>
chain, etc. $1200.00. Call 752-<lb/>
1442 ask for David.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Zenith stereo com-<lb/>
plete with speakers-automatic<lb/>
changer excellent condition! Per-<lb/>
fect size for dorm room. $65.00<lb/>
Call 758-5090 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Marantz 1040 amp<lb/>
$200 value, selling for $100.<lb/>
752-4009.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Premier Drum set<lb/>
$1300.00 value fa sale at $500.00<lb/>
Contact Raymond L. Brown<lb/>
758-7434.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Shure -Dynamic<lb/>
(Unishphere B) M icrophone-$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 Portable TV<lb/>
(new)-$80.00. Bureau-excel lent<lb/>
shape-$35.00. Call Don 752-1347.<lb/>
NEED A SUMMER JOB OH<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 words plus photo oould<lb/>
be very successful in obtaining<lb/>
the position you desire and runs 2<lb/>
weeksat$4.50or4weeksat $8.00<lb/>
and we will take the photo for only<lb/>
$12.25 Call 758-7487 or write to<lb/>
P.O. Box 16, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4.8 cubic feet refri-<lb/>
gerator call 758-9807.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 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-door, power steering, power<lb/>
brakes, AM-FM- $750 Call 752-<lb/>
0501.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Uueen waterbed<lb/>
complete 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 condition $150.00 or<lb/>
best offer. If interested call<lb/>
758-4290.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Bundy clarinet.<lb/>
$125.00. Conn aooustic guitar<lb/>
with hard case $150.00. Call<lb/>
758-9872-Cathy.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Ten Speed "Rally<lb/>
Record" andor bike rack. Both<lb/>
in excellent condition. Call 752-<lb/>
2797 after 6O0 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Bic 960 turntable.<lb/>
Still under warranty. $125, 752-<lb/>
0321.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 74 VW AMFM,<lb/>
37,500 miles, 4-speed like new<lb/>
condition Phone 756-5733.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 71 VW bus. FM<lb/>
stereo, engine in excellent condi-<lb/>
tion, front end needs work<lb/>
$500.00 firm. Call 752-5325 after<lb/>
6.00, ask for Kevin.<lb/>
NEEDED: 1 or 2 roommates for<lb/>
Summer. Rent:$53.00 plus utili-<lb/>
ties Oakmont Square Apts. Call<lb/>
756-2050.<lb/>
for rent (fj<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted:<lb/>
largt 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 room-Air<lb/>
Cond4 blocks from campus-<lb/>
Rent for Summer or Fall session-<lb/>
Call 752-4006 after 12.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1 &amp; 2 bedroom<lb/>
apartments, located on Cross St.<lb/>
Newly renovated and new ap-<lb/>
pliances. Call 752-4154<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private room, air<lb/>
conditioned, summer or fall. 4<lb/>
blocks from campus. 752-4006<lb/>
after 1 O0 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: House outside city, 3<lb/>
bedroom, 1 V4 bath, big backyard,<lb/>
available now for summer. Call<lb/>
Maria at 757-6390.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Want a nice duplex<lb/>
to rent for the summer? Phone<lb/>
758-7713.<lb/>
WANTED: To rent, 1 bedroom<lb/>
apt. for 2, summer onwards-$100<lb/>
a month. Call 758-8062.<lb/>
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: One<lb/>
or 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 800-<lb/>
5O0.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Sublease 1, bedroom<lb/>
apt. for June &amp; July. $145 a<lb/>
