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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057184_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
North<lb/>
Vol<lb/>
M<lb/>
55, No. 4?T<lb/>
13 March 1979<lb/>
Med School construction to begin soon<lb/>
B ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
dertising Manager<lb/>
Dr. William E. Laupus, dean of the School of<lb/>
Medicine, said recently that the Liason Committee on<lb/>
Medical Education (LCME) has given the ECU<lb/>
chool ol Medicine "continued provisional approval"<lb/>
tor one year, and that construction will begin on the<lb/>
- medical school building at the Pitt Countv<lb/>
Memorial Hospital on March 15.<lb/>
Laupus said that the LCME is scheduled to do<lb/>
another "sight survey" during the ll)7Q-80 academic<lb/>
year to evaluate third year programs.<lb/>
Recording the Laupus, full approval and<lb/>
creditation will come during the fourth year of<lb/>
operation.<lb/>
Laupus said that this is standard procedure for<lb/>
an) medical school just starting up its operations.<lb/>
Laupus said that S26 million in state contracts<lb/>
have Leon given out for the construction of the new<lb/>
medical building.<lb/>
The new building, said Laupus, will contain an<lb/>
auditorium, classrooms, administrative offices, a<lb/>
health sciencevlibrary, research labs and offices of all<lb/>
med -chool depts offices for consultative out-prac-<lb/>
clinics will he included in the new building also.<lb/>
rhe building will be 9 stories tall and will contain<lb/>
160,000 square feet of floor space.<lb/>
Laupus s-iid this is one of the largest construction<lb/>
- ever undertaken by the state of N.C.<lb/>
medual school facilities are presentlv<lb/>
scattered around in the north tower of the biology<lb/>
building, Ragsdale Hall, and the Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
Laupus said that the new building should be<lb/>
read in 24 to 30 months. At that time the med<lb/>
school will vacate the north tower of the biology<lb/>
building and Ragsdale Hall.<lb/>
Since the med school opened its doors to the first<lb/>
class ol students two years ago the school has<lb/>
developed residency in a number of areas: family<lb/>
med nine; internal medicine; obstetrics-gynecology;<lb/>
pediatrics; psychiatry; and surgery.<lb/>
According the Laupus the med school now has<lb/>
about 34 people doing residency work at Pitt<lb/>
Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
Laupus pointed out that those who are doing<lb/>
residenc) work are not students but are people who<lb/>
have already finished medical school.<lb/>
Laupus said that the med school plans to occupy<lb/>
part of the old Pitt County hospital building until the<lb/>
new med school building is finished.<lb/>
On July 1 the A wing of the old hospital will be<lb/>
taken over by the various med school departments.<lb/>
"This will give us an additional 22,000 square<lb/>
ieet ol lab and office space said Laupus. "We<lb/>
need 25-30,000 more feet of space<lb/>
Laupus said that the class that enters the med<lb/>
school tins iall ujl have 40 students, all are N C<lb/>
residents.<lb/>
This is an increase 0f 2 students over the size of<lb/>
I he tir-t class that entered two years ago.<lb/>
Laupus said that five new ' faculty members will<lb/>
oe added.<lb/>
Students study in Costa Rica<lb/>
ECU NEWS BIREAl<lb/>
HEREDIA, COSTA<lb/>
RICA- 15 ECU stu-<lb/>
have begun a<lb/>
semester of study at the<lb/>
Lniversidad Nacional in<lb/>
Heredia, Costa Rica,<lb/>
through an arrangement<lb/>
between the Costa Rican<lb/>
campus and ECl.<lb/>
The students are<lb/>
living with Costa Rican<lb/>
families, most of whom<lb/>
do not speak English,<lb/>
and are thus "provided<lb/>
with a family-oriented<lb/>
introduction into Latin<lb/>
culture, "while improv-<lb/>
ing their fluency in the<lb/>
Spanish language said<lb/>
Dr. RObert Cramer,<lb/>
director of the program.<lb/>
A variety of Latin<lb/>
A m e rican studies<lb/>
courses are offered,<lb/>
including tropical bio-<lb/>
logy, Central American<lb/>
geography, Central<lb/>
american history, socio-<lb/>
logy of Costa Rica's<lb/>
welfare system, field<lb/>
studies and Spanish<lb/>
language and culture.<lb/>
Some students are also<lb/>
engaged in independent<lb/>
research in their major<lb/>
fields.<lb/>
This is the sixth<lb/>
ear ECU students h<lb/>
ave studied at the<lb/>
Universidad Nacional,<lb/>
under sponsorship of<lb/>
the ECU Department of<lb/>
Geog'raphy.<lb/>
Among the locations<lb/>
visited by students in<lb/>
field study tfjps are the<lb/>
Atlantic and Pacific<lb/>
coasts, several volcan-<lb/>
oes, cloud forests and<lb/>
places of historical and<lb/>
cultural interst. A recent<lb/>
three-day trip to Manuel<lb/>
Antonio National Park<lb/>
on the Pacific coast<lb/>
included nature study<lb/>
with tropical biologists<lb/>
from the Universidad<lb/>
and a visit to a large<lb/>
African Palm plantation<lb/>
where palm nuts are<lb/>
cultivated for commercial<lb/>
use.<lb/>
This semester's<lb/>
group of students were<lb/>
officially welcomed to<lb/>
the campus by Dr. Jose<lb/>
Andres Masis, acting<lb/>
president of the Univer-<lb/>
sidad Nacional, at a<lb/>
luncheon hosted by the<lb/>
university administration<lb/>
and Student Federation.<lb/>
IS ECl STl DENTS are studying<lb/>
Costa Rica this semester. The<lb/>
students are shown here<lb/>
luncheon held in their honor.<lb/>
at a<lb/>
Transit discussed at SGA meeting<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne,<lb/>
SGA president, spoke to<lb/>
SGA members at Mon-<lb/>
day night's meeting<lb/>
about the veto on the<lb/>
bill for "Appropriations<lb/>
to Transit System<lb/>
Fund<lb/>
According to Payne,<lb/>
the bill is aot one of the<lb/>
best efforts the SGA can<lb/>
undertake. The money<lb/>
for buses he explained<lb/>
should come from ano-<lb/>
ther source, not set<lb/>
aside SGA fund. Payne<lb/>
stated that he had<lb/>
talked with transit bus<lb/>
managers who felt the<lb/>
bill was not effective.<lb/>
A motion to override<lb/>
the veto of the bill came<lb/>
from Charlie Sherrod, a<lb/>
member of the Student<lb/>
Welfare Committee.<lb/>
Sherrod felt the final<lb/>
veto would prove to<lb/>
students that SGA is not<lb/>
interested in a new<lb/>
transit system.<lb/>
Some members<lb/>
agreed with Payne and<lb/>
felt the bill should have<lb/>
first gone to the Appro-<lb/>
priations Committee as<lb/>
all bills do concerning<lb/>
monetary support. They<lb/>
felt the SGA should be<lb/>
spending summer fees<lb/>
and the bill is really<lb/>
ineffective. This year's<lb/>
legislature can not be<lb/>
positive that next year's<lb/>
legislature will be con-<lb/>
sistent in putting away<lb/>
money for a new bus,<lb/>
stressed the members.<lb/>
Other members<lb/>
agreed with Sherrod and<lb/>
stated that no one had<lb/>
made an effort to put<lb/>
money into a transit<lb/>
fund. They also stressed<lb/>
the fact that the buses<lb/>
are now falling apart<lb/>
and at least three new<lb/>
ones are needed.<lb/>
The motion to over-<lb/>
ride the veto the bill did<lb/>
not receive a two-thirds<lb/>
majority vote and failed<lb/>
to pass by the members.<lb/>
The appropriation to<lb/>
Phi Nu Alpha Sinfonia<lb/>
Music Fraternity was<lb/>
passed by members with<lb/>
an amendment of $100.<lb/>
Ill<lb/>
HI III<lb/>
CONSTRUCTION OF THE ECU Med S3 B?iWi?g .Ml g ?ndeny Mlh ,5.<lb/>
Med and Nursing Schools<lb/>
Bill could cut funding<lb/>
By ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
A bill js pending<lb/>
before the U.S. Con-<lb/>
gress that would cut<lb/>
and curtail funds to<lb/>
educational programs in<lb/>
the fields of health and<lb/>
medicine directly af-<lb/>
fecting the ECU Schools<lb/>
of Medicine and Nurs-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
According to Dr. Ed<lb/>
Monroe, Vice-Chancellor<lb/>
for Health Affairs, the<lb/>
movement to cut federal<lb/>
funds for health man-<lb/>
power programs is being<lb/>
spearheaded by HEW<lb/>
and President Carter.<lb/>
Monroe said that<lb/>
HEW is arguing that<lb/>
there is a surplus of<lb/>
doctors and nurses in<lb/>
the U.S however,<lb/>
Congress does not agree<lb/>
and in the past has<lb/>
refused to cut those<lb/>
funds.<lb/>
Monroe explained<lb/>
that the federal funds<lb/>
come in the form of<lb/>
formula grants; colleges<lb/>
and universities receive<lb/>
a certain number of<lb/>
dollars per student.<lb/>
Last fall a bill was<lb/>
passed in Congress to<lb/>
continue the funding of<lb/>
health manpower pro-<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
Congress then ad-<lb/>
journed and Carter re-<lb/>
fused to sign the bill<lb/>
allowing it to die.<lb/>
L nder a "continuing<lb/>
resolution" funds are<lb/>
Mill being provided,<lb/>
however funds under<lb/>
this resolution onlv last<lb/>
lor one vear.<lb/>
Monroe said that<lb/>
several weeks ago the<lb/>
Carter administration<lb/>
requested Congress to<lb/>
rescind the health<lb/>
manpower support.<lb/>
This request was<lb/>
made to the house of<lb/>
representatives' approp-<lb/>
riation committee.<lb/>
Originally funding for<lb/>
nursing programs was<lb/>
S30 million, Carter has<lb/>
requested a total cutoff<lb/>
of these funds.<lb/>
A house appropri-<lb/>
ations sub-committee<lb/>
refused the total cutoff<lb/>
uggestkm and instead<lb/>
deleted $10 million.<lb/>
According to Monroe<lb/>
the bill will now go to<lb/>
the full house and then<lb/>
to the senate.<lb/>
According to Monroe,<lb/>
both U.S. senators and<lb/>
all congressmen from<lb/>
N.C. were written to by<lb/>
ECU asking that they<lb/>
support full funding for<lb/>
the health manpower<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
Lath one wrote<lb/>
back and clearly indi-<lb/>
cated their support<lb/>
said Monroe.<lb/>
The total appropri-<lb/>
ations request for health<lb/>
manpower program- was<lb/>
1263 million, the Carter<lb/>
administration asked for<lb/>
a 3Ut of $168 million.<lb/>
The house agree.) to<lb/>
cut only $62 million.<lb/>
Monroe -aid that if<lb/>
I he cut- are made the<lb/>
?dfcel would be felt next<lb/>
fall at ECU.<lb/>
Vordiug to Monroe<lb/>
the school- of medicine<lb/>
and nursing would be<lb/>
hardest hit by the cut<lb/>
The ECU school ol<lb/>
medicine stands to lose<lb/>
about $300,000, the<lb/>
school of nursing would<lb/>
lose about $280,000.<lb/>
This money i-<lb/>
presently being used to<lb/>
pay the salaries for 14<lb/>
nursing fatuity mem-<lb/>
bers, 20 per cent of the<lb/>
total nursing faculty.<lb/>
Money" from the<lb/>
manpower program- is<lb/>
used in the medical<lb/>
school lo pay -alarie-<lb/>
and purchase- equip<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Whatever they see<lb/>
a nvvii for they can use<lb/>
this money for -aid<lb/>
Monroe.<lb/>
Monroe said that<lb/>
unless the state comes<lb/>
through with mono to<lb/>
replace the lost federal<lb/>
funding the nur-ing<lb/>
school face- two al-<lb/>
lernalive 1) , ul ,u.<lb/>
- ?? "I the faculty or 2)<lb/>
cut the number of<lb/>
-ludeni- renrolled in the<lb/>
-ehot nt nursing.<lb/>
Monroe -aid thai the<lb/>
federal government did<lb/>
"?t Uive he Mate- or<lb/>
the univer-itie- ,i;il ad-<lb/>
vance notice t hat tin<lb/>
tut- would he made.<lb/>
It tlu- matter i- not<lb/>
dean ?: up by the tin<lb/>
I he legislature (N.C.)<lb/>
fiin-he- then it will be<lb/>
hard to get the money<lb/>
said Monroe. "Carter<lb/>
hasn't given the schools<lb/>
enough time to prt.<lb/>
pare<lb/>
Monroe -aid that<lb/>
then i- an acute short-<lb/>
age ol nurses in N.C.<lb/>
Ho-pital -end re-<lb/>
cruiter- i Canada lo<lb/>
gel Canadian nurses to<lb/>
tome to work in N.C.<lb/>
ho-pitalaid Monroe.<lb/>
I he -ituation in N.C.<lb/>
i- typical ol the situation<lb/>
every w here except in<lb/>
the metropolitan areas<lb/>
iik' New 11rk.<lb/>
ilon i know nt a<lb/>
-ingle hospital in N.(i.<lb/>
thai i-n't aclhelv. dc<lb/>
pi rately try mg In ret nut<lb/>
iiur-e -aid Mouroe.<lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
<lb/>
DVandalism breaks out in men's<lb/>
dormssee p. 5.<lb/>
DSGA President reviews termsee<lb/>
p. 7.<lb/>
DMike Williams appears tonightsee<lb/>
p. 8.<lb/>
DPiedmont Chamber Orchestra per-<lb/>
formssee p. 8. <lb/>
? Bear Bryant to speak at ECU <lb/>
clinicsee p. 11.<lb/>
?ECU sweeps doubleheader over U<lb/>
. Connsee p. 10.<lb/>
Campus police report stolen<lb/>
cars<lb/>
By ROBERTAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
Francis Eddings,<lb/>
chief of campus police,<lb/>
told FOUNTABNHEAD<lb/>
in a recent interview<lb/>
that two automobiles<lb/>
have been stolen from<lb/>
the parking lot at<lb/>
Minges coliseum since<lb/>
November.<lb/>
'The owners of the<lb/>
vehicles contributed to<lb/>
the larceny of their own<lb/>
automobiles by leaving<lb/>
the keys in them said<lb/>
Eddings.<lb/>
According to Ed-<lb/>
dings, an auto belong-<lb/>
ing to a student was.<lb/>
stolen on Monday from<lb/>
the Minges parking lot,<lb/>
but was recovered . by<lb/>
policed Monday night<lb/>
on Chestnut St. on the<lb/>
west side of Greenville.<lb/>
Eddings said that no<lb/>
arrests have been made<lb/>
in the recent theft or in<lb/>
the theft of a university<lb/>
staff member's car that<lb/>
was stolen last Novem-<lb/>
ber.<lb/>
Eddings said that in<lb/>
both cases the can<lb/>
were found abandoned.<lb/>
In other police<lb/>
matters, Eddings re-<lb/>
? ported that two males,<lb/>
neither of whom are<lb/>
students, were appre-<lb/>
hended and arrested for<lb/>
breaking and entering<lb/>
into automobiles parked<lb/>
behind the library.<lb/>
One suspect was<lb/>
also charged with<lb/>
carrying a concealed<lb/>
weapon.<lb/>
Eddings said that<lb/>
both defendants are<lb/>
being given a prelim-<lb/>
inary hearing ' in Pitt<lb/>
County District Court<lb/>
and will be bound over<lb/>
for trial in superior<lb/>
court on the breaking<lb/>
and entering charges.<lb/>
It<lb/>
N<lb/>
- m - ?.??, .m M 0gMttm<lb/>
? ?V '?-r <lb/>
ttyh<lb/>
???- :k ill m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057184_0002"/><lb/>
,i<lb/>
Dorm Rooms<lb/>
Applications for resi-<lb/>
de hall rooms for<lb/>
Summer School 1979<lb/>
and School Year 1979-80<lb/>
be obtained from<lb/>
Housing Office as<lb/>
as an) one of the<lb/>
hall offices as<lb/>
March 13.<lb/>
leposits for these<lb/>
vmII be accepted<lb/>
Cashier's Office<lb/>
ing March 19.<lb/>
uired deposit for<lb/>
? S hool is $89.<lb/>
;50 tor private<lb/>
and for Fall<lb/>
160. The<lb/>
m u t b e<lb/>
mied b) the<lb/>
priate applica-<lb/>
terms<lb/>
v i 11 be<lb/>
in the offices<lb/>
respective resi-<lb/>
halls according to<lb/>
?wing schedule:<lb/>
ruesday. March 20:<lb/>
- who desice to<lb/>
the room they<lb/>
tor Fall<lb/>
r will be assign-<lb/>
wednesday, March<lb/>
luates, rising<lb/>
: rising junir-<lb/>
Hiursday, March 23.<lb/>
- phomores will<lb/>
Contest<lb/>
AKD is having its<lb/>
annual paper contest<lb/>
with cash prizes going<lb/>
to the authors of win-<lb/>
ning papers! Runners up<lb/>
in each division (under-<lb/>
grad and grad) will<lb/>
receive prizes also. AKD<lb/>
urges you to submit a<lb/>
paper (in the field of<lb/>
sociology). Submit<lb/>
papers to Bobby Little,<lb/>
sociology departmental<lb/>
office, 4th floor Brewster<lb/>
bldg.<lb/>
Pageant<lb/>
The Miss Black and<lb/>
Gold Pageant will be<lb/>
held March 22, 1979<lb/>
from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.<lb/>
in the Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
You can win 8 FREE<lb/>
GAMES of bowling! By<lb/>
being the champion of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center's Mini-Bowling<lb/>
Tournament, you can<lb/>
walk away with it all. If<lb/>
you can bowl the<lb/>
highest 3-game score<lb/>
any time during one<lb/>
week, you will qualify<lb/>
