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<pb facs="00057134_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 3,500,<lb/>
this issue is 12 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
 . r ru. iiniunrdtu ftrmnvilta- North Carolina 22 June 1977<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Bikes impounded, p. 2<lb/>
Heretic, p. 8.<lb/>
Two swimmers signed, p. 9<lb/>
Vol. 52, No. 56<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
slashed, windows broken<lb/>
Vandals damage cars<lb/>
By KERRY COX<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
Six vehicles were vandalized<lb/>
Monday night on James Street<lb/>
between Seventh and Eighth<lb/>
Streets. Both campus and city<lb/>
police investigated the incident.<lb/>
Slashed tires and broken<lb/>
windows of the cars were dis-<lb/>
covered between 1:30 a.m. and 2<lb/>
a.m. Tuesday by ECU police<lb/>
officer Doc Cannon.<lb/>
According to campus Polioe<lb/>
Chief Francis Eddings, Greenville<lb/>
Police Department was contacted<lb/>
since the cars were parked on a<lb/>
city street.<lb/>
"I haven't had anything hap-<lb/>
pen to this extreme since I've<lb/>
been here said Eddings. He<lb/>
came to ECU in 1974.<lb/>
Eddings said there was no<lb/>
apparent reason for the vandal-<lb/>
ism. Owners of the damaged cars<lb/>
were contacted last night, he<lb/>
said. All tires were slashed and<lb/>
windows were broken of a '73<lb/>
Ford belonging to James Mathe-<lb/>
son of Hayesville.<lb/>
Tires were removed from a' 70<lb/>
Volkswagon owned by Hazel<lb/>
Bradshawof Clinton.<lb/>
Three tires of a '68 Chevrolet<lb/>
owned by Wilson Burnette of<lb/>
Hobgood were slashed.<lb/>
Two tires of a '67 Dodge,<lb/>
owned bv George Howard Harri-<lb/>
See VANDALS, page 2.)<lb/>
THE BUFFALO CHI PKICK ERS entertained on the mall Monday night<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Staffers attend investigative<lb/>
reporters, editors convention<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
Three FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
members attended the second<lb/>
annual convention of Investiga-<lb/>
tive Reporters and Editors, Inc.<lb/>
(I.R.E.) June 17 through June 19<lb/>
at Ohio State University in<lb/>
Columbus, Ohio.<lb/>
Lynn Caverly, Doug White<lb/>
and Cindy Broome represented<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD at the con-<lb/>
vention where approximately 500<lb/>
people attended, including a<lb/>
handful of student journalists.<lb/>
Some of the speakers at the<lb/>
convention included Carl Bern-<lb/>
stein, formerly of The Washing-<lb/>
ton Post, Jack Anderson, Wash-<lb/>
ington columnist, Seymour Hersh<lb/>
of The New York Times, and Joe<lb/>
Murray, editor of The Lutkin<lb/>
News, a Pulitzer prize-winning<lb/>
newspaper in Texas.<lb/>
The convention consisted of 16<lb/>
workshops, and a special program<lb/>
on The Phoenix Project, which is<lb/>
group of reporters continuing the<lb/>
work of Arizona Republic investi-<lb/>
gative reporter, Don Bolles, who<lb/>
was killed last summer.<lb/>
Some of the workshops were<lb/>
entitled "Investigating with petty<lb/>
cash "Headhunters: politics<lb/>
"White-collar crime "Ethics<lb/>
and "Network '77<lb/>
Carl Bernstein, along with<lb/>
former colleague Bob Woodward,<lb/>
uncovered the Watergate scandal<lb/>
in The Washington Post.<lb/>
Bernstein spoke at the final<lb/>
luncheon Sunday.<lb/>
"We were outsiders Bern-<lb/>
stein said of himself and Wood-<lb/>
ward.<lb/>
"We were on the metropolitan<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
�' We didn' t have high sources<lb/>
in the White House. We had to<lb/>
start from the bottom and go up<lb/>
- clerks, secretaries, administra-<lb/>
tive assistants<lb/>
Bernstein said they started<lb/>
out as they had started any other<lb/>
story, and he referred again to<lb/>
their lack of White House<lb/>
sources.<lb/>
"We didn't have White House<lb/>
sources we could take to the Sans<lb/>
Souci (famous Washington<lb/>
French restaurant) for lunch<lb/>
said Bernstein.<lb/>
Bernstein spoke of the White<lb/>
House's attempt to undermine<lb/>
the credibility of the press.<lb/>
"The White House sought to<lb/>
make the credibility of the press<lb/>
the issue, instead of the conduct<lb/>
of the White House men<lb/>
Bernstein and Woodward<lb/>
have received an estimated $3.5<lb/>
million from their two best-selling<lb/>
books, and have royalties from<lb/>
the film, "All The President's<lb/>
Men" to come, according to The<lb/>
News and Observer.<lb/>
Robert Greene, editor of<lb/>
Newsdayand president of I.R.E<lb/>
addressed the gathering concern-<lb/>
ing The Phoenix Project.<lb/>
Greene said I.R.E. was set up<lb/>
Don Bolles' death, contrary to the<lb/>
belief that it was organized after<lb/>
his death.<lb/>
Greene said I.R.E. went to<lb/>
Arizona to continue Bolles' work,<lb/>
not to investigate his death.<lb/>
Greene said they hope that<lb/>
those who think a reporter can be<lb/>
silenced by death should take<lb/>
note that other reporters will<lb/>
continue his work.<lb/>
A total of 36 reporters were<lb/>
working on the project, with nine<lb/>
reporters working at any given<lb/>
time, according to Greene.<lb/>
Greene said that when the<lb/>
reporters arrived, the Phoenix<lb/>
polioe said, "You are our last<lb/>
hope against organized crime.<lb/>
Politicians won't listen to us<lb/>
Anthony Insolia, managing<lb/>
editor of Newsday, acted as editor<lb/>
of the group, according to<lb/>
Greene.<lb/>
Greene said every story was<lb/>
written at least once, and many<lb/>
were rewritten five or six times.<lb/>
Insolia said if he could have<lb/>
changed anything about the pro-<lb/>
ject, it would have been to have<lb/>
more editing help.<lb/>
Greene said he has been<lb/>
asked to write a book about the<lb/>
project, but he doesn't think they<lb/>
should make money by helping<lb/>
another reporter.<lb/>
NEXT WEEK: a report on<lb/>
Jack Anderson, Seymour Hersh,<lb/>
and Joe Murray of the Pulitzer<lb/>
prize-winning Lutkin News.<lb/>
FRANCIS F.DDINbS, Campus Chief of Polioe<lb/>
SGA transit system<lb/>
running two routes<lb/>
ByKENTYNDALL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association's (SGA) bus services<lb/>
are running two routes this<lb/>
summer, according to SGA<lb/>
Transit Manager Gene Summer -<lb/>
lin.<lb/>
The number of routes will<lb/>
expand to three again in the fall.<lb/>
The bus routes presently<lb/>
include Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center and most of the apart-<lb/>
ments and student residential<lb/>
areas off campus.<lb/>
No major changes have oc-<lb/>
curred since Neil Sessoms, SGA<lb/>
president, took office. According<lb/>
to Summerlin, any changes would<lb/>
be left up to the transit manager.<lb/>
The bus routes will remain the<lb/>
same as they have been for fall,<lb/>
with the purple, gold and brown<lb/>
schedules in full swing. An<lb/>
additional bus is on standby in<lb/>
case of mechanical failure.<lb/>
According to Summerlin, the<lb/>
schedules have already been<lb/>
extended by one hour from last<lb/>
year: from 230 to 330.<lb/>
The buses will run until 5:30<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
Another planned change for<lb/>
fall is that the gold schedule will<lb/>
include the newly constructed<lb/>
Greenville Square.<lb/>
Summerlin feels that it will<lb/>
only add a few minutes to the<lb/>
route, but will be important for<lb/>
the safety of the students.<lb/>
Presently, the bus stops at Pitt<lb/>
Plaza.<lb/>
The additional stop will pre-<lb/>
vent students from having to<lb/>
cross the 264 by-pass.<lb/>
A van has been ordered to<lb/>
serve the handicapped students.<lb/>
The funds fa the van have<lb/>
already been appropriated.<lb/>
The state is supplying the<lb/>
needed funds for the additional<lb/>
equipment for the van, including<lb/>
tie-downs for the wheel chairs, a<lb/>
mechanical lift, a bubble roof,<lb/>
i id a C.B. Radio.<lb/>
The brown bus, which is<lb/>
moperatiave during the summer,<lb/>
could be run if  need were<lb/>
strong enough.<lb/>
"I am willing said Summer-<lb/>
lin, "to run the bus if the students<lb/>
will respond to it<lb/>
He reports some feedback,<lb/>
but not enough to run the bus.<lb/>
Although not as many people<lb/>
are here to take advantage of the<lb/>
bus services during the summer,<lb/>
many students must stand in the<lb/>
aisles during regular session.<lb/>
Summerlin believes the num-<lb/>
ber of riders during the fall will<lb/>
increase.<lb/>
"I think the freshmen will<lb/>
respond to the buses real well<lb/>
"Everything has been going<lb/>
real smoothly<lb/>
SGA purchases van<lb/>
for handicapped<lb/>
By KERRY COX<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
Handicapped students will<lb/>
have transportation when both<lb/>
fall semester and a 1977 Ford<lb/>
Econoline roll around the corner.<lb/>
According to Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association (SGA) president<lb/>
Neil Sessoms, $6,734 was appro-<lb/>
priated last month by SGA for the<lb/>
purchase of the van.<lb/>
Sessoms said the alloted funds<lb/>
will amply cover costs of the van<lb/>
minus options.<lb/>
"We hope to have it operative<lb/>
by fall semester Sessoms said.<lb/>
He added that the van will<lb/>
probably be on campus "within<lb/>
the month<lb/>
Providing both taxi service<lb/>
and a standard set route, the<lb/>
vehicle will be painted gold and<lb/>
white to match other SGA buses.<lb/>
The North Carolina Depart-<lb/>
ment of Vocational Rehabilitation<lb/>
is seeking approval to buy<lb/>
optional equipment fa the van.<lb/>
Extras will induce six wheel-<lb/>
chair Icckdowns, an elevata lift,<lb/>
CB radio and antenna and a<lb/>
12-inch extended bubble top.<lb/>
The Student Welfare Com-<lb/>
mittee introduced the bill in May<lb/>
fa the benefit of handicapped<lb/>
ECU students.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057134_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 22 June 1977<lb/>
Council<lb/>
Anyone interested in or wish-<lb/>
ing to serve on a summer honor<lb/>
council should sign-up now.<lb/>
To find out more information,<lb/>
please call 757-6611, and ask for<lb/>
the Student Government Associ-<lb/>
ation. The sign-up period is June<lb/>
13-24 at Mendenhall, SGA office.<lb/>
Bahai<lb/>
Come see and hear the story<lb/>
of the Bahai Faith today at 3 30 in<lb/>
Room 238 MendenhaJI. This will<lb/>
be your last chance until July 13!<lb/>
Guests are welcome!<lb/>
Parking<lb/>
Any student interested in<lb/>
serving on the University-City<lb/>
parking committee please call the<lb/>
SGA office (757-6611) by June 24.<lb/>
Co-op<lb/>
The Community Buying Club,<lb/>
Greenville's good co-op has<lb/>
moved. The new location is 710<lb/>
Dickinson Avenue (across from<lb/>
Home Furniture). Operating<lb/>
