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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057112_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for 51 years. With a<lb/>
circulation of 8,500, this<lb/>
issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE <lb/>
Old Manuscripts, p. 8<lb/>
Dean Gray reminisces, p. 9<lb/>
Pirates hit skids, p. 12,<lb/>
Vd. 52, No.<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
15 February 1977<lb/>
SGA approves<lb/>
media board<lb/>
ByLARRYUEBERMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The SGA voted to establish a Communications Board Monday<lb/>
at the business meeting Feb. 14.<lb/>
Greg Pingston introduced the bill with some comments. He said it<lb/>
is past time for the board to be formed since the old Publications Board<lb/>
has been defunct for a year.<lb/>
"There has been slanted reporting and misuse of funds on campus<lb/>
this year said Pingston.<lb/>
"The administration demands the Communications Board and the<lb/>
students deserve it said Pingston.<lb/>
The screenings for Communications Board positions will begin at<lb/>
the first of Spring quarter. The deadline for filling all positions is April<lb/>
15. The legislature extended the date for this year only.<lb/>
The Communications Board by-laws state the deadline as March 30.<lb/>
The Communications Board will consist of the four editors of<lb/>
campus Publications, head photographer, WECU manager, SGA<lb/>
treasurer, two students chosen by SGA President, two students chosen<lb/>
by speaker of the House, and the Secretary of Minority Affairs.<lb/>
There was an amendment to the bill which would have the two<lb/>
students to be chosen by the Speaker of the House for the Board<lb/>
subject to approval by the legislature.<lb/>
The two other students to be chosen by the SGA president must not<lb/>
be members of the legislature and are not subject to approval by it.<lb/>
In other business, Tim Sullivan stated his oommittee on the<lb/>
proposed overpass for 10th Street will meet with Department of<lb/>
Transportation officials by the end of the month.<lb/>
The overpass would be barrier-free to aocommodate disabled<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Also. Phil Barbee and Frank Saunders have been appointed as<lb/>
co-chairpersons to the Elections Committee. Six persons applied and<lb/>
the other four will be oommittee members. The Spring elections will be<lb/>
overseen by this oommittee. It will be in charge of election rules, ballot<lb/>
boxes and locations, bajlot counters, and campaign violations.<lb/>
Kent Johnson, secretary to the office of International Programs,<lb/>
spoke to the legislature on his off ice's progress. He stated he hopes to<lb/>
get more interaction between students to generate inter-cultural<lb/>
activity. A Chinese dinner is planned for the near future and more<lb/>
dinners are planned for later.<lb/>
t' .? tat<lb/>
"��� 'ex<lb/>
 � . V �<lb/>
I<lb/>
iVj �<lb/>
T<lb/>
A N ECU STUDENT takes a break from bike riding to catch a few<lb/>
zzz's. The entire campus seems to be taking advantage of the<lb/>
pause in the cold spell by getting outdoors. Photo by Kirk<lb/>
Kingsbury<lb/>
pmOMTV M THE USt Of THE C0UR1S<lb/>
m refuse tetHtni" WILLW t<lb/>
i sjr <lb/>
CHARLES VINCENT of the Greenville Recrea-<lb/>
tion Dept. stated all city recreation facilities,<lb/>
including the Elm St. tennis courts, are open to<lb/>
university students who pay Greenville city<lb/>
taxes. Photo by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
Local facilities open to<lb/>
students paying city tax<lb/>
By ROBERTSWAIM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
According to Charles Vincent<lb/>
of the Greenville Recreation<lb/>
Department, all city owned re-<lb/>
creation facilities are open to<lb/>
anyone who pays Greenville city<lb/>
taxes, including ECU students.<lb/>
"Any city taxpayer can use<lb/>
the facilities said Vincent.<lb/>
According to Vincent, when a<lb/>
person wants to use a city facility<lb/>
they are asked for their name and<lb/>
address to determine if they are<lb/>
residents and taxpayers of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Chancellor has final say<lb/>
"We get their name and we<lb/>
ask a few questions like, do you<lb/>
list your taxes in Greenville?, Do<lb/>
you call Greenville your home?<lb/>
said Vincent.<lb/>
According to Vincent, if a<lb/>
student gives a dorm address and<lb/>
says that they are a taxpayer then<lb/>
the recreation people attempt to<lb/>
verify it.<lb/>
"We call the city tax office<lb/>
and verify that they are tax-<lb/>
payers said Vincent.<lb/>
According to Vincent, the city<lb/>
owned swimming pool is open to<lb/>
anyone to use for a fee of 50<lb/>
cents.<lb/>
"We are losing money on<lb/>
that<lb/>
Vincent stated the Recreation<lb/>
Department has run into a<lb/>
problem with ECU students<lb/>
wanting to use the city's gym-<lb/>
nasiums during the winter.<lb/>
"A lot of students want to play<lb/>
basketball inside and the college<lb/>
gym may have intramurals going<lb/>
on or some other activity. So they<lb/>
want to use the city gym's<lb/>
basketball court said Vincent.<lb/>
Vincent said the city also has<lb/>
activities going on that limit the<lb/>
use of basketball oourts.<lb/>
Dept. Heads set Prof salaries<lb/>
By ROBERT SW AIM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Each year the state legislature<lb/>
appropriates a certain amount of<lb/>
each state university's budget for<lb/>
salaries and quite often attach<lb/>
stipulations as to how the money<lb/>
will be distributed.<lb/>
For the year beginning July 1,<lb/>
1976 and ending June 30. 1977,<lb/>
ECU was alloted $14,169,826 for<lb/>
total university salaries.<lb/>
Faculty salaries are deter-<lb/>
mined more or less by the<lb/>
individual department chairman.<lb/>
Officially the final okay for any<lb/>
professor's salary rests with the<lb/>
chancellor.<lb/>
The chancellor bases his deci-<lb/>
sion on the recommendations of<lb/>
the department chairmen, the<lb/>
dean of the particular school, and<lb/>
the provost.<lb/>
The criteria for determining a<lb/>
beginning professor's salary in-<lb/>
cludes past experience, tran-<lb/>
scripts and academic record, any<lb/>
research done by that person in<lb/>
their particular field, any work<lb/>
that they have had published, and<lb/>
letters of recommendation.<lb/>
When a new prqfessor is<lb/>
hired, he is interviewed by the<lb/>
personnel oommittee of the de-<lb/>
partr.ient that is offering the<lb/>
position. The oommittee is given<lb/>
a figure to work with, regarding<lb/>
the salary of the available<lb/>
position.<lb/>
Based on the prospective<lb/>
employee's background and<lb/>
interview with the oommittee, the<lb/>
oommittee makes a recommend-<lb/>
ation for a starting salary.<lb/>
The committee does not<lb/>
necessarily recommend, that the<lb/>
new professor receive the full<lb/>
amount of money thai is available<lb/>
for the position.<lb/>
Merit pay raises are based on<lb/>
the recommendation of the de-<lb/>
partment chairmen.<lb/>
Raises based on merit are<lb/>
See SALARIES, page .J<lb/>
BUC sales sluggish<lb/>
According to Editor Susan<lb/>
Rogerson, only 85 subscriptions<lb/>
have been sold so far in the recent<lb/>
BUC subscription drive.<lb/>
"We expect the sales to<lb/>
increase at the beginning of the<lb/>
Spring quarter. It's the end of the<lb/>
quarter and people just don't<lb/>
have the money said Rogerson.<lb/>
Aocording to staff member<lb/>
Jaime Austria, students resent<lb/>
having to pay for their annual.<lb/>
"Students feel they've al-<lb/>
ready paid fa it through their<lb/>
act'ity fee said Austria.<lb/>
"If sales continue the way<lb/>
they are now. then I expect to sell<lb/>
only 500 subscriptions said<lb/>
Rogerson.<lb/>
Rogerson said that only $100<lb/>
worth of ads have been sold.<lb/>
"Ad sales are absolutely<lb/>
terrible, she said.<lb/>
According to Rogerson, sup-<lb/>
port from the business commun-<lb/>
ity has been slow.<lb/>
"It's a slack time of year for<lb/>
businesses and therefore they<lb/>
don't have the money for adver-<lb/>
tising. Another reason is that<lb/>
many businesses feel they have<lb/>
contributed enough support to<lb/>
ECU by contributing to Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium said Rogerson.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0002"/><lb/>
Adopt a pet Crafts fair Senior recital<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
15 February 1977<lb/>
Crisis Center Buy your BUC<lb/>
You don't have to be in a crisis<lb/>
to want to change something in<lb/>
yourself. It's alright to ask for<lb/>
guidance. The REAL House<lb/>
doesn't care what your name<lb/>
ishowyou feel about yourself is<lb/>
what's important. Call 758-HELP<lb/>
or oome by at 117 Evans St. 24<lb/>
hours a day.<lb/>
Free flick<lb/>
"STEP BY STEP' is the title<lb/>
of the free flick set in several<lb/>
countries of Latin America which<lb/>
will be shown Thursday evening<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. in room 238 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center and<lb/>
sponsored by the Bahai Associa-<lb/>
tion. If you have been wondering<lb/>
about the Bahai Faith, oome ask<lb/>
questions and join in the discus-<lb/>
sion. All are welcome!<lb/>
Legs<lb/>
All girls interested in trying<lb/>
out for 1977-78 Pom Pom Squad.<lb/>
Meet in the lobby of Fletcher<lb/>
Music Hall at 5:30 p.m. Thurs<lb/>
Mar. 10. Tryouts will be discus-<lb/>
sed.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi, National Honor<lb/>
Fraternity, will hold its monthly<lb/>
dinner meeting on Wednesday,<lb/>
Feb. 16, at 6 p.m. at Parker's<lb/>
Bar-B-Q. The speaker will be MS.<lb/>
Linda Starr of the ECU Sociology<lb/>
Dept. All brothers are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Bridge Benefit<lb/>
On February 4, District 30 of<lb/>
the North Carolina Nurses Asso-<lb/>
ciation held a Bridge Benefit and<lb/>
successfully raised the amount of<lb/>
money needed to secure their<lb/>
nursing scholarship fund for this<lb/>
year. The educational assistance<lb/>
will be given to a nursing student<lb/>
in one of the district schools of<lb/>
nursing who has a good scholastic<lb/>
record, exhibits maturity, good<lb/>
organizational skills and is in<lb/>
financial need.<lb/>
District 30 gratefully appre-<lb/>
ciates the support of the following<lb/>
area merchants in this endeavor:<lb/>
Ariane's, Book Barn, Brody's, C.<lb/>
Heber Forbes, Coffman's, The<lb/>
College Shop, Country Vogue,<lb/>
Daks, Diener's Bakery, First<lb/>
Federal Savings and Loan, The<lb/>
Gazebo, Happily Everafter,<lb/>
Happy Store, H.L. Hodges and<lb/>
Co Hungates, J.A's Uniform<lb/>
Shop, Jerry's Sweetshop, Krispy<lb/>
Kreme, Lautares, Morgan Prin-<lb/>
ters, Pepsi Cola Bottling Com-<lb/>
pany, Sarrell's, The Snooty Fox,<lb/>
Sylettes, and U-Ren-Co.<lb/>
The '77 BUCCANEER will be<lb/>
on sale from 12 to 5 p.m. in the<lb/>
lobbies of these dorms on the<lb/>
following days: Cotton Feb. 16,<lb/>
Scott Feb. 17, Tyler Feb. 18, and<lb/>
in the publications center.<lb/>
Help insure that there will be<lb/>
a' 77 BUC and buy your subscrip-<lb/>
tion now. The subscription price<lb/>
is $5.<lb/>
The Men's dorm &amp; the<lb/>
Women's dorm that buys the<lb/>
most subscriptions will each<lb/>
receive a free page in the<lb/>
Yearbook for their own use.<lb/>
Which two dams will receive this<lb/>
special coverage in the BUC?<lb/>
Attention SAM<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Society Advancement of Manage-<lb/>
ment on Thursday, Feb. 17, at 4<lb/>
p.m. in R102. The guest speaker<lb/>
will be Greenville's City Planner.<lb/>
All interested persons are invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Auditions<lb/>
Auditions for "Hedda<lb/>
Gabler" will be held Feb. 15 at<lb/>
730 p.m. in McGinnis Audito-<lb/>
rium. Everybody is welcome.<lb/>
Meat?<lb/>
A special presentation on<lb/>
Meat Alternates will be held on<lb/>
Thursday, Feb. 17, at the Agricul-<lb/>
tural Extension Offioe, 203 West<lb/>
Third Street, Greenville. The<lb/>
class will be 10 a.mnoon. Mrs.<lb/>
Lenore Walston, home econo-<lb/>
mist, Windsor, will present the<lb/>
program. She will be oovering the<lb/>
Vegetarian Diet and the use of the<lb/>
Wok Cooker. Call 758-1196 fa<lb/>
registration.<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Special Entertainment Committee<lb/>
of the Student Union Thursday,<lb/>
Feb. 17, at 4 p.m.<lb/>
Senior show<lb/>
"Mud and Metal a joint<lb/>
exhibition of art by ECU School of<lb/>
Art senia May Talbott Carter of<lb/>
Danville, Va. and Roxanne Reep<lb/>
of Nebo is on display through<lb/>
Feb. 18 in the gallery of Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center.<lb/>
The exhibition includes Mary<lb/>
Carta's stoneware and salt-fired<lb/>
ceramics and acrylic and oil<lb/>
paintings, and Roxanne Reep's<lb/>
sculpture, metal jewelry, aaylic<lb/>
paintings and multi-media draw-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
The animals available for<lb/>
adoption this week at the Animal<lb/>
Shelter include one small tabby<lb/>
cat; one black, small mutt; one<lb/>
brown and one black and white<lb/>
medium-sized mutts; a mother<lb/>
with two pups; a beagle, and two<lb/>
furry puppies that may be part<lb/>
Shepherd. A large afghan hound<lb/>
was also picked up near 2nd St. If<lb/>
you have lost your pet a need a<lb/>
friend, please check the Animanl<lb/>
Shelter first.<lb/>
Skate boards<lb/>
The Coastal Plain Arts and<lb/>
Crafts Fair, to be held November<lb/>
10, 11, and 12th, 1977 in Rocky<lb/>
Mount, N.C is now accepting<lb/>
applications fa aaftsmen in an 8<lb/>
county area. Craftsmen from the<lb/>
following oounties are invited to<lb/>
participate: Wake, Johnston,<lb/>
Wilson, Edgecombe, Halifax,<lb/>
Northampton, Franklin and Nash.<lb/>
Interested aaftsmen may obtain<lb/>
application blanks from their<lb/>
county Home Eoonomics Agent a<lb/>
fran Mrs. Agnes Safy, Home<lb/>
Economics Extension Agent, Box<lb/>
13, Nashville, N.C. 27856, which<lb/>
must be returned by April 1.<lb/>
Anyone interested in a skate<lb/>
board oontest on the ECU campus � . .<lb/>
contact the Secretary of the Pl3ISt<lb/>
Student Union President. The<lb/>
Special Entertainment Committee<lb/>
needs to know if there is an<lb/>
interest here.<lb/>
Summer work<lb/>
Wak this summer in the<lb/>
faests of Germany, on oonstruo-<lb/>
tion in Austria, on farms in<lb/>
Germany, Sweden and Denmark,<lb/>
in industries in France and<lb/>
Germany, in hotels ir Switzer-<lb/>
land. Well there are these jobs<lb/>
available as well as jobs in<lb/>
Ireland, England, Francs, Italy,<lb/>
and Holland are open by the<lb/>
consent of the governments of<lb/>
these countries to American<lb/>
university students coming to<lb/>
Europe the next summer.<lb/>
In most cases, the employers<lb/>
have requested especially for<lb/>
American students. Hence, they<lb/>
are particularly interested in the<lb/>
student and want to make the<lb/>
wak as interesting as possible.<lb/>
Please write fa further infa-<lb/>
matiai and application fams to:<lb/>
American-European Student-<lb/>
Service, Box 34733, FL 9490<lb/>
Vaduz, Liechtenstein (Europe).<lb/>
SNEA meeting<lb/>
There will be an SNEA<lb/>
meeting Wednesday, Feb. 16, at<lb/>
730 in the Multipurpose Room in<lb/>
MendenhaJI. Dr. Tacker of the<lb/>
Psychology Department will<lb/>
