<?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="00058003_0001"/>
f<lb/>
Serving the campus cpro-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE IN3DE<lb/>
Frat Rushp. 5<lb/>
Cinema Societyp. 7<lb/>
ECU-Statep. 11<lb/>
Vol. 53. No. 3<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
1 September 1977<lb/>
Beat<lb/>
State!<lb/>
There will be a Beat State Pep<lb/>
Rally on the ECU campus Sep-<lb/>
tember 1, starting at 7 p.m. at<lb/>
Greene dorm and ending at<lb/>
Ficklin Stadium. Last practice<lb/>
under the lights before the<lb/>
Pirates beat State<lb/>
Let the players know you are<lb/>
behind them! Get in the spirit of<lb/>
the Beat State Week and attend<lb/>
the pep rally on Thursday. Bring<lb/>
purple and gold shakers, horns,<lb/>
bells, and other spirits). Share a<lb/>
sheet with a friendmake a sign<lb/>
to bring to the state game.<lb/>
Suggestion: 1) "Beat State" 2)<lb/>
"Raise Hell"<lb/>
Wear your caps donated by<lb/>
Taylor beverages and bring your<lb/>
purple Pirate Rags to game.<lb/>
THESESTUDENTS ARE apparently discussing the outcome of the upcoming ECU-State germ<lb/>
which will be held Saturday in Raleigh<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Sessoms urges students to file for legislator<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Students may begin filing fa<lb/>
SGA legislature openings in the<lb/>
SGA office, according to Neil<lb/>
Sessoms, SGA president.<lb/>
"The legislature is probably<lb/>
the most powerful branch of the<lb/>
student government said<lb/>
Ssssoms.<lb/>
"Considering the budget said<lb/>
Sessoms of the second largest<lb/>
student government in the U.S<lb/>
"the legislature holds a very<lb/>
responsible position<lb/>
The legislature convenes<lb/>
weekly for approximately two<lb/>
hours, and committee meetings<lb/>
convene weekly for about one<lb/>
hour.<lb/>
"Experience is not necessary<lb/>
to be legislator, but it's helpful<lb/>
said Sessoms<lb/>
"It'sagood way to learn how<lb/>
government works<lb/>
Sessoms said he hopes the<lb/>
legislature will be a good cross-<lb/>
section of day and dorm students,<lb/>
Greeks and other particular<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
The best way to get something<lb/>
done is to have a representative in<lb/>
the legislature, said Sessoms.<lb/>
"Legislators will work for<lb/>
other projects said Sessoms,<lb/>
"But not like their own<lb/>
"What the legislature does<lb/>
effects everyone on campus, from<lb/>
grad students to freshmen<lb/>
Sessoms said.<lb/>
"I hope the legislature will be<lb/>
a conscientious group of students<lb/>
who are interested in serving the<lb/>
ECU student body by giving their<lb/>
time and talents said Sessoms.<lb/>
Sessoms said there will be a<lb/>
mandatory candidates' meeting<lb/>
after filing ends September 7.<lb/>
The meeting date will be an-<lb/>
nounced later.<lb/>
"I'd like to see a good turnout<lb/>
for this election said Sessoms.<lb/>
Voting precincts will be in<lb/>
strategic areas so students will<lb/>
have easy access to vote, accord-<lb/>
ing to Sessoms.<lb/>
Students running fa legis-<lb/>
lata positiais must be full-time<lb/>
students with an overall 2.0<lb/>
average, said Sessoms.<lb/>
Election day will be announc-<lb/>
ed sometime next week.<lb/>
More lighting imi<lb/>
ECU campus walkways<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
NewsEdita<lb/>
Twelve bases fa more liaht-<lb/>
ing on campus have recently been<lb/>
established and many branches of<lb/>
trees have been cut to provide<lb/>
better lighting, accading to Reed<lb/>
Warren, SGA vice-present.<lb/>
Warren discussed the lighting<lb/>
problem this summer with Vice-<lb/>
Chancella of Business Affairs,<lb/>
Cliff Moae.<lb/>
"He was very willing to help<lb/>
ussaid Warren. "I was very<lb/>
pleased with the quick response<lb/>
we received<lb/>
Warren said many lights<lb/>
which were hung from trees were<lb/>
put on light poles.<lb/>
"They're waking at the Slay<lb/>
dam area now said Warren.<lb/>
"The lights should help with<lb/>
the night bus route said<lb/>
Warren.<lb/>
"I hope the girls will use the<lb/>
lighted area for walking to<lb/>
Mendenhall and to the library at<lb/>
night said Warren.<lb/>
Warren said that in a couple of<lb/>
weeks, he and Moae will check<lb/>
the lights to determine if more<lb/>
lighting is needed.<lb/>
"If it's necessary, the lighting<lb/>
will be expanded said Warren.<lb/>
Warren mentioned that the<lb/>
By DENNIS KAHN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
H &amp; R Block is offering a<lb/>
course in filing tax returns which,<lb/>
accading to Dave Harter, mana-<lb/>
ger of the Greenville branch of H<lb/>
&amp; R Block, should be beneficial to<lb/>
both the individual and H &amp; R<lb/>
BLock.<lb/>
"Students who successfully<lb/>
complete the 81-hour, 13-week<lb/>
course and demonstrate an ability<lb/>
to do the wak have a good chance<lb/>
of being hired during the tax<lb/>
season said Harter.<lb/>
"Snce the tax season lasts<lb/>
from January 1 to April 15,<lb/>
graduates of the course should<lb/>
not expect year-round wak<lb/>
said Harter.<lb/>
Harter said the course entail-<lb/>
project was accomplished without<lb/>
spending any of the students'<lb/>
money. The university is financ-<lb/>
ing the lightingWe should be a<lb/>
catalyst fa getting things daie<lb/>
said Warren.<lb/>
 I think the key fa SGA to get<lb/>
projects like this accomplished is<lb/>
to uncterstand the problem of<lb/>
limited funds and keep our<lb/>
requests reasonable<lb/>
"Vice-Chancella Moae was<lb/>
na oily helpful, but responded<lb/>
quickly to better the lighting<lb/>
situation said Warren.<lb/>
"I'm very pleased with the<lb/>
results<lb/>
course<lb/>
ed no obligation to wak fa H &amp; R<lb/>
Block, and H &amp; R Block assumed<lb/>
no obligation to hire the student.<lb/>
 However, a good percentage<lb/>
of my employes are graduates of<lb/>
the course said Harter.<lb/>
Harter said the course was<lb/>
also useful in helping the student<lb/>
to better manage his finances.<lb/>
"The knowledge of little de-<lb/>
tails -an save money said<lb/>
Hart� "The little details would<lb/>
STUDYING STARTED IN August this year due to the change to<lb/>
semester system; this coed cracks the books early. Photo by Kirk<lb/>
Kingsbury<lb/>
be the ins and outs of filing tax<lb/>
returns.<lb/>
"Pathsnot known befae open<lb/>
like ocas through this course<lb/>
The 13-week course begins<lb/>
September 14, at the downtown H<lb/>
&amp; R Block office on the Greenville<lb/>
Mall The three-hour classes will<lb/>
be held Wednesdays and Fridays<lb/>
from 9 a.m. to 12 noon, with<lb/>
evening classes fron 7-10 p.m.<lb/>
Mondays and Wednesdays.<lb/>
"The $81 tuition for the<lb/>
course also covers the cost of four<lb/>
texts, a wakbook, a diploma fa<lb/>
those who graduate, and use of<lb/>
the audio-visual material said<lb/>
Harter.<lb/>
The course covers ever" as-<lb/>
pect of personal, farm, ano small<lb/>
business taxes, according to<lb/>
Harter.<lb/>
Fa more infamatiai, contact<lb/>
Dave Harter at 752-4807.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058003_0002"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Paye 2 FOUNTAINHEAD September 1,1977<lb/>
