<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058002_0001"/>
<lb/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity fa over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 24 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
. MMn5 East Carolina University Greenville, North Carolina 30 August 1977<lb/>
Vol. 5o, ro. ??????i???? Asm<lb/>
ON THE INSDE<lb/>
SU Boardpage 3<lb/>
N.O.R.M.Lpage 11<lb/>
'77 Rosterpage 18<lb/>
Bus Schedules page 8<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Soda shop needs<lb/>
completion funds<lb/>
ByLYNNCAVERLY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The renovation of the Student<lb/>
Supply Store soda shop will be<lb/>
completed as soon as funds have<lb/>
been appropriated, according to<lb/>
Curtis May, assistant manager of<lb/>
the ECU bookstore.<lb/>
According to May, approxi-<lb/>
mately $5,000 ' has been spent<lb/>
so far on renovations of the<lb/>
bookstore and soda shop comp-<lb/>
lex, located in Wright annex.<lb/>
"The bookstore is complete<lb/>
now in respect to any major<lb/>
touch-up painting and other<lb/>
minor details remain to be done<lb/>
by the contractors" stated May.<lb/>
"When bids were first taken<lb/>
on the project, a decision had to<lb/>
be made whether to scratch the<lb/>
entire project or to push comple-<lb/>
tion on the bookstore a the soda<lb/>
iop one, because the bids were<lb/>
high said May.<lb/>
"The decision to go with the<lb/>
bookstore appeared to have been<lb/>
the best one in the interest of the<lb/>
students said May.<lb/>
When the approximately<lb/>
8,800 sq. ft. soda shop is finished,<lb/>
it will be in the design of the<lb/>
THE RENOVA TED STUDENT SUPPLY Store lacks only a little polishing to be complete.<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
hanges said May. "Only some Croatan, said May. <lb/>
Vehicle towing extended to include all offenses<lb/>
ByLYNNCAVEPLY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Towing of vehicles wrongly<lb/>
parked on campus was extended<lb/>
to include all offenses, effective<lb/>
Sunday night, according to<lb/>
Campus Chief of Security, Joe<lb/>
Calder.<lb/>
Ticketing and towing of cars<lb/>
STUDENTS ARE REGISTERING their bicydes to keep them from being '?" by pooeszm<lb/>
parked on grass and blocking of<lb/>
traffic began last week, said<lb/>
Calder.<lb/>
The priority system is in<lb/>
effect now in which first priority is<lb/>
given to cars parked on the grass,<lb/>
second, to unregistered vehicles,<lb/>
third, to vehicles in no-parking<lb/>
areas, and fourth, to illegally<lb/>
parked , or freshmen vho park in<lb/>
the wrong areas, Calder said.<lb/>
"Usually about a week after<lb/>
registration , we have about<lb/>
3,000 registered student cars, and<lb/>
about 1,000 registered staff<lb/>
cars said Calder.<lb/>
"This year, because of the<lb/>
semester system, last year's<lb/>
parking decals are still good until<lb/>
September  said Calder.<lb/>
" When the crux of registering<lb/>
vehides is over, I expect there<lb/>
will be about 1,500-1,600 register-<lb/>
ed dorm vehicles, and about 1,800<lb/>
registered day vehicles<lb/>
Additional parking lots have<lb/>
been established, but it will be<lb/>
until December when they are<lb/>
straightened out, according to<lb/>
Calder.<lb/>
One lot is located on land the<lb/>
University bought between 8th<lb/>
and 9th Streets, and the other is<lb/>
located on the hill. Also, work is<lb/>
not complete on the lot located on<lb/>
Cotanche between 7th and 8th<lb/>
Streets, according to Calder.<lb/>
The rental parking spaces<lb/>
located in front of the drama<lb/>
building have had good response,<lb/>
said Calder.<lb/>
"Of the allotted student<lb/>
places, there are two left as of<lb/>
August 26 said Calder.<lb/>
"Also, there are only two<lb/>
spaces allotted for faculty park-<lb/>
ing. But these spaces are rented<lb/>
on a first-come-first-served basis<lb/>
So, if four students oome to rent<lb/>
them, we will rent them out to<lb/>
them said Calder.<lb/>
"The spaces rent fa 90.00 a<lb/>
year, "said Calder.<lb/>
ECU experiences acute housing shortag<lb/>
ByJOE BALLANCE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU is experiencing its worst<lb/>
housing shortage in years, ac-<lb/>
cording to Housing I "?tor Dan<lb/>
Wooten.<lb/>
University officials are optim-<lb/>
istic, however, that more housing<lb/>
will become available as the year<lb/>
progresses.<lb/>
Wooten stad the waiting list<lb/>
that reached 200 during the<lb/>
summer has already dwindled to<lb/>
about 20. Nearly all the remaining<lb/>
students on the list are men,<lb/>
according to Wooten.<lb/>
In addition to the marked<lb/>
redjction of students on the<lb/>
waiting list, student traffic for<lb/>
off-campus housing has slowed,<lb/>
according to Wooten.<lb/>
Wooten said many students<lb/>
who were on the waiting list<lb/>
looked elsewhere fa housing, a<lb/>
decided to delay enrollment until<lb/>
spring semesta.<lb/>
Some students failed to pull<lb/>
up their grade point averages<lb/>
during summer school and were<lb/>
not eligible to return to school this<lb/>
semester, and some decided at<lb/>
the last minute not to return to<lb/>
school, said Wooten.<lb/>
Some incoming freshmen<lb/>
have found themselves with an<lb/>
extra roomate. Jones damitay<lb/>
has 28 rooms with three oc-<lb/>
cupants, accading to Wooten.<lb/>
Three women's dorms,<lb/>
Cotten, Fleming, and Jarvis have<lb/>
15 rooms among them with three<lb/>
occupants All such over-loading<lb/>
should be eliminated within a few<lb/>
weeks, accading to Wooten.<lb/>
ECU has 5,539 spaces avail-<lb/>
able in the residence halls Of<lb/>
these, 3,239 spaces are reservea<lb/>
fa women while 2,300 are<lb/>
allotted to the men.<lb/>
WECU moves toward FM<lb/>
ByKENTYNDALL<lb/>
Assistant News Edita<lb/>
Campus radio station WECU<lb/>
has been making plans to go FM<lb/>
fa the past few years This year,<lb/>
howeva, the idea of changing<lb/>
WECU to FM is top prkTity,<lb/>
according to WECU General<lb/>
Managa, Rob Maxon.<lb/>
WECU, located on the second<lb/>
floor of the old wing of Joyna<lb/>
Library, is presently an AM<lb/>
station run on carrier current to<lb/>
the dams and various other<lb/>
campus buildings. Campus radio<lb/>
can only be received in those<lb/>
buildings which are hooked up by<lb/>
special telephone loops.<lb/>
ECU used to have an FM<lb/>
station, WWWS, but the trans-<lb/>
mitta blew up and an antenna<lb/>
was malfunctioning. This caused<lb/>
WWWS to loose its license,<lb/>
because funds would not permit<lb/>
the replacement of the damaged<lb/>
equipment, accading to Maxon.<lb/>
An FM station would allow the<lb/>
radio station to better send its<lb/>
signal on campus, also including<lb/>
the Greenville area.<lb/>
Maxon and Chief Engineer<lb/>
John Jester are looking in depth<lb/>
to the possibilities of going FM.<lb/>
WECU would probably be a<lb/>
10-watt educational station, but<lb/>
(there are possibilities of obtaining<lb/>
much more power.<lb/>
Accading to Maxon, it would<lb/>
take anywhere from six months to<lb/>
one year to obtain a Federal<lb/>
Communications Commission<lb/>
license after applying fa one.<lb/>
Maxon said a 10-watt educa-<lb/>
See WECU page 5.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0002"/><lb/>
pfiffiSBSfMBIW'<lb/>
??<lb/>
mmmammm<lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 30 August 1977<lb/>
Soccer<lb/>
Dental test Law test<lb/>
Chairperson Freshman<lb/>
There will be an organiza-<lb/>
tional meeting of the Greenville<lb/>
soccer club on Wednesday,<lb/>
August 31, at 700 in the Elm St.<lb/>
gym. All those interested are<lb/>
urges to attend or oontact Terry<lb/>
Flanagan at 752-2186.<lb/>
Anyone interested in filing fa<lb/>
Fall elections chairperson or<lb/>
committee should file in the SGA<lb/>
office, Room 218 Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, as soon as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
Tournaments<lb/>
All full-time students, pick up<lb/>
your information today oonoern-<lb/>
ing the ACU -1 tournaments to be<lb/>
conducted this semester by<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Tournaments will be conducted in<lb/>
chess, billiards, bowling, and<lb/>
table tennis. If participation is<lb/>
substandal, final winners will<lb/>
represent ECU in the regional<lb/>
tournaments in Blacksburg, Va.<lb/>
Detailed information ooncerning<lb/>
all aspects of the competition is<lb/>
available at the Billiards and<lb/>
Bowling Centers, Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Rentals<lb/>
Whether you'd like to polish<lb/>
up your game with some steady<lb/>
practice or invite three friends<lb/>
along fa some friendly competi-<lb/>
tion, you can rent a cowling lane<lb/>
to use fa one hour and it only<lb/>
costs $2.50 Lane rentals are<lb/>
available at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center every Saturday<lb/>
from 1200 Noon until 6O0 PM.<lb/>
Stop by and try it out; it's a great<lb/>
way to spend an hour.<lb/>
Rugby<lb/>
There will be a meeting of all<lb/>
those interested in playing on the<lb/>
ECU Rugby dub Wednesday,<lb/>
August 31, at 7.00 in Roan 102 of<lb/>
Memaia! Gym. This will be an<lb/>
aganizatioial meeting so all old<lb/>
members are urged to attend. If<lb/>
you can't make the meeting call<lb/>
Bob Davis at 758-5279 befae<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Tickets<lb/>
There are still plenty of<lb/>
student and guest tickets fa the<lb/>
ECU-Duke football game to be<lb/>
played on September 10 in<lb/>
Wallace Wade Stadium in<lb/>
Durham. The price is $5.00 fa<lb/>
student tickets and $8.00fa guest<lb/>
tickets. Get your tickets early and<lb/>
avotd the rush befae the game<lb/>
Golf<lb/>
Anyone interested in going<lb/>
out fa the ECU golf team should<lb/>
come to the meeting in Room 145,<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, at 7 00Thurs<lb/>
Sept 1st<lb/>
Freshman Registers should be a<lb/>
in by the end of September. I 61111 IS<lb/>
Registers may be picked up at<lb/>
that time in the SGA Vice<lb/>
President's office.<lb/>
Swimming<lb/>
The first team meetings fa<lb/>
both the men's and women's<lb/>
swim teams will be Thursday,<lb/>
September 1 at 3:30 in Room 145,<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. This meeting<lb/>
is mandatay fa anyaie interest-<lb/>
ed in swimming this seasai.<lb/>
Bahai<lb/>
The opening meeting of Bahai<lb/>
Assodation fa the fall semester<lb/>
will be held Thursday evening at<lb/>
7:30 in Room 238 Mendenhall. A<lb/>
film oi the Bahai Faith will be<lb/>
shown and there will be friends<lb/>
there to answer your questions on<lb/>
this newest of the World<lb/>
Religions. Guests are weloome.<lb/>
Fun in the Son<lb/>
Fun in the Son; Fa fun and<lb/>
fellowship, drop by Room 221,<lb/>
Mendenhall, 7.00 Thursday<lb/>
night. (Campus Crusade for<lb/>
Christ).<lb/>
Snow-Ski<lb/>
The ECU Snow-Ski dub will<lb/>
hold an aganizatioial meeting<lb/>
Thursday afternoon September 1<lb/>
at 4O0 in Room 108 Memaial<lb/>
Gym. Plans will be discussed fa<lb/>
the Thanksgiving trip to<lb/>
Snowshoe West Virginia. A limit-<lb/>
ed number of plaoes are avail-<lb/>
able. Plarib fa the Christmas trip<lb/>
to Beech Mountain and other<lb/>
adivities will also be discussed.<lb/>
Pep Rally<lb/>
There will be a beat State pep<lb/>
rally on the ECU campus<lb/>
September 1, starting at 700 at<lb/>
Greene dorm and ending at<lb/>
Fioklin Stadium. Last pradice<lb/>
under the lights before the<lb/>
Pirates beat State! The public is<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
Students, faculty and staff,<lb/>
your Crafts Center is now open<lb/>
Located on the ground floa of<lb/>
Mendenhall Stedent Center, the<lb/>
Crafts Center offers facilities fa<lb/>
wak m a wide variety of aafts.<lb/>
The Center's new hours are 300<lb/>
PM until $0.00 PM, Monday<lb/>
through Friday, and 1000 AM<lb/>
until 3O0 PM, Saturday. Drop by<lb/>
and find put what the Crafts<lb/>
Center is all about1<lb/>
All male students wanting to<lb/>
tryout fa the 1977-78 men's<lb/>
varsity tennis team should attend<lb/>
the meeting that will be held<lb/>
Thursday September 1 at 7:30 in<lb/>
Room 142, Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
All students interested in<lb/>
faming a bowling league should<lb/>
attend an aganizatioial meeting<lb/>
at Moiday, September 5 at 7:30<lb/>
PM in the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Bowling Center.<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
Anyone interested in becom-<lb/>
ing a manager fa the ECU men's<lb/>
basketball team is urged to oome<lb/>
by Coach Larry Gillman'soffice in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum as soon as<lb/>
possible. There are several open-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Any person interested in<lb/>
applying for SGA Attorney<lb/>
General should oome by the SGA<lb/>
office 218 Mendenhall student<lb/>
Center and fill out an application.<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
Free play hours in Mjnges and<lb/>
Memaial Gymnasiums are as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
Minges Coliseum:<lb/>
MonThurs. 8-11 PM<lb/>
Friday 8-10PM<lb/>
Saturday 10AM-9PM<lb/>
Sunday 2-9PM<lb/>
Memaial Gymnasium<lb/>
Moi-Friday 3-10PM<lb/>
Saturday dosed<lb/>
Sunday 2-9PM<lb/>
All gyms will be dosed from<lb/>
6O0 PM Friday until Tuesday<lb/>
maning during the Laba Day<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
There will be a honecoming<lb/>
Steering oommittee meeting on<lb/>
Thursday, September 1 at 3 O0 in<lb/>
Room 221, Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Please plan to attend.<lb/>
Billiards<lb/>
Students interested in faming<lb/>
a billards league are invited to<lb/>
attend a meeting scheduled foe<lb/>
Monday, September 12, at 7:30<lb/>
PM in the Billiards Center,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
The Dental Aptitude Test will<lb/>
be offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday, Odober<lb/>
8, 1977.<lb/>
Application blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to Division<lb/>
of Educational Measurements,<lb/>
American Dental Association, 211<lb/>
East Chicago Avenue, Chicago,<lb/>
lllinios, 60011 to arrive by Sep-<lb/>
tember 12, 1977. These applica-<lb/>
tions are also available at the<lb/>
Testing Center, Room-105,<lb/>
Speight Building, East Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
MCAT<lb/>
The final test date fa the<lb/>
Medical College Admission Test<lb/>
(MCAT) fa 1977 will be offered<lb/>
on Saturday, Odober 1, 1977.<lb/>
Application blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to MCAT<lb/>
Registration, The American Col-<lb/>
lege Testing Program, P.O. Box<lb/>
414, Iowa City, Iowa 52240 to<lb/>
arrive no later than September 2,<lb/>
1977. These applications are also<lb/>
available at the Testing Center,<lb/>
Room-105, Speight Building, East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
The Graduate Reoad Exami-<lb/>
nation will be offered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday,<lb/>
Odober 15, 1977.<lb/>
Application blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to Educa-<lb/>
tional Testing Service, Box 966-R,<lb/>
Prinoeton, NJ 08540 to arrive by<lb/>
September 19, 1977. Applicatios<lb/>
may be obtained from the Testing<lb/>
Center, Room-105, Speight Buil-<lb/>
ding, East Carolina University.<lb/>
Refrigerators<lb/>
The SGA still has 100 refri-<lb/>
gerators available fa fall semes-<lb/>
ter rental. Rent is $38.00 fa the<lb/>
year a $21.00 per semester, plus<lb/>
a $10.00 safety deposit. Come by<lb/>
Room 231, Mendenhall, SGA<lb/>
Refrigerata Offioe.<lb/>
BUG<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Buocanneer staff in the Buc offioe<lb/>
on Wednesday, August 31 at<lb/>
4:30. If you cannot attend, call<lb/>
757-6501 between 12:30 and 5.00<lb/>
The Law School Admission<lb/>
Test will be offered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday,<lb/>
Odober 8, 1977.<lb/>
Application blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to Educa-<lb/>
tional Testing service, Box 966-R,<lb/>
Prinoeton, NJ 08540 to arrive by<lb/>
September 8, 1977. Applications<lb/>
are available at the Testing<lb/>
Center, Room-105, Speight Buil-<lb/>
ding, East Carolina University.<lb/>
01' Waylon<lb/>
The pride ui iuienbach.<lb/>
Texas, Waylon Jennings, will be<lb/>
featured this Friday night from<lb/>
7-8 p.m. on WECU's Artist<lb/>
Series. Artist Series is heard<lb/>
only on 57 AM. WECU!<lb/>
Legislature<lb/>
Anyone interested in filing fa<lb/>
SGA legislative positions, day o<lb/>
dorm representatives, should<lb/>
oome by the SGA offioe to file<lb/>
befae September 7.<lb/>
