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<pb facs="00057171_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
North<lb/>
13r<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. ?1<lb/>
18 January 1979<lb/>
Easter Seal program gears up in 679<lb/>
By RICHY SMITH<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Easter Seal Program is a direct service<lb/>
agency that depends greatly on volunteer help in<lb/>
order to operate effectively, according to June<lb/>
Shough, representative from the Northeast office for<lb/>
the Easter Seal Program for crippled children.<lb/>
Shough was the guest speaker of the ECU public<lb/>
relations class.<lb/>
The class is planning to help the organization<lb/>
with its public relations as projects for the semester.<lb/>
"Each state differs from the other stated<lb/>
Shough.<lb/>
"VI e raise our own money, she said. "We used to<lb/>
receive money from the United Way Fund in<lb/>
kinston But since their drive did not go as well as<lb/>
last ear. the Easter Seal program did not receive<lb/>
any money except that which they raised.<lb/>
Ninety-six percent of the funds raised remained in<lb/>
N rth Carolina.<lb/>
The Easter Seal program operates two camps,<lb/>
Shough stated.<lb/>
Camp East-in-the-Pines, located in Suthern Pines,<lb/>
helps the physically handicapped.<lb/>
Camp Setoma, located in Winston-Salem, helps<lb/>
the mentally handicapped.<lb/>
"We have to recruit campers Shough said.<lb/>
"We are supposed to have county committees to<lb/>
help us with this and the fund raising that goes<lb/>
g with the maintenance of the camps.<lb/>
The camp sessions are usually two weeks and<lb/>
-? approximately $350.<lb/>
The cos1 ol camp, however, does not keep a<lb/>
person from attending. If the camper cannot pay the<lb/>
cost of camp, it will be taken care of by Easter Seal.<lb/>
There are usually two clients to every staff<lb/>
person, Shough stated.<lb/>
Depending on the activity and on the handicap of<lb/>
the client, there are more staff members assigned to<lb/>
each client.<lb/>
The Easter Seal program also offers a loan<lb/>
service of equipment for the handicapped that might<lb/>
need a certain type of expensive equipment.<lb/>
The Easter Seal program purchases such<lb/>
equipment.<lb/>
The program also provides transportation for the<lb/>
physically handicapped so they can take advantage of<lb/>
programs offered to them, Shough commented.<lb/>
There is a summer school program provided by<lb/>
the Easter Seal that allows a student who is<lb/>
interested in physical therapy or occupational therapy<lb/>
to work with a professional therapist in one of the<lb/>
camps.<lb/>
The student gains experience and finds out early<lb/>
if this is what he wants to do, and the camp in turn<lb/>
acquires a volunteer.<lb/>
The Easter Seal program also has what it calls a<lb/>
follow-up program.<lb/>
The program is a type of help line where people<lb/>
can call and ask for specific information.<lb/>
The staff is limited in North Carolina and<lb/>
volunteers are very important, Shough stated.<lb/>
Volunteers run the local programs, she added.<lb/>
There are two representatives and a secretary<lb/>
that cover 21 counties. It is mostly the Northeast<lb/>
region, Shough stated.<lb/>
"We have to do direct services Shough stated.<lb/>
Home visits have to be made when a prosthesis<lb/>
is requested to determine if the person that is<lb/>
receiving the artificial limb is willing to learn to use<lb/>
it, she added.<lb/>
It is a type of social work.<lb/>
There is a public relations office in Raleigh, but<lb/>
most of the work is done in this office in Greenville.<lb/>
"We do it all in the local office, she said.<lb/>
There are television and radio spots to be written<lb/>
and produced.<lb/>
Prog<lb/>
rams<lb/>
There are several programs that are being<lb/>
established for the 1979 campaign so that Easter<lb/>
Seals can still provide services.<lb/>
The Neighbor Campaign will be<lb/>
starting in February. Volunteers will be calling<lb/>
people in different neighborhoods to distribute Easter<lb/>
Seal kits.<lb/>
These kits will be distributed around the<lb/>
neighborhood for donations.<lb/>
The Lily Campaign will take place in the malls<lb/>
and schools.<lb/>
The Easter Seal program offers a Telephone<lb/>
Reassurance Program. Those people who are<lb/>
handicapped and live alone can have a volunteer<lb/>
come by and check on them every day and make<lb/>
sure everything is all right, Shough commented.<lb/>
"We'll call them at a certain time every day to<lb/>
follow up she added.<lb/>
There are many other programs that have been<lb/>
planned for the Easter Seal Campaign such as a<lb/>
Needs Assessment program in Morehead City.<lb/>
A Health Occupations Club at West Carteret High<lb/>
School is going to assess the county and its needs<lb/>
concerning the handicapped.<lb/>
You need interested persons and interested<lb/>
clients to have a program Shough said.<lb/>
Mail Campaigns<lb/>
The mail campaign is conducted by three<lb/>
different mailings.<lb/>
One mailing deals with membership. The other<lb/>
two involve donations for campships and Easter<lb/>
Seals.<lb/>
Many do not donate because they feel they<lb/>
cannot afford to contribute a sizeable amount of<lb/>
money, but that is not as important as if you just<lb/>
donate, Shough commented.<lb/>
"It's the small contributions that count she<lb/>
added.<lb/>
These are only a few of the services Easter Seals<lb/>
provide and only a few of the activities and<lb/>
programs that will be going on in the next few<lb/>
months.<lb/>
Local sponsors<lb/>
The corporate sponsors of Easter Seals are<lb/>
Holidays Inns and Century 21.<lb/>
The local office of the Easter Seal Program is 114<lb/>
East Third Street in the Nelson Building.<lb/>
Media Board discusses REBEL<lb/>
B ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
The ECU Media<lb/>
Board met Wednesday<lb/>
in regular session.<lb/>
At the last meeting<lb/>
in early December,<lb/>
REBEL ' Editor Luke<lb/>
 hisnant requested an<lb/>
additional appropriation<lb/>
SI,080 to print the<lb/>
78-79 edition of the<lb/>
REBEL.<lb/>
Whisnant said that<lb/>
he intended to have the<lb/>
book printed by Theo<lb/>
David Printers of Zebu-<lb/>
Ion. This company has<lb/>
printed the book for the<lb/>
past two years, accord-<lb/>
ing to Whisnant.<lb/>
At the request of<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander,<lb/>
associate dean of stu-<lb/>
dent affairs and member<lb/>
of the board, Whisnant<lb/>
solicited a bid from<lb/>
National printing of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
The bids from the<lb/>
two printers differed<lb/>
only by $580. The bid<lb/>
from Davis was $9,580,<lb/>
National bid $9,000.<lb/>
Whisnant strongly<lb/>
recommended that the<lb/>
board accept the bid<lb/>
SCJ plans trip<lb/>
By RICHY SMITH<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Society for Collegiate Journalists is planning<lb/>
their spring induction of members and their trip to<lb/>
the SCJ National Convention, according to Kav<lb/>
V illiams, president of the organization.<lb/>
vvp inducted five new members during fall in a<lb/>
Christmas ceremony and we are looking for more<lb/>
members for the spring Williams commented.<lb/>
The spring induction will be held April 17. The<lb/>
iety is now planning the induction and a picnic to<lb/>
be held also in the spring.<lb/>
The new pledges will be notified by letter, stated<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
After an orientation meeting to the Society, the<lb/>
pledges will be inducted in a ritualistic ceremony,<lb/>
she added.<lb/>
The election of the officers for the new year will<lb/>
be held later so that the new members may be<lb/>
present and take part.<lb/>
e have been working under slight handicap<lb/>
this year because of the size of our organization, but<lb/>
we have an enthusiastic group of writers and that<lb/>
makes all the difference Williams commented.<lb/>
The Society is planning also to attend the biennial<lb/>
national convention in Eastern Kentucky University,<lb/>
Kentucky.<lb/>
Craig Ammerman, cheif of the Associated Press<lb/>
New York City Bureau will lead the opening session<lb/>
of the SCJ convention on April 19, 1979.<lb/>
The workshop sessions will continue for the next<lb/>
two days until the convention closes.<lb/>
An awards luncheon will be held Saturday<lb/>
afternoon, April 21.<lb/>
Winners of the 1978 Publications Contest will be<lb/>
announced at the luncheon and other awards of the<lb/>
society will be made at that time.<lb/>
The ECU chapter of the SCJ has entered several<lb/>
articles from FOUNTAINHEAD to be judged,<lb/>
Williams stated.<lb/>
There were seven categories to find entries for<lb/>
and we feel we found qualifying articles, she added.<lb/>
The REBEL won second place in last year's<lb/>
competition of overall excellence of literary<lb/>
magazines.<lb/>
Harbinger of Bethany College won first place.<lb/>
"We hope to bring home some more winners this<lb/>
year commented Williams.<lb/>
The advisor for the ECU Society for collegiate<lb/>
Journalists is Ira L. Baker, Coordinator of<lb/>
from Davis and approve<lb/>
the additional appropria-<lb/>
tion of $1,080.<lb/>
"I would rather print<lb/>
with Theo Davis because<lb/>
I know their work said<lb/>
Whisnant. "We origin-<lb/>
ally went with Davis<lb/>
because Bob Glover,<lb/>
(former REBEL editor),<lb/>
was dissatisfied with<lb/>
National<lb/>
Whisnant said that<lb/>
Glover went to Bob<lb/>
Rash, a professor in the<lb/>
school of art, and asked<lb/>
Rash to reccommend a<lb/>
printer.<lb/>
According to Whis-<lb/>
nant, Rash told Glover<lb/>
that Theo Davis was<lb/>
"the best in the state<lb/>
After a short dis-<lb/>
cussion the board<lb/>
unanimously approved<lb/>
Whisnant's reccommen-<lb/>
dation.<lb/>
In other business,<lb/>
Whisnant reported to<lb/>
the board that Mrs. Joy<lb/>
Clark of the Student<lb/>
Fund Accounting Office<lb/>
had refused to release<lb/>
money for the REBEL'S<lb/>
petty cash even after<lb/>
Dr. James H. Tucker,<lb/>
dean of student affairs,<lb/>
had formally approved<lb/>
the expenditure.<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne,<lb/>
chairman of the board<lb/>
said, "That's not the<lb/>
way it works, we'll get<lb/>
this straightened out<lb/>
In new business the<lb/>
board appropriated<lb/>
$414.57 to pay Hunter<lb/>
Publishing for costs they<lb/>
had incurred related to<lb/>
the BUCCANNEER.<lb/>
Dr. James H. Tucker<lb/>
reported that no word<lb/>
has yet been received<lb/>
from the Federal Com-<lb/>
munications Commission<lb/>
on the WECU appli-<lb/>
cation for an FM<lb/>
license.<lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
Lady Pirates fall to UNC, 78-73See<lb/>
p.7.<lb/>
Super Bowl XIII is previewedSee<lb/>
p.8.<lb/>
For a definition of PCB'sSee p.3.<lb/>
California Suite is reviewedSee p.5.<lb/>
"Uppity Women" returnsSee p.4.<lb/>
SLPER BOB L MIL se p. 6<lb/>
ByMSC<lb/>
TV purchased<lb/>
THIS 5 FOOT TELEVISION screen will soon be<lb/>
placed in the TV room of Mendenhail Student<lb/>
Center. It is presently situated on the center's mam<lb/>
floor. The reception is simulated.<lb/>
H. Grogan<lb/>
Photo by jonn<lb/>
Bv CHRIS CAGLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A 5 foot Panasonic<lb/>
TV Screen has been<lb/>
purchased by Menden-<lb/>
hail Student Center,<lb/>
which will add to the<lb/>
many features available<lb/>
to students.<lb/>
According to Rudolph<lb/>
Alexander, associate<lb/>
dean of Student Affairs<lb/>
and director of the<lb/>
center, the screen is<lb/>
particularly good for<lb/>
special events, movies,<lb/>
and athletic events.<lb/>
"We checked into<lb/>
other available units,<lb/>
but the Panasonic unit<lb/>
is the best on the<lb/>
market in our judge-<lb/>
ment Alexander said.<lb/>
"It is the latest type<lb/>
of video-projector unit<lb/>
and the most current on<lb/>
the market said Paul<lb/>
Breitman, Mendenhail<lb/>
business manager.<lb/>
There are two key<lb/>
features reguarding the<lb/>
Panasonic unit, accord-<lb/>
ing to Alexander: (1) "It<lb/>
is a single unit. The<lb/>
Panasonic unit does not<lb/>
have the projector and<lb/>
the screen separate.<lb/>
This makes the unit<lb/>
very portable and also it<lb/>
will not go out of focus.<lb/>
The Panasonic unit has<lb/>
the proper focus already<lb/>
set (2) "The screen is<lb/>
washable, it will not be<lb/>
damaged by someone<lb/>
touching it. the unit is<lb/>
far more durable and<lb/>
practical for a public<lb/>
place like the Center<lb/>
Alexander added.<lb/>
There is one short-<lb/>
coming to the new<lb/>
screen though. It does<lb/>
not receive cable tele-<lb/>
vision.<lb/>
"It is not possible at<lb/>
this time to obtain cable<lb/>
vision because it is not<lb/>
available to the cam-<lb/>
pusAlexander said.<lb/>
"We are in contact<lb/>
with the cable company<lb/>
here, and we hope that<lb/>
in the future we will be<lb/>
able to have cable<lb/>
vision, but it will be a<lb/>
while Breitman said.<lb/>
The Panasonic unit is<lb/>
now located on the main<lb/>
floor in the student<lb/>
center. "We have it on<lb/>
the main floor so stu-<lb/>
dents may become ac-<lb/>
quainted with the unit,<lb/>
but later in the week it<lb/>