hours are Wednesday from 4-6 30<lb/>
p.m<lb/>
National<lb/>
Teacher's<lb/>
Exam<lb/>
The National Teacher Exam-<lb/>
inations (NTE) will be given at the<lb/>
Testing Center, ECU, Saturday,<lb/>
July 16, 1977.<lb/>
Scores from the examination<lb/>
are used by state for certification<lb/>
of teachers, by school systems for<lb/>
selection and identification of<lb/>
leadership qualities, and by col-<lb/>
leges as part of their graduation<lb/>
requirements.<lb/>
Educational Testing Service,<lb/>
which prepared and administers<lb/>
the tests, says they are designed<lb/>
to measure knowledge gained<lb/>
from professional and general<lb/>
education and in 27 subject-<lb/>
matter fields.<lb/>
Bulletins describing registra-<lb/>
tion procedures forms may be<lb/>
obtained from Mr. John S.<lb/>
Childers, Director, Testing Cent-<lb/>
er, ECU, Speight Building, Room<lb/>
105, telephone 757-6811, or direct<lb/>
ly from the National Teacher<lb/>
Examinations, Educational Test-<lb/>
ing Service, Box 911, Princeton,<lb/>
N.J. 08540.<lb/>
The deadline for regular re-<lb/>
gistration is June "3, 1977.<lb/>
On-the-spot registratton will not<lb/>
be permitted.<lb/>
WARNING: Campus police are<lb/>
impounding non-registered bicycles<lb/>
on campus now,<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
News writers are needed at<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD. If you would<lb/>
like to write for the news desk,<lb/>
call 757-6366 and ask for Cindy<lb/>
Broome or leave your name and<lb/>
phone number.<lb/>
VANDALS<lb/>
 Continued from page 1.<lb/>
son, of Snow Hill (Melody Lois<lb/>
Harrison, Garrett dorm) were<lb/>
slashed.<lb/>
Four tires were cut, and a<lb/>
window on the passenger side<lb/>
broken out of a '72 Chevrolet<lb/>
owned by Uoyd P. Dennis of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
A '74 Buick owned by<lb/>
Frank Arnold Murphy of Jackson-<lb/>
ville was also damaged.<lb/>
"I wish people would report<lb/>
things like this right away it<lb/>
would help Eddingssaid. "Re-<lb/>
port it to the polioe. Don't wait.<lb/>
Don't just ignore it<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE: Double bed mattress.<lb/>
Only 1 year old. In good con-<lb/>
dition. Call Bill &amp; Kim Devins,<lb/>
758-7741.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Mclntosh 2100 AM P,<lb/>
105 watts per chanel. Crown IC<lb/>
150 PRE AMP. Must hear to<lb/>
believe - $600.00 firm. Call<lb/>
758-8683, 11 XX) p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Table and chairs,<lb/>
antique oak ice box, antique desk,<lb/>
dresser, and buffet. Call 752-5170<lb/>
or 757-6736.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 73 Yahama 250MX.<lb/>
Good condition! $300. Call Robert<lb/>
�- 756-5190 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
YARD SALE - corner of A very<lb/>
and Holly off E. 1st - Sat. June 18,<lb/>
9 a.m. - antiques, furniture,<lb/>
plants, clothes, etc. <lb/>
FOR SALE: Refrigerator, 512 ft.<lb/>
high, very good condition. $70.00.<lb/>
Call 758-2801.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Beautiful AKC<lb/>
Poodle and also beautiful<lb/>
Pekingnese and one German<lb/>
Sheppard puppy (4 months old).<lb/>
Call 747-5591, Snow Hill.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AKC registered male<lb/>
Scottish Terriors. Will be seven<lb/>
weeks old by July 14th. Price set<lb/>
at $75.00. If interested call<lb/>
758-8101 or 752-0315 after 5:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE:<lb/>
35mm camera<lb/>
Call 752-1292.<lb/>
Nikkormat FTN<lb/>
black body $100.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1 bedroom (un-<lb/>
furnished) apt. at Village Green<lb/>
to sublet from July 1,1977 to July<lb/>
1, 1978. !150 monthly. Call<lb/>
758-6518, evenings 6-11 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Full size pin ball<lb/>
machine. $300. Call 752-4559<lb/>
after 5:00.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Cassette player for<lb/>
car. $30.00. 758-4863.<lb/>
personal<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: 1107 Evans<lb/>
St. $35 per month. Kitchen<lb/>
privileges. Phone 758-7675.<lb/>
Available Aug. 1.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private bedroom, air<lb/>
conditioned, across from campus.<lb/>
Call 758-2585.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate to<lb/>
share rent on $150.00. Call<lb/>
752-4349. (Utilities are included.)<lb/>
FOR RENT: One bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment for rent. Appliances in-<lb/>
cluded. $100 a month. Call<lb/>
752-4154.<lb/>
NEEDED: Roommate for summer<lb/>
school. 500-A Avery St. Call<lb/>
752-5170.<lb/>
WANTED: Responsible male<lb/>
graduate student seeks efficiency<lb/>
or small apartment beginning<lb/>
middle to late July. Please write<lb/>
2823 B Mayview Rd. Raleigh,<lb/>
N.C. 17607. Will be in school next<lb/>
2 years.<lb/>
YOGA LESSONS - effortless<lb/>
answer to a beautifully developed<lb/>
body and mind. Night classes for<lb/>
men and women. Call today for<lb/>
your enrol I ment. 752-5214.<lb/>
MUSICIANS WANTED; Guitar-<lb/>
ists, singers, musicians of all<lb/>
sorts, needed for Sunday mass in<lb/>
Biology Auditorium. Practice at<lb/>
11 a.m. You don't have to be<lb/>
Catholic to love music! Contact<lb/>
Judy Willis, 825 Evans St<lb/>
752-4043.<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
ARE FREEI<lb/>
ARE YOU SURE YOU KNOW<lb/>
WHAT FAMILY PLANNING<lb/>
IS ALL ABOUT?<lb/>
If you think it means preventing unwanted pregnancy  you're<lb/>
partly right. But it means more than that Like counseling<lb/>
young people about how a baby before they are ready can<lb/>
affect their health or mess up their lives  helping couples<lb/>
who want to have children but can't counseling men on male<lb/>
responsibility and methods of birth control.<lb/>
It's important to know ALL about family planning<lb/>
more than you may have thought.<lb/>
it means<lb/>
For information or help, contact the family planning clinic in<lb/>
your community, your local health department or your own<lb/>
physician.<lb/>
US DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH.<lb/>
EDUCATION AND WELFARE<lb/>
Public Health Service<lb/>
<pb facs="00057134_0003"/><lb/>
���������1<lb/>
EgSHSK' sB?f<lb/>
' �'��-KE9f3&amp;<lb/>
WDifhSlP iSpTT<lb/>
77<lb/>
Programs swing areas<lb/>
from stums to community<lb/>
22 Jim 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Pay 3<lb/>
ByBOBTHONEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Five urban-renewal projects<lb/>
and a public-housing program are<lb/>
nearing completion and mark<lb/>
Greenville's shift of concern from<lb/>
slum clearance to community<lb/>
development, according to Kerby<lb/>
Boyd of the dty's Redevelopment<lb/>
Commission.<lb/>
"Our purpose now is to<lb/>
restore and preserve existing<lb/>
neighborhoods to prevent them<lb/>
from deteriorating into the slums<lb/>
of the future said Boyd.<lb/>
Slums imply harried, fearful,<lb/>
desperated people living in filthy,<lb/>
broken-down tenements with gar-<lb/>
bage in the streets and vermin<lb/>
everywhere.<lb/>
No single factor causes the<lb/>
dedine of a neighborhood, accor-<lb/>
ding to planning studies conduc-<lb/>
ted for the commission.<lb/>
Many blighting factors are<lb/>
involved in the deterioration of<lb/>
decent neighborhoods into slums.<lb/>
Physical indications of blight,<lb/>
include housing deterioration,<lb/>
mixed residential and oommerdal<lb/>
land use, traffic hazards, and<lb/>
major fires.<lb/>
According to the planning<lb/>
studies, zoning was originally<lb/>
developed to physically separate<lb/>
industrial areas from residential<lb/>
areas so that the current livability<lb/>
of the residential community<lb/>
could be maintained.<lb/>
The proximity to residential<lb/>
areas of such activities are noise,<lb/>
glare, odors, electrial disturban-<lb/>
ces, and traffic congestion are<lb/>
considered disturbing factors.<lb/>
Since the consideration of<lb/>
psychological impact is involved,<lb/>
this judgment is necessarily<lb/>
somewhat subjective, according<lb/>
to the planning studies.<lb/>
Fa example, a corner grocery<lb/>
store was dted as more accepta-<lb/>
ble than an auto body shop ina<lb/>
residential area.<lb/>
The presence of a flower shop<lb/>
is more acceptable to a neighbor-<lb/>
ing hospital than the presence of<lb/>
a funeral parlor or marble and<lb/>
granite works<lb/>
Social condition of blight<lb/>
include high incidences of crime,<lb/>
tuberculosis, infant mortality,<lb/>
illegitimate births, and venereal courages investment by private<lb/>
diseases.<lb/>
Economic conditions dted in-<lb/>
dude high incidences of welfare<lb/>
cases, old-age assistance, and<lb/>
rental housing.<lb/>
Blight preventative methods<lb/>
dted by the planning studies<lb/>
include redevelopment and reha-<lb/>
bilitation.<lb/>
Redevelopment involves total<lb/>
clearance of an entire neighbor-<lb/>
hood or portions of a neighbor-<lb/>
hood.<lb/>
Rehabilitation involves remo-<lb/>
deling and replanning. A sub-<lb/>
stantial number of structures are<lb/>
allowed to remain and are up-<lb/>
graded to conform to building<lb/>
code requirements.<lb/>
Greenville's first effort at<lb/>
urban renewal, the Shore Drive<lb/>
project, involved total dearanoe<lb/>
and redevelopment, and resulted<lb/>
in the restoration of the Historic<lb/>
Town Commons.<lb/>
This 67-acre area contained<lb/>
236 sub-standard dwellings and<lb/>
was considered to be the worst<lb/>
slum in the dty.<lb/>
Prior to the renewal project,<lb/>
Shore Drive produced $3,000 in<lb/>
annual tax revenue to the dty. In<lb/>
1976 it produced $30,000 or a<lb/>
thousand percent increase, ac-<lb/>
cording to Boyd.<lb/>
The Newtown Urban Renewal<lb/>
Project deared 157 strudures<lb/>
from a dilapidated 18-acre neigh-<lb/>
borhood. These strudures were<lb/>
replaced with 78 units of new<lb/>
public housing.<lb/>
The $8 million Central Busi-<lb/>
ness District Project was desig-<lb/>
ned to accommodate a modern<lb/>
shopping area.<lb/>
It includes provisions for<lb/>
adequate parking, beautification<lb/>
of the area, and improved traffic<lb/>
conditions.<lb/>
Fifty-nine building have been<lb/>
fully renovated at a cost of over $1<lb/>
million.<lb/>
Ina ddition, $3 million has<lb/>
been spent on construction of<lb/>
nine buildings.<lb/>
Renovation is the major thrust<lb/>
in the Southside Urban Renewal<lb/>
Area.<lb/>
This 180-aore program en-<lb/>
Faculty members<lb/>
receive promotions<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Two members of the ECU<lb/>
School of Education faculty have<lb/>
received promotions in rank ef-<lb/>
fective Sept. 1.<lb/>
Dr. Keith Hudson, a member<lb/>
of the Department of Administra-<lb/>
tion and Supervision, will be<lb/>
promoted to the rank of full<lb/>
professor, and Dr. Betty Mobley<lb/>