speak on discipline in the class-<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Pianist Paul Tardif, a member<lb/>
of the ECU School of Music Artist<lb/>
Faculty, will perfam a recital of<lb/>
Romantic and contemporary<lb/>
piano compositions Tuesday,<lb/>
Feb. 15, at 8.15 p.m. The recital<lb/>
is scheduled fa the A.J. Fletcha<lb/>
Music Centa Recital Hall and is<lb/>
free and open to the public.<lb/>
Brama<lb/>
Communicate<lb/>
Persons who wish to develop<lb/>
their speaking skills are invited to<lb/>
enroll in "Practical Oral Com-<lb/>
munications an evening oourse<lb/>
to be offered on Thursday eve-<lb/>
nings, March 17-May 12, at ECU.<lb/>
The course would be espe-<lb/>
cially valuable fa those whose<lb/>
involvement in civic, business,<lb/>
church a social aganizatiais<lb/>
requires them to be confident,<lb/>
clear and convincing in speaking.<lb/>
Model U.N.<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Model U.N. on Thursday, Feb.<lb/>
17, at 430 in Brewster C-101. All<lb/>
interested members are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Don't miss the new East<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse production of<lb/>
"PELLEAS AND MEUSANDE"<lb/>
showing Feb. 11-12; 14-18 in the<lb/>
Studio Theatre. Tickets are avai-<lb/>
lable at the McGinnis Auditaium<lb/>
Box Offioe, 10-4 daily. Tickets are<lb/>
free fa ECU students with I.D.<lb/>
and Activity cards, and $2.50 fa<lb/>
the general public. It is a fairy<lb/>
tale and a love stay. Don't miss<lb/>
this unique production.<lb/>
Internships<lb/>
Mr. Jim Caplanides Directa<lb/>
of the N.C. Intanship Office, has<lb/>
announced plans fa the upoom-<lb/>
ing Summer Semester Internship<lb/>
Program in North Carolina State<lb/>
Government.<lb/>
Internships in various state<lb/>
government agencies will begin<lb/>
on May 23 and oontinue fa 13<lb/>
weeks throughout the summer.<lb/>
The positions require a 40-hour<lb/>
wak week, and interns will be<lb/>
paid $3.12 pa hour ($125'1wk.).<lb/>
Applications are now available<lb/>
from the Internship Office.<lb/>
Application deadline is March 25.<lb/>
Fa furtha infamatiai, write<lb/>
a call :N.C. Intanship Offioe, 401<lb/>
N. Wilminton St Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
27601,(919)733-5966.<lb/>
ECU Club<lb/>
The ECU Club plans a Spring<lb/>
Luncheon and Fashion Show Feb.<lb/>
26, at 1230 p.m. at the Greenville<lb/>
Golf and Country Club.<lb/>
As a part of the program,<lb/>
outgoing officers will be honaed<lb/>
and plans fa the spring bridge<lb/>
benefit will be announced. There<lb/>
will be a salad supper and<lb/>
winnas of the Lillian Jenkins<lb/>
Scholarship will be introduced.<lb/>
Fa resavations, call Mary<lb/>
Jane Hayek, 756-2891; Betty<lb/>
Grossnickle, 756-0706; a Martha<lb/>
Farell, 756-1956. Reservations<lb/>
deadline is Monday, Feb. 21.<lb/>
Debaah Louise Fales of Wil-<lb/>
mington, N.C. will perfam her<lb/>
senia recital on Feb. 17 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in the A.J. Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Janet Marie Watson of Kenly,<lb/>
N.C. will have her senia piano<lb/>
recital en Feb. 18, at 8:15 in the<lb/>
A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
Cooking<lb/>
An evening class in French<lb/>
cookery will be offered by ECU<lb/>
this spring. The oourse will cover<lb/>
menus and ocoking styles of the<lb/>
maja provinces of France. Stu-<lb/>
dents will prepare basic French<lb/>
dishes including aepes, souffles,<lb/>
pates a choux and will sample<lb/>
their own wak each night. In<lb/>
addition, the oourse will provide a<lb/>
genera1 ovaview of wines, with<lb/>
attention to which wines comple-<lb/>
ment a type of food a a particular<lb/>
menu.<lb/>
Instructa of the French cook-<lb/>
ing class is Mariette Davis-<lb/>
Givoiset, a graduate of Iowa in<lb/>
Dijon Univasities. The class will<lb/>
meet on Tuesdays, March 15-May<lb/>
3, from 7 to 10 p.m. Only 16<lb/>
persons can be accepted. Early<lb/>
registration is advised.<lb/>
New hours<lb/>
Due to the enagy aisis, the<lb/>
opaating hours of the Students<lb/>
Supply Stae and The Croatan are<lb/>
being adjusted effective this<lb/>
Friday, February 11: The Book-<lb/>
stae in Wright Building will be<lb/>
closed Saturday manings, The<lb/>
Croatan will close at 530 p.m. on<lb/>
Fridays and will be dosed on<lb/>
Saturday manings.<lb/>
New Hours of Opaation are:<lb/>
fa the Bookstore, 8.15 a.m. until<lb/>
5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays;<lb/>
and new hours fa the Croatan,<lb/>
730 a.m. until 9 p.m. Mondays<lb/>
through Thursdays and 730 a.m.<lb/>
until 530 p.m. Fridays.<lb/>
Disco jam<lb/>
"Aries the most dynamic<lb/>
D.J. in the histay of Disoo, will<lb/>
be in Wright Auditaium, Satur-<lb/>
day, Feb. 19 at 10 o'clock.<lb/>
"Aries" is from Charlotte and<lb/>
was rated number one by the<lb/>
Carolina School of Broadcasting<lb/>
so don't miss it! Admission is<lb/>
oily $1.<lb/>
Courses<lb/>
East Carolina offas a variety<lb/>
of non-aedit continuing educa-<lb/>
tion courses. They are designed<lb/>
fa adults of varied educational &amp;<lb/>
occupational backgrounds who<lb/>
wish to develop their knowledge<lb/>
and abilities concerning a variety<lb/>
of subjects. Emphasis is placed<lb/>
on flexibility of instruction so that<lb/>
objectives of individual participa-<lb/>
tion might be met to the greatest<lb/>
extent possible.<lb/>
Fa more infamatiai, write:<lb/>
Non-aedit Programs, Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, ECU; a<lb/>
ral 757-6143 a 757-6540.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0003"/><lb/>
�MMHMHHHHMKMHHRMSRHBBHHMMHH<lb/>
pj�Sg$j�<lb/>
15 February 1977 FOUKTAINHEAD Pig3<lb/>
Stokes hosts area- wide antique auction<lb/>
ByLARRYLIEBERMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The room reverberated with<lb/>
loud staccato sounds that seemed<lb/>
like gibberish to the unaccus-<lb/>
tomed ear.<lb/>
The room was filled with<lb/>
about 150 silent people.<lb/>
Only hand gestures and nods<lb/>
came from audience.<lb/>
An auctioneer was trying to<lb/>
work up the bids at Hawley's in<lb/>
Stokes, N.C about ten miles<lb/>
from Greenville.<lb/>
The customers were mostly<lb/>
middle-aged oouples that seemed<lb/>
confident and knowledgeable<lb/>
about antiques.<lb/>
"They come from as far away<lb/>
as Virginia said Mrs. George<lb/>
Hawley, wife of the owner and<lb/>
caller of the business.<lb/>
"We don't get too many<lb/>
college students out here said<lb/>
Mrs. Hawley. Most of the custo-<lb/>
mers were antique dealers that<lb/>
oome from Jacksonville, Bethel,<lb/>
Snow Hill, Robersonville, or<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
George Hawley, a licensed<lb/>
auctioneer and caller, built up the<lb/>
excitement as the bidding got<lb/>
more competitive by using his<lb/>
voice and his body to stir up the<lb/>
still cagey buyers.<lb/>
The audience played the game<lb/>
seriously as husbands and wives<lb/>
made lightning fast business<lb/>
decisions.<lb/>
The bidding started with small<lb/>
hurricane lamps and cut glass<lb/>
dishes. These were sold quickly<lb/>
as the crowd anticipated the<lb/>
larger antiques.<lb/>
Bids were incredibly low for<lb/>
oak and mahogany furniture.<lb/>
"Can I get $100 fa this set of<lb/>
Queen Anne claw foot chairs?"<lb/>
asks Hawley. "These sell for $200<lb/>
in the antique stores in Wilson<lb/>
"How much will you give?"<lb/>
shouted Hawley, someone mo-<lb/>
tioned $25. Hawley said, "Well<lb/>
that's more than I had. Now<lb/>
$50-$75-$50-heh $75- now $80.<lb/>
Last time, $75. Sold! for $75. You<lb/>
bought it number 46<lb/>
As the evening progressed<lb/>
Hawley got more intimate with<lb/>
the buyers. He told a lady on the<lb/>
front row, "You'll wake up<lb/>
tomorrow and be sayin' 'I wish I<lb/>
had or to another disappointed<lb/>
woman, "Your husband said no,<lb/>
what about you ma'm?"<lb/>
Everything from fiddle-back<lb/>
chairs, to wing-back wicker rock-<lb/>
ers, to serpentine China cabinets,<lb/>
and brass beds were auctioned on<lb/>
this particular Friday night.<lb/>
Lace cane chairs that may sell<lb/>
in an anitque store fa $50 to $100<lb/>
went fa $5 and $10. A brass bed,<lb/>
the biggest sale of the night, went<lb/>
fa $280 after a fierce bidding<lb/>
oontest.<lb/>
Hogge fights stereotype<lb/>
By NEIL SESSOMS<lb/>
NewsEdita<lb/>
Anne Hogge admits that<lb/>
spats have traditionally been a<lb/>
man's domain. As a woman<lb/>
spats edita of ECU'S FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD, she does not feel<lb/>
that being female makes her any<lb/>
less able to do the job.<lb/>
"It's not just for men<lb/>
Hogge clarified. "It's fa anybody<lb/>
who likes sports and is interest-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Hogge emphasized that she<lb/>
doesn't hold the job just to be<lb/>
unique.<lb/>
"I'm not doing this work to be<lb/>
exceptional a different. People<lb/>
confront me with things like that.<lb/>
I'm in this because I'm interest-<lb/>
ed, not to be an oddity<lb/>
Aside from her woolen Dallas<lb/>
Cowboys skull cap, Hogge shows<lb/>
no personal effects of her male<lb/>
aiented wak. Her laig, dark<lb/>
hair and casual but neat dress<lb/>
don't distinguish her from any<lb/>
other sophomae coed. Her round<lb/>
face makes her appear younger<lb/>
than 19.<lb/>
Hogge said she first became<lb/>
involved with sports in junia high<lb/>
school in Fayetteville, N.C.<lb/>
"I kept baseball stat's in<lb/>
junior high school and kept<lb/>
football and baseball stat's in<lb/>
high school<lb/>
Despite her interest in ath-<lb/>
letics, Hogge admitted the closest<lb/>
she came to playing on an<lb/>
aganized team was intramurals.<lb/>
She said she holds a special<lb/>
fondness fa volleyball.<lb/>
Hogge said she does not<lb/>
unduly push coverage of women's<lb/>
sports.<lb/>
"I won't overpublicize any-<lb/>
thing that doesn't deserve it. I<lb/>
might be kind of prejudiced<lb/>
though<lb/>
Accading to Hogge, she is<lb/>
not confined to the average<lb/>
female's knowledge of sports.<lb/>
"I don't feel I know every-<lb/>
thing about all spats, but I am<lb/>
pretty familiar with the maja<lb/>
ones<lb/>
Besides the sports pages,<lb/>
Hogge revealed that she is<lb/>
fascinated by newspapers in<lb/>
general.<lb/>
"I read everything in the<lb/>
papers, even the classifieds<lb/>
Hogge cited Phyllis Geage of<lb/>
CBS sports as a professional<lb/>
heroine. She does na feel Phyllis<lb/>
is waking up to her ability<lb/>
though.<lb/>
"They give her the trivial<lb/>
things complained Hogge.<lb/>
"She does nothing of real impa-<lb/>
tance, only the trite things the<lb/>
male oommentatas won't do<lb/>
Hogge said she may stay in<lb/>
sports after she gets her political<lb/>
science degree.<lb/>
"My ideal situation would be<lb/>
to beoome par1 of the Dallas<lb/>
Cowboys' aganizatioi<lb/>
Anne Hogge is making in-<lb/>
roads to the male dominated<lb/>
realm of sports and is not<lb/>
handicapped by her sex.<lb/>
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DELICIOUS- NUTRITIOUS- ECONOMICAL<lb/>
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CHICKEN - BURRITO- TACOS - ENCHILADAS<lb/>
SEAFOOO - GUACAMOLE - CHILI CON QUESO - RICE<lb/>
BettemLine<lb/>
Hawley has been in the<lb/>
auction business in Stokes fa<lb/>
eight years this April. He has a<lb/>
full house of buyers every Friday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
The antiques are sold on<lb/>
consignment and Hawley gets a<lb/>
20 per cent commission. Most of<lb/>
the pieces come from the nath-<lb/>
east.<lb/>
Owners haul the antiques<lb/>
down in trucks a send it via<lb/>
United Parcel Service. Next Fri-<lb/>
day's shipment is from Erie and<lb/>
New Holland, Pennsylvania. All<lb/>
the furniture sold this Friday<lb/>
came from New Hampshire and<lb/>
Maine.<lb/>
The auctions usually last until<lb/>
1a.m. a 2a.m said Mrs. Haw-<lb/>
ley. Then, people pull their cars<lb/>
and trucks up to the back doas<lb/>
and load up their purchases. Most<lb/>
people who oome are regular<lb/>
customers. Either buying or<lb/>
selling is their business, a it is<lb/>
just a hobby with them.<lb/>
Hawley's has some real bar-<lb/>
gains, and if college students<lb/>
need antique or inexpensive<lb/>
furniture, it is the plaoe to go.<lb/>
Austin named new<lb/>
Associate Registrar<lb/>
Mrs. Bobbie C. Austin, who<lb/>
began waking in the Registrar's<lb/>
office shatly after graduatioi in<lb/>
1955, has been appointed Asso-<lb/>
ciate Registrar fa ECU.<lb/>
The appointment was announ-<lb/>
ced today by Gil Moae, Regis-<lb/>
trar.<lb/>
Mrs. Austin, a native of Swan<lb/>
Quarter, N.C. received a BS<lb/>
degree in Business Education at<lb/>
East Carolina in 1955 and is<lb/>
waking ai a master's degree in<lb/>
Education Administration in addi-<lb/>
tion to fulltime duties in the<lb/>
Registrar's office. Since 1973, she<lb/>
has been administrative assis-<lb/>
tant. Previously she waked as a<lb/>
secretary and as supervisa fran<lb/>
1956 until 1973.<lb/>
The rrother of two sons, Mrs.<lb/>
Austin is the wife of H.L. Austin<lb/>
Sr. of Greenville. Her mother is<lb/>
Mrs. W.G. Credle, also of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
She is president of the Green-<lb/>
ville Tar Heel Little League<lb/>
Auxiliary, a member, Sunday<lb/>
School teacher and youth directa<lb/>
of First Pentecostal Holiness<lb/>
Church, Greenville.<lb/>
We've got<lb/>
what you want.<lb/>
See Her In Rubies, Sapphires &amp; Diamonds<lb/>
Let her light shine on Valentine's Day in<lb/>
precious, natural stones. Your choice of<lb/>
rubies or sapphires combined with diamonds<lb/>
in white or yellow 10K gold. Single cluster<lb/>
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Earrings $79.95. Pendant $49.95<lb/>
Use our Custom Charge Plan, your favorite<lb/>
bank card or layaway<lb/>
OntheMall<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Tues. A.C.C. Basketball<lb/>
Thur. A.C.C. Basketball<lb/>
Fri. Jazz with Duke and John<lb/>
Sat. Sat. Night Liye<lb/>
Sun. Music by Rick Cornfield<lb/>
warn<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0004"/><lb/>
R<lb/>
TjPHsSfPBSB<lb/>
;����  . .<lb/>
smaamaammmamVewmm<lb/>
El 1 � 1<lb/>
ditonals<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
15 February 1977<lb/>
Media bill is positive step<lb/>
The SGA Legislature Monday took a giant first<lb/>
step towards improving the rapport between student<lb/>
government and publications. The bill which it<lb/>
passed for a campus Communications Board, the<lb/>
drafting of which was largely the effort of SGA<lb/>
Vice-President Greg Pingston, should soon receive<lb/>
President Tim Sullivan's signature.<lb/>
The new board carries some improvements and<lb/>
many novel features over last year's Publications<lb/>
Board. One of the more radical changes is to give the<lb/>
SGA Vice-President the chairmanship of the new<lb/>
board. The membership consists of six persons from<lb/>
campus media and six persons from SGA. The<lb/>
chairperson would vote only in case of a tie. Past<lb/>
experience would indicate that the usual and often<lb/>
times capricious polarization of SGA and the<lb/>
publications would have the chairman casting the<lb/>
tie-breaking vote on many occasions. This may not be<lb/>
altogether bad. This new duty gives the vice-<lb/>
president more to do than just waiting for the<lb/>
president's office to be vacated. Candidates for this<lb/>
SGA position may now have a platform that stresses<lb/>
their media expertise andor ideas for campus<lb/>
