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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057169_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Vol. 55 No.if<lb/>
11 January 1979<lb/>
Differences may flare<lb/>
By WILLIAM M. WELCH<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
RALEIGH, (AP) - Since<lb/>
he's been lieutenant gov-<lb/>
ernor Jimm Green has<lb/>
often found himself op-<lb/>
posing Gin. Jim Hunt on<lb/>
les, and heading into<lb/>
the 1979 General Assembly<lb/>
session even more differ-<lb/>
ences figure to emerge<lb/>
between them.<lb/>
Their differences, both<lb/>
political and personal, are<lb/>
flare both because<lb/>
' ' vear ami because of<lb/>
their conflicting ambitions.<lb/>
Both could be running for<lb/>
ernor next vear.<lb/>
Green opposes Hunt<lb/>
Green, in a recent<lb/>
interview, said he is<lb/>
convinced that Hunt has<lb/>
already made up his mind<lb/>
to seek a second term. "I<lb/>
don think there's any<lb/>
doubt about that he said.<lb/>
"I think that's whv he<lb/>
pushed so hard for<lb/>
succession<lb/>
For Green, that leave<lb/>
three options as the<lb/>
session opens: He must<lb/>
find an issue on which to<lb/>
base a challenge to a<lb/>
sitting governor of his own<lb/>
Democratic Partv next<lb/>
year. Or, he must decide<lb/>
how to graceful!) seek a<lb/>
second term himself after<lb/>
?(?posing in 1977 the<lb/>
constitutional amendment<lb/>
that allows him - and Hunt<lb/>
- to do that.<lb/>
Or, he must face the<lb/>
session recognizing that it<lb/>
is his final one, look for<lb/>
another political office or<lb/>
give it all up.<lb/>
"1 haven't ruled any-<lb/>
thing out Green said.<lb/>
"Bui I've made absolutely<lb/>
no decision, and I won't<lb/>
until m supporters across<lb/>
the state express their<lb/>
opinion to me<lb/>
Green will make a<lb/>
decision this year, he said,<lb/>
b) December at the latest.<lb/>
And Hunt aides are expec-<lb/>
General Assembly opens<lb/>
U IIII M M. WELCH<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
ICH The 1979<lb/>
Assembl) con-<lb/>
noon today, the<lb/>
'dor by<lb/>
Jimmv Green and<lb/>
?pened bv<lb/>
State Thad<lb/>
-<lb/>
ries and floors<lb/>
hambers were<lb/>
with people as<lb/>
120 House<lb/>
senators<lb/>
r families with<lb/>
?r the opening-da)<lb/>
Machine<lb/>
reported<lb/>
Officers for each<lb/>
chamber, nominated by the<lb/>
Democratic caucuses late<lb/>
last vear, were formally<lb/>
elected and House mem-<lb/>
ber- were given committee<lb/>
assignments by Speaker<lb/>
Carl Stewart.<lb/>
Stewart was elected to<lb/>
a second term as speaker<lb/>
and Senator Craig Lawing,<lb/>
D-Mecklenburg, was elec-<lb/>
ted president pro tern of<lb/>
the Senate. Both had been<lb/>
picked by the Democratic<lb/>
i aucuses for the job<lb/>
Chief Justice Su-ie<lb/>
Sharp administered the<lb/>
oath ol office to senators<lb/>
and Appeal- Court Judge<lb/>
Gerald Arnold administered<lb/>
the oath to representative<lb/>
(?reen announced his<lb/>
committees and chairman<lb/>
earlier in the dav.<lb/>
revealing no major sur-<lb/>
prises but saying he would<lb/>
consolidate budgetmaking<lb/>
matters in three main<lb/>
committees. Green said he<lb/>
hoped the move would<lb/>
-peed the session's ad-<lb/>
journment.<lb/>
Stewart planned to<lb/>
announce his choices in a<lb/>
-pecial alternoon House<lb/>
session, recognizing each<lb/>
chairman and giving him<lb/>
or her a gavel. Stewart<lb/>
-aid he expected to retain<lb/>
about 80 percent of the<lb/>
committee assignments and<lb/>
chairmen from the 1977-78<lb/>
session, hi- first as<lb/>
-peaker.<lb/>
ting Green to come up<lb/>
with a major legislative<lb/>
issue to oppose the<lb/>
governor on.<lb/>
'He's got to try to cut<lb/>
Hunt one Hunt aide,<lb/>
asking not to be named,<lb/>
said. "He's got to have<lb/>
something he can hurt him<lb/>
with<lb/>
One likely battle, Green<lb/>
hinted, could come over<lb/>
taxes - not about whether<lb/>
to reduce them, but over<lb/>
how to do it.<lb/>
There are other possible<lb/>
battlegrounds, too.<lb/>
One is the state science<lb/>
and mathematics high<lb/>
school which was proposed<lb/>
b) Hunt last year and won<lb/>
a planning appropriation.<lb/>
Hunt will ask the legisla-<lb/>
ture for several hundred<lb/>
thousand dollars to get it<lb/>
off the ground this year.<lb/>
Hunt will reveal his tax<lb/>
plan Jan. 15 in the "state<lb/>
of the state" speech, and<lb/>
while the proposal isn't<lb/>
known now, Green is<lb/>
against the rebate plan<lb/>
first suggested by Hunt<lb/>
last year. Green said he<lb/>
thinks there is overwhelm-<lb/>
ing opposition among<lb/>
legislators that "seals the<lb/>
doom of any rebate idea<lb/>
Green prefers a per-<lb/>
manent cut, and said he<lb/>
will have his own recom-<lb/>
mendation later.<lb/>
Will he be prepared to<lb/>
light for it over whatever<lb/>
Hunt recommentds? "Oh<lb/>
yes, yes Green said.<lb/>
"Absolutely<lb/>
made snow<lb/>
at slopes<lb/>
BLOWING ROCK (AP)<lb/>
? Here i- a report of ski<lb/>
pe conditions from the<lb/>
heastern Ski Areas<lb/>
Asso lation:<lb/>
APPALACHIAN -<lb/>
Base f 36-40 inches.<lb/>
P wder surface. Five of<lb/>
slopes open. Six to<lb/>
new machine<lb/>
- w<lb/>
5K1 BEECH F.fteen<lb/>
inch base. Powder<lb/>
Five of 12 slopes<lb/>
'?? Some new machine<lb/>
made -now.<lb/>
CATALOOCHEE -<lb/>
Twelve to 30 inch base.<lb/>
Powder -urface. Two of six<lb/>
slope- open. Some new<lb/>
machine made snow.<lb/>
HOUND EARS -<lb/>
Thirty to 50 inch base.<lb/>
Powder surface. Two of<lb/>
two slopes open. Five<lb/>
inches of new machine<lb/>
made snow.<lb/>
MILL RIDGE - Fif-<lb/>
teen to 35 inch base.<lb/>
Powder surface. Three of<lb/>
four slopes open. Some<lb/>
new machine made snow.<lb/>
SAPHIRE VALLEY -<lb/>
Twenty to 60 inch base.<lb/>
Packed powder surface.<lb/>
Two of three slopes open.<lb/>
Ten inches of new machine<lb/>
made snow.<lb/>
SEVEN DEVILS<lb/>
Fifteen to 40 inch base.<lb/>
Packed powder surface.<lb/>
Three of five slopes open.<lb/>
Some new machine made<lb/>
snow.<lb/>
SUGAR MOUNTAIN<lb/>
? Fifteen to 65 inch base.<lb/>
Powder surface. Seven of<lb/>
12 slopes open. Some new<lb/>
machine made snow.<lb/>
WOLF LAUREL -<lb/>
Twelve to 60 inch base.<lb/>
Hard packed surface.<lb/>
Three of 9 slopes open.<lb/>
Some new machine made<lb/>
snow.<lb/>
OBER CATLINBURC,<lb/>
Tenn. ? Two to 30 inch<lb/>
base. Packed powder sur-<lb/>
face. Two of 5 slopes<lb/>
open. Some new machine<lb/>
made snow. Some icy<lb/>
-pots.<lb/>
SKY VALLEY, Ga. -<lb/>
Twenty-four to 60 inch<lb/>
base. Powder surface.<lb/>
Three of 3 slopes open.<lb/>
Twelve to 24 inches of new<lb/>
machine made snow.<lb/>
Library Science<lb/>
attends meeting<lb/>
ECU XEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Faculty members in the<lb/>
ECU Department of Library<lb/>
Science are participating<lb/>
thi week in two national<lb/>
professional meetings in<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
The American Library<lb/>
Association Midwinter<lb/>
Meeting extends through<lb/>
I he week with hundreds of<lb/>
committee meetings. The<lb/>
V?ocialion of American<lb/>
Library Schools Annual<lb/>
Conference overlaps this<lb/>
conference during the last<lb/>
of the week.<lb/>
The AALS conference<lb/>
theme for 1979 is "Library<lb/>
Research: Past, Present<lb/>
and Future Editors of<lb/>
I he major library science<lb/>
professional journals are<lb/>
leatured on the program.<lb/>
Professor Emily S.<lb/>
Boyce serves on the Re-<lb/>
sources and Technical<lb/>
Services Division Planning<lb/>
Committee for the bi-<lb/>
ennium and Associate<lb/>
Professor Donald E. Collins<lb/>
is a member of the Adult<lb/>
Library Materials Commi-<lb/>
ttee. .<lb/>
Chairman Gene D.<lb/>
Lanier will be attending<lb/>
both conferences as well as<lb/>
participating in the Asso-<lb/>
ciation of American Library<lb/>
Schools' Council of Deans<lb/>
and Directors.<lb/>
An ERICONTAP online<lb/>
demonstration will be a<lb/>
pecial feature of the<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
GOV JAMES B. HUNT J is being opposed by Li. Gov. Jimm, Green on<lb/>
several important issues.<lb/>
Remedial programs<lb/>
started in N. C.<lb/>
B) The A-sociated Press<lb/>
Several North Carolina<lb/>
universities have started<lb/>
remedial math and<lb/>
writing programs to help<lb/>
P eable number of<lb/>
entering freshmen who<lb/>
utfd basic instruction in<lb/>
the two subjects.<lb/>
NC State Universitv,<lb/>
I be University of North<lb/>
Carolina and East<lb/>
Carolina Universitv have<lb/>
lev loped remedial pro<lb/>
: I !l!l- to<lb/>
?i "idem.<lb/>
edi<lb/>
deal with the<lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
j ? ' ?' Durham killed . . . See p. 3.<lb/>
  ' ' Cohen poetrv i- reviewed<lb/>
??  ??? d. . . . See p. 5.<lb/>
 ? ni I nion spring semester<lb/>
 ??? iev : d . . . Si e p. 5.<lb/>
ECU upsets South CarolinaSee p.8.<lb/>
UNC?ECU wrestling ThursdaySee p.7.<lb/>
'm  ? ?V?<lb/>
' . .i'<lb/>
EC! began it- pro-<lb/>
live vear- ago. NC<lb/>
and UNC started<lb/>
? ir- last vear.<lb/>
Duke Universitv has a<lb/>
? htiiun "study -kills"<lb/>
gram in reading.<lb/>
ding and -tudv lech-<lb/>
- i: i - ?. But official- -av<lb/>
'be program i-n't speci-<lb/>
fic all) remedial although<lb/>
i- aimed at correcting<lb/>
u identic weaknesses.<lb/>
This fall ECU had<lb/>
'bout 120 students en-<lb/>
dled in remedial Eng-<lb/>
'? h composition and<lb/>
'?out 560 students in<lb/>
r medial math.<lb/>
NC State has about<lb/>
-0 freshmen in remedial<lb/>
Kngli-h composition and<lb/>
about 60 students in<lb/>
remedial math. UNC<lb/>
placed about 240 fresh-<lb/>
men in "developmental"<lb/>
- - sition<lb/>
I ? ? - ?. ha<lb/>
dial math program.<lb/>
' '?'  mi al Luke<lb/>
' ?' ? the<lb/>
' ? ? school j<lb/>
in the remedial<lb/>
?o?. "i! the basis of<lb/>
I igl -chool grades<lb/>
SAT core.<lb/>
 ? univers.it) official<lb/>
: ?: nts id the<lb/>
is-ses have ;he<lb/>
do<lb/>
? I w.irk. but ihe first<lb/>
'?aiii e to a? ijuire<lb/>
i;iev ,j,<lb/>
I gel in high <lb/>
nother nilii j<lb/>
v ? r-itie- are la ing<lb/>
b) requiring -Mice<lb/>
.dent- to -? . . ? eln.<lb/>
Ii<lb/>
"Regardl. <lb/>
. mil it  the<lb/>
1 the students w.<lb/>
ii and i<lb/>
.1 l.ii t .?! life - ;<lb/>
iM i: i ?<lb/>
I.<lb/>
Iill<lb/>
DROP-ADD PERIOD HAS<lb/>
those long annoying line.<lb/>
rolled around again, forcing students to stand in<lb/>
Photo by Chap Gurtey<lb/>
may<lb/>
NEW BERN, AP - New<lb/>
Bern Mayor Leander<lb/>
Morgan says he believes<lb/>
the town's police force may<lb/>
walk off their jobs again if<lb/>
their salaries are not<lb/>
raised.<lb/>
Thirty two officers and<lb/>
the chief of police turned<lb/>
in their badges June 30<lb/>
after the Board of<lb/>
Aldermen rejected their<lb/>
request for a 10 percent<lb/>
p'iy increase.<lb/>
Six veteran officers<lb/>
?have left the force recently<lb/>
in what Police Chief John<lb/>
W. Worhsam called "ab-<lb/>
ove the normal -rate for<lb/>
attrition<lb/>
City officials said<lb/>
salaries and working con-<lb/>
ditions are still a sensitive<lb/>
issue in the police depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The state personnel<lb/>
office is conducting a study<lb/>
of the city's pay policies.<lb/>
Bern police<lb/>
walk off job<lb/>
Woman sentenced<lb/>
to gas chamber<lb/>
Police Capt. P.O.<lb/>
Rodgers said if salaries are<lb/>
not raised, officers will<lb/>
probably look for new jobs.<lb/>
"Everyone is waiting to<lb/>
see what the state survey<lb/>
is going to produce<lb/>
Rodgers said.<lb/>
Worsham, a former FBI<lb/>
agent who has been chief<lb/>
of the 34-member<lb/>
department for more than<lb/>
seven years, said it is<lb/>
difficult from the depart-<lb/>
ment to attract new<lb/>
officers.<lb/>
He said most of the<lb/>
men who left the force<lb/>
went to better-paying jobs.<lb/>
"I would imagine that a<lb/>
walkout could very possibly<lb/>
happen again Morgan<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Morgan, who supports<lb/>
the police department's<lb/>
wage request, said he felt<lb/>
the cost to the city in<lb/>
money and morale would<lb/>
be a key factor when the<lb/>
aldermen consider pay<lb/>
policies in the future.<lb/>
Withdraw<lb/>
by the rules<lb/>
Students who are con-<lb/>
sidering withdrawing from<lb/>
school are to be reminded<lb/>
of the following:<lb/>
a) You have until Fri<lb/>
Jan. 12 to officially with-<lb/>
draw from ECU and re-<lb/>
ceive a full refund of<lb/>
prepaid tuition and fees.<lb/>
b) If you withdraw after<lb/>
Fri Jan. 12, and have<lb/>
already registered and<lb/>
picked up your schedule,<lb/>
your tuition w'ij be pro-<lb/>
rated for each day you are<lb/>
in school. You will also<lb/>
lose both your dorm rent<lb/>
and your $15 registration<lb/>
fee.<lb/>
ELIZABETHTOtt N AP<lb/>
elma Bollard Bar-<lb/>
lield, the woman sen-<lb/>
tenced to die in the gas<lb/>
chamber for a first-de-<lb/>
gree murder conviction,<lb/>
will be the second wo-<lb/>
man on death row in<lb/>
North Carolina and the<lb/>
-eiond convicted of com-<lb/>
mitting murder bv arsen-<lb/>
ic poioning.<lb/>
Mrs. Barfield wa-<lb/>
-entonced Salurdav night<lb/>
I" die in the ga<lb/>
chamber Feb. 9 after a<lb/>
Bladen County Superior<lb/>
Court jury convicted her<lb/>
ol lirst-degree murder<lb/>
earlier in the dav and<lb/>
recommended the death<lb/>
penalty instead of life<lb/>
imprisonment.<lb/>
She will join Rebecca<lb/>
Case Deeter of Kerners-<lb/>
ville when she is trans-<lb/>
lerred to death row at<lb/>
l he Women's Correctional<lb/>
Center in Raleigh today.<lb/>
Mrs. Deeter was con-<lb/>
victed in Forsyth Super-<lb/>
ior Court in September<lb/>
