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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057159_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Vol. 55 No.<lb/>
Voters re-elect Helms to Senate<lb/>
Mins by 'comfortable' marg<lb/>
? NA TOR JESSE HELMS The sweet taste of victory<lb/>
s smile as he returns to the U.S. Senate<lb/>
? 7J.<lb/>
By ROBERTSWAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
and<lb/>
The Associated Press<lb/>
RALEIGH - Republican Senator Jesse Helms easily<lb/>
defeated Democratic challenger John Ingram in Tuesday s<lb/>
HeTms received 54 percent of the vote. Ingram polled<lb/>
423.037 votes to Helms' 496,497.<lb/>
Early in the evening there was some speculation that<lb/>
Ingram might upset Helms due to the higher voter turnout<lb/>
which ,s usually an uplift for democratic candidates.<lb/>
W hen the early returns began to trickle in it was evident<lb/>
that Helms would be vicotrious and would win by a<lb/>
comfortable margin. rart at the<lb/>
Thousands of Helms supporters gathered at the<lb/>
Sheraton Hotel to await the returns and the cheer their<lb/>
ThTaowds at the Sheraton went wild with cheers when<lb/>
moved<lb/>
<lb/>
all three television networks decalred Helms the winner<lb/>
shortly before 10 p.m.<lb/>
It was about 10 p.m. when Helms came down from his<lb/>
suite to deliver his victory speech to an overflow crowd that<lb/>
had assembled in the ballroom of the hotel<lb/>
Nickname<lb/>
Helms began his address by saying "I'm Senator No<lb/>
and I'm glad to be here<lb/>
Helms explained his nickname to the thousands of<lb/>
who were watching on national television.<lb/>
"Perhaps I should mention the label, Senator No,<lb/>
bestowed upo me by an ultra-liberal newspaper editor<lb/>
(referring to Claude Sitton, editor of the News and<lb/>
Observer), in Raleigh, N.C. who intended it as a critical<lb/>
eDithet " said Helms. ,<lb/>
"What this editor failed to understand, in his frenzy of<lb/>
criticism, is that the people of N.C. indeed, f<lb/>
America want senators who will vote no to excessive<lb/>
federal spending, excessive federal controls and continued<lb/>
inflation " said Helms. .<lb/>
HeTms said that in voting no' to the excess o.<lb/>
government he had been voting 'yes' to the wishes of the<lb/>
oeople of the state. <lb/>
in dosing, Helms said that he held no ill leelmflsajnj<lb/>
his opponent, John Ingram who had viciously attacked him<lb/>
during the final days of the campaign.<lb/>
??I wish him and his family well said Helms.<lb/>
Helms to enter the 1980 Republican presidential primanes<lb/>
although Helms said he has no presidential ambitions at the<lb/>
moment.<lb/>
-?I think the senator is going to be an extraordinarily<lb/>
influential factor in the national Republican Party, sa.d<lb/>
state GOP chairman Jack Lee, who added he expects Helms<lb/>
at least to be a favorite son candidate<lb/>
Ingram won 38 counties to Helms' 62 but IngranVs<lb/>
were mainly small, rural areas, some w.th heavy black<lb/>
votes. He solidly took the northeastern corner,o he<lb/>
Sandhiilsand scattered counties in the fa??"? f<lb/>
Orange County, alway Democratic, but lost usually<lb/>
Democratic Durham.<lb/>
?This is not a personal victory. This is a victory of the<lb/>
conservative, free enterprise system in America. Helms<lb/>
declared after winning. . ? <lb/>
?I, is a clear signal that the American people are far<lb/>
ahead of the big spending Congress In realizing thaI fede a<lb/>
deficits and an overwhelming federal bureaucracy are after<lb/>
all the principle causes of inflation he said.<lb/>
Nicknamed "Senator No" for n?oonstwt opp?t.on to<lb/>
social legislation. Helms turned the tag to his advantage<lb/>
during the campa.gn, say.ng he was proud of vot.ng no<lb/>
to federal regulations and waste<lb/>
County votes<lb/>
N i ? Bureau<lb/>
 Homecom-<lb/>
I, will begin at<lb/>
a revised<lb/>
? events for<lb/>
Dav ECU<lb/>
.nave announced.<lb/>
the Home-<lb/>
?vas made<lb/>
. a change in<lb/>
ECU-William<lb/>
otball game at<lb/>
Fickien Stadium which will<lb/>
be televised by ABC (4<lb/>
p.m. EST) Before the<lb/>
television arrangements.<lb/>
the game had been sche-<lb/>
duled for a 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
kickoff<lb/>
The Homecoming par-<lb/>
ade, always a highlight of<lb/>
old gradsday at ECU. will<lb/>
form on Elm Street and<lb/>
move down Fifth Street<lb/>
pass the mam campus and<lb/>
the Chancellor's home pro-<lb/>
ceeding to the downtown<lb/>
area.<lb/>
The parade will include<lb/>
at least five bands and 17<lb/>
gaily decorated floats.<lb/>
The theme of the week-<lb/>
long Homecoming ob-<lb/>
servance in "New Horizons<lb/>
al ECU and this is ex-<lb/>
pected to be portrayed in<lb/>
design of the floats being<lb/>
readied for the parade.<lb/>
Art exhibits, class re-<lb/>
unions, socials and concerts<lb/>
are scheduled throughout<lb/>
?<lb/>
the week.<lb/>
Tickets should be ob-<lb/>
tained in advance for the<lb/>
Alumni Dance and Musical<lb/>
Extravaganza which will<lb/>
begin at 8:30 p.m. at the<lb/>
Moose Lodge. This is a<lb/>
couples only affair and<lb/>
tickets are $20 per couple<lb/>
advance sale, the alumni<lb/>
office said.<lb/>
Alumni registration for<lb/>
Homecoming will be held<lb/>
from 10 a.m. until 12:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Carries east<lb/>
Sen Jesse H lems carried the Piedmont and most of the<lb/>
east, losing in the rural hinterlands, as he easjfy <lb/>
aside Democrat John Ingram to win a second term Tuesday<lb/>
Helms whose liberal campaign spending contrasted<lb/>
with his conservative, anti-big government ideology, won<lb/>
54 percent of the vote by running up insurmountable<lb/>
margins in the major cities and smaller, textile counties of<lb/>
the oooulous Piedmont.<lb/>
lE margin, was as comfortable as when Helms became<lb/>
the state's first GOP senator since reconstruction in 1972<lb/>
And the victory was certain to fuel encouragement for<lb/>
Helms won by 10.000 votes in Mecklenburg, the largest<lb/>
county and by 5,000 each in Forsyth and Gu.lford. He took<lb/>
Buncombe in the mountains by 1.000 and New Hanover on<lb/>
the coast by 3.000.<lb/>
Helms won his home county of Wake by more than<lb/>
12.000 and took Ingrams home of Randolph county by<lb/>
nearly 5.000. . Birtll<lb/>
Ingram made no statement beyond his Tuesday mght<lb/>
councession, and said he planned to return to work as State<lb/>
insurance commissioner. Qa0,nh<lb/>
Helms remained secluded at h,s home in Ralegh<lb/>
Wednesday, and did not hold the traditional morning-after<lb/>
news conference.<lb/>
Media board keeps '78 BUCCANEER funds<lb/>
? RC BARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The question of what<lb/>
should be done with the<lb/>
funds originally intended<lb/>
for use for the publication<lb/>
of the now defunct 77-78<lb/>
BUCCANEER, and discus-<lb/>
sion of the right of FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD management<lb/>
to use legal services with-<lb/>
out notifying their gov-<lb/>
erning body highlighted<lb/>
Wednesday's Media Board<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
The money totally ap-<lb/>
proximately $42,000 has<lb/>
been the subject of a heated<lb/>
controversy in recent weeks<lb/>
between the Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment Association (SGA)<lb/>
and the various campus<lb/>
medias<lb/>
The SGA, through the<lb/>
statements of several legi-<lb/>
slators, wanted the funds<lb/>
reverted to the SGA Gen-<lb/>
eral Fund. Several mem-<lb/>
bers of the Media Board<lb/>
echoed their sentiments,<lb/>
saying that the money<lb/>
should be returned to the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
Several members of the<lb/>
campus media appeared<lb/>
before the Board to list<lb/>
specific funds that their<lb/>
respective publications and<lb/>
services should receive.<lb/>
Doug White. FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD editor, said that<lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
I<lb/>
WOODY ALLEN<lb/>
ECU-William and Mary to be televised on<lb/>
ABC see p. 8.<lb/>
State volleyball tournament at Minges<lb/>
this weekendsee p. 9.<lb/>
Greek Forumsee p. 5.<lb/>
Student Union Films Committee hasa full<lb/>
slate of free films for homecoming week.<lb/>
A nnie Hall leads the pack .for previews,<lb/>
see p. 6.<lb/>
The Gregg Smith Singers will perform at<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre this Wed. eveningsee<lb/>
p. 6.<lb/>
Interior design dept. seeks<lb/>
ByMARTHA OAKLEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Interior Design De-<lb/>
partment in ECU'S School<lb/>
of Art is currently being re-<lb/>
viewed for accreditation by<lb/>
The Foundation for Interior<lb/>
Design Education Re-<lb/>
search.<lb/>
The Foundation, known<lb/>
at FIDER, is a national<lb/>
organization that studied<lb/>
interior design education as<lb/>
ijght throughout the<lb/>
country in various schools<lb/>
of art.<lb/>
At the request of indi-<lb/>
vidual departments, FIDER<lb/>
will visit and make an eval-<lb/>
uation for possible accred-<lb/>
itation or simply offer sug-<lb/>
gestions.<lb/>
The Department of In-<lb/>
terior Design has received<lb/>
interest from the state<lb/>
chapter of the American<lb/>
Society of Interior Design<lb/>
concerning its accredit-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
The only pressure the<lb/>
FIDER<lb/>
department is undergoing<lb/>
to become accredited is<lb/>
self-made, according to<lb/>
Mel Stanforth, Chairman of<lb/>
the Interior Design Depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
According to Stanforth,<lb/>
the evaluation is now in the<lb/>
paperwork stages.<lb/>
"We wont't know the<lb/>
outcome for quite a while<lb/>
he said. "But if the depart<lb/>
ment becomes accredited it<lb/>
will be the only one In the<lb/>
state which is<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD needed<lb/>
a new typesetting machine,<lb/>
new furniture.file cabinets,<lb/>
light tables and industrial<lb/>
carpet.<lb/>
White commented on<lb/>
the amount of noise in the<lb/>
office, adding that the<lb/>
carpet would be an efficient<lb/>
sound deadener.<lb/>
Robert Swaim, FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD advertising<lb/>
manager said the printing<lb/>
budget would run out the<lb/>
last week in February, if<lb/>
printing costs continued at<lb/>
the present rate.<lb/>
"We will require an<lb/>
additional appropriation of<lb/>
$15,000 to print the paper<lb/>
until the end of school<lb/>
Swaim said.<lb/>
Pete Podeszwa, head<lb/>
photographer of the Photo<lb/>
Lab, said his department<lb/>
needed funds to cover<lb/>
purchases of new equip-<lb/>
ment, and to cover the cost<lb/>
of moving the Photo Lab<lb/>
into the Publications Build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
According to Podeszwa,<lb/>
the Photo Lab needs a film<lb/>
dryer, a darkcoom revol-<lb/>
ving door, a print pro-<lb/>
cessor, and a dry mount<lb/>
press.<lb/>
Podeszwa added that a<lb/>
new en larger was also<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
Craig Sahli, BUCCAN-<lb/>
EER editor, seid the yeer-<lb/>
book needed new lighting,<lb/>
alterations to the exterior<lb/>
walls to extend them to the<lb/>
ceiling, and two file cab-<lb/>
inets. Sahli also said that<lb/>
the yearbook staff needed<lb/>
one more typewriter and<lb/>
three desk lemps. .<lb/>
He said a desk calcu-<lb/>
lator for the business man-<lb/>
ager to aid in bookkeeping<lb/>
was needed.<lb/>
LukeWhlsnant, REBEL<lb/>
editor, asked for a new<lb/>
typewriter, a door to be cut<lb/>
leading from the magazines<lb/>
editorial department to Hs<lb/>
art depertment, and the<lb/>
wall to be extended to the<lb/>
ceiling.<lb/>
Discussion on the Issue<lb/>
began when one member ot<lb/>
the Media Board asserted<lb/>
that the money should be<lb/>
sent to the SGA, although<lb/>
she approved of the expen-<lb/>
ditures for the Photo Lab;<lb/>
the wall extensions to the<lb/>
ceiling mentioned by BUC-<lb/>
CANEER and REBEL, and<lb/>
purchase of light .Jxtures<lb/>
mentioned by alt three<lb/>
publications.<lb/>
Gerry Wallacf, presi-<lb/>
dent of the Men's Resi-<lb/>
dence Council said that the<lb/>
Media Board constitution<lb/>
stated that the Media<lb/>
Board had to keep the<lb/>
money.<lb/>
Wallace added that the<lb/>
media needed the funds,<lb/>
and that it was a "bad<lb/>
precedent to set to give the<lb/>
money away He also said<lb/>
that the organizations on<lb/>
campus should keep sav-<lb/>
ings accounts so that they<lb/>
wouldn't run out of funds.<lb/>
Wallace made his re-<lb/>
marks in the form of a<lb/>
motion, vhich was sec-<lb/>
onded.<lb/>
Dean Alexander said<lb/>
that he was against using<lb/>
the money for the campus<lb/>
media. "Thisboard doesn't I<lb/>
have the right to spend the<lb/>
money that was allocated to<lb/>
the BUCCANEER Alex-<lb/>
ander said.<lb/>
He added, "We have an<lb/>
obligation to see that it<lb/>
goes back to the SGA<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Eamon said<lb/>
that he was "strongly op-<lb/>
posed" to keeping tha<lb/>
money. He added that the<lb/>
board might have the legal<lb/>
right to the money, but not<lb/>
the "moral" right.<lb/>
Ann Thompson, of the<lb/>
Panhellenic Council said<lb/>
that the Board had the<lb/>
"moral" obligation to give<lb/>
the money to the SGA.<lb/>
Dean Alexander said<lb/>
that the Constitution prohi-<lb/>
bited the Medie Boerd from<lb/>
giving the money to the<lb/>
9GA In the future, but It<lb/>
wesn't In effect in this case.<lb/>
Dr. James Tucker of<lb/>
Student Affeirs seid thet he<lb/>
could see both eMes of tit<lb/>
controversy.<lb/>
Wallace said that the<lb/>
issue could not be decided<lb/>
by morals, it must be<lb/>
decided by laws. He added<lb/>
that the students would still<lb/>
benefit from the money. He<lb/>
said "It is a question of<lb/>
legality<lb/>
One of the members of<lb/>
the board asked Ann<lb/>
Thompson, who was op-<lb/>
posed to keeping the<lb/>
money, what the SGA<lb/>
would do with it. Thompson<lb/>
mentioned that the ECU<lb/>
Playhouse needed funding,<lb/>
as well as other financially<lb/>
strapped activities and or-<lb/>
ganizations.<lb/>
The vote was close,<lb/>
3-2 in favor of the Media<lb/>
Board keeping the funds.<lb/>
In other business, the<lb/>
board heard from the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Editor<lb/>
Doug White, and Adver-<lb/>
tising Manager, Robert<lb/>
Swaim, on an expenditure<lb/>
for legal advice during the<lb/>
last few months.<lb/>
Swaim said that the<lb/>
newspaper had received an<lb/>
inquiry from the State<lb/>
Board of Elections con-<lb/>
i cerning an advertisement<lb/>
placed in FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD for Sen. Jesse<lb/>
Helms. Swaim said that the<lb/>
reputation of both himself,<lb/>
and the reputation of the<lb/>
newspaper was at stake.<lb/>
He added that he<lb/>
sought legal advice, and he<lb/>
drew his authority to do this<lb/>
from the FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
contract which was sanc-<lb/>
tioned and approved by the<lb/>
M edia Board on M arch 29.<lb/>
Assistant Professor of<lb/>
journalism said 'Swaim<lb/>
and White should be com-<lb/>
mended for what they did,<lb/>
because it could have saved<lb/>
the university ? and the<lb/>
Media Board - a lot of<lb/>
em harassment<lb/>
Warren quoted several<lb/>
court cases which show that<lb/>
college newspaper publi-<lb/>
shers (a governing body<lb/>
lik6 the Media Board on<lb/>
this campus) were respon-<lb/>
sible for what was pub-<lb/>
lished in the school news-<lb/>
papers.<lb/>
Dean Alexander said<lb/>
that the Media Board did<lb/>
not have the Operations<lb/>
Manual for FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD, a booklet listing job<lb/>
descriptions, layout rules,<lb/>
and office procedure.<lb/>
Professor Ira Baker,<lb/>
Head of the Journalism<lb/>
program, said that The<lb/>
power of the press is to be<lb/>
responsible Baker quoted<lb/>
a source at the University of<lb/>
Missouri that stated that<lb/>
oneof the biggest problems<lb/>
of collegiate journalism was<lb/>
me fact that there was no<lb/>
responsible person to be<lb/>
legally liable in case of a<lb/>
lawsuit 'This ownership<lb/>
is not made clear. Baker<lb/>
added<lb/>
Baker commented fur-<lb/>
ther that a statement of<lb/>
policy should be a high pri-<lb/>
ority with FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD, and that the staff<lb/>
should not be blamed if no<lb/>
guidelines are provided "I<lb/>
would simply urge that the<lb/>
Media Board compose the<lb/>
guidelines as soon as pos-<lb/>
sible. Baker noted, and he<lb/>
left a manual from another<lb/>
school to use as a guideline<lb/>
for the operations manual<lb/>
The Media Board set a<lb/>
deadline of Jan. 1, for all<lb/>
campus media to make<lb/>
their operations manuals<lb/>
available.<lb/>
On the legal question<lb/>
the board approved a plan<lb/>
whereby the Editor and<lb/>
Advertising Manager of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD would<lb/>
be able to get legal services<lb/>
by informing only the<lb/>
chairman and advisor of the<lb/>
Media Board.<lb/>
EVERYONE LIKES A chtffng<lb/>
JKF' JP J<lb/>
<lb/>
r w <lb/>
r -w ??'? - <lb/>
m ? ??? ?m ????? ' ?<lb/>
? ??? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057159_0002"/><lb/>
FLAS<lb/>
Pag 2 FOUNTAINHEAD ? Nov?mb?r 1978<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
The campus level re-<lb/>
creational qualifying tour-<lb/>
naments to determine the<lb/>
top men and women in the<lb/>
events of bowling, billiards,<lb/>
backgammon, chess, and<lb/>
table tennis, are now un-<lb/>
derway The tournaments,<lb/>
sponsored by Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, are some<lb/>
fo several hundred being<lb/>
held at colleges and uni-<lb/>
versities around the nation i<lb/>
in the qualifying round for<lb/>
the intercollegiate cham-<lb/>
pionships conducted by the<lb/>
Association of College Un-<lb/>
ions ? International.<lb/>
The campus winners in<lb/>
each event will participate<lb/>
in the regional 5 tour-<lb/>
nament with the champions<lb/>
from approximately thirty<lb/>
other schools from the<lb/>
states of Kentucky. Vir-<lb/>
ginia. North Carolina, Ten-<lb/>
nessee, and South Caro-<lb/>
a The ACU-I regional<lb/>
face-to-face tournaments<lb/>
will be held Feb. 8, 9. and<lb/>
10. at the University of<lb/>
Tennessee in Knoxville,<lb/>
Tennessee. The trip to the<lb/>
regional competition for the<lb/>
ECU representatives will<lb/>
be sponsored by Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center.<lb/>
