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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057174_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
North<lb/>
Vol. 55<lb/>
luary 1079<lb/>
Tenants homeless after fire<lb/>
GREG WRIGHT, 15, discovered the fire at an<lb/>
apartment at Tar River and reported it to the<lb/>
Greenville Fire Department. Photo by Doug White)<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
One apartment was gutted, an-<lb/>
other received water damage and six<lb/>
couples were forced out of their<lb/>
homes Monday night due to a fire in<lb/>
one building of Tar River Apartments<lb/>
on 104 Ash St. Other apartments in<lb/>
the building received smoke damage.<lb/>
The fire began in the kitchen of<lb/>
Apt. 6 around 5 p.m. and swept<lb/>
upstairs and into an open attic space<lb/>
running the length of the building.<lb/>
The fire apparently began when<lb/>
record albums left on the stove<lb/>
caught fire, according to Beth Gillum,<lb/>
23, the wife of an ECU political<lb/>
science graduate student and a<lb/>
neighbor in Apt. 5.<lb/>
The tenants of Apt. 6 had just<lb/>
moved in and were gone when the<lb/>
electricity was turned on. The stove<lb/>
was set on high and ignited the<lb/>
records, she said.<lb/>
The fire had burned through a<lb/>
window when it was spotted by Greg<lb/>
Wright, 15, who tried to in vain to<lb/>
fight the flames with a fire<lb/>
extinguisher. He reported the fire at<lb/>
5:28 p.m.<lb/>
Four trucks and 20 men re-<lb/>
sponded to the call and stayed on<lb/>
the scene until 8:15 p.m. One<lb/>
fireman suffered a burned ear and<lb/>
was treated and released from Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital, according<lb/>
to hospital and fire department<lb/>
spokesmen.<lb/>
No estimate of the damage has<lb/>
been made yet, and residents of the<lb/>
building were reluctant to assess<lb/>
their own losses until they could<lb/>
contact their insurance agents. The<lb/>
grounds around the building were<lb/>
muddy and the carpets in the<lb/>
damaged apartment were more water<lb/>
than fabric. Residents were busy<lb/>
loading their belongings into cars or<lb/>
friends' apartments.<lb/>
Tenants of the building were<lb/>
moved to the Ramada Inn at the<lb/>
apartment complex's expense, ac-<lb/>
cording to Jerry Cox, manager of Tar<lb/>
River Apartments. He said he hoped<lb/>
to have better arrangements by<lb/>
Tuesday morning.<lb/>
FIREMEN FIGHT A blaze which River Apartment Complex Monday-<lb/>
gutted several apartments at Tar night. Photo by Doug White)<lb/>
Williams nominated for election chairpe<lb/>
By CHRIS CAGLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
SGA President Tom-<lb/>
ni Joe Payne nom-<lb/>
inated Jeff Williams,<lb/>
SGA Secretary for Ex-<lb/>
ternal affairs, for Spring<lb/>
elections chairman, at<lb/>
the Monday meeting of<lb/>
the SGA legislature.<lb/>
U illiams' name was<lb/>
sent to the Screenings<lb/>
and Appointments com-<lb/>
mittee for consideration.<lb/>
Payne said that he<lb/>
has confidence Wil-<lb/>
liams honest and his<lb/>
ability to do the job.<lb/>
"Jeff i qualified for<lb/>
the job. He has already<lb/>
been through one<lb/>
Spring election so he<lb/>
knows what is expected<lb/>
and what is required<lb/>
said Payne.<lb/>
The Appropriation to<lb/>
Team Handball was<lb/>
sent back to the com-<lb/>
mittee. The team re-<lb/>
quested $1370. This in-<lb/>
cludes money for un-<lb/>
iforms, hotel accomoda-<lb/>
tions to the West Point<lb/>
tournament and hotel<lb/>
accomodations for the<lb/>
National Tournament in<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
Some of the mem-<lb/>
bers felt the request<lb/>
was too much and SGA<lb/>
should not support the<lb/>
bill. They also felt the<lb/>
survival of the team<lb/>
handball does not de-<lb/>
pend on this figure.<lb/>
The members added<lb/>
that, if the rugby team<lb/>
had to get out and<lb/>
organize events to raise<lb/>
money for their uni-<lb/>
forms, the handball<lb/>
team should do the<lb/>
same.<lb/>
Phil Marion, a<lb/>
member of the Handball<lb/>
Team, spoke to SGA<lb/>
members. "We have a<lb/>
better team this year<lb/>
and we are gaining na-<lb/>
tional recognition for<lb/>
ECU. This year the<lb/>
tournament will be held<lb/>
in Madison Square Gar-<lb/>
den New York He<lb/>
added that, "Last year<lb/>
at the tournament we<lb/>
won one out of five<lb/>
games, but we still re-<lb/>
ceived national recogni-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
According to Marion,<lb/>
the reason the handball<lb/>
team does not want to<lb/>
buy their uniforms is<lb/>
because some team<lb/>
members will be grad-<lb/>
uating and taking their<lb/>
uniforms with them,<lb/>
this would cause new<lb/>
team members to be<lb/>
without uniforms and<lb/>
new uniforms will be<lb/>
hard to order, because<lb/>
the design of the uni-<lb/>
form may change.<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne,<lb/>
SGA president submit-<lb/>
ted the name of Jeff<lb/>
Williams for the election<lb/>
chairperson to the<lb/>
members. "One who<lb/>
has been through this<lb/>
type qf election before,<lb/>
I think he would be fair<lb/>
and honest in the poli-<lb/>
tical election com-<lb/>
mented Payne.<lb/>
The Student Welfare<lb/>
Committee reported that<lb/>
it has divided into sub-<lb/>
committees, so the<lb/>
members can concen-<lb/>
trate into the three<lb/>
areas: parking and<lb/>
towing, consumer book-<lb/>
let for students, and<lb/>
lighting unsafe areas on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The committee re-<lb/>
ported that the con-<lb/>
sumer booklet will con-<lb/>
sist of listings of re-<lb/>
staurants, apartments,<lb/>
convenience stores, en-<lb/>
tertainment areas,<lb/>
banks, fast foods and<lb/>
grocery stores in the<lb/>
Pitt County area.<lb/>
What's inside <lb/>
J.J. Cale appears at RoxySee p.6.<lb/>
ECU SChool of Art faculty exhibition<lb/>
See p.6.<lb/>
Pirate basketball team upsets Georgia<lb/>
Tech, 66-64See p.7.<lb/>
Lady Pirates destroy Long wood, 82-42<lb/>
See p.7.<lb/>
Greek Forum<lb/>
See p.5.<lb/>
needs participation<lb/>
Towing affects several ECU students<lb/>
See p.3.<lb/>
DON SCHLITZ<lb/>
See p. 6.)<lb/>
Jarvis residents moved<lb/>
ECU School of MBHiing<lb/>
By ANITA LANCASTER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Jarvis Dorm residents were informed during a<lb/>
Jan. 25 meeting with Carolyn Fulghum, dean of<lb/>
women, that they would be moved out of Jarvis<lb/>
within the next two weeks. The evacuation of Jarvis<lb/>
was the result of a Jan. 9 incident in which a<lb/>
ceiling in the west wing of Jarvis Dorm caved in.<lb/>
New facilities initiated<lb/>
By STEPHEN WILSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU School of Medicine is continuing to<lb/>
make the rapid progress that it has since its<lb/>
inception. Although the Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital complex has already begun to take its<lb/>
place as a fully functioning regional medical center,<lb/>
there are many programs and facilities soon to be<lb/>
initiated by the School of Medicine.<lb/>
These new programs and facilities are being<lb/>
anxiously awaited on by all of the faculty, staff, and<lb/>
students directly concerned with the School, and<lb/>
they will greatly affect the quality of medical care<lb/>
available to the regional community.<lb/>
Since many of the facts concerning the school's<lb/>
formation and operation have been confused, or<lb/>
vaguely understood, by many ECU students, and<lb/>
since a better liason is sought between the Medical<lb/>
School and all of the other departments within the<lb/>
university, a brief history is in order.<lb/>
The plans for the formulation of the School of<lb/>
Medicine were being considered prior to 1965, when<lb/>
the General Assembly of the State of North Carolina<lb/>
provided planning funds for East Carolina College<lb/>
lor its establishment. Additional funding and<lb/>
encouragement was given to the university by the<lb/>
Assembly, and in 1969 the recruitment process for<lb/>
the necessary core faculty and administrative<lb/>
personnel was begun.<lb/>
In 1971, the recommendation of Governor Robert<lb/>
Scott and the State Board of Higher Education,<lb/>
lunds were appropriated by the Assembly to allow<lb/>
the enrollment of the first class in 1972. From 1972<lb/>
to 1975 the School operated on a First Year<lb/>
r-rogram in Medical Education in cooperation with<lb/>
the School of Medicine of the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill. All students who<lb/>
successfully completed this First Year Program at<lb/>
fcLU were automatically transferred into the<lb/>
sophomore class at UNC-CH.<lb/>
r 5? � vC Aisembly a�owed for the expansion<lb/>
of the First Year Program and the establishment of<lb/>
a second-year curriculum at ECU. But in November,<lb/>
ECU MED SCHOOL is initiating several new<lb/>
programs and facilities which will be in conjunction<lb/>
t<lb/>
with the new Pitt Memorial.<lb/>
<lb/>
Photo by Chap Gurtey<lb/>
1974, ECU was authorized to begin work on a<lb/>
complete degree-granting School of Medicine.<lb/>
Appropriations by the Assembly at this point<lb/>
were in excess of $43 million. Accreditation was<lb/>
awarded in April, 1977, and 28 students were<lb/>
enrolled in the School's first class. Since then, the<lb/>
School has enrolled its second class of 36 students,<lb/>
and Residency Programs have been initiated in<lb/>
Family Practice, Psychiatry, Internal Medicine,<lb/>
Pediatrics, Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Surgery.<lb/>
At present, the School ts housed in several<lb/>
interim facilities, until the future Health Campus is<lb/>
completed adjacent to Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
Several of the Basic Science courses are being<lb/>
taught in the ECU Science Complex. Ragsdale Hall,<lb/>
which was formerly a dormitory, has been<lb/>
completely renovated and houses such departments<lb/>
as Physiology, Pharmacology, and Pathology. The<lb/>
Department of Psychiatry occupies its own interim<lb/>
facility adjacent to the hospital.<lb/>
Some other departments have moved to their<lb/>
permanent sites on the Hospital Complex. In the<lb/>
main building of the Complex are located the<lb/>
Departments of Pediatics, Obstetrics and Gyn-<lb/>
ecology, Surgery, and Radiology.<lb/>
The soon to be completed Health Campus will<lb/>
include several major additions to the Medical<lb/>
Complex. The nine-story Science Education Building<lb/>
and adjacent Administration Building will be the<lb/>
future center of operations for the Mescal School<lb/>
Construction on these buildings has begun with an<lb/>
anticipated completion date of summer, 1980.<lb/>
Since the major goal of the Medical School is to<lb/>
provide physicians who intend to enter the Family<lb/>
Practice, or other related Primary Care specialties,<lb/>
growth in these departments has occured at a<lb/>
greatly accelerated rate.<lb/>
The striking, new, Family Practice Center<lb/>
exemplifies well the effect that the Medical School<lb/>
will have on the regional community. The Family<lb/>
Practice Center is now fully staffed with four<lb/>
full-time faculty members and 14 resident<lb/>
physicians.<lb/>
It offers some of the most sophisticated<lb/>
programs found in the field for its patients, and can<lb/>
boast of the most advanced facilities and equipment<lb/>
offered as well.<lb/>
"What I have to tell you is very hard to say, so<lb/>
I am going to be as honest as possible. The<lb/>
university has been advised by the State<lb/>
Department of Insurance that, as a precautionarv<lb/>
measure, we must relocate you as soon as<lb/>
possible Fulghum's opening statement was met<lb/>
with mixed reactions from the residents. There were<lb/>
shouts of happiness, tears and anger at the news of<lb/>
the mandatory move from Jari.<lb/>
Fulghum stated that the dorm would only be<lb/>
closed temporarily, and stated further that, the<lb/>
building has not, and I repeat, has not been<lb/>
condemned She said that the building had been<lb/>
inspected and the university was assured that it was<lb/>
safe. However, the State Department of Insurance,<lb/>
upon receiving the investigative report on the<lb/>
accident, advised that the dorm residents be<lb/>
evacuated from the dorm in order to make the<lb/>
needed repairs.<lb/>
Fulghum told residents that this would be a<lb/>
permanent move for the remainder of the year.<lb/>
"We know that this is a difficult time for you,<lb/>
but the university has no choice, we must relocate<lb/>
you and make the needed repairs said Fulghum<lb/>
to the residents. "The university is willing to help<lb/>
you as much as we can to make the move as easy<lb/>
as possible<lb/>
Fulghum went on to explain exactly what the<lb/>
university would do. Residents were given a list of<lb/>
one-occupant dorm rooms (148) and a list of<lb/>
off-campus housing (37), which were supplied bv the<lb/>