Free concert<lb/>
The Popular Entertainment<lb/>
Committee brings you the first of<lb/>
hopefully many good shows to-<lb/>
night free on the mall. The 10th<lb/>
Ave. Band will rock &amp; roll you<lb/>
tonight at 8 p.m. If you missed<lb/>
them last week at the Elbo<lb/>
Room, don't miss this free show<lb/>
toight. If you saw them, then<lb/>
oome on! Vou know how good<lb/>
they are. Bring yourself, your<lb/>
goods and your friends and raise<lb/>
hell. (In case of rain, the show wiil<lb/>
still be free in Wright Audito-<lb/>
ium.)<lb/>
Gamma beta<lb/>
The Lamda Chapter of the<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi Society will have<lb/>
its first meeting on Thursday,<lb/>
September 1. The meeting will<lb/>
start at 7:00 in Room 244,<lb/>
Mendenhall. All members should<lb/>
attend this meeting.<lb/>
WECU news<lb/>
Anyone interested in waking<lb/>
fa the WECU news department<lb/>
should oontad the WECU News<lb/>
Direda immediately<lb/>
Interested persons should call<lb/>
757-6657 to make an appoint-<lb/>
ment. Openings indude posttiais<lb/>
fa news writers and broadcas-<lb/>
ters. No experience is necessary.<lb/>
Interpersonal research<lb/>
Unmarried undergraduates between the ages of 18 and 24 who are<lb/>
battered bylf-consdousness and lack of oonfidenoe around members<lb/>
of the opposite sex, are invited to participate in a research prqed<lb/>
comapring several methods intended to promote less self<lb/>
oonsdouuiess in heterosexual interpersonal situations.<lb/>
Your partidpatio will improve your understanding of the methods<lb/>
by whidn college people might learn to be more natural, less tense.a nd<lb/>
less inhibited around members of the opposite sex<lb/>
If you are interested in participating in this project, please oontad<lb/>
(by mail a by phaie), Dai Marcus, Department of Psydiology, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834-a leave your name, address, and phone<lb/>
number with the seaetary at 757-6800.<lb/>
The projed requires about aie hour per week fa six weeks.<lb/>
DF<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0003"/><lb/>
I SWfffig-?y: ?<lb/>
: ? ?  <lb/>
SU accepting Board applications<lb/>
30 August 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Student Union will accept<lb/>
applications from day students,<lb/>
starting today, for two day<lb/>
student posit ions on the SU Board<lb/>
of Directors, according to Dennis<lb/>
Ramset, SU president.<lb/>
The SGA treasurer and<lb/>
speaker of the legislature posi-<lb/>
tions were ousted from the board<lb/>
last spring.<lb/>
Ramsey said it was unfair for<lb/>
the SGA to have input on the SU<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
"The Student Union is no<lb/>
longer under the SGA he said.<lb/>
"They (SGA) don't do anything<lb/>
for us<lb/>
Members of the board include<lb/>
Men's Residence Council (MRC)<lb/>
and Women's Residence Council<lb/>
(WRC) presidents, Intre-Frater-<lb/>
nity Council (IEC) and Panhei-<lb/>
lenic presidents, SGA president,<lb/>
a representative of the faculty, a<lb/>
representative of the chancellor,<lb/>
Associate Dean of Student Affairs<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, and SU<lb/>
president Dennis Ramsey, the<lb/>
latter two being ex-officio board<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Ramsey siad there was a need<lb/>
to have two day students on the<lb/>
board to offset the dorm students<lb/>
(MRC and WRC presidents).<lb/>
Among the responsibilities of<lb/>
the board is to select the<lb/>
president, authorize<lb/>
establishment of committees, ap-<lb/>
1<lb/>
flMItfK<lb/>
prove the budget, approve pres-<lb/>
idential appointment of commit-<lb/>
tee chairpersons and establish<lb/>
and enforce the politics fa the<lb/>
Student Union, according to<lb/>
Ramsey<lb/>
The committees of the Student<lb/>
Union are the Art Exibition,<lb/>
Artist Series, Coffeehouse,<lb/>
Entertainer, Films, Lecture<lb/>
Series, Minority Arts, Popular<lb/>
Entertainment, Theatre Arts, and<lb/>
Travel committees.<lb/>
Applications may be picked up<lb/>
at the SU office on the second<lb/>
floor of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center or at the Information<lb/>
Desk.<lb/>
Day students may turn them<lb/>
in starting today, through Sept. 9<lb/>
at 5 p.m.<lb/>
? II1 :I l1<lb/>
1 1! '1?<lb/>
.<lb/>
, <lb/>
??UI:<lb/>
 v?J ?'<lb/>
T<lb/>
Semester schedule<lb/>
September 5, Monday-Labor Day Holiday<lb/>
October 3-14-Change of major<lb/>
October 6, Thursday-Last day to drop an undergraduate course<lb/>
or withdraw from school<lb/>
October 10-14-Pre-registration fa Spring Semester<lb/>
November 23, Wednesday-10 p.m. Thanksgiving Holiday begins<lb/>
November 28, Mcnday-8a.m. Classes resume. Last day to drop a<lb/>
graduate course without special permission<lb/>
December 9, Friday-Classes end<lb/>
December 10, Saturday-Common exams<lb/>
December 12, Monday-Reading Day<lb/>
December 13, Tuesday-Exams begin<lb/>
December 17, Saturday-Commoi exams<lb/>
December 20, Tuesday-10 p.m. Exams fa Fall Semester dose<lb/>
DROP-ADD BEGINS EARLY; this photo was taken ar 7 a.m. on the first day of drop-add.<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
This week at the<lb/>
ELBO<lb/>
ROOM<lb/>
Tues. - TIMES SQUARE<lb/>
Wed. thru Sun. - DAZZLE<lb/>
1<lb/>
mm<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
300 EVANS- ON- THE-MALL<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
PHONE: 752-2136<lb/>
FREE PRESCRIPTION PICKUP<lb/>
AND DELIVERY<lb/>
OLD FASHION SODA FOUNTAIN<lb/>
DRINKS MADE THE WAY YOU<lb/>
LIKE THEM: FRESHLY SQUEEZED<lb/>
LEMONADES AND ORANGEADES-<lb/>
MILKSHAKES MADE WITH ICE CREAM!<lb/>
PRESCRIPTION DEPT WITH MEDICA TION<lb/>
PROFILES: JOUR PRESCRIPTION ALWAYS<lb/>
AT OUR FINGERTIPS, EVEN THOUGH YOU<lb/>
MAY LOSE YOUR Rx BOTTLE.<lb/>
COSMETICS-<lb/>
SUNDRIES-<lb/>
TOILETRIES-<lb/>
DELIVERfo TO<lb/>
YOUR DOOR<lb/>
GREETING CARDS-<lb/>
SCHOOL SUPPLIES<lb/>
TIMEX WATCHES<lb/>
COSTUME JEWELRY<lb/>
ATHLETIC SUPPORTS,<lb/>
CON VALESCENT SUPPLIES,<lb/>
FIRST-AID SUPPLIES<lb/>
SUNGLASSES BY FOSTER<lb/>
GRANT AND COOL RAY<lb/>
!<lb/>
- i<lb/>
-? n.? q0tj0wWXH0lB<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 30 August 1977<lb/>
Ficklen expands as<lb/>
academics shrink<lb/>
This editorial appeared in the June 15 edition of FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
The staff felt it important enough to be reprinted for the regular<lb/>
student body to read.<lb/>
While funds for the expansion of Fioklen stadium<lb/>
are continuing to pour in and seven-foot centers are<lb/>
being signed on for the ECU basketball team,<lb/>
academic scholarship funds are being used to help<lb/>
repay a $400,000 loan secured for the expansion of<lb/>
the Students' Supply Store.<lb/>
Many university officials, as well as generous<lb/>
alumni are obviously under the impression that a<lb/>
school's reputation depends on its athletic program<lb/>
and the success of its sports teams. Fine for the<lb/>
officials and alumni, but the students are paying for<lb/>
this misguidance.<lb/>
According to Dr. John H. Home, Dean of<lb/>
admissions, academic standards, and consequently<lb/>
the school's reputation for academic excellence, are<lb/>
affected by three things: admissions requirements,<lb/>
retention requirements and scholarship funding.<lb/>
However, the ECU students are being led to believe<lb/>
that their school's reputation depends on a student<lb/>
supply store with a 100,000 square-feet sales area<lb/>
and an enormous football stadium equipped with a<lb/>
$500,000 press box a 150-seat chancellor's guest<lb/>
box, and an elevator, not to mention seven-foot<lb/>
centers.<lb/>
For an institution originally designed for higher<lb/>
education, the officials seem to be doing everything<lb/>
to de-emphasize academics and emphasize athletics.<lb/>
Not a penny has been touched of the athletic<lb/>
scholarship funds to help pay back this supply store<lb/>
expansion loan. And half of the $2.5 million reserve<lb/>
funds were dished out for the stadium expansion. But<lb/>
the scant funds set aside for academic scholarships<lb/>
have been totally wiped out.<lb/>
Not only have these funds been depleted, but<lb/>
when the academic scholarship program is reinsta-<lb/>
ted, it will be cut from the usual $60,000 to<lb/>
$30-40,000, according to Robert M. Bordreaux,<lb/>
financial aid offioer.<lb/>
So the Scholarships, Fellowships and Financial<lb/>
Aid Committee has decided to place extra emphasis<lb/>
on National Merit scholarships which have not been<lb/>
affected by the cut. But according to Suzie Stearn,<lb/>
vice-president of the League of Scholars and student<lb/>
member of the committee, the success of this task is<lb/>
not a sure thing. ECU does not have a reputation fa-<lb/>
attracting National Merit scholars. And with this<lb/>
further cut in ECU'S reputation for academic<lb/>
importance and excellence, increasing this proba-<lb/>
bility looks extremely doubtful.<lb/>
A school's reputation for academic excellence or<lb/>
non-excellence depends on the quality of the<lb/>
students in that xhool, not on how big a stadium or<lb/>
how manv soorts heroes it has. By discontinuing the<lb/>
academic suncnarship fund program for an indefinite<lb/>
period of time, ECU is also discontinuing itsquest for<lb/>
academic respectability.<lb/>
While a larger stadium and -unlimited athletic<lb/>
scholarship funds are helping pack the football and<lb/>
basketball teams with super-stars, more and more<lb/>
ECU graduates are unemployed because graduates<lb/>
from universities with reputations for academic<lb/>
superiority are beating them out of jobs.<lb/>
Almost $1.5 million remains dormant in the<lb/>
Reserve Funds since Ficklen Stadium took its cut.<lb/>
These funds could be used to help pay the supply<lb/>
store's loan and ECU could continue its academic<lb/>
scholarship program.<lb/>
The university officials and alumni are either<lb/>
going to have to get their priorities straightened out,<lb/>
or this school is going to be left with a dozen scholars,<lb/>
a huge book store, ond an athletic complex the size of<lb/>
northern New Jersey.<lb/>
Z&amp;-<lb/>
Rl)D I EXPECTED f PRlACTE ROOM!<lb/>
Something's got to give<lb/>
The ECU dormitories are<lb/>
filled 100 per osnt this fall.<lb/>
Students, although welcome to<lb/>
apply, need the luck of a<lb/>
leprechaun to get into the city's<lb/>
low income housing units by<lb/>
graduation. Landowners in this<lb/>
budding metropolis continue<lb/>
building townhousecomplexes<lb/>
renting at two arms, one and a<lb/>
half legs.<lb/>
Greenville's housing shortage<lb/>
for ECU students is critical, and<lb/>
something's got to give.<lb/>
According to Robert Usury,<lb/>
director of Institutional Research,<lb/>
ECU will "never again" build<lb/>
another dormitory, nor will the<lb/>
old dorms, when crumbled and<lb/>
fallen, be replaced.<lb/>
According to Sally Streeter,<lb/>
director of tenant affairs for<lb/>
Greenville, students do not us-<lb/>
ually qualify for low income<lb/>
housing. In order to get into one<lb/>
of the units, one must have lived<lb/>
in the city 12 months prior to<lb/>
application, be part of a "family"<lb/>
(i.e more than one person<lb/>
seeking a unit, related by blood or<lb/>
marriage), and be willing to sit at<lb/>
the end of a waiting list of 400<lb/>
people. Although 541 units now<lb/>
stand in Greenville and 111 more<lb/>
are presently under construction,<lb/>
Streeter says a student would be<lb/>
"extremely lucky to get one of<lb/>
these apartments by the time he<lb/>
or she graduated<lb/>
Finding an apartment or, God<lb/>
forbid, a small house in or around<lb/>
Greenville is a oommon joke<lb/>
among ECU students. Several<lb/>
oomplexes have been built over<lb/>
the last two years. But these<lb/>
architectural beauties rent for<lb/>
more tnan even a daddy s girl can<lb/>
afford without a loan. And why<lb/>
not? Landowners in Greenville<lb/>
have a captive audience, more<lb/>
than ready to plunk down their<lb/>
summer savingson any roach bed<lb/>
with walls they can find.<lb/>
The city could build low<lb/>
income housing exclusively for<lb/>
students. Landowners could build<lb/>
apartment oomplexes without bay<lb/>
windows, balconies and shag<lb/>
carpet. ECU could take care of its<lb/>
own and build one or two more<lb/>
"Cottens<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
BUC goes back to work<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
With the opening of school, all<lb/>
organizations on campus get back<lb/>
to work, and so it goes with the<lb/>
BUCCANEER. Our year will<lb/>
officially get started on Wednes-<lb/>
day, August 31 st at 4:30 when we<lb/>
have our first staff meeting.<lb/>
Previous experience isn't neces-<lb/>
sary. All you need is a whole-<lb/>
hearted interest and a willingness<lb/>
to work a few late hours. Anyone<lb/>
may attend, so if you'd like to see<lb/>
what it's all about, stop by the<lb/>
BUC office Wednesday after-<lb/>
noon. We'll be glad to have you<lb/>
on staff.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Susan Rogerson, Editor<lb/>
1978 BUCCANEER<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years.<lb/>
Senior EditorKim j Devins<lb/>
Production ManagerBob Glover<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert 9vaim<lb/>
News EditorCindy Broome<lb/>
Trends EditorMichael Futch<lb/>
SX)rtsEdJtorAnneHogge<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association of<lb/>
ECU and ,s distributed each Wednesday during the summer,<lb/>
and twice weekly during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0005"/><lb/>
Interpreters aid the<lb/>
hearing impaired<lb/>
30 Augu 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Hm 5<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Public response to sign lang-<lb/>
uage dasses has been "super<lb/>
according to Mike Ernest,<lb/>
Director of the Program for<lb/>
Hearing Impaired Students.<lb/>
The non-credit dasses are<lb/>
held on the second floor of Joyner<lb/>
Library from 3 p.m. to 4 p.m.<lb/>
Tuesdays and from 7 p.m. to 8:30<lb/>
p.m. on Thursday evenings.<lb/>
Each time period has a<lb/>
beginning and an intermediate<lb/>
dass.<lb/>
Persons completing the dass-<lb/>
es may redeve jobs as dassroom<lb/>
interpreters for hearing impaired<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"Classroom interpreters are<lb/>
paid 3 an hour, and notetakers<lb/>
redeve 2.30 an hour said<lb/>
Ernest.<lb/>
Ernest said that notetakers<lb/>
were necessary because hearing<lb/>
impaired students could not<lb/>
watch the interpreter and take<lb/>
notes simulyaneously.<lb/>
"We are very pleased both<lb/>
with the response to the sign<lb/>
language dasses and with com-<lb/>
memts redeved from, students<lb/>
and instrudors whose dasses use<lb/>
an interpreter.<lb/>
"The initial distradion of the<lb/>
interpreter wears off after the<lb/>
first 15 or 20 minutes of dass<lb/>
said Ernest.<lb/>
"One problem concerning<lb/>
hearing impaired students that<lb/>
has not yet been fully approached<lb/>
is the one of foreign language<lb/>
requirements.<lb/>
One solution employed by<lb/>
other schools with programs such<lb/>
as ours is substituting a foreign<lb/>
history or dvilization oourse<lb/>
said Ernest.<lb/>
According to Ernest, there are<lb/>
presently only seven impaired<lb/>
students redeving the services<lb/>
offered by his department, but<lb/>
thatnumber is expeded to in-<lb/>
crease as the program beconttw<lb/>
better known.<lb/>
Similar classes held on<lb/>
campus this summer were attend-<lb/>
ed by over 200 students and<lb/>
faculty, according to Ernest.<lb/>
Persons interested in the free<lb/>
sign language dasses, serving as<lb/>
notetaker if a deaf student is in<lb/>
one of their dasses, or in tutoring<lb/>
a cJeaf student should contad<lb/>
either Mike En ' Crras Luke,<lb/>
2ff brewster builumg 757-6729.<lb/>
DROP ADD UNES move slowly, and many people stand in line for hours. Photo by Pete Podeezvm)<lb/>
WECU<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
tional station would cost approx-<lb/>
imately $5,000 to $10,000 where a<lb/>
1,000 to 3,000-watt station would<lb/>
run between $15,000 and $30,000.<lb/>
This cost would indude equip-<lb/>
ment, a construdion permit, and<lb/>
engineering fees.<lb/>
Maxon also said there is a<lb/>
possibility of going FM by the fall<lb/>
of 1978.<lb/>
"There is a definite need for<lb/>
FM to provide Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina with an alternative radio<lb/>
station said Maxon. "But,<lb/>
there is a great need of adminis-<lb/>
trative help, as well as student<lb/>
support<lb/>
WECU staffers have been<lb/>
hard at work this year preparing<lb/>