will be moved down to<lb/>
the regular tv room on<lb/>
the ground floor Al-<lb/>
exander said.<lb/>
"We hope the stu-<lb/>
dents will enjoy and<lb/>
appreciate the unit, and<lb/>
also come out on Sun-<lb/>
day to watch the Super<lb/>
Bowl Game in the<lb/>
center he added.<lb/>
The Panasonic unit is<lb/>
available for students to<lb/>
use during all operating<lb/>
hours of the student<lb/>
center.<lb/>
1<lb/>
?f W0<lb/>
&amp; ?? ?<lb/>
' - ? ? -r ?'? , ?  V , ? -  <lb/>
i94tmt4ttm?t4t4t4 4TJWV<lb/>
<pb facs="00057171_0002"/><lb/>
Travel<lb/>
Registration deadline<lb/>
for the New Orleans<lb/>
Trip is Thursday, Feb.<lb/>
1. The trip is March<lb/>
2-11 during Spring<lb/>
Break. Four days will be<lb/>
spent in New Orleans at<lb/>
the Downtown Ramada<lb/>
Inn in the heart of the<lb/>
French Quarter. Three<lb/>
days will be spent in<lb/>
Atlanta at the Atlanta<lb/>
Townhouse in downtown<lb/>
Atlanta. The price of<lb/>
$185 includes transpor-<lb/>
tation to and from New<lb/>
Orleans, Atlanta, Green-<lb/>
ville, plus hotel accom-<lb/>
uiadalions.<lb/>
The New Orleans<lb/>
Museum of Art will be<lb/>
exhibiting Peru's Golden<lb/>
Treasures from Jan. 14-<lb/>
Apr. 15. The exhibit<lb/>
consists primarily of 225<lb/>
exquisite pieces of pre-<lb/>
Columbian Peruvian gold<lb/>
from the renowned<lb/>
Museo do Oro dei Peru<lb/>
in Lima. The collection<lb/>
is the largest of its kind<lb/>
ever shown in the<lb/>
United States. A variety<lb/>
of fine gold artifacts<lb/>
used by the pre-His-<lb/>
panic ruling classes will<lb/>
be on display. Superb<lb/>
gold mummy masks and<lb/>
golden gloves are high-<lb/>
lights of the show.<lb/>
YDC<lb/>
oung Democrats<lb/>
(?lul? will have an<lb/>
organizational meeting<lb/>
Jan. 18 in Rm 102C<lb/>
(Br, ,m,t). All are<lb/>
'MM<lb/>
I<lb/>
Give<lb/>
to the<lb/>
March<lb/>
of<lb/>
Dimes<lb/>
NEED<lb/>
PHOTOS<lb/>
MADE?<lb/>
CALL<lb/>
JOHN<lb/>
GROGAN<lb/>
75?-01?9<lb/>
Pag 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 January 1?7?<lb/>
Gammon<lb/>
Enjoy playing back-<lb/>
gammon? All persons in-<lb/>
terested in forming<lb/>
Backgammon Club to<lb/>
meet on a regular basis<lb/>
may sign up at the Men-<lb/>
denhall Billiards Center<lb/>
An organizational meeting<lb/>
will be held Tues Jan.<lb/>
23 at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Billiards Center. Bring<lb/>
your sets.<lb/>
FGSF<lb/>
Praise God for that<lb/>
wonderful meeting last<lb/>
Thur. This Thur. Jan. 18<lb/>
we are having a Prayer<lb/>
and Praise Meeting.<lb/>
Come and be with us in<lb/>
Mendenhall 212,<lb/>
7:30-9:30. COME EX-<lb/>
PECTING A MIRACLE!<lb/>
If you have any questions<lb/>
about Full Gospel Student<lb/>
Fellowship call 752-9932.<lb/>
Pledges<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
meeting of all those<lb/>
individuals interested in<lb/>
becoming a pledgee for<lb/>
the Kappa Alpha Psi<lb/>
Fraternity during Spring<lb/>
Semester on Thur Jan.<lb/>
25. A format high-<lb/>
lighting the upcoming<lb/>
pledge period as well as<lb/>
fraternity activities will<lb/>
be presented. The event<lb/>
is scheduled for 7 p.m.<lb/>
at the Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Afro American Cultural<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Phi Beta<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda is<lb/>
pleased to announce the<lb/>
success of their yearly<lb/>
service project, Oper-<lb/>
ation Santa Claus which<lb/>
was a donation to the<lb/>
Caswcll Center, Kinston,<lb/>
NC. They are hoping for<lb/>
the same success while<lb/>
attending their state<lb/>
convention, Mar. 16-18<lb/>
in Winston-Salem, NC.<lb/>
They would like to<lb/>
remind the student body<lb/>
nf their symposium,<lb/>
Mar. 21 scheduled to be<lb/>
held from 1-4 p.m. in<lb/>
Raw I. Topics of interest<lb/>
are: Finance, Banking,<lb/>
Management, Account-<lb/>
ing, Real Estate and<lb/>
Marketing. They feel it<lb/>
will be a valuable asset<lb/>
not only to the business<lb/>
students, but to the<lb/>
entire student body.<lb/>
ccc<lb/>
Art<lb/>
Come and learn of<lb/>
the joyful life Christians<lb/>
can experience. Along<lb/>
vim lots of other<lb/>
Christians, learn the<lb/>
fundamentals of having<lb/>
a personal relationship<lb/>
with Christ. Stop by<lb/>
Brewster D311 this<lb/>
Thur. night, 7-9 p.m.<lb/>
Sponsored by Campus<lb/>
Crusade for Christ.<lb/>
Meeting<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will<lb/>
meet Thur. Jan. 18 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall 244.<lb/>
All members are urged<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Meeting<lb/>
Rho Epsilon Will<lb/>
meet Thur Jan. 18 at 4<lb/>
p.m. in Rawl 101. This<lb/>
is a membership meet-<lb/>
ing. All persons in-<lb/>
terested in Real Estate<lb/>
are invited to attend and<lb/>
join Rho Epsilon.<lb/>
Current members are<lb/>
also urged to attend to<lb/>
help plan semester<lb/>
activities. Remember,<lb/>
Rho Epsilon is open to<lb/>
any interested person<lb/>
who wishes to further<lb/>
their involvement in the<lb/>
Real Estate Industry.<lb/>
Lacrosse<lb/>
All present and<lb/>
prospective members of<lb/>
the Lacrosse Club are<lb/>
reminded of an ex-<lb/>
tremely important spring<lb/>
organizational meeting,<lb/>
Wed Jan. 24, 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in Memorial Gvm,<lb/>
Rm 104. Regretfully, Sid<lb/>
Ross will not play the<lb/>
aecordian for your din-<lb/>
ing and dancing<lb/>
pleasure.<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
Alpha Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Service Sorority will be<lb/>
hosting a Spring Rush<lb/>
Wed Jan. 24 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Auditorium.<lb/>
The third Business of<lb/>
Art Seminar will be held<lb/>
Fri Jan. 19 at 11 a.m.<lb/>
in the Jenkins Audi-<lb/>
torium. Guest speaker<lb/>
will be Dr. Keusch from<lb/>
the ECU SChool of Bus-<lb/>
iness , who will discuss<lb/>
business knowledges and<lb/>
record-keeping for the<lb/>
studio artist and small<lb/>
art related business. All<lb/>
interested students are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Students, sign up to-<lb/>
day to bowl on a MSC<lb/>
Mixed-Doubles bowling<lb/>
league. Sign up for the<lb/>
Mon. or Tues. night<lb/>
league on the poster<lb/>
located on the ground<lb/>
floor main bulletin board<lb/>
in Mendenhall. The First<lb/>
meetingbowling nights<lb/>
will be Mon Jan 22 andj<lb/>
Tues Jan. 23. You don't<lb/>
have to be a pro to parti-<lb/>
cipate. Get some friends<lb/>
together and sign up<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Golf<lb/>
There will be a meeting<lb/>
of all persons interested<lb/>
in the ECU Golf Team<lb/>
on Mon. night, Jan. 22,<lb/>
7 p.m Rm 145 Minges.<lb/>
This does not include<lb/>
present members of the<lb/>
golf team.<lb/>
Romance, history, excitement, and mystery . . .<lb/>
Orle<lb/>
ans<lb/>
Atlanta Trip<lb/>
Only $185.00<lb/>
Registration Deadline<lb/>
Feb. 1, 1979<lb/>
44 Places Available<lb/>
The price includes transportation to and from New Orleans,<lb/>
Atlanta, and Greenville, plus hotel accommodations.<lb/>
Apply at the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall Student Cent<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union Travel Committee<lb/>
TraYol<lb/>
That's all we need,<lb/>
six more people to sign<lb/>
up for the Ft. Lauder<lb/>
dale-Bahamas Cruise<lb/>
Trip. The trip is March<lb/>
3-10, during Spring<lb/>
Break. The Travel<lb/>
Committee needs six<lb/>
more people to sign up<lb/>
or the trip may be<lb/>
cancelled. If you are<lb/>
tired of boring Spring<lb/>
Breaks go on this trip<lb/>
and you'll never forget<lb/>
it. Ft. Lauderdale is the<lb/>
scene for college stu-<lb/>
dents gathering for a<lb/>
good time in the sun.<lb/>
The Bahamas Cruise is<lb/>
the highlight of this<lb/>
trip, the glamorous<lb/>
parties on board the<lb/>
ship and the exotic life<lb/>
of the islands. Don't<lb/>
miss out on this great<lb/>
opportunity.<lb/>
CCC<lb/>
Chess<lb/>
All persons interested<lb/>
in playing chess are<lb/>
invited to stop by the<lb/>
Mendenhall Coffeehouse<lb/>
each Mon. evening at 7<lb/>
p.m. when the Chess<lb/>
Club holds its weekly<lb/>
meeting. Competition is<lb/>
at all levels and everyone<lb/>
is welcome to attend.<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
The League of<lb/>
Scholars will meet<lb/>
Tues Jan. 23 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in 238 Mendenhall. All<lb/>
members are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Is an abundant life<lb/>
still possible today? Meet!<lb/>
others who are enjoying i<lb/>
an abundant life with<lb/>
Christ. Learn how you1<lb/>
too, can experience the:<lb/>
abundant life Christ<lb/>
promises. Come by<lb/>
Brewster D311 from 7-9<lb/>
p.m. Thur. night.<lb/>
Sponsored by Campus<lb/>
Crusade for Christ.<lb/>
Jobs<lb/>
If you are interested<lb/>
in becoming an orien-<lb/>
tation counselor, come by<lb/>
Whichard Rm. 210 and<lb/>
pick up an application.<lb/>
Interviews will be con-<lb/>
ducted in Feb. and<lb/>
training sessions will be-<lb/>
gin in March.<lb/>
Courses<lb/>
Register now fur a<lb/>
mini-course in Di-<lb/>
Dance, Beginning Bridge,<lb/>
Billiards, or CPR Train<lb/>
ing. Sponsored b Men<lb/>
denhall Student Center,<lb/>
the courses are nper,<lb/>
ECU full-time tud?nt.<lb/>
faculty and staff MM<lb/>
members and thnr<lb/>
spouses or gueMs. P?r<lb/>
sons must regiter<lb/>
pav fees at the MSC<lb/>
Central Ticket Offi?<lb/>
tween the hours ?1 10<lb/>
a.m. and 4 p.m M<lb/>
through Fri. The first<lb/>
course begins Jan. 29.<lb/>
Jobs<lb/>
Dance<lb/>
Faculty and Staff<lb/>
Social Dance instruction<lb/>
is scheduled for 12 noon<lb/>
on Tues. and Thur. in<lb/>
Memorial Gym, Rm.<lb/>
108. If you are in-<lb/>
terested in learning<lb/>
some new steps or in<lb/>
developing your old<lb/>
skills, please join us.<lb/>
Mrs. Jo. Saunders,<lb/>
assistant professor in<lb/>
the Dept. of Health,<lb/>
Phys. Ed Recreation<lb/>
and Safety will be the<lb/>
instructor. For further<lb/>
information, contact<lb/>
Mrs. Saunders at 6000.<lb/>
School system- will<lb/>
begin interviewing<lb/>
ucation majors for 1979-8U<lb/>
positions during the<lb/>
month of January. Inter<lb/>
views will be scheduled<lb/>
through the Career<lb/>
Planning and Placement<lb/>
Office. Only those stu<lb/>
dents who are registi<lb/>
with the Placement Office<lb/>
will be eligible for the<lb/>
interviews.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Check out "Discount<lb/>
Day" every Mon. after<lb/>
noon at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Bowling Center. From 1<lb/>
p.m. until 4 p.m th<lb/>
price in OFF. Don't<lb/>
mis this opportunity to<lb/>
reallv save.<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
is still accepting<lb/>
applications for<lb/>
committee members.<lb/>
Wont you please apply?<lb/>
Second floor,<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
757-6611<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
for rent<lb/>
WANTED: Female<lb/>
roomate, preferably a<lb/>
graduate student or a<lb/>
quiet, settled person.<lb/>
Would have private<lb/>
room, can be furnished,<lb/>
1 block from campus,<lb/>
close to downtown,<lb/>
$87.50 plus Vi utilities<lb/>
and phone. Needed<lb/>
immediately! Call<lb/>
758-1636.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: 150<lb/>
plus H utilities. Color<lb/>
and cable TV free. 113<lb/>
B N. Holly St. 752-7225.<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT in<lb/>
large house, close to<lb/>
campus. 407 W. 4th St<lb/>
Call 752-9325. $35-50<lb/>
rent plus utilities.<lb/>
SALE: Single bed A<lb/>
mattress. Good shape<lb/>
for $40 or best offer.<lb/>
752-8254.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Capri,<lb/>
brown, 4 speed, U-6<lb/>
2600cc, air conditioning.<lb/>
Must sell. $400 or best<lb/>
offer. Call 756-3610<lb/>
between 6-8 p.m.<lb/>
SALE: Sanyo AMFM<lb/>
8-tk. car stereo wDX-<lb/>
and FF. Like new.<lb/>
Bought at $119. Asking<lb/>
$45. Will negotiate. Call<lb/>
752-8254.<lb/>
FOR SALE. Yashica<lb/>
Mat-124 TLR camera.<lb/>
Excellent condition.<lb/>
Bought at $125, asking<lb/>
$75 or best offer. Call<lb/>
7528254.<lb/>
Guitar and soft shell<lb/>
case. Great tone, perfect<lb/>
for Bluegrass, or any<lb/>
other style. $150. Call<lb/>
756-6835.<lb/>
Complete Ski Outfit ?<lb/>
$99. Olin MK I, 190<lb/>
cm; Lange boots, sixe<lb/>
10, Tyrolia bindings,<lb/>
polls and carrying cases.<lb/>
758-8794.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Ma-<lb/>
roon Monte Carlo with<lb/>
black vinyl top. Full<lb/>
equipped in excellent<lb/>
condition. Call after 5<lb/>
p.m. at 7588076.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2 pr.<lb/>
women's ski boots. 1<lb/>
prHansons, 6 l2m<lb/>
red. 1 prHumanics 7<lb/>
12, red. Both pair in<lb/>
good condition. $30. a<lb/>
pair. Call Susan<lb/>
758-3225.<lb/>
FOR SALE: BIC 981<lb/>
turntable $100; pair BIC<lb/>
formula 4 speakers<lb/>
$200; Marantu 2226 B<lb/>
receiver $150. Call<lb/>
758-5252 or come to 342<lb/>
Garrett.<lb/>
WEIGHT LOSS through<lb/>
yoga. Special juice<lb/>
fasting ? control<lb/>
techniques ? tension<lb/>
release ? supple body.<lb/>
Call Sunshine 758-0736<lb/>
mornings or evenings.<lb/>
Senior &amp; Junior nursing<lb/>
students unique<lb/>