communications.<lb/>
Another improvement over the old bylaws, this<lb/>
latest version allows the campus media to retain<lb/>
revenue from advertising sales, subscriptions and<lb/>
miscellaneous earnings. Under the previous system,<lb/>
this revenue went immediately into the SGA general<lb/>
fund, out of reach of the media. Letting the media<lb/>
keep what they earn will provide greater incentive to<lb/>
sell ads and solicit subscriptions. To use this money,<lb/>
however, still requires approval of the Communica-<lb/>
tions Board<lb/>
Publications (FOUNTAINHEAD, EBONY<lb/>
HERALD and the Literary Magazine) have operated<lb/>
this year with SGA, in effect, acting as their<lb/>
publisher-BUCCANEER has not operated at all after<lb/>
the staff quit in protest when the legislature cut its<lb/>
budget. WECU, the campus radio station, has always<lb/>
been somewhat autonomous of previous media<lb/>
boards and has fared well with appropriations from<lb/>
the SGA. But, WECU has learned that the best way<lb/>
to not antagonize student government is to ignore it;<lb/>
there is virtually no local news coverage by the radio<lb/>
station. The new board's duty as publisher is<lb/>
comprehensive, covering all campus media. Should<lb/>
students have complaints over the way in which<lb/>
media utilizes their budgets after the SGA's<lb/>
approval, then the Communications Board can act as<lb/>
a forum, and, it is hoped, an impartial judge.<lb/>
r<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis C. Leonard<lb/>
NewsEditorJ. Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Trends EditorPat Coyle<lb/>
Sports EditormAnne Hogge<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Is file student newspaper at East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association<lb/>
ot ECU end 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: 757-9366, 757-6X7, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually tor non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
leeA<lb/>
THIS IS miE CWE WPiTCU .<lb/>
fffPORflNGr fl ROBBEW, GOOD BUDDVl<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
SGA Secretary criticizes paper anew<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
It seems as though it is the<lb/>
vogue to criticize the F-Head, and<lb/>
about time too. The F-Head<lb/>
integrity has been in question for<lb/>
a long time, but it is now surfac-<lb/>
ing just how irresponsible the F-<lb/>
Head really is.<lb/>
I have charged the F-Head<lb/>
with mis-management, under-<lb/>
management, lack of policy both<lb/>
ethical and professional, and<lb/>
flagrant reporting bias, charges I<lb/>
know are true. But my purposes<lb/>
are not to hurt the F-Head, but to<lb/>
make them accountable for their<lb/>
actions and increase their ebbing<lb/>
credibility. I want these abuses to<lb/>
my money stopped.<lb/>
But who do I go to? The SGA<lb/>
Attorney General has informed<lb/>
me that the F-Head is out of the<lb/>
jurisdiction of the Honor Council<lb/>
and suggests that I take them to<lb/>
Civil Court. I would have to prove<lb/>
malicious intent in order to do<lb/>
this.<lb/>
I am not charging F-Head with<lb/>
malicious intent but lack of intent.<lb/>
Eagles' 'Hotel California 'lauded<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I tried real hard not to<lb/>
write this, honest I did; but<lb/>
something (simple justice pro-<lb/>
bably) made me step forward in<lb/>
defense of one Eagles, rock<lb/>
group.<lb/>
I've grown up listening to rock<lb/>
music. Elvis I remember as a<lb/>
childhood curiosity, the Beatles-<lb/>
a teenaged fantasy of hope (the<lb/>
answer); and Jesus (!) I'll never<lb/>
forget the early days of a mailed<lb/>
fist called Cream.<lb/>
Seriously, I've heard a lot of<lb/>
rock music. My personal favorite<lb/>
remains Crosby, Stills, Nash, and<lb/>
Young. It is in that gender<lb/>
(country rock) that I would like to<lb/>
address comment to Chris Far-<lb/>
ren.<lb/>
The music of CSN&amp; Y captured<lb/>
the soul of a nation's youth in<lb/>
crisis. (Days not long gone when a<lb/>
man could die but not vote.) Lots<lb/>
of people, myself included, will<lb/>
never quite shake the eerie mad-<lb/>
ness of Neil Youngs "Ohio" or<lb/>
the blissful escapism of "Wooden<lb/>
Ships<lb/>
No less an authority than Neil<lb/>
Young himself has been reliably<lb/>
quoted as recognizing the Eagles<lb/>
as the logical (and legitimate)<lb/>
suocessor toCSN&amp;Y.<lb/>
I agree, I like the Eagles, they<lb/>
are one damn good rock'n roll<lb/>
band. Not Gods, not demons, but<lb/>
excellent musicians. While I<lb/>
share Mr. Farren's affection for<lb/>
"Desperado" (and Don Felder is<lb/>
good with his instrument) I must<lb/>
disagree entirely with his recent<lb/>
assessment (putdown) of album<lb/>
"Hotel California<lb/>
Social changes? Man, the<lb/>
Eagles are singing about Califor-<lb/>
nia (America) and if sex with<lb/>
multiple partners, questioning of<lb/>
religion, and rich men raping the<lb/>
land ain't social, then gasoline<lb/>
ain't expensive.<lb/>
To simply dismiss such fine<lb/>
songs as: "Try and Love Again<lb/>
and "The Last Resort" as medi-<lb/>
ocre is both silly and negligent.<lb/>
And as for Glen Frey' s image and<lb/>
lifestyle, I don't particulary like<lb/>
his tough-shit role either, but I do<lb/>
admire his talent and girl friend<lb/>
with large breasts who recently<lb/>
appeared in Playboy magazine.<lb/>
The Eagles are good, very<lb/>
good, and "Hotel California" is<lb/>
one of their best. If you don't like,<lb/>
don't listen.<lb/>
Lee Lewis<lb/>
F-Head does little and has less to<lb/>
do to comply with policy.<lb/>
The F-Head is only under the<lb/>
jurisdiction of the Pub Board,<lb/>
which is non-existent. The Pub<lb/>
Board is soon to be replaced,<lb/>
however, by a Media Board.<lb/>
My problem is still that there<lb/>
are no rules against what I am<lb/>
charging the F-Head with. There<lb/>
seems to be no rules against<lb/>
mis-managing and under-<lb/>
managing over $80,000 of student<lb/>
fees each year, as long as there is<lb/>
no malicious intent.<lb/>
I will not put up with it. Jim<lb/>
Elliott must answer to a student's<lb/>
charges. A  free press must be<lb/>
responsible to something, I only<lb/>
hope that he is responsible to the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
If I had made any sort of<lb/>
superficial charge against SGA I<lb/>
would be followed everywhere I<lb/>
went by five F-Head reporters. As<lb/>
it is I am avoided by them. And I<lb/>
am making serious charges that I<lb/>
intend to follow through with!<lb/>
And so I have decided to<lb/>
challange Mr. Elliott to answer<lb/>
my charges in any public way he<lb/>
can. Whether he wishes to debate<lb/>
me, give me space in our paper,<lb/>
or devise some sort of public<lb/>
hearing is no matter. I only want<lb/>
to better the management of the<lb/>
F-Head for the good of all. I am<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Kent Johnson<lb/>
Secretary to the Of f ioe of<lb/>
International Programs for SGA.<lb/>
Editors note: Johnson was contac-<lb/>
ted for the specifics of his charges<lb/>
but refused to elaborate stating<lb/>
that he wished to confront Senior<lb/>
Editor Jim Elliott in a public<lb/>
forum. It was suggested that<lb/>
Johnson take his charges to the<lb/>
Communications Board when it is<lb/>
seated. Johnson agreed to air his<lb/>
grievances before the board.<lb/>
I<lb/>
��.�� ji- �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0005"/><lb/>
15 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
N. Y. papers consolidate, monopoly feared<lb/>
(LNS)When Rupert Mur-<lb/>
doch's purchase of the New York<lb/>
Post, New York magazine, the<lb/>
Village Voice and New West<lb/>
magazine became front page<lb/>
news in mid-January, the event<lb/>
was "explained" by an "inside<lb/>
look" at socialites and financiers<lb/>
tapping martini glasses with East<lb/>
Coast publishinq powers.<lb/>
Meet Rupert Murdoch, the 45<lb/>
year old Australian newspaper<lb/>
heir, owner of over 80 news-<lb/>
papers and a dozen magazines in<lb/>
Australia, Great Britain and the<lb/>
U.S. and now of three New York<lb/>
City publications with a combined<lb/>
circulation of more than<lb/>
1,037,000. Meet his (losing) op-<lb/>
ponent in the battle for control of<lb/>
New York magazine, the Village<lb/>
Voice, and New West magazine -<lb/>
all subsidiaries of the New York<lb/>
Magazine Company: Clay Felker.<lb/>
And Carter Burden, "heir to<lb/>
one of the city's classier for-<lb/>
tunes the young socialite who,<lb/>
vacationing in Sun Valley, sold<lb/>
his 23.8 percent stock in New<lb/>
Yak Magazine Company to give<lb/>
Murdoch the controlling 51 per-<lb/>
cent. Not to mention Newsweek<lb/>
and Washington Post publisher<lb/>
Kathryn Graham who entered a<lb/>
rival bid for Felker's group of<lb/>
publications. Or Burden's lawyer,<lb/>
Peter Tufo (who by the way is a<lb/>
"steady beau of Lee Radziwill" -<lb/>
Newsweek). Or Ben Sonnenberg,<lb/>
"the elegant art collector and<lb/>
public relations man" who in-<lb/>
troduced Felker "to some of the<lb/>
better things  and better names<lb/>
- in New York life (Newsweek)<lb/>
Newsweek pictured Murdoch<lb/>
and Felker and a now-familiar<lb/>
figure in New York City's fiscal<lb/>
crisis, investment banker Felix<lb/>
Rohatyn, on a sun deck in Long<lb/>
Island's plush Hamptons. The<lb/>
point of it all being how a big<lb/>
baracuda got eaten by a bigger<lb/>
and slyer shark when caught<lb/>
unaware on the waters of high<lb/>
finance.<lb/>
Who rubs shoulders with whom<lb/>
in the whole affair is partially<lb/>
illuminating. But the stay is also<lb/>
the older and less glamourous one<lb/>
of centralization and consolida-<lb/>
tion of the media, and of<lb/>
publishing wakers' respaise to<lb/>
that process  fa instance the<lb/>
Village Voice employees' decision<lb/>
to aganize into a union.<lb/>
The ooup that put three major<lb/>
publication in the city of eight<lb/>
million into one man's hands in<lb/>
the space of six weeks is only a<lb/>
dramatic version of what has been<lb/>
happening gradually over the<lb/>
course of the oantury. In news-<lb/>
L<lb/>
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paper publishing, the consoli-<lb/>
dation of independent dailies into<lb/>
chains (two or more papers,<lb/>
usually in different cities, owned<lb/>
or oontrolled by the same person<lb/>
or group) looks like this:<lb/>
In 1910, a time known for<lb/>
national newspaper giants like<lb/>
Hearst and Scripps, 3 percent of<lb/>
the existing U.S. dailies were<lb/>
chain-owned. By 1968, 47 percent<lb/>
of all daily U.S. papers were<lb/>
chain-owned; by 1974, 54.9 per-<lb/>
cent. And by 1990, if the current<lb/>
trend continues, it's been esti-<lb/>
mated that all dailies in the U.S.<lb/>
will be chain-owned.<lb/>
Publishing chains and broad-<lb/>
cast networks are only one form of<lb/>
media consolidation. In news-<lb/>
paper publishing, one of the<lb/>
largest U.S. mai.jfacturing in-<lb/>
dustries, joint operating agree-<lb/>
ments in more than 20 cities<lb/>
permit separately owned news-<lb/>
papers in the same city to<lb/>
combine operations such as print-<lb/>
ing and ads  and sometimes<lb/>
news and editorial functions.<lb/>
Critics maintain that other com-<lb/>
petitors are squeezed out by the<lb/>
strength of oombined operations.<lb/>
Pooling of operations, they say,<lb/>
gives joint operations added<lb/>
commercial clout, and diminishes<lb/>
their independence.<lb/>
A third source of media<lb/>
consolidation is cross-media<lb/>
ownership, in which two or more<lb/>
outlets in the same city but in<lb/>
different media are owned by the<lb/>
same person or group. By the<lb/>
close of the 1960 s, a single owner<lb/>
oontrolled at least one TV station<lb/>
and one newspaper in 24 of the<lb/>
largest 50 cities.<lb/>
Crosso nershipof newspaper<lb/>
and broadcast stations was ban-<lb/>
ned by the FCC in 1975. But<lb/>
Charles Firestone, a Washington<lb/>
D.C. lawyer who represents citi-<lb/>
zen groups in media monopoly<lb/>
suits, explains that the FCC - "a<lb/>
captive of the industry it regu-<lb/>
lates' - "grandfathered" the<lb/>
rule. That is. it allowed the<lb/>
existing cross-owners to keep<lb/>
their properties except in cities<lb/>
where they maintained a com-<lb/>
plete monopoly. "So they broke<lb/>
up the 16 smallest markets where<lb/>
there's only one newspaper, say,<lb/>
and one television. But in 72<lb/>
medium sized and larger cities,<lb/>
where there's extreme concen-<lb/>
tration and control, they im-<lb/>
munized the existing broad-<lb/>
casters from challengeIt was<lb/>
fully conscious. They knew every<lb/>
cross owner in the oountry<lb/>
The media is further consoli-<lb/>
dated, along with corporate<lb/>
power in general, when com-<lb/>
panies not primarily in the<lb/>
communications business own or<lb/>
are owned by mass-media outlets.<lb/>
Besides its TV network, the CBS<lb/>
conglomerate owns radio and TV<lb/>
stations, a record oompany, a<lb/>
publishing house, Creative Play-<lb/>
things, and Stein way pianos.<lb/>
RCA is able to help control<lb/>
what the public knows and thinks<lb/>
about its operations  which<lb/>
include RCA records, Hertz car<lb/>
rentals, Banquet frozen foods,<lb/>
Coronet carpets and Cushman<lb/>
and Wakefield real estate -<lb/>
through ownership of NBC and a<lb/>
number of radio and TV stations.<lb/>
With mass-oommunications<lb/>
outlets oontrolled by a small class<lb/>
of people with the economic<lb/>
means to own such high invest-<lb/>
ment operations, even different<lb/>
ownership does not assure that<lb/>
newspapers, magazines, radio<lb/>
and TV programming provide a<lb/>
genuinely free flow of ideas. As<lb/>
Ben Bagdikian points out in The<lb/>
Information Machines, "in most<lb/>
cases when a newspaper owner<lb/>
sells his paper, he looks for a<lb/>
buyer who will perpetuate the<lb/>
same political values.<lb/>
"When the Du Pont interests<lb/>
speculated on selling their mono-<lb/>
poly newspapers in Wilmington,<lb/>
Delaware, the leading suggestion<lb/>
was outright sale to an outside<lb/>
newspaper organization whose<lb/>
political and economic views<lb/>
closely parallel those of the<lb/>
present ownership<lb/>
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SPECIAL EVENTS:<lb/>
SATBEACH NIGHT<lb/>
SUNALL DAY BEACH PARTY<lb/>
TUESBEACH NIGHT<lb/>
WED LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
FRIVALENTINES PARTYMAKE OUT CONTEST!<lb/>
SATBEACH NIGHT<lb/>
SUNALL DAY BEACH PARTY<lb/>
TUESBEACH NIGHT<lb/>
WEDLADIES NIGHT<lb/>
FRINEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY!<lb/>
SATBEACH NIGHT<lb/>
SUNAl L DAY BEACH PARTY<lb/>
FIFTH AND COTANCHE STREETS DOWNTOWN<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0006"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
�����������M<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 15 February 1977<lb/>
ECU offers Saturday hobby instruction<lb/>
Persons who wish to learn<lb/>
more about basic communica-<lb/>
tions, gardening (indoors and<lb/>
out), bakery, or furniture re-<lb/>
finishing are invited to enroll in<lb/>
special Saturday classes to be<lb/>
offered by ECU during March.<lb/>
Each class on campus will<lb/>
meet for several hours one or two<lb/>
Saturdays and is open to any<lb/>
interested adult.<lb/>
Course offerings and sche-<lb/>
dules are:<lb/>
"Written Communications"<lb/>
(March5,10a.m. -3:30p.m.) isa<lb/>