of first-degree murder in<lb/>
last year's arsenic poi-<lb/>
soning death of her<lb/>
husband.<lb/>
Mr i;<lb/>
iaii led ? murder in<lb/>
???iii<lb/>
m .it.i ol her hailce,<lb/>
? ? ai: favloi nt St.<lb/>
1' no  Shf' bad pleaded<lb/>
?cent a the charges<lb/>
b) reason ol iuanil v<lb/>
In t -l.iuoiiv .i-t vm . k<lb/>
and in a -igned eun<lb/>
I. h.n. lr Bartield<lb/>
admitted administering<lb/>
poison ( lour people,<lb/>
including Tavlor and her<lb/>
mother. The four all<lb/>
died within a few duv-<lb/>
et eating or drinking the<lb/>
a?U and roach killer or<lb/>
rat poison jn their food.<lb/>
Mr- Barfield was on<lb/>
trial onlv the the Tavlor<lb/>
dealh. but Superior Court<lb/>
Judge Henrv A.McKinnon<lb/>
Jr. allowed the jury to<lb/>
ion-ider testiinonv about<lb/>
the olher poisonings in<lb/>
determining whether she<lb/>
intended to kill Tavlor.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Bladen District At<lb/>
tornev Joe Freeman Bntt<lb/>
had asked for the death<lb/>
penally, telling the jury<lb/>
that Mrs. Barfield was a<lb/>
"cold-blooded, deliberate<lb/>
murderer<lb/>
f<lb/>
m ??. ???<lb/>
?r' j0- ? . mr<lb/>
m ?? -<lb/>
? - - - . ,<lb/>
rmiezmn ????<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057169_0002"/><lb/>
IT<lb/>
? 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 11 January 1?79<lb/>
Careers<lb/>
Recent changes have<lb/>
been made to simplify the<lb/>
registration process with<lb/>
the Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Office. If you<lb/>
have a registration packet<lb/>
that has not been com-<lb/>
pleted, please stop by the<lb/>
Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Office for new<lb/>
instructions.<lb/>
Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Office<lb/>
Interview Schedule for<lb/>
January 1979<lb/>
Jan. 15 - National Center<lb/>
for Paralegal Training (any<lb/>
major)<lb/>
Jan. It Life of Virginia j<lb/>
(any major)<lb/>
Jan 23 - Stanley County<lb/>
Schools (Early childhood,<lb/>
Intermediate, English. Li-<lb/>
brary Science, Math)<lb/>
Jan. 24 Cherry, Bekaert<lb/>
&amp; Holland. CPA's (Ac-<lb/>
 minting)<lb/>
Jan. 25 Blue Bell<lb/>
(Business, Industrial Tech-<lb/>
nology); Reserve Life In-<lb/>
surance Company (Business<lb/>
Administration, Psychology,<lb/>
Sociology)<lb/>
Jan. 29 Cumberland<lb/>
County Schools (Early<lb/>
Childhood. Intermediate,<lb/>
Art. Drama, English, For-<lb/>
eign Languages, Guidance,<lb/>
Math. Industrial Arts, Li-<lb/>
brary Science, Band, Chor- j<lb/>
al, Physical Education, All j<lb/>
SCiences)<lb/>
Jan ?:? Wachovia Bank &amp;<lb/>
Trust Company (Business<lb/>
 In -(ration. Economics)<lb/>
1 rune K illiam Countv<lb/>
ols (Library Science,<lb/>
Special Education. Physical<lb/>
ipv, Occupational<lb/>
ipy, Math. Business<lb/>
ACT<lb/>
The ACT will be of-<lb/>
fered at ECU on Sat Feb.<lb/>
10. Application blanks are<lb/>
to be completed and maile<lb/>
to ACT Registration, P.O.<lb/>
Box 414, Iowa City, Iowa<lb/>
52240 to arrive no later<lb/>
than Jan. 12. Applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the<lb/>
ECU Testing Center, Room<lb/>
105, Speight Building.<lb/>
Backgammon<lb/>
Enjoy playing back-<lb/>
gammon? All persons in-<lb/>
terested in forming a<lb/>
Backgammon Club to meet<lb/>
on a regular basis may<lb/>
sign-up at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Billiards Center. An or-<lb/>
ganizational meeting will<lb/>
be held on Tues Jan. 23<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in the Billiards<lb/>
Center. Bring your sets.<lb/>
The Chi Beta Phi<lb/>
Scientific Honor Fraternity<lb/>
will have their pledge<lb/>
meeting on Wed Jan. 10<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. in Biology<lb/>
N-102.<lb/>
Lambda Alpha<lb/>
C.C.<lb/>
Start your semester<lb/>
right (after Christ's birth-<lb/>
day) by growing in your<lb/>
personal relationship with<lb/>
Christ. Besides having fun<lb/>
and meeting lots of other<lb/>
Christians on campus, you<lb/>
can learn more about the<lb/>
abundant Christian life.<lb/>
Christ promised. Come by<lb/>
Brewster D-311 this Thurs.<lb/>
nite at 7 p.m. Sponsored<lb/>
by Campus Crusade for<lb/>
Christ.<lb/>
Placement<lb/>
Only those students<lb/>
who are registered with<lb/>
the Placement Office are<lb/>
eligible for these inter-<lb/>
views. If you are a senior<lb/>
and are interested in reg-<lb/>
istering, please visit the<lb/>
Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Office to obtain<lb/>
the necessary forms. The<lb/>
office is located in the<lb/>
Mamie Jenkins Alumni<lb/>
Building behind the new<lb/>
Fine Arts Building.<lb/>
Christ<lb/>
Hey! One of our favor-<lb/>
ite speakers from last<lb/>
semester will be speaking<lb/>
at our meeting tonight Jan.<lb/>
H in Mendenhall 212,<lb/>
7:30-9:30 p.m. Mrs. Mary<lb/>
Ann Mayo will be sharing<lb/>
how knowing Jesus Christ<lb/>
as her personal Lord and<lb/>
Savior made a difference in<lb/>
her daily life. You are<lb/>
invited to come and hear<lb/>
this dynamic speaker.<lb/>
Come expecting a miracle!<lb/>
Also, plans concerning the<lb/>
FGS state convention Jan.<lb/>
20 will be discussed.<lb/>
BSU<lb/>
Pause, a time for per-<lb/>
sonal and spiritual reflec-<lb/>
tion. 7:30 p.m. Thurs.<lb/>
night at the Baptist Stu-<lb/>
dent Union, a place where<lb/>
social, spiritual, and ethnic<lb/>
growth is integrated. 511<lb/>
E. 10th St behind ECU<lb/>
library.<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
Cays<lb/>
The Cay Union of ECU<lb/>
will resume regular meet-<lb/>
ings Tues Jan. 16, at 5<lb/>
p.m. Meetings will be<lb/>
held weekly at 608 East<lb/>
Ninth St. This organization<lb/>
will continue to meet for<lb/>
the purposes of improving<lb/>
gay peoples self-awareness<lb/>
and self-concept.<lb/>
Study Skills<lb/>
There will be a man-<lb/>
datory meeting of the ECU<lb/>
chapter of Lambda Alpha<lb/>
Epsilon on Tues Jan. 16<lb/>
at 4:45 p.m. in rm. 101A<lb/>
Belk. AH members must<lb/>
attend and any interested<lb/>
persons are invited.<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
ience, Distri-<lb/>
butive Education, Industrial<lb/>
ts, Foreign Languages,<lb/>
Eiglish Social Studies)<lb/>
Bladen County<lb/>
SelIs (Early Childhood.<lb/>
mediate Math Con-<lb/>
centration, Science Read-<lb/>
Math. Physical Sci-<lb/>
ence, Chemistry Physics,<lb/>
Reading)<lb/>
Poetry<lb/>
The Poetry Forum will<lb/>
meet on the first and third<lb/>
Thursday of each month<lb/>
during the Spring Sem-<lb/>
ester. Watch bulletin<lb/>
boards for time and place<lb/>
ol meeting. Everyone wel-<lb/>
come to read their work.<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
UNION<lb/>
Become involved with<lb/>
campus entertainment.<lb/>
Interested? Apply!<lb/>
Room 234 Mendenhall<lb/>
APPLICATION DEADLINES:<lb/>
Student Union President<lb/>
thru Jan. 16<lb/>
Student Union Chairpersons<lb/>
Jan. 25 - Feb. 6<lb/>
Committee Membership<lb/>
Feb. 12-26<lb/>
A non-credit, Study<lb/>
Skills class will be con-<lb/>
ducted by Dr. Weingand<lb/>
beginning Jan. 15. There<lb/>
will be two groups. One<lb/>
will meet on Mon. and<lb/>
Wed. at 1 p.m. in Room<lb/>
305 Wright Annex and the<lb/>
other group will meet on<lb/>
Tues. and Thurs. at 1 p.m.<lb/>
in Room 305 Wright An-<lb/>
nex.<lb/>
Thela is available to<lb/>
all students. Attendance is<lb/>
voluntary - no formal<lb/>
registration is required.<lb/>
Students who are unable to<lb/>
make these times may<lb/>
come by the Counseling<lb/>
Center and schedule indi-<lb/>
vidual appointments.<lb/>
IV<lb/>
Inter-Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship will meet in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter, rm. 221 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Wed. night. Check it out!<lb/>
The Writer's Guild will<lb/>
meet Wed Jan. 17 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Brewster A-207.<lb/>
All interested writers asre<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
Pharmacy<lb/>
The Pharmacy College<lb/>
Admission Test will be<lb/>
offered at ECU on Sat<lb/>
Feb. 10. Applications are<lb/>
to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to the Psychological<lb/>
Corporation, 304 East 45th<lb/>
St New York, NY 10017<lb/>
to arrive no later than Jan.<lb/>
15. Applications may be<lb/>
obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, Room-105,<lb/>
Speight Building.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Signing<lb/>
The ECU Program for<lb/>
Hearing-Impaired Students<lb/>
will present a 3-hour<lb/>
credit Course for those<lb/>
students interested in the<lb/>
Sign Language. The Intro-<lb/>
duction to -Amecioan, Sign<lb/>
Language must be added<lb/>
during the Drop-Add pr -<lb/>
iod, because it was not<lb/>
listed for Spring Semester.<lb/>
If you need further infor-<lb/>
mation contact us at The<lb/>
Program for Hearing-Im-<lb/>
paired Students, Brewster<lb/>
A-114 or call 757-6729.<lb/>
Students, sign-up today<lb/>
to bowl on a MSC Mixed-<lb/>
Doubles bowling league.<lb/>
Sign-up for the Mon. or<lb/>
Tues. night league on the<lb/>
poster located on the<lb/>
ground floor main bulletin<lb/>
board in Mendenhall. The<lb/>
first meetingbowling<lb/>
nights will be Mon Jan.<lb/>
22 and Tues Jan. 23.<lb/>
You don't have to be a<lb/>
pro to participate. Get<lb/>
some friends together and<lb/>
sign-up today.<lb/>
Mini-Courses<lb/>
Register now for a<lb/>
mini-course in Disco<lb/>
Dance, Beginning Bridge,<lb/>
Billiards, or CPR Training.<lb/>
Sponsored by Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, the<lb/>
courses are open to ECU<lb/>
full-time students, faculty<lb/>
and staff MSC members,<lb/>
and their spouses or<lb/>
guests. Persons must reg-<lb/>
ister and pay fees at the<lb/>
MAC Central Ticket Office<lb/>
between the hours of 10<lb/>
a.m. and 4 p.m Monday<lb/>
thru Friday. The first<lb/>
course begins Jan. 29.<lb/>
Register today.<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
Check out "Discount<lb/>
Day" every Monday after-<lb/>
noon at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Bowling Center. From 1<lb/>
p.m. until 4 p.m the<lb/>
price of bowling is i$ off.<lb/>
Don't miss this opportunin<lb/>
to really save!<lb/>
Internships<lb/>
Information on the<lb/>
Summer, 1979 internships<lb/>
in state government has<lb/>
arrived at the Career !<lb/>
Planning and Placement<lb/>
Office. Internships are a-<lb/>
.vailable in nearly all<lb/>
majors to students who<lb/>
have completed two years<lb/>
of study. For more in-<lb/>
formation, visit the Career<lb/>
Planning and Placement<lb/>
Office in the Mamie Jen-<lb/>
kins Alumni Building.<lb/>
New Orleans<lb/>
Registration deadiim<lb/>
for the New Orleans Tnj<lb/>
is Thurs Feb. 1. The trij<lb/>
is March 2-11 during<lb/>
Spring Break. 4 days will<lb/>
be spent in New Orlean-<lb/>
at the Downtown Ramad.t<lb/>
Inn in the heart of th-<lb/>
French Quarter. 3 day<lb/>
will be spent in Atalant.i<lb/>
at the Atlanta Townhouse<lb/>
in downtown Atlanta. The<lb/>
price of $185 includes<lb/>
transportation to and from<lb/>
New Orleans, Atlanta,<lb/>
Greenville, plus hotel ac-<lb/>
comadations.<lb/>
Songwriters<lb/>
?w<lb/>
There will be a meeting<lb/>
of the Middle Atlantic<lb/>
Songwriter's Association on<lb/>
Sat Jan. 13 at 10 a.m. at<lb/>
the Jack Amyette Activi-<lb/>
ties Center in Jacksonville.<lb/>
M.A.S.A. is an<lb/>
organization formed to as-<lb/>
sist aspiring songwriters.<lb/>
The group has lyricists,<lb/>
musicians, and vocalists of<lb/>
all kinds of music. Come<lb/>
on and check it out.<lb/>
Collaboration is the key to<lb/>
the art.<lb/>
If your interested, call<lb/>
752-9390 for more infor-<lb/>
mation.<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
The National Teacher<lb/>
Examinations (NTE) will<lb/>
be given at the ECU <lb/>
Testing Center on Sat<lb/>
Feb. 17.<lb/>
s"?res from the exam-<lb/>
ination, are used bv<lb/>
states for certification of<lb/>
teachers, school vsteni!<lb/>
lor selection and .dent.fi- 4<lb/>
cation of leadership qual-<lb/>
ities. an(j by colleges a-<lb/>
part of their graduation<lb/>
requirements<lb/>
Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, which prepare<lb/>
and administers the test<lb/>
says they are designed to<lb/>
measure knowledge gained<lb/>
from professional and gen<lb/>
eral education and in 26<lb/>
subject-matter fields.<lb/>
Bulletins describing re<lb/>
gistration proceedures and<lb/>
containing registration<lb/>
forms ma be obtained<lb/>
from the ECU Te-ting<lb/>
Center. Speight Buldmg.<lb/>
Room-105. Mr John S<lb/>
ChiMers, Director, or dir-<lb/>
ectly from the National<lb/>
Testing Examinations. Ed-<lb/>
ucational Testn.g SEnri<lb/>
Box 911. Princeton, N J<lb/>
08541. The deadline for v<lb/>
gular registration is Jan<lb/>
25, On-the-spot registration<lb/>
i- not permitted.<lb/>
Models<lb/>
Savings<lb/>
Cruise<lb/>
Models are needed for<lb/>
Figure Drawing classes.<lb/>
Contact Mr. Crawley, Gor-<lb/>
dley, Dankins and Ms.<lb/>
Ross at 757-6563.<lb/>
At the Mendenhall<lb/>
Bowling Center you can<lb/>
rent a bowling lane to use<lb/>
for one hour and it onlv<lb/>
costs $3. "Rent-a-lane" is<lb/>
available every Saturday<lb/>
from 12 noon until 6 p.m.<lb/>
Stop by and get in on the<lb/>
great savings!<lb/>
Registration deadlines<lb/>
for the Ft. Lauderdale-<lb/>
Bahamas Cruise Trip is<lb/>
Tues Jan. 16. The trip is<lb/>
March 3-10, during Spring<lb/>
Break. Students will be<lb/>
staying at the Holiday Inn<lb/>
at Ft. Lauderdale before<lb/>
and after the 3 night and<lb/>
4 day cruise to the I<lb/>
Bahamas. The price of !<lb/>
$389 includes bus trans<lb/>
portation, hotel accomo- )<lb/>
dations in Ft. Lauderdale. j<lb/>
