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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057167_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Vol. 55<lb/>
f<lb/>
No. ST<lb/>
12 December 1978<lb/>
Tables turned on testing organizations<lb/>
California students examine school testing<lb/>
By NANCIE CREENSTEIN<lb/>
CCRS Writer<lb/>
Copyright, CCRS<lb/>
California students can<lb/>
now examine those who<lb/>
examine them.<lb/>
A landmark "Truth-in-<lb/>
Testing" bill was signed<lb/>
into law last September bv<lb/>
Democratic Gov. Jerrv<lb/>
Brown. The law allows<lb/>
students for the first time<lb/>
tn look into the workings<lb/>
ot organizations like the<lb/>
Educational Testing Service<lb/>
(ETS) of Princeton, N.J<lb/>
and the American College<lb/>
resting Program of Iowa<lb/>
City, Iowa, that develop<lb/>
and administer standard-<lb/>
ized college admissions<lb/>
tests.<lb/>
The bill was a reaction<lb/>
to 'he California Board of<lb/>
Regents' decision last year<lb/>
placing more importance<lb/>
on standardized tests as a<lb/>
basis lor admission, sav-<lb/>
Felice Smith, co-director of<lb/>
the University of California<lb/>
Student Lobby, sponsor of<lb/>
the bill.<lb/>
The bill requires ETS,<lb/>
and all other testing cor-<lb/>
porations, to: -disclose<lb/>
copies of old tests equiva-<lb/>
lent in content to those<lb/>
currently in use;<lb/>
-disclose data bearing<lb/>
on the quality and the<lb/>
validity of the tests and onl<lb/>
how well they actually<lb/>
predict success in college;<lb/>
disclose information on<lb/>
test costs and what money<lb/>
received by the tester is<lb/>
used for;<lb/>
disclose information on<lb/>
the purpose and subject<lb/>
matter of each test, and<lb/>
how each test is scored.<lb/>
Administrators are put-<lb/>
ting more weight on test<lb/>
-cores than grade point<lb/>
average for admissions,<lb/>
says Joel Packer, legisla-<lb/>
tive director of the U.S.<lb/>
Students Association, the<lb/>
national lobby group for<lb/>
student governments. Pac-<lb/>
DR. Iro R. PREWETT<lb/>
Live-in project<lb/>
to be held soon<lb/>
By ARAH ENABLE <lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Project InsideOut is<lb/>
a rgram allowing inter-<lb/>
ested students to see how<lb/>
a State institution for the<lb/>
mentally retarded func-<lb/>
tions. The students par-<lb/>
ticipating will live-in for<lb/>
"d a half days.<lb/>
Nie project takes place at<lb/>
Caswe'i Center in Kinston,<lb/>
Irum Jan. 24-27.<lb/>
Jane McDonald. pre-<lb/>
sident of the Student<lb/>
Council for Exceptional<lb/>
Children said, "Project In-<lb/>
sideOut is looking from<lb/>
the inside of an institution<lb/>
- out<lb/>
Students will stay in a<lb/>
new unit at C as well. Dis-<lb/>
cussions will be held to<lb/>
help alert students as to<lb/>
what is going on inside the<lb/>
center. McDonald said time<lb/>
will be spent talking with<lb/>
professionals, residents,<lb/>
and discussion groups.<lb/>
The purpose of the<lb/>
program, McDonald said,<lb/>
is to give the students a<lb/>
chance to gain knowledge<lb/>
and real experience in<lb/>
working wuh retarded<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Only on the first 50.<lb/>
applicants will be accepted<lb/>
into the program. The had<lb/>
of an applicant's depart-<lb/>
ment must approve and<lb/>
sign the pre-registration<lb/>
form. John Childers is<lb/>
Lo'ping students through<lb/>
the psychology department,<lb/>
and Dr. John Richardsc is<lb/>
giving students assistance<lb/>
with the program through<lb/>
the special education de-<lb/>
partment. Mary Lingerfelt<lb/>
is the co-ordinator of the<lb/>
program, and works<lb/>
through the volunteer ser-<lb/>
vices for Caswell Center.<lb/>
"Students will probably<lb/>
be paired with his field<lb/>
said McDonald speaking of<lb/>
the discussions. "Discus-<lb/>
sions are really good.<lb/>
Some students have said<lb/>
they really enjoyed that<lb/>
One topic of discussion is<lb/>
"Avoiding Burn-Out<lb/>
McDonald said she's really<lb/>
looking forward to hearing<lb/>
about that.<lb/>
The participants do<lb/>
have to pay for their own<lb/>
meals, said McDonald. "It<lb/>
shouldn't be more than<lb/>
SI.50 per meal she<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Caswell Center is fund-<lb/>
ing everything else, except<lb/>
transportation. No grade<lb/>
credit is given to the<lb/>
students, but that is going<lb/>
to be investigated as a<lb/>
possibility for next year.<lb/>
"Anybody that goes<lb/>
will be coming back with<lb/>
more than they left with. I<lb/>
think we'll learn more<lb/>
there in three days than<lb/>
we have in a semester of<lb/>
class McDonald added.<lb/>
ker said this is mostly<lb/>
because the number of<lb/>
applicants has been greatly<lb/>
outnumbering the openings<lb/>
at many schools.<lb/>
Controlling 80 percent<lb/>
ol the testing market is<lb/>
ETS, says the California<lb/>
Student Lobby. According<lb/>
to ETS, over 1.75 million<lb/>
students last year took its<lb/>
tests, including the Scho<lb/>
lastic Aptitude Test (SAT),<lb/>
the Law School Admissions<lb/>
Test (LSAT), the Graduate<lb/>
Records Exam (CRE), and<lb/>
the Graduate Management<lb/>
dmissions Test (GMAT).<lb/>
Group<lb/>
The nonprofit group<lb/>
also says it took in last<lb/>
year $70 million from its<lb/>
operations, a million dol-<lb/>
lars of which was "in ex<lb/>
ce<lb/>
lars of which was "in<lb/>
excess of expenditures<lb/>
"Legislation is er<lb/>
crucial because ETS is a<lb/>
very secretive corporation<lb/>
said Alan Nairn, a Colum-<lb/>
bia University graudate<lb/>
student working with Ralph<lb/>
Nader's Center for the<lb/>
Study of Responsive Law<lb/>
who has been studying<lb/>
ETS for five years.<lb/>
"Even though they're a<lb/>
nonprofit organization, they<lb/>
keep important information<lb/>
about tests and the run-<lb/>
ning of the corporation<lb/>
under wraps. The only way<lb/>
those things will come out<lb/>
is through legislation<lb/>
-aid Nairn.<lb/>
Tent<lb/>
Other non-ETS tests<lb/>
affected by the California<lb/>
law include the Medical<lb/>
College Admissions Test<lb/>
(MCAT) and the American<lb/>
College Testing admissions<lb/>
test (ACT).<lb/>
Other states<lb/>
Two similar, but stron-<lb/>
ger. "Truth-in-Testing"<lb/>
bills were introduced in<lb/>
both the New York State<lb/>
Legislature and the<lb/>
Congress. Neither,<lb/>
ever, has made it<lb/>
law.<lb/>
U.S.<lb/>
how-<lb/>
into a<lb/>
information<lb/>
New York's bill, which<lb/>
would also require the<lb/>
release of test questions<lb/>
and answers 30 days after<lb/>
the test's .scoring, was<lb/>
killed in committees of<lb/>
both houses because of<lb/>
ETS's strong objections.<lb/>
ETS<lb/>
Robert Moulthrop,<lb/>
director of the information<lb/>
division of ETS, said,<lb/>
"Basically the New York<lb/>
bill seems to call for things<lb/>
which are not necessary<lb/>
and might hamper the<lb/>
process of standardized<lb/>
testing across the coun-<lb/>
ts<lb/>
Moulthrop said the re-<lb/>
lease of current test ques-<lb/>
tions would only drive up<lb/>
the cost of the test<lb/>
development process. It<lb/>
takes 18-24 months- for a<lb/>
question to go through 150<lb/>
steps before it appears on<lb/>
a test, he said. Sample<lb/>
tests (retired tests) are<lb/>
available for every test<lb/>
now being given, he<lb/>
added, and "meet the<lb/>
exact specifications of the<lb/>
current lest<lb/>
Research<lb/>
Steve Soloman, state<lb/>
coordinator for the testing<lb/>
project of New York<lb/>
Public Interest Research<lb/>
Group (NYPIRG), said the<lb/>
bill is being reworked with<lb/>
ETS suggestions in mind<lb/>
and will be introduced<lb/>
during the next legislative<lb/>
session. NYPIRG is chief<lb/>
lobbying group for the<lb/>
legislation.<lb/>
Federal legislation<lb/>
introduced last April by<lb/>
Rep. Michael J. Harrington<lb/>
(D-Mass) aimed to force<lb/>
testing corporations to give<lb/>
the public more informa-<lb/>
tion on the limits of<lb/>
standardized tests, and on<lb/>
their validity and reliabil-<lb/>
ity.<lb/>
Release of tests<lb/>
It would have restricted<lb/>
the relea-e of test scores<lb/>
without students' permis-<lb/>
-ion and disallowed the<lb/>
use of test scores as<lb/>
cutoffs for college admis-<lb/>
-ion -aid James Costello.<lb/>
Harrington administrative<lb/>
assistant. The bill also<lb/>
called for access by stu-<lb/>
dent- to current test ques-<lb/>
tions, -aid Costello.<lb/>
Failure<lb/>
The bill died in commit-<lb/>
tee thi- year, and Costello<lb/>
-aid its chances next vear<lb/>
were small partly because<lb/>
Harrington did not seek<lb/>
re-election this year, and<lb/>
no other congressman has<lb/>
yet picked up sponsorship<lb/>
of the bill.<lb/>
"There is a hostile<lb/>
attitude among legislators<lb/>
to getting involved in this<lb/>
issue he said. "They are<lb/>
100 percent against govern-<lb/>
ment regulations in anv<lb/>
sector, and since regulation<lb/>
of testing corporations con-<lb/>
-titutes a new regulation,<lb/>
r� - being resisted all the<lb/>
i<lb/>
Culture<lb/>
Coblulkj ai -am tiiul<lb/>
most people don't think<lb/>
there is a need for any<lb/>
regulation because "testing<lb/>
is a hallowed part of<lb/>
American culture<lb/>
.National student lob-<lb/>
bie-t Packer said "Truth-<lb/>
in-Te-ting" is a new issue<lb/>
and "it will take a while to<lb/>
educate legislators about<lb/>
the variou- ramification- of<lb/>
te-ting and testing corpora-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Prewett given position<lb/>
ECl New- Bureau<lb/>
Dr. Clinton R. Pre-<lb/>
wett, veteran faculty<lb/>
'bairman and professor,<lb/>
has been appointed to a<lb/>
newly-created post of<lb/>
 'ant to the Chan-<lb/>
"� ia. Assignments<lb/>
"i<lb/>
The appointment,<lb/>
effective Dec. 1, was<lb/>
announced by ECU<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas B.<lb/>
Brewer.<lb/>
Prewett's responsibil-<lb/>
ities will include<lb/>
monitoring of the<lb/>
plementation of<lb/>
equal opportunity<lb/>
affirmative action<lb/>
grams; discussing<lb/>
problems of students,<lb/>
parents and others who<lb/>
come to the chancellor's<lb/>
office and seeking sol-<lb/>
utions to those problems;<lb/>
and special assignments<lb/>
pertaining to athletics<lb/>
and other public relations<lb/>
alignments, Brewer said.<lb/>
Brewer said the<lb/>
appointment was "in<lb/>
order to further enhance<lb/>
the ability of East<lb/>
Carolina University to<lb/>
respond to its needs<lb/>
Col. C.R. Blake,<lb/>
assistant to the chan-<lb/>
cellor, will continue in<lb/>
that position, working<lb/>
with general administra-<lb/>
tive taff assignments<lb/>
and governmental, alumni<lb/>
and ctVfc affairs, Brewer<lb/>
�an:<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
a native of<lb/>
came to East<lb/>
of<lb/>
hav ing<lb/>
from<lb/>
North<lb/>
In<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
lm-<lb/>
various<lb/>
and<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
rewett,<lb/>
Dallas, (. ,<lb/>
Carolina a dean<lb/>
students m 1952,<lb/>
received his PhD<lb/>
the University of<lb/>
Carolina in 1951.<lb/>
1957. he became<lb/>
fessor and chairman of<lb/>
the ECU psychology<lb/>
department and served<lb/>
as chairman of the de-<lb/>
partment for 17 years.<lb/>
He has served un-<lb/>
officially as a close ad-<lb/>
visor to Dr. Brewer<lb/>
-ince Brewer's election<lb/>
as new chancellor of<lb/>
ECU last Spring. Prewett<lb/>
served as secretary of<lb/>
the Chancellor Selection<lb/>
Committee during the<lb/>
1977-78 search.<lb/>
He has served as a<lb/>
consultant to many school<lb/>
