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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057144_0001"/>
Vol. 55 No<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
12 September 1978<lb/>
SGA extends deadline<lb/>
for filing candidates<lb/>
ELECTION DATE IS set for Sept. 26. These students vote<lb/>
for their favorite candidate in one of the many precincts<lb/>
scattertfo throughout the campus each year.<lb/>
By ROBERTSWAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
The deadline to file for<lb/>
student government legis-<lb/>
lative and class officer seats<lb/>
has been extended by the<lb/>
SGA elections committee to<lb/>
5 p.m. on Sept. 13.<lb/>
According to Jeff<lb/>
Felmming, a member of the<lb/>
elections committee, 25<lb/>
dorm seats are open in the<lb/>
legislative but only 16<lb/>
people have filed to run for<lb/>
those seats.<lb/>
Fleming said that there<lb/>
are several dorms in which<lb/>
no one has filed: Cotten,<lb/>
Garret, Fletcher, Tyler,<lb/>
Jarvis, Fleming, and<lb/>
White.<lb/>
"Enough people have-<lb/>
not filed said David Cart-<lb/>
wright, chairman of the<lb/>
elections committee. "We<lb/>
have got to have more<lb/>
people to file before we can<lb/>
have an election<lb/>
Fleming said that there<lb/>
are also 25 seats open for<lb/>
day students.<lb/>
As of last Thursday<lb/>
night 29 people had filed for<lb/>
the 25 day seats. Of that<lb/>
29, five of them have also<lb/>
filed for class officer posi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
According to Fleming,<lb/>
the only candidates who are<lb/>
presently facing any op-<lb/>
position are those running<lb/>
from Clement. Jones, and<lb/>
Umstead. Nine people are<lb/>
running unopposed from<lb/>
the other dormitories.<lb/>
Cartwright said that all<lb/>
day students who have<lb/>
filed "are really running<lb/>
unopposed since five of<lb/>
them have filed for class<lb/>
officer<lb/>
According to Cart-<lb/>
wright, the only class offic-<lb/>
er seat that has not been<lb/>
filed for is that of graduate<lb/>
class president<lb/>
Fleming said that a<lb/>
mandatory candidates<lb/>
meeting will be held on<lb/>
Sept. 14 at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
multi-purpose room of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Fleming added that<lb/>
campaigning can start im-<lb/>
mediately after the<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Election day is set for<lb/>
Sept. 26.<lb/>
Liquor- by - drink battle<lb/>
to continue in N.C. today<lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
CHARLOTTE, N.C.<lb/>
(AP - Tne next battle<lb/>
be' "e wets and drys<lb/>
is Tuesday when<lb/>
. tei s m Orange County<lb/>
iand Chapel Hill. Black<lb/>
Mountain and Southern<lb/>
p nnes go to the polls on<lb/>
the sCal-option liquor-by-<lb/>
the drink law passed by the<lb/>
Generai Assembly in June.<lb/>
Although wets won a<lb/>
resounding victory in Fri-<lb/>
day s mixed-drink endors-<lb/>
ement by Mecklenburg<lb/>
County voters, drys are<lb/>
looking forward to scoring<lb/>
triumphs in some of the<lb/>
upcoming liquor-by-the-<lb/>
drink votes.<lb/>
Following Tuesday's<lb/>
vote. Sanford and Louis-<lb/>
burg voters go to the polls<lb/>
on Sept. 20 and Dare<lb/>
County votes Sept. 22.<lb/>
New Hanover County<lb/>
and Asheville vote Jan. 16.<lb/>
That month, in as yet<lb/>
unscheduled elections,<lb/>
Sunset Beach, South port<lb/>
and Long Beach will con-<lb/>
sider the mixed-drink<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
Orange County is con-<lb/>
sidered a prime candidate<lb/>
for liquor by the drink by<lb/>
both opponents and sup-<lb/>
porters of the issue. In the<lb/>
statewide referendum held<lb/>
in 1973, Mecklenburg.<lb/>
Wake and Orange counies<lb/>
were the only counties<lb/>
voting for mixed drinks.<lb/>
Southern Pines is also seen<lb/>
as a likely candidate, but<lb/>
both sides will admit that<lb/>
Sanford, Louisburg Black<lb/>
Mountain and Dare County<lb/>
are other matters. And the<lb/>
victory in Mecklenburg is<lb/>
not thought to have helped<lb/>
the dry cause.<lb/>
"The onlyhopethe drys<lb/>
had in Southern Pines was<lb/>
to turn the momentum<lb/>
around said Jim Godfery,<lb/>
a leader of the mixed-drink<lb/>
forcesthere. "And the only<lb/>
way to do that was if<lb/>
Charlotte Mecklenburg<lb/>
County went down the<lb/>
drain<lb/>
In Orange, liquor by the<lb/>
drink supporter Toni Ewell,<lb/>
agreed. "I think we will<lb/>
definitely win now said<lb/>
Ms. Ewell, chairman of the<lb/>
Orange County Citizens for<lb/>
Local Option.<lb/>
See LIQUOR, p. 5)<lb/>
Who should play God? Jeremy Rifkm<lb/>
explores the heated controversy on<lb/>
clones, genetic engineering, test-tube<lb/>
babies, and recombinant DNA tonight at<lb/>
8 in the MSC theatre. See p. 7<lb/>
Stan Lee is the man responsible for CBS's<lb/>
"Incredible Hulk "Spider Man and<lb/>
"Wonder Woman. See p. 8<lb/>
The Pirates got off to a good start<lb/>
Saturday night in Carter Stadium, but<lb/>
after the first 46 seconds is was downhill<lb/>
all the way. See p. 10.<lb/>
w<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmm�m<lb/>
Accused men face federal charges<lb/>
PCB oil spill riles area farmers<lb/>
By The Associated .Press<lb/>
One Harnett County<lb/>
man. whose land has been<lb/>
contaminated by PCB, said<lb/>
recently those responsible<lb/>
for the spills should be shot.<lb/>
PCB-laced oil was<lb/>
spilled along 270 miles of<lb/>
roadway in the state last<lb/>
month by a night-riding<lb/>
trucker. One area was<lb/>
along N.C. 210 from Smith-<lb/>
field to Angier.<lb/>
T. M itchell Langdon, a<lb/>
26-year-old farmer, said<lb/>
that even though the grass<lb/>
is growing again where the<lb/>
toxic chemical was spilled,<lb/>
he isn't likely to forget<lb/>
about the chemical dump-<lb/>
ers. To get rid of the ster h<lb/>
left by the spill, he said to<lb/>
scrape a foot of soil from<lb/>
the three-quarters of an<lb/>
acre in front of his ware-<lb/>
house.<lb/>
He is considering mov-<lb/>
ing, but said he won't plow<lb/>
under his garden near the<lb/>
spill.<lb/>
Langdon wasn't<lb/>
impressed with the releases<lb/>
put out by the state<lb/>
Division of Health Services<lb/>
saying the PCB spills pose<lb/>
little immediate threat to<lb/>
health. "I think everybody<lb/>
ought to get a little PCB out<lb/>
there. Then maybe they'll<lb/>
recognize the seriousness<lb/>
of it<lb/>
Other residents along<lb/>
the N.C. 210 spill weren't<lb/>
as vocal as Langdon about<lb/>
what happened to their<lb/>
land. But many have<lb/>
plowed under their gardens<lb/>
or left them to wither.<lb/>
Those who had already<lb/>
canned vegetables said<lb/>
they are waiting for further<lb/>
word from the state before<lb/>
deciding whether to eat<lb/>
them.<lb/>
One farmer has erected<lb/>
a temporary electric fence<lb/>
to keep his beef cattle 100<lb/>
yards from the spill, as the<lb/>
state has recommended.<lb/>
Three New York men<lb/>
are being held in that state<lb/>
after being indicted two<lb/>
weeks ago by a Halifax<lb/>
County grand jury. They<lb/>
also face federal charges in<lb/>
connection with the spills.<lb/>
However, those arrests<lb/>
have done little to appease<lb/>
the people living near the<lb/>
spills.<lb/>
"Our neighbor has a<lb/>
crabapple tree that makes<lb/>
the best jelly you ever<lb/>
tasted said Herbert<lb/>
Stewart of Stewart's<lb/>
Grocery and Service along<lb/>
N.C. 210. "She said to my<lb/>
wife, 'Come get 'em any<lb/>
time you want 'em, but I<lb/>
said, No, it's too close to<lb/>
the highway If it came<lb/>
down to needing it and I<lb/>
had to, I would have eaten<lb/>
it, but I'm staying away<lb/>
from it when I can<lb/>
"When I ride on this<lb/>
road, I keep the glass<lb/>
windows up tight, and most<lb/>
of the time we keep the<lb/>
store closed up<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
The Aug. 31 edition of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD contain<lb/>
ed an article by Luke<lb/>
Whisnant entitled "Griev-<lb/>
ance Board in Favor of<lb/>
Women In the interest of<lb/>
accurate reporting, the<lb/>
Grievance Committee feels<lb/>
it is appropriate to not<lb/>
inaccuracies in that article.<lb/>
Therefore we have listed<lb/>
below each inaccuracy<lb/>
followed by the appropriate<lb/>
correction.<lb/>
1. "Grievance Board in<lb/>
favor of women" was the<lb/>
title of the article.<lb/>
CORRECTION: The<lb/>
Committee did not submit<lb/>
its report to Dean Tucker<lb/>
until Sept. 5. Furthermore,<lb/>
the Committee issued no<lb/>
prior statements concern-<lb/>
ing adherence or non-ad-<lb/>
herence to Title IX.<lb/>
2. A title in smaller<lb/>
print stated "Title IX<lb/>
violations corrected The<lb/>
Committee wishes to clarify<lb/>
that this title was a<lb/>
subjective evaluation by the<lb/>
reporter and not a conclu-<lb/>
sion reached by the<lb/>
Committee on that date.<lb/>
3. The opening para-<lb/>
graph states, the Uni-<lb/>
versity's Title IX Grievance<lb/>
Coimmittee accepted a plan<lb/>
which attempts to rectify<lb/>
Title IX violations<lb/>
CORRECTION: The<lb/>
Committee accepted the<lb/>
plan as an official exhibit<lb/>
presented by the respon-<lb/>
dents (the University ad-<lb/>
ministration). Note�this<lb/>
was correctly stated in<lb/>
paragraph six of the article.<lb/>
4. Paragraph 20 states,<lb/>
"Charles McLawhorn, atto-<lb/>
rney for the complaintants,<lb/>
then suggested that the<lb/>
Grievance Committee<lb/>
members Chairperson lone<lb/>
Ryan announced the Com-<lb/>
mittee's unanimous accep-<lb/>
tance and brought the<lb/>
hearing to a close<lb/>
CORRECTION: Artemis<lb/>
C. Kares was the Chairper-<lb/>
son of the Committee. In<lb/>
addition, the printing error<lb/>
resulted in a failure to<lb/>
identify for the reader<lb/>
exactly what the Committee<lb/>
was accepting.<lb/>
5. Paragraph 21 stated,<lb/>
"Dr. Ryan instructed a<lb/>
Channel 9 TV crew and<lb/>
"Ryan declared a recess<lb/>
CORRECTION: In both<lb/>
instances Chairperson Ka-<lb/>
ras was responsible for the<lb/>
identified behavior and not<lb/>
Dr. Ryan.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD reg-<lb/>
rets any inconvenience or<lb/>
confusion caused by these<lb/>
mistakes.<lb/>
AN ECU DEFENDER drags down State's<lb/>
Saturday night's 24-13 loss to the Wolfpack<lb/>
Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
Ted<lb/>
rown<lb/>
Photo<lb/>
in<lb/>
Housing improves since<lb/>
beginning of school year<lb/>
I <lb/>
MANY STUDENTS ARE eager to be assigned to a dorm<lb/>
room after a housing shortage on campus, and once<lb/>
they're in<lb/>
Photo by Kip Sloan<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The housing situation at<lb/>
ECU improved according to<lb/>
Dan Wooten, director of<lb/>
housing.<lb/>
According to Wooten,<lb/>
an of the men and all but<lb/>
about 75 of the women have<lb/>
been assigned rooms.<lb/>
Some of the room as-<lb/>
signments that have been<lb/>
made in the men's dorms<lb/>
include some of the male<lb/>
students being placed as<lb/>
third persons in a room.<lb/>
The housing office is<lb/>
presently moving third per-<lb/>
sons out of these rooms into<lb/>
rooms of their own.<lb/>
During the summer, the<lb/>
waiting list was long, and<lb/>
some students made other.<lb/>
arrangements for their<lb/>
housing.<lb/>
Wooten said others<lb/>
probably became discour-<lb/>
aged, and did not report for<lb/>
school.<lb/>
According to Wooten<lb/>
these two factors contribut-<lb/>
ed to the number of rooms<lb/>
that could be freed for other<lb/>
students to move into.<lb/>
Another factor contrib-<lb/>
tuting to the number of<lb/>
rooms that are vacant are<lb/>
the number of students who<lb/>
drop out of school.<lb/>
According to Wooten,<lb/>
several students will drop<lb/>
out during the first few<lb/>
weeks of school, and their<lb/>
rooms will then be available<lb/>
for use.<lb/>
Wooten said the hous-<lb/>
ing shortage has been<lb/>
especially bad this year.<lb/>
The shortage of available<lb/>
room space has been worse<lb/>
than it has been since the<lb/>
early 60's.<lb/>
According to Wooten,<lb/>
years ago, the housing<lb/>
situation was severe. For<lb/>
the next four years, (1970-<lb/>
1974), dorm space was<lb/>
plentiful, he said.<lb/>
For the four years im-<lb/>
mediately following, (1974-<lb/>
1978), dorm space was very<lb/>
limited.<lb/>
The Housing Office<lb/>
could make no predictions<lb/>
about the next years hous-<lb/>
ing situation.<lb/>
Increased or decreased<lb/>
enrollment the popularity<lb/>
of students moving out of<lb/>
the dorms into fraternity or<lb/>
sorority houses, and the<lb/>
availability of apartments<lb/>
all have a bearing on how<lb/>
many dorm rooms will be<lb/>
available, Wooten said.<lb/>
According to several<lb/>
persons involved in the<lb/>
apartments-for-rent busi-<lb/>
ness here in Greenville,<lb/>
most of the apartments<lb/>
have been rented since the<lb/>
middle of July. A spokes-<lb/>
. man from Village Green<lb/>
apartments said that few<lb/>
units may be available in<lb/>
October, because some ten-<lb/>
ants of these apartments<lb/>
may drop out of school.<lb/>
t<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
VMMPfJI<lb/>
-� �<lb/>
BSftemarmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057144_0002"/><lb/>
The ECU Program for<lb/>
Hearing-Impaired Students<lb/>
will present non-credit sign<lb/>
language classes for inter-<lb/>
ested students, staff, and<lb/>
faculty this semester.<lb/>
There will be no charge for<lb/>
the sign language classes.<lb/>
Classes will be limited to 25<lb/>
persons.<lb/>
Beginning sign lang-<lb/>
uage classes will meet on<lb/>
Wed Sept. 13 at 4 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster B-206.<lb/>
This will be an organ-<lb/>
izational meeting and will<lb/>
determine the exact time<lb/>
and day of class meetings.<lb/>
This class will provide<lb/>
an introduction to sign<lb/>
langauge for students,<lb/>
staff, or interested persons<lb/>
who have little or no<lb/>
previous language exper-<lb/>
ience<lb/>
A course for beginning<lb/>
interpreters will also hold<lb/>
its first meeting on Wed<lb/>
Sept. 13 at 4 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster B-205.<lb/>
Classes will meet for<lb/>
one hour on Monday and<lb/>
Wednesdays of each week.<lb/>
This class is for those<lb/>
who have had one year of<lb/>
sign language classes and<lb/>
are interested in basic<lb/>
interpreting skills.<lb/>
The-course will consist<lb/>
of advanced vocabulary,<lb/>
advance fingerspelling<lb/>
practice, mime, body and<lb/>
facial expression, and the<lb/>
ethics of interpreting.<lb/>
AED, Pre-med, Pre-<lb/>
dent meeting Tues Sept.<lb/>
12 at 7 p.m 307 Flanagan.<lb/>
Program Speaker is<lb/>
Jeremy Rifkin on "Who<lb/>
Should Play God?" in MSC<lb/>
at 8 p.m.<lb/>
AED will attend as a<lb/>
group following the 7 p.m.<lb/>
meeting in Flanagan.<lb/>
Dance<lb/>
An organizational meet-<lb/>
ing will be held on Mon<lb/>
Sept. 11, at Noon in Mem-<lb/>
orial Gym, room 108. Call<lb/>
Dr. Bonita Lockwood at<lb/>
757-6441 for further details.<lb/>
A new offering this<lb/>
year will be Faculty and<lb/>
Staff Social Dance instruct-<lb/>
ion scheduled for Noon on<lb/>
Tuesday and Thursday in<lb/>
Memorial Gym, room 108.<lb/>
If you are interested in<lb/>
learning some new steps<lb/>
or in redeveloping your old<lb/>
skills, please join us.<lb/>
Jo Saunders, assistant<lb/>
professor in the department<lb/>
of Health, Physical Educa-<lb/>
tion, Recreation and Safety<lb/>
will be the instructor.<lb/>
First meeting will be<lb/>
Tues Sept 12. For further<lb/>
information, contact Mrs.<lb/>
Saunders at 757-6000.<lb/>
Revelation<lb/>
Holy Trinity United<lb/>
Methodist Church, located<lb/>
at 1400 Red Banks Road,<lb/>
directly across from Ayoock<lb/>
Junior High, is having a<lb/>
study of the Book of<lb/>
Revelation beginning<lb/>
Tues Sept. 12 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m and concluding<lb/>
Thurs. night, Sept. 14.<lb/>
A study book, Vision of<lb/>
Patmos, will be available.<lb/>
Dr. Glen A. Holm, minist-<lb/>
er, will lead the study, and<lb/>
he invites the public to<lb/>
participate.<lb/>
Civitan<lb/>
ECU Collegiate Civitan<lb/>
meeting at 7 p.m Wed<lb/>
Sept. 13, in Brewster C-<lb/>
205.<lb/>
This is an organizational<lb/>
meeting, so former junior<lb/>
civitans or other interested<lb/>
persons are invited to join.<lb/>
Psi Chi<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
The Student Union Cof-<lb/>
feehouse Committee will<lb/>
meet Fri Sept. 15 at 3<lb/>
P-m. in room 238 Menden-<lb/>
hall. All members must<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
mi<lb/>
Are you preparing to<lb/>
work with children? If so,<lb/>
you are invited to attend<lb/>
the first meeting of the<lb/>
ACEI (Association of Child-<lb/>
hood Education Inter-<lb/>
national).<lb/>
We will meet Wed<lb/>
Sept 13, at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall, room 221.<lb/>
M embership will be open at<lb/>
this time. Please come and<lb/>
get involved.<lb/>
1VCF<lb/>
Inter-Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship will meet this<lb/>
Wednesday night from 7<lb/>
until 8:30 p.m. The meeting<lb/>
will be in room 221, at<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Playhouse<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
will hold auditions for the<lb/>
opening musical of the<lb/>
season, Pippin, on Tues<lb/>
Sept. 12 at 7:3; p.m. in<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
There are roles for 12<lb/>
men and 8 women, and<lb/>
director Ken Miller urges<lb/>
all interested parties, ECU<lb/>
students, faculty and staff,<lb/>
as well as area residents<lb/>
not connected with the<lb/>
university to try out.<lb/>
Among the roles are a<lb/>
granny" type character<lb/>
(played in the Broadway<lb/>
production by Irene Ryan,<lb/>
known for her portrayal of<lb/>
Granny" on the Beverly<lb/>
Hillbillies) and an old char-<lb/>
acter male actor, as well as<lb/>
a number of roles for<lb/>
college men and women.<lb/>
The play will open Oct. 20<lb/>
in McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
Ping pong<lb/>
A Table Tennis Club<lb/>
organizational meeting will<lb/>
be held on Tues Sept. 19<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in the Billiards<lb/>
Center at Mendenhall. All<lb/>
persons interested in play-<lb/>
ing table tennis are invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Phi Sigma<lb/>
Phi Sigma Tau, the<lb/>
philosophy honors club,<lb/>
will meet Wed Sept. 13, at<lb/>
7 p.m. in room BA325, the<lb/>
Philosophy Reading room.<lb/>
All present members<lb/>
please attend.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
The filing deadline for<lb/>
candidates in this year's<lb/>
SGA elections has been<lb/>
extended until 5 p.m<lb/>
Wed Sept. 13.<lb/>
The mandatory candid-<lb/>