for the roll-off on<lb/>
Monday, April 9. Four<lb/>
bowlers will qualify for<lb/>
the roll-off and one of<lb/>
them could be you.<lb/>
Drop by the Bowling<lb/>
Center for more details<lb/>
and while you're there,<lb/>
gie it a try.<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 13 March 1979<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
GREENSBORO-The<lb/>
22nd annual Seminars<lb/>
Abroad-open to all<lb/>
college students-will be<lb/>
offered by Guilford<lb/>
College beginning May<lb/>
24 and ending July 29.<lb/>
Members will be<lb/>
introduced to people and<lb/>
the places of the great-<lb/>
est artistic, cultural and<lb/>
historic importance in<lb/>
Paris, Madrid, Pisa, Flo-<lb/>
rence, Rome, Athens,<lb/>
Bern, Wengen, Munich,<lb/>
Vienna, Budapest,<lb/>
Leningrad, Berlin,<lb/>
Copenhagen, Amsterdam<lb/>
and London.<lb/>
Meetings with col-<lb/>
lege students are held<lb/>
in several cities, and<lb/>
free time is scheduled<lb/>
so that members can<lb/>
pursue special interests.<lb/>
Group leaders are<lb/>
Claude Shotts, director<lb/>
of Seminars Abroad<lb/>
since 1957 and coordina-<lb/>
tor of off campus<lb/>
studies at Guilford, and<lb/>
Ruth Rothe, a German<lb/>
native who has planned<lb/>
and led Seminars<lb/>
Abroad's summer pro-<lb/>
gram for 15 years.<lb/>
Either may be con-<lb/>
tacted at Guilford Col-<lb/>
lege for more informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
The League of Scho-<lb/>
lars will meet Tues. at<lb/>
7 P-m. in rm. 247<lb/>
Mendenhall. All mem-<lb/>
bers should plan to<lb/>
attend or see Dr. Ebbs<lb/>
to sign up for Scholar-<lb/>
ship Weekend. Final<lb/>
plans for our sympo-<lb/>
sium will also be discus-<lb/>
sed.<lb/>
Billiards<lb/>
There will be an<lb/>
Eight-Ball Billiards<lb/>
Tournament on Tuesday,<lb/>
March 27, 1979, at 6:00<lb/>
p.m. in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Billiards<lb/>
Center. All ECU stu-<lb/>
dents who are interested<lb/>
should register now at<lb/>
the Billiards Center. No<lb/>
registration forms will<lb/>
be accepted after Fri-<lb/>
day, March 23.<lb/>
Placement<lb/>
Un Wednesday,<lb/>
March 14 , the Socio-<lb/>
logy-Anthropology club<lb/>
will sponsor a special<lb/>
presentation presented<lb/>
by the ECU placement<lb/>
office. This special pro-<lb/>
gram will deal with<lb/>
resume preparation, job<lb/>
interviews, etc. A movie<lb/>
entitled: "The Inter-<lb/>
view" will also be<lb/>
shown. All are welcome<lb/>
and refreshments will be<lb/>
provided. The program<lb/>
will be held at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in room BD-302.<lb/>
Interning Meeting<lb/>
All students that are<lb/>
interested in working<lb/>
this summer with the<lb/>
State of NC Internship<lb/>
Program, please come<lb/>
by the Co-op Office as<lb/>
soon as possible. The<lb/>
deadline has been ex-<lb/>
tended from the 28 Feb,<lb/>
to 6 Mar<lb/>
The Society for the<lb/>
Advancement of<lb/>
Management will meet<lb/>
Wednesday, March 14i<lb/>
oo, 5 pm- in r?om<lb/>
221 Mendenhall. Elect<lb/>
tions of new officers will<lb/>
take place. All interes-<lb/>
ted persons are invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Everyone interested<lb/>
in applying the teach-<lb/>
ings of Jesus Chirst to<lb/>
their daily life is inivited<lb/>
to participate in an<lb/>
informal, direct Bible<lb/>
study each Tuesday at<lb/>
8:30 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
D-308 (sponsored by<lb/>
students for Christ).<lb/>
Cheers<lb/>
Varsity Cheerleading<lb/>
Try Outs open for guys<lb/>
and girls. No experience<lb/>
needed! All stunts and<lb/>
cheers will be taught.<lb/>
Everyone come out and<lb/>
see what its like. Meet<lb/>
at Minges-March 20th<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
GRAND OPENING<lb/>
PtiiyflpPicles<lb/>
ATfCETTC cOOT-WEARaMXESSORES<lb/>
Phldippldes Is Greenville's Resource Center<lb/>
For Cardio Vascular Fitness<lb/>
10 to 50 Savings During Grand Opening<lb/>
MensWomens Running and Tennis<lb/>
Shoe Specials<lb/>
I Shoe Saver I SHOE PATCH SPECIAL<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
PATCH<lb/>
S?! PAISH eXte,XJS " ,rfe oW shoes bV f'thng ,n worn soots<lb/>
patching holes and restoring the thickness o heets and sotes<lb/>
Reg. '3.00 now 2.00<lb/>
for patching<lb/>
footwear by Adidas, Nike, Puma, New Balance ,<lb/>
QrLPn!mV Etonlc ' Brook?. Converse, Tiger. Hours<lb/>
mreonvme 10-9:30 Dail<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA STUDENT UNION<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
?<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
$4.00 (in advance)<lb/>
PUBLIC<lb/>
$6.00<lb/>
with<lb/>
Thurs<lb/>
March 22,1979<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
for sale<lb/>
1976 500cc Kawasaki for<lb/>
sale, excellent condition<lb/>
has carry-all rack and<lb/>
back rest, also Hi-way<lb/>
foot rests, 2 new tires<lb/>
go with it - 1800. Call<lb/>
758-0962 after 7 p.m if<lb/>
you call earlier leave<lb/>
name and no. with ans.<lb/>
service.<lb/>
Stereo equipment avail-<lb/>
able thru College Dealer<lb/>
Check prices before you<lb/>
buy elsewhere. Call<lb/>
Michael, Stereo Consul-<lb/>
tent for Krasco, 7522601<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4 F-78 15's,<lb/>
GOodyear, Steel-belted<lb/>
radials. Have approx.<lb/>
15,000 miles on them.<lb/>
Call Laura at 758-6592.<lb/>
grMH Eetsona?<lb/>
MALE OR FEMALE<lb/>
Housemate needed -<lb/>
comfortable 3 B.R.<lb/>
house 1 mi. from<lb/>
campus. Pets are fine.<lb/>
Rent $58 plus 13 util.<lb/>
Call 758-6715 or<lb/>
752-2164 after 5 only.<lb/>
Ask for Bob.<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS 9<lb/>
counselors, asst.<lb/>
waterfront Director,<lb/>
Music Director, Arts &amp;<lb/>
Crafts Director, and a<lb/>
Dietician are needed at<lb/>
Camp Leach, Episcopal<lb/>
Camp near Bath, June<lb/>
17-Aug. 14. Call Rev.<lb/>
n<lb/>
 ri?.r?-rs??'i? ?-?????<lb/>
Bill Hadden at 758-2030<lb/>
if interested.<lb/>
WANTED: Responsible<lb/>
person willing to ex-<lb/>
change barn work for<lb/>
horseback riding<lb/>
lessons. Own transpor-<lb/>
tation required. Call<lb/>
756-7941 between 7-9<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
WANTED: Part time<lb/>
help, Putt-Putt golf<lb/>
course. 2 jobs available.<lb/>
?<lb/>
I in Greenville, 1<lb/>
Rocky Mount. Call<lb/>
758-1820 after 2 p.m.<lb/>
Spring is here! Time for<lb/>
that portrait you've been<lb/>
thinking about. Have it<lb/>
done OUTDOORS. (Ml:<lb/>
758-0962, portraits by<lb/>
Pete Podeszwa also<lb/>
resume pictures in black<lb/>
and white, weddings<lb/>
and all types of group<lb/>
shots.<lb/>
SENIORS - resume<lb/>
preparation is the kay<lb/>
factor in job placement.<lb/>
National Printing Co. is<lb/>
offering resume prep-<lb/>
aration to seniors. You<lb/>
merely submit the in-<lb/>
formation and we pro-<lb/>
vide the resume. Photo-<lb/>
graphs can be included.<lb/>
Low prices. For more<lb/>
information, contact<lb/>
Richard Cole at Office<lb/>
758-2486 Tues. &amp;<lb/>
Thurs. from 2-5 p.m. or<lb/>
Home 752-1662.<lb/>
LOST: Small black<lb/>
puppy wearing white<lb/>
flea collar. Lost on 10th<lb/>
St. near College Hill<lb/>
Dr. If found, please call<lb/>
752-4227.<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057184_0003"/><lb/>
CHANELO<lb/>
PIZZA ?P SPAGHETTI HOUSE<lb/>
' 507 E. 14th St. Greenville<lb/>
CALL - 758-7400<lb/>
:???KQS<lb/>
HAS WEEKLY BARGAINS<lb/>
TUESDAY DINE IN SPECIAL<lb/>
SPAGHETTI AND MEAT SAUCE<lb/>
STEAMING HOT AND PILED HIGH<lb/>
WITH MEAT ON A 11" PLATTER<lb/>
ONLY ? A PLATTER<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY , NO COUPON NECESSARY<lb/>
?,? <lb/>
&amp;-?<lb/>
YOU CAN'T EAT THIS<lb/>
CHEAP AT HOME!<lb/>
AND VALUABLE COUPONS<lb/>
CUP HERE<lb/>
5.95 VALUE<lb/>
FREE CHANELO'S T-SHIRT<lb/>
IHftKKB 5<lb/>
&amp; NAME: <lb/>
P PHONE:<lb/>
This note is legal tender for<lb/>
a free Chanelo'sT-Shirt with purchase<lb/>
of any party size pizza with one or<lb/>
more toppings.<lb/>
CARRY-OUT OR DINE-IN ONLY<lb/>
-?COlTPON EXPIRES MARrii ia-<lb/>
EXPIRES MARCH 19<lb/>
2 FREE<lb/>
TWO 13 OZ. COKES<lb/>
.W-Nftjfl'S<lb/>
NAME:<lb/>
PHONE:<lb/>
This note is legal tender for 3 free<lb/>
12 oz. cokes with purchase of any footlong<lb/>
sandwich, yonr choice of meat.<lb/>
CLIP HERE<lb/>
2 FREE<lb/>
TWO QUARTS OF COKE<lb/>
rfi i<lb/>
: w-W&amp;b s<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
PHONE:<lb/>
This note is good for 2 free qts.<lb/>
of coke with purchase of any large<lb/>
or medium pizza.<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES MARCH 19-<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
?ffrlNfciJS<lb/>
NAME:<lb/>
P PHONE:<lb/>
This note isn't good for<lb/>
anything. Its just free!<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES MARCH 19 <lb/>
.COUPON EXPIRES MARCH 19-1984.?J<lb/>
 -<lb/>
? 4 ??-?.??<lb/>
 ? "? i  - ?<lb/>
(t ? -  X<lb/>
mHi sMN??iwWi.?Wi' ?U(2<lb/>
'?xs<lb/>
<pb facs="00057184_0004"/><lb/>
P?9 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 13 M.rch 1979<lb/>
Carter's cuts unfair<lb/>
DR. PtfluiPS?<lb/>
There is a bill pending in<lb/>
Congress which could cut funds to<lb/>
health and medicine educational pro-<lb/>
grams (see story, p. 1). it should<lb/>
come as no surprise that this move,<lb/>
which would seriously limit the<lb/>
programs offered and the students<lb/>
enrolled in our nursing and med<lb/>
schools, is being spearheaded by<lb/>
HEW Secretary Joseph Califano, never<lb/>
a friend of this state, and President<lb/>
Carter.<lb/>
Carter's reasoning is, at best,<lb/>
uninformed, since he and HEW claim<lb/>
there is a surplus of doctors and<lb/>
nurses in the U.S. Congress,<lb/>
fortunately is more in touch with the<lb/>
needs of its constituents and has<lb/>
refused to cut off funds entirely,<lb/>
although they have proposed reducing<lb/>
the appropriation from $30 million to<lb/>
$20 million. Our president and his<lb/>
advisors have obviously never been to<lb/>
northeastern North Carolina, Appalach-<lb/>
ia, or any of a dozen other<lb/>
predominantly rural areas and seen<lb/>
first hand the virtually non-existant<lb/>
medical facilities.<lb/>
Many residents of these areas are<lb/>
forced to travel several miles, often to<lb/>
the next county, in order to reach a<lb/>
physician or nurse. Even more urban<lb/>
areas such as Raleigh and Greenville<lb/>
have felt the nurse shortage. Both<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital and<lb/>
Rex Hospital in Raleigh have been<lb/>
forced to close entire wings and limit<lb/>
patient admissions because they were<lb/>
understaffed.<lb/>
The med school would lose about<lb/>
$300,000, while the School of Nursing<lb/>
would lose about $280,000. This<lb/>
money (in the form of grants) is<lb/>
currently paying the salaries of 14<lb/>
nursing faculty members, 20 percent<lb/>
of the entire nursing faculty.<lb/>
ECU has contacted North Caroli-<lb/>
na's representatives and all have<lb/>
pledged their support for full funding<lb/>
of the health manpower programs.<lb/>
OHIACKV0U0W6 me ft<lb/>
STAAT. CotfCMTUUlTiONS-<lb/>
I ?CC you fflAMftfrED TO FlMO YOUft<lb/>
WAV BACK.<lb/>
HuM?OMycH.<lb/>
<lb/>
Vbu DwJ'T SOUMDTO? ?NTjUiiASTiC<lb/>
DiO you FiHO TMC uSM??om?<lb/>
I tioPC So.<lb/>
How C YOU HoLDiMft UP?<lb/>
IT'S B?CH aoirc A UHiLt<lb/>
Pont ftfmiNp wc. we oetn<lb/>
AFRAID To roovr AAoond Too<lb/>
fUoCH r TRY NOT To TilireX<lb/>
AftOUT IT.<lb/>
SoftVD?CSN,T HCLP<lb/>
mocH,DOCS IT?<lb/>
HoT fltocH.<lb/>
Viewpoint<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Gay leader rebuts letter<lb/>
'Sinful'gays need 'compassion'<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I would like to<lb/>
respond to the conserva-<lb/>
tive view and liberal<lb/>
mouth of Neil Johnson<lb/>
in the Feb. 27 edition<lb/>
of FOUNTAINHEAD. I<lb/>
was surprised that such<lb/>
a "God fearing" person<lb/>
as he made himself to<lb/>
be has such a hard<lb/>
heart and condemning<lb/>
attitude.<lb/>
I agree that student<lb/>
funds should not be<lb/>
allocated for sinful acti-<lb/>
vities which not only<lb/>
overs homosexual coun-<lb/>
sellors I ut a score of<lb/>
other things also. It is<lb/>
prett) evident in the<lb/>
Bible that homosexuality<lb/>
is siqful. The apostle<lb/>
Paul vsrote in his letter<lb/>
to the Romans (chapter<lb/>
1, verses 18-32) about<lb/>
thi subject and others.<lb/>
In speaking of man<lb/>
he said, "For even<lb/>
though they knew God,<lb/>
the) did not honor Him<lb/>
as God, or give thanks;<lb/>
but they became futile<lb/>
in their speculations<lb/>
and their foolish heart<lb/>
was darkened.<lb/>
"Professing to be<lb/>
wise, they became fools<lb/>
. . . For they exchang-<lb/>
ed the truth of God for<lb/>
a lie . . . For this<lb/>
reason God gave them<lb/>
over to degrading pass-<lb/>
ions; for their women<lb/>
exchanged the natural<lb/>
function for that which<lb/>
is unnatural, and in the<lb/>
same way also the men<lb/>
abandoned the natural<lb/>
function of the woman<lb/>
and burned in their<lb/>
desire towards one ano-<lb/>
ther, men with men<lb/>
committing indecent acts<lb/>
and receiving in their<lb/>
own persons the due<lb/>
penalty of their error<lb/>
of God is eternal life in<lb/>
Christ Jesus our Lord<lb/>
Yes, homosexuality<lb/>
is sinful, but so is<lb/>
gossip, lying, cheating,<lb/>
stealing . . . and even<lb/>
condemning. In looking<lb/>
at adultery, Jesus Christ<lb/>
gave a good example<lb/>
Reader is<lb/>
irritated at<lb/>
editorials<lb/>
Later, Paul speaks of<lb/>
what the penalty of sin<lb/>
is and also the cure of<lb/>
man's sinful condition<lb/>
(Romans 6:23): "For<lb/>
the wages of sin is<lb/>
death, but the free gift<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over SO years<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
DOUG WHITE<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
NEWS EDITORS<lb/>
RICK I GL1ARM IS<lb/>
MARC BARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editors<lb/>
Richy Smith<lb/>
Mike R og a r s<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editors<lb/>
Barry Clayton<lb/>
Bill Jonas<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Charlat Chandler<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
Assistant Advertising<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
Tarry Harndon<lb/>
Advertising Salesman<lb/>
Paul Llncka<lb/>
Chief Ad Artist<lb/>
Jana Walla<lb/>
Proofreaders<lb/>
Oaidra Dalahwnty<lb/>
Sua Johnson<lb/>
David Millar<lb/>
Typesetters<lb/>
Jaanatt Coals-<lb/>
Debbie Hota?in?<lb/>
Cartoonists<lb/>
Su Lamm<lb/>
Barry Clayton<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD la tha student<lb/>
newspaper of East Carolina University<lb/>
aponsorad by tha Modi Board of<lb/>
ECU and Is distributed each Tuesday<lb/>
? nd Thursday during the academic<lb/>
yootr (weekly during the eMmm.r)<lb/>
Editorial opinions are those of the<lb/>
Editorial Board and do not necoeeari-<lb/>
y reflect the opinions of the<lb/>
university or the Media Board<lb/>
Office or located en the second<lb/>
Hoor of the Publications Center (Old<lb/>
South Belldlns). Oer mslllna<lb/>
addrae. la: Old South Bulldlno.<lb/>
ECU, Greenville, N.C. B7S14.<lb/>
.??, 0?ene numbers are:<lb/>
? re 110 annually, alumni SB annually.<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Week in and week<lb/>
out, I pick up a<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD and<lb/>
go straight to the hu-<lb/>
mor (editorial) section,<lb/>
for that week's laughs.<lb/>
I did the same as usual<lb/>
this week, only to find<lb/>
myself quite irritated.<lb/>
First off, I read of<lb/>
all the gay's problems.<lb/>
My education here at<lb/>
ECU in classes of<lb/>
sociology and pyscholo-<lb/>
gy has taught me that<lb/>
homosexuality is caused<lb/>
from the lack of devel-<lb/>
opment within the<lb/>
mind.<lb/>