systems, mental health<lb/>
agencies and in in gov-<lb/>
ernmental and business<lb/>
-ettings. He is the<lb/>
author of a number of<lb/>
publications and research<lb/>
studies.<lb/>
He is married to the<lb/>
former Irene Blass, a<lb/>
psychiatric social worker<lb/>
at the Pitt County<lb/>
Mental Health Center.<lb/>
The Prewetts have three<lb/>
-on all graduates of<lb/>
ECl<lb/>
Dr. Stephen Prewett, a<lb/>
nuclear physicist at Oak<lb/>
Ridge, Tenn Dr. Mi-<lb/>
chael Prewett, a clinical<lb/>
psychiatrist employed at<lb/>
Georgia College and<lb/>
David Prewett, completing<lb/>
his doctorate at the<lb/>
University of Kentucky.<lb/>
Prewett received his<lb/>
BS degree from the<lb/>
University of Goergia and<lb/>
his MA from the<lb/>
University of Oklahoma<lb/>
in 1948.<lb/>
He has wide ranging<lb/>
interests in student life<lb/>
and in intercollegiate<lb/>
athletics, particularly<lb/>
baseball, is active in<lb/>
civic and community<lb/>
affairs, and is a member<lb/>
of St. James Methodist<lb/>
Church, Greenville. The<lb/>
Prewetts reside near<lb/>
Ayden.<lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
A new minor program in English has<lb/>
been startedSee p.3.<lb/>
A Duke University freshman is fast<lb/>
becoming an authorSee p.3.<lb/>
For a review of The Old CountrySee<lb/>
p.5.<lb/>
For a report on the progress of The<lb/>
Cinema Society See p.5.<lb/>
The Pirates face La. Tech in the<lb/>
Independence BowlSee p.7.<lb/>
Only 14 more days until Christmas!<lb/>
McGinnis9 renewal<lb/>
set to begin soon<lb/>
By GLENN THOMAS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A standing ovation<lb/>
heralded the last perfor-<lb/>
mance of the 1970's in<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium this<lb/>
past Saturday night.<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium<lb/>
will undergo major sur-<lb/>
gery during the next<lb/>
year. The construction,<lb/>
which calls for a new<lb/>
lighting system, an or-<lb/>
chestra pit, and a four-<lb/>
fold enlargement of the<lb/>
stage are just a few of<lb/>
the improvements sched-<lb/>
uled to start in Januarv.<lb/>
The theatre will be<lb/>
closed just over a vear,<lb/>
with plans to be re-<lb/>
opened in the spring of<lb/>
1980. After the fall<lb/>
semester ends, all classes<lb/>
will be moved out of<lb/>
the building.<lb/>
McGinnis opened in<lb/>
the spring of 1951, with<lb/>
the production of Thorn-<lb/>
ton Wilder's "Our<lb/>
Town At the time it<lb/>
was one of the most<lb/>
well equipped elementary<lb/>
school auditoriums in the<lb/>
U.S.<lb/>
In 1963. the Speech<lb/>
and Drama Dept. was<lb/>
founded and given a<lb/>
home in McGinnis. Soon<lb/>
after that the Summer<lb/>
Theatre opened and<lb/>
�or almost a decade.<lb/>
ran<lb/>
Gas guzzlers gamble; strike seen<lb/>
soon<lb/>
i<lb/>
OIL COMPANY PRESIDENT says there is an ample supply of gas. Photo ly Steve Romero)<lb/>
NEW YORK AP -<lb/>
Gasoline may go up 5<lb/>
cents a gallon next vear,<lb/>
but there should be<lb/>
enough for all drivers'<lb/>
needs, says the head of<lb/>
Standard Oil of Indiana.<lb/>
John Swearingen,<lb/>
chairman of the oil firm,<lb/>
said in an interview<lb/>
Sunday on CBS' "Face<lb/>
the Nation" that premi-<lb/>
um unleaded gas was<lb/>
the only type in short<lb/>
supply because of unan-<lb/>
ticipated high demand.<lb/>
But "there's plenty of<lb/>
the regular unleaded<lb/>
gasoline ail over the<lb/>
country he added.<lb/>
Swearingen said, how-<lb/>
ever, that the availability<lb/>
and price of gasoline<lb/>
next year depends on<lb/>
factors over which oil<lb/>
companies have no direct<lb/>
control, including the<lb/>
possibility of a strike by<lb/>
refinery workers in Jan-<lb/>
uary.<lb/>
la 1974 the Summer<lb/>
Theatre was closed, due<lb/>
'ti part to the "dilapi-<lb/>
dated" condition.<lb/>
Preston Sisk. Director<lb/>
ol the Drama Dept said<lb/>
that they have been<lb/>
waiting a long time for<lb/>
this renovation. He said<lb/>
that the Dept. was very<lb/>
happy with $1.9 million<lb/>
allocated for the first<lb/>
phase of improvement.<lb/>
The first phase calls<lb/>
for a completely new<lb/>
lighting system to be<lb/>
installed. This lighting<lb/>
-stem will be computer-<lb/>
ized and controlled from<lb/>
a glass booth. Also, a<lb/>
"tailor-made" sound sys-<lb/>
tem will be incorporated<lb/>
into the theatre.<lb/>
One of the larger<lb/>
scale improvements will<lb/>
be a quadrupling of the<lb/>
size of the stage. Also<lb/>
in the plans is an<lb/>
orchestra pit.<lb/>
Preston Sisk said that<lb/>
as yet they have no<lb/>
ideas as to a particular<lb/>
play for their Grand<lb/>
Opening. He said that<lb/>
they weren't sure, but it<lb/>
"might possibly be a<lb/>
large musical<lb/>
t<lb/>
WMrr�r� m<lb/>
 m srw-<lb/>
<lb/>
 " " m " m?4f-jt ft &amp; - 40<lb/>
 -4jr3-vrj4jj z-jrrr j a ?$<lb/>
m I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057167_0002"/><lb/>
1 1<lb/>
 I <lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 12 DacnT.br 1978<lb/>
Kim Chi Hais<lb/>
ON TRIAL<lb/>
FOR HIS LIFE<lb/>
in South Korea. His "crime<lb/>
Writing articles criticizing the<lb/>
South Korean government's<lb/>
harsh treatment of political<lb/>
dissidents.<lb/>
Mrs. Nurtjahja Murad has been<lb/>
IMPRISONED<lb/>
WITHOUT TRIAL<lb/>
in Indonesiasince 1968. Her<lb/>
"crime being married to the<lb/>
younger brother of an opposition<lb/>
political leader.<lb/>
Kim Chi Pa<lb/>
Nurtjahja Murad and half a<lb/>
million other "prisoners of con-<lb/>
science" are in jails around the<lb/>
world, not for anything they've<lb/>
done, but for what they believe.<lb/>
Help us help them. Write�<lb/>
AMNESTY<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
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add up to 5 qt� o. pram a ana � i<lb/>
j Zatagafltar.<lb/>
CaiFofAppowtman<lb/>
Preliminary Audition:<lb/>
East Carolina Univ. Greenville. NC Recital Hall,<lb/>
Sch of Musk Sun , Jan I4.3-8PM<lb/>
Preliminary and Call-Back Auditions:<lb/>
Carowinds. Charlotte. IMC. Sat &amp; Sun Jan 20 and 21.<lb/>
10 A. M to 8 PM. Paladium Amphitheatre<lb/>
WE SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
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SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
FOR YOUR CHRISTMAS<lb/>
AT<lb/>
PHONE 756 3344<lb/>
I at nn u jl l t HAfjrPETT'S DRUG STORE<lb/>
I $1.00 off the purchase of any rharlM,t .  <lb/>
g r ' 2500 S. Charles Street Exfention<lb/>
� $5.00 non-prescription merchandise<lb/>
a with student ID<lb/>
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a a a a a a b b a a b b a a a a a a a a<lb/>
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PHONE 756 3344<lb/>
STEEDS<lb/>
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CALCULATORS IMPRLVTED SHIRTS<lb/>
GLASSWARE<lb/>
STUFFED AXIMALS<lb/>
BOOKS FORR GIFTS<lb/>
MEDICAL BOORS<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
WARM-UP SUITS<lb/>
ECU JACKETS<lb/>
ECU JEWELRY<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
DESPERATELY needs committee members<lb/>
Please apply by Jan. 31 in the<lb/>
Student Union office,<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Mendenhall (757-6611)<lb/>
for sale<lb/>
FOR SALE: Keeshond<lb/>
Husky. Beautiful dog.<lb/>
135. Also free cat to<lb/>
good home. Call<lb/>
756-3054.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1976 Honda<lb/>
360T, 3,000 miles. $650.<lb/>
Call 758-7001 after 7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Nissan<lb/>
AM-FM car stereo cas-<lb/>
sette player 75 or best<lb/>
offer. Call 758-8475.<lb/>
I<lb/>
WANTED! Male ECU<lb/>
student needs 2 room-<lb/>
mates to share apt. near<lb/>
campus. Heatpumps,<lb/>
dishwasher. Call 758-0185.<lb/>
Housemate needed Nice<lb/>
comfortable 3)bedroom<lb/>
house located about 1<lb/>
mile from campus. Male<lb/>
or female, pets O.K.<lb/>
Rent-$58 plus V3 of util-<lb/>
ities. Call 758-6715 or<lb/>
752-2164 (after 5 only)<lb/>
and ask for Bob.<lb/>
WANTEDD Room or<lb/>
small Apt. wanted by<lb/>
Jan. 1st. Call 752-1353.<lb/>
for subleasetTTJIT<lb/>
Apt. in Greenmill Run, 1<lb/>
block from Campus.<lb/>
Available in Jan. Call<lb/>
Mike at 752-0471.<lb/>
Female roommate: needed<lb/>
to i share two bedroom<lb/>
apartment. Please call<lb/>
Eastbrook Apartments.<lb/>
758-7729.<lb/>
MALE<lb/>
NEEDED:<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
For 2 BR<lb/>
fully furnished Apt. at<lb/>
Eastbrook (for next<lb/>
semester). Call 752-6068.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE:<lb/>
Needed to share 2 BR<lb/>
apt. Good location,<lb/>
walking distance from<lb/>
campus. $70 plus 13<lb/>
utilities &amp; phone. Needed<lb/>
no later than Jan 1st.<lb/>
Call 758-0028.<lb/>
HANDMADE POTTERY<lb/>
SALE. Dec. 14-17 10<lb/>
a.m5 p.m. East of<lb/>
Ayden Pottery. Infor-<lb/>
mation call 746-6919, 3<lb/>
mi. East of Ayden on<lb/>
Hwy 102.<lb/>
FLORIDA: I need a<lb/>
ride to anywhere in<lb/>
Florida after<lb/>
Wi" help , � �<lb/>
WANTED: tl-<lb/>
Dleer Family StefcK�<lb/>
needs cooks lekhoU!<lb/>
and kitJk? ' w"resses,<lb/>
sr? 'SSL"<lb/>
2 �� SET I �<lb/>
1:00 - ?XV"�<lb/>
HIUKKS NEEDED"<lb/>
� fWcr for .as<lb/>
 alradv h.vt . rL<lb/>
ved. Will b� k��g<lb/>
Jh�� . D� M .�d<lb/>
ommg blck SaB <lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
� �?�� t"<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057167_0003"/><lb/>
iHLPuWishee b<lb/>
Duke freshman starts authorship<lb/>
DURHAM, NC (AP)<lb/>
rMfhUe � colleg<lb/>
feshmen anxiouah<lb/>
tht<lb/>
latest<lb/>
tMr Kra.lrs<lb/>
e<lb/>
await<lb/>
their<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
exam<lb/>
,rt'ha� John Mdte8e<lb/>
Pa?8 l� fead h"<lb/>
U,M r� ol his<lb/>
books<lb/>
ritl�. a musical<lb/>
ishing firm �<lb/>
B �rni put out<lb/>
 edited b<lb/>
1 Maltese, about<lb/>
Benoist He<lb/>
Th� <lb/>
Accompanist:<lb/>
x ' �biograph ut<lb/>
'u Benoist while<lb/>
that ileal with Watergate<lb/>
80 researchers can find<lb/>
ill that has been written<lb/>
atout each Watergate<lb/>
conversation.<lb/>
"1 started<lb/>
indexing tor<lb/>
Maltese said.<lb/>
I he hooks have<lb/>
out<lb/>
myself<lb/>
Most of<lb/>
no index<lb/>
to read the<lb/>
to find<lb/>
a particular<lb/>
w<lb/>
hm off from his<lb/>
I bonk on<lb/>
1<lb/>
also<lb/>
I a<lb/>
book<lb/>
.me<lb/>
. ord<lb/>
Ja kson<lb/>
hi writing<lb/>
he was<lb/>
publi<lb/>
� w .i - 14<lb/>
� k on<lb/>
w'll be mainl)<lb/>
vshat<lb/>
ible<lb/>
SO you have<lb/>
whole hook<lb/>
reference to<lb/>
conversation<lb/>
 hiie he was working<lb/>
on his Watergate book,<lb/>
Maltese received the<lb/>
offer to edit "The<lb/>
V� companist<lb/>
"I didn't want to do<lb/>
ii at first said Mal-<lb/>
tese He said he was<lb/>
concerned that it would<lb/>
iakc too much time from<lb/>
his Watergate research.<lb/>
M parents pointed<lb/>
out the advantage to<lb/>
having something pub-<lb/>
lished at the age of 16<lb/>
and said that might help<lb/>
me find a publisher for<lb/>
(lit w atergate book<lb/>
Maltese said "So 1<lb/>
looked over one of the<lb/>
manuscripts and decided<lb/>
to go ahead with it<lb/>
Maltese took on the<lb/>
editing job during "two<lb/>
very hectic months one<lb/>
summer" while vaca-<lb/>
tioning with his family<lb/>
m New York.<lb/>
The offer to edit the<lb/>
book was the result of<lb/>
Maltese's previous work -<lb/>
a musical bibliography on<lb/>
violinist Jascha Heifetz.<lb/>
"I've always liked to<lb/>
compile information and<lb/>
do research Maltese<lb/>
said. "And I have<lb/>
always made lists. Mv<lb/>
father had quite an<lb/>
extensive amount of<lb/>
information about Heifetz.<lb/>
