<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057143_0001"/>
Vct.SSNo.pf<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
nuM.<lb/>
1978<lb/>
Editor, conflicts said to be<lb/>
reasons for delay of BUC<lb/>
SUSAN ROGERSON. 1977-78 BUC editor.<lb/>
By MARK BARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
For the second year in a<lb/>
row, the annual yearbook,<lb/>
BUCCANEER , is in danger<lb/>
of not being published.<lb/>
According to reliable<lb/>
sources, the yearbook,<lb/>
which was to have included<lb/>
material from the aborted<lb/>
previous edition, has not<lb/>
yet been sent to the pub-<lb/>
lishers, Hunter Publishing<lb/>
Company of Winston-Sa-<lb/>
lem. The original deadlines<lb/>
came periodically through<lb/>
the summer.<lb/>
Problems with the year-<lb/>
book seemed to surface last<lb/>
spring. According to sev-<lb/>
eral sources, up until the<lb/>
beginning of last spring<lb/>
semester, the yearbook<lb/>
proceeded on schedule.Due<lb/>
to several conflicts on the<lb/>
staff between the editor<lb/>
and the different staff<lb/>
members, conditions began<lb/>
to deteriorate.<lb/>
Complaints against the<lb/>
aditor were aimed at a<lb/>
recent meeting of the Me-<lb/>
dia Board. Complaints a-<lb/>
gainst Susan Rogerson in-<lb/>
Media Board discusses yearbook ;<lb/>
Budget yet to be approved<lb/>
By JULIE EVERETTE<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Media Board, in a<lb/>
meeting Tuesday, dis-<lb/>
cussed plans to approve a<lb/>
budget for the<lb/>
BUCCANEER, the last of<lb/>
the media budgets to be<lb/>
approved.<lb/>
Media Board chairman<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne said the<lb/>
board will consider the<lb/>
BUCCANEER budget with-<lb/>
?.?-?. "w ?-?.?? '?'?'?"?Z-Z'Z-ZZ-ZZZ"ZZm2'ZmZmZ'Z-Z<lb/>
in the next two weeks.<lb/>
The board also plans to<lb/>
investigate why the 1977-78<lb/>
yearbook has been delayed.<lb/>
In other business,<lb/>
Payne says a Media Board<lb/>
secretary will be selected in<lb/>
September.<lb/>
Also. Robert Swaim,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD adver-<lb/>
tising manager, proposed a<lb/>
van for FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
staff members to be used<lb/>
twice a week to transport<lb/>
newspapers to and from the<lb/>
publishing company.<lb/>
The board postponed<lb/>
the decision to see if<lb/>
arrangements can be made.<lb/>
Swaim also requested a<lb/>
velox machine for<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD and<lb/>
light repairments. The dec-<lb/>
ision was also postponed.<lb/>
In other business, the<lb/>
board discussed the propo-<lb/>
sal to fund personal name-<lb/>
plates for desks in the<lb/>
EBONY HERALD office.<lb/>
The board postponed<lb/>
the decision until the media<lb/>
board tours media offices<lb/>
on campus to determine<lb/>
actual needs.<lb/>
The Media Board<lb/>
agreed to meet every Tues-<lb/>
day at 3 p.m.<lb/>
The board consists of<lb/>
nine members. Dr. James<lb/>
Tucker serves as advisor.<lb/>
According to Payne,<lb/>
there has been some cam-<lb/>
pus opposition to the board<lb/>
from other campus organi-<lb/>
zations concerning the<lb/>
boards' spending.<lb/>
"We are financially<lb/>
sound Payne said.<lb/>
"The Media Board is not<lb/>
hoarding money from other<lb/>
organizations. We have<lb/>
enough money to run effic-<lb/>
iently, but no more than is<lb/>
necessary<lb/>
eluded failure to meet<lb/>
deadlines, failure to super-<lb/>
vise the yearbook staff, and<lb/>
failure to meet obligations<lb/>
that arose in her position.<lb/>
According to a source<lb/>
close to the Media Board,<lb/>
Rogerson left school at the<lb/>
end of the spring semester<lb/>
in May with the yearbook<lb/>
incomplete. The Media<lb/>
Board was unaware of this<lb/>
fact until the middle of this<lb/>
past summer.<lb/>
Dr. James H. Tucker,<lb/>
dean of student affairs, and<lb/>
the advisor to the Media<lb/>
Board received a telephone<lb/>
call from Hunter Publishing<lb/>
Company stating that they<lb/>
had not yet received lay-<lb/>
outs, photos, and other<lb/>
related materials from the<lb/>
yearbook staff. During the<lb/>
course of that telephone<lb/>
call, a representative of<lb/>
Hunter Publishing inform-<lb/>
ed Dr. Tucker that the<lb/>
BUC was behind on<lb/>
meeting its deadlines, and<lb/>
apparently would not be<lb/>
published on time this fall.<lb/>
At this point, Tommy<lb/>
Joe Payne, chairman of the<lb/>
Media Board, owitacted<lb/>
Rogerson Rogerson ass-<lb/>
ured Payne at this time that<lb/>
she would finish the book.<lb/>
In a subsequent conver-<lb/>
sation between Payne and<lb/>
Rogerson, Rogerson said<lb/>
that her term had ended in<lb/>
May and that she was no<lb/>
longer responsible for the<lb/>
book.<lb/>
What's inside 1SU Travel Committee<lb/>
Virginia is for lovers, and even your mother knows it. :??<lb/>
-Xv<lb/>
See p. 3. 355<lb/>
planning group trips<lb/>
This week's free flick is Julia, starring Jane Fonda and j?<lb/>
Vanessa Redgrave. See p. 6.<lb/>
m<lb/>
VANESSA REDGRAVE<lb/>
T.H. White's bestsellingBoofc of Merlyn is reviewed in g?<lb/>
today's Trends section. See p. 6. ?<lb/>
ECU opens its ACC season against State this Saturday, gg<lb/>
but Pirate halfback Eddie Hicks will be sitting this one :?$<lb/>
out. See p. 8. ?$<lb/>
1<lb/>
The ECU soccer team travels to Raliegh this weekend <lb/>
for the Mayor's Cup Tournament. See p. 9. $?:?:<lb/>
i<lb/>
M?l<lb/>
Off-campus credit courses<lb/>
offered this fall at ECU<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Employees of eastern North<lb/>
Carolina social service, correct-<lb/>
ions and other human service<lb/>
delivery agencies who wish to<lb/>
work toward college degrees<lb/>
may enroll in off-campus credit<lb/>
courses to be offered this fall by<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Classes will be scheduled<lb/>
in several Region IV locations,<lb/>
including Williamston, Eliza-<lb/>
beth City. Rocky Mount, Wil-<lb/>
son. Greenville, Goidsboro,<lb/>
New Bern. Kinston and Kenan-<lb/>
sville.<lb/>
COURSESAND<lb/>
ENROLLMENT<lb/>
Course offerings, ranging<lb/>
from two to four semester<lb/>
hours, will concern such topics<lb/>
as social welfare politics, issues<lb/>
and programs; social welfare<lb/>
legislation and case law; fund-<lb/>
amentals of interviewing; hu-<lb/>
man behavior; supervision; and<lb/>
crisis intervention.<lb/>
The program, partially fund-<lb/>
ed by the U.S. Department of<lb/>
Health, Education and Welfare<lb/>
under Title XX of the Social<lb/>
Security Act, is sponsored by<lb/>
the EUC Department of Social<lb/>
Work and Correctional Services<lb/>
and the ECU Division of Contin-<lb/>
uing Education.<lb/>
Its purposes are to assist<lb/>
hyman service practitioners<lb/>
develop professionally and im-<lb/>
prove the quality of human<lb/>
service in this area.<lb/>
Since its beginning three<lb/>
years ago, more than 600<lb/>
persons from various human<lb/>
resource agencies in eastern<lb/>
N.C. have enrolled in 81 classes.<lb/>
According to program coor-<lb/>
dinator Homer Yearick, adjunct<lb/>
associate professor in the ECU<lb/>
School of Allied Health and<lb/>
Social Professions, individuals<lb/>
who participate may pursue the<lb/>
program at their own speed.<lb/>
"This program is for those<lb/>
who have successfully complet-<lb/>
ed high school a who hold<lb/>
college degrees in other fields<lb/>
and now wish to pursue an<lb/>
undergraduate degree in social<lb/>
work and correctional services<lb/>
he said<lb/>
"The courses are also of<lb/>
benefit to those who simply wish<lb/>
to enhamce their skill in human<lb/>
delivery<lb/>
Courses will be taught at the<lb/>
various locations by ECU faculty<lb/>
members, and a departmental<lb/>
faculty advisor is available at<lb/>
each location, he noted. The fall<lb/>
semester courses will begin<lb/>
during the week of Auaust 30<lb/>
and ended December 1?.<lb/>
Further information about<lb/>
the social work education pro<lb/>
gram is available from the ECU<lb/>
Department of Social Work and<lb/>
Correctional Services, School of<lb/>
Allied Health and Social Profes-<lb/>
sions, East Carolina University,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834, 757-<lb/>
6961.<lb/>
ByRICKIGLIARMIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The 78-79 Student Union<lb/>
Travel Committee is offer-<lb/>
ing five trips this year. This<lb/>
is the most that has ever<lb/>
been offered at East Caro-<lb/>
lina before.<lb/>
According to Bill Mar-<lb/>
tin, chairperson of the<lb/>
travel committee, this<lb/>
year's trips are expected to<lb/>
be the most popular in the<lb/>
committee's five-year exi-<lb/>
stance.<lb/>
"Hopefully this will be<lb/>
the best year yet said<lb/>
Martin.<lb/>
The first of the five trips<lb/>
is to New York City during<lb/>
Thanksgiving break. The<lb/>
date for this trip is Novem-<lb/>
ber 23-26. The cost of the<lb/>
trip will be $65. This fee<lb/>
will include accomodations<lb/>
(four people per room) and<lb/>
the bus fare to New York<lb/>
and back.<lb/>
The second trip will be a<lb/>
ski trip to Snowshoe, West<lb/>
Virginia from January 1-5.<lb/>
This ski trip will cost $160<lb/>
which includes room, bus<lb/>
fare, lift tickets for five<lb/>
days, and four evening<lb/>
meals.<lb/>
During spring break<lb/>
there will be two trips<lb/>
offered.<lb/>
A cruise to the Bahamas<lb/>
will cost $389. This will<lb/>
cover the cost of the cruise,<lb/>
meals while on the cruise,<lb/>
accomodations for a two-<lb/>
day stop in Ft. Lauderdale,<lb/>
and bus transportation.<lb/>
At the same time, a trip<lb/>
to Atlanta and New Orleans<lb/>
will be offered. The cost of<lb/>
this trip will be approx-<lb/>
imately $175. Accomoda-<lb/>
tions and the bus trip will<lb/>
be covered by this fare.<lb/>
The final trip will be<lb/>
offered between the time of<lb/>
graduation and the first<lb/>
session of summer school.<lb/>
This trip will be two weeks<lb/>
in London, England, and<lb/>
the price for this trip is<lb/>
$650.<lb/>
This price will include<lb/>
one week's stay at a London<lb/>
hotel. During this week,<lb/>
everyone will be ontheir<lb/>
own to travel in London or<lb/>
anywhere else they would<lb/>
like to travel. The second<lb/>
week of the trip will be<lb/>
spent on house boats. The<lb/>
house boat will cruise the<lb/>
Thames River between Ox-<lb/>
Payne reportedly told Ro-<lb/>
gerson that her responsi-<lb/>
bilities did not end in May,<lb/>
but continued until the<lb/>
book was completed, how-<lb/>
ever long after May that it<lb/>
took.<lb/>
Rogerson told Payne<lb/>
that the Photo Lab had not<lb/>
gotten photographs to her<lb/>
on time for use in the<lb/>
annual. Payne subsequently<lb/>
checked up on this alle-<lb/>
gation and reportedly found<lb/>
that the photographs were<lb/>
in fact ready to be edited at<lb/>
the time that they were<lb/>
supposed to be. The Photo<lb/>
Lab alleged that Ro-<lb/>
gerson, during the course<lb/>
of the semester, was often<lb/>
difficult or impossible to<lb/>
find on campus when the<lb/>
slides needed to be viewed<lb/>
for editing. In fact, a<lb/>
spokesman for the Photo<lb/>
Lab said that the color<lb/>
photographs for the annual<lb/>
had not yet been viewed for<lb/>
editing.<lb/>
According to a source<lb/>
close to last year's staff at<lb/>
the annual, the conditions<lb/>
at the BUCCANEER office<lb/>
went from bao 10 worse as<lb/>
the year went on Chaotic'<lb/>
was the word used in<lb/>
description for the condi-<lb/>
tions in the office. The<lb/>
source said that the staff<lb/>
was not well supervised<lb/>
during the crucial months<lb/>
from January throuQh May.<lb/>
One of the more start-<lb/>
ling revelations to come out<lb/>
of the Media Board meet-<lb/>
ing was the fact that<lb/>
between 25 and<lb/>
30 completed pages of<lb/>
the annual, ready for re-<lb/>
lease to the publishers,<lb/>
were found in the yearbook<lb/>
office by the new editor<lb/>
when he came in to start<lb/>
work on the new edition of<lb/>
the annual. Speculation has<lb/>
arisen as to where the rest<lb/>
of the pages are.<lb/>
Unconfirmed reports<lb/>
have said that the rest of<lb/>
the yearbook is in the hands<lb/>
of Susan Rogerson.<lb/>
Dr. James H. Tucker,<lb/>
an advisor to the Media<lb/>
Board hopes that the issue<lb/>
can be resolved very soon.<lb/>
He believes that if the<lb/>
yearbook can be made<lb/>
ready for release before<lb/>
Christmas vacation, it<lb/>
would be worthwhile to try<lb/>
and continue the project.<lb/>
He couldn't say when the<lb/>
yearbook would be pub-<lb/>
lished, because he has not<lb/>
talked with Rogerson<lb/>
in a long time.<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne said that<lb/>
he hoped there would be an<lb/>
annual and that he hoped it<lb/>
would be a good one. He<lb/>
also expressed the hope<lb/>
that it would come out<lb/>
soon.<lb/>
ford and London. The<lb/>
house boat rental is inclu-<lb/>
ded in the fare.<lb/>
The $650 will also cover<lb/>
the flight to London and<lb/>
back.<lb/>
While on the trips,<lb/>
individual insurance poli-<lb/>
cies will be in effect. The<lb/>
student union will not be<lb/>
held responsible for any<lb/>
mishaps to the participants<lb/>
except for the time of<lb/>
traveling.<lb/>
The only qualification<lb/>
for attending the trips is<lb/>
that all participants must<lb/>
be students, faculty and<lb/>
administration, or imme-<lb/>
diate family.<lb/>
While on the trips, the<lb/>
participants are on their<lb/>
own to do whatever they<lb/>
please .<lb/>
Registration for the<lb/>
New York City, Bahamas<lb/>