su<lb/>
The Student Union has open-<lb/>
ings on the following committees.<lb/>
Travel 3 openings<lb/>
"Entertainer" �1 opening<lb/>
Artist Series -2 openings<lb/>
Anyone interested in applying<lb/>
fa one of these openings should<lb/>
pick up an, application at the<lb/>
Student Union office or the<lb/>
Information Desk in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Psychology<lb/>
The psychology honor-society<lb/>
will hold its first meeting<lb/>
Tuesday, September 6 at 7 P.M.<lb/>
in Speight 129.<lb/>
This will be a general business<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
All Psi-Cni members and<lb/>
other interested students are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Pep rally<lb/>
There will be a Beat State Pep<lb/>
Rally at the Elbo Room Friday<lb/>
from 3-7 p.m. ECU cheerleaders<lb/>
will be present to boost spirit.<lb/>
DAZZLE will play.<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
The North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature will have its kick-off<lb/>
meeting of the new year, Wed-<lb/>
nesday, Sept. 7 at 750 in 244<lb/>
Mendenhall. All members are<lb/>
strongly urged to attend.<lb/>
FG<lb/>
"How to have a successful<lb/>
nervous breakdown, or, how to<lb/>
deal with discouragement<lb/>
That's the topic of the Forever<lb/>
Generation Bible study tomorrow<lb/>
night: Speaking will be Dan<lb/>
Coutcher, the National Assistant<lb/>
Director of the FG. Why not join<lb/>
us for this time of Bible study,<lb/>
singing and fellowship?-That's<lb/>
tomorrow night at 7:30 in<lb/>
Brewster B-103. Hope to see you<lb/>
there!<lb/>
Jaycees<lb/>
The Winterville Jayoees<lb/>
will work and help organize this<lb/>
chapter. There is a meeting<lb/>
planned at Mendenhall Monday,<lb/>
September 5 at 730 p.m. (Meet<lb/>
by the information desk for<lb/>
further instructions.) Both men<lb/>
and women are encouraged to<lb/>
join.<lb/>
If there are any questions,<lb/>
contact Ernest Hooks, 756-0282 a<lb/>
Bobby Manning 756-1828 after 8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Any person interested in<lb/>
applying fa SGA Attorney Gen-<lb/>
eral should oome by the SGA<lb/>
office 218 Mendenhall student<lb/>
Center and fill out an application.<lb/>
Buses<lb/>
There will be two buses<lb/>
leaving fa the game Sat. at<lb/>
Carter Stadium from Mendenhall<lb/>
at 300 p.m. No signing up a<lb/>
oost, just be there ready to go.<lb/>
Worship<lb/>
Rev. Bill Hadden, Episcopal<lb/>
Chaplain announoes that Episco-<lb/>
pal Waship fa students and<lb/>
faculty begins this Wed Sept. 7,<lb/>
at 5:30 at St. Paul's Church, 406<lb/>
4th St.<lb/>
4-H club<lb/>
Welcome back students! The<lb/>
ECU 4-H Collegiate Club is<lb/>
having a ocok-out at the East-<lb/>
brook party house Thursday,<lb/>
Sept. 1 at 7 p.m. Plans fa the<lb/>
coming year will be discussed,<lb/>
and interested members and<lb/>
others are invited to oome.<lb/>
AIP<lb/>
The Offices of Intramural<lb/>
Sports and Handicapped Student<lb/>
Services are in the process of<lb/>
developing and ooadinating an<lb/>
Adaptive Intramural Program fa<lb/>
all handicapped students. Should<lb/>
you be interested in recreational<lb/>
activities, you are invited to<lb/>
attend the first aganizatioial<lb/>
meeting oi Wednesday, Septem-<lb/>
ber 7, 1977 at 4 p.m. in room 221<lb/>
of Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Thiswill be your opportunity to<lb/>
express your ideas, and to show<lb/>
us the suppat that we will need.<lb/>
Chairperson<lb/>
Anyoie interested in filing fa<lb/>
Fall elections chairperson or<lb/>
oommittee should file in the SGA<lb/>
office, Room 218 Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, as soon as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
Frig, rentals<lb/>
The SGA still has 100 refriger-<lb/>
atas available fa fall semester<lb/>
rental. Rent is$38.00 fa the year<lb/>
a $21.00 per semesta, plus a<lb/>
$10.00 safety deposit. Come by<lb/>
Room 231, Mendenhall, SGA<lb/>
Refrigerata Office.<lb/>
Band<lb/>
The Interfraternity Council, in<lb/>
initiating the start of Fall Rush,<lb/>
will sponsa the band "Staircase"<lb/>
on the Mall from 4-8 P.M.<lb/>
Tuesday, Sept. 6th. Everyone is<lb/>
invited to attend and is encourag-<lb/>
ed to attend Rush this fall.<lb/>
Psi-Chi<lb/>
Psi-Chi Hona Society rush is<lb/>
on.<lb/>
Eligible psychology majors<lb/>
will be contacted, however, Psyc.<lb/>
minas and aha students with 12<lb/>
hours a mae of Psyc. may be<lb/>
eligible- Psi-Chi has no way of<lb/>
knowing who you are. If you are<lb/>
interested in Psi-Chi, inquire at<lb/>
the psychology offioe a see a<lb/>
Psi-Chi officer listed on the<lb/>
Psi-Chi bulletin board across from<lb/>
the Psyc. offioe in the Speight<lb/>
building. Rush ends Sept. 27, sc<lb/>
don't delay.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
All students interested in<lb/>
faming a bowling league should<lb/>
attend an organizational meeting<lb/>
on Monday, September 12, at<lb/>
7:30 PM in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Bowling Center.<lb/>
SGA posts<lb/>
Anyone interested in filing fa<lb/>
SGA legislative positions, day a<lb/>
dorm representatives, should<lb/>
oome by the SGA offioe to file<lb/>
befae September 7.<lb/>
Gospel<lb/>
The Essence Gospel Singas<lb/>
will meet at 7 p.m. Tues Sept. 7,<lb/>
1977 at Mendenhall rm. 244. All<lb/>
persons intaested in joining the<lb/>
choir are welcomed to attend.<lb/>
Co-op<lb/>
Anyone intaested in learning<lb/>
mae about cooperative education<lb/>
may do so by visiting the Co-op<lb/>
offioe in 313 Rawl building a by<lb/>
calling 757-6979.<lb/>
Clowning is f unbut<lb/>
Birth defects ore forever.<lb/>
Unless you help.<lb/>
March of Dimes<lb/>
THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED AS A PUBLIC bi Wv � BY TMI "IW<lb/>
No one eke<lb/>
can give us<lb/>
what you can<lb/>
(Join Us. Please.)<lb/>
Nobody else in the world can give us what you can.<lb/>
A pint of your blood.<lb/>
And your gift has never been more important. Be-<lb/>
cause blood from healthy donors, who freely do-<lb/>
nate their blood, is 10 times less likely gVx<lb/>
to cause infectious hepatitis in the -�- v<lb/>
recipient than is blood from many<lb/>
commercial sources.Think about<lb/>
that.<lb/>
The need is urgent, and continuous.<lb/>
Help us. Join us.Today.<lb/>
The American<lb/>
Red Cross.<lb/>
The Good<lb/>
Neighbor.<lb/>
1mbaHMHMHB<lb/>
mmMnmH<lb/>
<pb facs="00058003_0003"/><lb/>
�y ppmm bnpp<lb/>
Kissinger still on scene<lb/>
September 1,1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
(LNS)Former Secretary of<lb/>
State Henry Kissinger hasn't<lb/>
quite left the foreign service yet.<lb/>
In April he began serving as<lb/>
vice-chairman of the international<lb/>
advisory committee of the Chase<lb/>
Manhattan Bank, and beginning<lb/>
next January he will be promoted<lb/>
to chairman.<lb/>
The committee's major re-<lb/>
sponsibilities, according to a<lb/>
Chase Manhattan spokesperson,<lb/>
are advising the bank on its<lb/>
investments overseas, the world<lb/>
political climate and world eco-<lb/>
nomic trends.<lb/>
Chase Manhattan has good<lb/>
reasons for choosing a former<lb/>
Secretary of State as its head<lb/>
international advisor.<lb/>