and the cruise. Meals j<lb/>
aboard ship are also in-<lb/>
eluded.<lb/>
Counselors<lb/>
If you are interested in<lb/>
becoming an orientation<lb/>
counselor, come by Whi-<lb/>
chard rm 210 and pick up<lb/>
an application. Interviews<lb/>
will he conducted in Feb<lb/>
and training sessions vui!<lb/>
begin in March.<lb/>
Dorms<lb/>
There are two da<lb/>
student and one Greene<lb/>
Dorm openings in "SC.A.<lb/>
Sciwmng -will k? ,hi,i<lb/>
Thurs. Jan. 18 at 4 p.m.<lb/>
in Mendenhall 239. If<lb/>
interested, applications art-<lb/>
taken daily from 8-5 in<lb/>
Mendenhall 227 or call<lb/>
757-6611 ext. 218 for more<lb/>
?nlormation.<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Still doing<lb/>
OUR part.<lb/>
ouse<lb/>
ffeeh<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
desperately needs<lb/>
committee members.<lb/>
AtfOlflUMll<lb/>
Please apply, second floor<lb/>
Mendenhall, 757-fl 1<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
'for sale<lb/>
r(R SALE: Stereo compo-<lb/>
nents. Color TV - 19 inch<lb/>
5275; surfboard - swallow-<lb/>
uil. $120; Wet suit - Long<lb/>
John $50, Top $25, gloves<lb/>
and Boots $15; Desk &amp;<lb/>
chair $35. 756-8708.<lb/>
FOR SALE: A set of Bose<lb/>
501, only been owned for 3<lb/>
months, asking $300 or<lb/>
best offer, 404A Belk or<lb/>
758-9324.<lb/>
tor Bert ?<lb/>
?S-??-?n-?<lb/>
WANTED. Female<lb/>
room-<lb/>
'?al preferably a gradu-<lb/>
ate student or a quiet,<lb/>
titled person. Would have<lb/>
private room, can be<lb/>
furnished, 1 block from<lb/>
campus, close to down-<lb/>
"own. $87.50 plus V util-<lb/>
rtiea and phone. Needed<lb/>
immediately! Call 758-1636.<lb/>
ROOM ATE WANTED for<lb/>
nice 2 bedroom house.<lb/>
Cost is $90 mo. plus Vfc<lb/>
utilities. Call 758-1457.<lb/>
WANTED: Female Room-<lb/>
mate. Beginning spring<lb/>
semester, $56 a mo. and<lb/>
share of utilities. Private<lb/>
room with heater. 3 blocks<lb/>
from campus. Large<lb/>
kitchen. Call 758-2840.<lb/>
Room for rent near<lb/>
campus. $60 month plus V<lb/>
utilities. 758-6293.<lb/>
One or two female room-<lb/>
males needed for 2 bed-<lb/>
room Townhouse apartment<lb/>
al Oakmont Square Apts. -<lb/>
n bus route. Rent is $60<lb/>
a month plus utilities.<lb/>
Furnished. Available im-<lb/>
mediately - call 756-5181.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: Share<lb/>
kitchen, bathroom, and<lb/>
livingroom. $80 plus utili-<lb/>
ties. Call 758-3545 after 5<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
3 room apt. for rent.<lb/>
190month including utili-<lb/>
ties in Washington, N.C.<lb/>
Call 946-4050 or 975-2374.<lb/>
WANTED: Female room-<lb/>
mate for upstairs apart-<lb/>
ment. Location: 103 E.<lb/>
11th St. Rent $50.00 a mo.<lb/>
Very near campus. Call<lb/>
758-7044 and ask for<lb/>
Sherry or Janet.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED to<lb/>
share apartment at East-<lb/>
brook. Campus bus service<lb/>
available. $80month plus<lb/>
xz utilities. Call Jeff at<lb/>
758-1187.<lb/>
WANTED: Female room-<lb/>
mate to share 2 bedroom<lb/>
trailer. Rent $70 plus<lb/>
utilities. Call 752-2659, ask<lb/>
for Linda. Need immed-<lb/>
iately.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED as soon<lb/>
possible to share a two<lb/>
bedroom Townhouse apart-<lb/>
ment at Tar River Estates.<lb/>
Rent is $200 per month,<lb/>
you pay V3 rent, Vi<lb/>
utilities. Please call Fred at<lb/>
752-3427.<lb/>
Apartment for rent, four<lb/>
blocks from campus. Need<lb/>
third person to split rent.<lb/>
1145mo. rent. UtiL<lb/>
approx. $35.mo. Call Mike<lb/>
or Bill at 758-1207.<lb/>
Female roommate needed<lb/>
to share 2 bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment at College View. One<lb/>
half rent is $55 plus<lb/>
utilities and phone. Call<lb/>
752-7785.<lb/>
WANTED: male student<lb/>
l? share townhouse apart-<lb/>
'??? 70 a month rent,<lb/>
plus utilities. Call Gi<lb/>
or Wayne after<lb/>
758-1908.<lb/>
rreg<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: P.rtime<lb/>
restaurant help, flexible<lb/>
?ou?e, good p?y, no<lb/>
experience necessary<lb/>
Interview. MonWed J.n.<lb/>
?-10 from 12-7 Bon.ni.<lb/>
Steak House, 264 By-P?M<lb/>
WANTED. One<lb/>
t ? une small<lb/>
refrigerator. Call mTJI<lb/>
758-9827. Mary-<lb/>
'WND: Ladie? ?ristH.T<lb/>
j"v.c.m.y of sludem<lb/>
Describe to 758?6003.<lb/>
BELLY DANCE - Le, ,979<lb/>
he your year for heahh<lb/>
and beauty. Dance! A<lb/>
jourse in the ancient art of<lb/>
Mly dancing ught b<lb/>
Sunshine will begin J,n.<lb/>
5 (Monday night). Rides<lb/>
from campus ,v,iabJe<lb/>
Call 758-0736. (Mornings<lb/>
and evenings.)<lb/>
PORTRAITS<lb/>
JM-i Waicr??l?r<lb/>
Drawing . $20<lb/>
lr Yal<lb/>
Cr?-y<lb/>
i "?-?. i<lb/>
number. P"??ne<lb/>
by Creg<lb/>
535,<lb/>
Cre.t gift<lb/>
l y! Call<lb/>
'52-5736. f<lb/>
PanT ??ed -<lb/>
(-luh E iikk c M<lb/>
WEIGHT<lb/>
-special<lb/>
LOSS thru yog.<lb/>
ju?ce f.sting .<lb/>
control techniques - tension<lb/>
please - 5upple body<lb/>
Sunshine 758-0736<lb/>
"gs and evenings.<lb/>
i'ch.nd F.h, Fare<lb/>
?52 9279 or 756-8207<lb/>
morn-<lb/>
f<lb/>
- ?(? i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057169_0003"/><lb/>
Salisb<lb/>
11 January 1979 FQUNTAINHEAD Pago 3<lb/>
native finds<lb/>
war armor fascii-?<lb/>
ury<lb/>
EC l STUDENTS<lb/>
COM PARE schedules during th<lb/>
Durham student<lb/>
shot seven times<lb/>
drop-add period in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Photo by Chap Gurley<lb/>
SALISBURY NC AP) Lu-<lb/>
lh?r Sowers vfiays he can<lb/>
remeinlicr taking the tin off<lb/>
the chicken fiuse outside his<lb/>
family's farm near Salisbury<lb/>
wImmi he wus a boy and<lb/>
making Human armor with it.<lb/>
In high M-hool he made<lb/>
armor for Litm Cluh pre-<lb/>
-rni.iliHti- Nnvx he does it<lb/>
I ,i living.<lb/>
I lie 31' v ear-old Sowers<lb/>
.us he is not sure but he<lb/>
thinks his faseintation with<lb/>
armor may be heeau.se "ar-<lb/>
mor is inially sculptural in<lb/>
eoncepl<lb/>
Sowers studied sculpture<lb/>
for five years at Tyler School<lb/>
of Art at Temple University<lb/>
in Philadelphia.<lb/>
Then he returned to<lb/>
North Carolina to teach art in<lb/>
the public schools in Wilson.<lb/>
He taught for 1 1 years but all<lb/>
the while his interest was in<lb/>
the military uniforms from<lb/>
the da)s of the knights.<lb/>
He began making mili-<lb/>
tary reproductions of swords,<lb/>
??irks and other edged<lb/>
weapons, uniforms dnd in-<lb/>
signia as well as armor.<lb/>
Sowers is quick to sav he<lb/>
is nut ,i war monger. "I'm<lb/>
basieulh a pacifist at heart.<lb/>
But there's something about<lb/>
the romance and glamor of<lb/>
the peacetime aspects of it,<lb/>
uniforms, insignia and etc<lb/>
thai is laseintating<lb/>
Sowers decided to quit<lb/>
leaching four ears ago. He<lb/>
moved back to the familv<lb/>
farm ami built a small studio<lb/>
and foundry where he makes<lb/>
military reproductions to<lb/>
special order.<lb/>
He hand sews<lb/>
uniforms, pounds tool steel<lb/>
rod into swords, and<lb/>
hammers old fenders into<lb/>
suits o armoi<lb/>
II<lb/>
iv customers come<lb/>
mostly from museum, the<lb/>
National Park S'nnt, and<lb/>
military and history butfs.<lb/>
I'm busiialK a self-em-<lb/>
plnyed i raftsman hv ing be<lb/>
low the poverty level he<lb/>
-anl 'VI e are not -riling the<lb/>
uorhl on hre financially, but<lb/>
ve .r enjoying oufaelves<lb/>
His profession might<lb/>
-Irike some a mUi,<lb/>
M??  i.pie around<lb/>
here think I m .1 'i 111 ? off iuv<lb/>
roi ker to In .liimg something<lb/>
hki su; 'b. hi; the I s<lb/>
(?memm-n: with Ciil War<lb/>
bayonet -? iMmrds 120 ear-<lb/>
after th<lb/>
Ml' s, ,<lb/>
-t I:<lb/>
mosl<lb/>
in ihe<lb/>
id any<lb/>
could<lb/>
Mate<lb/>
niner<lb/>
1 -<lb/>
a<lb/>
a sparseh<lb/>
1 ?-<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
H<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
pital in<lb/>
<lb/>
thi<lb/>
!)' P"??es i-l a hunter<lb/>
: Ronnie Watson<lb/>
 finding the grav<lb/>
?n the woods Saturday<lb/>
ii the sheriffs<lb/>
'? raying he had<lb/>
evidence of a<lb/>
deputies said.<lb/>
S rill Bill Mien said<lb/>
kind  puzzles<lb/>
idding thai Emory's<lb/>
?' "as in dis.irrav.<lb/>
' ? deputies to con<lb/>
re had been a<lb/>
?' before his death.<lb/>
M mhers of the State<lb/>
Investigation and<lb/>
team from the<lb/>
Durham Police Department<lb/>
eombed the area Sunday,<lb/>
reported the) found<lb/>
no . . id n 1 Deputies said<lb/>
 ? vi neither a suspect<lb/>
.1 motive in the ease,<lb/>
rnunv never returned<lb/>
home alter he left to go on<lb/>
' dan Dei 11. H.s car<lb/>
was I ij Dec. 2 in a<lb/>
UN .1 in Durham<lb/>
I In- wallet was found<lb/>
by a Me-v mii Dec 2n<lb/>
and turned over to officers.<lb/>
V -i1' lies r the hov<lb/>
i t ht ? National<lb/>
' ? ? sheriffs depul ies,<lb/>
it- and the SB1.<lb/>
ined the efforl on<lb/>
De, <lb/>
proudly presents<lb/>
John Travolta<lb/>
in<lb/>
Saturday Night Fever<lb/>
Catch it<lb/>
This Fri. and Sat. night<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
THE HEAD HUNTER<lb/>
Men's Hair Styling<lb/>
located at Rivergate Shopping Ct. on<lb/>
E. 1 Oth St. Ext. across from Hastings Ford<lb/>
752-8855<lb/>
FEATURING ROFFLER<lb/>
FRANCHISE PRODUCTS<lb/>
owners<lb/>
Jack Dixon and Jimmy Dixon<lb/>
RofhiR<lb/>
?????? uriter. neededf<lb/>
CHAPTER<lb/>
THURSDAY NITE<lb/>
BUD PATRICK-Wisdom of the Bead<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi T G I F 3-7<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
American Dream John Moore<lb/>
Spinning the best Top 40 and<lb/>
BEACH MUSIC in Eastern N.C<lb/>
ADMISSION ON FRIDAY NITE<lb/>
KORE-O-MAT "1<lb/>
WELCOMES ECU STUDENTS'<lb/>
BACK TO SCHOOL<lb/>
E. 14th St. 7M-636<lb/>
44 Visit us for your laundry needs9<lb/>
? 36 washers ? change ? pinball<lb/>
? ao dryers machine ? color T.V.<lb/>
? dry-cleaning pick-up station<lb/>
? attendant 8:00 a.m4:00 p.m. daily<lb/>
Bring this coupon Sor free wash.<lb/>
ALL IZOD SWEATERS CARDIGAN<lb/>
and V-NECK $14.00<lb/>
ALL MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE IZOD<lb/>
LACOSTE SHIRTS $13.75<lb/>
ALL FOOT-JOY TENNIS SHOES<lb/>
112 PRICE<lb/>
ALL TENNIS BALLS 12 Price<lb/>
ALL SKI SWEATERS, JACKETS,<lb/>
GLOVES, BIBS &amp; OUTFITS 25 OFF<lb/>
ALL MENS WINTER SLACKS<lb/>
40 OFF<lb/>
(ntrtiim D. tulp<lb/>
frtJf Prafrrniiuml<lb/>
Gr??nv,ll? C?tntr, Clu?<lb/>
 4 V ? <lb/>
PAIR ELECTRONICS<lb/>
AUDIO CENTER<lb/>
"Best Buys"<lb/>
Hi-Fi Components from JVC<lb/>
Thursday Family Night<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
CAN EAT<lb/>
TROUT ??????????????? $1.95<lb/>
shrimp $3.95<lb/>
OYSTERS  $4.25<lb/>
FLOUNDER? $3.95<lb/>
Dinner meal Includes Golden Crisp<lb/>
French Fires, Cole Slaw, Tartar Sauce and<lb/>
the world's best hushpupples.<lb/>
FRIDAYS<lb/>
4jDAA Sun. thru Thurs. 4:30-0:00<lb/>
?fiifAOil Frl Sat' 4,i0I0,?0<lb/>
" Friday's Seafood<lb/>
V 23118. Evans St.<lb/>
JVC Quartz-Locked Direct-Drive Turntable<lb/>
with Automatic Return<lb/>
Ql A2<lb/>
JVC Stereo Cassette Deck<lb/>
5-Peak LED s. Super ANRS. SA Head<lb/>
$159.95<lb/>
JVC DC Integrated Stereo Amplifier<lb/>
with S.E.A. Graphic Equalizer<lb/>
45 watts Channel<lb/>
ii!?<lb/>
Model KD-55<lb/>
4.???? ll?M? (<lb/>
$257.95<lb/>
JA S44<lb/>
$249.95<lb/>
1<lb/>
Pair Electronics Audio Center Center<lb/>
'Where service comes first'<lb/>
8:30-5:30 Weekdays<lb/>
8:30-12:30 Saturday<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057169_0004"/><lb/>
P?g? 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 11 Januilry W9<lb/>
Secret registration polic<lb/>
Hundreds of students returned to school<lb/>
semester after registration day and<lb/>
ound to (heir horror ,ha, their hard won<lb/>
?dules for which they pre-registered had<lb/>
n destroyed, as of 4 p.m. on reg,s.rat,on<lb/>
This has been the university's<lb/>
??? for years, but it happens every<lb/>
"?ste. Something, obviously, is wrong<lb/>
several hundred students are unaware<lb/>
a unrversity policy which affects them so<lb/>
eable segment of the student body<lb/>
reahze the consequences of reg.sfpr-<lb/>
; Msl the deadline, and the problem IS<lb/>
compounded by the $10 late<lb/>
"?? fee No doubt, most of those<lb/>
 wh? saw their schedules eliminated<lb/>
to pay only the late fee in order<lb/>
 The core of the problem is the<lb/>
? Ja"Ure t0 Pr?Perly inform<lb/>
; of this policy, since it isn't even<lb/>
Jed in the catalogue.<lb/>
7 ZZTS m 9 casses for<lb/>
?000 students are monumental.<lb/>
? ?t is easy to see why some sort of<lb/>
"?" time is necessary in order to<lb/>
;fy the drop-add period, but the<lb/>
rsity has no excuse for not informing<lb/>
Swtents. It's ridiculous that such a<lb/>
ranging, cut and dried policy isn't<lb/>
oned ,n any official publications It's<lb/>
??? as if the university were playing a<lb/>
?e on its students.<lb/>
" only way students will ever hear of<lb/>
 policy under the present circumstances<lb/>
?; hey hear about it by word of mouth<lb/>
they learn about it first hand. By that<lb/>
of course, it is too late, and there are<lb/>
feelings as empty as when you<lb/>
?ddenly realize that you have no classes<lb/>
 ss,on. and should anything happen<lb/>
?t wu. cant 00 through drop-add, you<lb/>
m of attend school.<lb/>
The university has a duty to inform<lb/>
'? nts of any policies- which affect them<lb/>
h't duty has not been fulfilled A<lb/>
?rf" effort should be made to<lb/>
nate such polices to the students<lb/>
fectively.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
American<lb/>
yearbook<lb/>
Jimi Hendrix in perspective<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
H<lb/>