month: call 752-0701.<lb/>
WANTED: One or 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 5O0 and 7O0.<lb/>
Available June 1st.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
To share 2 bedroom apartment at<lb/>
Eastbrook for the summer. Pay<lb/>
half the rent &amp; utilities. Call<lb/>
752-8393 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
WANTED: Female roommateHs)<lb/>
needed desperately to share an<lb/>
apartment this summer andor<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 ai<lb/>
Emerald Isle. To faculty, 3<lb/>
bedrooms, ac, washer, garage,<lb/>
fenced yard. 1VS blocks from<lb/>
beach. $185 weekly. 758-3089.<lb/>
LOST: PLEASE whoever  picked<lb/>
up" a long, rust-oolored suede<lb/>
wallet with a leather floral 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: A mans gold wedding ring.<lb/>
Inside inscription is dated Aug. 6,<lb/>
1972. Reward offered. Call 752-<lb/>
2354 after 5 p.m. or anytime on<lb/>
weekends.<lb/>
LOST: A pair of brown framed<lb/>
glasses-they are in an orange,<lb/>
black-lined case. Need them back<lb/>
desperately. Call Lisa, 758-5066<lb/>
after 6O0. Reward.<lb/>
found<lb/>
FOUND: In the Croatan, man's<lb/>
gold ring with brown stone. Call<lb/>
752-4379.<lb/>
FOUND: 1 pairgray hard contact<lb/>
lenses. Found in Minges pool<lb/>
near the end of March. Still there<lb/>
on bulletin board. Ask lifeguard<lb/>
on duty.<lb/>
jpersonalj<lb/>
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: Con-<lb/>
struction workers needed fa wak<lb/>
in eastern part of N.C. Interviews<lb/>
will be held on Thursday, May 5th<lb/>
at the ECU Placement Office from<lb/>
1p.m5p.m.<lb/>
NEEDED: Tuta fa French IV<lb/>
Level fa first sessiai 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 women! Call 752-<lb/>
5214 after 4O0 p.m.<lb/>
LEARN TO HUSTLE: Socialize<lb/>
while you exercise. Fa men and<lb/>
women and couples. Only $10 per<lb/>
month. Classes begin May 2. Call<lb/>
Sunshine today after 4.00 p.m.<lb/>
752-5214.<lb/>
NEEDED: Ride to New Yak 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 emotiaially disturbed<lb/>
children. Wak schedule: seven<lb/>
and one-half days on duty, six and<lb/>
one-half days off in raation 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 contact 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/>
.<lb/>
���M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057129_0013"/><lb/>
Alston named Greensboro Daily<lb/>
News Athlete-of -the-Week<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Calvin Alston had what one<lb/>
could call a great championship<lb/>
meet last weekend at the South-<lb/>
ern Conference Track Champion-<lb/>
ships. He won the double all<lb/>
sprinters look for, the 100 and 200<lb/>
meters, and started off two relay<lb/>
teams to fantastic starts.<lb/>
For his efforts, the Greens-<lb/>
boro Daily News named the<lb/>
Athlete-of-the-Week in the state<lb/>
of North Carolina. He won the<lb/>
award over NBA all-pro David<lb/>
Thompson, a native of Shelby,<lb/>
among others.<lb/>
When notified of the award,<lb/>
Alston said, "I'm just as sur-<lb/>
prised as I can be. I saw very little<lb/>
in any paper about our meet. I'm<lb/>
proud to get this award<lb/>
Alston is the second East<lb/>
Carolina athlete to receive the<lb/>
award for the current school year.<lb/>
Pete Conaty, standout kicker on"<lb/>
the ECU football team, was<lb/>
tabbed by the GDN for his play in<lb/>
the Southern Illinois game.<lb/>
Alston was timed in the 100<lb/>
meter race in 10.5 by the<lb/>
hand-timers, who were consider-<lb/>
ed official for the meet. The<lb/>
electronic timing system, which is<lb/>
considered more accurate, had<lb/>
him in 10.35. In the 200 meters,<lb/>