Long of the Department of<lb/>
Elementary Education, will be<lb/>
promoted to assodate professor.<lb/>
Dr. Hudson is an East<lb/>
Carolina alumnus and received<lb/>
his dodoral degree from Florida<lb/>
State University. Before joining<lb/>
the ECU faculty in 1970, he was a<lb/>
teacher and administrator in the<lb/>
Wilson and Asheboro public<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
Among his research adivities<lb/>
have been development of a plan<lb/>
for the evaluation of school<lb/>
prindpals and a pilot project<lb/>
involving computer assistance for<lb/>
public schools.<lb/>
Dr. Long, also an East<lb/>
Carolina graduate, received her<lb/>
doctorate from Duke University.<lb/>
Before joining the ECU School of<lb/>
education faculty in 1964, she<lb/>
taught in Craven County, Beau-<lb/>
fort County, Pitt County and in<lb/>
Hampton, Va. and Halifax<lb/>
County, Va.<lb/>
Dr. Long is a reading spedal-<lb/>
ist and has conducted in-service<lb/>
workshops fa teachers of lang-<lb/>
uage arts.<lb/>
developers fa construction of<lb/>
new and modest homes for<lb/>
low-income families.<lb/>
The West Meadowbrook Re-<lb/>
development Project was desig-<lb/>
ned to relocate families out of the<lb/>
affeded flood plain area north of<lb/>
the Tar Riva. Construction of a<lb/>
neighbahood park, and rehabil-<lb/>
itation of homes not in the flood<lb/>
plain are induded in the plans.<lb/>
The $7.5 million Low Rent<lb/>
Public Housing Program attempts<lb/>
to assure standard housing fa all<lb/>
displaced persons.<lb/>
Residents in the project areas,<lb/>
whether owners a tenants, may<lb/>
be eligible for relocation on<lb/>
benefits indudin.i payment of<lb/>
moving expenses.<lb/>
In addition, ha eownas may<lb/>
be eligible fa gr. its of up to<lb/>
$15,000 fa the purchase of a<lb/>
replacement dwelling in addition<lb/>
to the purchase price of the<lb/>
property.<lb/>
As Greenville looks to the<lb/>
future, restaatioi and preserva-<lb/>
tion of existing neighbahoods<lb/>
marks the shift from slum dear-<lb/>
anoe and displaced families.<lb/>
r�<lb/>
And get three games for only $1.25.<lb/>
Bring three friends along. We'll let<lb/>
them in on the deal, too.<lb/>
WASHINGTON HWY.<lb/>
GRE�NVILi�, N.C<lb/>
Expires Sept. 1,1977 Phone 758-1820<lb/>
THE IRON HORSE<lb/>
TRADING CO.<lb/>
FINE GOLD<lb/>
AND SILVER<lb/>
JEWELRY<lb/>
TOPOFTHEMALL<lb/>
301 S. EVANS<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
THE FITNESS CLUB<lb/>
for men and women<lb/>
1112 bm St.<lb/>
Crtiivillt<lb/>
75IS5I4<lb/>
Welcome Back Students!<lb/>
NAUTILUS FEATURES:<lb/>
� Male and Female instructor;<lb/>
� Nautilus Machines: 12 of the most<lb/>
sophisticated fitness machines made.<lb/>
� OLYMPIC Barbells and Dumbbells<lb/>
� Whirlpool, sauna, showers, lockers<lb/>
� Color TV and Lounge<lb/>
� Protein and Vitamin supplements<lb/>
� Diet Plans<lb/>
Bring a friena and there is one week of extended membership.<lb/>
COME IN TODAY AND SIGN UP FOR A FREE<lb/>
WORKOUT<lb/>
at Nautilus Fitness is <lb/>
Come in and visit<lb/>
and bring your friends<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
$2.00 Purchase<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE GREENERY<lb/>
752-1303<lb/>
Located behind Headstrong in The New University Arcade.<lb/>
The newest Plant Store in Greenville and the closest<lb/>
to campus. We feature house plants and accessories at very<lb/>
reasonable prices.<lb/>
3" plants from 75<lb/>
5" plants from $1.49<lb/>
The Opening Special<lb/>
10" Hanging Baskets were $14.99 Now $7.99<lb/>
<pb facs="00057134_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 22 June 1977<lb/>
Easy money<lb/>
Perhaps the quickest, easiest way to get rich in<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina is to own apartments,<lb/>
duplexes, or housing of any sort. The thousands of<lb/>
ECU students are here to fill every vacancy. And with<lb/>
waiting lists even for the dormitories, the students<lb/>
have to have places to live.<lb/>
The landlords and realty companies know this, as<lb/>
they know the students are forced to settle for just<lb/>
about any cost or condition in housing that they can<lb/>
get. Consequently, apartment owners have a wide,<lb/>
open field for taking advantage of the students. And<lb/>
they do it to perfection.<lb/>
The popular rent rate in the major complexes for<lb/>
one-bedroom apartments is at least $135 per month.<lb/>
This includes nothing except maybe water and<lb/>
sewage. Two-bedroom apartments range anywhere<lb/>
between $155 to $200.<lb/>
Of course, there are a great number of smaller<lb/>
complexes dotted around this university town. Many<lb/>
of them are every bit as expensive as the larger ones.<lb/>
A few, however, such as Mr. William Corbitt's Sixth<lb/>
St. apartments, are $120 or $125 per month for<lb/>
one-bedroom. This is a bit more reasonable. At least<lb/>
these apartments are in good repair, have<lb/>
oomfortable floor space and are relatively close to<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
For those who cannot afford $125 per month,<lb/>
there are $70 and $90 apartments here and there,<lb/>
usually one-bedroom, that even come equipped with<lb/>
their own roaches, leaky gas heaters, broken down<lb/>
appliances, thin, non-insulated walls, plaster and<lb/>
paint crumbling from every wall and ceiling, and<lb/>
toilets that rarely function properly.<lb/>
But the realty companies and large land owners<lb/>
are not the only Greenvillites who take advantage of<lb/>
the students. Dozens of senior citizens living in<lb/>
residential sections near campus see fit to furnish<lb/>
tiny garage apartments or "efficiencies" with attic<lb/>
furniture and charge up to $150 a month rent. Their<lb/>
common justification is mere location.<lb/>
Landlords of all types have no problem charging<lb/>
such rates. Students cannot risk complaining about<lb/>
it. The landlords can evict a student one day and<lb/>
re-rent that apartment the next. The demand is<lb/>
there.<lb/>
Yes, housing of any sort in Greenville is a sure bet<lb/>
for fast, easy money. And the students who have put<lb/>
this small, Southern town on the map must suffer as<lb/>
the scapegoats of the whole, shoddy affair.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years.<lb/>
Senior EditorKim Devins<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising ManagerTerri Eloshway<lb/>
News EditorsCindy Broome<lb/>
Kerry Cox<lb/>
Trends EditorDavid Bosnick<lb/>
Sports EditorSteve Wheeler<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD la the student newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored by the Student Government<lb/>
Association of ECU and,is distributed each Wednesday during<lb/>
the summer, and twice weekly during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing addrem: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27934.<lb/>
Editorial off ices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually.<lb/>
i-0<lb/>
States should pay for abortions<lb/>
The U.S. Supreme Court Monday<lb/>
ruled that each state has the constitu-<lb/>
tional right to decide for itself if it will<lb/>
pay for abortions for the poor.<lb/>
This is a typical move for our<lb/>
conservative court, and a fairly reason-<lb/>
able one. Now let's hope the states,<lb/>
including North Carolina, will decide to<lb/>
pay for these abortions.<lb/>
Ninth grade sociology classes know<lb/>
that the lesser educated, lower income<lb/>
persons are the ones having so many<lb/>
children today. These are also the<lb/>
persons who form the welfare lines,<lb/>
contribute so many abandoned children<lb/>
to state supported orphanages, fill<lb/>
state juvenile centers and aowd the<lb/>
waiting rooms of state health centers.<lb/>
Many tax payers might complain<lb/>
about using their money to pay for<lb/>
others' abortions. But they will either<lb/>
pay for the abortions now, or pay fa<lb/>
mae aphans, juvenile delinquents<lb/>
and welfare recipients later.<lb/>
Therefae, if the states will decide<lb/>
in fava of paying fa abort ions fa the<lb/>
poa, the tax payers will actually be<lb/>
doing themselves a fava and saving<lb/>
moiey in the long run.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Anita Bryant would be proud<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
As a oonoerned individual of<lb/>
the ECU campus, I want to<lb/>
express my conuern fa a special<lb/>
group of students here.<lb/>
It hasn't been long ago that I<lb/>
made a decision to accept Christ<lb/>
into my life as both Lord and<lb/>
Savior. That was easy enough to<lb/>
do: with a typical "church<lb/>
upbringing" I've always believed<lb/>
in man's inherent sinfulness and<lb/>
Jesus' divine nature.<lb/>
The problem that over-<lb/>
whelmed me was sexual devia-<lb/>
tion. I knew I was homosexual<lb/>
and it never really bothered me.<lb/>
My few trips to a couple of gay<lb/>
bars were delightful and the<lb/>
people I met were often really<lb/>
nice.<lb/>
But something kept nagging<lb/>
at me. Although I wasn't con-<lb/>
vinced that homosexuality was<lb/>
wrong, depression plagued me as<lb/>
did a nervous problem and fears<lb/>
that had no basis.<lb/>
During the time following my<lb/>
"coming out" into the gay scene.I<lb/>
also dated a very wise Christian<lb/>
girl. It was impossible to cover up<lb/>
my secret life for long and soon<lb/>
she knew my story.<lb/>
But she nev&amp;r condemned me.<lb/>
We dated for several months and<lb/>
with a Christlike patience, she<lb/>
gradually persuaded me that my<lb/>
lifestyle was wrong and convinced<lb/>
me that I'd have to quit running<lb/>
around.<lb/>
It was extremely difficult to<lb/>
straighten up but I'm glad I did. It<lb/>
took time and even now I have<lb/>
trouble constraining my fleshly<lb/>
desires.<lb/>
But my depression has lifted<lb/>
and I haven't had trouble with<lb/>
nerves for a long time.<lb/>
Problems didn't leave me<lb/>
instantly, of course. In fact, for a<lb/>
while, I wasn't sure I could<lb/>
withstand the pressure and<lb/>
trauma of leaving my old friends<lb/>
and way of life.<lb/>
No lie: it was tough.<lb/>
But now I'm stronger for the<lb/>
struggle. And more than that, I<lb/>
can't just go along a happy little<lb/>
Christian life without remember-<lb/>
ing all the indjviduals like me who<lb/>
frequented the bars.<lb/>
They're people just like me.<lb/>
They're God'screatures, just like<lb/>
me. But not all of them have<lb/>
accepted Jesus into their lives.<lb/>
Not all of them can make that<lb/>
decision, merely because the very<lb/>
lifestyles they lead prevents them<lb/>
from submitting to a committed<lb/>
Christian life.<lb/>
Now the point of this letter<lb/>
applies to everyone but I especial-<lb/>
ly want the gays to consider the<lb/>
following statement:<lb/>
"Jesus Christ died for your<lb/>