cruise, and the Atlanta-<lb/>
New Orleans trip has al-<lb/>
ready begun. Ticket sales<lb/>
are on a first come-first<lb/>
serve basis.<lb/>
"It'satrip, not a tour<lb/>
said Martin. "We just get<lb/>
you there and you're on<lb/>
your own. We don't check<lb/>
upon you<lb/>
See TRA VEL. p. 3<lb/>
SO WHAT DO we do for an encore' Students will do<lb/>
anything to pass the time while waiting for State-ECU<lb/>
tickets.<lb/>
Campus cops warn students<lb/>
of theft-rape, and larceny<lb/>
DOGS PAUSE ON malt aa humans cnanga dasaas.<lb/>
By A RAH V'ENABLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Francis M. Eddings, chief of poi? <lb/>
campus security, said that already this year,<lb/>
sround25wallets have been reported stolen, and<lb/>
a few bicycles have been taken.<lb/>
The reason for this, he says, is due to the<lb/>
carelessness of students<lb/>
A students may leave his room unlocked and<lb/>
only be gone a few minutes It only takes 10 or 20<lb/>
seconds to walk off with a wallet, Eddings said.<lb/>
Eddings asks that students lock their doors<lb/>
when leaving their rooms, and use precautionary<lb/>
measures in preventing larceny.<lb/>
Eddings says campus police are prepared, but<lb/>
don't want to be confronted with problems.<lb/>
This year, a dispatcher will be on duty 24<lb/>
hours, 7 days a week. Campus Security can be<lb/>
reached at any time.<lb/>
After 8 p.m. the doors in the women s<lb/>
dormitories are supposed to be locked. However,<lb/>
Eddings says campus pottos have had to make<lb/>
rounds closing the doors two or three times a<lb/>
night.<lb/>
He reminds the woman that be keeping the<lb/>
door open for her convenience, she isalso making<lb/>
it convenient fa a prowler, rapist, ox burgular.<lb/>
Lynne Sngteton, a campus police women is<lb/>
visiting the women's dams giving a presentation<lb/>
on crime prevention. She uses slides which she<lb/>
has made, and narrates.<lb/>
In order to give the presentation she must be<lb/>
invited by dam administratas.<lb/>
Singleton is to be in Cotton. Fleming, and<lb/>
Jarvia the week of Sept 11 Participation<lb/>
is encouraged.<lb/>
w- 'W ?? ? -????'<lb/>
n'e?m ?  ?<lb/>
0mm"amr<lb/>
<pb facs="00057143_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 7<lb/>
Ceramics<lb/>
The Ceramics Department,<lb/>
in cooperation with the Visual<lb/>
Aits Forum and the S?A. is<lb/>
"sng a workshop Sept. 7 and<lb/>
the Leo Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
:er.<lb/>
Kent Follette. teacher at<lb/>
N noisState in Thibodaux. La<lb/>
lemonstrate from 10 a.m. -<lb/>
d 1 - 4 p.m. both days.<lb/>
also give a slide show<lb/>
and talk in the auditorium at 8<lb/>
Thursday evening<lb/>
VAF<lb/>
The Visual Arts Forum, the<lb/>
inization representing all<lb/>
- Is students, will hold its<lb/>
eeting of the year on<lb/>
Sept 8 at Noon in Jenkins<lb/>
rium. All interested per-<lb/>
e encouraged to attend.<lb/>
Who's who<lb/>
 m the process of<lb/>
students from our<lb/>
iopear in the 1978-79<lb/>
? A'ho's Who Among<lb/>
"lencan Colleges<lb/>
es<lb/>
sending out forms to<lb/>
ents and organizat-<lb/>
possible locate.<lb/>
. to make a nominat-<lb/>
ot receive the<lb/>
? ' s, please contact<lb/>
? lent affairs office<lb/>
nominations<lb/>
? 13<lb/>
The BUCCANEER will hodl<lb/>
an organizational meeting<lb/>
Wed Sept. 13 at 3 p.m. in the<lb/>
BUC office, second floor, Pub<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
All past and present staffers<lb/>
and anyone interested in joining<lb/>
the staff should attend.<lb/>
If you cannot attend, please<lb/>
call 757-6501.<lb/>
C.S.O.<lb/>
The Center For Student<lb/>
Opportunities, Division of<lb/>
Health Affairs, offers cost-free<lb/>
tutorial help upon request to<lb/>
majors and pre-majors in medi-<lb/>
cine, premedicine, nursing, and<lb/>
allied health.<lb/>
CSO also offers to employ as<lb/>
tutors graduate and certain<lb/>
undergi audate students who are<lb/>
able to assist fellow students in<lb/>
chemistry, biology, anatomy,<lb/>
physics, math and other courses<lb/>
in health professions curricula.<lb/>
Students interested in either<lb/>
aspect of this program should<lb/>
contact the Center For Student<lb/>
Opportunities immediately.<lb/>
Visit 208 Ragsdale Hall, or call<lb/>
757-6122, 6075, or 6081.<lb/>
Rick Elridge<lb/>
You are invited to come and<lb/>
hear singer, guitarist, and com-<lb/>
poser Rick Elridge thisThurs. at<lb/>
8 - 10 p.m. in Wright Audito-<lb/>
rium.<lb/>
Rick is a young man who<lb/>
used to be in a rock band and<lb/>
now istraveling all over the U.S.<lb/>
singing songs about whatJpsus<lb/>
has done and is doing in his life<lb/>
since he met Him.<lb/>
There is no admission<lb/>
charge and everyone is wel-<lb/>
come. This is being sponsored<lb/>
by the ECU Full Gospel Student<lb/>
Fellowship chapter.<lb/>
Open house<lb/>
Everyone is invited to an<lb/>
open house that is more than<lb/>
shaking hands at the Baptist<lb/>
Student Union, 511 East 10th St.<lb/>
oehind the ECU library, tonight<lb/>
beginning at 5 p.m. Supper is 75<lb/>
cents and you don't have to be<lb/>
baptist.<lb/>
The Baptist Student Union is<lb/>
a place where social, intellectual<lb/>
spiritual, and ethical growth are<lb/>
brought together.<lb/>
S6A<lb/>
There will be a manda-<lb/>
tory candidates meeting<lb/>
Thurs Sept. 7 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
the Multi-Purpose, Mend-<lb/>
enhall. Filing ends Thurs-<lb/>
day at 5 p.m. The election<lb/>
will be held on Sept. 19.<lb/>
REBEL<lb/>
The REBEL staff is now<lb/>
accepting original poetry,<lb/>
essays, plays, and short stories<lb/>
for publication in the 1979 issue<lb/>
of ECU's literary magazine.<lb/>
Your work should be type-<lb/>
written and can be brought to<lb/>
the REBEL off ioe in the publica-<lb/>
tions building, or mailed to The<lb/>
REBEL, Mendenhall, Greenvil-<lb/>
le N.C. 27834, or call 757-6502.<lb/>
Please keep a copy of your<lb/>
work and remember to include<lb/>
your name, address, and phone<lb/>
number with each submission.<lb/>
The deadline for literature is<lb/>
Dec. 15, 1978.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
The Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center recreation area has a lot<lb/>
to offer you. Watch for these<lb/>
great specials coming soon.<lb/>
' ? Rent-A-Lane" - begins<lb/>
Sept. 9. Saturdays from Noon to<lb/>
6 p.m. For $3 you can rent a<lb/>
bowling lane for one hour.<lb/>
"Red Pin Bowling begins<lb/>
Sun Sept. 16. Every Sunday<lb/>
from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. yccrget<lb/>
the chance to win one free game<lb/>
with every game bowled. Make<lb/>
a strike when the head pin is red<lb/>
and you win!<lb/>
"Discount Days are every<lb/>
Monday from 2 p.m. until 5<lb/>
p.m. Prices in bowling, billiards<lb/>
Attractions<lb/>
The Student Union Special<lb/>
Attractions Committee will meet<lb/>
on Tues Sept. 12 at 4 p.m. in<lb/>
room 238of Mendenhall. This is<lb/>
a most important meeting that<lb/>
requires the attendance of all<lb/>
committee members.<lb/>
Tourney<lb/>
and table tennis are V.<lb/>
beginning Mon Sept. 18.<lb/>
off<lb/>
Recreational tournaments<lb/>
sponsored by Mendenhall Stud-<lb/>
ent Center will be held this<lb/>
tsemester beginning Oct. 9 to<lb/>
select representatives to attend<lb/>
the ACU-I regional games tour-<lb/>
nament in Knoxville, Tenn.<lb/>
All full-time students inter-<lb/>
ested in participating should<lb/>
pick up necessary information at<lb/>
the Billiards or Bowling Centers<lb/>
in Mendenhall. The competition<lb/>
will involve billiards, backgam-<lb/>
mon, table tennis, bowling, and<lb/>
chess.<lb/>
Day and Dorm student pre-<lb/>
liminary tournaments will be<lb/>
held in October to select partici-<lb/>
pants to oompete in the All-<lb/>
Campus Tournaments to be held<lb/>
in November. All students must<lb/>
register by the deadline set up<lb/>
for each tournament.<lb/>
Mixed doubles<lb/>
Sign up now for MSC Mixed<lb/>
Doubles Bowling Leagues There<lb/>
will be a Monday night and a<lb/>
Tuesday league meeting at 7<lb/>
p.m. each week.<lb/>
The first meetings will be<lb/>
held on Sept. 11 and 12 at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Bowling Center. You must sign<lb/>
your name fa the league of your<lb/>
choioe on the poster located on<lb/>
the main bulletin board on the<lb/>
groud floor of the Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
AA<lb/>
Several AA members of the<lb/>
ECU campus community are<lb/>
organizing a University AA<lb/>
group. The initial organizational<lb/>
meeting will be held Fri Sept.<lb/>
8, in room 307, Erwin Hall.<lb/>
All interested individuals are<lb/>
oordially invited to attend.<lb/>
Cheer<lb/>
Anyone interested in a male<lb/>
position on the ECU cheer-<lb/>
leading squad, there will be an<lb/>
opening, beginning with the<lb/>
second home game, Sept. 30.<lb/>
Meet at MingesonSept. 5 at<lb/>
6 p.m.<lb/>
There will also be tryouts for<lb/>
a Pirate mascot (male or female)<lb/>
Meet on the same date<lb/>
for more information.<lb/>
Roc club<lb/>
Anyone interested in form-<lb/>
ing a recreational club to meet<lb/>
for weekly competition in bridge<lb/>
chess, or table tennis should<lb/>
sign up now at the Billiards<lb/>
Center in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Sigma Tau<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta, National<lb/>
English Society, will hold its<lb/>
first meeting on Mon Sept. 18,<lb/>
at 730 p.m. in the Coffeehouse<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Janice Faulkner of the ECE<lb/>
english Department will provide<lb/>
the nights program. All English<lb/>
majors and minors are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Civitan Club<lb/>
ECU Collegiate Civitan Club<lb/>
will hold its first meeting on<lb/>
Sept. 7, at 7 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
C-205.<lb/>
All former Junior Civitans<lb/>
are invited to attend or anyone<lb/>
wishing to become a member of<lb/>
a oollegiate service dub.<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
Travel Committee meeting.<lb/>
Thurs Sept 9. at 3 p.m. in<lb/>
room238Mendenhall. All mem-<lb/>
bers must be there<lb/>
Hours for the Crafts Center at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center are<lb/>
3 p.m. until 10 p.m Mon<lb/>
through Fr. .and 10 a.m. until 3<lb/>
p.m Sat.<lb/>
The Center is oomposed of a<lb/>
darkroom with three enlargers,<lb/>
a ceramics area, a jewelry<lb/>
metals area, a general crafts<lb/>
are. and textiles area with floor<lb/>
looms for weaving<lb/>
All full-time ECU students,<lb/>
faculty, staff and spouses are<lb/>
eligible to use these facilities A<lb/>
semester membership fee entit-<lb/>
les the Crafts Center member to<lb/>
use the fatalities, to check out<lb/>
tools and equipment, to check<lb/>
out library materials, to enlist<lb/>
the aid of crafts supervisors<lb/>
and to enroll in introductory-<lb/>
level workshops which are offe-<lb/>
red throughout the year<lb/>
Visit the Crafts Center any<lb/>
time during operating hours or<lb/>
call 757-6611 Ext. 271 for more<lb/>
information<lb/>
Sierra club<lb/>
The Sierra Club will hold a<lb/>
get-aoquianted meeting or<lb/>
Mon . Sept. 11. at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The program will feature a<lb/>
preview of upcoming trips, gooc<lb/>
food, good fellowship, arid a<lb/>
chance to find out about the<lb/>
club's many activities. The<lb/>
Sierra Club meets at the First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church on the<lb/>
corner of 14th and Elm Streets<lb/>
near the ECU campus.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Needs Students to work in the following positions:<lb/>
-Tovs Reporters, three reporters are needed to work on the news desk<lb/>
Must be able to type. Previous newspaper experience is helpful. Prefer<lb/>
students who have completed Journalism 2100. We are willing to train.<lb/>
-Proofreader, must be an English major. Two positions are open<lb/>
-Trends (entertainmentgPf eatures) Reporter, must be able to type,<lb/>
Journalism 2100 and experience are pref ered. We are willing to train.<lb/>
-Sports Reporter, one position open, same requirements as news reporters.<lb/>
If you are interested in any of the above post positions apply in person to<lb/>
Doug White, Editor on Monday Sept. 11 at 4 p.m. in the FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
office, second floor of the publications center, across from the library.<lb/>
ADVERTISING JOBS!<lb/>
-Advertising Salesmen, two positions open, must have car, be able to drive<lb/>
without getting lost, prefer Sophomores, MUST BE A<lb/>
BUSINESS MAJOR. Earn good money for good work. If interested in an<lb/>
advertising j ob apply in person to Robert M. Swaim, Director of Advertising<lb/>
on Monday Sept. 11 at 4 p.m. in the FOUNTAINHEAD office, second floor of<lb/>
the publications center, across from the library.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE: A twelve string Aria<lb/>
guitar in perfect cond. Beautiful<lb/>
woodwork. Call 758-7715.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
refrigerator<lb/>
ft. dorm<lb/>
luarter.<lb/>
$100. 756-2158 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 pair womensFrye<lb/>
boots, size 7. New heels and<lb/>
soles. Very good oond. $25. Call<lb/>
758-0962.<lb/>
FOR SALE: A.K.C. Irish Setter<lb/>
pups from championship hunt-<lb/>
ing and show stock. See both<lb/>
sire and dam. 756-3326 Glenn<lb/>
Holm.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 6 cu. ft. refrigerator<lb/>