the hand-timers had Alston in<lb/>
20.8, which qualified him for the<lb/>
NCAA Championships next<lb/>
month in Campaign, III. The<lb/>
automatic timers had him in<lb/>
20.62.<lb/>
Alston had near perfect starts<lb/>
in the two relays. In the 440 yard<lb/>
relay, which was disqualified<lb/>
when the fourth man, Otis<lb/>
Melvin, stepped out of the lane,<lb/>
Alston began from the starting<lb/>
blocks and ran his 110 yards in<lb/>
10.17, which is an amazing start.<lb/>
In the mile relay, which the<lb/>
Pirates easily won, Alston again<lb/>
ran the first leg, this time in 47.3.<lb/>
"After the relay was disquali-<lb/>
fied Alston said, "I knew I had<lb/>
to go just as fast as I could to help<lb/>
the team win. We (sprinters) just<lb/>
had to get some points back we<lb/>
had lost. The pressure was on<lb/>
The pressure was on, but<lb/>
Alston came through. After the<lb/>
relay mixup, the 100 meters was<lb/>
the next event for Alston. He was<lb/>
going up against John Burson<lb/>
from Western Carolina. Burson<lb/>
has the fastest time of any North<lb/>
1<lb/>
CALVIN ALSTON<lb/>
Carolina collegiate this year and gp reiays,<lb/>
was favored in the face. But<lb/>
Alston and Melvin beat him.<lb/>
"After the relay, Otis (Mel-<lb/>
vin) and myself got together and<lb/>
decided we had to beat Burson<lb/>
Alston stated. "I knew I had him<lb/>
after 50 meters of the race<lb/>
Alston had not faced Burson<lb/>
before Saturday and did not know<lb/>
what to expect from him.<lb/>
"I did not know just how fast<lb/>
he was Alston oontinued. "Otis<lb/>
(Melvin) had beaten him in the<lb/>
state high school meet last year<lb/>
In the 200 meters, Alston ran<lb/>
away from the field, as he has<lb/>
been doing all year. He has lost<lb/>
only to Olympians Harvey Glance<lb/>
and Calvin Dill and all-America<lb/>
Jon Young from Tennessee this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"I felt I had a good (200<lb/>
meter) time in the conference, but<lb/>
I know I can do better. I'm not<lb/>
running the curve as well as I<lb/>
can<lb/>
Most knowledgeable track ob-<lb/>
servers feel Alston runs the curve<lb/>
on relays as well as anyone they<lb/>
have ever seen, except for 1972<lb/>
Olympic 200 champion Larry<lb/>
Black from North Carolina<lb/>
Central.<lb/>
"I always run the curve well<lb/>
Alston said. "But I<lb/>
don't feel I'm running it well in<lb/>
the open 200.1 feel if I can run the<lb/>
curve well on the 200, I can place<lb/>
at tfle nationals<lb/>
ECU has two more meets<lb/>
before the nationals, the Pitt<lb/>
Invitational and the Tom Black<lb/>
Classic in Knoxville, Tenn. Alston<lb/>
is going to try fa the school<lb/>
record in the 400 meters at Pitt<lb/>
and stick with his specialty, the<lb/>
2001 meters, in the Tom Black<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
"I'll try for the record at<lb/>
Pitt he said. "I set the indoor<lb/>
record for the 400 there this year<lb/>
and I'll try to break the outdoor<lb/>
record next week<lb/>
Jay Purdie set the outdoor<lb/>
mark at the conference with a<lb/>
47.9. In the Tom Black, Alston<lb/>
will face Glance and Young and<lb/>
hopes to break his 200 record.<lb/>
"I feel I can run well against<lb/>
those two (Glance and Young)<lb/>
Alston added. "I'd like to beat<lb/>
them because they have beaten<lb/>
me.<lb/>
No matter what Alston dc<lb/>
from here on out, his conferenob<lb/>
meet would have to rank as a<lb/>
good season for most. But Alston<lb/>
wants more.<lb/>
Track in vnational Saturda y<lb/>
East Carolina's Lady Pirate<lb/>
track team will host an Invita-<lb/>
tional track and field meet<lb/>
Saturday at Bunting Field here.<lb/>
The meet will bring four<lb/>
teams in to run the 15 events<lb/>