sins. Whether or not you perceive<lb/>
your sexualsocial life as wrong<lb/>
or right, there are other aspects of<lb/>
your life that need cleaning up<lb/>
too. God loves you and really<lb/>
wants to oome into your life. You<lb/>
can't dean up your life and then<lb/>
oome to Christ. That's why he<lb/>
died in the first place. Please,<lb/>
please, wherever you are right<lb/>
now, ask Jesus to oome into your<lb/>
heart. Tell him you'll turn away<lb/>
from whatever in your life is<lb/>
sinful but ask him to TELL you<lb/>
what is right and what is wrong.<lb/>
Just let Jesus in now. You'll be<lb/>
doing yourself a favor<lb/>
That's just about the crux of<lb/>
the matter.Jesus is real as real<lb/>
can be. But h' won't oome into<lb/>
your heart un.ass you invite him.<lb/>
And whether you're straight,<lb/>
homosexual, miserable or con-<lb/>
tented, He's waiting.<lb/>
I know He is.<lb/>
Name withheld on request<lb/>
<pb facs="00057134_0005"/><lb/>
HIHHHHHHmMHHIHIHI<lb/>
����MHHHi<lb/>
�HMBI<lb/>
sRlwMSfcS �' 5 j �C"<lb/>
Organize Citizenship Education Program<lb/>
22Jur�1977 FOUNTAINHEAP P�p� 5<lb/>
ECU student, Pitt County 4-H funded for program<lb/>
By HELENA WOODARD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The North Carolina Internship<lb/>
Office (NCJO) recently funded a<lb/>
proposal by ECU student Cynthia<lb/>
Lynne Yow and the Pitt County<lb/>
4-H Program to organize a<lb/>
Citizenship Education Program In<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Lynne, a junior and political<lb/>
science major, will serve as<lb/>
Program Coordinator for the<lb/>
Citizenship Education Program.<lb/>
Actual planning and preparation<lb/>
for the project will begin July 11<lb/>
and will end August 26, 1977.<lb/>
According to Lynne, the pur-<lb/>
pose of the project is to structure<lb/>
citizenship participation to the<lb/>
maximum effect. As cited in her<lb/>
proposal, the project, appealing<lb/>
directly to youth, civic organiza-<lb/>
tions and all interested citizens,<lb/>
can result in an improvement in<lb/>
the quality of Pitt County's<lb/>
citizenry.<lb/>
"I designed my own program<lb/>
format Lynne began.<lb/>
"The NCIO is set up for<lb/>
students who want to design<lb/>
projects. You take the initiative<lb/>
and design your own service-<lb/>
learning project. I wanted to<lb/>
work in state and local govern-<lb/>
ment she continued.<lb/>
The NCIO, the first state<lb/>
internship office in the country,<lb/>
works with senior colleges and<lb/>
universities in developing and<lb/>
promoting service-learning.<lb/>
LYNNE YOW<lb/>
Lynne, who once served as<lb/>
one of two North Carolina dele-<lb/>
gates to a National 4-H Conven-<lb/>
tion, has already had federal work<lb/>
experience through summer po-<lb/>
sitions.<lb/>
She has served both as a<lb/>
Lyndon Baines Johnson intern<lb/>
and as a volunteer worker to a<lb/>
Ralph Nader assistant.<lb/>
"I went to Dr. Betsy Harper<lb/>
(Cooperative Education) and told<lb/>
her that I was looking for more job<lb/>
experience in my major Lynne<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"The co-op office knows what<lb/>
is available in many different<lb/>
fields. They helped me get<lb/>
started she added.<lb/>
According to Dr. Harper,<lb/>
Cooperative Education at ECU<lb/>
seeks to provide opportunities fa<lb/>
students to alternate periods of<lb/>
academic study with periods of<lb/>
off-campus employment related<lb/>
to their academic majors on<lb/>
goals.<lb/>
Lynne said that she needed<lb/>
someone to become affiliated with<lb/>
for the project. Mike Davis,<lb/>
director of the 4-H Extension<lb/>
Program, apparently had ideas<lb/>
similar to Lynne's own plans.<lb/>
"He needed someone to imple-<lb/>
ment his program she said.<lb/>
According to Mike Davis,<lb/>
Lynne's project represents a<lb/>
"seed" for similar future pro-<lb/>
jects.<lb/>
"We look forward to working<lb/>
with Lynne. If she can get this<lb/>
project going, we can continue it<lb/>
in future years said Davis.<lb/>
"One of the largest needs of<lb/>
young people is to become more<lb/>
aware of government service he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Among events scheduled in<lb/>
Lynne's proposal is a Citizen's<lb/>
career Education Week which will<lb/>
involve field trips, lectures and<lb/>
interaction between citizens and<lb/>
elected officials. . <lb/>
Students to study in Costa Rica<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Nineteen ECU students are<lb/>
preparing for the fourth ECU-<lb/>
Costa Rica study program at the<lb/>
Universidad Nacional in Heredia,<lb/>
Costa Rica this year.<lb/>
The students will begin their<lb/>
semester of studies July 25 and<lb/>
return in November. Most of the<lb/>
program will consist of classes on<lb/>
the Universidad Nacional cam-<lb/>
pus, with a final week of study in<lb/>
Guatemala, where students will<lb/>
study Guatemala's heavily<lb/>
Indian-influenced culture.<lb/>
Representing a variety of<lb/>
academic fields, the 19 students<lb/>
will take courses oriented toward<lb/>
Spanish and Latin American<lb/>
studies taught by professors from<lb/>
ECU as well as the Universidad<lb/>
Nacional.<lb/>
They include conversational<lb/>
Spanish language, Latin Ameri-<lb/>
can culture, Central American<lb/>
history, geography of Mexico and<lb/>
Central America , tropical bio-<lb/>
logy and sociology of Costa Rica's<lb/>
health and welfare systems.<lb/>
Classroom studies will be<lb/>
supplemented by field trips into<lb/>
selected areas of Central Ameri-<lb/>
ca and independent study pro-<lb/>
jects. Students will live with<lb/>
Costa Rican families in the area.<lb/>
The ECU-Costa Rica program<lb/>
is sponsored by the ECU Depart-<lb/>
ment of Geography, with the<lb/>
cooperation of the Departments of<lb/>
Foreign Languages and Sociology.<lb/>
Dr. Robert Cramer of the ECU<lb/>
geography faculty will be field<lb/>
director this year.<lb/>
Mar �Kay<lb/>
Rings &amp; Things<lb/>
112 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Open 10:00 -6:00<lb/>
Mon- Sat.<lb/>
TURQUOISE &amp;<lb/>
CORAL JEWELRY AT<lb/>
REASONABLE PRICES<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN<lb/>
JbJX.<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
SUNTHRUTHUR<lb/>
11:00 T010:00<lb/>
FRI&amp;SAT<lb/>
11:00 T01100<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
U.S.DA choice beef cut fresh daily<lb/>
For the full month of June , No. 12 will be on special<lb/>
Mon.� Thur Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
CHOPPED SIRLOIN WITH MUSHROOM GRAVY<lb/>
TEXAS TOAST WITH MELTED BUTTER<lb/>
BA KED PO TA TO OR FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
EAST10THST.<lb/>
ALL FOR<lb/>
<pb facs="00057134_0006"/><lb/>
mmWli � �<lb/>
<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 22 June 1977<lb/>
ECU offers conference on<lb/>
child abuse and neglect<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
"Children, Abused and Neg-<lb/>
lected a two-day conference on<lb/>
aspects of child abuse, will be<lb/>
offered by ECU June 27-28.<lb/>
The conference is designed for<lb/>
educators, ministers, nurses,<lb/>
social workers, law enforcement<lb/>
officers, day care personnel and<lb/>
others ooncerned with the con-<lb/>
dition of children.<lb/>
Program topics and issues<lb/>
include recognition of physical<lb/>
abuse and neglect, legal and<lb/>
moral responsibilities, minimiz-<lb/>
ing long-term effects of abuse on<lb/>
the child, changing parental<lb/>
behavior, and improvement of the<lb/>
marital relationship of the child<lb/>
abuser.<lb/>
Among the speakers is Diane<lb/>
Dr. Broadhurst, consultant to the<lb/>
HELP Resource Project in Balti-<lb/>
more and to the Washington<lb/>
School of Psychiatry.<lb/>
She is also author of numerous<lb/>
articles and conference presenta-<lb/>
tions on child abuse and neglect.<lb/>
Other speakers are Dr. Frank<lb/>
Loda, staff member of the N.C.<lb/>
Child Abuse Project and<lb/>
pediatrics professor in the UNO<lb/>
Chapel Hill School of Medicine<lb/>
Dr. Dan Davis of the N.C. Ov J<lb/>
Abuse and Neglect Resou ,e<lb/>
Center, Dr. David Knox, as? d-<lb/>
ate professor of sociology at ECU,<lb/>
and Dr. Robert Sammons, direct-<lb/>
or of the Sopris Mental Health<lb/>
Clinic in Glenwood Spr'ngs, Colo.<lb/>
The conference is sponsored<lb/>
by the Pitt County Department of<lb/>
Social Service, the N.C. Child<lb/>
Abuse and Neglect Resource<lb/>
Center, and the Eastern Area<lb/>
Health Education Center, in<lb/>
cooperation with ECU'S Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education and<lb/>
School of Allied Health and Social<lb/>
Professions.<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
conference is available from the<lb/>
Office of Non-Credit Programs,<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education,<lb/>
ECU, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
A Public Service of this newspaper &amp; The Advertising Council E��<lb/>
Today is the first da'<lb/>
of the rest of your life.<lb/>
Give blood<lb/>
so it can be the first day<lb/>
of somebody else's, too.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Red Cross. The Good Neighbor.<lb/>
Fun N'Sun Sale<lb/>
Summertime! Time to save on the season's sharpest fashions<lb/>
at Daks. Add a little fun and sun and you come up with the<lb/>
most terrific summer ever! ! ! Get it started off right with these<lb/>
Fantastic Bargains From Daks<lb/>
LEVIVNTTs"<lb/>
The Twosome for Summer Fun<lb/>
Check out our Denim Straight�Leg<lb/>
� LEVPS<lb/>
Were $14.98 Now$ 10.90<lb/>
w-rn<lb/>
T" SHIRTS<lb/>
Assorted Colors<lb/>
A $3.98 Value Now $1.97<lb/>
Also SloganT'SHIRTS VALUES TO $6.98<lb/>
NOW $1.98 to $4.98 (In both Plain &amp; Glitter)<lb/>
� WOMEN'S �TT77 � POLY�GAB PANTS<lb/>
RUGBY�STRIPE SHIRTS Cx a n� Assorted Styles &amp; Colors<lb/>
$9.98 Values $3.97<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
STARTS Were $14.98 Now $990<lb/>
YEAH, but can he sing?<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD file photo<lb/>
Greenville crime<lb/>
rate decreases<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Located on the mall - Downtown Greenville<lb/>
ByJUUEEVERETTE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The crime rate in the Green-<lb/>
ville area decreased 41 per cent<lb/>
last year, according to E.G.<lb/>
Cannon, Greenville's Chief-of-<lb/>
Polioe.<lb/>
According to Cannon, the<lb/>
main cause of the decrease is the<lb/>
recent crime prevention programs<lb/>
set up in Greenville.<lb/>
"A lot of new programs have<lb/>
been added to deter crime<lb/>
Cannon said.<lb/>
"The programs have a great<lb/>
deal to do with the decrease of<lb/>
crime. They are very beneficial<lb/>
said Cannon.<lb/>
Programs such as Mobile<lb/>
Crime Watch and Watch and<lb/>
Report involve the public.<lb/>
Aooording to Cannon, Watch<lb/>
and Report has been underway<lb/>