the station for oepration. A lot of<lb/>
maintenance and technical work<lb/>
has been done.<lb/>
Chief Engineer John Jeeter<lb/>
has repaired and tuned all of the<lb/>
transmitters, which should re-<lb/>
lieve the "buzz" or "hum" that<lb/>
the station signal carried last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
WECU plans to be on the air<lb/>
by Wednesday, August 31. A<lb/>
contest is scheduled for the first<lb/>
week of operation.<lb/>
Many new ideas have been<lb/>
put to use this year.<lb/>
"We are out to meet the<lb/>
needs of our listeners said<lb/>
Maxon.<lb/>
News<lb/>
writers<lb/>
needed!<lb/>
Call<lb/>
757-S366.<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
? $&amp;<lb/>
?J ? .<lb/>
 ?- .<lb/>
factory<lb/>
for blue bell apparel r<lb/>
Fall &amp; Winter Sportswear For Ladies<lb/>
SAVINGS UP TO 50-75<lb/>
Starts Thursday<lb/>
Blouses Gauchos<lb/>
Boot Pants<lb/>
Corduroy Slacks<lb/>
Special Group of Suspender Jeans $9.88<lb/>
Hours 1(A.MIM. Moiir'ri. .<lb/>
IOA.M6P.M. Sal.<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Onler<lb/>
Master Charge &amp; Visa Card Weleome<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 30 Auguat 1977<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
? ? .<lb/>
KROGER SAV-ON S HERE WITH QUALITY,<lb/>
VARIETY AND WEEKLY SPECIALS THAT<lb/>
ADD UP TO<lb/>
oorec<lb/>
THROUGHOUT THE STORE!<lb/>
TOGETHER AT LAST<lb/>
FOOD &amp; DRUGS UNDER<lb/>
ONE ROOF!<lb/>
Just park your car onoe, browse through our wide, uncluttered aisles,<lb/>
check out once, let us carry out your parcelsand you've done the<lb/>
biggest part of your weekly shopping at Kroger Sav-On. This easy,<lb/>
pleasant way of one-stop shopping will make even more sense when<lb/>
you've compared our store-wide low prices with those you've been<lb/>
paying!<lb/>
Sb<lb/>
on<lb/>
FOODDI0JG<lb/>
HAS QUALITY MEATS, FARM-<lb/>
FRESH PRODUCE, AN IN- STORE<lb/>
BAKERY, A DELICATESSEN <lb/>
RESTAURANT, COSMETICS, AND A<lb/>
FULL- SERVICE PHARMACY!<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
7A.M. 'til MIDNIGHT<lb/>
Monday fhru Saturday<lb/>
9A.M. 'til 8P.M.<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
back-to-school<lb/>
shopping list<lb/>
200-COU1NT<lb/>
0 FILLER PAPER3f'$1<lb/>
3-RIlNG ASST<lb/>
0 VINYL BINDERS$119<lb/>
0 LABEL MAKER79 <lb/>
DUO-TANG<lb/>
0 DUO-PORT PORTFOLIOS 19 <lb/>
12-INCH<lb/>
0 PLASTIC RULERS9L,<lb/>
STYLETTE<lb/>
0 A-JUSTA-LAMP$3"<lb/>
5-PACK<lb/>
0 BIC PENS68 <lb/>
ASSORTKU COLORS<lb/>
0 FLAIR PENS3f $1<lb/>
80Z<lb/>
0 ELMERS, GLUE77<lb/>
PLASTIC<lb/>
0 DRAWER ORGANIZERS77<lb/>
10-PACK<lb/>
? DRAWS-A-LOT ftCK<lb/>
M WATERCOLORS CRAYONS<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
0 DUO-TANG FOLDERS91?<lb/>
WKKKSKKVK IIIKKK.in HMIM.r OI AMII lls<lb/>
? .??<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0007"/><lb/>
?IVPnfl9BINHgFMVBVMHMK9MHBBH&amp;<lb/>
1<lb/>
30Augu?tl977 FOUN7AINHEAD<lb/>
West Texas city turns garbage into gold<lb/>
fPNCa This Wp5 Tcvac ??w f .  . <lb/>
(PNS) This West "texas city<lb/>
o9f 90,000 is turning garbage into<lb/>
gold. The first American city to<lb/>
recycle all its daily waste, Odessa<lb/>
has not only cut its expenses but<lb/>
may even soon make a profit from<lb/>
its garbage coTection.<lb/>
The Odessa formula goes like<lb/>
this: The city's green water<lb/>
(treated sewage effluent) is pas-<lb/>
sed to a sub-oontractor, who<lb/>
stockpiles it and puts in on<lb/>
agricultural land near the sewage<lb/>
treatment plant on the south side<lb/>
of the city<lb/>
Its solid waste goes to a<lb/>
recovery center on the northwest<lb/>
side of twon for sorting, shred-<lb/>
ding and grinding. This proces-<lb/>
sed material is then spread over<lb/>
ranchland, where it will even-<lb/>
tually convert itself into compost<lb/>
in the soil and improve ailing<lb/>
prairie grass so as to feed more<lb/>
cattle and provide ritore beef.<lb/>
Extracted metals are sold.<lb/>
And with the current rising trend<lb/>
in pig-iron prices, this alone may<lb/>
pay the $800,000 cost of the<lb/>
recycling plant vfcWri another<lb/>
five to eight years.<lb/>
"Garbage is golden said<lb/>
Dr. Geoffrey B. 9tanford, who<lb/>
designed the Odessa recycling<lb/>
system. "We cannot affcrd to<lb/>
throw it away<lb/>
While pointing out that the<lb/>
recycling program is still in the<lb/>
experimental stages, city officials<lb/>
are delighted with results so far.<lb/>
"It (the recycling process) has<lb/>
tremendous potential, both here<lb/>
and around the world says Jim<lb/>
Reese, a stockbroker who has<lb/>
mayor of Odessa when the<lb/>
program was started. "People<lb/>
have come from all over to look at<lb/>
the techniques being applied<lb/>
here<lb/>
City Manager Ron Neighbors<lb/>
describes the recycling program<lb/>
as "still experimental but going<lb/>
very well We have learned a lot<lb/>
and have proved some things<lb/>
he says, "though it will be<lb/>
another year or two before we'll<lb/>
know definitely about the soil<lb/>
enrichment aspects of it<lb/>
Odessa's household garbage<lb/>
is collected twice a week without<lb/>
the customary spillage and bash-<lb/>
ing of cans. Groups of neighbors<lb/>
-hare big city-owned bins, which<lb/>
are placed along the alleys back of<lb/>
their homes.<lb/>
Householders are urged to<lb/>
keep the containers and alleys<lb/>
dean. Undue neglect may bring a<lb/>
warning ticket or even a tele-<lb/>
phone call from City Hall.<lb/>
mm  "?" pnone can from City Hal<lb/>
ECU trestle message welcomes affiliates<lb/>
Motorists enterin the heart I<lb/>
Greenville and the ECU campus<lb/>
on South Charles Street now are<lb/>
being greeted by a brightly paint-<lb/>
ed train trestle that crosses<lb/>
above this busy thoroughfare.<lb/>
For several hundred yards, as<lb/>
the five-land artery dips past the<lb/>
University's athletic complex, the<lb/>
hugh lettering ECU, in purple on<lb/>
a gold background can be seen at<lb/>
the center steel plated structure.<lb/>
Then, as one nears the overpass,<lb/>
the rest of the messaae aoDears.<lb/>
"Welcome toHome of the<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
"We hope the sign will<lb/>
generate increased school spirit<lb/>
and provide a warm welcome to<lb/>
friends, students and alumni<lb/>
returnina to the ECU campus via<lb/>
MUCH WORK AND negotiating has resulted in the<lb/>
new purple and gold sign painted across the<lb/>
Southern Railway tram trestle on South Charles<lb/>
street Left to right) Clyde B. Bailiff, assistant<lb/>
superintendent, Eastern Division Southern Railway<lb/>
System; John F. Jack Minges, president of<lb/>
Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co Dr. Robert holt, vice<lb/>
Chancellor for ECU Administration and Planning;<lb/>
Max Joyner, president of the ECU Alumni<lb/>
Association; Don Leggett, director of ECU Alumni<lb/>
Affairs; and Rob vy hit ley, V.P. ofA.B. Whitley Inc.<lb/>
Photo by ECU News Bureau)<lb/>
I!<lb/>
T<lb/>
Serv<lb/>
Jim's<lb/>
A<lb/>
i<lb/>
Offers you Free Pick ? ups &amp; Deliveries to the<lb/>
College Dorms Every Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
Nights between 6:30 ? till.<lb/>
Still Giving Guaranteed Repairs<lb/>
for 90 days &amp; Installations on<lb/>
C.B. HiFi ? Stereo T.V.<lb/>
Call Jim or Tommy at<lb/>
756-7193<lb/>
 Located at 3103 S. Memorial Dr. Greenville, I.C.<lb/>
the Charles Street route says<lb/>
Don Leggett, director of the ECU<lb/>
Office of Alumni Affairs.<lb/>
It was Leggett who coordina-<lb/>
ted the efforts to get "Welcome<lb/>
to ECU, Home of the Pirates"<lb/>
painted on the trestle and he<lb/>
concedes that it was not an easy<lb/>
task. It took months of planning<lb/>
and negotiating.<lb/>
"First of all, permission had<lb/>
to be obtained from the Southern<lb/>
Railway System and contracts<lb/>
signed with the Railroad Com-<lb/>
pany regarding certain areas of<lb/>
responsibility Leggett said.<lb/>
Then someone had to be found<lb/>
to donate the work. A.B. Whitley,<lb/>
Inc. of Greenville, paint contrac-<lb/>
tors, agreed to provide the gold<lb/>
background, while Pepsi-Cola<lb/>
Bottling Co. of Greenville dona-<lb/>
ted the painting of the actual<lb/>
letters.<lb/>
"This was done at consider-<lb/>
able time and expense to these<lb/>
two Greenville-based busines-<lb/>
ses Leggett said.<lb/>
"Plans also had to be coordi-<lb/>
nated with the city and with the<lb/>
Highway Department and the<lb/>
State of North Carolina, both of<lb/>
whom were most cooperative<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
The painting of the structure<lb/>
took only a couple of days and a<lb/>
few gallons of purple and gold<lb/>
paint, which are the school oolors,<lb/>
to complete But before that work<lb/>
could begin, special insurance<lb/>
coverage fa the sign maker had<lb/>
to be obtained.<lb/>
Leggett admits that the exper-<lb/>
ience has taught him a lot about<lb/>
painting train trestles. Tough<lb/>
work?<lb/>
Absolutely, he says. But,<lb/>
"H was inspiring to receive the<lb/>
cooperation from so many differ-<lb/>
ent agencies while putting this<lb/>
project together. This illustrates<lb/>
the vast amount of interest and<lb/>
enthusiasm that our local citizens<lb/>
have for ECU and its various<lb/>
activities<lb/>
East Carolina University foot-<lb/>
ball games will be heard through-<lb/>
out eastern North Carolina and<lb/>
parts of the Piedmont this season<lb/>
over the 20-pl-s station lineup of<lb/>
the Pirate Sports Network.<lb/>
The Greenville outlet will be<lb/>
WOOW-AM. while the flagsbip<lb/>
station will be WKTC-FM in<lb/>
Tarboro.<lb/>
The Pirate Sports Network is<lb/>
the third largest ooilege network<lb/>
in North Carolina, with a cover-<lb/>
age area of nearly three million<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Formerly of Downtown Greenville<lb/>
has moved to its new location.<lb/>
We Feature;<lb/>
GIBSON FENDER<lb/>
MARTIN AMPEG<lb/>
GUITARS &amp; AMPS.<lb/>
Plus all the other, musical instruments.<lb/>
The Music Shop<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Centerl<lb/>
756-0007 (Next to K-mart)<lb/>
(Thurs. &amp; Fri. nights until 9 p.m.)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0008"/><lb/>
? I<lb/>
? I   ?<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 3fi August 1977<lb/>
SGA transit<lb/>
Schedules for purple, gold, brown routes<lb/>
co-rec scanpick up bus schedules at Mendenhall<lb/>
information d&amp;, SGA office and dorm counselors<lb/>
offices.<lb/>
Buses will run 730 a.m5 JO p.m.<lb/>
Night schedule is 6-10 Uonday through Thrusdays.<lb/>
PURPLE<lb/>
PlaceDeparts<lb/>
SpeightOn half hour<lb/>
East brook25 till hour<lb/>
River Bluff22tillhour<lb/>
Kings RowI8till hour<lb/>
Village Greene15till hour<lb/>
Memorial Gym12till hour<lb/>
Mendenhall10till hour<lb/>
SpeightOn the hour<lb/>
East brook5 after hour<lb/>
River Bluff8 after hour<lb/>
Kings Row12 after hour<lb/>
Village Greene15 after hour<lb/>
Memorial Gym17 after hour<lb/>
MendenhallGOLD20 after hour<lb/>
10th and College Hill25 after hour<lb/>
College Hill26 after hour<lb/>
Mmgeson half hour<lb/>
Allied Health27 till hour<lb/>
Pitt Plaza24 till hour<lb/>
Oakmont21 till hour<lb/>
Mendenhall16 till hour<lb/>
10th and College Hill5 till hour<lb/>
College Hill4 till hour<lb/>
Mmgeson the hour<lb/>
Allied Health3 after hour<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Oakmont6 after hour 9 after hour<lb/>
Mendenhall14 after hour<lb/>
BROWN<lb/>
NIGHT ROUTE<lb/>
Speight<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
5th and Elizabeth<lb/>
Avery and Holly<lb/>
Willow and Woodlawn<lb/>
Elm and Willow<lb/>
Willow and Oak<lb/>
Speight<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
5th and Elizabeth<lb/>
Avery and Holly<lb/>
Willow and Woodlawn<lb/>
Willow and Elm<lb/>
Willow and Oak<lb/>
on half hour<lb/>
28 till hour<lb/>
26 till hour<lb/>
22 till hour<lb/>
18till hour<lb/>
16till hour<lb/>
15tillhour<lb/>
13till hour<lb/>
on the hour<lb/>
2 after hour<lb/>
4 after hour<lb/>
8 after hour<lb/>
12 after hour<lb/>
14 after hour<lb/>
15 after hour<lb/>
17 after hour<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Joyner<lb/>
College Hill<lb/>
Mmges<lb/>
Allied Health<lb/>
Greenville Square<lb/>
Pitt Piaza<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Joyner<lb/>
College Hill<lb/>
Mmges<lb/>
Allied Health<lb/>
Greenville Square<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
TEN THOUSAND STUDENTS use the buses weekly<lb/>
on the hour<lb/>
3 after hour<lb/>
10 after hour<lb/>
15 after hour<lb/>
18 after hour<lb/>
21 after hour<lb/>
23 after hour<lb/>
on half hour<lb/>
27 till hour<lb/>
20tillhour<lb/>
15 till hour<lb/>
12tillhour<lb/>
9till hour<lb/>
7 till hour<lb/>
SOPHOMORES<lb/>
IT'S NOT TOO LATE<lb/>
TO ENROLL IN AIR FORCE ROTC<lb/>
and here are some facts that should interest you:<lb/>
Courses open to college men and women.<lb/>
Four hours academic credit per semester.<lb/>
No service obligation now.<lb/>
Full scholarships available that pay tuition, all fees, plus $100 a month tax-free al<lb/>
An Air Force officer commission when you receive your baccalaureate.<lb/>
The opportunity to get to know the spirit that made our nation great.<lb/>
Talk with our Air Force ROTC representative.<lb/>
Air force ROTC Ca'?w?Y to a Great<lb/>
Way of Life<lb/>
lowance.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0009"/><lb/>
30 August 1977 FOUNTAINHEAP Pag 9<lb/>
i Photos by<lb/>
PIRATE RAG-THE purple and gold "Pirate Rag" will make its <lb/>
debut among thousands of ECU football followers this fall,<lb/>
beginning Sept. 3 at Carter Stadium in Raleigh.<lb/>
'Pirate Rag ' is being sold through the ECU Student Supply Stores<lb/>
and is expected to become a familiar emblem, handy for waving the<lb/>
ECU Pirates on to victory. ECU News Bureau Photo.<lb/>
THE WAR' IS ON<lb/>
you've heard of starwars<lb/>
now you've got'album wars<lb/>
ALL$6.98 LP's$3.99<lb/>
ALL$7.98 LP's $4.99<lb/>
higher priced albums<lb/>
red ueed<lb/>
$7.981ist tapes$5.9<lb/>
all others reduced<lb/>
Pete<lb/>
Podeszwa<lb/>
STUDENTS CONTINUE TO wait in drop-add lines.<lb/>
We'll put 2 pounds of<lb/>
Alaskan<lb/>
crab leg!<lb/>
on the<lb/>
table<lb/>
you for only $535.<lb/>
They're big and meaty, shipped direct from the cold, clear waters<lb/>
of Alaska So come to the Family Fish I louse and bnng your appetite<lb/>
Along with your men you II enjoy tasty i ole slaw, hushpuppies. and<lb/>
a choice of baked potato or french friesu? Alaskan crab legs are avail<lb/>
able for a limited time only, so hurry on over<lb/>
Washington-419W Main Street-946-1301<lb/>
Also Burlington. Fayetteville &amp;<lb/>
2 locations in Raleigh<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0010"/><lb/>
???(???HMMHmBM<lb/>
P?Q? 10 FOUNTAINHEAP 30 Augu 1977<lb/>
This is the semester to get your<lb/>
programmable.<lb/>
The TI-57.<lb/>
Its self-teaching<lb/>
system gets you<lb/>
programming<lb/>
fast.<lb/>
79<lb/>
95<lb/>
.ms-gaw Tl Programmable 57. The powerful<lb/>
aicrJsaBJsas: ? suPerslide rule calculator you can program<lb/>
right from the keyboard. Comes with a asy-<lb/>
to-follow. self-teaching learning guide-over<lb/>
200 pages of step-by-step instructions and ex-<lb/>
amples. Quickly learn the value of making re-<lb/>
petitive calculations at the touch of a key.<lb/>
Recall entire instruction sequences. Display<lb/>
intermediate results at any point in a calcula-<lb/>
tion. Eight multi-use memories provide ad-<lb/>
dressable locations to store and recall data. Program memory<lb/>
stores up to 150 keystrokes (50 program steps). Editing too<lb/>
Singlestep. Backstep. Insert or delete at<lb/>
any point in a program. Also a powerful $m ??<lb/>
slide rule calculator with logs, trig func-<lb/>
tions and advanced statistics routines.<lb/>
The TI-58 and TI-59 combine three major inno-<lb/>
vations to bring the power of programming to<lb/>
you-even if you've never programmed before:<lb/>
1 Extraordinarily powerful - at remarkable low prices.<lb/>
2. Revolutionary plug-in modules put complex formulas to work<lb/>
at the touch of a key.<lb/>
3 Step-by-step learning guide that takes you from the basics of<lb/>
programming through advanced programmings-language you<lb/>
can understand.<lb/>
Tl Programmable 58. up to 480 program<lb/>
steps, or up to 60 memories Master Library<lb/>
module contains 25 prewritten programs in<lb/>
math, engineering, statistics and finance. Also<lb/>
increases number of steps - up to 5000. Library<lb/>
programs may also be addressed from the key-<lb/>
board or inserted as subroutines. Can also be<lb/>
used with Tl's new<lb/>
PC-100A printerplot- ?g iQC<lb/>
It lets you plot, w ?<lb/>
Programming<lb/>
ter<lb/>
124<lb/>
print headings and prompt-messages<lb/>