scheduled. They are East Caro-<lb/>
lina, South Carolina, North Caro-<lb/>
lina A&amp;T and St. Augustine's.<lb/>
There will be three events fa-<lb/>
high schcdas.<lb/>
The meet will begin at 11 a.m.<lb/>
with the field events, consisting<lb/>
of the sha put, discus, javelin,<lb/>
high jump and long jump.<lb/>
Immediately following will be<lb/>
the running events, consisting of<lb/>
the 100, 220, 440, and 880 yard<lb/>
events; the mile and two mile<lb/>
runs; the 880 yard and mile<lb/>
relays; and the 100 and 440 yard<lb/>
hurdles.<lb/>
The meet will be scaed ai the<lb/>
6-4-3-2-1 basis and trophies will<lb/>
be given to the top three teams.<lb/>
Individuals will get medals fa<lb/>
winning while t-shirts will be<lb/>
given to second and third place<lb/>
perfamas.<lb/>
"We feel we can have sane<lb/>
real gajd times in this meet<lb/>
Coach Laurie Arrants of East<lb/>
Carolina said. "We've beaten<lb/>
South Carolina and Nath Caro-<lb/>
lina A&amp;T this year, but we have<lb/>
na faced St. Augustine's<lb/>
Some of the feature events<lb/>
will be the 880, whae East<lb/>
Carolina has three girls in the<lb/>
220 range and the field events.<lb/>
The high school feature events<lb/>
will be the 100 and 220 yard<lb/>
dashes and the 100 hurdles. Lydia<lb/>
Rountree of Elm City and Cathy<lb/>
Suggs of Tarbao will be featured<lb/>
in the 100 and 220. Rountree won<lb/>
the state 100 title as a freshman,<lb/>
but has been runner-up to<lb/>
Olympic star Kathy McMillan the<lb/>
past two years. Suggs is the sister<lb/>
of East Carolina track star Carta<lb/>
Suggs.<lb/>
5 May 1977<lb/>
Page 13<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Softball upsets<lb/>
Upsets are beginning to shake things up in the Intramural softbail<lb/>
Top Ten rankings as FCA, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Scott Time Outs and<lb/>
Jones Blues have all lost in the last two weeks.<lb/>
FCA lost this week on a two-hitta as Phi Epsilon Kappa dropped<lb/>
them, 6-0, and Pi Kappa Phi handed Tau Kappa Epsilon its first loss<lb/>
last week, 8-0, on a one-hitta.<lb/>
The Fraternity leader, though, is Sigma Nu, which was still<lb/>
undefeated coming into this week. The Sigma Nus were scheduled to<lb/>
play Phi Kappa Phi on Wednesday.<lb/>
The Time Outs had dimbed to as high as second place in the<lb/>
rankings befae losing this week, which left the Charley Mansoi<lb/>
Family at number oie and the Belk Uglies at numba two. Ranked third<lb/>
through Tuesday's games are Sigma Nu, fourth is Evay Mahas Son,<lb/>
fifth is the Scott DJ's, sixth are the Kappa Sigmas, seventh are the<lb/>
Ratchet Jaws, eighth is Phi Epsilon Kappa, ninth is FCA and ranked<lb/>
tenth are the Time Outs.<lb/>
In women'splay, Hypertension replaced the Tyla Hits and Runs at<lb/>
the top of the rankings, after the Tyler team had to struggle past the<lb/>
Garrett Yardapes 4-2 to remain unbeaten. The Yardages are ranked<lb/>
third ahead of the Jerk Rejects and Fleming Floozies. The top saaity<lb/>
team are the Alpha Phis, who remained unbeaten with an exciting 11 -9<lb/>
win ever Alpha Delta Pi.<lb/>
Last week's Team Handball Exhibition was a huge success as the<lb/>
Gold Dusters and the Green Machine played through to a 34-34 tie in<lb/>
overtime. The Gold Dustas had a chance to win it on the final play of<lb/>
the game when JimChasteen missed a penalty sha with no time left.<lb/>
Penalty shas are rarely missed, but Chasteen's sha was blocked by<lb/>
the goalie fa the Green Machine, Larry Fike.<lb/>
Jim Chasteen tied fa high scaa haxxs with Darryl Smith of the<lb/>
Green Machine. Each playa had 11 points. Bruce Dunnevant scaed 10<lb/>
points fa the Gold Dusters and Miles Moody added eight. No one on<lb/>