ates meeting will then be<lb/>
held Thurs Sept. 14 at 7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Come and be a part of<lb/>
your Student Government<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Psi Chi will hold its first<lb/>
meeting of the year Tues-<lb/>
day Sept. 12 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
All psychology majors<lb/>
and minors and all inter-<lb/>
ested persons are invited to<lb/>
attend. Refreshments will<lb/>
be served, see you there.<lb/>
Potluck<lb/>
College-age religious<lb/>
liberals the Unitarian-<lb/>
Universalist Fellowship<lb/>
meets this Sunday at 10:30<lb/>
a.m. in the Planters Com-<lb/>
munity room, Third and<lb/>
Washington Streets. Op-<lb/>
tional potluck afterwards.<lb/>
Oldtimers and curious all<lb/>
Invited.<lb/>
MRC<lb/>
The Graduate Record<lb/>
Examination will be offered<lb/>
at ECU on Sat Oct. 21.<lb/>
Application blanks are<lb/>
to be completed and mailed<lb/>
to Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 966-R, Princeton,<lb/>
NJ 08540 to arrive by Sept.<lb/>
25. Applications may be<lb/>
obtained from the Testing<lb/>
Center, room 105, Speight<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Circle-K<lb/>
The Men's Residence<lb/>
Council and the Pirate Club<lb/>
will present filmed high-<lb/>
lights of the 1977 ECU<lb/>
football season; Wed<lb/>
night at 8 p.m. The film will<lb/>
last about one hour and be<lb/>
in the basement of Ayoock<lb/>
Dorm. Admission is free<lb/>
Journalism<lb/>
The Society for Colleg-<lb/>
iate Journalists will meet<lb/>
on September 19, 1978,<lb/>
Tuesday at 7 p.m. All<lb/>
members must attend and<lb/>
join in the final planning<lb/>
stages of that big event -<lb/>
The Journalism Workshop!<lb/>
Please join the officers at<lb/>
Austin building, near the<lb/>
journalism wing, for further<lb/>
instruction. Looking for-<lb/>
ward to our first official<lb/>
meeting of the semester,<lb/>
We hope you will come.<lb/>
The Circle-K is honored<lb/>
with our first guest speaker<lb/>
for the 1978-79 academic<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Ruth Taylor, chairper-<lb/>
son for the local American<lb/>
Red Cross is giving a short<lb/>
survey lecture on this out-<lb/>
standing organization.<lb/>
Our meetings are still<lb/>
being held at 213 Wright<lb/>
Annex at 6:30 p.m. every<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
This is in back of Wright<lb/>
Auditorium's unfinished<lb/>
snack bar, the same place<lb/>
where the ROTC is station-<lb/>
ed All students are wel-<lb/>
comed to attend.<lb/>
Sterieal?<lb/>
The ECU Chemistry<lb/>
Seminar will present<lb/>
Gurdial Singh senior re-<lb/>
search chemist with<lb/>
DuPont of Kinston, who<lb/>
will present a seminar on<lb/>
"Stereochemical conseq-<lb/>
uences of sterically-hinder-<lb/>
ed phosphorus comp-<lb/>
ounds" Sept. 15 at 2 p.m.<lb/>
in room 201 Flanagan Bldg.<lb/>
Refreshments will be<lb/>
served in the conference<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SOCW-CORR<lb/>
Students who wish to<lb/>
apply for admission to the<lb/>
department of Social Work<lb/>
and Correctional services<lb/>
should submit an applicat-<lb/>
ion and have two interviews<lb/>
no later than Sept. 20.<lb/>
A 2.5 quality point<lb/>
average is required. Ad-<lb/>
mission is open to students<lb/>
who are within 10 hours of<lb/>
completion of General Col-<lb/>
lege Requirements and who<lb/>
are second semester sop-<lb/>
homores or first semester<lb/>
juniors.<lb/>
For additional informat-<lb/>
ion concerning admission<lb/>
requirements and proced-<lb/>
ures contact: Dr. John R.<lb/>
Ball, chairperson, Social<lb/>
Work &amp; Correctional Serv-<lb/>
ices, 314 Allied Health<lb/>
(Carol Belk) Building,<lb/>
Phone 757-6961.<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
The Air Force ROTC<lb/>
corps will be kicking off this<lb/>
academic year with a corps<lb/>
picnic. This will be held at<lb/>
field 1, behind the Allied<lb/>
Health building.<lb/>
The corps would like to<lb/>
welcome some new staff<lb/>
members to our depart-<lb/>
ment. Our new FIP and<lb/>
sophomore instructor is<lb/>
Major Billy Tudor. Our new<lb/>
COC and senior instructor<lb/>
is Captain Steven Bien-<lb/>
stock. Our new NCOIC is<lb/>
Master Sergent Jim<lb/>
Daniels. Our new adminis-<lb/>
tration NCO is Staff Ser-<lb/>
geant Bruce Barry. WEL-<lb/>
COME ABOARD!<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
The Graduate Manag-<lb/>
ement Admission Test will<lb/>
be offered at ECU on Sat<lb/>
Oct. 28.<lb/>
Application blanks are<lb/>
to be completed and mailed<lb/>
to Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 966-R, Princeton,<lb/>
NJ 08540 to arrive by Oct.<lb/>
6. Applications are also<lb/>
available at the Testing<lb/>
Center, Speight Building,<lb/>
room 105.<lb/>
Need a place with the<lb/>
space, tools and equipment<lb/>
to work on your hobby or<lb/>
latest project?<lb/>
Visit the Crafts Center<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center and discover what it<lb/>
has to offer you. Hours are<lb/>
3 p.m. until 10 p.m<lb/>
M onday through Friday,<lb/>
and from 10 a.m. until 3<lb/>
p.m Saturday.<lb/>
The center is composed<lb/>
of a darkroom with three<lb/>
en larger s, a ceramics area,<lb/>
a jewelrymetals area, a<lb/>
general crafts area, and a<lb/>
textiles area with floor<lb/>
looms for weaving.<lb/>
All full-time students,<lb/>
faculty, staff, and spouses<lb/>
are eligible to use the<lb/>
facilities. A semester mem-<lb/>
bership fee of $10 entitles<lb/>
the Crafts Center member<lb/>
to use the facilities, to<lb/>
check out tools and equip-<lb/>
ment, to check out library<lb/>
materials, to enlist the aid<lb/>
of crafts supervisors, and to<lb/>
enroll in introductory level<lb/>
workshops which are offer-<lb/>
ed throughout the year.<lb/>
Visit the Crafts Center<lb/>
any time during operating<lb/>
hours or call 757-6611 Ext.<lb/>
271 for more information.<lb/>
Mean men<lb/>
The ECU Lacrosse Club<lb/>
is looking for a few good<lb/>
men.<lb/>
If you have played be-<lb/>
fore, are willing to learn or<lb/>
just damn mean, call 742-<lb/>
9516.<lb/>
All equipment (except<lb/>
sticks) will be provided, call<lb/>
now<lb/>
Pool party<lb/>
Sign up today to partici-<lb/>
pate in the "Billiards Lad-<lb/>
der Tournament" to begin<lb/>
on Wed Sept. 20, at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Billiards Cent-<lb/>
er. The tournament will run<lb/>
for eight weeks and prizes<lb/>
will be awarded.<lb/>
Tutors<lb/>
The Center for Student<lb/>
Opportunities hat immed-<lb/>
iate openings for graduate<lb/>
and certain undergraduate<lb/>
tutors to assist Health<lb/>
Affiars students in micro-<lb/>
biology, mathematics, phy-<lb/>
sics, biology and chemistry.<lb/>
Prospective tutors In<lb/>
these and other health-<lb/>
related areas are encourag-<lb/>
ed to contact Dr. Hensel,<lb/>
Tutorial Coordinator, now.<lb/>
Visit 208 Ragsdale Hall, or<lb/>
call the Center, 757-6122,<lb/>
6081, or 6075.<lb/>
Minority<lb/>
LSAT<lb/>
The Law School Admis-<lb/>
sion Test will be offered at<lb/>
ECU on Sat Oct. 14.<lb/>
Application blanks are<lb/>
to be completed and mailed<lb/>
to Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 966-R, Princeton,<lb/>
NJ 08540 to arrive by Sept.<lb/>
14. Applications are avail-<lb/>
able at the Testing Center,<lb/>
room 105, Speight Build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Faculty fit<lb/>
The department of<lb/>
Health, Physical Educat-<lb/>
ion, Recreation and Safety<lb/>
will once again sponsor a<lb/>
Faculty and Staff Fitness<lb/>
Program. All who have<lb/>
been active in this program<lb/>
in the past are urged to<lb/>
continue. All newcomers<lb/>
are cordially invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Sessions will be held in<lb/>
Memorial Gymn�ium at<lb/>
Noon on Mon Wed and<lb/>
Fri. A variety of activities<lb/>
(i.e. conditioning exercises,<lb/>
jogging, swimming, volley-<lb/>
ball, badminton, etc.) will<lb/>
be offered.<lb/>
Individual needs and<lb/>
interests will be consider-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Fall 1978-79 orientation<lb/>
program for incoming min-<lb/>
ority students: Schedule of<lb/>
Events: Sept. 12, through<lb/>
Sept 15:<lb/>
Sunday: worship ser-<lb/>
vices will be held at 11 a.m.<lb/>
at Cedar Grove M issionary<lb/>
Baptist Church with Rev.<lb/>
Ken Hammond. Bus pickup<lb/>
will be 10:15 a.m. at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
and at 10 20 a.m. Tyler<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
Monday: Welcome and<lb/>
Open Rap Session at 7 p.m.<lb/>
at the Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Tuesday: Academic Af-<lb/>
fairs  a "rap" with<lb/>
professors, at 7 p.m. at the<lb/>
Ledonia Wright Afro-<lb/>
American Cultural Center.<lb/>
Wednesday: Pool Party<lb/>
to be held at M emorial Gym<lb/>
from 7-9 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday: S.O.U.L.S.<lb/>
and Black Organizational<lb/>
meeting at 8 p.m. at the<lb/>
Ledonia Wright Afro-<lb/>
American Cultural Center.<lb/>
Friday: Greek Day: a<lb/>
block show at 5 p.m a<lb/>
"jam" from 10 until 2 p.m.<lb/>
at the Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Phi Beta<lb/>
There will be a Phi Beta<lb/>
Lambda meeting Wed<lb/>
Sept. 13, at 4:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Rawl 130.<lb/>
We urge all members<lb/>
and interested students to<lb/>
please attend.<lb/>
firad school<lb/>
Those planning to take<lb/>
one or more of the admis-<lb/>
sion tests required by grad-<lb/>
uate and professional<lb/>
schools are advised to<lb/>
register for the tests im-<lb/>
mediately. ZA disruption in<lb/>
mail service could prevent<lb/>
nose who delay from being<lb/>
registered for the early fall<lb/>
administrations.<lb/>
Gospel<lb/>
Phi Eta<lb/>
There will be a meeting<lb/>
for ail Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
numbers Tues Sept. 12 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in the Multi-<lb/>
purpose room in Menden-<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
Plans for the upcoming<lb/>
year will be discussed. All<lb/>
members are urged to come<lb/>
so not to miss out on all this<lb/>
semester's activities.<lb/>
Do you remember that<lb/>
during the last week of<lb/>
classes this April a fellow<lb/>
student was in a bicycle<lb/>
accident on College Hill 91?<lb/>
His skull was fractured,<lb/>
brain bruised, left ear drum<lb/>
ruptured, and the doctors<lb/>
did not expect him to live to<lb/>
the next day.<lb/>
Over 80 Christians in<lb/>
many parts of the country<lb/>
started praying for him and<lb/>
the next day he was alive!<lb/>
Not only was he alive but he<lb/>
was talking with people,<lb/>
there was no nore brain<lb/>
damage, and his vital signs<lb/>
were on the go. He left the<lb/>
hospital in eight days,<lb/>
strong and has been active<lb/>
in sports again, and is back<lb/>
at ECU this fall taking 14<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
Come and hear John M.<lb/>
Crowe tell how Jesus has<lb/>
brought him from death to<lb/>
life. This meeting will be<lb/>
Thurs Sept. 14 in Mend-<lb/>
enhall-221 at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
This will be the first<lb/>
meeting of the new year of<lb/>
the ECU Full Gospel Stud-<lb/>
ent Fellowship chapter.<lb/>
We plan to continue to<lb/>
meet at this same place<lb/>
every week. Some nights<lb/>
we will have a Christian<lb/>
musician or speaker, other<lb/>
nights we will have a Bible<lb/>
study.<lb/>
At all of these meetings<lb/>
we will sing songs of<lb/>
praise, share what God is<lb/>
doing in our lives, and pray<lb/>
for your needs, believing<lb/>
that God will meet those<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
Ann<lb/>
ouncing<lb/>
The Fourth Annual<lb/>
REBEL ART SHOW<lb/>
Details &amp; rules forthcoming<lb/>
Open to all ECU students<lb/>
Prizes to be awarded<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery Oct22thru28<lb/>
nent<lb/>
m<lb/>
MATURE STUDENT: male<lb/>
or female, preferably a<lb/>
grad studo needed to<lb/>
ahare a - blocks<lb/>
from campus. Call 758-7466<lb/>
keep trying if no answer.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
needed to ahare furnished<lb/>
apt. one block from camp-<lb/>
us. Call 758-6229 after 5<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
ECONOMY STEREO: Big<lb/>
sound complete component<lb/>
system plus 8-track. Works<lb/>
great for $60.00 758-7623.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sadi Yarl 6-<lb/>
string folk guitar, in excel-<lb/>
lent cond. $350. Call 758-<lb/>
1879 after 7 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '69 Dodge<lb/>
Coronet with slant six eng-<lb/>
ine in excellent cond. and<lb/>
new tires. Also Sony Cas-<lb/>
sette deck with mikes and<lb/>
headphone. And last but<lb/>
not least the famed Abra-<lb/>
ham Laweon Robot Kits<lb/>
Csllnow 758-7434.<lb/>
LOST. Sorority pin with<lb/>
sentimental value<lb/>
REWARD Call 757136<lb/>
en aaMaa m mi m I<lb/>
personal<lb/>
WANTED: Chaneio's kit-<lb/>
chen and deliver help for da<lb/>
�ml night shifts. You must<lb/>
&amp;� own oar. Come or oaH<lb/>
us for interview.<lb/>
�t 507 E. 14th St.<lb/>
WANTED: babysitter for<lb/>
Indepeodetrt 8 vr old boy -<lb/>
8at. Sept. 18, 8 a.m. to 10<lb/>
pm- CMkt rotated fields<lb/>
NEEDED: if arty<lb/>
� �� Haw ,o oomit<lb/>
�5 SZZTJ1-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057144_0003"/><lb/>
J oyner's electronic security syste:<lb/>
 foils ECU's potential book thieves<lb/>
12 September 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD P�M 3<lb/>
By DR. WILSON LUGUINE<lb/>
Associate Director<lb/>
of Joynei Library<lb/>
and<lb/>
DEEBROCKMAN<lb/>
Head of Circulation Dept.<lb/>
One major obstacle to<lb/>
good, efficient library ser-<lb/>
vice is book theft.<lb/>
Certainly if a needed<lb/>
�tern is readily available,<lb/>
ibrary users tend to be<lb/>
satisfied with service and<lb/>
alternatively, when a need-<lb/>
ed item is' missing users<lb/>
express dissatisfaction.<lb/>
The problem is one of<lb/>
perception - if a user says,<lb/>
"My need is greater than<lb/>
yours. My need is greater<lb/>
than anyone'sI'll just re-<lb/>
move the book by hook or<lb/>
by crook" - then a spiral<lb/>
effect in book losses takes<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Demand for missing ti-<lb/>
tles increases, frustration<lb/>
sets in and a growing<lb/>
number of library users<lb/>
adopt the attitude that their<lb/>
success or failure in a<lb/>
course depends upon their<lb/>
stealing a particular book or<lb/>
books.<lb/>
In order to arrest this<lb/>
chain reaction, libraries<lb/>
must decide the security<lb/>
problem of whether or not<lb/>
v.4aj�;<lb/>
to have an exit control and,<lb/>
if so, whether it should be<lb/>
manual or electronic.<lb/>
The fault with the man-<lb/>
ual exit control is that it<lb/>
doesn't do much more than<lb/>
remind the careless user to<lb/>
legally borrow a book.<lb/>
Users are supposed to<lb/>
show any books they have<lb/>
to the exit checker, and of<lb/>
course those they have in<lb/>
their hands are fairly ob-<lb/>
vious.<lb/>
However, books that are<lb/>
deliberately concealed are<lb/>
beyond the scope of the<lb/>
manual exit control.<lb/>
For this reason, an<lb/>
electronic security system<lb/>
often becomes necessary.<lb/>
Other reasons for in-<lb/>
stalling the electronic sys-<lb/>
tem are its ease of opera-<lb/>
tion, speedy checkout, and<lb/>
consistent efficiency.<lb/>
The effectiveness of e-<lb/>
lectronic devices is sup-<lb/>
ported not only by the<lb/>
opnion of librarians and<lb/>
borrowers who use aca-<lb/>
demic libraries where such<lb/>
equipment exits but also by<lb/>
actual fact.<lb/>
A study conducted in<lb/>
the Ohio State University<lb/>
Commerce Library showed<lb/>
that an inventory in 1973<lb/>
revealed 4 percent of the<lb/>
year's new books to be<lb/>
missing. A second inven-<lb/>
tory In 1974, after the<lb/>
installation of electronic<lb/>
devices, revealed that the<lb/>
loss rate had dropped to .65<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
Little did librarians<lb/>
realize the trouble they<lb/>
were making for them-<lb/>
selves when they gave up<lb/>
the medieval concept of the<lb/>
chained book.<lb/>
Chaining books guaran-<lb/>
teed Inventory control and<lb/>
library accessibility, elim-<lb/>
inated overdues and, in<lb/>
general, contributed to the<lb/>
well-being of the library<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
In a sense, the elec-<lb/>
tronic exit control system is<lb/>
today's modified version of<lb/>
the chained book. Large<lb/>
retail businesses were the<lb/>
first to recognize how the<lb/>
technology of electronics<lb/>
could be adapted to the<lb/>
problem of shoplifting.<lb/>
It was not long after,<lb/>
approximately 14 years<lb/>
ago, that the first electronic<lb/>
installation was applied to<lb/>
book losses in the Grand<lb/>
Rapids Public Library.<lb/>
Essentially, the electro-<lb/>
magnetic systems make use<lb/>
of devices which can detect<lb/>
sensitized material. The<lb/>
patron hands the library<lb/>
book he wants to borrow to<lb/>
the desk attendant who<lb/>
desensitizes them during<lb/>
the charge out process.<lb/>
Then the patron walks<lb/>
between the detection units<lb/>
without search or delay.<lb/>
If a patron tries to leave<lb/>
the library with material he<lb/>
has forgotten to check out,<lb/>
and exit gate will lock<lb/>
automatically and a signal<lb/>
will sound.<lb/>
The absent-minded pa-<lb/>
tron will have to step out of<lb/>
the exit way, go back to the<lb/>
desk and permit the atten-<lb/>
dant to discover ' which<lb/>
items have not been char-<lb/>
ged out and desensitized.<lb/>
Occasionally, there will<lb/>
be false alarms. Fine tun-<lb/>
ing the sensing units to<lb/>
discriminate between li-<lb/>
brary environments and<lb/>
objects such as three-ring<lb/>
binders and certain types of<lb/>
brief cases must be care-<lb/>
fully worked out during<lb/>
installation.<lb/>
Refinements and modi-<lb/>
fications normally follow<lb/>
during a testing period<lb/>
when the system is virtually<lb/>
purged of false alarms.<lb/>
Of course the best se-<lb/>
curity system an academic<lb/>
library can have is a climate<lb/>
of trust and respect within<lb/>
the college community.<lb/>
If borrowers could re-<lb/>
late their own personal<lb/>
needs to the good of all, the<lb/>
Library would flourish in a<lb/>
truly democratic atmos-<lb/>
phere.<lb/>
"The whole idea of the<lb/>
new electronic check sys-<lb/>
tem is to speed up service<lb/>
to our users at the actual<lb/>
check point itself and to<lb/>
make sure that materials in<lb/>
the library stay in the<lb/>
library and accounted for -<lb/>
for all our patrons said<lb/>
Luguine.<lb/>
HTt�L3"<lb/>
2'<lb/>
ft� v<lb/>