here for three years.<lb/>
"Whenever citizens are invol-<lb/>
ved, it is a big help Cannon<lb/>
said.<lb/>
According to Ralph Tyson,<lb/>
sheriff of Pitt County, a National<lb/>
Neighborhood Watch Program is<lb/>
being planned by the National<lb/>
Sheriff's Association.<lb/>
In this program, residents call<lb/>
law enforcement officials if they<lb/>
see anything strange in their<lb/>
neighborhoods<lb/>
According to Tyson, more<lb/>
citizen participation is needed.<lb/>
"People are becoming more<lb/>
aware of crime Tysor. said.<lb/>
"People have responded to<lb/>
the programs some, but it is not<lb/>
what it should be.<lb/>
"Everyone should make the<lb/>
effort to take a stand and keep<lb/>
crime down.<lb/>
"Everyone must get involved.<lb/>
I feel crime will decrease in the<lb/>
whole country if citizens become<lb/>
aware Tyson said.<lb/>
Aooording to Cannon, purse-<lb/>
snatching and shoplifting are the<lb/>
most frequent crimes in the<lb/>
Greenville area.<lb/>
"There is an increase in<lb/>
residential daytime breaking and<lb/>
entering said Tyson.<lb/>
Cannon feels stricter punish-<lb/>
ment would reduce crimes.<lb/>
Aooording to Cannon, crimes<lb/>
occur more frequently during<lb/>
holidays.<lb/>
"This gives burglars an op-<lb/>
portunity to work Cannon said.<lb/>
Greenville's police depart-<lb/>
ment has crime prevention offi-<lb/>
cers who go to homes, busines-<lb/>
ses,and clubsto inform citizens of<lb/>
safety precautions and to explain<lb/>
the crime prevention programs.<lb/>
Tyson predicted that crime<lb/>
will oontinue to decrease in the<lb/>
future due to such programs.<lb/>
"Teaching crime prevention<lb/>
in schools would be a big asset to<lb/>
people Tyson said.<lb/>
Aooording to Joseph H. Cal-<lb/>
der, Director of Security at East<lb/>
Carolina University, the crime<lb/>
rate on campus is stable.<lb/>
"Fstty larceny is most fre-<lb/>
quent on campus said Calder.<lb/>
"However, we don't have the<lb/>
bicycle larceny that we've had in<lb/>
past years<lb/>
Calder said approximately 80<lb/>
per cent of crime on campus is<lb/>
petty larceny.<lb/>
The remaining 20 per cent<lb/>
consists of trespassing, vanda-<lb/>
lism, peeping-toms, and drug<lb/>
traffic.<lb/>
Calder said non-students steal<lb/>
the most in dormitories, espe-<lb/>
cially in the men's dorms.<lb/>
Aooording to Calder, students<lb/>
should report any suspicious<lb/>
incidents or individuals to the<lb/>
university polioe.<lb/>
"We can control crime if<lb/>
students are reporting crimes and<lb/>
giving us leads<lb/>
"We have had excellent co-<lb/>
operation from the students this<lb/>
year<lb/>
 We have paid students about<lb/>
$300 in rewards this year for leads<lb/>
resulting in arrests he said.<lb/>
The campus polioe depart-<lb/>
ment has two aime prevention<lb/>
officers who talk to the students<lb/>
in the dorms about crime and<lb/>
rape.<lb/>
"The response in the girls'<lb/>
dorms has been very good said<lb/>
Calder.<lb/>
Calder said crime on the<lb/>
ECU campus is very low com-<lb/>
pared to other campuses.<lb/>
"We have a different type of<lb/>
student Calder said.<lb/>
"The ECU students come<lb/>
from more conservative back-<lb/>
grounds. Where you have conser-<lb/>
vatism, usually there is a lower<lb/>
crime rate<lb/>
Aooording to Calder, students<lb/>
committing crimes on campus are<lb/>
normally indicted and sent to<lb/>
oourt.<lb/>
"Quite a few students have<lb/>
been thrown out of school this<lb/>
year he said.<lb/>
"I feel students<lb/>
from other students<lb/>
thrown out of school<lb/>
quarter minimum<lb/>
who steal<lb/>
should be<lb/>
fa a one<lb/>
��<lb/>
"i<lb/>
�<lb/>
<pb facs="00057134_0007"/><lb/>
�����1<lb/>
�HIHHHIHIBHHHBHIHHHIH<lb/>
�IBH<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
22 June 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Ex Libris<lb/>
by DAVID R.BOSNICK<lb/>
October Light pure<lb/>
There isa traceable crumbling of the fabric of morality. The human<lb/>
being is stumbling into the twentieth century, shedding old virtues and<lb/>
principles as they become inconvenient. Those most affected, are the<lb/>
ancients. The 70 year old men and women whose youth and minds and<lb/>
prejudices are of another century. They stoically pursue their values<lb/>
while their bodies wither with them inside. They have lived too long.<lb/>
October Light by John Gardner is a lyrical probing of the<lb/>
convictions and sorrows of several old Vermonters. He parades<lb/>
characters and ideologies before the reader as priest, dope,<lb/>
smugglers, old men, ghosts. He parallels the destruction of the<lb/>
relationship of two old people, with the existential decline of several<lb/>
characters in a novel.<lb/>
James and Sally Page are brother and sister in their seventies who<lb/>
live in peace until the intrusion of the outside world, in the form of<lb/>
Sally'stelevisiDn set provokes him to violence. He is a guilt ridden old<lb/>
man who finds the only absolutes in his farm and Ethan Allan. He<lb/>
draws his strength from his history, and as his memories fade, so does<lb/>
his security.<lb/>
This isa novel of pure lyric. If one can say this, the actuality of plot<lb/>
and characters are lost in sheer appreciation H craftsmanship. He<lb/>
weaves his pic and subplot, moving the reader . from one hopeless<lb/>
world to the next<lb/>
Sally Abboti is a woman whose riches and beauty have faded and<lb/>
she is forced to move back with her brother and submit to his rules, his<lb/>
politics. James' destruction of her T.V. set is the final straw and she<lb/>
boards herself in her room with a trashy novel. Both too stubborn to<lb/>
relent, their fears and politics bubble to the surface and they are left<lb/>
much the same as before but with the reality that they are changed,<lb/>
tainted and dying.<lb/>
October Light will never appear on the best seller list. It does not<lb/>
contain a terrifying carnivorous animal, it is neither contrived nor<lb/>
shallow enough to be made into a T.V. movie and it is far too complex<lb/>
to be attempted by many screenwriters. John Gardner is a purist, and<lb/>
he is to popular fiction what Barishnikov is to the box step.<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
PLAZA ONE<lb/>
Final Chapter: Walking Tall - The poster fa this movie reads, "Now<lb/>
there was a man That may be true but the question is what sort of<lb/>
man. This is the final episode in this trilogy of barbaric justice and it is<lb/>
comprised of the same senseless violence as the previous films. Buford<lb/>
Pusser is dead, and this film embarrasses his memory. One star,<lb/>
because one never says anything bad about the dead.<lb/>
PLAZA TWO<lb/>
Other Side of Midnight - It isa female fantasy concerning a woman and<lb/>
figures whose characters are reminiscent of actual people. (Aristotle<lb/>
Onassis). It is a film that attempts to justify the glamour of the jet set<lb/>
and its morality, until its end. The climax is interesting, if not very<lb/>
surprising. I give this film two stars, as the acting is fair, and the<lb/>
production excellent.<lb/>
BUCCANEER ONE<lb/>
The Eage Has Landed<lb/>
Review opposite.<lb/>
BUCCANEER TWO<lb/>
The Heretic - Review on page 8.<lb/>
PITT THEATRE<lb/>
Smokey and the Bandit - Burt Reynolds and Sally fields (strikes one<lb/>
and two) are two kindred spirits caught up in a country Western world<lb/>
they had not made. But they have managed to become an exotic dancer<lb/>
and male fantasy in their misery. The sensitivity of their relationship is<lb/>
directly coupled with their mission in life, which is to smuggle a<lb/>
truckload of Coors beer across three states. No stars.<lb/>
PARK<lb/>
Catastrophe- This is a film that plays upon the morbid curiosity in each<lb/>
of us. It is strictly documentary with dubbed commentary that is so<lb/>
melodramatic as to be funny. The director and presumably his wife and<lb/>
children, are the voices of the unseen victims describing their terror.<lb/>
Their accents are cheap and atrocious. The actual disaster footage is<lb/>
impressive with the horror of sinking ships and exploding airships. The<lb/>
only other people in the theatre with this reviewer, were two nine year<lb/>
old boys who howled when they saw people jumping from a hotel<lb/>
holding mattresses. No stars, no kids.<lb/>
Eagle lays an egg<lb/>
ByDAVIDTREVINO<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Instead of men going to the<lb/>
moon, THE EAGLE HAS LAND-<lb/>
ED is about an actual attempt by<lb/>
German paratroopers to kidnap<lb/>
Winston Churchill and force a<lb/>
negotiated settlement to World<lb/>
War II. Any resemblances which<lb/>
may exist between verifiable<lb/>
Best<lb/>
Sellers<lb/>
Fiction<lb/>
The Thorn Birds by Collen<lb/>
McCul lough<lb/>
Falconer by John Cheever<lb/>
Oliver's Story by Erich<lb/>
Segal<lb/>
The Crash of '79 by Paul E.<lb/>
Erdman<lb/>
Condiminium by John D.<lb/>
McDonald<lb/>
Trinity by Leon Uris<lb/>
The Chancellor Manuscript<lb/>
by Robert Ludlum<lb/>
A Book of Common Prayer<lb/>
by Joan Didion<lb/>
Illusions by Richard Bach<lb/>
How To Save Your Own<lb/>
Life by Erica Jong<lb/>
Non-Fiction:<lb/>
Your Erroneous Zones by<lb/>
Wayne W. Dyer<lb/>
Passages by Gail Sheehy<lb/>
Haywire by Brooke Hay-<lb/>
ward<lb/>
Roots by Alec Haley<lb/>
The Dragons of Eden by<lb/>
Carl Sagan<lb/>
The Gamesman by M ichael<lb/>
Macoby<lb/>
The Book of Lists by David<lb/>
Wallenchinsky<lb/>
The Grass is Always<lb/>
Greener Over the Septic<lb/>
Tank by Erma Bombeck<lb/>
Majesty by Robert Lacey<lb/>
The Age of Uncertainty by<lb/>
John Kenneth Galbraith<lb/>
events and what goes on in this<lb/>
film are purely coincidental.<lb/>
EAGLE is a blend of the stark<lb/>
reality ai.d oomplex development<lb/>
of character found in THE<lb/>
LITTLE HORSE THIEVES and<lb/>
Nazi propaganda about the Ayran<lb/>
race.<lb/>
In a fit of madness Hitler<lb/>
declares that he wants Prime<lb/>
Minister Churchill abducted and<lb/>
brought to Belin. This wish is<lb/>
relayed to Colonel Radl (Robert<lb/>
Duvall) who isordered to draw up<lb/>
plans for the operation. WJien<lb/>
questioned by his aide as to<lb/>
whether or not even considering<lb/>
such an idea is a waste of time<lb/>
Radl responds by saying that<lb/>
although every wink in a party<lb/>
does not end in climax a man<lb/>
would be a fool not to pursue a<lb/>
question as far as it will go. This<lb/>
is an impressive speech for a man<lb/>
with an eye-patch and a rubber<lb/>
right hand stolen from a Mel<lb/>
Brooks movie.<lb/>
Radl recruits a witty IRA<lb/>
fanatic, Liam Devlin (Donald<lb/>
Sutherland), lecturing at a Ger-<lb/>
man university to help in the<lb/>
kidnap attempt. Devlin is too nice<lb/>
a terrorist to spend his time<lb/>
making bombs in his basement in<lb/>
Ireland so he joins with the Nazis<lb/>
so he can fight the English he<lb/>