the Green Machine scaed mae than four goals, besides Smith.<lb/>
Those in attendance must have liked what they saw, because 11<lb/>
teams signed up fa the Team Handball Intramurals which started oi<lb/>
Tuesday with three exciting games.<lb/>
Golf registration ends today and the tournament will be held<lb/>
Monday through Thursday, May 9-12, at Ayden Golf and Country<lb/>
Club. Contestants will play two36-hole rounds ova the four days, with<lb/>
the first round to be played on Monday a Tuesday and the second<lb/>
round to be played on Wednesday a Thursday. Awards will be<lb/>
presented to the winning individual and the winning team.<lb/>
Last year's medalist, Doug Davis, isbacktolead Soott Dam, which<lb/>
won the team title last year. Davis finished last year'sevent at 145, one<lb/>
ova par.<lb/>
This will be the last President's Cup competition of the year besides<lb/>
softbail and with the fratanity leadas separated by one point, it<lb/>
should surely detamine the winna in that division.<lb/>
Twenty four teams open play in the Women's M ixed Doubles as the<lb/>
finals and semi-finals of the men's singles and doubles tournaments<lb/>
wind down.<lb/>
The team of Gilbert Hensgen and Charles Glover has qualified fa<lb/>
the men's doubles finals and must now wait to find out who their<lb/>
opponents will be fa Thursday's championship.<lb/>
In singles play, four playas advanced to the semifinals. In<lb/>
semifinal play Keith Gray will meet Britt Murphy and Hensgen will<lb/>
meet Glova. Gray, the defending champion, had the hardest time<lb/>
advancing to the semis as he had to struggle past Rick Bright fa a 6-4,<lb/>
2-6, 6-3 three-set viday.<lb/>
See INTRAMURALS, page 75<lb/>
<pb facs="00057129_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 May 1977<lb/>
Tiede spotlights Long<lb/>
A U.S. Naval Officer<lb/>
will visit the Placement<lb/>
Office April 7,1977<lb/>
to discuss job<lb/>
opportunities available<lb/>
in:<lb/>
Nuclear Power, Avatation<lb/>
Supply Corps<lb/>
Business Management<lb/>
Engineering, and<lb/>
Surface Ship Management<lb/>
and Operations<lb/>
and Scholarships.<lb/>
Interested persons please<lb/>
register with the<lb/>
Placement Office.<lb/>
Editors Note: The following<lb/>
article, written in Joe Tiede's<lb/>
column, appeared in the May 1st<lb/>
edition of The Raleigh News and<lb/>
Observer.<lb/>
Tom Long, captain of the East<lb/>
Carolina soccer team, is leading a<lb/>
campaign to restore his sport as<lb/>
part of ECU's athletic program.<lb/>
According to Long, the school's<lb/>
Board of Trustees recently voted<lb/>
to discontinue soccer, citing<lb/>
HEW's Title IX regulations re-<lb/>
quiring equal funding for wo-<lb/>
men's sports.<lb/>
"This is hard to believe,<lb/>
coming at a time when soccer is<lb/>
one of the fastest growing sports<lb/>
in the country Long said.<lb/>
"Soccer at East Carolina has a<lb/>
budget of only $4,400, which is<lb/>
miniscule compared to the entire<lb/>
athletic program, It's the only<lb/>
non-scholarship sport we have<lb/>
Long, a senior from Hampton,<lb/>
Va. sees the trustees' action as<lb/>
"narrow-minded and short-<lb/>
sighted Additionally, he cites<lb/>
the fact that HEW doesn't require<lb/>
compliance until 1978. Canceling<lb/>
soccer now, he feels, forfeits the<lb/>
TOM LONG<lb/>
��-i<lb/>
 X<lb/>
possibility of a future solution to that soccer is probably the most<lb/>
the equal funding provision. economical of all sports because<lb/>
The ironic part of this'step is so little equipment is required.<lb/>
Pinkney signs with Lions<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
Reggie Pinkney was drafted<lb/>
Wednesday in the sixth round of<lb/>
Leotards, Briefs &amp; Tights<lb/>