practical writing course to im-<lb/>
prove abilities in writing letters,<lb/>
applications, vita sheets,<lb/>
memoranda, reports and other<lb/>
written communications.<lb/>
Horticulture for the Home-<lb/>
owner" (March 5, 9a.m1 p.m.)<lb/>
will oover planting and main-<lb/>
tenance of lawns, trees, shrubs,<lb/>
plants and bulbs.<lb/>
"Breads: Yeast and Quick'<lb/>
(March 5, 9 a.m. - 1 p.m.) will<lb/>
give basic instruction in techni-<lb/>
ques of yeast and quick bread<lb/>
preparation. Each student will<lb/>
make a loaf of each kind erf bread<lb/>
"Vegetable Gardening"<lb/>
(March 5, 9 a.m. - 1 p.m.) is a<lb/>
guide to planting the spring<lb/>
vegetable garden: what to plant,<lb/>
how to plant, soil preparation and<lb/>
site selection, fertilizing, ir-<lb/>
rigation and other gardening<lb/>
skills.<lb/>
"Conference Leadership<lb/>
Skills" (March 12, 10 a.m. - 3<lb/>
p.m.) will focus on techniques<lb/>
needed to get the most out of<lb/>
conferences, oommittee meetings<lb/>
and small group discussions, and<lb/>
will develop personal skills need-<lb/>
ed to be a good discussion leader<lb/>
or participant. An actual video-<lb/>
taped conference is included.<lb/>
"The Art of Furniture Re-<lb/>
finishing" (March12&amp; 19, 9a.m.<lb/>
-1 p.m.) is a two-day program of<lb/>
instruction in wood identification,<lb/>
use of tools, stripping of old<lb/>
finish, surface preparation, and<lb/>
final refinishing. Small pieces of<lb/>
furniture to work with should be<lb/>
brought to class by participants.<lb/>
"Houseplant How-To"<lb/>
(March 12, 9 a.m. - 1 p.m.) will<lb/>
oover selection, care and propa-<lb/>
gation of indoor plants. Specific<lb/>
topics to be discussed are growth<lb/>
requirements,potting media, plant<lb/>
feeding and control of insects and<lb/>
disease.<lb/>
"Baked Desserts" (March 12,<lb/>
9 a.m. - 1 p.m.) will involve<lb/>
demonstration of conventional<lb/>
and angel food cakes, pie aust,<lb/>
cream pie fillings and hard and<lb/>
soft meringues. Each student will<lb/>
bake a convent ionaJ cake and a<lb/>
cream meringue pie.<lb/>
Further information about<lb/>
these .uid other non-credit even-<lb/>
ing and Saturday course offerings<lb/>
is available from the Office of<lb/>
Non-Credit Programs, Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, or telephone<lb/>
757-S1436148.<lb/>
Early registration is advised,<lb/>
as enrollment in each class is<lb/>
limited.<lb/>
Nine ECU foreign students<lb/>
attend International Day<lb/>
A group of nine international<lb/>
students from ECU traveled to<lb/>
Raleigh on Thursday February<lb/>
10th to represent the University<lb/>
at the First Annual International<lb/>
Student Day at the State Capital.<lb/>
The purpose of this one-day affair<lb/>
was to provide an experiential<lb/>
learning opportunity on state<lb/>
government for foreign students<lb/>
in colleges and universities across<lb/>
the state, as well as to provide<lb/>
opportunity for students to meet<lb/>
other foreign students studying in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Approximately 225 students<lb/>
representing 25 technical schools,<lb/>
oommunity and junior oolleges<lb/>
and universities from across the<lb/>
Buy an<lb/>
ArtCarved College Ring<lb/>
Save $50.00 on an<lb/>
ArtCarved Diamond Ring<lb/>
When you buy an ArtCarved col-<lb/>
lege ring, we'll send you $50.00<lb/>
towards the purchase of an Art-<lb/>
Carved engagement ring. This<lb/>
offer is good any time � wear<lb/>
your college ring now and enjoy<lb/>
these important savings when<lb/>
you meet that special person.<lb/>
It's a new way ArtCarved helps<lb/>
you fight the high cost of fall-<lb/>
ing in love.<lb/>
COLLEGE RINGS<lb/>
IKIfflRVED<lb/>
RING DAYS<lb/>
TUESDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY<lb/>
FEBRUARY 15th &amp; 16th in the lobby of<lb/>
Wright Building from 9 AM 'till4 PM<lb/>
ORDER YOUR RING ANY OTHER DAY<lb/>
IN THE STUDENT SUPPLY STORE.<lb/>
state attended. The 225 students<lb/>
were from 52 different countries;<lb/>
African and Middle Eastern<lb/>
countries having the largest dele-<lb/>
gations.<lb/>
Secretary of State Thad Eure,<lb/>
offered the welcoming address to<lb/>
the students on behalf of Gover-<lb/>
nor Hunt. Highlights of the day's<lb/>
activities included a panel discus-<lb/>
sion by Representative  M ickey<lb/>
Michaux, and Senators Charles<lb/>
Vickeryand McNeill Smith. Tours<lb/>
were conducted in the Legislative<lb/>
Building with students having the<lb/>
opportunity of witnessing the<lb/>
House and Senate in session.<lb/>
Time was given to meet with<lb/>
other students from their home<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Representating ECU at this<lb/>
event were Javier Blanco from<lb/>
Costa Rica, Zulaiha Binti, Adul<lb/>
Majid Rahim, and Miss Yasmin<lb/>
Hussain of Malaysia, Mehrnaz<lb/>
Kaveh from Iran, Uhyi Liang Lin<lb/>
from Taiwan, Sukhum Praisaranti<lb/>
from Thailand, Melba Solidum<lb/>
from the Philippines, and<lb/>
Kehinde Tokuta from Nigeria.<lb/>
Joining the ECU delegation<lb/>
were Charn Wutthisakadi from<lb/>
Thailand representating Pitt<lb/>
Technical Institute and Miss<lb/>
Nazneen Abdul Rahim from Ma-<lb/>
laysia, a student at Elmhurst<lb/>
30 schools attend<lb/>
band clinic here<lb/>
Band students from 30 eastern<lb/>
North Carolina high schools parti-<lb/>
cipated in the annual ECU Band<lb/>
Clinic Feb. 11-12.<lb/>
Each young musician was<lb/>
selected by audition to perform in<lb/>
either of two bands: the Sympho-<lb/>
nic Band, conducted by Frank<lb/>
Erickson, noted oomposer and<lb/>
oonductor, and the Concert Band,<lb/>
conducted by Kenneth Ginn,<lb/>
director of the Greene Central<lb/>
High Srjhooi Band of Snow Hill.<lb/>
The ECU Band Clinic was<lb/>
sponsored by the N.C. Music<lb/>
Educators Conference and the<lb/>
ECU School of Music, and was<lb/>
directed by Herbert Carter of<lb/>
ECU and David J. Jones of<lb/>
Jacksonville, chairman of the<lb/>
Eastern N.C. Band Directors.<lb/>
Also featured at the clinic was<lb/>
Allan Dean, trumpet soloist and<lb/>
professor at the Eastman School<lb/>
of Music, Rochester, N.Y. Dean is<lb/>
also a member of the New York<lb/>
Brass Quintet.<lb/>
Among the clinic's scheduled<lb/>
events were a Friday evening<lb/>
concert in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
performed by the ECU Sym-<lb/>
phonic Wind Ensemble conduc-<lb/>
ted by Herbert Carter, and the<lb/>
ECU Jazz Ensemble, conducted<lb/>
by George Broussard.<lb/>
The ECU Wind Ensemble was<lb/>
the inaugural band for N.C. Gov.<lb/>
James Hunt and has recently<lb/>
returned from a tour of schools in<lb/>
Northern Virginia. The Jazz En-<lb/>
semble's performance was high-<lb/>
lighted by trumpet solos perfor-<lb/>
med by Allan Dean.<lb/>
Both high school clinic bands<lb/>
performed in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Saturday evening, before a local<lb/>
audience. The clinic concert fea-<lb/>
tured solo performances by Dean<lb/>
and performances of several<lb/>
Frank Erickson band composi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
ejpjfc<lb/>
Sports World<lb/>
A Family Recreation Facility<lb/>
Featuring the New, Modern<lb/>
Roller Skating<lb/>
Tuesdays-Lady's Night 6:30-11:00<lb/>
All ladiesadmitted for $1.00<lb/>
(includes skate rental)<lb/>
Wednesdays- ECU Night 6:30-11:00<lb/>
Free skate rental with<lb/>
presentation of I.D. card<lb/>
For more information call 756-6000<lb/>
Thursdays � Men's Night<lb/>
6:30- 11:00<lb/>
All men admitted for $1.00<lb/>
(includes skate rental)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0007"/><lb/>
Adult non-credit music<lb/>
courses offered Spring<lb/>
15 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Non-aedit classes for adults<lb/>
in basic guitar, banjo picking,<lb/>
advanced piano and jazz danoe<lb/>
will be offered this spring at ECU.<lb/>
" Basic Guitar" (Wednesdays,<lb/>
March 9-May 18) and "Scruggs-<lb/>
Style Banjo Picking" (Thursdays,<lb/>
March 10-May 5) will be instruc-<lb/>
ted by Michael Thompson, ECU<lb/>
School of Music graduate stu-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Thompson holds a degree in<lb/>
classical guitar performance and<lb/>
formerly studied with Jesus Silva<lb/>
at the N.C. School of the Arts. He<lb/>
was a first prize winner in the<lb/>
1974 Union Grove N.C. guitar<lb/>
competition and is featured banjo<lb/>
player with "Ground Speed a<lb/>
bluegrass band he recently form-<lb/>
ed. '<lb/>
Instruments for each course<lb/>
may be rented at the time of<lb/>
registration. Both courses will<lb/>
meet from 7:30 to 9 p.m.<lb/>
"Advanced Piano" (Tues-<lb/>
days, March 8-May 17) is open to<lb/>
adults who can read notes in both<lb/>
clefs and already play easy<lb/>
pieces. Each student will have a<lb/>
separate keyboard during class<lb/>
hours and will have access to<lb/>
campus pianos for parctice be-<lb/>
tween sevens.<lb/>
Instructor fa the course is Dr.<lb/>
Richard Lucht of the ECU key-<lb/>
board faculty, a specialist in<lb/>
group piano instruction and piano<lb/>
ECU hosts<lb/>
workshop<lb/>
Approximately 70 eastern<lb/>
Nath Carolina teachers of busi-<lb/>
ness education attended a work-<lb/>
shop in shorthand and type-<lb/>
writing at ECU Wednesday.<lb/>
The program featured pre-<lb/>
sentations by two noted authas<lb/>
whose texts are published by<lb/>
GreggMcGraw Hill of Atlanta.<lb/>
They were Dr. Fred E.<lb/>
Winger, autha of a new high<lb/>
school typewriting text and many<lb/>
other textbooks as well as articles<lb/>
in several professional education<lb/>
journals, and Howard L. New-<lb/>
house, leaurer in business edu-<lb/>
cation and business communi-<lb/>
cation and oo-autha of three<lb/>
Gregg Shathand texts.<lb/>
SALARIES<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
determined to some extent on the<lb/>
feedback that the chairman gets<lb/>
from students about their pro-<lb/>
fessas.<lb/>
The state could appropriate a<lb/>
5 percent merit raise, however<lb/>
some professas might get only a<lb/>
3 percent raise while others might<lb/>
get 8 peroent.<lb/>
The only other method fa<lb/>
raising salaries is an across-the-<lb/>
board raise granted by the N.C.<lb/>
Legislature.<lb/>
Supply and demand are also<lb/>
factas in determining salaries,<lb/>
accading to the provost. Ac-<lb/>
countants and medical personnel<lb/>
are not as abundant as English<lb/>
professas so therefae higher<lb/>
salaries must be offered to attract<lb/>
accounting professas and nurs-<lb/>
ing instructas.<lb/>
pedagogy. The piano oourse will<lb/>
meet 730-9P.M.<lb/>
"Jazz Danoe fa Caiditiaiing and<lb/>
Fun" will be taught to two class<lb/>
groups, one meeting Thursday<lb/>
evenings, March 17-May 12, and<lb/>
one on Friday manings, March<lb/>
11-May 6.<lb/>
Persons of both sexes will find<lb/>
the oourse fun and beneficial,<lb/>
accading to instructa Michele<lb/>
Mennett, member of the ECU<lb/>
dance faculty She previously<lb/>
taught and perfamed ballet and<lb/>
jazz danoe in Flaida and New<lb/>
Yak.<lb/>
The jazz danoe course will<lb/>
combine a variety of muscle<lb/>
conditioning exercises done<lb/>
rhythmically to music with em-<lb/>
phasis on the basic techniques of<lb/>
the jazz fam. Dress can consist of<lb/>
any loosely-fitting clothing, a<lb/>
leotards and tights. Participants<lb/>
may wear dance shoes, sneakers<lb/>
a go barefoot.<lb/>
Further information about<lb/>
these and other adult education<lb/>
offerings is available from the<lb/>
Office of Non-Credit Programs,<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education,<lb/>
East Carolina University, Green-<lb/>
ville, N.C. a telephaie 757-6143<lb/>
6148.<lb/>
(ferny<lb/>
y-uueet<lb/>
-rhoppe<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
Pastries,<lb/>
birthday cakes,<lb/>
cookies,<lb/>
and doughnuts.<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY to dorms between<lb/>
6 and 7 wt.a $5.00 minimum order.<lb/>
Save Money<lb/>
You Can Save Up To 50<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
MOVIE<lb/>
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i<lb/>
A-150 GUEST ADMISSION<lb/>
N? 11986<lb/>
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ADMIT ONE<lb/>
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All ABC Southeastern<lb/>
Theatres in the<lb/>
Carolmas, Virginia<lb/>
and Tennessee<lb/>
Augusta A Savannah, Ga<lb/>
Good anytjn-<lb/>
DEC. 31<lb/>
except '<lb/>
PLEASE "ANGE AT BOX OFP.CE oTt.CK<lb/>
Good 7 Days A Week!<lb/>
Matinees &amp; Evenings<lb/>
ABC SOUTHEASTERN THEATRES<lb/>
' Buy Your<lb/>
Discount Ticket:<lb/>
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CENTRAL<lb/>
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Newport News<lb/>
Norfolk<lb/>
Roanoke<lb/>
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ABC Thentwes In Ourz Arteci<lb/>
PITT<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
Thru Thursday<lb/>
"A STAR IS BORN"<lb/>
tomutw<lb/>
Starts Friday<lb/>
Clint Eastwood<lb/>
'THE ENFORCER"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0008"/><lb/>
��������IHBB<lb/>
������������1<lb/>
����!� ( ���  �������� �:� ��-�� � . � �� �� -����-� - �. ��<lb/>
PageS FOUNTAINHEAD 15 February 1977<lb/>
Manuscripts store fascinating history<lb/>
By BOB THONEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In a letter from Dr. George<lb/>
Washington Carver, the noted<lb/>
Black scientist comments, "As I<lb/>
sit here and write the great artist<lb/>
Nature has painted the sky in a<lb/>
way that the feeble hand of man<lb/>
cannot even approach<lb/>
On the shelf close to the<lb/>
Carver letters is correspondence<lb/>
from J. Edgar Hoover during the<lb/>
Red Scare of 1920 in which he<lb/>
tells of arresting communists and<lb/>
transporting "these. . . notorious<lb/>
characters back to the colder<lb/>
climate of Russia where their<lb/>
red' activities may add an<lb/>
element of heat to that somewhat<lb/>
unsettled country<lb/>
Under the direction of a<lb/>
manuscript committee, appointed<lb/>
from within the History Depart-<lb/>
ment, the ECb Manuscript Col-<lb/>
lection houses these and over one<lb/>
half million other items in over<lb/>
300 individual collections.<lb/>
Would you<lb/>
miss this?<lb/>
The wind in your face,<lb/>
The blur of trees,<lb/>
The sudden spray of snow<lb/>
that hangs suspended in<lb/>
the crisp, still air<lb/>
No, this isn't the day<lb/>
to stay home. Not for<lb/>
anything. Not even your<lb/>
period.<lb/>
So trust Tampax tampons.<lb/>
Internal protection that<lb/>
can't chafe or show, or<lb/>
feel bulky and awkward.<lb/>
Tampax tampons�because on<lb/>
a day like this you need<lb/>
protection, not distractions.<lb/>
The internal protection more women trust<lb/>
 If)<lb/>
The papers stretch from 1750<lb/>
to 1976 and touch upon thousands<lb/>
of topics from arctic exploration to<lb/>
Pitt C unty politics, from slave<lb/>
running to soul saving, and from<lb/>
Ku Klux Klan to World Federa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
According to ECU Manuscript<lb/>
Curator, Donald R. Lennon, such<lb/>
contemporary accounts of past<lb/>
events are essential to profes-<lb/>
sional and amate. r historians.<lb/>
"Only through the preserva-<lb/>
tion of historical records will<lb/>
future generations be able to<lb/>
understand and properly appreci-<lb/>
ate the institutions and events of<lb/>
the nineteenth and twentieth<lb/>
centuries said Lennon.<lb/>
"This repository will provide<lb/>
facilities fa the safekeeping of<lb/>