ECU Housing Office. The univeristy would also<lb/>
supply movers to help relocate the women's<lb/>
belongings to other dorms on campus.<lb/>
The residents were advised to start looking for a<lb/>
new place to live as soon as possible as, "it will be<lb/>
a first-come, first-serve basis. We will give you time<lb/>
to look for another place to stay, but if you don't<lb/>
find a place soon, housing will have to assign you<lb/>
to a room Fulghum said. She also said she would<lb/>
send a memo to one-occupant dorm rooms asking<lb/>
for their full cooperation in this matter.<lb/>
The university will also tk the cooperation of<lb/>
professors. "We understand that you may fall<lb/>
behind in your studies during the time of your<lb/>
move, so we will ask professors to work with vou "<lb/>
stated Fulghum.<lb/>
Fulghum also said that the SGA agreed to give<lb/>
full-refunds on rented- refrigerators, if the residents<lb/>
found they no longer needed them anymore.<lb/>
Julian Vainright, business manager of<lb/>
ECU, is also checking with the post office and<lb/>
Carolina Telephone to see if something could be<lb/>
worked out in the resident's favor.<lb/>
Also, according to Fulghum, for those who move<lb/>
off-campus, a prorated refund on dorm rent will be<lb/>
given back to the resident.<lb/>
Fulghum closed the meeting saying, "On behalf<lb/>
of the university we are very sorry about the<lb/>
inconvenience, but there is nothing we can do -�<lb/>
we must relocate you.<lb/>
m- mt �' -��� 0t<lb/>
i r �fmsf0m<lb/>
� � w-jrtm- - J - � - T-W-&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
' ?�? . �� .<lb/>
 m -<lb/>
 .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057174_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 30 January 1979<lb/>
t<lb/>
Gammon<lb/>
The newly formed<lb/>
Backgammon Club gets<lb/>
together on Monday ev-<lb/>
enings at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
table games area, off<lb/>
the ground floor at<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Interested students<lb/>
are asked to bring their<lb/>
sets.<lb/>
cso<lb/>
Students who have<lb/>
or who intend to<lb/>
declare a major in a<lb/>
health-related curricu-<lb/>
lum may qualify for the<lb/>
following cost-free ser-<lb/>
vices from the Center<lb/>
for Student Opportuni-<lb/>
ties: career-planning<lb/>
assistance; academic,<lb/>
personal and financial<lb/>
counseling; tutorial as-<lb/>
sistance; alleviation of<lb/>
lest anxiety; improved<lb/>
reading speed and com-<lb/>
prehension; better note-<lb/>
taking and test-taking<lb/>
techniques; and others.<lb/>
CSO also has im-<lb/>
mediate openings for<lb/>
student tutors, particu-<lb/>
larly in the sciences and<lb/>
mathematics. For infor-<lb/>
mation stop by the<lb/>
Center. Ragsdale 208,<lb/>
or call 757-6075, 6081<lb/>
or 6122.<lb/>
Biology<lb/>
Anyone wishing to<lb/>
go on the Biology Club<lb/>
field trip to Burroughs-<lb/>
 ellcome on feb. 2 are<lb/>
aked to sign up by<lb/>
Thursday. Feb. 1 on the<lb/>
sign up sheet in the<lb/>
Biology Reading Room<lb/>
(second floor in the<lb/>
biology building.)<lb/>
Any interested stu-<lb/>
dent is welcome.<lb/>
Signing<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
meeting of the Sign<lb/>
Language Club at BD -<lb/>
101 at 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Thurs Feb. 1.<lb/>
The meeting is open<lb/>
to interested students<lb/>
and faculties regardless<lb/>
of how well they know<lb/>
sign language, if at all.<lb/>
The club meets in the<lb/>
same classroom every<lb/>
Thursday at the same<lb/>
time. The purpose of<lb/>
the club is to socialize<lb/>
and develop sign lang-<lb/>
uage skills among deaf<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Christ<lb/>
Students for Christ<lb/>
sponsors an informal<lb/>
discussion of the word<lb/>
of God as a practical<lb/>
guide for life each<lb/>
Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster D-308.<lb/>
NASW<lb/>
The National Assoc-<lb/>
iation of Social Workers<lb/>
will have a meeting of<lb/>
officers and advisors on<lb/>
Wed Jan. 31 at 5<lb/>
p.m. in the Allied<lb/>
Health Belk Building.<lb/>
Check the main bulletin<lb/>
board in the lobby for<lb/>
room number.<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
The Crafts Center at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center is now offering<lb/>
introductory level work-<lb/>
shops in a variety of<lb/>
crafts. Beginning Dark-<lb/>
room, Pottery, Floor<lb/>
Loom Weaving, Wood-<lb/>
working, Quilting, Lea-<lb/>
ther Craft, Enameled<lb/>
Mirrors, Printmaking,<lb/>
Kite Making, Beginning<lb/>
Jewelry, and Contem-<lb/>
porary Basketry will be<lb/>
offered.<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
The ROTC will<lb/>
sponsor the Red Cross<lb/>
Blood Drive at ECU on<lb/>
Jan. 30 and 31 at<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Many volunteers are<lb/>
needed to make this a<lb/>
successful effort, so<lb/>
come between 10 a.m.<lb/>
and 4 p.m.<lb/>
Chess<lb/>
All persons interes-<lb/>
ted in playing chess are<lb/>
invited to stop by the<lb/>
Mendenhall Coffeehouse<lb/>
each Monday evening at<lb/>
7 p.m. when the Chess<lb/>
Club holds its weekly<lb/>
meeting. Competition is<lb/>
at all levels and every-<lb/>
one is welcome to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Comics<lb/>
The ECU Comic<lb/>
Book Club will meet<lb/>
Tues Jan. 30 at 7<lb/>
p.m. at the Nostalgia<lb/>
Newstand, 919 Dickin-<lb/>
son Ave.<lb/>
For more information<lb/>
call: 758-6909.<lb/>
Tennis<lb/>
If you enjoy playing<lb/>
table tennis, stop by<lb/>
the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center table tennis<lb/>
rooms each Tuesday<lb/>
evening at 7 p.m. when<lb/>
the Table Tennis Club<lb/>
meets. You will find<lb/>
players of all levels of<lb/>
ability participating.<lb/>
Various activities such<lb/>
as ladder tournaments<lb/>
are often scheduled. All<lb/>
ECU students, faculty<lb/>
and staff are welcome.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
torrent�!<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT:<lb/>
Male, $50 per mo. rent<lb/>
plus 13 utilities, phone<lb/>
&amp; cable TV. Fully<lb/>
furnished, color TV.<lb/>
Only need bed &amp;<lb/>
dresser. On ECU bus<lb/>
route. Call 752-7225.<lb/>
113B N. Holly St.<lb/>
p<lb/>
MALE desires roommate<lb/>
(male or female) to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apt.<lb/>
King's Row Apts.<lb/>
Located 1 mi. from<lb/>
campus on bus route.<lb/>
Call Burlon at 752-1929.<lb/>
WOULD LIKE to sub-<lb/>
lease two bedroom<lb/>
duplex 3 blocks from<lb/>
campus. Call 752-1791.<lb/>
WANTED: Female<lb/>
roommate to share 2<lb/>
bedroom apt. close to<lb/>
campus. $82.50 per mo.<lb/>
plus 12 utilities &amp;<lb/>
phone. CaJi 752-6758.<lb/>
Gamma Rho<lb/>
Sigma Gamma Rho<lb/>
service sorority is hav-<lb/>
ing a spring rush Sun<lb/>
Feb. 4, at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. This rush is<lb/>
open to all interested<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
The Fountain of Life<lb/>
Christian Fellowship will<lb/>
sponsor a revival on<lb/>
Feb. 1, 2, and 3.<lb/>
Services will begin<lb/>
nightly at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Chaplin Kenneth P.<lb/>
Edwards will be the<lb/>
guest speaker.<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
The REBEL, ECU's<lb/>
LiteraryArt Magazine,<lb/>
sponsors a program of<lb/>
prose and poetry read-<lb/>
ing monthly. Refresh-<lb/>
ments are served, dress<lb/>
is informal and the<lb/>
atmosphere is relaxed in<lb/>
Mendenhall's Coffee-<lb/>
house.<lb/>
Previously selected<lb/>
writers read original<lb/>
work, and occasionally<lb/>
the program is varied<lb/>
with contributions by<lb/>
artists from disciplines<lb/>
other than literature.<lb/>
The writers and<lb/>
other artists are usually<lb/>
ECU students or facul-<lb/>
ty. Readings are open<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
The Feb. 1 program<lb/>
will feature the follow-<lb/>
ing writers: Dr. Peter<lb/>
Makuck, Alison Thomp-<lb/>
son, Robert Jones, and<lb/>
Ray Harrell. Chancellor<lb/>
Thomas Brewer will also<lb/>
attend to present the<lb/>
REBEL Literature and<lb/>
Art awards.<lb/>
The REBEL annually<lb/>
presents two literature<lb/>
awards, one for the<lb/>
best poem accepted by<lb/>
the magazine, and one<lb/>
for the best story. An<lb/>
award is also presented<lb/>
for the "Best in Show"<lb/>
piece from the REBEL<lb/>
Art Show. Money for<lb/>
these awards is prov-<lb/>
ided by Jeffrey's Beer<lb/>
and Wine Co. and The<lb/>
Attic.<lb/>
Courses<lb/>
Students may reg-<lb/>
ister for a mini-course<lb/>
in Beginning Bridge,<lb/>
Billiards, or CPR train-<lb/>
ing, sponsored by Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center.<lb/>
The courses are open to<lb/>
ECU full-time students,<lb/>
faculty and staff MSC<lb/>
members and their<lb/>
spouses or guests.<lb/>
Persons must regi-<lb/>
ster and pay fees at the<lb/>
MSC Central Ticket<lb/>
office between the hours<lb/>
of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m<lb/>
Monday through Friday.<lb/>
The first course begins<lb/>
Jan. 29.<lb/>
TKE<lb/>
Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
will hold little sister<lb/>
rush Mon. and Tues<lb/>
Jan. 29 and 30, from<lb/>
8:30 p.m. until, at the<lb/>
TKE house.<lb/>
Race<lb/>
The Coastal Carolina<lb/>
Track Club will sponsor<lb/>
the First Annual Green-<lb/>
ville Road Race on<lb/>
April 1 at 3 p.m. This<lb/>
race is being sponsored<lb/>
by H.L. Hodges and the<lb/>
funds received from the<lb/>
entry fees will go to<lb/>
.benefit the Easter Seals<lb/>
Society.<lb/>
The race will begin<lb/>
on the Town Commons<lb/>
and circle around<lb/>
Greenville for a distance<lb/>
being 10,000 meters.<lb/>
Merchandise prizes will<lb/>
be awarded for the top<lb/>
finishers in the age<lb/>
divisions, both male and<lb/>
female. Everyone who<lb/>
finishes the race, no<lb/>
mattes, how long it takes<lb/>
will receive a certificate<lb/>
from the CCTC.<lb/>
The first 500 to<lb/>
enter will receive a race<lb/>
T-shirt. All entry fees<lb/>
are tax-deductible, re-<lb/>
freshments will be pro-<lb/>
vided throughout the<lb/>
race.<lb/>
Applications and in-<lb/>
formation are available<lb/>
by calling the Easter<lb/>
Seals at 758-3230 or<lb/>
Robert R. Gotwals Jr.<lb/>
at 752-3411. ��- �-<lb/>
Bake Sale<lb/>
The Ceramic Guild is<lb/>
having a homemade<lb/>
pizzabake sale from<lb/>
11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on<lb/>
Wed Jan. 31 in the<lb/>
upstairs lobby of Jen-<lb/>
kins Fine Arts Center.<lb/>
You can't find better<lb/>
prices anywhere.<lb/>
Pizza will be 50<lb/>
cents a slice or $3.50<lb/>
for a whole pizza.<lb/>
Taxes<lb/>
Free assistance in<lb/>
preparing Federal in-<lb/>
come and tax returns is<lb/>
now available to ECU<lb/>
students and faculty<lb/>
taxpayers who cannot<lb/>
pay for such a serice.<lb/>
Vita-Volunteer In-<lb/>
come tax assistance<lb/>
program, sponsored by<lb/>
the ECU Accounting<lb/>
Society, will help tax-<lb/>
payers in filling out the<lb/>
1040 and 1040A forms.<lb/>
Vita assistance will<lb/>
be offered at Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center<lb/>
from 4 - 7 p.m. on the<lb/>
following dates:<lb/>
First session: Jan.<lb/>
29 and 31; Feb. 5 and<lb/>
7; and Feb. 12 and 14.<lb/>
Second session:<lb/>
March 26 and 28; April<lb/>
2 and 4; April 9 and<lb/>
11.<lb/>
Volunteer aids are<lb/>
ECU students and<lb/>
members of the Ac-<lb/>
counting Society. They<lb/>
are trained in basic<lb/>
income tax preparation.<lb/>
Sigma Xi<lb/>
The next meeting of<lb/>
the ECU chapter of<lb/>
Sigma Xi, the Scientific<lb/>
Research Society, will<lb/>
be held on campus in<lb/>
room 103, Biology buil-<lb/>
ding at 7:30 p.m<lb/>
Wed Jan. 31.<lb/>
Dr. Stanley Riggs,<lb/>
professor of Geology at<lb/>
ECU, will speak on<lb/>
"North Carolina Phos-<lb/>
phate Deposits: Their<lb/>
Geology and Future<lb/>
Role as a Critical World<lb/>
Resource<lb/>
The general public,<lb/>
students and faculty are<lb/>
invited to attend this<lb/>
lecture as well as all<lb/>
Sigma Xi public lec-<lb/>
tures.<lb/>
Service<lb/>
An Episcopal service,<lb/>
of Holy Communion will<lb/>
be held Tuesday ev-<lb/>
ening Jan. 30 in the<lb/>
chapel of the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center Fifth<lb/>
Street across from<lb/>
Garrett Dorm.<lb/>
The service will be<lb/>
at 5 p.m. with the<lb/>
Episcopal Chaplain, the<lb/>
Rev. Bill Hadden offi-<lb/>
ciating.<lb/>
A supper will be<lb/>
served at 6 p.m. at the<lb/>
home of Eleanor Cole-<lb/>
man, 1003 E. Fifth<lb/>
Street (across from the<lb/>
main gate.) Bible study<lb/>
will follow. These pro-<lb/>
grams are open to all<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Peter Brook's King Lear<lb/>
and<lb/>
Franco Zeffirelli's<lb/>
Romeo and Juliet<lb/>
Wednesday night in the Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Psi-Chi<lb/>
Psi-Chi, the National<lb/>