hates with a dear conscience.<lb/>
The commander of the para-<lb/>
troopers, Colonel Steiner<lb/>
(Michael Caine), is a war hero<lb/>
in prison with his command under<lb/>
a suspended death sentence fa<lb/>
attempting to aid a Jewish woman<lb/>
he didn't know to escape from a<lb/>
concentration camp. Steiner is a<lb/>
more admirable maal figure than<lb/>
Devlin. His trcops are intensly<lb/>
loyal to him and stay by his side<lb/>
(through thick and thin) and<lb/>
when he leaves them to die in a<lb/>
church in England while he<lb/>
escapes. But, what can you hope<lb/>
fa fran a Nazi with a cockney<lb/>
accent.<lb/>
Once the action shifts to the<lb/>
pastaal English country village<lb/>
whae Churchill is caning fa a<lb/>
weekend holiday the events be-<lb/>
come so contrived as i to<lb/>
strain belief. Within ten<lb/>
minutes of contacting the local<lb/>
German spy (Jean Marsh), Devlin<lb/>
is completely integrated into local<lb/>
society and has won the undying<lb/>
love of Molly the Milkmaid<lb/>
(Jenny Agutter) who gees on to<lb/>
shoot ha old boyfriend rather<lb/>
than allow him to expose Devlin<lb/>
as a Nazi operative. Though she<lb/>
dees not approve of what Devlin<lb/>
is doing, Molly says she loves him<lb/>
and cannot bear to see him<lb/>
harmed. Sure.<lb/>
Disguised as free Polish para-<lb/>
troopers, Steina and his men<lb/>
have little mae trouble winning<lb/>
ova the entire village. By playing<lb/>
Bach on the church agan and<lb/>
running about marily in the<lb/>
streets the Germans are able to<lb/>
gain the oonf idence of evayoie in<lb/>
a community seemingly popu-<lb/>
lated entirely by good-hearted<lb/>
dolts. When one of the Gamans<lb/>
is killed saving the life of a small<lb/>
girl his Nazi unifam is exposed<lb/>
and within the hour the locals<lb/>
have discovaed what is going on<lb/>
in front of them. This act of<lb/>
Gaman oompassion introduces a<lb/>
bunch of Amaican buffoons led<lb/>
by a combat craving National<lb/>
Guard colonel (Larry Hagman).<lb/>
Steina escapes while all his men<lb/>
are killed holding off the Amai-<lb/>
cans. He finally manages to find<lb/>
Churchill and kill him but,<lb/>
Churchill is not killed because hs<lb/>
isonly a Churchill look-a-like who<lb/>
won a vacation in the country to<lb/>
fool the Gamans while the real<lb/>
Churchill went to Tehran.<lb/>
As if this is not enough to<lb/>
satisfy any one looking fa cinana<lb/>
vaite Devlin and Molly survive<lb/>
and begin a new life togetha as<lb/>
Gabriel Oak and Bathsheba in the<lb/>
beautiful English country side. As<lb/>
cinematic art THE EAGLE HAS<lb/>
LANDED is a complete disasta,<lb/>
but, as escapist entertainment it<lb/>
is in cola.<lb/>
Succeedsasbluesrock<lb/>
Buchanan's album fails as jazz<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Assistant Trends Edita<lb/>
Roy Buchanan has earned the<lb/>
reputation of being the con-<lb/>
summate guitarist, but has limit-<lb/>
ed himself in the past to mining<lb/>
what was left of bluesrock afta<lb/>
it became "respectable On<lb/>
"Loading Zone Buchanan ex-<lb/>
hibits his impressive skill as both<lb/>
a guitarist and writa, slashing<lb/>
through the mire of bluesrock<lb/>
cliches and faging new music out<lb/>
of an old fam. It is not, howeva,<lb/>
a jazz album as its promotas<lb/>
would have you believe. Despite<lb/>
an impressive array of jazz<lb/>
musicians and production by<lb/>
Stanley Clarke, it fails to generate<lb/>
the excitement one would expect<lb/>
from an assemblage of this<lb/>
caliber. Most disappointing is<lb/>
Clarke's flat, unimaginative pro-<lb/>
duction on all but three of the<lb/>
album's nine tracks. Only on<lb/>
"Hidden "Judy and "Ad-<lb/>
ventures of Bra Rabbit and Tar<lb/>
Baby do his produciton skills<lb/>
resemble his skills as a pafam-<lb/>
a.<lb/>
If fa no otha reason than to<lb/>
hear some of jazz's finest music-<lb/>
ians on a single piece of vinyl, one<lb/>
should buy this album. A recad<lb/>
that boasts Stanley Clarke, Jan<lb/>
Hammer, Narada Michael<lb/>
See ALBUM, page 8.<lb/>
ROY BUCHANAN<lb/>
<pb facs="00057134_0008"/><lb/>
w<lb/>
����<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAO 22 June 1977<lb/>
Exorcist II: elaborate mediocrity<lb/>
By DAVID TREVINO<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If you are planning to see<lb/>
Exorcist II, THE HERETIC be-<lb/>
cause Richard Burton has a role in<lb/>
it, remember that you can always<lb/>
see Laurence Olivier and Rex<lb/>
Harrison doing commerdals on<lb/>
television for free. Traditionally,<lb/>
sequels are but faded imitations<lb/>
of a proven hit inspired by the<lb/>
hope of further profits This is<lb/>
certainly the case with the new<lb/>
accessory to the EXORCIST.<lb/>
Technically, THE HERETIC is<lb/>
not a poor film. Director John<lb/>
Boorman has put together a slick,<lb/>
unified product. He makes in-<lb/>
telligent use of conventional film<lb/>
techniques to oover the basic<lb/>
weakness of a plot that attempts<lb/>
to explicate the reason there ever<lb/>
was an original EXORCIST film<lb/>
and why it should be allowed to<lb/>
breed like the PLANET OF THE<lb/>
APES of the late 60's.<lb/>
Red is used as a device to<lb/>
identify the sdentific method and<lb/>
its inability to resolve the super<lb/>
natural forces at work in the<lb/>
movie. One of the initial uses of<lb/>
red is with the Cardinal (Paul<lb/>
Henreid) who assigns Father<lb/>
Lament (Richard Burton) to in-<lb/>
vestigate the drcumstances sur-<lb/>
rounding the death of Father<lb/>
Merrin (Max Von Sydow) in the<lb/>
original Exordst. Thisassodation<lb/>
only seems to imply dogmatidsm<lb/>
but when later linked with the<lb/>
other uses of red it can be related<lb/>
to established science's refusal to<lb/>
recognize forces beyond its sys-<lb/>
tems of measure. The little tabs<lb/>
on the headgear of a machine of a<lb/>
machine which synchronizes the<lb/>
brain waves of a person under<lb/>
hypnosis with another mind were<lb/>
red as were eccentric drdes<lb/>
appearing around flashes of light<lb/>
emitted from the machine.<lb/>
The next three uses of red<lb/>
appear in sequences which takes<lb/>
place in Africa and are the best<lb/>
manipulated in the film. As<lb/>
Lament is flying towards a holy<lb/>
dty in Africa where he expeds to<lb/>
find Kokumo (james Earl Jones)<lb/>
other planes are spraying red<lb/>
pestiddesto prevent the influx of<lb/>
locusts which Lamont's pilot<lb/>
dedares has no effect.<lb/>
Onoe Lamont reaches the dty,<lb/>
he is unable to find Kokumo and<lb/>
asks a policeman with a red fez<lb/>
for directions. The policeman is of<lb/>
absolutely no value. Once Lamont<lb/>
reaches Kokumo he finds the holy<lb/>
man seated beyond a moat filled<lb/>
with nails. Kokumo explains to<lb/>
Lamont that to cross over he must<lb/>
depend on his faith and spits a<lb/>
� tomato from his mouth onto a nail<lb/>
showing how far sdence will carry<lb/>
him.<lb/>
In the final scenes, which<lb/>
takes place in Washington, D.C<lb/>
Boorman seems to be reaching for<lb/>
strained images using red. A<lb/>
hand rail has flecks of red on<lb/>
another-wiseblack surface sug-<lb/>
gesting that sdence can be an aid<lb/>
to dealing with supernatural<lb/>
forces but, that it ends at a point<lb/>
and something else must take<lb/>
over. When Dr. Gene Tuskin<lb/>
(Louise Fletcher) tells Lamont<lb/>
and Reagan (Linda Blair) that the<lb/>
sdentific world'is not ready for<lb/>
the truths they offer and a red dot<lb/>
appears beside her head, it seems<lb/>
as though Boorman has exhaust-<lb/>
ed the symbol. He uses it once<lb/>
more on top of the police cars<lb/>
(which usually have blue lights)<lb/>
which arrive on the scene along<lb/>
with the deafest group of neigh-<lb/>
bors anywhere after the entire<lb/>
house has been razed to the<lb/>
ground. Boorman needed<lb/>
a device which would allow for<lb/>
deviation from the laws of nature<lb/>
without the appearance of absurd<lb/>
contrivance. Fa this purpose he<lb/>
uses a visually exdting deception<lb/>
brought about by reflected and<lb/>
refraded images. Boornrwi puts<lb/>
faces in mirrors, behind glass, in<lb/>
reflection on water surfaces and<lb/>
in seeminqly infinite refledions<lb/>
and refractions from sets of<lb/>
mirrors. He is most effective at<lb/>
this technique in the center where<lb/>
Dr. Tuskin works which has no<lb/>
opaque walls.<lb/>
In spite of Boorman's adroit<lb/>
usage of dnematic devices, THE<lb/>
HERETIC is still no more than an<lb/>
elaborately mediocre movie. Four<lb/>
years ago when THE EXORCIST<lb/>
was originally released, demonic<lb/>
possession held a great deal more<lb/>
fasdnation than it does today<lb/>
after a glut of possession movies<lb/>
which peaked in BURNT OFFER-<lb/>
ING when Karen Black was<lb/>
possessed by the spirit of a house.<lb/>
Despite its seeming ex-<lb/>
haustion as a theme, another<lb/>
EXORCIST film is now in the<lb/>
planning stages. EXORCIST III,<lb/>
THE HUCKSTER will again star<lb/>
Linda Blair, who is befriended by<lb/>
Farrah Fawcett-Majors, the<lb/>
Mother Superior of a oonvent<lb/>
located in a mobile home park<lb/>
outside of Las Vegas, Nevada.<lb/>
Together they oonvinoe the Pope<lb/>
(Truman Capote) and Colonel<lb/>
Sanders (Henry Winkler) to back<lb/>
them in a chain of quickie<lb/>
exordsm dinics they plan to open<lb/>
in the Padfic Northwest<lb/>
ALBUM<lb/>
Continued from page 7.<lb/>
Walden (the best drummer in jazz superb, and the indusion of two<lb/>
today), and Raymond Gomez has songs by Walden and one by<lb/>
to succeed, one way or the other. Clarke almost succeed in making<lb/>
The performance of each is this recording a jazz entry.<lb/>
THISWEEKATTHE<lb/>
ELBOROOM<lb/>
Wed. 10th Avenue Band<lb/>
Thurs. Razz IVIa Tazz<lb/>
Early Bird Special<lb/>
 price admission'til 9:30<lb/>
Come Early!<lb/>
Every Sunday is Ladies Nite<lb/>
Cotonch Str�t<lb/>
OrMRvili<lb/>
SCRAPS is having some fun this summer �<lb/>
For every pair of jeans purchased at Scraps,<lb/>
you get a free cheeseburger and medium<lb/>
soft drink at Beef N'Shakes.<lb/>
This offer even includes Levi'sf TKG, MALE,<lb/>
Snapf inger, and French Star.<lb/>
For the best in fashion and some fun, come to SCRAPS.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
CotancheSt.<lb/>
Phone 758-4354 Hours 10 A.M5:30 P.M<lb/>
Clarke's "The Heat of the Battle"<lb/>
is explosive, hampered only by<lb/>
poor production, white Walden s<lb/>
seductive "Judy" is a classic,<lb/>
further enhanced by Walden's<lb/>
subtle percussion. Walden's<lb/>
 Your Love closes the album on<lb/>
a sour note. Buchanan's thin<lb/>
voice adds to the destruction of a<lb/>
basically weak song.<lb/>
"Hidden" is the nearest approxi-<lb/>
mation Buchanan makes to jazz,<lb/>
and this reviewer hopes it is an<lb/>
indication of things to oome.<lb/>
Buchanan's other compositions<lb/>
are firmly rooted in his specialty<lb/>