opportunity outside<lb/>
clinical setting part-time<lb/>
day &amp; early evening<lb/>
hours. Call 756-9466.<lb/>
Selling your mobile<lb/>
home in May? If vou<lb/>
have a 12'x50' or 55' 2<lb/>
bedroom mobile home, I<lb/>
?m an interested buyer.<lb/>
Terms negotiable.<lb/>
752-8241. Ask for<lb/>
Cheryle.<lb/>
Want to buy used<lb/>
photographic enlarger<lb/>
and other darkroom<lb/>
eqpt. Call Dave,<lb/>
752-7727.<lb/>
HELP! I would like a<lb/>
ride to the ECU-NCSU<lb/>
basketball game on<lb/>
Tue Jan. 23. Will<lb/>
help with ga. 752-8972.<lb/>
BELLY DANCE - Let<lb/>
1979 be your year for<lb/>
health and beautv.<lb/>
Dance! A course in the<lb/>
ancient art of Bellv<lb/>
Dancing taught by<lb/>
Sunshine will begin Jan.<lb/>
15 (Mon. night). Rides<lb/>
from campus available.<lb/>
Call 758-0736. (Mornings<lb/>
and evenings.).<lb/>
??<lb/>
IMili<lb/>
mMMtmtm<lb/>
???? ?. ?? ??,?? fi?fr<lb/>
?-? r tT? .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057171_0003"/><lb/>
"CB effects unknown<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Pac? 3<lb/>
tn.<lb/>
y MIKE ROGERS<lb/>
As?tan? New8 EdUor<lb/>
bHng theha?vaetio?bef;nr<lb/>
the past few yearg<lb/>
Ur Robert A. Klei<lb/>
Associate Professor of<lb/>
Chemistry at ECU<lb/>
Plained that PCBs are<lb/>
had? u?f hal?genated<lb/>
nadrocarbon.<lb/>
Their presence was<lb/>
discovered by a scientist<lb/>
in bweden in 1966.<lb/>
According to Klein,<lb/>
?-Bs are usually U9ed<lb/>
in liquid form.<lb/>
They are a mixture<lb/>
J! different compounds.<lb/>
rhp is no one set<lb/>
impound. In fact, there<lb/>
?re approximately 209<lb/>
Poasfe types of PCB<lb/>
"They are used<lb/>
primarily in transformer<lb/>
'  and other electrical<lb/>
equipment because of<lb/>
their stability and lack<lb/>
f conductivity com-<lb/>
mented Klein on their<lb/>
industrial use.<lb/>
PCBs are harmful.<lb/>
It you come into<lb/>
contact with it. there are<lb/>
no immediate effects,<lb/>
nut it can lead to birth<lb/>
defects, and can affect<lb/>
the nervous system.<lb/>
"They're like chlor-<lb/>
inated insecticides in<lb/>
that they deposit in the<lb/>
fatty and nervous<lb/>
tissues. They can also<lb/>
cause liver damage<lb/>
stated Klein.<lb/>
He added that that<lb/>
was only true in a case<lb/>
of small dosages, "high<lb/>
exposure can lead to<lb/>
serious toxicant symp-<lb/>
toms<lb/>
He added that PCBs<lb/>
lead to breakdown of<lb/>
body defenses, numb-<lb/>
ness, skin problems<lb/>
(Chloracne), kidney pro-<lb/>
blems, uncoordination,<lb/>
headaches, respiratory<lb/>
problems, and cancer.<lb/>
"In their breakdown,<lb/>
the products of PCBs<lb/>
can be more dangerous<lb/>
than the PCBs them-<lb/>
selves Klein stated.<lb/>
According to Klein,<lb/>
PCBs in the environ-<lb/>
ment are ingested by<lb/>
cows, which is the<lb/>
reason there is a rela-<lb/>
tively high concentration<lb/>
of PCBs in milk. There<lb/>
is also a large concen-<lb/>
tration in fresh water<lb/>
fish.<lb/>
Klein explained that<lb/>
PCBs work their way up<lb/>
through the food chain<lb/>
to the higher animals.<lb/>
PCBs enter the body<lb/>
mainly by ingestion.<lb/>
They can be absorbed<lb/>
through the skin,<lb/>
although this is not<lb/>
probable, said Klein.<lb/>
Using rats in exper-<lb/>
iments, PCBs were<lb/>
found to deposit in fat.<lb/>
After a while, the<lb/>
fats excreted most of it,<lb/>
but some remained.<lb/>
"Once it's in your<lb/>
body, it's hard to<lb/>
excrete said Klein.<lb/>
He explained that<lb/>
the more chlorine in<lb/>
you, the harder it is to<lb/>
get rid of.<lb/>
"If you have more<lb/>
than four chlorine atoms<lb/>
per molecule, it is<lb/>
excreted more slowly<lb/>
PCBs were very hard<lb/>
to get rid of. He said<lb/>
that in their pure state<lb/>
they can be incinerated<lb/>
at extrememly high<lb/>
temperatures.<lb/>
However, they are<lb/>
usually found already<lb/>
dumped in the soil, in<lb/>
which case they can't be<lb/>
destroyed.<lb/>
"It would be ex-<lb/>
ceedingly difficult to<lb/>
decompose chemically.<lb/>
They'll break down with<lb/>
short wave ultraviolet<lb/>
light, but we receive<lb/>
light of longer wave-<lb/>
lengths he said.<lb/>
In 1968 in Japan,<lb/>
some people were dis-<lb/>
covered with large levels<lb/>
of PCBs in them.<lb/>
They had ingested it<lb/>
in their rice oil.<lb/>
Rice oil is a fat,<lb/>
which is a good solvent<lb/>
for PCBs.<lb/>
This proved to be<lb/>
the turning point of the<lb/>
non-restricted use of<lb/>
PCBs.<lb/>
Klein said that<lb/>
Monsanto, the prime<lb/>
producer of PCBs in the<lb/>
U.S cut way down on<lb/>
their production of PCBs<lb/>
since their effects were<lb/>
discovered.<lb/>
"All people have a<lb/>
certain level of PCBs in<lb/>
them, but at present it<lb/>
does not seem to be<lb/>
enough to cause any<lb/>
problems; however, we<lb/>
don't know the long<lb/>
range effects conclu-<lb/>
ded Klein.<lb/>
Bus fatalities frustrate officials<lb/>
RALEIGH. AP - State<lb/>
officials say they feel<lb/>
frustrated and helpless in<lb/>
he wake of a substantial<lb/>
increase in the number of<lb/>
school-bus related school<lb/>
deaths so far this year.<lb/>
Two more children<lb/>
were killed last week in<lb/>
school-bus related acci-<lb/>
dents, bringing the<lb/>
number of children killed<lb/>
in such accidents since<lb/>
September to nine.<lb/>
it.<lb/>
I can't understand<lb/>
said Louis W.<lb/>
Alexander, transportation<lb/>
director for the state<lb/>
Department of Public<lb/>
Instruction. "We feel<lb/>
alone. We feel frustrated<lb/>
and we fee! helpless<lb/>
Alexander said last<lb/>
week that since 1973<lb/>
there have not been more<lb/>
than two school bus<lb/>
fatalities in North Caro-<lb/>
lina in a school year.<lb/>
The National Safety<lb/>
Council has reported that<lb/>
95 school students were<lb/>
killed in the United States<lb/>
during the 1977-78 school<lb/>
year. Figures for the<lb/>
current school year are<lb/>
not available. A council<lb/>
spokesman said 22.2<lb/>
million students were<lb/>
transported to and from<lb/>
school each day last year<lb/>
across the United States.<lb/>
A committee of school<lb/>
superintendants, princi-<lb/>
pals and transport atior<lb/>
supervisors will meet in<lb/>
Raleigh Friday to study<lb/>
supervision and selection<lb/>
of school bus drivers,<lb/>
instruction of passengers<lb/>
and discipline on school<lb/>
buses.<lb/>
North and South<lb/>
Carolina allow 16 and 17<lb/>
year-old drivers, but<lb/>
Virginia, Tennessee,Geor-<lb/>
gia and Florida do not.<lb/>
Officials in the other<lb/>
states said the preferred<lb/>
older drivers with more<lb/>
driving experience.<lb/>
Dr. Alvin M. Fountain<lb/>
II, North Carolina's school<lb/>
bus driver training<lb/>
coordinator, said statistics<lb/>
show that over the past<lb/>
five years in North<lb/>
lJLm phildren<lb/>
killed in school bus<lb/>
accidents are about five<lb/>
years old.<lb/>
The figures show<lb/>
school bus fatalities are<lb/>
more likely to occur in<lb/>
the afternoon, at the end<lb/>
of the week, and when<lb/>
children must cross the<lb/>
road to reach their home.<lb/>
"Perhaps late in the<lb/>
week, Friday particularly,<lb/>
the children themselves<lb/>
are looking ahead to the<lb/>
weekend, they don't pay<lb/>
as close attention to every<lb/>
detail Fountain said.<lb/>
"They leave a book on<lb/>
the bus, and suddenly<lb/>
they realize it when<lb/>
they're on their side of the<lb/>
road and dart back<lb/>
across the path of the<lb/>
bus.<lb/>
MA grads honored<lb/>
The ECU School of<lb/>
Nursing Graduate Student<lb/>
Organization recently<lb/>
honored three Master's<lb/>
graduates; Sylbia Brown,<lb/>
Betty Gay and Belinda<lb/>
Lee. at a dinner partv.<lb/>
The three nurses are<lb/>
among the first to com-<lb/>
plete the graduate pro-<lb/>
gram in nursing at ECU.<lb/>
Brown, a native of<lb/>
Beaulaville, has<lb/>
been an instructor on the<lb/>
nursing school faculty for<lb/>
three years and plans to<lb/>
continue teaching now<lb/>
that she has received her<lb/>
Master of Science in<lb/>
Nursing. She is married<lb/>
to w illiam Brown, a<lb/>
51 . lent in the ECU Med<lb/>
S hool .<lb/>
Gay, formerly of Lin-<lb/>
den, began her<lb/>
teaching career Spring<lb/>
semester as a clinical in-<lb/>
structor in the ECU<lb/>
School of Nursing. Mrs.<lb/>
Gay is married to Mar-<lb/>
shall Gay, who is a pro-<lb/>
bation officer in Farm-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Lee, originally of Four<lb/>
Oaks had com-<lb/>
pleted a Master in Child<lb/>
Development and Family<lb/>
Relations from ECU be-<lb/>
fore she began her grad-<lb/>
uate work in the nursing<lb/>
school.<lb/>
She has been on the<lb/>
ECU nursing school.<lb/>
She has been on the<lb/>
ECU nursing school<lb/>
teaching staff since fall<lb/>
of 1972 and is currently<lb/>
an assistant professor.<lb/>
Mrs. Lee is married to<lb/>
Charles Lee, a pathol-<lb/>
ogist assistant in the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine.<lb/>
BOYD'S BARBER<lb/>
and HAIRSTYLING<lb/>
1008 S. Evans a<lb/>
Phone 758-4056<lb/>
By'Appointment Only<lb/>
MdvinHBoyd<lb/>
MervinH.Boyd.Jr.<lb/>
Franklin<lb/>
? ????Wf I<lb/>
KORE-O-MAT<lb/>
WELCOMES ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
BACK TO SCHOOL<lb/>
E. 14th St. 7f a-9636<lb/>
44 Visit us for your laundry needs9<lb/>
? 36 washers ? change ? pinball<lb/>
? a? dryers machine ? color T.V.<lb/>
? dry-cleaning pick-up station<lb/>
? attendant 8:00 a.m4:oo p.m. daily<lb/>
Bring this coupon for free wash.<lb/>
News<lb/>
writers<lb/>
needed<lb/>
t<lb/>
call<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
M BOY SPtCl<lb/>
"T-?IIIT-TH<lb/>
10 OFF<lb/>
Any Menu Item<lb/>
(Except Specials)<lb/>
With Valid College I.D.<lb/>
? .?<lb/>
?' V V fC JLJJL-LlL-iJtLbc.<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
Located<lb/>
beside the Remade Inn,<lb/>
264 By-psss.<lb/>
STANDING ON THE corner, watching all the girls go by. Photo by Frank Barrow<lb/>
Hunt unsure of reelection<lb/>
RALEIGH, (AP) - Gov. Jim Hunt insisted again<lb/>
la) week that he still hasn't made up his mind<lb/>
about whether to seek a second term in 1980.<lb/>
Anyone who watches much television this month,<lb/>
however, might have reason to be skeptical. The<lb/>
governor has already been on statewide television<lb/>
once this month, and he will be on again tonight<lb/>
with his "State of the State" message.<lb/>
In between, there's been an appearance on NBC's<lb/>
Today show, to talk about the results of the<lb/>
minimum compentency tests. And he'll be on a<lb/>
statewide telecast yet again before the end of the<lb/>
month, probably Mon. night, Jan. 29, to deliver a<lb/>
speech about crime.<lb/>
I the sudden blitz of airtime just a coincidence?<lb/>
Or is it the initial motions of a new political<lb/>
campaign, which Hunt must crank up this year if he<lb/>
i- to seek re-election?<lb/>
Asked last week, Hunt said no. "Absolutelv not.<lb/>
I have no idea whether or not I might run again<lb/>
Hunt's aides also say the television appearances<lb/>
have no connection with politics, that it is<lb/>
coincidence the test results came out in January and<lb/>
that he would be making speeches about the budget<lb/>
and crime anyway.<lb/>
I don't think there's any connection said<lb/>
Stcphanice Bass, Hunt's deputy press secretary.<lb/>
'There's certainly no machinations to get it to work<lb/>
?ut that wav<lb/>
Hunt, has. nonetheless, gone to lengths to gain<lb/>
as wide an audience as poss.ble, and perhaps to put<lb/>
on a show worth  hmg.<lb/>
His 30-mmul. TV appearance last Tuesdav n.ght<lb/>
announcing the competency test results was carried<lb/>
l,ve on al1 1,ul ? ?l the 17 comment w-i. u-mn<lb/>
stations in the state. Ms. Bass said Tv lone<lb/>
holdout showed a taped version later, she .aid.<lb/>
Hunt had something to do pr-onallv with that<lb/>
wide reception, when a station in une .j the Mate<lb/>
largest cities decided not to show it live Hunt<lb/>
personall) phoned the station general manager on<lb/>
the .lav of the broadcast to ask that he relent Ms<lb/>
Ba- confirmed. The station earned the governor's<lb/>
speech.<lb/>
Included in the competency test speech was an<lb/>
eight-minute segment taped the day before when<lb/>
Hunt visited students ami parents at Raleigh.<lb/>
lhens Drive High School. All spoke glowingK ol the<lb/>
tests, which not incidental!) were proposed by Hunt<lb/>
and were a major part of his successful legislative<lb/>
package in 1977.<lb/>
The .hort tape was produced b) a New<lb/>
lelevision consultant. John Larkin. He is the<lb/>
??ne who handled Hunt's TV campaign in th<lb/>
governor . race, and who also came down to help<lb/>
with Hunt. T speech on the Wilmington 10 a vear<lb/>
York<lb/>
same<lb/>
976<lb/>
STUFFY'S<lb/>
 t<lb/>
?<lb/>
Miiiioi;<lb/>
MM'<lb/>
ft<lb/>
GOOD STUFF<lb/>
12oz DRAFT<lb/>
ONLY 25 ?<lb/>
6:00 pm - 10:OOpm<lb/>
Saturday Jan. 20,1979<lb/>
7526130<lb/>
Georgetown Shoppes<lb/>
fltajb<lb/>
t4 - ?. . ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057171_0004"/><lb/>
Way ?"  ??  v-j. ??? ? . m<lb/>
????MOM<lb/>
JIL f<lb/>
Pag 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 January 1979<lb/>
c<lb/>
<lb/>
Does the majority<lb/>
really want a BUC?<lb/>
DR. rOEflR.THiS IS SCWAToC<lb/>
HANSOtf. HE$ iNTCRf ST6D IfJ<lb/>
OU U)0K ON THE VENUS<lb/>
THE SClJiOR ftESEAftCri TECHNICIAN<lb/>