Tl Programmable 59. More powerful than the TI-58 Up to<lb/>
960 program steps or up to 100 memories. Magnetic cards store<lb/>
up to 960 steps. And, record and pro-<lb/>
tect custom programs Also 10 user"V Q?<lb/>
flags 6 levels of subroutines 4 types<lb/>
of branches<lb/>
'2<lb/>
Optional Libraries. Applied Statistics, Surveying, Real<lb/>
EstateFinance, Aviation, Marine Navigation. $35.00 each.<lb/>
The Tl 58 and 59.<lb/>
Both use<lb/>
revolutionary<lb/>
plug-in<lb/>
Solid State<lb/>
Software"<lb/>
libraries.<lb/>
FREE.<lb/>
When you buy a Tl Programmable 58<lb/>
or 59 you can get this 19-program<lb/>
Leisure Library.<lb/>
A $35.00 value if you act now.<lb/>
Football Predictor. Forecast score, point spread Bowling<lb/>
Scorekeeper. Track 90 bowlers Golf Handicapper. Up<lb/>
date handicap from latest round's score Bridge Computes<lb/>
points Irom tricks made and bid U.S. Chess Federation<lb/>
Rankings. Wins, losses, draws Codebreaker. 3,024 possi<lb/>
ble codes make this a unique challenge Blackjack Acey<lb/>
Ducey. Craps. Mars Lander. Pilot to a safe landing Jive<lb/>
Turkey. Guess mystery number-tells you if you re hiqh<lb/>
or low-but is it jiving you Nim. Play the machine each<lb/>
time it gets better Sea Battle. 15 missiles to sink sub<lb/>
Quarterback. Call plays. Photo 1. Compensate for change<lb/>
in photo enlargement magnification Photo II Fill-in flash<lb/>
Computes correct lens f-stop in strong ambient light Use<lb/>
it with a PC-100A and have even more fun Computer Art.<lb/>
Hangman. Put in a word, second player guesses or hangs<lb/>
Memo Pad. Write, enter messages Print and record them<lb/>
on 59 s mag card Use the card to replay the messaae<lb/>
Biorythm. Plots all three cycles<lb/>
l?nu? Library<lb/>
Leisure Library comes<lb/>
with Plug-m module<lb/>
Library manual Quick<lb/>
reference guide Label<lb/>
cards Library wallet<lb/>
r<lb/>
Orfer good from August 15 to October 31. 1977 Here s<lb/>
what you do. Fill out this coupon Return it to Tl with your<lb/>
serialized Customer Information Card (packed in the box)<lb/>
along with a copy of a dated proof of purchase showing<lb/>
the serial number Important. Your envelope must be<lb/>
postmarked no later than October 31 1977<lb/>
Leisure Library Oder<lb/>
P 0 Box53 Lubbock Texas 79408<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
City<lb/>
State<lb/>
'Suggested retail price<lb/>
? 1977 Texas Instruments Incorporated<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
INCORPORATED<lb/>
Tl 58 or 59 Serial Number ?rnm h . . ,<lb/>
(from back of calculator)<lb/>
Texas Instruments reserves the right to substitute software library nt wiuai u,i k?,<lb/>
Please allow .10 days lor delivery oV, vorf where pro?hZo ??rl?IZn???'<lb/>
F<lb/>
e<lb/>
11<lb/>
v<lb/>
a<lb/>
u<lb/>
c<lb/>
p<lb/>
r<lb/>
P<lb/>
v<lb/>
e<lb/>
r(<lb/>
ti<lb/>
it<lb/>
D<lb/>
fc<lb/>
at<lb/>
at<lb/>
a<lb/>
h<lb/>
th<lb/>
yo<lb/>
fa<lb/>
en<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0011"/><lb/>
Between the Lines<lb/>
by Michael Futch<lb/>
Explanations<lb/>
1977-78a fresh new year at booming East Carolina University.<lb/>
For the college "veteran it means a time to mentally erase those<lb/>
F's from the past, wrap up those nasty Inoompletes, and strive for the<lb/>
seemingly impossible-a 2.0. Or maybe better, having your name<lb/>
removed from the University probation list.<lb/>
Fa the "rookies it oould mean come culture shock, a lot of dirty<lb/>
hangovers, first attempts at study, and a few disillusions. And these<lb/>
are just a few of the many experiences to look forward to.<lb/>
A new year at ECU also means a new year at The Fountainhead.<lb/>
The pseudo-intellectual, forget bout the '60's (whatever happened to<lb/>
ecology?), favoriet of most Jones Cafeteria regulars, twice-a-week<lb/>
tabloid.<lb/>
But don't be dismayed. The Fountainhead'soutput is dependent on<lb/>
the students' input. We'll package and deliver all the news, features,<lb/>
entertainment, art, sport sand ads that the paper has room to fill. We'll<lb/>
be the gatekeepers; but more importantly, the student will be the<lb/>
critic.<lb/>
The beginning of a new school year invariably means a new<lb/>
Fountainhead staff, or at least a re-organization of the previous ones.<lb/>
As new editor of Trends-a section of the paper which specializes in<lb/>
entertainment, features and the Arts-it will be my job to package an<lb/>
informative, entertaining, and scholastic section of the publication.<lb/>
In the past, the trend has been for the editor of this department to<lb/>
write hisher personal column. Whether surprisingly strong, a<lb/>
apparently weak, the column ran in its usual place each week.<lb/>
This column will not be a mandatory once-a-week part of Trends,<lb/>
unless student response is good. It will not have priority over an article<lb/>
a review which I feel is more pertinent to the students.<lb/>
"Between the Lines" will be a somewhat liberal and open column.<lb/>
It may be an attempt at humor, a review, a a sidebar to a review,<lb/>
possibly some personal philosophizing, a retrospective, etc. Or it may<lb/>
not even run. The column has no dear definition, no certain goals<lb/>
probably because at this point this writer is unsure what inspirations<lb/>
will have shaken me between now and then.<lb/>
The only goal of "Between the Lines" is that the column will be<lb/>
entertainning and informative, and at times, controversial. If student<lb/>
response is derogatory, it will be canceled. Only to surface under a new<lb/>
title, on a different page. No seriously, it will continue only as long as<lb/>
it has appeal and as long as the ribbon holds out. (Note: I have all of<lb/>
David R. Bosnicks '76-77 film review outtakes catalogued and locked<lb/>
for quick filler material, in case the column bombs)<lb/>
The overall Trends section should be fairly unique and innovative,<lb/>
as compared to previous years The goal is not to mire in entertainment<lb/>
and reviews alone, but to include material that will be intellectually<lb/>
stimulating. It needs to be remembered that The Fountainhead is not<lb/>
Hi Parade or Creem magazine; it is a college newspaper.<lb/>
The Fountainhead has a large available reading audience. I hope<lb/>
this year's Trends will attract the attention of the majority.<lb/>
Ideas are weloome from students; it is your newspaper. Whether<lb/>
you know it or not, the University takes out a portion of your semester<lb/>
fees to help finance this paper.<lb/>
So much fa petty explanations and anarchaic goals Hope you<lb/>
enjoy<lb/>
1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
CAMPUS LIFE evokes contemplation Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
Best<lb/>
Sellers<lb/>
FICTION<lb/>
The Thorn Birds by Colleen<lb/>
McCullough<lb/>
The Crash of '79 by Paul E<lb/>
Erdman<lb/>
Illusions by Richard Bach<lb/>
Delta of Venus by Anais Nin<lb/>
Oliver's Story by Erich Segal<lb/>
Condominium by John D. Mac<lb/>
Donald<lb/>
ull Disclosure by William Satire<lb/>
Falconer by John Cheever<lb/>
Dynasty by Robert E. Elegant<lb/>
Trinity by Leon Uris<lb/>
NONFICTION<lb/>
Your Erroneous Zones by Wayne<lb/>
W. Dyer<lb/>
The Book of Lists by David<lb/>
Wallechinsky<lb/>
Looking Out for Nutnbm die by<lb/>
Robert J. Ringer<lb/>
The Dragons of Eden by Carl<lb/>
Sagan<lb/>
Vivien Leigh by Anne Edwards<lb/>
The Camera Never Blinks by Dan<lb/>
Rather<lb/>
It Didn't Start With Watergate by<lb/>
Victa Lansky<lb/>
The Managerial Womag by Mar-<lb/>
garet Hennig and Anne Jardin<lb/>
The Grass is Always Greener<lb/>
Over the Septic Tank by Erma<lb/>
Bombeck<lb/>
The Path Between the Seas by<lb/>
Fsvid McCullough<lb/>
Acoordlng to The New York<lb/>
Times Book Review Survey<lb/>
N.O.R.M.L program slated<lb/>
for Mendenhall Center<lb/>
"Marijuana: The New Prohi-<lb/>
bition" is the title of the<lb/>
film-lecutre program presented<lb/>
by N.O.R.M.L. (National Organ-<lb/>
izatioi fa the Refam of Mari-<lb/>
juana Laws) on September 29,<lb/>
1977 in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
"Enough people were arres-<lb/>
ted fa marijuana in 1973 to<lb/>
empty the whole city of a. Pau<lb/>
Minnesota. Don't you think it's<lb/>
time we stopped?" This is one of<lb/>
the many questions posed by<lb/>
N.O.R.M.L. lectures<lb/>
N.O.R.M.L. director Keith<lb/>
Stroup says that unfortunately his<lb/>
aganizatioi is not passe. In<lb/>
October of 1975 Jerry Mitchell<lb/>
was convicted oi selling 11 grams<lb/>
of marijuana and sentenced to 12<lb/>
years in jail.<lb/>
The N.O.R.M.L. campus lec-<lb/>
ture examines in detail the<lb/>
historical, medical, social, and<lb/>
legal aspects oi marijuana use. It<lb/>
features a oomprenhensive re-<lb/>
view of progress towards decri-<lb/>
minalization. It also analyzes<lb/>
alarmist scientific research about<lb/>
the drug.<lb/>
Two short films, "Marijuana:<lb/>
Assissin of Youth" and highlights<lb/>
of "Reefer Madness" are also<lb/>
included in the program.<lb/>
N.O.R.M.L. is a non-profit<lb/>
lobby seeking a non-criminal<lb/>
response to private use of mari-<lb/>
juana. The aganizatioi suppots<lb/>
a policy of discouragement of all<lb/>
recreational drugs including al-<lb/>
cohol and tobacco. However, the<lb/>
group feels that the use of<lb/>
criminal penalties has been harm-<lb/>
ful to both society and the<lb/>
individual, economically waste-<lb/>
ful, and ineffective as a deterrent.<lb/>
N.O.R.M.L's current activi-<lb/>
ties include lobbying fa decri-<lb/>
minalization of marijuana with<lb/>
state and federal legislatures,<lb/>
bringing constitutional challenges<lb/>
to some state and federal mari-<lb/>
juana laws, sponsaing re-educa-<lb/>
tion programs, and giving legal<lb/>
referral and assistance to those<lb/>
arrested.<lb/>
Rolling Stone sayd, "N.O.<lb/>
R.M.L. is not the only group<lb/>
waking fa marijuana refam,<lb/>
but it is the most prestigious and<lb/>
most successful aganizatiai. It<lb/>
has set the style fa an effective<lb/>
approach to the issue N.O.R.<lb/>
M .Lsmember ship includes such<lb/>
people as Ramsey Clark and<lb/>
Benjamin Spook.<lb/>
ECU'S N.O.R.M.L. lecture on<lb/>
September 29 is at 8fl0 P.M. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre. Admission is free fa<lb/>
ECU students Faculty and staff<lb/>
are admitted by MSC card, and<lb/>
public tickets are $2.00 each.<lb/>
Groups of 20 or more may<lb/>
purchase tickets fa $1.50 each.<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
on the Mall<lb/>
Tenth Avenue Band<lb/>
Tuesday, Aug. 30th<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0012"/><lb/>
12 FOUNTAINHEAD 30 A<lb/>
Coeds strugale with fridoe<lb/>
J&amp;'taticT'uJa<lb/>
ance<lb/>
aulfnlicMS?llg dancing"<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Smithsonian<lb/>
exhibition<lb/>
scheduled<lb/>
The theme that the earth is a<lb/>
spaceship is a recurring one in the<lb/>
exhibition "Our Only World<lb/>
Part of the Smithsonian Institu-<lb/>
tion Traveling Exhibition Series,<lb/>
this exhibit was produced by the<lb/>
U.S. Environmental Protection<lb/>
Agency.<lb/>
Illumnia, the Student Union<lb/>
Art Exhibition Committee, is<lb/>
sponsoring the exhibit which<lb/>
opens September 4, 1977 in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Gal-<lb/>
lery and remain on view through<lb/>
October 1, 1977.<lb/>
The exhibit oonsists of 113<lb/>
oolor photographs selected from<lb/>
E.P.As Project Documerica.<lb/>
Documerica is a program design-<lb/>
ed to portray the environmentalk<lb/>
crisis and the efforts being made<lb/>
to stow down and reverse envi-<lb/>
ronmental damage.<lb/>
47 of the country's finest<lb/>
photographers contributed to the<lb/>
exhibition. Their photographs<lb/>
were chosen from 10,000 prints in<lb/>
the Documerica files. Some pho-<lb/>
tographs show breathtaking<lb/>
beautv. Others show indictments<lb/>
of mistreatment of tha, environ-<lb/>
ment. Vieweo logeuief mey are a<lb/>
document of the American land-<lb/>
scape and its condition.<lb/>
Jt fun ani creative toay<lb/>
Ic fotip in tKap? I<lb/>
BICYCLE SHOP<lb/>
?530CotancneSt.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Wilson &amp; Raleigh<lb/>
Authorized Dealer for<lb/>
rFUCiEOT<lb/>
Takara Model 721 129,00<lb/>
Discover the difference a quality 10 speed can make. And discover, too, how mucn quality<lb/>
your dollar can buy. The 721 features Takara's Agile-light Ride combined with equipment<lb/>
normally found only on higher-priced bicycles. It's an outstanding value . from the SUN<lb/>
TOUR? derailleurs to the Dia Compe? safety-lever brakes, this is one for the road.<lb/>
Course confusion at ECU<lb/>
Goings On<lb/>
TUESDAY:<lb/>
" The Day the Earth Stood Still" shows at 1, 4 and 8 p.m. and<lb/>
?'Things to Come' at 2:45, 6:15, and 8:45, at the Roxy. Adm. $1.00<lb/>
Tenth Avenue Band on the University Mall, 8 p.m.<lb/>
THURSDAY:<lb/>
Student Union Film ' Shampoo starring Warren Beatty, 8 p.m.<lb/>
Adm. ECU ID and Activity Card.<lb/>
Poetry Forum, 8:00, Conference Room in Joyner Library<lb/>
Co-Rec Almost Anything Goes, 4 p.m University Mall<lb/>
Auditions fa ECU Playhouse Production of 'Bye, Bye, Birdie"<lb/>
7:30-10 p.m.<lb/>
FRIDAY:<lb/>
Student Union Film ??Shampoo 7 and 9 p.m. Adm. ECU ID and<lb/>
Activity Card<lb/>
Auditions for ECU Playhouse Production of 'Bye, Bye. Birdie"<lb/>
7:30-10 p.m. McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
SATURDAY:<lb/>
ECU-vs-N.C. State, 7:00, Carter Stadium.<lb/>
EAT FOR JUST<lb/>
V; plus cax MonTh<lb/>
urs.<lb/>
Crabeakes, slaw, jfrem li fries plirs<lb/>
hushfkippies.<lb/>
Vt pound hamburger steak, slaw,<lb/>
french fries an'd rolls.<lb/>
Fisb, slaw, french fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood Restaurant<lb/>
East 10th Street Ext.<lb/>
Old Washington Highway<lb/>
752-3172<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0013"/><lb/>
30 August 1977 FOUNTAINHEAP Page 13<lb/>
ECU Artist Series opens with featured pianist<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Artists Series begins Sept. 21<lb/>
with a conoert featuring pianist<lb/>
Ruth Laredo. Other programs<lb/>
slated for the year include<lb/>
Shinichi Suzuki's Talent Educa-<lb/>
tion Tour, flutist Jean-Pierre<lb/>
Rampal and harpsichordist Ro-<lb/>
bert Veyron-Laaoix, the Buffalo<lb/>
Philharmonic Orchestra, the Nor-<lb/>
man Luboff Choir and the Cana-<lb/>
dian Brass.<lb/>
Ruth Laredo has been solo<lb/>
pianist with several United States<lb/>
orchestras. A New York TIMES<lb/>
music critic said of her: she<lb/>
may just possibly become the<lb/>
present generation's first truly<lb/>
major American pianist Her<lb/>
performance is set for 8 p.m.<lb/>
Tickets are $1.50 fa ECU stu-<lb/>
dents and $4 fa the public.<lb/>
Shinichi Suzuki will appear with<lb/>
ten Japanese children instructed<lb/>
in his talent education method<lb/>
who will perfam waks of Vival-<lb/>
di, Bach, and Beethoven. The<lb/>
program has been highly acclaim-<lb/>
ed throughout the nation, both fa<lb/>
the quality of the performance<lb/>
from children so young and fa<lb/>
the innovativeness of Suzuki's<lb/>
teaching approach.<lb/>
Flutist Jean-Pierre Rampal<lb/>
RUTH LAREDO<lb/>
Learn to<lb/>
Prepare<lb/>
Income Taxes<lb/>
Like to meet the public?<lb/>
? Want to earn extra money?<lb/>
? Work accurately with figures?<lb/>
Enroll in the H &amp; R Block Income Tax Course beginning I<lb/>
in your area and learn to prepare income taxes tor yourself<lb/>
your triends and as a source ot income<lb/>
Job interviews available for best students Send tor tree<lb/>
information and class schedules today<lb/>
Classes begin and will be held in<lb/>
area locations<lb/>
HR BLOCK<lb/>
contact the office nearest you<lb/>
316 S. Evans S.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Phone 752-4907<lb/>
Please send me free inlormation about your tax<lb/>
preparation course. I understand there is no<lb/>
obligation.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
.City<lb/>
I Address<lb/>
State<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
CLIP AND MAIL TODAYl<lb/>
and harpsichordist Robert<lb/>
Veyron-Laaoix are scheduled to<lb/>
perfam 18th century music Feb.<lb/>
16. The Buffalo EVENING NEWS<lb/>
states the two have been  declar-<lb/>
ed by some celestial deaee to be<lb/>
in a permanent state of musical<lb/>
grace<lb/>
On Feb. 28 the Buffalo<lb/>
Philharmonic Orchestra will per-<lb/>
fam with Michael Tilson Thanas<lb/>
conducting and the Naman Lub-<lb/>
off Char will appear at ECU<lb/>
March 22 with a varied program<lb/>
ranging from Bach to the Beatles.<lb/>
Final show of the seasai will<lb/>
be the Canadian Brass, an<lb/>
ensemble assisting of two trum-<lb/>
pets, a French nan, a tronboie<lb/>
and a tuba.<lb/>
All shows exoept the Buffalo<lb/>
Philharmonic Orchestra and the<lb/>