Honor Fraternity for<lb/>
Psychology, is now ac-<lb/>
cepting applications for<lb/>
membership.<lb/>
The requirements are<lb/>
as follows: the appli-<lb/>
cant should be a psy-<lb/>
chology major, minor or<lb/>
graduate student with at<lb/>
least eight semester<lb/>
hours in psychology. A<lb/>
3.0 average must be<lb/>
maintained in psycholo-<lb/>
gy courses.<lb/>
All applications<lb/>
should be turned in no<lb/>
later than Feb. 16.<lb/>
The membership fee<lb/>
is $30. This includes a<lb/>
lifetime membership<lb/>
with no additional or<lb/>
annual fees. Applica-<lb/>
tions may be obtained<lb/>
from the psychology of-<lb/>
fice in Speight Building.<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
Violinist Eugene<lb/>
Fodor can be seen in<lb/>
concert on Tues Jan.<lb/>
30 at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Fodor has been<lb/>
calledone of the<lb/>
world's foremost living<lb/>
violinists Advance<lb/>
tickets are : ECU stu-<lb/>
dents - $2; Public $5.<lb/>
All tickets at the door<lb/>
are $5.<lb/>
The concert is spon-<lb/>
sored by the Student<lb/>
Union Artist Series Co-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
Sigma Pi<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi will<lb/>
hold its monthly busi-<lb/>
ness meeting Wed<lb/>
Jan. 31 at 6 p.m. in<lb/>
Austin 132.<lb/>
Center<lb/>
All full-time students<lb/>
students,<lb/>
student spouses, and<lb/>
staff and faculty Men<lb/>
denhall Student Center<lb/>
members are eligible to<lb/>
join the Crafts Center<lb/>
A semester membership<lb/>
costs $10 and includes<lb/>
workshops, tool check-<lb/>
out, use of librar<lb/>
materials, and aid ol<lb/>
experienced supervisors<lb/>
Personal supplies and<lb/>
supplies furnished by<lb/>
the Crafts Center must<lb/>
be purchased by the<lb/>
participant.<lb/>
Crafts Center mem<lb/>
berships are available<lb/>
during regular operating<lb/>
hours, 3 p.m. until 10<lb/>
p.m Monday through<lb/>
Friday, and 10 a.m.<lb/>
until 3 p.m Saturday.<lb/>
The last day to register<lb/>
for Spring Semester<lb/>
workshops is Sat Feb.<lb/>
3.<lb/>
Persons must reg-<lb/>
ister at the Craft?<lb/>
Center and class space<lb/>
is limited. No refund?<lb/>
will be made after the<lb/>
workshop registration<lb/>
deadline.<lb/>
Phi Beta<lb/>
There will be a Phi<lb/>
Beta Lambda meeting<lb/>
Wed Jan. 31 at 4<lb/>
p.m. in Rawl room 130.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD regrets that an<lb/>
error appeared in the ad for the<lb/>
Tree House on Jan. 23. A date was<lb/>
not given for the Pizza Special, which<lb/>
was on Wednesday, Jan. 25.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD apologizes for the<lb/>
inconvenience that may have resulted<lb/>
from this error for Tree House<lb/>
and the students.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
Applications for these Committee<lb/>
Chairmanships are NOW<lb/>
being taken through Tue Feb. 6<lb/>
? ART EXHIBITION<lb/>
? ARTISTS SERIES<lb/>
? COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
 FILMS<lb/>
 LECTURE<lb/>
 MAJOR<lb/>
ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
� untvuiitv s<lb/>
PI<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
 SPECIAL<lb/>
ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
? MINORITY ARTS<lb/>
?THEATRE ARTS<lb/>
?THE<lb/>
ENTERTAINER<lb/>
?TRAVEL<lb/>
lost �<lb/>
LOST IN Joyner Library<lb/>
Sun. night: Calendar in<lb/>
checkbook style. Floral<lb/>
design on front, plastic<lb/>
covering. If found, <lb/>
please call 758-9483, it<lb/>
has important receipts<lb/>
inside.<lb/>
�<lb/>
LOST: small Black<lb/>
Alaskan Husky Puppy<lb/>
about 3 mos. old. Lost<lb/>
near Crow's Nest on<lb/>
10th st. Answers to<lb/>
Roscoe. If found, call<lb/>
752-4227.<lb/>
DISCO DANCE - A<lb/>
course in disco is<lb/>
beginning Feb. 2, early<lb/>
Friday evenings to<lb/>
warm you up for the<lb/>
weekend - specializing<lb/>
in spins and partnering<lb/>
with an emphasis on<lb/>
arms. A more basic<lb/>
class will begin Feb. 4<lb/>
Sundays at 7 p.m.<lb/>
specializing in fancy<lb/>
footwork. You can learn<lb/>
very complex move-<lb/>
ments going step-by<lb/>
step. It's really very<lb/>
easy and such a fun<lb/>
class! There's only room<lb/>
for 3 more couples or 6<lb/>
singles so call and<lb/>
reserve a space today.<lb/>
Only S10 per mo. Call<lb/>
758-Q736 mornings and<lb/>
evenings.<lb/>
YOGA: A night course<lb/>
in Hatha Yoga is be-<lb/>
ginning Feb. 27. All<lb/>
interested persons<lb/>
please call Sunshine at<lb/>
758-0736. (mornings &amp;<lb/>
nights).<lb/>
BELLY DANCE Lessons<lb/>
for fun and exercise!<lb/>
Call Sunshine 758-0736<lb/>
(mornings and even-<lb/>
ings).<lb/>
SELLING you mobile<lb/>
home in May? If you<lb/>
have a 12x50 or 55<lb/>
two bedroom mobile<lb/>
home, I am an in-<lb/>
terested buyer. Terms<lb/>
negotiable. 752-8241.<lb/>
Ask for Cheryle.<lb/>
sale�<lb/>
. : !0. <lb/>
 � � <lb/>
CAMPER Top for sm.n<lb/>
Pick-up truck (f,t8<lb/>
Courier, eta) New<lb/>
condition, includes<lb/>
Wi!C,K�f �"��� to<lb/>
�. �200. 756-0895<lb/>
� <lb/>
�WA GEAR: Double<lb/>
ADri?' �77e8SUre <lb/>
AP" 77; regulator; 28<lb/>
dV�,k WCight8 w,ts'<lb/>
�ePth gauge; spear gun<lb/>
-1175534 ,15�'<lb/>
,w wSALE: l RH-<lb/>
Architects 3<lb/>
� w,ln� PeocOa and ink,<lb/>
�lfor �5 or wUl sel<lb/>
� � scale at H<lb/>
.�Si�� CA -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057174_0003"/><lb/>
�rnpuand Greenville nofoe departments<lb/>
Wty, ECU use similar<lb/>
30 January 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
 ED WILUAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer �<lb/>
rhe following poi.<lb/>
�? � both the Green-<lb/>
V K' amJ can�Pus police<lb/>
departments are al<lb/>
tht<lb/>
th(<lb/>
"aine, as<lb/>
almost<lb/>
well as<lb/>
requirements gov-<lb/>
erning a vehicle's eligi-<lb/>
b�l�ty to be towed<lb/>
Officer J.A. Karpo-<lb/>
Vlc? of the campus<lb/>
P�"ce department, said<lb/>
wherever possible, cam-<lb/>
Pus polar try not to<lb/>
ltHv a student's car.<lb/>
Infractions that<lb/>
would involve the tow-<lb/>
ing of a student's car<lb/>
include blocking the<lb/>
clearance for another<lb/>
car to get out of a<lb/>
space or lot, or parking<lb/>
where rented reserve<lb/>
parking lots or spaces<lb/>
exist, such as the lot<lb/>
north of the drama<lb/>
building. Karpovich<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Where 'Towing<lb/>
Enforced' signs are, a<lb/>
car can be towed for<lb/>
the infraction itself<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Students are not<lb/>
notified if their car is<lb/>
wed. They must check<lb/>
with the Campus Police<lb/>
Department to find out<lb/>
it their car has been<lb/>
towed, Karpovich add-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Captain A.G. Whit-<lb/>
aker ol the Greenville<lb/>
Police Department, aid<lb/>
city towing poli-<lb/>
appl) to citizens<lb/>
I students alike as<lb/>
as residential park-<lb/>
erned.<lb/>
do not have a<lb/>
� ol standards<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Greenville police try<lb/>
to put only a ticket on<lb/>
an illegally parked '<lb/>
vehicle, instead of tow-<lb/>
ing it, if at all possible,<lb/>
according to Whitaker.<lb/>
He also saia that<lb/>
Greenville police do not<lb/>
work in the campus<lb/>
area.<lb/>
The campus police<lb/>
have a rotating list of<lb/>
four service stations to<lb/>
call when a car is to be<lb/>
towed, Karpovich said.<lb/>
The four stations are:<lb/>
University Exxon, Fifth<lb/>
Street, Dunn's Body<lb/>
Shop, also on Fifth<lb/>
Street, 10th and Evans<lb/>
Union 76 on 10th<lb/>
Street, and Curt Smith's<lb/>
Amoco on 10th Street,<lb/>
-he added.<lb/>
� The stations must<lb/>
meet certain require-<lb/>
ments to get onto the<lb/>
list. Such requirements<lb/>
include having enough<lb/>
insurance available to<lb/>
cover a car if anv<lb/>
damage occurs to it<lb/>
during the towing<lb/>
process, plus a place to<lb/>
store the car. Also, a<lb/>
station must be located<lb/>
near the campus and be<lb/>
available for towing 24<lb/>
hours a day, Karpovich<lb/>
said.<lb/>
For vehicles involved<lb/>
in accidents, the owner<lb/>
of the car picks the<lb/>
towing service, he said.<lb/>
The police then call that<lb/>
service.<lb/>
Otherwise,the Green-<lb/>
ville police rotate the<lb/>
towing services to tow<lb/>
cars that have violated<lb/>
parking regulations.<lb/>
Curt Smith, owner of<lb/>
the Amoco Station on<lb/>
10th Street, said he has<lb/>
insurance policies total-<lb/>
ing $300,000. He pays<lb/>
close to $1,000 a year<lb/>
on garage liability, cov-<lb/>
ering fire and theft.<lb/>
He said he double-<lb/>
checks cars to deter-<lb/>
mine what damage has<lb/>
already occurred to it,<lb/>
then he writes down<lb/>
what's wrong. In this<lb/>
way, he hopes to cut<lb/>
down on arguments<lb/>
concerning any damage<lb/>
that may occur while<lb/>
towing a car.<lb/>
lowing costs are $20<lb/>
a day, $25 a night by<lb/>
the Greenville Police<lb/>
standards, Smith said.<lb/>
Officer Karpovich<lb/>
added that the Campus<lb/>
Police charge is $15 a<lb/>
day, $20 at night for<lb/>
towing costs. It is a<lb/>
did<lb/>
he<lb/>
for<lb/>
standard fee, with all<lb/>
the money going to the<lb/>
service station that<lb/>
the actual towing,<lb/>
concluded.<lb/>
The best way<lb/>
students to avoid gett-<lb/>
ing towed is to go to<lb/>
the campus police sta-<lb/>
tion and get an ECU<lb/>
Traffic regulations<lb/>
booklet. This booklet<lb/>
tells where students can<lb/>
park and at what times.<lb/>
Pi Lambda is reborn<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Pi Lambda Phi Fra-<lb/>
ternity disbanned during<lb/>
the fall semester of this<lb/>
school year, but because<lb/>
of the continued interest<lb/>
in the fraternity a re-<lb/>
organization drive has<lb/>
been started to save the<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
According to Bill<lb/>
Shreve, a past member<lb/>
of the fraternity, there<lb/>
are several alumni<lb/>
members of the frater-<lb/>
nity that are interested<lb/>
in keeping the Pi<lb/>
Lambda Phi's organized<lb/>
at ECU. Shreve said<lb/>
that there are also sev-<lb/>
eral members of the<lb/>
fraternity who are still<lb/>
in school and who are<lb/>
interested in reorgani-<lb/>
zing the chapter.<lb/>
Shreve said that the<lb/>
fraternity was strong<lb/>
several years ago and<lb/>
that the members are<lb/>
tO�OMy<lb/>
4 POINT BRAKE CHECK "1<lb/>
X ir�.Lt From Wh�I B�nwgi �<lb/>
�ATM� BrA m AM Four Mm, far Prt NM<lb/>
��, 1o�f M - wn C. Sarvtot Ox tXM<lb/>
'L.j3<lb/>
Wheel<lb/>
Alignment<lb/>
Mart U.S. Cars, ToyMes � Qststra<lb/>
cell for appointment<lb/>
Now You<lb/>
Wear. Call<lb/>
For All<lb/>
" Anvartcan<lb/>
Cars<lb/>
Can Stop Unavayi Trra<lb/>
For Appointment<lb/>
�COUPON�<lb/>
Oil-<lb/>
Filter-Lube<lb/>
$1 188<lb/>
H<lb/>
We professionally lubricate your cm md<lb/>
�dd up to 5 qtt. of premium oil and a ieiuxs<lb/>
2 ttage fitter. W '<lb/>
Cafl For Appointment.<lb/>
OFFICIAL NORTH CAROLINA STATE INSPECTION STATION<lb/>
WE SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
PFGoodrich<lb/>
�&amp;JIRE CENTER<lb/>
SAI S ft St PVK I<lb/>
W MMFRI.<lb/>
A J5:30 P.M.<lb/>
Coggins Car Care<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
320 West Cmvflle KM<lb/>
SATUWttT<lb/>
MO kMAM P J<lb/>
wsr<lb/>
10 Discount to all ECU Students- Greenville Store Only<lb/>
Excluding Contact Lenses and Oscar Specials<lb/>
� Due<lb/>
OPTICIANS , -<lb/>
Adjacent to East Carolina Eye Clinic <lb/>
'Jf<lb/>
opticians<lb/>
. anoaatwn<lb/>
of amenca<lb/>
YOU� DOCTOtS �tESCKIPTION<lb/>
ACCURATELY FILLED<lb/>
COMPLETE EYEGLASS SERVICE<lb/>
� CONTACT LENSES (HARD 6 SOFT)<lb/>
' PRESCRIPTIONS FILLEO<lb/>
' IROKEN LENSES DUPLICATED<lb/>
PRESCRIPTION SUN GLASSES<lb/>
� FRAMES REPAIRED &amp; REPLACED<lb/>
� CHEMICAL HARDENED LENSES<lb/>
� SELECTION OF OVER 1000 FRAMES<lb/>
� ARTIFICIAL EYES<lb/>
� OSHA APPROVED INDUSTRIAL GLASSES<lb/>
1<lb/>
Contact Lenses<lb/>
���<lb/>
Bausch &amp; Lomb or Softens<lb/>
Milton Roy Nature Vue<lb/>
Soft Lens�20o<lb/>
Semi Soft Lens�130<lb/>
Hard Lens�ns<lb/>
US CALL THE DOCTOR OF YOUR CHOICE FOR YOUR EYE EXAMINATION<lb/>
Ultra-Vue Plastic Lenses<lb/>
tint of choice in<lb/>
Oscar Oe La Rents<lb/>
Frame .<lb/>
LadiOe and Men Complete<lb/>
Single Vision<lb/>
Photo Gray<lb/>
Oscar De La Renta<lb/>
With Single Vision Plastic Lenaea<lb/>
Ladies 48 Complete<lb/>
Men do Complete<lb/>
Any Prescription<lb/>
Choice Of Tints<lb/>
Bifocal<lb/>
2650 Photo Gray 38!<lb/>
CLEAR VUE OPTICIAN<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. 752-1446<lb/>
PHYSICIANS QUADRANGLE<lb/>
" OFFICE; HOURS<lb/>
M fe Berkley Mall 9 A.M5:30 PM.<lb/>
 W OoidaOoro MQfi. TUES THLfRS FRI.<lb/>
BUILDING A<lb/>
1705W.6THST.<lb/>
114 E Walnut<lb/>
Downtown Goldsooro I<lb/>
interested enough to try<lb/>
to revive it.<lb/>
Shreve is especially<lb/>
concerned in the frater-<lb/>
nity because he is the<lb/>
oldest founding brother<lb/>
of the fraternity at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
"They came to me<lb/>