I just went through and<lb/>
listed it<lb/>
He later revised and<lb/>
added to the original<lb/>
bibliography, and the<lb/>
revised version was<lb/>
reproduced in the record<lb/>
album bv Heifetz.<lb/>
Maltese said his main<lb/>
problem is finding<lb/>
enough time between his<lb/>
writing for studying.<lb/>
"I haven't told anv<lb/>
 mv professors about<lb/>
the book Maltese said.<lb/>
"I'm afraid they might<lb/>
think I should do more<lb/>
News writers<lb/>
needed call<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
English department<lb/>
announces program<lb/>
M HC BARNES<lb/>
<lb/>
� e ish De<lb/>
' � announ-<lb/>
gran<lb/>
to a<lb/>
ition in<lb/>
ture and<lb/>
minor<lb/>
semester<lb/>
12 hours<lb/>
in '<lb/>
ur-<lb/>
r<lb/>
Literature<lb/>
taken<lb/>
<lb/>
irses Thi<lb/>
in<lb/>
English,<lb/>
irses<lb/>
as Black Literature in<lb/>
Vmerica, Modern Fantasy,<lb/>
nee Fiction. Special<lb/>
Studio- in Film, and The<lb/>
Sociaty.<lb/>
The new minor program<lb/>
is designed to meet the<lb/>
needs ol students majoring<lb/>
in other departments and<lb/>
iplines who want to<lb/>
further training in the<lb/>
ties, according to a<lb/>
ase from the Depart<lb/>
' ol English.<lb/>
The Department also<lb/>
- to announce a new<lb/>
urse, entitled The Study<lb/>
Popular Literature arid<lb/>
ture. It will be offered<lb/>
II a.m. on MWF. The<lb/>
is being tiered for<lb/>
;h- tir-r time this spring,<lb/>
it will be an "mtro-<lb/>
tion to critical analysis<lb/>
'�valuation of popular<lb/>
culture, it's literature, his-<lb/>
: signific ance<lb/>
Breakfast<lb/>
from 7 a.m.<lb/>
to 11 a.m.<lb/>
specializing<lb/>
in large<lb/>
country ham or sausage<lb/>
biscuits. Hot cakes. Scrambled<lb/>
eggs with country ham or<lb/>
sausage. Our 14 lb. beef<lb/>
burgers are ground from fresh<lb/>
Western Chuck. We have pure<lb/>
soft served ice cream. Also<lb/>
serving ham and cheese,<lb/>
chicken fillets, hot dogs, chili<lb/>
and beans, french fries, apple<lb/>
tnrnovers, and a varlcjy ofsoft<lb/>
drinks. Located on the corner<lb/>
of 51 hand Reade St. and on<lb/>
Hwy. fco in Washington.<lb/>
PMfl a.<lb/>
45 THE SEMESTER draws to a (lose, a lone squirrel<lb/>
11 v i m tint fin<lb/>
This week at the<lb/>
i<lb/>
Tues Pre-exam jam party<lb/>
Wed Gents nite- Same prices<lb/>
as Ladies nite<lb/>
Fri Super exam break<lb/>
 Christmas party<lb/>
J)" -Super exam break Christmas party<lb/>
-visit from ol' St. Nick himself<lb/>
i -prizes and free beverage for all<lb/>
 " Good luck on exams and<lb/>
vMorry Christmas from all the staff?<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
Pizza 81 Spaghetti<lb/>
House<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Spaghetti Special<lb/>
Large plate of Spaghetti<lb/>
with Garlic Bread<lb/>
$1.49<lb/>
758 7400<lb/>
507 E. 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.c. 37834<lb/>
<pb facs="00057167_0004"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Pag 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 12 Daotmber 1978<lb/>
Bah! Humbug I<lb/>
r<lb/>
Christmas again.<lb/>
Christmas, with it's plasticpolyvinyl<lb/>
Santas and fiberglass street decorations.<lb/>
Young lean Santas with eyeglasses (is he<lb/>
really an accountant the rest of the year?)<lb/>
ringing their bells for small change, while<lb/>
overhead those tired old carols jingle and<lb/>
harmonize with traffic sounds. Stores jam<lb/>
packed with housewives trying to get<lb/>
something other than a tie or after shave<lb/>
for their mates; indulgent parents buying<lb/>
junior his first computer. The streets are<lb/>
fun of people full of feigned "Good will to<lb/>
a' men" emotions.<lb/>
For two weeks out of 52, people are<lb/>
civil towards each other. A fat lot of good<lb/>
that does for the plight of humanity.<lb/>
People are still poor, lonely, hungry, and<lb/>
bloody well miserable. For two weeks they<lb/>
can watch the bourgeois revel in material-<lb/>
ism, buying, selling, returning, exchanging,<lb/>
never satisfied, while they buy what they<lb/>
can to appease the wrath of their children<lb/>
on Christmas morning.<lb/>
Christmas dinner. More parties later<lb/>
on. Endless feasts, bacchanals, and a<lb/>
chance to escape the dreary winter weather<lb/>
by staying home to watch football.<lb/>
How soon 'till New Year's?<lb/>
"I think I'll get him the tie<lb/>
Merry Christmas<lb/>
About this time of year, every At the risk of being labelled a romantic, it<lb/>
newspaper editor feels obligated to resides in the heart.<lb/>
pronounce his profound and probing Christmas is a time for giving, but not<lb/>
insights into the spirit of Christmas, and necessarily the giving most people are used<lb/>
this one is no exception. to. Christmas involves sacrifice, doing<lb/>
Christmas can be, and, for some, no without or with less so others may also<lb/>
doubt is like the scenario above, but for enjoy the season. It is a time to forget<lb/>
those who can look past the gaudy about yourself and concentrate on others for<lb/>
trappings, past the lawns littered with a change.<lb/>
glow-in-the-dark reindeer, past the pre-fab On behalf of the FOUNTAINHEAD staff,<lb/>
Christmas parades, Christmas is still there, we wish you a merry Christmas.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
'Favored fans'editorial criticized<lb/>
Commentary<lb/>
Uppity Woman bide adieu<lb/>
By HESTER PETTY<lb/>
I ppity U omen of Greenville<lb/>
)�<lb/>
Readers<lb/>
I tn- article isn't what you expect. It does not contain a<lb/>
feminist message. It does not present the earth-shaking<lb/>
- about herstory and the awful truth about history that<lb/>
ill) .i company my feminist vision.<lb/>
rhis is my farewell article, the last of the series. I am<lb/>
rig over this space usually devoted to discussions of<lb/>
inist concerns and I am giving it to me.<lb/>
irse I could have written a political piece and<lb/>
appeared quietly. But I : : want to leave without<lb/>
a ing good-bye.<lb/>
I have enjoyed my relationship to my articles to some<lb/>
I enjoyed that act of completion, or rather the<lb/>
pleted form, the black marks on the white paper. I<lb/>
d the idea that something I had to say might make<lb/>
Ffer i or mean something to someone.<lb/>
Rut it is there that the fun part begins and ends. The<lb/>
rest iswell no one word can describe it.<lb/>
The ret is made up of hours of frustration, whole<lb/>
chunks ol time spent searching for words to piece together<lb/>
sentences only to be I, later re-examined,<lb/>
� toij on a plate set before a person with a poor<lb/>
appetite who picks among the peas, re-designs the<lb/>
potatoes all the time watching the meat through a critical<lb/>
squint.<lb/>
A- the hours pass, the wired feeling moved in. Too<lb/>
many cigarettes and too much caffeine. Very bad habits. I<lb/>
don't recommend them.<lb/>
nd when the eyes are finally allowed to close in<lb/>
sleep, finished op on the shelf, it is with sandpaper lids<lb/>
grating over liquidi- -s, bloodshot eyeballs.<lb/>
Not a pretty picture. But it is one that I paint for<lb/>
myself, because I don't beleive this torment is inherent in<lb/>
the nature of writing.<lb/>
No. I bring this on myself. I always wait until the last<lb/>
minute to write these damn things. The hour gets later,<lb/>
but no. it's not late enough. Wait 'til it's really late, dark<lb/>
outside, due tomorrow.<lb/>
I'm still not sure if I ever really wanted to write these<lb/>
articles. I know that I wanted then to be written. And I<lb/>
guess that's why I wrote them.<lb/>
But whether or not I wanted to write, and in spite of<lb/>
the effort involved, I did write and I'm very glad that I<lb/>
did. Because I have gained so much from these weekly<lb/>
adventures.<lb/>
I gained a clarity of vision that has evolved from the<lb/>
discipline of writing. In order to be understood I had to be<lb/>
clear. In order to make an impact I had to be very clear. I<lb/>
learned alot about feminism as I wrote about it.<lb/>
I also found out that I could write and that possible,<lb/>
with work, I could eventually write very well. These are<lb/>
the gifts that my articles gave to me.<lb/>
I am grateful to FOUNTAINHEAD for making this<lb/>
space available to me each week. I am even more grateful<lb/>
to the people, some of whom I have never even met, who<lb/>
told me that they enjoyed or learned something from my<lb/>
articles. This, more than anything else, was my<lb/>
encouragement. Thank you.<lb/>
I believe that I have neglected to tell you why I<lb/>
decided to stop writing these articles. I assume that it is<lb/>
not because FOUNTAINHEAD has given me the ax (I'm<lb/>
not sure if my lease on this space was up at the end of<lb/>
this semester � nothing has been said so I presume that<lb/>
it wasn't).<lb/>
In any event, I am ready to retire. I would like to<lb/>
regain the freedom of watching football and old movies all<lb/>
day Saturday followed by a Sunday spent in bed with the<lb/>
Leisure Living section of the paper and my lover.<lb/>
I would like to clear out some of the books that I have<lb/>
i piling up on my Needs To Be Read shelf.<lb/>
I want to do further research in the areas of prehistoric<lb/>
matriarchy and lunar influence on human beings.<lb/>
And all of this takes time, time that is severely cut<lb/>
into by the effort that these articles require.<lb/>
So I bow out. The curtain falls. Act Two.<lb/>
And of course I really couldn't go without a few last<lb/>
words about feminism. Ain't it the truth!<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Hester Petty<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
A recent editorial in�<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
denounced the admin-<lb/>
istration's decision to<lb/>
excuse students from<lb/>
exams in order to allow<lb/>
them to attend the<lb/>
Independence Bowl. The<lb/>
article, entitled "Favored<lb/>
Football Fans says<lb/>
among other things' that<lb/>
football fans are re-<lb/>
ceiving preferred<lb/>
treatment and that "this<lb/>
university, obviously can<lb/>
be had cheaply<lb/>
In view of the fact<lb/>
that the editor failed to<lb/>
recommend an alternate<lb/>
solution for students who<lb/>
desire to attend the<lb/>
game to also take their<lb/>
exams, I can only<lb/>
suppose that he feels<lb/>
students should either<lb/>
stay at school and take<lb/>
their exams, or take an<lb/>
"F After all, he says,<lb/>
"this is an educational<lb/>
institution, not a football<lb/>
camp<lb/>
The editor is right<lb/>
about one thing-East<lb/>
Carolina is an educational<lb/>
institution, but one with<lb/>
an excellent athletic<lb/>
program which deserves<lb/>
the full support of the<lb/>
student body. This<lb/>
educational institution is<lb/>
right in encouraging<lb/>
student attendance at<lb/>
the Independence Bowl.<lb/>
If that is preferred<lb/>
treatment, then it is well<lb/>
deserved. For the sake<lb/>
itf a few late exams<lb/>
being administered, East<lb/>
Carolina will gain a lot<lb/>
lv backing its team at<lb/>
i In- bowl game. The<lb/>
administration made a<lb/>
.mm- and fair decision.<lb/>
'be school is not being<lb/>
"had it is taking<lb/>
advantage of a rare<lb/>
opportunity.<lb/>
Saying East Carolina<lb/>
is being "had" is in<lb/>
essence saying we have<lb/>
nothing to gain in this<lb/>
venture. In examining<lb/>
the facts, one will find<lb/>
this to be quite the<lb/>
contrary.<lb/>
It is no secret that a<lb/>
school with a well<lb/>
established and successful<lb/>
athletic program is more<lb/>
apt to draw in students<lb/>
than is a school with a<lb/>