in good oond. - ideal fa dorm<lb/>
rooms $80. Call 758-6919 after 8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 'l35 mrrf Canon<lb/>
f 2.5 automatic lens. Brand new<lb/>
and never used; case $175. Call<lb/>
752-2040 from 10 a.m. - 8 p.m.<lb/>
torrent (flfl<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: male<lb/>
a female to share mobile home<lb/>
3 mi. from ECU. Private room,<lb/>
$70 plus utilities. Call 756-4668<lb/>
after Sept. 12.<lb/>
QUIET MATURE male wanted<lb/>
to share Kings Row Apt. Call<lb/>
756-3278 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
DESPERATELY NEEDED:<lb/>
house in country no further than<lb/>
9 miles out of Greenville fa 2<lb/>
girls and 3 Siamese cats. Please<lb/>
call Michelle Daniels at 757-<lb/>
6366 between hours of 9 a.m.<lb/>
and 5 p.m. Will pay up to $150<lb/>
fa rent. Hurry<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: 2<lb/>
bdrm. apt. in Stratfad Arms.<lb/>
Share rent and utlltiies. Gail<lb/>
Now 756-9692.<lb/>
NEED TYPING? Cheap rates<lb/>
include proofreading, spelling,<lb/>
and grammatical corrections.<lb/>
Call Cynthia at 756-3815 any-<lb/>
time after 5 p.m.<lb/>
ANTIQUE SHOW and Flea<lb/>
market - Greenville Coflectas<lb/>
Club's 7th Annual - Sun Sept.<lb/>
10, 12-6 p.m. at Meedowbrook<lb/>
Drive-In, Mumfad Rd. near<lb/>
Airport. Info. CaJI 752-3456.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: to State Mon-<lb/>
day nights 7-10 p.m fron<lb/>
Greenville. Would consider car-<lb/>
pool. Reese call Sndy 7974979.<lb/>
SONIC DRIVE-IN<lb/>
CaJI Rod, Manager 758190<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057143_0003"/><lb/>
r t f r i<lb/>
r t<lb/>
r r <lb/>
Wilmington q fe<lb/>
goes back to school<lb/>
I<lb/>
"?. N.C.AP . With<lb/>
r Wal aaauranoes that<lb/>
 will be treated <lb/>
, Wilmington 10 leader<lb/>
Ben Chav is entered Duke Div-<lb/>
?n'ty School without incident<lb/>
Tuesday. <lb/>
Chavis is attending school on<lb/>
?JUdyreleaae P? from<lb/>
the Orange County prison facil-<lb/>
ity in Hillsborough.<lb/>
He will be taken by prison<lb/>
officials from ttv unit to the<lb/>
?hcoi each weekday, left with<lb/>
-out guard, and returned to the<lb/>
prison at night.<lb/>
Divinity school admissions<lb/>
director B. Maurice Ritchie said<lb/>
Chavis would be treated "on the<lb/>
same basis as any other<lb/>
student<lb/>
"We want everything as<lb/>
normal as possible for him and<lb/>
for the faculty<lb/>
Chavis' tuition is being paid<lb/>
by the Commission for Racial<lb/>
Justice of the United Church of<lb/>
Christ.<lb/>
And that financial support<lb/>
has drawm criticism from some<lb/>
churches, according to a<lb/>
Church of Christ spokesman.<lb/>
Prisons spokesman Stewart<lb/>
Shadabolt said Chavis had sign-<lb/>
ed an agreemen stating that his<lb/>
intentions at Duke were to<lb/>
studv<lb/>
"Any other activity other<lb/>
than scnooi win ve to be<lb/>
approved by the superintendent<lb/>
of the Orange County facility.<lb/>
He is not there to go on a<lb/>
public speaking tour or appear<lb/>
in support of any political<lb/>
TRAVEL<lb/>
continued from p. 1<lb/>
position, one way or the other<lb/>
Shadboit said.<lb/>
Chavis was charged with<lb/>
eight other black men and a<lb/>
white woman in the f irebombing<lb/>
of white-owned grocery store<lb/>
during racial violence in Wil-<lb/>
mington in 1971.<lb/>
Since that time the 10 has<lb/>
hecome cause of national and<lb/>
international concern, with<lb/>
some groups claiming the<lb/>
group is an example of the<lb/>
violation of civil rights in this<lb/>
country.<lb/>
7 Saptember 1978 FOUNTAJNHEAD Hmt<lb/>
eeds students<lb/>
interviews<lb/>
A FAMILIAR SIGHT on campus, rain or shine, is the tow truck.<lb/>
Virginia recognized i<lb/>
best slogan in nation<lb/>
RICHMOND, Va. AP - The<lb/>
Virginia State Travel Service<lb/>
says its slogan, "Virginia Is For<lb/>
Lovers is the best known<lb/>
travel slogan in the nation for<lb/>
the sixth consecutive year.<lb/>
A survey conducted by a<lb/>
Richmond research group in<lb/>
major metropolitan areas show-<lb/>
ed 58 percent of the respondants<lb/>
were familar with the slogan,<lb/>
the travel service said.<lb/>
Slogans for New Yak and<lb/>
West Virginia placed second<lb/>
and third, respectively, the<lb/>
travel service said.<lb/>
"This latest survey tells us<lb/>
that national interest in Virgin-<lb/>
ia' s vacation appeal is very high<lb/>
and still growing said Mar-<lb/>
shall Murduagh, state travel<lb/>
commissioner.<lb/>
"We've received requests<lb/>
for buttons and decals from<lb/>
people all over the world<lb/>
Murduagh added.<lb/>
The motto was created for<lb/>
the state in 1969 and has been<lb/>
used on millions of towels, pens,<lb/>
shirts, bumper stickers and<lb/>
buttons.<lb/>
Travelers spent an estimated<lb/>
$1.9 billion last year in the state,<lb/>
making travel Virginia's second-<lb/>
largest industry, the travel<lb/>
service said.<lb/>
There is no type of<lb/>
chaperoned supervision ac-<lb/>
cording to Martin. Martin<lb/>
added that for every trip<lb/>
though there is a university<lb/>
official among the parti-<lb/>
cipants in case of any legal<lb/>
problems. The official is<lb/>
also there to speak for the<lb/>
univensty if there is any<lb/>
need to do so.<lb/>
M artin hopes this travel<lb/>
season to be a very suc-<lb/>
cessful one.<lb/>
"The trips are planned<lb/>
in order to provide the<lb/>
best low-cost travel avail-<lb/>
able for students at group<lb/>
rates said Martin.<lb/>
ITALIAN RESTAURANT<lb/>
AND<lb/>
Pizzeria<lb/>
FEATURING?HOME MADE<lb/>
sacra<lb/>
OQEEU<lb/>
HERO<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
ITALIAN SAUSAGE<lb/>
MEAT BALL<lb/>
STEAK<lb/>
SALAMI<lb/>
? LASAGNA<lb/>
? ZITI AL FORMO<lb/>
? FETTUCINI<lb/>
? MANICOTTI<lb/>
? ANTIPASTO<lb/>
? SHRIMP MARINARA<lb/>
? RIB-EYE STEAK<lb/>
? VEAL PARMIGIANA<lb/>
Open 4:30 Full Take-Out Service ? CHICKEN-PARMIGIANA<lb/>
G?Ffirfl4? SQUARt<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
756-7300<lb/>
Let a Tl calculator help you make more efficient use of your time.<lb/>
This semester and for years to come.<lb/>
FREE! This S12.95 value<lb/>
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SI 24.95'<lb/>
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The Sourcebook for Programmable Calculators is a<lb/>
new book from Texas Instruments designed to help<lb/>
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programmed solutions to problems in a wide range<lb/>
of fields. And it's yours free, if you act now.<lb/>
The TI Programmable (<lb/>
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Tl's preprogrammed<lb/>
Solid State Software? !<lb/>
plug-in modules. A Mas- I<lb/>
ter Library Module of 25 <lb/>
programs in math, sta- .<lb/>
tistics, and finance is<lb/>
included. Optional li- I<lb/>
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tion. Marine Navigation. I<lb/>
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For TI-59 owners, Tl's (<lb/>
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Use this coupon to obtain your free book.<lb/>
Texas Instruments will send you a free copy ot Sourcebook for Programmable<lb/>
Calculators, a $12 95 value when you (1) Return mis completed coupon including<lb/>
serial number (2) along with your completed TI-58 or TI-59 customer information<lb/>
card (packed in box) (3) a dated copy of proof of your purchase verifying purchase<lb/>
between August 15 and October 31 1978 Year coupon, customer information con),<lb/>
and dated copy of proof of purchase must be postmarked on or before November 7.<lb/>
1971 to qualify for this special offer Book covers step by-step programmed solu-<lb/>
tions to problems m a wide range of fields mathematics calculus statistics business<lb/>
and operations research economics, biology engineering physics and astronomy<lb/>
music, and much more<lb/>
Send to: TI-585t Free look Offer P. 0 Boi 53. Lubbock Texas 79408<lb/>
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TI-58 or TI 59 SERIAL NUMBER<lb/>
llrom back of calculator!<lb/>
Please allow 30 days tor delivery Offer void where orortiMrt by law Offer oood m U S only<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
INCORPORATED<lb/>
($299.95<lb/>
Programmable 59<lb/>
(pre-written programs) are available in major study<lb/>
fields including civil, electronic and computer engi-<lb/>
neering; physics, statistics, and businessfinance.<lb/>
And, additional ready-made programs written by<lb/>
professionals in your field are available through Tl's<lb/>
Professional Program Exchange (PPX-59) member-<lb/>
, ship program.<lb/>
Tl's Programmable 58<lb/>
and 59 calculators offer<lb/>
a wide range of capa-<lb/>
bility and performance.<lb/>
From the student to the<lb/>
advanced professional,<lb/>
there's a TI Programma-<lb/>
ble ideally suited to your<lb/>
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See them both at your<lb/>
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45104<lb/>
i - - n<lb/>
By MARILYN TURNER<lb/>
Co-ordlnator of Public Info<lb/>
The Co-op office will<lb/>
give top priority for spring<lb/>
co-op placements to stu-<lb/>
dents who contact their<lb/>
coordinators prior to Octo-<lb/>
ber 13. Co-op coordinators<lb/>
Dr. Barry Davidson, Karen<lb/>
Frye, Sandy Green and Dr.<lb/>
Betsy Harper have informa-<lb/>
tion about a number of jobs<lb/>
related to your major for<lb/>
alternating semesters of<lb/>
work. Salaries for these<lb/>
positions range as high as<lb/>
$4.28 an hour on the basis<lb/>
of a forty hour week. Come<lb/>
by the Co-op office, 313<lb/>
Rawl Building, for more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Students who would like<lb/>
to learn more about how<lb/>
Cooperative Education at<lb/>
ECU can help you earn<lb/>
money and valuable job<lb/>
experience should attend<lb/>
one of the introductory<lb/>
sessions being held next<lb/>
week. The Co-op meeting<lb/>
for Art students is sched-<lb/>
uled for 2 p.m. Tuesday,<lb/>
September 12 in the Jen-<lb/>
kins Auditorium. Business<lb/>
Education, Library Science,<lb/>
and Music students should<lb/>
attend the 3:30 p.m. meet-<lb/>
ing, Tuesday, September<lb/>
12 in Rawl 304. Philosophy,<lb/>
Political Science, History,<lb/>
and Geography students<lb/>
will meet at 3 p.m Wed-<lb/>
nesday, September 13 in<lb/>
Brewster D-311.<lb/>
All students who parti-<lb/>
cipated in the summer<lb/>
co-op program are urged to<lb/>
contact their coordinators,<lb/>
or Terry Elks the Co-op<lb/>
secretary to set up appoint-<lb/>
ments with Marilyn Turner,<lb/>
Coordinator of Public Infor-<lb/>
mation. Turner would like<lb/>
to interview all students for<lb/>
the purpose of preparing<lb/>
releases for home town<lb/>
newspapers, the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, and<lb/>
local newspapers.<lb/>
Save $40<lb/>
on Womens'<lb/>
leather coats.<lb/>
Sale $99<lb/>
Reg. $139. Womens' leather full<lb/>
length coat. Tie belt with<lb/>
pockets and fully lined.<lb/>
Special<lb/>
vinyl slicker<lb/>
5.99<lb/>
Womens' rain slicker.<lb/>
100 PVC with rayon<lb/>
Wdtklrl g Brignf dolors.<lb/>
Special<lb/>
ski jacket<lb/>
12.99<lb/>
Womens'ski jacket.<lb/>
100 nylon with<lb/>
interlocking polyester.<lb/>
Special 7.99<lb/>
of cuddly<lb/>
brushed acrylic knit have ribbed,<lb/>
trim. Crew and V-neck styles in<lb/>
assorted solids and contrast<lb/>
trimmed combinations. S.M.L.<lb/>
Special 8.99<lb/>
for the<lb/>
cool weather ahead. Choose from<lb/>
Fair Isle-style pullovers, striped<lb/>
crewneck classics and cable knit<lb/>
cardigans. All acrylic for warmth<lb/>
and easy care. S.M.L.<lb/>
This<lb/>
is<lb/>
dCPenney<lb/>
?Shop 10 A.M. ? 9:30 P.M.<lb/>
?Phone 75&amp;-1190<lb/>
t<lb/>
pitfwg?mwii?<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057143_0004"/><lb/>
r r<lb/>
H?t off the wire<lb/>
1878 FOUNTAINHEAD Hm?<lb/>
AYETTEV.LLE - Norr)s<lb/>
v-Taylorwasindl0cr(dS<lb/>
Cumberland County<lb/>
'and jury late Tueadav J.<lb/>
'9nt counts.<lb/>
Anyone interested in writing<lb/>
news for the Fountain head<lb/>
call 757-6366<lb/>
'urder<lb/>
mg<lb/>
esday on<lb/>
eluding<lb/>
rape and k.dnap-<lb/>
<lb/>
DURHAM Although its<lb/>
aent says the school is<lb/>
m the real estate<lb/>
siness, Duke University<lb/>
u bought Riverben.<lb/>
acre tract of prime<lb/>
elopment land along the<lb/>
se River m northern<lb/>
County reportedly<lb/>
th several million dol-<lb/>
CHARLOTTE About<lb/>
3.500 farmers, most of<lb/>
them from North Carolina<lb/>
and Kentucky, have protes-<lb/>
ted to the Environmental<lb/>
Protection Agency about<lb/>
the possible ban or limits<lb/>
on a chemical which has<lb/>
improved tobacco produc-<lb/>
tion but now has been<lb/>
found to cause cancer in<lb/>
laboratory animals.<lb/>
<lb/>
RALEIGH - senior Federal<lb/>
Judge Algernon Lee Butler,<lb/>
a leader m the desegrega-<lb/>
tion of public schools, died<lb/>
Tuesday in Raleigh.<lb/>
WILMINGTON - A Univer-<lb/>
sity of North Carolina at<lb/>
Wilmington biochemist and<lb/>
three of his colleague's<lb/>
returned last week from a<lb/>
successful month-long ex-<lb/>
pedition to Lake Baikal, a<lb/>
30-million-year old lake in<lb/>
central Siberia. The four<lb/>
were the first foreign scien-<lb/>
tists ever allowed to do<lb/>
research there.<lb/>
<lb/>
RALEIGH - The state<lb/>
thinks it is time the Chris-<lb/>
tian-affiliated schools go on<lb/>
with the business of provid-<lb/>
ing a basic education for<lb/>
their youngsters, but offi-<lb/>
Students may study abroad<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