c�� e<lb/>
 pSc, jwa<lb/>
Lwir<lb/>
K<lb/>
A FAMILIAR SCENE on campus ishe student who .akes<lb/>
advantage of the last days of summer.<lb/>
Photo by Kirk Kingsbury)<lb/>
Doctors trying to find cause<lb/>
Legionnaires disease baffles officials<lb/>
NEW YORK AP-<lb/>
Federal and city health<lb/>
officials, studying an out-<lb/>
break of Legionnaires<lb/>
disease which has killed<lb/>
two persons here are trying<lb/>
figure out why some local<lb/>
residents have a larger-<lb/>
than-expected number of<lb/>
antibodies to protect them<lb/>
against the disease.<lb/>
Dr. William Foege,<lb/>
director of the National<lb/>
Med school receives HEW grant<lb/>
ECU NEW BUREAU<lb/>
The Department of Family Medicine at the East Carolina<lb/>
School of Medicine has received a $463,380 grant from the<lb/>
Department of Health, Education and Welfare to support a<lb/>
graduate training program designed to improve the quality of<lb/>
health care in eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Dr. James G. Jones, project director ana chairman of the<lb/>
family medicine department, said the purpose of the<lb/>
program is to provide professional training experience for<lb/>
family practice residents in the first, second anc third years<lb/>
of training.<lb/>
Jones days selection cf residents participating in the<lb/>
program will target physicians who plan to practice in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina in an effort "to relieve the present<lb/>
critical physician manpower shortage<lb/>
"As a result of this training program, our impact on the<lb/>
quality and availability of health care in the region and state<lb/>
will occur even sooner than we projected says Jones.<lb/>
There are now only 188 family physicians practicing in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina. The grant will help increase that<lb/>
figure during the next 20 years to 300 or more, a ratio of at<lb/>
least one family physician per 2,000 population.<lb/>
Funds will be used to develop and enhance training<lb/>
programs, hire additional personnel such as clinical<lb/>
pharmacist, nurse practitioner and nutritionist.<lb/>
"The grant will also fund active research In famitv<lb/>
disease patterns seen by the family, physician in rural<lb/>
settings says Jones.<lb/>
"The studies will help identify the relationship of<lb/>
socioeconomic factors to disease patterns - in hypertension or<lb/>
diabetes, for example - and enable us to update our<lb/>
curriculum to reflect our unique regional health problems.<lb/>
A director of research will be recruited to coordinate data<lb/>
collected from rural physicians and ECU faculty members.<lb/>
Grant funds whi also be used to support continuing<lb/>
educations programs for rural practitioners in the region.<lb/>
Physicians will be given the opportunity to attend a<lb/>
"mini-residency" at the Eastern Carolina Family Practice<lb/>
Center, the primary care facility operated by the medical<lb/>
school's Department of Family Medicine.<lb/>
Seven family practice residents are now training at the<lb/>
center, and eight more will begin studies in July. Jones says<lb/>
the grant will help the medical school reach its goal of 36<lb/>
residents at the center by 1981.<lb/>
Center for Disease Control,<lb/>
says blood tests of victims<lb/>
and some "control" sub-<lb/>
jects who didn't have the<lb/>
disease have indicated that<lb/>
both groups have antibod-<lb/>
ies against Legionnaires<lb/>
disease at levels "higher<lb/>
than we would expect<lb/>
"There's undoubtedly<lb/>
some sporadic disease<lb/>
transmission going on. We<lb/>
don't know at this time how<lb/>
important this outbreak<lb/>
isFoege says.<lb/>
By Sunday, six cases,<lb/>
including the two deaths,<lb/>
had been confirmed as<lb/>
caused by Legionnaires<lb/>
disease, the bacterial<lb/>
malady that killed 29<lb/>
people and sickened more<lb/>
than 150 after an American<lb/>
Legion convention in Phila-<lb/>
delphis 1976. -<lb/>
The list of possible<lb/>
victims had risen to 97,<lb/>
jumping by 25 cases in a<lb/>
day, and one of the<lb/>
suspected cases ended in<lb/>
death. But Dr. Paul<lb/>
Caswell, deputy director of<lb/>
operations for the local<lb/>
Legionnaires Disease Task<lb/>
Force, said the zooming<lb/>
figure probably resulted<lb/>
from the intense publicity<lb/>
of recent days.<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
FOUNTAIN<lb/>
HEAD<lb/>
advertisers<lb/>
OJXRA-FRATERiITY COUNCIL p�-<lb/>
The Beat Carolina Pep Rally,<lb/>
in Cooperation with Joe Hallow<lb/>
Everyone9 invited to<lb/>
Support the Pirates<lb/>
with 25 FREE<lb/>
&amp;zM<lb/>
Our Cheerleaders will be there<lb/>
to guide us on to victory I<lb/>
The Clothes Horse<lb/>
jate Clothing.<lb/>
SPONSORS<lb/>
Hallow Distributing Co.<lb/>
Strohs,Pabst, Pearl<lb/>
H. L. Hodges &amp; Co,<lb/>
"We outfit the Pirate<lb/>
Mike's Bicycle Shop<lb/>
"Rides with the Pirate<lb/>
218F University Arcade<lb/>
Grand Opening September 20th<lb/>
<lb/>
The Gazebo<lb/>
 � �<lb/>
peaaazmg m<lb/>
at affordable prices.<lb/>
Harmony House South<lb/>
'The Student Stereo Center"<lb/>
on the mall<lb/>
McDonald<lb/>
Bissette's Discount Center<lb/>
"Good homecooking<lb/>
and affordable prices on the mali.<lb/>
Wiener King<lb/>
A dog a day keeps the Tarheels away.<lb/>
Hardee's<lb/>
Featuring the new look for 1978.<lb/>
Pipeline<lb/>
Mingies Building<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
t<lb/>
y<lb/>
p � - . . <lb/>
�� -�� w��-��<lb/>
A4i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057144_0004"/><lb/>
Pi<lb/>
Childish behavio<lb/>
nfbSt hS nh0t UniC)ue ,0 8 parficu a?<lb/>
n�7liinre???nfor such behavior is rather<lb/>
s,M;ulirithiifrherHee,Lr3Te"<lb/>
moments throughouf thVnofTe<lb/>
were funny enough to elicit the hvstertert<lb/>
esponses of the audience. Worst of all ti<lb/>
laughter was usually inapproor ate to h�<lb/>
action portrayed on screen. Mpropna,e to ,he<lb/>
For example, in one scene, Lillian is shown<lb/>
running frantically through deserted tn<lb/>
fefd0herSh,oUji?l?fl T P which' w �<lb/>
u0prroarues,ymeXPl'Cab,e reas�n. " TaSJi<lb/>
as S SSiHlnni"ian and Ju,ia are n<lb/>
simple but beautiful language and exore<lb/>
sions. The audience was heardto snicklr Erf�<lb/>
neaTh9 Li H2n t0 Julia "II love you " P<lb/>
The students present were nithar .<lb/>
T�2?gffi n0t !ngenTheenoungh<lb/>
(proDably both) to appreciate or understand<lb/>
tests?1008 wnicn �wssk<lb/>
anything but the pointy-eareVvn.1<lb/>
floor for a question and anlwe? oerid<lb/>
Amazingly, someone was stupid ergrTfoSk<lb/>
. Did the pointed ears hurt?" It is hard to<lb/>
cThI ng (,� ECU,s reputation) question<lb/>
�hS Vdents aJe not ,orceJ to attend lectures<lb/>
and films, and once there, are free to leave if<lb/>
they find they cannot appreciate or uerltand<lb/>
f.ffinta 0n- '?,he mark 3 anadulfilone<lb/>
h m�i?a?! quieIly tnrou9h something above<lb/>
h mTEfhi an5 n0t 2isturb others around<lb/>
students dhflJfhi fa Child "�one behaves �<lb/>
students did at the aforementioned programs.<lb/>
Viewpoint<lb/>
Human rights: 'the dignity of the<lb/>
individual is jeopardized<lb/>
Commentary<lb/>
Birth control effectiveness<lb/>
ermined<lb/>
By SHELLY PITTERMAN<lb/>
Brandeis University<lb/>
Waltham. Mass<lb/>
No state can plead<lb/>
innocent to the charge that<lb/>
it violates human rights.<lb/>
Differing power structures<lb/>
and economic systems have<lb/>
given rise to a variety of<lb/>
forms of subjugation . all<lb/>
conceived to perpetuate the<lb/>
authority of the powerful<lb/>
Apartheid, which pre-<lb/>
scribes the degradation of<lb/>
South Africa's majority<lb/>
population solely on the<lb/>
basis of color, differs in<lb/>
both kind and degree from<lb/>
the structures of political<lb/>
oppression built in the<lb/>
Soviet Union, South Korea<lb/>
or Chile; however, the<lb/>
dignity of the inividual is<lb/>
jeopardized in all nations.<lb/>
The issue of human<lb/>
rights is not confined to<lb/>
national boundaries, be-<lb/>
cause it extends beyond the<lb/>
basic guarantee of suffrage<lb/>
to matters of economic<lb/>
privilege. The unraveling<lb/>
social fabrics of individual<lb/>
states have assumed a<lb/>
particulary international<lb/>
character in the aftermath<lb/>
of the OPEC oil embargo of<lb/>
1973. which forced all na-<lb/>
tions acknowledge their<lb/>
economic and military in-<lb/>
terdependence. ,<lb/>
Accordingly, the moun-<lb/>
ting tensions and continued<lb/>
bloodshed in southern A-<lb/>
frica clearly theaten world<lb/>
peace and economic sta-<lb/>
bility. In addition, the<lb/>
exploitative activities of<lb/>
multi-national corporations<lb/>
in much of the developing<lb/>
world violate the human<lb/>
right to economic self-de-<lb/>
termination.<lb/>
Human rights" is thus<lb/>
a transnational phenomen-<lb/>
on, and it is imperative<lb/>
that, in many instances,<lb/>
transnational efforts be<lb/>
launched in order to first<lb/>
affirm and then preserve<lb/>
the dignity of the indivi-<lb/>
dual.<lb/>
The United Nations<lb/>
continues to play a sig-<lb/>
nificant role in alleviating<lb/>
the tribulations of victims<lb/>
of national oppression<lb/>
through its relief programs<lb/>
for refugees. The U.N. is<lb/>
also the primary focus for<lb/>
the development of a New<lb/>
International Economic Or-<lb/>
der, which is ultimately an<lb/>
issue of individual human<lb/>
rights because of its im-<lb/>
plications for the distri-<lb/>
bution of world resources<lb/>
and for ensuring govern-<lb/>
mental responsiveness to<lb/>
its citizens.<lb/>
Other organizations,<lb/>
especially Amnesty Inter-<lb/>
national, actively monitor<lb/>
violations of individual<lb/>
rights in scores of nations<lb/>
with varying political and<lb/>
economic structures. Fur-<lb/>
ther, the application of<lb/>
multilateral pressures on<lb/>
South Africa, such as the<lb/>
recent (though belated)<lb/>
arms embargo, reflects an<lb/>
international rejection of<lb/>
the inhumanity of the apar-<lb/>
theid system. More deter-<lb/>
mined and cooperatively<lb/>
implemented international<lb/>
programs could certainly<lb/>
help relieve the oppressive<lb/>
Plight of the Southeast<lb/>
Asian "boat people as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
Yet, transnational in-<lb/>
stitutions cannot solely be<lb/>
responsible for the preser-<lb/>
vation of human rights.<lb/>
People must be more<lb/>
cognizant of their own<lb/>
violations and less reluctant<lb/>
to restrict the process of<lb/>
progressive social change.<lb/>
More than ever before<lb/>
(though less than neces-<lb/>
sary), multilateralism has<lb/>
begun to, as Clarence Streit<lb/>
wrote in Union Now, "put<lb/>
individuality back on the<lb/>
throne that nationality has<lb/>
usurppd Reason, there-<lb/>
fore, orates that there be<lb/>
intensified transnational<lb/>
cooperation in order to<lb/>
affirm economic and pol-<lb/>
itical human dignity.<lb/>
The winning editorial in<lb/>
the 1977 Student Editorial<lb/>
Contest, launched last au-<lb/>
tumn by the Federal Union<lb/>
Youth Program, appears<lb/>
above. The author, Shelly<lb/>
Pitterman, graduated in<lb/>
May from Brandeis Uni-<lb/>
versity, Waltham, Mass<lb/>
where he was a member of<lb/>
the United Nations Asso-<lb/>
ciation and served as Edi-<lb/>
torial Page Editor for its<lb/>
student newspaper, The<lb/>
Justice. Mr. Pitterman's<lb/>
home is in Flushing, New<lb/>
York. The opinions ex-<lb/>
pressed are those of the<lb/>
author.<lb/>
By HESTER PETTY<lb/>
Uppity Women of Greenville<lb/>
The effectiveness of any<lb/>
birth control method ij<lb/>
dependent on the woman<lb/>
who is using it. A motivated<lb/>
women using a well-fitted<lb/>
disphragm-contraceptive<lb/>
jelly or a foam-condom<lb/>
combination is better off<lb/>
than a woman using the Pill<lb/>
or an IUO (intra-uterine<lb/>
device).<lb/>
Although the effect-<lb/>
iveness rate is the same for<lb/>
the two women, the moti-<lb/>
vated user of a barrier<lb/>
method does not risk dis-<lb/>
ease, or death. If you have<lb/>
a strong moral or religious<lb/>
objection to abortion, the<lb/>
Pill's 99.5 percent theoret-<lb/>
ical effective rate would<lb/>
pregnancy is headed for<lb/>
abortion or acceptance, the<lb/>
danger of septic abortion<lb/>
accompanied by hospitaliz-<lb/>
ation or death is present. If<lb/>
you become pregnant with<lb/>
an IUD in place see a doctor<lb/>
immediately.<lb/>
IUD users have a better<lb/>
chance of experiencing PID<lb/>
(Pelvis Inflammatory<lb/>
Disease) than non-IUD us-<lb/>
ers. PID includes a number<lb/>
of pelvic infections. Symp-<lb/>
toms are: increasing pain<lb/>
with intercourse, orgasm<lb/>
and or menstruation;<lb/>
chills, fever; irregular<lb/>
bleeding. These symptoms<lb/>
also apply to ectopic preg-<lb/>
nancy and therefore a pre-<lb/>
gnancy test should precede<lb/>
an diagnosis of PID. PID<lb/>
can result in severe damage<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
probably mean that the Pill Z damafle<lb/>
BUC Editor<lb/>
blames Rogerson<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I appreciate your<lb/>
sympathy, however I must<lb/>
point out two points in the<lb/>
recent FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
editorial that might be<lb/>
misunderstood. First of all,<lb/>
I did not state, imply, or<lb/>
cause to be inferred the fact<lb/>
that I would like to tuck<lb/>
away or forget the status of<lb/>
lasy years BUC. My only<lb/>
concern is with any effect<lb/>
that last year's situation<lb/>
might have on this year's<lb/>
BUC. I realize that every-<lb/>
one is very disappointed in<lb/>
the delay of the yearbook,<lb/>
and l will do everything<lb/>
�can to see that last year's<lb/>
Fbuntainhcad<lb/>
tarararflftr<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Leigh Coakley<lb/>
EditorDoug White<lb/>
News Editors<lb/>
Juiie Everette<lb/>
Ricki Giiarmrs<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
Robert M.Swaim<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
RXJMTAINHEAOtotlti<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
mistakes are not repeated<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
I must also point out<lb/>
that the responsibility for<lb/>
completing last year's BUC<lb/>
belongs to former editor<lb/>
Susan Rogerson, and not to<lb/>
me or any member of this<lb/>
year's staff.<lb/>
Craig Sahli<lb/>
BUCCANEER Editor<lb/>
More of<lb/>
the same<lb/>
I To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I was disappointed<lb/>
in 1977 when the BUCCA-<lb/>
NEER failed to appear<lb/>
because of the bumblings<lb/>
of the SGA legislature. I<lb/>
felt, though, that since that<lb/>
was only my freshman<lb/>
year, that little would be<lb/>
lost, from a personal view-<lb/>
point. Now I see that<lb/>
history repeats itself, and<lb/>
the book which would have<lb/>
covered my first two years<lb/>
of college is unlikely to be<lb/>
completed.<lb/>
Not only have the SGA<lb/>
and, to a lesser extent, the<lb/>
Media Board screwed up<lb/>
our annual, but Susan<lb/>
Rogerson has behaved<lb/>
most irresponsibly by more<lb/>
or less dumping the unfin-<lb/>
ished yearbook in the lap of<lb/>
an infant and fledgling<lb/>
Media Board. She is the<lb/>
real villain in this night-<lb/>
mare.<lb/>
RusmI White<lb/>
consider the alternatives to<lb/>
oral contraceptives.<lb/>
THE IUD<lb/>
The IUD is not much of<lb/>
an alternative. Many<lb/>
women have it removed<lb/>
within a year of its insertion<lb/>
because of pain, bleeding<lb/>
(longer menstrual flow;<lb/>
spotting), infection and<lb/>
other medical reasons. For<lb/>
those who stick with it, there<lb/>
are risks to be considered.<lb/>
The IUD is not as likely<lb/>
as the Pill to kill its user<lb/>
(there are 39 IUD deaths in<lb/>
the U.S. annually out of 3 to<lb/>
4 million users; there are<lb/>
200 Pill deaths each year<lb/>
for every million Pill users).<lb/>
The IUD is, however, just<lb/>
as likely as the Pill to<lb/>
hospitalize its user (one in<lb/>
300 or one in 500 annually).<lb/>
Perforation of the uter-<lb/>
If you have any of the<lb/>
following conditions you<lb/>
should not use the IUD:<lb/>
pregnancy, endometriosis,<lb/>
any history of veneral dis-<lb/>
ease, and vaginal or uterine<lb/>
infection, PID, prohibitive-<lb/>
ly small uterus excessively<lb/>
heavy menstrual flow and<lb/>
or cramping, bleeding be-<lb/>
tween periods, large fib-<lb/>
roids, uterine deformities,<lb/>
use of anticoagulants, car-<lb/>
diac disease, anemia, sickle<lb/>
cell disease, recent child-<lb/>
birth or recent abortion.<lb/>
THE DIAPHRAGM<lb/>
It is ironic to note<lb/>
that the Pill, which promis-<lb/>
ed to give women sexual<lb/>
freedom (including the fre-<lb/>
edom to experience' brief<lb/>
sexual encounters) in-<lb/>
creases a woman's chance<lb/>
of picking up (no pun<lb/>
w ��- u, Cloning up (no pun<lb/>
us by the IUD is more likely intended) VD. Whereas the<lb/>
diaphragm used with cont-<lb/>
insertion, but it can happen<lb/>
at any time. The perfora-<lb/>
tion rate is about one per<lb/>
1,000 insertions when in-<lb/>
sertion is performed by a<lb/>
skilled doctor. The rate<lb/>
goes up � with unskilled<lb/>
doctors. The IUD has also<lb/>
been known to perforate<lb/>
the uterus and the migrate<lb/>
into the abdominal cavity.<lb/>
The medical profession<lb/>
is divided on what to do<lb/>
with these migrated lUD's<lb/>
raceptive jelly or cream,<lb/>
decreases a woman's<lb/>
chance of contracting VD<lb/>
from a VD-infected man.<lb/>
From the standpoint of<lb/>
woman's health, the dia-<lb/>
phragm is more "liberat-<lb/>
ing" than the Pill.<lb/>
When used by a motiv-<lb/>
ated women, the dia-<lb/>
phragm - contracpetive jel-<lb/>
ly is almost as reliable as<lb/>
the Pill, and it is competely<lb/>
safe. The only side-effect<lb/>
 m- � w . -�.�. i no winy siae-enect<lb/>
some favor pulling it out by may be a reaction (itching,<lb/>
the string if it has not burning) to a particular<lb/>
settled someplace. Others brand of cream or jelly<lb/>
favor doing a laparoscopy which can be solved by<lb/>
or laparotomy in order to changing brands,<lb/>
find it and remove it. The four common types<lb/>
Others favor letting it re- of diaphagm are: the coil-<lb/>
main where it is if no fever spring, the flat-spring or<lb/>
or pain is present. If your<lb/>
IUD has disappeared and<lb/>
you aren't aware of having<lb/>
expelled it, it is best to have<lb/>
x-rays taken to make sure it<lb/>
hasn't moved into you<lb/>
uterus or abdomen.<lb/>
Becoming pregnant<lb/>
with an IUD in place can be<lb/>
dangerous. Almost half of<lb/>
the women who decide to<lb/>
carry the pregnancy to term<lb/>
will miscarry. Whether the<lb/>
Mesinga, the arching or<lb/>
Findlav. and the<lb/>
Bowbenf. Almost every<lb/>
women can find one that<lb/>
will work for her.<lb/>
The effectiveness of this<lb/>
method depends on two<lb/>