12 Price with this Ad<lb/>
by<lb/>
GYM-KIN<lb/>
H.L Hodges<lb/>
the NFL draft by the Detroit<lb/>
Lions. Pinkney was a four-year<lb/>
starter at defensive cornerback<lb/>
for the Pirates.<lb/>
Pinkney represents the first<lb/>
player to be drafted from an East<lb/>
Carolina team since 1973, when<lb/>
REGGIE PINKNEY<lb/>
Large Selection<lb/>
of Used Golf Balls<lb/>
On Sale<lb/>
Good Selection<lb/>
of Baush &amp; Lomb<lb/>
Ray-Ban Olympic<lb/>
Sunglasses<lb/>
were 2L.OO<lb/>
now 12.00<lb/>
Automatic Shag Bags<lb/>
Holds 70 Balls<lb/>
were 23.00<lb/>
now on sale 12.00<lb/>
Knit Head Covers<lb/>
set of 4<lb/>
were '14.00 to 16.00<lb/>
on sale 9.75<lb/>
Gordon D. Fulp<lb/>
GOLF PROFESSIONAL<lb/>
Canvas Duck Golf Bags<lb/>
were 25.00<lb/>
on sale � 12.00<lb/>
All Etonic Top-Siders<lb/>
25 off<lb/>
GREENVILLE GOLF AND COUNTRY CLI III<lb/>
ROUTE O COUNTRY CLUB DRIVE<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA 27834<lb/>
both Carl Summerell and Carles-<lb/>
ter Crumpler were drafted.<lb/>
The 5-11, 190 pound Fort<lb/>
Bragg, N.C native, was named<lb/>
all-Southern Conference as a<lb/>
senior, honorable mention all-<lb/>
conference as a sophomore and<lb/>
junior, and was selected to play in<lb/>
the North-South Shrine Bowl<lb/>
Game in Pontiac, Mich the first<lb/>
player ever from East Carolina to<lb/>
play in that post-season game.<lb/>
During the 1976 season, when<lb/>
Pinkney played a key role in the<lb/>
Pirate's winning a third Southern<lb/>
Conference Championship in five<lb/>
years, Pinkney broke the school<lb/>
record for most interception re-<lb/>
turn yards in a single game (137<lb/>
vs Richmond), broke the record<lb/>
for most interception return yards<lb/>
in a season (197 yards) and broke<lb/>
the record for most interception<lb/>
return yards in a career (275<lb/>
yards).<lb/>
In setting those records, Pink-<lb/>
ney led the Pirate team and the<lb/>
Southern Conference in intercep-<lb/>
tions last year with six, one of<lb/>
those being a 98-yarder against<lb/>
Richmond, the longest non-scor-<lb/>
ing return in school history. In his<lb/>
four-year career, Pinkney had 16<lb/>
interceptions.<lb/>
As a freshman, Pinkney re-<lb/>
turned 20 kickoffs for 467 yards,<lb/>
to rank tenth in the country in<lb/>
1973 in kickoff returns.<lb/>
Pinkney came to East Carolina<lb/>
from Reid Ross High School in<lb/>
Fayetteville where he earned<lb/>
all-city, all-conference, all-East,<lb/>
all-state and MVP honors as a<lb/>
running back.<lb/>
ECU defensive secondary<lb/>
coach Lanny Norris said, This is<lb/>
just tremendous. I'm very happy<lb/>
for Reggie. We felt that Reggie<lb/>
would be drafted and we feel he<lb/>
will make a fine pro player. This<lb/>
is a real boost to our entire<lb/>
program at East Carolina<lb/>
Incidentally, Reggie's young-<lb/>
er brother, William A. Pinkney<lb/>
III, will enter ECU next fall on a<lb/>
football grant-in-aid.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057129_0015"/><lb/>
HHBHIMHMIHHIH<lb/>
<lb/>
5 May 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
Tennis team has best season yet<lb/>
By THOMASUPB-<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina tennis team<lb/>
oompeted in its final Southern<lb/>
Conference tournament last<lb/>
weekend at Davidson College,<lb/>
finishing sixth in a field of nine<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
The Pirates amassed 25<lb/>
points, compared to winner Fur-<lb/>
man's total of 66.<lb/>
This is the highest total ever<lb/>
compiled by an ECU team, and<lb/>
emphasizes this season as the<lb/>
best ever for the Bucs.<lb/>
The Pirates were led in singles<lb/>
by freshman standout Henry<lb/>
Hostetler, who entered his brac-<lb/>