es are available for 15<lb/>
? in the spring. 1979<lb/>
? ECU s Central Amer-<lb/>
Program at the<lb/>
1' Nacional in Heredia.<lb/>
?:ram. now in its<lb/>
otves classes<lb/>
I i at the Costa<lb/>
??? " studies in<lb/>
guage also avail-<lb/>
) session will begin<lb/>
April 27.<lb/>
its from ECU will live<lb/>
with native Costa Rican families<lb/>
near the campus. Heredia, a<lb/>
suburb of San Jose, the capital<lb/>
city of Costa Rica, is located at<lb/>
4.000 feet above sea level.<lb/>
Weekends will be devoted to<lb/>
field trips throughout Costa Rica<lb/>
and surrounding areas.<lb/>
Classes to be offered this<lb/>
session include Spanish conver-<lb/>
sation and culture, tropical<lb/>
biology, field studies, geograp-<lb/>
hy of Mexico and Central<lb/>
America and Central American<lb/>
history.<lb/>
WED. PRISM &amp;<lb/>
FngUc?R'fE<lb/>
TRTR. s ?P Fragile<lb/>
 S<lb/>
FRI<lb/>
SAT. Ru?y Sia.xx W the Grey Band<lb/>
SUN. Sidewinder<lb/>
For a spectacular steak<lb/>
special<lb/>
Buy one get one free<lb/>
Our 8 oz. T-bone dinner<lb/>
includes choice of potato<lb/>
Texas Toast and salad from<lb/>
our FREE all-you-can eat<lb/>
Salad Bar. JJ<lb/>
cials of those schools say<lb/>
they will appeal a Superior<lb/>
Court judge's decision that<lb/>
they must file required<lb/>
annual reports on their<lb/>
operations.<lb/>
<lb/>
CHARLOTTE Ordinary<lb/>
dog ticks probably caused<lb/>
the sudden doaths of a local<lb/>
couple by infecting them<lb/>
with Rocky Mountain spot-<lb/>
ted fever. That's the diag-<lb/>
nosis by health authorities<lb/>
who were baffled until<lb/>
Tuesday by the deaths of<lb/>
Leonard Whiteside, 49, and<lb/>
his wife, Jo Ann, 47, within<lb/>
two days of each other.<lb/>
Plastic coverings<lb/>
disguise contents<lb/>
Students may arrange for<lb/>
independent study in their<lb/>
major fields.<lb/>
According to Dr. Robert<lb/>
Cramer, director of the prog-<lb/>
ram, participation in the prog-<lb/>
ram costs a student about the<lb/>
same as a semester of study on<lb/>
the ECU campus.<lb/>
Further information about<lb/>
the Costa Rica study program<lb/>
and application materials are<lb/>
available from Dr. Cramer at the<lb/>
ECU Department of Geography.<lb/>
k????<lb/>
Child's Plate FREE<lb/>
Includes Hamburger<lb/>
French Fries and Lollipop<lb/>
with FREE drink<lb/>
New Hours<lb/>
SunThurs. 11 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11 a.m10 p.m.<lb/>
ORMOND BEACH, Fla.<lb/>
AP<lb/>
What you see is not<lb/>
always what's in the<lb/>
can-with Ron Sarzier's nov-<lb/>
elty wrappers.<lb/>
Sarzier makes plastic<lb/>
coverings that cool cans<lb/>
and disguise their contents:<lb/>
beer becomes soda pop;<lb/>
soda pop, beer.<lb/>
Three encounters with a<lb/>
law prohibiting consump-<lb/>
tion of alcohol on public<lb/>
streets and beaches promp-<lb/>
ted the labels, Sarzier says.<lb/>
"One time I'd just<lb/>
walked out of the motel<lb/>
door with a beer and,<lb/>
wham, I got nailed he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He estimates sales at<lb/>
440,000 so far.<lb/>
Sarzier says soft drink<lb/>
makers have had mixed<lb/>
reactions: one cola distribu-<lb/>
tor bought 10,000 wraps as<lb/>
giveaways, while another<lb/>
fired off a not-so-nice let-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
FRIDAYS<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
FRIDAY'S<lb/>
Wants You!<lb/>
to visit our<lb/>
new Restaurant<lb/>
We think you<lb/>
will love our<lb/>
atmosphere and our food &amp;<lb/>
prices are just for you.<lb/>
$U CLIFFS ?<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
WasMnglon Highway (N C J3 ExT I Greenville. Norm Carolina<lb/>
Phone 752 317?<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Special<lb/>
(CUFFS SHRIMP NIGHT)<lb/>
Regular Pried Shrimp?f?.??$.2.95<lb/>
Come out today for luneh or<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057143_0005"/><lb/>
Page6 FOUNTAINHEAD 7<lb/>
Julia marks the<lb/>
SU's second free<lb/>
film presentation<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee will pre-<lb/>
sent its second film of the<lb/>
semester. Julia, this Friday<lb/>
and Saturday night at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre. Times for the film<lb/>
are 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.<lb/>
Jane Fonda portrays Amer-<lb/>
ican playwright Lillian<lb/>
Hellman in 20th<lb/>
Century-Fox's version of<lb/>
the Hellman short story<lb/>
about the relationship bet-<lb/>
ween two women.<lb/>
Julia tells of an adven-<lb/>
ture on which Hellman,<lb/>
already a renowned play-<lb/>
wright, actually embarked<lb/>
m the Thirtiesa tense,<lb/>
dangerous assignment<lb/>
through Germany on the<lb/>
brink of World War II.<lb/>
It was undertaken to<lb/>
help a woman named Julia,<lb/>
with whom she had once<lb/>
been the closest of friends.<lb/>
Vanessa Redgrave portrays<lb/>
"Julia" in the movie.<lb/>
Jane Fonda talks about<lb/>
,Hie f'im which was awarded<lb/>
nree Oscars at last year's<lb/>
Academy Awards: "Julia<lb/>
and Lillian are both extra-<lb/>
ordinary women. Julia, in<lb/>
particular. I think the film<lb/>
is even more successful<lb/>
than in the commercial<lb/>
sense in that women can<lb/>
identify with the two prin-<lb/>
-? players. For, although<lb/>
?hey are exceptional we<lb/>
have been able to show<lb/>
their human side their<lb/>
vulnerabilities, uncertain-<lb/>
ties, casmplsxrtles, contra-<lb/>
dictions "<lb/>
The Academy Award<lb/>
winning star feels more<lb/>
films will now be written<lb/>
with stronger roles for<lb/>
actresses.<lb/>
I think because during<lb/>
the last few years, with the<lb/>
growth of the women's<lb/>
movement in the United<lb/>
States and the new con-<lb/>
sciousness that is inherent<lb/>
in the movement, the old<lb/>
stereotypes for women are<lb/>
being destroyed. I'm not<lb/>
saying that there aren't<lb/>
films being made that<lb/>
contain the old stereotype<lb/>
but they have become more<lb/>
or less obsolete<lb/>
"During the late Fifties<lb/>
and Sixties, I played a<lb/>
number of these stereotype<lb/>
roles says Fonda. "The<lb/>
silly ingenues, the Barba-<lb/>
rellas, the kind of fluffy-<lb/>
headed silliness that we<lb/>
always took for granted in<lb/>
female roles on the screen.<lb/>
You can't get away with<lb/>
that anymore.<lb/>
But, ah, what are the new<lb/>
stereotypes? Who are the<lb/>
new heroines? We don't<lb/>
know the answers yet<lb/>
In Julia, director, Fred<lb/>
Zinnemann focuses on Eu-<lb/>
rope in 1937 laying bare a<lb/>
penetrating account of the<lb/>
demands made by loyalty<lb/>
and friendship against the<lb/>
background of the rise of<lb/>
Naziism.<lb/>
He also gives us an<lb/>
amazing glimpse of Miss<lb/>
Hellman's burgeoning ca-<lb/>
reer in the American thea-<lb/>
tre and her romantic in-<lb/>
volvement with the famed<lb/>
author of detective novels,<lb/>
Dashiell Hammett, portray-<lb/>
ed in the film by Jason<lb/>
Robards.<lb/>
Other directors may<lb/>
have been more prolific<lb/>
than Fred Zinnemann over<lb/>
the past few decades but<lb/>
few have made a more<lb/>
important or more varied<lb/>
contribution to the interna-<lb/>
tional cinema: from Gary<lb/>
Cooper riding off into the<lb/>
sunset in High Noon to<lb/>
Frank Sinatra's break-<lb/>
through dramatic perform-<lb/>
ance in From Here to<lb/>
E tmrnity ; from Paul Soo-<lb/>
field'sSir Thomas More, ?<lb/>
opting for conscience rather<lb/>
than king, to Edward Fox's<lb/>
ulttmate outsider in Day of<lb/>
the Jackal.<lb/>
Dissimilar as they are in<lb/>
content, Zinnemann's films<lb/>
seem bound together by a<lb/>
consistent personal vision <lb/>
an overriding concern with<lb/>
the individual against the<lb/>
establishment.<lb/>
His major theme in<lb/>
Julia is maintained<lb/>
throughout. Julia is his<lb/>
first film in over four years.<lb/>
Set in 1937 Europe,<lb/>
against the backdrop of tlje<lb/>
The Book ofMerlyn<lb/>
The real ending to T.H. White s<lb/>
masterpiece has finally arrived<lb/>
JANE FONDA AS Lillian Hellman and Vanessa<lb/>
Redgrave portrays the title role in "Julia The film<lb/>
will be shown at the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre this friday and Saturday night at 7 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
rise of the Nazi party and<lb/>
military unrest, Alvin<lb/>
Sargent's (he won an Oscar<lb/>
for his screenplay) script<lb/>
deals with a profound<lb/>
friendship and a lone fight<lb/>
against fascism.<lb/>
"I don't set out deliber-<lb/>
ately to impose my vision-<lb/>
such as it ison other<lb/>
people Zinnemann poin-<lb/>
ted out in an interview with<lb/>
American Film Magazine.<lb/>
"PerhapsI'm old fashioned<lb/>
in thinking of films as<lb/>
entertainment. My private<lb/>
visions don't have much to<lb/>
do with it. I used to be a<lb/>
'method director I went<lb/>
through that phase. But<lb/>
basically I feel entertain-<lb/>
ment is what we are here<lb/>
for.<lb/>
"You read a story and<lb/>
either like it or don't. If you<lb/>
like it you make it he<lb/>
adds.<lb/>
He obviously liked the<lb/>
premise for Julia. He drives<lb/>
home his point about the<lb/>
two women and their strug-<lb/>
gle with finesse.<lb/>
Julia was Lillian<lb/>
Hellman's closest friend<lb/>
who, when she grew up,<lb/>
left her wealthy New York<lb/>
family to work in Germany<lb/>
and aaatat the anti-Hitler<lb/>
movement.<lb/>
The last time Hellman<lb/>
saw her was in 1937 when<lb/>
she was acting as a secret<lb/>
courier for Julia's under-<lb/>
ground organization on a<lb/>
train between Paris and<lb/>
Berlin.<lb/>
In the film, which was<lb/>
shot in England, Paris and<lb/>
Alsece, Fonda plays her<lb/>
way into the viewer's heart<lb/>
as she has only done a<lb/>
couple of times before<lb/>
(notably A Doll's House).<lb/>
9 Fonda considers the<lb/>
opportunity to work, with<lb/>
Redgrave the chance of a<lb/>
lifetime: "I've never had<lb/>
the opportunity in a film to<lb/>
express very deep caring<lb/>
for another woman. I've<lb/>
made a lot of films and in<lb/>
almost all of them, if there<lb/>
was another woman, it was<lb/>
just thatThe Other<lb/>
Woman competing for the<lb/>
affections of some man or<lb/>
just competing. That is<lb/>
usually the relationship<lb/>
between two women that is<lb/>
brought to the screen<lb/>
This was an ideal<lb/>
chance for Fonda to have a<lb/>
real screen relationship<lb/>
with another woman. In the<lb/>
event of Julia, it would not<lb/>
just be as a sideline ,but<lb/>
the matrix of the story<lb/>
the principle dramatic<lb/>
thrust of the film. As<lb/>
childhood friends, these<lb/>
two women probably cared<lb/>
as deeply for each other as<lb/>
they had for any other<lb/>
human being in their entire<lb/>
lives.<lb/>
Lillian Hellman yved<lb/>
with American writer<lb/>
Dashiell Hammett for many<lb/>
years, had a very important<lb/>
and complex relationship<lb/>
with him, but his support,<lb/>
in many ways, didn't match<lb/>
the support given her by<lb/>
Julia.<lb/>
About her role in Julia,<lb/>
Fonda went on to say, "It's<lb/>
been very moving and<lb/>
enjoyable for me to be in a<lb/>
film where women can say<lb/>
to each other 'I care about<lb/>
you and I want you to be<lb/>
brave and I want you to<lb/>
extend yourself as far as<lb/>
you can, and be bold and<lb/>
don't be afraid to be angry<lb/>
because anger makes you<lb/>
courageous "<lb/>
"It's been a richly<lb/>
rewarding experience to<lb/>
play scenes with someone<lb/>
like Vanessa Redgrave and<lb/>
See FONDA, p.7<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
You may have the thought you knew the ending to<lb/>
T.H. White's The Once and Future King. We finally<lb/>
get to see the real ending to W hite' s story, for The Book<lb/>
of Merlyn has arrived.<lb/>
This book is the once-forgotten, fifth and final<lb/>
chapter of White's grand epic of the story of King<lb/>
Arthur.<lb/>
It lay unknown and unpublished, till someone,<lb/>
evidently someone from the University of Texas in<lb/>
Austin, discovered it. What a deceased British author's<lb/>
manuscript was doing at the University of Texas is a<lb/>
mystery, but that seems to be where it was as the<lb/>
University press is responsible for the new book.<lb/>
" The Once and Future King,<lb/>
including The Book of Merlyn,<lb/>
stands as a testament to the<lb/>
eccentric genious of T.H. White,<lb/>
who 9s life story is itself very<lb/>
interesting reading<lb/>
It matters not, however, who printed the book as<lb/>
long as someone finally did. Now the tale is complete,<lb/>
" 'rounded off and bright and done' " as White once<lb/>
wrote.<lb/>
The complete The Once and Future King is like a<lb/>
Greek tradgedy. It tells of King Arthur's birth, life, and<lb/>
mostly, his inescapable, tragic doom.<lb/>
3ut it is not all tragic, by any means: much of the<lb/>
story is of a merry, whimsical nature, involving humor,<lb/>
parody, talking animals, and the like. M uch of the early<lb/>
chapters are a satire on the notions and conventions of<lb/>
chivalry, knighthood, and SirThomas Malory.<lb/>
It's predominant theme is man's inclination towards<lb/>
warfare.<lb/>
The Once and Future King begins with Arthur as<lb/>
the young peasant boy Wart, about as far from being a<lb/>
klng??ahaapuMb?.<lb/>
Enter the mysterious Merlyn, who, living back-<lb/>
wards through time as he does, knows what will happen<lb/>
and arrives to set the future events into motion.<lb/>
He is Wart's tutor, and it is an odd education he<lb/>
brings: he teaches Wart by magically transforming him<lb/>
into birds, fish, etcetera.<lb/>