to get it started again<lb/>
said Shreve. "The Pi<lb/>
Lam's that are still at<lb/>
ECU are still very in-<lb/>
terested and don't want<lb/>
to see the fraternity<lb/>
disappear entirely<lb/>
Among the students<lb/>
who are attempting to<lb/>
reorganize the fraternity<lb/>
are Bibb Baugh, Ken<lb/>
Turner, Steve Broad-<lb/>
head, and Ronnie Ea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
According to Shreve,<lb/>
financial problems was<lb/>
one of the reasons for<lb/>
the closing of the fra-<lb/>
ternity. Shreve said that<lb/>
there were about ten<lb/>
separate problems which<lb/>
plagued the fraternity<lb/>
and they all came to-<lb/>
gether at once. A large<lb/>
graduating class from<lb/>
the fraternity also added<lb/>
to the problems. This<lb/>
left the fraternity with a<lb/>
very low membership.<lb/>
Shreve explained<lb/>
that the reorganization<lb/>
of Pi Lambda Phi Fra-<lb/>
ternity will begin next<lb/>
week. He said that re-<lb/>
organizational efforts<lb/>
shall be conducted by<lb/>
alumni and friends of<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
meeting of all alumni<lb/>
and interested parties<lb/>
on Feb. 5 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
This meeting will be<lb/>
held in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. The<lb/>
gathering will be for all<lb/>
interested ECU students<lb/>
who desire to become a<lb/>
part of a fraternal and<lb/>
social organization ac-<lb/>
cording to Shreve.<lb/>
FRIDAYS<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Special Features<lb/>
Sunday-Couples Night: 2 delicious<lb/>
seafood platters of Shrimp, Oysters, Fish,<lb/>
Pup fesW' Fri6S and �Ur Fam0US Hus<lb/>
Only $7.99 for 2<lb/>
Monday-Shrimp-A-Roo: a delicious<lb/>
entre'of Calabash Style Shrimp with French<lb/>
Fries, Cole Slaw and Hush Puppies.<lb/>
All For Only $2.99<lb/>
Tuesday-Fish Fry:An the Fried Fish<lb/>
(Trout or Perch) you can eat with French Fries<lb/>
Slaw, and Hush Puppies. No takeout<lb/>
Only $2.25<lb/>
qm<lb/>
Wednesday-Fried Oysters.Goiden<lb/>
Brown Fried Oysters with French Fries, Cole<lb/>
Slaw and Hush Puppies.<lb/>
Only $2.99<lb/>
Thursday-Family Night: Great<lb/>
specials on Shrimp, Oysters Trout Or Perch<lb/>
No Takeout<lb/>
Shnmp $4.25<lb/>
TroutOr Perch$2.25<lb/>
ere$4.25<lb/>
Flounder$3.95<lb/>
"All You Can Eat"<lb/>
Hours: Open 4:30 P.M. To 9 P.M.<lb/>
Sunday-Thursday<lb/>
4:30 P.MliP.M.<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
Located On Evans Street<lb/>
Behind Sports World<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is re-<lb/>
quired to be readily available for sale<lb/>
at or below the advertised price in<lb/>
each A&amp;P Store, except as specifi<lb/>
caily noted in this ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. FEB. 3 AT AAP IN Gr66nviile, NC<lb/>
Wow! Look What I Got At A&amp;P!<lb/>
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66,000 INSTANT PRIZE WINNERS!<lb/>
4 400 ANN PAGE SPAGHETTI SAUCE 32 OZ<lb/>
8 800 ANN PAGE MAYONNAISE 32 OZ<lb/>
1 650 ANN PAGE PEANUT BUTTER 18 OZ<lb/>
1 650 ANN PAGE BLACK PEPPER 4 OZ<lb/>
30 800 ANN PAGE KETCHUP 14 OZ<lb/>
1 650 AP TOOTHPASTE OZ<lb/>
1 650 A�P SHAVE CREAM 11 OZ<lb/>
1 65C A�P BABY SHAMPOO 16 OZ<lb/>
4 400 ANN PAGE SM STUFFED OLIVES 5 OZ<lb/>
9 350 OUR OWN TEA BAGS 100 CT<lb/>
60<lb/>
WAYS<lb/>
TO WIN<lb/>
CASH!<lb/>
Number ofWinningOdds tOdds 13 Oc<lb/>
WinnersAmountVisitVisits <lb/>
51 w-I3C<lb/>
25010056 000- VD8<lb/>
5005028 000154<lb/>
1 00025�4 DOC. <lb/>
2 500to600�<lb/>
3 50054 000306<lb/>
50 00C280<lb/>
66 00C aap'5 eac . 16<lb/>
Odds 26<lb/>
Visits<lb/>
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538<lb/>
Total<lb/>
25 000<lb/>
123 785<lb/>
86<lb/>
S25.<lb/>
AAP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
SIRL<lb/>
STEA<lb/>
LaJ<lb/>
A&amp;P is a Deli Shop<lb/>
BUCKET OF<lb/>
FRIED CHICKEN<lb/>
3 PIECE BUCKET $249<lb/>
FRESHLY MADE<lb/>
POTATO SALAD<lb/>
OR COLE SLAW<lb/>
y<lb/>
x<lb/>
s<lb/>
PARKAY<lb/>
AAP COUPON<lb/>
PARKAY�IN QUARTERS<lb/>
MARGARINE 2<lb/>
a<lb/>
 �vfc LIMIT TWO WITH COUPON<lb/>
9TZ- ANO ADDITIONAL $7.50 CRDER<lb/>
30C<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
1 LB.<lb/>
PKGS.<lb/>
685<lb/>
lJJLj- � ��2?IlRl.s?LIlfL!?L�p�.Greenville, NC<lb/>
s�fif'<lb/>
 A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
KRAFT�SALAD DRESSING<lb/>
MIRACLE WHIP<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON<lb/>
2 AC AND ADDITIONAL $7 50 ORDER<lb/>
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CHEESE 12 OZ.<lb/>
SAUSAGE 14 OZ.<lb/>
PEPPERONI 13 OZ.<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
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AAP SWEETMILK OR BUTTERMILK<lb/>
BISCUITS<lb/>
10 CT<lb/>
8 0Z.<lb/>
CANS<lb/>
CHIQUITA<lb/>
GOLDEN<lb/>
BANANAS<lb/>
LBS<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057174_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 30 January 1979<lb/>
(<lb/>
P<lb/>
ft<lb/>
P<lb/>
i<lb/>
The ERA must pass<lb/>
Three million two hundred twenty<lb/>
thousand people can't be completely<lb/>
wrong, right?<lb/>
The North Carolina legislature<lb/>
apparently thinks so, since, according<lb/>
to North Carolinians United for ERA,<lb/>
that is the number of North Carolina<lb/>
citizens who support the Equal Rights<lb/>
Amendment, and the legislature has<lb/>
defeated this human rights proposal<lb/>
three times since 1973. It is difficult<lb/>
to understand their reluctance to<lb/>
merely confirm what was put forth in<lb/>
the Declaration of Independence.<lb/>
The amendment is needed because<lb/>
the constitution does not fully protect<lb/>
both sexes. For instance, it wasn't<lb/>
until 1971 that a woman bringing suit<lb/>
under the equal protection clause of<lb/>
the 14th amendment won a case<lb/>
before the Supreme Court. That<lb/>
decision, however, did not overrule<lb/>
earlier decisions upholding sex discri-<lb/>
mination.<lb/>
The ERA will outlaw wage and<lb/>
Social Security discrepancies which<lb/>
exist between the sexes. Unequal<lb/>
credit and estate laws (often discrimi-<lb/>
nating against men; for example, a<lb/>
widower's Social Security benefits are<lb/>
not equal to those of a widow) would<lb/>
be eliminated.<lb/>
ERA would not conscript women<lb/>
into the military. Congress has<lb/>
always had the power to draft women<lb/>
as well as men. Laws which apply to<lb/>
one sex because of reproductive<lb/>
differences, such as maternity benefits<lb/>
would not be affected. The right to<lb/>
privacy under the constitution would<lb/>
permit a separation of sexes under<lb/>
some circumstances, such as rest-<lb/>
-rooms and sleeping quarters in public<lb/>
institutions.<lb/>
Every president since Eisenhower<lb/>
has endorsed the amendment, along<lb/>
with major religious groups such as<lb/>
the Methodists, Catholics, Presbyteri-<lb/>
ans, Episcopals, A.M.E. Zion, Unitari-<lb/>
an Universal ists, American Baptist<lb/>
Churches, and even a right-winger<lb/>
like South Carolina's Strom Thurmond.<lb/>
If you want to see women get a<lb/>
fair chance in life and to insure that<lb/>
neither sex will be more privileged<lb/>
than the other, write your representa-<lb/>
tives in Raleigh. Let them know that<lb/>
the time has come to treat men and<lb/>
women equally and fairly.<lb/>
Greenpeace<lb/>
Whale mail is necessary<lb/>
By JERRY ADDERTON<lb/>
Greenpeace Support of Greenville<lb/>
Below you will find information and recom-<lb/>
mendations concerning use of the Pelley Amendment<lb/>
against the outlaw whaling nations of Peru, Chile,<lb/>
ami Korea.<lb/>
The Pelley Amendment is our only real hope of<lb/>
stopping or curtailing whaling in these countries. If<lb/>
Carter invokes the Pelley Amendment, it will mean<lb/>
the United States will ban seafood imports from<lb/>
these countries. Since their international trade in<lb/>
fisheries products is far more valuable than their<lb/>
whaling industries, invocation of the Pelley<lb/>
Amendment would be a decisive blow against<lb/>
outlaw whaling.<lb/>
Each year outlaw whaling accounts for around 20<lb/>
percent of the whales slaughtered thoughout the<lb/>
world. Outlaw whalers respect no agreements<lb/>
established to save the last remaining great whales.<lb/>
Ihey kill nursing mothers and calves, and protected<lb/>
species such as the blue and humpback whales. We<lb/>
now have the opportunity to apply pressure to end<lb/>
this outlaw industry through the Pelley Amendment.<lb/>
Facts offered<lb/>
A<lb/>
(�<lb/>
The Commerce Department has certified that<lb/>
Peru, Chile and Korea violate international<lb/>
conservation regulations because of their outlaw<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
It is now up to President Carter to invoke the<lb/>
Pelley Amendment against those nations.<lb/>
The deadline for action is Feb. 13 (the final<lb/>
date for the ruling).<lb/>
Recommendations made<lb/>
1. That President Carter invoke the Pelley<lb/>
Amendment to protect the whales from unregulated<lb/>
whaling.<lb/>
That the United States offer technical and<lb/>
financial assistance to these countries to help<lb/>
implement alternatives to whaling such as<lb/>
aquaculture (i.e kelp cultivation and fish farming)<lb/>
and jojoba farming. This would generate more<lb/>
products, profits, and jobs than whaling could ever<lb/>
now provide.<lb/>
Please write Pres. Carter and urge his quick<lb/>
action on invoking the Pelley Amendment. We can<lb/>
usher in the end of this outlaw whaling if you send<lb/>
your letters. Every 19 minutes a whale dies �<lb/>
some by outlaw whalers. Time is running out.<lb/>
A word about jojoba; jojoba (ho-HO-ba) is a<lb/>
bean-producing plant that grows well in arrid areas.<lb/>
The bean of the jojoba contains oil that is<lb/>
comparable to whale oil in every way and superior<lb/>
to whale oil in that it has no fishy odor and will<lb/>
not turn rancid.<lb/>
It is being grown commercially now in New<lb/>
Mexico and Arizona. This plant could well mean<lb/>
salvation for the great whales.<lb/>
Last week, several groups, including Greenpeace,<lb/>
Friends of the Earth, Sierra Club, Fund for Animal<lb/>
Welfare, Whale Center, and Project Jonah, formed<lb/>
a coalition called the Whale Alliance, to press for<lb/>
adoption of a 10 year moratorium on deep-sea<lb/>
whaling at the next International Whaling<lb/>
Commission meeting in July. If the United States<lb/>
were to introduce this resolution, it would be certain<lb/>
to pass. Essentially this would mean victory in our<lb/>
fight to save the whales.<lb/>
David McTaggart and three of his associates in<lb/>
Greenpeace Europe, who have conducted nine<lb/>
brilliantly successful campaigns in the last eight<lb/>
months, believes this moratorium is a strong<lb/>
possibility � If the United States introduces it.<lb/>
Therefore it is essential to pressure Pres. Carter to<lb/>
do so.<lb/>
Please be aware of this vital mailout campaign<lb/>
coming up, and to immediately initiate the Pelley<lb/>
Amendment mailout. This must occur by early'<lb/>
February if we are to stop outlaw whaling.<lb/>
This is only a first step in a multi-phased plan<lb/>
aimed at ending whaling before it is too late. Speed<lb/>
and quantity are equally important.<lb/>
Greenpeace has waged a lonely struggle for five<lb/>
years on the high seas to save a few whales here<lb/>
and there. By utilizing the immense power of the<lb/>
government to do the job for us, we can save<lb/>
thousands of whales, perhaps even entire species<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Please, put your energy and support behind both<lb/>
projects.<lb/>
Mail your letters to: President Carter<lb/>
The White House<lb/>
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.<lb/>
Washington, DC 20500<lb/>
For more information on any aspect of<lb/>
Greenpeace, contact Jerry Adderton at 758-6259<lb/>
after 5 p.m. on weekdays. Your support will be<lb/>
greatly appreciated.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Miller's review of jazz is razzed<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Each time I pick up<lb/>
a FOUNTAJHEAD, I<lb/>
eagerly turn' "to the<lb/>
"Trends" section to<lb/>
read the latest farces<lb/>
that sometimes pass for<lb/>
record reviews. Fre-<lb/>
quently, they show a<lb/>
lack of knowledge and<lb/>
understanding of music;<lb/>
they are nevertheless a<lb/>
consistent source of<lb/>
entertainment.<lb/>
For five years, I<lb/>
have read your record<lb/>
reviews, and with the<lb/>
exception of Chris<lb/>
Farren's pieces, they are<lb/>
usually journalistic mis-<lb/>
nomers.<lb/>
However last<lb/>
week's review of Bob<lb/>
James' Touchdown by<lb/>
Mr. Miller was a dis-<lb/>
gusting dose of saccha-<lb/>
rin-coated hero worship.<lb/>
The quality of the album<lb/>
is inconsequential, the<lb/>
review was the absolute<lb/>
pits.<lb/>
First of all, Mr.<lb/>
Miller, you are a record<lb/>
reviewer. A reviewer is<lb/>
a careful blend of fan<lb/>
and critic and his goal<lb/>