of bluesrock. "The Circle"<lb/>
attempts to be great rock, with<lb/>
music that can best be described<lb/>
as a hybrid of "Gimme Shelter"<lb/>
and "All Along the Watchtower"<lb/>
with one-fourth the energy of<lb/>
either. The song is plagued with<lb/>
embarrassingly simple lyrics.<lb/>
"The Adventures of Brer<lb/>
Rabbit and Tar Baby" is the<lb/>
album's most enjoyable moment.<lb/>
This tongue in cheek duet be-<lb/>
tween Buchanan and Clarke<lb/>
marvellously paradies the<lb/>
twangy, railroad rhythm of early<lb/>
"guitar" reoords by the likes of<lb/>
Les Paul or Chet Atkins. Clarke's<lb/>
wash tub bass is marvelous.<lb/>
In "Done Your Daddy Dirty<lb/>
Buchanan keeps the lyrics merci-<lb/>
fully short, repeating the title,<lb/>
allowing the music to express his<lb/>
"shame on you" attitude.<lb/>
All the pyrotechnics<lb/>
befitting a "legendary" perform-<lb/>
er are in order, with some truly<lb/>
amazing riffs tossed about like<lb/>
confetti. Buchanan continues to<lb/>
assert himself as a major force in<lb/>
today's music.<lb/>
(Album courtesy of Apple<lb/>
Reoords.)<lb/>
(1) SPICED HAM<lb/>
(2) BOLOGNA &amp; CHEESE<lb/>
(3) HAM &amp; SWISS<lb/>
(4) HAM, SWISS &amp; SALAMI<lb/>
(5) TUNA<lb/>
'6) ROAST BEEF<lb/>
(7) TURKEY<lb/>
(8) CLUB<lb/>
(9) SUPER<lb/>
(10) CHEESE<lb/>
(11) HOT PASTROMI<lb/>
(12) HOT CORNED BEEF<lb/>
BUM PIES BEST<lb/>
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SERVING A QUART OF YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE<lb/>
Try Our Phone-in &amp; Take-Out Service 752-1828 706EvansSt.<lb/>
(Corner of Evans &amp; 8th St.)<lb/>
Store Hours- 10:00a.m. -2a.m. MonSat.<lb/>
Sun. - 12:00 p.m. -2:00a.m.<lb/>
Enjoy your favorite programs on our 6 ft. T.V.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Cr<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
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Street<lb/>
Fri.&amp;Sat. Bull<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
ft<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
LIVE JAZZ<lb/>
<pb facs="00057134_0009"/><lb/>
MHHMHHH<lb/>
IHHHBHm<lb/>
tarn?:<lb/>
jusms. MSB<lb/>
���n<lb/>
�bBBbH<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
22 June 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
77ire? wrestlers signed<lb/>
Scharf announces<lb/>
two swimmers<lb/>
ECU swim coach, Ray Scharf,<lb/>
announced today the signing of<lb/>
two top-notch swimmers for the<lb/>
1977-78 school year, one each for<lb/>
the Pirates' men's and women's<lb/>
teams. Kevin Weisil signed with<lb/>
the 12-time Southern Conference<lb/>
champion men's squad, while<lb/>
Julie Schaffer will join the Lady<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
Weisel, a native of Orlando,<lb/>
Fla is the son of Henry Weisel,<lb/>
coach of Rollins College swim<lb/>
team. He attended Bishop Moore<lb/>
High School in Orlando and<lb/>
finished fourth in the state of<lb/>
Florida in the 500 freestyle this<lb/>
past season with a time of 4:43.<lb/>
He also lists times of 1:46 in the<lb/>
200 free and 16:30 for the 1,650<lb/>
free.<lb/>
"I am very pleased Kevin has<lb/>
decided to attend East Carolina<lb/>
Scharf said. "We really wanted<lb/>
him. He is a worker, cut out of the<lb/>
I<lb/>
same mold as Ted Nieman<lb/>
(Pirates' record-breaking fresh-<lb/>
man from Winter Park, Fla.) He<lb/>
will make us super strong in the<lb/>
freestyle events and relays<lb/>
Schaffer, a butterflier from<lb/>
Rockville, Md attended<lb/>
Magruder High School. She has<lb/>
best times of 1 00.7 in the 100 fly<lb/>
and 2:10.6 in the200 fly. Her time<lb/>
in the later event would have<lb/>
placed in the national collegiate<lb/>
meet this season. An honor role<lb/>
student, Schaffer also swam the<lb/>
200 individual medley in 2:16.8,<lb/>
the 400 IM in 453 and the 100<lb/>
free in 55.8.<lb/>
"Julie is a national caliber<lb/>
swimmer for us Scharf said. "I<lb/>
hope her transition to the oollege<lb/>
program will be quick, because<lb/>
she can improve our program.<lb/>
We've got the kind of program<lb/>
that should help her, both ath-<lb/>
letically and academically<lb/>
COACH RAY SCHARF, coach of East Carolina's 12-time Southern<lb/>
Conference champion swim tim, announced the signing of two<lb/>
swimmers yesterday. Julie Schaffer will join the Lady Pirates, while<lb/>
Kevin Weisel will join the men's squad. Scharf will coach both teams<lb/>
next year, after coaching the men only for the past 11 years.<lb/>
ECU assistant athletic director<lb/>
and former wrestling coach, John<lb/>
Wei born, announced today the<lb/>
signing of three more wrestlers.<lb/>
Soloman revils, Frank Prewitt and<lb/>
Scott Eaton signed grants-in-aid<lb/>
with the Pirates.<lb/>
Revils, a native of Norfolk,<lb/>
Va will wrestle in the 190-pound<lb/>
weight class for the Pirates next<lb/>
year. Although Revils has only<lb/>
wrestled fa two years, he has<lb/>
compiled a phenomenal record<lb/>
with little experience. During his<lb/>
junior season, Revils finished<lb/>
third in the Virginia state<lb/>
championships after winning the<lb/>
district title. He finished the year<lb/>
with a 35-5-2 record at 185 and<lb/>
was outstanding wrestler. As a<lb/>
senior, Revils had a record of 27-0<lb/>
and won the district and state<lb/>
championships in the 185-pound<lb/>
class. He was outstanding wrest-<lb/>
ler on the team.<lb/>
Prewitt, a 142-pounder from<lb/>
Norwich, N.Y is the brother of<lb/>
Paul Prewitt, a four-year wrestler<lb/>
for the Pirates. Prewitt attended<lb/>
Norwich High School until his<lb/>
senior year when he wrestled for<lb/>
Shurburne-Earleville High<lb/>
School.<lb/>
As a freshman 98-pounder<lb/>
Prewitt was 18-8 and was fourth<lb/>
in the Shurburne-Earleville<lb/>
Tourney and third in Section 4,<lb/>
Class A. Wrestling at 112, he<lb/>
bettered his mark to 25-5 during<lb/>
his sophomore season. He was<lb/>
second in the Shurburne-Earle-<lb/>
ville Tournament and first in<lb/>
Section 4, Class A. Prewitt<lb/>
improved his record to 28-1 -1 as a<lb/>
junior, wrestling at 126. He won<lb/>
the Sidney Tourney and was first<lb/>
in Section 4, Class A. As a senior<lb/>
at Shurburne-Earleville High,<lb/>
Prewitt finished 29-1-1. He was<lb/>
first in the Shurburne-Earleville<lb/>
Tournament, first in the Section<lb/>
4, Class A, and second in the<lb/>
sectionals.<lb/>
Eaton, another 142-pounder,<lb/>
attended Grove City (Pa.) High<lb/>
School. After going 5-5 as a<lb/>
freshman, he was sectional<lb/>
runner-up for two years before<lb/>
winning the sectionals as a<lb/>
senior. He had records of 10-5 as<lb/>
a soph, 15-2-1 as a junior and<lb/>
14-2-1 as a senior.<lb/>
"We are very happy to get<lb/>
these three guys into our pro-<lb/>
gram Welborn said. "Revils<lb/>
will give us the help we need at<lb/>
190. He is a gutsy type of<lb/>
wrestler. He's got a lot of<lb/>
potential, and with work, he will<lb/>
be great. Prewitt is a diamond in<lb/>
the rough. He had a very good<lb/>
season both as a junior and a<lb/>
senior, and was highly recruited.<lb/>
He can help us immediately at<lb/>
142. Eaton had excellent coaching<lb/>
in high school. He has seven or<lb/>
eight years of experienoe and will<lb/>
provide excellent depth at 142<lb/>
The signing of these three<lb/>
wrestlers brings the year's total<lb/>
to five signees.<lb/>
Earlier signed by the Pirates<lb/>
were Bob Passino, 116 pounder<lb/>
from Falls Church,<lb/>
Va and Charles Fine, also a 118-<lb/>
pound wrestler from Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
JOHN WELBORN, assistant athletic director and former wrestling<lb/>
coach, announced yesterday the signing of three wrestlers to grants-in-<lb/>
aid. This brings to five the total signed by Welborn thus far. He terms<lb/>
thisyear's set of recruits among the best ever to come to East Carolina.<lb/>
Bill Hill, ECU'S only all-America wrestler, will coach the Pirates next<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Baseball strengthens with five slgnings<lb/>
The East Carolina baseball<lb/>
team, which finished the regular<lb/>
season as the Southern Con-<lb/>
ference champions, have signed<lb/>
five recruits who look to be some<lb/>
of the best recruits ever brought<lb/>
in at ECU. Head Coach Monte<lb/>
Little said that he considers the<lb/>
five "quality" players. "They are<lb/>
the kind who can come in right<lb/>
away and help us. We feel we<lb/>
have improved ourselves at<lb/>
several positions<lb/>
Virginia Beach, Va. native<lb/>
Mike Sage could be the heir to<lb/>
departed Sonny Wooten's first<lb/>
base position. The 6-1,195-pound<lb/>
southpaw led his Kempsville<lb/>
High team to the state regional<lb/>
championship this season with a<lb/>
.419 batting average, to go along<lb/>
with a perfect 8-0 pitching record<lb/>
and an 0.60 ERA. Sage was<lb/>
selected to the all-East (va.)<lb/>
squad, was named the Virginia<lb/>
High School League All-State<lb/>
Team, and was named the<lb/>
Virginia Beach Sun Player of the<lb/>
Year.<lb/>
The Pirates added strength to<lb/>
the pitching corps with the<lb/>
signing of Earle Mobley. Mobley<lb/>
was a three-sport standout at<lb/>
Portsmouth (Va.) Catholic High.<lb/>
He was all-state in soccer,<lb/>
all-state and Portsmouth Sports<lb/>
Club Player of the Year in<lb/>
basketball, as well a picking up<lb/>
several baseball honors. He was<lb/>
named to the Tidewater Con-<lb/>
ference Independent Schools<lb/>
team for three years, and was an<lb/>
all-state and all-city pick his<lb/>
senior year. He was chosen the<lb/>
Portsmouth Sports Club baseball<lb/>
Player of the Year this season.<lb/>
The lefthander struck out dose to<lb/>
300 batters during his high school<lb/>
career.<lb/>
Jackie Dunn, a native of<lb/>
Fremont, N.C was a second<lb/>
baseman at Charles B. Aycock<lb/>
High in Pikesville, the same high<lb/>
school as former ECU pitcher<lb/>
Terry Durham. Dunn was all-<lb/>
conference in baseball and foot-<lb/>
ball fa two years, and finished<lb/>
with the top batting average on<lb/>
his team fa two years straight.<lb/>
Southport resident Tim Stilla<lb/>
was a pitcher at South Brunswick<lb/>
High. He was the Most Valuable<lb/>
Player on his team as well as<lb/>
being selected all-confaence. He<lb/>
won honaable mention honas in<lb/>
football, and was a letterman in<lb/>
basektball and track. He was<lb/>
named the South Brunswick<lb/>
Athlete of the Year fa 1976-77.<lb/>
Pinetown, N.C. brought Larry<lb/>
Anderson to the ECU ranks.<lb/>
Anderson, who attended Bath<lb/>
High School, was a star in both<lb/>
football and baseball, capturing<lb/>
MVP honas in both sports. In<lb/>
baseball, he was also all con-<lb/>
ference, all-East and captain of<lb/>
his team. He garnered similar<lb/>
honors in football, and was<lb/>
named a high school all-America.<lb/>
"Our schedule next year will<lb/>
demand good players fa our<lb/>
team said Coach Little. "We<lb/>