Qualifying tournaments<lb/>
were conducted in each<lb/>
dorm to determine dorm<lb/>
winners who will parti-<lb/>
cipate in the All-Campus<lb/>
tournaments. Day-student<lb/>
representatives were sel-<lb/>
ected through tournaments<lb/>
held in September and<lb/>
October which were con-<lb/>
ducted by MSC.<lb/>
The Writer's Guild will<lb/>
meet Monday at 7:30 In<lb/>
Austin-207. Discussion will<lb/>
include formation of a prose<lb/>
forum. All persons inter-<lb/>
ested in writing welcome.<lb/>
Tournament<lb/>
The All-Campus Bowl-<lb/>
ing Tournament will be<lb/>
held Thurs, Nov. 30, with<lb/>
the women's competition<lb/>
beginning at 6 p.m. and the<lb/>
men's competition getting<lb/>
underway at 8 p.m. at<lb/>
Mendenhall. The top five<lb/>
winners in each division<lb/>
. will represent ECU in<lb/>
! Knoxville.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
Chemistry Sierra<lb/>
Billiards<lb/>
MSC<lb/>
The MSC All-Campus<lb/>
Bowling Tournament sche-<lb/>
duled for Thurs Nov. 9<lb/>
has been re-scheduled for<lb/>
Thurs Nov. 30. The wom-<lb/>
en s competition will begin<lb/>
at 6 p.m. and the men's<lb/>
competition will begin at 8<lb/>
p.m. at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Bowling Center.<lb/>
Come watch the compe-<lb/>
tition as the MSC All-<lb/>
Campus Billiards Tourna-<lb/>
ment gets underway on<lb/>
Mon Nov. 13 at 6 p.m. in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Billiards<lb/>
Center. The semi-finals and<lb/>
final match will be held<lb/>
Tues. evening, Nov. 14 at<lb/>
the dorm and day-student<lb/>
tournaments will meet in<lb/>
this double elimination<lb/>
competition to determine<lb/>
the champion and second<lb/>
place finisher who will<lb/>
represent ECU in the ACUI<lb/>
regional tournament in<lb/>
Knoxville, Tennessee.<lb/>
Backgammon<lb/>
Scheduled for Mon<lb/>
Nov. 20 is the All-Campus<lb/>
Backgammon Tournament<lb/>
to be held in the Multi-<lb/>
purpose Room at Men-<lb/>
denhall at 7 p.m. Intro-<lb/>
duced at the regional tour-<lb/>
nament fro the first time<lb/>
last year it met with such<lb/>
success that the event will<lb/>
be continued. The first<lb/>
place finisher will partici-<lb/>
pate in the regional face-<lb/>
to-face tournament.<lb/>
Are you a user being<lb/>
used? Would you like to be<lb/>
free but are cscared that no<lb/>
one will accept you? If so,<lb/>
you are a person who needs<lb/>
to hear Myles Cartrette tell<lb/>
how Jesus Christ accepted<lb/>
him as a user and a loser<lb/>
and had given him a life of<lb/>
real freedom. We invite you<lb/>
to come tonight, Nov. 9 in<lb/>
Mendenhall 212 7:30-9:30<lb/>
p.m. Also after the meeting<lb/>
we are going to the movie,<lb/>
"Born Again Full Gospel<lb/>
Student Fellowship will ac-<lb/>
cept you.<lb/>
Turkey shoot<lb/>
Win your Thanksgiving<lb/>
dinner at the Mendenhall<lb/>
"Turkey Shoot Thurs<lb/>
Nov. 16 between the hours<lb/>
of 7 p.m. and 11 p.m the<lb/>
MSC Bowling Center will<lb/>
be the site of an old-fa-<lb/>
shioned turkey shoot with a<lb/>
slight difference. An entry<lb/>
fee of $1.25 will give you<lb/>
the chance to bowl one ball<lb/>
on ten consecutive lanes. If<lb/>
at least eight pins fall on<lb/>
each lane, you win a<lb/>
turkey! Enter as many<lb/>
times as you like. Limit<lb/>
three wins perperson.<lb/>
Interested in Chem-<lb/>
istry? The ECU Chapter of<lb/>
the American Chemical So-<lb/>
ciety is reactivation. You<lb/>
need not be a chemistry<lb/>
major to join. If interested,<lb/>
come to the meeting in<lb/>
Flanagan, 202, Mon<lb/>
Nov. 13at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Military<lb/>
Pablo<lb/>
Trivia<lb/>
The Student Union Ma-<lb/>
jor Attractions Committee<lb/>
will present Pablo Cruise<lb/>
with special guest Lving-<lb/>
ston Taylor on Thurs, Nov.<lb/>
9, at 8 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
Tickets will be $5 for<lb/>
ECU students and $7 for<lb/>
the public. All tickets are<lb/>
available from the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. In addi-<lb/>
tion, public tickets can be<lb/>
purchased from Apple Re-<lb/>
cords, School Kid's Re-<lb/>
cords, and The M usic Shop.<lb/>
Only public tickets will be<lb/>
sold at the door.<lb/>
Republican<lb/>
ECU College Republi-<lb/>
cans have their next meet-<lb/>
ing on Thurs Nov. 16 at 7<lb/>
p.m. The meeting will be<lb/>
held in Brewster C-103. All<lb/>
interested persons are in-<lb/>
vited to attend. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served.<lb/>
The Intramural Depart-<lb/>
ment in its never ending<lb/>
search to provide various<lb/>
types of competition for the<lb/>
college student again offers<lb/>
a unique opportunity,<lb/>
baseball trivia. This com-<lb/>
petition requires no physi-<lb/>
cal strength or stamina,<lb/>
just intelligence of the<lb/>
history of professional<lb/>
baseball. Registration be-<lb/>
gins Nov. 13-16 in the<lb/>
Intramural Office, Rm. 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym. Play be-<lb/>
gins Mon Nov. 20, SIGN-<lb/>
UP The intramural pro-<lb/>
gram is only as good as the<lb/>
people who participate.<lb/>
The Sierra Club will<lb/>
meet Mon Nov. 13, at 8<lb/>
p.m. to explore North Car-<lb/>
olina's plan for improving<lb/>
and maintaining water<lb/>
quality in the state. Anyone<lb/>
interested in fishing,<lb/>
swimming, boating, crab-<lb/>
bing, or any other activities<lb/>
on North Carolina's rivers<lb/>
arrl streams is encouraged<lb/>
to attend. The club meets in<lb/>
the basement of the First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church, 14th<lb/>
and Elm streets, Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
Leadership Training<lb/>
Classes (LTC) are designed<lb/>
to teach you about the<lb/>
Christian way of life and to<lb/>
show you about growing in<lb/>
a personal relationship with<lb/>
Jesus Christ.<lb/>
You'll have fun, meet<lb/>
new friends and learn a lot.<lb/>
LTC meets every Thursday<lb/>
night at 7 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
B-103. Everyone is invited.<lb/>
LTC is sponsored by the<lb/>
Campus Crusade for<lb/>
Christ.<lb/>
Cap-Sown<lb/>
Graduate<lb/>
History<lb/>
The Lambda-Eta Chap-<lb/>
ter of the Phi Alpha Theta,<lb/>
History Honor Society, will<lb/>
hold its fall semester ini-<lb/>
tiation ceremony on Tues<lb/>
Nov. 14 at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster C-103. Dr.<lb/>
Thomas Brewer will be the<lb/>
guest speaker. Faculty<lb/>
members who have been of<lb/>
service to the organization<lb/>
will also be honored. All<lb/>
history majors, minors, and<lb/>
faculty members are invi-<lb/>
ted to attend. There will be<lb/>
a reception hald after the<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Attention all first sem-<lb/>
ester graduates. Delivery<lb/>
dates for your caps and<lb/>
gowns will be Nov. 28-30 at<lb/>
the Student Supply Store.<lb/>
These Keepsake gowns<lb/>
are yours to keep providing<lb/>
the $10 graduation fee has<lb/>
been paid. For those re-<lb/>
ceiving the Masters Degree<lb/>
the $10 fee pays for your<lb/>
cap and gown, but there is<lb/>
an extra fee of $7.95 for<lb/>
your hood. Any questions<lb/>
pertaining to caps and<lb/>
gowns should be referred to<lb/>
the Student Supply Store,<lb/>
Wright Building.<lb/>
First, take a young per-<lb/>
son in military service,<lb/>
probably away from home<lb/>
during the Christmas sea-<lb/>
son for the first time; mix<lb/>
with some mail. Then add<lb/>
an idea conceived by con-<lb/>
cerned Americans, and you<lb/>
have a continuing cam-<lb/>
paign called "Military<lb/>
Overseas Mail" (or<lb/>
M.O.M as sometimes<lb/>
known) ? to serve our<lb/>
military personnel not only<lb/>
overseas, but Stateside as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
In the previous Christ-<lb/>
mas programs, thousands<lb/>
of pieces of mail, primarily<lb/>
Christmas cards with notes<lb/>
and letters of support and<lb/>
encouragement written in-<lb/>
side, have been collected<lb/>
from the public. This mail<lb/>
in turn has been distributed<lb/>
all accross the U.S. and<lb/>
around the world, to let our<lb/>
young military people know<lb/>
that we as individual Am-<lb/>
ericans do care about them.<lb/>
(If you have a friend or<lb/>
relative in military service,<lb/>
who would appreciate some<lb/>
extra mail at Christmas,<lb/>
sen d in the name and<lb/>
address, and MOM. will<lb/>
see that some mail is sent<lb/>
to them.)<lb/>
This is an ideal Christ-<lb/>
mas project for students<lb/>
and their families, either as<lb/>
individuals or as members<lb/>
of organized clubs or other<lb/>
groups. For information on<lb/>
how you or your group may<lb/>
participate in this very<lb/>
worthwhile event, please<lb/>
send a stamped, self-<lb/>
addressed envelope to:<lb/>
MILITARY OVERSEAS<lb/>
MAIL<lb/>
Box 1787<lb/>
Baltimore, Md. 21203<lb/>
Also, please mention how<lb/>
you learned of M .O.M .<lb/>
P.S. This recipe is sure-<lb/>
fire and never fails. It's<lb/>
topped with the warm<lb/>
feeling that you've made a<lb/>
young American service-<lb/>
men and women, many<lb/>
places in the States and<lb/>
around the world, a little<lb/>
happier at Christmas.<lb/>
The Graduate Record<lb/>
Examination will be offered<lb/>
at ECU on Sat Dec. 9,<lb/>
1978. Application blanks<lb/>
are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to: Educational<lb/>
Testing Service, Box 966-R,<lb/>
Princeton, NJ 08540.<lb/>
Late registration dead-<lb/>
line is Nov. 15, 1978.<lb/>
Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU Test-<lb/>
ing Center, Rm. 105,<lb/>
Speight Building.<lb/>
ACT<lb/>
Printing<lb/>
The ACT will be offered<lb/>
at ECU on Sat Dec. 9,<lb/>
1978. Application balnks<lb/>
are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to: ACT Registra-<lb/>
tion, P.O. Box 414, Iowa<lb/>
City, Iowa 52240 to arrive<lb/>
no later than Nov. 10, 1978.<lb/>
Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU Test-<lb/>
ing Center, Rm. 105,<lb/>
Speight Building.<lb/>
Law<lb/>
The Print Group will<lb/>
have cards and note paper<lb/>
with university scenes for<lb/>
sale beginning Mon Nov-<lb/>
ember 6. Contact any print<lb/>
maker in Rm. 1105 Jenkins<lb/>
bldg.<lb/>
Economics<lb/>
The student section of<lb/>
the American Home<lb/>
Economics Association will<lb/>
meet Mon November 13<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in the Van-<lb/>
Landingham room of the<lb/>
Home Economics Building.<lb/>
An interesting program<lb/>
on today's fashions will be<lb/>
presented. All home econ-<lb/>
omics majors and any other<lb/>
interested persons are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Comics<lb/>
The ECU Comic Book<lb/>
Club is holding a Comic<lb/>
book convention at the<lb/>
Roxy Theatre. Sun Nov.<lb/>
12. The convention will last<lb/>
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and<lb/>
admission is free to the<lb/>
public. Anyone interested<lb/>
in comics, fantasy, science<lb/>
fiction or nostalgia in gen-<lb/>
eral is encouraged to at-<lb/>
tend. Dealer space is avail-<lb/>
able. For more information<lb/>
call 758-6909 before 7p.m.<lb/>
The Law School Ad-<lb/>
mission Test will be offered<lb/>
at ECU on Sat Dec 2,<lb/>
1978. Application blanks<lb/>
are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to: Educational<lb/>
Testing Service, Box 966-R.<lb/>
Princeton, NJ 08540<lb/>
Late registration dead-<lb/>
line is Nov. 13, 1978<lb/>
Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU Test-<lb/>
ing Center. Speight Build-<lb/>
ing, Rm. 105<lb/>
College Life<lb/>
Another 'College Life"<lb/>
is taking place this week-<lb/>
end! If you want to take a<lb/>
? ? study break just getting<lb/>
in from the weekend and<lb/>
want to relax, or need a<lb/>
break from your roommate,<lb/>
come over to Garrett Dorm<lb/>
Lobby, Sunday night at 9<lb/>
p.m. This weekend "Col-<lb/>
lege Life" is bringing Tom<lb/>
Lowder, a speaker from<lb/>
UNC. and guitarist Richard<lb/>
Fullilove. There will be the<lb/>
usual fun, refreshments,<lb/>
and a door prize. If you are<lb/>
even mildly interested in<lb/>
finding out how Jesus<lb/>
Christ relates to you, the<lb/>
college student, "College<lb/>
Life" is for you! So come on<lb/>
down to Garrett Dorm<lb/>
Lobby. Sunday night at 9<lb/>
p.m. for "College Life<lb/>
The Student Union Coffeehouse Committee presents . . .<lb/>
Carolina Bluegrass<lb/>
along with<lb/>
Frank Hunter<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. Nov. 10 &amp; 11<lb/>
at 8:30 &amp; 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Rm. 15 Mendenhall<lb/>
On Sat. night, Frank Hunter will perform in the<lb/>
CoHeehowe while Carolina Bluegrau perform in the Snack Bar.<lb/>
Admission:<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
f Jl? ? WJWIJJJEJE<lb/>
wax<lb/>
ALLEN<lb/>
DANE<lb/>
KEATON<lb/>
"ANNIE<lb/>
HALL'<lb/>
Friday night only 5, 7 and 9<lb/>
?ECOND EIC ATTRACTION<lb/>
cMctxilLn MonOE UcmMe J&amp;aiuxE<lb/>
cHouj to cMaviy a cWutionaixz 8:30 fx.m.<lb/>
 Plus a JsA Nicholson Festival Sunday at 4 p.m.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Si<lb/>
?ii.iii?i.i?ijti?i???????ag<lb/>
m sau<lb/>
gnats tm ?$? IB is <lb/>
tmsm- pH? Hr Hunt &amp; '<lb/>
mm to Mif iPi 8s- MHM fi S?i<lb/>
?mm ap m 3- ??<lb/>
HM&amp;M<lb/>
PfttAU HDOliMAff<lb/>
H<lb/>
OtfW wtf tiw &amp;&amp;m I<lb/>
; g4 ?i3 ygga &amp;? Has<lb/>
.????? lUiAifcil<lb/>
mm m M "?"?<lb/>
C&amp;sgSH mm ? ?tart?las?.<lb/>
Viammmm<lb/>
;?? fey<lb/>
I<lb/>
I&amp; cm<lb/>
ant<lb/>
ma<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057159_0003"/><lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Grtenvifis, North Carolina ???<lb/>
Voters re-elect Helms to Senate<lb/>
wins by 'comfortable' margin<lb/>
U S SENA TOR JESSE HELMS The sweet taste of victory<lb/>
s reflected in Helms' smile as he returns to the U.S. Senate<lb/>
for a second term.<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
and<lb/>
The Associated Press<lb/>
RALEIGH ? Republican Senator Jesse Helms easily<lb/>
defeated Democratic challenger John Ingram in Tuesday's<lb/>
election.<lb/>
Helms received 54 percent of the vote. Ingram polled<lb/>
423,037 votes to Helms' 496,497.<lb/>
Early in the evening there was some speculation that<lb/>
Ingram might upset Helms due to the higher voter turnout<lb/>
which is usually an uplift for democratic candidates.<lb/>
W hen the early returns began to trickle in it was evident<lb/>
that Helms would be vicotrious and would win by a<lb/>
comfortable margin.<lb/>
Thousands of Helms supporters gathered at the<lb/>
Sheraton Hotel to await the returns and the cheer their<lb/>
candidate.<lb/>
The crowds at the Sheraton went wild with cheers when<lb/>
Homecoming parade moved<lb/>
to Saturday afternoon<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Saturday's Homecom-<lb/>
ing 8 parade will begin at<lb/>
under a revised<lb/>
able of events for<lb/>
ecommg Day. ECU<lb/>
?? als have announced.<lb/>
'he shift m the Home-<lb/>
ng schedule was made<lb/>
necessary by a change in<lb/>
the ECU-William<lb/>
and Mary football game at<lb/>
en Stadium which will<lb/>
be televised by ABC (4<lb/>
p.m. EST). Before the<lb/>
television arrangements,<lb/>
the game had been sche-<lb/>
duled for a 1 :30 p.m.<lb/>
kickoff.<lb/>
The Homecoming par-<lb/>
ade, always a highlight of<lb/>
old grads day at ECU, will<lb/>
form on Elm Street and<lb/>
move down Fifth Street<lb/>
pass the main campus and<lb/>
the Chancellor's home pro-<lb/>
ceeding to the downtown<lb/>
area.<lb/>
The parade will include<lb/>
at least five bands and 17<lb/>
gaily decorated floats.<lb/>
The theme of the week-<lb/>
long Homecoming ob-<lb/>
servance in "New Horizons<lb/>
al ECU and this is ex-<lb/>
pected to be portrayed in<lb/>
design of the floats being<lb/>
readied for the parade.<lb/>
Art exhibits, class re-<lb/>
unions, socials and concerts<lb/>
are scheduled throughout<lb/>
the week.<lb/>
Tickets should be ob-<lb/>
tained in advance for the<lb/>
Alumni Dance and Musical<lb/>
Extravaganza which will<lb/>
begin at 8:30 p.m. at the<lb/>
Moose Lodge. This is a<lb/>
couples only affair and<lb/>
tickets are $20 per couple<lb/>
advance sale, the alumni<lb/>
office said.<lb/>
Alumni registration for<lb/>
Homecoming will be held<lb/>
from 10 a.m. until 12:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
all three television networks decalred Helms the winner<lb/>
shortly before 10 p.m.<lb/>
It was about 10 p.m. when Helms came down from his<lb/>
suite to deliver his victory speech to an overflow crowd that<lb/>
had assembled in the ballroom of the hotel.<lb/>
Nickname<lb/>
Helms began his address by saying "I'm Senator No<lb/>
and I'm glad to be here<lb/>
Helms explained his nickname to the thousands of<lb/>
who were watching on national television.<lb/>
"Perhaps I should mention the label, Senator No<lb/>
bestowed upon me by an ultra-liberal newspaper editor,<lb/>
(referring to Claude Sitton, editor of the News and<lb/>
Observer), in Raleigh, N.C. who intended it as a critical<lb/>
epithet said Helms.<lb/>
"What this editor failed to understand, in his frenzy of<lb/>
criticism, isthat the people of N.C. indeed, citizens all over<lb/>
America want senators who will vote no' to excessive<lb/>
federal spending, excessive federal controls and continued<lb/>
inflation said Helms.<lb/>
Helms said that in voting 'no' to the excess of<lb/>
government he had been voting 'yes' to the wishes of the<lb/>
people of the state.<lb/>
Inclosing, Helms said that he held no ill feelings against<lb/>
his opponent, John Ingram who had viciously attacked him<lb/>
during the final days of the campaign.<lb/>
"I wish him and his family well said Helms.<lb/>
Carries east<lb/>
Sen. Jesse Hlems carried the Piedmont and most of the<lb/>
east, losing in the rural hinterlands, as he easily brushed<lb/>
aside Democrat John Ingram to win a second term Tuesday.<lb/>
Helms, whose liberal campaign spending contrasted<lb/>
with his conservative, anti-big government ideology, won<lb/>
54 percent of the vote by running up insurmountable<lb/>
margins in the major cities and smaller, textile counties of<lb/>
the populous Piedmont.<lb/>
The margin, was as comfortable as when Helms bacame<lb/>
the state's first GOP senator since reconstruction in 1972<lb/>
And the victory was certain to fuel encouragement for<lb/>
Helms to enter the 1980 Republican presidential primaries,<lb/>
although Helms said he has no presidential ambitions at the<lb/>
moment.<lb/>
"I think the senator is going to be an extraordinarily<lb/>
influential factor in the national Republican Party said<lb/>
state GOP chairman Jack Lee, who added he expects Helms<lb/>
at least to be a favorite son candidate.<lb/>