I rHooH4r you riem-<lb/>
ECU students are ostensibly an-<lb/>
gered about the BUCCANEER'S fail-<lb/>
ure to publish an annual for the past<lb/>
two years. Those angry cards and<lb/>
letters keep trickling in to FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD, so we know for certain<lb/>
that some students are disappointed.<lb/>
But do they represent the majority<lb/>
opinion? Sadly, judging from student<lb/>
participation in the production of the<lb/>
BUC, the letter writers represent a<lb/>
small but vocal minority.<lb/>
This is unfortunate, because a year<lb/>
book is a valuable artifact from<lb/>
anyone's college experience. It goes<lb/>
beyond nostalgia, which is simply a<lb/>
yearning for the past. Already, many<lb/>
students have found out how much fun<lb/>
it is to look through their high school<lb/>
annuals and see who has married,<lb/>
who's in jail, etc.<lb/>
In this respect, yearbooks are a<lb/>
measure of change, a means of seeing<lb/>
where you've been, and to stop and<lb/>
think about where you're headed.<lb/>
Most students won't realize this until<lb/>
long after they've left ECU.<lb/>
Nevertheless, if the students don't<lb/>
want a book, then there is no<lb/>
justification for spending $44,000 of<lb/>
their money to publish it. A meager<lb/>
1000 students took the time to have<lb/>
their individual photos made for this<lb/>
year's BUC, despite a constant barrage<lb/>
of advertisements (none smaller than a<lb/>
half page) in FOUNTAINHEAD from<lb/>
the end of October until the beginning<lb/>
of December. The deadline for having<lb/>
pictures made was even extended two<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
The present BUC staff seems<lb/>
complete, although most of the staff<lb/>
are either freshmen or sophomores,<lb/>
many of whom were unfamiliar with<lb/>
the controversy surrounding the BUCC-<lb/>
ANEER when they first joined the<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
Maybe students really do want an<lb/>
annual, but their behavior thus far has<lb/>
only added to the arguments against a<lb/>
BUCCANEER. If the future is at all<lb/>
like the recent past, ECU'S annual<lb/>
seems to be terminally ill.<lb/>
UJ6LL f T AS J?LL<lb/>
uS? oua uV -ToocM<lb/>
TWS LAGS. TdiS IS OOft.<lb/>
ovefc H?e ?s rue c0??T,<lb/>
LAA. flisrt) THIS ?S THr<lb/>
Ao6?T?cs UA6<lb/>
TtftS ODD c-Aoa-sr?<lb/>
Logic Dcssn InC<lb/>
Aerospace Labs<lb/>
senator, this d?v?ce<lb/>
15 ooikjo to change<lb/>
of ufe for ?v?y mAio<lb/>
uJomAKj, And CMu-V ok)<lb/>
THIS PLANET. IT UJILL<lb/>
rO$U)CR. m.Ny OF OOA.<lb/>
rnosT paessiioa. Pftofc?ms. <lb/>
?s AHTH?<lb/>
VENUS PR066<lb/>
X JHREU) Tb&amp;?7HE IN MY<lb/>
SP0? Time To hmole rtie<lb/>
SCRoB FlcS, Ufed Dstes.<lb/>
Te VEfoas PtoBe is Ttfts ufiy.<lb/>
OF CuASF.<lb/>
Uppity Women<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
A feminist's resolutions<lb/>
Advertising-news ratio defended<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I would like to shed<lb/>
some light on some of<lb/>
the comments offered by<lb/>
Brett Melvin, one of the<lb/>
media's most vicious<lb/>
enemies, in his letter<lb/>
that appeared in the<lb/>
Jan. 9 issue of FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD.<lb/>
He questions the ra-<lb/>
tio of ads to news in<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, in-<lb/>
sinuating that there is<lb/>
something evil about<lb/>
advertising.<lb/>
Well Brett, yes the<lb/>
ads do benefit the<lb/>
students. If it were not<lb/>
for the $70,000 that<lb/>
advertising will generate<lb/>
in revenues for the<lb/>
newspaper this year<lb/>
'Biased'<lb/>
editorials<lb/>
defined<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
This letter is in<lb/>
regard to the letter<lb/>
written by Mr. Vincent<lb/>
Brett Melvin about<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD's "bi-<lb/>
ased" editorials.<lb/>
First, there is no<lb/>
such animal as a<lb/>
"biased" editorial. This<lb/>
is an example of<lb/>
redundancy, because<lb/>
every editorial by its<lb/>
very nature is a state-<lb/>
ment of that particular<lb/>
person's bias.<lb/>
An editorial is one<lb/>
person's opinion, what-<lb/>
ever that opinion may<lb/>
be. Consult your dic-<lb/>
tionary, Mr. Melvin.<lb/>
You will find that your<lb/>
letter is a prime<lb/>
example of bias.<lb/>
Each to his own,<lb/>
whether you like it or<lb/>
not; but yours is a case<lb/>
of the pot calling the<lb/>
kettle black.<lb/>
Jerry Adderton<lb/>
then the students would<lb/>
have to pick up the tab<lb/>
and the financial support<lb/>
for FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
would have to come<lb/>
entirely from student<lb/>
fees. So those ads that<lb/>
you so detest are saving<lb/>
the students $70,000 a<lb/>
year, or roughly $7 per<lb/>
student per year.<lb/>
Two years ago<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD was<lb/>
only 20 percent self-<lb/>
supporting, today it is<lb/>
70 percent self-sup-<lb/>
porting. This is the<lb/>
result of a lot of hard<lb/>
work on the part of the<lb/>
advertising staff. Unlike<lb/>
most campus organiza-<lb/>
tions that panhandle and<lb/>
look for handouts from<lb/>
SGA, the FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD staff hustles<lb/>
and raises its own<lb/>
money to support its<lb/>
operations. No other or-<lb/>
ganization can boast<lb/>
such a high percentage<lb/>
of self-support.<lb/>
Advertising informs<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD read-<lb/>
ers just as much, if not<lb/>
more, than the news<lb/>
column of the paper.<lb/>
You will notice numer-<lb/>
ous food coupons (i.e.<lb/>
Hardees, Roy Rogers,<lb/>
Stuffy's, Blimpies, New-<lb/>
by's, Friday's, etc)<lb/>
that appear in the<lb/>
paper. These ads make<lb/>
available to the student<lb/>
body a great deal of<lb/>
savings on meals. The<lb/>
restaurant ads are only<lb/>
one example of how ad-<lb/>
vertising serves the stu-<lb/>
dent body.<lb/>
Perhaps if Melvin<lb/>
would take Business<lb/>
2000 and Journalism<lb/>
2000 he might be en-<lb/>
lightened about news-<lb/>
papers and their bu-<lb/>
siness operations.<lb/>
As to the ad-news<lb/>
ratio that was men-<lb/>
tioned, Melvin is way<lb/>
off base again; it is<lb/>
75-25 ads to news, not<lb/>
50-50. If Melvin would<lb/>
take time to read the<lb/>
News and Observer,<lb/>
(that is if he can read),<lb/>
he might just notice that<lb/>
on the average inside<lb/>
pages the ad-news ratio<lb/>
runs as high as 90-10<lb/>
percent. Almost all<lb/>
newspapers across the<lb/>
U.S. run at least 75<lb/>
percent ads.<lb/>
As for the much dis-<lb/>
cussed and hotly de-<lb/>
bated BUCCANEER,<lb/>
that cannot be laid at<lb/>
the feet of the Media<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
The Media Board in-<lb/>
herited the BUC mess<lb/>
from the SGA purely<lb/>
and simply. It was poor<lb/>
management and the<lb/>
petty politics of those<lb/>
like Brett Melvin, whose<lb/>
only purpose in life<lb/>
seems to be destroying<lb/>
the hard work of others.<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
Lack of annual is<lb/>
'amazingly retarded<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
It has come to my<lb/>
attention that the real<lb/>
ECU pirates are not on<lb/>
the football field or<lb/>
basketball court, but in<lb/>
the SGA and administr-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
I find it amazingly<lb/>
retarded and extremely<lb/>
embarrassing for a<lb/>
universtiy of this size<lb/>
and self-proclaimed su-<lb/>
periority not to publish<lb/>
a yearbook for its<lb/>
students. One year is<lb/>
bad enough, but two?<lb/>
C'mon, Rose High does<lb/>
better than that.<lb/>
Student fees pay for<lb/>
the yearbook expense<lb/>
like they pay for the<lb/>
toilet paper in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center. We<lb/>
know what happens to<lb/>
the toilet paper and it<lb/>
might as well be the<lb/>
same for the yearbook<lb/>
the way things have<lb/>
been going lately.<lb/>
And while SGA<lb/>
continues to drag their<lb/>
feet in cow dung<lb/>
whenever this subject is<lb/>
formally discussed, the<lb/>
administration appears<lb/>
to be doing the same,<lb/>
only barefooted.<lb/>
In all honesty I must<lb/>
admit I do not attend<lb/>
ECU; I'm just an<lb/>
interested bystander and<lb/>
graduate of a university<lb/>
which has produced a<lb/>
yearbook every year<lb/>
without fail since its<lb/>
initial existence in 1898.<lb/>
So why should I care if<lb/>
ECU has a yearbook or<lb/>
not? I don't care. But<lb/>
somebody should. And<lb/>
at the present it looks<lb/>
as if no one does.<lb/>
Is that why they call<lb/>
it E-Z-U?<lb/>
Del Hunt<lb/>
By CHARLENE CARTER<lb/>
"Happy New Year to us all, and one more for<lb/>
Hester Petty, who is taking a well-earned respite<lb/>
from writing this column.<lb/>
I like New Year's (sentimental as it may seem)<lb/>
because after years of having repeatedly heard that<lb/>
it is a time of new beginnings, I have gradually<lb/>
succumbed to the consensus and now look forward to<lb/>
making my New Year's Resolutions.<lb/>
I made two New Year's resolutions this year.<lb/>
One was to give up eating sugar, including any<lb/>
foods with sugar in them, (try buying groceries on<lb/>
that resolution! Also, read William Duffy's<lb/>
devastating "Sugar Blues and see how long it<lb/>
takes you to stop eating sugar.), the other was to<lb/>
start doing more things that want to do. This is<lb/>
why I decided to take over this column.<lb/>
So here it is  a new year. I am proud to report<lb/>
that my sugar habit has been drastically reduced.<lb/>
Writing this column and allowing dirty dishes to<lb/>
remain in the kitchen sink are manifestations of the<lb/>
second resolution. Everyone has their pet things that<lb/>
they like to do, and rather than be specific, let it<lb/>
suffice to say that I've got mine, too.<lb/>
In writing this column, I will deliberately attempt<lb/>
to avoid interjecting too many personal statements<lb/>
which would detract from the ideas presented, ideas<lb/>
which could come from any one of the several<lb/>
thousand women in Greenville. After all, you don't<lb/>
know who I am. I could be in one of you classes. Or<lb/>
your waitress in your favorite restaurant. Or that<lb/>
woman whose arms were filled with Christmas<lb/>
presents, that you didn't open the door for because<lb/>
if those bitches are so hot for equal rights then<lb/>
let'em find out what it's like.<lb/>
Anonymity could prove beneficial to me in picking<lb/>
up on some honest reactions to the column, without<lb/>
the knowledge of my identity deterring criticism.<lb/>
Now, back to my resolution, what could possibly<lb/>
prevent me from doing what want to do? After all,<lb/>
this is 1979. I think I'll just go all the way  call me<lb/>
sentimental, and count my blessings<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving th East Carolina community for ovsr 50 years<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Steve Bachner N?ws E0TORS Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
Rtofci Gllarmis<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Jeff Rollins<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Is the student newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored by the Media Board of ECU<lb/>
and Is distributed each Tuesday and Thuraday (weekly<lb/>
during the summer).<lb/>
Mailing address: Old Sooth Building, Greenville, N C.<lb/>
27834<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6306, 757-6367, 757-6309<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
1.) I am a woman.<lb/>
2.) As a woman, I am allowed to own property,<lb/>
to vote, and to obtain a bank loan without mv<lb/>
husband's signature.<lb/>
3.)My husband no longer has the legal right to<lb/>
all my earnings, or the right to administer corporal<lb/>
punishment to me at his discretion.<lb/>
4.) I can obtain a divorce from my husband.<lb/>
5.) It is now possible for a woman to obtain a<lb/>
college education equal to a man's.<lb/>
6.) My employer must pay me a wage equal to<lb/>
that of a man with the same duties.<lb/>
7.) It has become "alright in the past few<lb/>
years, for a woman to devote more time to pursuits<lb/>
outside of the home.<lb/>
Anyone who would not agree that all of the above<lb/>
are definitely things to be glad about has got to be<lb/>
a flake. However, to anyone who did not detect in<lb/>
blessings two through seven, the definite odo of<lb/>
ancient salmon fried in lard and served with caviar<lb/>
may I suggest (1) an immediate visit to vour family<lb/>
otorhmolaryngologist; (2) the re-reading of' items two<lb/>
through seven in the above list, proceeding each one<lb/>
with the question, "Why?" (3) tune in next week for<lb/>
information on a hot new item guaranteed to remove<lb/>
stale fish odors from your breathing air.<lb/>
To be honest, I must confess that the nemesis of<lb/>
my resolution to do more things that I want to do is<lb/>
contained m statement seven. To say that it has<lb/>
become acceptable in recent years for a woman to<lb/>
spend more time outside the home, is to also sav<lb/>
quietly but audibly, that in the past it was noi<lb/>
aceptable. I grew up in that past<lb/>
?JhZ f?rAmatiVe yCarS WCre Spent in a med.um-sized<lb/>