should be an objective<lb/>
appraisal of a recorded<lb/>
endeavor. It should be a<lb/>
pairing of knowledge of<lb/>
subject matter and a<lb/>
tasteful exposition of<lb/>
written talent. Your<lb/>
accounts of Mr. James<lb/>
failed on many accounts.<lb/>
The most intelligent<lb/>
phrase you used was<lb/>
your initial emphasis on<lb/>
Mr. James' influential<lb/>
role in popular music.<lb/>
Jazz music is as far<lb/>
removed from the<lb/>
musical mainstream as<lb/>
is reggae or punk.<lb/>
The popularity of an<lb/>
album is not necessarily<lb/>
a measure of judgement<lb/>
of its musical quality,<lb/>
and isn't that what we<lb/>
seek in our music and<lb/>
not slick production,<lb/>
packaging, and publici-<lb/>
ty? Columbia jazz artists<lb/>
personify this smoothly<lb/>
saleable item which we<lb/>
Jazz enthusiasts are<lb/>
supposed to accept as<lb/>
the supreme being's gift<lb/>
to the record market.<lb/>
Jazz music, like<lb/>
classical, has relied on<lb/>
its musical integrity to<lb/>
distinguish itself without<lb/>
relying on popular or<lb/>
commercial appeal. Jazz<lb/>
is not a trend, it is a<lb/>
culture which has and<lb/>
will withstand the i<lb/>
appeal of the mighty<lb/>
dollar.<lb/>
Mr. Miller, the<lb/>
greatest composer-arr-<lb/>
angers in the world<lb/>
today (if your own<lb/>
assertion holds true) are<lb/>
starving students at<lb/>
Ju'lliard or Berkley or<lb/>
burgeoning neophytes<lb/>
playing small clubs.<lb/>
At this point I.<lb/>
should rest my argu-<lb/>
ment, but your ludi-<lb/>
crous assaults upon jazz<lb/>
music have incensed<lb/>
me. Your contention<lb/>
that Mr. James put<lb/>
many jazz notables in<lb/>
the limelight shows your<lb/>
insufferable knowledge<lb/>
of jazz. Each of these<lb/>
stars had distinguished<lb/>
himself by his talent<lb/>
long before Columbia<lb/>
hit upon the commercial<lb/>
aspects of jazz and<lb/>
allowed Mr. James his<lb/>
melodramatic clutches<lb/>
upon the sound mixer.<lb/>
These stars put Bob<lb/>
James on the map bv<lb/>
showcasing his talent<lb/>
which is production and<lb/>
certainly not his musical<lb/>
ability. You see, simple<lb/>
music is simple music<lb/>
regardless of the special<lb/>
effects Mr. James can<lb/>
incorporate into his<lb/>
mundane music.<lb/>
Higher quality jazz<lb/>
music can and is being<lb/>
recorded live with four<lb/>
musicians, instead of<lb/>
the plethora of musical<lb/>
sessionmen and multi-<lb/>
tracking wizardry<lb/>
Mr. Miller, it was<lb/>
the "heroin influenced<lb/>
'artists' that laid the<lb/>
groundworks for your<lb/>
"money-influenced hori-<lb/>
zontal men" like Bob<lb/>
James. As far as better<lb/>
music being produced<lb/>
nowadays, there perhaps<lb/>
might be such, but they<lb/>
record on ECM and not<lb/>
Columbia.<lb/>
Columbia jazz artists<lb/>
don't hold a candle to<lb/>
gents like Charlie<lb/>
Parker, Duke Ellington,<lb/>
or Fats Waller whose<lb/>
names have proved the<lb/>
test of time. In my<lb/>
opinion. Bob James<lb/>
doesn't rate as a<lb/>
popular jazz innovator,<lb/>
he doesn't even rate.<lb/>
Mr. Miller, your<lb/>
review is as poorly<lb/>
written, mostly unknow-<lb/>
ledgeable and contradic-<lb/>
tory as I have seen<lb/>
grace the pages of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD. Your<lb/>
biased favoritism is<lb/>
unexcusable for a<lb/>
supposedly literate re-<lb/>
viewer.<lb/>
Patrick Minges<lb/>
Student Welfare Committee<lb/>
m<lb/>
member offers parking solution<lb/>
Founfainhead<lb/>
Swing the East Carolina community for oyst 50 years<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Steve Bachner NEWS EDITORS Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
�ls<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Jeff Rollins<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sem Rogers<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD la the student newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored by the Media Board of ECU<lb/>
and Is distributed each Tuesday and Thursday (weekly<lb/>
during the summer).<lb/>
Mailing addrees: Old Sooth Building, Greenville,<lb/>
27834<lb/>
Editorial office: 787-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309<lb/>
Subscription. $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
N C<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In last Tuesday's<lb/>
paper some misleading<lb/>
information was re-<lb/>
vealed concerning my<lb/>
discussion of parking<lb/>
with the director of<lb/>
Traffic and Security,<lb/>
Joseph Calder. This<lb/>
letter will clarify out<lb/>
talk on the subject of<lb/>
future parking changes<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
Chief Calder advised<lb/>
me that the state ve-<lb/>
hicles parked in front of<lb/>
Memorial Gym will be<lb/>
moved across from his<lb/>
traffic office just as<lb/>
soon as a new 75 space<lb/>
lot is completed. This<lb/>
new lot is projected to<lb/>
accomodate top priority<lb/>
vehicles (when it comes<lb/>
to campus parking),<lb/>
those belonging to the<lb/>
university (state).<lb/>
When the state ve-<lb/>
hicles are moved from<lb/>
in front of Memorial<lb/>
Gym this will create 17<lb/>
to 20 additional parking<lb/>
spaces for staff parking<lb/>
in a prime parking<lb/>
Vea. Tle SGA Student<lb/>
Welfare Committee re-<lb/>
quested that those new<lb/>
space's be allocated to<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The rejection seems<lb/>
to be based on evidence<lb/>
of past student parking<lb/>
in that same area.<lb/>
Students waiting to fill<lb/>
spots once others left<lb/>
created an intolerable<lb/>
traffic problem for that<lb/>
critical area. My com-<lb/>
mittee did receive an<lb/>
assurance that students<lb/>
could possibly be com-<lb/>
pensated elsewhere.<lb/>
Also, the new 75<lb/>
space lot across from<lb/>
Traffice and Security<lb/>
may free some spaces<lb/>
around the campus for<lb/>
staff or student vehi-<lb/>
cles. Remember, that's<lb/>
just a possibility.<lb/>
The university plans<lb/>
to pave and mark the<lb/>
dirt parking lots across<lb/>
from the Joyner Library<lb/>
and Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center. This will<lb/>
become a reality once<lb/>
the school receives a<lb/>
low bid on the contract.<lb/>
Once this vital project<lb/>
is completed students<lb/>
will enjoy at least a 20<lb/>
percent increase in<lb/>
parking spaces availa-<lb/>
ble.<lb/>
Chief Calder and the<lb/>
committee are aware<lb/>
that parking can be<lb/>
troublesome. I can say<lb/>
that Mr. Calder's co.<lb/>
operation has been<lb/>
commendable.<lb/>
I feel the outlook for<lb/>
increased student park-<lb/>
ing looks a little bright-<lb/>
er with the above men<lb/>
tioned changes that are<lb/>
in the works.<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
Student Welfare twam.<lb/>
Parking and Towing<lb/>
Subcommittee<lb/>
�! �<lb/>
 � � � <lb/>
 � �<lb/>
4 , Trmmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057174_0005"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
Greek Forum<lb/>
30 January 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
BJ WCKI GLIARMIS ,<lb/>
hews Editor<lb/>
Th<lb/>
pre are 20 to 25<lb/>
at s a lot more<lb/>
hj" th"e are at many<lb/>
schools. In fa�-t . '<lb/>
1,1 ,act we re<lb/>
�"that we are able to<lb/>
ru,u�' so many frat.<lb/>
ernitiea and sororities<lb/>
 order to par.<lb/>
"cipate foil, i� the<lb/>
 system, each<lb/>
,8e h to show<lb/>
crea� in the organiia-<lb/>
tjon, the system, and in<lb/>
ampus. Every or-<lb/>
ganization on campus<lb/>
Greek or non-Greek is<lb/>
�'d vMth this dil-<lb/>
emma. Although<lb/>
studying ukes up a large<lb/>
amount f time in a<lb/>
student's life, they<lb/>
manage to budget their<lb/>
time well in order to<lb/>
participate in every<lb/>
phase of college life.<lb/>
Now, you are prob-<lb/>
ably raying to yourself,<lb/>
V hat is she talking<lb/>
about or "What is<lb/>
this leading up to?"<lb/>
Thi is what the<lb/>
article is leading up to.<lb/>
An organization can<lb/>
work well together as<lb/>
long as everyone con-<lb/>
tributes his or her fair<lb/>
-hare. But when<lb/>
apathy creeps into an<lb/>
rganization, the entire<lb/>
' rmula of success is<lb/>
destroyed.<lb/>
In other words,<lb/>
apathy has almost<lb/>
destroyed the Greek<lb/>
forum. In order for this<lb/>
column to be inforrna.<lb/>
,Jve and helpful to the<lb/>
students and to the<lb/>
campus, the participants<lb/>
must do their part. Out<lb/>
of 20 to 25 Greek<lb/>
organizations at ECU I<lb/>
received three articles<lb/>
this week.<lb/>
The Greek Forum<lb/>
could be a very in-<lb/>
teresting column for<lb/>
every fraternity and<lb/>
sorority but in order to<lb/>
do this, every fraternity<lb/>
and sorority must par-<lb/>
ticipate. Share vour<lb/>
news with the other<lb/>
students on campus. Be<lb/>
proud of your organiza-<lb/>
tion. Publicity is<lb/>
number one when rush<lb/>
time rolls around again.<lb/>
Announcements:<lb/>
Throughout the<lb/>
month of February, the<lb/>
Alpha Phi's will be<lb/>
selling heart lolly pops<lb/>
to raise money for their<lb/>
national philanthrophy,<lb/>
the Heart Fund.<lb/>
The Sigma, Sigma<lb/>
Sigmas are planning<lb/>
their Spring Formal for<lb/>
March 24 at the Green-<lb/>
ville Country Club.<lb/>
Virginia Minges,<lb/>
chapter advisor for the<lb/>
Tri-Sigs, is entertaining<lb/>
the sorority at her home<lb/>
on Feb. 5. Mrs. Minges<lb/>
will be having a wine<lb/>
and cheese tasting party<lb/>
in honor of the sorori-<lb/>
tv's 19th birthday at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Taus<lb/>
initiated 14 brothers<lb/>
Sunday. The Phi Taus<lb/>
also held their installa-<lb/>
tion of officers. The<lb/>
new president is Steve<lb/>
Curry; Vice President,<lb/>
Monty Rish; Treasurer,<lb/>
Mike Newsome, and<lb/>
Secretary, Steve<lb/>
O'Geary. The new<lb/>
Sergeant at Arms is<lb/>
David Jones.<lb/>
The Phi Taus are in<lb/>
the process of selling<lb/>
tickets to see the<lb/>
Dynamic Upsetters on<lb/>
Feb. 17. The fraternity<lb/>
will be presenting this<lb/>
group at the Greenville<lb/>
Moose Lodge. It should<lb/>
be a fun evening.<lb/>
Tickets can be bought<lb/>
from any Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau member.<lb/>
This weekend the<lb/>
Phi Taus will have their<lb/>
parent's weekend and<lb/>
formal which will be<lb/>
held at the Greenville<lb/>
Country Club.<lb/>
Phonothon deemed success<lb/>
itchell's Hair Styling<lb/>
qJ P,a" Shopping Cenrei<lb/>
v-lCrcenville North Carolina<lb/>
756-2950<lb/>
17HU<lb/>
CALL<lb/>
HAIRSTYLE!<lb/>
SPRING HAIRDO<lb/>
756-2950<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Second Annual<lb/>
Pitt County Phonothon<lb/>
was held Jan. 15, 16,<lb/>
and 17. The Phonothon<lb/>
is sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU Alumni Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
During the phonothon<lb/>
students and alumni<lb/>
take part in calling ECU<lb/>
alumni in order to get<lb/>
monetary pledges from<lb/>
them. This year, ap-<lb/>
proximately 65 local al-<lb/>
umni volunteered to<lb/>
work at the phonothon.<lb/>
According to an ECU<lb/>
news release, the vol-<lb/>
unteers were divided<lb/>
into three teams. Each<lb/>
team was responsible<lb/>
for handling the re-<lb/>
sponsibilities of the<lb/>
phonothon for their par-<lb/>
ticular night.<lb/>
Responsibilities in-<lb/>
cluded making personal<lb/>
telephone calls to for-<lb/>
mer ECU students<lb/>
which are now residing<lb/>
in Pitt County.<lb/>
The volunteers met<lb/>
at the Alumni Building<lb/>
at 5:45 p.m. for a<lb/>
buffet and orientation.<lb/>
The phone calls began<lb/>
at 7 p.m. and ended at<lb/>
10 p.m.<lb/>
The news release<lb/>
stated that the purpose<lb/>
of the telephone calls<lb/>
were to solicit pledges<lb/>
to the Alumni Loyalty<lb/>
Fund which is designed<lb/>
to supplement state<lb/>
budgetary allocations for<lb/>
the academic programs<lb/>
at the university.<lb/>
During the three<lb/>
night phonothon, many<lb/>
alumni were contacted<lb/>
and a gracious amount<lb/>
of money was collected<lb/>
for the Loyalty Fund.<lb/>
492 alumni pledged<lb/>
money during the phon-<lb/>
othon. The total amount<lb/>
of pledges collected was<lb/>
$10,436.<lb/>
Of the 492 alumni<lb/>
who pledged money,<lb/>
354 were new contri-<lb/>
butors. This came out<lb/>
assic Saving.<lb/>
On Sale Now Through February 1<lb/>
Thv<lb/>
H,�mantK io,n<lb/>
B8nsjjis$<lb/>
Includes:<lb/>
Liebesfreud<lb/>
Liebesleid<lb/>
Caprice viennois<lb/>
Tambourin chinois<lb/>
The Old Refrain<lb/>
RED SEAL<lb/>
HC1 RED SEAL<lb/>
International Tchaikovsky ViolinComfpetition<lb/>
Top Prize Winner<lb/>
Eiene Fodor<lb/>
plays<lb/>
Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto<lb/>
and<lb/>
Saint Saens: Introduction &amp; Rondo Capriceioso<lb/>
ev Philhaimonw Ore hesi r,<lb/>
 rich I emscloi f C ondut tew<lb/>
H.99<lb/>
per disc<lb/>
You'll find a wide selection of<lb/>
the recordings of Eugene Fodor<lb/>
at the Record Bar<lb/>
Home of the one year pro-rated tape guarantee!<lb/>
CV �� �����<lb/>
� jyyv<lb/>