papers and unpublished records<lb/>
which the manuscript committee<lb/>
deems to be of permanent<lb/>
historical significance<lb/>
Often Lennon may be found in<lb/>
an old garage or office gathering<lb/>
papers from the dust of years.<lb/>
"I spend much of my time<lb/>
rummaging through attics, base-<lb/>
ments, and barns, competing<lb/>
with mice, silver fish, spiders,<lb/>
and mildew in an effort to salvage<lb/>
material that will tell of our<lb/>
past said Lennon.<lb/>
"One of our greatest prob-<lb/>
lems is convincing people that the<lb/>
diaries, ledgers, scrapbooks, and<lb/>
personal correspondence of their<lb/>
father or grandfather is of perma-<lb/>
nent historical significance and<lb/>
should be properly preserved for<lb/>
the use of future generations<lb/>
"The ECU Manuscript Col-<lb/>
lection is always anxious to locate<lb/>
and help in the preservation of<lb/>
personal papers said Lennon.<lb/>
The collection at ECU was<lb/>
established for the purpose of<lb/>
providing a central repository<lb/>
where material created by men<lb/>
and women of past generations<lb/>
could be properly safeguarded.<lb/>
"Papers my be placed in the<lb/>
collection as gifts, loans or<lb/>
copies said Lennon.<lb/>
When collections are loaned,<lb/>
the staff supplies a contract<lb/>
guaranteeing to return all items<lb/>
upon request.<lb/>
In the case of copied collec-<lb/>
tions, the university absorbs all<lb/>
copying expenses, said Lennon.<lb/>
By loaning material, the fami-<lb/>
ly is assured of the safety of their<lb/>
historical papers while still main-<lb/>
taining ownership.<lb/>
Lennon said that one of his<lb/>
favorite collections contains the<lb/>
prisoner of war diary of Joe<lb/>
Kinsey who was captured at<lb/>
Charlestown, S.C. and impri-<lb/>
soned on an island in Lake Erie<lb/>
near Sandusky, Ohio.<lb/>
Similar collections tell of<lb/>
hardships of camp life, disillu-<lb/>
sionment with progress of the<lb/>
war, the search for deserters, and<lb/>
the heartbreak and death which<lb/>
surrounds any war.<lb/>
One real treasure, Lennon<lb/>
said, is a letter from General<lb/>
Alfred M. Scales to Governor<lb/>
Zebulon B. Vance, written in<lb/>
1864.<lb/>
On the bottom of the letter is a<lb/>
brief note in Vance's handwriting<lb/>
instructing an aid to send Scales<lb/>
the material.<lb/>
Lennon encourages private<lb/>
citizens, churches, historical so-<lb/>
cieties, fraternal organizations<lb/>
and other interested groups to<lb/>
join in a major effort to safeguard<lb/>
the records of their historic<lb/>
Bargain Hours<lb/>
2-5 8-11<lb/>
Every<lb/>
Mon. Tues. Wed<lb/>
Quarter Fry Chicken<lb/>
French � Fries &amp; Salad<lb/>
Grecian Bread<lb/>
Tea or Coffee<lb/>
$1.99 including tax<lb/>
MADI ONir BY TAMPAX INCORPORATE! PAlMtR MASS<lb/>
Spaghetti<lb/>
Salad<lb/>
Grecian Bread<lb/>
Tea or Coffee<lb/>
$1.99 including tax<lb/>
activities. public Monday and Friday from<lb/>
The Collection is located in eight until five, and other times<lb/>
Joyner Library and is open to the by appointment.<lb/>
DON LENNON examines a document from ECU Manuscript<lb/>
Collection, currently totaling over 400,000 items. FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD file photo<lb/>
L �  �500 W.renville Blvd.<lb/>
FOUND WHILE CRA WLING through the loft of a pony stable in<lb/>
Washington, N.C Don Lennon right and student aide Ken<lb/>
Dilda sort through ledger books and correspondence of<lb/>
Confederate Major General Bryan Grimes.<lb/>
� MnMHHHnHnHMMMHHMI<lb/>
'� lb. Royal Rib Eye 5twk Dinner<lb/>
Includes a hot baked potato, crisp garden<lb/>
fresh salad, and fresh baked hot roll.<lb/>
Regular $2.89<lb/>
50COff<lb/>
SALAD BAR<lb/>
49P<lb/>
With Dinner!<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$2.39<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
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JMIOtr VALID ONLY ON<lb/>
MUUot MON.4THUR<lb/>
CAPTAIN JACK'S<lb/>
FISH DINNER<lb/>
3 Pieces of Flounder, cocktail sauce or tarter sauce, lemon<lb/>
wedge, baked potato, cole slaw, and fresh baked roll.<lb/>
Regular $2.39<lb/>
50COff<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
SALAD BAR<lb/>
With Dinner! STEAK<lb/>
$1.89<lb/>
with con<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
VALID ONLY ON<lb/>
HUUofc MON 4THUR<lb/>
L����OJW.ienyiljeJBIvd. �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0009"/><lb/>
IBRHBHHH<lb/>
Art chairman since 1956<lb/>
i<lb/>
4<lb/>
Gray sees art school growth<lb/>
By DENNIS LEONARD<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
For 21 years, the ECU School<lb/>
of Art has been chaired by Dr.<lb/>
Wellington B. Gray, a distin-<lb/>
guished looking man with confi-<lb/>
dence.<lb/>
Dean Gray, as many art<lb/>
students prefer to call him, came<lb/>
to ECU in 1956 when it was a<lb/>
small college with only 3,500<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"I came to East Carolina as<lb/>
director of the art department and<lb/>
wasthe first full-time professor<lb/>
said Gray. "There were only four<lb/>
faculty members and 27 art<lb/>
majors at the time<lb/>
According to Gray, he did not<lb/>
have a hard time maintaining the<lb/>
art department in those early<lb/>
days.<lb/>
"I didn't have a tough time<lb/>
when we first began even though<lb/>
we didn't have much money. In<lb/>
fact, no one had much money<lb/>
then<lb/>
According to Gray, the growth<lb/>
of the art department began when<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins became the<lb/>
chancel la of ECU.<lb/>
"Dr. Jenkins told me he<lb/>
wanted to have programs that we<lb/>
could be outstanding in, in a<lb/>
relatively short time<lb/>
According to Gray, Jenkins<lb/>
then named art, music, drama,<lb/>
and athletics as the four programs<lb/>
he wanted strengthened.<lb/>
The native New Yorker beam-<lb/>
ed with pride as he remembered<lb/>
those rapid days of growth in the<lb/>
1960's.<lb/>
"There was no difficulty in<lb/>
getting a faculty member back<lb/>
then because everyone had the<lb/>
idea that the art school was going<lb/>
to grow.<lb/>
"We grew in spite of eastern<lb/>
N.C. There are no big research<lb/>
libraries or museums in the area,<lb/>
so we had to manufacture the<lb/>
need fa art<lb/>
Aocading to Gray, this year's<lb/>
enrollment in the School of Art<lb/>
includes students from 88 of 100<lb/>
counties in N.C, 28 states, and<lb/>
seven faeign countries.<lb/>
Aside from being dean of the<lb/>
School of Art, Gray was a judge<lb/>
for three years in the Miss<lb/>
America Pageant.<lb/>
"One of my fellow officers in<lb/>
World War II, who lives in<lb/>
Atlantic City, N.J called me up<lb/>
to be a judge. I must have<lb/>
equated myself in good ader,<lb/>
because officials called me two<lb/>
more times to judge after that<lb/>
"Asa result of being a judge,<lb/>
I have made over 250 speeches<lb/>
about the pageant<lb/>
Accading to Gray, the pa-<lb/>
geant is not a flesh parade, but<lb/>
rather an educational enterprise.<lb/>
 The pageant gives away over<lb/>
$1 million a year in scholarships.<lb/>
It also has over 70,000 ladies<lb/>
involved throughout the country<lb/>
each year<lb/>
Gray remembers one year at<lb/>
the pageant when Art Fleming,<lb/>
television star of "Jeopardy<lb/>
became friends with his 16<lb/>
year-old son.<lb/>
"Art took my son under his<lb/>
wings and decided he was going<lb/>
to teach him to be a bartender<lb/>
Gray said that the pageant<lb/>
was a fantastic learning exper-<lb/>
ience fa both himself and his<lb/>
family.<lb/>
Dean Gray is now devoting his<lb/>
attention to the recently ocm-<lb/>
pleteo Leo W. Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
"There are so many things we<lb/>
can do with the new art school<lb/>
boasted Gray Fa the first time,<lb/>
we have an honest to God art<lb/>
gallery<lb/>
Aocading to Gray, the School<lb/>
of Art should become a regional<lb/>
center fa art exhibition.<lb/>
"Since we are all together,<lb/>
there is a spirit of cooperation and<lb/>
better faculty maale<lb/>
Gray pointed to the print-<lb/>
making department as an exam-<lb/>
ple.<lb/>
"In Rawl, printmaking had<lb/>
only two very crowded studios.<lb/>
Now printmaking has six special-<lb/>
ized studios<lb/>
Art students are as fond of<lb/>
Dean Gray as he is of the new<lb/>
building.<lb/>
"When I first came to school<lb/>
here, Dean Gray sat down with<lb/>
me fa three hours and really<lb/>
turned me on to art said a<lb/>
graduate student in communica-<lb/>
tions art.<lb/>
"I talk to as many of the new<lb/>
students as I possibly can said<lb/>
Gray. "I am sure that 99 per cent<lb/>
of the time I can convince new<lb/>
students to come here because of<lb/>
the faculty, facilities, and pro-<lb/>
gram<lb/>
When the new Fine Arts<lb/>
Center was completed, Dr. Jen-<lb/>
kins and U.S. Sen. Robert Mor-<lb/>
gan asked that the new gallery be<lb/>
named after Gray. "I oouldn't<lb/>
have been prouder of anything. It<lb/>
was the high point of my life<lb/>
reflected Gray.<lb/>
"This has been a third child<lb/>
that I have watched grow and<lb/>
prosper. I hope to be spending<lb/>
the rest of my time on the<lb/>
improvement of the School of Art<lb/>
befae my retirement oonfided<lb/>
Gray.<lb/>
As the confident dean indi-<lb/>
cates, the School of Art's future<lb/>
should be bright. This can be<lb/>
linked to Gray's influence in the<lb/>
school itself.<lb/>
Considered one of nation's finest<lb/>
Symphony relaxes for show<lb/>
BySUSYCHESTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Detroit Symphony Or-<lb/>
chestra, one of the maja aches-<lb/>
tras in the country, perfamed at<lb/>
Wright Auditaium last Tuesday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
The achestra opened with<lb/>
Mussorgsky's "Night on Bald<lb/>
Mountain a darkly spirited<lb/>
wak depicting the sacrifice of the<lb/>
Black Goat on a windswept<lb/>
mountaintop. Inspired by opium-<lb/>
induced visions, the eerie music<lb/>
reaeates the terra of the faces<lb/>
of evil as they celebrate the Black<lb/>
Mass on the Witches' Sabbath.<lb/>
Through dramatic repetition of<lb/>
occult impressions, "Night on<lb/>
Bald Mountain" builds into a<lb/>
satanistic frenzy that dies only as<lb/>
churchbells chime in the maning<lb/>
and daybreak disperses the<lb/>
spirits of darkness.<lb/>
Aldo Ceccato led tha DSO in a<lb/>
very clear perfamance of the<lb/>
wak last Tuesday night. But the<lb/>
careful, precise patrayal of the<lb/>
Satanic revels was too tame fa<lb/>
the wild terra Mussagsky inten-<lb/>
ded.<lb/>
Mussagsky's wak depends<lb/>
a the fascination that people feel<lb/>
fa evil and the unknown and<lb/>
unless the perfamanoe aeates a<lb/>
mood of utter submission to the<lb/>
faces of darkness the music loses<lb/>
its strength and excitement. The<lb/>
DSO performance lacked that<lb/>
necessary element of terra, and<lb/>
consequently its fascination.<lb/>
Even the moments of peaceful<lb/>
beauty at daybreak were marred<lb/>
by the exposed intonation prob-<lb/>
lems in the upper woodwinds.<lb/>
The pretty and delicate texture<lb/>
suited the mood of gentle respite<lb/>
offered by maning's light as the<lb/>
music ended. While the delicate<lb/>
handling was appropriate at the<lb/>
end, a less delicate interpretation<lb/>
would have improved the whole<lb/>
perfarp-VTce.<lb/>
Bogos Matchikian was the<lb/>
soloist fa the Bartok Concerto<lb/>
No. 2 fa violin and achestra. The<lb/>
Bartok, written in 1938, is marked<lb/>
by exuberant folk tunes, powerful<lb/>
rhythms, and great depth of<lb/>
expression.<lb/>
Matchikian was impressive in<lb/>
meeting the technical demands of<lb/>
the concerto. In realizing the<lb/>
concerto's expressive potential,<lb/>
Matchikian aeated an intensity<lb/>
that gave life to his secure<lb/>
technique.<lb/>
Tchaikovsky's popular 6th<lb/>
Symphony closed the perfor-<lb/>
mance. Tchaikovsky poured all of<lb/>
his tortured self-pity into his 6th,<lb/>
a Pathetique, Symphoiy.<lb/>
The DSO had some fine<lb/>
moments in their perfamance:<lb/>
some beautiful, lyric passages,<lb/>
especially when the clarinet had<lb/>
the theme, a second movement of<lb/>
charm and grace, a brisk march in<lb/>
the third movement, and a<lb/>
haunting last note in the string<lb/>
basses that hung in the air fa<lb/>
several breathless seconds befae<lb/>
being broken by applause.<lb/>
Ceccato's conducting was an<lb/>
art fam, full of beautiful, grace-<lb/>
ful gestures that sculpted the<lb/>
music in the air. But while his<lb/>
gestures were fun to watch, I<lb/>
suspect the achestra would have<lb/>
done as well without him. His<lb/>
conducting seemed to be an<lb/>
accompaniment to their playing, a<lb/>
dramatic and pictaiaJ realization<lb/>
of the achestra's music, almost<lb/>
as if he were responding to their<lb/>
ideas instead of they to his.<lb/>
The perfamance was ham-<lb/>
pered by the pea aooustics of<lb/>
Wright Auditaium. But even<lb/>
more it was hampered by a lack of<lb/>
intensity. The whole perfamance<lb/>
would have been improved if the<lb/>
conducta had been less graceful<lb/>
and the achestra less relaxed.<lb/>
15 February 1977<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
Marquee<lb/>
by DAVID R BOSNICK<lb/>
'Sundown' - dreadful<lb/>
The three wast movies this reviewer has ever seen were:<lb/>
"Chubasoo" which starred Michael Parks, in which a young teenage<lb/>
boy finds fatune, fame, and his unrequited(and drowning) love, while<lb/>
waking oi a Greek tunaboat. Bunching up behind, with a true sense of<lb/>
the absurd, is " Blackula which concerns the aigins of the first black<lb/>
vampire to terraize a ghetto area and eventually succumb upon<lb/>
contracting sickle-cell anemia in a badello. The third aazed cinematic<lb/>
adventure into remission of petty cash, is a tie between several films,<lb/>
ranging from "The Cars that Eat People which isself-explanatay, to<lb/>
Soachy in which a geriatric Connie Stevens threatens to aalize the<lb/>
underwald of a midwestern city.<lb/>
This reviewer now notes the arrival of another film that is destined<lb/>
fa T.V. within the next six maiths, "The Town that Dreaded<lb/>
Sundown It has a wathlessness intrinsic to any film that refuses to<lb/>
do research when documenting true accounts, to hire talented actas<lb/>
fa roles whose dialogue oould curdle milk, a to intelligently<lb/>
exaggerate certain aspects of the series of events fa dramatic impact.<lb/>
Based upon the mass and unsolved murders in Texarkana in 1946,<lb/>
the film opens with the narrata telling the audience that the people of<lb/>
the town are still terrified of this culprit who, from all evidence, must<lb/>
be at least 75. (Lock up your daughtas).<lb/>
The audience is treated to a series of attacks which make little<lb/>
sense, have no dramatic ascension and culminate with the assailant<lb/>
stabbing a girl with a pinioned trombone, chewing various pations of<lb/>
another's anatomy, a chasing still another through a canfield with a<lb/>
pick.<lb/>
The town, finding all of this violence poa fa tourism, hires Captain<lb/>
Maales(Ben Johnson), who is "the toughest and most famous Texas<lb/>
ranger alive He arrives in a starched white suit, pearl-handled<lb/>
six-shooters and chewing a cigar as old as his stereotype. Raying the<lb/>
tough enfacer, he jostles reporters aside while donating a dollar to a<lb/>
blind man'scup, all of which infamsusof what a swell guy he ison the<lb/>
inside. (Thanks) Partnered with Maales is the earnest young deputy<lb/>