They say that great<lb/>
amounts of exposure to<lb/>
violence on TV leads to<lb/>
violent acts. What<lb/>
about homosexuality?<lb/>
If we don't stand<lb/>
"P. perhaps we all<lb/>
should bend over and<lb/>
give it a try. It's<lb/>
something that's unnat-<lb/>
Iural and belongs in the<lb/>
closet, next to the dirty<lb/>
shoes.<lb/>
The second thing<lb/>
that truly amazed me<lb/>
was all the controversy<lb/>
over Mr. Larry Gillman.<lb/>
The way I see it, he<lb/>
brought a good schedule<lb/>
to ECU.<lb/>
I would rather lose<lb/>
respectively sk to a<lb/>
good team in basketball<lb/>
than win humiliatingly<lb/>
against any of the<lb/>
second rate football<lb/>
teams we played this<lb/>
year, with the exception<lb/>
of N.C. State or maybe<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
If ECU isn't even<lb/>
going to try to run with<lb/>
the big dogs, why even<lb/>
try to think we can?<lb/>
Dave Anderson<lb/>
A heterosexual realist<lb/>
for us to apply to our<lb/>
own lives.<lb/>
In the same way we<lb/>
who believe in and<lb/>
follow Jesus should<lb/>
show compassion and<lb/>
care for homosexuals<lb/>
(and gossips and con-<lb/>
demners) but not accept<lb/>
their behavior.<lb/>
And lastly, in refer-<lb/>
ence to Luke Whis-<lb/>
nant's rebuke of Mr.<lb/>
Johnson, you only suc-<lb/>
ceeded in lowering<lb/>
yourself to the level of<lb/>
the person you consider-<lb/>
ed so low  proving<lb/>
yourself just as cruel<lb/>
and hard hearted.<lb/>
Angelo Candler<lb/>
By MICHAEL LEE<lb/>
Co-Chairperson<lb/>
East Carolina Gay<lb/>
Community<lb/>
In the SGA meeting<lb/>
of Feb. 26, I presented<lb/>
an explanation of bill<lb/>
LB-18-1 "Appropriations<lb/>
for the East Carolina<lb/>
Gay Community and I<lb/>
remained to wtach and<lb/>
listen with great interest<lb/>
to the proceedings that<lb/>
followed. I find it<lb/>
difficult to believe that<lb/>
Mr. Charlie Sherrod, in<lb/>
his letter to FOUNT-<lb/>
AINHEAD, March 1,<lb/>
would atempt to legiti-<lb/>
mize what happened in<lb/>
that meeting.<lb/>
The bill was favorab-<lb/>
ly reported to the floor<lb/>
by a unanimous vote of<lb/>
the appropriations com-<lb/>
mittee, but for the sum<lb/>
of 1200, not $250. Mr.<lb/>
Sherrod also knows as<lb/>
well as I and anyone<lb/>
else in the meeting that<lb/>
at least 80 percent of<lb/>
the time used in nega-<lb/>
tive debate was devoted<lb/>
to degrading the mor-<lb/>
als, aims and purposes<lb/>
of the group sponsoring<lb/>
the bill and to ominous<lb/>
warnings about the<lb/>
consequences of subsidi-<lb/>
zing those "abnormal<lb/>
deviants and not to<lb/>
any discussion of the<lb/>
merits or lack of merit<lb/>
in the bill.<lb/>
One member even<lb/>
proposed as a scare<lb/>
tactic that the role call<lb/>
vote be printed in<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD. The<lb/>
display was so embarr-<lb/>
assing to some memb-<lb/>
ers of the legislature<lb/>
that the president of<lb/>
our group and I have<lb/>
received calls from them<lb/>
apologizing for the ac-<lb/>
tions of their colleagues.<lb/>
I view, with greatest<lb/>
contempt, Mr. Sherrod's<lb/>
reference to the efforts<lb/>
of the East Carolina<lb/>
Gay Community to esta-<lb/>
blish a peer counselling<lb/>
group, as recruitment.<lb/>
The leadership of our<lb/>
organization is well a-<lb/>
ware, thanks to many<lb/>
painful experiences of<lb/>
the past, that the mor-<lb/>
als of gays are often<lb/>
questioned simply be-<lb/>
cause we are gay and<lb/>
therefore, we have<lb/>
made every effort to<lb/>
conduct the activities of<lb/>
the group with unquest-<lb/>
ionable integrity.<lb/>
Our group was start-<lb/>
ed and every meeting<lb/>
conducted with the aid<lb/>
and constant guidance<lb/>
of the Sisters of the<lb/>
Immaculate Heart of<lb/>
Mary, an order of the<lb/>
Catholic Church.<lb/>
Does Mr. Sherrod<lb/>
Greenpeace<lb/>
"Cut their hands off?"<lb/>
Protesters chain<lb/>
By JERRY ADDERTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
With shouts of "Cut their hands off ringing in<lb/>
the air, five vessels departed from St. Johns,<lb/>
Newfoundland, March 4.<lb/>
The shouts were not in reference to the seals,<lb/>
but to the half dozen young men and women from<lb/>
Greenpeace who had chained themselves to the<lb/>
sealing vessels in an effort to stop the ships from<lb/>
leaving port.<lb/>
Morrissey Johnson, captain of the "Lady<lb/>
Johnson who had earlier accepted the blessing of<lb/>
i j CLUrch in behalf of the sealers, used a<lb/>
sledgehammer to break the chain one woman had<lb/>
used to attach herself to the ship, although police<lb/>
were approaching with bolt cutters. Annie Linton, 25<lb/>
of Boston was kicked by Newfoundlanders who<lb/>
darted out of the crowd as she was carried down the<lb/>
gangway. The Newfoundland police stood by.<lb/>
"They would have killed us if the police hadn't<lb/>
rescued us said Greenpeace representative Dr.<lb/>
Patrick Moore. Dr. Moore had responded to the<lb/>
blessings of the sealers by asking for a blessing of<lb/>
the seals.<lb/>
The protest was intense and short lived. Jeffrey<lb/>
Kunz, 18, of Fort Wayne, Indiana, jumped off the<lb/>
dock and attempted to chain himself to the rudder<lb/>
cage of the "Lady Johnson Five Zoniac inflatable<lb/>
boats tried to stop the vessels, but were seized by<lb/>
the Coast Guard.<lb/>
A total of 12 Greenpeacers were arrested. None<lb/>
were injured. The vessels have left to begin the<lb/>
annual harp seal slaughter off Newfoundland.<lb/>
Greenpeace is saddened by the violent turn of<lb/>
events in St. John's. However, Greenpeace continues<lb/>
tirm in its resolve to seek a solution to this tragic<lb/>
selves to seal ships<lb/>
tt?SZ.f93?VSr both ou?<lb/>
In Alesund Harbor, Norway, volunteers from the<lb/>
Greenpeace vessel, "Rainbow Warrior" chained<lb/>
themselves to the deck and crow's nest of "he<lb/>
Norwegian sealing vessel, "Vesla Mari "<lb/>
Police removed seven Greenpeacers from the<lb/>
deck with boltcutters but three more in the crow's<lb/>
nest refused to come down, and flew a flag at the<lb/>
top saying "Save the Seals" in Norwegian <lb/>
tfcJ?T P AleSUnd at 5:15 Pm- 'hat with<lb/>
three Greenpeace protestors on board<lb/>
They were later forced from the ship and let off<lb/>
at an island 30 miles offshore. All protestors were<lb/>
released from custody, but more were battered From<lb/>
angry crowds who also attacked independent ?e?<lb/>
photographers on the scene. ews<lb/>
Talks were held March 2 between r?-<lb/>
official Allan Thornton and ThorwaTd" ?SE?<lb/>
Norwegian secretary of state, on NoiDi<lb/>
involvement m the decimation of harp and horded<lb/>
seals of Newfoundland and the Jan Mayen are.<lb/>
(known as the western ice.) Thornton iskL T<lb/>
withdrawal of Norway from the annua massacre "<lb/>
in raris, a banner of protest of the hare .e.i<lb/>
hum was hung from the Eiffel Tower by dSuS?<lb/>
Allen and Greenpeace Paris, bringing renewed<lb/>
.nternationa publicity to the slaughter. <lb/>
th- ? uMt th ycar8? Greenpeace has gone to<lb/>
the ice to bear witness to the injustice of th?!<lb/>
by non-violentlv placing ourselv u he h"nt<lb/>
hunters' dubs and bX seals w! L thc<lb/>
only our commitment to life"itK .bnng with us<lb/>
behind .11 ill Vti ?-e<lb/>
hunt. Greenpe.ce wUl be on Z ? TatV" '<lb/>
working towards the day that snri? H?L ??.<lb/>
?ight again be a time of reneZTL? ' floe?<lb/>
it ahoulJ be. Save Uw ?b ?nd ?Iebr?km as<lb/>
honestly believe that the<lb/>
ECU Counselling Center<lb/>
would send a letter of<lb/>
support for our efforts<lb/>
to the SGA, signed bv<lb/>
all five members of the<lb/>
staff, if we were estab-<lb/>
lishing a recruitment<lb/>
center? aWe know,<lb/>
probably better than<lb/>
straights, that homosex-<lb/>
ual feelings and even a<lb/>
homosexual experience<lb/>
does not make anyone<lb/>
gay. Contrary to some<lb/>
popular beliefs, nobody<lb/>
has ever made anvone<lb/>
else gay and we have<lb/>
no intentions of trving.<lb/>
Everyone who has<lb/>
gone through the exper-<lb/>
ience of coming out<lb/>
knows the pain, fear<lb/>
and incredible loneliness<lb/>
it can bring and how-<lb/>
desperate the need is<lb/>
for someone to talk to<lb/>
who will understand and<lb/>
not condemn.<lb/>
When we contacted<lb/>
the Counselling Center<lb/>
about the idea, the<lb/>
professionals who staff<lb/>
the center felt the idea<lb/>
had merit and even<lb/>
offered the use of office<lb/>
space in the center, if<lb/>
we could staff it with<lb/>
trained people. The<lb/>
Counselling Center is<lb/>
cooperating with our<lb/>
efforts to obtain such<lb/>
training and will work<lb/>
m close conjunction with<lb/>
the Rev. and Mrs.<lb/>
Claude Andrews, who<lb/>
have demonstrated a<lb/>
competence in training<lb/>
peer group counsellors.<lb/>
The Rev. and Mrs<lb/>
Andrews have broad<lb/>
experience in the estab-<lb/>
lishment of this type of<lb/>
service at the University<lb/>
of Georgia. If the<lb/>
Counselling Center is<lb/>
willing to go on record<lb/>
?n'their letter to the<lb/>
A, supporting the<lb/>
peer counselling group<lb/>
as a valuable addition-<lb/>
al aid" then why does<lb/>
Mr. Sherrod feel that it<lb/>
would be "like sending<lb/>
a friend who has suicid<lb/>
at tendencies to a<lb/>
f-rson standing on .<lb/>
Mr. Sherrod's attem-<lb/>
pt to deny that the<lb/>
M,A defeated bill<lb/>
LB-18-1 because of the<lb/>
group who sponsored it,<lb/>
falls woefully short.<lb/>
The SGA was aware of<lb/>
all the facts mentioned<lb/>
n this letter and more,<lb/>
and they still chose to<lb/>
ignore the obvious qual-<lb/>
ity and need of the<lb/>
project.<lb/>
t<lb/>
- - <lb/>
? -?????.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057184_0005"/><lb/>
13 March 19?9 FOUNTAINHtAD Page 5<lb/>
Greek Forum<lb/>
e<lb/>
9<lb/>
By RICKI GUARMIS<lb/>
-Vws Editor<lb/>
Well, another spring<lb/>
break has slipped ? away<lb/>
It s funny how ten davs<lb/>
of class, tests, and<lb/>
lectures seem to drag on<lb/>
wh.le ten days of sleep,<lb/>
sun and fun seem to<lb/>
quickly pass us bv.<lb/>
It's over though and<lb/>
now it s time to pull out<lb/>
all ot the text books<lb/>
nieh vse carelessly<lb/>
crammed under our bed<lb/>
and read those five<lb/>
books which should have<lb/>
been read over the<lb/>
holidavv.<lb/>
It will take us about<lb/>
a week to recover from<lb/>
the shock of once more<lb/>
attending classes and<lb/>
taking pages of notes.<lb/>
But once we get in the<lb/>
swing of things again,<lb/>
mabe we can write all<lb/>
those termpapers which<lb/>
aren't due for another<lb/>
month, or read those<lb/>
nocls which will only<lb/>
tested on the final<lb/>
U!11.<lb/>
It has been the<lb/>
experience of many stu-<lb/>
dents that to leave these<lb/>
long term projects un-<lb/>
done until the last<lb/>
minute is a very unwise<lb/>
decision. The reason<lb/>
being that in about<lb/>
three weeks, fraternities<lb/>
and sororities will begin<lb/>
the biggest time of the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Happy hours, field<lb/>
days, dances, and that<lb/>
irresistable urge to for-<lb/>
get present commit-<lb/>
ments and play in the<lb/>
sun, often get in the<lb/>
way of term papers and<lb/>
books.<lb/>
March 31, Greek<lb/>
Week will begin with Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi Field Day<lb/>
and the fun will not<lb/>
stop until one week later<lb/>
at Moser's Farm. It<lb/>
would be nice, for once,<lb/>
to be able to attend all<lb/>
the functions and not<lb/>
have to worry about<lb/>
school work. If we catch<lb/>
up on our work that we<lb/>
missed during break, we<lb/>
may consider writing<lb/>
tnat paper, even if we<lb/>
will have to hand it in a<lb/>
month early!<lb/>
Announcements:<lb/>
Six members of<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilons<lb/>
attended the regional<lb/>
convention last weekend.<lb/>
The convention was held<lb/>
in Atlanta, Ga.<lb/>
Tuesday, the Sig-Eps<lb/>
will have a happy hour<lb/>
at Pantana Bobs with a<lb/>
raffle and reduced prices<lb/>
on all beverages.<lb/>
The next Grubb<lb/>
Party will be this Satur-<lb/>
day, March 17. The<lb/>
party will start at 9<lb/>
p.m. Everyone is invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
The Alpha Xi Deltas<lb/>
are having their Pink<lb/>
Rose Ball Formal on<lb/>
March 23. The formal<lb/>
will be held at the<lb/>
Bogue Banks Country<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
The weekend of<lb/>
March 30-April 1, the<lb/>
Alpha Xi Deltas will<lb/>
host Epsilon Province<lb/>
Convention which will<lb/>
be held at the house<lb/>
and at the Holiday Inn.<lb/>
The Delta Zetas were<lb/>
very pleased with their<lb/>
Pancake Dinner. It was<lb/>
a big success. They<lb/>
would like to thank all<lb/>
the independents and<lb/>
Greeks for their support.<lb/>
The Delta Zetas are<lb/>
now getting reading for<lb/>
Dreamgirl, which will<lb/>
be held on March 23<lb/>
and 24.<lb/>
On Sunday, March<lb/>
18, the Alpha Omicron<lb/>
Pi Sorority pledges will<lb/>
have their first annual<lb/>
swim-a-thon for arth-<lb/>
ritis. Every house will<lb/>
be asked to put up a<lb/>
swimmer and as many<lb/>
monetary pledges as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
The organization<lb/>
raising the most money<lb/>
will win a trophy.<lb/>
The swim-a-thon will<lb/>
be held at the Memorial<lb/>
Gym Pool from 1 p.m.<lb/>
until 3 p.m. on Sunday.<lb/>
For more information<lb/>
call 758-7788.<lb/>
The spring formal for<lb/>
the Alpha Omicron Pi's<lb/>
will be March 23 at the<lb/>
chapter house. It will be<lb/>
in the form of a<lb/>
Hawaiian Luau and the<lb/>
spring pledges will be<lb/>
presented.<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sorority is proud to<lb/>
annouce that they have<lb/>
two new spring pledges.<lb/>
The pledges were induc-<lb/>
ted Monday night.<lb/>
Tri Sigs are having a<lb/>
Taco Dinner on Monday,<lb/>
March 19. For more<lb/>
information about<lb/>
tickets, call 752-1349.<lb/>
Tri Sigs are holding<lb/>
an all day rush work<lb/>
shop on April 1. This<lb/>
day will be in prepara-<lb/>
tion for formal rush in<lb/>
the fall.<lb/>
The Sigmas are<lb/>
holding their spring<lb/>
formal at the Greenville<lb/>
Country Club on March<lb/>
24. Several alumni<lb/>
members will be attend-<lb/>
ing and the pledges will<lb/>
be presented.<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/>
cally noted in this ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT, MARCH 17 AT A&amp;P IN<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
$208,652 in cash PRIZES!<lb/>
48,398 CASH PRIZE WINNERS<lb/>
OOO00 WINNER<lb/>
Recent vandalism in male dorms costly<lb/>
s1000?? WINNER<lb/>
'1000?? WINNER<lb/>
n<lb/>
1p0?? WINNER<lb/>
t<lb/>
JOHNGUITON, JR. LILLIAN FRANTZ MIRIAM L. FERRELL CURT<lb/>
CHINA GROVE, N.C. CAROLINA BEACH, N.C. ABBEVILLE, S.C. RALEIGH, N.C.<lb/>
ODDS CHART EFFECTIVE MARCH 11, 1979<lb/>
By ROBEhT SWAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
According to James<lb/>
B. Mallory, dean of<lb/>
men. approximately<lb/>
$700 has been collected<lb/>
from male dorm stu-<lb/>
dents during the past<lb/>
three weeks in restitu-<lb/>
tion for vandalism in<lb/>
the dorms.<lb/>
Mallory said that<lb/>
recently he has been<lb/>
meeting with residence<lb/>
hall directors, officers of<lb/>
the MRC. and indivi-<lb/>
dual house councils to<lb/>
formulate plans to<lb/>
combat vandalism in the<lb/>
dorms.<lb/>
"These people have<lb/>
done a good job<lb/>
publicizing the fact that<lb/>
students have to pay for<lb/>
vandalism said Mall-<lb/>
ory. "This has been a<lb/>
good campaign<lb/>
Mallory said that<lb/>
ninety per cent of all<lb/>
dorm vandalism occurs<lb/>
on weekends.<lb/>
"This year we have<lb/>
had an epidemic of<lb/>
people breaking out and<lb/>
stealing fire extinguish-<lb/>
ers said Mallory.<lb/>
"Windows and screens<lb/>