things. The diaphragm<lb/>
must be well-fitted. This<lb/>
can be accomplished by a<lb/>
doctor or para-medic who is<lb/>
a skilled diaphragm fitter<lb/>
and who likes tne Diaph-<lb/>
ragm (a motivated doctor).<lb/>
The diaphragm must be<lb/>
used according to direct-<lb/>
ions, This can be accomp-<lb/>
lished by a woman who<lb/>
follows all the instructions<lb/>
and who likes her diaph-<lb/>
ragm and enjoys the idea<lb/>
that her birth control meth-<lb/>
od is not harming her (a<lb/>
motivated women).<lb/>
VAGINAL SPERMICIDES<lb/>
Not only is the foam-<lb/>
condom very effective when<lb/>
used properly, this method<lb/>
reduces your chances of<lb/>
getting VD, is non-<lb/>
prescription, is completely<lb/>
safe, and actually improves<lb/>
vaginal health. The only<lb/>
problem associated with<lb/>
this barrier method is its<lb/>
reputation.<lb/>
Like the diaphragm, it is<lb/>
considered messy and un-<lb/>
spontaneous. It also req-<lb/>
uires male participattion in<lb/>
the birth control process.<lb/>
But considering the serious<lb/>
side-effects of the Pill and<lb/>
the IUD these arguments<lb/>
lose importance. There are<lb/>
many brands of vaginal<lb/>
spermicide. All appear to<lb/>
be fairly equal in reliability<lb/>
THE BBT<lb/>
BASALBODYTEMP<lb/>
There is a shift in basal<lb/>
body temperature when a<lb/>
women ovulates(her fertile<lb/>
period). This is usually in<lb/>
mid-cycle. This shift is<lb/>
usually a rise of .5 to 1.0<lb/>
degrees Fahrenheit. By<lb/>
keeping a chart of BBT a<lb/>
woman can tell when she is<lb/>
ovulating.<lb/>
The reading must be<lb/>
taken daily in the morning<lb/>
while still in bed, after a<lb/>
minumum of five hours<lb/>
sleep, before eating, drink-<lb/>
ing, smoking or conversat-<lb/>
ion. The problem is that<lb/>
this method can only tell a<lb/>
women when she is ovula-<lb/>
ting as she is in the process<lb/>
of ovulating. And since<lb/>
sperm can live in the uterus<lb/>
for up to 72 hours, there<lb/>
may still be some live ones<lb/>
around when she discovers<lb/>
that she is fertile. An<lb/>
infection can also affect the<lb/>
temperature reading mak-<lb/>
ing it invalid.<lb/>
This method is really<lb/>
only useful for planning<lb/>
sexual intercourse after<lb/>
ovulation and before the<lb/>
next menstrual period, it<lb/>
also requires a hell of a lot<lb/>
of motivation on the part of<lb/>
the woman, it does make<lb/>
the bonder-rhythm<lb/>
method more reliable when<lb/>
used together.<lb/>
THE CERVICAL MUCUS<lb/>
BILUNQS METHOD<lb/>
Many women's cer-<lb/>
vical mucus flow makes this<lb/>
method impossible for them<lb/>
��Z�� flBn'1 u� ��'�<lb/>
method), it is no<lb/>
mended � women<lb/>
�noomfcablawith<lb/>
E ���� � call, ,or<lb/>
inaertlng � ((iMn) (,<lb/>
into the vagina and visually<lb/>
exammging the mucus<lb/>
quality daily.<lb/>
Phase One - Menustra-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Phase Two - The Dry<lb/>
Days. Little discharge and<lb/>
sometimes a distinct sensa-<lb/>
tion of dryness.<lb/>
Phase Three - Preovula-<lb/>
tion Mucus . Whitish or<lb/>
cloudy colored mucus that<lb/>
is pasty or sticky in consist-<lb/>
ency. This is the beginning<lb/>
of a favorable environment<lb/>
for sperm. Conception may<lb/>
occur.<lb/>
Phase Four - Wet or<lb/>
Peak Days. Increase in<lb/>
cervical discharge. Clear<lb/>
and highly lubricative with<lb/>
the consistency and stretch-<lb/>
iness of egg white. Last for<lb/>
one day and sometimes two<lb/>
or three. Conception is<lb/>
'ikely to occur. On the<lb/>
fourth day after the mucus<lb/>
peaks, a women may re-<lb/>
sume unprotected inter-<lb/>
course (calculated safe per-<lb/>
iod from the last day of<lb/>
maximum wetness).<lb/>
Phase Five - End of the<lb/>
Cycle. M ucus may become<lb/>
clear and wattery or resume<lb/>
its preovulation stickiness.<lb/>
This article is by no<lb/>
means complete. Before<lb/>
choosing any birth control<lb/>
method, or any combination<lb/>
of methods, inform yourself<lb/>
fully. I have listed two<lb/>
excellent sources below. I<lb/>
have personal experience<lb/>
with both the IUD (One and<lb/>
a half years) and the<lb/>
diaphragm (three years)<lb/>
and I would enjoy talking<lb/>
with any women who has<lb/>
questions or comments a-<lb/>
bout their practical value in<lb/>
use. Write to. Hester Petty<lb/>
Uppity Women of Green-<lb/>
ville, P.O. Box 1373, Green<lb/>
-ville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
FURTHER READING<lb/>
Women and the<lb/>
Crisis in Sex Hormones by<lb/>
Barbara Seaman and<lb/>
Gideon Seaman, M.D<lb/>
(Bantam Books,) paper<lb/>
$2.95.<lb/>
Our Bodies, Our Selves<lb/>
by The Boston Women's<lb/>
Health Book Collective,<lb/>
(Simon and Schuster), pap.<lb/>
er $4.85.<lb/>
Uppity Women of Green<lb/>
;ville is open to participat-<lb/>
,on �V any woman, if you<lb/>
"ant to become politically<lb/>
mvoived in ,he WOmen <lb/>
movement within a small<lb/>
9roup framework pjeaaa<lb/>
call Hester at 752-S912.<lb/>
A oonaciotfsnoaa raising<lb/>
group being formed. ThS<lb/>
first organizational meeting<lb/>
was heid Sunday Th;<lb/>
groupi is open to prticipa-<lb/>
t,on �y any worn. �<lb/>
JJJW7 or Tna � �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057144_0005"/><lb/>
'1<lb/>
Fir<lb/>
surviving quints<lb/>
12 Sfrtinbr 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Hmi<lb/>
By JIM CARRIER<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
Aberdeen, S.D. AP<lb/>
They are five teen-agers<lb/>
who wear braces on their<lb/>
teeth, play basketball, take<lb/>
Piano lessons, throw slum-<lb/>
ber parties - ordinary kids<lb/>
growing up in an o<lb/>
town.<lb/>
�t was planned thai way,<lb/>
their ordinariness. For<lb/>
these children are probably<lb/>
Americas most famous set<lb/>
celebrate birthday<lb/>
of sibling, the Fischer<lb/>
quintuplets.<lb/>
They entered high<lb/>
school two weeks ago and<lb/>
will turn 15 on Thursday.<lb/>
The five became nation-<lb/>
al sweethearts on the morn-<lb/>
ing of Sat Sept. 14, 1963,<lb/>
as America's first surviving<lb/>
quints. It was a celebrated<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Through the extraordi-<lb/>
nary efforts of their parents<lb/>
- especially their mother <lb/>
they have, by all accounts.<lb/>
emerged unscathed by the<lb/>
hoopla that surrounded<lb/>
their early years.<lb/>
The four girls, Maggie,<lb/>
Anne, Cathy and Margie,<lb/>
play on the freshman bask-<lb/>
etball team and wear their<lb/>
hair long. Friends say they<lb/>
are "like anyone else.<lb/>
Kinda quiet. All nice<lb/>
Jim, the fifth quint,<lb/>
worked on a neighbor's<lb/>
farm this summer.<lb/>
Certainly to their<lb/>
schoolmates, and to most<lb/>
people in town, they have<lb/>
lost their celebrity identi-<lb/>
ties as "The Quints<lb/>
The parents still shield<lb/>
the children from publicity,<lb/>
but they don't try to hide<lb/>
them.<lb/>
All requests for inter-<lb/>
views still go through the<lb/>
family attorneys. There are<lb/>
monthly requests, all<lb/>
turned down.<lb/>
The family house  a<lb/>
mansion with 17 rooms and<lb/>
five baths  is more<lb/>
secluded than ever after 16<lb/>
years. It was built soon<lb/>
after the quints were born<lb/>
through services and ma-<lb/>
terials donated by towns-<lb/>
people.<lb/>
An older sister,<lb/>
Charlotte, seven when the<lb/>
quints were born, has<lb/>
married and moved from<lb/>
home.<lb/>
The oldest brother and<lb/>
another sister will marry<lb/>
later this year.<lb/>
Two older children, the<lb/>
quints and Cindy, born a<lb/>
year after the quints and<lb/>
now in the same grade,<lb/>
remain at home.<lb/>
Mary Ann Fischer often<lb/>
said she wanted to raise the<lb/>
quints not as five special<lb/>
children, but as part of a<lb/>
family of 11 children.<lb/>
The Fischers and their<lb/>
attorneys studied carefully<lb/>
the case of the 1934 Dionne<lb/>
quintuplets, whose exploit-<lb/>
ation by their father  they<lb/>
were on display at a world's<lb/>
fair  led to lawsuits and<lb/>
sibling rivalry.<lb/>
Three quint contracts<lb/>
were signed � one with<lb/>
Curtis Publishing for an<lb/>
exclusive Saturday Evening<lb/>
Post feature, one with<lb/>
Brown and Bigelofor calen-<lb/>
dar paintings, and one with<lb/>
Borden, advertising cheese<lb/>
and disposable diapers.<lb/>
Fischer once said the<lb/>
Curtis and Brown and<lb/>
Bigelow contracts totaled<lb/>
$80,000 the first year.<lb/>
Money from the con-<lb/>
tracts wa3 invested in<lb/>
guardia ships for all 11<lb/>
children  payable at age<lb/>
18.<lb/>
The contracts have long<lb/>
since expired, and there<lb/>
has been no need for extra<lb/>
money. The Fischers, says<lb/>
one acquaintance, " had<lb/>
their cake and ate it too<lb/>
for the quints' fame allow-<lb/>
ed their parents to buy a<lb/>
normal life for the children,<lb/>
and then turn their atten-<lb/>
tion inward, to their big<lb/>
family.<lb/>
CAMPUS CANINES SPEND day girl-wathcing behind Fleming dorm.<lb/>
Photo by Richard Goldman<lb/>
N. C. Trail Committee<lb/>
picks Busbee as chairman<lb/>
BIKES ARE HIDING now in tear oJpeing stolen.<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
LIQUOR<lb/>
continued from p. 1<lb/>
����������.IP ��-� I II I MW�MWW�im<lb/>
In the 1973 referendum<lb/>
Black Mountain voters op-<lb/>
posed mixed drinks by<lb/>
619-355. This time, only the<lb/>
opponents have mounted a<lb/>
campaign for votes.<lb/>
People say it is doubtful<lb/>
mixed drinks will triumph<lb/>
in Louisburg where the vote<lb/>
was 3 to 1 against in the<lb/>
1973 referendum, and sup-<lb/>
porters have decided that<lb/>
silence is their most effect-<lb/>
ive weapon.<lb/>
Sanford was opposed to<lb/>
liquor by the drink in 1973<lb/>
and the city has seen no<lb/>
organized support this year<lb/>
formixeddrinks.<lb/>
Dare County with its<lb/>
resort towns is too close to<lb/>
call, however. Voters nar-<lb/>
rowly rejected the state-<lb/>
wide proposal, 1,070 to 964<lb/>
in 1973.<lb/>
However a new Christ<lb/>
-ian Action League chapter<lb/>
in Orange hopes to beat<lb/>
mixed drinks with votes<lb/>
from northern Orange<lb/>
around Hillsborough.<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Dr. Raymond Bus-<lb/>
bee, a professor in the East<lb/>
Carolina University Depart-<lb/>
ment of Health, Physical<lb/>
Education, Recreation and<lb/>
Safety, has been appointed<lb/>
chairman of the N.C. Trails<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Announcement of the<lb/>
appointment was made by<lb/>
Howard Lee, secretary oif<lb/>
the N.C. Dept. 6f Naturalk<lb/>
Resources and Community<lb/>
Development. The commit-<lb/>
tee was created in 1973 by<lb/>
the NC. General Assembly<lb/>
to serve as an advisory<lb/>
body on the development of<lb/>
recreational trails in the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Among the trails al-<lb/>
ready proposed are a<lb/>
"mountains to the sea"<lb/>
trail for bikers, hikers.<lb/>
canoeists, horseback riders<lb/>
and off-road vehicle user.<lb/>
This proposed trail<lb/>
would begin in the moun-<lb/>
tain region and continue<lb/>
through the central part of<lb/>
the state into the Raleiqh<lb/>
area, to the Wilmington<lb/>
area, up the Outer Banks to<lb/>
Manteo, and westward to<lb/>
Merchant's Mill Pond State<lb/>
Park in Gates County<lb/>
The committee previ-<lb/>
ously recommended two<lb/>
canoie trails: the Lumber<lb/>
River Canoie Trail in<lb/>
Scotland County, dedicated<lb/>
by Secretary Lea in May,<lb/>
and the French Brood River<lb/>
Canoe Trail, scheduled for<lb/>
dedication later this month.<lb/>
The committee includes<lb/>
seven members, twlo from<lb/>
each major region of the<lb/>
state and one at-large<lb/>
member.<lb/>
In addition to advising<lb/>
the Secretary of Natural<lb/>
Resources and Community<lb/>
Development, the commit-<lb/>
tee's responsibilities incl-<lb/>
ude coordination of trail<lb/>
development among local<lb/>
governments and providing<lb/>
assistance to local govern-<lb/>
ments in the formation of<lb/>
recreational trail plans<lb/>
their areas.<lb/>
in<lb/>
16 educators appointed<lb/>
to English advisory board<lb/>
ECU NEWSBUREAU<lb/>
Sixteen outstanding<lb/>
English educators in the<lb/>
U.S. and Canada have been<lb/>
appointed to the newly<lb/>
expanded Editorial Advis-<lb/>
ory Board of the journal<lb/>
Teaching English in the<lb/>
Two-Year College.<lb/>
The journal, an ECU<lb/>
publication,is beginning its<lb/>
fifth year. Editors are W.<lb/>
Keats Sparrow, Frieda W.<lb/>
Purvis and Bertie E.<lb/>
Fearing, all of the ECU<lb/>
Department of English.<lb/>
Two will be board<lb/>
members-at-large, and two<lb/>
will serve as ex-officio<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Twelve of the 16 new<lb/>
advisory board members<lb/>
were chosen on a regional<lb/>
basis covering the nation.<lb/>
In publishing a wide<lb/>
range of articles written for<lb/>
college English teachers by<lb/>
college English teachers.<lb/>
TETYC serves to enhance<lb/>
English instruction in<lb/>
colleges.By representing a<lb/>
wide geographical area, the<lb/>
Editoinai Advisory Board<lb/>
will serve to help TETYC<lb/>
discover and better meet<lb/>
professional needs of Eng-<lb/>
lish teachers.<lb/>
NEWS WRITERS NEEDED!<lb/>
Fifth St<lb/>
4th 8t<lb/>
3rd St.<lb/>
oc<lb/>
B<lb/>
OVERTON'S<lb/>
SUPERMARKET<lb/>
ECU!<lb/>
A free T shirt<lb/>
to the first 1,000 students<lb/>
with a $30.00 food order,<lb/>
also free desk blotters.<lb/>
Overtoil'<lb/>
"�?<lb/>
W<lb/>
Shasta soft drinks<lb/>
2 liter bottle<lb/>
TOTAL cereal i2oz.boX<lb/>
$1.09 value now<lb/>
Kellogg's Corn Flakes<lb/>
18 oz. box<lb/>
.79 value now<lb/>
Q VERTON S finest ground beef patties $l29lb<lb/>
Chicken parts<lb/>
leg with thigh �SOlb<lb/>
breast with wing �OtlD<lb/>
Thank you for shopping at Overton's. Overtoil's the home of Greenville's best meats, just ask anyone.<lb/>
Overton's to Greenville's headquarters for ground beef. No order too large or small.<lb/>
&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;kAtiHtBRtik&amp;M&amp;MI<lb/>
m �� <lb/>
�r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057144_0006"/><lb/>
mppippHipPi<lb/>
Page 6 F0UNTA1NHEAD 12 S�pl�mbw 197a<lb/>
Campus media hosts 400<lb/>
Publications workshop to be held here<lb/>
ECU Na&amp;s Bureau<lb/>
'More than 200 high<lb/>
school and community col-<lb/>
lege students and school<lb/>
publications advisors are<lb/>
expected to attend ECU's<lb/>
Fourth Annual Publications<lb/>
Workshop Sept. 30.<lb/>
The workshop, "A<lb/>
Changing Press in a Chang-<lb/>
ing Society will include<lb/>
27 sessions, specifically des<lb/>
-igned for staff workers on<lb/>
school and college newspa-<lb/>
pers, yearbooks, broadcast<lb/>
stations or magazines.<lb/>
A special feature of the<lb/>
event is a contest, in which<lb/>
ai student participants are<lb/>
eligible to compete in one<lb/>
of these categories: news<lb/>
story, feature story, sports<lb/>
news story, spot news<lb/>
photography, and broad-<lb/>
cast script.<lb/>
Displays of publications<lb/>
produced at represented<lb/>
schools and colleges will be<lb/>
arranged for viewing<lb/>
throughout the workshop.<lb/>
Among the workshop<lb/>
consultants are N.C. Rep.<lb/>
Walter Jones; Henrietta<lb/>
Barbour, publications ad-<lb/>
visor at Rocky Mount High<lb/>
School; Miriam Dunn, pub-<lb/>
lications advisor<lb/>
H'9h School,<lb/>
James Edwards of Hunter<lb/>
Publishing Co.<lb/>
at Fike<lb/>
Wilson;<lb/>
Tommy Forrest, staff<lb/>
photographer for the Green<lb/>
-ville Daily Reflector; Tim<lb/>
Jones, Daily Reflector pro-<lb/>
duction manager; Clarence<lb/>
Lipscomb, language con-<lb/>
sultant with the N.C. Dept.<lb/>
of Public Instruction.<lb/>
Jerry Raynor, Sunday<lb/>
editor of the Greenville<lb/>
Daily Reflector; Dr. David<lb/>
Stevens, ECU legal advisor<lb/>
Bill Stoess of Delmar Co<lb/>
Monika Sutherland of Pro-<lb/>
ductive Communications,<lb/>
Inc and Dr. Thomas<lb/>
Williams, writer and form-<lb/>
er editor of TAR HEEL<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
Also directing sessions<lb/>
will be staff members from<lb/>
ECU'S own publications,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, REBEL<lb/>
and BUCCANEER.<lb/>
The workshop is spon-<lb/>
sored by the ECU Society of<lb/>
Collegiate Journalists and<lb/>
the ECU journalism prog-<lb/>
ram in cooperation with the<lb/>
ECU Division of Contiuing<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is re<lb/>
quired to be readily available for sale<lb/>
at or below the advertised price in<lb/>
each AErP Store, except as specifi<lb/>
cally noted in this ad.<lb/>
WOO!<lb/>
EVEN SCHOOL CAN have its moment of beauty<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
lit<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. SEPT 16 AT AAP IN Gfeenville<lb/>
CASH CARD Doctors turn<lb/>
I2WAYST0MATCH&amp;WIN ATA&amp;P I toe to thumb<lb/>
s275000<lb/>
IN CASH PRIZES!<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
TICKETS &amp;<lb/>
COLLECTOR<lb/>
CARD<lb/>
lO WAYS<lb/>
L TO WIN! A<lb/>
PRIZE<lb/>
WINNERS<lb/>
START<lb/>
? 134790 HERE'S ALL YOU<lb/>
I �<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
Pick up a free concealed<lb/>
M 000 Cash Cards<lb/>
Playing Card Ticket at<lb/>
A&amp;P s checkout counter<lb/>
or service desk each<lb/>
time you visit A&amp;P You<lb/>
must be 18 years old or<lb/>
older to play<lb/>
Push out the portions of<lb/>
each ticket to reveal 2<lb/>
playing cards Where<lb/>
they match, insert them<lb/>
into your collector card<lb/>
Or your Cash Cards<lb/>
Ticket may show you are<lb/>
an instant �1 or �5<lb/>
winner<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
Lucky you You re a big<lb/>
winner when you have<lb/>
matched any set of 3 or 4<lb/>
cards on your Collector Card<lb/>
You win the cash prize shown<lb/>
for that game Only one cash<lb/>
pnze per game or CoHector<lb/>
card is allowed<lb/>
Turn in your winning Collector<lb/>
Card to your ASP store<lb/>
manager Once it s verified<lb/>
you will get your prize and a<lb/>
new' 1 000 Cash Cards<lb/>
Collector card, so you can<lb/>
keep on playing and winning<lb/>
up to� 1.000at A&amp;P<lb/>
C WHEN WE<lb/>
PLAY<lb/>
GAMES<lb/>
DO CASH CARDS<lb/>
. YOU'RE<lb/>
THE WINNER!<lb/>
Starting right now play<lb/>
A&amp;P s M 000 cash cards<lb/>
jame You could win up to<lb/>
000 It s fun and exciting and<lb/>
' lave to buy a thing We<lb/>
r it'sa great way to get to know<lb/>
:iPs values and a<lb/>
to 1 ooo<lb/>
EMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
SO A .NSPECTED FRESH FRYER<lb/>
BOX-0-<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
�<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
NO PURCHASE<lb/>
m<lb/>
WIN<lb/>
S1&amp;S5<lb/>
INSTANTir<lb/>
WITH Si,000 CASH<lb/>
CARDS TICKETS<lb/>
OH<lb/>
WINS 10 S20<lb/>
$100 OK<lb/>
SI 000 WITH<lb/>
YOU<lb/>
COILECTOH<lb/>
CARO<lb/>
Play AAPs $1,000 Cash Card<lb/>