�fl RECORDS &amp; TAPES � �P<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
SOUNDS DELICIOUS!<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
<lb/>
rwrr-<lb/>
to be approximately 72<lb/>
percent of the alumni<lb/>
who were called.<lb/>
During the phono-<lb/>
thon this year, prizes<lb/>
were given during the<lb/>
three-day event. Incen-<lb/>
tive prizes were awar-<lb/>
ded during each hour of<lb/>
the calling. An overall<lb/>
prize was given at the<lb/>
end of each session.<lb/>
This prize was awarded<lb/>
to the person who ob-<lb/>
tained the largest a-<lb/>
mount of money in<lb/>
pledges during the ses-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Don Leggett, director<lb/>
of Alumni Affairs, sta-<lb/>
ted that the effort was<lb/>
a tremendous success.<lb/>
He also expressed his<lb/>
appreciation to the vol-<lb/>
unteers who were in-<lb/>
volved in the project.<lb/>
Leggett thanked<lb/>
those who responded<lb/>
favorably to the soli-<lb/>
citation of the callers<lb/>
during the alumni pho-<lb/>
nolhon.<lb/>
COME<lb/>
ON<lb/>
OVER<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
SIRLOIN TIPS<lb/>
with or without $1.99<lb/>
green peppers and onions<lb/>
FOR BANQUET<lb/>
FACILITIES CALL<lb/>
758 2713<lb/>
offer good thro feb. 1,1979<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057174_0006"/><lb/>
atzaat<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAO 30 January 1979<lb/>
Don<lb/>
By BARRY CLAYTON<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
JJ.<lb/>
Something old and something new.<lb/>
This particular pair might seem out of place at a<lb/>
wedding. But a lot of people are going to want to<lb/>
see them when they appear at the Roxy.<lb/>
They are songwriter-performers J.J. Cale and<lb/>
Don Schlitz, and they will be performing at the<lb/>
Roxy on the ninth and 10th of February. Shows will<lb/>
be at 7 and 10:30 each night. Tickets will be J4.50<lb/>
for members, $5.00 advance, and $6.00 at the door,<lb/>
The best way to go about lining up one of these<lb/>
$4.50 tickets along with membership in the Roxy (a<lb/>
non profit organization dedicated to bringing all the<lb/>
better things to its members) is to contact Shep at<lb/>
752-7746. F<lb/>
For some time the Roxy had been trying to book<lb/>
J.J. Cale to appear in Greenville. And though the<lb/>
story is sort of vague, it seems that Cale's<lb/>
eventually accepting the invitation revolves around<lb/>
the advice of his drummer Jimmy Carstein who<lb/>
happened to be in town when John Prine played<lb/>
the Roxy last December. Carstein was apparently<lb/>
enough impressed with the atmosphere to talk to<lb/>
Cale about it, and in the end Cale agreed to<lb/>
appear.<lb/>
An awful lot of people are going to ask, "J.J.<lb/>
" ho.<lb/>
Part of the reason for this is the plastic-glossed<lb/>
pop-disco mania that has so successfully bleached<lb/>
out the '60s and early '70s music awareness like a<lb/>
Clorox enema.<lb/>
And, partly, the reason is that Cale has always<lb/>
preferred to avoid the spotlight, promoting his<lb/>
music and not himself.<lb/>
Those of you who get off on watching Kiss claw<lb/>
and kick about on stage are going to be<lb/>
dissappointed.<lb/>
This man is serious. He's putting you on to<lb/>
some good soundnot just putting you on.<lb/>
But if the spotlight should catch him<lb/>
momentarily (and Cale has been known to fairly fold<lb/>
himself to avoid this), what you might see is a tall<lb/>
wiry man in his late thirties clad in t-shirts, jeans,<lb/>
dark glasses, and a $50 Harmony acoustic guitar<lb/>
that ha, had its back removed to permit easier<lb/>
access to tfe melange of pick-ups and other<lb/>
assorted electronic paraphenalia with which Cale has<lb/>
modified his instrument and is constantly tinkering.<lb/>
Cale's penchant for anonymity has become<lb/>
somewhat of a legend in itself. In past years he has<lb/>
allowed no photographs of himself to appear on the<lb/>
album covers of his three lp's (Naturally, Really<lb/>
Okie) all released since '73. He likes to play on the<lb/>
far edge of the stage, out of the limelight, and<lb/>
sometimes not even facing his audience.<lb/>
Of his reticence, Cale says, "I'm not really into<lb/>
show business. I'm just there to play and sing my<lb/>
tunes when people are coming up to you, you<lb/>
know, it's kind of a drag. So I try to stay pretty<lb/>
low. It slows down the career, but I've wanted it<lb/>
that way I'm always afraid it's gonna by a hype.<lb/>
Music is a free deal, you know? When I first<lb/>
started getting any money for music, I couldn't<lb/>
believe you got paid for doing it. Music is not a<lb/>
commodity<lb/>
It's a philosophy that Cale has lived since his<lb/>
start in the entertainment field. Cale has been<lb/>
around. His career began in the late '50s playing in<lb/>
the bars of Tulsa and Oklahoma City for whatever it<lb/>
would bring.<lb/>
He became involved in some of the innumerable<lb/>
band that sprouted up as Elvis first began to<lb/>
popularize rock and roll music. Among these were<lb/>
Cale's own group, The Valentines (remember, it was<lb/>
another age entirely), and Gene Crose and the<lb/>
Rockets for whom J.J. played guitar.<lb/>
While playing in his native Oklahoma, Cale first<lb/>
met Leon Russell, and in '64 the two of them<lb/>
packed it up and headed for Los Angeles where<lb/>
they helped put together Delaney and Bonnie's<lb/>
band. Leon started to put together a recording<lb/>
studio, and Cale spent a year playing at the<lb/>
Whisky-A-Gogo where he appeared opposite Johnny<lb/>
Rivers.<lb/>
It was about this time that Cale wrote the song<lb/>
that was to open a lot of doors for him in the<lb/>
industry. Bui liU. immediately. In 1970 Eric Clapton<lb/>
recorded it on his first solo album.<lb/>
The song?<lb/>
"After Midnight<lb/>
And the way was cleared for Cale's own first lp<lb/>
which was released on the Shelter label. The album<lb/>
was Naturally, and the studio was Leon's.<lb/>
Not surprising. Since '64, Cale had spent his<lb/>
spare time at Shelter cutting demos and working<lb/>
with the equipment trying to become proficient to<lb/>
the point that he could capture that element of<lb/>
"backporch" naturalism that he sought to preserve<lb/>
in his music.<lb/>
Says Cale's Nashville Producer Audie Ashworth,<lb/>
"Sometimes he'll (Cale) walk into a studio, turn on<lb/>
the tape machine and do the song in one take. The<lb/>
spontaneity's there, and you just can't duplicate<lb/>
that. Or sometimes we spend maybe $2,000 on four<lb/>
or five overdubs of horns and voices, and then,<lb/>
when we sit down to mix it, he'll say it sounds<lb/>
better without them, and we'll take off all those<lb/>
damn overdubs and we're right back where we<lb/>
started, with the live track<lb/>
And that, too, had become a trademark of the<lb/>
J.J. Cale sound-everything a song needs and not<lb/>
one note more.<lb/>
Onstage with Cale will be a young face, but<lb/>
SONGWRITER-PERFORMER J.J. Cale and Don<lb/>
Schhtz will be performing at the Roxy on the 9th<lb/>
one that is rapidly becoming well-known to the<lb/>
citizens of Nashville. It belongs to 25-year-old Don<lb/>
Schhtz, a songwriter-singer who is making a name<lb/>
tor himself not just in the home of Opry but in the<lb/>
rest of the nation as well.<lb/>
Heard a song by the name of "The Gambler"<lb/>
recently?<lb/>
You should have. It has been recorded by no<lb/>
tess than nine recording artists, among them Johnny<lb/>
Lash and Kenny Rogers. Schlitz himself<lb/>
recorded his own version of the tune which did<lb/>
very well on the Billboard chartsmuch better than<lb/>
those by Cash and Rogers, in fact.<lb/>
Schlitz signed up with Capitol as a singer-per-<lb/>
former, but it doesn't appear to be cutting too<lb/>
deeply into his career as a songwriter. Schlitz's<lb/>
songs are generally in demand, quite aside from the<lb/>
phenomenal success of "The Gambler This year<lb/>
18 separate artists are cutting their own versions of<lb/>
Schhtz s songs.<lb/>
In the meanwhile, he is causing a certain<lb/>
amount of ripples on the usually mirror-slick<lb/>
recording industry.<lb/>
Maggie Cavender, the executive director of the<lb/>
ind 10th of February. JJ. Cole's photo show<lb/>
begins at 7 and 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Nashville Songwriters' Association has said that<lb/>
Schhtz is going to be some kind of supercat "<lb/>
And singer Bobby Bare has predicted that "within<lb/>
two years Don Schlitz will be the foremost<lb/>
songwriter in Nashville<lb/>
Although he has sold other sorrgs, the success<lb/>
that he enjoys today seems to be a direct<lb/>
by-product of "The Gambler It is the top country<lb/>
song ,n Nashville today. It netted for Schlitz the<lb/>
Lountrv Music Magazine's "Song of the Year"<lb/>
award. Says Audie Ashworth (who produces both<lb/>
Schhtz and I Cap "Tk� u i i<lb/>
arm.nrl ,t . � ' WH�le tHlng StemS<lb/>
around that song.<lb/>
Overnight success?<lb/>
No not really. Schlitz spent five long years in<lb/>
Nashville working at various jobs (the longest-last,�<lb/>
was a job as a computer operator which he has<lb/>
onlv just recently left behind), sleeping ,n his car<lb/>
and living on a diet of jelly sandwiches.<lb/>
A perfect pluck and luck storv<lb/>
The new kid and the old hand. Thev should be<lb/>
quite an entertaining pair, and they'll" be at the<lb/>
Roxy Friday and Saturday nights<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
A young scluptor plans a party for his fiancee's<lb/>
father and for an important art collector. In order to<lb/>
impress them he switches his furniture with that of<lb/>
his wealthy neighbor who has left for the weekend.<lb/>
But the party turns out quite differently than the<lb/>
sculptor plans when the lights go out, one of his<lb/>
ex-girlfriends crashes the party and the neighbor<lb/>
from whom he "borrowed" the furniture returns<lb/>
unexpectedly.<lb/>
That's not all, though, the fun is just beginning<lb/>
in Peter Schaffer's Black Comedy, a Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Dinner Theatre performance. The<lb/>
play is entitled Black Comedy because the action<lb/>
takes place during an electrical black-out. Thus,<lb/>
although the audience is able to see, the characters<lb/>
must stumble around in the dark. And stumble they<lb/>
certainly do, to their own chargrin and our<lb/>
amusement.<lb/>
This year, for the first time since the inception<lb/>
of the Mendenhall Dinner Theatre, there will be a<lb/>
special dessert Performance for students, faculty and<lb/>
staff. For a mere $2.50, the price of a movie, the<lb/>
play-goer is treated to cheesecake or apple pie a la<lb/>
mode with coffee or tea, in addition to being able<lb/>
to watch this delightful play.<lb/>
In addition to the special Dessert Performance,<lb/>
the show will also run for three evening<lb/>
performances with only 100 seats available each<lb/>
night. The dates are February 8-10; dinner is served<lb/>
beginning at 6:30 p.m and curtain is at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Tickets are available at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Prices are $6 for<lb/>
students and $8.50 for the public. Mail orders are<lb/>
accepted, and all tickets must be purchased at least<lb/>
36 hours in advance.<lb/>
Acting in the play are Marvin Hunt as Brindsley<lb/>
Miller, and up and coming sculptor for whom<lb/>
everything goes wrong, Phyllis Kivett as Carroll<lb/>
Melkett, the sculptors debutante fiancee, Lee Baker<lb/>
Comedy<lb/>
as the fiancee's authoritative father, Sue Ellen<lb/>
McLeod as Clea, the ex-girlfriend of the sculptor,<lb/>
Gregory S. Smith as Mr. Bamburger, the wealthy<lb/>
and stone-deaf art collector and Bill Roberson as<lb/>
Harold Goringe, the sculptor's gay neighbor and<lb/>
proprietor of an antique store.<lb/>
Attending one of their rehersals this writer saw<lb/>
that they are a hard-working and charismatic cast.<lb/>
Says Dr. Farr, "We had tryouts before Christmas<lb/>
and had rehersal the first day back<lb/>
For Bill Roberson, the most difficult thing about<lb/>
being in the play is "playing someone that's gay. I<lb/>
tend to be a little too stereotype with it he says.<lb/>
'They (others in the cast) tell me I don't but I feel<lb/>
like I do<lb/>
Sue Ellen<lb/>
the<lb/>
Sculpture, prints and woodwork highlight show<lb/>
School of Art <lb/>
McLeod, who plays Clea,<lb/>
sculptor's ex-girlfriend, says of working on the<lb/>
production, "I've enjoyed every minute of it It's<lb/>
work but work I enjoyed. It's fun meeting new<lb/>
.Pne0tPhecear"th0Ugh ' d " ' of PP'<lb/>
One -remarkable feature of the play is that the<lb/>
darkness brought about by the electncal balck out il<lb/>
suggested by the characters actions while the stage<lb/>
remains completely lit. g<lb/>
McLeod observes that this technique "is<lb/>
working very well. This play is difficult became eve<lb/>
con act never happens. The characters are in lie<lb/>