(Andrew Prine) who has lines the likes of: "it will take a miracle to<lb/>
catch this pervert now whereupon they find the automobile used in<lb/>
the aimes, so Maales says "This might be our mirade Lad love a<lb/>
duck.<lb/>
To synopsize a dull finale, the two lawmen notice a man walking<lb/>
near a sandpit with a hooded mask, (the man has opted to wear his<lb/>
pervert garment in the heat and light of day), and they blow an<lb/>
inconclusive hole in him. The actual conclusion of the movie was<lb/>
written by an economic maja at Geagia Southern, and has all the<lb/>
drama and excitement that degree entails. This reviewer would simply<lb/>
state it, but no one believe him.<lb/>
This movie has no redeeming features and a small child kicked over<lb/>
my soft drink. I would sell my mother to the Arabs befae I gave this<lb/>
disaster a star. This film is being shown at the Park Theatre through<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
A LDO CECCA TO and his Detroit Symphony played at ECU last<lb/>
�.��-Jir TlT TJfnjHflfffiW<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0010"/><lb/>
BS9RI<lb/>
mmammm<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 15 February 1977<lb/>
Hall and Oatesin retrospect<lb/>
It's the second half of the<lb/>
Seventies and all the changes are<lb/>
over; the war is over, flower<lb/>
power, hippies, heavy metal,<lb/>
unisex, and psychedelics have all<lb/>
gone by the boards. But some-<lb/>
thing remarkable has happened;<lb/>
from all the passion and excite-<lb/>
ment of rock and roll; from the<lb/>
primitive three-chord clamor;<lb/>
from all the sources - gospel,<lb/>
folk, R&amp;B and everything else,<lb/>
there's come a new sense of<lb/>
things. It's an end product; the<lb/>
finely cut and highly polished<lb/>
diamond that's been trying to<lb/>
emerge ever since the fifties. This<lb/>
diamond is hard and flashing yet<lb/>
soft as a gift of love; it's Daryl<lb/>
Hall and John Oates and their<lb/>
music; the crystalization of rook<lb/>
and roll on their new album on<lb/>
RCA "Bigger Than Both of Us<lb/>
First of all, this is their year.<lb/>
The single "Sara Smile from<lb/>
their first RCA album Darvl Hall<lb/>
&amp; John Oates" has been certified<lb/>
gold. "She's Gone" from their<lb/>
second LP on Atlantic Records,<lb/>
has been high on the charts with<lb/>
the album "Abandoned Lunch-<lb/>
eonette going gold. "Bigger<lb/>
Than Both of Us with massive<lb/>
pre-release orders, will almost<lb/>
certainly be certified gold within<lb/>
the near future.<lb/>
In addition they are the<lb/>
recipientsof two NATRA Awards,<lb/>
one for "Sara Smile" as Best<lb/>
Song of the Year and the other<lb/>
naming them Best Duo of the<lb/>
Year. Daryl and John were also<lb/>
recently honored by the Rock<lb/>
Awards show, naming them Best<lb/>
New Group. In winning the<lb/>
award, they beat out such acts as<lb/>
Aerosmith, Bruce Springsteen,<lb/>
Bob Seger and Thin Lizzy.<lb/>
We're talking about some-<lb/>
thing very special here! It's taken<lb/>
awhile for Daryl and John to truly<lb/>
oome into their own, but It's<lb/>
SPEED READING COURSE<lb/>
TOBETAUGHTINKINSTON<lb/>
The Southern Reading Lab is offering their famous speed<lb/>
reading course to a limited number of qualified people here in<lb/>
the K inston area. The average person who completes this course<lb/>
can read 10 times faster, and with substantially improved<lb/>
comprehension and better concentration.<lb/>
This famous course has taught many thousands of people to read<lb/>
over 1000 words per minute with the ability to understand and<lb/>
retain what they have read much more effectively. Average<lb/>
graduates can read most novels in less than one hour.<lb/>
For complete details about this famous speed reading course be<lb/>
sure to attend one of the free one hour orientation lectures that<lb/>
have been scheduled. These lectures are open to the public,<lb/>
above age 13 (persons under 18 should be accompanied by a<lb/>
parent, if possible,) and the course will be explained in complete<lb/>
detail, including class schedules, instruction procedures and a<lb/>
tuition that is much less than similar courses.<lb/>
These meetings will be held at:<lb/>
Executive Conference Room of King's Restaurant, 409 E. New<lb/>
Bern Rd.<lb/>
Tuesday Feb. 15 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday Feb. 16 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday Feb. 17 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
Friday Feb. 18 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
andTWOFINALMEETINGSonSat. Feb. 19at1:30p.m. &amp; 330<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Classes are limited and class places will be filled on first<lb/>
come-first serve basis only. Be sure to attend the earliest<lb/>
meeting possible to insure a class place. Group rates are<lb/>
available upon request.<lb/>
unquestionably been worth the<lb/>
wait. According to John Oates,<lb/>
"This is a collaboration and it<lb/>
took time to reach a balance.<lb/>
"But now and Daryl Hall<lb/>
interjects now, we' re burning on<lb/>
all cylinders. It's a balance; it's<lb/>
drawing an essence out of your<lb/>
roots. This is head music and<lb/>
heart music. And it's a whole<lb/>
physical thing, too. I get into rock<lb/>
music to pick up girls but it's<lb/>
gone way beyond that now. They<lb/>
can look if they want to, but I<lb/>
want them to listen<lb/>
Daryl, 27, grew up, in Potts-<lb/>
town, Pa. about 40 miles west of<lb/>
Philadelphia. "It'ssort of subur-<lb/>
ban now he says, "but back<lb/>
then it was really country. I spent<lb/>
a great deal of time alone. I had a<lb/>
lot of time to develop my<lb/>
fantasies. My parents were<lb/>
classical musicians and they gave<lb/>
me piano and voice lessons. But<lb/>
after the first time I heard rock<lb/>
and roll, it was all over<lb/>
The first rock record he<lb/>
bought was Ike and Tina Turner's<lb/>
"(I Think) 'It's Gonna Work Out<lb/>
Fine' ' and, sure enough, rock<lb/>
and roll, the devil's music, stole<lb/>
another soul. "I was running<lb/>
away to Philadelphia as soon as I<lb/>
oould Before you knew it the<lb/>
young, very blond suburban kid<lb/>
was hanging out on street corners<lb/>
singing with local "under the<lb/>
street lamp" black a capella<lb/>
groups. All the while, though, he<lb/>
kept on with his classical training.<lb/>
"It got to a point where I was<lb/>
singing with the Philadelphia<lb/>
Orchestra in the afternoon and<lb/>
then would sing back up for<lb/>
Smokey Robinson at the Uptown<lb/>
Theater later that night Some-<lb/>
where at home Daryl hasa picture<lb/>
of himself, at 17, with the<lb/>
Temptations. "I learned more<lb/>
from David Ruffin and Eddie<lb/>
Kendricks than from anyone<lb/>
else<lb/>
At 18, Daryl started playing<lb/>
with local Jersey Shore bands and<lb/>
made his first record with<lb/>
"Kenny Gamble and the<lb/>
Romeos Mr. Gamble, of<lb/>
course, went on to bigger things;<lb/>
he, Thorn Bell and Leon Huff are<lb/>
the prime forces behind the<lb/>
"Philly" sound. Daryl was in on<lb/>
the scene from the beginning,<lb/>
working at Sigma Sound as a<lb/>
session musician on recordings by<lb/>
The Stylistics, The Delphonics<lb/>
and others. Later he and producer<lb/>
Tom Sellers and singersong-<lb/>
writer Tim Moore started a<lb/>
Beatle-ish rock band called<lb/>
Gulliver which eventually record-<lb/>
ed an album for Elektra.<lb/>
Meanwhile, though, in 1967<lb/>
he had met John Oates. Their<lb/>
first efforts together were a<lb/>
disaster: according to John "it<lb/>
just sounded ridiculous. The song<lb/>
was bad and our voices sounded<lb/>
terrible together They were<lb/>
coming at things from two<lb/>
different directions.<lb/>
John, who's 26, was actually<lb/>
encouraged by his parents to<lb/>
become a rock and roller. His<lb/>
mother even took him to a "Bill<lb/>
Haley and The Comets" ooncert.<lb/>
He was born in New York City<lb/>
and moved to Philadelphia at age<lb/>
four. At age 8, he started playing<lb/>
guitar and imitating Elvis Presley<lb/>
in local schoolyards.<lb/>
"When you get to junior high<lb/>
you finally need money. To take<lb/>
out girls, you need money. I never<lb/>
worked. I always knew it was<lb/>
music. I'd watch bands with my<lb/>
mouth open, chills running down<lb/>
my spine. I'd go to the Steel Pier<lb/>
in Atlantic City, N.J. to see Sam<lb/>
and Dave or U.S. Bonds and I'd<lb/>
go crazy. I always knew music<lb/>
was the way, the answer<lb/>
And so John was transfixed by<lb/>
rock and roll. "I was a hoodlum,<lb/>
man. I changed my crew cut to a<lb/>
pompadour. Man, we'd walk into<lb/>
a dance and it was war-a music<lb/>
war. The guys would be wearing<lb/>
black trench coats, tab collars,<lb/>
pointy shoes. The girls would<lb/>
have teased hair, with little pieces<lb/>
of scotch tape holding down the<lb/>
curls. There'd be people in a<lb/>
circle doing splits, dancing,<lb/>
grinding, pushing the girls into<lb/>
the ooat racks. There were no<lb/>
bands, only records and this was<lb/>
every Saturday night.<lb/>
"This was the golden age. It<lb/>
still happens in small towns, in<lb/>
finished basements And Daryl<lb/>
adds, "The first time I made it<lb/>
with a girl it was in her parents<lb/>
finished basement. We got car-<lb/>
ried away and broke one of her<lb/>
father's bowling trophies<lb/>
Surprisingly though, John<lb/>
Oates, the little dark-haired<lb/>
Mediterranean-looking punk,<lb/>
later got into folk music. He even<lb/>
went on to oollege, studying<lb/>
journalism and picking folk<lb/>
See HALL, pg. 11)<lb/>
Feb.17<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Feb.22<lb/>
THURSDAYS<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
Cornelius Brothersand<lb/>
Sister Rose<lb/>
National Recording Artists<lb/>
End of Classes Celebration<lb/>
Bill Deal and the Rondells<lb/>
Jolly Roger &amp; Thursdays (R &amp; N Inc.) Ph. 752-4668<lb/>
If You Like<lb/>
men MUSIC<lb/>
You'll Love<lb/>
PLAYING YOUR FAVORITE<lb/>
BEACH MUSIC<lb/>
EVERY<lb/>
TUESDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT<lb/>
AND<lb/>
ALL DAY SUNDAY<lb/>
FIFTH A COTANCHE STREETS DOWNTOWN<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0011"/><lb/>
IIHBBBRmVMHBHBiiBSMi<lb/>
15<lb/>
February 1g77 FOUNT AJNHEAD Ptgt 11<lb/>
"Pelleasand Melisande"at<lb/>
Studio Theatre this week<lb/>
PAIGE WEAVER and Terry Pickard in a scene from "Pelleas<lb/>
and Melisande" Photo by ECU News Bureau)<lb/>
PELLEAS AND MELI-<lb/>
SANDE, a mysterious fantasy<lb/>
love stay, opened at the ECU<lb/>
Playhouse in the intimate Studio<lb/>
Theatre February 11, for seven<lb/>
performances, Feb. 11-12; 14-18.<lb/>
The play, by classic writer<lb/>
Maurice Maeterlinck, presents<lb/>
the sensitive relationship be-<lb/>
tween an innocent girl, her<lb/>
domineering husband, and his<lb/>
younger brother.<lb/>
The plot poses the question:<lb/>
should a naive girl, tricked into an<lb/>
unhappy marriage, remain faith-<lb/>
ful if she finds her true love?<lb/>
Donald Biehn, the director of<lb/>
past Playhouse productions,<lb/>
DRACULA and INDIANS, and<lb/>
Departmental technical staff<lb/>
weave together a truly unique set<lb/>
design and elaborate lighting<lb/>
effects in PELLEAS AND<lb/>
MELISANDE to achieve an<lb/>
atmosphere of both mystery and<lb/>
bewilderment. The production<lb/>
features festival-style seating.<lb/>
Paige Weaver, in his first<lb/>
major role with the Playhouse,<lb/>
portrays the naivety and the little<lb/>
girl characteristics which the role<lb/>
of Melisande requires.<lb/>
Terry Pickard, known to Play-<lb/>
house-goers for his performance<lb/>
asthe "wild man" in DRACULA,<lb/>
tackles a new role as the quiet and<lb/>
honest Pelleas.<lb/>
Tickets fa PELLEAS AND<lb/>
MELISANDE may be obtained at<lb/>
the MoGinnis Auditaium box<lb/>
office beginning February 4.<lb/>
1977. Box offioe hours are 10-4<lb/>
weekdays, a reservation may tx<lb/>
made by calling 757-6390.<lb/>
Tickets are $2.50 general<lb/>
admission and free to ECU<lb/>
students with I.D. and Activity<lb/>
Cards.<lb/>
HALL<lb/>
Continued from pg. 10<lb/>
guitar. After meeting Daryl he<lb/>
played occasionally with the<lb/>
soon-to-disband "Gulliver<lb/>
In 1969, the two decided to<lb/>
work seriously together. Pria to<lb/>
this they had only written songs<lb/>
together. Now they began to play<lb/>
around Philadelphia, establishing<lb/>
a substantial local following. In<lb/>
1972, they signed with Atlantic<lb/>
Reoads, and with Arif Mardin<lb/>
producing, cut and released<lb/>
"Whole Oates" in October. It<lb/>
was a oompredium of their best<lb/>
material to date and was a simple,<lb/>
straightfaward album. "Just raw<lb/>
material says Daryl now.<lb/>
1973, however, brought the<lb/>
classic "Abandoned Luncheon-<lb/>
ette The album was a step<lb/>
faward, they had added a rhythm<lb/>
section oistage, and introduced<lb/>
electronic new sounds from mel-<lb/>
lotrons, synthesizers and such.<lb/>
Arif Mardin once again produced<lb/>
with the assistance of Chris Bond,<lb/>
a talented Philadelphia friend of<lb/>
the duo. "What we tried to do<lb/>
then was to fuse progressive<lb/>
music with soul music says Mr.<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
"War Babies their next<lb/>
effat, came in 1974 and was quite<lb/>
a departure fron the mellow<lb/>
soulfulness of "Abandoned<lb/>
Luncheonette It was extreme,<lb/>
progressive rock with Todd Rund-<lb/>
gren producing. Says Daryl, "It<lb/>
was cold, metallic, nihilistic. It<lb/>
was all our conflicts coming out. It<lb/>
was very naked music. We had<lb/>
uprooted ourselves, come to New<lb/>
York and picked up on all the<lb/>
madness around us<lb/>
The upshot of the whole thing<lb/>
was a complete reassessment for<lb/>
the two. They changed record<lb/>
companies, moving to RCA and<lb/>
began to change their focus and<lb/>
their sound.<lb/>
With "War Babies" they had<lb/>
gone to their youthful extremes,<lb/>
 Daryl Hal I and John Oates the<lb/>
"Slver Album" was a reconcili-<lb/>
ation, peace upon the waters.<lb/>
Featuring the beautiful lyricism<lb/>
of "Sara Smile" the album<lb/>
brought them a larger and more<lb/>
devoted following.<lb/>
Now, "Bigger Than Both of<lb/>
Us" continues their evolution.<lb/>
They're riding high; strong,<lb/>
successful and yet still as pas-<lb/>
sionate. They are extending<lb/>
themselves and everybody else<lb/>
once again.<lb/>
John Oates says it best:<lb/>
"Everyone is drawing from the<lb/>
same wells today. It'sail out there<lb/>
to choose from-the blues, the<lb/>
Beatles, the Everly Brothers,<lb/>
Stockhausen. Anyone can use old<lb/>
styles but fusing them with<lb/>
ividual perceptions is tough.<lb/>
V at comes out is a synthesis<lb/>
"You see, we're not a group.<lb/>
We're a duo; coming from<lb/>
different places. In a group the<lb/>
focus is diffused. What results is<lb/>
often just a muddy consensus.<lb/>
We're tighter and more center-<lb/>
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They have identical Green-<lb/>
wich Village apartments, see each<lb/>
other every day and work to-<lb/>
gether constantly. Daryl smokes<lb/>
thick cigars and is a keen student<lb/>
of the metaphysical and the<lb/>
occult. John races sports cars and<lb/>
reads a lot. There are similarities<lb/>
and differences, but out of all of it<lb/>
a whole, a sound has been<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057112_0012"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
�H<lb/>
�Mm<lb/>
fe : .vx3<lb/>