Game at any of the 133 A&amp;P<lb/>
stores located In North Carolina<lb/>
South Carolina. Fannin Cty<lb/>
Georgia and Washington Cry<lb/>
Va. This promotion is scheduled<lb/>
to end on Dec. 9. 1978.<lb/>
( 0DDS CHART EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 10 197$<lb/>
NUMBER ODDS 000S ODDS<lb/>
Of 1 13 ?6<lb/>
This offer is not open to em-<lb/>
ployees of A&amp;P, it's subsidiaries,<lb/>
manufacturers of this game,<lb/>
their advertising agencies and<lb/>
families of the foregoing.<lb/>
GAME<lb/>
SI 000<lb/>
$ 100<lb/>
 20<lb/>
$ 10<lb/>
$ 5<lb/>
40<lb/>
250<lb/>
1 500<lb/>
3 000 I I in<lb/>
i<lb/>
5 000 1 m<lb/>
125 000 1 m<lb/>
VISIT<lb/>
1 in 437 500<lb/>
1 m 70 000<lb/>
VISITS<lb/>
1 m 33 654<lb/>
1 in 5 384<lb/>
t1<lb/>
Total<lb/>
number of<lb/>
prizes<lb/>
I 1I0OC CS� tMD Mm  M .<lb/>
rod Of. Df r�M I 9H<lb/>
1 in 11 667 1 ,n<lb/>
5 833 T 1 ra<lb/>
3 500 1 ,n<lb/>
140 1 in<lb/>
449 1 in<lb/>
269" 1 in<lb/>
1<lb/>
VISITS<lb/>
1 m 16 827<lb/>
1 m 2 692<lb/>
449<lb/>
224<lb/>
135<lb/>
53<lb/>
r<lb/>
JANE PARKER WHOLE WHEAT OR<lb/>
CRACKED WHEAT<lb/>
BREAD<lb/>
A4P QUALITY HEAVY<lb/>
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
BONELESS<lb/>
ROAST<lb/>
CUT FROM<lb/>
THE<lb/>
CHUCK<lb/>
s EIGHT O'CLOCK �Vr4 COFFEE<lb/>
p �kN DAY PERSONNIGHT PERSON SWEEPSTAKES<lb/>
YOUR CHOICE OF PRIZES<lb/>
GRAND PRIZE 8 DAYS OR 8 NIGHTS IN RIO DE JANEIRO BRASlL<lb/>
VARIO<lb/>
4 . lum<lb/>
A SUPERB BLEND, RICH IN BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
EIGHT O'CLOCK COFFEE<lb/>
eAG $99 ia $589 L<lb/>
FIRST PMIZf<lb/>
UkKSiMnHiHi<lb/>
IkMH<lb/>
'0 SECOND ��lll�<lb/>
100 THIRD PMIZCS<lb/>
H . r A ,��� � , .<lb/>
00,000 EARLY BIRO WINNERS<lb/>
ENTRY BLANKS IN YOUR A&amp;P STORE<lb/>
AT THE y-<lb/>
EIGHT O'CLOCK COFFEE<lb/>
SWEEPSTAKES DISPLAY<lb/>
NO PURCHASE. REQUIRED<lb/>
ynuS X2 It�CT'0N PR,CE SIGH-THROUGHOUT<lb/>
� YOUR AP STORE Whon ASP buy m.k. . sp�7.l<lb/>
 T tV .1 . low pnce we p.ti Ih. s.vmo, onto<lb/>
���LmtT"  ��0 lo 0Uf mon����9<lb/>
CARNATION choc r nn<lb/>
SLENDER �00� O 2aZ I<lb/>
CONTAINS RICH BRAilian COFFEES<lb/>
EIGHT O'CLOCK INSTANT COFFEE<lb/>
A&amp;P picks the best produce<lb/>
GOLDEN YELLOW<lb/>
o oz SO99<lb/>
JAR O<lb/>
AAPCOUPON<lb/>
A4PGRADE<lb/>
MEDIUM EGGS<lb/>
BEANEE WEENEES 3<lb/>
?2 $109 DRESSING<lb/>
BANANAS<lb/>
LIMIT TWO DOZEN WITH<lb/>
COUPON AND ADDITIONAL<lb/>
7 SO ORDER<lb/>
88<lb/>
7�� OZ $11<lb/>
CANS<lb/>
RAN<lb/>
PEANUT af<lb/>
BUTTER � nch<lb/>
.oz $109<lb/>
JAM<lb/>
2. 99c<lb/>
GRAPE JELLY<lb/>
" �� l �.0�fRS OR CCORS<lb/>
PAPER TOWELS jrc?�65c<lb/>
A- FLAVORS C� FOOO 4<lb/>
PUSS N BOOTS<lb/>
f�ANCO -AMENICAN<lb/>
SPAGHETTI OS<lb/>
FRUIT JuiCr RCO<lb/>
HAWAIIAN<lb/>
PUNCH<lb/>
MliOGG s<lb/>
FRUIT LOOPS S I"<lb/>
�tan<lb/>
JAN<lb/>
ij oz S-f00<lb/>
CANS<lb/>
MAYONNAISE<lb/>
KEN L RATION OOC FOOO<lb/>
TENDER<lb/>
CHUNKS 20<lb/>
Lm-oz si oo<lb/>
r CANS<lb/>
CALIFORNIA GROWN CRISP ICEBERG<lb/>
HEAD LETTUCE 3 �D!<lb/>
RED TOKAY. RIBIER. SCUPPERNONGS, OR THOMPSON<lb/>
SEED, ESS GRAPES<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT SEPT 16 AT AAP IN (.TOOn V.I.I?<lb/>
AAPCOUPON<lb/>
ANN PACE<lb/>
MAYONNAISE<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS<lb/>
COUPON AND AOOITIONAL<lb/>
7 SO ORDER<lb/>
SAVE 31<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
68<lb/>
I wiram LiMIT one coupon .��2 ,<lb/>
ECONOMY<lb/>
CORNER<lb/>
T Cot�i la i<lb/>
y Comor  wDtrt<lb/>
� �? im��mWil�cowwT<lb/>
UN Mlo. I.MNUI H.M1 Nl<lb/>
SAVE $3.00<lb/>
cDonlm<lb/>
DISCOUNT COUPONS<lb/>
AT YOUR PARTICIPATING<lb/>
a ant NO PURCHASE<lb/>
A&amp;P S NECESSARY<lb/>
:<lb/>
:<lb/>
 <lb/>
i<lb/>
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -<lb/>
Back in July, little Trudy<lb/>
Howie of Gastonia let Duke<lb/>
Medical Center surgeons<lb/>
cut one of her toes off.<lb/>
And then in rare 14-<lb/>
hour operation, those sur-<lb/>
geons turned that toe into a<lb/>
thumb for the 8-year-old.<lb/>
Last week for the first<lb/>
time in her life. Trudy was<lb/>
able to touch her right<lb/>
thumb to her right little<lb/>
finger. ,<lb/>
Until the operation,<lb/>
such a simple movement<lb/>
was an impossibility for her<lb/>
because of a congenital<lb/>
birth defect that left only a<lb/>
nub where her thumb<lb/>
should have been.<lb/>
A team of six plastic<lb/>
surgeons at Duke Medical<lb/>
Center used a technique<lb/>
called a microsurgical com-<lb/>
posite tissue transplantat-<lb/>
ion.<lb/>
It took them 14 hours<lb/>
because the microscopic<lb/>
arteries and veins had to be<lb/>
attached seperately, some<lb/>
being as small as one<lb/>
millimeter in diameter<lb/>
"We are confident that<lb/>
she'll have full feeling and<lb/>
use, just like a normal<lb/>
thumb said Dr. Donald<lb/>
Serafin. associate professor<lb/>
of plastic surgery.<lb/>
Now the third grader<lb/>
will be able to hold a pencil<lb/>
properly m school and<lb/>
manipulate objects in a<lb/>
grasp others take for grant-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
"I think in be able to<lb/>
play games and write and<lb/>
draw a lot better can<lb/>
already touch my little<lb/>
finger she said Friday<lb/>
NTE will be<lb/>
held at ECU<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
ECU will be one of the<lb/>
designated sites for administra-<lb/>
tion of the National Teacher<lb/>
Examinations during the acad-<lb/>
emic year 1978-79.<lb/>
Eligible to take the test are<lb/>
students completing teacher<lb/>
preparation programs and ad-<lb/>
vanced degree candidates in<lb/>
specific fields.<lb/>
Scheduled dates of the<lb/>
examinations are Nov. 11 1973<lb/>
Feb. 17, 1979; and July 21<lb/>
1979.<lb/>
Results of the NTE are<lb/>
considered by many large school<lb/>
districts as one of several factors<lb/>
m the selection of new teachers<lb/>
and are used by some states as a<lb/>
standard for issuing credentials<lb/>
or licenses to teacher candid-<lb/>
ates.<lb/>
On each test day. registrants<lb/>
V take the common examina-<lb/>
tions, which measure profes-<lb/>
sional preparation and general<lb/>
educational background, and an<lb/>
area exam.nat.on which mea-<lb/>
sures mastery of speaf,c sub-<lb/>
jects<lb/>
Further information about<lb/>
the tests and application mater-<lb/>
�als are available from campus<lb/>
P'acement officers. sctkS<lb/>
-Ee' eTTI '<lb/>
Too. ZT � Educationai<lb/>
History prof<lb/>
publishes paper<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
"Ten Men of High Office in<lb/>
Revolutionary North Carolina<lb/>
1777-1783: A Test of th� Martin<lb/>
Thesis in Men in Rebellion<lb/>
an article by ECU faculty<lb/>
historian Karl Rodabaugh ap-<lb/>
pears m the current issue of an<lb/>
international journal.<lb/>
The article is included in<lb/>
Histoire Scdale a profes-<lb/>
sional journal published by the<lb/>
Untversite d'Ottawa, Canada<lb/>
By dose examination of the<lb/>
drcumstancBs of the 10 leaders'<lb/>
Participation in the American<lb/>
devolution, Rodabaugh quest-<lb/>
ions the validity of a theory<lb/>
proposed byUamesKirby Martin<lb/>
.7itf,8'peraon-<lb/>
autnererJecair<lb/>
in<lb/>
The 10 leaders discvseeo<lb/>
the article include:<lb/>
Samuel Ashe (New Hanover<lb/>
5- T"s BeX"<lb/>
(Chowan Cntntll, T y<lb/>
ihomas<lb/>
County),<lb/>
��O-HI.County ft<lb/>
�"�0niW. Ato�MC<lb/>
��� County EoWa <lb/>
(Onsow County) and j�L<lb/>
William, ftij'<lb/>
HooabBugh, a spec u<lb/>
aunor of several .i<lb/>
b�ok'ength study of the F�nv<lb/>
�'oitin1<lb/>
Alabama, century<lb/>
" � �� � "�. ,j,ti<lb/>
He holds decrees ?��<lb/>
UNC-Chapej Mm.<lb/>
�<lb/>
<pb facs="00057144_0007"/><lb/>
Jeremy Rifk<lb/>
oted lecturer discusses genetic engineering and<lb/>
Zoning at Mendenhall Student Center at 8 P.M.<lb/>
91 12at8p.m StUdent Theatfe on Tues<lb/>
 exp-Se"ZT �� ,he ISSUe 8�"c engineering and<lb/>
�"s quest.ons raised by genet.c engineering<lb/>
T�T: E h- e�oped a new<lb/>
pss �fe 9een ,n tne natal evolutionary<lb/>
�� wh�e m.crob.ologists have "doned" frogs and micT<lb/>
.8By ! ISOn'V matter of years before systematic<lb/>
c eng.neenng and doning can be extended to man<lb/>
aenr6 addreSS6S bef0re the Na,1� A�demy<lb/>
rS2L2L-�n re00mb,nant DN and provided expert<lb/>
STdL p m��y thG Kennedy Subcommittees<lb/>
neaitn and the Environment.<lb/>
e has also appeared on numerous radio and television<lb/>
ograms as cr.tics of recomb.nant DNA research<lb/>
s concerned over the prospect that w.th.n our lifetime,<lb/>
-AH! conceivably have withm our power the ability to choose our<lb/>
successors by creating a new race of human beings with<lb/>
carefu . elected physical ana mental qualities<lb/>
the recent birth of the world's first documented test tube<lb/>
the debate ever the use of recombinant DNA and other such<lb/>
ods of conception will be discussed in many circles.<lb/>
�is ?or the lecture are priced at $2 for the general public It<lb/>
�d that patrons purchase their tickets early as a sell-out is<lb/>
�ected.<lb/>
ission for ECU students and faculty and staff members<lb/>
be by an admission pass which may be picked up at the<lb/>
�ral Ticket Office by presenting and ID and Activity Card or an<lb/>
) V ember ship Card.<lb/>
Coleman is welcome<lb/>
new faculty member<lb/>
BV SUSIE CHESTON<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
I didn't go to Donna<lb/>
Coleman s recital with the<lb/>
ntention of reviewing it.<lb/>
but I think ECU deserves to<lb/>
know that we've got a live<lb/>
one on our hands.<lb/>
Donna Coleman is a<lb/>
new ECU faculty member<lb/>
the School of Music. Her<lb/>
Wednesday recital was the<lb/>
young pianist's East<lb/>
Carolina debut<lb/>
-1 r . familiar music is<lb/>
hard to :isten to. and Ms.<lb/>
Colemans program was lar-<lb/>
gely unfmaihar to the aud-<lb/>
ience<lb/>
The bulk of the program<lb/>
include dtechmques and<lb/>
styles unique to 20th cen-<lb/>
� American composers:<lb/>
for instance, the electronic<lb/>
tape used in David Bates<lb/>
'Till Then - Gestures II<lb/>
(1974); the 12-tone system<lb/>
of Salvatore Martmano's<lb/>
'Cocktail Music" (1962);<lb/>
the austerity of the Copland<lb/>
'Piano Variations" (1030);<lb/>
and the lack of tonal center<lb/>
n 24-year-old Gregory Bal-<lb/>
l s Piano Music 2"<lb/>
(1975)<lb/>
The pianist, dressed in<lb/>
striking magenta, played<lb/>
. h an intensity that kept<lb/>
her audience listening to<lb/>
even the least famialiar<lb/>
techniques in the contem-<lb/>
porary music<lb/>
After a brief pause.the<lb/>
26-year-old ECU faculty<lb/>
member returned with the<lb/>
beloved "Sonata in A-flat<lb/>
opus 110 (1821) of Beethov-<lb/>
en. Here she proved her<lb/>
abilities in a traditional<lb/>
piece, played with a brittle<lb/>
brilliance.<lb/>
The performance was<lb/>
a long one, with over 90<lb/>
minutes of music. The<lb/>
length drove a few away at<lb/>
Intermission, but those who<lb/>
stayed were treated to the<lb/>
Charles Ives "First Sonata<lb/>
for Piano" (1902-10).<lb/>
"It is exciting to<lb/>
see a performer<lb/>
give her all to<lb/>
her music<lb/>
The Ives was aggres-<lb/>
sive, powerful, at times<lb/>
tender, brilliant rather thn<lb/>
warm, an orchestra of<lb/>
sounds alternating with the<lb/>
imtimacy of a single whis-<lb/>
pered note.<lb/>
The 40-minute virtuos-<lb/>
tic sonata is a real workout,<lb/>
and Ms. Coleman gave all<lb/>
her energy to the music<lb/>
with an intensity that made<lb/>
watching her exhausting.<lb/>
It is exciting to see a<lb/>
performer give her n'l to<lb/>
her music, and espeu.ally<lb/>
exciting when that per-<lb/>
former is one of East<lb/>
Carolina's very own.<lb/>
Welcome, Donna<lb/>
Coleman.<lb/>
The Student Uoion Lecture Series Committee has<lb/>
planned lectures for the 1978-79 season which range from a<lb/>
history of sex in the cinema to the legal rights of women.<lb/>
All lectures will be presented in the J. Curtis Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre in Mendenhall Student Center at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Noted Playboy columnist Arthur C. Knight will speak on<lb/>
"Sex in the Cinema" on Oct 10,1978.<lb/>
Knight illustrates his talk with a fifty minute film which<lb/>
traces the evolution of sex in the movies from Thomas<lb/>
Edison's "The Kiss" to Linda Lovelace's "Deep Thoat<lb/>
Knight is both entertaining and informative. Public tickets<lb/>
are $2 , and groups of 20 or more are $1.50.<lb/>
Ed Bradley is the first Black television network<lb/>
anchorman and White House correspondence for CBS-TV<lb/>
news.<lb/>
On Feb 15, 1979 Bradley will offer a unique and<lb/>
insightful perspective into the role television plays in shaping<lb/>
the world and the lives of the people in it. Public tickets are<lb/>
$? , and groups of 20 or more are $2.50.<lb/>
Another television personality, Shana Alexander, will<lb/>
speak on March 20, 1979. She will deal with the legal rights<lb/>
of women. Many people assume women have a number of<lb/>
rights which they do not actually have.<lb/>
An equally large number deny women rights women do<lb/>
and do not have, an opportunity she seldom has in her weekly<lb/>
appearances on "60 Minutes Public tickets are $3 , and<lb/>
groups of 20 or more are $2.50.<lb/>
On a date to be announced, Reverend Jesse Jackson will<lb/>
appear on the Lecture Series.<lb/>
A leader in the furtherance of Black political and<lb/>
economic independence, this incredible speaker is the<lb/>
Executive Director of People United to Save Humanity<lb/>
(PUSH).<lb/>
Jackson lives and preaches the principles of the<lb/>
Southern Christian Leadership Conference. His lecture topic<lb/>
changes as the issues change. Public tickets are $3 , and<lb/>
groups of 20 or more are $2.50.<lb/>
Students are admitted by ID and Activity Card, and ECU<lb/>
faculty and staff are admitted by M SC membership cards.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION THEATRE ARTS COMMITTEE<lb/>
Esther Rolle, "Florida" of Good Times fame, and Valerie<lb/>
Harper, "Rhoda Morgenstern" of Rhoda, along with mime<lb/>
Keith Berger and plays by Edward Albee comprise a season<lb/>
of great theatre entertainment from the Student Union<lb/>
Theatre Arts Committee.<lb/>
The Theatre Arts Committee also offers a dance series.<lb/>
The theatre season opens Oct 4, 1978 with Keith<lb/>
Berger. Berger 6 performance last year was so popular that<lb/>
the committee decided on a return engagement.<lb/>
As well as presenting a fine performance, the talented<lb/>
and personable Berger conducted a fine workshop which is<lb/>
still being praised by those involved.<lb/>
The same format, with a different program, will be used<lb/>
for this year's performance. The program will be held at 8<lb/>
p.m. in the Mendenhall Student Center Theatre.<lb/>
According to Tennessee Williams, Edward Albee is the<lb/>
only great playwright America had produced.<lb/>
Albee ahs taken time from his writing schedule to cast,<lb/>
produce, and direct a series of his own plays.<lb/>
Two of them, The Zoo Story and The American Dream<lb/>
will be performed in the Mendenhall Student Center Theatre<lb/>
on Jan 24, 1979 at 8 p.m. Albee is probably best<lb/>
known for writing Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, these<lb/>
plays are equally fine.<lb/>
Esther Rolle steps out of comedy on Feb 13, 1979 to<lb/>
characterize two great Americans - Sojourner Truth and<lb/>
Susan B. Anthony. Both women were crusaders for the<lb/>
female sex, but, even more, both were crusaders for<lb/>
humanity, for the dignity of all individuals.<lb/>
This powerful actress delivers a powerful performance<lb/>
about powerful characters. The performance will be in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Theatre at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Dear Liar is how Mrs. Patrick Campbell began a letter to<lb/>
George Bernard Shaw. Valerie Harper and Anthony Zerbe<lb/>
recreate the tumultuous love-hate relationship of the famous<lb/>
pair.<lb/>
The performance has already won critical acclaim in New<lb/>
York and is just beginning its tour. The ECU performance is<lb/>
March 26,1979 at 8 p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Season tickets are now on sale at the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Prices are $4 for ECU students, $8 for ECU faculty<lb/>
and staff, and $12 for the public. For further information<lb/>
call 757-6611, extension 266.<lb/>
WITH THE RECENT birth of the world's first documented<lb/>
test tube baby, the debate over the use of recombinant DNA<lb/>
and other such methods of conception will be discussed in<lb/>
many circles. Now scientists say it is only a matter of years<lb/>
before systematic genetic engineering and cloning can be<lb/>
extended to man. Rifkin speaks on these issues at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center tonight at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Greenville piano teachers anticipate<lb/>
composer<lb/>
ECU NEWSBUREAU<lb/>
GREENVILLE - Greenville<lb/>
area piano teachers will<lb/>
meet at the School of<lb/>
Music. East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity. Greenville, on<lb/>
Sunday. Sept. 10 from 1 :30<lb/>
pm until 4:30 pm, to hear<lb/>
the eminent composer and<lb/>
teacher. James Bastien<lb/>
The workshop will in-<lb/>
troduce the new 26 volume<lb/>
Bastien Piano Library, a<lb/>
complete course of instuc-<lb/>
tion for beginning piano<lb/>
students, and the Oler<lb/>
Beginner Piano Library, a<lb/>
six-volume series of in-<lb/>
structional books for adults<lb/>
Corn's second book arrives<lb/>
who would like to begin<lb/>
piano lessons.<lb/>
Both courses were writ-<lb/>
ten and composed by Bas-<lb/>
tien and his wife Jane<lb/>
Simsor Bastien.<lb/>
Tested teaching tech-<lb/>
niques for both children<lb/>
and adults will be demon-<lb/>
strated.<lb/>
NOTED COMPOSER WAS<lb/>
A SSOCIA TE PROFESSOR<lb/>
JamesBastienis a noted<lb/>
teacher, composer, pianist<lb/>
and lecturer.<lb/>
Most recently, he was<lb/>
associate professor of mu-<lb/>
sic at Loyola University.<lb/>
New Orleans, where he<lb/>
taught advanced university<lb/>
students, as well as class<lb/>
piano to piano minors.<lb/>
bastien isalso a<lb/>
prolific author<lb/>
He has been a member<lb/>
of the faculty of Notre<lb/>
Dame University. Tulane<lb/>
University, and has the<lb/>
distinction of being one of<lb/>
the youngest artists to ever<lb/>
serve on the faculty at<lb/>
Tanglewood<lb/>
For the past four years<lb/>
Bastien has been a member<lb/>
of the National Music<lb/>
Camp. Interlochen, Mich.<lb/>
In addition to working<lb/>
with college students, Bas-<lb/>
tien has taught privately<lb/>
in Portland. Dallas and<lb/>
New Orleans<lb/>
Bastien ,s the author of<lb/>
a book. How To Teach<lb/>
Piano Successfully, now in<lb/>
its second edition, anc<lb/>
co-authorcomposer with<lb/>
his wife of Beginning Piano<lb/>
For Adults.<lb/>
Since June. 1975. Bas-<lb/>