tmgh! ghost now, a rock and roll wraith<lb/>
airwaves, burning through the tedium of late<lb/>
-d,o with brusts of blue fire. Though his public life<lb/>
less than four years he vss a? )<lb/>
?  "r as tailed upon to nlav<lb/>
 ? psychedelic ? gl)d, BU?ar a!a,ar. bfue<lb/>
m mist, clown.<lb/>
Jimt Hendrix: Voodoo Child of the iauarian 4?<lb/>
 mm m .UU.N as a musuaau and a person. Written bv<lb/>
??,??? a Harlem born poet, Jirm wj L,<lb/>
??" bfcf? hi. lonely childhood ,n Seattle, throng<lb/>
? ?? of apprenticeship on the Southern soul 'YhitliV<lb/>
its r,r:?r brt' h,r,L rap' ??-<lb/>
;Milu hi- image ?.s m of f<lb/>
He b!?s fo, everv,h,?g: rhv.hn, and bl<lb/>
?:? csv R-k s<lb/>
i piavea best bv musicians on sneakina<lb/>
'?rni- uith it. antecedents. spewing<lb/>
TJk- extraordinary decline of the music in the l.te 70's<lb/>
?' - a. leas, partly attributed to players who grew up<lb/>
-??" .? nothing bu, rock. Several steps removed from<lb/>
?? .hv create technically advanced pop<lb/>
.ri.1,ldeve.U made, but ultimately brittle and boring.<lb/>
H,ndm pu, ? time backing R&amp;B stars hke Little<lb/>
-i and the Isley Brothers. He had their licks dow<lb/>
?J a? also an attent.ve student of blues. Alone deen<lb/>
'? ?' ? ?, he played Muddy Waters a d Rober<lb/>
m - ?stic guitar. As he told a rock writer 'The<lb/>
- are easv to play, but no, to fee. The background of<lb/>
wrkT"tt a ,muab,u- ?. B.ues i rpart ?<lb/>
Mendri, attacked the blues, dug down ,n,o ,hem<lb/>
-IreMied hem and made them sound new. He called "j.<lb/>
un.l electric church music "We trv ,o make ??<lb/>
m-? o loose and hard-hitting so that 2 h.ts ZZ Z<lb/>
h-nl nough ,() make it open. ? fc shock therapy ?<lb/>
Cas.mg a cold eye on the debasement of the music<lb/>
fa he would fight desperately in h,s final davs, Hed<lb/>
' ahold 0 I y?Ung drag0" Umi' ,he "tabhshmen<lb/>
V to ahold of ? and turns i, into a cabaret act with the<lb/>
Xhertr, ?? <lb/>
iJr"? IS kpreferab,e to ? technique in a popular<lb/>
?tax-in ?mtl-js?<lb/>
h- io?g tL de,oqp?ic0kf ,ghre,cegflu,l"rrlinb;d:i wi,hr- eff?"<lb/>
?rolled freW" ,rf 1 Ill-second ,irai?g ??d<lb/>
I ?? ?? ??e improvisations.<lb/>
I" I" i hal h ba;kward5' d?? whe,er he had<lb/>
Henden JR. Z;P?I ?<lb/>
n io'e 'eS; SUCCe!Sfu d Henderson's<lb/>
 f epLs ,ear ;imeaning from H"d"?-?<lb/>
r. ?. P " love.peace cosmology, wjlh good<lb/>
-is. i d ? H:nd;rsonv"?<lb/>
? Hendrix dre. ,? ?,eJf f VBree,M"? his<lb/>
I -yjjji- -it ftTS:<lb/>
ien an estate worth only 5400,000<lb/>
?2 ?!???: M to -p- h,s<lb/>
mnHs. 'e ng ha a T" a"d anti-ar<lb/>
-rsen the r blaSf pear and h" ltiCd  WOU,d<lb/>
?ir,x hired b ack Ja dePfec,ate i,s value. When<lb/>
? -he pavIollb,rnkd ????. topped them<lb/>
Hm.lrix Experience wh  P , L ? reUn'te the Jimi<lb/>
- ifiri;nddw: teks"8: or ruhrer and bass<lb/>
"?ntracl was due to expire management<lb/>
hli1wara:nSeuneveni'befcre he ?? <lb/>
?ravel. Henderson does" a oodK SeX' C'?thes'<lb/>
"fa rock star's life but J? reCrean"g the texture<lb/>
"? Much of Hendrixs Z1 "I ?rtUnatey enthralled by<lb/>
 (nayHed SSfcZ <lb/>
 t? notice or care g Henderson seems<lb/>
SFsrvsTr trde5 h's b-k -<lb/>
verbatim interviews nrl,?t. lnc,uded are numerous<lb/>
r c,a??? ihrU?s,n??tg,6an'?,e:ba,exda;ge r,h<lb/>
 ? hook hoi lenslh And H PJ? adds nothing<lb/>
"????- X?8: tdcririons of<lb/>
? boi, over. At 5,4 pages, "Zfi lS<lb/>
'? ' .he eT w- b ,He "aWS ?f <lb/>
? -ors of excess 1, rt WaS -?-??:<lb/>
himself, .here is fee lnTanH ' era and ,he m?"<lb/>
?k worth loo ng1nTog  ,heSe !???. ??'s<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
On Yearbooks<lb/>
' member running<lb/>
errands for my mom at an<lb/>
age when running errands<lb/>
wasn't exactly what I had<lb/>
?n mind, and how I<lb/>
begged, pleaded, and com-<lb/>
plained about it to no<lb/>
ava.l. One of my great<lb/>
errands was to go to the<lb/>
store from time to time<lb/>
and buy various items to<lb/>
he used in the kitchen.<lb/>
One eventful day still<lb/>
looms ominously in my<lb/>
mind.<lb/>
It seems that mom had<lb/>
run out of sugar and<lb/>
needed me to go get her<lb/>
some more. So taking her<lb/>
dollar I li, out to the store<lb/>
Once there I found it<lb/>
impossible to get to the<lb/>
sugar without walking past<lb/>
the candy. I slowed up and<lb/>
got to figuring as I did<lb/>
once in a while when<lb/>
forced to by lack of better<lb/>
things to do. It is a known<lb/>
fact that candy had quite a<lb/>
bit o( sugar in it.<lb/>
Mom would probablv<lb/>
use the sugar in a c,ke for<lb/>
us, and I would eat most<lb/>
of the cake, and therefore<lb/>
most of the sugar. Well<lb/>
being an astute business-<lb/>
man, I figured I held the<lb/>
majority of the stock, and<lb/>
therefore control, and I<lb/>
decided that the sugar,<lb/>
since most of it was meant<lb/>
for me anyway, should be<lb/>
in the form of candy. And<lb/>
the candy made my trip<lb/>
home glorious.<lb/>
The reception at the<lb/>
house, though, wasn't<lb/>
quite as glorious. Dad had<lb/>
a big leather strap (he was<lb/>
quite a large man, a 48<lb/>
waist I believe) with which<lb/>
he received his exercise.<lb/>
Further details should not<lb/>
be necessary.<lb/>
I remember dad exer-<lb/>
ting at another time<lb/>
during my childhood. He<lb/>
would pay me to mow the<lb/>
yard once a week. One<lb/>
time I asked for my monev<lb/>
m advance, and what boy<lb/>
can be expected ,o rem-<lb/>
ember to mow a yard with<lb/>
a brand new rubber band<lb/>
propelled airplane to plav<lb/>
with. '<lb/>
I think sometimes about<lb/>
moments as these<lb/>
occured during my child<lb/>
hood. The reason has<lb/>
suddenly dawned on me<lb/>
Obviously my parents<lb/>
d'dn. like giving out<lb/>
money and receiving noth-<lb/>
ing in return.<lb/>
U I had only found this<lb/>
out earlier mv dad<lb/>
wouldn't have been m such<lb/>
top physical condition, for I<lb/>
wouldn't have afforded h.m<lb/>
the luxury of his exercise<lb/>
per.ods. I have learned fr ,m<lb/>
?he lesson, though, and<lb/>
now all I have to do ,s<lb/>
find a big leather strap a<lb/>
person larger than me that<lb/>
can use it without fear of<lb/>
retaliation, and the BIT<lb/>
CANEER staff.<lb/>
 "h hopes of didactidsm.<lb/>
Steve Fisher<lb/>
? ? mese <lb/>
Howell's biblical view ofgays rebutted<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In response to Mr<lb/>
Frank Howell's letter in<lb/>
your Dec. 7 issue, let me<lb/>
make a couple of points.<lb/>
first, the burden of my<lb/>
letter (regarding the anon-<lb/>
ymous homosexual who<lb/>
wroter earlier and whose<lb/>
letter sounded like a sui-<lb/>
cide note) was that our<lb/>
society is often insensitive.<lb/>
Mr. Howell's letter illu.<lb/>
strated the point; he spent<lb/>
'our columns "laying<lb/>
down the law" from thJ mj<lb/>
Bible. Interestingly enough, neW8DaDPr<lb/>
he never mentioned John PCI<lb/>
J6J nor d?d he offer one<lb/>
word of advice, sympathy<lb/>
or concern for the potential<lb/>
suicide.<lb/>
His theology appears to<lb/>
be legalistic; he overlooks<lb/>
the fact that no man enters<lb/>
'nto the Kingdom of God<lb/>
by way of his own "good"<lb/>
works, but enters by way<lb/>
of the one good work, that<lb/>
of Christ s sacrificial death<lb/>
? behalf of hopeless<lb/>
mankind.<lb/>
My second point is that<lb/>
Mr; HoHowell presumed<lb/>
that I had attempted "to<lb/>
say that God approves of<lb/>
homosexuality N0 sir<lb/>
what I attempted to say<lb/>
was that God loves the<lb/>
homosexual, the rapis the<lb/>
racist, the hypocrite, the<lb/>
self-righteous, etc. in<lb/>
?y that is beyond man's<lb/>
Good NeWS- And ,h.t<lb/>
ood fN?-ws is ,h.? Chris,<lb/>
td r all of us. and<lb/>
whosoever ,?. ca?<lb/>
bee8rde"of ,he Urd Sha,i<lb/>
Bill Byrd<lb/>
rv Professor<lb/>
Department of CommuniU<lb/>
Health<lb/>
chastised<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
? Rxjnfajnhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina AnmMia . w?a<lb/>
? varwina eommunity for over 50 years<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
 Doug White<lb/>
PRODs?BNarrAQE: adv!5? -??"<lb/>
NEWS EDITORS Robrt M ? Sweim<lb/>
r . Gliarmir<lb/>
What on earth<lb/>
wrong with you?<lb/>
?gh, to be proud<lb/>
??ur university was<lb/>
cited to go to a<lb/>
You<lb/>
that<lb/>
sel-<lb/>
bowl<lb/>
vta umf,nkind's -i"81-<lb/>
Mr. Hollowell has cho-<lb/>
sen, rather, to try t0 m.ke<lb/>
this particular behavior u-<lb/>
n.quely ungodly by citing a<lb/>
host of scripture verses.<lb/>
rl ?K l? aPPrec?'e the<lb/>
fact that no stnner wi?<lb/>
H?8.l n" ?eaVen' M'<lb/>
Hollowell, if he k<lb/>
h?man, is a sinnerj as<lb/>
of us are.<lb/>
Perhaps we should<lb/>
shout to the suicides "P. IV V ?<lb/>
ahead and jumVL ? ? I ? UHlUlte<lb/>
damned to Hell, .nyw.yr<lb/>
I think not. The Bible is<lb/>
n,ed with hope and we<lb/>
would do well t? . "<lb/>
the hope 7. ? PT0?im<lb/>
? ?upe as opposed m<lb/>
l.m,?ng our message ,o the<lb/>
doomsday passages <lb/>
Mr H .I?1 Cap0n fr<lb/>
Mr. Hollowell's e?er w?s<lb/>
J-Jte misleading. His ler<lb/>
Arf not presen, B llV<lb/>
Mews on g.ys ha<lb/>
stemed nuit? <lb/>
Hu?e unaware of<lb/>
requests<lb/>
letters<lb/>
T" ftHNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Marc Barnes<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Jeff Rollins<lb/>
MaMbw addrw Old Sooth BulMlng. Orav<lb/>
Edltortal oNIcm: 757-63C6 757387 rtrjiinn<lb/>
I<lb/>
?M? .mm<lb/>
game instead of criticizing<lb/>
" ' just heard your<lb/>
lomments on TV and<lb/>
could not believe it.<lb/>
No one is being<lb/>
excused from exams - thev<lb/>
are just allowing oya'i<lb/>
students ,o lake their<lb/>
exams at a different time<lb/>
Many businessmen<lb/>
ihroughout eastern Caro-<lb/>
lina have supported the<lb/>
athletic and academic<lb/>
Program at ECU for many<lb/>
years and we certainly do<lb/>
"ot want any par, of <lb/>
'njured by such a biased<lb/>
attitude such ?s you<lb/>
display.<lb/>
H" you don't want to be<lb/>
? Part of ? progressive<lb/>
Program, go soroe h<lb/>
kte" K "ubafker Co1'<lb/>
ege where there is B0<lb/>
sports program.<lb/>
Jack Nobles<lb/>
)?<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
solution<lb/>
offered<lb/>
T" FOl NTAINHEAD:<lb/>
' 'he risk ai<lb/>
W the Studeni II<lb/>
 Allr.c"?! r <lb/>
1.1' uhv ?, T C"n,m?<lb/>
?-H do"  J<lb/>
fifsi prepared n. s<lb/>
'?? ?peedV j bn ' Kh"<lb/>
'? 7?l "? ??-??<lb/>
?uld be "r ? ?<lb/>
"? priorities.<lb/>
 Carey<lb/>
Iir.de id<lb/>
I ??? an innui ?<lb/>
 P" "?l acrviM<lb/>
 Bi fnr ? '<lb/>
c??c.iiii?. I I <lb/>
carvraled ,?r<lb/>
????rua h?H0<lb/>
?mv incarci-raii?,?<lb/>
2 fi h.?. .C<lb/>
rd "?? ani . ?,M,n<lb/>
f? m whiK " <lb/>
 J Hh t? wrrr.<lb/>
??hni ??" IB th<lb/>
 ludentM if iK<lb/>
'are ,? tfle? w?ud<lb/>
.wrtpcn HJth<lb/>
?-l-ire " "f<lb/>
? r Y?rk<lb/>
 Anr?d Wader<lb/>
. aii bm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057169_0005"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
11 January 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Pag 5<lb/>
Writer William S. Cohen s poetry revea,<lb/>
exceptional perception and sensitivity'<lb/>
Trendc V.i ? M nanas, ttinrAm ? k 'i   <lb/>
-<lb/>
M<lb/>
ell<lb/>
as being a<lb/>
congressman from Maine,<lb/>
William S. Cohen is a poet<lb/>
ol exceptional perception<lb/>
and sensitivity. His recent-<lb/>
ly published first book. Of<lb/>
I and Seasons, is a<lb/>
genuine!) pleasureable ex-<lb/>
perience to read.<lb/>
In thirty-six poems he<lb/>
writes .ompellingly about<lb/>
the beaut) of America, of<lb/>
V m England childhood<lb/>
and strong patriotism, of<lb/>
love and death, of the<lb/>
importance of friendship as<lb/>
as the need for<lb/>
tude, of his family, and<lb/>
? government that he<lb/>
has learned the<lb/>
o( V atergate.<lb/>
His images are dis-<lb/>
tinct!) American. Take for<lb/>
tance these vivid lines<lb/>
n the poem "Hancock<lb/>
Street which describe the<lb/>
place where the man grew<lb/>
up<lb/>
lair<lb/>
The memory of<lb/>
the butcher next<lb/>
with red fingers<lb/>
door<lb/>
and quick hands;<lb/>
the barber who<lb/>
dipped my yellow<lb/>
with lyrical scissors<lb/>
that sang of Italv.<lb/>
And those unshaven lost<lb/>
who slept on steps and<lb/>
in vacant lots<lb/>
reeking of wine and<lb/>
canned heat<lb/>
squeezed into handerker-<lb/>
ehiefs.<lb/>
reeling, red-faced<lb/>
The book is divided into<lb/>
fourteen sections, each one<lb/>
prefaced by a prose<lb/>
passage that, coupled with<lb/>
the poems, takes one into<lb/>
Bill Cohen's life to reveal<lb/>
the man and his thoughts.<lb/>
In his introduction<lb/>
Cohen describes his book,<lb/>
A poem is a window into<lb/>
the soul of the writer. A<lb/>
collection o( poems, in a<lb/>
way, is a biography-a<lb/>
travelogue that reveals the<lb/>
route of a personal<lb/>
journey. But it is bio-<lb/>
graph) without the bag-<lb/>
gage of historical explana-<lb/>
tion, anecdote or embel-<lb/>
lishment<lb/>
He continues, "If the<lb/>
words are finely tuned and<lb/>
acoustically arranged then<lb/>
fhey will fall upon the<lb/>
inner ear without the need<lb/>
l accompaniment; if they<lb/>
are not, then a full<lb/>
orchestration, with bass<lb/>
an.I brass, will not<lb/>
transmute their cacopho-<lb/>
nv<lb/>
Cohen, as congressman,<lb/>
leads a very active political<lb/>
life and lives for the most<lb/>
ol the year in Washington.<lb/>
He is thus near the seat of<lb/>
power in this country,<lb/>
mid-stream mainsteam, so<lb/>
t" -peak, and his poems<lb/>
about Washington and its<lb/>
machinations are fascina-<lb/>
ting.<lb/>
The poet, as begits his<lb/>
alter-self. the politician,<lb/>
has a great enthusiasm<lb/>
and optimism about the<lb/>
possibilities of the country.<lb/>