Ingram won 38 counties to Helms' 62, but Ingram's<lb/>
were mainly small, rural areas, some with heavy black<lb/>
votes. He solidly took the northeastern corner, much of the<lb/>
Sandhillsand scattered counties in the far west. He carried<lb/>
Orange County, alway Democratic, but lost usually<lb/>
Democratic Durham.<lb/>
"This is not a personal victory. This is a victory of the<lb/>
conservative, free enterprise system in America Helms<lb/>
declared after winning.<lb/>
"It is a clear signal that the American people are far<lb/>
ahead of the big spending Congress in realizing that federal<lb/>
deficits and an overwhelming federal bureaucracy are after<lb/>
all the principle causes of inflation he said.<lb/>
Nicknamed "Senator No" for his constant opposition to<lb/>
social legislation. Helms turned the tag to his advantage<lb/>
during the campaign, saying he was proud of voting "no<lb/>
to federal regulations and waste.<lb/>
County votes<lb/>
Helms won by 10,000 votes in Mecklenburg, the largest<lb/>
county, and by 5,000 each in Forsyth and Guilford. He took<lb/>
Buncombe in the mountains by 1,000 and New Hanover on<lb/>
the coast by 3,000<lb/>
Helms won his home county of Wake by more than<lb/>
12.000 and took Ingram's home of Randolph county by<lb/>
nearly 5.000.<lb/>
Ingram made no statement beyond his Tuesday night<lb/>
councession, and said he planned to return to work as state<lb/>
insurance commissioner.<lb/>
Helms remained secluded at his home in Raleigh<lb/>
Wednesday, and did not hold the traditional morning-after<lb/>
news conference.<lb/>
Media board keeps '78 BUCCANEER funds<lb/>
MARC BARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The question of what<lb/>
should be done with the<lb/>
originally intended<lb/>
ise for the publication<lb/>
ow defunct 77-78<lb/>
BUCCANEER, and discus-<lb/>
nght of FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD management<lb/>
to use legal services with-<lb/>
out notifying their gov-<lb/>
erning body highlighted<lb/>
Wednesday's Media Board<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
The money totally ap-<lb/>
proximately $42,000 has<lb/>
been the subject of a heated<lb/>
controversy in recent weeks<lb/>
between the Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment Association (SGA)<lb/>
and the various campus<lb/>
medias<lb/>
The SGA, through the<lb/>
statements of several legi-<lb/>
slators, wanted the funds<lb/>
reverted to the SGA Gen-<lb/>
eral Fund. Several mem-<lb/>
bers of the Media Board<lb/>
echoed their sentiments,<lb/>
saying that the money<lb/>
should be returned to the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
Several members of the<lb/>
campus media appeared<lb/>
before the Board to list<lb/>
specific funds that their<lb/>
respective publications and<lb/>
services should receive.<lb/>
Doug White, FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD editor, said that<lb/>
 <lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
WOODY ALLEN<lb/>
ECU-William and Mary to be televised on<lb/>
ABCsee p. 8.<lb/>
State volleyball tournament at Minges<lb/>
this weekendsee p. 9.<lb/>
Greek Forumsee p. 5.<lb/>
Student Union Films Committee hasa full<lb/>
slate of free films for homecoming week.<lb/>
Annie Hall leads the packfor previews,<lb/>
see p. 6.<lb/>
The Gregg Smith Singers will perform at<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre this Wed. eveningsee<lb/>
P. 6.<lb/>
Interior design dept. seeks<lb/>
accreditation from FIDER<lb/>
By MARTHA OAKLEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Interior Design De-<lb/>
partment in ECU'S School<lb/>
of Art is currently being re-<lb/>
viewed for accreditation by<lb/>
The Foundation for Interior<lb/>
Design Education Re-<lb/>
search.<lb/>
The Foundation, known<lb/>
at FIDER, is a national<lb/>
organization that studied<lb/>
interior design education as<lb/>
ught throughout the<lb/>
country in various schools<lb/>
of art.<lb/>
At the request of indi-<lb/>
vidual departments, FIDER<lb/>
will visit and make an eval-<lb/>
uation for possible accred-<lb/>
itation or simply offer sug-<lb/>
gestions.<lb/>
The Department of In-<lb/>
terior Design has received<lb/>
interest from the state<lb/>
chapter of the American<lb/>
Society of Interior Design<lb/>
concerning its accredit-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
The only pressure the<lb/>
department is undergoing<lb/>
to become accredited is<lb/>
self-made, according to<lb/>
Mel Stanforth, Chairman of<lb/>
the Interior Design Depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
According to Stanforth,<lb/>
the evaluation is now in the<lb/>
paperwork stages.<lb/>
"We wont't know the<lb/>
outcome for quite a while<lb/>
he said. "But if the depart-<lb/>
ment becomes accredited it<lb/>
will be the only one in the<lb/>
state which is<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD needed<lb/>
a new typesetting machine,<lb/>
new furniture,file cabinets,<lb/>
light tables and industrial<lb/>
carpet.<lb/>
White commented on<lb/>
the amount of noise in the<lb/>
office, adding that the<lb/>
carpet would be an efficient<lb/>
sound deadener.<lb/>
Robert Swaim, FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD advertising<lb/>
manager said the printing<lb/>
budget would run out the<lb/>
last week in February, if<lb/>
printing costs continued at<lb/>
the present rate.<lb/>
"We will require an<lb/>
additional appropriation of<lb/>
$15,000 to print the paper<lb/>
until the end of school<lb/>
Swaim said.<lb/>
Pete Podeszwa, head<lb/>
photographer of the Photo<lb/>
Lab, said his department<lb/>
needed funds to cover<lb/>
purchases of new equip-<lb/>
ment, and to cover the cost<lb/>
of moving the Photo Lab<lb/>
into the Publications Build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
According to Podeszwa,<lb/>
the Photo Lab needs a film<lb/>
dryer, a darkroom revol-<lb/>
ving door, a print pro-<lb/>
cessor, and a dry mount<lb/>
press.<lb/>
Podeszwa added that a<lb/>
new en larger was also<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
Craig Sahli, BUCCAN-<lb/>
EER editor, said the year-<lb/>
book needed new lighting,<lb/>
alterations to the exterior<lb/>
walls to extend them to the<lb/>
ceiling, and two file cab-<lb/>
inets. Sahli also said that<lb/>
the yearbook staff needed<lb/>
one more typewriter and<lb/>
three desk lamps. ,<lb/>
He said a desk calcu-<lb/>
lator for the business man-<lb/>
ager to aid in bookkeeping<lb/>
was needed.<lb/>
LukeWhisnant, REBEL<lb/>
editor, asked for a new<lb/>
typewriter, a door to be out<lb/>
leading from the magazines<lb/>
editorial department to Ha<lb/>
art department, and the<lb/>
wall to be extended to the<lb/>
ceiling.<lb/>
Discussion on the Issue<lb/>
began when one member of<lb/>
the Media Board asserted<lb/>
that the money should be<lb/>
sent to the SGA, although<lb/>
she approved of the expen-<lb/>
ditures for the Photo Lab;<lb/>
the wall extensions to the<lb/>
ceiling mentioned by BUC-<lb/>
CANEER and REBEL, and<lb/>
purchase of light .jjxtures<lb/>
mentioned by all three<lb/>
publications.<lb/>
Gerry Wallace, presi-<lb/>
dent of the Men's Resi-<lb/>
dence Council said that the<lb/>
Media Board constitution<lb/>
stated that the Media<lb/>
Board had to keep the<lb/>
money.<lb/>
Wallace added that the<lb/>
media needed the funds,<lb/>
and that it was a "bad<lb/>
precedent to set to give the<lb/>
money away He also said<lb/>
that the organizations on<lb/>
campus should keep sav-<lb/>
ings accounts so that they<lb/>
wouldn't run out of funds.<lb/>
Wallace made his re-<lb/>
marks in the form of a<lb/>
motion, which was sec-<lb/>
onded.<lb/>
Dean Alexander said<lb/>
that he was against using<lb/>
the money for the campus<lb/>
media. "This board doesn't<lb/>
have the right to spend the<lb/>
money that was allocated to<lb/>
the BUCCANEER Alex-<lb/>
ander said.<lb/>
He added, "We have an<lb/>
obligation to see that it<lb/>
goes back to the SGA<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Eamon said<lb/>
that he was "strongly op-<lb/>
posed" to keeping the<lb/>
money. He added that the<lb/>
board might have the legal<lb/>
right to the money, but not<lb/>
the "moral" right.<lb/>
Ann Thompson, of the<lb/>
Panhellenic Council said<lb/>
that the Board had the<lb/>
"moral" obligation to give<lb/>
the money to the SGA.<lb/>
Dean Alexander said<lb/>
that the Constitution prohi-<lb/>
bited the M edia Board from<lb/>
giving the money to the<lb/>
SGA in the future, but It<lb/>
wasn't In effect in this case.<lb/>
Dr. James Tucker of<lb/>
Student Affaire aatd that he<lb/>
could see both tides of th<lb/>
controversy.<lb/>
Wallace said that the<lb/>
issue could not be decided<lb/>
by morals, it must be<lb/>
decided by laws. He added<lb/>
that the students would still<lb/>
benefit from the money. He<lb/>
said "It is a question of<lb/>
legality<lb/>
One of the members of<lb/>
the board asked Ann<lb/>
Thompson, who was op-<lb/>
posed to keeping the<lb/>
money, what the SGA<lb/>
would do with it. Thompson<lb/>
mentioned that the ECU<lb/>
Playhouse needed funding,<lb/>
as well as other financially<lb/>
strapped activities and or-<lb/>
ganizations.<lb/>
The vote was close,<lb/>
3-2 in favor of the Media<lb/>
Board keeping the funds.<lb/>
In other business, the<lb/>
board heard from the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Editor<lb/>
Doug White, and Adver-<lb/>
tising Manager, Robert<lb/>
Swaim, on an expenditure<lb/>
for legal advice during the<lb/>
last few months.<lb/>
Swaim said that the<lb/>
newspaper had received an<lb/>
inquiry from the State<lb/>
Board of Elections con-<lb/>
cerning an advertisement<lb/>
placed in FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD for Sen. Jesse<lb/>
Helms. Swaim said that the<lb/>
reputation of both himself,<lb/>
and the reputation of the<lb/>
newspaper was at stake.<lb/>
He added that he<lb/>
sought legal advice, and he<lb/>
drew his authority to do this<lb/>
from the FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
contract which was sanc-<lb/>
tioned and approved by the<lb/>
Media Board on March 29.<lb/>
Assistant Professor of<lb/>
Journalism said "Swaim<lb/>
and White should be com-<lb/>
mended for what they did,<lb/>
because it could have saved<lb/>
the university ? and the<lb/>
Media Board ? a lot of<lb/>
embarassment<lb/>
Warren quoted several<lb/>
court cases which show that<lb/>
college newspaper publi-<lb/>
shers (a governing body<lb/>
like the Media Board on<lb/>
this campus) were respon-<lb/>
sible for what was pub-<lb/>
lished in the school news-<lb/>
papers.<lb/>
Dean Alexander said<lb/>
that the Media Board did<lb/>
not have the Operations<lb/>
Manual for FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD, a booklet listing job<lb/>
descriptions, layout rules,<lb/>
and office procedure.<lb/>
Professor Ira Baker.<lb/>
Head of the Journalism<lb/>
program, said that "The<lb/>
power of the press is to be<lb/>
responsible Baker quoted<lb/>
a source at the University of<lb/>
Missouri that stated that<lb/>
one of the biggest problems<lb/>
of collegiate journalism was<lb/>
the fact that there was no<lb/>
responsible person to be<lb/>
legally liable in case of a<lb/>
lawsuit. "This ownership<lb/>
is not made clear Baker<lb/>
added<lb/>
Baker commented fur-<lb/>
ther that a statement of<lb/>
policy should be a high pri-<lb/>
ority with FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD, and that the staff<lb/>
should not be blamed if no<lb/>
guidelines are provided l<lb/>
would simply urge that the<lb/>
Media Board compose the<lb/>
guidelines as soon as pos-<lb/>
sible. Baker noted, and he<lb/>
left a manual from another<lb/>
school to use as a guideline<lb/>
for the operations manual<lb/>
The Media Board set a<lb/>
deadline of Jan. 1, for all<lb/>
campus media to make<lb/>
their operations manuals<lb/>
available.<lb/>
On the legal question.<lb/>
the board approved a plan<lb/>
whereby the Editor and<lb/>
Advertising Manager of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD would<lb/>
be able to get legal services<lb/>
by informing only the<lb/>
chairman and advisor of the<lb/>
Media Board.<lb/>
EVERYONE LIKES A<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057159_0004"/><lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
The campus level re-<lb/>
creational qualifying tour-<lb/>
naments to determine the<lb/>
top men and women in the<lb/>
events of bowling, billiards,<lb/>
backgammon, chess, and<lb/>
table tennis, are now un-<lb/>
derway. The tournaments,<lb/>
sponsored by Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, are some<lb/>
fo several hundred being<lb/>
held at colleges and uni-<lb/>
versities around the nation i<lb/>
in the qualifying round for<lb/>
the intercollegiate cham-<lb/>
pionships conducted by the<lb/>
Association of College Un-<lb/>
ions ? International.<lb/>
The campus winners in<lb/>
each event will participate<lb/>
m the regional 5 tour-<lb/>
nament with the champions<lb/>
from approximately thirty<lb/>
other schools from the<lb/>
states of Kentucky, Vir-<lb/>
ginia. North Carolina, Ten-<lb/>
nessee, and South Caro-<lb/>
lina The ACU-I regional<lb/>
face-to-face tournaments<lb/>
will be held Feb. 8, 9, and<lb/>
10. at the University of<lb/>
Tennessee in Knoxville,<lb/>
Tennessee. The trip to the<lb/>
regional competition for the<lb/>
ECU representatives will<lb/>
be sponsored by Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center.<lb/>
Qualifying tournaments<lb/>
were conducted in each<lb/>
dorm to determine dorm<lb/>
winners who will parti-<lb/>
cipate in the All-Campus<lb/>
tournaments. Day-student<lb/>
representatives were sel-<lb/>
ected through tournaments<lb/>
held in September and<lb/>
October which were con-<lb/>
ducted by MSC<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
MSC<lb/>
The MSC All-Campus<lb/>
Bowling Tournament sche-<lb/>
duled for Thurs Nov. 9<lb/>
has been re-scheduled for<lb/>
Thurs Nov. 30. The wom-<lb/>
en s competition will begin<lb/>
at 6 p.m. and the men's<lb/>
competition will begin at 8<lb/>
p.m. at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Bowling Center.<lb/>
The Writer's Guild will<lb/>
meet Monday at 7:30 in<lb/>
Austin-207. Discussion will<lb/>
include formation of a prose<lb/>
forum. All persons inter-<lb/>
ested in writing welcome.<lb/>
Tournament<lb/>
The All-Campus Bowl-<lb/>
ing Tournament will be<lb/>
held Thurs, Nov. 30, with<lb/>
the women's competition<lb/>
beginning at 6 p.m. and the<lb/>
men's competition getting<lb/>
underway at 8 p.m. at<lb/>
Mendenhall. The top five<lb/>
winners in each division<lb/>
will represent ECU in<lb/>
Knoxville.<lb/>
Billiards<lb/>
Come watch the compe-<lb/>
tition as the MSC All-<lb/>
Campus Billiards Tourna-<lb/>
ment gets underway on<lb/>
Mon Nov. 13 at 6 p.m. in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Billiards<lb/>
Center. The semi finals and<lb/>
final match will be held<lb/>
Tues. evening, Nov. 14 at<lb/>
the dorm and day-student<lb/>
tournaments will meet in<lb/>
this double elimination<lb/>
competition to determine<lb/>
the champion and second<lb/>
place finisher who will<lb/>
represent ECU in the ACUI<lb/>
regional tournament in<lb/>
Knoxville, Tennessee.<lb/>
Backgammon<lb/>
Scheduled for Mon<lb/>
Nov. 20 is the All-Campus<lb/>
Backgammon Tournament<lb/>
to be held in the Multi-<lb/>
purpose Room at Men-<lb/>
denhall at 7 p.m. Intro-<lb/>
duced at the regional tour-<lb/>
nament fro the first time<lb/>
last year it met with such<lb/>
success that the event will<lb/>
be continued. The first<lb/>
place finisher will partici-<lb/>
pate in the regional face-<lb/>
to-face tournament.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
Are you a user being<lb/>
used? Would you like to be<lb/>
free but are cscared that no<lb/>
one will accept you? If so,<lb/>
you are a person who needs<lb/>
to hear Myies Cartrette tell<lb/>
how Jesus Christ accepted<lb/>
him as a user and a loser<lb/>
and had given him a life of<lb/>
real freedom. We invite you<lb/>
to come tonight, Nov. 9 in<lb/>
Mendenhall 212 7:30-9:30<lb/>
p.m. Also after the meeting<lb/>
we are going to the movie,<lb/>
"Born Again Full Gospel<lb/>
Student Fellowship will ac-<lb/>
cept you.<lb/>
Turkey shoot<lb/>
Win your Thanksgiving<lb/>
dinner at the Mendenhall<lb/>
"Turkey Shoot Thurs<lb/>
Nov. 16 between the hours<lb/>
of 7 p.m. and 11 p.m the<lb/>
MSC Bowling Center will<lb/>
be the site of an old-fa-<lb/>
shioned turkey shoot with a<lb/>
slight difference. An entry<lb/>
fee of $1.25 will give you<lb/>
the chance to bowl one ball<lb/>
on ten consecutive lanes. If<lb/>
at least eight pins fall on<lb/>
each lane, you win a<lb/>
turkey! Enter as many<lb/>
times as you like. Limit<lb/>
three wins perperson.<lb/>
Trivia<lb/>
The Intramural Depart-<lb/>
ment in its never ending<lb/>
search to provide various<lb/>
types of competition for the<lb/>
college student again offers<lb/>
a unique opportunity,<lb/>
baseball trivia. This com-<lb/>
petition requires no physi-<lb/>
cal strength or stamina,<lb/>
just intelligence of the<lb/>
history of professional<lb/>
baseball. Registration be-<lb/>
gins Nov. 13-16 in the<lb/>
Intramural Office, Rm. 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym. Play be-<lb/>
gins Mon Nov. 20, SIGN-<lb/>
UP The intramural pro-<lb/>
gram is only as good as the<lb/>
people who participate.<lb/>
Chemistry<lb/>
Interested in Chem-<lb/>
istry? The ECU Chapter of<lb/>
the American Chemical So-<lb/>
ciety is reactivation. You<lb/>
need not be a chemistry<lb/>
major to join. If interested,<lb/>
come to the meeting in<lb/>
Flanagan, 202, Mon<lb/>
Nov. 13 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Pablo<lb/>
The Student Union Ma-<lb/>
jor Attractions Committee<lb/>
will present Pablo Cruise<lb/>
with special guest Lving-<lb/>
ston Taylor on Thurs, Nov.<lb/>
9, at 8 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
Tickets will be $5 for<lb/>
ECU students and $7 for<lb/>
the public. All tickets are<lb/>
available from the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. In addi-<lb/>
tion, public tickets can be<lb/>
purchased from Apple Re-<lb/>
cords, School Kid's Re-<lb/>
cords, and The M usic Shop.<lb/>
Only public tickets will be<lb/>
sold at the door.<lb/>
Republican<lb/>
ECU College Republi-<lb/>
cans have their next meet-<lb/>
ing on Thurs Nov. 16 at 7<lb/>
p.m. The meeting will be<lb/>
held in Brewster C-103. All<lb/>
interested persons are in-<lb/>
vited to attend. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served.<lb/>
History<lb/>
The Lambda-Eta Chap-<lb/>
ter of the Phi Alpha Theta,<lb/>