reputation for losing. The<lb/>
athletic program is a<lb/>
means of opening the<lb/>
eyes of prospective<lb/>
students to a school's<lb/>
academic programs. The<lb/>
more positive exposure<lb/>
this institution gets, the<lb/>
more enrollment it will<lb/>
get.<lb/>
Playing an important<lb/>
bowl game in Louisiana<lb/>
will give East Carolina<lb/>
excellent exposure in the<lb/>
deep south, as well as<lb/>
recognition nationally.<lb/>
thus making it more<lb/>
likely to be considered<lb/>
by prospective college<lb/>
students as their choice<lb/>
of educational institutions.<lb/>
The issue at hand,<lb/>
i ben should not be an<lb/>
i-sue at all. Support of<lb/>
�uch an important event<lb/>
i- necessary. East<lb/>
Carolina is obligated to<lb/>
line its utmost support<lb/>
for the good of the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
An important point to<lb/>
consider now is the fact<lb/>
ibat the Independence<lb/>
Bowl does require a<lb/>
certain attendance at the<lb/>
contest by East Carolina<lb/>
lans. They have sent us<lb/>
10,000 tickets which they<lb/>
expect to be sold. The<lb/>
tak of finding 10,000<lb/>
people willing to travel<lb/>
that distance to support<lb/>
the Pirates will be<lb/>
difficult enough without<lb/>
the administration making<lb/>
it relatively impossible<lb/>
for students to go bv<lb/>
forcing them to take<lb/>
exams at a designated<lb/>
time<lb/>
Just as important is<lb/>
the fact that bowl games<lb/>
art money-making pros-<lb/>
pet t, and a bowl will<lb/>
not invite a team that<lb/>
u ill not bring in rev-<lb/>
enue. What other bowl<lb/>
Mould be willing to give<lb/>
"T.CV a bid when the<lb/>
-luool will not support<lb/>
ibe learn?<lb/>
The opportunity to<lb/>
participate in future bowl<lb/>
gam�s might be lost for<lb/>
a long time to come<lb/>
�hould we show an<lb/>
inability to draw a<lb/>
� rowd. East Carolina<lb/>
would certainly be<lb/>
making a huge sacrifice<lb/>
lor the sake of exams<lb/>
being taken on time-ex<lb/>
ain which could easih<lb/>
be postponed with no<lb/>
harm done.<lb/>
Sandra Corbett<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD classified<lb/>
advertising should be free<lb/>
W<lb/>
Ill SIM b�.n (rtisW' <lb/>
MMtnM, . SWC4K T. y I �. ijrr<lb/>
o<lb/>
o � to W�iTl��<lb/>
TWi. fl<lb/>
Rxjntainhead<lb/>
Serving ths East Carolina community for ovor 50 yaara<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Leigh Coakley wf E0TOR8 Robert M. Smalm<lb/>
Ricki Gliarmis<lb/>
Marc Barnes SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sem Rogers<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Steve Bachner<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Is the student newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored by the Media Board of ECU<lb/>
and Is distributed each Tuesday and Thursday (weekly<lb/>
during the summer).<lb/>
Mailing address: Old Sooth Building, Greenville, NC.<lb/>
27834<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6360, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni 66 annually.<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Those who were<lb/>
around last year realize<lb/>
some of the significant<lb/>
changes in our school-<lb/>
newspaper. For one,<lb/>
it's bigger. The physi-<lb/>
cal size is bigger. Take<lb/>
a look at the advertising.<lb/>
It's bigger. And you<lb/>
know what? So is the<lb/>
print.<lb/>
But, but look. Look<lb/>
at the classified ad sec-<lb/>
tion. It's much smaller<lb/>
than it was last year.<lb/>
Isn't it a shame? It<lb/>
covered a half, some-<lb/>
times a whole page of<lb/>
last year's "smaller"<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
QUESTION: What<lb/>
happened? Last year I<lb/>
used to see many good<lb/>
deals on stereo equip-<lb/>
ment, furniture and hous-<lb/>
ing information, etc.<lb/>
ANSWER: I'll ten<lb/>
you what happened.<lb/>
Last year (spring) classi-<lb/>
fied advertising was free<lb/>
to the student, any stu-<lb/>
dent on campus. That<lb/>
was such a nice service<lb/>
(one of the best provid-<lb/>
ed by any organisation<lb/>
on campus).<lb/>
Around the first of<lb/>
this semester "(fall 78) I<lb/>
went to your offices anx-<lb/>
iously anticipating selling<lb/>
my guitar through your<lb/>
free classified ad section.<lb/>
But no-o-o-o-o<lb/>
. Now you've got to<lb/>
charge a fucking dollar<lb/>
for each run on a cUaat-<lb/>
Tied ad.<lb/>
No-o-o. You cu't let<lb/>
a potential source of<lb/>
dollars go unmilked. Of<lb/>
course not. You need<lb/>
this money for your big-<lb/>
ger paper, bigger adver-<lb/>
tising, bigger print.<lb/>
Oh. About two<lb/>
months ago I sent you a<lb/>
letter to this same effect<lb/>
through the campus mail.<lb/>
I don't know if the<lb/>
reason that it wasn't<lb/>
published was because of<lb/>
the campus mail turtle<lb/>
or some FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD executive decision.<lb/>
To insure that the.<lb/>
latter does not happen<lb/>
this time, I am enclosing<lb/>
a check for $1. You<lb/>
n print it in the<lb/>
classified section if you<lb/>
won't print it in the<lb/>
"Forum<lb/>
A whole dollar. JU8t<lb/>
ihink what you and the<lb/>
Media Board can do<lb/>
with that. Lose it?<lb/>
.much to ask for the<lb/>
'return of free classify<lb/>
! advertising for students<lb/>
j m our school newspaper9<lb/>
If so, theii<lb/>
f excu-u-use . me.f.f<lb/>
Alger Salt<lb/>
Editor's note: Class<lb/>
ified advertising m<lb/>
FOLSTAISHEAD � only<lb/>
slightly smaller than las!<lb/>
year. A quarter page<lb/>
' M our present format is<lb/>
� W to a half page m<lb/>
a tabloid. Mr Salt j<lb/>
money has been re<lb/>
 turned, j<lb/>
Exam<lb/>
editorial<lb/>
praised<lb/>
C�e ii 10 the Dram. To WUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
D�p.nmem? Jp f .b<lb/>
V<lb/>
M<lb/>
�he general fund? To<lb/>
�nsure th.t the former<lb/>
doesnt happen w;�<lb/>
�ke photo copies of<lb/>
th.s letter (a�d check) l0<lb/>
cH attention to the cam-<lb/>
Pus mail authorities if<lb/>
th�y lose h.<lb/>
J-� - the executive<lb/>
2 ���� concert �<lb/>
"� � . .� SltttStioB with<lb/>
 execute ��<lb/>
,fi"� �oVenis "2;<lb/>
 C. SwLT .u �<lb/>
too m� :T'  �<lb/>
for<lb/>
twice<lb/>
Iri m<lb/>
I wish to commend<lb/>
o� on your editorial<lb/>
�nd regarding exemp<lb/>
�'�� from CXamt for<lb/>
�hose who purchase<lb/>
tickets to the ECU bowl<lb/>
�me. In aB <lb/>
�"�demies � receiving<lb/>
� ��� leos suction<lb/>
�"� �thletics �e w.<lb/>
�"�ng more and<lb/>
�t is<lb/>
pro<lb/>
v�tnto�e<lb/>
take a<lb/>
1 fl that you s�a<lb/>
r. (irrseni a<lb/>
��. sad I<lb/>
know thai<lb/>
l who<lb/>
"wag te <lb/>
yaa to<lb/>
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� W -� . 12 D�ombr 1978 FOUNTAI<lb/>
 OUNTAINHEAD wishes you all<lb/>
ui<lb/>
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0 r .� r" ��'��'<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057167_0006"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 12 December .a8<lb/>
Bennett's play, The Old<lb/>
Country, is'intellectual'<lb/>
By DAVID TREVINO<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Old Country<lb/>
by Man Bennett<lb/>
Faber Paperbacks (64p.)<lb/>
 was at home at Hookham. I was alone in the<lb/>
all the lights came on. I knew it was<lb/>
� could hear them whispering outside. I got<lb/>
into one roomSomebody started to open<lb/>
ioor so I got behind it with a hammer. I<lb/>
hrmgmg the hammer down on his head<lb/>
ht looked up at me and smiled. It was Pa.<lb/>
we were all somehow at a garden party.<lb/>
early 1950's Harold Adrian Russell<lb/>
a knight, chief of the counter-Soviet<lb/>
During the<lb/>
. Philby, son of<lb/>
section of the British Secret Service and its liason<lb/>
with the American Central Intelligence Agency went<lb/>
on trial in England accused as a Russian agent. He<lb/>
was aquitted.<lb/>
Soon alter Philby defected to the Soviet Union<lb/>
he obtained citizenship and was decorated as a<lb/>
He had been recruited by the KGB at age 22.<lb/>
He mv lives in Moscow and works at the offices of<lb/>
tl Committee for State Securitv in Dzerzinskv<lb/>
Square.<lb/>
From this shadowy tale of treachery and intrigue<lb/>
Bennett has drawn The Old Country, a play<lb/>
scient ol the work of Chekhov and alive with'<lb/>
music ol the English language. The Old Country<lb/>
- performed in the Queen's Theatre in London<lb/>
durinj S ber ol 1()77 and has now appeared in<lb/>
Bennett's play takes place in a deteriorating<lb/>
summer home outside Moscow 14 years after his<lb/>
Philby figure, Hilary, has defected. He and his wife,<lb/>
Bron, live alone but for the ever present and never<lb/>
seen KGB agent who keeps them under constant<lb/>
survellience.<lb/>
The decoration of their home and their manner are<lb/>
distinctly English. They entertain only a minor<lb/>
Quisling from the Portsmouth Dockyard named Eric<lb/>
and his wffe Olga.<lb/>
Bennett's Hilary is a man torn between contempt<lb/>
for England, an institution he perceives as declining,<lb/>
and his unrelenting love for his native land. Though<lb/>
he has betrayed his government and lives in a dacha<lb/>
outside Moscow, Hilary and his lair are so typically<lb/>
English that it is not until well over a third of<lb/>
the play has transpired that it becomes unmistakably<lb/>
clear that the setting is in the Soviet Union.<lb/>
After Eric and Olga have departed from their first<lb/>
visit Hilary berates their less than aristocratic manner<lb/>
raging that he has nothing at all in common with<lb/>
them. Bennett crystallizes the situation with Bron's<lb/>
answer, "Except the one thing. You're all traitors<lb/>
The lines of the play's conflict are unmistakably<lb/>
drawn and the resolution of Hilary's dilema can<lb/>
begin. Hilary sister, Veronica, and her husband,<lb/>
Duff, arrive from England, obstensibly because Duff is<lb/>
to deliver a series of lectures on E.M. Forster's<lb/>
Passage to India in Moscow. It becomes immediately<lb/>
obvious that Duff is to serve as a foil for Hilary.<lb/>
Duffs true purpose in coming to the Soviet Union<lb/>
is to attempt to conviee Hilary to participate in a<lb/>
prisoner exchange. Hilary and a disgruntled Russian<lb/>
flautist are to be turned over to the British in<lb/>
exchange for a captured KGB operative held bv the<lb/>
British.<lb/>
THE OLD COUNTRY is a<lb/>
play reminiscent of the<lb/>
work of Chekov and alive<lb/>
with the music of the<lb/>
English language. THE<lb/>
OLD COUNTRY was first<lb/>
performed in the Queen's<lb/>
Theatre in London during<lb/>
September of 1977 and has<lb/>
now appeared in paper-<lb/>
back. Here Alec Guinness<lb/>
is shown in the premier<lb/>
production.<lb/>
Hilary is hesitant. He had dedicated his entire<lb/>
adult life to the undermining and destruction of a<lb/>
system of values he finds corrupt and decadent, but<lb/>
that value system is no more.<lb/>
In the 14 years he has spent in exile Hilary's<lb/>
England has changed immensely. The society Veronica<lb/>
and Duff describe to him more closely resembles the<lb/>
Russia he lives in than it does the countrv he<lb/>
betrayed so many years before.<lb/>
The metamorphasis of his political Moriarty is so<lb/>
sweeping that it mocks Hilary's idealistic treachery.<lb/>
He is a shattered existentialist at the end of the<lb/>
play and is taken, meek and defeated, to participate<lb/>
in the prisoner exchange.<lb/>
Bennett i a superb stylist and master of the<lb/>
English language. The unity of The Old Country from<lb/>
the opening curtain to the final blackout shows the<lb/>
�nan<lb/>
His<lb/>