More than 50 of its profits<lb/>
come from the $16 billion it has<lb/>
invested abroad. One third of its<lb/>
foreign investments are in Latin<lb/>
America.<lb/>
In the coming years Kissinger<lb/>
will also be appearing on NBC<lb/>
television as a foreign affairs<lb/>
expert fa a repated $1.5 million<lb/>
fee.<lb/>
And fa writing his memoirs<lb/>
about his government service he<lb/>
will receive $2 million.<lb/>
Another outlet fa Kissinger's<lb/>
expertise will be the Geagetown<lb/>
University School of Foreign<lb/>
Service, where beginning next<lb/>
September he will be teaching<lb/>
courses in diplomacy.<lb/>
Kissinger had considered a<lb/>
chair at Columbia University,<lb/>
endowed by his longtime benefao-<lb/>
ta Nelson Rockefeller, but de-<lb/>
clined the offer after several<lb/>
student rallies and faculty pro-<lb/>
tests against the appointment.<lb/>
According to The New York<lb/>
Times, the famer Seaetary of<lb/>
State, whoengineered U.S. policy<lb/>
throughout much of the Indochina<lb/>
War as well as the "destabiliza-<lb/>
tion" in Chile, is "quite sens�tive<lb/>
toaiticism<lb/>
Earlier this spring he declined<lb/>
to attend a ceremony at the<lb/>
University of Pennsylvania which<lb/>
was awarding him an honaary<lb/>
degree, after opposition was<lb/>
expressed in the faculty bulletin<lb/>
and on the campus.<lb/>
interested in news<lb/>
writing? Call<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
Women hitchhikers<lb/>
blamed for rape<lb/>
(LNS)A panel of judges in<lb/>
Califania has declared an open<lb/>
season fa rapists who attack<lb/>
women hitchhikers.<lb/>
In judgement handed down at<lb/>
the end of July, the Califania<lb/>
Court of Appeals voted unani-<lb/>
mously to set free a man<lb/>
convicted of raping a woman he<lb/>
had picked up in his car.<lb/>
The written decision by Judge<lb/>
Lynn Compton explained in<lb/>
practically so many wads that<lb/>
any wonan who stands by the<lb/>
side of a road with her thumb up<lb/>
deserves whatever she gets.<lb/>
"The lone female hitchhiker<lb/>
Compton wrae, "in the absence<lb/>
of an emergency situation, as a<lb/>
practical matter, advises all who<lb/>
pass by that she is willing to enter<lb/>
the vehicle with anyone who stops<lb/>
and in doing so advertises she has<lb/>
less concern fa the consequences<lb/>
than the average female<lb/>
Several months ago, a judge<lb/>
in Madison, Wisconsin applied<lb/>
the same logic in ruling that rape<lb/>
isa"namal" react ion to "prov-<lb/>
ocative" clothing worn by<lb/>
women. Women's groups in<lb/>
Madison are currently conducting<lb/>
a petition campaign in an attempt<lb/>
to remove the judge from office.<lb/>
THE LINE<lb/>
Thursday &amp; Friday<lb/>
"Gallery" with Bisa<lb/>
Famer Members a<lb/>
WakShop<lb/>
Watch Saturday Night Live<lb/>
5th STREET<lb/>
IMPORT SERVICE<lb/>
Finest in Foreign Car<lb/>
Repair<lb/>
Volkswagens- Porsche<lb/>
specialists<lb/>
1007 ESth St. Greenville<lb/>
758-1534<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN<lb/>
JO JOL<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
SUN THRU THUR<lb/>
11:00 TO 10:00<lb/>
FRI &amp;SAT<lb/>
11:00 TO 11:00<lb/>
Western Sizzlin will feature<lb/>
a special each day of the week<lb/>
beginning Sept. 5th- 9th<lb/>
�<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
U.S. DA choice beef cut fresh daily<lb/>
For the full month of August<lb/>
IHHB<lb/>
<pb facs="00058003_0004"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD September 1, 1977<lb/>
Bike registration:<lb/>
service or law?<lb/>
The Campus Security Office requires all students'<lb/>
bicycles to be registered if they are going to be on<lb/>
campus. This is called a service. Service? Or law?<lb/>
The purpose behind registering bicycles is so a<lb/>
stolen bike can be traced and identified by the<lb/>
campus police for the owner, according to Joseph H.<lb/>
Calder, Director of Security. Another reason, he<lb/>
says, is for proof of ownership. In other words, if<lb/>
someone is suspected of possessing a stolen bike and<lb/>
the bike is registered, the police can establish<lb/>
whether or not it is in fact stolen.<lb/>
Fine. But that's it. The only reasons for<lb/>
registering bicycles is for the protection of the<lb/>
owners. A service, so far. But what happens if a<lb/>
student does not wish to partake of this generous<lb/>
service? The lock will be cut off and the bicycle<lb/>
impounded. This smacks of law, not service. Since<lb/>
when are people penalized fa refusing a service?<lb/>
While the Security Office lauds registering<lb/>
bicycles as a service fa the students, it turns around<lb/>
and treats nonacceptance of this service as breaking<lb/>
a law. This is contradictay at best.<lb/>
If the purpose behind registering bicycles is<lb/>
solely fa the protection of the owners, as officials at<lb/>
the Security Office say, the students should have the<lb/>
choice between whether a not they want this service,<lb/>
just as merchants have the choice of whether a not<lb/>
they want special police surveillance of their<lb/>
businesses. Merchants are not faced to have this<lb/>
extra police protection, and students should not be<lb/>
faced to accept this campus police protection.<lb/>
Granted, the help in tracking down a stolen bike is<lb/>
certainly wathwhile. But the owner should be able to<lb/>
decide fa himself whether a not he wants this help.<lb/>
Bicycle owners are not only penalized fa not<lb/>
accepting this "service" by having to pay to get their<lb/>
bikes out of impoundment, but they are also<lb/>
punished by having expensive locks and chains fa<lb/>
their bikes destroyed. And if a bike is locked and<lb/>
chained, it is obviously owned and cared fa and not<lb/>
likely to be left lying about as rubbage on campus to<lb/>
be cleaned up.<lb/>
The Security Office states that it makes no money<lb/>
off these registration and impoundment fees. So<lb/>
padding around campus in hot pursuit of an<lb/>
unregistered bike is only wasting time and money fa<lb/>
the campus police and causing endless hassles fa<lb/>
students who should never be faced to obey the laws<lb/>
of this "service" in the first place.<lb/>
If bike registration is a service, it should be<lb/>
treated as such. But if it's going to be treated as a<lb/>
law, then the students should be given some<lb/>
justification.<lb/>
FM seen as boon<lb/>
WECU has been trying to go FM fa several<lb/>
years. This year, this project is "top priority<lb/>
accading to Rob Maxon, WECU general manager.<lb/>
But it is going to take student and administrative<lb/>
support to make it happen.<lb/>
WECU is almost a joke now and has been since it<lb/>
was begun. With only power enough to broadcast on<lb/>
campus, the effats and moiey put into this station<lb/>
have been wasted. By going FM, WECU oould<lb/>
broadcast into the Greenville area as a wathwhile<lb/>
educational a, at least, sophisticated radio station,<lb/>
as it should if it is an associate of a university. Fa<lb/>
students with an IQ of three digits, an alternative to<lb/>
canned Top 40 and tired acid rook would be a<lb/>
welcome relief.<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