art the main things<lb/>
being damaged<lb/>
Mallory attributes<lb/>
much of the vandalism<lb/>
to alcohol consumption<lb/>
and in same cases to<lb/>
students 'rom other<lb/>
universities who are<lb/>
visiting ECU on week-<lb/>
ends.<lb/>
"We get them from<lb/>
all over, Carolina. State,<lb/>
and Wake Forest. They<lb/>
come down here and<lb/>
get to raising hell on<lb/>
the weekends and have<lb/>
too much to drink<lb/>
said Mallory. "It is a<lb/>
rare mvassion that a<lb/>
student vandalizes who<lb/>
has not been drinking;<lb/>
alcohol is the prevailing<lb/>
factor in vandalism<lb/>
Mallory said that<lb/>
most of the time<lb/>
students vandalizing are<lb/>
caught by the campus<lb/>
police or by the hall<lb/>
advisor.<lb/>
Mallory added that<lb/>
more and more students<lb/>
are coming forward and<lb/>
reporting acts of van-<lb/>
dalism and turning in<lb/>
those responsible.<lb/>
According to Mallory<lb/>
the punishment for<lb/>
vandalism on the first<lb/>
offense is restitution;<lb/>
second offense - restitu-<lb/>
tion plus a fine levied<lb/>
by the house council,<lb/>
loss of campus parking<lb/>
privileges, suspended<lb/>
suspension and possible<lb/>
removal from the dorm.<lb/>
Mallory said that<lb/>
removal from the dorm<lb/>
is used as a last resort<lb/>
because many students<lb/>
who want to get out of<lb/>
a dorm contract would<lb/>
commit acts of vandal-<lb/>
ism in order to get out<lb/>
of the dorm.<lb/>
Mallory said that<lb/>
discipline matters have<lb/>
been minimal this year<lb/>
except for those cases<lb/>
of vandalism and thefts.<lb/>
"We've had wonder-<lb/>
ful cooperation from the<lb/>
MRC and the house<lb/>
councils this year, they<lb/>
have done a fantastic<lb/>
job in combating this<lb/>
problem of vandalism<lb/>
said Mallory.<lb/>
59,572<lb/>
FOOD PRIZE<lb/>
WINNERS<lb/>
Number 0'Wtnn.ngOaai ?Oads 13Oaa? 26<lb/>
WinnersAmount-? - a?'M1Total<lb/>
 ?-? -<lb/>
i? "<lb/>
1 -<lb/>
5857J m-i?i ?.<lb/>
? ' <lb/>
ra<lb/>
2 IN A BAG<lb/>
LIMIT 2 BAGS.<lb/>
PLEASE<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH 2 IN A<lb/>
WHOLE-<lb/>
FRYERS<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
French student assists in teaching<lb/>
HOLLY RIDGE ? CHUNK<lb/>
SLAB BACON<lb/>
99c<lb/>
SWIFT'S<lb/>
HOSTESS HAM<lb/>
4"c'annd$7<lb/>
Limit one with $50 order<lb/>
B CHRIS CAGLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A native of Nancy,<lb/>
200 miles east of Paris,<lb/>
Ben.ut Herique works as<lb/>
a french assistant in the<lb/>
Foreign Language<lb/>
Department at ECU. He<lb/>
a Senior majoring in<lb/>
English and assists in<lb/>
ten hours of french<lb/>
class<lb/>
Herique describes his<lb/>
home as, "A university<lb/>
town with 220,000 inha-<lb/>
bitants "I enjoy assis-<lb/>
ting the classes because<lb/>
I can see both parallels<lb/>
of civilization and also<lb/>
the students' reactions<lb/>
to what I say said<lb/>
Herique.<lb/>
He stated that it was<lb/>
very hard to get this<lb/>
type of job. "A lot of<lb/>
students are eager to go<lb/>
to the United States,<lb/>
but approximately 60 or<lb/>
100 students get to<lb/>
go commented<lb/>
Herique.<lb/>
Herique explained<lb/>
the applying procedure<lb/>
for students who want<lb/>
the job. A student must<lb/>
fill out numerous appli-<lb/>
cations. There are 300<lb/>
applications sent<lb/>
through the university<lb/>
in Paris and then are<lb/>
sent to the International<lb/>
Institute of Education in<lb/>
New York. In New York<lb/>
approximately 80 appli-<lb/>
cations are picked, how-<lb/>
ever, stated Herique,<lb/>
this depends on the<lb/>
demand of the universi-<lb/>
ties. The student must<lb/>
sign a statement that<lb/>
requires him to go<lb/>
wherever there is a<lb/>
place in the university.<lb/>
Herique describes<lb/>
GreenvUle as a quiet<lb/>
place. "French people<lb/>
lie quiet places. We<lb/>
are used to villages in<lb/>
the middle of which is<lb/>
the church ? ???<lb/>
He went on to state that<lb/>
everything ?s typical in<lb/>
Greenville, For exam-<lb/>
ple in France you<lb/>
wouldn't see pink and<lb/>
green houses, or red<lb/>
brick houses, except in<lb/>
Europe "I don't feel<lb/>
homesick at all because<lb/>
1 am used to traveling<lb/>
and enjoy it very much.<lb/>
I began traveling at the<lb/>
age of 14 as french guys<lb/>
usually do all over<lb/>
Europe remarked Her-<lb/>
ique.<lb/>
Herique commented<lb/>
about the American TV<lb/>
shows that can be seen<lb/>
in France. "You can<lb/>
usually see at least ten<lb/>
good movies on TV, and<lb/>
shows like Kojak,<lb/>
Starsky and Hutch are<lb/>
translated in French<lb/>
He spends his week-<lb/>
ends traveling a lot.<lb/>
Herique explained that<lb/>
he would like to take a<lb/>
lot of pictures back<lb/>
home and he uses the<lb/>
time on weekends to<lb/>
photograph pictures<lb/>
about American life.<lb/>
To attend a univer-<lb/>
sity in France is very<lb/>
cheap, according to<lb/>
Herique. He stated that<lb/>
he paid $14 for tuition<lb/>
and registration for one<lb/>
year. "Students usually<lb/>
pay $40 a year, this fee<lb/>
is for everybody french<lb/>
or nonfrench. It is not<lb/>
like here in the U.S.<lb/>
where a different fee is<lb/>
required for in-state and<lb/>
out-of-state students<lb/>
said Herique.<lb/>
He went on to ex-<lb/>
plain that in the dormi-<lb/>
tories a student has a<lb/>
single room. "All dorms<lb/>
and individual depart-<lb/>
ments are located far<lb/>
away from each other<lb/>
A student usually tra-<lb/>
vels by mopeds. Accord-<lb/>
ing to him, second hand<lb/>
mopeds are easy to find<lb/>
and very cheap. A<lb/>
student can buy one for<lb/>
$100 and he usaully has<lb/>
at least one moped. In<lb/>
France you are able to<lb/>
travel by mopeds at the<lb/>
age of. 14 and drive a<lb/>
car at the age of 18.<lb/>
Before one can get<lb/>
his driver's license he<lb/>
must take lessons.<lb/>
There are usually 20<lb/>
required lessons, accord-<lb/>
ing to Herique. "You for getting vour<lb/>
pay approximately $500 license he said.<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
" Howdy ECU Students "<lb/>
Clip this coupon for<lb/>
good Western Eatin'<lb/>
DOUBLE<lb/>
R BAR BURGER<lb/>
REGULAR<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
MEDIUM DRINK<lb/>
$1.60<lb/>
offer good'til 3-24-79<lb/>
CAKE MIXES<lb/>
DUNCAN HINES ? BUTTER GOLD ? WHITE<lb/>
YELLOW<lb/>
LEMON<lb/>
DEVILS<lb/>
DELUXE I FOOD<lb/>
' Jy LIMIT TWO WITH COUPON<lb/>
' - , AND ADDITIONAL $7 50 ORDER<lb/>
 LIMIT ONE COUPON f <lb/>
SAVE GOODTMRU SAT. MAR 17 AT AP IN IjrOGnVIIIS 657<lb/>
288c<lb/>
pkgs KKgm r<lb/>
A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
A SUPERB BLEND, RICH IN BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
EIGHT O'CLOCK COFFEE<lb/>
7V7 UMrr ONE wrTH coupor? <lb/>
 SAVE 7 LIMIT ONE COUPON VTOO-TWlllO Df<lb/>
 31C S GOOD THRU SAT MAR. 17 AT AP IN D?w<lb/>
?65?<lb/>
TIDE<lb/>
LAUNDRY<lb/>
DETERGENT<lb/>
Limit one with this coupon and ???"?111?<lb/>
additional $7.50 order Good thru Sat March 24 at A&amp;P<lb/>
99<lb/>
49oz. pkg.<lb/>
tt<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Joe Collins<lb/>
with<lb/>
Shelly Lang<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat, March 16 &amp; 17<lb/>
Shows at 9 &amp; 10 p.m.<lb/>
Free snacks<lb/>
Room 15, Mendenhall<lb/>
Admission is 50 cents<lb/>
c<lb/>
GOLDEN RIPE<lb/>
BANANAS<lb/>
OUTSTANDING<lb/>
PRICE! lb.<lb/>
19<lb/>
MOUNTAIN DEW OR<lb/>
PEPSI COLA<lb/>
8Ni?k $139<lb/>
bottles<lb/>
JUICY?RED RIPE SLICING<lb/>
SWEET &amp; FIRM?RED RIPE<lb/>
TOMATOES I STRAWBERRIES<lb/>
 39 ? ?&amp; 99<lb/>
??? " "<lb/>
i -<lb/>
 -<lb/>
? -? ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057184_0006"/><lb/>
u?c " ' mMtnncMu 13 iwarcn i?9<lb/>
ECU program helps students get money<lb/>
By MARGARET BUNCH<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Tragedy strikes and a<lb/>
young man<lb/>
who lias a bright future<lb/>
in almost any field that<lb/>
he chooses, must inter-<lb/>
rupt his education and<lb/>
go to work to pay off<lb/>
family debts. Will he<lb/>
get the chance to be all<lb/>
he is potentially capable<lb/>
ol being in life?<lb/>
A bright high school<lb/>
senior is a member of a<lb/>
large family. The<lb/>
mother and father never<lb/>
finished grade school<lb/>
and there are several<lb/>
children to feed, clothe<lb/>
and send to school.<lb/>
How does this senior<lb/>
get the chance to be all<lb/>
lit' or she has the<lb/>
potential to become?<lb/>
The eldest daughter<lb/>
of a $27,000 a year<lb/>
family has a great skill<lb/>
for medicine or teach-<lb/>
ing, but one of the<lb/>
family members sudden-<lb/>
ly becomes ill with a<lb/>
long, debilitating and<lb/>
expensive disease. How<lb/>
does this young woman<lb/>
get the chance to be<lb/>
the doctor or teacher<lb/>
that she is potentially<lb/>
capable of being?<lb/>
Help for all these<lb/>
people and others like<lb/>
them-the details might<lb/>
vary some, but the<lb/>
bottom line is the<lb/>
same-is available<lb/>
through financial aid,<lb/>
the touchstone of many<lb/>
modern Horatio Alger-<lb/>
like stories.<lb/>
But there are prob-<lb/>
lems. Where to<lb/>
go:<lb/>
Who to see? How to fill<lb/>
out the forms. Who is<lb/>
eligible? Financial aid,<lb/>
for all its benefits, can<lb/>
be a financial jungle.<lb/>
ECU has a program<lb/>
to clear up this perplex-<lb/>
ing maze through the<lb/>
Financial Aid offices<lb/>
headed by Robert Boud-<lb/>
reaux, director, and<lb/>
staffed with three other<lb/>
officers; Doris Lamm,<lb/>
Karen Barbee and Ken-<lb/>
neth Wheeler.<lb/>
At request of princi-<lb/>
pals or counselors, some<lb/>
of the financial aid<lb/>
people will go out to<lb/>
local high schools and<lb/>
give workshop cr,r stu-<lb/>
dents and parents, offer-<lb/>
ing guidance sessions<lb/>
and explaining fife com-<lb/>
plexities of loans, grants<lb/>
and scholarships, and<lb/>
the best and easiest way<lb/>
to go about getting what<lb/>
you need to go to a<lb/>
college, technical school<lb/>
or university.<lb/>
The forms necessary<lb/>
for financial aid require<lb/>
much information that<lb/>
some families are reluc-<lb/>
tant to give, such as<lb/>
information about family<lb/>
income as reported on<lb/>
the last income tax<lb/>
form, indebtedness and<lb/>
other details of the<lb/>
family finances. After<lb/>
some assurance that all<lb/>
the information on the<lb/>
application is confiden-<lb/>
tial, most parents are<lb/>
willing to help their<lb/>
children get financial<lb/>
help, Boudreaux says.<lb/>
The directions on the<lb/>
forms sometimes need<lb/>
clarification. The unini-<lb/>
tiated, not used to the<lb/>
terms used, find filling<lb/>
out all the answers quite<lb/>
difficult in terms of<lb/>
understanding exactly<lb/>
what information the<lb/>
question is requesting.<lb/>
Boudreaux explains<lb/>
that at most schools of<lb/>
higher learning, at least<lb/>
50 percent of the enroll-<lb/>
ment has some type of<lb/>
financial aid. Overall,<lb/>
enrollment would be one<lb/>
third less if all financial<lb/>
aid programs were stop-<lb/>
ped.<lb/>
He and the ECU<lb/>
financial aid officers<lb/>
point out that there are<lb/>
many loans, scholarships<lb/>
and grants available to<lb/>
students. The basic<lb/>
problem seems to be<lb/>
that the students are<lb/>
reluctant to apply, do<lb/>
not know how to apply<lb/>
or think that they are<lb/>
not eligible.<lb/>
The terms for eligi-<lb/>
bility, according to Bou-<lb/>
dreaux, are becoming<lb/>
more lenient as the<lb/>
definitions of minimum<lb/>
income becomes a high-<lb/>
er figure.<lb/>
A recent change in<lb/>
the federal student aid<lb/>
program increases the<lb/>
number of students eli-<lb/>
gible for help-both in<lb/>
the group that is still<lb/>
dependent on family and<lb/>
the group that is living<lb/>
apart and independent<lb/>
of family.<lb/>
A student may be<lb/>
eligible for a Basic<lb/>
Educational Opportunity<lb/>
Grant (BEOC) even l(<lb/>
the family income is as<lb/>
high as $25,000 or more<lb/>
if the family has several<lb/>
children. The old ceiling<lb/>
was around $15,000.<lb/>
Boudreaux and his<lb/>
staff spend their time<lb/>
trying to match up<lb/>
students who need funds<lb/>
with the money that is<lb/>
available.<lb/>
This winter they<lb/>
have traveled to 11 high<lb/>
schools, held 15 work<lb/>
shops and talked to 780<lb/>
students and parents.<lb/>
Every one of the 780<lb/>
was an individual case,<lb/>
each one with special<lb/>
needs and each one was<lb/>
counseled on the chance<lb/>
to become all that he or<lb/>
she is potentially capa-<lb/>
ble of being.<lb/>
Spring break at bad time<lb/>
B KARlWENDT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The differences be-<lb/>
tween the spring breaks<lb/>
ol the past and those of<lb/>
the present are evident<lb/>
in in any ways. Perhaps<lb/>
most evident is where<lb/>
students spend their<lb/>
i acations.<lb/>
In the past, as many<lb/>
ol the seniors will<lb/>
remember, ECU was on<lb/>
the quarter system. The<lb/>
spring break normally<lb/>
occurred in late April or<lb/>
early May or wherever<lb/>
hater happened to fall.<lb/>
I sually the weather was<lb/>
jut beginning to warm<lb/>
up and the beach was<lb/>
the most popular place<lb/>
to spend the holidays.<lb/>
(with the exception of<lb/>
nursing majors who, I<lb/>
am told, spent most of<lb/>
vacation typing up<lb/>
ipers.)<lb/>
But at present, ECU<lb/>
is on the semester<lb/>
system. This means that<lb/>
if the spring break were<lb/>
going to fall around<lb/>
Easter, then it would<lb/>
come almost directly<lb/>
before final exams. So<lb/>
the break was moved up<lb/>
to late February or early-<lb/>
March. ,<lb/>
Unfortunately this<lb/>
meant that the weather<lb/>
was less than perfect for<lb/>
going to the local<lb/>
beaches. Students were<lb/>
left with the dilemma of<lb/>
"Where can I go for<lb/>
break?"<lb/>
Quite a few ECU<lb/>
students decided to keep<lb/>
the tradition of going to<lb/>
the beach, which is<lb/>
exactly what they did.<lb/>
But the beaches they<lb/>
went to were in Florida,<lb/>
not in North Carolina.<lb/>
Some students had<lb/>
hoped that the weather<lb/>
would be cold enough to<lb/>
go skiing. The physical<lb/>
education department<lb/>
even had a class going<lb/>
to Snowshoe, W. Va.<lb/>
over the break to<lb/>
practice their classroom<lb/>
training. Skiing was<lb/>
beautiful at Snowshoe.<lb/>
But it appeared that<lb/>
the majority of students<lb/>
were going to spend a<lb/>
long peaceful holiday at<lb/>
home, with the major<lb/>
activities being, "Sleep,<lb/>
eat and sleep some<lb/>
more<lb/>
Catching up on<lb/>
studies did not seem<lb/>
high on anyone's list of<lb/>
things to do.<lb/>
Many students<lb/>
seemed unhappy with<lb/>
where the break occurs<lb/>
during the semester.<lb/>
They expressed a desire<lb/>
to have the break a few<lb/>
weeks later in the<lb/>
semester so they could<lb/>
take advantage of<lb/>
warmer weather.<lb/>
Graduates take exam<lb/>
B RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Graduate Record<lb/>
Examination (GRE) and<lb/>
the Law School Admis-<lb/>
sions Test (LSAT) have<lb/>
been scheduled at ECU<lb/>
according to John S.<lb/>
Childers, director of the<lb/>
ECU Testing Center.<lb/>
The GRE will be<lb/>
offered at ECU on<lb/>
Saturday, April 28,<lb/>
1979.<lb/>
Applications are to<lb/>
be completed and<lb/>
mailed to Educational<lb/>
Testing Service, Box<lb/>
966-R, Princeton, NJ<lb/>
08540.<lb/>
Late registration<lb/>
deadline is March 28.<lb/>
The applications for<lb/>
the GRE can be<lb/>
obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center located<lb/>
in room 105, Speight<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
The LSAT will be<lb/>
offered at ECU<lb/>
Saturday, April 21.<lb/>
on<lb/>
Applications are to<lb/>
be completed and<lb/>
mailed to the same<lb/>