Naman Lubovv Choir are sche-<lb/>
duled fa the Mendenhail Student<lb/>
Center Theatre at 8 p.m. The<lb/>
achestra and choir will appear in<lb/>
Wright Auditaium.<lb/>
Individual and seasai tickets<lb/>
fa all Artists Series concerts are<lb/>
Mail aders fa Artists Series<lb/>
season tickets should be sent with<lb/>
a stamped, addressed envelope to<lb/>
Artists Series, Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Mendenhail Student Cen-<lb/>
ter, East Carolina University,<lb/>
Greenville N.C. 27834.<lb/>
available from the ECU Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhail Stu-<lb/>
dent Center. Public season tickets<lb/>
are $15 each, and tickets ECU<lb/>
faculty and staff members are $10<lb/>
each ECU students may pur-<lb/>
chase season tickets fa $5.<lb/>
RIGGAIS'<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
Shoes Repaired to Look Like New!<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 Wesj<lb/>
1<lb/>
tw.<lb/>
J<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
Pizza &amp; Spaghetti<lb/>
House<lb/>
FAST FREE<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
DELIVERYlXCARRY OUT<lb/>
coldest beer - lowest prices<lb/>
DIAL 758-7400<lb/>
507 EAST 14th STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Nothing beats a Pizza from CHANELO'S<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MONDAY thru THURSDAY11:30 a.m. til 1:00 a.m.<lb/>
FRIDAY and SATURDAY11:30 a.m. til 2:00 a.m.<lb/>
SUNDAY 11:30 a.m. til 12:00 p.m.<lb/>
a<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
STUDENTS!<lb/>
SALE!<lb/>
LEVI JEANS<lb/>
Corduroy and Denim<lb/>
Values to 516 00<lb/>
s11.99<lb/>
COWL NECK TEE TOPS<lb/>
Stripes, solids Reg. to $15 ? ?y Garland<lb/>
25 OFF<lb/>
CLASSIC SHIRTS<lb/>
Checks ? Plaids ? Prints<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
s11.00<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 30 August 1977<lb/>
films<lb/>
by David W. Trevino<lb/>
Rollercoaster is a cinematic spectacular in which the film's most<lb/>
spectacular event takes place before the first box of popcorn is gone.<lb/>
The remainder of the movie is little more than limp filler as the faces<lb/>
of crmri aro marshalled to insure nothing else will happen. And nothing<lb/>
aco-rec<lb/>
else ooea nappen.<lb/>
At the beginning of the film, the management flashed a message<lb/>
warning the audience about the powerful technique used to make<lb/>
Rollercoaster more realistic, Sensu, round. By placing four large<lb/>
speakers around the theatre and ?' incredible photography the actual<lb/>
shakes and sounds of a rollerooaster ride were supposed to be<lb/>
reproduced. The actual effect achieved was closer to sticking your head<lb/>
intoa washing machine and letting the blades of the agitator beat out a<lb/>
rumba on your temples.<lb/>
If Sensurround left something to be desired (namely earplugs), the<lb/>
acting in thefilm was unable to match even that level of achievement.<lb/>
George Segal seems willing to spend the rest of his career wearing<lb/>
great suits and looking confused. As the safety inspector who first<lb/>
conceives that the rol lercoaster accidents are the premeditated acts of a<lb/>
man, Segal wanders through the film with his mouth alternately agape<lb/>
in bewilderment and pursed in determination. Segal looks like a man in<lb/>
a pay toilet with no change, and a plane to catch in five minutes.<lb/>
Wrinkled Richard Widmark gets an airing-out as the incredibly<lb/>
bumbling, hardboiled Federal investigator who plays the percentages<lb/>
and doesn't take chancesor entertain audiences. Maybe Widmark<lb/>
has done it just too many times, because he just doesn't seem to have<lb/>
anything left. Or maybe the world really doesn't need another<lb/>
crotchety, old father-figure cop.<lb/>
Timothy Bottoms is a fine actor who has no real reason to e in a<lb/>
commercial product like Rollercoaster, except for the money. However,<lb/>
if he continues wasting his talent wandering around amusement parks<lb/>
looking like he just discovered the secret of fire, the good roles may<lb/>
start passing him by without any consideration at all.<lb/>
As the deranged bomber who seeks to extort a million dollars from<lb/>
the rollercoaster magnates of America, Bottoms finds his acting talent<lb/>
demonstrated only in his ability to shift a twitch from eye to eye.<lb/>
Rollercoaster is little more than a poorly conceived commercial<lb/>
vehicle to bring a few name actors and a cheap technical effect together<lb/>
in order to fleece the entertainment seeking movie goers of America. If<lb/>
you really are interested though, George Segal and the police finally<lb/>
manage to catch Timothy Bottoms (after he has been run over by a<lb/>
rollercoaster) and no one cares.<lb/>
BREAKING TRAINING Pitt The Bad News Bears ride again in this<lb/>
sappy sequel without the stars of the original. Going to see these<lb/>
movies only encourages their producers to make more and more. Skip<lb/>
it. One star.<lb/>
GODZILLA ON MONSTER ISLAND Buccaneer Movies One) This<lb/>
Japanese monster film wastotally financed by the saleof a 1966 Toyota<lb/>
earlier this year. It's Godzilla and the Spiny Turtle versus the Belly<lb/>
Buzz Saw and the Flying Gorgon in a battle for planet Earth. Absurdly<lb/>
costumed men run amok in cardboard cities setting plastic models<lb/>
aflame while cockroaches try to take over the world. This late show<lb/>
reject is penalized one star because admission is charged.<lb/>
POCO LITTLE DOG LOST Plaza Two) Poco gets lost in the desert 250<lb/>
miles from home and thumbs back it's as bad as it sounds. Most of<lb/>
this poorly edited footage looks like atuff Alpo didn't use in their TV<lb/>
commercials. The producers of Godziiia do Walt Disney and show<lb/>
ninety minutes of a dog running through ;lds fa no stars.<lb/>
ROLLERCOASTER Buccaneer Movies Two) Reviewed above.<lb/>
THE RESCUERSPlaza One) This Walt Disney animated feature is far<lb/>
and away the best cinematic entertainment commercially available this<lb/>
week in Greenville. Eva Gaba and Bob Newhart provide the voices fa<lb/>
the two humanitarian mice who risk all to save a little girl and her teddy<lb/>
bear from the clutches of an evil hag and her flunkie alligatas. The<lb/>
animation is excellent and sometimes spectacular. Three stars.<lb/>
A TA LE OF TWO CRITTERSPlaza One) Loosely based on the Dickens<lb/>
classic about revolutionary France, this is anaher film about lost<lb/>
animals, a popular, recent theme.<lb/>
A young raccoon and a bear cub meet under strained circumstances<lb/>
and work out a relationship that is developed throughout the work.<lb/>
Unfatunately, the raccoon finds the bear hibernating with anaher and<lb/>
the affari ends. One star.<lb/>
THUNDER AND LIGHTNING Park) This movie is fa all those people<lb/>
who spend Friday and Saturday nights sitting on the hoods of their cars<lb/>
in teh Faomat parking la. David Carradine and Kate Jackson drive<lb/>
fast and get into fights with the same rednecks over and over again.<lb/>
Watch Uniroyal take on the Baja Peninsula while punching yourself<lb/>
silly and save the price of a ticket. One star because Burt Reynolds is<lb/>
oot in it-<lb/>
KEITH BOWERS CA TCHES up on the news as<lb/>
he relaxes on the wall between classes.<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
Conversion to semester<lb/>
brings suggested curriculum<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Enough with abstract quasi-<lb/>
conceptual courses! We believe<lb/>
that a liberal arts education ought<lb/>
to help us live our lives. We want<lb/>
courses in practical, fundamental<lb/>
matters, ones that answer the<lb/>
really trivial questions and leave<lb/>
the impatant oies fa us. Here<lb/>
are some oourses we suggest be<lb/>
included in next year's catalogue.<lb/>
English 2433 Attempts to answer<lb/>
the question "Why is Milton so<lb/>
boring?" This course also exam-<lb/>
ines aher 18th century poets and<lb/>
their childhood diseases.<lb/>
Geology 2100 It has recently been<lb/>
observed that the universe is<lb/>
expanding into the shape of a<lb/>
matzoh ball. Wherefae? Is there<lb/>
life in Wisconsin: Why is there no<lb/>
oonstellation of a dogfish? Also<lb/>
study is made into the aigins of<lb/>
the stars in Greer Gar son' s eyes.<lb/>
Poly Sci 3733 The political<lb/>
philosophies of Ezra Pound and<lb/>
Richard Nixon are linked with<lb/>
those of Donnie Osmaid and<lb/>
David Bowie. Also, the "happy-<lb/>
go-lucky" side of Marx is discus-<lb/>
sed and why he neves made it<lb/>
with girls.<lb/>
WRITERS<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
for<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
If<lb/>
Interested,<lb/>
Call 7576367<lb/>
Music 3400 How to sing an aria<lb/>
while maintianing your masculin-<lb/>
ity as well as how to play with<lb/>
flugelhan with braces on your<lb/>
uppers are topics discussed.<lb/>
Special attention is paid to the<lb/>
proper pronunciation of "Dva-<lb/>
ak<lb/>
Psychology 1750 Why are mice<lb/>
neuraic? Why do some people<lb/>
have a pathotoqical fear of cold<lb/>
spaghetti? The writing and thea-<lb/>
ies of the Buddhist psychiatrist<lb/>
brahers, Jung and Jang, are<lb/>
studied in detail.<lb/>
Physics 10 Introduction to the<lb/>
basic physical laws of the uni-<lb/>
verse and their loopholes. If an<lb/>
apple falls from a distance of 57<lb/>
feet accelerating at 32 miles per<lb/>
second per second will it still bake<lb/>
into a good pie?<lb/>
Philosophy 4570 Rare extant<lb/>
copies of Plato's Dialogues have<lb/>
recently been unearthed. In them<lb/>
are segments recading argu-<lb/>
ments between Soaates and his<lb/>
wife, also some gossip from the<lb/>
baths. Also included in these<lb/>
parchments are one of Plato's<lb/>
grocery lists.a nd a receipt fa a<lb/>
take-out pizza, both of which are<lb/>
studied in detail<lb/>
Aimc<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Thur.<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
'Prodigy '<lb/>
'Wide Open'<lb/>
formerly Fresh<lb/>
MATTRESS MART<lb/>
WHOLESALE TO EVERYONE<lb/>
QUALITY FOR LESS<lb/>
WATERBEDS by wavecrest<lb/>
TWIN (2 PIECE SET)<lb/>
FULL (2PIECE SET)<lb/>
QUEEN (2 PIECE SET)<lb/>
KING (3 PIECE SET)<lb/>
39.00<lb/>
87.00<lb/>
89.00<lb/>
160.00<lb/>
215.00<lb/>
ANY STUDENT WITH VALID ID WILL<lb/>
BE GIVEN A $5-$30 COUPON<lb/>
TOWARDS PURCHASE OF<lb/>
MATTRESS AND FOUNDATION.<lb/>
1302 N. GREENE ST.<lb/>
(ACROSS THE RIVER)<lb/>
OPEN MON-FRI 10-1 &amp; 2-5<lb/>
SAT 10-1 758-1101<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0015"/><lb/>
1977-78 Lecture Series<lb/>
Variety of speakers stated<lb/>
30 AuQuat 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Pap? 15<lb/>
collegiate crossword<lb/>
NARD NIMOY<lb/>
UMPIE<lb/>
706 Evans St.<lb/>
Ph 752-1828<lb/>
"AN ADVENTURE IN EATING<lb/>
Great Deli Menu Fun Place to Eat<lb/>
BBQ Beef Giant T.V. Screen<lb/>
Steak &amp; Cheese Pinball<lb/>
Salad Bar &amp; Beverage Bar<lb/>
Famous Blimpie Bucket<lb/>
OPEN : Mon-Sat. at 11100 a.m. Sun. 12:00.<lb/>
a<lb/>
(We Cater)<lb/>
(Much Parking)<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
A speaker on marijuana law<lb/>
reform and hypnotist Gil Eagles,<lb/>
political columnist Jack Anderson<lb/>
and television performer Leonard<lb/>
Nimoy are featured on the<lb/>
1977-78 Lecture Series at East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
The series is sponsored by<lb/>
ECU'S Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
Gil Eagles will perform de-<lb/>
monstrations of hypnotism and<lb/>
the power of extra-sensory per-<lb/>
ception when he appears at ECU<lb/>
Nov. 1. He will use volunteer<lb/>
participants from the audience.<lb/>
Investigative reporter Jack<lb/>
Anderson is scheduled to speak at<lb/>
ECU Jan. 17. First to implicate<lb/>
John Mitchell and H. Ft. Halde-<lb/>
man in the Watergate affair,<lb/>
Anderson is credited with un-<lb/>
covering many major political<lb/>
scandals.<lb/>
Leonard Nimoy, best known<lb/>
as "Mr. Speck" of the "Star<lb/>
Trek" TV series, will speak at<lb/>
ECU Feb. 15. He has also<lb/>
appeared as King Arthur in the<lb/>
musical production "Camelot"<lb/>
and performed in the "Mission:<lb/>
Impossible" TV series.<lb/>
Each lecture will begin at 8<lb/>
p.m. in the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Theatre. Public tickets fa<lb/>
all four lectures are available at<lb/>
$5 each per season ticket. Tickets<lb/>
for individual programs are also<lb/>
offered.<lb/>
1734567"9loii1213?<lb/>
14616<lb/>
178<lb/>
192021?<lb/>
23?241Hir<lb/>
2627282930<lb/>
3132?33<lb/>
3536<lb/>
394041424344<lb/>
15464748<lb/>
49?50B<lb/>
5253545556<lb/>
575815960<lb/>
6162<lb/>
?64<lb/>
??;<lb/>
? EdwardJulius, 1977 CollegiateW76-32<lb/>
ACROSS50 Part of USAF12Rank above knight1<lb/>
51  science13Endurance1<lb/>
1 Servile52 "Aba  Honeymoon'16Relatives on the<lb/>
8 Rich or prominent54 Aquatic mammalmother's side<lb/>
persons56  fide21Garden toolH<lb/>
14 Frequenter57 Cotton cloth27Sky-blue<lb/>
15 Stuffed oneself59 Eating place28Gloomy (poet.)<lb/>
17 Classroom need61 Certain movie29"Valley of the<lb/>
18 Experienced personversions30Relay-race itema<lb/>
19 Big bundle62 Howl32Common suffix<lb/>
20 Knockout substance63 Most sound34Prefix: new<lb/>
22 Suffix: body64 Men of Madrid37House bug<lb/>
23 Basic Latin verb38"The  of<lb/>
24 Division of timeDOWNPenzance"<lb/>
25 Insect egg39Tuscaloosa's state<lb/>
26 Ship of old1 Affair40Most tidy<lb/>
28 Be afraid of2 Fort or TV western41Agencies<lb/>
30 Nota 3 Edible mollusk42Site of famous<lb/>
31 Old men4 Workshop itemobservatory<lb/>
33 Musical pieces5 Mineral suffix43Come forth<lb/>
35 Exploit6 With 10-Down,44Payment returns<lb/>
36 Tennis termcertainty47Computer term<lb/>
37 Disciplined and7 "Scarlet Letter"53 for All<lb/>
austerecharacter, et al.Seasons"<lb/>
41 Radio or TV muff8 Catholic devotion54Individuals<lb/>
45 Heapperiods55Mark with lines<lb/>
46 Picture game9 Assert56Heavy knife<lb/>
48 Designate10 See 6-Down58Past president<lb/>
49 Mr. Gershwin11 Minerals60Wine measure<lb/>
East Carolina Kennels<lb/>
Will offer a course in beginner obedience<lb/>
training for dogs The cost will be only<lb/>
?25.00 for a 6 week course<lb/>
classes will start Sept 20<lb/>
For more information call<lb/>
Ed perry<lb/>
752 9854<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAP 30 August 1977<lb/>
Blue denim jeans have lengthy history<lb/>
By BUD JOHNS<lb/>
Blue Denim Jeans-the class-<lb/>
less uniform of the world today-<lb/>
got co-rec 'art m 1850 as Brown<lb/>
Canvas Pants made by a man who<lb/>
didn't like the word "Jeans" and<lb/>
insisted that his products were<lb/>
Waist Overalls Somehow it's<lb/>
hard to imagine the "Brown<lb/>
Canvas Revolution" and "The<lb/>
Waist Overall Generation let<lb/>
alone a "Canvasmachine<lb/>
The man who started it all was<lb/>
Levi Strauss-yes. there really<lb/>
was such a man-and although the<lb/>
first Levi's tor California's Gold<lb/>
Rush Prospectors were made<lb/>
from tent canvas, sailcloth or<lb/>
whatever heavy material he could<lb/>
find, he stitched as soon as<lb/>
possible to denim oolor blue with<lb/>
the native American dye indigo.<lb/>
Denim is the Americanized<lb/>
name and version of a rugged<lb/>
fabric once known as "Serge De<lb/>
Nimes" (cloth of Nimes, France).<lb/>
Legend has it that the durable<lb/>
cotton material was used fa the<lb/>
sails on Christopher Columbus'<lb/>
ships but while that can't be<lb/>
verified there's no question that<lb/>
denim was a major reason why<lb/>
cowboys, miners and lumberjacks<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
i -?'??<lb/>
. - ? ? ? i<lb/>
for sale 6ft<lb/>
?4<lb/>
SMITH CORONA TYPEWRITER<lb/>
one portable manual student<lb/>
model, one funky old upright.<lb/>
Excellent cond $50.00each. Call<lb/>
752-4511.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1967 Plymouth Fury<lb/>
III. Hardtop, white with black<lb/>
vinyl top. 383-V8 engine. Must<lb/>
Sell! Good Cond. I380.0O But will<lb/>
Negotiate. Call 752-6713.<lb/>
OR SALE Olivetti adding mac. 6<lb/>
months old, 80.00, 12000 new.<lb/>
call 752-5133.<lb/>
WHIRLPOOL AIR COND. 10,500<lb/>
btu. Good Cond. 170.00 Call<lb/>
756-4290.<lb/>
CROWN IC-150 preamp, JBL SE<lb/>
460, 80 watts per channel300.00<lb/>
for the pair. Call 746-4898.<lb/>
1973 FORF TORINO. 4 door hard<lb/>
top. Very low mileage, air am<lb/>
fm stereo, power steering and<lb/>
brakes. Only 300 miles,on set of<lb/>
new tires. 2,000.00. Must Sell.<lb/>
825-7381. Bethel. Ask fa Mike a<lb/>
leave<lb/>
STEREO complete with built in<lb/>
turntable, reel to reel, cassette<lb/>
unit and speakers. 150.00 Sharp<lb/>
System. Cat! Elm Villa 752-4349.<lb/>
COMPACT REFRIGERATOR<lb/>