WHfTT BIKE REGrlSTPtflTfOV?<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Student slams local drivers<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I have a gripe to voioe about<lb/>
95 per cent of the lioensed drivers<lb/>
in Greenville, N.C I am taking it<lb/>
fa granted that they do, in fact,<lb/>
have licenses. However, some-<lb/>
where, somehow, they obviously<lb/>
were not told what the little<lb/>
handle on the left of the steering<lb/>
wheel is for. Well, surprise! It's a<lb/>
turn signal, used to tell other<lb/>
motorists approaching from the<lb/>
front and behind that you intend<lb/>
to turn. They are truely uncanny<lb/>
devises that some genius engi-<lb/>
neer designed so beautifully to<lb/>
make driving easier and safer.<lb/>
And it seems such a waste that<lb/>
these cute little products of<lb/>
modern technology are going to<lb/>
waste.<lb/>
I just do not understand why<lb/>
people refuse to use turn signals.<lb/>
Do they expect us to read their<lb/>
minds through the windshield<lb/>
and know when they plan to turn?<lb/>
I am really getting tired of<lb/>
digging my teeth out of the<lb/>
Forum letters<lb/>
should be typed or<lb/>
printed, signed and<lb/>
include the writer's<lb/>
address or tele-<lb/>
phone number. Let-<lb/>
ters are subject to<lb/>
editing for taste and<lb/>
brevity and may be<lb/>
sent to FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD or left at the<lb/>
Information Desk in<lb/>
Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
steering wheel after some lazy<lb/>
driver approaching an intersec-<lb/>
tion decides to turn left without<lb/>
signaling and I'm going straight<lb/>
across. Not only is this inconsi-<lb/>
derate, (an understatement), but<lb/>
it's just a touch dangerous. It's<lb/>
not as if flicking on the turn signal<lb/>
took some great physical effort,<lb/>
after all.<lb/>
Not only do these Greenvil-<lb/>
lites refuse to use turn signals,<lb/>
but they also seem to insist on<lb/>
driving in the left hand lane of<lb/>
double highways fa no reason<lb/>
(other than that it may be<lb/>
"fun?"). Left lanes are for<lb/>
passjng, and all highway regula-<lb/>
tions say we are to stick to the<lb/>
right lane except fa passing. So,<lb/>
you get behind a farmer in a<lb/>
pick-up (the most notaious of all<lb/>
N.C. drivers) and want to pass.<lb/>
But, guess again! Fa in the left<lb/>
lane another farmer is auising at<lb/>
a hot 35 mph.<lb/>
I don't know what it's going to<lb/>
take-maybe a good, gaey wreck<lb/>
a two-but lazy inoonsidaate<lb/>
drivers are nothing but a nuisance<lb/>
and a pain in theneck fa the<lb/>
rest of us.<lb/>
Bill Devins<lb/>
Founlainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor war titty years.<lb/>
3enior Edjt0rKim J. Devins<lb/>
Production Manager. Bob Glover<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert Swaim<lb/>
f5 EditorCindy Broome<lb/>
Trends EditorMichael Futch<lb/>
SportsEditor AnneHogge<lb/>
FCWNTAmHEADisthestudemnewtpaper of East Carolina<lb/>
EctTlS'XSlS 55S- S" Asscoatlon �<lb/>
ECU and is distributed each Wednesday during the summer<lb/>
and twice weekly during the school year '<lb/>
paeS8:0,dS�Uth G��nville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually.<lb/>
tx<lb/>
at<lb/>
Ic<lb/>
w<lb/>
Ur<lb/>
te<lb/>
"<lb/>
Si<lb/>
P"<lb/>
IF<lb/>
n<lb/>
vVl<lb/>
th<lb/>
te<lb/>
-<lb/>
�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058003_0005"/><lb/>
' :<lb/>
September 1,1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
ECU co-op students<lb/>
enjoy NASA work<lb/>
A GROUP OF students and faculty members from<lb/>
the ECU Dept. of Science Education plan a<lb/>
workshop program for ECU'S environmental educa-<lb/>
tion project. Left to right are: graduate student Jo<lb/>
Duckett, faculty members Robert Dough, Dan<lb/>
Nicholson, Carolyn Hampton and Carol Hampton,<lb/>
graduate student Nancy Hall and faculty member<lb/>
Charles Coble. Photo by ECU Dept. of Science<lb/>
Education<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
Fraternity fun week: rush<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
Next week will mark the<lb/>
beginning of the fraternity rushes<lb/>
at ECU. ECU has 11 fraternities<lb/>
located throughout the city. All<lb/>
will be having parties throughout<lb/>
the week.<lb/>
During rush week, most fra-<lb/>
ternities try to have bands or<lb/>
"mixers" with "little sisters<lb/>
Some even have picnics or<lb/>
pig-piokins.<lb/>
According to Kirk Edgerton,<lb/>
IFC president, the purpose of<lb/>
rush is to attract new members.<lb/>
"We try to look for anyone<lb/>
who is interested and influence<lb/>
them to join the fraternity sys<lb/>
tern said Edgerton.<lb/>
Edgerton said that attending<lb/>
fraternity rushes costs students<lb/>
nothing.<lb/>
Approximately 10 of the<lb/>
students at ECU are members of<lb/>
fraternities or sororities.<lb/>
Edgerton said most greeks are<lb/>
very active in campus affairs.<lb/>
 I would say that the SGA was<lb/>
40 to 50 greek last year, and<lb/>
many greeks are members of<lb/>
honorary professional fraterni-<lb/>
ties and sororities said Edger-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
Many greeks live in their<lb/>
fraternity and sorority houses.<lb/>
Generally, the houses are spa-<lb/>
cious old mansions with party<lb/>
rooms and study areas. Some of<lb/>
the houses even employ cooks to<lb/>
prepare meals for the fraternity<lb/>
brothers and sorority sisters, said<lb/>
Edgerton.<lb/>
According to Edgerton the<lb/>
houses can accommodate any-<lb/>
where from 20 to 40 brothers.<lb/>
Edgerton said fraternities per-<lb/>
form many civic acts such as<lb/>
raising money for the Heart Fund<lb/>
and the Red Cross.<lb/>
Fraternities have many social<lb/>
functions. Drinking contests and<lb/>
greek field days are at the top of<lb/>
the list. There are also inter-<lb/>
fraternity, fraternity-sorority<lb/>
parties and band parties.<lb/>
Edgerton enoourages every-<lb/>
one to attend rushes to have a<lb/>
good time and take a look at<lb/>
fraternity life.<lb/>
"Joining a fraternity can<lb/>
enhance a persons' college<lb/>
years said Edgerton. "It's a<lb/>
great way to become aquainted<lb/>
with other people and become<lb/>
involved in campus activities<lb/>
Two ECU students, Ellen<lb/>
Schraeder of Westchester, Pa<lb/>
and Lori Anderson of Lincolnton,<lb/>
N.C recently completed their<lb/>
summer coop work experiences<lb/>
with NASA Headquarters in<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
Schraeder, a senior with a<lb/>
double major in sociology and<lb/>
psychology, worked as an assis-<lb/>
tant to the summer programs<lb/>
coordinator in the office of<lb/>
Employee Development at NASA.<lb/>
In addition to her assistant's<lb/>
duties, Schraeder was responsi-<lb/>
ble for helping the summer<lb/>
programs coordinator screen<lb/>
films and distributing a monthly<lb/>
calendar of events which she<lb/>
helped to develop.<lb/>
Anderson, a junior business<lb/>
education major, worked as a<lb/>
Student Management Aid during<lb/>
her co-op experience. As Student<lb/>
Management Aid, she was re-<lb/>
sponsible for processing training<lb/>
forms fa NASA employees who<lb/>
were enrolled in Continuing Ed-<lb/>
ucation courses or specific cour-<lb/>