tien has devoted his entire<lb/>
efforts to writing from his<lb/>
home in San Diego. Calif.<lb/>
Tne meeting is spon-<lb/>
sored by Greenve Piano<lb/>
Teachers Association in co-<lb/>
operation with the School of<lb/>
Music. East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity . Greenville.<lb/>
He<lb/>
tfNew<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
A Call in the Midst of<lb/>
the Crowd is Alfred Corn's<lb/>
second book of poetry.<lb/>
His work has appeared in<lb/>
The New Yorker, the Sat-<lb/>
urday Review, Poetry and<lb/>
I M numerous other major pub-<lb/>
j�l 1-jftfiigfr . jm dcations.<lb/>
The book is divided into<lb/>
two sections. The first is an<lb/>
offering of eleven poems<lb/>
with the loose-knit if inter-<lb/>
estingly woven theme of<lb/>
"the working of the mind<lb/>
The functions of memory<lb/>
and reverie and their place<lb/>
in our consciousness are<lb/>
subjects that recur through<lb/>
HIS BEST MOMENTS occur when he emphasizes the these poems.<lb/>
uniqueness of the moment, and the part memory plays in The second section is<lb/>
�Were I to die, let it be on a day like entitled A Call in the Midst<lb/>
of the Crowd: Poem in Four<lb/>
Parts on New York City. In<lb/>
lour consciousness<lb/>
this<lb/>
this section Corn intersper-<lb/>
ses his cityscape poems<lb/>
with historical, literary and<lb/>
political snippets of New<lb/>
Yorkana. The poem is<lb/>
organized in four parts<lb/>
intended to show the dif-<lb/>
ferent seasons: January,<lb/>
April, July, and October.<lb/>
Corn is one of the<lb/>
accepted traditional poets<lb/>
in New York. :t seems like<lb/>
the major magazines all<lb/>
prefer poetry from what<lb/>
Kenneth Koch calls the<lb/>
"Blue" school. These<lb/>
poems are misty, cat-in-<lb/>
the-window, rainy-day city-<lb/>
scape poems.<lb/>
Con comes directly from<lb/>
the "Blue" tradition and<lb/>
writes in the elegant, intro-<lb/>
spective, fastidious style of<lb/>
the school. But all this is<lb/>
not to underestimate his<lb/>
worth.<lb/>
Harold Bloom says of<lb/>
Corn that he "achieves an<lb/>
authority and resonance<lb/>
wholly worthy of his pre-<lb/>
cursors. I know of nothing<lb/>
else of such ambition and<lb/>
realized power in Corn's<lb/>
own genration of American<lb/>
Poets<lb/>
"He has had the skill<lb/>
and courage to confront,<lb/>
absorb, and renew our<lb/>
poetic tradition at its most<lb/>
vital. His aesthetic pros-<lb/>
pects are remarkable, even<lb/>
in this crowded time<lb/>
Corn's subject is the<lb/>
city, specifically New York,<lb/>
resturants, crowded<lb/>
streets, wistful cafe after-<lb/>
noons and park scenes are<lb/>
the backdrop against which<lb/>
the poet acts and thinks,<lb/>
lives.<lb/>
H is best moments occur<lb/>
when he emphasizes the<lb/>
W�fl��ft�Pay<lb/>
uniqueness of the moment,<lb/>
and the part memory plays<lb/>
in our consciousness. In TO<lb/>
A Muse Corn speaks of<lb/>
when the muse visits, in<lb/>
other words, of when he<lb/>
feels like he is striking at te<lb/>
the nature of living most<lb/>
closely in his poetry.<lb/>
The air burns with the trace<lb/>
of where<lb/>
You spoke - never twice<lb/>
the same spot.<lb/>
The idea's to strike, then<lb/>
vanish.<lb/>
Your only object what<lb/>
comes next,<lb/>
The moment just now be-<lb/>
ginning.<lb/>
emphasized always in<lb/>
Corn's poetry is the tem-<lb/>
poral nature of life and the<lb/>
enigmatic function memory<lb/>
plays in our lives.<lb/>
For instance in Darken-<lb/>
ing Hotel Room the person-<lb/>
is lying in a hotel room,<lb/>
imagining all the other<lb/>
occupants of the room, and<lb/>
wondering what they<lb/>
thought as they looked at<lb/>
the same room.<lb/>
Then the poem pro-<lb/>
ceeds to become the act of<lb/>
memory; such as the intim-<lb/>
acy Corn can achieve with<lb/>
his impeccable sense of<lb/>
"the mind turned back on<lb/>
itself, to watch itself He<lb/>
recalls<lb/>
Afternoon light models her<lb/>
face into<lb/>
Fatigue, kindness, a worry<lb/>
wrinkle<lb/>
Between dark brows Curly �:�:<lb/>
hair.<lb/>
:�:�<lb/>
Short and not well arranq- <lb/>
ed In another ?.<lb/>
v<lb/>
Room someone misses a :$�<lb/>
note of the scale; �<lb/>
1<lb/>
And she bends down to me. �<lb/>
a mound :�:�<lb/>
I<lb/>
Of not much more than self &amp;<lb/>
She smiles. �<lb/>
Her head turning this way, �:�:<lb/>
that way :<lb/>
Corn says that memory ft:<lb/>
appears as a gift, as a :�<lb/>
second sight that has the <lb/>
power to transport us in i�:<lb/>
a sate conduct to lost<lb/>
houses, forbidden rooms<lb/>
Memory is essential to<lb/>
See POETRY, p oj<lb/>
v<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057144_0008"/><lb/>
Pages FOUNTAINHEAD 12 September 1978<lb/>
Hulk<lb/>
best-sellin<lb/>
comic<lb/>
ByJOHNWEYLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Can a man with green skin and a petulant personality find<lb/>
true happiness in today's status-seeking society?<lb/>
-Stan Lee, The Incredible Hulk<lb/>
Comics are getting big now. The business is booming,<lb/>
and branching out: into books, newspapers, movies, TV.<lb/>
Best among the comic book-books out now are the works of<lb/>
Stan Lee. His latest: The Incredible Hulk and The Silver<lb/>
Surfer.<lb/>
These works, in a sense the biggest comics of all, are a<lb/>
series of expensive, best-selling volumes reprinting vintage<lb/>
adventures from the Marvel Comics Group archives. Stan<lb/>
Lees the mastermind behind Marvel, the world's top-selling<lb/>
comic's producers. Stan's the man responsible for such<lb/>
super-hero stalwarts as the amazing Spider-Man, the<lb/>
mighty Thor, the Fantastic Four and The Incredible Hulk.<lb/>
The Hulk Mightier than a battering ram! The Hulk! More<lb/>
dangerous than a runaway tornado! The Hulk! As<lb/>
uncontrollable as the very forces of nature herself! Foe of<lb/>
every human being on earth shout the captions about the<lb/>
book's brutish star, the jolly green giant of the comics, the<lb/>
(on 4U SLUbmn JLtt J<lb/>
In appreciation of our<lb/>
ECU students, We are<lb/>
offering this week only<lb/>
a 10 discount on<lb/>
all fall sweaters.<lb/>
V-necks, Cowls, Turtle Necks, Crews,<lb/>
Button Downs, Bulkies, and Vest<lb/>
Dresent this coupon along with<lb/>
Student ID to receive discount.<lb/>
monster with the strength of a thousand oxen and the<lb/>
intellect of one.<lb/>
For those not versed in all things Hulkish, the Hulk is also<lb/>
Dr. Bruce Banner, a scientist who was caught in the<lb/>
explosion of his own gamma bomb, turning him into "seven<lb/>
feet, one thousand pounds of unfettered fury<lb/>
The Hulk's one of the most popular comic book characters<lb/>
around, and the star of his own prime-time television series.<lb/>
This book, entitled rather simply The Incredible Hulk,<lb/>
contains some of or greenskin's earliest exploits, culled from<lb/>
the early 1960s pages of Avengers, Fantastic Four, and<lb/>
Hulk's own series. Included are the man-monster's battles<lb/>
against such vociferous villains as the Ringmaster and his<lb/>
Circus of Crime, the leader and his horde of humanoids, the<lb/>
Chameleon and Boomerang.<lb/>
Introductions and explanations are supplied by the<lb/>
ever-ready wit of Lee, who says, I get a twinge of<lb/>
nostalgia as I read these older yarns. True, they're probably<lb/>
not as slick and sophisticated I y crafted as some of our<lb/>
present sagas, but their very naivete and directness really<lb/>
appeal. Maybe its just sentiment, or maybe I'm prejudiced,<lb/>
cause I was there at the creation, but I really think they hold<lb/>
up well, even though they were written before some of you<lb/>
were born<lb/>
He's right. These old stories, with their simple plots,<lb/>
corny dialogue, and stereotyped characters, have a special<lb/>
charm to them. They're exciting and fun to read and tell a lot<lb/>
more story within their pages than today's tales.<lb/>
It's interesting seeing the changes comics and the Hulk<lb/>
have made over the years. His speech evolves enroute from<lb/>
"You! Boy! You locked me in cell! You pay for that now to<lb/>
a time when he acted generally like the Fantastic Four's<lb/>
Thing.<lb/>
"Just wait'll my head clears, long hair, and then we'll see<lb/>
who does the sufferin to a period when he still had<lb/>
Banner's brain while the Hulk saying such things as, "The<lb/>
trajectory carried us safely beyond the radiation area to the<lb/>
familiar garbled gab greenskin uses today.<lb/>
His appearance has changed, too. In his initial<lb/>
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With its new, low price and limited time $5 00 re-<lb/>
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Use this coupon to obtain your $5.00 rebate.<lb/>
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flows. Payment, present and future value<lb/>
number of periods for annuities. Also days<lb/>
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Statistical functions<lb/>
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adventures here he's a slow-moving, almost mute monster in<lb/>
tattered clothes, looking and acting a great deal like the old<lb/>
movie Frankenstein.<lb/>
Hulk's resemblance to that far-famed creature is one of<lb/>
the secrets of his appeal. Hulk in part is nothing more than<lb/>
Boris Karloff's Frankenstein translated Into modern,<lb/>
superheroic terms.<lb/>
If super heroes are the present incarnations of the heroes<lb/>
of yesteryear-the cowboy, the detective, and the legendary<lb/>
warrior-then the Hulk is a re-hash of the old monster myths<lb/>
epitomized in the Frankenstein films of a few decades ago.<lb/>
Other symbolic searches into the soul of the Hulk: Hulk is<lb/>
a symbol of anger. We all feel uncontrollable anger within<lb/>
ourselves at times. Hulk is that anger, personified.<lb/>
His alter ego, Dr. Banner, though a skinny, bespectacled<lb/>
Clark Kent-like scientist, spends most of his scientific skills<lb/>
on making bombs and similar violent weaponry for the army.<lb/>
He must feel helpless rage, else he'd go on to more peaceful<lb/>
pursuits.<lb/>
The fateful gamma radiation that struck him must have<lb/>
acted as a catalyst for the rage he felt, bringing it to huge,<lb/>
horrible life as the Hulk.<lb/>
Why is it that Banner always manages to give himself a<lb/>
kick in the ass with his own inventions? The gamma bomb<lb/>
that made him Hulk was constructed by himself.<lb/>
In these early adventures, Banner almost gets himself<lb/>
killed by a robot he, himself, invented; becomes trapped<lb/>
by special unbreakable chains of his own design; nearly gets<lb/>
blown up by both a "nuclear device" and a new gamma<lb/>
bomb he made, and is kidnapped and almost fatally wounded<lb/>
over a 'absorbatron"machine of his.<lb/>
Why all the self-destruction? Being the Hulk has brought<lb/>
nothing but pain, suffering, and injury to Dr. Banner.<lb/>
Perhaps that first, fateful gamma bomblast somehow<lb/>
unleashed terrible feelings of self-hatred deep within<lb/>
Banner's psyche. Is Banner a secret masochist, and the Hulk<lb/>
his instrument of self-abuse?<lb/>
One thing more: why does he always wear purple pants?<lb/>
The things are so worn and ragged, you'd think he'd want to<lb/>
change them once in a while. You'd think he'd at least like to<lb/>
wear a different color pair of pants occasionally - they clash<lb/>
with his green akin.<lb/>
For that matter, In these early epics when people weren't<lb/>
sure Banner and Hulk were one and the same, why didn't<lb/>
they ever notice the doctor and the monster always wore the<lb/>
same damn purple pants?<lb/>
These are typical of the weighty thoughts that may run<lb/>
riot through the mind while reading such heady intellectual<lb/>
material as "The Incredible Hulk"<lb/>
But as Lee says, though the average comics fan reads<lb/>
them for the "deep philosophical and sociological Import<lb/>
these Hulk tales can be enjoyed merely for the exciting stuff.<lb/>
"THE HULK IS one of the most popular comi<lb/>
characters around, and the star of his own prime-time<lb/>
television series<lb/>
This is a nice book - the stories all by Lee, are usually<lb/>
engrossing and always at least interesting, and the artwork,<lb/>
mostly by Jack Kirby.and Steve Ditko. is excellent.<lb/>
The panels are colored the usual comic book coloring way.<lb/>
which means unimaginitively toned and sloppily printed<lb/>
It's a pity an otherwise slickly-produced book couldn't<lb/>
have better coloring than the comic books.<lb/>
Can a man with green skin and a petulant personality find<lb/>
true happiness in today's status-seeking society? If you don't<lb/>
know after reading The Incredible Hulk, you never will.<lb/>
EPISCOPAL STUDENTS<lb/>
Holy Communion Service Tuesday Sept. 12th<lb/>
Chapel of Methodist Student Center 5th and Holly St<lb/>
5:00 P.M. Supper and Bible Study following<lb/>
Rev. Bill Hadden, Jr. chaplain<lb/>
:rawKB s<lb/>
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DOUGH MADE FRESHDAILY 10'14" 17"<lb/>
Cheese2 253.80 4.60<lb/>
Onion2604.30 5.20<lb/>
Green Pepper2604.30 520<lb/>
Pepperoni2604.30 5.20<lb/>
Italtai Sausage2604.30 5.20<lb/>
Ground Beef2.604 30 5.20<lb/>
Black Olive2.604.30 5.20<lb/>
Green Olive2.604.30 5.20<lb/>
Anchovy2604 30 520<lb/>
Shrimp2604.30 5 20<lb/>
Mushroom2.604.30 5.20<lb/>
Ham2.604.30 5 20<lb/>
ADDITIONAL ITEMS4050 60<lb/>
CHANELOS SUPREME4.506 50 7 75<lb/>
SUPREME INGREDIENTS<lb/>
Cheese Onions, GreenPepperPepperoni,Italian Sausaqe.<lb/>
Black Olivet. Oren OlivesMushroom (Ar�chvies if requested)<lb/>
1. Spaghetti &amp; Meat Sauce with Hot Garlic Bread 2.25<lb/>
2. Spaghetti ft Meat Baits with Hot Garlic Bread 160<lb/>
3. Spaghetti ft Mushroom Sauce with Mot Garlic Bread 2.60<lb/>
4. Spaghetti. Mushroom ft Meat Balls wMot Garlic Bread 2.95<lb/>
5 Lasagna with Hot Garlic Bread 2.95<lb/>
Extra Meat Balls .30<lb/>
A Omp Toned Salad 85 C Garlic Bread 56<lb/>
8 Che SaUxi 2 25 O Cheese Bread 65<lb/>
(Lettuc. tomato, black owves. freer olive, ham. turkey, cheese and carrots I<lb/>
C�ko. o� Oreswnas 1 Thouwnd idand 2 French 3 Bleu Cheese 4 iteN<lb/>
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On, r VEGETARIAN<lb/>
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Hamburg St�k UeMuc ft ?<lb/>
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HAM ft CHEESE<lb/>
"am. Che� Ltt Tnma?o �<lb/>
HOT PASTRAMI<lb/>
HOT ROAST BEEF<lb/>
Roet Beet. Mu.tard Tomato<lb/>
TURKEY SANDWlST<lb/>
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' 9 �-�<lb/>
<pb facs="00057144_0009"/><lb/>
 v �<lb/>
solo album.<lb/>
Walsh is back with<lb/>
12 September 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
By EDWARD KALE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
At last! After a long<lb/>
absence Joe Walsh is back<lb/>
with a solo album.<lb/>
Having immersed him-<lb/>
self in the Eagles two years<lb/>
ago, after the departure of<lb/>
Bernie Leadon, Walsh<lb/>
seemed to give up solo<lb/>
work for the greater good of<lb/>
that band.<lb/>
His writing talents and<lb/>
membership in that band<lb/>
have certainly been appre-<lb/>
ciated, especially in Hotel<lb/>
California, their biggest<lb/>
L.P. to date.<lb/>
During that time, how-<lb/>
ever, Walsh has definitely<lb/>
been working on his own.<lb/>
His new album, But<lb/>
Seriously, Folks, shows a<lb/>
maturation, a positive<lb/>
growth in composition and<lb/>
style that was well worth<lb/>
waiting for.<lb/>
His involvement with<lb/>
the Eagles has contributed<lb/>
to the excellence of this<lb/>
new album. Supported by<lb/>
his work with that band,<lb/>
Poetry: 'beyond the city limits9<lb/>
continu&amp;d from p. 7<lb/>
the poem, Darkening Hotel<lb/>
Room, and it is an essential<lb/>
element in Corn's poetics<lb/>
as well. In the final section<lb/>
of the poem, the persona<lb/>
Degms by thinking "The<lb/>
man wrapped in darkness is<lb/>
free to dream<lb/>
That line presents us<lb/>
with Corn's view of man in<lb/>
the universe. Corns man<lb/>
lights the existential dark-<lb/>
ness with images from his<lb/>
fe. A picture of Christ<lb/>
hangs in the room which<lb/>
the personal says is "indif-<lb/>
ferent to. unaware of us<lb/>
In the second section,<lb/>
the long poem on New York<lb/>
City. A Call in the Midst of<lb/>
the Mind, the poet uses the<lb/>
city as a metaphor for life<lb/>
and the world. By dividing<lb/>
the poem along with the<lb/>
lines of the four seasons<lb/>
Corn suggests the univers-<lb/>
ality of his intentions. The<lb/>
four seasons bring to mind<lb/>
the four elements. Corn<lb/>
constructs his poem along<lb/>
transcedental lines.<lb/>
The city is life, sub-<lb/>
jected to the changes of<lb/>
history and the changes<lb/>
wrought upon it by weather<lb/>
and nature. The reader gets<lb/>
a real sense of the history of<lb/>
the city from the quotes<lb/>
from Walt Whitman, Henry<lb/>
James, Mark Twain and<lb/>
other thinking men who<lb/>
visited or lived in New<lb/>
York. Corn also presents us<lb/>
with journalistic, statistical<lb/>
and historical documents.<lb/>
Corn has roots deep in<lb/>
the city. The poet describes<lb/>
his city with the intamacy<lb/>
and with the accuracy of<lb/>
long, loving observance.<lb/>
His love for the place of his<lb/>
birth is evident in the<lb/>
following passage.<lb/>
Were I to die, let it be on a<lb/>
day like this.<lb/>
Starting now. And by twi-<lb/>
light, as people begin<lb/>
To leave the bars, soothed<lb/>
and rounded by one<lb/>
September<lb/>
Roundup<lb/>
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Or two drinks, to gather at<lb/>
the theaters<lb/>
In Lincoln Center, or take a<lb/>
last stroll before<lb/>
The park got dark and<lb/>
dangerous, I'd begin<lb/>
To feel it slipping through<lb/>
my fingers<lb/>
Like fine sand, as every-<lb/>
thing goes dim, the hum<lb/>
Of traffic, cries, horns,<lb/>
sirens,<lb/>
Even though the New<lb/>
Yorker will probably be<lb/>
able to relate to Corn's<lb/>
book than the provincial<lb/>
(which this reviewer must<lb/>
confess to being), by giving<lb/>
a sense of the history of<lb/>
New York Corn is also<lb/>
giving us a sense of the<lb/>
history of our country, and<lb/>
in that his poetry goes<lb/>
beyond the city limits.<lb/>
Many thanks to Penguin<lb/>
Books for their review copy<lb/>
there has been no rush to<lb/>
get an album together, no<lb/>
hurry to have something<lb/>
written and delivered to the<lb/>
company by deadline.<lb/>
Without that demand-<lb/>
ing pressure of a solo<lb/>
career, and having had two<lb/>
leisurely years to work,<lb/>
Walsh has been able to pick<lb/>
and choose, write just<lb/>
enough to fill out this<lb/>
album. This unhurried<lb/>
composition is evident in<lb/>
the continuity, the togeth-<lb/>
erness of this L.P.<lb/>
At first listening, one<lb/>
might miss some of the<lb/>
driving energy that is more<lb/>
obvious in So What, his last<lb/>
studio album. Don't worry!<lb/>