freezer stainless steel top w2<lb/>
burners. Call Vicki 758-6227.<lb/>
72 RED TRIUMPH SPITFIRE<lb/>
752-8799 ask for Robin.<lb/>
PANASONIC STEREO- Reel to<lb/>
Reel tape deck, auto reversing.<lb/>
Excellent cond. 1150.00.Call<lb/>
752-6042.<lb/>
BOOKTRADER located, oorner of<lb/>
Evans &amp; 11th. Trade your paper-<lb/>
backs, buy used paperbacks also<lb/>
comic books- tues. thru Sat. 9-4.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Refrigerator, I45.00,<lb/>
small gas stove, 140.00. Call<lb/>
Sherry, 823-2256 fa further info.<lb/>
(Appliances are in Greenville<lb/>
area.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Clairol Kindness<lb/>
3-way Electric Rollers. Also<lb/>
Clairol "Crazy Curl" curling<lb/>
wand with steam. Call Margaret<lb/>
at 758-8230 a cane by 415<lb/>
Clement.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Hada 360<lb/>
excellent coid. under 8,000 miles<lb/>
new tire and battery, elec. star,<lb/>
oily 600.00 Call 752-9600 a cane<lb/>
by 211C Scott Dorm.<lb/>
ART STUDENTS- Exhibit and sell<lb/>
your work on consignment in<lb/>
the Silver Thread, 218-A E. 5th<lb/>
St. 752-3601. Need ceramics,<lb/>
feather jewelry, weaving and<lb/>
other Fibre works.<lb/>
made Levi's "The Pants That<lb/>
Won The West<lb/>
Denim's durability and eco-<lb/>
nomy made it ideal fa wak-<lb/>
clothes and that remained its<lb/>
principal use until the 1950s.<lb/>
When it became increasingly<lb/>
desirable-and acceptable-for<lb/>
school and casual wear. It was<lb/>
about this time that Levi Strauss<lb/>
&amp; Company began its rapid<lb/>
growth from a small regional<lb/>
company to the wald's largest<lb/>
apparel manufacturer and intro-<lb/>
duced its "Shrink To Fit" denim<lb/>
in the eastern United States as<lb/>
the jeans Guaranteed to Shrink,<lb/>
Wrinkle and Fade<lb/>
The Red Rooster Restaurant<lb/>
2713 EAST 10TH STREET<lb/>
BRAD N,CHOLS. Own GREENVILLE. N.C.<lb/>
PHONE 758-1920<lb/>
-B Every Da) of the Week Specials:<lb/>
Salisbury Steak$1.75<lb/>
Veal Cutlet$1.75<lb/>
Hamburger SteakS 1.75<lb/>
Daily Specials $2.45 Chuckwagon Steak81.75<lb/>
Mon. B.B.Q. Dinner<lb/>
Tues. Stew Beef rt M ? L ? .<lb/>
Open Monday-Friday<lb/>
Weds. Chicken Pastry , . n <lb/>
6:00 a.m2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Thurs. Country Style Steak<lb/>
3:00 p.m8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Fri. Fresh Fish r<lb/>
Welcome to the Red Rooster Restaurant!<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pair of Frazier<lb/>
Speakers. 8" Woofer, 37 tweeter.<lb/>
Good Sound. $100.00 Firm.<lb/>
752-3739.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sony TC355 Reel to<lb/>
Reel Tape Deck. Very Good<lb/>
Condition. Comes with hook up<lb/>
and two excellent mikes $150.00<lb/>
Firm. 752-3739.<lb/>
FOR SALE Component Stereo<lb/>
System with big sound at a cheap<lb/>
price. Pioneer PL12 Professional<lb/>
Turntable. Marantz Model 1060<lb/>
Console Stereo Amplifier. Hitachi<lb/>
Model ST-3411 AM-FM Stereo,<lb/>
Cassette Deck-Recorder<lb/>
Symphonic Model S-105 8-track<lb/>
Deck. Large Advent Speakers<lb/>
with utility cabnet. Approximate<lb/>
Saleprice $650.00 Buzz Chip at<lb/>
758-1437.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Leather tote bag<lb/>
(dance bag) Brand new. !50.00on<lb/>
best offer. Call 758-8724.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE NEEDED<lb/>
for house close to campus. Grad<lb/>
student preferred. Will share<lb/>
with 2 other students and split<lb/>
cost 3 ways, approx. $80.00 ier<lb/>
month. Linda Hunt or Patty<lb/>
McMon at 757-6909.<lb/>
r<lb/>
rvt ir?lN<lb/>
BUNDY TRIIMDct nri<lb/>
stand and case. Take best offer.<lb/>
Call John Rouse 753-2091.<lb/>
torrent (fl)<lb/>
ROOMATE NEEDED (ECU<lb/>
STUDENT PREFERRED( FOR<lb/>
TRAILER. Colonial Trailer Park<lb/>
after 5:00 Lot 39.Located at<lb/>
oorner of Hwy 11 and 264 ByPass<lb/>
.i<lb/>
(personal (A<lb/>
AKC GERMAN SHEPPARD<lb/>
puppies. Shots and De-wormed.<lb/>
Call 758-0428.<lb/>
KITTENS to good home call<lb/>
Rebecca after 5.O0 at 752-0102.<lb/>
COLLEGE STUDENTS develope<lb/>
better skills and attitudes for<lb/>
learning. Better Education Class.<lb/>
Four 3-hour sessions: Effective<lb/>
Communications-Handling<lb/>
Changes-Achieving your Goals-<lb/>
Living Up To Your Potential.<lb/>
Class starts Tues. night, Sept. 6.<lb/>
Call 756-5128 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
LEARN TO BELLY DANCE<lb/>
authentic dance lessons by a<lb/>
professional fa the month of<lb/>
Sept. ONLY 25.00! This offer will<lb/>
not be repeated. Course will be<lb/>
offered across the street from<lb/>
Kappa Sigma house within walk-<lb/>
ing didtsnce of campus on Tues.<lb/>
and Thurs. nites from 700-800<lb/>
P.M. Call 752-5214 for more info<lb/>
or come Sept. 1 at 7.00. Ladies<lb/>
only.<lb/>
HELP WANTED taking applica-<lb/>
tions fa a part time construction<lb/>
type job. Must be able to wak<lb/>
Tuesday and Thursday afternoons<lb/>
and some Saturdays. Call<lb/>
758-2300 days and 758-3480<lb/>
nights. Ask to speak to Rick.<lb/>
ARABIC DANCE authentic belly<lb/>
dancing, call Donna Whitley,<lb/>
experienced teacher and per-<lb/>
former in Casablanca and<lb/>
California 752-0928.<lb/>
ARE YOU WORKING YOUR<lb/>
WAY THROUGH COLLEGE? Get<lb/>
ready fa tuition selling wald<lb/>
famous Avon Products. High!<lb/>
Flexible hours. Call 752-7006.<lb/>
YOGA LESSONS Turn tension<lb/>
into energy. Slenderize your body<lb/>
as you renew the elasticity of your<lb/>
skin and muscles. The oldest<lb/>
science for a youthful body.<lb/>
Special introduction to each area<lb/>
of your body during the month of<lb/>
Sept. only 25.00! Within walking<lb/>
distance of campus. Tues and<lb/>
Thurs. nite 8-9 across from Kappa<lb/>
Sigma house. Classes begin Sept.<lb/>
1 Call 752-5214 fa mae info.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE needed to<lb/>
share2bedrm. apt. at Tar River,<lb/>
205 Apt8, Elm St<lb/>
CRAFT CLASSES- Maaame and<lb/>
weaving classes, 110.00-4 weeks.<lb/>
Sign up now at the Silver Thread,<lb/>
218-A ? 5th St. 752-3601<lb/>
1 ' l ?J 't n ' - ' ,<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0017"/><lb/>
30 August 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 17<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
SUN THRU THUR<lb/>
11:00 TO 10:00<lb/>
FRI &amp;SAT<lb/>
11:00 TO 11:00<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
U.S. DA choice beef cut fresh daily<lb/>
No. 12 will be on special<lb/>
TyesWed Thurs.<lb/>
Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
CHOPPED SIRLOIN<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
MUSHROOM GRAVY<lb/>
TEXAS TOAST WITH<lb/>
MEL TED BUTTER<lb/>
BAKED POTATO<lb/>
OR FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
ALL<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
1.29<lb/>
EAST 10TH ST.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0018"/><lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 18 FOUNTAINHEAO 30 August 1977<lb/>
Pirates rank high in overall<lb/>
national football statistics<lb/>
Sideline Chat<lb/>
co-rec<lb/>
withSTEVEWHEELER<lb/>
Critics rate Pirates<lb/>
Now that East Carolina University has Jropped out of the Southern<lb/>
Conference, the Pirates must face a tough independent schedule that<lb/>
includes several independents in the south, as well as a couple of early<lb/>
games against Atlantic Coast Conference teams.<lb/>
Most of the so-called authorities, the annual football magazines,<lb/>
have had East Carolina facing a tough year, with a chance to break the<lb/>
.500 mark. The Pirates have been depicted by one publication to be a<lb/>
beaten team, with a 3-8 mark predicted. Another said the worst the<lb/>
Pirates could finish is 9-2.<lb/>
One magazine had, N.C. State beating the Pirates by a 38-10<lb/>
margin, and further, has the Wolfpack going on to a 10-1 season and<lb/>
beating Maryland for the ACC championship (sic). Another publication<lb/>
has the Wolfpack ranked as the tenth worst team in the nation, and<lb/>
their Rout of the Week' fa Sept. 3: East Carolina over N.C. State. So<lb/>
much for the magazines. The game is played on the field.<lb/>
This writer feels the Pirates have the potential to have a good<lb/>
season, maybe as good as last year. But, many injuries have popped up<lb/>
in pre-season practice, and if more occur, the Pirates could have as low<lb/>
as a 6-5 season. Barring anymore injuries, the Pirates look to have the<lb/>
skilled personnel to go 9-2 a 10-1, which is a lot to ask considering 11<lb/>
starters graduated last year.<lb/>
MEDIA RESPECTS DYE<lb/>
Head coach Pat Dye has spoken at several medic gatherings . the<lb/>
past few weeks, and seems at each to have the respect of all the media,<lb/>
even me Raliegh Durham and Greensboro-based people. There is<lb/>
little skepticism on the faces of these writers and broadcasters, many of<lb/>
whom cover UNC and N.C. State for a living, or graduated from those<lb/>
schools. He has their respect.<lb/>
One of the reasons Dye captivates his audiences is his Southern<lb/>
drawl and his way of speaking to the point and not evading touching<lb/>
questions.<lb/>
At the ECU media day, Dye was asked several questions about his<lb/>
first two games being job-savers or breakers for the N.C. State and<lb/>
Duke coaches, Bo Rein and Mike McGee, respectively. Straingt to the<lb/>
point, Dye said he was here to win football games for East Carolina,<lb/>
while Rein and McGee were at their respective schools for the same<lb/>
reasons. If they lost their jobs in the process, that was their problem.<lb/>
He said he would prepare for those games the same way he prepares<lb/>
for any others-to win.<lb/>
When asked about the situation UNC brought up during the<lb/>
summer when they made a policy not to play in-state non-conference<lb/>
teamsafter contracts run out, Dye replied, "A coach at Carolina cannot<lb/>
keep his job if he loses to East Carolina. And the only way not to lose to<lb/>
East Carolina, is not to play East Carolina<lb/>
Such candor has brought Dye a kind of respect from the media that<lb/>
few ocaches have. During the Southern Independents media gathering<lb/>
in Atlanta, Ga Dye was said to have been the best speaker among the<lb/>
coaches there. The Atlanta Constitution gave the Pirates a big spread<lb/>
out of Dye's speech.<lb/>
PIRA TES NOW BIG DRA W<lb/>
East Carolina seems to be the state's biggest draw for N.C. State.<lb/>
The Pirates last year drew 49,700 at Carter Stadium in their 23-14 win<lb/>
over the Wolfpack, by far State's largest home crowd. The UNC-ECU<lb/>
game drew 49,000, Carolina's second largest home attendance.<lb/>
This year, the game with State is a sure sellout, and is expected to<lb/>
top 50,000. Reports from Duke show that ticket sales for the ECU-Duke<lb/>
game on Sept. 10 are way up from any game they had last year. East<lb/>
Carolina wasallotted 10,000 fa this game and they are going fast.<lb/>
The Blue Devils have had some paltry aowds over the past ten<lb/>
years, with just a couple of sellouts. Last year, they drew just 37,000 fa<lb/>
national champion Pitt, and but 20,000 fa an impatant conference<lb/>
game with number five ranked Maryland.<lb/>
There has been talk from Duke's new athletic directa, Tom<lb/>
Butters, that Duke will not Ixma verbal agreements fa three future<lb/>
gamesthat were made between ECU'S athletic directa, Bill Cain, and<lb/>
famer Duke AD, Carl James. Butters said recently that any future<lb/>
Tames between the two schools would hinge on this year's attendant<lb/>
See PIRA TES, page 23<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Over the past five years, East<lb/>
Carolina's football program has<lb/>
established itself as one of the<lb/>
finest in the nation. This five year<lb/>
period, 1972-1976, has seen East<lb/>
Carolina football become nation-<lb/>
ally ranked in six of the NCAA's<lb/>
eight football team perfamance<lb/>
lists. These lists show the real<lb/>
progress that East Carolina foot-<lb/>
ball has made.<lb/>
In winningest teams over the<lb/>
last five regular seasons, East<lb/>
Carolina ranks 11th, tied with<lb/>
UCLA and just ahead of Miami<lb/>
(Ohio) and Maryland. East<lb/>
Carolina's record over this period<lb/>
was 42 wins 13 losses fa a<lb/>
percentage of .764.<lb/>
In soaring offense over the last<lb/>
five years, East Carolina ranks<lb/>
16th just behind N.C. State and<lb/>
Maryland which are 14th and 15th<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
In rushing offense, East<lb/>
Carolina ranks ninth averaging<lb/>
274 yards a game. Local teams<lb/>
ranked in this list include Nath<lb/>
Carolina 21st and N.C. State at<lb/>
22nd.<lb/>
Defense has been a big reason<lb/>
fa ECU'S success on the football<lb/>
field in the last five years and<lb/>
there too the Pirates rank with the<lb/>
nation's best. In scaing defense<lb/>
East Carolina , held<lb/>
its opposition to just 13.9 points<lb/>
per game.<lb/>
In rushing defense East<lb/>
Carolina ranks 13th, holding its<lb/>
opponents to 142.1 yards per<lb/>
game. Other local teams in this<lb/>
categay include Maryland num-<lb/>
ber seven and Furman at number<lb/>
15.<lb/>
In total defense and offense,<lb/>
East Carolina ranks 12th and<lb/>
22nd respectively. The Pirate<lb/>
offense averaged 360 yards in<lb/>
total offense and the defense held<lb/>
its opponents to 263 yards total.<lb/>
The 1976 football season<lb/>
helped to improve the overall<lb/>
ranking in the NCAA. There were<lb/>
many team and individual<lb/>
categories in which the Pirates<lb/>
were ranked.<lb/>
In home attendance East<lb/>
Carolina ranked 87th with 17,738<lb/>
people per game. This moved<lb/>
East Carolina up five places from<lb/>
the previous year with a jump of<lb/>
2,202 per game.<lb/>
In team statistics, East<lb/>
Carolina ranked fifth last season<lb/>
in rushing offense with an<lb/>
average of 296.6 yards per game.<lb/>
Defensively, East Carolina rank-<lb/>
ed third in total defense with a<lb/>
214.1 yard per game average. The<lb/>
Pirates were 8th in rushing<lb/>
defense, holding opponents to<lb/>
123 yards per game. In scaing<lb/>
defense, East Carolina ranked 6th<lb/>
with a 10.5 average. In pass<lb/>
interceptions the Pirates ranked<lb/>
number one by picking off 11.9<lb/>
percent of all passes thrown. ECU<lb/>
also ranks first in interception<lb/>
return yardage with 519 yards.<lb/>
In individual categories<lb/>
Gerald Hall tied fa 12th in punt<lb/>
returns with 11.6 yards per<lb/>
return. Eddie Hicks was one of<lb/>
only eight running backs to<lb/>
average over six yards per carry<lb/>
at a 6.5 clip. He was ranked fifth,<lb/>
but is the top returner as the four<lb/>
ahead of him graduated.<lb/>
In regional statistics East<lb/>
Carolina ranks very high also.<lb/>
ECU is the only Division One<lb/>
team in the Nath Carolina, South<lb/>
Carolina, and Virginia area to<lb/>
post a winning season every year<lb/>
over the last five years. The<lb/>
Pirates are also the only team in<lb/>
North Carolina to have all-<lb/>
Americas the last three years in a<lb/>
row. They were Danny Kepley<lb/>
linebacker in '74, Jim BoJding,<lb/>
safety, '75, and Cary Godette,<lb/>
defensive end, '76.<lb/>
If Pat Dye, fourth-year head<lb/>
ooach, had two mae years under<lb/>
his belt, he would be the seventh<lb/>
winningest active NCAA coach in<lb/>
winning percentage. His three<lb/>
teams have won 24 while losing<lb/>
just nine fa a .727 winning<lb/>
percentage.<lb/>
New coach greets<lb/>
"77 soccer hopefuls<lb/>
East Carolina Unversity's soc-<lb/>
cer team opened practice last<lb/>
week, and new head coach Brad<lb/>
Smith greeted over 30 hopefuls<lb/>
fa the 1977 team.<lb/>
"We've been working on<lb/>
conditioning all week said<lb/>
Smith. "We'll begin waking ai<lb/>
fundamentals and plays this<lb/>
week<lb/>
"We've been running them<lb/>
alot, too Smith added. "I'm of<lb/>
the feeling that if you're in better<lb/>
condition than your opponents,<lb/>
you'll be able to win many<lb/>
matches in the latter minutes<lb/>
Smith and assistant coach<lb/>
Bucky Moser selected senias<lb/>
Tan Laig of Virginia Beach, Va<lb/>
and Charlie Hardy of Kinston, as<lb/>
captains fa the coming season.<lb/>
There will be one additional<lb/>
captain per game selected befae<lb/>
each contest.<lb/>
Long, a defensive player is<lb/>
probably the top returning player<lb/>
on the team, as he was selected as<lb/>
all-confer enoe and second team<lb/>
all-South last year. Hardy is also<lb/>
one of the top defenders on the<lb/>
team. Jeff Karpovich and Phil<lb/>
Martin are among the top retur-<lb/>
nees on offense. Jeff Kluger is<lb/>
another top player back fa Smith.<lb/>
The team is preparing fa its<lb/>
opener on Sept. 15 in the<lb/>