have a number of recruits that<lb/>
will add depth to our squad plus<lb/>
give c ir veterans a challenge fa<lb/>
playing time. This has been the<lb/>
best reauiting year we've had in<lb/>
my five years at East Carolina<lb/>
MONTE LITTLE<lb/>
<pb facs="00057134_0010"/><lb/>
MMH<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAP 22 June 1977<lb/>
Standings<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA SUMMER COLLEGIA TE LEAGUE STA TS<lb/>
 Through Sunday. June 19<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Louisburg<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Atlantic Christian<lb/>
Campbell<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
W<lb/>
6<lb/>
6<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
L<lb/>
1<lb/>
GB Pet.<lb/>
.857<lb/>
212.750<lb/>
31 12.625<lb/>
53.444<lb/>
64.333<lb/>
86.111<lb/>
Pirates among leaders<lb/>
in Summer League stats<lb/>
J<lb/>
I<lb/>
BONANZA<lb/>
Good wholesome American food<lb/>
at right neighborly prices.<lb/>
For your dining pleasure,<lb/>
Bonanza is now serving Paul Masson<lb/>
Wines. Also, Michelob, Budweiser<lb/>
and Auheuser Busch, Natural Light<lb/>
Draught Beers.<lb/>
Location<lb/>
520 Greenville Blvd. 264 By-pass<lb/>
Jim's<lb/>
SERV-A-SET<lb/>
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Guaranteed Repairs<lb/>
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Installations<lb/>
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Despite going hitless in three trips in North<lb/>
Carolina's lone game of the week, Tar Heel Greg<lb/>
Robinson clung to the hitting lead in the North<lb/>
Carolina Summer Collegiate League through two<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
Robinson has picked up 10 hits in 20 trips for a<lb/>
fine .5000 batting average.<lb/>
East Carolina's Eddie Gates moved up from third<lb/>
to second plaoe to challenge with a .447 average,<lb/>
while Dave Terrell of Campbell leaped from eighth<lb/>
' to third with a .429 mark.<lb/>
Three other batters are also hitting .4000 or<lb/>
better. They are Max Raynor of Louisburg with a<lb/>
.424 mark, Chuck Barclift of Louisburg at .412, and<lb/>
Jim Atkinson of North Carolina at .419.<lb/>
North Carolina held onto the lead in the league<lb/>
only by virtue of winning its lone start, while<lb/>
Louisburg was getting its second defeat at the hands<lb/>
of Campbell, 8-4, on Friday. That left the Tar Heels<lb/>
with a 6-1 record, while Louisburg is second at 6-2.<lb/>
East Carolina is the only other team above .500 with<lb/>
a 5-3 mark.<lb/>
The Pirates lead the team batting again this<lb/>
week with a .302 mark, but Louisburg is hard-press-<lb/>
ing them with a .301 average.<lb/>
Louisburg's Bill Lucas has still not given us an<lb/>
earned run in 21 innings of hurling. His 0.00 earned<lb/>
run average easily tops the league. He's 2-0 so far<lb/>
for the Hurricanes.<lb/>
North Carolina's Greg Norris is second in<lb/>
pitching with a 2.00 ERA, followed by Larry Ward of<lb/>
Louisburg at 2.25, and Cecil Davis of UNC-Wilm-<lb/>
ington at 2.50.<lb/>
Louisburg leads the team pitching with a 2.45<lb/>
mark, with North Carolina second at 2.92.<lb/>
THESE THREE PIRATES are among statistical<lb/>
leaders after two weeks of the Summer League<lb/>
season. Mickey Britt left leads in strikeouts with 33<lb/>
and wins with three. Bobby Supel center holds the<lb/>
league leads in triples with three, runs batted in<lb/>
with 14 and extra base hits with seven. Eddie Gates<lb/>
stands second in batting with a .447 average, and<lb/>
leads in most hits with 17 and stolen bases with 11.<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
NOW ISTHETIMETO ENROLL<lb/>
IN THE AIR FORCE ROTC4 YEAR PROGRAM<lb/>
and here are some facts that should interest you:<lb/>
 Courses open to college men and women.<lb/>
 Two hours academic credit per semester.<lb/>
 No service obligation now.<lb/>
 Full scholarships available that pay tuition, all fees, plus a $100 a month tax-free allowance.<lb/>
 An Air Force officer commission when you receive your baccalaureate.<lb/>
 The opportunity to get to know the spirit that made our nation great.<lb/>
Talk with our Air Force ROTC representative.<lb/>
Contact: Captain Ashley Lane<lb/>
ECU Wright Annex 206<lb/>
Phone 757-6597<lb/>
Air Harcc IHITC<lb/>
Gateway to a Great<lb/>
Way of Life<lb/>
<pb facs="00057134_0011"/><lb/>
fJS:P"<lb/>
�i<lb/>
r:<lb/>
�� i , ��<lb/>
<lb/>
Bucs win three of five<lb/>
22 June 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Britt wins two to key Pirates<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina's summer<lb/>
league baseball team played five<lb/>
games in a row during the past<lb/>
week and came out with three<lb/>
wins and a pair of losses to<lb/>
remain in third place in the<lb/>
league.<lb/>
The Pirates beat Campbell<lb/>
twice, 10-9 at Harrington Field on<lb/>
Tuesday night of last week and<lb/>
5-2 in Buies Creek on Saturday.<lb/>
Atlantic Christian was the other<lb/>
victim, losing to the Pirates 15-7<lb/>
at Harrington. Louisburg and<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington beat the<lb/>
Pirates, 8-1 and 5-3, respectively,<lb/>
on their home fields.<lb/>
ECU 10, CAMPBELL 9<lb/>
The Fighting Camels jumped<lb/>
out to a 6-0 lead over M ickey Britt<lb/>
and East Carolina in this game<lb/>
during the first two innings. The<lb/>
Pirates came back with five in the<lb/>
fourth, keyed by Kevin<lb/>
Cameron's two-run single. After<lb/>
the Bucs took a 8-6 lead in the<lb/>
sixth and led 9-7 after seven, the<lb/>
Camels came back with two in the<lb/>
eighth to tie the game.<lb/>
In the bottom of the tenth,<lb/>
ECU's Maoon Move hit a ball to<lb/>
right centerfield and Moe Toner<lb/>
dropped for a two-base error.<lb/>
Robert Brinkley grounded to first<lb/>
base, with Move taking third.<lb/>
Tommy Warriok came on to hit a<lb/>
two out single to drive in the<lb/>
winning run.<lb/>
Britt, in raising his mark to<lb/>
2-0, was not real sharp. He gave<lb/>
up eight earned runs, but struck<lb/>
out 13.<lb/>
LOUISBURG 8, ECU 1<lb/>
Louisburg, in a fight with<lb/>
Carolina for the league lead,<lb/>
whipped the Pirates although<lb/>
they scored just two earned runs.<lb/>
Bill Lucas, recruited by East<lb/>
Carolina, tossed a three-hitter at<lb/>
the Pirates to earn the win. Billy<lb/>
Davis absorbed his second loss of<lb/>
the season for the Bucs, even<lb/>
though he pitched fairly well,<lb/>
with errors by the Pirate defense<lb/>
giving up most of the runs.<lb/>
ECU 15, ACC7<lb/>
The Pirate hitters put on their<lb/>
hitting shoes for this game,<lb/>
bombarding the Bulldogs with 19<lb/>
hits. Eddie Gates, one of the<lb/>
league's leading hitters, was four<lb/>
for six with two RBI's while<lb/>
Raymie Styons was 3-4, including<lb/>
his league-leading third homer of<lb/>
the young season. Tommy Cobb<lb/>
came out of his slump to hit three<lb/>
for four with three RBIs. Tim<lb/>
Barden led Atlantic Christian at<lb/>
the bat, going three for five.<lb/>
Billy Williamson got the win<lb/>
for the Pirates in relief, pitching 5<lb/>
1 3 innings of ball without giving<lb/>
up a run. He gave up just four hits<lb/>
during the span.<lb/>
U'NOW5, ECU3<lb/>
The Pirates looked flat at the<lb/>
�<lb/>
Aesthetics Aside,<lb/>
v<lb/>
McDonald's of Greenville<lb/>
Delicately poses the question<lb/>
How far can you spit?<lb/>
And cordially invites you to find out<lb/>
by participating in the<lb/>
First Annual<lb/>
(we hope)<lb/>
Watermelon Seed<lb/>
Spitting Contest<lb/>
<lb/>
Saturday, June Twenty fifth<lb/>
? P M<lb/>
at McDonald's<lb/>
Tenth and Cotanche Streets<lb/>
In observance of<lb/>
World Championship<lb/>
Watermelon Seed Spitting<lb/>
Contest Day<lb/>
Prizes Will Be Awarded!<lb/>
First Prize � A month's supply of Big Mac<lb/>
sandwiches (30)<lb/>
Second Prize -A month's supply of<lb/>
Hamburgers (30)<lb/>
Third Prize � A week's supply of World<lb/>
Famous French Fries<lb/>
Competition by age groups: 6 12 years<lb/>
12 17 years<lb/>
Adult<lb/>
� McDonali<lb/>
rs<lb/>
Wr do It all for you<lb/>
bat in this game, giving just<lb/>
seven hits off Mike Hunter. The<lb/>
Pirates managed single runs in<lb/>
the fourth, sixth and ninth<lb/>
innings against the previously<lb/>
winless Seahawks. Hunter is 1-1.<lb/>
Chip McDonald staked the<lb/>
Seahawks off to a 2-0 lead in the<lb/>
second when he hit a two-run<lb/>
homer over the leftfield fence off<lb/>
Brad Price. After the Pirates run<lb/>
in the fourth, the Seahawks got<lb/>
three in the bottom of the frame<lb/>
to finish their scoring.<lb/>
The Pirates staged a mild rally<lb/>
in the ninth. Supel began the<lb/>
inning with a triple off the<lb/>
rightfield wall. After Macon<lb/>
Moye walked and Styons popped<lb/>
up to the third baseman, Robert<lb/>
Brinkley hit a ball to deep right.<lb/>
The Seahawk rightfielder caught<lb/>
the ball up against the fence, with<lb/>
Supel scoring. TommyWarrick<lb/>
kept the rally going with a single,<lb/>
but Tommy Cobb flied out to deep<lb/>
right to end the game.<lb/>
ECU 7, CAMPBELL 3<lb/>
The Pirates jumped out to a<lb/>
2-0 lead with single runs in the<lb/>
second and third innings, but the<lb/>
Camels came back to tie it up with<lb/>
a two-run homer by Curly<lb/>
Summerlin in the fourth. The<lb/>
Pirates added single runs m the<lb/>
fifth and sixth and three in the<lb/>
ninth to win the game.<lb/>
Britt was again the winner for<lb/>
the Pirates, picking up his third<lb/>
win of the season. He pitched a<lb/>
five-hitter, with just one of the<lb/>
hits-the homer-being out of the<lb/>
infield. He struck out 11 and<lb/>
walked but one.<lb/>
Bobby Supel's two-run triple<lb/>
off the wall in the ninth provided<lb/>
the Pirates with the insurance<lb/>
runs needed.<lb/>
The Pirates will tv e another<lb/>
busy week ahead, playing at<lb/>
Atlantic Christian tonight, host-<lb/>
ing Carolina and UNC-W on<lb/>
Friday and Saturday night, re-<lb/>
spectively, and traveling to<lb/>
Carolina on Monday.<lb/>
rtauioA<lb/>
Wednesday is<lb/>
Free Stage Night<lb/>
If you have some<lb/>
talent, come down<lb/>
and try out!<lb/>
Pizza Special<lb/>
Monday &amp; Wednesday<lb/>
Nights 5-7 P.M.<lb/>
Special Prices on Beverages!<lb/>
Ladies Night MonFri. Mini-Chef Salad 99<lb/>
The Pro Shop<lb/>
Of Greenville, Inc.<lb/>
� Pro Line Golf<lb/>
� Tennis Equipment and Attire<lb/>
� Casual Wfear<lb/>
Greenville's Headquarters for Faded Glory<lb/>
(Men and Women, Sizes ranging from 26 to 38)<lb/>
Store Hours<lb/>
MonFri. 10�8<lb/>
Sat. 10�6<lb/>
We String Rackets Ourselves<lb/>
111 Eastbrook Drive<lb/>
752-1525<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057134_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 22 June 1977<lb/>
� 9�y �e� kj ��<lb/>
fe5 oco��<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057134_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>