address which is listed<lb/>
above for the GRE.<lb/>
These application blanks<lb/>
can also be obtained in<lb/>
room 105, Speight<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
ARMY-NAVYSTO??<lb/>
1501 S. Evans <lb/>
B-15 Vxnbor, field.<lb/>
deck, flight, morke jackets<lb/>
Beck Pecks<lb/>
SAAD S SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
'113 GRANDE AVE,<lb/>
at<lb/>
COLLEGE VIEW<lb/>
CLEANERS<lb/>
RICGA.VS<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
AND<lb/>
LEATHER SHOP<lb/>
Nw leather pocketbooks<lb/>
belts, and belt buckles.<lb/>
Shoes repaired to look<lb/>
like new.<lb/>
Ill W. 4th St.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
Shoney't Real<lb/>
Italian<lb/>
ghctti with iu-<lb/>
P?rb, tasty,<lb/>
meat sauce,<lb/>
Parmesan<lb/>
Cheese, Hot<lb/>
Grecian<lb/>
Sherlock's<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
On 5th St. across from<lb/>
the Book Barn.<lb/>
Good Food<lb/>
&amp; w<lb/>
Good People<lb/>
Vegetarian diets<lb/>
respected.<lb/>
MonSat. 1 la.m. -9p.m.<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
Located b?sM<lb/>
the Ramada Min,<lb/>
264 By-past,<lb/>
SAUI<lb/>
$2&amp;9<lb/>
Freshman admissions coming in<lb/>
By ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
Freshman admissions<lb/>
applications are "run-<lb/>
ning about the same as<lb/>
last year according to<lb/>
Dr. John Home, dean of<lb/>
admissions.<lb/>
"And last year we<lb/>
had the highest number<lb/>
of applications we've<lb/>
had in years added<lb/>
Home.<lb/>
So far this year the<lb/>
admissions office has<lb/>
.accepted about 3,500<lb/>
freshmen, 5400 appli-<lb/>
cations have been re-<lb/>
ceived.<lb/>
Of those accepted,<lb/>
1340 were in-state men,<lb/>
176 out-of-state men,<lb/>
1,829 in-state women,<lb/>
and 374 out-of-state<lb/>
women.<lb/>
The average SAT<lb/>
score for incoming<lb/>
freshmen is 875, ac-<lb/>
cording to Home.<lb/>
Home estimates that<lb/>
about 55 per cent of<lb/>
those accepted will<lb/>
actually come in the<lb/>
Fail.<lb/>
Home said that<lb/>
approximately 50 per<lb/>
cent of those enter as<lb/>
freshmen will drop out<lb/>
or transfer before their<lb/>
class graduates.<lb/>
Home said that<lb/>
despite nationally de-<lb/>
clining enrollments ECU ?<lb/>
has leveled off and '<lb/>
remained steady with no<lb/>
decrease.<lb/>
th.<lb/>
'We've been<lb/>
admissions<lb/>
luckv,<lb/>
office<lb/>
ii r<lb/>
TRAFFIC FICFF<lb/>
50 OFF<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
Ladies and Mens Sweaters<lb/>
now as low as $10.00<lb/>
reg. up to $32.00<lb/>
HIS Cords $12.50 were $25.00<lb/>
WRANGLER Cords $7.50<lb/>
were $15.00<lb/>
HIS, MALE, FRENCH AND<lb/>
SEDGEFTFJ D Jeans now as<lb/>
low as $8.00 were up to $28.00<lb/>
Ladies Light Weight Wool Slacks<lb/>
$16.50 were $33.00<lb/>
Flannel Shirts $7.50 were $21.0(<lb/>
Satin Slacks $12.50 were $25.00<lb/>
All scarves , jewelry, vests, shawls<lb/>
50 off<lb/>
Plus 10 to 25 off on certain<lb/>
new Spring Merchandise<lb/>
Sale good<lb/>
Wed. 3-14 through Sat. 3-17<lb/>
1MX)-9rf)0p.m.<lb/>
limited supply so hurry<lb/>
THE<lb/>
I 4IIH HCIHF<lb/>
Pitt Pl?zi<lb/>
has done a good job of<lb/>
promoting ECU to the<lb/>
public said Home.<lb/>
Home said that his<lb/>
recruiters work primarily<lb/>
the two Carolinas and<lb/>
Virginia.<lb/>
In S.C. ECU re-<lb/>
cruiters visit Greenville,<lb/>
Columbia, and<lb/>
Charleston; in VA. they<lb/>
work the tidewater area<lb/>
of Norfolk and VA.<lb/>
Beach, Richmond, and<lb/>
northern VA and the<lb/>
Washington, D.C. area.<lb/>
Home said that the<lb/>
admissions office is<lb/>
beginning to send re-<lb/>
cruiters to the north.<lb/>
Home said they are<lb/>
now recruiting in parts<lb/>
of N.J. and New York.<lb/>
ror the first time<lb/>
we went to a high<lb/>
school college fair in<lb/>
Long Island, N.Y<lb/>
said Home. "We're<lb/>
going to another college<lb/>
fair in Boston<lb/>
"I'd be surprised if<lb/>
we get two students out<lb/>
of that trip to Long<lb/>
Island, but what we're<lb/>
doing is making contacts<lb/>
for 1980 said Home.<lb/>
Dorms will be filled<lb/>
by June, according to<lb/>
Home.<lb/>
"TIm'v would have<lb/>
been filled earlier if it<lb/>
hadn't been for the<lb/>
computer changeover<lb/>
said Home.<lb/>
Home noted that<lb/>
admissions standards<lb/>
have changed some over<lb/>
the last two years.<lb/>
The class of 1980<lb/>
that entered as fre-h<lb/>
men in the fall ! '76<lb/>
had to have a projected<lb/>
rade point average ol<lb/>
1.6; the class ol 1982<lb/>
that entered as fresh-<lb/>
men in the fall ol '78<lb/>
had to have a projected<lb/>
grade point average ol<lb/>
1.8.<lb/>
Home estimates that<lb/>
one third of the entering<lb/>
freshmen class will come<lb/>
Irorn five C counties:<lb/>
Wake, Guillord. Forsyth,<lb/>
Cumberland, and Meck-<lb/>
lenburg.<lb/>
These counties<lb/>
include the major met-<lb/>
ropolitan areas ol N.C<lb/>
Raleigh, Greensboro.<lb/>
w insion-Salem, High<lb/>
Point, Fayetteviiie, and<lb/>
Charlotte.<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
now has<lb/>
Rexall BRAND VITAMINS<lb/>
?&amp;?' ONE TABLET DAILY<lb/>
Family Vitamins<lb/>
Here's an ideal multivitamin supple-<lb/>
ment tor the whole family! Vitamins<lb/>
are essential for the health, growth<lb/>
and survival of all living things. If<lb/>
you're not sure you're eating food<lb/>
with the correct balance of nutri-<lb/>
ents, you owe it to yourself to take<lb/>
REXALL ONE TABLET DAILY Family<lb/>
Vitamin supplements.<lb/>
100TabletsREG. 2.30<lb/>
PLUS IRON 100's. . REG. $2.55<lb/>
YOUR CHOICE "J 99<lb/>
LOSE WEIGHT!<lb/>
The non-habit<lb/>
forming way fth<lb/>
jpexa<lb/>
PERMATHENE-<lb/>
12<lb/>
WITHOUT<lb/>
CRASH DIETS<lb/>
Of<lb/>
TORTUROUS<lb/>
EXERCISE'<lb/>
$9 99 REG<lb/>
?? 4.00<lb/>
?Rexaf High Potency<lb/>
STRESS<lb/>
FORMULA<lb/>
VITAMINS<lb/>
This supplement is specially<lb/>
formulated for "today's woman<lb/>
pressure and stressful situations can rob your bodv of<lb/>
important vitamins. REXALL STRESS FORMULA VITA-<lb/>
MINS work fast to replace water soluble B Complex<lb/>
Vitamins as well as Vitamin C and E. So when a hectic<lb/>
day starts to get you down?remember to reach for<lb/>
REXALL HIGH POTENCY STRESS FORMULA VITAMINS<lb/>
60 TabletsREG. M.05<lb/>
PLUS IRON 60V REG. M.55<lb/>
YOUR CHOICE<lb/>
TPexa<lb/>
VITAMIN C<lb/>
I 250 mg 250's s ?<lb/>
5? REG.?3.25 2.<lb/>
500 mg 250's $<lb/>
REG. ?5.55<lb/>
399<lb/>
CHEVVABLE 250 mg - fto<lb/>
250's REG. ?2.15 J<lb/>
CtMEGA)"<lb/>
00SE.<lb/>
1000 mg 100's <lb/>
Texal! TREOFER<lb/>
IRON TABS<lb/>
325 mg.<lb/>
Ferrous Sulfate.lOO's<lb/>
REG.<lb/>
?1.85 t<lb/>
DICALCIUM<lb/>
PHOSPHATE<lb/>
with Calcium Gluconate &amp;<lb/>
Vitamin D<lb/>
100Capills 4 19<lb/>
REG.?1.45 '<lb/>
 m VITAMIN<lb/>
P E 200 I.U 250's MUM)<lb/>
- L.REG. 7.15 lp<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
 tm m Store Hours<lb/>
 Fri- fr3O-5:0Qi<lb/>
t<lb/>
? im? , ?  <lb/>
 ?? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057184_0007"/><lb/>
id ivtarcn ia? ruUNfAlNncAU rage <lb/>
Steering Committee meets<lb/>
Kn RICKI guakhos<lb/>
News hditor<lb/>
Steering Com-<lb/>
the Put<lb/>
5 un Monitor-<lb/>
g Program met Wed-<lb/>
21. The<lb/>
? '??'? members<lb/>
the Court<lb/>
Program's<lb/>
1 Ml' it cm cut of<lb/>
i headed up<lb/>
responsible<lb/>
nitor's training,<lb/>
volunteers,<lb/>
Pitt Count)<lb/>
Monitoring Pr<lb/>
Sram is a program<lb/>
which through a team<lb/>
?t trained observers,<lb/>
will monitor the Pitt<lb/>
County courts over a<lb/>
designated period of<lb/>
time. The Monitoring<lb/>
will take place in order<lb/>
to recognize and docu-<lb/>
ment possible inade-<lb/>
quacies, recommend<lb/>
remedies to the prob-<lb/>
lems, and to promote<lb/>
improved understanding<lb/>
01 the system of justice<lb/>
by the general public.<lb/>
The program's state-<lb/>
ment ol purpose which<lb/>
ro-<lb/>
was reached<lb/>
at<lb/>
th<lb/>
recent meeting is "To<lb/>
promote swift, sure, and<lb/>
fair disposition of justice<lb/>
ter every defendant by<lb/>
working with the judi-<lb/>
ciary and the public<lb/>
toward improving the<lb/>
court system.<lb/>
The Court Monitor-<lb/>
ing Program will main-<lb/>
tain a speakers Bureau,<lb/>
according to Wendy<lb/>
Gronert, publicity chair-<lb/>
person for the program.<lb/>
Gronert states that any-<lb/>
one wishing to contact a<lb/>
speaker with CMP<lb/>
should call Mary Coch-<lb/>
ran at 756-3863, or Rov<lb/>
Schaal at 758-4895.<lb/>
Gronert also said<lb/>
that anyone wishing to<lb/>
be a volunteer with the<lb/>
program or anyone de-<lb/>
siring more information<lb/>
about CMP should con-<lb/>
tact Carroll Webber,<lb/>
coordinator of volun-<lb/>
teers, at 758-4906.<lb/>
The next meeting of<lb/>
the court Monitoring<lb/>
Program will be held at<lb/>
7:30 p.m Tuesday,<lb/>
March 27, at the First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church on<lb/>
14th and Elm Streets.<lb/>
All interested members<lb/>
of the public are invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Payne reflects on term<lb/>
By MIKE ROGERS<lb/>
distant News Editor<lb/>
rn Joe Payne, SGA president, recently<lb/>
his term which is reaching a close.<lb/>
ave learned a bunch about dealing with<lb/>
I've learned about the Board of Trustees<lb/>
ancil. I've really enjoyed it<lb/>
 the Board of Trustees has taught<lb/>
nt: different channels. For example,<lb/>
meious with their decisions like the<lb/>
I ?? said Payne.<lb/>
mtact with a lot of people in<lb/>
good, some bad. But by attending<lb/>
mncil meetings, I've learned things I<lb/>
hae learned otherwise said Payne.<lb/>
- as chairman of the Media<lb/>
? isked if he ever had problems with his<lb/>
loyalty to one or the other, he<lb/>
when I'm in the Media Board, I don't<lb/>
SGA; the opposite is true<lb/>
hat the Media Board takes up more<lb/>
'We had to try and get a broadcasting license<lb/>
WEC1 ide what to do about the Buc, and<lb/>
grip on the money<lb/>
explained the Board's difficulty concerning<lb/>
illy had two choices; either print the<lb/>
the money. However, the Board was<lb/>
awkward position when we were asked<lb/>
the money back into the<lb/>
lecision wa alreadv made tor<lb/>
some of his regrets about the<lb/>
inizations feel that if we tund them<lb/>
should fund them every year. The<lb/>
 expected to fund everything. For<lb/>
recent ga bill issue. 11 that bill<lb/>
had come across my desk, I would have vetoed it.<lb/>
Not because it had to do with homosexuals, but<lb/>
because all to the SGA's money comes from the<lb/>
students, and it's not their responsibility to fund<lb/>
counseling said Payne.<lb/>
Payne added, "I'm not surprised at what some<lb/>
people in SGA will do. Some enjoy playing politics.<lb/>
The only difference between us and the city council<lb/>
is the amount of money involved and the feedback<lb/>
from the public. Some members of the SGA treat it<lb/>
a an end rather than a means<lb/>
Payne went on to say that, "there are some<lb/>
problems with the school. For instance, if you are<lb/>
ticketed three times for being in a incorrect parking<lb/>
place, the police can tow you anytime they want,<lb/>
even if your car is in a legitimate parking space<lb/>
Payne added, "The transit and security systems<lb/>
need refinement<lb/>
"However, my main regret is that if we fund an<lb/>
organization once, they expect it every year. Drama<lb/>
and marching band get credit; we shouldn't give<lb/>
money to them. Each case should be dealt with<lb/>
separately. There should be exceptions, but the<lb/>
exceptions should not be precedents said Payne.<lb/>
Payne, "Alot of SGA members take the attitude<lb/>
that all of this year's money should be spent this<lb/>
year, but I feel that it should be spent responsibly<lb/>
Pavne also commented on student attitude.<lb/>
"Many people complain about the things that the<lb/>
SGA does, but they never come to the meetings and<lb/>
speak, they probably won't even vote next term.<lb/>
They really should come to the meetings if they're<lb/>
dissatisfied said Payne.<lb/>
Payne concluded, "Sometimes this job is a really<lb/>
hair-raising experience, and other times, it feels like<lb/>
a token position-really needless, but the experience<lb/>
one gains is really worth it<lb/>
Blake out of hospital<lb/>
BKK1 M SWAIM<lb/>
rhertising Manager<lb/>
? Blake,<lb/>
chan-<lb/>
ge -<lb/>
I inty<lb/>
H -<lb/>
. I rwenl<lb/>
pancrea-<lb/>
: the<lb/>
15 after<lb/>
itreme dis-<lb/>
- stricken<lb/>
i virus that in-<lb/>
, tn reas and<lb/>
hi is entire<lb/>
major problem<lb/>
a- a gastric illness that<lb/>
i ompletely paral) zed my<lb/>
stomach and abdomen<lb/>
said Blake.<lb/>
According to Blake<lb/>
he ha not had a<lb/>
physical in five year<lb/>
this a.? only the second<lb/>
time he has ever been<lb/>
hospitalized.<lb/>
Blake was hospital-<lb/>
ized for 10 days.<lb/>
Blake said that his<lb/>
absence from the uni-<lb/>
er-it did not cause<lb/>
an major problems or<lb/>
the need to reassign his<lb/>
usual duties<lb/>
"We have a fine<lb/>
team here in Dr.<lb/>
Brewer's administration,<lb/>
a fine inter-office team<lb/>
and secretarial stall<lb/>
said Blake.<lb/>
'If<lb/>
anv<lb/>
us are<lb/>
laid up, the team picks<lb/>
up the slack and ol<lb/>
course we are able to<lb/>
communicate by tele-<lb/>
phone<lb/>
Wed. PINNACLE<lb/>
"SSFnderswitch<lb/>
Afternoon Delight<lb/>
co-sponsored<lb/>
by TKE<lb/>
Sat. PEGASUS<lb/>
Sim. EAZE<lb/>
(dlivviiil rnrc 4 i u . i-i he stepping off into nowhere, but is only a few feet<lb/>
GRKKNMLLh (,IhS A muted, ehost-like appearance , JV-i ? l- u ? j<lb/>
r   ? . r.?i ? from hi.I s high-rise dormitories,<lb/>
to familiar surroundings. Ihis K(.l student seems to<lb/>
If someone cares for your children<lb/>
while you work, you may have a<lb/>
tax credit of up to $800 coming<lb/>
to you. Check your tax<lb/>
instructions for details.<lb/>
internal Revenue Service<lb/>
fflcialECUClassRlng<lb/>
20<lb/>
On sale are our men's<lb/>
traditional Siladium? rings and<lb/>
selected women's 10-karat<lb/>
gold rings. These rings are custom-<lb/>
made individually for you. They are an<lb/>
exceptional buy at the price of $59.95. You get your<lb/>
choice of many custom features. Come see them today.<lb/>
Large Selection of Gold Rings Available<lb/>
March 14, 15, 4 16. Student Supply Stor.kobby RT(7IRyLD<lb/>
Deposit require Ask about Oaster Charge or Visa. 'Savings vary slightly from style to styW. COLLEGE F0NGS<lb/>
3 days only!<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
? .<lb/>
- -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057184_0008"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
rat:<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 13 March 1979<lb/>
5<lb/>
Piedmont Chamber<lb/>
Orchestra appears<lb/>
On March 15. 1979,<lb/>
?it 8 p.m. the Piedmont<lb/>
Chamber Orchestra will<lb/>
present a lively and<lb/>
diversified program con-<lb/>
ducted by Nicholas<lb/>
Harsai The perfor-<lb/>
mance will be held in<lb/>
the Hendrix Theatre in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center an) is sponsored<lb/>
the Student Union<lb/>
rn- ? S ries Commit-<lb/>
ert will utter<lb/>
vari tlette of<lb/>
and -tie<lb/>
? ?   for<lb/>
orchestra,<lb/>
tra, ami<lb/>
 The<lb/>
am will be the "La<lb/>
Seta Overture"<lb/>
by Ha "Svmphony<lb/>
 H flat<lb/>
k Mozart;<lb/>
?n and Alie-<lb/>
Orches-<lb/>
E gar; "Con-<lb/>
E flat Major,<lb/>
Horns and<lb/>
5 xlet Op.<lb/>
Beethoven; and<lb/>
Suite, Op.<lb/>
ak<lb/>
Fr - Bergstone,<lb/>
principal<lb/>
assistant,<lb/>
the<lb/>
Beethoven<lb/>
Mr. Bergstone<lb/>
kground<lb/>
i y e r. He<lb/>
rincipal horn<lb/>
" sas City<lb/>
performed<lb/>
with the New tork<lb/>
Philharmonic, the Pitts-<lb/>
burg Symphony, the<lb/>
New York Opera, and<lb/>
has been soloist with<lb/>
the Cabrillo Music<lb/>
Festival. Mr. -he,<lb/>