He explains his feeling in<lb/>
the prose section that<lb/>
precedes the poems about<lb/>
Vs ashington.<lb/>
new faces<lb/>
and out, new<lb/>
tialb<lb/>
w ashington is essen-<lb/>
a city of transients<lb/>
he says,<lb/>
moving in<lb/>
Presidents, Congressmen,<lb/>
Cabinet officers, foreign<lb/>
service diplomatsthe<lb/>
unrelenting flow of the<lb/>
Potomac<lb/>
"And with each wave<lb/>
of new faces, a certain<lb/>
hope flickers in all but the<lb/>
most hardened hearts of<lb/>
Washington-based journal-<lb/>
ists and new commentators<lb/>
that life somehow will be<lb/>
better, the economv will<lb/>
improve, the national<lb/>
malaise will evaporate.<lb/>
"It is the belief that<lb/>
the world is still maleable<lb/>
and our country can be<lb/>
squeezed and reshaped to<lb/>
fit its former greatness and<lb/>
once again glow in a<lb/>
gilded era of history.<lb/>
"It is the same<lb/>
optimism that each spring<lb/>
brings, the sensuous<lb/>
feeling of dull roots<lb/>
stirring under the layers of<lb/>
cold earth, of brittle<lb/>
branches leaking green<lb/>
leaves to flutter in the<lb/>
currents of warm wind<lb/>
Bill Cohen lives as<lb/>
imaginatively as he writes.<lb/>
In 1972, he walked 600<lb/>
miles through Maine's<lb/>
Second Congressional Dis-<lb/>
trict while campaigning for<lb/>
a seat in the House of<lb/>
Bepresentatives; he was<lb/>
elected to Congress in that<lb/>
year, was re-elected in<lb/>
1974, and again in 1976.<lb/>
Cohen was named a<lb/>
Fellow at Harvard's John<lb/>
F. Kennedy Institute of<lb/>
Politics in 1972. In 1974,<lb/>
Time selected him as one<lb/>
America's future leaders,<lb/>
and in 1975 he was named<lb/>
as one of the Ten<lb/>
Outstanding Young Men in<lb/>
America by the U.S. Union<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce.<lb/>
Even though Cohen<lb/>
loves our government he<lb/>
can also clearly see its<lb/>
imperfections and cruelties.<lb/>
In his "Song of Song My"<lb/>
he deals with tragedy of<lb/>
the Song My massacre in<lb/>
Vietnam.<lb/>
The morning headlines and<lb/>
evening news<lb/>
Picked a sheet of music<lb/>
From the repertoire of war<lb/>
And scanned the meter of<lb/>
madness,<lb/>
Singing us the melody<lb/>
Of guns and gore:<lb/>
My<lb/>
In the village of<lb/>
Young violinist Eugene Fodor is<lb/>
'the Mick Jogger of classical music<lb/>
Walked G.I. joe<lb/>
Searching for the Foe<lb/>
Looking for the Foe, Joe<lb/>
Slat-thin people<lb/>
And small children<lb/>
Were strung between<lb/>
chorus<lb/>
Of defining the enemy<lb/>
"You helped the V.C<lb/>
"But against our Will<lb/>
"No matter, you gave<lb/>
them aid<lb/>
"We are not the Foe,<lb/>
Joe<lb/>
On cue from the conductor,<lb/>
The percussion section<lb/>
struck<lb/>
And an octave of innocence<lb/>
Was cracked by the cymbal<lb/>
Of bullet on bone,<lb/>
Bone on bone<lb/>
Broken notes heaped in a<lb/>
crescendo of shame;<lb/>
AS WELL AS<lb/>
S. Colhen is a<lb/>
bing<lb/>
p -el.<lb/>
congressman from Maine. Will<lb/>
A stanza of strangers<lb/>
w ho measured their lives<lb/>
In a cup of land<lb/>
Lav like slaughtered sheep<lb/>
In a yellow sleep;<lb/>
In the Village of Song<lb/>
M)<lb/>
Walked G.I. Jo<lb/>
Searching for the Foe<lb/>
Iking tor tli. Foe, Joe<lb/>
tarn<lb/>
Bill Cohen writes a<lb/>
h. .ihhy, red-cheeked and<lb/>
robust try. Hud Mac-<lb/>
Li -? . note.) author and<lb/>
'?!isiori and radio<lb/>
? "nunentator tor CB<lb/>
unt.s i,i Ins foreword:<lb/>
Tie immense diversitv of<lb/>
-uhjerl matter in this M,k<lb/>
lerses - ije of i(v<lb/>
principal fascinations<lb/>
He's young, he's hand-<lb/>
some, he's athletic. He's a<lb/>
violin virtuoso. At 27,<lb/>
Eugene Fodor has ac-<lb/>
complished more than most<lb/>
do in a lifetime. Called<lb/>
"the Mick Jaggar of clas-<lb/>
1 music a title he<lb/>
tinds quite humorous, Fo-<lb/>
dor has soared in the<lb/>
musical, and not so mu-<lb/>
sical, world.<lb/>
Eugene Fodor will per-<lb/>
form m the Hendrix The-<lb/>
atre at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center on the ECU campus<lb/>
Wed Jan. 30 at 8<lb/>
p m His appearance is<lb/>
msored by the Student<lb/>
I nion rtists Series Com-<lb/>
Fodor captured one of<lb/>
the violin prizes<lb/>
at Mosi ov? s Tchaikovskv<lb/>
International Competition<lb/>
in 1975. His was the most<lb/>
celebrated performance bv<lb/>
an American in the Soviet<lb/>
Union since Van Cliburn's<lb/>
piano triumph twenty years<lb/>
ago. No American violinist<lb/>
has ever done so well;<lb/>
Fodor tied for second place<lb/>
vMth two Russians, but no<lb/>
tirst prize was given.<lb/>
Fodor kept quiet about the<lb/>
second prize, but manv<lb/>
listeners felt the decision<lb/>
was a political one; 14 of<lb/>
the 19 judges were from<lb/>
communist countries, and<lb/>
the judge from North<lb/>
Vietnam chain-smoked<lb/>
throughout Fodor's perfor-<lb/>
mance.<lb/>
Nevertheless, the per-<lb/>
formance was a triumph.<lb/>
His Russian audience de-<lb/>
manded four encores.<lb/>
Crowds of violin "group-<lb/>
ies followed him after<lb/>
each appearance, calling<lb/>
him "adored Eugeny<lb/>
Fodor. who has long been<lb/>
know as a ladies' man,<lb/>
said jokingly to an Amer-<lb/>
ican reporter, "You're the<lb/>
first man who's been in<lb/>
mv room for two weeks<lb/>
Since the Russian compe-<lb/>
tition, Fodor has plaved at<lb/>
the White House, played<lb/>
many first-class bookings<lb/>
here and abroad, and<lb/>
performed as soloist with<lb/>
-iveral symphony orche-<lb/>
stras.<lb/>
Fodor carefully guards<lb/>
his soloist status. "At the<lb/>
age of eight, I knew I<lb/>
wanted to be a soloist. If I<lb/>
had ever thought I would<lb/>
be buried in an orchestra,<lb/>
I would probably have<lb/>
quit explains Fodor. Fo-<lb/>
dor also calls himself a<lb/>
"born extrovert while his<lb/>
father calls him a "ham<lb/>
At any rate, he never gets<lb/>
nervous, and feels that<lb/>
personality is the key to<lb/>
his performance.<lb/>
Says. Fodor, "I think a<lb/>
lot of what you need is<lb/>
individual. Aside from<lb/>
technique of the highest<lb/>
caliber, you need the<lb/>
glitter, the conviction of<lb/>
your own style, the pol-<lb/>
ish He feels his tech-<lb/>
nique was probably esta-<lb/>
blished by the time he was<lb/>
fifteen; he's been working<lb/>
on the glitter since then.<lb/>
No one should have the<lb/>
impression, though, that<lb/>
Fodor is not totally serious<lb/>
about music. He has been<lb/>
a dedicated student since<lb/>
age 12, when he won his<lb/>
first music scholarship. He<lb/>
studied at Julliard, at In-<lb/>
diana University, and with<lb/>
Jascha Heifetz. Heifetz<lb/>
made him trim his long<lb/>
hair and abandon (tempor-<lb/>
arily) his motorcycle. Fear-<lb/>
ing for Fodor's hands,<lb/>
Heifetz unsuccessfully tried<lb/>
to separate Fodor from<lb/>
horses, which he trains in<lb/>
his spare time.<lb/>
Tickets are now on sale<lb/>
at the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. They are $2 for<lb/>
ECU students and $5 for<lb/>
the public. All tickets at<lb/>
the door are $5.<lb/>
HE'S YOUNG, HE'S handsome, he's<lb/>
athletic, he's a violin virtuoso. He's<lb/>
tugene Fodor.<lb/>
films<lb/>
 ; t iim H<lb/>
M anager<lb/>
I nion<lb/>
will<lb/>
r I" '<lb/>
the sprint:<lb/>
addition In its<lb/>
itj special<lb/>
night hlnis<lb/>
i if I the season<lb/>
most popular<lb/>
1978, v a,<lb/>
 li! I' '  starring John<lb/>
Ita .mhI ex-soaper<lb/>
, I mi (.ornev .<lb/>
I r.i ? ill.i does evorvthing<lb/>
imt -nig in his hrsi<lb/>
starring rule .is an actor.<lb/>
It: Fever, "Sen ork bred<lb/>
street punk Travolta has<lb/>
onh dancing on his mind<lb/>
until he meets mature<lb/>
Manhattanite. Karen Lynn<lb/>
Gorney, and struggles to<lb/>
change his lifestyle.<lb/>
I ra .ilia was nominated for<lb/>
? Hi si Actor Academy<lb/>
v.ird and the Bee Gees<lb/>
i I a dynamic disco<lb/>
On Jan. 19-20 Burt<lb/>
Reynold's tremendously<lb/>
successful Smokey and the<lb/>
Bandit will be shown.<lb/>
Reynolds weaves car-<lb/>
crashes, car-chashes, real<lb/>
life girl-friend, Sally Field,<lb/>
and a tobacco-spitting<lb/>
sheriff, played by Jackie<lb/>
Gleason, into this enjoyable<lb/>
(.B pastiche.<lb/>
On Jan. 26-27, First<lb/>
I will be shown. It is<lb/>
a romantically concieved<lb/>
movie thai deals with<lb/>
sensitive college student,<lb/>
William Kau( ,?, , date<lb/>
 the prom, in Brian<lb/>
DePalma's Carrie). In<lb/>
Kan's plight he discoveres<lb/>
the affectionate Susan Dey<lb/>
and learns a valuable<lb/>
less amj( ?at Stevens<lb/>
and Paul Williams tunes.<lb/>
()" Feb. 2-3, the<lb/>
spine-tingling hospital<lb/>
ln?rror story Coma will be<lb/>
shown. Genevieve Bujold<lb/>
da a Boston Hospital<lb/>
mir-e thrust into a<lb/>
?lwind of I lice.<lb/>
?avers and black market<lb/>
 Richard Widmark<lb/>
plays the ruthless tech-<lb/>
"?'crat who leads the world<lb/>
11 spr parts dealership.<lb/>
Mi- hael Douglas and<lb/>
the sinister Elizabeth<lb/>
-lilv round out an<lb/>
 xccllcnt cast.<lb/>
Neil Simon's "The<lb/>
Heartbreak Kid<lb/>
M<lb/>
Ken Richter lectures on England<lb/>
Kenneth Richter. one of PS of Mendenhall Stu- who makes highly polished for the Film Lerir?. A .MHU ? r-u m-j.i<lb/>
Kenneth Richter, one of<lb/>
the documentary travel<lb/>
film's most stimulating<lb/>
platform personalities, will<lb/>
appear in the Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre on Mon Jan. 22<lb/>
present his film "En-<lb/>
gland. Scotland, and<lb/>
Wales The program,<lb/>
which is under the au-<lb/>
of Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center, will begin at<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
Kenneth Richter, edu-<lb/>
cated at Thayer Academy<lb/>
and Harvard University is<lb/>
known to lecture audiences<lb/>
across the United States<lb/>
and Canada as a Holly-<lb/>
wood trained film producer<lb/>
who makes highly polished<lb/>
motion pictures and gives<lb/>
an usually informative and<lb/>
entertaining narration. To<lb/>
other lecturers and to<lb/>
lecture sponsors, he is one<lb/>
of the most respected<lb/>
people in the field. He was<lb/>
a founding member of and<lb/>
one of the first Cahrimen<lb/>
for the Film Lecutre As-<lb/>
sociation.<lb/>
Richter has worked in<lb/>
more than half the nations<lb/>
of the world. He has been<lb/>
presented many prizes and<lb/>
awards. Six times he has<lb/>
won the Detroit World Ad-<lb/>
venture Series Popularity<lb/>
Poll. Recently he was<lb/>
KENNETH MCHTER. ONE of the<lb/>
film's most stimulating platform personalities,<lb/>
documentary travel<lb/>
will appear<lb/>
i<lb/>
m the Hendrix Theatre on Mon Jan. 22 to present his<lb/>
film "England, Scotland, and Wales. "<lb/>
awarded a Gold Medal by<lb/>
the Austrian Government<lb/>
for his production "To<lb/>
Austria With Love<lb/>
"England, Scotland,<lb/>
Wales" begins with a trip<lb/>
to Dover by Channel Ferry.<lb/>
From there the film depicts<lb/>
life in the bustling city of<lb/>
London. .<lb/>
Wales the film shows the<lb/>
great Welsh castles in-<lb/>
cluding the Harkech Castle<lb/>
at sunset. The film takes<lb/>
the viewer on a leisurely<lb/>
visit to the isle of Skye<lb/>
and to northwest Scotland<lb/>
in early autumn, where the<lb/>
air sparkles and heather is<lb/>
in full bloom.<lb/>
Tickets for the film are<lb/>
$1.50 and may be pur-<lb/>
chased from the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office. Admission<lb/>
for ECU students will be<lb/>
by ID and Activity Cards<lb/>
and by MSC Membership<lb/>
Card for ECU faculty and<lb/>
staff members.<lb/>
1 i Feb. 9-10, the Yei<lb/>
Simon smash. The<lb/>
Hi ntllircak Kid will be<lb/>
sIioimi. Simon's supreme<lb/>
comedv of embarrasment<lb/>
was inspired by a Bruce J.<lb/>
Friedman idea. Jewish<lb/>
boy. Charles Grodin, gels<lb/>
married to Jeannie Berlin,<lb/>
(?rodin meets beautiful<lb/>
W SP-ish blonde, Cybill<lb/>
Shepard, on his honeymoon<lb/>
and divides to change his<lb/>
plans. Either hilarious or<lb/>
horrifying, depending on<lb/>
voiir point of view. The<lb/>
film was directed by Elaine<lb/>
May. whoso daughter,<lb/>
Berlin, plavs Crodin's<lb/>
bride.<lb/>
On Feb.<lb/>
 ojght stars<lb/>
16-17, Jon<lb/>
inConrack.<lb/>
Voight plays a sharp,<lb/>
back-woods South Carolina<lb/>
teacher sent to an isolated<lb/>
island to teach a group of<lb/>
impossible-to-teach black<lb/>
students with astounding<lb/>
results. The film is based<lb/>
on a true slorv.<lb/>
On Feb. 23-24, the<lb/>
innovative semi-experiment-<lb/>
al lilm FM comes to<lb/>
Mendenhall. The 1978 film<lb/>
both delighted and confused<lb/>
critics with its unconven-<lb/>
tional and original use of<lb/>
sound. The film serves up<lb/>
?'Vir twenlv current<lb/>
i l??rl iiil- along ihe<lb/>
W .IV .<lb/>
On Marc 16-17, the<lb/>
-? len !i,tn,n classic <lb/>
??? ??I Ui lh?g will be<lb/>
?? ???? ' Mendenhall<lb/>
"Mm! iii Center. The<lb/>
: !uni, tale retohes<lb/>
around incnvnan Dun<lb/>
.)'? lisuti and the dog thai<lb/>
nniiinii ii lelcpath-<lb/>
? ivith. This hlniia-<lb/>
 '?! a Harlan Ellison<lb/>
?" is tiiiiuv. compelling.<lb/>
off-the-wall<lb/>
id well worth any body's<lb/>
liillf.<lb/>
Paper Chase<lb/>
On March 23-24, The<lb/>
1'itif (.hast' conies to<lb/>
Mendenhall. Timothv<lb/>
Bottom I.indsav Wagner,<lb/>
.Mill Housnian. Graham<lb/>
Rei4.fl. Edward Herrmann.<lb/>
and Bob Lydiard star in<lb/>
this James Bridges film.<lb/>
I he pressures f Bottoms'<lb/>
treshn,an vear in Harvard<lb/>
Law School are intensified<lb/>
when he falls ?r the<lb/>
daughter of his tvrranicaf<lb/>
professr. Bottoms is<lb/>
excellent as the student<lb/>
and Oscar-winning<lb/>
Houseman js outstanding<lb/>
as the professor. Woodv<lb/>
Mien's<lb/>
einematographer, Gorden<lb/>