dark so its working together without seeming to '<lb/>
Lindsay Pauly stage mistress, says of her job<lb/>
e oa1rseSlvgeseatTheCa"Se  �S � build �<lb/>
ffcl , i �- There s a technical crew that builds<lb/>
-�.Xihv. zz r- -<lb/>
The comedy of errors situation combined with<lb/>
the effective sight gags wntten i�to thTpla" thu d<lb/>
make this plav the �, j V P- sno"la<lb/>
P J ine )ifre-de-resistance o( a fine meal.<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
An estimated 300 persons attended the opening<lb/>
of the East Carolina School of Art Faculty<lb/>
exhibition at Wellington B. Gray Gallery last Friday<lb/>
night. Each year an exhibition of the faculty's<lb/>
current work is held and this most recent show<lb/>
illustrates that it is comprised of artists of<lb/>
extraordinary quality.<lb/>
Aaron Karp, director of the gallery, mentioned<lb/>
that he was quite pleased with the caliber of the<lb/>
works included in the exhibit. Mr. Karp deserves to<lb/>
be commended for developing Gray Gallery into the<lb/>
vital, intellectually active gallery that it is.<lb/>
Ray E. Elmore's Rose and E.E. HenryAn Apple<lb/>
a Day present us with arresting portraits of<lb/>
individuals who intrigue us. These pencil portraits<lb/>
are then set against a second idea. In Rose the<lb/>
artist surrounds the pencil of a rather stoic Black<lb/>
woman with a checkerboard of oranges, browns and<lb/>
yellows, in E.E. Henry the portrait of a distinguished<lb/>
father figure is seen though a calendar, onto which<lb/>
are drawn apples, with one of the apples having the<lb/>
only color on the drawing. The intriguing subject<lb/>
matter and very finished quality of Elmore's work<lb/>
makes it one of the most distinguished in the<lb/>
Betsy Ross's series, Sidings, is a study of<lb/>
exquisite textures. There is a tactile quality to this<lb/>
series which is fascination in a irritatingly vague<lb/>
way Ms. Ross also exhibits her Imaculat Conception<lb/>
which is based in a delightful style of drawing we<lb/>
are often treated to by this artist.<lb/>
That is a very delicate, very feminie pure<lb/>
rendunng of rabbits, white, white rabbits, or some<lb/>
other immacualte field of animal, say, painted<lb/>
against snow. These drawings which deal with the<lb/>
variances of whitenesses often include ovals among<lb/>
the imagery which implies a sense of prenatal<lb/>
innocence or sanctity.<lb/>
Betsy Ross is quoted in the brochure<lb/>
accompanying last year's exhibit as saying, "I deal<lb/>
with incongruities, taking pleasure in inventing<lb/>
transitions between color and black and white,<lb/>
between positive and negative, between the large<lb/>
mass and the infinitesimal mark, between the sedate<lb/>
and the outrageous<lb/>
One of the best offerings this year was made<lb/>
by George Danhires. His paintings of abruptly<lb/>
foreshortened interiors are peopled with stark,<lb/>
prosaically drawn but nevertheless disturbing,<lb/>
nudes. His subject matter is Vat alter and he<lb/>
tempers and humanises its cool emotional climate<lb/>
Paul Hartley is surely one of the most talented<lb/>
artists included in the show. His small Eve and<lb/>
Serpent is a well executed cloissonistic composition.<lb/>
Pedestal depicts a draped object with a strawberry<lb/>
on top of it. It haunts back to the Dada wrapped<lb/>
is<lb/>
also drawn<lb/>
flourescent-type light. The word "bit<lb/>
,n a blue,<lb/>
and painted'in Senegal'like 7"is inT ' rCVer�ed<lb/>
Hartlol Ve Cat<lb/>
images<lb/>
lim<lb/>
Hartl�v'c m� V7 u ,s ln Carnival.<lb/>
y g-charged and evoeativ,<lb/>
Art<lb/>
object tradition. Three larger compositions show<lb/>
Hartley's full tange of talents.<lb/>
His Michael's Hero and Rainbow is comprised of<lb/>
the �JwtH�Hy drswn images of Maurice Chevalier<lb/>
and Mickey Mouse set against a design of blue,<lb/>
circles. He adds to this compostion the upside down<lb/>
reflection of Chevalier and Mickey Mouse. The<lb/>
colors and subject matter of Michael's Hero make<lb/>
the piece sasy to relate to.<lb/>
Hartley's Carnival 28: Gold Dust at my Feet<lb/>
incorporates the image of the stawberry again, as<lb/>
wail as the image of Chevalier and a motif of<lb/>
combined with his innovative hiT cvoc�" ag<lb/>
one of the faculty fiU;ck�r�U-d� m <lb/>
primal African JST � �<lb/>
work. Her PrototypT J <lb/>
feeling, mspite of its modern lines " Al,CC<lb/>
the high-points of the tL hL'TI ere �ne of<lb/>
photographs catch swirls of'li.ht f "<lb/>
t�l��;oi lam� the strange light<lb/>
f��mg in � bathtub<lb/>
�f color �nd of the<lb/>
tp<lb/>
myself to stop "and ake ' 1� i l �Jkw<lb/>
occasion I recognise what I aL ??' Md� ttP��<lb/>
new m the oft-seen is Henrv S. mething<lb/>
Donald Sexauerexhhs . S nn Ufeat-<lb/>
�mages dealing with six J�" � si ���&amp;<lb/>
Charlotte before the 193? �ST' . .vison. of<lb/>
Sexaue's dexterity with hi LT lnt,i�� evince<lb/>
qualities may more �� ed�"� but his lyrical<lb/>
T o seen in km<lb/>
I" FACULTY p.?.<lb/>
?LtfVe,eVision' the 8h�d�ws<lb/>
and other .nterior scenes full<lb/>
fanciful effects of light,<lb/>
Stindt has said,<lb/>
iiniarnniiim<lb/>
I<lb/>
�iMiaaiiw<lb/>
,m�i,i �<lb/>
mm&amp;r mm:�<lb/>
 �<lb/>
��� m<lb/>
' �ttH��. �u. 4V�� ' ��b<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057174_0007"/><lb/>
30 January 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Psqs 7<lb/>
continued from p.6.<lb/>
drawin<lb/>
Makebelieve a naint'<lb/>
e .mages of mask, ' P�,gnantly incorporates<lb/>
female figure present' in �d that �Huitous<lb/>
�n Sexauer's works. His To<lb/>
Construct -iri  "<lb/>
possesses the mi.f 1S . charanstic in that it<lb/>
tema.efigUre;XnuC:0drb:tme d�m,nate<lb/>
Marilyn Cordlev'sCrl l Scwsn'<lb/>
both combine abstran T i a"rf 2<lb/>
Curative Jages T rch,tectural �ents with<lb/>
between the k! poppers. Thus the contrast<lb/>
retail syatm (XM t"� and ,he inhuma"<lb/>
achieved b, the use Z HTf �f � MaU?) "<lb/>
one painting. d'fferent graPh,c styles in<lb/>
MarUvn Gordlev's states in the brochufe<lb/>
nuoth " ear,S 8h�W' "Tht' establishment<lb/>
, eM'S" 'nventions, and visions have been an<lb/>
32 motivation in my work. 1 wish<lb/>
crystall�e vision through art applicabh<lb/>
human Mate and to the reality of out time<lb/>
this point of view has been pertinent to the<lb/>
 aching ol drawing and painting on an advanced<lb/>
level. Students are encourages to think in a flexible<lb/>
and creative manner and to develop a personal<lb/>
aesthetic in ther work<lb/>
Joe Buske's Fantasy with Pink Moon is a mixed<lb/>
composition utilizing delicate variations in<lb/>
earthly colors contrasted with a pink half-moon. It is<lb/>
to<lb/>
to the<lb/>
Recital<lb/>
planned<lb/>
Charley Ann Peele<lb/>
Hopkins, masters candi-<lb/>
date in music at East<lb/>
Carolina University, will<lb/>
present her graduate<lb/>
organ recital on Feb. 4<lb/>
at the First Presbyterian<lb/>
Church in Greenville.<lb/>
Hopkins, stu-<lb/>
dent of E.Robert Ervvin,<lb/>
will present a program<lb/>
which will include<lb/>
"Prelude and Fugue in<lb/>
sharp minor" by<lb/>
Buxtehude. "Suite du<lb/>
2nd Ton" by Guilain.<lb/>
Sonata 11 for organ"<lb/>
by Hindemith, "Sonata<lb/>
111 for organ" by<lb/>
Mendelssohn and three<lb/>
chorale preludes from<lb/>
"Clavierubung, Part<lb/>
111" by Bach.<lb/>
Hopkins re-<lb/>
ceived her Bachelor of<lb/>
Music from Meredith<lb/>
College and has served<lb/>
as a graduate teaching<lb/>
assistant at ECU. She is<lb/>
also choir director of<lb/>
the First United Metho-<lb/>
dist Church in William-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
The recital<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
an understated piece, quietly lovely.<lb/>
Buske says of the art of weaving that "The<lb/>
woven image in both its loom-controlled and<lb/>
hand-manipulated aspects has been my field of<lb/>
studio interest for many years. The mechanics of<lb/>
the process and the endless possibilities of pattern<lb/>
and texture are alway challenging<lb/>
Bill Holly presents us with a watercolor entitled<lb/>
Fall Landscape' which is a non-objective composed<lb/>
of dabs of Fall color. It is a pleasant composition-<lb/>
Holly observes that "To the act of painting I bring<lb/>
my subconscious experiences and reactions and<lb/>
some conscious, preconceived notions about color,<lb/>
composition, and technique. These notions serve as<lb/>
guidelines to get started<lb/>
"The fluid nature of watercolor challenges these<lb/>
preconceived notions and forces changes in search<lb/>
and discovery process. Hunches are followed,<lb/>
chances taken, evaluation made, and corrections<lb/>
implemented<lb/>
"The in-process decisions may serve to clarify<lb/>
ideas or may lead far from the original intentions.<lb/>
Whether or not the results are successful the<lb/>
satisfactions come fromexplorations and discoveries.<lb/>
"Those possibilities not used in that particular<lb/>
painting serve as stimuli for later paintings in<lb/>
series<lb/>
Phil Phillips' Mark is an endearing painting<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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1 A <lb/>
Aii SAVE WISELY, X<lb/>
Un of J NotM Worth 10n Defer Each On<lb/>
Your Nut Purchno Of JU Or Mora<lb/>
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� STETCH YOUR DOLLAR <lb/>
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COUPON<lb/>
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AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
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PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
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THE STROM BREWERY COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN � l7�<lb/>
Fill him up<lb/>
For the real beer lover.<lb/>
depicting the portrait of a little boy behind which<lb/>
are the images of the boys dreams: a train, a<lb/>
teepee, a car. The little boy wears a cowboy hat.<lb/>
All this is saved from being too cutsy and cliche by<lb/>
the excellently rendered portrait of the boy.<lb/>
Ed Rood's Phenomenological Color Series is a<lb/>
group of cool studies on the interaction of colors in<lb/>
a controlled change of a series of related colors. His<lb/>
designs are bold, masculine. "I paint says Reep.<lb/>
"Once I made pictures, then works. I try to make<lb/>
images today but can't. My vision is improving,<lb/>
however. A great number of people enjoy my work<lb/>
� especially my wife These etudes are brilliant<lb/>
and subtle.<lb/>
Cabbages, carrots and fruit are the subjects of<lb/>
Tran Gordley's vision. His Cabbage V Section is a<lb/>
convolus of green swirls. His Carrott Bands is a<lb/>
neatly arranged pattern of oranges against white.<lb/>
His Mixed Fruit is a composition of fluid color.<lb/>
Lack of space prohibits discussion of Robert<lb/>
Edminston's Head Study, a Nefertii, like sculpture<lb/>
Art Haney's fanciful sculpture, Harlev Davidson<lb/>
Panhead Hog Powered Trike, Bob Rashch's gum<lb/>
prints of Americana, Tom Evan's lovely brown<lb/>
non-objective Still Life, Wesley Crawley's Maillol-<lb/>
esque Untitled Bronze, Chuck Chamberlain's<lb/>
fantastical ceramic piece, Rita's Tickler, Terry<lb/>
Smith's astonishingly lovely woodwork and John<lb/>
Satterlield's necklaces.<lb/>
Each of these artists deserves further description<lb/>
and analysis than space permits, but suffice it to<lb/>
say that their work represents them well.<lb/>
A MESSAGE FROM<lb/>
THE TRAFFIC FICLHF<lb/>
Because II S If WIH 11 I I believes in and totally<lb/>
supports the ECU Athletic Program, we are pleased to announce our<lb/>
sponsorship of the University Women's Basketball team in conjunction<lb/>
with WNCT-Radio. To help celebrate this initial broadcast of<lb/>
women's sports, we are having a SPORTS SALE featuring sweatshirts,<lb/>
ski jackets, flannel shirts, and jeans. Come on in and take advantage of<lb/>
all the SUPER VALUES and support your women's basketball team.<lb/>
The games will be aired Feb. 6 at 7:30 against UNC and<lb/>
Feb. 12 at 7:00 against number one ranked Old Dominion<lb/>
TIHE II 41114 lit H<lb/>
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10:00-9:00 MonSat.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057174_0008"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
�an-<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 30 January 1979<lb/>
e Indians tonight<lb/>
Pirates shock Ga. Tech 66-64 in OT<lb/>
M avnor<lb/>
hi Pirates I heii<lb/>
i ten losses. M<lb/>
the gun marked I<lb/>
talented transfer<lb/>
ight tin- Bij.<lb/>
rienl Earliei this vear<lb/>
horn which i<lb/>
P<lb/>
" W i<lb/>
Kerb Krusen was opei<lb/>
I We've<lb/>
nt 13-0 in the earl)<lb/>
I in the fir<lb/>
mm) Drumm<lb/>
trine bad<lb/>
1<lb/>
fers face<lb/>
�i<lb/>
e<lb/>
ECl<lb/>
mm?<lb/>
Davenderwood muscles one in<lb/>
 i,<lb/>
son. Kvrhaufih star<lb/>
Pirates triumph<lb/>
over UNC-W 92-79<lb/>
UAH!<lb/>
Bis win<lb/>
Warrior. hrusen star<lb/>
I<lb/>
Herl<lb/>
M<lb/>
assis<lb/>