since graduation from<lb/>
the North Carolina<lb/>
School of the Arts, has<lb/>
been principal horn of<lb/>
the Birmingham and<lb/>
Santa Rosa Symphonies,<lb/>
has performed with the<lb/>
San Francisco Symphony<lb/>
and Opera, and was a<lb/>
member of the<lb/>
Piedmont Brass Quintet.<lb/>
Nicholas Harsanyi,<lb/>
the dynamic conductor<lb/>
ol the orchestra, has<lb/>
made distinguished con-<lb/>
tributions to American<lb/>
musical life as conductor<lb/>
of the Princeton Cham-<lb/>
ber Orchestra, conductor<lb/>
ol the Bach Aria Croup,<lb/>
Director of the Inter-<lb/>
lochen Arts Academy<lb/>
Orchestra, and Dean of<lb/>
the school of Music of<lb/>
the North Carolina<lb/>
School of the Arts.<lb/>
Harsanyi has continually<lb/>
added to his reputation<lb/>
as a conductor with<lb/>
appearances ,? (u<lb/>
 ork, Canada, through-<lb/>
out Europe and the<lb/>
Eastern Seaboard. He<lb/>
has also made extensive<lb/>
recordings for Decca and<lb/>
Vox<lb/>
The entire 22 mem-<lb/>
ber orchestra is one ol<lb/>
rare spirit. It counts in<lb/>
its number a former<lb/>
concertmaster from the<lb/>
Orchestra de la Sutsse<lb/>
Romande, a winner of<lb/>
the prestigious Naum-<lb/>
burg Competition, prin-<lb/>
cipal players from major<lb/>
symphonies, and the<lb/>
nationally known Clarion<lb/>
Wind Quintet. The<lb/>
Piedmont Chamber Or-<lb/>
chestra is a professional<lb/>
affiliate of the North<lb/>
Carolina School of the<lb/>
Arts in Winston-Salem,<lb/>
NC. The orchestra was<lb/>
established in 1968 by<lb/>
the Rockefeller Founda-<lb/>
tion and the Foundation<lb/>
tor the School of the<lb/>
Arts. It received national<lb/>
recognition after its<lb/>
performance at the<lb/>
inauguration of Kennedy<lb/>
Center. At a time when<lb/>
the beauty and flexibility<lb/>
of the small orchestra<lb/>
are recognized and in<lb/>
great demand, the<lb/>
Piedmont Chamber Or-<lb/>
chestra is being ac-<lb/>
claimed as one of<lb/>
America's finest ensem-<lb/>
bles.<lb/>
Tickets are now on<lb/>
sale in the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Men-<lb/>
denahll Student Center.<lb/>
Tickis are S2 tor ECU<lb/>
students and $5 for the<lb/>
public. All tickets at the<lb/>
door are $5. For further<lb/>
information contact the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office at<lb/>
757-661S. ext. 266.<lb/>
k<lb/>
Nicolas Harsanyi conducts the Piedmont Chamber Orch<lb/>
estra<lb/>
The Outlaws and The<lb/>
Molly Hatchet Band will<lb/>
perform here at Menges<lb/>
Minges Coliseum on<lb/>
the campus of East<lb/>
Carolina University will<lb/>
be the site of a major<lb/>
concert featuring Arista<lb/>
recording artists The<lb/>
Outlaws. Special guest<lb/>
appearing on the concert<lb/>
will be Molly<lb/>
Hatchet. The<lb/>
concert, which is under<lb/>
the sponsorship, of the<lb/>
ECU Student Union<lb/>
Major Attractions Com-<lb/>
mittee, is scheduled for<lb/>
March 22 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
 grew<lb/>
Forida,<lb/>
The Outlaws<lb/>
up in Tampa,<lb/>
and carved out a<lb/>
reputation as a burning<lb/>
live band, playing the<lb/>
usual rounds of bars<lb/>
and clubs. Up from this<lb/>
grass root circuit the<lb/>
band went on to<lb/>
develop near legendary<lb/>
local stars. Their<lb/>
musical mentors were<lb/>
fellow Floridians Lynard<lb/>
Skynard who gave them<lb/>
their first lug break.<lb/>
In 1974 the band<lb/>
signed with Arista<lb/>
Records and released<lb/>
their first alburn.<lb/>
"Outlaws The album<lb/>
was released to coincide<lb/>
with a concert by the<lb/>
band before 100,000<lb/>
people in Central Park.<lb/>
From this auspicious<lb/>
beginning, the band has<lb/>
been constantly on the<lb/>
run. They toured with<lb/>
The Who in Euorope,<lb/>
opened for The Rolling<lb/>
ton?. and played tor<lb/>
audiences all uer the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Ticket- for the<lb/>
concert are priced at $4<lb/>
for F.C.I students and<lb/>
$6 tor the public.<lb/>
Tickets may be pur-<lb/>
chased from the ECU<lb/>
Central Ticket Office. In<lb/>
addtion, public tick. -<lb/>
may be purchased from<lb/>
Apple Rerords. School<lb/>
Kids Records, ami The<lb/>
Music Shop.<lb/>
Guitarist Mike Williams appears<lb/>
tonight at 8 p.m. in concert<lb/>
The Outlaws<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Special Attractions Co-<lb/>
mmittee will present<lb/>
another free concert<lb/>
tonight in the Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre, Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Fea-<lb/>
tured for the 8 p.m.<lb/>
show will be Mike<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
Mike Williams is an<lb/>
entertainer's entertainer.<lb/>
He is one of the<lb/>
strongest solo perform-<lb/>
ers in the country<lb/>
today. He has toured<lb/>
with 25 nationally known<lb/>
acts and appeared at<lb/>
numerous colleges and<lb/>
clubs.<lb/>
Primarily known for<lb/>
his mastery of the 12<lb/>
string guitar and his<lb/>
story-telling ability,<lb/>
Mike has been favorably<lb/>
compared to such artists<lb/>
as Leo Kotke and Mike<lb/>
Cross. In fact, he ha<lb/>
written several songs<lb/>
recorded by Cross and<lb/>
other artists including<lb/>
John Derner. His muu.<lb/>
has a country flavor and<lb/>
Iks have a tendeno to<lb/>
sing along or shout vMth<lb/>
Ne X illiams. p. 9<lb/>
Fingers is a 'strangely un-put-downable9 novel about Viet-Nam<lb/>
By WILLIAM JONES<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
The Five Fingers, by<lb/>
Gayle Rivers and James<lb/>
Hudson, is a "one of a<lb/>
kind" book.<lb/>
First impressions<lb/>
might easily cause this<lb/>
novel to be mistaken for<lb/>
a glorified, double-issue<lb/>
version of Sgt. Fury and<lb/>
his Howling Comman-<lb/>
dos. It is packed with<lb/>
more violence, death,<lb/>
blood and guts, than,<lb/>
possibly, any other book<lb/>
in print. Yet, one reads<lb/>
this bellicose adventure<lb/>
with the gruesome,<lb/>
everpresent knowledge<lb/>
that such horrific events<lb/>
actually took place. The<lb/>
story is true, but as the<lb/>
novel's cover puts it, it<lb/>
is "a story that can only<lb/>
be told as fiction<lb/>
The Five Fingers is<lb/>
about guerrilla warfare,<lb/>
specifically, that of the<lb/>
Vietnam theatre, 1969.<lb/>
It recounts a top-secret<lb/>
assassination mission<lb/>
launched by Allied<lb/>
Forces in South Viet-<lb/>
nam. The cover oper-<lb/>
ation's objective is to<lb/>
infiltrate southern China<lb/>
via Laos and North<lb/>
Vietnam, then 'hit' 11<lb/>
Chinese and North<lb/>
Vietnamese military<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
Code named The<lb/>
Five Fingers Exercise,<lb/>
the seven men who<lb/>
make up the furtive<lb/>
mission are crack<lb/>
special forces operatives<lb/>
from five countries.<lb/>
Each man is a<lb/>
specialist, the best of<lb/>
his kind in at least one<lb/>
facet of military opera-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Gayle Rivers, who<lb/>
co-authored the book, is<lb/>
from New Zealand. He<lb/>
was the youngest team-<lb/>
member, but second in<lb/>
command. Rivers is as<lb/>
close to being fighting<lb/>
machine as you can get.<lb/>
His instinct for survival<lb/>
in second to none.<lb/>
Other members of<lb/>
the force include Maj.<lb/>
Toliver, American Green<lb/>
Beret, commanding offi-<lb/>
cer; Lt. Tan, a Korean<lb/>
Ranger and communica-<lb/>
tion specialist; Master<lb/>
Sgt. Jackson, U.S.Green<lb/>
Beret, a demolitions<lb/>
expert; Cpl. Barry<lb/>
Wiley, an ustrailian<lb/>
explosives wizard and<lb/>
all-around superb sol-<lb/>
dier; Pfc. Morrosco, a<lb/>
Green Beret medic; and<lb/>
finally, Regimental Ser-<lb/>
gent Major Prather, a<lb/>
British "observer<lb/>
Gayle Rivers (a<lb/>
pseudomny) and James<lb/>
Hudson effect The Five<lb/>
Fingers with an en-<lb/>
grossingly piquant style<lb/>
of writing. Their subject<lb/>
matter is the most basic<lb/>
and animalistic of<lb/>
human drives  pure,<lb/>
untoward survival in the<lb/>
most uncivilized of<lb/>
settings, leech-infested<lb/>
jungle and swamp. Their<lb/>
technique is necessarily<lb/>
graphic and point-blank<lb/>
(how could one 'cheer-<lb/>
fully' describe the<lb/>
explosion of blood and<lb/>
bits of bone resulting<lb/>
from one man's blowing<lb/>
another man to half by<lb/>
shotgun?). And it deals<lb/>
most effectively with the<lb/>
circumstances of the<lb/>
novel.<lb/>
Rivers and Hudson<lb/>
carry the reader along<lb/>
on this clandestine<lb/>
adventure, viewing the<lb/>
action first-hand through<lb/>
the eyes of Gayle<lb/>
Rivers. The reader<lb/>
quickly becomes a<lb/>
member of the mission,<lb/>
reacting instinctively,<lb/>
killing as a .matter of<lb/>
course, planning each<lb/>
encounter with calcu-<lb/>
lating cold-bloodedness.<lb/>
Always with the single<lb/>
purpose in mind of<lb/>
survival to achieve<lb/>
mission completion.<lb/>
Until eventually ma-<lb/>
king it to Ta Shu Tang.<lb/>
China, site for the<lb/>
mission's execution.<lb/>
And then revenge<lb/>
becomes the single<lb/>
purpose in mind. Rev-<lb/>
enge alone drives you<lb/>
back toward yOUr<lb/>
superiors against incal-<lb/>
culable odds and un-<lb/>
bearable hardship.<lb/>
Five Finger8<lb/>
The Five Fingers is a<lb/>
ftrangely un-put-downa-<lb/>
t book. The authors<lb/>
aw the reader inl0<lb/>
intimate proximity of the<lb/>
ry with such Sk1 ,ha<lb/>
,hl T hard-put to ieave<lb/>
h's comrads' alone ln<lb/>
battle.<lb/>
While a work of<lb/>
"J-Kl'gible importance,<lb/>
FeT"8' <lb/>
rest,r -?e<lb/>
concerning th ,?<lb/>
1 . ? ine inner-<lb/>
h7:hk'ngs or ??.<lb/>
for rS' h"nd deling<lb/>
Ior what a ;? 1<lb/>
Forces - Special<lb/>
'?s suicide"<lb/>
search-and-destrov miss.<lb/>
,on must be like<lb/>
for those who can<lb/>
mach the reafism i"<lb/>
8,ves a raw taste of<lb/>
erillasurvival of<lb/>
? ????-? m. m<lb/>
;? , . ?<lb/>
 : : :<lb/>
<pb facs="00057184_0009"/><lb/>
IP HgrtMJI IJJ i .tfLa-LfcLLLI-L-LgJ ' "VP ?<lb/>
Young Artists Competition winners<lb/>
to perform in recital in April<lb/>
Carol Wolfe, Sheila<lb/>
? rooks, Jim Poteat and<lb/>
Ben Leaptrott, winners<lb/>
of the YOung Artists<lb/>
Competition at the East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
School of Music, will be<lb/>
presented in recital in<lb/>
April.<lb/>
All juniors, seniors<lb/>
or graduate students<lb/>
were eligible to enter<lb/>
the competition spon-<lb/>
sored by the Student<lb/>
Forum of the ECU<lb/>
music school. Judges for<lb/>
the competition were<lb/>
faculty members of the<lb/>
music school.<lb/>
Carol Wolfe of<lb/>
Orlando, Fla is a<lb/>
graduate student in<lb/>
piano under Henry Dos-<lb/>
key. She was declared<lb/>
the overall winner for<lb/>
her performance of the<lb/>
second and third move-<lb/>
ments of Mozart's<lb/>
"Sonata in B flat<lb/>
Major" and "Jeux D'<lb/>
Eau" by Ravel.<lb/>
A Glen Alpine, N.C.<lb/>
native, Jim Poteat, who<lb/>
studies oboe with David<lb/>
Hawkins, was winner of<lb/>
the instrumental divi-<lb/>
sion. He performed the<lb/>
first movement of "Con-<lb/>
certo in C Major" by<lb/>
Haydn and "Romance"<lb/>
by Schumann.<lb/>
Mezzo-soprano Sheila<lb/>
Brooks of Wilmington,<lb/>
N.C, winner in the<lb/>
vocal category, is a<lb/>
graduate student study-<lb/>
ing with Gladys White.<lb/>
Ms. Brooks selections<lb/>
lor the competition were<lb/>
"Immer leiser wird mein<lb/>
Schlummer" by Brahms<lb/>
and<lb/>
Va! laisse couler<lb/>
mes larmes" from<lb/>
WERTHER bj Masse-<lb/>
net.<lb/>
Pianist Ben Leaptrott<lb/>
ol Statesville, N.C. a<lb/>
junior studying with<lb/>
Paul Tardif, won the<lb/>
keyboard competition<lb/>
with "Intermezzo" b<lb/>
Brahma and "Capriccio"<lb/>
bv Dohnanvi.<lb/>
IKr WHI.IWIS IS an entertainers entertainer.<lb/>
i- one ol the strongest solo performers in the<lb/>
tod.iv. He bas toured with 25 nationally<lb/>
Esther Rolle brings<lb/>
tie-worn an show<lb/>
to campus March 19<lb/>
known acts and appeared at numerous colleges and<lb/>
Hubs. Williams is primarily known for his mastery<lb/>
of the 12 string guitar and his story-telling ability<lb/>
-ion<lb/>
R<lb/>
tyal<lb/>
r<lb/>
M .<lb/>
in<lb/>
E V<lb/>
ader<lb/>
? ima n<lb/>
tty, not<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
show<lb/>
on display<lb/>
a comedienne are<lb/>
known to television<lb/>
audiences throughout<lb/>
the nation. and the<lb/>
women she portrays<lb/>
were able to laugh at<lb/>
themselves and others.<lb/>
M- Rolle was<lb/>
trained in New York and<lb/>
has performed on stages<lb/>
and ofi Broadway. At<lb/>
present she is dividing<lb/>
her t line bet w een<lb/>
: vision and lour<lb/>
performances of her<lb/>
rent presentation, in<lb/>
which she plays two<lb/>
men oi contrasting<lb/>
natures  one white.<lb/>
e black; one educated,<lb/>
one illiterate; one<lb/>
middle class and one a<lb/>
treed slave  but both<lb/>
lividuals of strength<lb/>
mrage.<lb/>
Public tickets for the<lb/>
Esther Rolle perform-<lb/>
ano are Si each and<lb/>
are available at the<lb/>
EC! Central Tickel<lb/>
Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Iff it's sick to love a pen,<lb/>
then the world's going crazy.<lb/>
People are fanatics when it comes to their Pilot Razor Point pens.<lb/>
They're reluctant to give them up And when someone borrows one,<lb/>
what happens is inevitable<lb/>
First, they love the way it writes Really smooth and extra-fine. They<lb/>
go wild over its clever metal collar that helps keep the point from going<lb/>
squish Naturally they "forget" to give it back, although it's only 79tf.<lb/>
This can be very embarrassing when they're caught in the act.<lb/>
Others have pocketed Pilot's Fineiiner pen. The one with the slightly<lb/>
less delicate stroke. It's only 69c.<lb/>
So if you bor row someone's Razor<lb/>
Point o' Finelinei pen<lb/>
you'd berte'<lb/>
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But. for much e t!<lb/>
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Mce than iust something to write with.<lb/>
<lb/>
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? Vpril<lb/>
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and<lb/>
late<lb/>
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(ration in<lb/>
ents<lb/>
? Sallie<lb/>
a<lb/>
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Reg. $13.50 NOW ONLY $9.75<lb/>
WILLIAMS<lb/>
continued from p. 8<lb/>
Mike on several ot the<lb/>
i horuses<lb/>
Mike ha- two<lb/>
albums to his credit,<lb/>
'The Radio Show and<lb/>
"Free Man, Happy<lb/>
Man Both albums<lb/>
tot.prd b a mane of<lb/>
red hair, with a<lb/>
looming fuss-baritone<lb/>
voice and a big 12<lb/>
-tring guitar, he fills the<lb/>
stage all by himself. His<lb/>
Mono- and songs flow<lb/>
out naturally and easily,<lb/>
and Mike has the<lb/>
uncanny ability to keep<lb/>
his audience in stitches.<lb/>
For an evening of<lb/>
enjoyment you will not<lb/>
want to miss Mike<lb/>
w illiam-<lb/>
Pizza Ixixi<lb/>
AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
?<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
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-? r .? <lb/>
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mm"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057184_0010"/><lb/>
M<lb/>
1<lb/>
? -<lb/>
? ?V<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 13 March 1979<lb/>
3mSSikh<lb/>
i " ??<lb/>
ECU sweeps doubleheader over UConn<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The East Carolina baseball team swept a<lb/>
doubleheader from Connecticut yesterday afternoon<lb/>
to run their season record to 4-4.<lb/>
Parker Davis hurled a two-hit shutout in the<lb/>
opener as the Pirate offense exploded in the third<lb/>
inning for four runs and five hits en route to a 5-0<lb/>
w in.<lb/>
Bobb) Patterson and Earle Mobley combined for<lb/>
et another Pirate shutout in the second game,<lb/>
while the Pirate offense struck for all their runs in<lb/>