There is something to be learned from the animals,<lb/>
the sorceror says, though Wart knows not what.<lb/>
The following chapters concern Arthur's growing<lb/>
up, coronation, and the tangled web of events leading<lb/>
to his doom, involving Lancelot, Guinivere, and his<lb/>
illegitimate, Incestously-conoeived, insane son Ma-<lb/>
dred.<lb/>
In The Book of Merlyn, it is back to the animals. It<lb/>
takes up right where book four, The Candle in the Wind<lb/>
ended: with Arthur , old, tormented, weary, in his tent<lb/>
on the eve of the cataclysmic battle he must fight<lb/>
against his own son.<lb/>
It waltzesthe sage Merlyn, who had van.shed from<lb/>
the narrative some time before.<lb/>
The magician takes the aged ruler to an<lb/>
underground badger's den wherein awa.t h.s old<lb/>
animal pals from his days as Wart - badger, hedgehog,<lb/>
owl, dog, snake, and a stuffed pike.<lb/>
The lesson the animals have to teach, and the lesson<lb/>
Arthur must learn before the final, fatal battle<lb/>
tomorrow, is what to do about mankind's preled.ction<lb/>
towards war and bloodshed.<lb/>
In all the animal kingdom, save for a few var.et.es<lb/>
of ants, no animals engage in warfare.<lb/>
Man is the only animal beastial enough to so<lb/>
wantonly wage war against his own kind. Merlyn<lb/>
transforms Arthur into an ant and a wild goose, to learn<lb/>
why.<lb/>
White wrote this book when the clouds of World<lb/>
War II were hanging dark about his head.<lb/>
Terrrified by the impending disaster, he tried in his<lb/>
art to discover what makes man kill his own kind, and to<lb/>
hopefully find an antidote what Arthur, Merlyn, and his<lb/>
animal committee come up with is that war is birthed<lb/>
basically by the holding of national property, and<lb/>
stimulated by certain glandular conditions unique to<lb/>
the human being.<lb/>
Whether White is wrong or right with this theory,<lb/>
and it takes a complete reading of the books and a good<lb/>
deal of careful thought to grasp what it really menas, is<lb/>
certain he'son to something.<lb/>
Whit's books are a great and glorious part of our<lb/>
literature.<lb/>
Though the overall feeling they give is a feeling of<lb/>
unconnectedness, parody mixed with tragedy mixed<lb/>
with realism mixed with talking animals, mixed with<lb/>
natural history (much of The Book of Merlyn reads like<lb/>
a highly unusual anatomy lesson), still they leave the<lb/>
reader with a happy glow. The final message is quite<lb/>
warm and humanistic.<lb/>
The Once and Future King, including The Book of<lb/>
Merlyn, stand as a testament to the erratic and<lb/>
eccentric genius of T.H. White, who's life story is itself<lb/>
very interesting reading. The books show vividly<lb/>
White's hopes, dreams, fears, such as his terrors of<lb/>
war, interests, such as his love of animals, and mostly,<lb/>
his humanity.<lb/>
His re-working of the classic King Arthur myths is<lb/>
recommended for all. (This is the book which, by the<lb/>
way, Walt Disney's cartoon The Sword in the Stone and<lb/>
the musical Camelot are based upon.)<lb/>
The only unpleasant thing about The Book of<lb/>
Merlyn is that the new paperback edition costs $2.25,<lb/>
not including tax.<lb/>
Evidently, we are expected to pay this ridiculous<lb/>
sum for the priviledge of getting illustrations and the<lb/>
inside covers emblazoned with a pattern representing<lb/>
Merlyn'spet owl.<lb/>
Fine as the illustrations, by Trevor Stubly, are,<lb/>
that's a lot to pay for a paperback.<lb/>
Most likely, we are asked for such a hefty sum<lb/>
because, the book being published for the first time, we<lb/>
can't get a copy anywhere else. You can find a copy<lb/>
though.<lb/>
Readers are recommended not to buy the book but to<lb/>
borrow it from the ECU library, which will cost them<lb/>
absolutely nothing.<lb/>
Middle Adantic Songwrit<lb/>
artists<lb/>
By ANITA LANCASTER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Fifteen years ago R.L. Kirkendahl wrote the lyrics to "Misty<lb/>
Blue He received alot of praise from family and friends so he<lb/>
decided to send it to a publisher and see if it would be an<lb/>
acceptable piece in the Country and Western music industry.<lb/>
Well, it was. In fact, it grossed over a million dollara One<lb/>
would think K irkendahl would be ecstatic about the success of his<lb/>
song.<lb/>
He would have been, had he gotten credit for it. Kirkendahl<lb/>
was "ripped-off<lb/>
The publisher liked his lyrics, but since Kirkendahl didn't<lb/>
know he had to oopyright his lyrics and was not aware that most<lb/>
publishing companies found in the back of random magazines are<lb/>
about as honest as Benedict Arnold, the publisher took advantage<lb/>
of Kirkendahl's vulnerability.<lb/>
Kirkendahl has been writing lyrics for 25 years now, but until<lb/>
recently had no way of getting it published or set to music.<lb/>
By chance, he met Charles Davis, a piano instructor at Andy<lb/>
Ownings Music Store in Jacksonville, North Carolina. They began<lb/>
talking and decided to get together interested people who were<lb/>
having the same problem. They figured that there must be many<lb/>
songwriters around, but most of them just don't know anyone else<lb/>
who writes.<lb/>
The formation of the Middle Atlantic Songwriters Association,<lb/>
Inc. was the "brainchild" of Kirkendahl and Davis. The<lb/>
association held its first bi-monthly meeting in a Jacksonville<lb/>
resturant last March. Only 7 people were present at that first<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
There are now 25 charter members and people continue to<lb/>
inquire as the word spreads. Publicity chairman, Suzy Miller, is<lb/>
responsible fa "getting the word around" as she has appeared,<lb/>
with association President, Ron Lay, on two TV talk shows; has<lb/>
arranged spots on radio; has arranged for newspaper publicity,<lb/>
and hasenlisted several club appearances at various festivals and<lb/>
shows.<lb/>
The age span of members ranges from a 16 year old to a 65<lb/>
year dd. Writing styles span everything from gospel to hard rock.<lb/>
Some members are professional musicians, and some are very<lb/>
good amatuers.<lb/>
The association's big "foot in the door" ie Scorpion Records,<lb/>
owned by Roddy McDowell. McDowell is willing to listen to all<lb/>
tapes the. association cares to send him.<lb/>
If he cannot use them, he'll send them to someone he thinks<lb/>
would be interested. At the present time, two members Kay<lb/>
Trexler and Suzy Miller - have songs being considered for<lb/>
publication with McDowell.<lb/>
As mentioned previously, the association has grown to a 25<lb/>
charter membership Ones the association gets 30 dharter<lb/>
memebrs it can become a member of a national aganlzation called<lb/>
? the American Quito of Authors and Composers. What is so great<lb/>
about becoming s member of the aganlzation is the fact that<lb/>
several publishers are members of the Guild - which opens up<lb/>
anothsr doa fa songwriters.<lb/>
Through the Guild the association will have national contacts<lb/>
with pubiishas, other writers, and musicians.<lb/>
"At the moment we are in need of nxxe musicians, says Suzy<lb/>
Milla. "But whateva you do in the way of music we would be<lb/>
most happy to have you attend one of our meetingsbe it lyricist,<lb/>
composer, and a musician.<lb/>
"Most prospective members call me up and think that they<lb/>
must go through and be approved by me a someone in the group.<lb/>
Like I have to read their stuff and say whether it is good enough.<lb/>
That is totally backwards! It is not our function to approve of<lb/>
prospective members a their wak - to be quite truthful, they are<lb/>
to come and see if they approve of us<lb/>
All the members contribute whateva talent they may have to<lb/>
help the group.<lb/>
Thae is a lawya, who takes care of legal mattas; a music<lb/>
teacha who transcribes fa thoee who can't read a write their own<lb/>
music; a printer to help with publicity mattas; several guitarists, a<lb/>
piano playa, a banjo playa, and several vocalists fa those writas<lb/>
with bad pipes.<lb/>
The highlight of each meeting is when the members' new song<lb/>
are rated by the group. The songs are judged on wads, music,<lb/>
and commercial potential, and then are critiqued<lb/>
The non-profit aganizatioi includes members from Jackson-<lb/>
ville, Swansbao, and surrounding areas, and the meetings<lb/>
include ways to finance recading equipment, the distribution of<lb/>
the addresses of publishing companies, and feedback on the<lb/>
quality of songs.<lb/>
" The songs are judged on words,<lb/>
music, and comercial potential,<lb/>
and then are critiqued. "<lb/>
Future ambit ions of the association include having a Showcase<lb/>
featuring aiglnai songs by the members; assembling s song<lb/>
banck, which is a library of members' songs which will be<lb/>
available to musicians, pubiishas, and producers seeking original<lb/>
material, and a bus trip to Nashville to meet with the pubiishas in<lb/>
person with hopes of gaining exposure.<lb/>
THERE ARE NOW 25 charter members<lb/>
in the Middle Atlantic Songwriters' Associate and<lb/>
people continue to inquire about it as word spreads<lb/>
The ages of the members range from 16 to 65.<lb/>
"They (the pubiishas)will definitely rememba us. ?vs<lb/>
na?rhO00U,d  We f? 32?N<lb/>
Some of the members d the group are also intaested in<lb/>
getting a music publishing company established in Jksolte<lb/>
and future plans include making that dream a reelinT<lb/>
TtteMiMIe Atlantic Songwriters Association ntmaflUfl<lb/>
2nd and 4th Saturday in the activity essTTTiT ?!??<lb/>
Building in Jacksonville. ,f you are aTcut of to!wfoua7!<lb/>
??? best toprovide a room In oTolal<lb/>
of their membas. ?w homes<lb/>
The fee is $25.00<lb/>
The fee will be $10.00 annually thereafter<lb/>
"Some of our members have been writingjeaa than a v<lb/>
some, 25 years. Whatever it has been makes noT yw'<lb/>
Miller. ?88 "? tfenoe, says<lb/>
"Come and see and you will faai the onmran<lb/>
enthusiasm we ail snare. ???aoahlp and<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: If you arm interested in Haarntno mor. <lb/>
the association call Anita at 752-9390.) mmmna "? about<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
tw m m i ?<lb/>
??? m-<lb/>
K<lb/>
<pb facs="00057143_0006"/><lb/>
?ew towing ordinance is adopted :<lb/>
will insure more drivers of safe service<lb/>
1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pag 7<lb/>
BYJOHNMONDS<lb/>
Staff WriwT dnVer returns to drive "s<lb/>
car away later and finds it has<lb/>
lrT9'ne a citizen of r b88n t?"Bdi He then V<lb/>
vine cTmavbe Trn ' 906S t0 the Qwenvllle POice<lb/>
?. Park.nghis his property from the tow<lb/>
service.<lb/>
Upon reaching the garage,<lb/>
he pays the owner the tow fee<lb/>
and turns to his car only yo find<lb/>
a dent with the paint scratched<lb/>
off. When the proprietor is<lb/>
asked about the cars condition,<lb/>
? her automobile on a street in<lb/>
eenville. Perhaps he parks in<lb/>
f"opark.ng zone, possible<lb/>
because be didn't see the sign<lb/>
Later the car, a shining 1978<lb/>
Cutlass Suprern- without a<lb/>
blemish to be found is towed<lb/>
he says it was already dented<lb/>
when he towed it.<lb/>
The car owner now checks<lb/>
the Greenville Police Depart-<lb/>
ment hoping to find an answer<lb/>
to the question. When did it<lb/>
happen? This question can be<lb/>
answered easily by Greenville<lb/>
Police when correct procedure is<lb/>
administered by the officer at<lb/>
the scene of the towing.<lb/>
But do all city police offioers<lb/>
follow correct procedure during<lb/>
the towing process? Correct<lb/>
procedure would mean the<lb/>
checking of the exterior of the<lb/>
car fa dents and other damage<lb/>
before towing. Does each of ficer<lb/>
do this before he releases the<lb/>
car to the tow truck?<lb/>
Legal Advisor to Greenville<lb/>
polioe, H.D. Cox, says he trusts<lb/>
most of the offioers to fill out the<lb/>
forms correctly, but human<lb/>
error is always possible.<lb/>
Maybe when the weather is<lb/>
ew plastic surgery techniques used<lb/>
Couple change faces to resemble Elvis<lb/>
ByCHARLESCAMPBELL<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
ATLANTA (AP) - Plastic sur-<lb/>
meant togetherness and<lb/>
ai understanding for young<lb/>
rs Erin Rhyne and Jesse<lb/>
Bolt<lb/>
Ms. Rhyne was getting tired<lb/>
Riggan Shoe Repair Shop<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 W. 14th Street<lb/>
of the way girls would shower<lb/>
attention on her man, who was<lb/>
touring as an Elvis Presley<lb/>
imitator. He said she didn't<lb/>
understand.<lb/>
But now they're in it togeth-<lb/>
er. Both their faces were<lb/>
reshaped to 13 likenesses of the<lb/>
late King of Rock 'n' Roll<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
Along with three fellow<lb/>
performers who also faoed the<lb/>
scalpel to heighten resem-<lb/>
blanoes to dead rook stars, Bolt<lb/>
and Ms. Rhyne revealed their<lb/>
Board your horse at<lb/>
Forrest Acres Stables<lb/>
Excellent care and ccncfitkiis<lb/>
$85 a month 3miles from town call 752-1823<lb/>
Thorpe Music Co.<lb/>
201 EL9thStreet Greeiville,N.C<lb/>
For all your party needs<lb/>
! iuke box rentals <lb/>
 pinball and f oosball <lb/>
Welcome Back Students<lb/>
752-4606<lb/>
new looks Friday to a national<lb/>
television audienoe.<lb/>
Later Firday, the five played<lb/>
the first oonoert in what promot-<lb/>
er Danny O' Day hopes will be a<lb/>