unmistakably touch of an accomplisl<lb/>
characters are engaging and well drai<lb/>
The dialogue i- witty without ever being for � I<lb/>
and intellectual without being pretentious. : � �� all it<lb/>
is a wonderful demonstration ol the expressive<lb/>
capabilities of the English tongue.<lb/>
Unquestionably The Old Country is a testimony<lb/>
Bennett's master of the subtle nuances<lb/>
language and theatre. Unfortunately it fails to in-<lb/>
or even consider the most challenging question ra-<lb/>
by Hilary's predicament. Wh does Lnt<lb/>
aristocrat, a member of the club, an establishment<lb/>
insider betray his country for a nation he ha<lb/>
se.n and a creed he only auel understands<lb/>
B ignoring this important question Bennett<lb/>
a cheap out. leaves his audieno u - .� sfied<lb/>
denies a tine drama greatness.<lb/>
�<lb/>
North Carolina Glass and John<lb/>
Will share the Gray art gallery<lb/>
VU 1-V!T W. TREVINO<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Expatriot in the<lb/>
in wilds" and<lb/>
 irth Carolina Glass '78"<lb/>
exhibited in the<lb/>
w i ington B. Gray Gallerv<lb/>
in the Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
ter until Jan. lh.<lb/>
"An Expatriot in the<lb/>
Canadian Wilds" is a<lb/>
collection of prints and<lb/>
photographs by American<lb/>
irtist J.hn Will.<lb/>
'North Carolina Glass<lb/>
i- a traveling ex-<lb/>
hibition containing eighty-<lb/>
- of glassware by<lb/>
North Carolina Artists.<lb/>
fter the brilliant shows<lb/>
that have been displayed<lb/>
this fal in the Gray<lb/>
Gallery these two exhibi-<lb/>
ts are disappointing.<lb/>
rhej snnply do not meet<lb/>
the expectations created bv<lb/>
the three stunning shows<lb/>
which opened the 1978-79<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"North Carolina Glass<lb/>
is the most recent<lb/>
result of "The Studio<lb/>
Movement" started by<lb/>
Harvey K Littleton and<lb/>
Dominick Labino in 1962.<lb/>
The Studio Move-<lb/>
ment" seeks to free the<lb/>
trlassmaker from the inti-<lb/>
midating tradition of<lb/>
lengthy �ypremica�hipB<lb/>
and the reputation as an<lb/>
artisian rather than an<lb/>
artist. It stresses the<lb/>
importance of the designer<lb/>
and maker of the piece<lb/>
being the same person.<lb/>
The pieces in this show<lb/>
lack the flawless clarity,<lb/>
purity and absence of color<lb/>
characteristic of the crystal<lb/>
Angus McDougall designs<lb/>
for Steuben Glass, but they<lb/>
are infused with a unique<lb/>
feeling of spontaneity<lb/>
which transcends the mon-<lb/>
otony of teh more tech-<lb/>
nically perfect objects. The<lb/>
glassware on display in<lb/>
this show is exemplary of<lb/>
the potential of a largely-<lb/>
unexplored medium.<lb/>
Mark Peiser's vases<lb/>
consist of traditional nat-<lb/>
ural subjects, but his<lb/>
approach to these themes<lb/>
goes beyond the broadly<lb/>
acceptable shapes and de-<lb/>
corations of glass' heritage.<lb/>
Peiser has frozen fragile<lb/>
moments and movements<lb/>
within the walls of his<lb/>
blown glass vases.<lb/>
"Three Ducks on a<lb/>
Pond" by John Nygren is<lb/>
reminiscent of Oriental<lb/>
pottery. It is a blown glass<lb/>
vase decorated by three<lb/>
ducks circling over a fluid<lb/>
sea creature in the water<lb/>
beneath them. The har-<lb/>
monious blending of the<lb/>
dark tones help to create a<lb/>
beautilully exocative piece.<lb/>
But it doesn't match<lb/>
the expressiveness of the<lb/>
simple Matisse-like ima-<lb/>
gery of William Bernstein's<lb/>
"Blue Line Woman" or<lb/>
"Woman with Father<lb/>
Bernstein's figures are elo-<lb/>
quent with a minimum of<lb/>
lines and color.<lb/>
Not all of the glasswork<lb/>
is concerned with figurative<lb/>
work or traditional forms.<lb/>
works such as "Progres-<lb/>
sion" and "Tube Twist"<lb/>
are fluid forms that stun-<lb/>
ningly convey strength and<lb/>
motion. "Blue Eye" is a<lb/>
kinetic sculpture of layered<lb/>
forms that serves as a<lb/>
testimony to Littleton's<lb/>
genius. He is a master of<lb/>
glass.<lb/>
John Will is a master<lb/>
printer. His technique is<lb/>
impeccable. "An American<lb/>
Expatriot in the Canadian<lb/>
Wilds" is a demonstration<lb/>
Art<lb/>
Gilbert Johnson's arresting<lb/>
vases and perweights are<lb/>
smooth, natural shaped<lb/>
filled with membraned of<lb/>
shape and color that cap-<lb/>
ture the elusive motion of<lb/>
smoke. It's as though<lb/>
Johnson has trapped a<lb/>
genie in each of his pieces.<lb/>
Ther is magic in them all.<lb/>
The most stimulating<lb/>
work in the show is that of<lb/>
Mare K. Littleton, co-<lb/>
tounder of "The Studio<lb/>
Movement His larger<lb/>
of his proficiency in all<lb/>
aspects of printmaking, all<lb/>
technical aspects that is.<lb/>
His largely autobiographi-<lb/>
cal approach to content<lb/>
relies on caricature and<lb/>
wit. Unfortunately, he's<lb/>
just not that funny.<lb/>
None of his pieces<lb/>
exhibits the unique vision<lb/>
shown by Pete Milton in<lb/>
"October Piece None of<lb/>
them are as powerfully<lb/>
evocative as "Hooker" by<lb/>
Robert Peppers. The deli-<lb/>
cate textures in James� A.<lb/>
McNeill Whistler's "Fum-<lb/>
ette" are absent. His craft<lb/>
never fails him, but his<lb/>
humor doesn't carry him<lb/>
either.<lb/>
Many of the etchings<lb/>
fromthe Halifax and Door<lb/>
County collection are not<lb/>
lacking in humor besides<lb/>
being masterful visual a-<lb/>
chievments. They are lac-<lb/>
inated with a flacor and<lb/>
feeling lacking in much of<lb/>
Will's later work.<lb/>
"Halihorse" is a col-<lb/>
lection of surreal images.<lb/>
"The Merchant VII" is an<lb/>
autobiographical piece with<lb/>
an interestingly embossed<lb/>
section. "Halifeather" is<lb/>
a pleasing composition of<lb/>
color, delicate lines and<lb/>
space.<lb/>
His later color prints<lb/>
rely heavily on words to<lb/>
fill the compositions much<lb/>
as Saul Steinberg fills his<lb/>
ooficial looking documents<lb/>
with illegible print. But<lb/>
Will's words are meant to<lb/>
be read and enjoyed as<lb/>
well as prop up the form.<lb/>
He needs all the help he<lb/>
can in trying to match<lb/>
Steinberg's surgical wit.<lb/>
In some of his color<lb/>
pieces Will is able to<lb/>
combine commentary and<lb/>
craft to create pleasing<lb/>
compositions. The most<lb/>
JOHN WILLS EXHIBITION shares the<lb/>
Wellington B. Gray Gallery with<lb/>
exhibition of North Carolina glasi<lb/>
an<lb/>
notable of these are vis-<lb/>
ually exciting "Attack of<lb/>
the Intaglio Goon Squad"<lb/>
and "The God of Art<lb/>
Most of his color work<lb/>
unfortunately takes on dis-<lb/>
tasteful tones of indulgence<lb/>
and commercialism. Sensa-<lb/>
tional color contrasts and<lb/>
w ill's particular sense of<lb/>
humor does not entertain<lb/>
for very long. As Will<lb/>
states, "At times the style<lb/>
is so relaxed that the jokes<lb/>
don't have punch lines<lb/>
Some do have punch<lb/>
lines and a great deal of<lb/>
Will's work is . ithoin a<lb/>
doubt stimulating and<lb/>
worthwhile, but n n<lb/>
loo heavily on amusing the<lb/>
viewer with absent wii<lb/>
Too often looking a! a<lb/>
J"hn W il! prim<lb/>
watching "Laven<lb/>
Shirley you woi<lb/>
the peopl, �. ui<lb/>
track sjU because<lb/>
not even smiiii<lb/>
Singer, songwriter Prine is 'music's prince of cynics'<lb/>
Bv CHRIS FARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Singer, songwriter and<lb/>
folk music's prince of<lb/>
cynics, John Prine, played<lb/>
to an extremely enthusi-<lb/>
astic crows this past<lb/>
Thursdav night at the<lb/>
Roxy.<lb/>
Delayed by a snow-<lb/>
storm that hit Chicago<lb/>
airport, Prine didn't arrive<lb/>
in Greenville until 7 p.m<lb/>
and consequently the show<lb/>
got under way about an<lb/>
hour late.<lb/>
David Lewis, a local<lb/>
musician, opened up the<lb/>
first show with a collection<lb/>
of original tunes. His voice<lb/>
was soothing and his songs<lb/>
extremely good, but un-<lb/>
fortunately, the audience<lb/>
who had paid to hear<lb/>
music was far from being<lb/>
in a listening mood.<lb/>
From the onset there<lb/>
were those ail familiar<lb/>
screams of "Rock-n-Roll"<lb/>
coming from the crowd.<lb/>
How can one guy with an<lb/>
acoustic guitar possibly<lb/>
"Rock-n-Roll"?<lb/>
After an admirable per-<lb/>
formance by Lewis and a<lb/>
short intermission, John<lb/>
Prine and his band took<lb/>
the stage.<lb/>
Prine is a veteran of<lb/>
many road tours, and his<lb/>
lifestyle is epitomized in<lb/>
his stage presence.<lb/>
Dressed in jeans, guitar<lb/>
slung low around his waist,<lb/>
he started off the show<lb/>
enthusiastically with<lb/>
"Spanish Pipedream" (you<lb/>
know, "blow up your TV"<lb/>
la la la).<lb/>
From there, Prine<lb/>
moved smoothly through<lb/>
his show pausing period-<lb/>
ically to tune his guitar<lb/>
and to light up a Salem.<lb/>
Mixing tunes from his<lb/>
latest album, Bruised Or-<lb/>
ange, with some of his<lb/>
earlier, more recognizable<lb/>
material, Prine and his<lb/>
band brought the crowd to<lb/>
their feet on several oc-<lb/>
cassions.<lb/>
Playing to a half-filled<lb/>
house, Prine kept the stage<lb/>
smile but spoke infre-<lb/>
quently except once to ex-<lb/>
plain the theme of "Sabu<lb/>
Visits the Twin Cities<lb/>
Alone" from Bruised Or-<lb/>
ange. The band left the<lb/>
stage and Prine performed<lb/>
"Illegal Smile" and "Dear<lb/>
Abby" both receiving,<lb/>
thunderous responses.<lb/>
Prine's band is com-<lb/>
prised of: John Burns,<lb/>
guitar; Howard Levy, key-<lb/>
boards, harp, flute, steel<lb/>
drum, etc Tom Piekarski,<lb/>
bass; and Angie Verious,<lb/>
drums. The band was<lb/>
tight. Together they pro-<lb/>
duced a full sound with<lb/>
lots of energy.<lb/>
However, the delayed<lb/>
arrival of Prine resulted in<lb/>
a rushed sound check. The<lb/>
balance was particularly<lb/>
lacking in the beginning,<lb/>
but improved steadily to<lb/>
the end of the show.<lb/>
There is no doubt that<lb/>
John Prine is a superb<lb/>
songwriter and an equally<lb/>
good performer. His per-<lb/>
formance at the Roxy<lb/>
Thursday probably won<lb/>
him some fans, but its also<lb/>
likely that because of the<lb/>
rudeness fo much of the<lb/>
crowd, it turned away<lb/>
many future Roxy patrons.<lb/>
As far as future con-<lb/>
certs at the Roxy go, it<lb/>
to the fact that the crowd<lb/>
was awfully noisy; noisy in<lb/>
this case as opposed to<lb/>
responsive.<lb/>
The Roxy is struggling<lb/>
to stay on its feet for the<lb/>
sake of the community. It<lb/>
seems unfortunate that a<lb/>
segment of that same<lb/>
community, because of their<lb/>
uncontrolled actions seems<lb/>
to be working against the<lb/>
Music<lb/>
se3ems to me some pri-<lb/>
orities need to be ex-<lb/>
amined. The primary rea-<lb/>
son to go to a concert<lb/>
should be to listen to<lb/>
music. To those who feel<lb/>
that it is to get drunk,<lb/>
something is wrong. In an<lb/>
interview after the show,<lb/>
Prine even made reference<lb/>
cause.<lb/>
After the show Prine<lb/>
very hospitably related the<lb/>
following facts to me in<lb/>
the luxury of his converted<lb/>
Greyhound bus.<lb/>
FARREN: Why did you<lb/>
switch labels, from Atlantic<lb/>
to Asylum?<lb/>
PRINE: I didn't want to<lb/>
stay there any longer. I<lb/>
just wanted a fresh label.<lb/>
F: A new life?<lb/>
P: A new label. I don't<lb/>
know if a new label can<lb/>
give you a new life. I<lb/>
owed Atlantic. I had a long<lb/>
contract like two albums a<lb/>
year for the next five<lb/>
years. I just figured it<lb/>
would be better if I wnt<lb/>
somewhere else.<lb/>
F: Are you pleased with<lb/>
Asylum, and will you stay<lb/>
with them for your next<lb/>
album?<lb/>