History Honor Society, will<lb/>
hold its fall semester ini-<lb/>
tiation ceremony on Tues<lb/>
Nov. 14 at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster C-103. Dr.<lb/>
Thomas Brewer will be the<lb/>
guest speaker. -Faculty<lb/>
members who have been of<lb/>
service to the organization<lb/>
will also be honored. All<lb/>
history majors, minors, and<lb/>
faculty members are invi-<lb/>
ted to attend. There will be<lb/>
a reception hald after the<lb/>
meeting. ?<lb/>
Sierra<lb/>
The Sierra Club will<lb/>
meet Mon Nov. 13, at 8<lb/>
p.m. to explore North Car-<lb/>
olina's plan for improving<lb/>
and maintaining water<lb/>
quality in the state. Anyone<lb/>
interested in fishing,<lb/>
swimming, boating, crab-<lb/>
bing, or any other activities<lb/>
on North Carolina's rivers<lb/>
and streams is encouraged<lb/>
to attend. The club meets in<lb/>
the basement of the First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church, 14th<lb/>
and Elm streets, Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
Leadership Training<lb/>
Classes (LTC) are designed<lb/>
to teach you about the<lb/>
Christian way of life and to<lb/>
show you about growing in<lb/>
a personal relationship with<lb/>
Jesus Christ.<lb/>
You'll have fun, meet<lb/>
new friends and learn a lot.<lb/>
LTC meets every Thursday<lb/>
night at 7 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
B-103. Everyone is invited.<lb/>
LTC is sponsored by the<lb/>
Campus Crusade for<lb/>
Christ.<lb/>
Military<lb/>
Cap-Gown<lb/>
Attention all first sem-<lb/>
ester graduates. Delivery<lb/>
dates for your caps and<lb/>
gowns will be Nov. 28-30 at<lb/>
the Student Supply Store.<lb/>
These Keepsake gowns<lb/>
are yours to keep providing<lb/>
the $10 graduation fee has<lb/>
been paid. For those re-<lb/>
ceiving the Masters Degree<lb/>
the $10 fee pays for your<lb/>
cap and gown, but there is<lb/>
an extra fee of $7.95 for<lb/>
your hood. Any questions<lb/>
pertaining to caps and<lb/>
gowns should be referred to<lb/>
the Student Supply Store,<lb/>
Wright Building.<lb/>
First, take a young per-<lb/>
son in military service,<lb/>
probably away from home<lb/>
during the Christmas sea-<lb/>
son for the first time; mix<lb/>
with some mail. Then add<lb/>
an idea conceived by con-<lb/>
cerned Americans, and you<lb/>
have a continuing cam-<lb/>
paign called "Military<lb/>
Overseas Mail" (or<lb/>
M.O.M as sometimes<lb/>
known) ? to serve our<lb/>
military personnel not only<lb/>
overseas, but Stateside as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
In the previous Christ-<lb/>
mas programs, thousands<lb/>
of pieces of mail, primarily<lb/>
Christmas cards with notes<lb/>
and letters of support and<lb/>
encouragement written in-<lb/>
side, have been collected<lb/>
from the public. This mail<lb/>
in turn has been distributed<lb/>
all accross the U.S. and<lb/>
around the world, to let our<lb/>
young military people know<lb/>
that we as individual Am-<lb/>
ericans do care about them.<lb/>
(If you have a friend or<lb/>
relative in military service,<lb/>
who would appreciate some<lb/>
extra mail at Christmas,<lb/>
sen d in the name and<lb/>
address, and MOM. will<lb/>
see that some mail is sent<lb/>
to them.)<lb/>
This is an ideal Christ-<lb/>
mas project for students<lb/>
and their families, either as<lb/>
individuals or as members<lb/>
of organized clubs or other<lb/>
groups. For information on<lb/>
how you or your group may<lb/>
participate in this very<lb/>
worthwhile event, please<lb/>
send a stamped, self-<lb/>
addressed envelope to:<lb/>
MILITARY OVERSEAS<lb/>
MAIL<lb/>
Box 1787<lb/>
Baltimore, Md. 21203<lb/>
Also, please mention how<lb/>
you learned of M O.M.<lb/>
P.S. This recipe is sure-<lb/>
fire and never fails. It's<lb/>
topped with the warm<lb/>
feeling that you've made a<lb/>
young American service-<lb/>
men and women, many<lb/>
places in the States and<lb/>
around the world, a little<lb/>
happier at Christmas.<lb/>
Graduate<lb/>
The Graduate Record<lb/>
Examination will be offered<lb/>
at ECU on Sat Dec. 9,<lb/>
1978. Application blanks<lb/>
are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to: Educational<lb/>
Testing Service, Box 966-R,<lb/>
Princeton, NJ 08540.<lb/>
Late registration dead-<lb/>
line is Nov. 15, 1978.<lb/>
Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU Test-<lb/>
ing Center, Rm. 105,<lb/>
Speight Building.<lb/>
Printing<lb/>
The Print Group will<lb/>
have cards and note paper<lb/>
with university scenes for<lb/>
sale beginning Mon Nov-<lb/>
ember 6. Contact any print<lb/>
maker in Rm. 1105 Jenkins<lb/>
bldg.<lb/>
Economics<lb/>
The student section of<lb/>
the American Home<lb/>
Economics Association will<lb/>
meet Mon November 13<lb/>
at 7 p.m. m the Van-<lb/>
Landingham room of the<lb/>
Home Economics Building.<lb/>
An interesting program<lb/>
on today's fashions will be<lb/>
presented. All home econ-<lb/>
omics majors and any other<lb/>
interested persons are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
ACT<lb/>
The ACT will be offered<lb/>
at ECU on Sat Dec 9.<lb/>
1978 Application balnks<lb/>
are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to: ACT Registra-<lb/>
tion. P.O. Box 414, Iowa<lb/>
City, Iowa 52240 to arrive<lb/>
no later than Nov. 10. 1978<lb/>
Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU Test-<lb/>
ing Center, Rm 105,<lb/>
Speight Building.<lb/>
Law<lb/>
Comics<lb/>
The ECU Comic Book<lb/>
Club is holding a Comic<lb/>
book convention at the<lb/>
Roxy Theatre, Sun Nov<lb/>
12. The convention will last<lb/>
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and<lb/>
admission is free to the<lb/>
public. Anyone interested<lb/>
in comics, fantasy, science<lb/>
fiction or nostalgia in gen-<lb/>
eral is encouraged to at-<lb/>
tend. Dealer space is avail-<lb/>
able. For more information<lb/>
call 758-6909 before 7 p.m.<lb/>
The Law School Ad<lb/>
mission Test will be offered<lb/>
at ECU on Sat , Dec 2.<lb/>
1978 Application blanks<lb/>
are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to: Educational<lb/>
Testing Service. Box 966-R<lb/>
Princeton, NJ 08540<lb/>
Late registration dead-<lb/>
line is Nov. 13. 1978<lb/>
Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU Test-<lb/>
ing Center. Speight Build-<lb/>
ing. Rm 105<lb/>
College Life<lb/>
Another 'College Life'<lb/>
is taking place this week-<lb/>
end! If you want to take a<lb/>
'study break . just getting<lb/>
in from the weekend and<lb/>
want to relax, or need a<lb/>
break from your roommate,<lb/>
come over to Garrett Do-t<lb/>
Lobby. Sunday night at 9<lb/>
p.m. This weekend Col-<lb/>
lege Life is bringing Tom<lb/>
Lowder. a speaker from<lb/>
UNC. and guitarist Richard<lb/>
Fullilove. There will be the<lb/>
usual fun, refreshments,<lb/>
and a door prize If you are<lb/>
even mildly interested in<lb/>
finding out how Jesus<lb/>
Christ relates to you. the<lb/>
college student. "College<lb/>
Life' is for you! So come on<lb/>
down to Garrett Dorm<lb/>
Lobby. Sunday night at 9<lb/>
p.m. for "College Life1<lb/>
The Student Union Coffeehouse Committee presents . . .<lb/>
Carolina Bluegrass<lb/>
along with<lb/>
Frank Hunter<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. Nov. 10 &amp; 11<lb/>
at 8:30 &amp; 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Rm. 15 Mendenhall<lb/>
p,xouahf fxxmnti<lb/>
WOOD<lb/>
ALLEN<lb/>
DIANE<lb/>
KEATON<lb/>
"ANNIE<lb/>
HALL'<lb/>
On Sat. night, Frank Hunter will perform in the<lb/>
Coffeehouse while Carolina Bluegrass performs in the Snack Bar.<lb/>
Admi<lb/>
ssion:<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Friday night only 5, 7 and 9<lb/>
SECOND BIC il II U IK S<lb/>
Marilyn eMonxoE JcxJjIe Dtoiwu<lb/>
oafataao<lb/>
ctjcuj bo cA(axxif a cduoncuXE 8:30 fi.m.<lb/>
cfH dlijouk ?jz IO.15 fx.m.<lb/>
Plus a Jack Nicholson Festival Sunday at 4 p.m.<lb/>
a<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
ust see to appreciate only<lb/>
$35. 758-7676.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Refrigerator<lb/>
great for use in an apt. or<lb/>
home. Is in good condition.<lb/>
NEED IMMEDIATELY: A<lb/>
responsJbiefemaleroorn<lb/>
mate to share a two bed-<lb/>
room apt. Rent $63. Call<lb/>
758-5794.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
wanted to share apt. close<lb/>
to campus with two other<lb/>
giris. Her share of the rent<lb/>
would be $70 plus Vt<lb/>
utilities. Call 752-2024.<lb/>
MID EASTERN DANCE:<lb/>
(Authentic Belly Dancing)<lb/>
taught by Sunshine - exper-<lb/>
ienced teacher and perfor-<lb/>
mer in Ohio, Mexico,<lb/>
Atlanta, and the D.C. area.<lb/>
Classes are now forming.<lb/>
Call 756-0736.<lb/>
YOGA: Hatha yoga is now<lb/>
being taught by Sunshine.<lb/>
New classes forming. Relax<lb/>
-ation, realization, weight<lb/>
loss. For more info, call<lb/>
756-0736.<lb/>
NEEDED: Used light-<lb/>
weight bicycle with 23"<lb/>
frame. Will negotiate on<lb/>
price. Call Dan at 758-8074.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Sales-<lb/>
Person in Golf, Tennis and<lb/>
Ski Specialty Shop with ex-<lb/>
perience in bookkeeping,<lb/>
typing and other secretarial<lb/>
duties. Part-time position-<lb/>
hours negotiable. Applica-<lb/>
tions now being<lb/>
Call 752-1525.<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
UUS-IIHI.HH1I<lb/>
?MSto mmUM Hhn<lb/>
<pb facs="00057159_0005"/><lb/>
wZtT" ??" Sun,n,er Schoo,<lb/>
- an tour offered to students.<lb/>
. Piedmont<lb/>
has discount fares<lb/>
worth flying home<lb/>
about<lb/>
???? ! like I<lb/>
Round Thritt?3 Fare .<lb/>
uu l '  lateofd pd<lb/>
Weekend Excursion Fare<lb/>
li<lb/>
 . ihthefirstav<lb/>
oil<lb/>
te mforn<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
i I ' ??<lb/>
? "  inpe<lb/>
?B-Nr- 55<lb/>
UNO-Innsbruck, Austria<lb/>
9 Novtmbf 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pag 3<lb/>
International program open to students<lb/>
By RICHY SMITH<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
An International Sum-<lb/>
mer School is held each<lb/>
summer in Innsbruck, Au-<lb/>
stria and is open to stu-<lb/>
dents all over the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
The program is part of<lb/>
the International Study<lb/>
Programs and is sponsored<lb/>
by the University of New<lb/>
Orleans.<lb/>
The sixth annual pro-<lb/>
gram will expand in 1979<lb/>
from 200 to 250 students,<lb/>
according to program dir-<lb/>
ector. Dr. Gordon Mueller.<lb/>
"UNO's popular alpine<lb/>
summer school attracted<lb/>
students from 39 different<lb/>
universities and five for-<lb/>
eign countries this past<lb/>
summer said Mueller,<lb/>
"and as a result UNO-<lb/>
Innsbruck has now become<lb/>
the largest overseas sum-<lb/>
mer school offered by any<lb/>
American university<lb/>
Mueller said students<lb/>
are already making their<lb/>
applications for next sum-<lb/>
mer.<lb/>
Courses are focused on<lb/>
the cultural, historic, social<lb/>
and economic traditions of<lb/>
Europe. Geology, business,<lb/>
and education classes are<lb/>
also taught. All credits are<lb/>
transferable and all in-<lb/>
struction of courses are by<lb/>
faculties from American<lb/>
universities. All courses are<lb/>
taught in English.<lb/>
There are approximate-<lb/>
ly 60 courses in 19 different<lb/>
subject areas. Nine sem-<lb/>
ester credits may be a-<lb/>
quired during the summer<lb/>
school session, according to<lb/>
M ueller.<lb/>
fcf<lb/>
TX<lb/>
JJ?<lb/>
U.S.A.<lb/>
24 Hours a day<lb/>
Large homemade biscuits with<lb/>
Ham-Sausage-Steak<lb/>
Chicken-Qieese-Butter<lb/>
Also Combinations<lb/>
-Dinners-<lb/>
FriedChicken Tubs and Buckets<lb/>
also Drive thru window<lb/>
For take out call 500N.GreeneSt<lb/>
758-7607<lb/>
"Job opportunities are<lb/>
available for students at<lb/>
other schools who wish to<lb/>
work for the program as<lb/>
official campus representa-<lb/>
tives in 197879 stated<lb/>
Mueller<lb/>
Mueller said those stu-<lb/>
dents interested in working<lb/>
should notify the University<lb/>
of New Orleans.<lb/>
The six week summer<lb/>
program also offers special<lb/>
courses and a workshop<lb/>
featuring American poet<lb/>
Robert Duncan. There will<lb/>
also be a Symposium on<lb/>
War and Peace under the<lb/>
supervision of Professor<lb/>
Stephen E. Ambrose, the<lb/>
official biographer of Pres-<lb/>
ident Eisenhower and in-<lb/>
ternationally known mili-<lb/>
tary historian.<lb/>
Students are housed in<lb/>
the student dormitory at<lb/>
the University of Innsbruck<lb/>
while attending the pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
According to Mueller,<lb/>
time isalloted for travelling<lb/>
and touring Europe.<lb/>
The UNO-Innsbruck<lb/>
summer program begins<lb/>
July 1 and ends August 10.<lb/>
Students may partici-<lb/>
pate in an optional three-<lb/>
week tour of northern Eur-<lb/>
ope or the Greek Islands<lb/>
HOLLOWELL'S<lb/>
SNACK BAR<lb/>
Orangeade and Lemonade<lb/>
25 and 35<lb/>
made from fresh oranges and lemons,<lb/>
no imitation flavoring added.<lb/>
Hot Dogs 45<lb/>
Ice Cream, all flavors 15 dip<lb/>
Banana Splits 86<lb/>
Hot Fudge Sundae 70<lb/>
Quality ? Cofflptfiffvt Pricms ? Sfvlcm<lb/>
8a.m730p.m. 8a.m-l0p.rn.<lb/>
prior to the school.<lb/>
According to Mueller,<lb/>
the total package cost is<lb/>
$1,539. It includes the<lb/>
charter flight, tuition, and<lb/>
room There is a reduced<lb/>
price set for students ar-<lb/>
ranging their own trans-<lb/>
portation<lb/>
Information may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the University<lb/>
of New Orleans. New Or-<lb/>
leans. Louisiana.<lb/>
WE ARE PAYING<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
FOR CLASS RINGS<lb/>
(REGARDLESS OF CONDITION)<lb/>
OTHER GOLD RINGS<lb/>
(REGARDLESS OF CONDITION)<lb/>
ANY GOLD OR SILVER OF<lb/>
ANY KIND AND<lb/>
TOP CASH PRICE PAID FOR<lb/>
SILVER AND GOLD COINS<lb/>
COIN COLLECTIONS<lb/>
BRING TO "COIN MAN"<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE<lb/>
SOUTH<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
BOOKS<lb/>
axu<lb/>
butterflies<lb/>
rlington Blvd.<lb/>
reenville, A.C.<lb/>
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BROAD SELECTION OF<lb/>
PAPERBACKS, BARD-<lb/>
BACRS,MAGAZLES A.YD<lb/>
TEACHING AIDS.<lb/>
We deal in special orders<lb/>
of any size.<lb/>
OPEN Mon. thro Sal.<lb/>
10:OOam? 9:00pm<lb/>
You too<lb/>
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h<lb/>
i could become<lb/>
a collector's item<lb/>
Make your YEARBOOK PORTRAIT<lb/>
ppointment NOW<lb/>
APPOINTMENTS<lb/>
BEING TAKEN NOW<lb/>
COME BY<lb/>
OR<lb/>
CALL THE BUC OFFICE<lb/>
AT 757 6501<lb/>
PICTURES WILL BE MADE<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
MONDAY, NOV. 6<lb/>
UNTIL<lb/>
TUESDAY, NOV. 31<lb/>
FROM 9 a.m. TIL 5 p.m.<lb/>
THIS IS<lb/>
THE ONLY TIME<lb/>
PICTURES<lb/>
WILL BE MADE<lb/>
THIS YEAR!<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? , ???'?, mmm <lb/>
<pb facs="00057159_0006"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
1<lb/>
Impoverished media<lb/>
The Photo Lab<lb/>
from Its present<lb/>
dorm.<lb/>
The FOUNT A<lb/>
cafeteria, and has<lb/>
tile floor. These<lb/>
throughout the office when calls are received.<lb/>
needs to move its operations<lb/>
dungeon beneath Fleming<lb/>
NHEAD office was once a<lb/>
a cavernous ceiling and hard<lb/>
factors, plus the numerous<lb/>
The Media Board acted wisely yesterday in<lb/>
deciding to keep the $42,000 originally<lb/>
allocated for the 197778 BUCCANEER. They<lb/>
now have the capital to make the desperately<lb/>
needed improvements in the media offices,<lb/>
and it is our hope that the board will not be<lb/>
tight-fisted with this windfall profit.<lb/>
All media housed in the Old South Building<lb/>
(REBEL, BUCCANEER, FOUNTAINHEAD,<lb/>
and the EBONY HERALD) need new light<lb/>
fixtures. Only FOUNTAINHEAD has any<lb/>
hanging light fixtures, and only a few at that.<lb/>
The other three have only desk lamps and very<lb/>
dim lights embedded in the ceiling 15 feet<lb/>
above the floor.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD needs another typesett-<lb/>
er, since the present one is old and<lb/>
untrustworthy. Should this machine break<lb/>
down, it would shut down the entire operation<lb/>
of the paperThe BUCCANEER, REBEL, and<lb/>
EBONY HERALD have virtually no typewrit-<lb/>
ers This list does ijiot even begin to scratch the<lb/>
The media need a new, centralized phone surface. WECU has not even been mentioned,<lb/>
system, and FOUNTAINHEAD, since its office At last, however,<lb/>
space is quite large and is divided into small resources to make up for the"years of neglect<lb/>
cubicles, needs an intercom system to keep our we suffered und?r the Student Governmc<lb/>
beleaguered secretary from having to scream Association.<lb/>
partitions within the office wreak havoc with<lb/>
noises, bouncing them back and forth, etc.<lb/>
One can imagine the din in the office on layout<lb/>
days when, at any given moment, there are<lb/>
usually a half dozen typewriters in use, a very<lb/>
noisy AP wire machine, all three phone lines<lb/>
ringing constantly, a headliner and typesetter<lb/>
(both of which emit myriad nerve-racking<lb/>
electronic "beeping" sounds) in use, people<lb/>
are shouting to relay phone calls, someone is<lb/>
swearing at a maqhine that just ate 15 minutes<lb/>
worth of work, wNile all the time these sounds<lb/>
are ricocheting throughout the office. The<lb/>
need for some sort<lb/>
deaden the noise<lb/>
American<lb/>
of inudstrial grade carpet to<lb/>
s obvious.<lb/>
Elections for sale<lb/>
Can an election be bought?<lb/>
In North Carolina's case, yes. Jesse Helms<lb/>
won the Senate race not because of his<lb/>
jingoism so much as because of his unprece-<lb/>
dented financial resources. He holds the<lb/>
campaign was characterized by chaos and<lb/>
disorder, in stark contrast to the efficient<lb/>
political machine of the Helms campaign.<lb/>
Consequently, roughly a third of the voting<lb/>
population decided the outcome of the election.<lb/>
Wealthy American still rule<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
The waiters in white gloves were serving the<lb/>
chyssoise and chilled white wine when the party got<lb/>
roue1- Unlike"cither parties, the trouble didn't start among<lb/>
quests, but among those who weren't invited.<lb/>
But then this was no ordinary bash. It was an exclusive<lb/>
dinner party held by a prominent socialite in San<lb/>
Francisco s Union Square, where dinner is usually served in<lb/>
brown paper bags.<lb/>
By the time 'he guests got to their long-stemmed<lb/>
.vbernes the party was out of control. Apple cores and<lb/>
curses flew at the diners and the police were called.<lb/>