southern American town, with one newspaper which<lb/>
daily espoused the virtues of the charityP work of<lb/>
local women s groups, which were usuallv auxiharv<lb/>
foTi? ?e" S ?rani"tions- Another high v<lb/>
t? U I ?f 8WeTn st?enTs t<lb/>
fl? ,? r WCre nt l? be questioned. One<lb/>
1.KI ChJWM Psented almost every vear was<lb/>
mn.hJ5 ?18COVCry that the childre" of workTn<lb/>
mothers had been found to have lower ,JLm g<lb/>
??-children whose mothers rLame 'home<lb/>
How I reconciled this "fact" with th ?<lb/>
my mother had worked sine I w? f tht<lb/>
and I was consistently athe ton Z  '<lb/>
throughout elementary Jchol I h.ve no 7L T<lb/>
very UrbraT <lb/>
dous difficultyPPgettingy'? oTSrtyZ" <lb/>
work very h.rd  doing thing, fo, T?lf 1 <lb/>
"uppity" attitude?) Ucd "f<lb/>
In regard to statements two through six- W?. k.<lb/>
?n.tl,ioiS;?"t, tdCon" ,?  Th'<lb/>
no. .ngin.U, J "ZZnZ"<lb/>
t<lb/>
? . ,<lb/>
' V v ? <lb/>
- - ? ?v-v-1 mc v v-? ?,<lb/>
??T-mi4Qf<lb/>
<lb/>
 ?A' ,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057171_0005"/><lb/>
California Suite is 'tedious, too diverse'<lb/>
By BARRY CLAYTON<lb/>
Wistant Trends Editor<lb/>
There is little doubt<lb/>
that many people<lb/>
consider Neil Simon one<lb/>
oi the foremost of<lb/>
America's comedv<lb/>
screenplay writer Res-<lb/>
ponsible tor innumerable<lb/>
runaway box-office hits<lb/>
(and some that were<lb/>
not Simon perhaps<lb/>
found his single best<lb/>
received film in last<lb/>
year's The Goodbye Girl<lb/>
which, in part at least,<lb/>
owed much of its phe-<lb/>
nomenal success to the<lb/>
tact that Simon chose to<lb/>
blond his own particular<lb/>
brand of madcap<lb/>
c?nicd around a love<lb/>
-torv.<lb/>
In The Goodbye Girl,<lb/>
tenderness and the<lb/>
comic glibness of the<lb/>
characters alternately<lb/>
trade off turns in the<lb/>
spotlight so that neither<lb/>
ol those qualities had a<lb/>
chance to become over-<lb/>
hearing.<lb/>
It worked.<lb/>
So, of course, it is<lb/>
only reasonable that<lb/>
Simon would return to a<lb/>
formula that proved a<lb/>
success when he got<lb/>
around to his next film.<lb/>
And of course, the<lb/>
formula would work<lb/>
again.<lb/>
But it didn't.<lb/>
The single biggest<lb/>
problem of Simon's new<lb/>
film California Suite is<lb/>
the internal diversity of<lb/>
the storyline. It is too<lb/>
diverse. Much too<lb/>
diverse to come off<lb/>
effectively.<lb/>
Why?"<lb/>
Well, probably the<lb/>
film's lack of effective-<lb/>
ness is due to the fact<lb/>
that there is no single<lb/>
coherent story. There<lb/>
are four stories which<lb/>
span a broad field of<lb/>
emotions from utter<lb/>
pathos all the way to<lb/>
Vaudeville slapstick. The<lb/>
viewer is left to find a<lb/>
common ground for<lb/>
himself, and it is just<lb/>
too tiring a process to<lb/>
sit through in an un-<lb/>
comfortable seat in the<lb/>
dark and still enjoy.<lb/>
Another serious pro-<lb/>
blem with California<lb/>
Suite is the cast.<lb/>
It is a good cast. A<lb/>
of writing the screenplay<lb/>
to be acted by a cast.<lb/>
Certainly Richard<lb/>
Pryor and Alan Alda<lb/>
are very fine comedians<lb/>
but that is primarily<lb/>
comedy film work.<lb/>
But how Neil Simon<lb/>
could write better Alda-<lb/>
or Pryor-type comedy<lb/>
than Alda or Pryor,<lb/>
transmit it to film, and<lb/>
still make it work is<lb/>
gauntlet of comic levels<lb/>
from none at all to far<lb/>
too much.<lb/>
The story opens with<lb/>
a pathetic battle bet-<lb/>
ween two long-term<lb/>
divorcees for the custody<lb/>
"The film's lack of effectiveness is due to the<lb/>
fact that there is no single coherent story.<lb/>
There are four stories which span a broad<lb/>
field of emotions from utter pathos all the way<lb/>
to Vaudeville slapstick.<lb/>
59<lb/>
very good cast. And<lb/>
without doubt, it would<lb/>
be very tempting to<lb/>
write a screenplay<lb/>
around instead of<lb/>
around the cast instead<lb/>
because they write their<lb/>
own material. They are<lb/>
good at it. That is how<lb/>
they made it in comedy.<lb/>
Stage presence alone is<lb/>
not enough to make a<lb/>
Harrison and Cheston perform<lb/>
in joint senior recital on Friday<lb/>
By LIKE WHISNANT<lb/>
Staff R riter<lb/>
Anne Harrison and<lb/>
Susan Che-ton will per-<lb/>
form in Senior Recital on<lb/>
Friday night. January 19,<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m. The sax-<lb/>
ophone flute recital will<lb/>
held in A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall. Admission is<lb/>
free and the public is<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
Anne Harrison is an<lb/>
alto saxophone major<lb/>
working towards a Music<lb/>
Education degree. She<lb/>
will open the program<lb/>
with Claud' Pascal's<lb/>
S natine" tor alto sax-<lb/>
ophone and piano. ac-<lb/>
companied by James Gil-<lb/>
liam.<lb/>
She will also perform<lb/>
"Chore- (No. 7)" by<lb/>
Heitor Villa-Lobos. In<lb/>
"Choros' the alto sax-<lb/>
ophone is one of an<lb/>
eight-piece instrumental<lb/>
ensemble. Performing<lb/>
with Mi Harrison will<lb/>
David Briley, con-<lb/>
ductor; Eddie Asten, tarn<lb/>
tarn; Cindy Cooley, bas-<lb/>
n; Bari Webster, clar-<lb/>
inet; Jim Poteat, oboe;<lb/>
Man J White, flute;<lb/>
Glenn Dai violin; and<lb/>
Andi Smith, cello.<lb/>
Miss Harrison will<lb/>
close her portion of the<lb/>
ret ital with three move-<lb/>
ments of Paule Maurice's<lb/>
Tableaux de Provence<lb/>
Pianist Diane Kolwyck will<lb/>
accompany the Maurice.<lb/>
Mi-s Harrison is a<lb/>
native oi ienna, ir-<lb/>
ginia. She has performed<lb/>
with the East Carolina<lb/>
K ind Ensemble and Jazz<lb/>
Band, as well as the<lb/>
Concert Band, Marching<lb/>
Band, and various sax-<lb/>
ophone quartet<lb/>
She has also been<lb/>
active in the ECU Chap-<lb/>
ter of the Music Edu-<lb/>
cator's National Confer-<lb/>
ence, serving a- Vice<lb/>
President ior the past<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Following her recital<lb/>
Mis Harrion plans to<lb/>
student teach in il-<lb/>
mington before going on<lb/>
to graduate school in<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Susan Cheston is a<lb/>
flutist working towards a<lb/>
double degree in Music-<lb/>
Education and Music<lb/>
Therapy. A native of An-<lb/>
napolis, Maryland, Ms.<lb/>
Cheston has performed as<lb/>
first chair flutist with the<lb/>
ECU Concert Band, Wind<lb/>
Ensemble, and Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra.<lb/>
She has also been<lb/>
active as President ol the<lb/>
ECU Music Therapy<lb/>
Club. Ms. Cheston is a<lb/>
member of Pi Kappa<lb/>
Lambda, the music honor<lb/>
society .<lb/>
She will perform the<lb/>
"Sonata in A" bv Gio-<lb/>
vanni Platti, accompanied<lb/>
by Jill Stouder on piano<lb/>
ami Amy Cheston on<lb/>
cello. "Syrinx" by Claude<lb/>
Debussy will be per-<lb/>
formed unaccompanied.<lb/>
The recital will close<lb/>
with the "Sonata for<lb/>
Flute and Piano" of<lb/>
SErgoi Prokofieff. The<lb/>
four-movement Sonata<lb/>
will be accompanied by<lb/>
the School of Music<lb/>
(acuity member Ellen<lb/>
Nagode.<lb/>
A reception will follow<lb/>
the Friday night recital.<lb/>
about the district auditions<lb/>
is available from Dr. Clyde<lb/>
Hiss at the ECU School' of<lb/>
Music.<lb/>
difficult to understand.<lb/>
Yet, that seems to be<lb/>
exactly what Simon<lb/>
attempted. And the<lb/>
total effect is about<lb/>
what one might expect<lb/>
it to be?tiresome.<lb/>
The film conveys the<lb/>
impression of manic<lb/>
depression and schizo-<lb/>
phrenia, skipping inanely<lb/>
between separate story-<lb/>
lines that have nothing<lb/>
whatsoever to do with<lb/>
one another (outside of<lb/>
the fact that they ail<lb/>
occur in a common<lb/>
locale) while at the<lb/>
same time running the<lb/>
Singers<lb/>
Young<lb/>
aspire to<lb/>
singers who<lb/>
operatic careers<lb/>
are invited to participate in<lb/>
the 1978-79 Metropolitan<lb/>
Opera National Council<lb/>
southeastern district aud-<lb/>
itions at East Caolina<lb/>
University Jan. 20.<lb/>
Purpose of the annual<lb/>
auditions program is to<lb/>
discover new operatic<lb/>
Doskey<lb/>
- Henry<lb/>
Doskey, member of the<lb/>
keyboard faculty of the<lb/>
School of Music at ECU<lb/>
will perform in a faculty<lb/>
recital in Hendrix Thea-<lb/>
tre in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center on Jan. 21<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Doskey will play a<lb/>
varied program including<lb/>
"Variations on a Minuet<lb/>
bv Duport" by Mozart,<lb/>
"Sonata No. 23, in F<lb/>
Minor, Op. 57" by<lb/>
Beethoven, Scenes of<lb/>
Childhood, Op. 15" by<lb/>
Schumann, "Sonata No.<lb/>
9, Op. 68" by Scriabine<lb/>
and "Etudes-Tableaux<lb/>
from Op. 39" by Rach-<lb/>
maninoff.<lb/>
Doskey recently pre-<lb/>
sented his debut recital<lb/>
in Carnegie Recital Hall<lb/>
talent to make it possible<lb/>
for singers in all parts of and performed a solo<lb/>
the nation to be heard and recital in Chicago's Or-<lb/>
aided in their careers.<lb/>
District winners are<lb/>
eligible to participate in<lb/>
regional auditions, and<lb/>
regional winners enter<lb/>
national auditions later in<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
Further information<lb/>
chestra Hall as national<lb/>
winner of the 1977<lb/>
Allied Arts piano award.<lb/>
After receiving a BM<lb/>
and MM from Southern<lb/>
Methodist University,<lb/>
Doskey is completing his<lb/>
doctorial work at Indiana<lb/>
University.<lb/>
of their teenage daugh-<lb/>
ter. She prefers the life-<lb/>
style of her ultra-mel-<lb/>
low, laid-back Hollywood<lb/>
screenwriter-father (Alan<lb/>
Alda) to that of her<lb/>
mother (Jane Fonda)<lb/>
who works as an editor<lb/>
for a New York based<lb/>
news magazine, and has<lb/>
run off to live with him<lb/>
in sunny Los Angeles.<lb/>
When Fonda jets to<lb/>
California to carry her<lb/>
daughter back, the old<lb/>
comedy skit of the East<lb/>
Coast vs. the West<lb/>
Coast is once again<lb/>
dragged to the silver<lb/>
screen (If you've sat<lb/>
through Allen's Annie<lb/>
Hall, you've seen this<lb/>
before  and much<lb/>
better.)<lb/>
This is the pathos<lb/>
part of the film, and<lb/>
chuckles are few and far<lb/>
between even though it<lb/>
is obvious that the<lb/>
actors are trying.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Richard<lb/>
Pryor and Bill Cosby<lb/>
have checked into the<lb/>
hotel with their wives.<lb/>
The event is their annual<lb/>
vacation, but it proves<lb/>
 to be more of a vacation<lb/>
for Cosby and wife than<lb/>
for the other couple.<lb/>
The chief problem is<lb/>
that Pryor's reservation<lb/>
didn't materialize, and<lb/>
he and his spouse are<lb/>
forced to spend their<lb/>
vacation in a closet-sized<lb/>
room complete with<lb/>
freely running water and<lb/>
a furnace that will give<lb/>
them no peace.<lb/>
As the film's story<lb/>
returns to them at<lb/>
various points through-<lb/>
out the movie, the close<lb/>
friendship slowly dis-<lb/>
solves until finally the<lb/>
foursome is literally at<lb/>
each other's throats<lb/>
with Cosby gnawing on<lb/>
Pryor's ear and de-<lb/>
manding that Pryor ad-<lb/>
mit that it has been a<lb/>
wonderful vacation and<lb/>
promise that they will<lb/>
vacation together again<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
Even under this tor-<lb/>
ture Pryor refuses<lb/>
concede the latter.<lb/>
to<lb/>
Sadder is the role<lb/>
Walter Matthau has<lb/>
take upon himself, that<lb/>
of an elderly married<lb/>
Jew who has flown in<lb/>
from the East to attend<lb/>
his nephew's Barmitz<lb/>
vah, and finds himself<lb/>
in bed with a beautiful<lb/>
young hooker who has<lb/>
had too much to drink,<lb/>
and cannot be roused.<lb/>
Of course, Matthau's<lb/>
wife is due any minute,<lb/>
and that old, tired<lb/>
routine about trying to<lb/>
hide the body is once<lb/>
again summoned to the<lb/>
aid of movie-going<lb/>
insomniacs.<lb/>
Strictly Vaudeville<lb/>
stuff.<lb/>
By far, the team of<lb/>
Michael Caine and<lb/>
Maggie Smith outshine<lb/>
the rest of this ill-fated<lb/>
cast. Their excellent and<lb/>
touching rendering of<lb/>
the story of an aging<lb/>
actress and her DC<lb/>
consort in town to<lb/>
attend the Great Oscar<lb/>
Giveawav is bevond<lb/>
question the highlight of<lb/>
California Suite. Inspired<lb/>
performances and the<lb/>
best one- and two-<lb/>
liners of the film make<lb/>
their story the movie's<lb/>
showcase.<lb/>
Unfortunately, it is<lb/>
not enough to save the<lb/>
film from the impression<lb/>
of overall tedium.<lb/>
-S?perman is a modern<lb/>
American Prometheus<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
Hardly any figure is<lb/>
more ingrained in the<lb/>
American mythology and<lb/>
culture than Superman.<lb/>
This modern Prometheus<lb/>
first appeared in comic<lb/>
books during World War<lb/>
II and became an im-<lb/>
mediate success.<lb/>
The concept of Su-<lb/>
perman then became on<lb/>
of the longest running<lb/>
television series ever.<lb/>
The recent 39 mil-<lb/>
lion dollar extravaganza,<lb/>
Superman, proves that<lb/>
the character has con-<lb/>
tinued appeal. Why do<lb/>
people, especially Am-<lb/>
ericans, love this char-<lb/>
acter so much?<lb/>
Superman, like Shel-<lb/>
ley's Prometheus, is<lb/>
"the type of the highest<lb/>