P: So far they've done a<lb/>
real good job with this<lb/>
record; according to our<lb/>
contract there is supposed<lb/>
to be two more for them. I<lb/>
was real satisfied with<lb/>
what they did on this one,<lb/>
so I'm trying to get back<lb/>
in the studio, probably the<lb/>
first of the year. I want to<lb/>
try and get one out by<lb/>
March.<lb/>
F: Do you have a whole<lb/>
album's worth of new<lb/>
T<lb/>
f<lb/>
WMmMlmmmimmm<lb/>
m- �� - -<lb/>
I<lb/>
"� <lb/>
material already written?<lb/>
P: Yea, you never know<lb/>
though until you get in<lb/>
there. You start writing<lb/>
some things after you see<lb/>
which way the record's<lb/>
going, rather than just take<lb/>
a collection of anv 12<lb/>
ongs. They don't alwavs<lb/>
make an album because<lb/>
some of the songs don't<lb/>
lay right next to the other<lb/>
ones. So, once you get in<lb/>
there you just see how<lb/>
things are going.<lb/>
F: Will Steve Goodman<lb/>
produce your next album?<lb/>
P: No, not the next one. I<lb/>
don't know exactly who<lb/>
I m gonna work with on<lb/>
the next one. I've been<lb/>
talking with a bunch of<lb/>
people.<lb/>
F: How long have you<lb/>
been .touring?<lb/>
P: We've been out since<lb/>
the beginning of June til<lb/>
the last of October. This is<lb/>
�he first time we've been<lb/>
out since we .U went home<lb/>
tor .bout . aontfe We<lb/>
'�lm' �ut IO do this one.<lb/>
�hen a coypfc da, m<lb/>
Georgia, and then go back<lb/>
home and trv and <lb/>
things together for the<lb/>
 We JUM VM,rt.<lb/>
MXNHM to pas and �<lb/>
dates erne up. I naen<lb/>
�n back here ln a wh.le.<lb/>
���� been known<lb/>
m � a Mlo performpr<lb/>
r man ears. hv th,<lb/>
witc to the band?<lb/>
Yea- I worked just<lb/>
fhout lh' hole tune smce<lb/>
1 -��"ed - 71 as a solo. I<lb/>
'ook a band out ,n 75 jus.<lb/>
for about ree months or<lb/>
so.<lb/>
� " tht right after<lb/>
came out?<lb/>
f: That latest hit thing<lb/>
" some�hing that when<lb/>
�U ,efv" a record co�-<lb/>
P�y they pul togetber ,<lb/>
J�e.i hits .Ibua and<lb/>
� " ,�U h <lb/>
m"r how maa. y<lb/>
vou had. As .L m<lb/>
See PfUNE p.6<lb/>
<pb facs="00057167_0007"/><lb/>
12 December 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pq9 7<lb/>
matter to me<lb/>
continued from p.5<lb/>
f� leave. I found out abou<lb/>
 ,r"�' a friend. I didn't<lb/>
'� um the album when<lb/>
11 irst came out.<lb/>
F: There's obviously . big<lb/>
�Wterence especially in the<lb/>
V between a soo<lb/>
ormance and using the<lb/>
Jnl k that kind of more<lb/>
you. less you or just part<lb/>
Ol MU?<lb/>
h� hat 1 wanted to<lb/>
1 l'ad a band in '75<lb/>
l,ut H wu mre of a, well,<lb/>
� just didn't get right. The<lb/>
music was sounding good<lb/>
but it didn't work the best'<lb/>
It didn't feel comfortable<lb/>
or me. I couldn't do a<lb/>
show behind it; you know I<lb/>
mean I could do one tune<lb/>
after another, but it didn't<lb/>
flow along like it does<lb/>
when I was working alone.<lb/>
We put this together last<lb/>
May, and all these guys<lb/>
feel real comfortable to me<lb/>
and therefore I feel like I<lb/>
can go ahead and make it<lb/>
a show, (laughing) I really<lb/>
enjoy turning around and<lb/>
having them play for a<lb/>
while and not me standing<lb/>
there breaking strings and<lb/>
banging on my guitar. Its<lb/>
almost like I felt some-<lb/>
times when I was going<lb/>
out there with just my<lb/>
guitar, it was like going<lb/>
out with one kettle drum<lb/>
and bangin' on it and just<lb/>
singing.<lb/>
F: It seems like the songs<lb/>
that are still the most<lb/>
requested and well re-<lb/>
ceived are the songs from<lb/>
your first album. People<lb/>
have been saying that the<lb/>
first album was great, but<lb/>
since then nothing has<lb/>
matched it. Do you agree?<lb/>
P: I couldn't agree.<lb/>
F: Does that bother you<lb/>
that people keep screaming<lb/>
for "Hello There" and<lb/>
"Sam Stone"?<lb/>
P: No, fortunately because<lb/>
they're good songs. You<lb/>
know like I been singin<lb/>
them all these years and<lb/>
as long as they want to<lb/>
hear them I'll keep singing<lb/>
them. If they weren't good<lb/>
songs, they would have<lb/>
gotten old for me a long<lb/>
time ago you know?<lb/>
There's some of them that<lb/>
I like to give a rest every<lb/>
once in a while, you know,<lb/>
just so they'll be fresh to<lb/>
me. But thankfully their<lb/>
good songs and they stand<lb/>
up to me when I play<lb/>
them, I might have a gold<lb/>
album with that first album<lb/>
in a year or so and its<lb/>
never been on the charts.<lb/>
It just sells slow and<lb/>
steady. Bruised Orange has<lb/>
sold better than any of<lb/>
then records initially, since<lb/>
it came out five months<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
F: Bruised Orange is a<lb/>
little more slick an album<lb/>
than your previous.<lb/>
P: I've had a couple of<lb/>
The Cinema Society begins Spring Series<lb/>
Bj JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Issistant Trends Editor<lb/>
� he Cmema Society of<lb/>
"Ik i- going to<lb/>
' live international<lb/>
 M well as an<lb/>
�t classic film<lb/>
hr! m ite Spring<lb/>
Series, 1979. The price<lb/>
�� Tics of films is<lb/>
Deadline for sub-<lb/>
is Dec. 15.<lb/>
Cinema Society<lb/>
� ks an opportunity<lb/>
ic and art-film<lb/>
�iasts to see works<lb/>
the major inter-<lb/>
il film directors of<lb/>
lay- At SI a film<lb/>
price cannot be beat,<lb/>
especially when one<lb/>
considers the calibre of<lb/>
the movies shown.<lb/>
On Jan. 28 Hearts of<lb/>
the West will be shown.<lb/>
Hearts of the West, dir-<lb/>
ected by Howard Zieff,<lb/>
deals with a controversial<lb/>
Nebraska farm boy (Jeff<lb/>
Bridges) who enrolls in<lb/>
the Western Writing<lb/>
School and stumbles into<lb/>
1930's Hollywood and<lb/>
adventure.<lb/>
Alan Arkin, Andy<lb/>
Griffith, Blythe Danner,<lb/>
and Donald Pleasance are<lb/>
the Hollywoodites. Jav<lb/>
Locks. of Time, says<lb/>
that the movie "Abounds<lb/>
in happy eccentricity and<lb/>
cleverness, (and has)<lb/>
blithe good humor about<lb/>
fate and a boyant faith<lb/>
in the happy ending<lb/>
Lies my Father Told<lb/>
Me, directed by famed<lb/>
Czeck filmmaker Jan<lb/>
Kadar, deals with a<lb/>
small Jewish boy growing<lb/>
up in depression-poor<lb/>
Montreal, and with the<lb/>
way he learns the ways<lb/>
of the world as reflected<lb/>
by his grandfather. He<lb/>
also must learn painful<lb/>
realities from his parents.<lb/>
AH. Weller, in the<lb/>
Mew York Times, said<lb/>
the movie, "Touchingly,<lb/>
modestly reveals people<lb/>
as authentic as the<lb/>
settings in which they<lb/>
are captured<lb/>
On Feb. 25 the<lb/>
Cinema Society is going<lb/>
to present an evening of<lb/>
short films. These are<lb/>
the best short films from<lb/>
around the world: dra-<lb/>
matic, lyric, animated,<lb/>
comic, scenic - a wide<lb/>
selection for a full<lb/>
evening's cinematic<lb/>
delight.<lb/>
Jean-Paul Belmondo<lb/>
and Genevieve Bujold<lb/>
start in The Thief of<lb/>
Paris, an entertaining<lb/>
story of a young<lb/>
Frenchman at the turn<lb/>
of the century, who<lb/>
becomes- a second-story<lb/>
man to gain the wealth<lb/>
required to court his<lb/>
young beloved. An un-<lb/>
expected outcome caps<lb/>
the tale. The film is<lb/>
directed by Louis Malie.<lb/>
Dersu-Uzala was the<lb/>
winner of the Academy<lb/>
Award for Best Foreign<lb/>
Film in 1975. The<lb/>
great Japanese director<lb/>
Akira Kurosawa continues<lb/>
his career-long investi-<lb/>
gation into the com-<lb/>
plexity and indomitability<lb/>
of the human spirit.<lb/>
The film concerns the<lb/>
efforts of a party of<lb/>
Russian soldiers to chart<lb/>
the vast wilderness of<lb/>
Siberia. Durine their<lb/>
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More than once, his<lb/>
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men from destruction.<lb/>
The movie was filmed<lb/>
entirely on location in<lb/>
Siberia.<lb/>
people mention that to me,<lb/>
but its as simple an album<lb/>
as I've ever made.<lb/>
F: So you don't see any<lb/>
real differences?<lb/>
'� No, I'm singing on key<lb/>
and my guitar is in tune.<lb/>
You know, Goodman just<lb/>
insisted that I get it right<lb/>
instead of just sitting down<lb/>
singing a song and saying<lb/>
"That's it, let's get the<lb/>
record out<lb/>
r: Your songs have real<lb/>
interesting themes, real<lb/>
interesting characters. Do<lb/>
they come mostly from real<lb/>
life?<lb/>
P: Sometimes. It doesn't<lb/>
matter to me if it is fact or<lb/>
fiction.<lb/>
F: I mean was there a<lb/>
Sam Stone?<lb/>
P: No, that's just like a<lb/>
character. It was a vehicle<lb/>
to tell that story. Besides<lb/>
that, if there had been, I<lb/>
wouldn't have told on the<lb/>
F: Between 1975 and 1978,<lb/>
were you seriously consi-<lb/>
dering giving up music as<lb/>
a career?<lb/>
P: Yea, I took it up<lb/>
because it vas fun. Runnin<lb/>
around by myself not being<lb/>
able to find someone to<lb/>
make a record with, it wa-<lb/>
getting to be a- big a<lb/>
chore a the Post Office<lb/>
was.<lb/>
F: That's turned around<lb/>
now, things are on the<lb/>
upswing?<lb/>
P: Yea, that's whv I put<lb/>
this band together and<lb/>
everything. 'w e managed<lb/>
t' have a pretty good time<lb/>
out there tonight.<lb/>
F: Thanks tor your time.<lb/>
good luck in Georgia.<lb/>
P: Sure, thank- alot.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057167_0008"/><lb/>
� I<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAO 12 D�cwntMr 1978<lb/>
'<lb/>
The Peace Movement<lb/>
Didn't End with the War.<lb/>
Because American Militarism didn't end<lb/>
with the war either. Around the world,<lb/>
U.S. armaments and money are still<lb/>
propping up dictatorships. And at home,<lb/>
the Pentagon squanders more of our tax<lb/>
dollars than ever on costly boondoggles<lb/>
like the M-X missile system. Military spending<lb/>
each year robs America of jobs and urgently<lb/>
needed social programs.<lb/>
The Peace Movement, Continued.<lb/>
Since the end of the war, the Coalition for a New<lb/>
Foreign and Military Policy has played a leading role<lb/>
in the movement to take America's "future out of the<lb/>
hands of generals and aerospace corporations and<lb/>
put it back in the hands of the people,where it<lb/>
belongs.<lb/>
The Coalition coordinates the Capitol Hill lobbying of<lb/>
dozens of religious, peace, labor, and social justice<lb/>
organizations. We monitor key legislation and alert our<lb/>
nationwide activist network to the latest developments.<lb/>
We research the issues and distribute the results. And<lb/>
we help local activists tie their work into a coordinated<lb/>
national strategy.<lb/>
Our Work's Paying Off.<lb/>
We helped scuttle the B-1 Bomber. We cut back military<lb/>
aid to dictatorships in Chile, Uruguay, Arge'jna, and<lb/>
the Philippines. And now we're challenging the very<lb/>
foundation of militarism � distorted budget priorities<lb/>
that put the Pentagon ahead of our communities, our<lb/>
jobs, and our environment.<lb/>
We're working to end the arms race, and lo transfer<lb/>
federal spending from unnecessary military programs to<lb/>
underfunded job and human needs<lb/>
programs. We're making sure that<lb/>
U.S. aid supports human rights, not<lb/>
oppression. We're working to pull American<lb/>
soldiers out of Korea, and other outposts<lb/>
of an outdated interventionist foreign<lb/>
policy. We're working for majority rule and<lb/>
authentic self-determination in South Africa.<lb/>
And we're working to help the people of Indochina<lb/>
with reconstruction aid.<lb/>
Give Peace A Fighting Chance.<lb/>