That energy is still there. It<lb/>
is all just presented in a<lb/>
much smoother, more fluid<lb/>
package. The rough edges<lb/>
are gone.<lb/>
With the excellent<lb/>
talent appearing on the<lb/>
album, how could it help<lb/>
but be together? Joe Vitale,<lb/>
a member of his old<lb/>
Barnstorm band, is back<lb/>
o n drums, as well as flute<lb/>
and some synthesizer. Jay<lb/>
Ferguson distinguishes<lb/>
himself on keyboards, and<lb/>
Willie Weeks plays a<lb/>
strong but thinking bass.<lb/>
Flawlessly mixed and<lb/>
recorded, the album flows<lb/>
with natural, unhesitating<lb/>
movement.<lb/>
The songs progress into<lb/>
each other in a continuity<lb/>
that is beautiful. Each<lb/>
But Seriously<lb/>
Folks9, shows a<lb/>
maturation, a<lb/>
positive growth<lb/>
in composition<lb/>
and style "<lb/>
metamorphisizes from the<lb/>
lilting strumming to hard<lb/>
rock, sliding licks that are<lb/>
so Walsh.<lb/>
He's obviously been<lb/>
working on his voice, also.<lb/>
In lighter moments, it's a<lb/>
forlorn calling, a space<lb/>
echoing, yet when appro-<lb/>
priate he turns it up and<lb/>
tells it.<lb/>
But Seriously, Folks<lb/>
shows a real progression in<lb/>
Walsh as a solo artist. The<lb/>
unhurried and careful<lb/>
composition of this album<lb/>
makes it a must for any<lb/>
Walsh fan.<lb/>
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Pope John Paul 6a poor wren<lb/>
seeking to offer some thought<lb/>
regarding the great themes9<lb/>
By GEORGE W. CORNELL<lb/>
AP Religion Writer<lb/>
6<lb/>
VATICAN CITY (AP) - "Some<lb/>
bishops resemble eagles who<lb/>
gilde majestically at high<lb/>
levels the future Pope John<lb/>
Paul I wrote seven years ago in a<lb/>
letter to Mark Twain.<lb/>
"Others are nightingales<lb/>
who sing the praises of theLord<lb/>
in a marvelous way.<lb/>
"Others are poor wrens on<lb/>
the lowest bough of the eccle-<lb/>
siastical tree who only squeak,<lb/>
seeking to offer some small<lb/>
thought regarding the great<lb/>
themes.<lb/>
"I belong to the final<lb/>
category The letter to the 19th<lb/>
century Americar humorist vas<lb/>
one of a series that Cardinal<lb/>
Albino Luaani wrote to a<lb/>
number of historical, literary<lb/>
and religious figures, including<lb/>
the Elizabethan post Christop-<lb/>
her Marlowe, novelist Charies<lb/>
Dickens, Ulysses' wife, Pene-<lb/>
lope, Pinorxhio and Christ.<lb/>
Published first in Padua in<lb/>
the Catholic monthly magazine<lb/>
St. Anthony's Messenger, they<lb/>
were collected in a book, "To<lb/>
the Very Illustrious that has<lb/>
become the most-wanted item in<lb/>
Roman bookstores since Luciani<lb/>
was elected pope last weekend.<lb/>
The book is temporarily out<lb/>
of print, and there is a thriving<lb/>
trade in photocopies<lb/>
Luciani wrote that when he<lb/>
taught in the seminary at<lb/>
Belluno, where his studies loved<lb/>
his frequent recounting of Mark<lb/>
Twain's stories, bu. he said now<lb/>
that he was cardinal-patri arch<lb/>
of Venice, he suspected some of<lb/>
the priests in his diocese would<lb/>
be scandalized and would ex-<lb/>
claim, "A bishop who reads<lb/>
Mark Twain<lb/>
"Perhaps they need first to<lb/>
understand that as there are<lb/>
many types of books, there are<lb/>
many types of bishops he<lb/>
commented.<lb/>
Luciani quoted Tolstoy's tale<lb/>
about the cook who the dogs<lb/>
considered a great chef whne he<lb/>
threw out meat scraps but a dud<lb/>
when he threw out onion skins.<lb/>
In his "Dear Jesus" letter<lb/>
the cardinal said he had been<lb/>
criticized fa "writing letters in<lb/>
all directionsand not even one<lb/>
line to Jesus Christ<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057144_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 12 September 1978<lb/>
omin<lb/>
ECU QUARTERBACK HENRY Trevathan rolls out and<lb/>
looks for a receiver against N. C. State Saturday night in<lb/>
Carter Stadium , Dh�,� K �.<lb/>
Photo by Chap Gurley<lb/>
Green suffers bruised ribs<lb/>
and goin<lb/>
ECU SPLIT END Billy Ray Washington races towards<lb/>
the Wolfpack goal line for the Pirates second<lb/>
touchdown of the evening.<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Turnovers, injuries hurt Pirates<lb/>
By CHARLESCHANDLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
With 75�o of an offen-<lb/>
- 'eld out. stange.<lb/>
bizarre, and often disas-<lb/>
" ngscan happen to<lb/>
a football team. Such was<lb/>
�se Saturday night in<lb/>
ECU Pirates 29-13 loss<lb/>
toN C State<lb/>
ate halfbacks Eddie<lb/>
H - and Anthony Collins<lb/>
both sdehned before<lb/>
Then, on the last<lb/>
e first half for the<lb/>
ates, starting quarter-<lb/>
back Leander Green suf-<lb/>
from severe rib m-<lb/>
es.<lb/>
This left the P'rates<lb/>
��� " only one backfield<lb/>
starter available for the<lb/>
se alf duty. Sure<lb/>
"Tose strange.dis-<lb/>
asterous things happened.<lb/>
The Pirate offense commit-<lb/>
ted five second half turn-<lb/>
overs with two turnovers<lb/>
deep in Wolfpack territory.<lb/>
With 19th ranked North<lb/>
Carolina on the schedule<lb/>
for Saturday, what can<lb/>
head coach Pat Dye and<lb/>
staff do to try to prepare<lb/>
their 'walking wounded9"<lb/>
We've just got to patch<lb/>
ourselves together said s<lb/>
Dye North Carolina has<lb/>
one fine football team<lb/>
We didn't get the ball<lb/>
outside like I had hoped<lb/>
said Dye We just didn't<lb/>
make the first downs rush-<lb/>
ing We must try to elim-<lb/>
inate the turnovers<lb/>
Dye said injuries to<lb/>
Hicks and Collins affected<lb/>
the team's confidence more<lb/>
than anything else. "But<lb/>
he said. "I don't think we<lb/>
came on as well as we<lb/>
should have<lb/>
"We've got to sit down<lb/>
and see )ust what it was we<lb/>
did explained Pirate spit<lb/>
end Terry Gallaher. "I'm<lb/>
totally frustrated. We made<lb/>
so many mistakes, just little<lb/>
things. It'sgoing tobe hard<lb/>
to get back up at the start of<lb/>
the week. But I know Coach<lb/>
Dye will take the right<lb/>
approach<lb/>
"We must pull to-<lb/>
gether said backup quar-<lb/>
terback Steve Greer. who<lb/>
was forced to take over the<lb/>
Pirate offense after Green's<lb/>
injury. "We'll have to<lb/>
concentrate in practice bet-<lb/>
ter. I know we've got a<lb/>
good team We just need to<lb/>
execute our plays better<lb/>
"Sure, we could have<lb/>
used Eddie Hicks and An-<lb/>
thony Collins but.that's no<lb/>
excuse. We must learn to<lb/>
handle these situations<lb/>
"We just need to suck<lb/>
it up and get ready for<lb/>
Carolina said Pirate de-<lb/>
fensive back Ruffin<lb/>
McNeil. "I never got down<lb/>
on the offense. There were<lb/>
a lot of new guys in there.<lb/>
This week we'll just have to<lb/>
practice oneness "<lb/>
"Right now we're just<lb/>
not together said Harrell.<lb/>
There are a lot of little<lb/>
problems. Everybody's<lb/>
down right now. But we<lb/>
face Carolina next week.<lb/>
"We'll be back up because<lb/>
we must win that game if<lb/>
we want a bowl bid<lb/>
Harrell, who scampered<lb/>
71 yards for a touchdown to<lb/>
open the night's scoring,<lb/>
said he felt that maybe the<lb/>
score was too quick. "After<lb/>
the score, I thought to<lb/>
myself, we still have a long<lb/>
way to go. Maybe it came<lb/>
too early and we got lazy. It<lb/>
kind of looked like it<lb/>
"We made alot of mis-<lb/>
takes out there tonight<lb/>
explained Pirate backup<lb/>
halfback Sam Harrell. "We<lb/>
executed well at times. But<lb/>
we just made too many<lb/>
mental errors. The State<lb/>
defense kept us confused,<lb/>
though. They seemed to<lb/>
wait until just the right<lb/>
times to make their<lb/>
moves<lb/>
"I think we could have<lb/>
ran at them noted center<lb/>
Jeff Hagans. "But who<lb/>
knows with all those turn-<lb/>
overs? I don't know. Our<lb/>
backup halfbacks are good<lb/>
though<lb/>
"They have the talent<lb/>
said N.C. State head coach<lb/>
Bo Rein. "If they ever<lb/>
eliminate those mistakes<lb/>
They have one of the<lb/>
quickest teams I've seen. A<lb/>
big factor in the game was<lb/>
the injury to Leander<lb/>
(Green). That certainly<lb/>
helped usout<lb/>
"This was one of the<lb/>
most disappointing games<lb/>
I've seen since I've been<lb/>
here concluded Dye. "If<lb/>
we're going to have any<lb/>
chance at North Carolina<lb/>
next week, we must have<lb/>
better effort<lb/>
ECU-State<lb/>
Stats<lb/>
RUSHING<lb/>
ECU - Sutton 11-18 Harrell<lb/>
3-83, Hawkins 6-60, Green<lb/>
4-(-15), Blue 2-4, Wiley 3-4,<lb/>
Greer 8-10, Washington<lb/>
1-3, Elliott 1-2, Trevathan<lb/>
1-5, N C. STATE Smith<lb/>
18-3, Brown 23-124, Vick-<lb/>
ers 11-36, McLean 6-28,<lb/>
Baker 2-6, Sullivan 4-11.<lb/>
PASSING<lb/>
ECU Green 0-4-1-0, Harrell<lb/>
0-1-1-0, Greer 2-3-67, Trev-<lb/>
athan 2-5-2-12 N.C. STATE<lb/>
Smim 3-5-76, Brown 1-2-<lb/>
012.<lb/>
RECEIVING<lb/>
ECU Harrell 1-20, Gallaher<lb/>
2-12, Washington 1-47<lb/>
N.C. STATE McLean 1-(-3)<lb/>
Quick 1-66, hall 1-12, Fab-<lb/>
iny 1-12.<lb/>
Hitter's five FG's r�<lb/>
Pack past Pirates, 29-13<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
RALEIGH- Nathan<lb/>
Ritter didn't carry the ball<lb/>
one time, catch a single<lb/>
pass or score one touch-<lb/>
down against ECU Satur-<lb/>
day night.<lb/>
But the diminutive 5-7,<lb/>
145 pound sophomore sent<lb/>
a record five field goals<lb/>
through the Carter Stadium<lb/>
uprights to propel N.C.<lb/>
State past the Pirates 29-<lb/>
13.<lb/>
Ritter, a former team-<lb/>
amte of Ted Brown's at<lb/>
High Point Andrews, stole<lb/>
much of the limelight from<lb/>
the Heisman Trophy cand-<lb/>
idate as he accounted for<lb/>
17 points in the Wolfpack's<lb/>
season opener.<lb/>
N.C. State's victory<lb/>
ove ECU was the first in<lb/>
three years while the<lb/>
Pirates overall record fell to<lb/>
1-1 for the season. "What<lb/>
happened tonight was that<lb/>
we got beat by a fine State<lb/>
football team said ECU<lb/>
head coach Pat Dye after<lb/>
the game "The strength<lb/>
of their team, is their<lb/>
defense and they showed<lb/>
that tonight. I think their<lb/>
place kicker (Ritter) was the<lb/>
best I've ever seen Not<lb/>
one of the 50,800 fans in<lb/>
Carter Stadium would dis-<lb/>
agree with Dye. Ritter<lb/>
booted field goals of 48, 29.<lb/>
46, 34, and 44 yards and<lb/>
also added two extra<lb/>
points. The five field goals<lb/>
broke a N.C. State kicking<lb/>
record shared by Gerld<lb/>
Warren and Harold Deters,<lb/>
and Ritter' 3 17 points in a<lb/>
single game broke the<lb/>
previous record of 12 also<lb/>
held by Warren against<lb/>
Virginia in 1967.<lb/>
"You just keep your<lb/>
head down and concen-<lb/>
trate explained Ritter<lb/>
who's 46 yarder in the third<lb/>
quarter bounced over the<lb/>
corss bar. "Jay Sherrill<lb/>
(former N.C. State place-<lb/>
kicker) gets me ready on<lb/>
the sidelines. He goes<lb/>
through things three or four<lb/>
times to get me ready<lb/>
Once again the Pirates<lb/>
offense was ineffective<lb/>
most of the game and could<lb/>
manage but nine first<lb/>
downs against the stingy<lb/>
Pack defense.<lb/>
Although total offensive<lb/>
yardage between the two<lb/>
teams was close, it was<lb/>
N.C. State's ability to cap-<lb/>
italize on seven costly<lb/>
Pirate turnovers which was<lb/>
the difference.<lb/>
"We just weren't able<lb/>
to get the ball outside<lb/>
said DyeLater we wanted<lb/>
to throw the ball in running<lb/>
situations. We didn't make<lb/>
the first downs rushing that<lb/>
we needed<lb/>
Just like last year<lb/>
against the Wolfpack, ECU<lb/>
struck quickly in the first<lb/>
quarter. On the second play<lb/>
of the game, halfback Sam<lb/>
Harrell took a pitch from<lb/>
quarterback Leander Green<lb/>
and scampered 71 yards<lb/>
down the right side for a<lb/>
touchdown. Bill Lamm's<lb/>
conversion put the Pirates<lb/>
ahead 7-0 and only 46<lb/>
seconds had elapsed on the<lb/>
ciock.<lb/>
But it was not until late<lb/>
in the fourth quarter before<lb/>
the Pirates could get back<lb/>
on the scoreboard again,<lb/>
and by then the game was<lb/>
all but over.<lb/>
Sandwiched in between<lb/>
Harrell's touchdown romp<lb/>
in the first quarter and a 47<lb/>
yard touchdown pass from<lb/>
Steve Greer to split end<lb/>
Billy Ray Washington in<lb/>
the final period were four<lb/>
interceptions and three<lb/>
fumbles by the Pirates.<lb/>
Green's fumble on<lb/>
ECU's second possession<lb/>
was recovered by State's<lb/>
Joe Hannah which gave the<lb/>
Wolfpack excellent field<lb/>
position at the Pirate 26<lb/>
yard line.<lb/>
From there, the Pack<lb/>
went 26 yards in eight plays<lb/>
with quarterback Scott<lb/>
Smith going to final yards<lb/>
for the touchdown. Ritter's<lb/>
extra point tied score at 7-7<lb/>
with 5:25 left in the first<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
On the second play of<lb/>
the second quarter, Ritter<lb/>
booted the first of his five<lb/>
field goals and State moved<lb/>
ahead 10-7 with 14:48 re-<lb/>
maining in the half.<lb/>
Ritter added his second<lb/>
field goal on the State's<lb/>
next possession from 27<lb/>
yards out to push the<lb/>
Wolfpack ahead 13-7 and<lb/>
that's the way the score<lb/>
remain at the half.<lb/>
Turnovers set up two of<lb/>
Ritter's second hald field<lb/>
goals. Sam Harrell's pass<lb/>
was intercepted by James<lb/>
Butler and Ritter converted<lb/>
three plays later from 46<lb/>
yards out with 26 seconds<lb/>
left in the third quarter.<lb/>
The Pirates quickly<lb/>
turned the ball over again<lb/>
when Steve Greer fumbled<lb/>
at his own 22. On the third<lb/>
play of the final quarter.<lb/>
Ritter hit from 34 yards out<lb/>
and State upped its lead to<lb/>
19-7.<lb/>
Ritter's final field goai<lb/>
came from 45 yards out and<lb/>
increased the Pack's mar-<lb/>
gin to 22-7<lb/>
The Pirates managed<lb/>
excellent field position after<lb/>
a Billy Ray Vickers fumble<lb/>
was recovered by Perry<lb/>
Allred at the State 23. but<lb/>
safety Woodrow Wilson<lb/>
picked off a Henry Trevat-<lb/>
han pass and raced 86<lb/>
yards for atouchdown.<lb/>
"We played well, on<lb/>
defense. ' said Dye. "I<lb/>
guess they only scored one<lb/>
touchdown against our def-<lb/>
ense, And they didn't get<lb/>
many first downs in the<lb/>
second half. They moved<lb/>
the ball well in the first<lb/>
half. If we had only tackled<lb/>
a little better<lb/>
Score by Quarters<lb/>
East Carolina 7 0 0 6-13<lb/>
N.C. State 7 6 3 13 - 29<lb/>
ECU-Harrall 71 run (Lamm<lb/>
kick)<lb/>
NCS-Smith 1 run (Ritter<lb/>
kick)<lb/>
NCS-FG Ritter 48<lb/>
NCS-FG Ritter 29<lb/>
NCS-FG Ritter 46<lb/>
NCS-FG Ritter 34<lb/>
NCS-FG Ritter 44<lb/>
NCS-Wilson 86 Intercep-<lb/>
tion Return (Ritter Kick)<lb/>
ECU-Washington 46 Pass<lb/>
from Greer (run failed)<lb/>
DEFENSIVE END ZACK Valentine sacks N.C. State<lb/>
quarterback Scott Smith in the Wolfpack's 29-13 victory<lb/>
over ECU Saturday night.<lb/>
Crunch<lb/>
Valentine had seven<lb/>
including two sacks.<lb/>
tackles against the Wolfpack<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
'They got all the breaks' - Valentine<lb/>
Trouble ahead<lb/>
flftAyfZJT'n9rhn int� W�"Pa PiCk9d UP " yardS � ��� tarfd in the<lb/>
State Hafba Tm HXJZT T   " Eddt HiCks �ho " �" �'� � ��<lb/>
oia.e nairoack bam Harrell leads the blocking for Hawkins, injury.<lb/>
the younger brother of former Pirate star Willie Hawkins, Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
t<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
RALEIGH Even after<lb/>
a disappointing 29-13 loss<lb/>
to N.C. State ECU head<lb/>
coach Pat Dye has no<lb/>
excuse for his team's per-<lb/>
formance in front of a near<lb/>
record crowd of 50,800 in<lb/>
Carter Stadium.<lb/>
"We just got beat by a<lb/>
better football team to-<lb/>
night admitted Dye. "It<lb/>
was just like I thought, the<lb/>
strength of this State team<lb/>
is in its defense<lb/>
For the second consec-<lb/>
utive week, the Pirate<lb/>
defense performed admir-<lb/>
ably allowing less than 300<lb/>
yards on total offense. But<lb/>
seven Pirate turnovers kept<lb/>
the defense in the hole<lb/>
most of the evening.<lb/>
"We've got to eliminate<lb/>
some of these turnovers<lb/>
said Dye. "But our players<lb/>
didn't quit and they had<lb/>
plenty of chances late in the<lb/>
game with so much going<lb/>
against them. We've just<lb/>
got to patch ourselves to-<lb/>
gether and get ready to<lb/>
play probably a better team<lb/>
next week<lb/>
Even with injuries to<lb/>
halfbacks Eddie Hicks and<lb/>
Anthony Collins along with<lb/>
quarterback Leander<lb/>
Green, Dye and the rest of<lb/>
the Pirates have not hit the<lb/>
panic button, yet.<lb/>
"N.C. State was just the<lb/>
better team tonight said<lb/>
ECU defensive end Zack<lb/>
Valentine who made seven<lb/>
tackles including two sacks<lb/>
on Wolfpack quarterback<lb/>
Scott Smith. "We didn't<lb/>
play that bad, but then<lb/>
again we didn't play that<lb/>
good, either. But we can't<lb/>
just lay down now with<lb/>
North Carolina in front of<lb/>
us. We've got to come back<lb/>
and fight<lb/>
Even more frustrating<lb/>
for Valentine and the rest of<lb/>
his cohorts was the bionic<lb/>
toe of Wolfpack place kick-<lb/>
er Nathan Ritter who boot-<lb/>
ed a record five field goals.<lb/>
Each time the ECU defense<lb/>
stymied a Wolfpack drive,<lb/>
Ritter would oome on and<lb/>
send another field goal<lb/>
through the uprights. He<lb/>
even bounced one across<lb/>
the cross bar in the third<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
"It's frustrating to keep<lb/>
them from scoring a touch-<lb/>
down and then they get all<lb/>
those field goals ex-<lb/>
plained Valentine. "But<lb/>
you just have to live with it.<lb/>
They just seemed to get all<lb/>
the breaks tonight. But I<lb/>
know this team. We won't<lb/>
keep our heads down for<lb/>
long. We'll be ready for<lb/>
next week<lb/>
Linebacker Tommy Su-<lb/>
mmer also felt the breaks<lb/>
played a key factor in the<lb/>
Wolfpack's victory.<lb/>
"We just didn't get any<lb/>
breaks said Summer, "it<lb/>
just seemed like they jum-<lb/>
ped on us from the opening<lb/>
and never eased up. But<lb/>
nobody ever gave up. We<lb/>
played our heart out. They<lb/>
were just the better football<lb/>
team tonight<lb/>
With its 14-6 win over<lb/>
Western Carolina and the<lb/>
loas to N.C. State, the<lb/>
Pirates now take a 1-1<lb/>
record into next week's<lb/>
game with Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference rival North<lb/>
Carolina. The Tar Heels<lb/>
season opener iS also<lb/>
against ECU and Summer<lb/>
feels the UNC game is one<lb/>
the Pirates simply can't<lb/>
afford to lose at thtsstage of<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
"We've just got to win<lb/>
that game, no ways about<lb/>
it<lb/>
admitted Summer. "We've<lb/>
got a lot of work to do in<lb/>
practice this week. But<lb/>
we're going to get better I<lb/>
think by next week we'll<lb/>