ses of training as well as typing<lb/>
memos and filing.<lb/>
Both students agreed that<lb/>
their oo-op work with NASA was a<lb/>
deciding factor in developing<lb/>
their career goals.<lb/>
"As a result of my oo-op<lb/>
experience with NASA, I've deci-<lb/>
ded that working with the govern-<lb/>
ment is where I belong said<lb/>
Schraeder.<lb/>
Anderson agreed, saying,<lb/>
"Co-op gave me a good insight<lb/>
into what I want to do. I had<lb/>
planned to teach Now I'd like to<lb/>
go back to Washington and work<lb/>
for NASA<lb/>
ECU offers cooperative study-<lb/>
work experiences for students in<lb/>
several academic areas, allowing<lb/>
full-time students to alternate<lb/>
periods of academic study with<lb/>
periods of off-campus employ-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
THE ATTIC<lb/>
Wed. Thur Prodigy'<lb/>
FriWide Open'<lb/>
Sat. Sun.formerly Fresh<lb/>
Have Time? Need Money?<lb/>
We seek 2-3 additional salespersons MF for Part or Fulltime<lb/>
work in and near Greenvile, dealing direct with public Experi-<lb/>
ence desired but not mandatory Very High Hourly Income.<lb/>
Contact: Box 3735<lb/>
Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
With Phone tor Immediate Interview.<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
Back to College store<lb/>
junior fry-baby<lb/>
junior cookin' crock<lb/>
Q99<lb/>
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$29<lb/>
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than just one store your<lb/>
hair blower dryer<lb/>
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FOODMUJG<lb/>
<pb facs="00058003_0006"/><lb/>
HMHBBJHBMHBSBBIMbH<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD September 1,1977<lb/>
AOVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily<lb/>
available for sale at or below :he advertised price in each<lb/>
A&amp;P Store, except as specifically noted in this ad.<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 3 AT AAP IN GREENVILLE. N C<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058003_0007"/><lb/>
- , : "���<lb/>
�H<lb/>
VM IP<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
September 1, 1977 FOUNTAINHEAP Page 7<lb/>
Communique'<lb/>
(Editor's Note: Herein debuts Communique a weekly oolumn<lb/>
contributed by writers in all walks of life. An East Carolina senior who<lb/>
has had some extraordinary experiences with the Law sends us the<lb/>
following Communique)<lb/>
It was a scene no doubt repeated with minor variations in high<lb/>
schools throughout theoountry, when LedZepplin was still a new band<lb/>
and before the fall of Woodstock. My girl-friend wore a thin leather<lb/>
bracelet and the night before we had seen "The Graduate" which had<lb/>
just come to town. I was in the yearbook office working on the sports<lb/>
section of the "Quatra-Log our annual, when the principal appeared<lb/>
at the door.<lb/>
"Tom I looked up, "There are some men in my office who would<lb/>
like to talk with you<lb/>
Walking down the hall I considered the possible identities of the<lb/>
"men" my principal had so enigmatically mentioned. They might be<lb/>
some sort of military recruiters wanting to tell me that the Marine<lb/>
Corps oould make a man out of me, or perhaps, and more hopefully,<lb/>
they would be agents from some magazine or another wanting to give<lb/>
me the job. Regardless, my palms were moist before I stood in front of<lb/>
the thick, oak-grained door on which was affixed the awesome title<lb/>
"principal<lb/>
I he two men were youngish, I notioed upon walking in. One was<lb/>
slender and dark, the other was blond. I held out my hand to the<lb/>
slender one and instead of snaking it, he pulled a black wa-let-like<lb/>
thing out of his breast pocket and snapped it open in front of my face. It<lb/>
was a badge. "I'm Detective G� C� from the Narcotics Division. I am<lb/>
here to inform you that you are under arrest. You have the right to<lb/>
remain silent The mind defends itself with a device known as<lb/>
shock. I barely heard what the officer was saying. It was almost as if I<lb/>
were transfixed, there, sitting in the cushioned institutional office<lb/>
chair, not hearing what was being said and my oonscious mind refusing<lb/>
tooonfront the situation. "You have the right to consult an attorney<lb/>
Still, it is not long before the man who has lost his leg, indeed<lb/>
realized that he has lost his leg. A yellow piece of paper was handed to<lb/>
me. It seemed to make my hands shake. I read it and in the impersonal<lb/>
cant of jurisprudence I was informed that I was charged with "the<lb/>
distribution of a controlled substance, to wit: LSD My principal<lb/>
leared at me over his glasses. I hated him. I wondered which of the<lb/>
people I had sold add to had turned informer. I couldn't think of a<lb/>
single likely one, and indeed had no idea at all as to whom it was until I<lb/>
saw him in the witness box several months later.<lb/>
The two men prepared to leave but I just kept sitting. "You're<lb/>
coming with us said the tall one and produced a pair of handcuffs<lb/>
from his briefcase. Funny, I had thought all of it was going to be over<lb/>
when they left. I stood up and the other officer waved the handcuffs<lb/>
away. I ai.i grateful to this day for his touch of humanity.<lb/>
At the poiioe station they inked my fingertips and rolled them on<lb/>
paper. I stood in front of a grey wall and held a post-board sign with a<lb/>
number written on it in front of my chest while they took my picture.<lb/>
The same men who were in the principal's office asked me some<lb/>
quest ions about where I had gotten the acid and to whom I had sold it. I<lb/>
didn' i answer. They said I was entitled to one phone call; a privilege I<lb/>
made certain to enjoy. I called a friend of mine who was still at school<lb/>
and asked him to "bring the book on my night-table to the<lb/>
police-station" which was a code I knew he'd understand for "take my<lb/>
pot and flush it My friend was, prosaically, simply shitting, but he<lb/>
said he'd do it.<lb/>
The two men then lead me to an elevator. One of them pushed the<lb/>
button fa the top floa and when the metal doas re-opened we<lb/>
stepped into a small caged area. A large man, the jaila, came with<lb/>
keys jangling (much like they do on "Gunsmoke") and let us into his<lb/>
office. After some talk with the jaila the detectives left and the fat man<lb/>
walked me to a eel I. Once I was inside he closed the doa and left. I was<lb/>
alone.<lb/>
Paperback Best Sellers<lb/>
Star Wars by Geage Lucas<lb/>
Passages by Gail Sheehy<lb/>
Love's Wildest Fires by Christina<lb/>
Savage<lb/>
The Other Side of Midnight by<lb/>
Sidney Sheldon<lb/>
This Loving Torment by Valerie<lb/>
Sherwood<lb/>
Touch Not The Cat by Mary<lb/>
Stewart<lb/>
The Users by Joyoe Haber<lb/>
Ordinary People by Judith Guest<lb/>
What Really Happened to the<lb/>
Class of '65 by Michael Medved<lb/>
and David Wallechinsky<lb/>
Blind Ambition by John Dean<lb/>
The Pride of the Peacock by<lb/>
Victaia Holt<lb/>
Rogue's Mistress by Constance<lb/>
Gluyas<lb/>
Life After Life by Raymond A.<lb/>
Moody Jr.<lb/>
Magic by William Goldman<lb/>
The Deep by Peter Benchley<lb/>
�According to The New York<lb/>