Ending the war in Indochina took the energy and<lb/>
commitment of millions of Americans. Building a new<lb/>
foreign policy will take the same commitment, and more.<lb/>
That's wfrftf&amp;yeu m tawfe you're like us, you still want to<lb/>
put your energy and experience to work where they're<lb/>
needed. And where they'll be effective. The Coalition for<lb/>
a New Foreign and Military Policy. Try us on.<lb/>
Join the Coalition Network.<lb/>
Coalition for a New Foreign and Military Policy<lb/>
120 Maryland Avenue, NE<lb/>
Washington, D.C. 20002<lb/>
? It still fits. Sign me up for the Coalitions network and<lb/>
send me regular Action Alerts on key legislation<lb/>
Action Guides on the issues and resources for local<lb/>
organizing work. Here's $10 for one year of Coal.t.on<lb/>
materials.<lb/>
? Tell me more about the Coalition and how I can get<lb/>
involved. Here's a dollar for my information packet.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
City<lb/>
State<lb/>
Z�<lb/>
Phone (<lb/>
Ch�s�an Church (D.sciples o. Chris Department o. bZch!n Sociefy iSncSSt SSSST 0Ce<lb/>
Legislation � FRIENDSHIPMENT � Friends nf the P,i,n,� iw . ,L-�rL. L ce ea .episcopal Peace Fellowship � Fnends Committee on Nat,�<lb/>
Produced by Public Media Center, San Francisco.<lb/>
4<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
-� m m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057167_0009"/><lb/>
12 December 198 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Pirates face La, Tech 3Q<lb/>
in Independence Bowl<lb/>
Bulldog quarterback Eric Barkley<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Louisiana Tech head coach Maxie Lambnght rambled<lb/>
on and on Wednesday in a phone hook-up praising ECU,<lb/>
the Bulldogs opponent in Saturday's Independence Bowl<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"We haven't played a team defensively as good as<lb/>
ECU all year explained Lambright, on in his 12th season<lb/>
at Louisiana Tech. "They run the finest wishbone offense<lb/>
we've seen all season and from what we've seen on film<lb/>
they're one of the most well disciplined teams we've<lb/>
faced. They'll certainly present us with a lot of problems<lb/>
When Lambright had concluded his pre-game<lb/>
comments, Pirate coach Pat Dye turned towards the large<lb/>
group of sportswriters present and smiled. "Don't let him<lb/>
fool ya grinned Dye. "He's one of them wise old<lb/>
foxes<lb/>
Indeed, Lambright and his Bulldogs will probably have<lb/>
more than one trick up their sleeves when the Pirates and<lb/>
Louisiana Tech square off in Shreveport, La. this weekend.<lb/>
In fact, while most of the pre-game publicity has been<lb/>
centered around the Bucs' awesome defense, Dye and his<lb/>
statf have been putting in overtime devising all kinds of<lb/>
schemes for the Bulldogs passing game.<lb/>
"How many pass defenses? About a dozen answered<lb/>
Dye. "They go deep, they go short, they run screens and<lb/>
quick screens. They run just about everything you can<lb/>
think of. It's a complicated passing game and we can't<lb/>
afford to give up the big play<lb/>
Louisiana Tech, the Southland Conference champions,<lb/>
have not one, but two quarterbacks who can throw the<lb/>
ball equally as well.<lb/>
Keith Thibodeaux has completed 81 passes for 1128<lb/>
yards while freshman Eric Barkley has played well during<lb/>
the last few games and will get the starting nod Saturday.<lb/>
Receivers? The Bulldogs have plenty with Scooter<lb/>
Spruiell and George Yates, the team's top pass catchers.<lb/>
The speedy Spruiell has grabbed 37 passes for 642 yards<lb/>
and Yates has 20 for 217 yards.<lb/>
"Barkley and Thibodeaux are both fine passers noted<lb/>
Dye. "With all their different pass patterns it'll be largely<lb/>
a guessing game for us to stop them. But our players are<lb/>
excited about the game and we'll certainly be ready for<lb/>
them<lb/>
The Pirates 8-3 finished the season winning seven of<lb/>
their last eight games including its last four games in a<lb/>
row. The Bucs defense allowed only 204.8 total yards a<lb/>
game while the secondary held opponents to 76 yards and<lb/>
intercepted 19 passes.<lb/>
"They're receivers aren't big, but they're fast and they<lb/>
can catch the ball in traffic said Pirate safety Gerald<lb/>
Hall, who was recently selected to the All-Southern<lb/>
Independent along with teammate Zack Valentine They<lb/>
remind me more of Western Carolina than anybody else<lb/>
we've faced this year. Everybody on the team's excited<lb/>
about playing in the bowl game. A win would certainly be<lb/>
a nice way to end my career here<lb/>
The Pirates ability to control Louisiana Tech's passing<lb/>
game will certainly be the key to the game. And Hall<lb/>
along with the rest of his cohorts in the secondary have<lb/>
experienced little trouble against other pass mined teams<lb/>
like Western Carolina and Appalachian State.<lb/>
"They run a lot of patterns across the middle splitting<lb/>
the zone explained cornerback Willie Holley. "They<lb/>
throw on first down 40 percent of the time and they've<lb/>
got some capable running backs. They just win with that<lb/>
passing game<lb/>
NOTESWayne Inman, Mike Brewington, and Eddie<lb/>
Hicks were all named to the All-Southern Independent<lb/>
second teamthe ECU defense finished second in the<lb/>
nation in total yards allowed per game behind top ranked<lb/>
Penn Statethe Pirates secondary allowed only two teams<lb/>
to pass for more than 100 yards in a gameGerald Hall<lb/>
intercepted four passes and finished seventh in the nation<lb/>
in punt returns with a 13.3 averageCharlie Carter led<lb/>
ECU in interceptions with fivefreshman running back<lb/>
Harold Blue suffered a broken ankle last week in practive<lb/>
and will miss the Independence Bowl gameMonday was<lb/>
the last full contact practice before the Pirates leave from<lb/>
Kinston Airport Thursday at 3 p.m. and will return to<lb/>
Greenville sometime Sunday afternoon.<lb/>
ECU QB Leander Green<lb/>
(Photo by John H. G-<lb/>
Veteran Bulldogs use sack-it-toem defensive scheme<lb/>
M RE m<lb/>
I<lb/>
field<lb/>
i '� Loui-<lb/>
 . when<lb/>
J A in the<lb/>
de re-<lb/>
er Spruiil,<lb/>
Zack<lb/>
stand-<lb/>
�I and<lb/>
�k- George<lb/>
iteh pose a<lb/>
itionall)<lb/>
Pirate de-<lb/>
. 205 lb.<lb/>
n Baton<lb/>
aver-<lb/>
: I i ards<lb/>
on in<lb/>
His quickness and<lb/>
strength boosted his squad<lb/>
their ith consecutive<lb/>
' �" ihJand Conference<lb/>
i ham�pionship in the last<lb/>
eight years. In addition,<lb/>
 ate- has also done ex-<lb/>
eptionally well in the pass<lb/>
ving department with<lb/>
20 r�?i eptions for 217<lb/>
 ards.<lb/>
Scooter Spruiil, a 5-11<lb/>
senior receiver, will also be<lb/>
closely watched in Satur-<lb/>
day's howl game because<lb/>
is excellent pass re-<lb/>
ding abilities. Spruiil led<lb/>
the Bulldogs in receiving<lb/>
this season with 37 catches<lb/>
tor 642 total yards and an<lb/>
average of 17.4 yards per<lb/>
ch.<lb/>
Spruiil, who also<lb/>
doubles as a punt returner,<lb/>
began his receiving career<lb/>
last season when he caught<lb/>
8 passes for 142 yards.<lb/>
This year Spruiil has<lb/>
four TD pass receptions to<lb/>
his credit while averaging<lb/>
:<lb/>
Jimmy Blackshire<lb/>
Zack Jones<lb/>
71.3 yards per contest. As<lb/>
a return specialist this<lb/>
year, he ha- run back 16<lb/>
punts for 165 yards.<lb/>
Another offensive<lb/>
standout tor Coach Maxie<lb/>
Lambright" Bulldogs is<lb/>
kick oil returner Zack<lb/>
Jones. Jones, a 5-10. 179<lb/>
lb. junior, has returned 18<lb/>
kick-offs for the Bulldog-<lb/>
this season with an n<lb/>
of 22.9 yards per return.<lb/>
His 417 total yards include<lb/>
a dazzling 97 yard return<lb/>
for a touchdown this sea-<lb/>
son. Jones will also be a<lb/>
mainstay in the defensive<lb/>
alignment of the Bulldogs<lb/>
where he will start at the<lb/>
cornerback position.<lb/>
Defensively, the Bull-<lb/>
dogs can match their<lb/>
squad with any in the<lb/>
country. Several of their<lb/>
defense players are top<lb/>
NFL prospects including<lb/>
noseguard, Ardis McCann<lb/>
and defensive tackle, Ron-<lb/>
nie Paggett. Each is com-<lb/>
it g ' iiti'tr ir<lb/>
 ' tllv Paggei �  'iad<lb/>
II. . : - a � K - . a<lb/>
total ol seventy ta.kt. -<lb/>
Despite tVx<lb/>
I defeiiMM stand . <lb/>
I. a h Maxie Lambright is<lb/>
aware of the talent on<lb/>
the Pirate squad.<lb/>
I think that overall the<lb/>
Pirates are the finest team<lb/>
.s will m�ft all vear<lb/>
said Lambright East Caro-<lb/>
lina i- ei -emelj well<lb/>
reached football team with<lb/>
talent that makes for very<lb/>
tough opposition.<lb/>
This is a game we look<lb/>
forward to because it<lb/>
affords us an opportunity<lb/>
to end the year on a<lb/>
winning note and play<lb/>
against a ver strong<lb/>
opponent in a bowl game<lb/>
He then added that. "I<lb/>
must confess that the<lb/>
alignments they use don't<lb/>
bother me nearly as much<lb/>
as the talent thev have.<lb/>
Independence Bowl notes<lb/>
A defensive standoff?<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
surprised it Sat.<lb/>
Independence Bowl<lb/>
ends in a scoreless leadln It jusl that both the<lb/>
tnd Louisiana Lech h�'e exhibited brilliant<lb/>
play throughout the season. ECU finished second<lb/>
nation yielding only 204 total yards a game behind<lb/>
ne ranked Penn State while the Bulldogs are<lb/>
pponents to 158 yards rushing per game. One of<lb/>
amazing statistics in the Louisiana Tech press<lb/>
the Bulldogs have dumped opponents for 705<lb/>
sses!<lb/>
"1 don't think I've ever heard of any team doing<lb/>
ng like that in one season admitted ECU coach<lb/>
"They do alot of blitzing and they've really got<lb/>
son standing individual players<lb/>
Buildg noseguard Ardis McCann has stopped opposing<lb/>
rriers behind the line of scrimmage 31 times for 203<lb/>
in losses. He finished the season with 105 tackles in<lb/>
games. Linebacker Jimmy Blackshire had 13 stops for<lb/>
103 ards while tackles Ronnie Paggett had 16 hits<lb/>
mother 102 yard- lost. Safety Jean Dorner leads the<lb/>
m in interceptions with five while Lavon James has<lb/>
d off l'�ur pae-<lb/>
The Bulldogs have also been one of the nation's top<lb/>
suppliers in the pro football ranks. Pittsburgh quarterbacks<lb/>
Terry Bradshaw was the No. 1 pro draft pick in 1970.<lb/>
Other former Louisiana Tech standouts currently in the pro<lb/>
ranks are Roger Carr and David Lee of the Baltimore<lb/>
Colts, Roland Harper of the Chicago Bears, Billy Ryckman<lb/>
of the Atlanta Falcons.<lb/>
ECU loses in Hatter Classic;<lb/>
face Lynchburg tonight<lb/>
The Pirate Club has chartered two flights to Sheveport,<lb/>
La. for the Saturday afternoon game which will be played<lb/>
in 51,000 seat State Park Stadium. There will be 188<lb/>
members of the Pirate Club on the two chartered planes-<lb/>
One flight will depart Kinston Friday while the other plane<lb/>
will leave Saturday morning. The ECU headquarters will<lb/>
be in the Bossier City Hilton.<lb/>
The Independence Bowl will be televised locally by<lb/>
WITN-TV of Washington. Former ECU football player<lb/>
Kenny Strayhorn and WITN Sports Director Dick Jones<lb/>
will do the color and play-by-play for the game which will<lb/>
be broadcast back to Greenville beginning at 2:30 EST.<lb/>
The game may also be carried by Channel 5'in Raleigh.<lb/>
Louisiana Tech head coach Maxie Lambright is a big<lb/>
favorite among Bulldog fans and the Mississippi native<lb/>
ha- compiled some impressive credentials. His overall<lb/>