IBBH<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 12<lb/>
15 February 1977<lb/>
EC Grapplers do wn<lb/>
Old Dominion, 37-4<lb/>
ByANNEHOGGE<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU'S wrestling team got<lb/>
back on the road to victory by<lb/>
traveling to Ola Dominion Satur-<lb/>
day night. The Pirates walloped<lb/>
the Monarchs by a score of 37-4.<lb/>
The Pirates won their first<lb/>
match by forfeit. John Koenigs,<lb/>
at 118, was credited with the win.<lb/>
At 126. the Monarchs won<lb/>
eir only match of the evening.<lb/>
Kretz defeated Charlie<lb/>
McGnmsey by a score of 16-5.<lb/>
Junior standout Paul Osman<lb/>
nt up against James Davenport<lb/>
m the 134 class. He defeated<lb/>
Davenport 11-7 Osman now has a<lb/>
19-match unbeaten streak.<lb/>
Pirate Tim Gaghan soundly<lb/>
beat Eric Webb by a score of 5-0.<lb/>
Joe Patykula was defeated by<lb/>
Pirate Frank Schaede in the 150<lb/>
weight class. Patykula was blank-<lb/>
ed. 8-0.<lb/>
In the 158 class. Pirate Steve<lb/>
Goode, coming off a shoulder<lb/>
injury he acquired in last week's<lb/>
match against State, defeated<lb/>
Tim Davidson. Goode beat David-<lb/>
son 10-7 in one of the closer<lb/>
matches of the evening.<lb/>
Another Pirate standout. Phil<lb/>
Mueller, came out victorious.<lb/>
Mueller won the 167 weight class<lb/>
by default, and now has a record<lb/>
of 23-1.<lb/>
Freshman Jay Dever won in<lb/>
the 177 class, by whipping Bill<lb/>
aux 9-1.<lb/>
John Williams defeated Dave<lb/>
Cappetta in the 190 division by a<lb/>
score of 10-2.<lb/>
In the heavyweight division.<lb/>
Pirate D.T. Joyner beat Randy<lb/>
Payne 11 I<lb/>
The Pirate grapplers are now<lb/>
7-3 for the year.<lb/>
Their next match is Saturday<lb/>
t against Richmond. It will be<lb/>
held m Mmges at 8O0.<lb/>
FRESHMAN HERB GRA Y. who is mastering the stuff. led the<lb/>
Pirates against W &amp; M with 20 points.<lb/>
Pirates drop two, will<lb/>
play in SC tournament<lb/>
THE WRESTLING TEAM'S win gave them a 7-3 overall record.<lb/>
They host Richmond Saturday nite at 8 00.<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina assured itself of<lb/>
oad game in the first round of<lb/>
the Southern nee basl<lb/>
ball tournament ater this month<lb/>
by dropping two key conference<lb/>
games in the past few days. The<lb/>
Pirates were in the lead in both<lb/>
games until the final minutes only<lb/>
to let the games and home court<lb/>
advantage for the tourney slip<lb/>
away in the waning moments.<lb/>
Thursday night. William and<lb/>
Mary captured its second game of<lb/>
the year over the Pirates with a<lb/>
70-66 triumph while Appalachian<lb/>
State avenged one of its three<lb/>
league losses by taking ECU<lb/>
66-63 Saturday night in Boone.<lb/>
The William and Mary game<lb/>
was close from start to finish.<lb/>
Neither team was able to mount<lb/>
more than a seven-point lead at<lb/>
any time. During the first half the<lb/>
score changed hands 271 i mes and<lb/>
was tied on nine occasions. The<lb/>
Pirates went into the locker room<lb/>
at the half with a 36-35 lead,<lb/>
much to the delight of the 2,000<lb/>
fans in Mmges Coliseum.<lb/>
At the start of the second half,<lb/>
the Pirates extended its lead to<lb/>
five and was ahead for about six<lb/>
minutes, a lead that set the<lb/>
longevity record for this close<lb/>
contest. After the I ndians took the<lb/>
lead back briefly, the Pirates were<lb/>
again back in front. After break-<lb/>
ing back into the lead at 52-51,<lb/>
the Pirates' Herb Gray got hot. A<lb/>
steal by Louis Crosby and an<lb/>
assist to Gray on the fast break<lb/>
put the Pirates up by three. Gray<lb/>
then made a layup and Crosby<lb/>
stole another pass. This time he<lb/>
led Gray perfectly with tht<lb/>
the fast break and Gray stul<lb/>
the ball through the nets i<lb/>
the crowd's delight.<lb/>
After a William and M<lb/>
time out. tl<lb/>
and tied the s<lb/>
minutes remaining.<lb/>
the Pirates o<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
68-62 lead with only 16 9eo<lb/>
left. The Pirates then hit a cot<lb/>
of quick baskets before time<lb/>
expired.<lb/>
John Lowenhaupt led the<lb/>
Indians' attack with 30 points. 19<lb/>
of them coming in the second<lb/>
half. Ron Satterwaite added 12.<lb/>
Gray led ECU with 20, 18 of his<lb/>
coming in the second half. Crosby<lb/>
and Jim Ramsey put in ten<lb/>
apiece.<lb/>
William and Mary's Matt<lb/>
Courage led all rebounders with<lb/>
13 while Gray led the Pirates with<lb/>
12.<lb/>
The game at Appalachian<lb/>
State was another chapter of the<lb/>
Pirates' fight with the referees.<lb/>
ECU was whistled for 31 personal<lb/>
fouls while ASU committed just<lb/>
19.<lb/>
"I guess it just ain't meant to<lb/>
be Head Coach Dave Patton<lb/>
said following the game. "We<lb/>
played well enough to win, but we<lb/>
missed a couple of shots and free<lb/>
throws right at the end, and that<lb/>
was the story.<lb/>
"These guys deserve better.<lb/>
And its' s a shame that they don't<lb/>
get better. I feel sorry for them.<lb/>
This was the fourth straight game<lb/>
we have lost and in all four we<lb/>
have outscored our foes from the<lb/>
field but have seen our opponents<lb/>
go to the foul line many more<lb/>
hm-<lb/>
. ! Of 11<lb/>
:ripe while<lb/>
Appalachi.i 'it there 36<lb/>
5 of<lb/>
;ood<lb/>
. thei iinted more<lb/>
�ughout<lb/>
.vas close until<lb/>
: The Apps Walter<lb/>
Anderson hit a basket with 45<lb/>
i onds to go to put his team<lb/>
'or good 61-60. He added<lb/>
two free throws with 21 seconds<lb/>
remaining to provide the final<lb/>
margin.<lb/>
The two teams shot 58 times<lb/>
each from the floor, with the<lb/>
Pirates hitting on 26 and the<lb/>
Mounties hitting 24. But. the foul<lb/>
line was the difference. The<lb/>
Pirates hit 72.7 per cent of their<lb/>
free tosses while ASU hit on 41.7<lb/>
per cent. But with 25 more<lb/>
attempts, there were enough<lb/>
shots to insure victory.<lb/>
Larry Hunt led the Pirates<lb/>
with a season-high 21 points<lb/>
while Crosby added ten.<lb/>
Anderson was the hot man fa<lb/>
Appalachian with 22 points.<lb/>
Bobby Pace added 11 and Carl<lb/>
Hubbard ten.<lb/>
The loss for the Pirates<lb/>
dropped its conference slate to<lb/>
3-7 and overall record to 8-14. It<lb/>
not only insured them a road<lb/>
game in the tourney, but also<lb/>
assured them a losing record on<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
The Pirates played last night<lb/>
at Georgia Southern, Patton's<lb/>
alma mater. Tomorrow night,<lb/>
they will host Furmans Paladins<lb/>
in another pivotable SC gan<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0013"/><lb/>
Prestigious Knights of Columbus<lb/>
15 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
Track team does well in meet<lb/>
BySTEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If snot often you can be in two<lb/>
places at one time doing two<lb/>
things and do well at both . But<lb/>
the East Carolina track team<lb/>
proved you can as they split the<lb/>
team up Saturday to go to two big<lb/>
meets.<lb/>
Part of the team was invited to<lb/>
the prestigious Knights of Colum-<lb/>
bus track meet in the Richfield<lb/>
Coliseum in Cleveland, Ohio<lb/>
while the rest of the thindads<lb/>
traveled to Raleigh for the<lb/>
Wolfpack Invitational. Both did<lb/>
exceptionally well.<lb/>
The group of Otis Melvin,<lb/>
Larry Austin, Carter Suggs, Mar-<lb/>
vin Rankins, Calvin Alston, Ben<lb/>
Duckenfield, and James Freeman<lb/>
journeyed to the Knights of<lb/>
Columbus meet and went up<lb/>
against some of the nations's best<lb/>
tracksters. They were not embar-<lb/>
rassed with their performances.<lb/>
Melvin and Austin competed<lb/>
in the feature 60 yard dash which<lb/>
included 1976 Olympic champion<lb/>
Haisley Crawford from Jamaica.<lb/>
Austin managed a fifth place<lb/>
finish while Melvin just missed<lb/>
the finals. Austin ran 6.2 in the<lb/>
finals after turning in a season's<lb/>
best 6.1 in the semis. That time<lb/>
qualified him for the naionals<lb/>
and he was beaten by no other<lb/>
collegiate sprinter in the race.<lb/>
Suggs ran in an event which is<lb/>
fairly new to him, the 440 dash<lb/>
Suggs has been a 60 yard dash<lb/>
man for the past two years but<lb/>
has switched to the quarter mile<lb/>
thisyear. He finished third with a<lb/>
fine time of 50.2, one-tenth of a<lb/>
second off the school record.<lb/>
Rankins placed a strong fourth<lb/>
in the 60 high nurdles running<lb/>
against some of the world s best<lb/>
competition Olympic bronze<lb/>
medalist Wiiiie Davenport won<lb/>
while Larry Srnpp another Olym-<lb/>
pian took second.<lb/>
Melvin, Alston, Duckenfield,<lb/>
and Freeman comprised the mile<lb/>
relay team that took third place,<lb/>
running a school record 320.4 in<lb/>
the prooess.<lb/>
THE LADY PIRA TES will host UNC tonight at 7:00. This will be<lb/>
their last regular season game before tournament play.<lb/>
Photo by Kip Sloan<lb/>
ArmyNavy Store<lb/>
1501 Evans<lb/>
12p.rn5a0p.rrw,<lb/>
Back packs, Field, Flight,<lb/>
Bomber, &amp; Snorkel Jackets,<lb/>
Jeans<lb/>
In the meet at Raleigh, bast<lb/>
Carolina took three of the events<lb/>
run, second only to host N.C.<lb/>
State's four first place finishes.<lb/>
No team scoring was kept.<lb/>
Mike Hodge won the long<lb/>
lump with a track record leap of<lb/>
23-3 j4, eclipsing the old mark of<lb/>
23-2 34 set in December by the<lb/>
Pirates' Billy Etchison. Etchison<lb/>
took second with a leap of 23-2<lb/>
78 while George Jackson placed<lb/>
fourth with a jump of 22-8<lb/>
Herman Mclntyre continued<lb/>
his strong performances in the<lb/>
triple jump, winning with a leap<lb/>
of 50-2 34 while Jackson took<lb/>
fourth in 49-2 Va and Hodge fifth<lb/>
with a jump of 47-4<lb/>
Charlie Moss won the 440 in<lb/>
school reoord tying 50.1. He had<lb/>
strong support as Terry Perry<lb/>
finished fourth in 50.3 and Robert<lb/>
Franklin copped fifth in 50 6<lb/>
The ECU two mile relay team<lb/>
of James Willett. Wayne Chai-<lb/>
son, Ray Moore, and Keith<lb/>
Urquhart took second with their<lb/>
best time of the year. 7:58.0.<lb/>
In the mile relay. Moss,<lb/>
Franklin. Perry, and McCollough<lb/>
teamed up fa a fine time of<lb/>
3:24.0 to place third. McCollough<lb/>
also took fourth in the 600.<lb/>
running the distance in 1:13 4<lb/>
Tom Watson's best throw of the<lb/>
year in the shot put. 49-10. was<lb/>
good enough to get the senior<lb/>
fifth place.<lb/>
The track team will travel to<lb/>
Wilmington. Delaware this week-<lb/>
end to compete in the Delaware<lb/>
Invitational, its last meet before<lb/>
the conference championships.<lb/>
mim<lb/>
E.C.U.NIGHTISBACK<lb/>
AND BIGGERTHAN EVER.<lb/>
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ICHOPPED STEAK DINNER $1.49<lb/>
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Crabeakes. slaw, freneh fries plus<lb/>
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Fish, slaw freneh fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
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Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat. 752-3172<lb/>
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(out 10th St.)<lb/>
Lautares Jewelers<lb/>
Registered Jewelers Certified Gemologist<lb/>
American Gem Society<lb/>
Diamond Specialists<lb/>
See George Lautares ECU Class'41<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0014"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
-���� ����<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
Hg4 FOUNTAINHEAD 15 February 1977<lb/>
Appalachian State crushes ECU gym team<lb/>
By MICHAELFUTCH<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Appalachian State's women's<lb/>
Jor all the<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
you can cat!<lb/>
WEDNESDAY ONLY<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Shoney s real Italian Spaghetti with su<lb/>
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and hot Grecian bread a Wednesday<lb/>
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BOY<lb/>
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206 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville. N.C. 27834<lb/>
gymnastics team descended from<lb/>
the mountaintops of Boone Satur-<lb/>
day and rolled to a 96.8 to 67.35<lb/>
victory over the Pirates.<lb/>
ASU dominated tha best all-<lb/>
around category with three mem-<lb/>
bers out in the top five. Valerie<lb/>
Striggow won best all-around<lb/>
with 26.8 points. Nancy Bulloch<lb/>
took second place with 25.9, and<lb/>
teammate Beth Wilson tallied<lb/>
third with 24.7. East Carolina's<lb/>
Betsy Adkins placed fourth with<lb/>
21.0. Pirate Donna Pendley roun-<lb/>
ded out the top five with 14.65<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Kathy Otstot of ASU won the<lb/>
balance beam competition with a<lb/>
score of 6.6. Teammate Striggow<lb/>
placed second with 6.4. Nancy<lb/>
Baker of ECU and Beth Wilson of<lb/>
ASU tied for third with identical<lb/>
scores of 5.6. Nancy Bulloch of<lb/>
ASU finished fifth with 5.35.<lb/>
In the floor exercise, ASU's<lb/>
Bulloch had high score of 7.55.<lb/>
The Mountaineers continued<lb/>
their domination by placing se-<lb/>
cond and third in the event.<lb/>
Striggow placed with 6.95 and<lb/>
Wilson grabbed a total of 6.3<lb/>
points. ECU'S Adkins finished<lb/>
fourth with 5.95 and teammate<lb/>
Baker placed a close fifth with<lb/>
5.55.<lb/>
Appalachian dominated the<lb/>
vaulting competition with three of<lb/>
its members placing in the top<lb/>
five. An 8.15 score gave first<lb/>
place to Bulloch while fellow<lb/>
Mountaineers Wilson and Strig-<lb/>
gow tied with 7.75 for second<lb/>
place. ECU'S Adkins scored 7.05<lb/>
for a fourth place finish and<lb/>
teammate Birch rounded out the<lb/>
top five performers with 5.05.<lb/>
In the uneven parallel bars<lb/>
competition, Striggow placed first<lb/>
with 5.7 points. Teammates Wil-<lb/>
son and Bulloch of ASU finished<lb/>
second and third in the exercise<lb/>
with scores of 5.05 and 4.85,<lb/>
respectively. Pendley of ECU<lb/>
placed fourth with 3.65 points.<lb/>
It was definitely not a day ra-<lb/>
the Pirates' women's gymnastics<lb/>
team, but it should be cited that<lb/>
the team lacks experience. All<lb/>
due credit, however, should go to<lb/>
the Appalachian team as they<lb/>
cruised to an easy victory.<lb/>
The gymnastics team' next<lb/>
meet will be at Longwoou Col-<lb/>
lege, Feb. 19, at 2100.<lb/>
THE WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS team will travel to Longwood<lb/>
College Saturday for a 2:00 match. Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Is it sick<lb/>
tolovr<lb/>
apen<lb/>
is it crazy to love marker pens that give you the smoothest, thinnest line in<lb/>
town and feel so right in your hand9 Is it mad to worship pens with clever<lb/>
little netal "collars" to keep their plastic points from getting squishy7<lb/>
Not if the pen is a Pilot marker pen.<lb/>
Our Razor Point, at only 69C. gives<lb/>
the kind of extra-fine delicate line you'll flip .<lb/>
over And for those times you want a little less<lb/>
line, have a fling with our fine point<lb/>
59c Fmeliner It has the will and fortitude to<lb/>
actually write through carbons.<lb/>
So, don't settle for a casual relationship<lb/>
Get yourself a lasting one, or two, to have<lb/>
and to hold at your college book store.<lb/>
Pilot Corp. of America, 41-15 36th St<lb/>
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Sports writers needed<lb/>