ket seeded sixth.<lb/>
Hostetler was defeated by<lb/>
Davidson's Gil Kayton 6-4, 6-0 in<lb/>
the first round, and was placed in<lb/>
a consolation bracket.<lb/>
Hostetler blazed through the<lb/>
oonsolation bracket, winning the<lb/>
round and finishing fifth overall<lb/>
in the number five position.<lb/>
Hostetler defeated Brown of<lb/>
Marshall 6-3, 6-1, and Marc<lb/>
Krupp of The Citadel 6-4, 6-1, to<lb/>
clinch the championship. In doing<lb/>
so, Hostetler was the Pirate'stop<lb/>
finisher.<lb/>
Sixth-seeded junior Tom Dur-<lb/>
fee had the misfortune of facing<lb/>
fourth-seeded Davis Babb of<lb/>
Appalachian State in the first<lb/>
round of the number one singles<lb/>
bracket.<lb/>
INTRAMURALS<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
Water Basketball has started its spring schedule and, despite a<lb/>
number of early forfeits, play is as wet and wonderful as ever.<lb/>
Leading the way during the first two weeks were the Necromancers<lb/>
and Afternoon Delight, as the Monkberry Moon Delight picked up a<lb/>
pair of forfeit wins.<lb/>
Afternoon Delight has the biggest win so far with a 46-8 drubbing<lb/>
of the Waterheads. Leading the Delightful Delights were Pam Carter,<lb/>
with 27 points, and Rick Bright, with 18 points.<lb/>
The Necromancers also won big with a 46-14 win over the same<lb/>
Waterheads as Jean Evans poured in 18 points.<lb/>
In other games, Splashers and Gashers topped Waterlogged 27-26,<lb/>
and the Necromancers won 25-18. Who Knows won over Jaws II 28-22.<lb/>
The important Intramural Council meeting scheduled fa Monday,<lb/>
May 9, has been changed to Thursday, May 19, at 5 p.m in room 105 of<lb/>
Memorial Gym. It is a very important end of the year meeting and<lb/>
attendance is mandatory for all organizations.<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
A picture in Tuesday's FOUNTAINHEAD mistakenly captioned<lb/>
a Pirate pitcher as M ickey Britt. The caption should have read Terry<lb/>
Durham.<lb/>
PILOT<lb/>
Liner<lb/>
HUTeAUlMER:AMAGMHe0fr<lb/>
STEP BACKWARD M WRITING a�<lb/>
Durfee was defeated 6-1, 6-1,<lb/>
and placed in the oonsolation<lb/>
round, where he reached the<lb/>
finals by downing seventh-seeded<lb/>
Will Byrumof VMI 7-5, 6-1.<lb/>
Durfee was then beaten by<lb/>
Davidson's Al lard Cast el lain 2-6,<lb/>
6-2, 6-0 to take sixth place in his<lb/>
division.<lb/>
The Pirates number two hope-<lb/>
ful was sixth-seeded Jim Ratliff.<lb/>
Ratliff was defeated by the<lb/>
eventual champion, William and<lb/>
Mary's David Smith, by a 6-1, 6-3<lb/>
score.<lb/>
In the consolation round,<lb/>
Ratliff defeated VMI's Rick Green<lb/>
6-3, 6-1 to reach the finals. He<lb/>
was beaten by Bobby McWaters<lb/>
of The Citadel 6-2, 6-0, to finish<lb/>
sixth.<lb/>
Senior Doug Get singer was<lb/>
East Carolina's number three<lb/>
singles entry. Seeded seventh,<lb/>
Getsinger defeated Moses of<lb/>
Marshall 7-5, 6-1 in a sub-round,<lb/>
and then lost to eventual champ-<lb/>
ion Jack Jones of Furman, 7-6,<lb/>
6-1. Getsinger lost to Davidson's<lb/>
Stewart Boswell 6-4, 6-3, and<lb/>
wound up seventh overall.<lb/>
The Pirate's entry in the<lb/>
number four singles bracket,<lb/>
Mitch Pergerson, was seeded<lb/>
fifth entering the tournament, but<lb/>
lost to Davidson's John Trout 6-0,<lb/>
6-0 in the first round.<lb/>
Pergerson reached the finals<lb/>
of the consolation bracket by<lb/>
beating Fred Allen, the number<lb/>
nine seed from VM 1, 6-4, 6-4, but<lb/>
lost to The Citadel's Bill Ohlandt<lb/>
in a hard fought match, 3-6, 6-2,<lb/>
6-2.<lb/>
Freshman Kenny Love, seed-<lb/>
ed seventh, had the bad luck to<lb/>
meet second-seeded Mann of<lb/>
William and Mary in the first<lb/>
round. Love put up a good round,<lb/>