won-loss record stands at 95-35-2 and his teams have won<lb/>
uthland Conference championships since 1971. His<lb/>
eam'fl have eight or more games in<lb/>
Lambright's 11 seasons and the Bulldogs<lb/>
produced the nation's winning streak (23 games) during<lb/>
the 1973 and 1974 seasons.<lb/>
The Bulldogs captured the Independence Bowl title last<lb/>
year with a 24-14 victory over Louisville. Quarterback<lb/>
Keith Thibodeaux completed 19 of 39 passes for 287 yards<lb/>
and two touchdowns as the Louisiana Tech jumped out<lb/>
front 21-7 in the first quarter. Thibodeaux was named the<lb/>
Most Valuable Player in the game.<lb/>
The ECU basketball team suffered "first halfitis" in<lb/>
the Hatter Classic last weekend, said Pirate coach Larry<lb/>
Gillman, and as a result returned to Greenville with two<lb/>
embarrasing losses.<lb/>
In their first tourney game on Friday, the Pirates fell<lb/>
prey to Ail-American Larry Bird and his Indiana State<lb/>
teammates. The Sycamores trounced the Pirates 102-79 as<lb/>
Bird scored 32 points, 26 in the first half, despite<lb/>
missing over 10 minutes of the game.<lb/>
In the tournament's consolation game on Saturday<lb/>
night the Pirates lost to Stetson, the Hatter Classic's host<lb/>
team, by a score of 107-82. The Hatters were led by N.C.<lb/>
State trasfer Dirk Ewing and forward Greg Guye, who<lb/>
both tallied 24 points for the night.<lb/>
A young team<lb/>
After the latter contest Gillman commented that his<lb/>
team lacked sufficient play in the first half of both<lb/>
games.<lb/>
"We've got a young team said Gillman, "and four<lb/>
games on the road is difficult for any veteran team.<lb/>
We'd like to come out and play aggresively, but we're<lb/>
just too beat after the four games<lb/>
The Pirate road games began over a week ago at<lb/>
William and Mary. The Pirates then traveled to<lb/>
Tennessee before arriving in Deland, Fla. for the Hatter<lb/>
Classic.<lb/>
A "Shootout<lb/>
�<lb/>
The Indiana State contest was billed as a shootout<lb/>
between Bird and ECU's Oliver Mack, the nation's top<lb/>
two returning scorers from a year ago. But Mack was<lb/>
able to provide enough fire to make the duel as exciting<lb/>
as had been expected. Saddled with foul trouble most all<lb/>
night, Mack scored but 15 points.<lb/>
Center Greg Cornelius led the Pirates in the loss to<lb/>
Indiana State with 17 points, but tallied most of them<lb/>
after the mighty Bird had taken his seat on the bench<lb/>
for the night.<lb/>
The Sycamores broke the contest open midway through<lb/>
the first half, out-scoring the Pirates 15-6, and eventually<lb/>
taking a 57-31 lead by halftime.<lb/>
Mononucleo�i�?<lb/>
The Pirates ran into much the same situation against<lb/>
Stetson. The Hatters outscored the Pirates 16-2 over a<lb/>
period midway through the first half and went into the<lb/>
kicker room at the intermission with a 51-28 advantage.<lb/>
The second half proved little easier for Gillman's<lb/>
Pirates, as they were unable to narrow the margin at all.<lb/>
As was the case against Indiana State, Mack played<lb/>
below par in the contest with the Sycamores. The<lb/>
All-America candidate scored but 18 points, and drew<lb/>
concern from his coach.<lb/>
"We're taking Mack to the hospital when we get back<lb/>
to Greenville for some blood tests and a full physical<lb/>
said Gillman. The Pirate mentor believes his star guard<lb/>
has mononucleosis because of his poor enduance in the<lb/>
second half of contests of late.<lb/>
Mack: All tournament<lb/>
Assisting Mack in the scoring column against Stetson<lb/>
was freshman Clarence Miles, who also tallied 18 points.<lb/>
Cornelius finished with 12 points. Al Tyson and George<lb/>
Maynor also scored in double figures for ECU, finishing<lb/>
with 10 points each.<lb/>
Though he did not play up to par, Mack was still<lb/>
named to the All-Tournament team. Bird was named the<lb/>
tourney's Most Valuable Player.<lb/>
The two losses dropped the Pirate record to 2-4 for<lb/>
the season. Their next contest is upcoming this Tuesday<lb/>
against Lynchburg in a 7:30 game at Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
ECU then travels to College Park to face the 19th ranked<lb/>
Maryland Terrapins on Saturday.<lb/>
t<lb/>
' ' <lb/>
m- 4r 00<lb/>
�'�'<lb/>
�� w <lb/>
 ' r<lb/>
 0t0l Jtf ' -&amp; ��<lb/>
&amp;&amp;<lb/>
<pb facs="00057167_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 12 December 1978<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD's Fearless Forecast<lb/>
Special Bowl Game Edition<lb/>
L<lb/>
INDEPENDENCE BOW!<lb/>
GARDEN STATE BOVII<lb/>
HALI OF FAME BOVIL<lb/>
HOLIDAY BOVU <lb/>
LIBERTY BOW I<lb/>
-I BOVsl<lb/>
! WCKRINK BOW!<lb/>
FIESTA BOW L<lb/>
VY V H BOWl<lb/>
C VTOR BOW .<lb/>
VSTRO Bl.l BOWK! BOL:<lb/>
 BOW I<lb/>
liOWI<lb/>
K BOW l<lb/>
ORANGE HOWL<lb/>
Louisiana Tech 6 4 - ECU 8 3<lb/>
Rutgers 10-1 - Arizona St. 8-3<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M 7 4 - Iowa State 8 3<lb/>
Navy 8-3 Bngham Young 9-3<lb/>
Missouri 7 4 � LSI' 8 3<lb/>
Maryland 9-2 � Texas 9-2<lb/>
N.C. State 8 3 - Pittsburgh 8 3<lb/>
Arkansas 9-2 - UCLA 8 3<lb/>
Purdue 8-2-1 - Georgia Tech 7-4<lb/>
Clemson 10-1 Ohio State 7-3-1<lb/>
Stanford 7-4 Georgia 9 11<lb/>
Houston 10-2 Notre Dame 8 3<lb/>
Southern Cal 111 - Michigan 10 1<lb/>
Penn State 11-0 - Alabama 10-1<lb/>
Oklahoma 10-1 � Nebraska 9-2<lb/>
SAM BOGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU by 14 . ,<lb/>
Arizona St. by 10<lb/>
Iowa St. by 3<lb/>
Navy bv 10<lb/>
LSL'by' 14<lb/>
Maryland by 10<lb/>
N.C. State by 6<lb/>
Arkansas by 7<lb/>
Georgia Tech by 3<lb/>
Clemson by 7<lb/>
Georgia by 14<lb/>
Notre Dame by 7<lb/>
Michigan by 10<lb/>
Penn State by 7<lb/>
Nebraska by 7<lb/>
CHtRLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU by 17<lb/>
Arizona St. by 10<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M by 7<lb/>
Navy by 7<lb/>
Missouri by 9<lb/>
Texas by 10<lb/>
Pittsburgh by 4<lb/>
Arkansas by 6<lb/>
Georgia Tech by 4<lb/>
Clemson by 7<lb/>
Georgia by 8<lb/>
Notre Dame by 3<lb/>
Southern Cal by 2<lb/>
!Ynn State by 1<lb/>
Oklahoma by 9<lb/>
DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
Staff writer<lb/>
ECU by 14<lb/>
Arizona St. by 3<lb/>
Iowa St. by 6<lb/>
Navy by 10<lb/>
LSU by 6<lb/>
Maryland by 1<lb/>
N.C. State by 3<lb/>
UCLA by 7<lb/>
Goergia Tech by 3<lb/>
Clemson by 3<lb/>
Georgia by 10<lb/>
Notre Dame by 10<lb/>
Southern Cal by 1<lb/>
Penn State by 8<lb/>
Oklahoma by 6<lb/>
IK Kin HERNDON<lb/>
Advertising Managt i<lb/>
ECl b) 1"<lb/>
Arizona St. bj 16<lb/>
Eowa Si b) 3<lb/>
Brigham Young<lb/>
LSI bj 2<lb/>
. xas b) 5<lb/>
Pittsburgh b) 4<lb/>
rkansas b) i<lb/>
Purdue b) 12<lb/>
Clemson b) <lb/>
Georgia bj 10<lb/>
Houston b) 1<lb/>
Southern Cal b<lb/>
Penn StaU ' � -<lb/>
Oklahoma bj 1 1<lb/>
-J<lb/>
Cowboys picked to win second consecutive Super Bowl<lb/>
l H Kl� CHANDLER<lb/>
Na<lb/>
W �<lb/>
Football<lb/>
iach,<lb/>
is pre-<lb/>
i tht<lb/>
W ell, even though three<lb/>
playoff spots are still open<lb/>
in the NFC as the season's<lb/>
last week of plav approa-<lb/>
s, there is some spe-<lb/>
culation as to who the<lb/>
eventual World Champion<lb/>
will be.<lb/>
The pick here is the<lb/>
Dallas Cowboys. Tom Lan-<lb/>
dr' club struggled early,<lb/>
hut as i common for<lb/>
them, came on strong late<lb/>
m the ear. For the past<lb/>
month, the Cowboy's pla<lb/>
has been nothing less than<lb/>
TKE's dump Renegades,<lb/>
win handball championship<lb/>
i <lb/>
a<lb/>
the<lb/>
ami it<lb/>
to a<lb/>
� R<lb/>
a mpus<lb/>
Indtv idual<lb/>
Kappa V psilon v. <lb/>
.<lb/>
-<lb/>
Ka<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
win<lb/>
<lb/>
layofl<lb/>
<lb/>
i 5-4<lb/>
-m.<lb/>
,  w i- the firsl<lb/>
Cotton<lb/>
Slapshot o<lb/>
 � performance<lb/>
Alpha i Delta also<lb/>
a big upsel b)<lb/>
13 Spiril of Fleming<lb/>
rtime. The Alpha Xis<lb/>
from behind to tie<lb/>
force n into<lb/>
hen scored with<lb/>
� to win the<lb/>
title.<lb/>
-coring<lb/>
the two d i �<lb/>
B I P �<lb/>
I<lb/>
 . who<lb/>
K S gma,<lb/>
 ,i )ti .wai- and Linda<lb/>
F.aton, of Sl�p�Hot, look<lb/>
n's title with 23<lb/>
� Ig - g ii Susan<lb/>
: Mpha Xi Delta,<lb/>
� 21 g als.<lb/>
 . bowling match<lb/>
( 1 the championship<lb/>
� . i o-rec bowimg lea-<lb/>
SSS topped BSA by<lb/>
. 16 pins, 1971 to 1957,<lb/>
npus title.<lb/>
BSA won the i'irt<lb/>
I 25 pins, 631-606,<lb/>
SSS took the second<lb/>
by 87 pins, 722-635,<lb/>
take a commanding<lb/>
In the third and<lb/>
iding game, BSA came<lb/>
within an eyelash oi vic-<lb/>
w inning the lat<lb/>
game, but not by enough<lb/>
. � � me SSS's lead.<lb/>
BSA won the final match<lb/>
691-643, but that lett<lb/>
m 16 pins short of<lb/>
 ictory.<lb/>
The<lb/>
men<lb/>
men and wo-<lb/>
tree throw cham-<lb/>
pions were decided, too,<lb/>
over the pasl week. Frank<lb/>
Buck won the men title<lb/>
with a perfect 25 for 25<lb/>
from the free throw line<lb/>
 id Linda F.aton won the<lb/>
women's title with a 23 tor<lb/>
25 performance from the<lb/>
tree throw line.<lb/>
In the preseason fl<lb/>
Intramural basketball<lb/>
nament, the Roundbaliers<lb/>
re won the men's title<lb/>
and W ho's Karen won the<lb/>
awesome.<lb/>
The defense has played<lb/>
as well as any time in the<lb/>
past and the explosive<lb/>
offense has been unstop-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
About the only team<lb/>
that seems able ot chal-<lb/>
lenging Dallas is the Los<lb/>
Angeles Bams. But if they<lb/>
are not able to heal all<lb/>
their recent backfield<lb/>
wounds, tht- Cowboys will<lb/>
coasl into the Super Bowl.<lb/>
If Dallas does indeed<lb/>
reach the Super Bowl, they<lb/>
could well go up againM<lb/>
the Pittsburg Steelers. The<lb/>
only team that appear- to<lb/>
have a chance to stand<lb/>
in the way of Chuck Noll-<lb/>
club in the AFC is the<lb/>
New England Patriots.<lb/>
Throughout the season,<lb/>
teams all around the NFL<lb/>
have had extreme high?<lb/>
and lows. The Patriots and<lb/>
Steelers appear to be the<lb/>
only AFC clubs to have<lb/>
played consistently enough<lb/>
to warrant a Super Bowl<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
If one was looking for a<lb/>
darkhorse in the race for<lb/>
the World Championship,<lb/>
they would almost have to<lb/>
look at the Houston Oiler<lb/>
Rookie F.arl Campbell a-<lb/>
provided the lone ingre-<lb/>
dient that this club has<lb/>
yearned for the past sev-<lb/>
eral seasons.<lb/>
It appears, of course,<lb/>
that the AFC Super Bowl<lb/>
playoffs will be much<lb/>
more competative than<lb/>
those in the NFC. The<lb/>
NFC just simply lacks in<lb/>
powerhouse teams as com-<lb/>
pared to their counterpart.<lb/>
This makes no differ-<lb/>
ence, though. The NFC<lb/>
does have the number one<lb/>
powerhouse in the entire<lb/>
League. The Cowboys are<lb/>
the best, and should prove<lb/>
it by winning their second<lb/>
consecutive Super Bowl.<lb/>
Getting back to a mat-<lb/>
ter more closely at hand.<lb/>
falo, Cleveland 6 over<lb/>
Cincinnati, Pittsburgh 10<lb/>
over Denver, Seattle 7 over<lb/>
Kansas City, New England<lb/>
3 over Miami, Houston 2<lb/>
over San Diego, Minnesota<lb/>
6 over Oakland, Dallas 13<lb/>
over NY. Jets, Wash-<lb/>
Independence Bowl<lb/>
mgl<lb/>
Atlanta<lb/>
Philadelj<lb/>
Giants, Deli<lb/>
s<lb/>
� ' -<lb/>
� V,<lb/>
I alllfia Ba<lb/>
v er<lb/>
Orh-an<lb/>
t<lb/>
Saturday on WITN-TV<lb/>
here's a quick<lb/>
week's games.<lb/>
Baltimore 9<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057167_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>