An unemployed crasher was arrested as the silverware<lb/>
jvas rushed inside. The hostess was livid.<lb/>
She had a nght to have a party in a public place, she<lb/>
said The lady throws a lot of parties. Earlier this year, she<lb/>
had one for dogs.<lb/>
This bald juxtaposition of wealth and poverty was<lb/>
unique m only one respect: its visibility. Such extremes are<lb/>
with us every day but usually they are discreetly hidden.<lb/>
America, after all. is supposed to a land of dizzying<lb/>
social mobility, the place where Karl Marx's vision of a<lb/>
classless society has largely been realized. Other<lb/>
unfortunate lands have working classes, lords and ladies.<lb/>
America has only a huge, amorphous middle class.<lb/>
Indeed, most Americans wouia probably describe<lb/>
'hemseives as middle class: the $75,000 a year attorney<lb/>
grudgingly, because he hasn't yet amassed enough capital<lb/>
to live on the $10,000 a year clerk-typist proudly, because<lb/>
she doesn't rave to live on welfare.<lb/>
Thtne are. as Thomas Massey points out in a recent<lb/>
article m the Washington Monthly, worlds of difference<lb/>
between the expectations, contacts and real-life prospects<lb/>
of the lawyer and the clerk-typist. Yet both consider<lb/>
themselves, and are considered by many, to be "middle<lb/>
class<lb/>
possibly' (64) under the control of an indefiable family or<lb/>
group of associates<lb/>
If the old line clans that control much of America's<lb/>
wealth  and by extension its social and political life - have<lb/>
not withered away, nei her have workers.<lb/>
According to Zeitlii, the proportion of male manual<lb/>
workers in the workforce (47 percent to 1970) has remained<lb/>
nearly constant since J920. Among the additional seven<lb/>
percent officially classified as "service workers" are<lb/>
janitors, porters, laundy workers and dishwashers.<lb/>
Most of the overall rise in service worker has come from<lb/>
the increasing number of working women, Women may not<lb/>
blue pollars and do manual labor, but<lb/>
beauticians  are clearly working<lb/>
class when judged by irjeome and their lack of control over<lb/>
their jobs.<lb/>
dubious distinction of being the top fund raiser One can hardly say that Helms represents<lb/>
m the nation in last Tuesday's election. majority of North Carolina's citizens.<lb/>
Ingram put up a valiant, although Nationally, the voter turnout was the smallest<lb/>
hopelessly uphill struggle to oust North<lb/>
Carolina's most embarassing citizen. The poor<lb/>
man never had a chance. In most any modern<lb/>
election, publicity, especially television and<lb/>
radio publicity, is usually a crucial factor in the<lb/>
outcome, and this election was no exception<lb/>
since World War II. Just how representative is<lb/>
a government when so few voters cast their<lb/>
ballots?<lb/>
Meager resources, a disorganized cam-<lb/>
paign, and a low voter turnout combined to<lb/>
sentence North Carolina to another six years of<lb/>
ngram's paltry $200,000 or so was no match a hawkish reactionary. We can only hope that<lb/>
'or the six million largely out-of-state dollars voters will not repeat the mistake they made<lb/>
Helms had at his disposal. Tuesday in 1984<lb/>
As if this wasn't bad enough, Ingram's Sour grapes.<lb/>
wear traditional<lb/>
many- typists.cashiers,<lb/>
Wealthy Americans, un<lb/>
Europe, not only reign, they rule.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
And unlike male industrial workers, female service<lb/>
workers are largely unorganized.<lb/>
The impact of these statistics in human terms<lb/>
profound, becoming clejarly visible only in moments of bad<lb/>
timing and bad taste, lit e the dinner party in Union Square<lb/>
ike the doddering crowned heads of<lb/>
Greenpeace fights to save ecology<lb/>
Together, they form<lb/>
immense economic, pol<lb/>
to the same clubs, spi<lb/>
a self-contained network with<lb/>
tical and social power. They belong<lb/>
their drinks on the same manicured<lb/>
lawns, send their child en to the same schools.<lb/>
Five of the lesser<lb/>
medical school ahead of Allan Bakke were white students,<lb/>
heavy donors to the school and<lb/>
A classless society?<lb/>
If nearly ail of us are middle class, it follows that there is<lb/>
no worn ng class, or at least not much pf one, no ruling class<lb/>
and none of the class conflict that plagues other societies.<lb/>
Even liberal pundits like John Kenneth Galbraith agree<lb/>
ours j becoming a white collar "service economy" where<lb/>
mar igement and labor work as a team to reach common<lb/>
goals America, according to this view, has made its<lb/>
omiette without breaking eggs.<lb/>
It s a comforting view, but does it hold up? Much<lb/>
research suggests it does not. An extensive survey by<lb/>
UCLA professor M durice Zeitlin in The Progressive cites<lb/>
the following figures<lb/>
In 1810, the top one percent of the American<lb/>
people owned 21 percent of the nation's wealth.<lb/>
In 1915, the top two percent of the people owned 35<lb/>
percent of the wealth.<lb/>
Today, the top one percent still owns 25 percent of all<lb/>
personal and financial assets.<lb/>
Comments Zeitlin: "Through all the tumultuous<lb/>
changes  the Civil War and the emancipation of the slaves,<lb/>
the Populist and Progressive movements, the Great<lb/>
Depression, the New Deal, progressive taxation, the mass<lb/>
organization of industrial workers and World Wars I and II<lb/>
- this class has held on to everything it had. They owned<lb/>
America then and they own it now<lb/>
Many of America's owners belong to the great captialist<lb/>
families of the 19th century, the "captains of industry" that<lb/>
supposedly disappeared with the Model T.<lb/>
The Mellon family controls at least four firms In the top<lb/>
non-financials, including Gulf Oil and Alcoa.<lb/>
Laurance Rockefeller ownes a controlling five percent<lb/>
interest in Eastern Airlines in secret accounts so<lb/>
well-hidden that when the federal government and Eastern<lb/>
itself wanted to know where they were, they had to ask<lb/>
Rockefeller to tell them.<lb/>
A study by Phillip Burch Jr. based on information in the<lb/>
business press concluded that "at least 60 percent of the<lb/>
top 500 industrial corporations are 'probably (236) or<lb/>
Health, Education anc<lb/>
"nobody seems to noti<lb/>
their quotas<lb/>
For working people<lb/>
Reading Lillian Rubin's<lb/>
who use the expression<lb/>
their lives<lb/>
qualified applicants who entered<lb/>
the fortunate sons of<lb/>
politicians with clout<lb/>
While the middle dlass and the minorities are fighting<lb/>
I out over who should be admitted to med school a<lb/>
Welfare Dept. official remarked,<lb/>
x that the rich are still assured of<lb/>
the cost of powerlessness is high,<lb/>
book on working class lives, Worlds<lb/>
of Pain, one is struck by the number of workers in their 20s<lb/>
when I was young as though<lb/>
are already over.<lb/>
The movie Blue Collar presented an equally disturbing<lb/>
picture of frantic mach smo and self-destructive violence.<lb/>
That's a touch of clas no one likes to think about much.<lb/>
system is the skeleton in America's<lb/>
out.<lb/>
But it's there. The class<lb/>
closet, waiting to come<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
A word about Green-<lb/>
peace.<lb/>
We are ecologists, ac-<lb/>
tively working to protect<lb/>
our fragile world. We have<lb/>
fought French atmospheric<lb/>
nuclear testing in Polyn-<lb/>
esia, and won.<lb/>
We have helped to<lb/>
expose the brutality of the<lb/>
baby harp seal slaughter in<lb/>
Newfoundland. We have<lb/>
driven the Russian whaling<lb/>
industry out of North A-<lb/>
merican waters.<lb/>
In 1975, we launched<lb/>
our first anti-whaling cam-<lb/>
paign in the Pacific. Mem-<lb/>
bers of the campaign<lb/>
placed themselves between<lb/>
the harpoon cannons and<lb/>
the whales, with the Rus-<lb/>
sians narrowly missing our<lb/>
people with their explosive<lb/>
harpoons.<lb/>
In 1976, we mobilized a<lb/>
high-speed ocean going<lb/>
pursuit ship, the Green-<lb/>
Rxrntainhead<lb/>
Serving tha East Carolina community for ovor 50 yoara<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
DougWMto<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Laigh Coaklav N EDT0RS Robort M. S?aim<lb/>
Mia Evaratta<lb/>
tycki Gliarmia<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
StavaBachnar<lb/>
Carolina Unkaraity sponsors<lb/>
and la diattibulad a<lb/>
during tha Summar),<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
SamRogars<lb/>
of East<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD la tha studant nawapapar<lb/>
baraitv sponsor by tha Madia Boaru<lb/>
toutad aaoh Tuaaday and Thursday (waakly<lb/>
StSSF9 Hlr 0ld th BMlw,fl9. G'?"wllla, N.C.<lb/>
Editorial oficas: 757-6366, 767-6967, 767-6306.<lb/>
Subscriptions: 610 annually, alumni 66 annually.<lb/>
peace II, a 150 foot con-<lb/>
verted minesweeper, to try<lb/>
again to save the lives of<lb/>
the last remaining whales<lb/>
in the world. For the first<lb/>
time since World War II the<lb/>
Russians would come no<lb/>
closer than 700 miles of the<lb/>
U.S. coast.<lb/>
Our high-speed con-<lb/>
frontations led to the saving<lb/>
of an estimated 1,400<lb/>
whales. Greenpeace is ask-<lb/>
ing for a 10 year mora-<lb/>
torium on all commercial<lb/>
whaling.<lb/>
Throughout the au-<lb/>
tumn-winter, Greenpeace<lb/>
will conduct a worldwide<lb/>
series of whale campaigns.<lb/>
No longer simply summer<lb/>
sailors, we are now in a<lb/>
position to confront the an-<lb/>
cient horror of whaling<lb/>
whenever and wherever is<lb/>
occurs.<lb/>
Since the first boat<lb/>
sailed for the atomic test<lb/>
site on Amchitka Island<lb/>
seven years ago, the family<lb/>
has grown around the<lb/>
world. In the last few years<lb/>
Greenpeace members have<lb/>
confronted environmental<lb/>
problems in many coun-<lb/>
tries. We are dedicated to a<lb/>
green and peaceful planet<lb/>
Earth for ourselves, our<lb/>
children, and generations<lb/>
yet unborn.<lb/>
We are working to save<lb/>
the whales, and the seals,<lb/>
to stop the spread of nu-<lb/>
clear weapons, radioactive<lb/>
contamination, toxic herbi-<lb/>
cides, and other dangerous<lb/>
poisons. We are trying to<lb/>
communicate a sense of<lb/>
love for our planet home<lb/>
and all of its creatures.<lb/>
Our work coats money,<lb/>
and we rely on you for help.<lb/>
We are not supported by<lb/>
any government, business,<lb/>
or other organization.<lb/>
When you join Greenpeace, i<lb/>
its for life!<lb/>
Below you will see how<lb/>
we have spent our money<lb/>
so far, and where it has<lb/>
come from. If you want<lb/>
your money to go toward a<lb/>
certain project, please let<lb/>
us know; we'll make sure<lb/>
that it does.<lb/>
Money In: 46 percent<lb/>
Donations and member-<lb/>
ships, 19.5 percent loans,<lb/>
15.3 percent, lotteries, 13.5<lb/>
percent T-shirts, buttons,<lb/>
etc 5.7 percent benefits.<lb/>
Money Out: 44.3 per-<lb/>
cent, whale campaigns,<lb/>
19.9 percent, fundraising.<lb/>
13.2 percent, seals, nu-<lb/>
clear, misc campaigns. 13<lb/>
percent office. 9.6 percent<lb/>
newsletters.<lb/>
We welcome your help<lb/>
Please get in touch with<lb/>
Jerry Adderton at 758-6259<lb/>
after 5 p.m. weekdays or<lb/>
any other Greenpeace<lb/>
member.<lb/>
We have no frills to<lb/>
offer, no fancy offices to<lb/>
visit or periodical maiiouts<lb/>
to send you. The whales<lb/>
and seals need your help<lb/>
Thank you<lb/>
Jerry Adderton<lb/>
Rice termination<lb/>
appears 'unjustified'<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
I am not a Science Ed-<lb/>
ucation major, but I have<lb/>
several friends who are,<lb/>
and it oonoerns me that no<lb/>
one has sought to in-<lb/>
vestigate the abrupt ter-<lb/>
mination of Dr. Dale Rice's<lb/>
contract.<lb/>
I could understand it if<lb/>
he was a poor instructor,<lb/>
but it appears that he<lb/>
maintained some impact on<lb/>
his students or they would<lb/>
not have written to<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD com-<lb/>
plementing his teaching<lb/>
techniques.<lb/>
I have never met Dr.<lb/>
Rice, but it appears that his<lb/>
termination was unjustified<lb/>
if there are so many irate<lb/>
and disappointed students<lb/>
in the department.<lb/>
This is not a high school<lb/>
where out favorite teachers<lb/>
were thoee who gave easy<lb/>
tests and let us go to the<lb/>
bathroom to have a cig-<lb/>
arette. The people who are<lb/>
deeply concerned about<lb/>
this matter are juniors and<lb/>
seniors in college: those<lb/>
who were so influenced by<lb/>
Rice's teachings that they<lb/>
wish for future education<lb/>
majors to have the same<lb/>
stimulating opportunity<lb/>
they had.<lb/>
Surely there is some-<lb/>
thing wrong. Was Dr<lb/>
Rice's termination really<lb/>
justified or was it just<lb/>
another bureaucratic mal-<lb/>
function?<lb/>
I. as well as others<lb/>
would like to know the real<lb/>
story behind this matter, if<lb/>
no one can produce con-<lb/>
crete evidence on the mat-<lb/>
ter, then it is up to those in<lb/>
the Science Ed department<lb/>
to rebu e these bureaucrats<lb/>
and see that justice is<lb/>
served.<lb/>
it is hard to believe that<lb/>
? contracted teacher may<lb/>
be terminated solely on the<lb/>
grounds of a faculty de-<lb/>
cisionIt is apparent that<lb/>
no students were consulted<lb/>
in the final decision.<lb/>
Anita Lancaster<lb/>
aalvssv<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057159_0007"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
9 November 1978 FOUNTAIWHEAD Psgs 7<lb/>
Greek Forum<lb/>
9 November 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
By RICK I GLIARMis:<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
After much work and a<lb/>
ot of well spent hours<lb/>
Homecoming'78 has finally<lb/>
arrived. Each fraternity and<lb/>
sorority has worked hard<lb/>
this month preparing for<lb/>
the D?9 day. Some of the<lb/>
houses will be building<lb/>
louse decorations, some<lb/>
will have floats represent-<lb/>
ing them in the parade, and<lb/>
others will be planning<lb/>
oarties. brunches, and<lb/>
aiumm weekends.<lb/>
Because of the ABC<lb/>
-egional telecast of the<lb/>
ECU ? William and Mary<lb/>
game, the kick-off time has<lb/>
been changed from 1 :30<lb/>
p.m. to 4:10 p.m. The<lb/>
homecoming parade has<lb/>
also been changed from 10<lb/>
a.m. to1 p.m.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS:<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Tays are<lb/>
putting the final touches on<lb/>
their Homecoming float in<lb/>
anticipation of bringing<lb/>
home first prize again this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
On Nov. 8, the Phi Taus<lb/>
had a "different" sort of<lb/>
social with the Alpha Delta<lb/>
Pi's. The theme of the party<lb/>
was a square dance. The<lb/>
Phi Taus picked up the girls<lb/>
at their house and had a<lb/>
hay ride prior to the social.<lb/>
Homecoming festivities<lb/>
at the Phi Tau house will<lb/>
begin on Friday night with<lb/>
a "Welcome Home" party<lb/>
for all returning alumni.<lb/>
Immediately following<lb/>
the football game, the Phi<lb/>
Taus will eat supper to-<lb/>
gether at the house fol-<lb/>
lowed by a dance. Five<lb/>
Degrees South will provide<lb/>
dancing music for the<lb/>
guests.<lb/>
The Phi Taus together<lb/>
with the Alpha Delta Pi's<lb/>
are selling dollar coupons<lb/>
for Weiner King. The pro-<lb/>
ceeds will go to the Heart<lb/>
Fund.<lb/>
The Phi Taus would like<lb/>
to congratulate their<lb/>
sweetheart, Suzanne Lamb<lb/>
on being selected I.F.C. re-<lb/>
presentative for the Home-<lb/>
coming court.<lb/>
The Kappa Sigmas will<lb/>
be having alumni weekend<lb/>
during homecoming this<lb/>
year rather than during<lb/>
their formal. They will<lb/>
attend the game together<lb/>
and there will be a party at<lb/>
the house following the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Sunday morning the<lb/>
Kappa Sigs will hold their<lb/>
annual alumni breakfaast.<lb/>
The Kappa Sigs also urge<lb/>
everyone to vote for Home-<lb/>
coming Pirate. The polls<lb/>
close on Thursday at 4 p.m.<lb/>
The Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
sorority is holding its an-<lb/>
nual alumni and parent<lb/>
weekend this weekend dur-<lb/>
ing homecoming. There<lb/>
will be coffee and donuts<lb/>
served at the house before<lb/>
the parade at 11 a.m. At 12<lb/>
noon, the Sigmas will en-<lb/>
tertain their guests at a<lb/>
brunch at the house. The<lb/>
parade will follow at 1 p.m.<lb/>
after which the sorority,<lb/>
parents, and alumni will<lb/>
attend the football game.<lb/>
The Tri-Sigs won all-<lb/>
campus team tennis this<lb/>
year.participants from the<lb/>
sorority were Elizabeth<lb/>
Wallace. Sarah Casey,<lb/>
Jackie Cauthen, and Nancy<lb/>
Britt.<lb/>
The Sigmas are pre-<lb/>
paring for a busy week<lb/>
while they work as mar-<lb/>
shals at the tobacco show<lb/>
on Nov. 14,15, and 16.<lb/>
The Sigmas are also<lb/>
busy planning their annual<lb/>
pie throw. This year the Pie<lb/>
Throw will be held at the<lb/>
Chapter X on Nov. 21, from<lb/>
4 p.m. until 7 p.m.<lb/>
The Alpha Phi's are<lb/>
building their homecoming<lb/>
float for the parade with the<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alphas. The<lb/>
Alpha Phi'sare planning an<lb/>
alumni cocktail party Fri-<lb/>
day night.<lb/>
The Alpha Phi's now<lb/>
have 21 members in the fall<lb/>
pledge class after recently<lb/>
inducting the last members<lb/>
of the class.<lb/>
The Chi Omegas have<lb/>
been getting ready for<lb/>
Homecoming weekend by<lb/>
working on their front yard<lb/>
decorations. The Chi O's<lb/>
are also planning their<lb/>
annual alumni brunch.<lb/>
The Alpha Xi Deltas had<lb/>
a tea in honor of their<lb/>
alumni. It was a great<lb/>
success<lb/>
GREAT<lb/>
MEXICAN<lb/>
EATERY<lb/>
512 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Open 11:00 11:00<lb/>
Mon. thru Thur.<lb/>
Fri.Sat. 11:00 12:0<lb/>
Sun. 12:00 11:00<lb/>
WEEKDAY<lb/>
LUNCHEON SPECIAL<lb/>
S1.59<lb/>
MON. thru FRI. 11-2 &amp; 5-8<lb/>
Dr. Pepper, Beer, Pepsi,<lb/>
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kVe Gladly Accept Personal Checks.<lb/>
Free Taco Cid Iron -on Patch<lb/>
with $4.UO food order<lb/>
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FEATURING<lb/>
HOMECOMING SPECIAL<lb/>
Saturday 1111<lb/>
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AIX FOR $3.99<lb/>
Also featuring all new Sals<lb/>
Open:<lb/>
SunThur. 11-10 p.m.<lb/>
Fri.&amp;Sat. 11-11<lb/>
Thursday Family Night<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