profitable tour of the United<lb/>
States and Europe.<lb/>
But the oonoert was delayed<lb/>
about an hour because of<lb/>
technical problems and because<lb/>
only a handful of fans had<lb/>
arrived by showtime.<lb/>
O' Day paid for surgery p he<lb/>
refuses to say how much - and<lb/>
says he has sunk nearly $1<lb/>
million into the project so far.<lb/>
Duke O'Connell, 30, has<lb/>
been recast as Jim Morrison,<lb/>
lead singer of The Doors, who<lb/>
died in 1971.<lb/>
A oouple of stitches below<lb/>
the lip were was all that needed<lb/>
for Marc Hazebrouch, 28, who<lb/>
said he had often been told be<lb/>
looked liek Jim Croce, a singer<lb/>
who died in 1973.<lb/>
The most ambitious surgical<lb/>
project was transforming Mona<lb/>
Caywood Moore, 27, into Janis<lb/>
Joplin, the throaty songstress<lb/>
who died in 1970.<lb/>
More work is planned on her<lb/>
nose and cheekbones, but it<lb/>
seems likely she will have to rely<lb/>
on her dress and voioe.<lb/>
"She was so close vocally I<lb/>
couldn't refuse her O'Day<lb/>
said. "I'll give you aoopy of the<lb/>
before picture. She looked just<lb/>
like David Bowie<lb/>
In makeup, Bolt already<lb/>
resembles Presley. All he need-<lb/>
ed was a stitch above the upper<lb/>
lip to give him a permanent<lb/>
Presley sneer.<lb/>
O'Day recalled overhearing<lb/>
recurrent quarrels between Bolt<lb/>
and Ms. Rhyne about the<lb/>
response to the role he played.<lb/>
"He said, 'I wish you oould<lb/>
stand in my shoes She said, 'I<lb/>
wish I oould, too I said,<lb/>
 Excuse mehas anybody got a<lb/>
scalpel?"<lb/>
"It's alright she said. "I<lb/>
miss my hair<lb/>
Her once-flowing tresses<lb/>
have been clipped, blackened<lb/>
and greased to go along with a<lb/>
black leather outfit.<lb/>
She thinks her show will<lb/>
make Presley's brand of musical<lb/>
sexuality attractive to men as<lb/>
well as women.<lb/>
"I'm really trying to give the<lb/>
men in the audienoe what Elvis<lb/>
gave the women, gave everyone<lb/>
really she said. "I think it's<lb/>
something if Elvis were alive,<lb/>
he'd just have to come see<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
f&amp;at S<lb/>
AaotcaJiA<lb/>
203 South Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Phone: 752-3980<lb/>
Hours: 9:00-5:00 Monday-Friday<lb/>
Other Hours By Appointment<lb/>
Specializing in<lb/>
Portraits Weddings Resume<lb/>
? Instant Color Passports ?<lb/>
bad or a large number of<lb/>
vehicles are being towed, a<lb/>
break in policy might occur. But<lb/>
the policy should never be<lb/>
interrupted. These reports are<lb/>
important to the company who<lb/>
towed the car as well as the<lb/>
owner of the car.<lb/>
When each officer follows<lb/>
the correct procedure, and who<lb/>
follows policy every time, the<lb/>
city and citizen are protected<lb/>
from oosts resulting from towing<lb/>
accidents.<lb/>
On April 13,1978, the city of<lb/>
Greenville adopted an ordinance<lb/>
with niles and regulations per-<lb/>
taining totow service in the city.<lb/>
The main force in the adoption o<lb/>
of the ordinance was Hugh D.<lb/>
Cox, legal advisor of Greenville<lb/>
polioe.<lb/>
He recently said, "I bit nails<lb/>
and stepped on toes to get this<lb/>
thing passed because we were<lb/>
open to too much friction from<lb/>
citizens Now the ordinance<lb/>
stands and Greenville is free<lb/>
from legal dangers it at one time<lb/>
might have encountered.<lb/>
The ordinanoe has criteria<lb/>
for interested towing services to<lb/>
meet. The requirements begin<lb/>
with the need of a large amount<lb/>
of insurance on the company.<lb/>
Each company must keep re-<lb/>
oords of the cars they tow<lb/>
throughout the year. The ordin-<lb/>
ance also sets prices on towing.<lb/>
Daytime towing oosts $20 and<lb/>
night, holiday, and weekend<lb/>
cost $25.<lb/>
The ordinanoe allows the city<lb/>
to revoke privileges of towing to<lb/>
any oompany who does not<lb/>
follow the rules.<lb/>
This ordinance, is designed<lb/>
mainly to protect the city from<lb/>
being taken to oourt by citizen<lb/>
for car damage. But how are<lb/>
citizens and their cars safe-<lb/>
guarded from towing damage?<lb/>
Section 12, article 52 of the<lb/>
Standard Operating Procedure<lb/>
for Greenville police, states that<lb/>
prior to towing, the officer shall<lb/>
inspect the interior and exterior<lb/>
of the vehicle for valuables. All<lb/>
exterior damage will also be<lb/>
recorded.<lb/>
But does each officer actual-<lb/>
ly check the car well enough to<lb/>
find scratches and dents that<lb/>
could lead to complications<lb/>
later? Maybe half of the officers<lb/>
are careful in their inspections,<lb/>
but most are probably rush jobs.<lb/>
The answer to the question<lb/>
of whether a person'scar is safe<lb/>
after being towed leans on<lb/>
whether the officer is careful<lb/>
during his inspection. The laws<lb/>
have well covered the rights of<lb/>
both the city of Greenville and<lb/>
its citizens. The responsibility<lb/>
falls on each officer to do his job<lb/>
well and follow procedure to the<lb/>
maximum.<lb/>
HE IS AN enigma, destined<lb/>
to be known inside and<lb/>
outside the field as a<lb/>
steadfast creator of ideas, a<lb/>
never-ending crusader des-<lb/>
tined to gnaw until he<lb/>
reaches bone, and a true<lb/>
dissident among his coun-<lb/>
trymen.<lb/>
MAKETHECAMPOS<lb/>
If you order your mmm ahiv jm? w, m<lb/>
phone before Friday WET<lb/>
can save yourself a trip. ammmd m M&amp;&amp; &amp;9<lb/>
Now thru Friday, Carolina Telephone representatives will be taking<lb/>
your orders at three campus locations: the Book Store, Qement Dorm<lb/>
Lobby and Tyler Dorm Lobby.<lb/>
In addition, by ordering your phone now, you'll beat<lb/>
the crowd and get early installation.<lb/>
And finally, your early order ensures that<lb/>
your number will be in-<lb/>
cluded in the ECU<lb/>
Telephone Directory<lb/>
for 78-79.<lb/>
So make the<lb/>
connection. Or-<lb/>
der your phone<lb/>
today.<lb/>
SOB Carolina Telephone<lb/>
UNITED TELEPHONE SYSTEM'<lb/>
Harlan Ellison: A dissident<lb/>
In last Tuesday's edition of FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD the first installment of a critique of<lb/>
Harlan Ellison appeared in the Trends<lb/>
section. Below is the conclusion of the<lb/>
critique.<lb/>
By DA RREN BERGSTEIN<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
And that is only one of Harlan's quabbles.<lb/>
Perhaps the main reason he resigned from SFWA<lb/>
was, as he stated in his speech, that this is where<lb/>
to become rich, he says, to just sit back and take<lb/>
thousandsof dollars in royalties and don't rely on<lb/>
cramped deadlines where the waiting list is long<lb/>
and the money is pigscratch.<lb/>
This is where Harlan has decided to go, to<lb/>
grab the wealth of the world while it's still<lb/>
available, instead of being worshipped like a god<lb/>
at some nameless convention by hundreds of<lb/>
mindless people hungry for an autograph, or lock<lb/>
of hair.<lb/>
And he is moving, too. Extremely fast.<lb/>
He has sold a sequel to his Nebula award<lb/>
winning story "A Boy and His Dog called<lb/>
 Blood s A Rover" to NBC.<lb/>
He scripted an episode of the now defunct<lb/>
series Logan s Run. which was probably the<lb/>
best show ever done.<lb/>
And. as I stated before, it took time and<lb/>
patience to build hispyramid but he did.<lb/>
Hisshort story "I Have NoMouth And I Must<lb/>
Scream a Hugo award winner, is one of the<lb/>
greatest works of fiction ever written. He edited<lb/>
the most, oontoversiai anthology series ever<lb/>
attempted, Dangerous Visions. Again. Danger-<lb/>
ous Visions, and the forthcoming The Last<lb/>
Dangerous Visions, which broke hundreds of<lb/>
new writers and gave equal time to the artists of<lb/>
yesterday.<lb/>
He has produced two albums, one with Robert<lb/>
Bloch, one solo, on both of their short stories.<lb/>
Years back, he developed two scripts for the<lb/>
greatest sf TV show ever, the outstanding Outer<lb/>
Limits, both of which won awards.<lb/>
He scripted the Star Trek episode, The City<lb/>
onthe Edge of Forever, which also won an award.<lb/>
He has close to thirty books published, both<lb/>
saenoe fiction, mystery and mainstream; his<lb/>
short story collections (among the best) are:<lb/>
' The Beast that Shouted Love at the Heart of the<lb/>
World "I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream" ;<lb/>
"Approaching Oblivion" ; and "Ellison Wonder-<lb/>
land<lb/>
And he still is as vigorous as your normal<lb/>
everyday household pest.<lb/>
He is very involved with the ERA and the<lb/>
feminists' movement, of which he always has had<lb/>
a stong belief in.<lb/>
So yes. Harlan is angry. But his new exploits,<lb/>
his leadership, and his sheer writing talents<lb/>
make him more than a mere sf author.<lb/>
He is an enigma, destined to be known made<lb/>
and outside the sf field as a steadfast creator of<lb/>
ideas, a never-ending crusader destined to gnaw<lb/>
till he reaches bone, and true dissident among his<lb/>
countrymen. A dissident on the brink of success.<lb/>
Fonda and Redgrave star in<lb/>
Julia: this weekend's free flick<lb/>
continued from p.6<lb/>
to see her face radiant<lb/>
because of ideas, because<lb/>
of awakening conscious-<lb/>
ness about the movement<lb/>
of people who have been<lb/>
disenfranchised and who<lb/>
are taking power<lb/>
"It's nice to see a<lb/>
woman moved by that and<lb/>
be able to remind the<lb/>
audience that we are trans-<lb/>
ported by social processes<lb/>
and not just by a romance?<lb/>
although that is there as<lb/>
well<lb/>
Of Julia, film critic<lb/>
Vincent Canby of the New<lb/>
York Times writes: "It<lb/>
moves back and forth in<lb/>
time and place as we do in<lb/>
good conversation, without<lb/>
self-consciousness, the<lb/>
main thread (and real ur-<lb/>
gency) being the need to<lb/>
get some grip on feeling<lb/>
and, possibly, the truth<lb/>
Miss Fonda and Miss<lb/>
Redgrave are marvelous<lb/>
and true, and even the<lb/>
small echoes of English<lb/>
speech cadences one hears<lb/>
in Miss Fonda's voice are<lb/>
moving, as if she were in<lb/>
some fashion bowing to her<lb/>
English co-star. Maximilian<lb/>
Schell, as a courier sent by<lb/>
Julia to reach Lillian in<lb/>
Paris, seems actually<lb/>
have reduced himself<lb/>
size to play a man<lb/>
physical frailty and<lb/>
immense courage<lb/>
Of JuliaFrank Rich of<lb/>
to<lb/>
in<lb/>
of<lb/>
supports ECU Pirates with pre-game<lb/>
warm-up at Ramada Inn South in Apex,<lb/>
7 miles south of Raleigh on the Fuquay<lb/>
Varina Exit Food and drink provided.<lb/>
Time Magazine writes:<lb/>
"Julia trades in serious<lb/>
ideas rather than comjc<lb/>
book fantasies. Director<lb/>
Zinnemann (High Noon)<lb/>
brings a Graham<lb/>
Greenesque sense of<lb/>
intrigue to this adventure,<lb/>
and he sets up a powerful<lb/>
climactic scene. When<lb/>
Heliman finally arrives in a<lb/>
smoky Berlin cafe to deliver<lb/>
the loot, her terse, hurried<lb/>
conversation with Julia<lb/>
sums up everythingabout<lb/>
friendship, political com-<lb/>
mitment and growing up<lb/>
Films are open to ECU<lb/>
students, faculty and staff<lb/>
and their guests.Admission<lb/>
is by ID and Activity Cards<lb/>
or Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Membership Card<lb/>
All films are shown in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Instruments "<lb/>
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?? ? C ??S82 'IIS' HI<lb/>
<pb facs="00057143_0007"/><lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 7 September 1978<lb/>
Hicks out with lung injury<lb/>
Ailing<lb/>
t RS<lb/>
ach Pat<lb/>
ted with<lb/>
his<lb/>
? s con<lb/>
n Caro<lb/>
? ? ja ly<lb/>
Saturc!a<lb/>
oast<lb/>
N C<lb/>
It was announced Wed-<lb/>
nesday that ECUs star<lb/>
halfback Eddie Hicks has<lb/>
been hospitalized with a<lb/>
collapsed lung and will<lb/>
miss Saturday's game a-<lb/>
gamst N.C State.<lb/>
Losing Eddie is a big<lb/>
blow to our offense said<lb/>
ECU head coach Pat Dye<lb/>
vesterday at his weekly<lb/>
press conference "We're<lb/>
m the poorest physical<lb/>
condition right now that I<lb/>
Simply Sports<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
iv Gamesaver- Ruffin McIVeill<lb/>
nave a spectacular defensive<lb/>
State last year He managed a few<lb/>
.vsition, but failed to intercept any<lb/>
?' a ke fumble.<lb/>
- remaining, and the Pirates backed up<lb/>
McNeill produced the biggest<lb/>
when he tackled Wolfpack running<lb/>
? ? the end zone on the final play<lb/>
- ? ver N.C State<lb/>
-? ver after thev threw'that pass<lb/>
?" the put three<lb/>
J we go back out there<lb/>
wn or one of his<lb/>
? littlequick flair out and<lb/>
 be m the<lb/>
can remember since I've<lb/>
been here We're a badly<lb/>
crippled team<lb/>
Hicks suffered the in-<lb/>
jury early in the Western<lb/>
Carolina game, but it was<lb/>
not diagnosed until after<lb/>
practice Monday ecu<lb/>
Sports Medicine Director<lb/>
Rod Compton said Hicks<lb/>
would remain in the hos-<lb/>
pital from two to five days<lb/>
before he will be released.<lb/>
"Right now, he's ex-<lb/>
periencing a lot of pain and<lb/>
discomfort said Comp-<lb/>
ton. "He could be back at<lb/>
practice next week, but as<lb/>
far as any contact is con-<lb/>
cerned, no one knows<lb/>
Besides Hicks, halfback<lb/>
Sam Harrell and fullback<lb/>
Theodore Sutton are suf-<lb/>
fering from minor injuries<lb/>
but are expected to start,<lb/>
while halfback Anthony<lb/>
Collins is doubtful for the<lb/>
N.C State game. Sopho-<lb/>
more Mike Hawkins will<lb/>