perfection of moral and<lb/>
intellectual nature, im-<lb/>
pelled by the purest and<lb/>
the truest motives to the<lb/>
best and nobelest<lb/>
ends He is not tain-<lb/>
ted, as is the rest of<lb/>
humanity, with sniveling<lb/>
little selfishnesses or<lb/>
imperfections. In this<lb/>
resepect, he is the<lb/>
nearest thing to Jesus<lb/>
Christ that popular cul-<lb/>
ture will ever create.<lb/>
Superman fights for<lb/>
"Truth, Justice and the<lb/>
American Way How to<lb/>
out-moded those words<lb/>
seem now, almost to the<lb/>
point of being quaint.<lb/>
When Superman said<lb/>
them to Lois Lane on<lb/>
her balcony many of the<lb/>
people in the movie I<lb/>
was in actually laughed.<lb/>
Their reaction to those<lb/>
once sacrosanct words is<lb/>
a pointed reminder of<lb/>
how our patriotic values<lb/>
have changed since<lb/>
1932, Superman's in-<lb/>
ception.<lb/>
Richard Donner's Su-<lb/>
perman is a masterpiece<lb/>
of Americana. And his<lb/>
movie appeals to our<lb/>
strong, if tempered,<lb/>
sense of patriotism as<lb/>
much as those World<lb/>
War II comic books that<lb/>
showed our hero battling<lb/>
a blitzkrieg.<lb/>
Donner's landscapes<lb/>
evoke the same optim-<lb/>
ism as does the best<lb/>
Winslow Homer. The<lb/>
whole Smallville portion<lb/>
of the film is perfectly<lb/>
American Gothic.<lb/>
You name them, the<lb/>
stereotypes are there:<lb/>
the American Mother,<lb/>
the American Dad, the<lb/>
farm, the collie, the<lb/>
small-town high school,<lb/>
etc. But Donner makes<lb/>
these stereotypes non-<lb/>
theless capable of pos-<lb/>
sessing dramatic<lb/>
strength, even pathos.<lb/>
Donner shooting of<lb/>
the scenes evinces an<lb/>
excellent cinematic and<lb/>
poetic creativity. One<lb/>
especially good shot is<lb/>
that of the mother, seen<lb/>
through the screen of<lb/>
the screen door. The<lb/>
image of the woman<lb/>
behind the door is richlt<lb/>
textured by the screen.<lb/>
In another instance,<lb/>
Donner began with a<lb/>
low-angle shot of the<lb/>
son and his foster-<lb/>
mother in the distance,<lb/>
up a sloping wheat<lb/>
field. Then he slowly<lb/>
pans up the wheat field<lb/>
increasing the amount of<lb/>
sky relative to the<lb/>
amount of wheat seen<lb/>
with the two figures, to<lb/>
end with a brilliantly<lb/>
see SiPERMA V p.6<lb/>
Reviewer capsulizes classical, rock, soul, and jazz<lb/>
Bv DAVID MILLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Jean-Pierre Rampal, Lily Laskine ? Sakura<lb/>
A collection of traditional Japanese melodies<lb/>
performed on European instruments (Jean-Pierre<lb/>
Rampal ? flutist, Lilly Laskine ? harpist).<lb/>
Columbia is hyping Rampal as one of the greatest<lb/>
flutists in history. This album reasserts the fact that<lb/>
he has the versatility needed to support the claim.<lb/>
Side one is purely Oriental; side two is more<lb/>
European in nature. Even though these selections<lb/>
have been toned-down and mellowed-out for the<lb/>
Occidental ear, this is some of the most restful<lb/>
music I have ever heard. A<lb/>
Jazz<lb/>
Tom Scott ? Intimate Strangers<lb/>
Scott's most ambitious work to date. This is a<lb/>
concept-album revolving around (Can you believe it?)<lb/>
a one-night-stand. Surprisingly, it works. Marvelous<lb/>
arrangements and superb liner notes make this a<lb/>
I must. A<lb/>
? Earl Klugh ? Magic In Your Eyes<lb/>
Beautiful arrangements by Dave Grusin, faultlessly<lb/>
played by Earl Klugh, Grusin and the standard<lb/>
session players. Another routinely perfect set from<lb/>
Klugh. What more could one ask for? Only depth is<lb/>
lacking. Nice easy listening. B<lb/>
St?ul<lb/>
Pointer Sisters ? Fire<lb/>
The most interesting female vocal group of the<lb/>
seventies. Another carefully-chosen collection of mat-<lb/>
erial delivered wonderfully in their jazzy scat-singing<lb/>
style. The Bruce Springsteen penned single, Fire, is<lb/>
the centrifuge. A scorcher. A-<lb/>
James Brown ? Take A Look At Those Cakes<lb/>
This man has been around for over 20Vfc years and<lb/>
has been doing different renditions of the same old<lb/>
song for at least t 19 of them. Brown's ? only<lb/>
progression as an artist has been in uncreasing the<lb/>
length, number of sexual entendres, and amount of<lb/>
repetition in each tune. This album is reminiscent of<lb/>
Muhammad Ali's shadowy performance in the first<lb/>
Leon Spinks fight. B ?<lb/>
Earth, Wind and Fire ? Greatest Hits<lb/>
The most promising soul group since Sly and the<lb/>
Family S tone. Yet, much of the material in this<lb/>
collection is weak. The prostituted "Got to Get You<lb/>
Into My Life" from Sargeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts<lb/>
Club Band should never have been recorded by<lb/>
performers with this degree of creative potential.<lb/>
If one is really interested in E,W &amp; F's<lb/>
"Greatest pick up copies of ther Way of the<lb/>
World and Gratitude LPs. B-<lb/>
Marvin Gaye ? Here, My Dear<lb/>
Marvin Gaye revolutionalized soul music in 1970 with<lb/>
his socially-conscious What's Going On and again in<lb/>
1972 with the sex-oriented Let's Get It On. Ever<lb/>
since then, everyone else in the R&amp;B field, other<lb/>
than Stevie Wonder, have merely been making<lb/>
clones of Gaye's material. Now, in the Day of Disco,<lb/>
Gaye has the courage to release another concept<lb/>
album ? this time dealing with his divorce from his<lb/>
wife Annie. Despite a perfectly terrible album title,<lb/>
the lyricism on most of these songs is more<lb/>
substantial than "Hey, baby, I got a toe in my sock<lb/>
for you and, as such, requires more attentive<lb/>
listening. Therefore, it probably will not sell.<lb/>
Clones of the seventies<lb/>
Parliament ? Motor Booty Affair<lb/>
Producer George Clinton has cloned one group into<lb/>
three. Parliament, Funkadelic and Bootsy's Rubber<lb/>
Band record separate albums and are billed as<lb/>
appearing in concert together as individual entities.<lb/>
Yet, all three groups are composed of the same<lb/>
people (A few costume and stylistic changes create<lb/>
the illusion).<lb/>
Clinton is obviously interested in money if not<lb/>
artistry. He has found a means to<lb/>
release an album every other month by the same<lb/>
group and still keep fan attention.<lb/>
For androids only.<lb/>
Molly Hatchet ? Molly Hatchet<lb/>
A Lynyrd Skynyrd imitation. For carnivores only.<lb/>
The Band ? Anthology<lb/>
Yet another collection of The Band's greatest hits ?<lb/>
this time a double LP set. Despite the number of<lb/>
Band reissues in the past two years, this album<lb/>
contains some of the best rock recorded in the last<lb/>
decade and a half. A-<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
?.<lb/>
m 0 -t m - 0<lb/>
m ? ?? 40 m m<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057171_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 16 January 1979<lb/>
Superman : 'the myth changes'<lb/>
continued from p.5<lb/>
Romantic statement: the<lb/>
mother and her son<lb/>
standing in front of the<lb/>
infinite blue sky. Again,<lb/>
both Dormer's theme and<lb/>
technique remind one of<lb/>
 insiow Homer, that<lb/>
quintessential Amer-<lb/>
ican painter.<lb/>
So, even though he<lb/>
Has not born here, by<lb/>
his deserving. Superman<lb/>
earns his citizenship.<lb/>
But what differentiates<lb/>
Superman from anv<lb/>
other mid-western young<lb/>
man who had a happy,<lb/>
but rather schmaltsy and<lb/>
predictable home life?<lb/>
Superman can tell<lb/>
' what color panties Lois<lb/>
Lane has on, just by<lb/>
looking at her. He run's<lb/>
foot-races with express<lb/>
trains. He can push<lb/>
continental plates into<lb/>
place and fly faster than<lb/>
a nuclear missile.<lb/>
Yes he can fly. And<lb/>
the connotations come<lb/>
quickly to mind. To fly<lb/>
is to have purpose and<lb/>
direction and capability.<lb/>
It is to have a perfect<lb/>
confidence in ones sex-<lb/>
uality. To fly is to be<lb/>
able to see the future<lb/>
and to be everywhere at<lb/>
once. It means that one<lb/>
is free and knows what<lb/>
to do with that freedom.<lb/>
Surely the scenes are<lb/>
most lyrical and trans-<lb/>
cendant in which Super-<lb/>
man is shown flying<lb/>
with Lois Lane, this<lb/>
aerial ballet connotes<lb/>
flights of rapture and<lb/>
passion, flights of fancy<lb/>
and of the imagination.<lb/>
No wonder we love<lb/>
Superman. He can do<lb/>
this all the time.<lb/>
Superman's powerful<lb/>
sexual attractiveness has<lb/>
always been a strong<lb/>
part of his total appeal,<lb/>
but never moreso than<lb/>
in the recent movie.<lb/>
Donner enhances Super-<lb/>
man's leotard exhibited<lb/>
virility with a whole<lb/>
motif of phallic imagery.<lb/>
In fact, this movie is the<lb/>
first episode about Su-<lb/>
perman that ever sug-<lb/>
gests he could have<lb/>
anything more than a<lb/>
platonic relationship with<lb/>
Lois Lane. That the<lb/>
myth can change to suit<lb/>
the taste of its believers<lb/>
shows its vitality.<lb/>
Americans have over<lb/>
the past decade or so<lb/>
seen themselves in a<lb/>
variety of ways and our<lb/>
movies reflect it. We<lb/>
have seen outselves as<lb/>
'Its been a rough few yea<lb/>
for the actors of The Waltons<lb/>
the ugly American, the<lb/>
anti-hero, and finally,<lb/>
with All the President's<lb/>
Men, as the great<lb/>
villian.<lb/>
Reaction<lb/>
One feels that the<lb/>
most recent success of<lb/>
Superman indicated a<lb/>
reaction to all the neg-<lb/>
ativism of the '60's and<lb/>
'70's. Perhaps we are<lb/>
tired of being the ugly<lb/>
American and want to<lb/>
identify more with Su-<lb/>
perman, the handsome<lb/>
American.<lb/>
cSle&amp;Saft yarns!<lb/>
LW 812 Dickimoo Ave. <lb/>
WE HAVE LILY PEARL<lb/>
COTTON<lb/>
Spinning Cla?? to bepn J?- 22<lb/>
through PITT TECH.<lb/>
Qll 752-0715<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) -<lb/>
It been a rough few<lb/>
years lor those of us<lb/>
addict (i ? secretly or<lb/>
otherwise ? to CBS'<lb/>
enduring family series,<lb/>
"The Waltons<lb/>
hirst. our hero.<lb/>
John-Boy, left Waltons'<lb/>
mountain to chase a<lb/>
writing career in new<lb/>
Vrk; this is when actor<lb/>
Richard Thomas decided<lb/>
to leave the show to<lb/>
broaden Ins horizons.<lb/>
Then Ellen Corby,<lb/>
who plays Grandma on<lb/>
the show, suffered a<lb/>
?ke, greatly reducing<lb/>
her role in the series.<lb/>
Between seasons, actor<lb/>
 ill Geer died, leaving<lb/>
sad for the man and<lb/>
beloved Grandpa<lb/>
K alton he portraved.<lb/>
And tonight. Mama<lb/>
Walton says goodbye to<lb/>
the mountain. Actress<lb/>
Michael Learned, who<lb/>
has been Olivia Walton<lb/>
tor seven years, leaves<lb/>
the series as a regular<lb/>
performer alter tonight's<lb/>
episode. She's leaving<lb/>
partly because she<lb/>
didn't expect "The<lb/>
Waltons" to return next<lb/>
season, which it ma<lb/>
not, and partly because<lb/>
of an urge to return to<lb/>
the stage.<lb/>
"The Waltons" was<lb/>
Miss Learned's first<lb/>
American TV venture.<lb/>
She joined the show in<lb/>
19i3 because she<lb/>
needed money, thinking<lb/>
it might last a few<lb/>
episodes, maybe even a<lb/>
couple of seasons.<lb/>
"I had just divorced<lb/>
my husband of 15 years,<lb/>
and I needed a jobI<lb/>
never dreamed the<lb/>
series would last that<lb/>
long<lb/>
But one of the<lb/>
strengths of "The Wal-<lb/>
tons" has been the<lb/>
ability to adapt to and<lb/>
often benefit from<lb/>
hanges and adversities<lb/>
among the cast. I've<lb/>
always resented it when<lb/>
after some real-life com-<lb/>
plication alters the com-<lb/>
plexion of a TV series,<lb/>
only casual, passing re-<lb/>
ference is made to the<lb/>
change and the show<lb/>
carries on as if nothing<lb/>
happened.<lb/>
This doesn't happen<lb/>
in real life, and it<lb/>
doesn't happen on "The<lb/>
Waltons to the show's<lb/>
credit. Difficulties adn<lb/>
disruptions are made to<lb/>
work for the show.<lb/>
When Thomas left<lb/>
the show, John-Boy<lb/>
didn't just vanish into<lb/>
the woods; his character<lb/>
is still heard from in<lb/>
letters and telephone<lb/>
calls. When Miss Corbv<lb/>
suffered her str9oke<lb/>
Grandma suffered a<lb/>
stroke; and when Miss<lb/>
Corby's doctor allowed<lb/>
her to return to work,<lb/>
Grandma came home<lb/>
from the hospital.<lb/>
When Will Geer<lb/>
died, a special memorial<lb/>
show was written as<lb/>
tribute to his character.<lb/>
Tonight in Miss Learn-<lb/>
ed's tearful farewell,<lb/>
Olivia discovers she has<lb/>
tuberculosis, leaving<lb/>
John Walton (Ralph<lb/>
Waite) to manage the<lb/>
remaining six members<lb/>
of the Walton brood.<lb/>
Creator Earl Hamner<lb/>
sees Miss Learned's de-<lb/>
parture as both a loss<lb/>
and an opportunity.<lb/>
"In those remaining<lb/>
shows this year in which<lb/>
John Walton is left<lb/>
without his wife, he will<lb/>
struggle to be mother<lb/>
and father without her.<lb/>
It places an additional<lb/>
burden upon him, but I<lb/>
think this lends credibil-<lb/>
ity to the show<lb/>
Still, we "Waltons"<lb/>
crazies will Miss Olivia.<lb/>
Miss Learned, who only<lb/>
came for the money<lb/>
understands.<lb/>
lcr.&amp;Sat.<lb/>
 BUV-V-<lb/>
BHECKIHW006<lb/>
Sale still going strong at<lb/>
TRAFFIC IIC I I<lb/>
Limited supply ?o please hurry.<lb/>
Plus all new goods not<lb/>
on sale are 10 off with<lb/>
your ECU I.D.<lb/>