call 757-6366<lb/>
r<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
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Across from<lb/>
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113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
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Hastings Ford<lb/>
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We repair all makesand models of<lb/>
motorcycles.<lb/>
We sell custompartsandaccessories<lb/>
We do custom painting.<lb/>
We have pick-up service.<lb/>
Coming soon- van accessories<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0015"/><lb/>
� v '� �'�0v S ; vft:iwx:  <lb/>
15 February 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
��&amp;zmmwm�;zmwmm&amp;-�&amp;&amp;$ffl&amp;-<lb/>
�&amp;<lb/>
� <lb/>
�<lb/>
for sate @)<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1977 Cutlass Salon-<lb/>
AMFM stereo, PS, PB, AT,<lb/>
Bucket seats, console. Lt. blue<lb/>
with white landau roof. Orig.<lb/>
price over $7000 must sell $5990.<lb/>
Call 752-9006.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Girl's 3 speed bike<lb/>
$35.00, channel master auto<lb/>
cassette tape player $30. Zenith<lb/>
Dlack and white t.v. $40.00. All<lb/>
recently overhauled and in good<lb/>
condition. 752-4511 between 5<lb/>
and 9 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Old Cutlass Su-<lb/>
preme, 1971, one owner, excel-<lb/>
lent condition. $1925.00. Phone<lb/>
756-6007.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Guild D-5, Acoustic<lb/>
Guitar. Excellent condition<lb/>
$250.00 or you make reasonable<lb/>
offer. Call 756-2459 for Bob, or<lb/>
see on display at Razz Jazz<lb/>
Record Shop.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '71 SuperBeetle with<lb/>
rebuilt engine and mostly new<lb/>
parts. Runs well. Must sell at a<lb/>
loss for $975.00 or you make<lb/>
reasonable offer. Call Bob at<lb/>
756-2459.<lb/>
FOR SALE: BIC 960 turntable. 7<lb/>
months warranty left. Call 752-<lb/>
0734.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Tad Davis Imperial<lb/>
Deluxe tennis racket, 1 Jack<lb/>
kreamer 752-6439. Good price.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 8,000 BTU Cddspot<lb/>
air conditioner - $75.00, 19 cu. ft.<lb/>
Frigidaire refrigerator (needs<lb/>
work) - $50, Black vinyl, Spanish<lb/>
style sofa and chair, (in slight<lb/>
repair) - $50.00. Call 752-5717<lb/>
after 500 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Waterbed frame,<lb/>
pedestal, handrubbed finish.<lb/>
Price negotiable. Call Woodv<lb/>
756-1540.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Collection of 25<lb/>
albums. Including albums by Yes,<lb/>
Beach Boys, Hendrix, ELP and<lb/>
many more. Prices from $2 to $3.<lb/>
Come by room 415 Aycock any<lb/>
day after 300 p.m. now for best<lb/>
selection.<lb/>
rOR SALE: Texas instruments<lb/>
SR-51 a electronic calculator.<lb/>
Adaptor, two owners manuals,<lb/>
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carrying cases included free. Call<lb/>
752-9905 and ask for Jeff.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 74 VW Bug $2200.<lb/>
Contemp. furniture &amp; doublebed<lb/>
Excellent condition. Call 752-0903<lb/>
after 430.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fender' Princeton<lb/>
Reverb Guitar amp. $150. Electric<lb/>
Guitar Fuzz-Wah-Volume Pedal.<lb/>
4 wahs and fuzz sustain, volume,<lb/>
and intensity controls. $60. Send<lb/>
reply to: Box 3067, Greenville.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1968 Chev. Impala.<lb/>
55,000 little old lady back and<lb/>
forth to church miles. Air, power<lb/>
steer needs minor repairs$500<lb/>
758-1437 after 930 nights.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Brand New ARP<lb/>
ODYSSEY SYNTHESIZER, per-<lb/>
fect condition. For more informa-<lb/>
tion. Call 758-0794.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Datsun 240Z.<lb/>
Red automatic. Must sell. Call<lb/>
758-4262 after 5.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Waterbed, mattress,<lb/>
frame with braces, liner. $60. Call<lb/>
752-6856.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4.2cub. refrigerator,<lb/>
good condition; excellent for<lb/>
dorm use. $80.00. Call 752-5493.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Toyota Celica<lb/>
S.G 4 speed, excellent cond. 102<lb/>
B Belk Dorm. 758-7865.<lb/>
FOR SALE: PE 3060 automatic<lb/>
turntable complete with Stanton<lb/>
681 EE phono cartridge. Also<lb/>
Koss Pro-4-A headphones. All<lb/>
with original boxes. Reasonable.<lb/>
758-3701 evenings.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Yamaha clarinet.<lb/>
Good condition. $90. Call 758-<lb/>
9378.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Marantz 2325 Stereo<lb/>
reciever 125 wchan. 20-20K at<lb/>
.15 T.H.D. and I.M. with<lb/>
walnut case. 752-9100, 11a.m<lb/>
6p.m. Ask for Buz.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Experienced<lb/>
typist. 758-3106 (Jane) before 5.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Peugeot Bicycle,<lb/>
Blue, like new, best offer. 758-<lb/>
7591.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4" X 5" Graphic<lb/>
View II with Schneider Xenar 150<lb/>
mm. Dagor 358 15 holders. 4<lb/>
developing tanks and 6 negative<lb/>
holders. $275. Call John 758-<lb/>
1592.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Gibson Les Paul<lb/>
guitar with case and an Ampeg<lb/>
Amplifier VT-40 worth over<lb/>
$1,300. All interested people call<lb/>
756-3874.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1964 Triumph Spit-<lb/>
fire. Will accept best offer - call<lb/>
758-7415 after 200 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '71 Opel GT Low<lb/>
milage, AC, excellent condition<lb/>
32 MPG. Call Mark Hurley at KA<lb/>
House. 758-8999.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: 758-5948.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer receiver 50<lb/>
watts Rms pr. channel, 2 channel.<lb/>
AR-2AX speakers. Excellent con-<lb/>
dition. $350 Call 756-1547.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 10 week old male<lb/>
German Shepherd puppy. $60<lb/>
including collar, leash, &amp; bowl.<lb/>
Call 758-5364.<lb/>
FOR SALE: One New Pioneer<lb/>
Reverberation Amp. Got it for<lb/>
Christmas, must sell wwarranty<lb/>
$95.00. Phone 752-4379.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1969 Red Fiat 124<lb/>
Excellent Cond. 75,000 miles<lb/>
$200 take up $36mo. payments-<lb/>
$550 left call 757-6690 9p.m<lb/>
12p.m. Sun-Thnr�j<lb/>
FOR SALE: &amp; Toyota Celica<lb/>
G.T. Air-conditioned, AM-Fm<lb/>
stereo 5-speed, luggage rack.<lb/>
Only 5,000 miles, like new<lb/>
condition, metallic blue, white<lb/>
interior. Call 752-8290 after 5<lb/>
p.mask for Carol.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Amplifier - Sound<lb/>
City, Concord GT-80 (Brand new)<lb/>
2-12" speakers, built-in reverb.<lb/>
Retail price $699. Will sell for<lb/>
$300. Must sell before spring<lb/>
quarter. Call Chris at 756-6252.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 5 speed 27" Sears<lb/>
bicycle. Good oondition. Price<lb/>
$45.00. 55 lb. Bear Grizzly bow<lb/>
with arrow, tips, and other<lb/>
accessories. Call fa information.<lb/>
758-2799.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Needfor school. All<lb/>
in excellent oondition: 1969 Fiat<lb/>
124 - 700$, 17" Crosby Radnor<lb/>
hunt saddle with fittings 180$,<lb/>
Konica autoreflex T with f1.4<lb/>
lens 150$, albums - misc. 3.50<lb/>
each. Call 757-6690 only from<lb/>
9-12 p.m. Sun. - Thurs.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Garrard SLX-2 turn-<lb/>
table. Excellent condition except<lb/>
needs new needle. $30. Call<lb/>
758-5008 after five.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 TS 185 Suzuki,<lb/>
excellent oondition. No reason-<lb/>
able offer refused. Call 758-8999,<lb/>
ask for Phil or leave a message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Akai 8-Track Play-<lb/>
backRecord Component. This<lb/>
model has 2 heads, 2 vu meters,<lb/>
and fast forward. Comes with<lb/>
head demagnetizer. $100 nego-<lb/>
tiable.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AKC Weimaraner<lb/>
puppies. Call 758-7790.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 8 Track &amp; Cassette<lb/>
tapes 12.00 ea. Over 30 tapes by<lb/>
various artists. 758-8984, 318<lb/>
Aycock Dorm (trash room).<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 Ford Van 240<lb/>
6-cylinder, straight drive, air,<lb/>
carpet, paneling, $1400.00. 752-<lb/>
9520.<lb/>
cOR SALE: Jansport Backpack<lb/>
and Frostline Tent, both Brand<lb/>
new and super light. Also Dynaco<lb/>
Amp. contact Jim at 1305 S.<lb/>
Cotanche St (near Twin Rinks)<lb/>
upstairs. Come by anytime.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Telecaster guitar,<lb/>
and J.V.C. Turntable. Call 758-<lb/>
7954.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 Firebird runs<lb/>
good, must sell, $1200. Call<lb/>
758-8543 or come by 201 Jones.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Yahama Guitar, good<lb/>
condition. Excellent for begin-<lb/>
ners. 150.00 contact Nancy<lb/>
through ad in Fountainh�H<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Yamaha zsu<lb/>
Endura. Excellent oondition 2500<lb/>
miles $675. 758-9063.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Fiat Spider,<lb/>
AM-FM Stereo, tape player, wire<lb/>
wheels, excellent condition,<lb/>
$3,850 .all 756-6768 after 530.<lb/>
MUST SELL: Sunn studio lead<lb/>
amp hardly used. $175.00. Call<lb/>
Maria 752-9022 fa more infarrv<lb/>
atiai.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New-Clairol "Kind-<lb/>
ness 3-way Hairsetter" with mist<lb/>
a regular control. Pins &amp; Condi-<lb/>
tioning mist treatment included.<lb/>
Only $20.00, call 758-0603.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 Harley David<lb/>
son 125 Rapiado. Fair cond.<lb/>
$225.00. Kasino bass amp. $250.<lb/>
Call 758-0250 evenings.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Wilson T3000 Tennis<lb/>
Racket- $25.00. Lonny House-<lb/>
758-8843.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Queen size waterbed<lb/>
mattress, liner, frame, heater and<lb/>
thermostat, $75. 756-6220.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Needed<lb/>
to share 2-bedroom trailer.<lb/>
Washer &amp; dryer &amp; air condition-<lb/>
ing. $60month &amp; utilities. Ql<lb/>
758-8160 after 9O0 p.m. a cane<lb/>
by Flanagan 420. Junia, Senia,<lb/>
a Graduate student preferred.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: To<lb/>
share trailer in Quail Hollow,<lb/>
752-3536.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private room avail-<lb/>
able Spring term. Graduate stu-<lb/>
dent preferred. 756-2459.<lb/>
WANTED: 1 a 2 female room-<lb/>
mates beginning March 1. Call<lb/>
752-9340.<lb/>
WANTED: Female a females to<lb/>
sublet 2 bedroom house from<lb/>
March until August a end of<lb/>
summer school. Located 2 blocks<lb/>
from campus. $80 a month. Call<lb/>
after 6O0 any day at 758-2338.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate. 704<lb/>
East Third St. (2 blocks from<lb/>
campus. Lg. 2 bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment.)<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate fa<lb/>
Spring quarter to share 2 bed-<lb/>
room trailer, air oond washer<lb/>
and dryer. Rent $80.00 month -<lb/>
oovers everything. Call Martha.<lb/>
752-0973.<lb/>
WANTED: One a two female<lb/>
roommates for Village Gr. Apt.<lb/>
$50 per month plus utilities. Call<lb/>
758-0595 after 3.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Unfurnished room<lb/>
$35mo. &amp; utilities. See Steve in<lb/>
420 Flanagan.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Room, 402 Student<lb/>
St. Phone: 752-4814. Quiet; fur-<lb/>
nished; $55 per month; utilities<lb/>
included.<lb/>
LOST: An opal ring and heart<lb/>
shaped necklace. If found please<lb/>
return to Kathy, 226 Fleming.<lb/>
752-9195. Reward Guaranteed.<lb/>
LOST: A garnet necklace some-<lb/>
where between White and Brew-<lb/>
ster. If found, call 752-8651.<lb/>
Reward of (fired.<lb/>
LOST: Ladies wrap around swea-<lb/>
ter Brown with different colaed<lb/>
stripes around it and a Navy blue<lb/>
tie belt. Lost in Jolly Rogers. If<lb/>
found call 752-9907 a bring by<lb/>
818 Greene Dam.<lb/>
LOST Double-diamond silver<lb/>
pre-engagement ring in bathroom<lb/>
at lower level of Mendenhall<lb/>
Saturday night. Of sentimental<lb/>
value. Reward�no questions<lb/>
asked. Call 752-0187.<lb/>
LOST: Gold high school ring 24 in<lb/>
the middle. A.P.B. on inside.<lb/>
Great personal value. Reward.<lb/>
Contact Beth 758-8845.<lb/>
found<lb/>
i<lb/>
j<lb/>
FOUND: Pair of glasses at the<lb/>
track. Call 752-0424.<lb/>
FOUND: Black onyx class ring on<lb/>
Appalachian Trail in West<lb/>
Virginia about six months ago.<lb/>
Contact Appalachian Trail Con-<lb/>
ference, Box 236, Harper's Ferry,<lb/>
W. Va. 25425 - 304-535-6331.<lb/>
FOUND: Gold, 1970, High School<lb/>
ring from TerrySanfad H.S.KTR<lb/>
initials. Gal1 752-7791.<lb/>
personal (&amp;<lb/>
FOUND: someone who listens<lb/>
and helps. You don't have to be in<lb/>
a aisis to call a cane by the<lb/>
REAL aisis center. Counseling<lb/>
and referrals are what they offer.<lb/>
They're free, too. Call 758-HELP.<lb/>
WANTED: Chronic tension head-<lb/>
ache suffers to take part in<lb/>
research study. Please leave<lb/>
name, phone no. and the times<lb/>
you can be reached at the<lb/>
Psychology Dept. Robertson's<lb/>
box.<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY: A used guitar<lb/>
case fa my classical guitar. If<lb/>
you've got what I need call<lb/>
758-2509.<lb/>
"PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle.<lb/>
752-4272.<lb/>
YOGA LESSONS: exercises to<lb/>
calm the mind and slim the body -<lb/>
way of life. Classes faming now.<lb/>
Call Sunshine, 752-5214 after 9O0<lb/>
p.m. on Mond. and Wed after<lb/>
530 all other nights.<lb/>
LEARN TO BELLY DANCE! Let<lb/>
this year's resolution be a better<lb/>
figure! Call Sunshine, 752-5214<lb/>
after 9 00 p.m. on Mon. and Wed.<lb/>
after 500 p.m. all other nites.<lb/>
TAX SERVICES: ECU Business<lb/>
student would like to prepare<lb/>
income tax returns evenings and<lb/>
weekends. Reasonable rates. Call<lb/>
756-4180. Typing services also<lb/>
jvailabJe.<lb/>
Needed: Whoever wrote the care<lb/>
that was delivered to 423 Jones<lb/>
dorm, please call TWM at<lb/>
758-7895.<lb/>
B<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0016"/><lb/>
16 FOUNTAINHEAD 15 February 1977<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIIM<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
SUN THRU THUR<lb/>
11:00 TO 10:00<lb/>
FRI &amp;SAT<lb/>
11:00 TO 11:00<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
U.S.DA choice beef cut fresh daily<lb/>
For the full month of February, No. 12 will be on<lb/>
special Mon.�Thur Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
CHOPPED SIRL 01 N<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
MUSHROOM GRAVY<lb/>
TEXAS TOAST WITH<lb/>
MELTED BUTTER<lb/>
BAKED POTATO<lb/>
OR FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
ALL<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
1.29<lb/>
EAST 10TH ST<lb/>
<pb facs="00057112_0017"/>
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