the first three innings in the 6-0 win.<lb/>
Pirate head coach Monte Little noted after the<lb/>
second game that the sweep was just what his club<lb/>
needed to get on track. "This should get our<lb/>
fellows believing in themselves again he said.<lb/>
"To have a good year he continued, "we'll<lb/>
need to have a couple of winning streaks of nine or<lb/>
10 in a row. I hope this is the start of a string<lb/>
here.<lb/>
Davis, a junior from Williamston, held the<lb/>
Huskies without a hit for five innings. An infield<lb/>
hit to open the sixth broke up his bid for a<lb/>
no-hitter.<lb/>
The third inning Pirate explosion in the first<lb/>
game began with a single by outfielder Billy Best.<lb/>
Butchdavis followed with another single as Best<lb/>
moved to third. Davis stold second just before<lb/>
Macon Moye slashed a two-run double to right<lb/>
field.<lb/>
Moye then scored on single down the left field<lb/>
line by Raymie Styons. Bob Neffs two-out single<lb/>
scored Styons to complete Pirate scoring in the<lb/>
inning the Huskies would probably like to forget.<lb/>
Max Raynor had two RBI and scored once to<lb/>
lead the Pirate attack in the second game.<lb/>
Pirate pitchers Patterson and Mobley held the<lb/>
Huskies to only five hits, three of which came in<lb/>
the sixth inning when the game was virtually sewn<lb/>
up.<lb/>
Pirate pitching in the doubleheader drew raves<lb/>
from Little. "Our pitching was just great he<lb/>
said. "But it has been all year. We have four or<lb/>
five guys who we feel can do the job. I guess our<lb/>
earned run average is below one now<lb/>
The sweep followed a 4-0 victory over the same<lb/>
Connecticut team on Sunday. Pirate pitcher Mickey<lb/>
Bntt allowed only four hits in that game.<lb/>
The win Sunday over the Huskies broke a four<lb/>
game losing streak for the Pirates, the last three of<lb/>
which were one run decisions.<lb/>
Two of those one run losses came at the hands<lb/>
of ACC and national power Clemson. The Pirates<lb/>
dropped the two games by 2-1 and 1-0 scores.<lb/>
"We just couldn't get the hits when we needed<lb/>
them at Clemson said Little. "But our pitching<lb/>
and defense was great. Besides, losing two games<lb/>
that close at Clemson is nothing to be ashamed of.<lb/>
Ihose losses won't hurt us at all<lb/>
Little did not seem concerned that his club had<lb/>
but two home runs after its first eight games.<lb/>
The power will he said. "We should start<lb/>
hitting much better as the weather breaks. We<lb/>
have plenty of big guys who can hit the long ball<lb/>
Little said he was optimistic about Pirate chances<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
ECU baseball coach Monte Little<lb/>
A COACHES GRAVEYARD<lb/>
The East Carolina basketball program<lb/>
Former ECU coach Larry Gillman<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
"A coaches graveyard<lb/>
That's the way former Marshall coach Frank<lb/>
Ellwood described the Thundering Herd's football<lb/>
program last fall when he was fired after four<lb/>
seasons with one year still remaining on his<lb/>
contract.<lb/>
And the East Carolina basketball program- is<lb/>
quickly developing a similar reputation.<lb/>
Larry Gillman became the third Pirate basketball<lb/>
coach to leave East Carolina in six years, when he<lb/>
submitted his resignation to ECU Athletic Director<lb/>
Bill Cain two weeks ago.<lb/>
In a statement released by the athletic<lb/>
department, Gillman cited "the university failure to<lb/>
extend him a long term contract to continue the<lb/>
development of the program" as the reason for his<lb/>
resignation.<lb/>
The former San Francisco assistant's resignation<lb/>
came as no surprise. East Carolina alumni and local<lb/>
supporters screamed for Gillman's job after just one<lb/>
season when he finished with a poor 9-17 record<lb/>
even though he boasted the Pirates would win as<lb/>
many as 17 or 18 games and appear in a<lb/>
post-season tournament.<lb/>
Although the Pirates won 12 games and lost 15<lb/>
this year, many observers still felt Gillman would be<lb/>
released at the end of the year because of the<lb/>
endless amount of bad publicity the university has<lb/>
received along with the alleged NCAA recruiting<lb/>
Dye announces<lb/>
football signees<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Doug Smith, the most valuable player in the<lb/>
1978 Shrine Bowl game, heads a list of 27 high<lb/>
school players who have signed grants-in-aid with<lb/>
East Carolina for the coming season.<lb/>
The group, which includes six members of North<lb/>
Carolina's '78 Shrine Bowl team, is dominated by<lb/>
North Carolina natives with 18 players in all.<lb/>
"I'm very proud of this recruiting class and I<lb/>
think we had a good year by our standards East<lb/>
Carolina head coach Pat Dye said. "We signed a<lb/>
lot of kids in areas where we lack depth right now<lb/>
md they should help us in the near future<lb/>
"Pm really excited about our interior linemen<lb/>
and several others who should help us out in the<lb/>
secondary Dye continued. "It's hard to tell right<lb/>
now who will be able to help out immediately until<lb/>
the fall pre-season drills. But it's been a good<lb/>
recruiting year so far on paper<lb/>
Smith, a 6-5, 255-pounder from Bayboro, was<lb/>
named all-conference and all-state and was recruited<lb/>
by all the major football powers this year.<lb/>
"Individually, Doug Smith has to rank as one of<lb/>
East Carolina's top signees ever, along with Mike<lb/>
Brewington who will be a- senior and an<lb/>
All-American candidate next fall and Carlester<lb/>
Crumpler, the school's top all-time rusher. He<lb/>
should be a great one before he leaves East<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Maury Banks of Thomasville, Lloyd Black of<lb/>
Sanford, Mark Ervin of Morgantown, Gary Gambrell<lb/>
of Goldsboro, and Mike Meads of Elizabeth City<lb/>
were all Shrine Bowl linemen who will join the<lb/>
Pirates in the fall. Meads, one of the most highly<lb/>
sought after linemen two years ago played iri the<lb/>
1977 Shrine Bowl game and transferred from Duke.<lb/>
He had already enrolled in school and will be<lb/>
eligible as a sophomore for the 1980 season.<lb/>
Tony Elliott of Tabor City, a 2,000-yard rusher,<lb/>
is the only running back who played in the Shrine<lb/>
Bowl that signed with East Carolina this year.<lb/>
Jess Eberdt of Rocky Mount, is the only other<lb/>
East Carolina signee who did not come directly from<lb/>
the high school ranks. Eberdt was a walk-on last<lb/>
fall, but did not see any action. He will be a<lb/>
freshman for the 1979 season.<lb/>
Head coach Pat Dye<lb/>
The 27 East Carolina signees hail from only<lb/>
three states. Eighteen are from North Carolina, five<lb/>
are from Virginia and three are from Georgia where<lb/>
Dye played his collegiate ball.<lb/>
"We lost several top prospects to North<lb/>
Larohna, N.C. State and other schools in North<lb/>
Carolina, but overall we had a pretty good year<lb/>
Dye said. "I'm very encouraged about our upcoming<lb/>
season and the players are really looking forward to<lb/>
East Carolina finished last season with an<lb/>
impressive 9-3 overall record including a 35-13<lb/>
victory over Southland Conference champion<lb/>
Louisi-<lb/>
ana Tech in the Independence Bowl in Shreveport,<lb/>
La. Dye's five year record at East Carolina now<lb/>
stands at 41-14.<lb/>
The Pirates top defensive performers who<lb/>
finished their career last fall were: Gerald Hall<lb/>
Zack Valentine, Vance Tingler, Oliver Felton<lb/>
Tommy Summer, and Fred Chavis. The top<lb/>
offensive players lost were: Terry Gallaher, Steve<lb/>
Greer, Mitchell Smith, Nelson Smith, Sam Harrell<lb/>
and Eddie Hicks.<lb/>
Although the 1979 East Carolina football<lb/>
schedule hasn't been announced yet, the Pirates are<lb/>
expected to open Sept. 1 against Western Carolina<lb/>
which will be followed by road games against<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference teams N.C. State, Duke<lb/>
and Wake Forest.<lb/>
The 1979 East Carolina signees: Backs - Moe<lb/>
Bennett, 5-11, 205, Lexington; Melvin Brown, 5-10,<lb/>
180 augusta, Ga Jesse Eberdt, 6-0, 165, Rocky<lb/>
Mount; Tony EHiott, 6-1, 175, Tabor City; Reggie<lb/>
5-10, 175, Franklin, Va Michael McNeil, 6-0, 190,<lb/>
Launnburg; Carlton Nelson, 6-1, 170, Portsmouth,<lb/>
Va ; Greg Stewart 5-11 175, Middlebrook, Va<lb/>
Wilhe Swmson, 5-11 215 Kinston; Randy Turner,<lb/>
o-l, 190, Augusta, Ga Norwood Vann, 5-11, 185,<lb/>
See FOOTBALL, p. 11<lb/>
violations.<lb/>
?n2e despite Gran's resignation, which will<lb/>
undoutedly set the program back another three or<lb/>
u0nUsrolveydearS' nUmer0US P"Mems still remained<lb/>
rnJrh?' T!e t0tal basketba11 bget, which includes<lb/>
coaches salaries, equipment, along with recruiting<lb/>
and travel expenses, totals only $140,000 per Vear<lb/>
with just $13,000 set aside for recruiting <lb/>
According to the latest figures in a story<lb/>
released by the Atlanta Constituional, Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Lonierence schools spend a minimum of $225,000 a<lb/>
ycir.<lb/>
Item. Over the last five years, East Carolina has<lb/>
nad just one winning record. During the last 13<lb/>
seasons, only six teams have finished with winnin<lb/>
records and three of those teams were just one<lb/>
game above the .500 mark.<lb/>
Item. More than a dozen players have quit, left<lb/>
school or transferred during the last five years at<lb/>
Last Carolina.<lb/>
One glimpse at just a few of those statistics<lb/>
would make any potential player or coach cringe<lb/>
and certainly think twice before coming to East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
However, several area collegiate coaches, who<lb/>
asked not to be identified, insist a winning program<lb/>
can be developed at East Carolina. And the coaches<lb/>
interviewed also agreed money is certainly the key<lb/>
factor.<lb/>
"Money is the major problem at East Carolina,<lb/>
but the universtiy simply has to sit down and<lb/>
decide whether they want a first class program or<lb/>
just do enough to get by one coach said. "If they<lb/>
want a competitive program which can compete with<lb/>
the top schools in the country, they're going to<lb/>
have to decide what they exactly want. Right now<lb/>
the football program is really making progress, but<lb/>
basketball is also expected to make monev and<lb/>
basketball is certainly the most popular ' sport<lb/>
through most of North Carolina<lb/>
"Whoever the university names as the new head<lb/>
coach will be the one instrumental in building a<lb/>
solid foundation underneath the program another<lb/>
coach said. "Everyone loves Pat Dve down there<lb/>
and the basketball coach needs the same tvpe of<lb/>
support Dye's received. The coach will need that<lb/>
type of image which will be popular among the<lb/>
alumni players and the fans.<lb/>
"It was pretty obvious after Gillman's first vear<lb/>
that none of the players or manv of the alumni<lb/>
were getting along very well 'with him " he<lb/>
continued "Larry Gillman's image just didn't 'fit the<lb/>
Carohna program and thing just never worked<lb/>
out. Who knows? If he had been able to get the<lb/>
support of the alumni and the community he could<lb/>
have built a winner there<lb/>
The proper image, money, alumni and<lb/>
community support - they're all vital factor in<lb/>
building a competitive program at East Carolina or<lb/>
any school. (<lb/>
And until the university and<lb/>
decide to build a quality basketball<lb/>
Carolina will continue its reputation as "a cc<lb/>
graveyard<lb/>
its supporters<lb/>
program. East<lb/>
Search begins for new<lb/>
ECU basketball coach<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The East Carolina athletic department announced<lb/>
last week that a selection committee has been<lb/>
formed to begin screening applicants for the<lb/>
basketball coaching vacancy. The committee will<lb/>
advise the chancellor and the athletic director in the<lb/>
selection of a new coach.<lb/>
The vacancy was created two weeks ago when<lb/>
Pirate coach Larry Gillman resigned under pressure<lb/>
after two years at East Carolina. Gillman, a<lb/>
30-year-old native of Mount Vernon, N.Y compiled<lb/>
a 12-15 record this season and had a two- vear<lb/>
record of 21-32. 7<lb/>
Although the search for a new coach has been<lb/>
underway for just over a week now, several reports<lb/>
indicated at least three candidates have been<lb/>
interviewed for the job although no names were<lb/>
mentioned. Athletic department officials said<lb/>
Monday afternoon that no deadline has been<lb/>
established for the naming of a new coach although<lb/>
it is believed one may be named as early as next<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Terry Kunze, as assistant under Gillman this<lb/>
season and a former assistant coach at Minnesota<lb/>
Appalachian State's Bobby Cremins and Wake<lb/>
Forest assistant David Odum head the list of<lb/>
candidates for the job.<lb/>
Kunze has already received favorable reports<lb/>
from the players and right now is considered the<lb/>
leading candidate for the vacancy, according to<lb/>
several reports.<lb/>
Cremins a star player under Frank McGuire at<lb/>
South Carolina, has enjoyed winning seasons for the<lb/>
last three years at Appalachian State. The<lb/>
Mountaineers defeated Furman this season for the<lb/>
Southern Conference Championship but lost in the<lb/>
first round of the NCAA playoffs last weekend to<lb/>
Southeastern Conference member Louisiana Tech<lb/>
Odum was the head coach at Durham Senior<lb/>
High School before he joined the Wake Forest<lb/>
coaching staff. He was largely responsible for the<lb/>
Deacons big recruiting season last year when Wake<lb/>
Former ECU<lb/>
Assistant Coach<lb/>
 Billy Lee<lb/>
irddMike,VHSe,mRs0ger' " J?' uy Morga<lb/>
JlrsE Sr d1 pattrnm- tr? rch<lb/>
withdrew his name from cons dera.fnn I' Car?hna'<lb/>
head coach at Pembroke State nn U?' n?W the<lb/>
finished his first year x PembrJfcT' <lb/>
co-coach of the vear in ih? r tnd Was voted<lb/>
along with PfeifU: Tom ?? <lb/>
h in the<lb/>
"I just finished one year hereTp ZT M?nday<lb/>
re-lly happy with L station wj <lb/>
entire starting lineup coming back 1" T ?Ur<lb/>
top recruits and I just can't ?? J g, W,th some<lb/>
program after they've re.uV .u?? . ,eVin? the<lb/>
the past year. The East Carolina oK me durin?<lb/>
but just csn't leave at tCtfme' " ' ???d one.<lb/>
Lee, who served primarily<lb/>
coordinator for one year under P S ,  defensive<lb/>
to a third place finish in thi C ?v' led Pe?broke<lb/>
The Braves LshedThe "e. 0 w<lb/>
mark and 13-14 overall. a 66 inference<lb/>
F??XhCT imeS Which are bei?g linked with .u<lb/>
East Carolina post are Maryland assf.n, h Jhe<lb/>
E?. CMv Md JoC H?"ing7on? ? and V<lb/>
East Carolina assistant coacl Butch Estr!?<lb/>
coach Jack Jensen and former Wet Jf"<lb/>
coach Fred ConnaUy Western Carolia,<lb/>
f<lb/>
i<lb/>
????? ? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
- . ?<lb/>
- ? ???rn?m?.i? I<lb/>
p3PP?'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057184_0011"/><lb/>
Bryant to speak at ECU clinic<lb/>
spring<lb/>
football<lb/>
clinic<lb/>
Legendary Alabama football coach Paul "Bear"<lb/>
Bryant will be the featured speaker at East<lb/>
Carolina's annual spring football clinic to be held<lb/>
Mar. 16-18 on the campus.<lb/>
Bryant, who has led the Crimson Tide to five<lb/>
Rational championships and bowl games each of the<lb/>
past 20 years, will address the group on Sunday,<lb/>
while members of the East Carolina staff and several<lb/>
outstanding high school coaches will hold sessions<lb/>
the first two days.<lb/>