Campbell Classic Tournament.<lb/>
The Pirates will be in the Classic<lb/>
with host Campbell, Erskine and<lb/>
Guilfad.<lb/>
TOM LONG<lb/>
1977 Football Starters<lb/>
DEPTH CHARTS AFTER SPRING DRILLS: Subject to change<lb/>
OFFENSE<lb/>
SE- TERRY GALLAHER, Billy Washingtoi, Van Davenpat<lb/>
LT- Mitchel Smith, Mike Heywood, Tim Swads<lb/>
LG- Nelsai Smith, Wayne Inman, Drew O'Darnell<lb/>
C- Rickie Hdliday, Jeff Hagans, Rob Wirthlin<lb/>
RG- WAYNE BOLT, Mitchell Johnston, John Maness<lb/>
RT- MATT MULHOLLAND, Mike Heywood, John Wrape<lb/>
TE- Barry Johnson, Eric Walker, Joe Godette<lb/>
QB- Jimmy Southerland, Leander Green, Steve Greer<lb/>
LHB- WILLIE HAWKINS, Sam Harrell, Alexanda French<lb/>
RHB- EDDIE HICKS, Sam Harrell<lb/>
FB- Vince Kolanko, Theoodre Sutton, Pary Allred<lb/>
DEFENSE<lb/>
DE- ZACK VALENTINE, Ed Nelson, Henry Blackwell<lb/>
LT- WAYNE POOLE, Vance Tingler, D.T. Joyner<lb/>
NG- OLIVER FELTON, Cliffad Williams, Blake Camp<lb/>
RT- Noah Clark, Woodrew Stevenson, D.T. Joyna<lb/>
DE- Fred Chavis, John Maris, John Bauer<lb/>
SLB- HAROLD RANDOLPH, HAROLD FORT, Tommy Summer<lb/>
WLB- Mike Brewington, Larry Paul<lb/>
CB- Willie Holley, James Freer<lb/>
FS- Steve Hale, Drew Fish, Mike Dross<lb/>
SS- GERALD HALL, Ruff in McNeill, Tommy Groves<lb/>
CB- Charlie Carter, Thomas McLaurin<lb/>
KICKING<lb/>
K- Junia Creech, Bill Lamm, Barry Johnson<lb/>
P- Rodney Allen, Paul Riociarelli, Henry Trevathan, Tony Tripp<lb/>
Returning starter in CAPS<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0019"/><lb/>
????????????????????B<lb/>
30Augmt1877 FPU NT AIM HEAD P?g? 19<lb/>
Walk on Randolph likes contact of the game<lb/>
What makes a 6-2, 195-pound<lb/>
man want to play linebacker in<lb/>
major college football? For East<lb/>
Carolina University all-America<lb/>
candidate Harold Randolph, it's a<lb/>
love for contact.<lb/>
The Greenville native neters<lb/>
his senior season with loads of<lb/>
honors, including all-state and<lb/>
all-Southern Conference for two<lb/>
years running and honorable<lb/>
mention all-America once, as well<lb/>
as two heavyweight boxing cham-<lb/>
pionships on the ECU campus.<lb/>
"I love the game of football<lb/>
mostly because of the contact<lb/>
said Randolph. "I just love to hit.<lb/>
When it stops being fun, I'll know<lb/>
it's time to quit<lb/>
Randolph has been the lead-<lb/>
ing Pirate "hitter" for the past<lb/>
two seasons, getting 115 unassis-<lb/>
ted tackles in 1975 and 108 in<lb/>
1976. And he does not "baby" his<lb/>
opponent to the ground, as many<lb/>
ball-carriers who have had to visit<lb/>
the sidelines would quickly attest<lb/>
to. His tackles have been labeled<lb/>
"bone-shattering<lb/>
Being the only senior return-<lb/>
ing starter on defense, Randolph<lb/>
has been put into the position of<lb/>
being the leader.<lb/>
"I don't think that will affect<lb/>
my play at all he said. "I want<lb/>
to keep the rest of the guys<lb/>
(defense) fired up all the time,<lb/>
anyway<lb/>
Pirate head coach Pat Dye<lb/>
says Randolph is one of the top<lb/>
two or three linebackers he has<lb/>
ever been around. The others<lb/>
were all-Americas Woodrow<lb/>
Lowe of Alabama and Danny<lb/>
Kepleyof ECU.<lb/>
"All great linebackers have in<lb/>
common the great intensity with<lb/>
which they play Dye said.<lb/>
"Harold has just that. But he<lb/>
stands above the others because<lb/>
he has pure, great athletic ability<lb/>
and is very fast (4.5-40)<lb/>
Randolph was one of the many<lb/>
walkons at East Carolina to make<lb/>
Three recruits signed<lb/>
for 1978 tennis season<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
men's tennis coach, Randy Ran-<lb/>
dolph, has announced the signing<lb/>
of three recruits fa the 1978<lb/>
season. Curtiss Tedesco, Dave<lb/>
Marino and Maury Werness will<lb/>
join the Pirates next year hoping<lb/>
to improve the tennis program.<lb/>
Tedesco was ranked 15th in<lb/>
the East for 18-and-under players<lb/>
last year and has beaten several<lb/>
netters ranked in the top ten. He<lb/>
is the son of Mrs. Irene Tedesco<lb/>
of Huntington, N.Y.<lb/>
Marino, hailing from Ches-<lb/>
wick, Pa is currently ranked as<lb/>
the number two singles and<lb/>
number one doubles player in the<lb/>
Allegheny Mountains Tennis<lb/>
Association. He is the son of Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Ken Marino.<lb/>
Werness, a native of Norfolk,<lb/>
Va is ranked in the top five<lb/>
doubles players in the Mid-<lb/>
Atlantic Tennis Association for 18<lb/>
year olds.<lb/>
"I'm very proud to have these<lb/>
three fine, young gentlemen<lb/>
enter our program Randolph<lb/>
said. "I'm sure they'll be able to<lb/>
help us out immediately<lb/>
CaRoliru Qems &amp; SilveR<lb/>
?02 E Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
Gifts cut Stones Onyx<lb/>
Silver Smithing Supplies<lb/>
Try Our Bead Corner<lb/>
Bring this Ad in<lb/>
for 10 Discount on<lb/>
All Jewelry.<lb/>
CUSTOM MADE HANDWROUGHT JEWELRY<lb/>
Th u rsd a v<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
?Gallery" with Rwa<lb/>
Former Members of<lb/>
Work Shop<lb/>
Wateh Saturday Nighl Live<lb/>
J<lb/>
it. (The Pirates will start six<lb/>
players this season who walked<lb/>
on without a scholarship). He said<lb/>
he thought ooming out of high<lb/>
school that he could play oollege<lb/>
ball and when Dye gave him the<lb/>
chance, he knew he had to make<lb/>
the best of it. He did.<lb/>
The Pirates last year ranked<lb/>
third in the nation intotal defense,<lb/>
sixth in scoring defense and<lb/>
eighth in rushing defense. He<lb/>
characterized the defense as<lb/>
"being like a pack of dober-<lb/>
mans always playing a team<lb/>
defense and helping each other<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Randolph analyzed his play as<lb/>
opposed to former Pirate Danny<lb/>
Kepley, now a star in the<lb/>
Canadian Football League.<lb/>
"Kepley was bigger than me,<lb/>
so when he hit someone he<lb/>
naturally drove them back he<lb/>
said. "Being small like I am, I<lb/>
need something extra. That is the<lb/>
forearm tackle I use<lb/>
When asked why he got into<lb/>
boxing, Randolph replied,<lb/>
"When I was little, I used to get<lb/>
whipped' all the time. It was to<lb/>
protect myself<lb/>
Harold Randolph no longer<lb/>
gets 'whipped' by anyone.<lb/>
HAROLD RANDOLPH<lb/>
THE TREE HOUSE RESTAURANT<lb/>
123 I 5<lb/>
Greenvik<lb/>
752-7483<lb/>
NC<lb/>
New &amp; Now for Fall<lb/>
Boots are Back and Bigger Than Ever on the Fal<lb/>
Fashion Scene' Demi-wedge Crepe Sole Side Z<lb/>
Reg $21 99 SAVE $6.09<lb/>
15.90<lb/>
Women s Sizes<lb/>
Stitched Clutch Handbag<lb/>
Assorted Colors<lb/>
Reqularly$6 99 4.77<lb/>
Prices Good thru Saturday<lb/>
le Sport Casual with Padded<lb/>
Collar and Ridged Sole for Active Wai<lb/>
Rea( '4 99 SAVE S4.55<lb/>
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Men s Sizes<lb/>
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Get to know us; you'll like us.<lb/>
264 Bypass<lb/>
MTh. 10:00 a.m9:00 p.m.<lb/>
Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-8<lb/>
Op?n Fventngs ? MasterC?arge Visa or Ask About Ow Layaway Plan<lb/>
? . - l 9 . <lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0020"/><lb/>
Page 20 FOUNTAINHEAD 30 August 1977<lb/>
In tramuraI season no w under wa y<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Another big year of intramural<lb/>
activity gets underway this week<lb/>
when co-rec Softball and men's<lb/>
and women's flag football regis-<lb/>
tration closes and the Intramural<lb/>
Co-Rec Almost Anything Goes<lb/>
takes place on Thursday, Sep-<lb/>
tember 1 on the University Mall.<lb/>
The intramural department is<lb/>
once again ready to serve you in<lb/>
any one of seven areas. First,<lb/>
there are the intramural events<lb/>
and games themselves in men's,<lb/>
women's and co-rec play, which<lb/>
will run throughout the semester.<lb/>
Next, the intramural department<lb/>
is in charge of all reservations for<lb/>
the handball and racquetball<lb/>
courts under university control.<lb/>
These oourts will be reserved to<lb/>
ECU students, faculty and staff in<lb/>
the morning for play on each day.<lb/>
Also offered by the intramural<lb/>
department are services in equip-<lb/>
ment checkout, free play in both<lb/>
Minges and Memorial Gym fa<lb/>
the basketball enthusiasts and the<lb/>
recreational swim program.<lb/>
During certain hours each<lb/>
week the gyms and swimming<lb/>
pools will be open fa student use.<lb/>
The swimming pool will be open<lb/>
UNBELIEVABLE SAVINGS<lb/>
CALCULATORS &amp; STEREOS<lb/>
calculators<lb/>
Texas Instruments? ,i?Wpm K WAS<lb/>
WASSALE<lb/>
TI-59$300 . 4 95HP-10 . .$175<lb/>
TI-58$93 95HP-19CS345<lb/>
Tl-57S80Sb9 99HP-21$80<lb/>
PC-100A$200 $149 95 1HP-22. .$125<lb/>
MBA-FINANCE $80$59 99 1HP-25. . $125<lb/>
SR-51-11 ?$70$45 95 '?HP-25C$160<lb/>
SR-40 TI-1680$40 $40$23 95 $23 95HP-27 HP-29C .$175 $195<lb/>
BA-BUSINESS $40$27 95 ????HP-55. . $395<lb/>
TI-5015$80$6295V2S21HP-67 $450<lb/>
TI-5040$130$94 95HP-91 $325<lb/>
TI-5050M$110$79 95HP-92 $625<lb/>
MODULE LIBFORHP-97 $750<lb/>
58 &amp; 59 $29 95<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
$153 95<lb/>
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$69 95<lb/>
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1. Abov prhc?$ Include AC Adaplor-Chargmr and Carrying<lb/>
Caaa<lb/>
2. AH abova calculator hava full ona-yamr factory warranty<lb/>
3. Enclota paymant In full with ordar, or ramlt $20 with ordar,<lb/>
baianca COD.<lb/>
i. Shipping Chargaa: Add $3.00 for calculator and 4 of prica<lb/>
for racalvr.<lb/>
5. FAST DELIVERY GUARANTEED only with M.O. or cmrliflad<lb/>
chacku. Paraonal chack will dalay 'ha ordar until It claar<lb/>
bank.<lb/>
STEREO<lb/>
RECEIVERS<lb/>
aoniOMeeir<lb/>
SX-1K0<lb/>
SX 100<lb/>
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MEG SALE<lb/>
$?O0 SS4<lb/>
$700 $???<lb/>
$400 $402<lb/>
$900 $347<lb/>
$400 $279<lb/>
$300 9213<lb/>
$250 $179<lb/>
$200 $149<lb/>
SEND<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
CATALOGUE<lb/>
PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED<lb/>
ONLY WITH<lb/>
CREDIT CARDS<lb/>
$14 -237-5990<lb/>
(Add ? foir?dtl l?rs)<lb/>
STEREO WAREHOUSE<lb/>
110 NEW ALLEY, STATE COLLEGE, PA 16801<lb/>
at the following times: Mingei<lb/>
Pool will be openfrom8-10 p.m.<lb/>
during the week and from 3-9 on<lb/>
weeekends. Memorial pools will<lb/>
be open from 4-6 p.m. during the<lb/>
week and also from 10 to 1 p.m.<lb/>
on Monday, Wednesday and<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
For basketball free play,<lb/>
Memorial Gym will be open from<lb/>
4-10 p.m. on Monday through<lb/>
Friday and from 2 to 9 p.m. on<lb/>
Sundays. Minges Coliseum will<lb/>
be open for free play from 8-11<lb/>
p.m. on weekdays, from 10 a.m.<lb/>
to 9 p.m. on Saturdays and from 2<lb/>
to 9 p.m. on Sundays. Equipment<lb/>
can also be checked out for use<lb/>
during these limes at either<lb/>
Memorial Gym or Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum.<lb/>
While registration periods for<lb/>
flag football. Co-Rec Almost<lb/>
Anything Goes and oo-rec soft-<lb/>
ball close tomorrow, August 31<lb/>
registration for men's and<lb/>
women's tennis singles and dou-<lb/>
bles runs through Thursday,<lb/>
September 1. Play begins next<lb/>
Wednesday for the flag football<lb/>
and Co-Rec Softball competition<lb/>
and the tennis tournaments on<lb/>
both the singles and doubles<lb/>
levels will begin on September 7.<lb/>
The Co-Rec Almost Anything<lb/>
Goes carnival will begin on<lb/>
Thursday and there will be six<lb/>
events: blind football, human<lb/>
innertube, balloon toss, Skin the<lb/>
Snake, Egg Toss and Shishkabob.<lb/>
Some of you might be able to<lb/>
guess what the event calls for by<lb/>
its name, but some won't be able<lb/>
to guess. The fun and action all<lb/>
begins Thursday at 4 p.m. on the<lb/>
University Mall.<lb/>
Addition of Marino<lb/>
fills basketball staff<lb/>
The new East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity basketball staff was recen-<lb/>
tly completed with the addition of<lb/>
Frank Marino, from the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Detroit, as graduate<lb/>
assistant.<lb/>
Marino, a native of Mt.<lb/>
Vernon, N.Y served as a gra-<lb/>
duate assistant at Detroit last<lb/>
season. Prior to that time, he had<lb/>
served as assistant basketball<lb/>
coacr at Westchester Community<lb/>
College and in a similar position<lb/>
at Tuckahoe High School in<lb/>
East Chester, NY.<lb/>
From 1972-77. he has been a<lb/>
resident staff member of the<lb/>
Five-Star Basketball Camp, which<lb/>
is considered to be one of the<lb/>
finest all-star camps in the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
Marino is a 1970 graduate of<lb/>
C.W. Post, where he earned his<lb/>
degree in history. He attended<lb/>
graduate school at lona College.<lb/>
The 29-year old Marino, who<lb/>
assumed his duties in August, is<lb/>
single.<lb/>
The Pro Shop<lb/>
Of GreenvfNeJnc.<lb/>
1st WEEK SPECIAL OFFER<lb/>
now thru Saturday<lb/>
Free nylon strings with any tennis<lb/>
racket purchased<lb/>
All Faded Glory fashion jeans &amp;<lb/>
coordinates one item at regular<lb/>
price 2nd item price<lb/>
15 off on all Sperry Top Sider<lb/>
Shoes<lb/>
All girls golf outfits and mens golf<lb/>
slacks 20 off<lb/>
15 off on all golf clubs and golf<lb/>
bags<lb/>
For those still interested re-<lb/>
gistration closes August 31 and<lb/>
each team must have three men<lb/>
and three women to compete.<lb/>
Co-Rec Softball is a new event<lb/>
this year. Each team entering<lb/>
must have at least five girls and<lb/>
five guys on the roster. There has<lb/>
to be enough girls on the field to<lb/>
outnumber those guys on the field<lb/>
for the same team. To offset any<lb/>
physical advantage the guys<lb/>
might have, a giant 16-inch<lb/>
softball will be used. Registration<lb/>
ends on August 31 for this event<lb/>
and play will begin on Sept. 6.<lb/>
One more event that is still a<lb/>
few weeks away, but one that<lb/>
everyone should watch for will be<lb/>
the men'sand women's volleyball<lb/>
competition. Registration begins<lb/>
on September 19 and play will<lb/>
begin on September 27.<lb/>
CLUB SPORTS<lb/>
This year Marty Martinez will<lb/>
be working with the Intramural<lb/>
Department in a full-time capa-<lb/>
city. Among his duties will be<lb/>
handling the dub sports program<lb/>
at East Carolina University.<lb/>
Martinez worked with the<lb/>
sports club program as a Grad-<lb/>
uate Assisant last year. Anyone<lb/>
interested in joining a Club Sports<lb/>
team see him.<lb/>
Among the cl ,bs seeking new<lb/>
members are the Bicycling and<lb/>
Hiking Clubs. Anyone interested<lb/>
in joining with these dubs should<lb/>
see Martinez in the Intramural<lb/>
Office on the main floor of<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
INTRAMURAL TRAINER<lb/>
One of the programs initiated<lb/>
last year that will be continued<lb/>
this year is that of Intramural<lb/>
Trainer. The Trainer program will<lb/>
give the student partidpating in<lb/>
intramural activities the assur-<lb/>
ance that, in case of injury, newiil<lb/>
receive some form of first-aid fa<lb/>
his injury, even though the<lb/>
Intramural Program Is not re-<lb/>
sponsible for any injury a student<lb/>
might incur while partidpating in<lb/>
adivities. See Intramural Trainer<lb/>
Dan Beat for more information on<lb/>
the services offered by this<lb/>
department of the Intramural<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
INTRA-ACTION<lb/>
That covers most of the<lb/>
pertinent information for this<lb/>
week. This column will appear<lb/>
weekly in The Fountainhead on<lb/>
Thursdays. So watch for it. In<lb/>
addition, the Intramural Depart-<lb/>
ment publishes a weekly newslet-<lb/>
ter of its own that will bring you<lb/>
up-to-date with what is happen-<lb/>
ing Finally, for schedules and<lb/>
registration dates call the Intra-<lb/>
Adion Hotline at 757-6562. So<lb/>
long until next week.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0021"/><lb/>
???????????(????????Mi<lb/>
?<lb/>
30 August 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 21<lb/>
Hicks strives for personal, team success<lb/>
One could not blame East<lb/>
Carolina running back Eddie<lb/>
Hicks if his thoughts about the<lb/>
Pirates' upcoming opener against<lb/>
N.C. State drift back to a year ago<lb/>
in Raleigh.<lb/>
East Carolina was leading<lb/>
Wdfpack 16-14 with just ever a<lb/>
minute left to play. ECU lined up<lb/>
for an apparent field goal, but the<lb/>
snap from center was taken by<lb/>
Willie Hawkins who handed off to<lb/>
Hicks on a reverse, who outraced<lb/>
a State defender into the end<lb/>
zone for the game clinching score.<lb/>