Times<lb/>
Cinema Society offers<lb/>
Greenville film alternative<lb/>
ByDAVIDTREVINO<lb/>
Assistant Trends Edita<lb/>
Are you interested in viewing<lb/>
"quality" films right here in<lb/>
Greenville? The newly famed<lb/>
Cinema Society of Greenville<lb/>
wants to make them available at<lb/>
the most reasonable of rates.<lb/>
The purpose of the Cinema<lb/>
Society is to screen movies which<lb/>
would not namally appear either<lb/>
in the commercial theaters in<lb/>
town or Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. On a trial basis, the<lb/>
Cinema Society would like to<lb/>
make the following films available<lb/>
during the fall semester: The<lb/>
Go-Between, Love is a Funny<lb/>
Thing, Je T'Aime, Je T Aime,<lb/>
Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams<lb/>
and A Brief Vacation. An expan-<lb/>
ded selection may be offered in<lb/>
the spring if the response during<lb/>
the fall is enthusiastic enough.<lb/>
However if even one film is to<lb/>
be shown this fall, the Cinema<lb/>
Society needs at least 150 subscri-<lb/>
bers. The modest subscription fee<lb/>
of only $5.00 includes all five<lb/>
films to be screened this fall.<lb/>
Buying a subscription is the only<lb/>
way to see these movies as<lb/>
absolutely no tickets fa indivi-<lb/>
dual films will be made available.<lb/>
All subscriptions must be<lb/>
purchased by September 15 at the<lb/>
latest. They can be obtained by<lb/>
sending a check made payable to<lb/>
the Cinema Society of Greenville<lb/>
to either William Stephenson a<lb/>
Peter Makuck in care of the<lb/>
English Department in Austin<lb/>
here at ECU. The subscription<lb/>
tickets will be distributed at the<lb/>
doa of the first film to be shown<lb/>
on September 25.<lb/>
Preceded by a coffee hour, all<lb/>
the films will be screened Sunday<lb/>
evenings in the theater of the<lb/>
Jenkins Memaial Art Center.<lb/>
After September 25 the other<lb/>
showings will be the following:<lb/>
Oct. 9, Oct. 23, Nov. 6 and Nov.<lb/>
20.<lb/>
The oppatunity to see movies<lb/>
other than Godzilla on Monster<lb/>
Island and recycled commercial<lb/>
releases is limited indeed. The<lb/>
Cinema Society of Greenville is<lb/>
trying to change that situation<lb/>
and deserves the enthusiastic<lb/>
suppat of the East Carolina<lb/>
University community and the<lb/>
people of Greenville. Or else, you<lb/>
can just watch Shampoo faever.<lb/>
Album deluge scheduled<lb/>
for fall season release<lb/>
KEITH EMERSON OF Emerson, Lake and Palmer, The group's<lb/>
"Works" II LP is scheduled fa September release. Fountainhead<lb/>
File photo<lb/>
The Fall seasoi is approach-<lb/>
ing and textbooks aren't the only<lb/>
hot item on the market.<lb/>
The maja recad oompanies<lb/>
shouldn't be eyeing red as most<lb/>
are on the verge of re-stocking all<lb/>
the record stores with their<lb/>
seasonal discharge of discs.<lb/>
Along with the important<lb/>
Christmas shopping season, and<lb/>
after the demise of a maia fand<lb/>
very often mina) music figure,<lb/>
the early. Fall appears to be a<lb/>
favaite period fa most recad<lb/>
oompanies to release albums on a<lb/>
probability with profit in mind. Or<lb/>
maybe one should oared that<lb/>
sentence by saying a huge profit<lb/>
in mind.<lb/>
The pattern is definitely not<lb/>
being altered in the Fall of '77.<lb/>
The number of albums to be<lb/>
released in the next two months<lb/>
will be incredible. The record<lb/>
conpanies may not seal as many<lb/>
LP's as McDonalds sells Bin<lb/>
Macs. But Big Macs don't retail<lb/>
at $7.98 a piece.<lb/>
Warner Brothers fall-release<lb/>
Ifst induces Rod Stewart, the<lb/>
recently released Doobie<lb/>
Brahers' LP, Randy Newman,<lb/>
Maria Muldaur, Loe Sayer, yet<lb/>
another studio over-dubbed<lb/>
Hendrix album, a "best of"<lb/>
Jethro (Wasn't "Living in the<lb/>
Past sufficient?) Tull, new<lb/>
Leonard Cohen prodioed by Phil<lb/>
Spector, and the threedisc<lb/>
"Decade" retrospedive of Neil<lb/>
Young.<lb/>
Atlantic has Sept.3 scheduled<lb/>
fa the release of the long-delayed<lb/>
Rolling Stones live album, "Love<lb/>
You Live With album package<lb/>
artwak by Andy Warhol, how can<lb/>
these 'ole boys miss? Other<lb/>
September releases induce Ringo<lb/>
Starr, volumn two of ELPs<lb/>
"Waks a Small Faces (Rem-<lb/>
ember "ItohycooPark?") reunion<lb/>
album, without Ronnie Lane,<lb/>
Bette Midler, Roberta Flack,<lb/>
Abba, Mark Farner of Grand<lb/>
Funk fame, Phil Manzanera of<lb/>
Roxy Music, and the tempting<lb/>
Temptations.<lb/>
Motown has a Diana Ross<lb/>
studio album for September<lb/>
release. Odober releases induce:<lb/>
Smokey Robinson, Thelma<lb/>
Houston, !�� e Commodores,<lb/>
Junia Walker, a Eddie Kendncks<lb/>
greatest hits package, and a<lb/>
possible Fifth Dimension recad.<lb/>
Arista's Fall schedule indud-<lb/>
es Lou Reed, Rick Danko from the<lb/>
Band. Don McLean, Jery Garda<lb/>
and Bob Weir, with David<lb/>
Faman, and a hopeful Patti<lb/>
Smith LP.<lb/>
A live Crosby-Nash aium<lb/>
highlights ABC recad company<lb/>
Fall list. There will be a new<lb/>
music from Steely Dan, Levon<lb/>
Helm, and Don Williams.<lb/>
On Columbia. September re-<lb/>
leases include Aerosmith,<lb/>
Chicago, live Santana, Art<lb/>
Garfunkel, and Phoebe Snow.<lb/>
Odober's list comprises of fresh<lb/>
Boz Scaggs, Earth, Wind and<lb/>
Fire, another Loggins and<lb/>
Messina live album, and Neil<lb/>
Diamond. Bob Dylan and Paul<lb/>
Simon are both repute? to be<lb/>
reoading fa the Fall.<lb/>
New Linda Rondstadt,<lb/>
"Simple Dreams is scheduled<lb/>
fa release this week oi Elektra<lb/>
Asylum. Also fa September<lb/>
release is new Tom Waits.<lb/>
Odober'slist induces Queen and<lb/>
Joe Walsh.<lb/>
On Epic and other roiated CBS<lb/>
labels, new Rick Nelson, Gilbert<lb/>
OSullivan, Wild Cherry, Charlie<lb/>
Daniels. MFSB, David<lb/>
Johanssen, and Isley Brothers are<lb/>
schedulec fa . jiease.<lb/>
Richie Havens and Gato<lb/>
Barbieri are on the slates fa<lb/>
immediate release by A and M<lb/>
recads. Also fa Fall release are:<lb/>
a Peter Allen live album,<lb/>
Carpenters, Rick Wakeman, Nils<lb/>
Lofgren, Michele Phillips, Joan<lb/>
Armatrading, Pablo Cruise, Billy<lb/>
Preston, and Billy Swan.<lb/>
RCA'stall release list indudes<lb/>
the recently released Hall and<lb/>
Oates, Iggy Pop, David Bowie,<lb/>
Jefferson Starship, and John (the<lb/>
Pat Boone of the 70s) Denver.<lb/>
Of oourse these, are just a few<lb/>
of the many albums, from just a<lb/>
few of the many recad compan-<lb/>
ies, to be looking fa in the very<lb/>
near future. With kids returning<lb/>
to their respedive college cam-<lb/>
puses, carrying a pocketful of<lb/>
cash, the record companies have<lb/>
dollar signs in thoir eyes. It's the<lb/>
time of the season and they will<lb/>
definitely make the moot of it.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058003_0008"/><lb/>
g<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD September 1,1977<lb/>
Tuesday's concert on the malt<lb/>
Tenth Avenue shows tasteful restraint<lb/>
ByMACMCKZE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
There is a formula to Top-40<lb/>
rock music that is difficult to<lb/>
master.<lb/>
It is essential that the songs<lb/>