CAN EAT<lb/>
TROUT$I-9$<lb/>
SHRIMP$3-95<lb/>
OYSTERS  $4.25<lb/>
FLOUNDER ?????????? $3.95<lb/>
Dinner meal Includes Golden Crisp<lb/>
French Fires, Cole Slaw, Tartar Sance and<lb/>
the world's best hushpupples.<lb/>
FRIDAY'S<lb/>
IfiQA Sun. thru Thurs. 430-9:00<lb/>
?f fifltAfi Frl-&amp; Sat 430-10:00<lb/>
Friday's Seafood<lb/>
2311 S.Evans St.<lb/>
It's Homecoming<lb/>
Dress in style for the occasion<lb/>
with fashions from<lb/>
STEVE MARTIN<lb/>
A Wild And Crazy Guy<lb/>
William E. McEuen IVcsents<lb/>
STEVE MARTIN<lb/>
A Wild And (.Vary Guv<lb/>
(formerly DAKS)<lb/>
Featuring:<lb/>
 4 piece co-ordinates<lb/>
Includes lnc Hit King Tut<lb/>
Also Includes Cat Handcuffs<lb/>
I'hilosopln Religion College Language<lb/>
c?'<lb/>
?<lb/>
W<lb/>
 sweaters<lb/>
 skirts<lb/>
 jeans<lb/>
Steve MartinA Wild And<lb/>
Crazy Guy. The most eagei ,<lb/>
awaited comedy albut'<lb/>
is this follow-up to Martin s<lb/>
smash hit debut IP.<lb/>
Small The gold single King<lb/>
Tut' (performed live here) is<lb/>
included plus 'Cat handcuff<lb/>
AnExpose and the title track<lb/>
Sale runs<lb/>
Nov. 9-15<lb/>
On Warner Bros. Records and Tapes<lb/>
t<lb/>
Mix and Match<lb/>
for the greatest look on campus!<lb/>
DA Kelly'? Evan Street Mall Greenville Ph. 752-8965<lb/>
NICHOLS<lb/>
Hwy. 264 By-Pass<lb/>
(iUAHAVTKKJI<lb/>
IftYKST WU<lb/>
.<lb/>
mkwm0mi0mmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057159_0008"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 9 November 1978<lb/>
Voice, organ recitals<lb/>
highlight the week<lb/>
By HELEN OBROMOWITCZ<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Charles Bath, pian-<lb/>
ist, chairperson of the ECU<lb/>
School of Music Keyboard<lb/>
ulty, will appear in a<lb/>
with his vio-<lb/>
linist wife Joanne. Satur-<lb/>
- Nov 11 at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
The program. sche-<lb/>
led for the A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
cital Hall is free and<lb/>
n to the public.<lb/>
The Baths will perform<lb/>
'hree sonatas for violin and<lb/>
piano The Mozart Sonata<lb/>
C. K 296: the Brahms<lb/>
Sonata No. 1 in G , Opus 78<lb/>
and the Beethoven Sonata<lb/>
D, Opus 12. No 1<lb/>
As a duo and with their<lb/>
musician children. the<lb/>
Baths have appeared at the<lb/>
petter Bntt Music Festival<lb/>
Jacksonville. Oregon.<lb/>
and m several North Caro-<lb/>
;ma cities<lb/>
Joanne Bath received<lb/>
the Bachelor of Music de-<lb/>
with honors from<lb/>
n University. the<lb/>
Master of Music degree<lb/>
from the University of<lb/>
M higan and a per-<lb/>
s certificate from<lb/>
Conservatoire Amer-<lb/>
m Fontamebleau.<lb/>
e She teacl ilin<lb/>
? Greenville.<lb/>
s Bath holds un-<lb/>
graduate and doctoral<lb/>
the Univer-<lb/>
  ? gan and the<lb/>
let ' Music degree<lb/>
m the Eastman School of<lb/>
sic.<lb/>
"he Baths recently pre-<lb/>
? ; a sonata recital for<lb/>
N C Music Teachers'<lb/>
 oice recital<lb/>
this Monday<lb/>
Karen Weinberger of<lb/>
? folk, Va. and Ft. Laud-<lb/>
lale Fia. and Jerry Dea-<lb/>
ton of SilverSpnng, Md<lb/>
senior voice students in the<lb/>
ECU School of Music, will<lb/>
perform in a joint recital<lb/>
program Monday, Nov. 13,<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
The program is free and<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
Ms. Weinberger will<lb/>
perform songs and arias<lb/>
from the classical vocal<lb/>
literature in six languages:<lb/>
English, German, French,<lb/>
Provincial (Medieval)<lb/>
French, Yiddish and He-<lb/>
brew.<lb/>
Her program will in-<lb/>
clude selections from<lb/>
Haydn. Persichetti, Faure,<lb/>
Ravel and Wolf. Her per-<lb/>
formance of Ravel's He-<lb/>
brew prayer will be ac-<lb/>
companied by a student<lb/>
harpist, and other selec-<lb/>
tions will be accompanied<lb/>
by pianist Jackie Riley.<lb/>
Aquarius Court;<lb/>
Spring, Md.<lb/>
Silver<lb/>
Mezzo-soprano<lb/>
Mezzo-soprano Jenni<lb/>
Harrison of Newport News,<lb/>
Va senior voice student in<lb/>
the ECU School of Music,<lb/>
will perform in recital Fri-<lb/>
day, Nov. 10, at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
in the A.J. Fletcher Music<lb/>
Center Recital Hall.<lb/>
The program, a joint<lb/>
recital with soprano Cheryl<lb/>
Burkhart of Blackwood, NJ,<lb/>
is free and open to the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
Ms. Harrison will sing<lb/>
M ozarf s Voi Che Sapete<lb/>
and "Oiseaux si Tous les<lb/>
Ans Weckerlin's "Mam-<lb/>
an Dites-moi Schubert's<lb/>
Music<lb/>
A student of Gladys<lb/>
White of the ECU voice<lb/>
faculty, Karen Weinberger<lb/>
is a candidate for the<lb/>
Bachelor of Arts degree,<lb/>
with a major concentration<lb/>
in music and a minor in<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Jerry Deaton, a student<lb/>
of Dr. Clyde Hiss of the<lb/>
ECU voice faculty, will per-<lb/>
form Handel's "Alma<lb/>
Mia and "Call Forth Thy<lb/>
Powers, My Soul three<lb/>
songs by Wolf, Faure's<lb/>
"L" hives a Cesee" and "La<lb/>
Lune Blanche Luit dans les<lb/>
Bois Virgil Thomson's<lb/>
The Tiger Paul Bowies'<lb/>
Heavenly Grass" and<lb/>
Tom Lehrer's "Hunting<lb/>
Song<lb/>
He will be accompanied<lb/>
by pianist Diane Kolwyck.<lb/>
Deaton, a candidate for<lb/>
the Bachelor of Music<lb/>
degree in music therapy is<lb/>
the son of Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Donald Hamburger of 4<lb/>
"Fruhlingslaube Schu-<lb/>
mann's "Die Soldaten-<lb/>
braut" and two songs by<lb/>
Samuel Barber.<lb/>
With Cheryl Burkhart,<lb/>
she will be featured in two<lb/>
duets, "What Can We Poor<lb/>
Females Do?" by Purcell.<lb/>
arranged by Benjamin<lb/>
Britten, and Hawthorne's<lb/>
"Hope<lb/>
Pianist Ron Roberts will<lb/>
be her accompanist.<lb/>
A candidate for Bach-<lb/>
elor of Music degrees in<lb/>
music therapy and music<lb/>
education, Ms. Harrison is<lb/>
a student of Gladys White<lb/>
of the ECU voice faculty.<lb/>
Her parents are Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs. PS. Harrison of 802<lb/>
Roberto Drive, Newport<lb/>
News, Va.<lb/>
Duo recital at<lb/>
Christ Episcopal<lb/>
Church<lb/>
12<lb/>
On Sunday, November<lb/>
a duo recital will be<lb/>
presented by Mickey Terry<lb/>
(organ) and Lorraine Ja-<lb/>
cobs (voice) at Christ Ep-<lb/>
iscopal Church in New Bern<lb/>
at 5 p.m. in the sancuary of<lb/>
the church.<lb/>
The first half of the<lb/>
program will consist of<lb/>
organ works performed by<lb/>
Mr. Terry including Pre-<lb/>
lude and Fugue in A Minor<lb/>
by Buxtehude, Prelude and<lb/>
Fugue in D Major and the<lb/>
Chorale Prelude on Savior<lb/>
of the Heathen, Come by<lb/>
Bach as well as Pachabel's<lb/>
Ricercare in C Minor and<lb/>
Telemann's Grave from the<lb/>
D. Major Sonata.<lb/>
Handel arias<lb/>
The second half of the<lb/>
program will be dedicated<lb/>
to arias by G.F. Handel<lb/>
from various oratoios on<lb/>
which Ms. Jacobs (Contal-<lb/>
to) will sing and Mr. Terry<lb/>
will accompany.<lb/>
Mr. Terry, a 1977 ECU<lb/>
graduate, is now pursuing<lb/>
graduate studies there and<lb/>
is Organist of Jarvis Mem-<lb/>
orial United Methodist<lb/>
Church.<lb/>
A former student of<lb/>
Mrs. Selina Forbes and<lb/>
Doctors E. Robert Irwin<lb/>
and David L. Foster, he has<lb/>
just recently presented a<lb/>
recital in Greenville in<lb/>
which Ms. Jacobs, a piano<lb/>
graduate of the Peabody<lb/>
(Conservatory) Institute of<lb/>
John Hopkins. University<lb/>
and former piano soloist<lb/>
with the Ba'itmore Sym-<lb/>
phony, was featured as<lb/>
pianist.<lb/>
Ms. Jacobs is also an<lb/>
ECU grad in History and<lb/>
English and is currently<lb/>
pursuing her M.A. degree<lb/>
in English there.<lb/>
The program is a part of<lb/>
an Artists Series there at<lb/>
the church where Ms. Jac-<lb/>
obs is serving as Organist-<lb/>
Choirmaster. The admis-<lb/>
sion is free and the public is<lb/>
cordially invited to attend.<lb/>
THE GREGG SMITH Singers will appear<lb/>
under the direction of, Gregg Smith this Wed Nov. 75 at 8<lb/>
p.m. in the Hendrix Theatre. Gregg Smith and his singers<lb/>
have achieved an international reputation for their superb<lb/>
choral mastery. The concert itself is a dramatic experience.<lb/>
The singers move from balcony to main floor, with each<lb/>
piece performed in a different arrangement. The effect is<lb/>
live stereo music' MysicAppreciation students who attend<lb/>
the performance will receive double credit towards their<lb/>
recital requirement in addition to hearing the breathtaking,<lb/>
multi-dimensional sounds of the group The recital is<lb/>
sponsored by the Student Union Artists Series Committee<lb/>
New exhibits: 'stunning<lb/>
By DAVID vV. TREVINO<lb/>
and<lb/>
MARK WILKINSON<lb/>
Staff Writers<lb/>
"Images: Women on<lb/>
Paper and "Ten Centuries<lb/>
of East Asian Art" opened<lb/>
at the Wellington B. Gray<lb/>
Gallery in the Jenkins Fine<lb/>
Arts Center with a cep-<lb/>
tion Sunday afterno&amp;n.<lb/>
In addition to the art<lb/>
contained in these exhibi-<lb/>
tions, the attending crowd<lb/>
was treated to Renaissance<lb/>
music performed on the<lb/>
lute by Walter Wilder,<lb/>
artist-in-residence at Pitt<lb/>
Co. Technical Institute.<lb/>
"Images: Women on<lb/>
Paper" is a loan exhibition<lb/>
from the Weatherspoon<lb/>
Gallery of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Greens-<lb/>
boro. In a selection of<lb/>
paintings, drawings and<lb/>
prints drawn from the<lb/>
Weatherspoon's perma-<lb/>
nent collection, gallery di-<lb/>
rector James Tucker pre-<lb/>
sented a wide view of<lb/>
women. "Women on Pa-<lb/>
per" is being exhibited for<lb/>
the first time anywhere in<lb/>
the Wellington B. Gray<lb/>
Gallery. It will be shown<lb/>
been exposed. Although<lb/>
many of the pieces in the<lb/>
show were originally made<lb/>
for export to the West and<lb/>
reflect some outside influ-<lb/>
ences in taste, they are<lb/>
none the less distinctly<lb/>
Oriental.<lb/>
Because of the geo-<lb/>
Art<lb/>
next at the Weatherspoon<lb/>
Gallery in February.<lb/>
"Ten Centuries of East<lb/>
Asian Art" isa show drawn<lb/>
from the private collection<lb/>
of a member of the Medical<lb/>
School faculty. The scrolls,<lb/>
ceramics and furniture on<lb/>
display provide a fascinat-<lb/>
ing view of art to which<lb/>
most Occidentals have not<lb/>
r<lb/>
Allen, Nicholson, Monroe films slated<lb/>
DIANE K EA TON A NQ Woody A Hen in a scene from one of<lb/>
this week's Free Flicks, "Annie Hall The film will be<lb/>
shown Friday only at 5, 7 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee has six<lb/>
films scheduled for the<lb/>
homecoming weekend, in-<lb/>
cluding two Best Picture<lb/>
winners, Woody Allen's<lb/>
Annie Hall and Milos<lb/>
Foreman's One Flew Over<lb/>
the Cuckoo's Nest starring<lb/>
Jack Nicholson.<lb/>
Annie Hall will be<lb/>
shown this Friday night at<lb/>
5. 7, and 9 in Mendenhall's<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
The film, in addition to<lb/>
its Best Picture embellish-<lb/>
ment, netted Best Director<lb/>
and Best Screenplay a-<lb/>
wards for Allen as well as a<lb/>
Best Actress award for<lb/>
co-star Diane Keaton.<lb/>
Annie Hall is described<lb/>
by Allen as "a romantic<lb/>
comedy about a contempo-<lb/>
rary urban neurotic It<lb/>
reunites him with Diane<lb/>
Keaton and Tony Roberts.<lb/>
The trio previously per-<lb/>
formed together on the<lb/>
Broadway stage in Allen's<lb/>
hit comedy Play It Again,<lb/>
Sam and later re-created<lb/>
their roles in the equally<lb/>
successful motion picture<lb/>
version.<lb/>
Others in the cast are<lb/>
Carol Kane, Paul Simon,<lb/>
Janet Margolin, Shelley<lb/>
Duval, Christopher Walken<lb/>
and Colleen Dewhurst.<lb/>
Acclaimed ail over the<lb/>
world as today's foremost<lb/>
comic genius, Woody Allen<lb/>
has once again written,<lb/>
(with Marshall Brickman),<lb/>
directed and starred in a<lb/>
film.<lb/>
Allen was born in Brook-<lb/>
lyn and began his career<lb/>
while still in high school by<lb/>
sending gags to newspaper<lb/>
to columnists. After gradu-<lb/>
ation, he became a writer<lb/>
very brave people let me<lb/>
direct it<lb/>
On Saturday, the Films<lb/>
Committee has scheduled a<lb/>
special double feature to be<lb/>
screened at 7 and 9 p.m. in<lb/>
the Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Films to be shown are<lb/>
How to Marry a<lb/>
Millionaire, at 8:30 p.m<lb/>
and All About Eve, 10:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
for Sid Caesar and other<lb/>
television comedians.<lb/>
In 1961, Allen's manag-<lb/>
er persuaded their reticent<lb/>
client to take his jokes<lb/>
directly to the public, so he<lb/>
began as a stand-up comic<lb/>
in obscure New York night<lb/>
spots and audiences and<lb/>
critics became aware of the<lb/>
fact that there was a<lb/>
brilliant new talent on the<lb/>
entertainment scene.<lb/>
Allen was then asked to<lb/>
write the script for the<lb/>
movie What's New Pussy-<lb/>
cat? as well as play a<lb/>
featured role in the film.<lb/>
The film was a commercial<lb/>
success and in 1968, Alien<lb/>
wrote the screenplay for<lb/>
7ae the Money and Run,<lb/>
in which he was to star.<lb/>
Then, as he says, "some<lb/>
How to Marry a Million-<lb/>
aire stars Marilyn Monroe,<lb/>
Betty Grable, Lauren<lb/>
Bacall, William Powell and<lb/>
Rory Calhoun and sports<lb/>
excellent performances by<lb/>
the ensemble. The film is a<lb/>
superb comedy of the fifties<lb/>
about three man-hunting<lb/>
females who pool their<lb/>
resources to trap eligible<lb/>
bachelors.<lb/>
All About Eve stars<lb/>
Marilyn Monroe and Bette<lb/>
Davis along with an all star<lb/>
cast in a cynical view of<lb/>
theatre life, filled with<lb/>
epigrammatic gems. Davis<lb/>
glows as an aging star,<lb/>
Gary Merrill plays her<lb/>
young beau, Anne Baxter is<lb/>
a grasping actress, George<lb/>
Sanders a poison pen critic,<lb/>
Hugh Marlowe a play-<lb/>
wright and Celeste Holm<lb/>
Marlowe's sugary wife.<lb/>
The film is a fifties classic.<lb/>
On Sunday, there will<lb/>
be a Jack Nicholson Festiv-<lb/>
al at 4 p.m. featuring Five<lb/>
Easy Pieces, The Last<lb/>
Detail, and One Flew Over<lb/>
the Cuckoo's Nest.<lb/>
Five Easy Pieces, is a<lb/>
subtle masterpiece of act-<lb/>
ing and direction.<lb/>
Bobby Dupea speaks to<lb/>
a whole generation, and<lb/>
Jack Nicholson's perform-<lb/>
ance is a complex welding<lb/>
of emotions - fear, pride,<lb/>
independence, self-pity,<lb/>
humor, and sadness.<lb/>
The Last Detail is a<lb/>
wildly raucous and poetical-<lb/>
ly complex portrait of an<lb/>
arrogant but sensitive sail-<lb/>
or played by Jack<lb/>
Nicholson. It is the com-<lb/>
passionate story of two<lb/>
veteran sailors who escort a<lb/>
young recruit to the brig.<lb/>
Their no-holds-barred last<lb/>
fling builds in salty humor<lb/>
and makes one of the<lb/>
richest character studies in<lb/>
years.<lb/>
One Flew Over the<lb/>
Cuckoo's Nest is Milos<lb/>
Foreman's brilliant adapta-<lb/>
tion of the Ken Kesey novel<lb/>
of the same name. The film<lb/>
won Best Picture of the<lb/>
ear in 1976 and swept the<lb/>
rest of the major awards,<lb/>
including Best Actor, Jack<lb/>
Nicholson, Best Actress,<lb/>
Louise Fletcher, Best Di-<lb/>
rector, Milos Foreman, and<lb/>
Best Screenplay.<lb/>
graphic barriers that sepa-<lb/>
rated the cultures of the<lb/>
East from those of the West<lb/>
for so long, Oriental art<lb/>
developed relatively inde-<lb/>
pendent of movements and<lb/>
symbols with which we are<lb/>
most familiar. Man is<lb/>
hardly the measure of all<lb/>
things in "Ten Centuries of<lb/>
East Asian Art<lb/>
In the delicate watercol-<lb/>
or and ink paintings, man<lb/>
appears as a less imposing<lb/>
part of the landscape. He<lb/>
appears in harmony, if not<lb/>
dominance. Rather than<lb/>
the measure of existence,<lb/>
man seems like a rather<lb/>
small part. Mountains and<lb/>
trees loom immensely over<lb/>
the fragile human figures.<lb/>
The gentle, expressive<lb/>
strokes found in the paint-<lb/>
ings are identical to those<lb/>
found in the calligraphy<lb/>
which accompanies them.<lb/>
Both are painted with the<lb/>
same brush and in the<lb/>
demanding style and medi-<lb/>
um that makes covering an<lb/>
error virtually impossible.<lb/>
Although many of the<lb/>
paintings on the horizontal<lb/>
story scrolls are realistic<lb/>
and line oriented, much of<lb/>
the paintinig is almost<lb/>
romantic in nature, ex-<lb/>
pressing images in only a<lb/>
few sweeps of the brush.<lb/>
The bamboo piece is a<lb/>
wonderful example of just<lb/>
such a rendering of a<lb/>
standard Oriental subject<lb/>
The horizontal scroll of the<lb/>
monkey is another beautiful<lb/>
work in which the monkey<lb/>
is only barely suggested<lb/>
by the sensitive brushwork<lb/>
The dragons on the<lb/>
Korean porcelin pottery<lb/>
1 emotionally evocative<lb/>
and reminiscent of some<lb/>
works of American folk art<lb/>
In all the ceramic pieces the<lb/>
artists used gentle, natural<lb/>
shapes and displayed brilli-<lb/>
ant skill in the brushwork<lb/>
decorations. A pair of<lb/>
Japanese Satusuma earth-<lb/>
en ware vases of the early<lb/>
19th century exhibit the<lb/>
characteristic mastery of<lb/>
the cracking effect found in<lb/>
so much Oriental ceramic<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Although much of the<lb/>
furniture on display is<lb/>
ornately decorated in a<lb/>
rather Baroque style, there<lb/>
? ? ?'? R 1 p<lb/>
1<lb/>
HOWEVER DISTASTEFUL l?c<lb/>
YPs. "Girl on fltn ?  ' 0room'9<lb/>
?"?9es: Women p V P <lb/>
November 22 in the wUf . noW ?? "?<lb/>
?of ?2r QrMy Qn"y  "T"<lb/>
i ?hoto by John H. Grog an<lb/>
t<lb/>
P I rj??&amp;r  I . -fl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057159_0009"/><lb/>
9 November 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pag 7<lb/>
Picasso, Matisse, Warhol and Ramos are featured<lb/>
continued from p. 6<lb/>
are P,eces that exhibit<lb/>
simplicity of form and<lb/>
graceful lines. Perhaps the<lb/>
most pleasing furn.ture<lb/>
Pieces are the Ch.nese<lb/>
luang hua-li cabinets from<lb/>
he 19tn century Both the<lb/>
??nd sides are discreet-<lb/>
tapered so that the<lb/>
nets seem comfortably<lb/>
"ng rather than bulky<lb/>
' imposing.<lb/>
Ten Centuries of East<lb/>
A" isararechance<lb/>
"Pie the art of cultures<lb/>
alue harmonious co-<lb/>
gence with nature rath-<lb/>
m its alteration to<lb/>
spiritual needs of<lb/>
ie who brc<lb/>
on by viewing<lb/>
exciting show will<lb/>
ate the generosity of<lb/>
ilty member who<lb/>
these pieces with<lb/>
, iblic<lb/>
?ges: Women on<lb/>
is a collection of 60<lb/>
all but five of which<lb/>
by male artists, in<lb/>
mage of woman<lb/>
It contains<lb/>
. artists the quality<lb/>
1 'arely been<lb/>