This offer is effective through<lb/>
Feb. 3, 1979.<lb/>
Ill II ill 14 IK I I<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
10:00-9:00 MonSat<lb/>
inema<lb/>
movie<lb/>
P. A.<lb/>
SYSTEMS<lb/>
TOM<lb/>
sunn((<lb/>
By LUKE WHISNANT<lb/>
Writer<lb/>
Face it. folks: Green-<lb/>
'??  hardly a cultural<lb/>
Mr<lb/>
in fact, there is a<lb/>
downright dirth of quality<lb/>
entertainment here.<lb/>
I specially in the area<lb/>
not ies.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD film<lb/>
critic David Bosnick once<lb/>
summed it up: "Rr.<lb/>
viewing movies in Green-<lb/>
ville is like shooting fish<lb/>
in a barrel<lb/>
But now we have an<lb/>
alternative.<lb/>
For persons interested<lb/>
quality films at budget<lb/>
prices, the Greenville<lb/>
Cinema Society is the<lb/>
long-awaited awer.<lb/>
The Society was cre-<lb/>
ated last school year by<lb/>
two ECU English pro-<lb/>
fessors, Drs. Bill Ste-<lb/>
phenson and Peter Ma-<lb/>
cuck, with the intent of<lb/>
bringing superior qualin<lb/>
international films to a<lb/>
city where Smohey and<lb/>
the Bandit and The Cars<lb/>
that Eat People seem to<lb/>
be the most popular cin-<lb/>
ematic fare.<lb/>
The motto of the<lb/>
Society seems to be "Six<lb/>
Films for Six Dollars<lb/>
For a six dollar semester<lb/>
membership, one can<lb/>
view six top notch films.<lb/>
This semester's films<lb/>
were chosen on the basis<lb/>
of feedback from Society<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Members asked for<lb/>
more English-speaking<lb/>
films, so the selection<lb/>
committee has lined up<lb/>
two: American director<lb/>
Howard Zieffs Hearts of<lb/>
the West, (Jan. 28), and<lb/>
Canadian Jan Kadar's<lb/>
award-winning Lies My<lb/>
Father Told Me Feb<lb/>
In response to the<lb/>
popularity of shorter art,<lb/>
the Society has scheduled<lb/>
"An Evening of Short<lb/>
Films" for Feb. 25.<lb/>
A French film, The<lb/>
Theif of Pans. directed<lb/>
by Louis Malic, will be<lb/>
shown on Mar. 18, fol-<lb/>
lowed by the Japanese-<lb/>
Russian Dersu izala pr<lb/>
8.<lb/>
The spring series<lb/>
closes with Fellini's clas-<lb/>
sic La Strada ciety of Greenvil,e? and<lb/>
No .ndiv.dual t.ckets send them to Bill Ste-<lb/>
will be sold at the door, phenson, ECU Depart-<lb/>
To regtster for the spring ment of English, Green-<lb/>
series, make checks pav- ville N C 27834<lb/>
able to "The Cinema So-<lb/>
EARTH<lb/>
WOODSON<lb/>
PIANO-<lb/>
ORGAN<lb/>
WAREHOUSE<lb/>
BESirJrTITT PLAZA<lb/>
 30 GREENVILLE HI VD 1<lb/>
fPHONE 756-2032<lb/>
-WE HAVE<lb/>
MORETHAN<lb/>
?IANOS&amp; ORGAN<lb/>
HftNE&amp;'S-<lb/>
Coleman<lb/>
ECl XEUS BLREAL<lb/>
GREENVILLE - Pianist<lb/>
Donna Coleman of the East<lb/>
Carolina University School<lb/>
Music faculty performed<lb/>
in two recent recitals at<lb/>
i ale I niversity.<lb/>
She wa presented in a<lb/>
solo recital of contemporarv<lb/>
American piano music bv<lb/>
Ezra Stiles College in the<lb/>
Stiles Master's House, a<lb/>
program which included<lb/>
works by Carl Ruggles,<lb/>
Salvatore Marirano, Gre-<lb/>
gory Ballard and Charles<lb/>
Ives.<lb/>
In addition, she was<lb/>
featured with clarinetist<lb/>
Edward Johnson in a<lb/>
second recital, a perfor-<lb/>
mance of the Brahms<lb/>
Sonatas, Opus 120, Nos. 1<lb/>
and 2. The two performers<lb/>
will present the same<lb/>
program at ECU Jan. 10.<lb/>
Ms. Coleman joined the<lb/>
ECU keyboard faculty this<lb/>
fall, at the rank of<lb/>
lecturer. She is an alumna<lb/>
of Indiana University of<lb/>
Pennsylvania with the<lb/>
Master of Music degree<lb/>
from the University of<lb/>
Michigan.<lb/>
In September she was<lb/>
second place winner in the<lb/>
Kennedy Center-Rockefeller<lb/>
Foundation Competition for<lb/>
Excellence in the Perfor-<lb/>
mance of American Music.<lb/>
 CHANELO'S RUSH SPECIAL<lb/>
? IS STILL ON<lb/>
Buy a 20 Inch Party Pizza<lb/>
and get 3 FREE qts. of Coke<lb/>
Buy a 17 inch Pizza<lb/>
and get 2 FREE qts. of Coke<lb/>
Buy a 14 inch Pizza<lb/>
and get 1 FREE qt. of Coke<lb/>
DINE IN OR DELIVER<lb/>
CHANELO'S PIZZA<lb/>
FOR SUBS OR PIZZA<lb/>
CALL 758-7400<lb/>
SEMI ANNUAL<lb/>
BLACK CAT<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
Fall And Winter<lb/>
Merchandise<lb/>
30 to 50<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Price effective Jan. 18-Jan. 23<lb/>
ONE HOUR KORETIZING<lb/>
Body on Dristan Cough<lb/>
Tap Shampoo Formula 3 oz.<lb/>
for dry, normal, reg I.75<lb/>
oily hair sale 29<lb/>
2.72<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
or<lb/>
reg<lb/>
tale<lb/>
DRISTAN<lb/>
aporasa(Spr;iv<lb/>
The Student Union Free Flick<lb/>
This Weekend<lb/>
will be<lb/>
Smokey and The Bandit<lb/>
Fri. and Sat.<lb/>
at<lb/>
7:00 and 9:00<lb/>
FREE STORAGE<lb/>
OFF REG. PRICE<lb/>
DRY CLEANING<lb/>
LEATHERS<lb/>
SUEDE<lb/>
CLEANING<lb/>
?? AI?r?Hon<lb/>
? OftOfmf rvtco<lb/>
QUlet World<lb/>
Drittan Vapor<lb/>
Quiet World 12's N?l Spray 12<lb/>
reg 1.66<lb/>
?le 1.22<lb/>
EXTRA SPECIAL<lb/>
SAVINGS<lb/>
4W119<lb/>
V4A'<lb/>
tlMl<lb/>
nip<lb/>
vm<lb/>
pm7AM.H7PM<lb/>
CMA?l?$TNiXTTO!<lb/>
FIAZA<lb/>
Johnton &amp; Johnson<lb/>
Reach Toothbrush<lb/>
reg 1.12<lb/>
? .69<lb/>
-Driven Door &amp; Window Srvic-<lb/>
?t&amp;-rn Tun<lb/>
??Mm<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057171_0007"/><lb/>
 Roie" offtn?e. and<lb/>
18 January 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Lady Pirates lose<lb/>
heartbreaker to UNC<lb/>
IIMn DuPKEF<lb/>
unior<lb/>
?<lb/>
l d<lb/>
"Man I" in :<lb/>
Mill ol<lb/>
con ' Ml<lb/>
I<lb/>
ill and <lb/>
<lb/>
North (.ai<lb/>
I NI i<lb/>
-<lb/>
I I<lb/>
in lrn<lb/>
mi' and<lb/>
 I ' "<lb/>
! ,i MI ?<lb/>
irolnia<lb/>
nder<lb/>
;<lb/>
:<lb/>
Bill I K 111 ?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Gil<lb/>
tin'<lb/>
,<lb/>
we had to do inthe<lb/>
econd hall. No ime look<lb/>
command ol the offensi<lb/>
 K did a poor job on<lb/>
I (dense instead ol<lb/>
dosing oft the lane we<lb/>
ivould just -land there<lb/>
The completeh pulled<lb/>
us out ol out offense in<lb/>
se ond half.<lb/>
I horn ps m led t he<lb/>
Pirate trout line with 15<lb/>
hounds while on nei t -<lb/>
ing on 12 our ol 15 field<lb/>
goal attempts lor a<lb/>
phenominal 80 pert ent.<lb/>
Stead i enter-forw ard<lb/>
L tin Emerson, an un-<lb/>
led member i d<lb/>
f (.1 platoi<lb/>
with 15 poii<lb/>
grabs 1<lb/>
?<lb/>
shying<lb/>
v Inch rei<lb/>
n ites nrematurelv.<lb/>
Guard Kerbaugh, the<lb/>
Hue second<lb/>
i ? producer i m th<lb/>
?<lb/>
? -<lb/>
X2<lb/>
S<lb/>
a iik defense<lb/>
? I. D) PIR III<lb/>
lule gets<lb/>
tougher for E(U<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
?'<lb/>
-<lb/>
ts early<lb/>
' to<lb/>
? r Mack the<lb/>
Waltei M : Herb<lb/>
?<lb/>
jus!<lb/>
; iga inst<lb/>
rait . ery<lb/>
 -  fhev did i he same<lb/>
 p loi iked prett<lb/>
I rom t I uesda v<lb/>
terdav Gillman also said<lb/>
is returned horn' bei ause ol<lb/>
will not play in the<lb/>
?ad the Pirate- in scoring with<lb/>
IK V average followed by George Maynor who has<lb/>
- . . is getting 10 5 points<lb/>
j i- the Bm leading rebounder with<lb/>
?. rwood i- ECl s onl) other double<lb/>
with a 10.0 averag.<lb/>
OUl I II M U.K. THE I I lit In<lb/>
a ? loaning<lb/>
in l(i!<lb/>
Mack glams one home<lb/>
s"Utfl I<lb/>
John fi. Grogan<lb/>
Host lirats Tuesday<lb/>
Spring season begin s<lb/>
for ECU intramurals<lb/>
B'<lb/>
C Nm EDEME ER<lb/>
Staff ?? ? <lb/>
intramural program lor Spring S ster i- already underwav with men's and women'swOMEN p<lb/>
basketball start ing tonight i ? 134S Mi.<lb/>
tean - 1 ive signed uphV- ? '?<lb/>
mpetition. This? ? ? ' i<lb/>
 ear t here ha e heen a<lb/>
couple ol rule changes First, because ol continuous i lock.MENB -<lb/>
free-throws will be -hot until the last 2 minutes of each half. At this tune all tree throws willF l 1 K r In le H M hi D B ? ? ? ?utt<lb/>
t" two-shol fouls unless<lb/>
it i .i -hooting ). . when the shot has beenS' . ?- ?<lb/>
made. Second, there will be no lump balls. In junp hall situations, possession ol the ball will alternate betweenMEN 1. Bell . 1K Nads<lb/>
the team<lb/>
Both the men andMEN<lb/>
women's All-Campus1. Belk I1 ? i<lb/>
winners are back this2 K <lb/>
year and therefore leadNads<lb/>
the pre-season rankings! Si t St geS<lb/>
The Peace Pirates5. Langs ton D.J "s<lb/>
who took the women's1 N ! . .<lb/>
crown last vear, and the7 Slavs! Bas ! <lb/>
Belk Plea-er- who wonVillians<lb/>
Wolfpack in state of shock after loss<lb/>
B.<lb/>
 II i:i I S i .11 NDl.EB<lb/>
N i State's nation<lb/>
ally ranked basketball<lb/>
mi i- in a -tate ol<lb/>
I h i - i - the i in;<lb/>
that has heen ranked in<lb/>
I ? tor much o<lb/>
tin- season 1 hi- is the<lb/>
?hi that one major<lb/>
' ollege i oach i ailed<lb/>
? 11 her tin- vear, "the<lb/>
team I've -ecu in<lb/>
the entire i iluntry ' But<lb/>
tin- i- also the team<lb/>
that stands 0 in CC<lb/>
The I 1th ranked<lb/>
 oltp.it k dropped then<lb/>
fourth (A game ol the<lb/>
young league season last<lb/>
night at the hand- of<lb/>
the I N(. far Heels<lb/>
7(' 69 on a last second<lb/>
i! and dunk play l<lb/>
the Heel defensive<lb/>
standout Dudlev Brad<lb/>
le<lb/>
The Wolfpack had<lb/>
trailed W-19 at the half<lb/>
before staging a brilliant<lb/>
ma be even rniraculou -<lb/>
econd half comeback.<lb/>
The Pack had the ball<lb/>
with a one point lead<lb/>
with 10 seconds left<lb/>
alter a I N(, missed<lb/>
field ge.il But on the<lb/>
way up court. stage<lb/>
wuarge Clyde Austin<lb/>
saw the game literally<lb/>
stolen from his team b<lb/>
Bradley<lb/>
I he Pack must now<lb/>
regroup for next I u<lb/>
day night's game a<lb/>
gainst the ECl Pirates<lb/>
in Raleigh. The Pirates<lb/>
have been an up and<lb/>
down team .ill vear.<lb/>
defeating South Carolina<lb/>
last week in a mighty<lb/>
upset before being hu-<lb/>
miliated b rennessee-<lb/>
itanooga earlier this<lb/>
 eek .<lb/>
The oltpa.k will be<lb/>
an overwhelming fa<lb/>
ite in the game. But<lb/>
the must most certainly<lb/>
he careful not to day<lb/>
dow ri the game w it the<lb/>
Pirate- and look back at<lb/>
the traumatii I N(. lo<lb/>
Foi it was none other<lb/>
t ban Fl ank M (.Hire,<lb/>
Si 'tit h (Ian ilina head<lb/>
i oach, w ho -tated that<lb/>
hi- team wa- not men<lb/>
tallv read loi the<lb/>
ie-<lb/>
1'he Wolfpack has<lb/>
awesome offensive tire-<lb/>
power- that was dis-<lb/>
plaved in full force in<lb/>
the -econd hall ol the<lb/>
I NC game la-t evening.<lb/>
Point guard Clyde<lb/>
Austin is the best at his<lb/>
position in the ACC. He<lb/>
run- the &amp; olfpack of-<lb/>
fense to near-perfection<lb/>
and has a deadly out-<lb/>
side -Hot to go with his<lb/>
dazzling inside moves.<lb/>
The other guard is<lb/>
senior Tons Warren, one<lb/>
ol the best all-around<lb/>
players in the confer-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
At forward. the<lb/>
w olfpack starts Hawk-<lb/>
eye Whitney and Tiny<lb/>
Pmder, This dup crashes<lb/>
the boards about as well<lb/>
as any forward combin-<lb/>
ation in the nation. Both<lb/>
i an be i ounted upon in<lb/>
the clutch and both are<lb/>
powerful tone- insidi<lb/>
t center, the <lb/>
pack di ide pla ing tin<lb/>
between senior Glenn<lb/>
Sudhop and sophomo<lb/>
Craig att- Neither<lb/>
a -tar. but the tact that<lb/>
the V olfpack is aide to<lb/>
keep a fresh big man in<lb/>
the game all the tune i-<lb/>
a plus for Norm Sloan<lb/>
and company<lb/>
State big pills just<lb/>
may be their bench.<lb/>
Kenny Matthews almost<lb/>
killed UNC la-t night<lb/>
with his deadh outside<lb/>
-hooting Donnie Per<lb/>
km t Jones, and<lb/>
Steve Parzych also pro<lb/>
v ide super depth<lb/>
Vs ith last night's loss<lb/>
the Wolfpack stands at<lb/>
11-5 on the season. The<lb/>
Pirates are 6-8<lb/>
Mpha ! ;<lb/>
I<lb/>
i ?  ? ; .<lb/>
M<lb/>
1 ' Omega<lb/>
Delta<lb/>
1 6 ' ai d 126 'J<lb/>
? ly<lb/>
III ? Till dl <lb/>
f- leming lead- w ith<lb/>
575 8 followed by Cotten<lb/>
with U8.5 and Tler<lb/>
with 233.5<lb/>
I f" om registra-<lb/>
tions in hole Roi<lb/>
and rm<lb/>
W ' Jan. In<lb/>
rollerball there will be<lb/>
two leagues set up One<lb/>
will play on skat and<lb/>
the other will<lb/>
sneakers<lb/>
<pb facs="00057171_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 January 1979<lb/>
Ah, the grace of a'Swann'<lb/>
LYMS Sit INN, THE Pittsburgh<lb/>
Steeler's super graceful wide-receiver<lb/>
catches a cruiciai pass against the<lb/>
Houston Oilers in this Year's AFC<lb/>
Championship Game. Swarm suffered<lb/>
an injured ankle earlier this week, a<lb/>
fact that is of much concern to Steeler<lb/>
fans, who are looking forward to<lb/>
Pittsburgh 's Sunday encounter with<lb/>
the Dallas Cowboys in Super Bowl<lb/>
Mil.<lb/>
Swann's injury has<lb/>
Steelers concerned<lb/>
By BRlCE LOWITT<lb/>
4P Sports Writer<lb/>
MIAMI (AP) - Lynn Swann's foot<lb/>
ma wind up rivaling Paul Warfield's<lb/>
hamstring or Fran Tarkenton's<lb/>
?re this dav<lb/>
Sviann the<lb/>
arm<lb/>
is over. .<lb/>
vann, the lithe wide receiver of<lb/>
ie Pittsburgh Steeler limped out of<lb/>
camp and ito Parkway<lb/>
uesday after teammate Ron<lb/>
hepped on his left<lb/>
rung<lb/>
H<lb/>
? iurin<lb/>
rorkout lor Sunday's Super<lb/>
was broken, X-ravs<lb/>
sn tl ? Steelers -aid Swann<lb/>
ild resume practicing today. But<lb/>
md in tape, was bruised<lb/>
and Swann was limping.<lb/>
And that wa- enough to cause a<lb/>