be concise and polished, as well<lb/>
as tightly performed. If this<lb/>
formula is followed step by step,<lb/>
then it should seem logical that<lb/>
the band using this formula<lb/>
"hould be a suocess. It sounds<lb/>
simple enough, but it isn't.<lb/>
There are some bands that no<lb/>
matter how hard they try, they<lb/>
simply aren't good imitators of a<lb/>
certain artist, or artists, that they<lb/>
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bring aaoss in performance. If a<lb/>
band plans to stay in the Top-40<lb/>
genre, it is important that they be<lb/>
instantly recognizable to the<lb/>
average music fan.<lb/>
That fan may be a rabid radio<lb/>
listener of three to four hours<lb/>
everyday. Another person may<lb/>
listen to the radio for only an hour<lb/>
twice a week. But it really<lb/>
doesn't matter. A band who plays<lb/>
popular music as the basis of their<lb/>
show, can't afford to make those<lb/>
kind of assumptions about the<lb/>
people they play to.<lb/>
On the other hand, it is<lb/>
detrimental that the band not<lb/>
make the mistake of becoming<lb/>
slaves to the formula. When a<lb/>
band does fall victim to the<lb/>
formula, they are depriving the<lb/>
audience of the stamp of original-<lb/>
ity the band puts on the music, as<lb/>
well as depriving the band of the<lb/>
natural feel and emotion they<lb/>
need to make the show a success.<lb/>
Tenth Avenue has mastered<lb/>
these two extremes of the formula<lb/>
very well. They have been able to<lb/>
do so by a capable mix of material<lb/>
that will please the singles<lb/>
fanatic, yet not disappoint the die<lb/>
hard rock 'n' roller. Tenth<lb/>
Avenue is also a band of tasteful<lb/>
restraint. All of the members are<lb/>
potent soloists, but they are really<lb/>
able to showcase their talents<lb/>
playing as a unit.<lb/>
During their concert rm thp<lb/>
Mall Tuesday night, the band's<lb/>
professionalism shone, well. Lead<lb/>
vocalist Steve uuinney sang with<lb/>
the confidence of any rock'n' roll<lb/>
veteran. L.D. Worly won the<lb/>
respect of the crowd with his<lb/>
searing guitar lines.<lb/>
The rythym section of drum-<lb/>
mer Danny Lupton and bassist<lb/>
Mickey Hayes was unrelenting<lb/>
throughout the evening. All of<lb/>
this musical activity was further<lb/>
enhanced by Johnny Cut red's<lb/>
commandment of the keyboards.<lb/>
The band blistered every song<lb/>
that they performed. The stand-<lb/>
outs fa the evening included a<lb/>
rousing version of Aerosmith's<lb/>
"Walk This Way"<lb/>
impressive aiginaJ<lb/>
 Bar Star<lb/>
But tw-band's<lb/>
Boston's "Smokin"<lb/>
delight. In<lb/>
song, the<lb/>
and a very<lb/>
tune called<lb/>
treatment of<lb/>
was a true<lb/>
the execution of the<lb/>
band was flawless.<lb/>
Steve Quinney especially sang in<lb/>
with such power, it would have<lb/>
made Boston's Bradley Delp turn<lb/>
green with disbelief.<lb/>
Apart from a few technical<lb/>
problems, the evening was a<lb/>
enjoyable one. Tenth Avenue may<lb/>
not strike some people as daring<lb/>
as some bands, but there are few<lb/>
of them that are as proficient.<lb/>
Mar�Kay<lb/>
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present your student ID<lb/>
and this ad from now until<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058003_0009"/><lb/>
September 1,1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
holds musical auditions<lb/>
THE LEO JENKINS Art Building.<lb/>
Auditions for the East<lb/>
Carolina Playhouses season<lb/>
opener will he held Thursday and<lb/>
Friday nights of this week, from<lb/>
7:30 to 10:00 p.m. in McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium on the E.CU.<lb/>
Campus.<lb/>
The musical comedy, BYE<lb/>
BYE BIRDIE directed by Edgar<lb/>
Loessin, is scheduled for perform-<lb/>
ance October 10 through 15 at<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium. The char-<lb/>
acters range in age from high<lb/>
school students, faculty and staff,<lb/>
as well as to citizens of Greenville<lb/>
and the surrounding area.<lb/>
"Anyone interested is invited<lb/>
to try out said Loessin, who is<lb/>
Artistic Director of the Playhouse<lb/>
and Chairman of the Department<lb/>
of Drama and Speech at ECU<lb/>
"People who audition should<lb/>
be prepared to sing a song of their<lb/>
own choice-we'll provide an<lb/>
accompanist-and to danoe. Our<lb/>
choreographer, Frank Wagner,<lb/>
will lead each auditionee through<lb/>
some movements<lb/>
BYE BYE BIRDIE written by<lb/>
Michael Stewart with music by<lb/>
Charles Strouse and lyrics by Lee<lb/>
Adams, tells the story of a rock<lb/>
and roll singer who is about to be<lb/>
inducted into the army. "The play<lb/>
was inspired by the success of<lb/>
Elvis Presley in the late 1950 s,<lb/>
and we thought it would be a<lb/>
fitting tribute to his passing<lb/>
Loessin said.<lb/>
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�����MHHHVHBBHHRHniHRfliHHB<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAiNHEAD September 1,1977<lb/>
9 9<lb/>
I<lb/>
East Carolina Medical Sch<lb/>
increases staff with nurse-midwife<lb/>
ECU NEWS Bureau<lb/>
A unique training exper-<lb/>
ience is awaiting East Carolina<lb/>
University medical students when<lb/>
Josephine Hookway, a nurse-<lb/>
midwife on the clinical staff of the<lb/>
ECU Department of Obstetrics<lb/>
-Gynecology begins teaching later<lb/>
this month.<lb/>
M rs. Hookway sees her teach-<lb/>
ing role as giving medical<lb/>
students practical training and<lb/>
instruction in support of expect-<lb/>
ant mothers.<lb/>
"I see myself as one who's<lb/>
helping to improve the outcome of<lb/>
pregnancy she said.<lb/>
Mrs. Hookway's objective is<lb/>
timely and necessary, since the<lb/>
infant mortality rate for eastern<lb/>
North Carolina was 21.3 per 1,000<lb/>
live births in 1975 as compared to<lb/>
a rate of 18.5 fa the state and<lb/>
16.1 fa the natiai.<lb/>
The N.C. Board of Medical<lb/>
Examiners, the agency which<lb/>
licenses all Tarheel doctors,<lb/>
granted Mrs. Hookway approval<lb/>
in April, allowing her to carry out<lb/>
her current responsibilities under<lb/>
supervision of an obstetrician-<lb/>
gynecologist.<lb/>
She explained she can handle<lb/>
all aspects of namal pregnancy<lb/>
from the pregnancy test through<lb/>
delivery This means she can<lb/>
give instruction to other nurses<lb/>
and perfam physicals, she said.<lb/>
Because her duties are similar<lb/>
to those of a medical decta, Mrs.<lb/>
Hookway finds it necessary to<lb/>
carry malpractice insurance.<lb/>
In addition to her teaching<lb/>
duties, she is doing normal<lb/>
deliveries at Pitt Memaial and<lb/>
waking in two prenatal clinics in<lb/>
the Pitt County Health Depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
During the month of June, she<lb/>
perfamed 14 deliveries.<lb/>
Mrs. Hookway's experience<lb/>
and Tedentials are impressive.<lb/>
She received her registered nurs-<lb/>
ing education in native Great<lb/>
Britain at St. Mary's College in<lb/>
Cardiff. She waked as a nurse<lb/>
midwife and instructa of medical<lb/>
students in England fa five<lb/>
years.<lb/>
In 1959, she and her husband<lb/>
emigrated fron England to the<lb/>
Kinston area where her husband<lb/>
took a job as a physicist with<lb/>