eastern North<lb/>
Picasso's 1923<lb/>
The<lb/>
reflects the<lb/>
'?avor of his figure<lb/>
' the same peri-<lb/>
? th a minimum of<lb/>
picasso evokes a<lb/>
N<lb/>
this study of a<lb/>
. and her serv-<lb/>
'?' ?ker a co-<lb/>
tph, offers an<lb/>
view a char-<lb/>
?? rk of the cele-<lb/>
ralist, Jean<lb/>
' Amidst the sub-<lb/>
?rs and gentle<lb/>
' jures of this<lb/>
id-headed<lb/>
s practically the<lb/>
? Chariot's<lb/>
a McNeill<lb/>
- represented<lb/>
' ng Fum-<lb/>
 th brilliantly<lb/>
"es Whistler is<lb/>
1 capture the delicate<lb/>
ace collar or<lb/>
, strands of<lb/>
i mmate a<lb/>
ng<lb/>
? ey portrait.<lb/>
fact fi the past. It<lb/>
have never been<lb/>
O jr urban<lb/>
? ands new images<lb/>
 th the unique<lb/>
an experience an in-<lb/>
ass society<lb/>
ites<lb/>
People in the city sur-<lb/>
der a great deal of their<lb/>
It's a necessary<lb/>
10 survive On a<lb/>
? V ? New York that<lb/>
?ore people than<lb/>
classes at ECU it<lb/>
;mes imperative to view<lb/>
thers on the sidewalk<lb/>
bstacles to be dealt with<lb/>
niessly as possible<lb/>
than thousands of<lb/>
??  temples of the noble<lb/>
? spirit<lb/>
v iny of your senses<lb/>
to be deadened to<lb/>
? being over-<lb/>
ed by the torrent of<lb/>
?hat one is bom-<lb/>
?. th m urban oent-<lb/>
It's just a fact of life<lb/>
-?mething has to be<lb/>
icular to stirr ulate the<lb/>
sened sensitivity of the<lb/>
?riporary city dweller.<lb/>
es a bright flash to<lb/>
est someone who<lb/>
ires mto the burning sun<lb/>
reality in Chicago every<lb/>
ng.<lb/>
Shipboard Girl an<lb/>
set lithograph by Roy<lb/>
UchtensU .n, "Tobacco<lb/>
Rose, a silkscreen by Mel<lb/>
Ramos. Tom Wesselman's<lb/>
silkscreen, Nude and<lb/>
Andy Warhol's silkscreen<lb/>
portrait Elizabeth Taylor"<lb/>
reflect the elimination of<lb/>
anything but essential,<lb/>
startling images. Women<lb/>
ted in cold, stark<lb/>
images that convey none of<lb/>
the tenderness found in<lb/>
Whistler's etchings.<lb/>
Ramos piece depicts in<lb/>
brutally realistic figures a<lb/>
nude woman with two<lb/>
packs of cigarettes that<lb/>
hints broadly at the insensi-<lb/>
tive view of woman as an<lb/>
object "Tobacco Rose" is<lb/>
also a textbook example of<lb/>
the California Pop style<lb/>
embraced by Ramos in his<lb/>
work.<lb/>
"Shipboard Girl" is just<lb/>
as characteristic of Roy<lb/>
Lichtenstein's easily recog-<lb/>
nizable style. And the<lb/>
sharp lines and carefully<lb/>
regimented coloring are<lb/>
just as recognizably repre-<lb/>
sentative of the urban<lb/>
world most Americans now<lb/>
exist in<lb/>
Tom Wesselman's in-<lb/>
volvement with erotic<lb/>
themes is evident in the<lb/>
realistic sexual imagery of<lb/>
his silkscreen "Nude<lb/>
The form of woman is<lb/>
portrayed in the most basic<lb/>
imagery. The face is<lb/>
conveyed by a mouth. The<lb/>
breasts are simple shapes<lb/>
crowned with color.<lb/>
The most horrific vision<lb/>
of woman in the show is<lb/>
that of Red Grooms. In the<lb/>
stunningly evocative cray-<lb/>
pas "Girl on Beach<lb/>
Groom uses painfully seg-<lb/>
mented shapes of garish<lb/>
colors to capture an unfor-<lb/>
tunately recognizable view<lb/>
of woman. Groom's girl<lb/>
appears as a violently color-<lb/>
ed object displayed on a<lb/>
blanket as crassly as any<lb/>
other commercial product<lb/>
designed for mass con-<lb/>
sumption. However dis-<lb/>
tasteful her smile may be,<lb/>
"Girl on Beach" is an<lb/>
exciting piece.<lb/>
The vision of earlier<lb/>
artists is appealing in its<lb/>
enchanting simplicity. But<lb/>
it is a testimony to contem-<lb/>
porary artists that amidst<lb/>
the dehumanizing ugliness<lb/>
of urban life they are able<lb/>
to find distinctly human<lb/>
beauty. Anyone can look at<lb/>
Eden and be charmed, but<lb/>
it takes some kind of genius<lb/>
to gaze at the chemical<lb/>
plants of Houston and see<lb/>
the splendor of the spirit of<lb/>
man But the man who<lb/>
labors in that tangle of<lb/>
pipes demands beauty and<lb/>
the artist who shows it to<lb/>
him is priceless<lb/>
MACRAME,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057159_0010"/><lb/>
REVENGE<lb/>
ECU, Indians tangle in homecoming contest<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU had just blasted Appalachian State 45-14 after a<lb/>
g 9-7 loss to Southwestern Louisiana and the Pirates<lb/>
were apparently back on course heading into the Oyster<lb/>
Bowl classic against William and Mary<lb/>
a the Pirates needed was a victory over the Indians<lb/>
a Peach Bowl invitation would be extended soon after.<lb/>
fact, the Pirates were regarded as heavy favorites<lb/>
entering the contest with William and Mary<lb/>
sitting on a lowly 4-5 record<lb/>
the craftiest Indian of them all. quarterback Tom<lb/>
directed William and Mary to classic 21-17 come<lb/>
from behind victory which sent the Pirates home empty<lb/>
led. The senior from Fairview. Pa completed 10 out of<lb/>
5 passes for 137 yards and two touchdowns and got the<lb/>
; TD himself from 12 yards out late in the third<lb/>
just took them as another easy game<lb/>
bered ECU cornerback Willie Holley. "Maybe we<lb/>
bit too excited about our bowl possibilities and<lb/>
1 didn't concentrate<lb/>
tantz did a good job keeping them in the game<lb/>
me we got ahead and they got a lot of lucky breaks<lb/>
? ready every time we got ahead and they got a<lb/>
' ? ??: eaks But we'll be ready thistime<lb/>
? Ih a regional television audience watching and a bowl<lb/>
- -emote possibility, it's not likely the Pirates<lb/>
will be looking past the Indians this time around in their<lb/>
homecoming game.<lb/>
William and Mary boasts a fine 5-3-1 record this year<lb/>
with Rozantz still directing the offense and defensive end<lb/>
Melvin Martin heading a much improved defense which has<lb/>
allowed just over 13 pointsa game.<lb/>
"I know our players are looking forward to this one<lb/>
understated ECU head coach Pat Dye. "Tom Rozantz is a<lb/>
very intelligent runner and passed and reads defenses very<lb/>
well. Next to N.C. State, I would have to say they're about<lb/>
the toughest defensive team we've faced this season.<lb/>
"They've beaten us physically the last two years<lb/>
although they didn't win in 1976. We've developed a pretty<lb/>
tough rivalry against them and it should oertainly be a good<lb/>
TV. game<lb/>
The ECU-William and Mary game will be one of four<lb/>
regional telecasts Saturday afternoon following the<lb/>
Nebraska- Oklahoma contest. The game will begin at 4:10<lb/>
instead of the previous scheduled 1:30kickoff.<lb/>
William and Mary dropped a narrow 20-19 decision in<lb/>
1976 and intensified the rivalry with its 21-17 upset last<lb/>
season<lb/>
They kept us out of the bowl game and no one on the<lb/>
team this year has forgotten about that said free safety<lb/>
Gerald Hall, the nation's seventh ranked punt returner.<lb/>
That game went through my mind the whole summer.<lb/>
They sure talked a lot of junk out there on the field<lb/>
too continued Hall. "I remember when the game was<lb/>
over one of them told me 'You guys ain't gonna see no<lb/>
Peaches this year<lb/>
"Yea, all we saw was tears said defensive tackles<lb/>
Fred Chavis. "Heck, that's the worst I've ever felt after a<lb/>
loss<lb/>
The loss cancelled the Pirates Peach Bowl bid, even<lb/>
though the Buc's were later mentioned as a possible<lb/>
candidate in the Independence Bowl in Shreveport, La. And<lb/>
with a 6-3 record this year, many observers have already<lb/>
written off the Pirates bowl hopes.<lb/>
"I still think we can get to a bowl game said Hall. "If<lb/>
we play smart and don't make any mistakes this week and<lb/>
win and beat Marshall we could still go somewhere<lb/>
NOTES Vern Lundquist and former Notre Dame<lb/>
quarterback Terry Hanratty will handle the broadcast<lb/>
chores Saturday. Lundquist will do the play-by-play while<lb/>
Hanratty will be the color commentator Appalachian State<lb/>
was averaging more than 450 yards a game coming into last<lb/>
week's contest against ECU. The Pirates limited the<lb/>
Mountaineers to just 168 yards total offenseECU ranks<lb/>
second nationally in pass defense at 87.7 yards per game<lb/>
while the Bucs are 24th in rushing defense allowing only<lb/>
134 yards and 21st in scoring with just 13.3 points per<lb/>
gameGerald Hall ranks seventh in punt returns with a<lb/>
13.4 average while halfback Anthony Collins is 14th in<lb/>
kickoff returns with a 24.8 averageBill Lamm connected<lb/>
on two more long field goals against Appalachian State but<lb/>
also missed two extra pointsLamm has booted 10 of 16<lb/>
field goals this seasonECU leads the overall series<lb/>
against William and Mary 6-3-1.<lb/>
Gerald Hall<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
ends ECU season<lb/>
with 7-0 setback<lb/>
<lb/>
ECU's Mallory honored<lb/>
with Hall of Fame selection<lb/>
 A RE A I<lb/>
St; ter<lb/>
lay set the<lb/>
? ? ednesday as the<lb/>
Soccer team closed<lb/>
' 978-79 season on a<lb/>
so ?? jsing to the<lb/>
" ??" -els 7-0<lb/>
occer Field<lb/>
tarting Pirate<lb/>
??? n gs 3rad W inchell and<lb/>
Mar'm sa! out the<lb/>
because of<lb/>
pensions ? W inchell<lb/>
?s ejected in last Satur-<lb/>
against Appai-<lb/>
was benched<lb/>
Martin who<lb/>
:iscipiinary action<lb/>
head coach<lb/>
e suspen-<lb/>
? ?? the Pirates with<lb/>
'emely weak offense<lb/>
:nesday s contest.<lb/>
The Tarheels, however,<lb/>
ed on by hopes of<lb/>
CAA playoff<lb/>
ber - early, scoring<lb/>
Steve Scott's goal with<lb/>
. 3:17 gone in the<lb/>
ng half Halfback Roy<lb/>
Bar ?? Aas credited with<lb/>
or field conditions<lb/>
ed both teamsdunng<lb/>
? match as time<lb/>
j again well placpc! balls<lb/>
breeching halt in<lb/>
of mud Never-<lb/>
ess the Tarheels didn't<lb/>
let a httie mud stop them<lb/>
nr scoring their second<lb/>
goal of the half off the head<lb/>
of Rick Marvin with 10:33<lb/>
gone in the first half John<lb/>
Fernandez was credited<lb/>
with the assist<lb/>
Several minutes later,<lb/>
David Blum assisted Steve<lb/>
Scott for Scott's second<lb/>
goal of the day with 14:22<lb/>
elapsed in the half<lb/>
The Tarheels blitzed the<lb/>
Pirate defense with 42 48<lb/>
gone in the half when John<lb/>
Mansfield booted a goal<lb/>
assisted by Adam Abron-<lb/>
ski The goal pushed the<lb/>
Tarheelsahead 4-0.<lb/>
However, the Tarheels<lb/>
we- atisfied with the<lb/>
commanding lead as Sean<lb/>
Naber connected on a goal<lb/>
with but six seconds left to<lb/>
play in the half. The first<lb/>
finally ended with the Tar-<lb/>
heels on top of a comfor-<lb/>
table 5-0 lead.<lb/>
The second half of ac-<lb/>
tion could well have been<lb/>
called the John Mansfield<lb/>
show as the Tarheel wing<lb/>
booted two consecutive<lb/>
goals.<lb/>
Mansfield's first goal of<lb/>
the half came late in the<lb/>
game when he slammed a<lb/>
Butch Bernard assist into<lb/>
the goal with 31 46 gone in<lb/>
the second half.<lb/>
Seven minutes elapsed<lb/>
before Mansfield connected<lb/>
again with 38:09 gone on an<lb/>
assist by teammate Sean<lb/>
Naber<lb/>
Despite a weak overall<lb/>
defensive showing, Pirate<lb/>
goalie Kevin Tyus played a<lb/>
commendable game as time<lb/>
and again he prevented<lb/>
Tarheels from scoring with<lb/>
excellent saves<lb/>
The comedy finally<lb/>
ended for the Pirates with<lb/>
the Tarheels on top of 7-0<lb/>
blowout score<lb/>
Andrew Roman<lb/>
ECU SOCCER COACH Brad Smith praised Roman for his<lb/>
play against North Carolina despite the Pirates 7-0 loss.<lb/>
ECU finished the season with a disappointing 3-11-2 record.<lb/>
Photo by John H. Grogan<lb/>
Statistically, it was a<lb/>
sad day for the Pirates as<lb/>
they could only manage one<lb/>
shot at the Carolina goal for<lb/>
the entire match. On the<lb/>
other hand, the Tarheel<lb/>
squad fired 21 total shots at<lb/>
the Pirate goal.<lb/>
Wednesday's loss left<lb/>
ECU with a 3-11-2 overall<lb/>
record. North Crolina<lb/>
upped their record to 11-3-4<lb/>
for the season.<lb/>
Coach Brad Smith,<lb/>
though displeased with his<lb/>
team's performance, did<lb/>
credit Andy Roman with<lb/>
good offensive play. After<lb/>
today's loss, the Buc's will<lb/>
be looking forward to next<lb/>
year's season when the<lb/>
Pirates hope to be a much<lb/>
more experienced squad<lb/>
capable of a winning sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
When the news of the<lb/>
new inductees to the ECU<lb/>
Sports Hall of Fame was<lb/>
announced, many students<lb/>
were befuddled. One of the<lb/>
names in the group was<lb/>
James B. Mallory, the ECU<lb/>
Dean of Men.<lb/>
Few students today<lb/>
realize it. but Mallory was<lb/>
once the head coach of the<lb/>
Pirate baseball team. And a<lb/>
good one at that. In fact, he<lb/>
led the Pirates to the NAIA<lb/>
national championship in<lb/>
1961, sending not only<lb/>
Greenville, but the entire<lb/>
state of North Carolina into<lb/>
a frenzy.<lb/>
Mai lory's success was<lb/>
not limited to just one<lb/>
season either. He coached<lb/>
the Pirates from 1954 until<lb/>
1962, then came back as<lb/>
interim coach in 1973. His<lb/>
figures read 161 wins and<lb/>
only 60 losses for .729 per-<lb/>
centage. Not bad for an<lb/>
administrator. ,<lb/>
Mallory was also an<lb/>
assistant football coach<lb/>
during his early years at<lb/>
East Carolin College. He<lb/>
taught physical education<lb/>
for eleven years.<lb/>
The ECU Dean also has<lb/>
a background in major<lb/>
league baseball. At one<lb/>
time he played with the<lb/>
Washington Senators, the<lb/>
New York Giants, and the<lb/>
St. Louis Cardinals. He<lb/>
played with such greats at<lb/>
Mel Ott, Ernie Lombardi,<lb/>
Sal Magli, and Red Scho-<lb/>
endist during his two year<lb/>
big league career.<lb/>
Later, he moved to Elon<lb/>
College as head baseball<lb/>
coach. His teams posted 72<lb/>
wins and 16 losses. His six<lb/>
years there included four<lb/>
conference championships<lb/>
and two second place fin-<lb/>
ishes.<lb/>
It seems that Mallory<lb/>
won everywhere he went.<lb/>
"I always tried to get my<lb/>
players fundamentally<lb/>
sound said Mallory. "If<lb/>
they do the basics right,<lb/>
then they'll make one less<lb/>
mistake than their oppo-<lb/>
nent. That mistake is the<lb/>
difference in winning and<lb/>
losing<lb/>
The 1961 championship<lb/>
team did those basics just<lb/>
right, claims Mallory.<lb/>
"That team had real guts<lb/>
said the former Pirate<lb/>
coach. "The Yankees'<lb/>
comeback this year reminds<lb/>
me of them. They always<lb/>
seemed to pull out games<lb/>
that it seemed they would<lb/>
lose. That's the mark of a<lb/>
great team<lb/>
Mallory said that the<lb/>
1961 team won the national<lb/>
championship under quite<lb/>
adverse conditions. "Since<lb/>
the tournament was played<lb/>
after school was out, we<lb/>
lost some players because<lb/>
they had summer jobs.<lb/>
Also, our leading hitter,<lb/>
Gary Pierce couldn't make<lb/>
the trip<lb/>
Later, the Pirates lost a<lb/>
starter due to an injury<lb/>
which trimmed the roster<lb/>
down to 12 players. Yet<lb/>
Mallory brought his team<lb/>
r<lb/>
Jim Mallory<lb/>
through.<lb/>
Former ECU Chancellor<lb/>
Leo Jenkins thinks he<lb/>
knows why Mallory pulled<lb/>
his team through that year,<lb/>
and why he was always a<lb/>
winner.<lb/>
"Jim is a very enthu-<lb/>
siastic coach said Jen-<lb/>
kins. "He seemed to in-<lb/>
spire all the young who<lb/>
played under him He had<lb/>
that little knack of being<lb/>
able to inspire others and<lb/>
instill confidence in then<lb/>
that so many coaches lack<lb/>
He's the type of coach that<lb/>
I'd want my boy to play<lb/>
under<lb/>
ECU athletic director<lb/>
Bill 'Cain says that Mallory<lb/>
was a candidate that the<lb/>
Hall of Fame selection<lb/>
committee could not over-<lb/>
look "We are very pleased<lb/>
to have him in the Hall<lb/>
noted Cam "The Univer-<lb/>
sity should be proud of his<lb/>
record not only as a coach<lb/>
but asa person.<lb/>
"I played under him<lb/>
when I played football<lb/>
here continued Cain.<lb/>
The thing that impressed<lb/>
me about him. in foot!<lb/>
and baseball was 'ha-<lb/>
always gave everyone<lb/>
chance Also he h i<lb/>
unique ability to daw the<lb/>
best from everybody<lb/>
played for him<lb/>
Mallory seemed<lb/>
honored with his selection<lb/>
to the Hall o? Fame "It's<lb/>
quite a thrill said Ma<lb/>
lory it feels good t - .?.<lb/>
that people recogmrt-<lb/>
this way<lb/>
People have always re-<lb/>
cogmzed Maiiory's e<lb/>
lence In 1961. he Aas<lb/>
named winner of the V.<lb/>
Wynn award The award s<lb/>
given annually by the Ral-<lb/>
eigh Hotstove League I<lb/>
the person m North Caro-<lb/>
lina who contributes most<lb/>
to baseball<lb/>
More recent winners<lb/>
include New York Yankee<lb/>
pitcher Catfish Hunter and<lb/>
San Diego pitcher, and<lb/>
1978 NL Cy Young Award<lb/>
winner. Gaylord Perry<lb/>
That s not bad company<lb/>
Just ask Catfish and<lb/>
Gaylord<lb/>
Revils, Northrup head returnees<lb/>
Pirate wrestlers open in Monarch tournament<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
It's called the Monarch Invitational, but over the last<lb/>
few years the two-day tournament has been an annual<lb/>
display of some brilliant individual performances by ECU<lb/>
wrestlers.<lb/>
Take last year's tournament for an example.<lb/>
A relatively unknown freshman by the name of Butch<lb/>
Revils from Norfolk, Va. upset four top seeded opponents to<lb/>
capture the 177 pound weight class. Revils was also named<lb/>
the tournament's outstanding wrestler and went on to have<lb/>
a spectacular freshman season.<lb/>
And again this year, Pirate head coach Bill Hill will take<lb/>
virtually his entire team to the tournament with great<lb/>
expectations another freshman will emerge from his<lb/>
recruiting crop.<lb/>
"The Monarch tournament is quickly becoming one of<lb/>
the biggest and most prestigious tournaments In this area<lb/>
said Hill. "I always enjoy this tournament because it gives<lb/>
me a good opportunity to see how all our wrestlers look and<lb/>
see what area they need Improvement in.<lb/>
Since we have a lot of freshmen on the squad It also<lb/>
gives me a good look at them as well<lb/>
M ore than 350 wrestlers will be oompeteing In the event<lb/>
with almost 35 teams entered. Awards will be given to'the<lb/>
first and second place teams while individual wrestlers will<lb/>
place first, second or third.<lb/>
"At this stage of the season I'm not real concerned with<lb/>
how we finish asa team explained Hill. "We just want to<lb/>
fmd out who can help us early in the season and give some<lb/>
of our younger wrestlers experience<lb/>
The Pirates return eight lettermen from last year's<lb/>