 dlis. displays his usual<lb/>
talent for establishing<lb/>
closeness. The<lb/>
film inspired the TV series.<lb/>
On March 30-31, the<lb/>
devastating Sydney Pollack<lb/>
film. They Shoot Horses<lb/>
Don t They will come to<lb/>
I rHi,la.<lb/>
' H Sarrain. Suanna<lb/>
v ?'? Lite Gig Voun<lb/>
'? i il Bull  Ronnie<lb/>
? ?lid lln <lb/>
M l.ern stai in iln? hi<lb/>
marathon<lb/>
' ? ? In i Mines a<lb/>
life, with a<lb/>
- il pint- nd<lb/>
Fn,Ja .s<lb/>
ti, g,p<lb/>
I'll- aimless Vtrra?<lb/>
will latin results.<lb/>
' N i -i (Is, ,ir I<lb/>
rm.mce . r<lb/>
j r.mei i.j "he<lb/>
le-l<lb/>
I. IMma's<lb/>
 -Imwii<lb/>
the lieudm<lb/>
II '? Il i- a tascinating<lb/>
lh? world id<lb/>
ll.il piltl, s.<lb/>
??? i  and<lb/>
??Kin- -i- lib. abilitv In<lb/>
? ?!?!? i. uill or<lb/>
i the mind).<lb/>
i '? Iilma -weeps one  lu<lb/>
i ? nil a-les, nj<lb/>
i ' ? ? -si? m rv mg. mlo<lb/>
. mi- tmpossjl sjj.<lb/>
???? :m i-Iv nig her<lb/>
" hi-kiiK tn counterpart.<lb/>
 drett Stevens. l's<lb/>
 rate entertainment in<lb/>
"h Hiteh- ock tradition.<lb/>
MiL'hhgliliiig the sm. sfr<lb/>
?h- i lassj, (.iiablanca<lb/>
? s(V!ie- cull-<lb/>
iirii . 7In- Graduate on<lb/>
pnl 7 8 and May 4-3<lb/>
r' ? pet tivelv .<lb/>
Ml Free-Flick- will b<lb/>
-h.we m Mendenhall's<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre. Admis-<lb/>
-i m is bv D and Activity<lb/>
Card<lb/>
t<lb/>
-d.  ;<lb/>
?<lb/>
 ??' iniiMiiiaiiiijuiL<lb/>
'  ? -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057169_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 F0UNTA1NHEAD 11 January 1979<lb/>
Bob James rates as popular jazz innovator<lb/>
By DAVID MILLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
. Bob James is the best composer-arranger working in<lb/>
popular jazz today.<lb/>
Critics do not realize this fact, yet. Most will not<lb/>
accept him until his platters have become fossilized on<lb/>
the shelves in some dust-laden, musty musical mausoleum.<lb/>
I am not a critic. I am a BJ fan.<lb/>
Critics do not spend money on albums. They don't<lb/>
have to.<lb/>
1 actually buy James' work. I have an advanced<lb/>
promotional copy of his sixth effort, Touchdown, in front<lb/>
ot me at this moment. I will go out and pick up another<lb/>
as soon as possible.<lb/>
Most non-jazz listeners must be asking, "Who the hell<lb/>
is. Bob James?"<lb/>
Most of us are already familiar with his work. Without<lb/>
being aware ot it he has written the charts for andor<lb/>
produced Paul Simon's Rhymin' Simon and Still Crazy<lb/>
After All These Years; the two Kenny Loggins solo<lb/>
albums; LPs by Roberta Flack, Blood, Sweat, and Tears,<lb/>
Phoebe Snow, Barbra Streisand, and a veritable catalog of<lb/>
arrangements tor other of the better pop performers.<lb/>
In addition, and more importantly, Bob James is<lb/>
largel) responsible for the soul-rock eclectic movement that<lb/>
started in jazz in the late 60's at CTI Records and which<lb/>
ha already expanded into ever corner of the popular<lb/>
music world.<lb/>
Nearly anyone of stature to emerge in jazz in the past<lb/>
years has, at one time or another, worked with Bob<lb/>
James.<lb/>
All one must do to confirm his genius is to listen to<lb/>
powerful charts written for Graver Washington on<lb/>
"Mister Magic" and "Feels So Good Then, compare<lb/>
them to Washington's lesser efforts without James.<lb/>
Hubert Law. a well, shines best under James'<lb/>
sion (Hubert's last album, produced by himself and<lb/>
ther Ronnie is downright tedious). It is not that<lb/>
- depend on Jame so much for their qualitv of<lb/>
 art- probably the finest sax man and flutist<lb/>
?? r K ii tod a) <lb/>
But. playing is mostly a technical skill. Bob James is<lb/>
man who puts the skill to its best use. He has the<lb/>
ability to interject substance into even the most juvenille<lb/>
material.<lb/>
Mozart, Basie, Charlie Parker and Stevie Wonder have<lb/>
all been musical innovators.<lb/>
novator is a very rare, gifted individual whose art<lb/>
ii I should not. be classified.<lb/>
that Bob James is also an innovator. His art,<lb/>
 uld only be referred to &amp; Jamesdom.<lb/>
Critics often call Jamesdom "cocktail jazz"<lb/>
mes even less kindly, "Muzak<lb/>
But. the title of this album, Touchdown (as in<lb/>
uld give some sort of key as to the<lb/>
foi listening to Bob James.<lb/>
True, this stuff is slick music. True, it<lb/>
M<lb/>
or<lb/>
six<lb/>
is<lb/>
easy<lb/>
But. there is a common misconception carried over<lb/>
heroin-influenced "artists" of the 40's and 50's<lb/>
must be difficult on the surface in order to have<lb/>
- mething be lislenable and have substance<lb/>
as learned the subtle art of camouflage. One only<lb/>
rulj hear James after at least 50 listenings,<lb/>
the intricacies, the colors, the flair, the<lb/>
; multi-rhythmical textures of Oriental music that<lb/>
nously been hidden finally begin to appear. The<lb/>
is alive. It Hows in a relaxed, easy, effortless, liquid<lb/>
iner. et, somehow, it still retains power, tension and<lb/>
e even in its quietest moments.<lb/>
But. a critic doesn't see thi-<lb/>
A critic's chief problem is that he is a horizontal man.<lb/>
He is still buried in what was being done 20 to 30 years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
He doesn't realize that with each and every generation<lb/>
arts and artists just keep getting better.<lb/>
Just as James Dickey's and Robert Lowell's techniques<lb/>
as poets are more advanced than Lord Byron's or John<lb/>
Keats just as Ali is a far greater boxer than Gene<lb/>
Tunney, so the jazz artists working today are better<lb/>
craftsmen than their peers were 25 years ago.<lb/>
Dexter Gordon and John Coltrane, for instance, are<lb/>
consummate musicians. Many times, however, what they<lb/>
play is quite dated in comparison to the better stuff being<lb/>
written by the better musicians today. Likewise, 10 years<lb/>
from now, the quality of performerperformance will be<lb/>
still even more advanced.<lb/>
But, at this moment, Bob James is the best in the<lb/>
business. Yet, he is not so much a prolific keyboardist as<lb/>
he is an arranger.<lb/>
It has been said of Count Basie that the entire band is<lb/>
his instrument. The same statement is definitely true of<lb/>
James.<lb/>
Most of the time he has been content to write his<lb/>
charts, stay in the background and let his sidemen handle<lb/>
the front-line play. And with sidemen like the ones on<lb/>
Touchdown, who wouldn't be content to lay back?<lb/>
In addition to Bob himself, old friend Hubert Laws is<lb/>
on flute; Eric Gale does the chores on electric guitar; Ron<lb/>
Carter is on string bass; Gary King does the honors on<lb/>
electric bass; Steve Gadd and Idris Muhammad alternate<lb/>
on drums; Dave Sanborn does duty on alto sax; and Earl<lb/>
Klugh plays a splendid acoustic guitar.<lb/>
In addition, Jon Faddis and Randy Brecker head the<lb/>
trumpet section; and Wayne Andre and the late Dave<lb/>
Bargeron of "Blood, Sweat and Tears" are featured on<lb/>
trombones.<lb/>
As a critic, 1 am obliged at this point to supply my<lb/>
pretentious, multi-syllabic explication of what Bob is doing<lb/>
on each cut of his album.<lb/>
But, again I am not a critic. I am a fan.<lb/>
And as a fan, I realize that analyzing this music<lb/>
molests and violates its simple freedom.<lb/>
And as a fan, I only want to say that Bob James is a<lb/>
vertical man. He knows that art cannot remain stationary.<lb/>
It must change and grow.<lb/>
But, as a critic, I must also say that there are only<lb/>
three outstanding selections on this album.<lb/>
They include "Angela" (the theme from the television<lb/>
series "Taxi"), "Sun Runner and the title tune<lb/>
"Touchdown<lb/>
All three are at leasts partially riff tunes. But, these<lb/>
are not the same sort of predictable riffs that were<lb/>
employed prevalently during the big band period. Since<lb/>
Bob has a doctorate in musical composition from<lb/>
Columbia, his riffs show a marked classical influence.<lb/>
All three songs are also pure examples of the fulfilled<lb/>
promise of human potential. Maslow should tape and use<lb/>
them as motivational exercises. I<lb/>
"Angela opening side one, is the most slow-paced<lb/>
and emotional set on the LP. It is a very understated piece<lb/>
and the understatement works well. Bob takes a sweet,<lb/>
tired old love theme and interjects fresh spirit into it, just<lb/>
as surely as Jesus did the same for Lazarus.<lb/>
He is lent great support on a short solo by Eric Gale,<lb/>
whose unique, simplistic style is well-used here. Even<lb/>
though Gale is in no sense a quality player, James does<lb/>
have the ability to evoke a certain "soulfulness" from<lb/>
him. But, the real credit on this track belongs to Bob<lb/>
himself, for his lazy, easy, right hand single-line style<lb/>
work on Fender Rhodes throughout. An unaccompanied<lb/>
flute solo by Phil Bodner on the opening and closing eight<lb/>
bars ties this simple ballad together beautifully.<lb/>
"Touchdown" is basically the only non-acoustic cut on<lb/>
the album. It is also the only track on which David<lb/>
Film competition open<lb/>
SPARTANBURG, S.C<lb/>
Films ?uth 79 the fifth<lb/>
ilm competition<lb/>
ference held at<lb/>
College, is now<lb/>
king entries for this<lb/>
tr's event. The deadline<lb/>
ries is Jan. 10.<lb/>
is open to<lb/>
all student and indepen-<lb/>
? Immakers working in<lb/>
10 Southeastern states<lb/>
Mabama, Florida, Geor-<lb/>
Kentucky, Louisiana,<lb/>
Mississippi, the Carolina<lb/>
Fennessee, and Virginia).<lb/>
Fil: must be either<lb/>
16 millimeter.<lb/>
"Filmsouth "74" is<lb/>
bj a grant from<lb/>
National Endowment<lb/>
the Arts in "washing-<lb/>
ton. D.C a Federal Agen-<lb/>
a grant from the<lb/>
irtanburg County Foun-<lb/>
tion; and by assistance<lb/>
from members of the film<lb/>
staff of the South Carolina<lb/>
rts Commission.<lb/>
mpetition categories<lb/>
are open to young film-<lb/>
maker- under age 15,<lb/>
filmakers ages 15-18, and<lb/>
filmmakers 19 and over.<lb/>
Cash awards will be<lb/>
presented to winning films.<lb/>
Dr. Al Scmitz, Chair-<lb/>
man of Converse's Phil-<lb/>
phy Department, is Di-<lb/>
rector of "Filmsouth '79<lb/>
He has announced a partial<lb/>
list of program guests<lb/>
including Carmen D'Avino,<lb/>
Academy Award nominee;<lb/>
Marv Jane Cole nan and<lb/>
George Griffin from the<lb/>
Sinking Creek Film Cele-<lb/>
bration; Eli Noyes, award<lb/>
winning film animator;<lb/>
Rodney Sheratsky, ranking<lb/>
scholar on the World War<lb/>
II English documentary<lb/>
films of Humphry Jen-<lb/>
nings, and Stan Woodward<lb/>
who will present the Spar-<lb/>
tanburgh premiere of his<lb/>
new turn. "It's Grits<lb/>
Judges for the compe-<lb/>
tition will be John Miller,<lb/>
director. Super-8 Thing<lb/>
at Bavlor School in Chat-<lb/>
tanooga, Tenn Nan Rob-<lb/>
inson, Audience Develop-<lb/>
ment Coordinator for Film<lb/>
with the South Carolina<lb/>
Art- Commission; and Lin-<lb/>
da Taylor, Chairperson of<lb/>
the Art Department and<lb/>
film teacher at Spartan-<lb/>
burgh Day School.<lb/>
"Filmsouth '79" events<lb/>
will open Thurs Jan 25 at<lb/>
8 p.m. with a Conference<lb/>
Guest Show held in Hart-<lb/>
ness Auditorium.<lb/>
Registration will be<lb/>
field Jan. 26 at 9 a.m. in<lb/>
Hartness followed by<lb/>
workshops at 10 a.m. on th<lb/>
various aspects of film-<lb/>
making. These workshops<lb/>
will include sessions with<lb/>
outstanding filmmakers and<lb/>
representatives of major<lb/>
film schools. Workshops<lb/>
will also be held Saturday<lb/>
morning, Jan. 27. Cath-<lb/>
erine Keane of the South<lb/>
Carolina Arts Commission<lb/>
i- Director of the Work-<lb/>
shops.<lb/>
"Filmsouth '79" Award<lb/>
films will be screened at<lb/>
1.30 p.m. and 10 p.m.<lb/>
Jan. 27.<lb/>
All events for "Film-<lb/>
south '79" will be open,<lb/>
free of charge to the<lb/>
public. For more infor-<lb/>
mation andor entrv<lb/>
blanks, please contact: Dr.<lb/>
A.O. Schmitz, Director,<lb/>
FILMSOUTH, Converse<lb/>
College, Spartanburgh,<lb/>
S.C 29301 or telephone<lb/>
(803) 585-6421, ext. 385.<lb/>
GET YOUR ACT<lb/>
TOGETHER<lb/>
r<lb/>
And let the world cotch k ot The<lb/>
Old Country Ousch Gardens m<lb/>
Wilhomsburg Va<lb/>
During our 1979 Audition Tour<lb/>
we II be looking for singer<lb/>
dancers mimes jugglers J<lb/>
Duppeteers magicians ri <lb/>
oogpipers violinists<lb/>
bluegross bonds ?<lb/>
musicians ond <lb/>
technicians<lb/>
A spectacular new Musical<lb/>
Revue m our Hastings Music<lb/>
Theatre will open the doors to on <lb/>
exciting experience for more sing <lb/>
ers dancers and technicians thon<lb/>
ever before<lb/>
Work with outstanding talents and earn a<lb/>
good salory while you re ot it Get our act together and<lb/>
show it to us Then get ready to show it to the world<lb/>
For further information coll Old Country Live<lb/>
Entertainment Department<lb/>
Audition Dot:<lb/>
ion 22. t979(Mon)<lb/>
1 00 PM to 5 00 PM<lb/>
A J. Fletcher Recital Holl<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville N C<lb/>
d&amp;ry<lb/>
An equal opponurmy<lb/>
Accomponw record ptayef ond cou?t reconJn ?? be ovortobte<lb/>
Sanborn's sax, backed by James and a fine brass<lb/>
forefront. Even though Sanborn's playing has Tery little<lb/>
range, he is another of those performers whose<lb/>
weaknesses Bob can use to give character to a piece.<lb/>
The First cut on side two, "Sun Runner is merely a<lb/>
work-out song of the most elevated order, much in the<lb/>
vein of "Heads" on Bob's last album of the same name.<lb/>
It is easy to envision bouncing along a country road on an<lb/>