Moment m the rumor-ripe<lb/>
'here that pervades every Super<lb/>
I. where a sniffle quickly becomes<lb/>
? pneumonia and a sprain turns<lb/>
npound fracture.<lb/>
I: was hack before Super Bowl VIII<lb/>
in Houston thai Warfield, the Miami<lb/>
Doi premier wide receiver.<lb/>
'di had a damaging hamstring<lb/>
It was the talk of the town lor<lb/>
wa- just a lot of<lb/>
ays, but<lb/>
 artield made hi- quota of<lb/>
hot ai<lb/>
artistii es and the Dolphin blew<lb/>
awa Minnesota 24-7.<lb/>
next yt-ar the Vikings were<lb/>
? in the Super Bowl. And all of a<lb/>
Iden the word was out the Fran<lb/>
Tarkenton, Minnesota's quarterback,<lb/>
uld barely lift his arm. He could do<lb/>
a lot more than that, of course ? and<lb/>
Hi- passing didn't suffer<lb/>
ible. Only the Vikings suffered<lb/>
again, beaten 16-6 by Pittsburgh.<lb/>
Now is was Swann's turn to<lb/>
become the center of attention.<lb/>
It - pain, but I've been able to<lb/>
take pain he said in a telephone<lb/>
interview when asked about the<lb/>
injury. "I'll be able to go out there<lb/>
and play with a broken foot. It's<lb/>
going to hurt a whole lot and I might<lb/>
not be able to practice until Sundav<lb/>
morning. But I'll be tough. A broken<lb/>
toot i-n't going to stop me<lb/>
And then Swann burst out<lb/>
laughing. He'd been kidding all the<lb/>
time. He wasn't really hurt that bad.<lb/>
"h'H be all right he said,<lb/>
serious now. "I should be able to<lb/>
practice tomorrow<lb/>
The injury occured when Swann<lb/>
and Johnson, the Steeler left<lb/>
cornerback, "were running side bj<lb/>
-ide. I thought I had room to move to<lb/>
the inside and I was wrong. He jut<lb/>
stepped down ? right on my foot<lb/>
Swann will no doubt be the center<lb/>
oi the Cowboy attention on Sundav,<lb/>
just as he was in Super Bowl X.<lb/>
Dallas, of course, is hoping its efforts<lb/>
this time around will be more<lb/>
successful.<lb/>
- far as I know, the last lime<lb/>
somebod) -aid thev were going to<lb/>
intimidate me in the Super Bowl, I<lb/>
ended up the MVP said Swann, on<lb/>
the end (d a touchdown pass plav that<lb/>
covered 64 yards and gave the<lb/>
Steelers their 21-17 victory over the<lb/>
"Intimidation" has become the<lb/>
byword ol theis Super Bowl. Can the<lb/>
Steelers intimidate Tony Dorsett of<lb/>
Dallas? Can Hollywood Henderson of<lb/>
the Cowboys intimidate Pittsburgh?<lb/>
Does all the talk mean anything?<lb/>
Apparently not. Virtually every<lb/>
player who has anything to say on the<lb/>
matter shrugs off this intimidation<lb/>
business, especially in a game with<lb/>
team- of this calibre.<lb/>
H a player can be intimidated,<lb/>
everyone finds out about it in a hurrv<lb/>
and he isn't around very long ? and<lb/>
he certainly doesn't get to the Super<lb/>
Bowl said Swann.<lb/>
W e don't talk about intimidation.<lb/>
People tell us that we are the<lb/>
intimidators. We just go out and plav<lb/>
football. We've been coached that you<lb/>
win games by tackling and by moving<lb/>
the ball and scoring piints.<lb/>
"It always seems other people are<lb/>
talking about how they're not going to<lb/>
be intimidated by us. Sometimes they<lb/>
even trv and reverse it, sav they're<lb/>
going to be the intimidating team<lb/>
John Stallworth, known for the<lb/>
most part as Pittsburgh's "other"<lb/>
receiver before setting a National<lb/>
Fottball League playoff record with 10<lb/>
catches against Denver, also brushes<lb/>
away suggetions that the Cowboys,<lb/>
with All-Pro safeties Charlie Waters<lb/>
and Cliff Harris, can intimidate<lb/>
Pittsburgh's pass-catchers.<lb/>
"Weve played against hard-hitting<lb/>
teams before ? you can talk about<lb/>
the Oakland secondary with George<lb/>
Atkinson and Jack Tatum back there<lb/>
? so it's not a different feeling for<lb/>
U playing against hard-hitting safe-<lb/>
ties like Dallas has Stallworth says.<lb/>
Hey, y'know, we practice against<lb/>
two ol the hardest-hitting safeties in<lb/>
the league. Donnie Shell and Mike<lb/>
V agner<lb/>
And Stallworth's two teammates,<lb/>
-landing nearby, grinned ? intimi-<lb/>
dating!) .<lb/>
Dallas9 dynamic Tony Dorsett<lb/>
Steelers, Cowboys in 'Super' Bowl<lb/>
The upcoming Super<lb/>
Bowl featuring the Dal-<lb/>
las Cowboys and the<lb/>
Pittsburgh Steelers has<lb/>
been billed as a truly<lb/>
"super" matchup. The<lb/>
two clubs involved are<lb/>
considered by nearly all<lb/>
observors to be the two<lb/>
very best teams in the<lb/>
NFL this season.<lb/>
The winner will be-<lb/>
come the first three<lb/>
time winner in Super<lb/>
Bowl history. Such a<lb/>
game presents many<lb/>
arguements when pre-<lb/>
diction time rolls around<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Several FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD staff have spoken<lb/>
on the game as follows:<lb/>
TERRY HERNDON:<lb/>
This year's matchup<lb/>
in Super Bowl XIII<lb/>
should produce a game<lb/>
that live up to its<lb/>
billing. Dallas, the NFC<lb/>
representative, is the<lb/>
defensing champion of<lb/>
pro football, while Pitts-<lb/>
burgh, the AFC repre-<lb/>
sentative, owns this<lb/>
season's best record.<lb/>
The "Flex Defense"<lb/>
employed by Dallas have<lb/>
proven effective against<lb/>
weak NFC competition,<lb/>
as the Cowboys have<lb/>
ranked near the top in<lb/>
total defense all season.<lb/>
Dallas won last year's<lb/>
Super Bowl by stoppin<lb/>
the rushing game of the<lb/>
Denver Bronco's on first<lb/>
down. Facing second<lb/>
and third downs with<lb/>
long yardage to go,<lb/>
Denver wasd forced to<lb/>
throw.<lb/>
Dallas put a big rush<lb/>
on Bronco quarterback<lb/>
Craig Morton, whose<lb/>
immobility proved fatal,<lb/>
and the Cowboys picked<lb/>
off four first half passes.<lb/>
However, Pittsburgh<lb/>
should not be troubled<lb/>
by these problems.<lb/>
Franco Harris and<lb/>
his sidekick, Rocky Blei-<lb/>
er, will be able to run<lb/>
behind Pittsburgh's<lb/>
standout offensive line,<lb/>
and quarterback Terry<lb/>
Bradshaw should find<lb/>
adequate time to find<lb/>
his receivers. Brad-<lb/>
shaw's running ability<lb/>
separates him from most<lb/>
other quarterbacks and<lb/>
will certainly provide an<lb/>
escape when the Cow-<lb/>
boys think they have<lb/>
him lassoed.<lb/>
In a tight<lb/>
Pittsburgh will<lb/>
24-17.<lb/>
JIMMY DuPREE:<lb/>
game,<lb/>
win<lb/>
While many specula-<lb/>
tors express the view<lb/>
that Super Bowl XIII<lb/>
will simply be a repeat<lb/>
of Super Bowl X, wit<lb/>
the Steelers conquering<lb/>
the chagrined Cowboys,<lb/>
one must not be so<lb/>
hasty as to overlook the<lb/>
powerful aspects of the<lb/>
Dallas offense.<lb/>
True; Terry Brad-<lb/>
shaw has had vast<lb/>
success connecting with<lb/>
his favorite target, Lynn<lb/>
Swann, and running<lb/>
backs Franco Harris and<lb/>
Rocky Bleier have im-<lb/>
pressive stats on the<lb/>
ground. However, Ed<lb/>
Jones, Harvey MArtin<lb/>
and Randy White form<lb/>
the backbone of a de-<lb/>
fense capable of nul-<lb/>
lifying any offensive<lb/>
strenghts.<lb/>
Roger Staubach's<lb/>
success with Billy Joe<lb/>
DuPree makes an equal-<lb/>
ly awesome combination<lb/>
 Fountainhead<lb/>
Editorial Board<lb/>
meeting Monday at<lb/>
 5<lb/>
? Join The<lb/>
r$hmBiz<lb/>
Gi&amp;ats<lb/>
'Summer<lb/>
In the Disney College Workshop<lb/>
 SINGERS ?<lb/>
? INSTRUMENTALISTS <lb/>
You could find yourself performing<lb/>
on the most famous stage of all<lb/>
Disneyland. uiait?isne?utertd.<lb/>
' P'?n? ?"?lC' OM<lb/>
College Freshmen. Sophomores and Juniors are eligible to audition for this 12 we<lb/>
summer workshop in entertainment Scholarships, housing grants and stipends w<lb/>
be awarded those selected Minimum age, 18.<lb/>
Singers: Prepare vocal piece of your choice Disney choreographers w provide<lb/>
dance routine?singers must dance<lb/>
Instrumentalists: Prepare 3-5 minute performance selection ALL APPLICANTS<lb/>
BRING MUSIC. INSTRUMENTS (including doubles), PHOTOS AND RESUMES<lb/>
FOR ALL INFORMATION REGARDING AUDITIONS CONTACT:<lb/>
DISNEYLAND WALT DISNEY WORLD<lb/>
1313HartxxEWvd po Box40<lb/>
Anaheim, CA 92803 Lake Buena Vista FL 32830<lb/>
(714) 533-4456 ext 701 (305) 824-4206 ext 4206<lb/>
DO NOT CALL AUDITION LOCATION<lb/>
Live auditions will be held at the toUowing tocations<lb/>
Feb. 9, 10 A.M. - 6 P.M.<lb/>
GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY<lb/>
University Plaza<lb/>
Atlanta, Georgia 30303<lb/>
GET YOUR ACT<lb/>
TOGETHER<lb/>
And let the world catch it ot The<lb/>
Old Country. Dusch Gardens in<lb/>
Villiomsburg. Vo<lb/>
During our 1979 Audition Tour<lb/>
we'll be looking for singers<lb/>
oncers, mimes, jugglers<lb/>
ouppeteers magicians<lb/>
bagpipers, vio'mists.<lb/>
bluegross bonds. ?<lb/>
musicians and<lb/>
technicians<lb/>
A spectacular new Musical <lb/>
Revue m our Hastings Music J <lb/>
Theotre will open the doors to anVk Jff &amp;j?<lb/>
exciting experience for more sing- T Jl ffi<lb/>
ers, dancers and technicians than i  <lb/>
ever before '<lb/>
Work with outstanding talents and eorn a<lb/>
good salary while you're at it Get your oct together ond<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 Datei<lb/>
Jon, 22, 1979(Mon)<lb/>
1:00 PM tO 5:00 P.M.<lb/>
A J Fletcher Recital Holl<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville. N.C<lb/>
Huvh (.ardiTc.<lb/>
W iHwrrnhMni. Mi.<lb/>
An equol opportunity<lb/>
mploy?rMrH<lb/>
Accompanist record ploy' ond cossette recorder win be ovoitoble<lb/>
to the Bradshaw-Swann<lb/>
dup. No one can deny<lb/>
the open field ability of<lb/>
Tony Dorsett or the<lb/>
coaching ability of Tom<lb/>
Landry; just two more<lb/>
reasons why Dallas<lb/>
should nip the Steelers<lb/>
by four.<lb/>
CHARLES CHANDLER:<lb/>
The key to this game<lb/>
could be the battle<lb/>
between the Steeler of-<lb/>
fensive line and the<lb/>
Dallas defensive line.<lb/>
The Pittsburgh offensive<lb/>
front needs to keep the<lb/>
Dalls "Doomsday De-<lb/>
fense" away from Terry<lb/>
Bradshaw for him to be<lb/>
effective. Also, Steeler<lb/>
backs Franco Harris and<lb/>
Rocky Bleier do need a<lb/>
certain amount of room<lb/>
to run.<lb/>
As for the Dallas<lb/>
defense, one needs only<lb/>
to look back to last<lb/>
year's Super Bowl<lb/>
game. The Cowboys hu-<lb/>
miliated Denver's Bron-<lb/>
cos with that defensive<lb/>
front. Thr Steeler offen-<lb/>
sive line simply must<lb/>
perform well. The feel-<lb/>
ing here is that both<lb/>
opposing lines will ahve<lb/>
their moments of glory.<lb/>
The "hidden key" to<lb/>
this game may come<lb/>
back to the Dalls com-<lb/>
puter offense and coach<lb/>
Tom Landry's coachng<lb/>
strategy. Many teams<lb/>
have lost Super Bowl<lb/>
games because they<lb/>
were afraid of doing<lb/>
something wrong. Lan-<lb/>
dry won't do this Sun-<lb/>
day. He has a history of<lb/>
being a wide-open<lb/>
coach. After all, who<lb/>
brought the flee-flicker<lb/>
back to the NFL?<lb/>
Landry's open-mind-<lb/>
edness may catch the<lb/>
Steelers off-guard and<lb/>
therefore give his club a<lb/>
mighty boost. If he does<lb/>
decide to gamble on<lb/>
offense, e he has the<lb/>
tools in Roger Stauback,<lb/>
Tony Dorsett, Billy Joe<lb/>
DuPree, and Tony Hill.<lb/>
Another man to watch<lb/>
for Sunday is Preston<lb/>
Pearson. He would like<lb/>
nothing better than to<lb/>
play a big role in de-<lb/>
feating his old team<lb/>
mates. He does have a<lb/>
va of being at the<lb/>
right place at the right<lb/>
time.<lb/>
uper<lb/>
I t 1 i<lb/>
n super<lb/>
Bowl, Dallas-<lb/>
come out on top b 3.<lb/>
"THE MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRLS<lb/>
EVER ASSEMBLED FOR ONE<lb/>
X-RATED FILM<lb/>
"<lb/>
264 Playhouse '<lb/>
COME SMELL MY PWE PERNHE<lb/>
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starring MARGO NEAL ? PETER HALCOM BE- REN A BROWN and<lb/>
introducing DAWN STARR an flpg PPTEfTHSFl mCOBP release<lb/>
in COLOR ?<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
THE HEAD HUNTER<lb/>
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located at Rivergate Shopping Ct on<lb/>
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Jack Dixon and Jimmy Dixon<lb/>
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Seek, flight, snorkel jackets<lb/>
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BuftwHer, ScWttz, Miller. Strops $7.88<lb/>
BufcWtf, ScNrtz. Mfcr, Stall's Kigs $39.00<lb/>
SO Lbs. Ice $2.75<lb/>
ALL SKI APPAREL &amp;<lb/>
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GOLF SHOES 25 OFF<lb/>
ALL TENNIS BALLS,<lb/>
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12 PRICE. <lb/>
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P?lon 754 no<lb/>
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Thursday Family Night<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
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PERCH OR TROUT$.as<lb/>
FLOUNDER z$<lb/>
SHRIMP $4.2$<lb/>
OYSTERStM?<lb/>
Dinner meal Includes Golden Crisp<lb/>
French Fries, Cole Slaw, Tartar Sauce<lb/>
 ??! the world's<lb/>
1 lilMHIl 5 Sun. thru Thurs.<lb/>
1890 Frl &amp; ??<lb/>
SulIOOfl 4:30.10:00<lb/>
Friday's Seafood<lb/>
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tyr-jK p x 1 iv<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057171_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>