squad including Revils and sophomore Vic Northrup who<lb/>
were both named to the National M at New' AB-raahmwn<lb/>
team Northrup finished the season with a fine f64 record<lb/>
and was a member of ECU NCAA tournament team.<lb/>
Revils logged an impressive 18-5-1 record and was also<lb/>
named the Outstanding Freshman in the Witkes Open.<lb/>
Other top returnees include Bob Passino at 118, Frank<lb/>
Schaede at 150, Steve Goode at 158, and Jay Dever at 190.<lb/>
Passino finished the season with a 13-9 record although<lb/>
he was injured most of the season while Shaede had a<lb/>
14-12-1 mark and Goode posted a 21-8 record. Dever<lb/>
finished with a 17-6 record.<lb/>
Heavyweight D.T. Joyner is expected to join the team<lb/>
after the football season and will be regarded as one of the<lb/>
top heavyweight prospects in the nation. Joyner finished<lb/>
20-2 last year, and competed in the NCAA tournament<lb/>
championships along with Northrup.<lb/>
"Once again we'll be strong in the upper weight<lb/>
classes noted Hill, who begins his second season at ECU.<lb/>
"Last year we had a lot of problems in the lower weights<lb/>
and we tried to recruit some people who will hetp us thta<lb/>
year The Monarch Tournament will help me determine<lb/>
wh.ch ones we'll be able to use in our 0,her ear?y<lb/>
tournaments and dual matches. y<lb/>
,hJ(;UiireShmen pr0spects who will be competing ,n<lb/>
the r f.rst oolleg.ate tournament this weekend arfsteven<lb/>
Milanese at 118, Mark Twigg, Troy Spencer at 34 and<lb/>
Danny Keene at 126 a ?<lb/>
Twigg and Spencer will battle for th? 1 x ?<lb/>
vacated by phi Osman, a SSL ?ElE2 on<lb/>
number, whogr.clu.ted last ynr. en, team<lb/>
Milanese will badc-up Passino at 11a while k ?<lb/>
lunlor Ctarll. MoGimse, w,n bat ,Vte ,?" an<lb/>
position. ,ne 126 pound<lb/>
Other wrestlers expected to mak? th? ?<lb/>
Monarch tournament arVjames RoT Rona, 12 '? S<lb/>
?Dcrmid Foster all at 142, Jamas Ellison, i? pllj?<lb/>
177 and Brian Marrtam at 190 ' M Spear at<lb/>
<pb facs="00057159_0011"/><lb/>
9 Novambf 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pap 9<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD's Fearless Forecast<lb/>
WAKE FOREST AT DUKE<lb/>
UNC AT CLEMSON<lb/>
WARYLANDatvRGna<lb/>
0KClASIEATpENN STATE<lb/>
SUAT?81 ATOWAST.<lb/>
LSU AT ALABAMA<lb/>
SBGnTON AT SOUTHERN CAL<lb/>
STANF0RD AT ARIZONA ST<lb/>
ARKANSAS AT BAYLOR<lb/>
HOUSTON AT TEXAS<lb/>
CHARLESCHANDLER<lb/>
(85-32-1)<lb/>
ECU 31-7<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Iowa St.<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Arizona St.<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
TERRY HERNDON<lb/>
(81-36-1)<lb/>
ECU 45-19<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Oklahoma St.<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Arizona St.<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Houston<lb/>
SAM ROGERSDAVID MA READY<lb/>
(77-40-1)(52-20)<lb/>
ECU 20-17ECU 24-7<lb/>
Wake ForestDuke<lb/>
ClemsonClemson<lb/>
MarylandMaryland<lb/>
Penn StatePenn State<lb/>
OklahomaNebraska<lb/>
Oklahoma St.Iowa St.<lb/>
AlabamaAlabama<lb/>
Southern CalWashington<lb/>
StanfordArizona St.<lb/>
ArkansasArkansas<lb/>
TexasTexas<lb/>
JAMESB. MALLORY<lb/>
ECU Dean of Men<lb/>
ECU 27-13<lb/>
Ouke<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Oklahoma St.<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Arizona<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
Volleyball tourney is set<lb/>
Bv.IlM M v noocc-<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU is honored this<lb/>
year with the responsibility<lb/>
of hosting the NCAIAW<lb/>
Volleyball Championship.<lb/>
The tournament will be<lb/>
held this Friday, and<lb/>
Saturday at Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum.<lb/>
The 15 teams in this<lb/>
weekend's tournament are<lb/>
divided into two divisions.<lb/>
ECU will be competing with<lb/>
Division I schools from<lb/>
across the state. The<lb/>
Pirates are tied in the<lb/>
seedmgs with Duke for<lb/>
third. There will be a coin<lb/>
flip to decide which school<lb/>
will acquire the third place<lb/>
seeding<lb/>
If ECU wins the toss,<lb/>
the Pirates will face UNC-G<lb/>
in the first round of the<lb/>
tourney In the event that<lb/>
they lose, the Bucs will<lb/>
meet with the Mountain-<lb/>
eers of Appalachian State<lb/>
Coach Ahta Dillon<lb/>
expressed scepticism over<lb/>
?tie Pirates' previous play<lb/>
against those two teams<lb/>
We beat Appalachian<lb/>
easily earlier in the<lb/>
season, but they never have<lb/>
against us.<lb/>
NC-G gave us one of the<lb/>
;hest wins we had all<lb/>
season They were ready<lb/>
N C State comes into<lb/>
the Tournament seeded<lb/>
first with North Carolina<lb/>
seeded second.<lb/>
State has to be the<lb/>
favorite m the Tourna-<lb/>
ment said Dillon. "They<lb/>
haven't lost many matches<lb/>
(10-2) They were upset at<lb/>
the beginning of the second<lb/>
half of the season by<lb/>
UNC-G Its probably a<lb/>
toss-up among the top four<lb/>
teams. It's the tightest race<lb/>
that we've had in quite a<lb/>
while<lb/>
The seedmgs are decid-<lb/>
ed by the school's won-loss<lb/>
record with other schools in<lb/>
their division North Caro-<lb/>
lina returns to defend the<lb/>
title they took home last<lb/>
season Wake Forest, a<lb/>
Division II team last<lb/>
season, will round out the<lb/>
seven team Division I<lb/>
standings.<lb/>
In Division II, High<lb/>
Point, Western Carolina,<lb/>
and Guilford College have<lb/>
captured the top three<lb/>
positions. High Point is<lb/>
considered the favorite in<lb/>
the field of eight teams.<lb/>
The Pirates take an<lb/>
impressive 28-11 mark into<lb/>
the tournament. "We're<lb/>
seeded the same as we<lb/>
were last year said<lb/>
Dillon. "Last year we kink<lb/>
of fell apart in the first<lb/>
round and never got going;<lb/>
I think we will do better<lb/>
than we did then, how-<lb/>
ever<lb/>
ECU vs. William and Mary-<lb/>
ABC Regional TV<lb/>
kickoff 4:10 p.m.<lb/>
Mallory<lb/>
assists<lb/>
forecasters<lb/>
ECU Dean of Men and<lb/>
former head baseball coach<lb/>
James Mallory is this<lb/>
week's guest picker in the<lb/>
Fearless Forecast. Last<lb/>
week's guest, basketball<lb/>
coach Larry Gillman posted<lb/>
a very respectable 10-2<lb/>
record. Several games this<lb/>
week are between Top 10<lb/>
teams, and in several<lb/>
cases, are for conference<lb/>
championships. Top-<lb/>
ranked Oklahoma travels to<lb/>
Nebraska to face the<lb/>
fourth-ranked Cornhusk-<lb/>
ers Sixth-ranked Texas<lb/>
plays eighth-ranked Hou-<lb/>
ston in a key Southwest<lb/>
Conference encounter.<lb/>
Among area teams,<lb/>
fJ C State faces the<lb/>
' uahst test, as thev 'ravel<lb/>
tosecond-rankedPenn State<lb/>
MENDENHALL SNACK BAR<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
" Homecoming Special "<lb/>
PIRATES TRESURE BOX<lb/>
with Golden Fried Chicken<lb/>
Pearl Potato Salad<lb/>
Emerald Cole Slaw<lb/>
Ruby Apple<lb/>
Sapphire Roll<lb/>
ready to go to the game!<lb/>
SERVOMATION CORPORATION<lb/>
A?T-?F? ? m,<lb/>
STOCK REDUCTION SALE<lb/>
(Now In Progress)<lb/>
On IZOD Lacosta Shirts and Sweaters<lb/>
Men's and Women's.<lb/>
We have an excellent selection of SKI EQUIPMENT now in stock.<lb/>
SKI PACKAGES (Skis, Boots, Bindings and Poles):<lb/>
$169.00<lb/>
(For a limited time)<lb/>
Good Selection of Used Ski Equipment.<lb/>
Gordon D. Fulp<lb/>
Golf Professional<lb/>
Greenville Country Club<lb/>
Of I of Mejfiai 0'<lb/>
Phone 750504<lb/>
Open 7 days a week unr: la?<lb/>
 1 U North Greti'U;<lb/>
Gieenvillt- M C 7.S34<lb/>
Phone 919 7s '( .1<lb/>
Sm "1mmm<lb/>
NOW FEATURING<lb/>
LUNCH 11 a.m2 p.m.<lb/>
Choice of meat ,<lb/>
2 vegetables.<lb/>
Coffee or Tea.<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
DINNER 4:30 7 p.m<lb/>
Choice of meat,<lb/>
3 vegetables,<lb/>
Coffee or Tea.<lb/>
$2.25 ?<lb/>
 HOMEMADE DESSERTS AVAILABLE <lb/>
Hours: Sunday Thursday open until 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Fridav and Saturday open until 9x00 p.m<lb/>
? We also are serving from our regular menu.<lb/>
We have a catering service for private parties.<lb/>
For information call 752 2624.<lb/>
i PiwfcKii<lb/>
IMflMBftO S<lb/>
jsp<lb/>
FOR PIZZAS AND<lb/>
SUBS AFTER THE<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
NESDTORHAXAFTSt<lb/>
A DAY IN CLASSES?<lb/>
TH?SUNSET<lb/>
n9E.3thST!?T<lb/>
CALL OR<lb/>
COME BY CHANELO'S<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
507 E. 14th St.<lb/>
. Riggan Shoe<lb/>
 Repair Shop <lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 W. 4th Street<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 GRANDE AVE.<lb/>
at<lb/>
COLLEGE VIEW<lb/>
CLEANERS<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
1501 S. Evans<lb/>
B-15, bomber, field,<lb/>
deck, flight, snorkel jackets<lb/>
Back Packs<lb/>
THIS WEEK AT<lb/>
(EhapterX<lb/>
THURSDAY? JOHN MOORE<lb/>
FRIDAYTGIF PARTY<lb/>
AFTERNOON<lb/>
QUARTER<lb/>
FRIDAY NIGHTfinals of<lb/>
MISS CHAPTER<lb/>
X CONTEST<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
STEVE HARDY<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
VICTORY PARTY<lb/>
SATURDAYWITH<lb/>
TOMMY GARDNER<lb/>
<lb/>
-rinnn The ECU e?? s<lb/>
Student Union <lb/>
Presents !<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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 on sale at MSC Central Ticket <lb/>
TV<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
? only 2,000 available, only 5<lb/>
Nantucket<lb/>
Sunday Nov. 19th<lb/>
8:00 pm Wright Aud.<lb/>
Tickets:<lb/>
Students $1.50<lb/>
Public $3.00<lb/>
? Office<lb/>
<lb/>
 ? mail order ticket requests are urged to<lb/>
 be prompt<lb/>
 Presented by SU<lb/>
 Special Attractions Commitee<lb/>
<lb/>
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?&amp;<lb/>
? "Epic" are trademarks of CBS Inc S 1978 CBS Inc<lb/>
Live,<lb/>
1 get Liv.<lb/>
Treat yourself. to lyrics that<lb/>
flutter the heart. To a voice that<lb/>
triggers sighs and smiles.<lb/>
Livingston Taylor's new album.<lb/>
"3-Way Mirror" generates the<lb/>
kind of spirited, lifegiving quali<lb/>
ties you would expect from an<lb/>
original.<lb/>
Livingston's first album on<lb/>
Epic (and his first release in 5<lb/>
years I contains nine Taylor made<lb/>
tunes, and one he's chosen to<lb/>
interpret. Backed up by Maria<lb/>
Muldaur on "No Thank You<lb/>
Skycap Liv proves once again<lb/>
that the love song is alive and<lb/>
well and waiting to be heard.<lb/>
Livingston Taylor. Identifiable<lb/>
his own man.<lb/>
.w<lb/>
"3-Wiy Mirror:<lb/>
Livingston Taylor'is<lb/>
new album featuring<lb/>
"L. A. Serenade" and<lb/>
"Going Round<lb/>
One More Time?<lb/>
On Epic Records and Tapes.<lb/>
Mruictour ?prs courtesy o? Warner Bros Records Producedby N.ck DeCaro'or TheEitena nmem<lb/>
Company. Cwcut.ve Producer Charles Koppe?man Represent .on ICM Management Don La Boston .<lb/>
Appearing Nov. 9 at ECU<lb/>
t<lb/>
"? ? -? m <lb/>
' ? ? ? t<lb/>
?'<lb/>
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??????"??? "????"<lb/>
??????nWt?liJiHj<lb/>
t<lb/>
?-<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057159_0012"/><lb/>
"??? ? <lb/>
Papa 10 FOUNAINHEAD 9 Nggghjt 10?<lb/>
Cowboy problems are big<lb/>
mystery to Landry, NFL<lb/>
ByCHARLESCHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The present NFL season<lb/>
seems to be full of question<lb/>
marks. One of them mujst<lb/>
certainly be the defending<lb/>
World Champion Dallas<lb/>
Cowboys The season<lb/>
began with great expec-<lb/>
tations by the Cowboys<lb/>
Now saddled with a 6-4<lb/>
record, the NFL champs<lb/>
Tiust struggle to even win<lb/>
'her own division.<lb/>
What's the problem<lb/>
Well, the Cowboys are not<lb/>
lying with the enthusi-<lb/>
asm that it takes to win<lb/>
tfadays in the NFL Each<lb/>
week their opponents note<lb/>
this lack of 'fight" within<lb/>
the champs<lb/>
Another big problem for<lb/>
Torn Landry's club has<lb/>
been turnovers Dallas is<lb/>
giving up more turnovers<lb/>
it is receiving. Such<lb/>
'sties ust do not belong<lb/>
hampionship teams.<lb/>
' another theory on<lb/>
siow start by the<lb/>
??boys is that such<lb/>
almost always happens to a<lb/>
rom Landry coached ttam.<lb/>
The Cowboys have lad<lb/>
such mid-season was he<lb/>
?ear that the Cowbcs<lb/>
; big game without<lb/>
irst going through a mid-<lb/>
season slump So maybe<lb/>
' all is lost for Dallas<lb/>
Yet. Landry should not<lb/>
for granted that his<lb/>
?Ml! come on strong as<lb/>
ai He must work them<lb/>
harder than ever m an<lb/>
tempt to attain champ-<lb/>
' P caf-ber again<lb/>
ers feel that<lb/>
will, indeed.<lb/>
? ind reach the<lb/>
" "gain But. who<lb/>
'?  ng else has<lb/>
??xpected in the<lb/>
?eason.<lb/>
-? ok at the<lb/>
1 ' ' '? - week:<lb/>
DALLAS17GREEN BAY 7<lb/>
Both these clubs are out<lb/>
ve their worth this<lb/>
? Botl osl last week.<lb/>
Cowboys must<lb/>
? realize that the<lb/>
? ? ? ?'? not bow at their<lb/>
"ust demand<lb/>
Packers don't<lb/>
but should be<lb/>
" here.<lb/>
BUFFALO 10<lb/>
s showed<lb/>
?ne last week how<lb/>
can be when Bob<lb/>
is at the helm.<lb/>
- Knox and the<lb/>
? matched that<lb/>
??? ill see more of<lb/>
'his game.<lb/>
ST LOUIS27<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO 13<lb/>
Bud Wilkinson finally<lb/>
has most of Cardinals back<lb/>
from early season injuries.<lb/>
Most preveiant among the<lb/>
returnees is quarterback<lb/>
Jim hart. The 13 year<lb/>
veteran has the offense<lb/>
rolling again The 49ers lost<lb/>
:heir mam weapon, O.J.<lb/>
Simpson, to injury last<lb/>
'hese factors add<lb/>
?'? ' number three for<lb/>
St Louis<lb/>
PITTSBURGH 24<lb/>
LOSANGELES21<lb/>
This isthe biggest game<lb/>
of the week it could be a<lb/>
preview of the Super Bowl.<lb/>
Both teams appear to be<lb/>
good candidates for that<lb/>
game. The feeling here is<lb/>
that the Steelers are simply<lb/>
the better team. The<lb/>
Steelers to win the Super<lb/>
BowP Who knows9 First<lb/>
they must pull this one out.<lb/>
NEW ORLEANS13<lb/>
ATLANTA 10<lb/>
These two teams are<lb/>
battling it out for a possible<lb/>
wild card spot in the NFC.<lb/>
The Saints have their best<lb/>
team ever. The Falcons are<lb/>
probably the superior of the<lb/>
two clubs. But, in the upset<lb/>
special of the week, the<lb/>
Saints take another big step<lb/>
toward true respectability.<lb/>
SEATTLE 21<lb/>
BALTIMORE 20<lb/>
With Bert Jones, the<lb/>
Colts can play with any-<lb/>
body. The Seahawks are on<lb/>
the verge of becoming a<lb/>
very good team. In a "real<lb/>
donnybrook look for Jim<lb/>
Zorn to lead the Seattle clan<lb/>
to victory.<lb/>
MINNESTOA20<lb/>
CHICAGO10<lb/>
The Bears have just<lb/>
about blown it. They were<lb/>
picked by many to win the<lb/>
NFC Central this year. But<lb/>
after winning their first<lb/>
three games, they have lost<lb/>
seven straight. Make that<lb/>
eight after this encounter<lb/>
with the surging Vikings.<lb/>
DENVER17<lb/>
CLEVELAND 13<lb/>
This is a matchup of<lb/>
playoff hopefuls. Both<lb/>
could end up there when<lb/>
the season ends. Yet both<lb/>
have their problems. Den-<lb/>
ver's appear less sever,<lb/>
so<lb/>
NEW ENGLAND 20<lb/>
HOUSTON 14<lb/>
CBS-TV commentator<lb/>
Pat Summerall said Sunday<lb/>
that the Patriots may well<lb/>
be the best team in the NFL<lb/>
this season. That is a very<lb/>
distinct possibility. The<lb/>
Oilers will put up a good<lb/>
fight, but will find them-<lb/>
selves in agreement with<lb/>
Summerall after this game.<lb/>
TAMPA BAY 17<lb/>
DETROIT 14<lb/>
The Buccaneers sport<lb/>
one of the NFL's brightest<lb/>
young defenses. The Lions<lb/>
have played well in recent<lb/>
.weeks, and should continue<lb/>
to do so this week. But<lb/>
something in the stars says<lb/>
the expansion Bucs will<lb/>
win.<lb/>
WASHINGTON 28<lb/>
NEW YORK GIANTS21<lb/>
The Redskins have lost<lb/>
three of their last four, yet<lb/>
still lead the NFC East by<lb/>
one game. They're not<lb/>
about to let the Giants ruin<lb/>
their dream of a division<lb/>
championship as they<lb/>
bounce back from a loss to<lb/>
Baltimore last Monday<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA 17<lb/>
NEW YORK JETS14<lb/>
OAKLAND24<lb/>
CINCINNATI 14<lb/>
SANDIEG017<lb/>
KANSASCITY7<lb/>
The Chargers are a<lb/>
good young team. Yet they<lb/>
have had problems this<lb/>
season. This game with the<lb/>
Chiefs is not one of them.<lb/>
NEW<lb/>
ECU CANVAS<lb/>
ROCKING CHAIR<lb/>
FOLDS UP FOR STORAGE<lb/>
ECU COACHING<lb/>
JACKETS<lb/>
PAT'S HAT<lb/>
and<lb/>
STADIUM SEATS<lb/>
PURPLE and GOLD<lb/>
RUGBY SWEATERS<lb/>
' i<lb/>
??.<lb/>
H.L.HODGES<lb/>
AND COMPANY, INC.<lb/>
210 E. 5th St. Phone 752-4156<lb/>
BONANZA<lb/>
FOR PIRATES ONLY<lb/>
Bonanza is proud to present<lb/>
the return of our fabulous<lb/>
PIRATE SPECIAL!<lb/>
Which includes a ooz. Sirloin Steak,<lb/>
Baked Potato , Texas Toast, Salad<lb/>
from our FREE, all you can eat Salad Bar<lb/>
and your choice of Beverage<lb/>
( except milk, and Dessert.<lb/>
All for $2.89<lb/>
STITFFY'S<lb/>
S,<lb/>
4 ?<lb/>
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re<lb/>
$<lb/>
i i<lb/>
'Jff<lb/>
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Good Stuff<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
Special<lb/>
,STUFFY'S<lb/>
Js<lb/>
 ,<lb/>
y<lb/>
25 cents off<lb/>
with the purchase<lb/>
of any sub<lb/>
offer good through Nov. loth, with coupon<lb/>
Don't forget your<lb/>
date with a sub.<lb/>
Take one to the game<lb/>
. " " '????'???.<lb/>
3 Z 'r<lb/>
iK<lb/>
STUFFY'S SANDWICHES <lb/>
No. 1 Spiced Ham - Cooked Salam. - Cheese VYo" ?TT<lb/>
No. 2 Cheese - Provolone - Swiss - Amencan , <lb/>
No. 3 Nam-Swiss 25 245<lb/>
No. 4 Nsm - Salami - Swiss 55 ???<lb/>
No 5 TunaSalad V25 245<lb/>
No. 6 Roast Beef r5? 2 95<lb/>
No. 7 Turkay r55 3 05<lb/>
No 8 Club -Ham -Turkey -Cheese "1 ! !?<lb/>
? 9 Stuffy Fsmou. - Ham-Cappacola - Salami-Cheese so 2 ?<lb/>
Stuffy Star - Ham - Cappacola - Proscuitn,<lb/>
Salami - Cheese ? ec , <lb/>
Bologna-Cooked Salam, Cheese f??<lb/>
Pastrami  1W <lb/>
Corned Beef ?? 2 <lb/>
 ?( 55 3qc<lb/>
All Stuffys Garnished at no extra cost with Tomatoes.<lb/>
lettuce, onions, oil. vinegar. oreg3no and salt<lb/>
BEVERAGES<lb/>
Coca Cola - Sprite - Tab - Orange Ju.ce - Mr POb - Draft Beer - Coffee<lb/>
Iced Tea - Lemonade - M.Ik - Hawaiian Punch - Hot Chocolate<lb/>
No. 11<lb/>
No. 12<lb/>
No. 13<lb/>
J<lb/>
Offer good all day, eyery day<lb/>
with presentation of ECU I.D. card.<lb/>
<lb/>
Remember Great Things Happei<lb/>
at Bonanza  and ECU<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057159_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>