replace Hicks in the Pirate<lb/>
backfield.<lb/>
ECUs offense was far<lb/>
from impressive in the<lb/>
Pirate' s narrow 14-6 victory<lb/>
over the Catamounts in<lb/>
their season opener last<lb/>
week. "I have to blame<lb/>
myself for a lot of things<lb/>
that happened last week<lb/>
explained Dye. "It was a<lb/>
very poor coaching job and<lb/>
we accomplished very few<lb/>
things we set goals for<lb/>
against Western Carolina.<lb/>
"Defensively, we were<lb/>
a different team con-<lb/>
tinued Dye. "We made<lb/>
very few mistakes, and the<lb/>
ones we did make didn't<lb/>
hurt us. I'm really encour-<lb/>
aged about the play of our<lb/>
defense<lb/>
The Pirates secondary<lb/>
intercepted four passes and<lb/>
held highly touted quarter-<lb/>
back M ike Pusey to just ten<lb/>
completions for 131 yards<lb/>
while the Catamounts<lb/>
gained only 47 yards on the<lb/>
ground<lb/>
More than 50.000 fans<lb/>
are expected in the Carter<lb/>
Stadium for the 7:00 pm<lb/>
contest. N.C. State is the<lb/>
first of two straight games<lb/>
against Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference schools. The Pi-<lb/>
rates face North Carolina<lb/>
next week in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
"This is a big game for<lb/>
both schools noted Dye.<lb/>
"I don't think it used to be<lb/>
until we beat State a couple<lb/>
of times. But it's certainly a<lb/>
prestige game for us. It<lb/>
gives our kids a chance to<lb/>
play against a name school<lb/>
with a big reputation.<lb/>
We've been very fortunate<lb/>
to beat them the last two<lb/>
years <lb/>
Last year, Pirate safety<lb/>
Ruffin McNeil tackled<lb/>
State's Ricky Adams two<lb/>
yards short of the goal line<lb/>
on the final play of the<lb/>
game to preserve a drama-<lb/>
tic 28-23 ECU victory.<lb/>
"N.C. State has an<lb/>
outstanding team this<lb/>
year said Dye. "They<lb/>
have all their key people<lb/>
returning. They have an<lb/>
excellent offensive line and<lb/>
some talented people at the<lb/>
skill positions.<lb/>
"Ted Brown is certainly<lb/>
one of the finest backs in<lb/>
the country" continued<lb/>
Dye. "You can't tackle him<lb/>
one-on-one, you've got to<lb/>
swarm around him. Bill Ray<lb/>
Vickers isalsoafine back<lb/>
NOTING THE Pirates<lb/>
"It's weeks like this that<lb/>
make you earn your pay-<lb/>
check" said Dye referring<lb/>
to the Pirates injury situ-<lb/>
ation in the offensive back-<lb/>
fieldfreshman John<lb/>
Hallow broke his foot in<lb/>
practice Monday and will<lb/>
also miss the N.C. State<lb/>
game.<lb/>
will be the ninth meeting<lb/>
between the two schools<lb/>
with N.C. State holding a<lb/>
5-4 edge in the series. The<lb/>
Wolfpack's last victory<lb/>
came in 1975 when they<lb/>
defeated ECU 26-3.<lb/>
EDDIE HICKS<lb/>
Photo by Pete Poaes<lb/>
M "<lb/>
. <lb/>
<lb/>
? me ' 'he Lumberton.<lb/>
3nt at ECU<lb/>
most<lb/>
-<lb/>
 .1-<lb/>
tted McNeill "We<lb/>
'?: ? ' ??' ? as) i- bul ?' - as the<lb/>
each g ime<lb/>
: streak against N C<lb/>
rice again probably go<lb/>
??? - ??'?en ECU squares off against the<lb/>
artor Stadium<lb/>
? ? rward to this game<lb/>
r'scneof our toughest rivalries and I<lb/>
wn is one c the greatest<lb/>
s such, a dangerous oass<lb/>
' '? trouble fa our secondar,<lb/>
? ? ???- with a "arrow 14-6 victory<lb/>
secondary held Catamount<lb/>
letions for 131 yards and<lb/>
e P se eraged well over 200 yards<lb/>
<lb/>
? -??? but then our pass rush<lb/>
' rad passes explained McNeill. "I<lb/>
ime for everybody. I'm glad we got<lb/>
-<lb/>
the  rtfpack 'ast season served as a<lb/>
they went on to defeat Duke the next<lb/>
games before losing to South Carolina<lb/>
tentica with another Atlantic<lb/>
North Carolina, immediately following<lb/>
- e thei tea i could be called an underdog this<lb/>
- Stcte and East Carolina are more<lb/>
than they've eer been before It's certainly<lb/>
 i winner in this game I think it a going to<lb/>
? A jt gang to have to go out there and give<lb/>
State wins their season opener against ECU<lb/>
have no adverse affect on the rest of<lb/>
. weel- against North Carolina.<lb/>
- negative thoughts like that said<lb/>
?? both games. I know that But no matter<lb/>
-asor we'll get up for them. It doesn't<lb/>
- ? ?'? ' Carolina<lb/>
J<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
fi<lb/>
THE ECU SOCCER team opens its 1978 season<lb/>
Saturday when the Pirate booters face N C State in the<lb/>
first round of the maugral Mayor's Cup Tournament<lb/>
The Pirates tied At Ian tic Chr,stain 1-1 t,<lb/>
game earlier this wee photo hy John M.<lb/>
scrimmage<lb/>
Qrogan<lb/>
Soccer team opens against State<lb/>
Fan of the Week<lb/>
Each week FOUNTAINHEAD will select a Fai I<lb/>
the Week at an ECU football game. This wee<lb/>
Smith has earned the honorable distinction of becor- rg<lb/>
FOUNTIANHEAD s first Fan of the Week<lb/>
Chad is from Lake Waccamaw. N C He is sev<lb/>
years old and attend Halisboro Elementary Scnc<lb/>
lake WaccamaA<lb/>
Chad attended Saturday's game m Ficklen Sar: urr<lb/>
with his father Robert Smith He is Mark Hoffman s<lb/>
half brother Hoffman is areserve piacekicker on the<lb/>
Pirate 'ootban team this year<lb/>
"I just like ? watch Va p a, footba1' saa Chad<lb/>
"Chad is Mark s biggest I said his f ither<lb/>
don't think anyone is more proud of  ?? he is<lb/>
Chad told me he wants to see all the game-<lb/>
th.s season. We're certain! qomg to try<lb/>
It s dedicated fans ke Chad Sr- ??  ? cheer ?<lb/>
Pirates on to victory each week and chances are ?<lb/>
m Carter Stadium when ECU squares off aga nsl f<lb/>
State<lb/>
By CHA RLES CHA NDLER<lb/>
Staff Writer a<lb/>
The young, inexperienced<lb/>
ECU soccer team opens its<lb/>
1978-79 season this Saturday<lb/>
against N.C. State in the<lb/>
inauguralMayor s Cup Tourn-<lb/>
ament in Raleigh Also entered<lb/>
m the two day affair are Duke<lb/>
and North Carolina. The ECU -<lb/>
N.C State game gets underway<lb/>
at 1 .30 p.m.<lb/>
The Pirate booters go into<lb/>
the tournament with a talented,<lb/>
yet basically untested team.<lb/>
"We'll start six freshmen<lb/>
says Pirate head coach Brad<lb/>
Smith "We've got alot of new<lb/>
faces who will get alot of playing<lb/>
time. "We'll have to learn in a<lb/>
hurry<lb/>
Yet. along with the youth<lb/>
comes a wave of optimism "We<lb/>
had a good recruiting year<lb/>
said Smit' "We have alot mor<lb/>
offensive players than last year<lb/>
I've got to be optimistic.<lb/>
In preparation for the up-<lb/>
coming tournament, the Pirates<lb/>
held a scrimmage against Atlan-<lb/>
tic Christian College earlier this<lb/>
week. "I was very pleased with<lb/>
our defense, but a little disap-<lb/>
pointed m our offense said<lb/>
Smith "We need to work the<lb/>
ball outside more. We've been<lb/>
going straight down the middle.<lb/>
That's always the strerth of a<lb/>
defense '<lb/>
Pirate star wingman and<lb/>
co-captain Phil Martin also feels<lb/>
a few offensive adjustments are<lb/>
necessary. "In the scrimmage,<lb/>
we had a lot of minor problems.<lb/>
But I feel we can correct them.<lb/>
We're small and inexperienced,<lb/>
so we must be more aggressive.<lb/>
We have the scorers. We just<lb/>
have to get meaner<lb/>
Pirate defensive captain Jeff<lb/>
Kluger. the lone senior returnee<lb/>
on the squad, said he felt<lb/>
confident in the defense. "If we<lb/>
stay together, we should be able<lb/>
to hold State to no more than<lb/>
two goals said Kluger "We<lb/>
just need more of tense I know<lb/>
we' re capable<lb/>
Equally capable of scoring<lb/>
should be the revamped Wolf-<lb/>
pack The entire N.C. State<lb/>
soccer program has gone<lb/>
through a complete realignment<lb/>
since last season. A new coach<lb/>
has been hired and many<lb/>
players from last year's squad<lb/>
failed to make the present team.<lb/>
N.C. State put a great deal of<lb/>
money into recruiting last year<lb/>
and the results could eventually<lb/>
be devastating. The Wolfpack<lb/>
signed the nation's number one<lb/>
prospect, Ail-American Mike<lb/>
Fink of New Jersey. "I know<lb/>
Fink will be super said<lb/>
Kluger. "He's supposed to be<lb/>
about as good as they come<lb/>
Kluger feels that the other<lb/>
two teams in the tournament<lb/>
should also field formidabte<lb/>
squads Carolina is always<lb/>
tough. Duke should be okay<lb/>
also<lb/>
"Carolina will probably be in<lb/>
the top 20 said Smith. "But I<lb/>
feel our chances in the tourna-<lb/>
ment are as good as we make<lb/>
them said Smith. Two wins<lb/>
up there would certainly get our<lb/>
program some of the support<lb/>
and faith we need Two wins,<lb/>
a even one, would certainly<lb/>
mean a lot to the younger<lb/>
players on the Pirate squad also.<lb/>
"A quick start would certainly<lb/>
help their confidence said<lb/>
Martin.<lb/>
The Pirate's begin their<lb/>
eight game home schedule<lb/>
on September 16 when they<lb/>
play host to Catawba<lb/>
College.<lb/>
ECU students wait and wait and wait<lb/>
BySAM ROGERS ? ??????<lb/>
CRAIG THORNTON<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Waiting in line all night fa those precious football and<lb/>
basketball tickets has long been a famihar practice for students at<lb/>
N.C. State and North Carolina.<lb/>
But only recently with ECUs surge towards big time football<lb/>
have students on the Greenville campus been forced to pull<lb/>
all-nighters outside the ticket office in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
A crowd estimated at more than 1,000 students gathered<lb/>
outside Minges Coliseum Monday night to wait for tickets which<lb/>
went on sale fa the ECU-State and ECU-UNC games Tuesday<lb/>
maning at 830<lb/>
Students brought everything from televisions to parachess<lb/>
games to help them through the monotony of the evening. Plenty<lb/>
of beer and food was on hand and several fraternities played cards<lb/>
all the way through the wee hours of the maning befae finally<lb/>
quitting<lb/>
"There really should be a better way of distributing the tickets<lb/>
than go through something like this said Tim Mans a freshman<lb/>
from Kinston N.C, who arrived around midnight to get his place<lb/>
in line. "But I really don't have any other solution so I guess<lb/>
they'll keep doing it until somebody comes up with a better<lb/>
method. But I'm a big Pirate fan anyway, and I love football so I<lb/>
guess I really don't mind all that much<lb/>
Hansen Matthews a junia fran Wilmingtai, N C wasn't<lb/>
exactly pleased with the idea of waiting all night either "This is<lb/>
just chaotic as hell observed Matthews while watching even<lb/>
rrwre cars pulling into the Minges Coliseum parking lot.<lb/>
"Me and my roommate weren't going to come until about six<lb/>
this morning, but we heard so many people were already coming<lb/>
that we dicided if we wanted tickets to the game we had better go<lb/>
on and get in line<lb/>
"Everybody figured there would probably be a lot of people<lb/>
over here in the maning. but then we heard there weregotngto be<lb/>
alot of people in line tonight said Chris Hill, a freshman from<lb/>
Kinston, N.C "It kind of scared us into going on over there.<lb/>
Besides, everybody else on our dam floa was doing it too<lb/>
Plenty of influential campus leaders and some famer ECU<lb/>
football players were among the group of students patiently<lb/>
waiting in line.<lb/>
Mike Mase, the Student Uniai President was present along<lb/>
with Dalton Denison, the Inter-Fraternity Council president, and<lb/>
Robert Swaim, FOUNTAINHEAD's Business Directa.<lb/>
"It's just like one great big party out here said Mase as he<lb/>
prepared to bundle up in his sleeping bag. "I'd rather do this<lb/>
every night than go to classes. It's certainly a night to remember<lb/>
Apparently even Jimmy Southerland and Junia Creech, two<lb/>
members of the Pirate football team last year, couldn't pull any<lb/>
strings in the ECU football office. Southerland threw a 62 yard<lb/>
touchdown pass to Billy Ray Washington against the Wolfpack last<lb/>
year and scaed the winning TD himself in the final quarter on a<lb/>
nifty 23 yard run. " Heck, Jimmy won the game fa us last year<lb/>
said one sympathetic student. "I honestly think he deserves a<lb/>
ticket without having to stand out here in line all night. I sure wish<lb/>
we had him next Saturday the way the offense looked against<lb/>
Western Carolina<lb/>
Craig Thantoi, a senia from Havelock, N.C. earned the<lb/>
honaable distindioi as the very first student in line to purchase<lb/>
histickets.Thantoiarrivedat 7:46 Monday maning with his five<lb/>
year old son, Shawn.<lb/>
I've had lousy tickets fa the last four years at the Slate<lb/>
games said Thantoi, who's wife arrived at five o'clock to p?ck<lb/>
up Shawn who waited with his father fa nine hours. "I don't know<lb/>
if they'll be any better, but at least I won't have to wait very lone<lb/>
fa my tickets<lb/>
d J T G StUdentS' Thornto" s armec w,th a<lb/>
sleeping bag. a televise set. insect repellent P,entv oMa ?'<lb/>
most impatantly. his checkbook ?<lb/>
"I'd planned on dang this for a innn ?&amp;<lb/>
"I really thought there wild bemanJ<lb/>
one really started tocorne untH abt 2 <lb/>
on.y abait 10 pecpto who sta Ight - ?.<lb/>
anything like this befae ve neve' s<lb/>
Neither had campus security officer Bill Rp,?<lb/>
casy ?? m? of the beer dr"erS n?r j?<lb/>
amused at the whole thing. ratner<lb/>
1 ve seen some people waiting in iin? an ? ?,<lb/>
befae, but I've never seen anwhino fl for ?0ncerts<lb/>
Reichaein "AduaHy. we cou.T ?<lb/>
drinking beer, but as longas they renL ? T here fc<lb/>