e ening, <lb/>
impressioi upoi S<lb/>
Me<lb/>
Ma)<lb/>
"H<lb/>
thai<lb/>
er.<lb/>
 f<lb/>
Waynor helps Mack<lb/>
M<lb/>
awa me<lb/>
responsibilities tl .<lb/>
star Oliver Mack lasl -� as<lb/>
doesn't ha<lb/>
ady Pirates humiliate Longwood<lb/>
ded tl ml)<lb/>
in it<lb/>
i She was,<lb/>
' ' � ontest<lb/>
i itili give the Pirate<lb/>
sperieni e While their<lb/>
the first half<lb/>
was light ami well<lb/>
ard Brenda Fettrow hit the tirt ol<lb/>
until<lb/>
1 17 left, the<lb/>
M' Wi<lb/>
md<lb/>
1<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
l<lb/>
Sot<lb/>
lasl wei k<lb/>
rihute 18 to<lb/>
ifl sev. i<lb/>
Lillian Bai ne re ed Roun<lb/>
 N'i and . hes<lb/>
W( R�ve thai starting<lb/>
experiem i i ommented I ath) ndruzzi<lb/>
" ' �'�' " pleased v ith the gamt . no doubt W e<lb/>
! �' ' II defensive effort w e didn't know<lb/>
what the) were doing on nfft n e foi a while "<lb/>
rhe Pirate mentor also hi the strong plav<lb/>
under 'he boards ol forward Lynn Emerson and<lb/>
;v Patt Howell, as well a- Thompson and<lb/>
Gin<lb/>
 ' tt'ad th state in rebounding<lb/>
x id a game like this (61 rebounds)<lb/>
tainh helps<lb/>
r game is an important game. We want<lb/>
one game at a time<lb/>
Hu 7. Pullen 1 ii I 2, Landon 2<lb/>
  0 0 In. Fettrow 3 1 10,<lb/>
Hughes i) 0 i 0, V ilson I<lb/>
" " i Min I (i (i 2, Ra) 0 1-3 1. Murrav �<lb/>
0-0 0, Brown I 0 0 2. Gates 0 0 0 0 IDTALS<lb/>
6 14<lb/>
ECl i<lb/>
hompson 9 5-7 23 E<lb/>
mersori Z<lb/>
Cirven 8 0-1 16, Kerhaugh 2 2-2 6, Barnes 0<lb/>
" " 0, Young (i ii 0 0, Rountree 7 5 18,<lb/>
Howell 2 ii 0 , Ross X 0-0 H. Inslej 1 0-0 2.<lb/>
Versprille 0 0 0 0 TOTALS 35 12-17 82<lb/>
Halftime ECl 52, Longwood 20 Fouled oul<lb/>
NnM fotal fouls ECl 19, Longwood 18<lb/>
� ethnical fouls: NONE. A-350v<lb/>
s�i�-k? id, .ir(1(, defe<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057174_0009"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
Long<lb/>
wait is finally over for Northrup<lb/>
30 January 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
By SAW ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
"� ht' would rathjr k" , be the first <lb/>
�linnc his frustratedI  �Ut �n the WrestHng "at<lb/>
i long slump teammatea erge from thei,<lb/>
Northrup, the Pirate's talented Ifi7<lb/>
1 earlier this ' 6' pounder, was<lb/>
W just before h V" ,Wh a torn ke<lb/>
wo month lhKCrlTInvitati�nal- A"d <lb/>
Welin� and watcthe'p t0sit �<lb/>
�ual matches this year aU f�Ur �f<lb/>
Pr"b4 be bafk n � "�&amp; f <lb/>
when the R, . , , � hneuD next<lb/>
" ,f" Bucs travel to Williamsburgh<lb/>
have l0 accept, ' explained Northrup who<lb/>
season with an 18-9 record. "But right<lb/>
;t� " gel hack out there and help my,<lb/>
'K even more frustrating tor Northrup has<lb/>
rash ot injuries which have sidelined<lb/>
!t enttre Pirate's lineup at one time fr<lb/>
� eyar. On paper, ECU certainly boasted<lb/>
� finest dual teams in the state before the<lb/>
�� And then, slowly, but surely, the<lb/>
un to crop up<lb/>
Revils, ECU's 177 pounder missed a<lb/>
th bruised ribs while Jay Dever has been<lb/>
all season long with back problems.<lb/>
Heavyweight D.T. Joyner fractured a bone in his<lb/>
hand near the end of football season and decided to<lb/>
postpone his senior campaign until next year.<lb/>
And just recently Steve Goode, a 158-pounder,<lb/>
suffered a severely bruised leg and has missed the<lb/>
Pirate's last two dual matches.<lb/>
"No one realizes this, but ive had the potential<lb/>
on this team to go undefeated at the beginning of<lb/>
the year said Northrup. "We've had more injuries<lb/>
and operations than any team here in the last five<lb/>
years put together. We've just been a team struck<lb/>
with bad luck and it really gets you down.<lb/>
"The upperclassmen can take it, but it's really<lb/>
tough on the freshmen who have to go out there<lb/>
and wrestle against some really tough opponents.<lb/>
Our Ireshmen have made tremendous improvement<lb/>
all season long, :hough, and they're improving more<lb/>
and more everyday In the wrestling room<lb/>
The Waverly, N.Y. native had been pushing<lb/>
himself extremely hard for the last two weeks<lb/>
preparing for the season's final dual matches before<lb/>
the Eastern Regionals and then, hopefully, the<lb/>
NCAA Championships in Ames, Iowa.<lb/>
"The last two weeks, I've worked real hard<lb/>
said Northrup. "I've been running a lot even<lb/>
though it hurts. But I've just got to do it to get<lb/>
bark in shape. The trainers have also helped me a<lb/>
lot with my knee<lb/>
Although Northrup failed to win a tournament<lb/>
title during the regualr season last year, everything<lb/>
"fell right into place" in the all-important Eastern<lb/>
Regionals which is the qualifying stop-off for the<lb/>
NCAA Championships.<lb/>
"I just seemed to peak there are the end of the<lb/>
season and that's exactly what any wrestler wants<lb/>
to be doing when he gets to the NCAA finals<lb/>
explained Northrup. "But my knee started acting up<lb/>
again after the regionals and it just hurt to walk by<lb/>
the time I got to the NCAA tournament<lb/>
Despite losing in the first round of the NCAA<lb/>
WU'TenN N�rthn t WaS named t0 the Amateaur<lb/>
Wrestling News All-Freshmen team and was listed<lb/>
among the top wrestlers in National Mat News'<lb/>
honorable mention selections.<lb/>
And Northrup is confident the Pirate's will have<lb/>
several performers, as well as himself, capable of<lb/>
qualifying for the nationals this year "Steve<lb/>
Coode was wrestling real well before he got hurt<lb/>
Bf, .fV .P0tential All-America said Northrup.<lb/>
Butch Revils and Frank Scaede are also real<lb/>
talented wrestlers who could make it to the finals<lb/>
As for Northrup? "I sat out of wrestling for<lb/>
three years after high school before I started again<lb/>
and it took me about five months to get that<lb/>
competitive edge back he admitted. "I know I<lb/>
on t be back in top shape in our dual matches<lb/>
next week but maybe towards the end of the season<lb/>
HI get a few breaks. After a season like this I<lb/>
could sure use a few<lb/>
ENTERING THE<lb/>
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Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 30 January 1079<lb/>
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Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
EC U swimmers drown Seahawks<lb/>
By DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
Sa Writer<lb/>
The Pirate men and<lb/>
women's swimming<lb/>
teams posted convincing<lb/>
victories over the UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington Seahawks,<lb/>
Saturday, in a dual<lb/>
swim meet in Minges<lb/>
Natatorium.<lb/>
The dual meet, first<lb/>
ever between the Pir-<lb/>
ate- and the Seahawks,<lb/>
was a runaway from the<lb/>
start as the men<lb/>
roasted to an easy 79-34<lb/>
win, capturing ten of<lb/>
the thirteen events<lb/>
while the women's team<lb/>
outdistanced their op-<lb/>
ponents 65-44.<lb/>
Pirate winners in the<lb/>
men's events included:<lb/>
Jack Clowar in the 100<lb/>
and 200 yd. freestyle;<lb/>
Tom Bell in the one<lb/>
and three meter diving<lb/>
events; Ted Nieman in<lb/>
the 100 vd. freest vie;<lb/>
John Tudor in the 50<lb/>
yd. freestyle; Joe Kushy<lb/>
in the 200 yd. indivi-<lb/>
dual medley; David<lb/>
Moodv in the 200 vd.<lb/>
backstroke; and, Doug<lb/>
Brindley in the 500 yd.<lb/>
freestyle.<lb/>
Coach Ray Scharf<lb/>
was satisfied with his<lb/>
squad's performances.<lb/>
"Our guys were pretty<lb/>
tired today, so we tired<lb/>
to take it easy. We<lb/>
expected the women's<lb/>
events to be close and<lb/>
they were. I was very<lb/>
happy with the job they<lb/>
did today<lb/>
Cindy Sailer took<lb/>
first place in three<lb/>
Intramural basketball<lb/>
moves into full swing<lb/>
By<lb/>
CANDY WEDEMEYER<lb/>
Intramural Writer<lb/>
The first full week<lb/>
of basketball came to a<lb/>
close with the tranked<lb/>
teams for the most<lb/>
pasrt of faring well.<lb/>
Belk Dormitory contin-<lb/>
ue- to dominate their<lb/>
division as ten Belk<lb/>
teams recorded wins.<lb/>
Top-ranked Pleasers<lb/>
downed their fellow<lb/>
fdorm members Belk<lb/>
slow motion 42-33.<lb/>
The Belk Players<lb/>
Association slaughtered<lb/>
the Scott Challengers<lb/>
102-30. Other Belk<lb/>
teams recording victor-<lb/>
ies were the Belk Buck-<lb/>
les, Belk Aviators, Belk<lb/>
White Hope, Belk Rush,<lb/>
Belk Stylons, Belk Roa-<lb/>
ches, Belk Stud Farm<lb/>
and Belk Slimy Dogs.<lb/>
Other ranked teams that<lb/>
won were Scott Stooges<lb/>
over the Jones Jailers<lb/>
58-44, Jones Jaguars<lb/>
over Scott Cadillacs 70-<lb/>
26 and the Slaystead<lb/>
Basketball Villians<lb/>
downed previously<lb/>
ranked Belk Bullets 44-<lb/>
23.<lb/>
In ClubIndependent<lb/>
play the Nads easilv<lb/>
overcame the Outsiders<lb/>
52-29, No Jumping<lb/>
Fools downed Phi Sigma<lb/>
Pi 42-29, the Heartbreak<lb/>
Kids downed the Dirty<lb/>
Dogs 70-37, the Tas<lb/>
manian Devils beat the<lb/>
Ozone Airmen 59-47,<lb/>
and the Pac upset the<lb/>
Langston D.Js 60-40.<lb/>
In a couple of close<lb/>
games involving non-<lb/>
ranked teams the Nug-<lb/>
gets defeated On Your<lb/>
Back 41-36 and Phi Ep-<lb/>
silon Kappa defeated<lb/>
ROTC I 47-46.<lb/>
For the fraternities,<lb/>
top-ranked Kappa Alpha<lb/>
downed Kappa Sigma<lb/>
52-44 and Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau had a rough rime<lb/>
with the TKE Bomb<lb/>
Squad but eventually<lb/>
downed them 32-31.<lb/>
Other fraternity results<lb/>
were as follows: Alpha<lb/>
Phi Alpha upset pre-<lb/>
viously ranked Omega<lb/>
Psi Phi 44-40, Sigma<lb/>
Nu defeated Delta Sig-<lb/>
ma Phi 40-24, Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi defeated Beta Theta<lb/>
Pi 43-15 and Alpha<lb/>
Sigma Phi defeated Sig-<lb/>
ma Tau Gamma 23-18.<lb/>
TOP TEN - Patterson<lb/>
1. Belk Pleasers<lb/>
2. Kappa Alpha<lb/>
3. Nads<lb/>
4. Jones Jaguars<lb/>
5. Slaystead Villians<lb/>
6. Heartbreak Kids<lb/>
7. Belk Players Ass.<lb/>
8. Scott Stooges<lb/>
9. Tasmanian Devils<lb/>
10. Phi Kappa Tau A<lb/>
Arm wrestling began<lb/>
last Thursday as several<lb/>
spectators gathered to<lb/>
watch first round action.<lb/>
Thursday's most gru-<lb/>
eling match was be-<lb/>
tween Wes Carrell and<lb/>
Michael Coopers in the<lb/>
middle wieght class. Te<lb/>
two struggled for over<lb/>
three minutes until Car-<lb/>
rell finally pinned Co-<lb/>
oper. Strong semi-<lb/>
finalists include Carrell<lb/>
and Charlie Carter in<lb/>
the middle weight,<lb/>
Bobby Little and wrest-<lb/>
ler Paul Osman in the<lb/>
light class, and Elaine<lb/>
Davis and Anna Ed-<lb/>
wards in the women's<lb/>
division. The heavy-<lb/>
weight finals will be<lb/>
held at halftime of the<lb/>
ECU William and Mary<lb/>
Basketball game. The<lb/>
favorite to win this<lb/>
match is Nate Wigfall.<lb/>
The men's and<lb/>
women's bowling pro-<lb/>
grams get under this<lb/>
week<lb/>
Breakfast, Lunch<lb/>
and Dinner<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
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FRIDAY<lb/>
$.20 OFF ON ANY MEAL<lb/>
Coupon offer effective Jan. 30<lb/>
Feb. 2,1979<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
-J<lb/>
events including the 500<lb/>
and 100 yd. butterflies,<lb/>
and the 50 yd. free-<lb/>
style. She was also on<lb/>
the winning freestyle<lb/>
relay team. Lucy Weck-<lb/>
erling broke the<lb/>
women's varsity record<lb/>
in the 50 yd. backstroke<lb/>
with a time of 32:17.<lb/>
Other winners included<lb/>
Karen Davidson in the<lb/>
500 yd. freestyle; Shar-<lb/>
on Burns in the 100 yd.<lb/>
freestyle; and, Julie<lb/>
Malcom in the 50 yd.<lb/>
breastroke.<lb/>
With Saturdav's win,<lb/>
the men's swim team,<lb/>
now riding a three meet<lb/>
winning streak, in-<lb/>
creased their record to<lb/>
3-2 while the Seahawks<lb/>
dropped to 4-2. Both<lb/>
the Lady Pirates and<lb/>
Seahawks now sport 3-2<lb/>
records.<lb/>
The Pirates will face<lb/>
interstate rival N.C.<lb/>
State today in a dual<lb/>
swim meet at Raleigh.<lb/>
Schedule starting time<lb/>
for the meet is 7 p.m.<lb/>
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ADD-A-GOLD BEADSthe beads you'll be<lb/>
proud to wear!<lb/>
VALENTINE'S SPECIAL<lb/>
7mml4k Solid Gold Bead$3.00 each<lb/>
JX. DAWSON, CO.<lb/>
2818 E. 10th St 102 N Main St<lb/>
Greenville Belhaven, N.C.<lb/>
(919)752-1600 (919)943-2121<lb/>
Prices good through Feb. 14, 1979<lb/>
LWIN Si3Q 5<lb/>
�<lb/>
Pizza &amp; Spaghetti House<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Spaghetti Special<lb/>
Large plate of Spaghetti<lb/>
with Garlic Bread<lb/>
$1.49<lb/>
7587400<lb/>
507 E. 14th St<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
NEVER BEFORE<lb/>
And Probably<lb/>
NEVER AGAIN!<lb/>
SONYSTR 7800<lb/>
Sony STR 7800 SD<lb/>
125 Watts Per<lb/>
Channel<lb/>
For<lb/>
$399.95<lb/>
Inquira at<lb/>
Harmony House<lb/>
South<lb/>
Downtown on tha Mall, Graanvlli. 752-3651<lb/>
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