"That was definitely one of<lb/>
the highlights for me alst year<lb/>
said the fleetfooted junior recal-<lb/>
ling the play. "We had great<lb/>
blocking, and everything worked<lb/>
out well<lb/>
This season, Hicks says that<lb/>
he has set several goals for<lb/>
himself, ones that if he reaches,<lb/>
the team will benefit.<lb/>
"I'd like to rush for 1000 yards<lb/>
if I could Hicks said, "and it<lb/>
would be nice to make all-<lb/>
America. But the most important<lb/>
thing is fa the team to be<lb/>
successful. If the team is suoceT.<lb/>
Put, I'll be happy<lb/>
Last season at this time, Hicks<lb/>
was an unknown sophomore, a<lb/>
question mark in the offensive<lb/>
backfield. That question mark<lb/>
was soon changed to an exclama-<lb/>
tion point as the Henderson,<lb/>
N.C, native rushed fa 897 yards,<lb/>
and was ranked fifth out of eight<lb/>
running backs in the country last<lb/>
year to average over six yards per<lb/>
carry (6.5).<lb/>
This year, a lot of attention is<lb/>
being focused on one half of the<lb/>
famed "H &amp; H Trucking Co as<lb/>
the Pirates prepare fa their Sept.<lb/>
3 opener against N.C. State.<lb/>
Hicks admits it's a different<lb/>
feeling being one of the players<lb/>
most watched in pre-season, but<lb/>
claims that he is not preparing<lb/>
any differently.<lb/>
"I'm really not doing anything<lb/>
that I haven't done before he<lb/>
said. "All I'm doing when I go out<lb/>
is trying to do the best I can all<lb/>
the time<lb/>
Actually, Hicks admits he has<lb/>
had one problem to date, and that<lb/>
is with the quarterback situation.<lb/>
However, as opponents wait with<lb/>
bated breath to prey on ECU'S<lb/>
unknown quarterbacks, they may<lb/>
have to settle fa seeing streaks of<lb/>
purple flash right befae their<lb/>
eyes.<lb/>
1' The quarterbacks have caus-<lb/>
ed a problem fa me the ECU<lb/>
halfback admitted. "Those guys<lb/>
are so fast going down the line,a<lb/>
so quick with their releases<lb/>
that I sometimes have trouble<lb/>
keeping up with them When<lb/>
was the last time anyone with 4.3<lb/>
speed had trouble keeping up<lb/>
with anybody?<lb/>
Although Hicks was the lead-<lb/>
ing ground gainer fa the Pv ites<lb/>
in 76, he doesn't feel like he is<lb/>
THURSDAY'S<lb/>
Grand Opening Thursday Night<lb/>
free admission all night<lb/>
doors open at 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
featuring 'FrameWork'<lb/>
top 40 rock &amp; roll band<lb/>
from Charlotte<lb/>
Mar-Kay<lb/>
Rings &amp; Things<lb/>
112 E. 5th St<lb/>
Open 10:00 -6:00<lb/>
Mon. ? Sat.<lb/>
A Tandy Leather Dealer<lb/>
TURQUOISE &amp;<lb/>
CORAL JEWELRY AT<lb/>
REASONABLE PRICES<lb/>
the key man in the wishbone<lb/>
attack, na does he bel ieve that he<lb/>
is the one to stop.<lb/>
"We'vega several good guys<lb/>
in the backfield thi; year he<lb/>
said. "Hawk(WillieHawkins, the<lb/>
other half of the H &amp; H Trucking<lb/>
Co.) gained over 700 yards last<lb/>
season, and Sam Harrell is a third<lb/>
breakaway back. Rus we've got<lb/>
good receivers and Vince Kolanko<lb/>
istoughasa fullback. As a matter<lb/>
of fact he added, " the offensive<lb/>
line would like to see all of us gain<lb/>
over a thousand yards<lb/>
That may na be possible, but<lb/>
that should serve a proper<lb/>
warning to those who feel the<lb/>
Pirate offense may suffer from<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
When it comes to a philosophy<lb/>
of football fa Eddie Hicks, he<lb/>
keeps it simple and straight to the<lb/>
point.<lb/>
"I just want to win stated<lb/>
the speedster. "When I get my<lb/>
handson the ball I'm going to run<lb/>
as hard as I can fa as far as I can.<lb/>
When I'm not running the ball<lb/>
I'm going to see to it that my<lb/>
block is made. Fa us to be a good<lb/>
football team, everything's got to<lb/>
fall right in place. I'm gonna try<lb/>
my best to see that it happens<lb/>
if 1977 turns out anything like<lb/>
1976, East Carolina's opponents<lb/>
will fall right into placeright<lb/>
behind Eddie Hicks.<lb/>
EDDIE HICKS<lb/>
NOW AVAILABLE!<lb/>
PAT'S<lb/>
HAT!<lb/>
ADVERTISED IN SPORTS ILLUSTRATED<lb/>
The ONLY official ECU<lb/>
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'S<lb/>
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ECU FOOTBALL<lb/>
Only 14 days left until the N.C. State football at Raleighbe sure<lb/>
to get your OFFICIAL ECU football coaching hat before the big<lb/>
game! Better hurrysupply is limited!<lb/>
Don's accept any imitationslook for this label!<lb/>
?A1<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
H.L.HODGES<lb/>
AND COMPANY, INC.<lb/>
210 E. 5th St. Phone 752-4156<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0022"/><lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Page 2k. FOUNTAINHEAD 30 August 1977<lb/>
Strong safety Hall All-America candidate<lb/>
What goes through a college<lb/>
football player's mind when he<lb/>
has become the veteran at his<lb/>
position instead of the youngster<lb/>
in just on short year? Gerald Hall,<lb/>
East Carolina University all-<lb/>
America candidate at strong<lb/>
safety, says he doesn't feel any<lb/>
differently.<lb/>
"I really don't feel any<lb/>
differently than last year said<lb/>
Hall. "Sure, I'll be the one the<lb/>
young guys will come to for<lb/>
advice, but I have confidence in<lb/>
them just as I did last year in the<lb/>
three seniors<lb/>
Hall was the sophomore in the<lb/>
Pirates' four-deep secondary last<lb/>
?VCXK<lb/>
time's getting short<lb/>
but it's not too late!<lb/>
Place your telephone order now so you'll be included in the<lb/>
Student directory<lb/>
We are no longer on campus, so place your order at our NEW<lb/>
office at 1530 HOOKER ROAD You may also make your<lb/>
payments at the new office during the day or at our night<lb/>
depository. You may also make payments at any branch of NCNB<lb/>
in Greenville or in the student bank on campus<lb/>
CaroinaTetepbone<lb/>
5th STREET<lb/>
IMPORT SERVICE<lb/>
Finest in Foreign Car<lb/>
Repair<lb/>
Volkswagens- Porsche<lb/>
specialists<lb/>
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758-1534<lb/>
year that included all-America<lb/>
Jim Bolding, Reggie Pinkney and<lb/>
Ernest Madison, all four-year<lb/>
starters. His position was the one<lb/>
that produced worry because of<lb/>
lack of experience. But he may<lb/>
have been the best of the bunch<lb/>
and the three seniors all were<lb/>
invited and played in post-season<lb/>
all-star games.<lb/>
"This is a new year Hall<lb/>
added. "We have to forget all<lb/>
about last year. The only thing on<lb/>
our minds right now is winning on<lb/>
Sept. 3 against State<lb/>
Hall hinted that this year's<lb/>
backfield, composed of senior<lb/>
Steve Hale, sophs Charlie Carter<lb/>
and Willie Holly, and himself,<lb/>
oould be as good or better than<lb/>
last year's crew, generally<lb/>
thought of as being one of the<lb/>
elite secondaries in the country.<lb/>
"We're going to fool a lot of<lb/>
people Hall said. "I feel we can<lb/>
be just as good as last year. These<lb/>
corner men (Carter and Holly)<lb/>
will hit hard. They'll stick you.<lb/>
and Steve (Hale) has played<lb/>
enough in the past three years<lb/>
that he is like another starter<lb/>
coming back<lb/>
Hall was 12th in the nation in<lb/>
punt returns last season with an<lb/>
11.6 average and is the seventh<lb/>
leading returner coming back this<lb/>
year. He also had six intercep-<lb/>
tions and returned them for 153<lb/>
yards. Fa his efforts, he was<lb/>
named second team all-America<lb/>
by Football Weekly for sopho-<lb/>
mores last year.<lb/>
Hall returned a schooi-iecord<lb/>
tying 26 punts last season and<lb/>
would have had more, except for<lb/>
the fact that teams kicked from<lb/>
him fa the last half of the year.<lb/>
"I feel that helped our team<lb/>
when they punted away from<lb/>
me Hall added. "They often<lb/>
times got off a shat punt, which<lb/>
gave us jood field position<lb/>
The Edenton, N.C native<lb/>
came to East Carolina right off<lb/>
the rebound, so to speak. Pat<lb/>
Dye, Pirate head coach, was<lb/>
reauiting Zack Valentine when<lb/>
he was Hail playing basketball.<lb/>
When he saw what a good athelte<lb/>
Hall was, Dye immediately offer-<lb/>
ed him a scholarship to play<lb/>
football, and Hall has never let<lb/>
him down.<lb/>
"Gerald was the best defen-<lb/>
sive back wo had overall last<lb/>
year Dye said. "And everybody<lb/>
knows what great ones we had in<lb/>
the three senias that had started<lb/>
fa three years together<lb/>
East Carolina's defense was<lb/>
ranked third in the nation overall<lb/>
last season, but Hall thinks they<lb/>
can be better this season. He may<lb/>
be slightly biases, however, since<lb/>
three members of the defense<lb/>
(including Hall himself) gradua-<lb/>
GERALDHALL<lb/>
See HALL page 23<lb/>
BIG DADDY'S<lb/>
CHUCKWAGON 10th St.<lb/>
Dinners nightly<lb/>
Fresh vegetables<lb/>
Homemade potato and chicken salad<lb/>
Good onion rings<lb/>
Variety of sandwiehes<lb/>
Fresh BarBQ<lb/>
Ham hu rger stea ks<lb/>
Milksliakes<lb/>
Tea<lb/>
8:30-7:30 MF. 8:30-3:00 Sat.<lb/>
Closed Sun.<lb/>
HARDEE'S<lb/>
CAR SHOP<lb/>
3 MiUi East of Gr?t?nvill?t on Hwy. 33<lb/>
Look For Larg? Whit ft?l Building On Right<lb/>
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Specializing In<lb/>
Fiberglass Cors (Corv?tt??)<lb/>
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Award-Winning Car Customising<lb/>
ft Painting By Phil<lb/>
Call 758 7520 or Nights 752-1783<lb/>
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OpiTHtOf I Huit r &amp; ()?nnis HdMle .Wl?l PJIJ<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058002_0023"/><lb/>
?????I<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
Liz White named to<lb/>
Sports Medicine staff<lb/>
30 Augml 19T, FOUNTAINHEAD Pag? 23<lb/>
Hall remains optimistic<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Sports Medicine Director Rod<lb/>
Compton has announced the<lb/>
appointment of Liz White as<lb/>
Assistant Athletic trainer.<lb/>
White, a native of Norfolk,<lb/>
Va will assist Compton with<lb/>
administration of the Sports Med-<lb/>
icine curriculum, and in supervi-<lb/>
sion of student trainers, as well as<lb/>
heading up Sports Mediane's<lb/>
work with women's athletics.<lb/>
White came to East Carolina<lb/>
in 1974, and served for two years<lb/>
as a graduate assistant. She<lb/>
gained her certification last year,<lb/>
while waking at ECU on a<lb/>
graduate fellowship.<lb/>
This year, White will move<lb/>
into a full-time position as<lb/>
non-tenured faculty. With the<lb/>
appointment, she becomes the<lb/>
first woman on the full-time<lb/>
Sports Mediane Staff.<lb/>
Continued from page 22<lb/>
ted from Holmes High in Eden-<lb/>
ton. Valentine and Willie Holley<lb/>
are the others.<lb/>
"The people back home are<lb/>
real proud Hall said. "They<lb/>
give us a lot of support and keep<lb/>
telling us to keep up the good<lb/>
work.<lb/>
"I feel we can be better<lb/>
defensively mainly because of our<lb/>
linebackers and the strength of<lb/>
our line. Wayne (Poole) and Noah<lb/>
(Clark, defensive tackles) are<lb/>
much stronger than a year ago,<lb/>
while Zack (Valentine) and Fred<lb/>
(Chavis) are awfully quick. We<lb/>
can be better<lb/>
Hall also feels the Pirates'<lb/>
tough schedule will deep the team<lb/>
alert. "There's no easy game on<lb/>
the schedule. We'll just have to<lb/>
take them one at a time<lb/>
Hall not only has a new<lb/>
supporting cast in the secondary,<lb/>
but also a new coach. Bobby<lb/>
Wallace came to ECU when<lb/>
Lanny Norris resigned to enter<lb/>
private business. He is impressed<lb/>
with Hall from what he has seen<lb/>
in films.<lb/>
"Gerald's one of the best<lb/>
defensive backs I've ever seen.<lb/>
he said. "He does a great job<lb/>
defeating blocks on the option<lb/>
game and with his ooverage. He' II<lb/>
be a leader on defense.<lb/>
From an inexperienced starter<lb/>
at the start of 1976 to the leader at<lb/>
the start of 1977. That's a long<lb/>
way to go in a year, but Gerald<lb/>
Hall will have done just that on<lb/>
Sept. 3 in Carter Stadium.<lb/>
Pirate games sell tickets<lb/>
Continued from page 18<lb/>
Butters said that before he knew sales for the game were much<lb/>
higher than in the past, and he seems to have put himself back into a<lb/>
corner. Butters is said to be close to Duke head ooaoh Mike McGee.<lb/>
and McGee, according to sources, wants no part of playing the Pirates.<lb/>
But, if the game this year draws a sellout, as it seems it is going to,<lb/>
Butters will have to agree fa future games.<lb/>
As Art Chansky, spats edita of the Durham Maning Herald, put<lb/>
it befae the contracts were signed fa this year's game. " Duke is<lb/>
either foolish a scared, a both, fa na playing East Carolina, now a<lb/>
in the future.<lb/>
LIZ WHITE (RIGHT) was recently named as Assistant Athletic<lb/>
trainer with the Sports Medicine Department.<lb/>
DIAL-A-PIRATE<lb/>
East Carolina University's "Dial-A-Pirate" is now back in<lb/>
operation fa the yea. Taped messages, cnanged daily, with coacnes<lb/>
and players, are available to you by dialing 919-757-6900. Stay in toucn<lb/>
with Pirate athletics daily through "Dial-A-Pirate<lb/>
 <lb/>
Sports<lb/>
writers<lb/>
needed<lb/>
Call 757-6366<lb/>
for more information<lb/>
Pirate scrimmage marks improvement<lb/>
CHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Assistant Spats Edita<lb/>
Thursday night. August 25th,<lb/>
Pat Dye presented his football<lb/>
team under the lights in Fioklen<lb/>
Stadium to see what fall practice<lb/>
had done to shape up his fourth<lb/>
East Carolina team. What Coach<lb/>
Dye did see was an improvement<lb/>
by both the offense and defense.<lb/>
The game itself pitted the first<lb/>
team offense and defense against<lb/>
the rest of the team. The Purple<lb/>
starters won a 49-19 victay over<lb/>
the gold .earn.<lb/>
Running back Eddie Hicks<lb/>
scaed fa the Purple, as did<lb/>
quarterback Leander Green with<lb/>
two long runs. Other standouts<lb/>
were quarterback Jimmy Souther-<lb/>
land, showing a marked im-<lb/>
provement in passing, and Mit-<lb/>
chell Smith, coming off an broken<lb/>
hand injury.<lb/>
Injuries still plague the Pi-<lb/>
rates. Those on the injury list<lb/>
include fullback Vince Kolanko,<lb/>
offensive tackle Matt Mulholland,<lb/>
strong safety Gerald Hall, nose-<lb/>
guard Clifford Williams, and<lb/>
center Jeff Hagans.<lb/>
Coach Dye hopes his team will<lb/>
be healed in time fa the opener<lb/>
at NC State this Saturday, 7 00<lb/>
p.m at Carter Stadium. The<lb/>
game is a sellout.<lb/>
LEARN TO<lb/>
Belly Dance<lb/>
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specializing in<lb/>
finger cymbals<lb/>
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from professional dancer and<lb/>
teacher "SUNSHINE'<lb/>
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Greenville. NC 27834<lb/>
JIMMY SOUTHERLAND<lb/>
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Silver Smithing Supplies<lb/>
Try Our Bead Caner<lb/>
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Hand made jewelry;fa men also<lb/>
Embroidered shirts<lb/>
And many rrxxe hand aafted<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058002_0024"/><lb/>
Pay 24 FOUNTAINHEAD 30 August 1977<lb/>
? It<lb/>
 f<lb/>
HOW TO HAVE YOUR CAKE AND EAT IT T<lb/>
Thursday after 5, have some cake on us.<lb/>
We'll be one year old September 1st,<lb/>
so you get to eat a piece of the party!<lb/>
Cake on the house, with seconds while it lasts.<lb/>
And who ever heard of celebrating a birthday<lb/>
without candles?<lb/>
Thursday sit down to candlelight and flowers<lb/>
at every table in our place.<lb/>
Come to our party<lb/>
It's going to be a piece of cake.<lb/>
And there's nothing that can hold a candle to that.<lb/>
? .<lb/>
!(?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
McDonald's<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
sS?<lb/>
Mfe do it all tor you<lb/>
?XfSqjj.<lb/>
y<lb/>
10th and Cotanche Streets<lb/>
(Ad Manager's note: The McDonald's ad that appeared in the 8-23 issue<lb/>
was not supposed to run until the 25th. Therefore iff you were mconvienienced<lb/>
when you went to get your plant, FOUNTAINHEAD apologizes. McDonalds<lb/>
was not at fault. We regret the error.)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0025"/><lb/>
0ee7e088c67cb2149cbdc35c40bf066e 00058002.0002.tif<lb/>
28deca90f48a204566058e0cd5ad9c49 00058002.0003.tif<lb/>
3a9110ba3c871b6910b33a4c68d03b54 00058002.0004.tif<lb/>
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45516cf1d91da974843f040a3e9cae0f 00058002.0001.tif<lb/>
<pb facs="00058002_0026"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>