The clinic, scheduled to coincide with the opening<lb/>
of spring practice for the 1978 Independence Bowl<lb/>
champions, will offer on-the-field instruction as well as<lb/>
lectures.<lb/>
It is open to all high school and junior high<lb/>
school head coaches and their staffs. The registration<lb/>
fee of $15 per person includes a Friday night social<lb/>
hour and pizza party, and a Saturday night barbecue.<lb/>
"I couldn't be happier that Coach Bryant has<lb/>
accepted our invitation to come to East Carolina for<lb/>
this clinic said Pirate coach Pat Dye who has<lb/>
completed five seasons himself with a fine 41-15<lb/>
record. "Coach Bryant has meant so much to the<lb/>
game of college football through the years<lb/>
Bryant, with a career record of 284-77-16, has<lb/>
averaged 8.4 wins per season for 34 years. Only two<lb/>
college coaches have won more games, Pop Warner<lb/>
at 313, and Amos Alonzo Stagg at 314. In<lb/>
comparison, Stagg averaged 5.5 wins per season for<lb/>
57 years.<lb/>
"We have the most successful college coach<lb/>
ioday at this clinic and our staff will be available<lb/>
the whole weekend as well Dye continued. "But<lb/>
one of the important things about this clinic is that<lb/>
high school coaches will be able to learn from other<lb/>
successful high school coaches as well. It is 48<lb/>
hours of intense football<lb/>
"Any young coach,<lb/>
anything necessary to<lb/>
once in his lifetime. I'm<lb/>
head or assistant, should do<lb/>
hear Coach Bryant at least<lb/>
glad we are able to bring<lb/>
him to Greenville for this clinic<lb/>
Two Alabama assistants, Mel Moore and Bill<lb/>
Oliver, will join Brvant for the clinic.<lb/>
Moore, the<lb/>
quarterback<lb/>
Tide's offensive coordinator, was a<lb/>
on the 1961 national championship team<lb/>
at Alabama and has served there since 1965, which<lb/>
was also a national title season.<lb/>
Oliver is a 1962 Bama graduate and works with<lb/>
the defensive backfield. He joined the current Tid<lb/>
staff in 1971. He lettered three times and<lb/>
starter on the 1961 national champions.<lb/>
blems<lb/>
in NCAA Indoor meet<lb/>
By DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
After qualifying for the nationals in the one mile<lb/>
relay at the Last Chance Invitational in Murfreesbo-<lb/>
ro, Tenn. earlier this month, ECU track coach Bill<lb/>
Carson, and his four sprinters were confident of a<lb/>
high finish in last Friday and Saturday's NCAA<lb/>
National competition in Detroit, Mich.<lb/>
However, disaster struck Saturday when ECU<lb/>
sprinter Terry Perry collided with a University of<lb/>
Indiana runner and fell down.<lb/>
The mile relay team qualified for the event on<lb/>
the 280 yard indoor track at Murfreesboro when<lb/>
they ran a blazing 3:12 flat, seventh best in the<lb/>
U.S. at the time. Their semi-final qualifying time<lb/>
in the nationals placed them at fifth best in the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Despite the hard luck suffered by the relay<lb/>
team, Carson was proud of the superior effort put<lb/>
forth by his sprinters leading to Saturday's mishap.<lb/>
"They gave it their best shot" commented<lb/>
Carson, "I'm very proud of them. All we had to<lb/>
do in the mile relay was finish the race and all four<lb/>
of our guys would have received All-America status.<lb/>
Calvin ran a good first leg in the race. In fact,<lb/>
his 49.1 leadoff was the fastest in the field. We<lb/>
had a good chance at fourth in the event and<lb/>
possibly third. As for Terry's collision with the<lb/>
Indiana runner, I think it was just a trick of fate -<lb/>
something you try your best to avoid, especially in<lb/>
the national competition<lb/>
Perry described his view of the events leading<lb/>
up to the accident, "We made a good handoff with<lb/>
the baton noted Perry, "and I was running fairly<lb/>
well. I had a lot of momentum going into the turn.<lb/>
I could see the Indiana guy out of the corner of<lb/>
my eye as I began to move around him. While I<lb/>
was making my cut towards the inside, he was<lb/>
running<lb/>
moving outside from the inside lane  something<lb/>
which most sprinters don't do. The last thing I<lb/>
remember was when he hit. It was the only<lb/>
collision I've ever had since I've been<lb/>
track<lb/>
According to Carson, who has attended the<lb/>
NCAA's for the past 12 years, the track officials<lb/>
called the accident the worst one of its kind in the<lb/>
last 15 years of competition. Perry was knocked<lb/>
unconscious after hitting the ground and sustained<lb/>
several cuts and abrasions, including a sprained<lb/>
arm.<lb/>
Indiana's runner wasn't as lucky. He suffered<lb/>
one sprained and one broken leg as well as seven<lb/>
cuts and bruises over his back and arms.<lb/>
In addition to qualifying the relay team, ECU's<lb/>
freshman jumping sensation, Russell Parker also<lb/>
qualified in the high jumping event. In the quarter<lb/>
mile event, the Pirates had two sprinters competing<lb/>
including Calvin Alston and Otis Melvin. Alston<lb/>
failed to qualify for the finals. However, Melvin<lb/>
did qualify with a 3:18.77, fifth best out of a field<lb/>
of 16.<lb/>
While running in the finals, he was disqualified<lb/>
after he stepped on the line. Bill Miller reached<lb/>
the semi-finals and recorded a very fast time of<lb/>
4:09 in the mile run, yet he too failed to make the<lb/>
final selections.<lb/>
Parker reached Saturday's finals out of a field oi<lb/>
27 when he jumped seven feet Friday, March 8;<lb/>
nevertheless, according to Parker, he could not<lb/>
"psych myself out enough" to clear the mark after<lb/>
reaching Saturday's finals.<lb/>
However, he did finish a remarkable eighth in<lb/>
the U.S. in the indoor high jump. Parker reflected<lb/>
his feelings about his performance at the<lb/>
prestigious event, "I guess you could say I just<lb/>
didn't have it together. I didn't get a chance to<lb/>
practice until the day of the competition, but it was<lb/>
a great experience just being there.<lb/>
Softball season begins next week<lb/>
e<lb/>
was a<lb/>
East Carolina's sec-<lb/>
ond softball team will<lb/>
open its season March<lb/>
20 with a doubleheader<lb/>
at Pembroke State.<lb/>
The Pirate women<lb/>
will play a schedule this<lb/>
spring which lists 24<lb/>
games plus three tourn-<lb/>
aments.<lb/>
On March 23, North<lb/>
Carolina A and T opens<lb/>
an abbreviated home<lb/>
Players selected<lb/>
for all-star game<lb/>
schedule which also fea-<lb/>
tures visits by St.<lb/>
Augustine's on March<lb/>
29, North Carolina on<lb/>
April 4, Campbell on<lb/>
April 9, and N.C. State<lb/>
on April 10, each for<lb/>
two games. All home<lb/>
games start at 3 p.<lb/>
The<lb/>
ule:<lb/>
March 20  at<lb/>
Pembroke State (2); 23<lb/>
complete sched-<lb/>
tt KHINGTON (AP)<lb/>
Twenty of the nation's<lb/>
o 11 e g ia t e women<lb/>
players have been<lb/>
named to the 1979<lb/>
All-America Basketball<lb/>
ClaK to be held in<lb/>
Greensboro on March<lb/>
31, the Association for<lb/>
Intercollegiate Athletics<lb/>
Women announced<lb/>
lay.<lb/>
The all-star game,<lb/>
matching East and West<lb/>
-tt tor 8 p.m. in the<lb/>
Grccnhoro Coliseum.<lb/>
Named to the East<lb/>
team were: Genia<lb/>
Beasley, sophomore cen-<lb/>
ter, N.C. State; Cindy<lb/>
Brogdon, senior for-<lb/>
vsard, Tennessee; Pam<lb/>
Chambers, junior for-<lb/>
ward, Tennessee Tech;<lb/>
Carol Chason, senior<lb/>
forward, Valdosta State;<lb/>
Kris Kirchner, sopho-<lb/>
more center, Maryland;<lb/>
Trudi La try, sophomore<lb/>
forward, N.C. Sate;<lb/>
Nancy Lieberman, junior<lb/>
forward, Old Dominion;<lb/>
Inge Nissen, junior cen-<lb/>
ter, Old Dominion; Hol-<lb/>
ly Warlick, junior<lb/>
guard, Tennessee, and<lb/>
Annie Laurie Withering-<lb/>
ton, sophomore center,<lb/>
Stephen F. Austin<lb/>
State; Denise Curry,<lb/>
sophomore center,<lb/>
UCLA; Sharon Farrah,<lb/>
senior guard, Missouri;<lb/>
Julie Gross, junior cen-<lb/>
ter, Louisiana State;<lb/>
Brenda Martin, senior<lb/>
forward, California State<lb/>
-Fullerton; Anita Ortega,<lb/>
senior guard, UCLA, Jill<lb/>
Rankin, junior center,<lb/>
Wayland Baptist; Linda<lb/>
Waggoner, junior for-<lb/>
ward, Texas-Austin; Ro-<lb/>
sie Walker, junior cen-<lb/>
ter, Stephen F. Austin<lb/>
State, and Lynette Woo-<lb/>
dard, sophomore for-<lb/>
ward, Kansas.<lb/>
Beasley, Brogdon,<lb/>
Lieberman, Nissen,<lb/>
Women's tennis schedule<lb/>
East Carolina's wo-<lb/>
men's tennis team will<lb/>
pla s? dual matches<lb/>
prior to the state tourn-<lb/>
ament this spring accor-<lb/>
ding to the schedule<lb/>
just released.<lb/>
Coach Barbara<lb/>
Olschner's team will<lb/>
open its slate on March<lb/>
16 against High Point,<lb/>
playing its only home<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
The state AIAW<lb/>
tournament will be<lb/>
played at Wake Forest<lb/>
on April 19-21.<lb/>
The complete sched-<lb/>
ule: March 16 - High<lb/>
Point; 23 - at N.C.<lb/>
State; 24  at Appala-<lb/>
chian State; 28 Har-<lb/>
vard at Duke; 29  at<lb/>
High Point; April 12 <lb/>
at Old Dominion; 19-21<lb/>
NCAIAW Tournament in<lb/>
Winston-Salem.<lb/>
Warlick, Witherington,<lb/>
Curry, Gross, Ortega,<lb/>
Rankin, and Woodard<lb/>
are repear performers<lb/>
from last year's Classic<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
Nissen will be una-<lb/>
ble to play for the East<lb/>
in the all-star affair<lb/>
because of an earlier<lb/>
commitment to compete<lb/>
in Sweden that week-<lb/>
end. Her place will be<lb/>
taken by Katrina Ander-<lb/>
son, senior center from<lb/>
South Carolina-Colum-<lb/>
bia.<lb/>
The East team will<lb/>
be coached by Chris<lb/>
Weller, head coach at<lb/>
Maryland assisted by<lb/>
Sylvia Rhyne, head<lb/>
coach at Maryland,<lb/>
assisted by Sylvia<lb/>
Rhyne, head coach at<lb/>
Francis Marion College<lb/>
in Florence, S.C.<lb/>
The West team will<lb/>
be coached by Jody<lb/>
Conradt, head coach at<lb/>
Texas-Austin, assisted<lb/>
by Sonja Hogg, head<lb/>
coach at Louisiana Tech.<lb/>
The Classic is spon-<lb/>
sored jointly by the<lb/>
 AIAW and Hanes Hos-<lb/>
iery Co.<lb/>
SPECIAL ON<lb/>
STROH'S BEER<lb/>
SIX PACKS ?12 OZ CANS<lb/>
12 PACKS-12 OZ CANS $3.78<lb/>
24 pack Strohcase $7.51<lb/>
Available at all Harris Supermarkets.<lb/>
Check our prices on domestic and<lb/>
imported wines and beers.<lb/>
Large selection<lb/>
of cheese and party supplies.<lb/>
SUPER MARKETS, INC.<lb/>
"Where Shopping Is A Pleasure"<lb/>
located in Greenville on<lb/>
10th St and Greene St.<lb/>
Drive,<lb/>
<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
continued from p. It<lb/>
Magnolia; Linemen - Maury Banks, 6-2, 250,<lb/>
Thomasville; Rick Barnes, 5-11, 245, Newnan, Ga<lb/>
James Barron, 6-2, 230, Wilson; Lloyd Black, 6-3,<lb/>
195, Sanford; Robert Boyette, 6-0, 215, Morehead<lb/>
City; Kenneth Brown, 5-11, 230, Tarboro; Mark<lb/>
Ervin, 6-2, 230, Morganton; Gary Gambrell, 6-2,<lb/>
220, Goldsboro; Mike Meads, 6-4, 240, Elisabeth<lb/>
City; David Niemeyer, 6-3, 220, Raleigh; Anthony<lb/>
Robbins, 6-2, 220, Windsor; John Robertson, 6-5,<lb/>
220, Eden; Will Saunders, 6-2, 190, Franklin, Va<lb/>
TVnig Smith, 6-5, 255, Bayboro.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
You may be eligible for a two-year Air Force ROTC scholarship. The scholarship includes full<lb/>
tuition, lab expenses, incidental fees, a reimbursement for textbooks, and $100 a month tax free.<lb/>
How do you qualify? You must have at least two years of graduate or undergraduate work remain-<lb/>
ing, and be willing to serve your nation at least four years as an Air Force officer. Scholarships are<lb/>
available to students who can qualify for pilot, navigator, or missile training, and to those who are<lb/>
majoring in selected technical and nontechnical academic disciplines, in certain scientific areas, in<lb/>
undergraduate nursing, or selected premedical degree areas. Non-scholarship students enrolled in<lb/>
the Air Force ROTC two-year program also receive the $100 monthly tax-free allowance just like the<lb/>
scholarship students. Find out today about a two-year Air Force ROTC scholarship and about the<lb/>
Air Force way of life. Your Air Force ROTC counselor has the details.<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
Gateway to o great way of!<lb/>
CONTACT:<lb/>
Allen T. Tinkham, Captain, USAF<lb/>
Recruiting Officer<lb/>
Wright Annex 757-6597<lb/>
- North Carolina A and<lb/>
T (2); 24 - at UNC<lb/>
Greensboro (UNC-Green-<lb/>
sboro, North Carolina,<lb/>
Appalachian State); 27<lb/>
 at N.C. State (2); 29<lb/>
 St. Augustine's (2);<lb/>
31  at UNC-Greensbo-<lb/>
ro (UNC-Greensboro,<lb/>
Western Carolina. Appa-<lb/>
lachian State).<lb/>
April 4  North<lb/>
Carolina (2); 6-7-  at<lb/>
N.C. State Invitational;<lb/>
9 ? Campbell (2); 10 <lb/>
N.C. State (2); 18 - at<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington (2);<lb/>
frimys<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Special Features<lb/>
Sunday-Couples Night: 2 delicious<lb/>
seafood platters of Shrimp, Oysters, Fish,<lb/>
Cole Slaw, French Fries and our Famous Hush<lb/>
Puppies.<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 $3.50<lb/>
Tuesday-Fish Fry:ah the Fried Rshi<lb/>
(Trout or Perch) you can eat with French Fries<lb/>
Slaw, and Hush Puppies. No takOOUt<lb/>
Only $2.75<lb/>
Wednesday-Fried Oysters:Goiden<lb/>
Brown Fried Oysters with French Fries, Colel<lb/>
Slaw and Hush Puppies.<lb/>
Only $3.75<lb/>
Thursday-Family Night: Great<lb/>
Specials on Shrimp, Oysters Trout Or Perch,<lb/>
No Takeout<lb/>
Shrimp$5.50<lb/>
Trout Or Perch$2.75<lb/>
Oysters $4.95<lb/>
Flounder$4.50<lb/>
"All You Can Eat"<lb/>
Hours: Open 4:30 P.M. To 9 P.M.<lb/>
Sunday-Thursday<lb/>
4:30 P.M10 P.M.<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
fi I<lb/>
Located On Evana Street<lb/>
?<lb/>
?p<lb/>
<pb facs="00057184_0012"/><lb/>
 ' "? <lb/>
t <lb/>
?-? <lb/>
, I ??<lb/>
. ? t "? 1 I<lb/>
Our Once-a-year<lb/>
V<lb/>
Northern Connection Sale<lb/>
o o<lb/>
?l<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
?<lb/>
o<lb/>
A<lb/>
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vvV<lb/>
o o<lb/>
000<lb/>
?c<lb/>
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I<lb/>
$?? of Dollars in<lb/>
stereo components at<lb/>
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Below are just a few examples:<lb/>
r<lb/>
?ee<lb/>
.? rrr cr ?<lb/>
<lb/>
SANYO<lb/>
DCX 3300 (4 chaneli)$156.00<lb/>
PIONEER SX 535$147.00<lb/>
SHERWOOD S 7050$98.00<lb/>
SHERWOOD S 8900A$194.00<lb/>
SANSUI 771$182.00<lb/>
TOSHIBA SA 620(Demo)<lb/>
$249.95<lb/>
TOSHIBA SA 775(New) 75 watts $375.00<lb/>
per chaneli<lb/>
SONY STR 7800(New) 75 watto$399.oo<lb/>
per chaneli w?<lb/>
SONY STR 1800(Demo)<lb/>
JVC 5525<lb/>
$131.50<lb/>
$131.00<lb/>
BSR 710X<lb/>
BSR 350 SX(new)<lb/>
BSR 400(new)<lb/>
BSR 200S(new)<lb/>
$59.95<lb/>
$80.44<lb/>
?$85.89<lb/>
$61.94<lb/>
SCIENTIFIC<lb/>
ACOUTIC (12" 2 way).<lb/>
PIONEER CS 05<lb/>
CRAIG 9431<lb/>
BOSE 601<lb/>
(Demo-1 pair only)<lb/>
BOSE 301<lb/>
? $96.44 pr.<lb/>
$99.95 pr.<lb/>
? $39.95 pr.<lb/>
$510.00pr.<lb/>
301 $198.00pr.<lb/>
(New but scratched I pair only)<lb/>
CRAIG H260<lb/>
(8 track recorder ? playback)<lb/>
SONY TC 353D?<lb/>
(reel to reel)<lb/>
TEAC A420<lb/>
(cassette)<lb/>
TEAC A 4300 Creel to reel)<lb/>
ACCESORIES<lb/>
DISC WASHERS<lb/>
SOUND GUARD<lb/>
?$77.00<lb/>
? $169.95<lb/>
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COMPACTS<lb/>
TOSHIBA AmFm8TTurnatable-<lb/>
With speakers $139.95<lb/>
PANASONIC AmFm8t4 chaneli<lb/>
wlth speakers$149.95<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
On the Mall - Downtown Greenville<lb/>
7523651<lb/>
t<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057184_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>