April morning five mile run while James' Oberheim<lb/>
Polyphonic sun rays flash through overhanging willow<lb/>
branches.<lb/>
Extended runs by Hubert Laws, Earl Klugh and the<lb/>
master's acoustic piano style that trickles like water from a<lb/>
half-on, half-off faucet keep "Sun Runner" clipping along<lb/>
on rays of pure white light.<lb/>
The two remaining songs are somewhat marrred by<lb/>
length.<lb/>
"I Want To Thank You at 7:09, is at least one<lb/>
minute too long. Bob could and should have focused this<lb/>
cut much tighter. But, then again, I've only listened to the<lb/>
album 30 times in the last two days. Perhaps in another<lb/>
two months I'll be able to truly appreciate it.<lb/>
Hubert Laws' play, although technically superb, evokes<lb/>
no emotion whatsoever on this track. Earl Klugh manages<lb/>
to liven up the set with some clean, crisp chops, as usual.<lb/>
"Caribbean Nights the final song, is the weakest on<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 GRANDE AVE.<lb/>
at<lb/>
COLLEGE VIEW<lb/>
- CLEANERS<lb/>
ARMY-uAVY STORE<lb/>
1501 S Evjns<lb/>
B-15, bejmber, fiekl,<lb/>
)ck, flight, snorkel jackets<lb/>
Back Packs<lb/>
i<lb/>
Mikes' Bicycle<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
(0b<lb/>
University Arcade<lb/>
Complete line of tools &amp;<lb/>
accessories. Years of<lb/>
experience fixing<lb/>
Greenville's bikes.<lb/>
Guaranteed Service.<lb/>
752-5291<lb/>
NEW BEGINNINGS<lb/>
New Yean Resolution: Deepen my life<lb/>
through love. Let us assist you.<lb/>
Baptist Student Union JE. 10th St, behind<lb/>
ECU Library<lb/>
Tuesday Fellowship Meal 5:30<lb/>
Thursday Pause 7:30, spiritual reflection.<lb/>
A place where social, spiritual,<lb/>
and ethical growth is integrated.<lb/>
VICE CHANCELLOR FOR<lb/>
INSTITUTIONAL ADVANCEMENT<lb/>
East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, invite applica-<lb/>
tions for the newly-created position of Vice Chancellor for Institutional<lb/>
Advancement beginning July 1, 1979.<lb/>
The University has an on-campus enrollment of 12,000, offers degree<lb/>
programs in usual academic areas, including the doctoral degrees in selected<lb/>
disciplines. On-campus housing accommodates 5,600 students; a new student<lb/>
center is on campus, and a strong student government association exists.<lb/>
There are approximately 40,000 living alumni of East Carolina.<lb/>
This appointee will report directly to the Chancellor and will admini-<lb/>
ster and coordinate activities and units such as News Bureau, E.C.U. Founda-<lb/>
tion, Institutional Research, Alumni Affairs, Deferred Giving, Planning<lb/>
Office, and corporate and foundation relations. This appointee will have<lb/>
opportunity to recruit most of the staff for this expanded area at the<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Requirements include B.A. degree (advanced degrees preferred), a record<lb/>
of prior accomplishments in institutional advancement activities, knowledge<lb/>
in fund raising and alumni affairs, administrative skills, ability to<lb/>
articulate University goals to the various constituencies, parties and<lb/>
interests of East Carolina University, and capability to travel as required.<lb/>
The salary for this position is negotiable. Applications for this<lb/>
position will be received until February 19, 1979. All materials should be<lb/>
sent to: Dr. Thomas B. Brewer, Chancellor, East Carolina University,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina 27834.<lb/>
East Carolina University is a constituent<lb/>
institution of the University of North Carolina.<lb/>
An Equal OpportunityAffirmative Action ?aployer.<lb/>
the album. Not surprisingly, it ? o the kmf?t ? ?.??<lb/>
The depth of the other pieces is ? ?tl j?<lb/>
Ronnie Laws' effect, on Hubert, compare his rH,U?e mth<lb/>
Bob, notably on the Biiet piece, "F.r.ndote , off Jcs<lb/>
second album. , . p<lb/>
There is at least one slack cut on any Bob James LT<lb/>
(In some sense, this can be refreshing since it t.<lb/>
rest of us commoners know that he too is hu?anly<lb/>
fallible. If it weren't for this standard lesser track, hts<lb/>
material would just be too daziling to be beueveable). <lb/>
On another album by another artist, however, Nights<lb/>
might be entirely acceptable. It's just that I have come to<lb/>
expect more than great players playing roultnely great<lb/>
sets from Bob James.<lb/>
To borrow literally from the Jerry Ford School of<lb/>
Kindergarten Metaphors, the final score on Bob James'<lb/>
latest album is three Touchdowns, one field goal, and he<lb/>
even had to punt the ball away once.<lb/>
But, Bob James is an artist. On the two weaker cuts,<lb/>
it is easy enough to sense his boredom with the plush<lb/>
style that he has developed on his first six albums.<lb/>
He knows that he can't stay in one place but just so<lb/>
long. Look for a change of style on his next outing.<lb/>
Deli Kitchen<lb/>
Located on the corner of Raleigh<lb/>
and Dickinson Avenue.<lb/>
HOME-COOKED FOODS<lb/>
AND REASONABLE PRICES.<lb/>
Ham and sausage biscuits<lb/>
Homemade cakes , banana pudding<lb/>
Free refills on coffee and tea<lb/>
Open 7:00 a.m7:00 p.m.<lb/>
SKI HOUDAYS<lb/>
Sugar Mountain<lb/>
Jan. 26- 3nights $44.00<lb/>
Beech Mountain<lb/>
Feb. 9- 3night? $44.00<lb/>
Other dates available on request<lb/>
Call for booking information<lb/>
QUIXOTE TRAVELS , Inc.<lb/>
Q 319CotancheSt.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057169_0007"/><lb/>
11 January 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Pag 7<lb/>
Pirates pull shocker,<lb/>
dump Gamecocks<lb/>
t.reg Cornelius at work<lb/>
Lady Pirates edge<lb/>
Catamounts 84- 73<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Larry Gillman called last week's win over Iono his<lb/>
biggest victory at ECU, but less than one week later his<lb/>
Pirate- scored an even bigger upset.<lb/>
Down by as many as eight points in the second half,<lb/>
ECl came from behind in the final minutes of play to<lb/>
post a narrow 56-55 victory over highly regarded South<lb/>
Carolina which undoubtedly marked the school's biggest<lb/>
basketball win in recent history.<lb/>
ECl used clutch free throw shooting down the stretch<lb/>
to walk away with their second triumph in as many games<lb/>
and have now won three of its last four games. The<lb/>
Pirates evened their overall record to 6-6 while South<lb/>
Carolina fell to 6-4 for the year.<lb/>
We didn't play a picture perfect game out there<lb/>
tonight, but we played with a lot of guts explained a<lb/>
relieved Gillman after the game. "Give the kids a lot of<lb/>
credit. The) gave great effort throughout the entire game<lb/>
for a young team they showed a lot of poise there at the<lb/>
end.<lb/>
For Gillman and the rest of the 6300 fans on hand the<lb/>
game ended not one second too soon. ECU guard George<lb/>
Maynor was touted by South Carolina's Kevin Dunleaw<lb/>
with lour seconds remaining and the Pirates leading bv<lb/>
two 55-53.<lb/>
After a Gamecock timeout, Mavnor sank the front end<lb/>
ol a one-and-one but missed Ins second attempt which<lb/>
South Carolina quickly rebounded. Mike Dovle raced<lb/>
downcourt and popped in a neat 35 footer, but 'the bucket<lb/>
still left the highly favored Gamecocks one point behind at<lb/>
the buzzer.<lb/>
"I was real thankful George hit that first free throw<lb/>
because I just knew Doyle was going to hit that shot<lb/>
Gillman sa,d. 'But it's real nice to beat a team the<lb/>
cahber of South Carolina at home. ECU has never beaten<lb/>
anybody this good at home so it's really nice for a<lb/>
change. This certainly has to be ECU's biggest win "<lb/>
Although both teams shot poorly in the game and<lb/>
committed its share of turnovers, the Pirates continued to<lb/>
stage comebacks when South Carolina appeared on the<lb/>
verge ol breaking the game wide open<lb/>
ECU scored the first five points in the game but the<lb/>
Gamecocks came roaring back to score ten straight points<lb/>
kenfVK I65 StlCky manto"man the second half<lb/>
wL H A T7 big Cedric Hores " Tom<lb/>
 mbushand the Gamecocks simply couldn't hit from the<lb/>
outside shooting a cold 29.5 percent game<lb/>
After the lead changed hands five times midway<lb/>
through the second half, ECU took control for a good<lb/>
52-51 on forward Herb Krusen's follow shot with 619<lb/>
remaining The Bucs then effectively used their stall game<lb/>
in the fina four minutes to perfection keeping the<lb/>
Gamecocks off balance and forcing numerous fouls<lb/>
Defens,vely we played with much more intensity in<lb/>
the second half and we did a great job on Horges' and<lb/>
W.mbush inside noted Gillman. "I knew we had to run<lb/>
against a team as strong as they were on the boards, but<lb/>
we d.d ,l by running off our defense not on the boards<lb/>
Our guys scrambles and hustles and it paid off in the Ion<lb/>
run tonight. 8<lb/>
Although Horges scored 13 points in the first half, the<lb/>
talented orward failed to score in the second stanza<lb/>
although he was the top rebounder in the game with 15.<lb/>
Doyle led the Gamecocks with 18 points followed by<lb/>
Horges and Zam Fredrick with 10.<lb/>
Frank Hobson battl<lb/>
es<lb/>
Carolin.<lb/>
i if<lb/>
i no<lb/>
? lrli-T of<lb/>
and the<lb/>
? Mar-<lb/>
a come-<lb/>
! win at<lb/>
' last<lb/>
unts led<lb/>
ime, but<lb/>
s t a<lb/>
md re-<lb/>
winter, hit<lb/>
shots of the<lb/>
and (.irvin<lb/>
. . Is to<lb/>
ina to it?<lb/>
? I starts,<lb/>
nd 1-1 in<lb/>
the state second leading<lb/>
scorer, with 9:45 left in the<lb/>
halt.<lb/>
Th.<lb/>
ho then<lb/>
out-<lb/>
U Division I play<lb/>
ima is<lb/>
2-2 in<lb/>
e dif-<lb/>
sure<lb/>
Cathy<lb/>
slow-<lb/>
tOUl trouble<lb/>
Kerbaugh kept<lb/>
? rsl hail and<lb/>
out and<lb/>
1- nc ol<lb/>
play ers in the<lb/>
d<lb/>
junior<lb/>
Creek, hit<lb/>
- from the<lb/>
intermission on<lb/>
a 34-point<lb/>
- H point<lb/>
? : ? Girvin supported<lb/>
? rformai<lb/>
P ttes jumped to a<lb/>
the first seven<lb/>
led by Ker-<lb/>
itstanding shoot-<lb/>
the Catamounts<lb/>
?nt at 20-20 on<lb/>
a lay up by Jane Arledge,<lb/>
p.mited the Pirates 13-3<lb/>
and surged to a H)-32 lead<lb/>
halftime.<lb/>
Thompson -cored on a<lb/>
lay up alter a pass from<lb/>
I.ciia Rounrree and gave<lb/>
the visitors a 51-50 lead<lb/>
with 12:30 to play. WCU<lb/>
ild never regain the lead<lb/>
: trailed by as much as<lb/>
1 1 points with four minutes<lb/>
to go when Girven netted<lb/>
a follow shot to make it<lb/>
78-64.<lb/>
 estern came out fast<lb/>
and strong and we were a<lb/>
step slow in the first<lb/>
half Andruzzi said. "Lil-<lb/>
lian Barne- came in at<lb/>
point and moved the ball<lb/>
well again-t their zone. We<lb/>
Acre a little taller and able<lb/>
to control the boards, too.<lb/>
so that made a difference.<lb/>
Thi- is our first real<lb/>
road trip, and alter two<lb/>
wins at home, it was<lb/>
important to establish that<lb/>
we could plav on the road.<lb/>
Vi e could have lost, but<lb/>
the team came alive in the<lb/>
second half<lb/>
East Carolina Thompson<lb/>
15-4-34. Emerson 3-4-10.<lb/>
Girven 8-0-16. Kerbaugh<lb/>
9-0-18, Rountree 0-0-0.<lb/>
Barnes 1-3-5, Howell 0-0-0,<lb/>
Ross 0-1-1.<lb/>
If estern Carolina ? Ar-<lb/>
ledge 11-2-30. Crisp 6-0-12,<lb/>
Julian 4-0-8. Freeman 3-4-<lb/>
10. Salt) 0-7-7, Barker<lb/>
1-0-2, Spainhour 0-0-0,<lb/>
Wilson 0-0-0. Stor 1-0-2.<lb/>
Rae 1-0-2.<lb/>
Wrestlers set to face Heels<lb/>
Lydia Roundtree drives<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The Pirate wrestling season has been a somewhat<lb/>
frustrating one so far. The Bucs have dropped their only<lb/>
dual match to N.C State and have put together subpar<lb/>
performances in both the Monarch and Wilkes Open<lb/>
tournaments.<lb/>
But ECU head coach Bill Hill hopes his injury-plagued<lb/>
Pirates can piece things back together Thursday night<lb/>
when ECU squares off against Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
rival North Carolina in Minges Coliseum. The match will<lb/>
begin at 8:00.<lb/>
"It's been a somewhat frustrating year because of all<lb/>
the injuries we've had admitted Hill Tuesday before<lb/>
practice. "Butch Revils and Vic Northrup have both been<lb/>
out most of the season and we've been forced to wrestle a<lb/>
lot of younger people who just don't have much<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
"But this is the Carolina match and our entire team<lb/>
Title IX draws attention<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -<lb/>
An illegal power grabe by<lb/>
the federal government<lb/>
calculated ambiguitv a<lb/>
quantum lead in federal<lb/>
control over higher edu-<lb/>
cation. stupid<lb/>
I niversity presidents,<lb/>
lawyers, professors and<lb/>
athletic directors gathered<lb/>
Monday at the NCAA<lb/>
convention and what affect<lb/>
convention to discuss Title<lb/>
IX and what affect it will<lb/>
have on college athletics.<lb/>
And any sports fan<lb/>
who's having trouble fi-<lb/>
guring out whai all the<lb/>
complicated legal mumbo-<lb/>
jumbo means would have<lb/>
found himself in good<lb/>
company. The university<lb/>
president, athletic direct-<lb/>
ors, professors and lawvers<lb/>
weren't sure themselves.<lb/>
But they were unan-<lb/>
imous on one key point ?<lb/>
Title IX, federal legislation<lb/>
prohibiting discrimination<lb/>
against women in college<lb/>
athletics, will be a disaster<lb/>
if football and basketball,<lb/>
the sports that make most<lb/>
programs self-reliant, are<lb/>
not exempt from strict per<lb/>
capita expenditure enforce-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Many deligato also<lb/>