but lost by a 6-3, 6-0 score.<lb/>
Love then went to the consola-<lb/>
tion bracket, where he lost to<lb/>
sixth-seeded Tim Clodfelter 6-2,<lb/>
4-6, 6-4 to finish in seventh<lb/>
position.<lb/>
In doubles, Tom Durfee and<lb/>
Doug Getsinger were seeded<lb/>
sixth, and played William and<lb/>
Mary's Abrams and Galloway in<lb/>
the first round. The Pirates lost<lb/>
6-2, 6-1, and were placed in the<lb/>
oonsolation bracket.<lb/>
They defeated Allner and<lb/>
Green from VMI, but lost to<lb/>
Castellain-Boswell of Davidson in<lb/>
the finals. Durfee and Getsinger<lb/>
finished sixth in the finals.<lb/>
Hostetler and Love were seed-<lb/>
ed seventh in the second doubles<lb/>
bracket, and lost to second-seed-<lb/>
ed Barnhill-Kaytonof Davidson by<lb/>
a 6-3, 6-0 score. They advanced to<lb/>
the finals in the consolation<lb/>
bracket by beating Pugh and<lb/>
Stallings of VMI 6-2, 6-2. and<lb/>
Western Carolina's Eddie Tho-<lb/>
mas and Kenny Steen 6-4, 6-4.<lb/>
The pair wound up sixth after<lb/>
losing to The Citadel's Marc<lb/>
Krupp and Enoch Booth 6-1,6-1.<lb/>
In the number three doubles<lb/>
bracket, Pergerson and Ratliff<lb/>
were seeded seventh and were<lb/>
thus pitted against Furman's<lb/>
Keith Collins and Phil Hammont.<lb/>
The second-seeded Collins and<lb/>
Hammont emerged victorious by<lb/>
a 6-2, 6-0 tally.<lb/>
In the consolation round,<lb/>
Pergerson and Ratliff swept by<lb/>
Marshall's Brown and Perkinson<lb/>
6-4, 7-5, and Doug Beam and<lb/>
Clodfelter 6-1, 7-6. The two were<lb/>
then defeated by fifth-seeded<lb/>
Milne and Pollack of The Citadel<lb/>
in a tight 6-4, 4-6, 6-4 oontest to<lb/>
finish sixth.<lb/>
After the action, Pirate coach<lb/>
Randy Randolph remarked, "We<lb/>
finished about where we started<lb/>
and did as well as expected. I am<lb/>
a little disappointed that we<lb/>
didn't do better<lb/>
As to the Pirate's landmark<lb/>
season, Randolph stated, "I'm<lb/>
pleased but not satisfied<lb/>
After such a sensational sea-<lb/>
son, the Pirates can only get<lb/>
better. Next year, with an influx<lb/>
of talented players, East Carolina<lb/>
should be competitive with any-<lb/>
one in the state.<lb/>
Interior Design Seniors'<lb/>
U;�.<lb/>
It's Our Show<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
Finale<lb/>
SOt E. Ninth St<lb/>
May9,lO and 12-IS<lb/>
1:00-5:00 and 7:00-9:00<lb/>
Frank Brannon Hilda Lopez<lb/>
Jeffrey DeWitt Martha Lee Marvin<lb/>
Jane Flanagan Denise Pace<lb/>
Karla Gillie Hal Peck, Jr<lb/>
Martha Jane Poisson<lb/>
mm imum u m mm mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057129_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 May 1977<lb/>
Southern Pride Car Wash<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
Complete self-service car wash center<lb/>
Can even wash vans, boats, motorcycles, etc.<lb/>
Featuring wash, wax,tire cleaner, and<lb/>
super vacuums 25 cycles<lb/>
Open 24 hours�7 days a week<lb/>
Located at 1300 E. 10th St.<lb/>
(Beside Big Daddy's Chuck Wagon)<lb/>
Sports writers needed<lb/>
for summer and fall.<lb/>
If you enjoy sports and<lb/>
like to write, why not<lb/>
make money and gain<lb/>
experience while doing<lb/>
both?<lb/>
If interested,<lb/>
call 757-6366<lb/>
Save on Solti!<lb/>
On Sale May 1-14<lb/>
All London albums<lb/>
conducted by Sir Georg Solti<lb/>
$3.99A be<lb/>
499cassette taPe<lb/>
SOUI BOLERO<lb/>
H,jvhi How DHDussyLriMef I A;rpsMil.1jflf-cjne<lb/>
T�- rm-ij �vr,�rvOrchestra<lb/>
'�&amp;&amp;S$fi$&amp;$&amp;8�&amp;<lb/>
ro�w.v.swv �����:�:�.<lb/>
All London Classics will be on sale during the month of May<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
<pb facs="00057129_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>