find out what we're really<lb/>
made of<lb/>
"Concentration, we've<lb/>
got to improve our concen-<lb/>
tration on both offense and<lb/>
defense said corner back<lb/>
Willey Holley. "We missed<lb/>
a�ot of tackles out there<lb/>
tonight, but we'll get better<lb/>
in practice this week.<lb/>
We've got to keep our<lb/>
beads up high and go out<lb/>
there next weak and get the<lb/>
job done<lb/>
t<lb/>
 �-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057144_0011"/><lb/>
Sees herself as 'team person'<lb/>
12 S�pf mbr 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD P�g� 11<lb/>
LCSS<lb/>
By BETSY McDAVID<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Laurie Arrents.<lb/>
�n trying to describe her<lb/>
personality, one step into<lb/>
her office is worth a thou-<lb/>
sand words. Peanut's char-<lb/>
acter Lucy, with a field<lb/>
hockey stick in hand, greets<lb/>
you at the door with a<lb/>
warning to "keep your<lb/>
cool<lb/>
A sweeping glance a-<lb/>
cross the walls inside takes<lb/>
you from natural land-<lb/>
scapes and comical pictures<lb/>
to framed certificates and<lb/>
engraved plaoues, mom-<lb/>
entos of teams Arrants has<lb/>
coached in the past. The<lb/>
shelves overflow with<lb/>
books, notebooks, and tro-<lb/>
phies, but your eye finally<lb/>
comes to rest on a poem<lb/>
taped above her desk:<lb/>
Do not save your loving<lb/>
speeches<lb/>
For your friends till they<lb/>
are dead.<lb/>
Do not write them on<lb/>
their tombstones<lb/>
Speak them rather now<lb/>
instead.<lb/>
"that's my philosophy<lb/>
of life" the petite Arrants<lb/>
smiles. "I like to bring<lb/>
happiness to other people's<lb/>
lives<lb/>
Arrants feels that<lb/>
through coaching women's<lb/>
athletics she can do just<lb/>
that. Involved in jayvee<lb/>
basketball, track, and cur-<lb/>
rently field hockey, she has<lb/>
been at East Carolina for<lb/>
four years.<lb/>
She claims field hockey<lb/>
reflects her own lifestyle.<lb/>
"I like the comradeship of<lb/>
the game she xnfesses.<lb/>
"It is outdoors, it's fast, it's<lb/>
constantly changing, and<lb/>
its both physically and<lb/>
mentally demanding. It's<lb/>
me<lb/>
All her life Arrants has<lb/>
taken on challenges. The<lb/>
youngest of three children,<lb/>
she grew up in a small town<lb/>
with a population of only<lb/>
600. Her sister won beauty<lb/>
contests and excelled in<lb/>
school, but Arrants admit-<lb/>
ted she never envied her<lb/>
sibling. "In fact, we were<lb/>
very close" she said.<lb/>
Her father was a welder<lb/>
for a nearby DuPont plant.<lb/>
Since he could not interest<lb/>
his son in mechanics, he<lb/>
adopted Laurie as his "lit-<lb/>
tle boy "I was always<lb/>
interested in go-carts, mo-<lb/>
torcycles, things of that<lb/>
nature she related. "I've<lb/>
won two stock car races and<lb/>
at least two or three<lb/>
motorcycle races, and, of<lb/>
course, I change my own oil<lb/>
and spark plugs<lb/>
She began playing bas-<lb/>
ketball in high school. At<lb/>
the same time she managed<lb/>
to drive a school bus, be a<lb/>
class officer, and hold down<lb/>
a steady boyfriend. "I did<lb/>
alot of camping and hiking.<lb/>
And I enjoyed people. None<lb/>
of that has changed<lb/>
It was in college that<lb/>
sports began to be more<lb/>
than a pasttime. For three<lb/>
years, Arrants played bas-<lb/>
ketball on an AAU team<lb/>
scholarship for the Raytown<lb/>
Piperettes. "It was a<lb/>
full-time thing - almost like<lb/>
the pros she said. Prac-<lb/>
tice began seven days a<lb/>
week in August and play<lb/>
continued through the<lb/>
spring. Summer camps and<lb/>
team tryouts demanded the<lb/>
remaining months.<lb/>
"I finally decided to<lb/>
give it up she said. "I<lb/>
knew there had to be more<lb/>
to Laurie Arrants than<lb/>
that<lb/>
After graduation from<lb/>
Winthrop College in Rock<lb/>
Hill, S.C Arrants went<lb/>
into recreational therapy. A<lb/>
year later, she returned to<lb/>
school, this time for a<lb/>
master's degree in exer-<lb/>
cise, physiology, and bio-<lb/>
mechanics.<lb/>
Her interest in field<lb/>
hockey had long ago devel-<lb/>
oped (she was team captain<lb/>
at Winthrop) when she<lb/>
applied for a teaching-<lb/>
coaching job at ECU. "It<lb/>
was the first place I tried<lb/>
and I got the job. I liked this<lb/>
part of North Carolina<lb/>
Arrants said.<lb/>
"I love coaching" she<lb/>
went on. "I try to present a<lb/>
challenge for my girls.<lb/>
'Can't' doesn't exist in our<lb/>
vocabulary<lb/>
Her relationship with<lb/>
flogf<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Billy Bass three for five<lb/>
touchdowns and Oliver<lb/>
Mack ran for a pair as the<lb/>
Scott Time-Outs opened<lb/>
their 1978 intramural foot-<lb/>
ball season with a 44-0 rout<lb/>
of the Scott Studs.<lb/>
The Time-Outs went<lb/>
undefeated last season in<lb/>
copping the all-campus title<lb/>
and the picked up right<lb/>
a here they left off. man-<lb/>
handling the Studs.<lb/>
Bass threw in and over<lb/>
the Studs' defense and hit<lb/>
Dan McCombs twice, Mack<lb/>
twice and Terry Campbell<lb/>
once Roger Horton added<lb/>
another score for the Time-<lb/>
Outs when he intercepted a<lb/>
pass and returned it all the<lb/>
way 4or a touchdown.<lb/>
But the Time-Outs<lb/>
weren't the only team to<lb/>
get off to a big start last<lb/>
week. The Jones Studs<lb/>
started their season with a<lb/>
38-8 win over the Jones<lb/>
Acholics as quarterback<lb/>
Ricky Murray threw for five<lb/>
touchdowns, four to former<lb/>
high school teammate<lb/>
DavidWilliams. Murray's<lb/>
touchdown passes included<lb/>
a 65-yard pass and a<lb/>
68-yard pass. He teamed<lb/>
up with Chris Flotz on the<lb/>
65-yarder, which came on<lb/>
the last play of the game.<lb/>
The Studs' defense was led<lb/>
by Dan Gillespie, who<lb/>
picked off two passes.<lb/>
Another perenielly<lb/>
strong team is the Sada-<lb/>
haru Ohs and they opened<lb/>
their 1978 season with a<lb/>
14-2 win over a tough<lb/>
Village Brook Six Pack<lb/>
team. Tommy Triplett led<lb/>
the win with a touchdown<lb/>
catch on a 30-yard play, and<lb/>
threw for the other score on<lb/>
a 20-yarder to Steve Staley.<lb/>
Kappa Alpha bombed<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma, 38-14,<lb/>
in a battle of fraternity<lb/>
teams as Joe Wood tallied<lb/>
on three scores on passes<lb/>
from Mike Warren.<lb/>
The Jones Bucs round-<lb/>
ed the major games with a<lb/>
narrow 28-22 win over the<lb/>
Jones No Names, coming<lb/>
Breakfast<lb/>
from 7 a.m.<lb/>
to 11a.m.<lb/>
specializing<lb/>
in large<lb/>
(country ham or sausage<lb/>
biscuits. Hot cakes. Scrambled<lb/>
eggs with country ham or<lb/>
sausage. Our 14 lb. beef<lb/>
burgers are ground from fresh<lb/>
Western Chuck. We have pure<lb/>
soft served ice cream. Also<lb/>
serving ham and cheese,<lb/>
chicken fillets, hot dogs, chili<lb/>
and beans, freach fries, apple<lb/>
turnovers, and a variety of soft<lb/>
drinks. Located on the corner<lb/>
of 5th and Reade St. and on<lb/>
Hwy. 264 in Washington.<lb/>
KORE-O-MAT<lb/>
Attention ECU men on the hill:<lb/>
If you want to know where<lb/>
the girls do their wash, then<lb/>
come to KORE-O-MAT on<lb/>
E. I4th Street (bottom of the<lb/>
hill across from Chanelo's).<lb/>
You 11 be glad you did! In addl<lb/>
tlon to girls we offer the<lb/>
following:<lb/>
 fluff and fold service<lb/>
 color TV pinball<lb/>
 drinks and.snacks<lb/>
 attendant<lb/>
 professional dry-cleaning<lb/>
pick-up station<lb/>
Bring this coupon in for<lb/>
one free wash 8am-4pm daily<lb/>
? good thru Sept so, 1978 <lb/>
from behind to win with<lb/>
less than a minute left in<lb/>
the game. Keith Pippin left<lb/>
the Bucs at quarterback.<lb/>
Last year's women's<lb/>
all-campus champions, the<lb/>
Cotton Bunnies, lost their<lb/>
first game by forfeit, but<lb/>
are still one of the favorites<lb/>
this year. In the biggest<lb/>
game of the week, an<lb/>
inner-sorority matchup<lb/>
Delta Zeta and Chi Omega<lb/>
found the deezees winning,<lb/>
24-0. Tracey Harvey led the<lb/>
way on offense with two<lb/>
touchdowns and two extra<lb/>
poitns and she also inter-<lb/>
cepted a pass on defense.<lb/>
Play gets into full swing<lb/>
this week with a full slate of<lb/>
games.<lb/>
The Almost Anything<lb/>
Goes sports carnival origin-<lb/>
ally scheduled for this<lb/>
afternoon conflicted with<lb/>
several other events, so it<lb/>
has been resceduled for<lb/>
Tuesday, September 26 at 4<lb/>
p.m. on the Mall. Registr-<lb/>
ation has also been extend-<lb/>
ed to run through Septem-<lb/>
ber 21.<lb/>
Several other intra-<lb/>
mural sports open their<lb/>
registration period this<lb/>
week. Golf, team tennis<lb/>
and co-rec tennis mixed<lb/>
doubles will all open play<lb/>
next Tuesday, with the golf<lb/>
tournament being held on<lb/>
the Ayden Country Club<lb/>
course.<lb/>
The annual ECU-<lb/>
McDonald's Frisbee Pent-<lb/>
athlon tournament will be<lb/>
held on the College Hill<lb/>
intramural field on Sept-<lb/>
ember 20. Registration for<lb/>
the event will run Septem-<lb/>
ber 17 at the intramural<lb/>
office and the McDonalds<lb/>
on Tenth and Cotanche<lb/>
Streets.<lb/>
There will be five events<lb/>
which will test entrants on<lb/>
their accuracy, � distance,<lb/>
and throwing ability. Cash<lb/>
prizes will be awarded to<lb/>
the first three finishers and<lb/>
t-shirts will be awarded to<lb/>
the top 40 finisers.<lb/>
The competition is open<lb/>
to full-time ECU students<lb/>
only.<lb/>
Ask me about<lb/>
Life Insurance<lb/>
for Students<lb/>
and<lb/>
Young Adults<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/>
INSUIAMCI<lb/>
State Farm Life Insurance Company<lb/>
Home Office Bloommgton. Illinois<lb/>
bill McDonald<lb/>
Green ville, N.C.<lb/>
East lOth Street<lb/>
Phone 7S 2-6MO<lb/>
SEIKO<lb/>
THE SEIKO LC DIGITAL QUARTZ<lb/>
WATCHCALCULATOR.<lb/>
It's almost like having your office on your wrist.<lb/>
No. FH001M-J350 00.<lb/>
LC Digital Quartz Multi<lb/>
Function Calculator with<lb/>
memory Features hours.<lb/>
minutes, seconds, day and<lb/>
date Displays up to 8 digits<lb/>
with floating decimal<lb/>
Stainless steel case and<lb/>
adjustable bracelet.<lb/>
Stylus included<lb/>
The watch continuously displays seconds, minutes, hours day<lb/>
and date. The calculator displays answers in up to eight digits<lb/>
(with a Floating Decmal Point) in the four basic arithmetic functions<lb/>
plus constant calculations, raising numbers to a given power<lb/>
square root extraction, percentage additions and discounts.<lb/>
and mixed calculations.<lb/>
All with amazing simplicity and superb Seiko accuracy and<lb/>
dependability. You'll wonder how you ever did business without it.<lb/>
Seiko Quartz. gQ<lb/>
FLOYD G. ROBINSON JEWELERS<lb/>
C � Ni 3 M A ,<lb/>
iEE N<lb/>
Onthe Mall Downtown Greenville (BeadeDfck's)<lb/>
Greenville's Only SEIKO Headquarters!<lb/>
the team consists of mutual<lb/>
respect. "I want them to<lb/>
feel my door is always open<lb/>
to talk over anything on<lb/>
their minds, but I try to<lb/>
discourage developing per-<lb/>
sonal friendships<lb/>
Yet, she radiates such<lb/>
warmth and enthusiasm it<lb/>
is difficult to imagine how<lb/>
she could avoid becoming a<lb/>
personal friend to everyone<lb/>
who comes in contact with<lb/>
her. "I like to think of<lb/>
myself outgoing and opti-<lb/>
mistic" she admits.<lb/>
Arrants also sees her-<lb/>
self as a "team" person.<lb/>
Her belief is that the world<lb/>
would be much better off<lb/>
with the "team first" atti-<lb/>
tude. "Instead everyone<lb/>
seems to be out for them-<lb/>
selves, money-hungry. Not<lb/>
only that, but people label<lb/>
each other, forcing some-<lb/>
one into a role from which<lb/>
they can never escape. I'm<lb/>
out to change these types of<lb/>
attitudes. "If I could<lb/>
change anything about my-<lb/>
self, it would have to be my<lb/>
temper said Arrants.<lb/>
"Venting it at the wrong<lb/>
times has gotten me into<lb/>
trouble at times. Also, I<lb/>
would spend more time<lb/>
expressing my feelings for<lb/>
people while they're still<lb/>
around.<lb/>
I AURIE ARRANTS<lb/>
ARMYNAVY STORE<lb/>
1501 S. Evans St.<lb/>
Backpack, camping equipment,<lb/>
boots, shoes, rainwear. Military<lb/>
Jackets. Surplus of all kinds.<lb/>
Special jeans $3.95<lb/>
The BOOKTRADER<lb/>
919 Dickinson Ave<lb/>
Parking or 10th St.<lb/>
Trade Paperback Books<lb/>
For the BOOKTRADER's<lb/>
Hours Daily 9-7 Sun 2-6<lb/>
It's Coming!<lb/>
It's Coming!<lb/>
Stereo<lb/>
Village<lb/>
The Complete Sound<lb/>
bystem Store<lb/>
317 ARLINGTON BLVD<lb/>
PHONE 756-9988<lb/>
THE DOWXTOVfX<lb/>
GREEWIIXE<lb/>
ASSOCIATION'S<lb/>
ECU STUDENT<lb/>
APPRECIATION<lb/>
 fcW ri lH Itt<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 11<lb/>
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 16<lb/>
All ECU Students<lb/>
Are Invited!<lb/>
Come celebrate with us and get<lb/>
speeially priced merchandise<lb/>
and special discounts all week long<lb/>
We've got 'em on everything you need!<lb/>
SHOP WERE TOU SEE<lb/>
THE WINDOW BANNERS<lb/>
Student ID eards required<lb/>
jl Jodhpurs<lb/>
� 1 collection � by PBM<lb/>
IHK SHOULDKR SAYS II AIL. Simple. Direct,<lb/>
by PBM Natural. Along with the distinctive pocket treat<lb/>
ments. it is as much an expression of our own individual stvle as it is of content<lb/>
porarv fashion. See the Jodhpurs collection of suits and sports jackets in fine<lb/>
fabrications. Suits from $165.00 Sports jackets from $110 00<lb/>
Open Thursday night till 9:00.<lb/>
The Clothes Horse<lb/>
by Coff man's<lb/>
218 East Fifth Street<lb/>
 � ��<lb/>
 ��V<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057144_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 12 September 1978<lb/>
40<lb/>
One thing stands<lb/>
between the<lb/>
seal pup and the<lb/>
hunter9 ship -<lb/>
GREENPEACE<lb/>
MLach spring, Greenpeace volunteers<lb/>
confront the hunters who club and<lb/>
thin almost all Harp Seal pups born<lb/>
on the Ice-floes of Newfoundland.<lb/>
Greenpeace U changing the odd, and<lb/>
saving the smalt. Sand your contribution<lb/>
to: Greenpeace Foundation 240 Fort<lb/>
Mason San Francisco, CA 94123<lb/>
Imagine a world without<lb/>
GREENPEACE<lb/>
ART &amp; CAMERA<lb/>
526 S. Cotanche St.<lb/>
Down Town<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES<lb/>
LIMITED TIME OFFER<lb/>
t<lb/>
12 Exp. Color Film<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
� Kodacolor<lb/>
� GAF<lb/>
� Fugi<lb/>
(Foreign Film<lb/>
Not Included<lb/>
$249<lb/>
O<lb/>
VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
� must accompany order I<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES<lb/>
! LIMITED TIME OFFER<lb/>
20 Exp. Color Film<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
� Kodacolor<lb/>
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3<lb/>
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1 MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER'<lb/>
MOVIE OR SLIDE<lb/>
me or Kodachrome Processing<lb/>
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LIMITED TIME OFFERj<lb/>
Sab $149<lb/>
VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
1 MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER1<lb/>
PLAZA CAMERA<lb/>
Rough night for ECU in Carter Stadium<lb/>
A near record crowd of 50,800 fann<lb/>
watched the ECU-N.C.State football<lb/>
game in Carter Stadium Saturday<lb/>
night. In upper right photo, ECU's Zack<lb/>
Valentine tackle Scott Smith while in<lb/>
lower right Theodore Sutton carrie� the<lb/>
ball. In the upper left photo, two<lb/>
Wolfpack defendern grab Leander<lb/>
(ireen and in the bottom left photo<lb/>
Sport Medicine Director Rod Compton<lb/>
helps an injured ECU player.<lb/>
Photos by John H. Grogan<lb/>
and Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
t<lb/>
Tonlte at the Elbo Room<lb/>
This year's First Bikini Contest.<lb/>
ECU'S prettiest girls competing<lb/>
for a super grand prise.<lb/>
Thursday - The Original beach sounds<lb/>
off The Drifters.<lb/>
Friday afternoon party 3-7<lb/>
Sunday: Ladies nite.<lb/>
There's a new face in<lb/>
downtown Greenville<lb/>
Bringing you Quality print-<lb/>
ing for all your business<lb/>
and personal needs<lb/>
Student and office supplies<lb/>
Cards for every occasion<lb/>
and much, much more<lb/>
Come see us at<lb/>
Pirate soccer team loses twice<lb/>
Sow Located at the University Arcade<lb/>
o Celebrate Student<lb/>
Appreciation Week<lb/>
One FREE T shirt<lb/>
with any<lb/>
$10.00 purchase.<lb/>
BvTERRYYEARGEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The youthful ECU Soc-<lb/>
cer team is off to a slow<lb/>
start this season with two<lb/>
disappointing losses last<lb/>
weekend. Coach Brad<lb/>
Smith's squad participated<lb/>
in the first Mayor's Cup<lb/>
Tournament with Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference teams<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
WED.andTHUR.<lb/>
"SUPERGRIT"<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
A<lb/>
FRISATSUX.<lb/>
"BULL"<lb/>
Friday nite All vs. Spinks<lb/>
on 7 foot Advent<lb/>
North Carolina. North Car-<lb/>
olina State and Duke Uni-<lb/>
versity. The tournament<lb/>
was held over a two-day<lb/>
period Saturday and Sun-<lb/>
day in Raleigh.<lb/>
Saturday's match up's<lb/>
were North Carolina again-<lb/>
st Duke in the opener and<lb/>
North Carolina State took<lb/>
on East Carolina in the<lb/>
afternoon match.<lb/>
The Tarheels defeated<lb/>
the Blue Devils 4-2 while<lb/>
East Carolina lost to North<lb/>
Carolina State 4-0.<lb/>
The University of North<lb/>
Carolina met with North<lb/>
Carolina State to decide the<lb/>
tournament champion. The<lb/>
game remained very close<lb/>
up until a second half surge<lb/>
by the Tarheels, which left<lb/>
them with a five to zip lead<lb/>
in the first place position.<lb/>
Duke played ECU in the<lb/>
jflfe<lb/>
ItfiPJN KB 5<lb/>
HP.<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
81 Spaghetti<lb/>
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Fast Free Delivery<lb/>
11:30 a.m.<lb/>
until closing<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
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I<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Wt<lb/>
CQK'<lb/>
<lb/>
fi<lb/>
BRAD SMITH<lb/>
consolation game to de-<lb/>
termine third place. The<lb/>
Pirates were defeated 5-0<lb/>
Defensively. ECU had<lb/>
some bright moments Ag-<lb/>
gressive play from senior<lb/>
Jeff K lugger led the Pirates<lb/>
m the first half against N.C<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
HI 25<lb/>
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;mba<lb/>
iTI 55<lb/>
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t -��<lb/>
S28 95<lb/>
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HP31E S53 50<lb/>
HP32E $70 00<lb/>
:HP33E S87 50<lb/>
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