questioned the legality of<lb/>
the legislation, as well as<lb/>
its wisdom.<lb/>
"Title IX is for real<lb/>
-aid Bud Davis, president<lb/>
ol the University of New<lb/>
Mexico, who spent several<lb/>
weeks in Washington stud-<lb/>
ying the guidelines with<lb/>
officials of the department<lb/>
of Health, Education and<lb/>
Welfare who wrote them.<lb/>
'It will involve massive<lb/>
sums of money at a time<lb/>
of fiscal exigencies in<lb/>
higher education, and the<lb/>
financial base of a major<lb/>
collegiate activity may be<lb/>
in jeopardy<lb/>
Davis and Phillip B.<lb/>
Brown, an NCAA attorney,<lb/>
addressed more than 1,000<lb/>
worried convention deli-<lb/>
gates on Title IX compli-<lb/>
ance requirements, which<lb/>
HEW has said must be<lb/>
observed by Sept. 1, 1979.<lb/>
"The crux to Title IX is<lb/>
football and basketball<lb/>
said Davis. "Where, in the<lb/>
past, considerable reliance<lb/>
has been placed on fund-<lb/>
ing athletics as an auxiliary<lb/>
enterprise with resources<lb/>
coming from revenues from<lb/>
games (football and<lb/>
basketball ticket sales),<lb/>
gifts (alumni and booster<lb/>
domations) and student<lb/>
fees. Title IX will necessi-<lb/>
tate in resources or real-<lb/>
location of often limited<lb/>
funds.<lb/>
A number of deligates<lb/>
suggested the NCAA pur-<lb/>
sue Title IX through the<lb/>
courts and argued that<lb/>
athletic budgets which re-<lb/>
ceive no federal assistance<lb/>
should not be subject to<lb/>
federal control.<lb/>
look- forward to it every year. Butch is back in the lineup<lb/>
which will help us in the upper weight and Steve Goode<lb/>
i- looking better every time he wrestles. But we'll have<lb/>
have a real strong effort in the upper weights to t<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Hie Tar Heels have jumped out to a fast -tart this<lb/>
season and currently boast an impressive 3-1 record with<lb/>
wins over national power- Wilkes, and Yale and suffered<lb/>
their only loss against Navy bv a 17-16 -core.<lb/>
North Carolina has always had superior -trength in the<lb/>
lower weigh, classes and this year's -quad is no exception<lb/>
I he Hod- are led by 126 pounder CD. Mock who boa<lb/>
a On 10-1 record including a first place finish in the<lb/>
Carolina Invitational earlier this season He'll gel supj<lb/>
Iron, UK pounder Bobby Monahan who ha- a 7-1 slate<lb/>
and Dave Jeurgen- at 150 who  7-1 overall this season<lb/>
Ih year the Tar Heels also have pjen.v  seasoned<lb/>
veterans in the upper weight- led bv Dean Brior a 177<lb/>
pounder with a 8-2 record. Carter Mario ha- a 7-2 -late at<lb/>
1d8 and Mike Benzel has carded a 6-2 mark at 177.<lb/>
"They've always been strong in the lower weights "<lb/>
noted Hill. "But this year they're a well balanced team<lb/>
from top to bottom. CD. Mock is one of the finest 126<lb/>
pounder ,n the country and came within one match<lb/>
placing m ,he national- la-t vear<lb/>
Hill figure a couple of decisions in the lower weight<lb/>
classes and some pin- in the upper weights will be the<lb/>
hrates only hope of up-ettmg the faored Tar Heel-<lb/>
North Carolina topped ECl in both matches la-t vear I)<lb/>
e re going ,o win we'll have to do ? with pin- in the<lb/>
upper weights and jus. hope for the be. in the lower<lb/>
weigh, classes. We've go. a lot of youngsters in the lower<lb/>
weights who just don't have much collegiate experience -<lb/>
HillI said freshman Steve Milanese will wrestle at 118<lb/>
with either freshman Danny Keene or David Jeree at 126<lb/>
rrehrnan j,m Osborne and Tom Robinson will be , m<lb/>
and 142 with Frank Schaede at 150<lb/>
BTr (MHieili"Ibe at ,58- M"vm James a. 167.<lb/>
Butch Revils a. 177, Jay Dever or Bryan Merriman a, 190<lb/>
and reshman M.ndell Tyson, a member o, lhe Ea<lb/>
football team at heavyweight.<lb/>
Bu.ch is back and ju-t about a. full -peed again after<lb/>
ha,mg a nagging rib IBJur?,? H,ll -aid. "He wrestled well<lb/>
 ? Wilkes over the holidays bu. he was jus. no, ,?<lb/>
I11 "wrestle a- well a- he could for "the u hole<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
M,nh'H,TKl'nrt,ai U,ki P"0,i  Practk a"d ' '?<lb/>
M.ndell Tyson will do a One job lor u- a, heavvweufhl<lb/>
with more experience.<lb/>
Looks ahead to UNC Thursday<lb/>
Frosh Tyson cast in early 'star' role<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
It seem- every season the Pirate wrestling team is in<lb/>
dire straits of a heavyweight, ECU coach Bill Hill just<lb/>
wanders next door to the football office, grabs a massive<lb/>
defensive tackle and puts a jersev on him.<lb/>
And the switch from the gridiron to the wrestling mat<lb/>
ha- been extremely successful over the past few years<lb/>
Uilhe Bryant won back-to-back Southern Conference<lb/>
championships and was a two-time member of the Pirate's<lb/>
NCAA team while at ECU. D.T. Joyner finished last<lb/>
season with a 20-2 record and was ranked all season long<lb/>
a- one of the top heavyweights in the country by National<lb/>
Mat News.<lb/>
And with Joyner out this season with ft fractured wrist,<lb/>
freshman Mindell Tyson promises to become the next<lb/>
all-star performer for the Pirates at heavyweight. "HE's<lb/>
got excellent size and a good knowledge of wrestling to<lb/>
become a really outstanding heavyweight before he leaves<lb/>
here savd Pirate coach Bill Hill. "He moves well on his<lb/>
feet and uses his weight against his opponent when he<lb/>
I<lb/>
needs to. He's got some big shoes to fill this season with<lb/>
D T out for the year, but I'm looking for good things out<lb/>
of him.<lb/>
Besides football, Tyson, a massive 280 pounder, found<lb/>
time to destroy opponents on the wrestling mat as well at<lb/>
Bays.de High School in Virginia Beach, Va. He finished<lb/>
second m Virginia in the state championships his senior<lb/>
year and posted an impressive 18-5 record.<lb/>
"I really didn't plan on wrestling when I came to ECU<lb/>
but Coach Hill talked to me about it and asked me if 'i<lb/>
would be interested explained the personable Tyson. "I<lb/>
still wasn't real sure about it when I came here, but I<lb/>
quickly realized that one sport wasn't going to keep my<lb/>
weight down. So when I found out D.T. wasn't going to<lb/>
wrestle things just kind of worked out for me<lb/>
Tyson, like most collegiate wrestlers likes the<lb/>
individuality of the sport and has worked hard over the<lb/>
last few weeks grasping some new moves and techniques<lb/>
he can use during the rest of the season.<lb/>
"On the football field you make a mistake and it's a<lb/>
team error and sometimes your mistakes get covered up "<lb/>
Tyson said. "But wrestling is a completely different sport<lb/>
It s one-on-one, you against the other guy right out there<lb/>
in the open. I like that though. It makes you think. You<lb/>
have lo gel oU, .here and outsmart vour opponen.<lb/>
Sometime,  works and -omet.mes ? doesn't "<lb/>
Even Jovner ha- been somewhat -urpnsed with Tv-on-<lb/>
progre-s ,n practice sessions and admits big thing- ,re<lb/>
ahead for the talented freshman<lb/>
a lot ol hl8 opponents with h,s strength" Jovner said<lb/>
uh.le watching ,he P.ra.es pract.ee session Tue-dav<lb/>
One part.cular opponent Tyson would hke to beat will<lb/>
he T:r Heer,ThaCharlK: " lh" P? <lb/>
the Tar Heels Thursday night in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
I m msi hke everybody else on the team sa.d Tvson<lb/>
?-ho wi, be competing in h,s first collegiate match agams<lb/>
'ho Heels. I m excited and I hope the res, of the team<lb/>
-n pull together and beat them. We've jus, got to tak"<lb/>
the match to .hem and no, le, them take it to" us. We've<lb/>
got a good chance of beating them and Coach Hill has<lb/>
plenty of confidence in us<lb/>
Tvson also figures he'll have more than one fan in the<lb/>
stands for the match. In fact, there mav be abou W<lb/>
cheering for him alone. J W<lb/>
"I've heard a lot of guys on the football team will be<lb/>
t '<lb/>
<pb facs="00057169_0008"/><lb/>
 1 1 -<lb/>
-<lb/>
 4 t i- - ??" 1<lb/>
 1 ?<lb/>
.? v, ? ?? ?<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 11 January 1979<lb/>
Super Bowl XHI offers exciting,<lb/>
even matchup between 'the best9<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The upcoming Super<lb/>
Bowl matchup featuring<lb/>
the Dallas Cowboys and<lb/>
the Pittsburgh Steelera ap-<lb/>
pears, at least on paper, to<lb/>
hav the potential to b<lb/>
more exciting and even-<lb/>
fought than any of the<lb/>
previous twelve games<lb/>
played on Super Sunday.<lb/>
If for no other reason<lb/>
this game should draw<lb/>
extra-curricular attention<lb/>
because it provides the<lb/>
first rematch in the history<lb/>
of the Super Bowl. These<lb/>
two clubs met in Super<lb/>
Bowl X with the Steelers<lb/>
taking a narrow 21-17 vic-<lb/>
tory .<lb/>
That game is consi-<lb/>
dered by most observers to<lb/>
be the best of the Super<lb/>
Bowl's. So, naturally, the<lb/>
rematch should prove to be<lb/>
very exciting.<lb/>
nother big sidelight to<lb/>
this ear's game is the fact<lb/>
it the victor vecomes the<lb/>
fist three-time winner in<lb/>
per Bowl history. The<lb/>
Steelers won Super Bowl's<lb/>
IX and X consecutively.<lb/>
The Cowboys were winners<lb/>
in Super Bowl XI and<lb/>
number XII.<lb/>
One thing that the ex-<lb/>
perts like about this year's<lb/>
matchup is the fact that<lb/>
both clubs involved in the<lb/>
Super Bowl are near unan-<lb/>
imously considered the two<lb/>
very best teams in the<lb/>
NFL. Usually one of the<lb/>
teams involved in this big<lb/>
game is somewhat of a<lb/>
Cinderella team. Denver's<lb/>
appearance last year is a<lb/>
prime example.<lb/>
Because Dallas and Pit-<lb/>
tsburgh are considered the<lb/>
League's best, one must<lb/>
feel that this game is<lb/>
indeed the true champion-<lb/>
ship of professional foot-<lb/>
ball.<lb/>
Both teams have very<lb/>
few weaknesses. Both of-<lb/>
fenses are explosive as<lb/>
dynomite, while the de-<lb/>
fenses are as still as<lb/>
boards.<lb/>
If one was to look for<lb/>
the crucial matchup in this<lb/>
game, they would nearly<lb/>
have to consider the battle<lb/>
that will take place be-<lb/>
tween the Steeler offensive<lb/>
line and the Dallas defen-<lb/>
sive line.<lb/>
The Steeler blockers,<lb/>
headed by All-Pros Mike<lb/>
Webster and Jon Kolb are<lb/>
an awesome group. All<lb/>
year long they have pro-<lb/>
vided their quarterback,<lb/>
NFL MVP Terry Bradshaw<lb/>
more than ample time to<lb/>
throw. He is, after all, one<lb/>
of the few NFL quarter-<lb/>
backs to avoid serious<lb/>
injury this year. Also, the<lb/>
line constantly opens gap-<lb/>
ping holes for backs Fran-<lb/>
co Harris and Rocky Ble-<lb/>
ier.<lb/>
The Dallas defensive<lb/>
line, the backbone of their<lb/>
"Doomsday Defense is<lb/>
also an awesome machine.<lb/>
Headed bv stars Harvey<lb/>
Martin, Ed "Too Tall"<lb/>
Jones, and Randy White,<lb/>
the line has caused havock<lb/>
in opposing backfields<lb/>
throughout the season.<lb/>
The matchup between<lb/>
these two powerful lines<lb/>
may decide the outcome of<lb/>
this game. Forget about<lb/>
Tony Dorsett, Roger Stau-<lb/>
bach, Mean Joe Greene,<lb/>
and Jack Ham. They will<lb/>
play their parts in the<lb/>
outcome of this game for<lb/>
sure.<lb/>
But, rather, one should<lb/>
focus their attention on<lb/>
battle in the tranches. For,<lb/>
if the Steeler offensive line<lb/>
can hold back Randy,<lb/>
Harvey, and Too Tall, and<lb/>
therefore allow Bradshaw<lb/>
time to work his wonders,<lb/>
Dallas may be in for a<lb/>
long day.<lb/>
On the other hand, if<lb/>
the "Doomsday Defense"<lb/>
penetrates the Steeler<lb/>
front, Bradshaw will have<lb/>
little time to work and his<lb/>
hands full.<lb/>
An interesting thought<lb/>
for a very thought-provo-<lb/>
king game, huh?<lb/>
IL SALE 20 off<lb/>
JAN- 9- JAN- 20<lb/>
NATURAL OCCURRENCES<lb/>
1801 S. Charles Street Suite No. 10<lb/>
Business Hours: Mon Fn. 12-9 pm<lb/>
Saturday 12-9 pm (or by appointment)<lb/>
SPECIALIZING IN :<lb/>
STERLING &amp; 14K GOLD CHAINS<lb/>
STICK PINS PENDANTS<lb/>
EARRINGS RINGS<lb/>
MACRAME'<lb/>
MINERAL SPECIMENS FOR COLLECTORS<lb/>
DECORATOR ITEMS<lb/>
LARGEST SELECTION OF<lb/>
ADD-A-BEADS IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
CONTACT:<lb/>
Brian Gray<lb/>
Bruce Gray<lb/>
Brenda Gray<lb/>
Terri Clark<lb/>
Norma Gray<lb/>
cj<lb/>
Saturai Occurances<lb/>
11th St.<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
i'<lb/>
Greenville BM.<lb/>
t<lb/>
1<lb/>
WOULD YOU BELIEVE<lb/>
SUPER!<lb/>
WELCOME BACK SPECIAL<lb/>
LMRMBfaBS<lb/>
ip<lb/>
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3 FREE QUARTS OF COKE with the <lb/>
purchase of 20 inch PARTY PIZZA<lb/>
I<lb/>
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:W:$<lb/>
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l<lb/>
2 FREE QUARTS OF COKE with the<lb/>
purchase of any LARGE PIZZA<lb/>
1 FREE QUART OF COKE with the<lb/>
purchase of any MEDIUM PIZZA<lb/>
mm<lb/>
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OFFER GOOD UNTIL THURSDAY JAN. 18,1979<lb/>
DINE IN FAST FREE DELIVERY TAKE OUT<lb/>
AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE 758 7400<lb/>
OR HOP IN YOUR CAR AND COME TO<lb/>
MonThur. 11:30am-12:30am<lb/>
Frl. &amp; Sat. 11:30am-1:30am<lb/>
Sun. 11:30am-11:30pm<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
507 E. 10th Street<lb/>
corner of 14th and Charles<lb/>
NOTHING BEATS A PIZZA FROM CHANELO'S<lb/>
LASAGNA<lb/>
SUBMARINES<lb/>
<pb facs="00057169_0009"/>
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