won'tdoanyth.ngtothem Bull .maa.ne- - " "<lb/>
mess in the maning with all this trash ls QO,na to be qUl,e a<lb/>
s.the sun came up Tuesday man.nn<lb/>
window. twc,nes outside eaoh<lb/>
"I'm glad I got a plaoe up front in line ?<lb/>
miss it. eaJlvcan'aff0rdt0<lb/>
The ticket office repated dose to tyy ?-?.<lb/>
boththeStateandCaroi,nagarranda'8 "e ?d fa<lb/>
EL 2 - 11? Tuesday <lb/>
Tuesday afternoon to dean up the trasfeftv ?? 'ate<lb/>
nighters and several mentioned they hop2 nJZZ ? th over<lb/>
time a mess like th.s was aeated. WOu,d ?e the last<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057143_0008"/><lb/>
r r r <lb/>
FOZJNTAINHEADs Fearless Forecast<lb/>
1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
fCUATN.c.STATE<lb/>
SsErMsr<lb/>
RG?NlA AT WAKE FOREST<lb/>
nURR'ATNOTREARMSET ,<lb/>
TulTpRAATNEBRASKA ?<lb/>
JQERS AT PENN STATE<lb/>
WESTERN CAROLiNA AT TENN TECH<lb/>
SAW ROGERS(8-)<lb/>
ECU 20-13<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
PennState<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Western Carolina<lb/>
TERRY HERNDON(8-2) CHARLESCHANDLER(7-3) BETSY McDA VID (7-3)<lb/>
N.C. State24-14<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Georgia Tech<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Western Carolina<lb/>
ECU 22-21<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Western Carolina<lb/>
ECU 21-17<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
UCI.A<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Georgia Tech<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Western Carolina<lb/>
WAYNE NEWNAM<lb/>
ECU Sports Promotion Director<lb/>
ECU 17-14<lb/>
Southern Cat<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Western Carolina<lb/>
Wayne Newnam<lb/>
guestpicker<lb/>
ECU Sports Promo-<lb/>
tions Director Wayne<lb/>
Newnam is this week's<lb/>
guest prognosticator in<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADS Fear-<lb/>
less Forecast. Last week's<lb/>
guest, ECU Chancellor Dr.<lb/>
Thomas Brewer picked the<lb/>
winner in eight of the ten<lb/>
games selected. Season to-<lb/>
tals of the regular<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD selec-<lb/>
tors will appear weekly at<lb/>
the left of their names in<lb/>
the prediction box.<lb/>
ECU DEFENSIVE BACK Baffin McNeill<lb/>
?' ?9h celebration after stopping<lb/>
Ricky A dama ust snort of fne en(j Jp 9<lb/>
the final play of the game.<lb/>
Pirates Willie Holley,<lb/>
secondary ready for State<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
During his four seasons<lb/>
as head coach at ECU Pat<lb/>
Dye has become very ac-<lb/>
customed to all the pre-<lb/>
game publicity and excite-<lb/>
ment before the Pirates<lb/>
annual contest against At-<lb/>
lantic Coast Conference foe<lb/>
N.C. State.<lb/>
"It's a prestige game<lb/>
for ECU" said Dye. "If we<lb/>
beat State consequently our<lb/>
program continues to grow<lb/>
bigger. It means a great<lb/>
deal to the public and the<lb/>
media. It's a chance to<lb/>
move up for ECU<lb/>
ECU cornerback Willie<lb/>
Holley also realizes the<lb/>
importance of the N.C.<lb/>
State game and looks for-<lb/>
ward to the annual contest<lb/>
against the Wolfpack every<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"It's a challenge for me<lb/>
as well as the rest of the<lb/>
players" admitted the ju-<lb/>
nior from Endenton, N.C<lb/>
We work real hard in<lb/>
practice for N.C. State<lb/>
every year. What we do in<lb/>
this game is real important.<lb/>
It's always been a big game<lb/>
for me<lb/>
Holley is a bonafide<lb/>
member of the "swarm" a<lb/>
nickname for which mem-<lb/>
bers of the ECU secondary.<lb/>
In the Pirates opener<lb/>
against highly touted<lb/>
quarterback Mike Pusey,<lb/>
one of the nation's passing<lb/>
leaders last year.<lb/>
Pusey could manage<lb/>
only ten completions for<lb/>
131 yards and had three of<lb/>
his passes intercepted.<lb/>
"Everybody's a lot<lb/>
more confident back there<lb/>
now explained Holley<lb/>
who played with safety<lb/>
Gerald Hall at Holmes High<lb/>
School.<lb/>
"Last year Gerald was<lb/>
the only experienced player<lb/>
in the secondary. But as the<lb/>
season got older we got<lb/>
better and better each<lb/>
game. We're all alot more<lb/>
confident about moving a-<lb/>
round back there now<lb/>
"After that first game<lb/>
against Western Carolina I<lb/>
think we gave everyone a<lb/>
pretty good example of how<lb/>
weI we have improved<lb/>
since fast year<lb/>
Last year N.C. State<lb/>
quarterback Johnny Evvans<lb/>
completed 17 of 31 touch-<lb/>
down<lb/>
Last year N.C. State<lb/>
quarterback Johnny Evans<lb/>
completed 17 of 31 passes<lb/>
for 301 yards and a touch-<lb/>
down against ECU. Evans<lb/>
has graduated but Scott<lb/>
Smith is a master of the<lb/>
veer offense and may be<lb/>
just as dangerous as Evans.<lb/>
"I don't think there will<lb/>
be as much pressure on us,<lb/>
this year" noted Holley.<lb/>
"But we're not going into<lb/>
this game thinking Smith<lb/>
won't pass against us be-<lb/>
cause we know he certainly<lb/>
hasthe ability.<lb/>
For many years, N.C.<lb/>
State has always been<lb/>
highly favored over ECU,<lb/>
hut that's changed during<lb/>
the last four years since Pat<lb/>
Dye took over the Pirate<lb/>
program.<lb/>
"I don't think they<lb/>
regard us any more as a<lb/>
smaller, lesser known<lb/>
team" explained Holley.<lb/>
They feel much the same<lb/>
way we do. Both teams are<lb/>
about equal and we both<lb/>
know the game is going to<lb/>
be close. Tney no longer<lb/>
take the game lightly be-<lb/>
cause they know we're<lb/>
capable of beating them.<lb/>
"Most people are prob-<lb/>
ably picking State to come<lb/>
out on top Saturday night,<lb/>
but we're confident we can<lb/>
do the job<lb/>
The Pirate secondary<lb/>
pilfered a total of four<lb/>
passes from Catamount<lb/>
quarterbacks Saturday nite.<lb/>
Gerald Hall grabbed one<lb/>
interception while Ruffln<lb/>
McNeill, Charlie and,Way-<lb/>
ne Perry Carter had one<lb/>
apiece.<lb/>
Holley who intercepted<lb/>
one pass last season and<lb/>
returned it 42 yards was the<lb/>
lone starter in the second-<lb/>
ary who failed to get one.<lb/>
"It doesn't bother me<lb/>
much" smiled Holley. "My<lb/>
time will come and it might<lb/>
be real soon<lb/>
bSm 4J) ftAQK?<lb/>
Ask me about<lb/>
Life Insurance<lb/>
for Students<lb/>
and<lb/>
Young Adults<lb/>
?T??t ??t?<lb/>
The earlier you start it, the<lb/>
lower the premiums. And<lb/>
the sooner cash values begin<lb/>
to build for emergencies or<lb/>
business opportunities later<lb/>
" on. Call me for details.<lb/>
IMi??MCi<lb/>
bill mcdonalo<lb/>
iPi?C??<lb/>
State Farm Life Insurance Company<lb/>
Home Office Btoomington, Illinois<lb/>
Olschner heads improved<lb/>
women'?tennis team<lb/>
PAUSE<lb/>
Thursday Sept. 7,7:30 pm<lb/>
By BETSY MCDA VID<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"Youth, consistency,<lb/>
and concentration" will set<lb/>
the stage for a vigorous<lb/>
new season at ECU in<lb/>
women's tennis, according<lb/>
to Coach Barbara Olschner.<lb/>
"We may not have an<lb/>
outstanding year , she<lb/>
said, "but we are building<lb/>
a powerful team from most<lb/>
ly freshmen and .soph-<lb/>
omores. They are showing<lb/>
a lot of promise. We will<lb/>
definitely be getting better<lb/>
every year<lb/>
Olschner is not only<lb/>
building a new tennis team,<lb/>
she is building a new<lb/>
experience as she faces her<lb/>
first season at ECU. Com-<lb/>
muting from Morehead<lb/>
Olschner is not only<lb/>
building a new tennis team,<lb/>
she is building a new<lb/>
experience as she faces her<lb/>
first season at ECU. Com-<lb/>
muting from Morehead<lb/>
City daily, she has had only<lb/>
a week to get the feel of her<lb/>
team. "I am comfortable<lb/>
and confident with them<lb/>
already she said. A<lb/>
strong influx of ability will<lb/>
be added by several return-<lb/>
ing netters. Olschner, sing-<lb/>
led out Diane Keough as a<lb/>
particularly good senior<lb/>
prospect.<lb/>
"Debbie Spinozzoia<lb/>
also seems strong. She is a<lb/>
sophomore from Penn-<lb/>
sylvania with a great all-<lb/>
court game. She should do<lb/>
very well said Olschner.<lb/>
"I am also keeping my<lb/>
eye on transfer student<lb/>
from Hofstra New York,<lb/>
Pat Stewart she added<lb/>
Stewart played number one<lb/>
position there for two<lb/>
years. Olschner looks to her<lb/>
to be atop contender here.<lb/>
Olschner admits it will<lb/>
be difficult to tell how the<lb/>
Lady Pirates would fare<lb/>
once the action begins.They<lb/>
will compete against basic-<lb/>
ally the same schools as<lb/>
always.<lb/>
" M y girls have dedicat-<lb/>
ed and the desire to win,<lb/>
but matches like those with<lb/>
UNC-Chapei Hill, Wake<lb/>
Forest, and N.C. State will<lb/>
be hard to take said<lb/>
Olscher. "Our opponents<lb/>
have experience on their<lb/>
side<lb/>
She feels confident in<lb/>
filling at least middle place<lb/>
in the conference, hopeful-<lb/>
ly better. "We should be<lb/>
tough she said, "for most<lb/>
of the other teams to beat<lb/>
"We are always eager<lb/>
to add new talent said<lb/>
Olscher. We work under<lb/>
the challenge system where<lb/>
both first and second squad<lb/>
are constantly open to<lb/>
newcomer<lb/>
She encourages anyone<lb/>
who wants to play to come<lb/>
and try out anytime. Cuts<lb/>
have not been made, so all<lb/>
positions are "still up for<lb/>
grabs<lb/>
Play begins September<lb/>
21 when the Pirates square<lb/>
off against N.C. State for a<lb/>
2 p.m. home match.<lb/>
time to<lb/>
breath<lb/>
deeply,<lb/>
rest,<lb/>
reorient,<lb/>
refresh the spirit. Pause is<lb/>
sponsored by: The Baptist Student<lb/>
Union 511E. 10th 8t, Behind the<lb/>
ECU Library.The Baptist Student<lb/>
Union is a place where social,<lb/>
spiritual, and ethical growth are<lb/>
integrated.<lb/>
vr?-<lb/>
Almost Anything Goes begins<lb/>
LLU3<lb/>
U.S. A.<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolian Univ-<lb/>
ersity intramural depart-<lb/>
ment will hold Its annual<lb/>
Almost Anything Goes<lb/>
sports carvival at 4 p.m. on<lb/>
Tuesday on the University<lb/>
Mall.<lb/>
This will be the fourth<lb/>
year for the Almost Any-<lb/>
thing Goes carnival and<lb/>
there have been numerous<lb/>
events added and deleted<lb/>
after last year's event. A<lb/>
minumum of six men and<lb/>
six women must be on each<lb/>
team to participate.<lb/>
This will be the fourth<lb/>
year for the Almost Any-<lb/>
thing Goes carnival and<lb/>
there have been numerous<lb/>
events added and deleted<lb/>
after last year's event. A<lb/>
minimum of six men and<lb/>
six women must be on each<lb/>
team to participate, and as<lb/>
many as four men and four<lb/>
women will be allowed on<lb/>
each roster.<lb/>
Events for this year's<lb/>
carnival will be the human<lb/>
innertube, the egg throw,<lb/>
the hooia-hoop course, and<lb/>
the Platter basketball race.<lb/>
Each event will be run<lb/>
against time, with the best<lb/>
six times earning points<lb/>
toward the overall Almost<lb/>
Anything Goes champion-<lb/>
ship. The Platter basketball<lb/>
race will be the Super<lb/>
playoff event and will count<lb/>
double. First-place wil)<lb/>
count for 15 points, second-<lb/>
place will count for ten<lb/>
points, third-place will<lb/>
count for six points, fourth<lb/>
-place will award four<lb/>
points, fifth-place two<lb/>
points and one point will be<lb/>
awarded for a sixth-place<lb/>
finish. All events will be<lb/>
teem events with three or<lb/>
more teammates participa-<lb/>
ting in each event.<lb/>
GreenviHe area mer-<lb/>
chants annually sweeten<lb/>
the pot of prize by offering<lb/>
free dinner, meatsand other<lb/>
prizes to the winning teams<lb/>
in each event. All full-time<lb/>
ECU students, faculty and<lb/>
staff are eligible to partici-<lb/>
pate in the festivities and<lb/>
there is no limit on how a<lb/>
team may organized, as<lb/>
long as each team has three<lb/>
men and three women on<lb/>
the team.<lb/>
Some of the events, like<lb/>
the paddle basketball race,<lb/>
will require strength.<lb/>
24Hoursacky<lb/>
with<lb/>
Abo Combinaticns<lb/>
-Dinners-<lb/>
FriedChicken Tubs and Buckets<lb/>
also live thru window<lb/>
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Quality e Compelitive Prices e Service<lb/>
Hi ? ? Tern Etj! ft Hi Taw<lb/>
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8 a.m730 p.m. 8 a.m10 p.m.<lb/>
ujleV<lb/>
' FEATURING . . .<lb/>
V' CAN DIES<lb/>
ALWAYS FRESH<lb/>
lrtttttl Sieve,<lb/>
&amp; <lb/>
1<lb/>
Thursday X ite at the<lb/>
The Best in Beaeh music<lb/>
with North Carolina's own<lb/>
jiu<lb/>
Friday: Beat State Party!<lb/>
Sunday: Italics Nite<lb/>
Tuesday: C iazy Tues.<lb/>
cflPuS<lb/>
douiT?fc,voA<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057143_0009"/><lb/>
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 y - - <lb/>
10 FOUNTAINHEAD 7 September 1978<lb/>
SHOP BIG STAR<lb/>
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LOCATED AT<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
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FREE DICTIONARY!<lb/>
Buy Volumes 2 &amp; 3 of<lb/>
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Prices good thru Sat Sept. 9. 1978 - Quality Rights<lb/>
Reserved - None sold to other Dealers or Resturants<lb/>
irms-<lb/>
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With purchase of each<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057143_0010"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>