DuPont. After taking the register-<lb/>
ed nursing examination Mrs.<lb/>
Hookway went to wak at Lenoir<lb/>
Memaial Hospital in the Labor<lb/>
and Delivery Department.<lb/>
In 1972, Mrs. Hookway left<lb/>
Lenoir Memaial to teach nursing<lb/>
at Lenoir Community College.<lb/>
After four years as an instructa,<lb/>
she went to Booth Maternity<lb/>
Center in Philadelphia for a<lb/>
four-month course in her special-<lb/>
ity and was duly certified as a<lb/>
nurse-midwife by the American<lb/>
College of Nurse-Midwives last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Mrs. Hookway said she has<lb/>
good rappat and waking rela-<lb/>
tioiships with Pitt County obstet-<lb/>
ricians who ask her to come to<lb/>
Greenville to help with the patient<lb/>
load.<lb/>
 She is doing an excellent job.<lb/>
We don't know what we would do<lb/>
without her said one. "She<lb/>
serves as a liasion person<lb/>
between the health department<lb/>
and us, and she takes care of<lb/>
patients prenatal I y and post nat al-<lb/>
ly<lb/>
"I think there is a need fa<lb/>
mae nusse specialists to relieve<lb/>
overwaked doctors said Mrs.<lb/>
Hookway. "In Europe all namal<lb/>
hospital deliveries are perfamed<lb/>
by nurse midwives<lb/>
Practicing midwives are also<lb/>
mae common in the Natheast<lb/>
and Midwest regions of the<lb/>
country tnan in the south, she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Many people ask me if I<lb/>
believe in home deliveries. I'm<lb/>
not in fava of it. I think women<lb/>
should have babies in the<lb/>
hospital, which is the safest<lb/>
place she said.<lb/>
Answers<lb/>
to<lb/>
crossword<lb/>
puzzle<lb/>
Would you like to see Colle-<lb/>
giate Crossword appear in the<lb/>
Trends Section of the Fountain-<lb/>
HEAD AS A REGULAR FEA<lb/>
TURE? If you do, write a call<lb/>
Michael Futch, Trends Edita, at<lb/>
the Fountainhead, 757-6366.<lb/>
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Apply for telephone service at 1530 Hooker Road.<lb/>
CaroinaTetephone<lb/>
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uTS<lb/>
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SHOP<lb/>
Formerly of Downtown Greenville<lb/>
has moved to its new location.<lb/>
We Feature;<lb/>
GIBSON FENDER<lb/>
MARTIN AMPEti<lb/>
GUITARS &amp; AMPS.<lb/>
Plus all the other, musical instruments.<lb/>
tThe Music Shop<lb/>
viUe Square Shopping Center<lb/>
(Next to K-mart)<lb/>
hurs. &amp; Fri. nights until 9 p.m.)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058003_0011"/><lb/>
"Must" game for both<lb/>
wnbar 1,1977 FX NTAINHEAD Pap 11<lb/>
Tn<lb/>
AN<lb/>
MA<lb/>
IT<lb/>
N'<lb/>
As<lb/>
iR<lb/>
M�:<lb/>
AB<lb/>
NA<lb/>
AT<lb/>
IY:<lb/>
IS<lb/>
<lb/>
Pirates, Pack clash Saturday<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
By late Saturday night the<lb/>
mystery surrounding the football<lb/>
teams of NC State and East<lb/>
Carolina will be known. State<lb/>
hopes that this first game will be<lb/>
the start of a winning season and<lb/>
the end of the losses the Pack<lb/>
suffered last year. Meanwhile<lb/>
ECU is hoping that their young<lb/>
team, which lost eleven starters<lb/>
from last year, will take up where<lb/>
last years team left ott. in tnis,<lb/>
the eighth meeting of the two<lb/>
schools, both head ooaches Pat<lb/>
Dye and Bo Rein feel that their<lb/>
teams are capable of doing the job<lb/>
of winning games.<lb/>
As far as East Carolina is<lb/>
concerned, Pat Dye feels both<lb/>
anxious and optimistic about his<lb/>
team's chances this year.<lb/>
"I thinkwehave more players<lb/>
than ever before, but due to the<lb/>
lack of experioe, I'm not sure<lb/>
about the quality said Dye. "It<lb/>
may not be what it has in the past<lb/>
I think we have more depth, in<lb/>
that we have more players<lb/>
capable of winning. I'm real<lb/>
anxious to see this team play, just<lb/>
like I think the players are<lb/>
anxious. I think we'll have a good<lb/>
sound football team before the<lb/>
year is over, but I don't know if<lb/>
we'll start out that way. But no<lb/>
matter what happens early, we<lb/>
will just have to keep on, keeping<lb/>
on<lb/>
The injury situation has been<lb/>
a problem this year although it is<lb/>
felt that most of the injuries will<lb/>
be straightened out by game<lb/>
time.<lb/>
"We were hurt some in<lb/>
pre-season with the wet and cool<lb/>
weather, along with injuries<lb/>
Dye said. "Otherwise, things<lb/>
were pretty good. Our practices<lb/>
haven't been what we wanted<lb/>
them to be, but then all teams<lb/>
find this to be true. If it were not<lb/>
true, then the team is not being<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Here are the starting line ups fa East Carolina and N.C. State. We<lb/>
felt it necessary to publish this chart since there are so many new<lb/>
players for both teams. You may want to cut this out and take it to the<lb/>
game. This will be done on a weekly basis for your convenience.<lb/>
East Cardina-vs-N.C State<lb/>
Saturday Sept. 3, 1977 700 p.m.<lb/>
Carter Stadium, RaJeigh, N.C.<lb/>
Last years soore: ECU 23, NCSU 14<lb/>
OFFENSES: East Cardina-wishbone; N.C. State-twin veer<lb/>
DEFENSES: East Cardina-5-2; N.C. State-5-2<lb/>
1976 RECORDS: East Carolina 9-2-0<lb/>
N.C. State 3-7-1<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
OFFENSE<lb/>
When East Carolina has the ball<lb/>
TE Barry Johnson (Sr. 225)<lb/>
LT Mitchell Smith (Jr. 236)<lb/>
LG Nelson Smith (Jr. 238)<lb/>
C Rickie Hdliday(Sr. 193)<lb/>
RG Wayne Bolt (Sr. 257)<lb/>
RT Matt Mulholland (Jr. 235)<lb/>
SE Terry Gallaher(Sr. 174)<lb/>
LHB Willie Hawkins(Sr. 188)<lb/>
FBVinoeKolanko(Sr.188)<lb/>
RHB Eddie Hicks (Jr. 201)<lb/>
QB Jimmy Southerland (Sr. 170)<lb/>
or Leander Green (So. 165)<lb/>
Wolfpack<lb/>
DEFENSE<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
E Joe Hannah (So. 223)<lb/>
E Marion Gale (So. 190)<lb/>
LT Tom Prongay (Sr. 239).<lb/>
MGA.W.Jenkins(Sr.224)<lb/>
RT Simon Gupton (So. 252)<lb/>
LBKyleWescoe(Jr.225).<lb/>
LB Bill Cowher (Jr. 216) .<lb/>
CB Tommy London (Sr. 204)<lb/>
CB Richard Carter (Sr. 164)<lb/>
SS Ralph Stringer (Sr. 198)<lb/>
FS Woodrow W i I son (So. 181)<lb/>
DEFENSEOFFENSE<lb/>
1 East CarolinaWhen N. C. State has the ball<lb/>
SSE John Mario (So. 206)TETomFabiny(Jr. 188)<lb/>
LT Wayne Poole (Jr. 235).LT Chris Dieterich (So. 219)<lb/>
I NG Oliver Felton (Jr. 207).LGTimGillespie(Jr.232)<lb/>
1 RT Noah Clark (So. 225) .CJimRichter(So. 238)<lb/>
WSE Zack Valentine (Jr. 218)RG Rodger Parker (So. 219)<lb/>
SLB Harold Randolph (Sr, 195)RT Ricky Olive (So. 232)<lb/>
WLB Harold Fat (Sr. 193)SE Elijah Marshall (Sr. 186)<lb/>
LCB Char I ie Carter (So. 173)HB Ted Brown (Jr. 188<lb/>
1 SSGeraldHall(Jr. 184) .FB Timmy Johnson (Sr. 188)<lb/>
1 FS Steve Hale (Sr. 177) .FLK Randy Hall (Jr. 179)<lb/>
RCB Willie Holley (So. 176)QB Johnny Evans (Sr. 200)<lb/>
waked hard enough<lb/>
When talking about the Pirate<lb/>
offense, Coach Dye feels confi-<lb/>
dent in his two quarterbacks,<lb/>
Leander Green and Jimmy<lb/>
Southerland. Dye also feels good<lb/>
about his backs and the offensive<lb/>
line.<lb/>
Dye saidWe've never gone<lb/>
into a game with two quarter-<lb/>
backs that are out fa the first<lb/>
time ai their own. But then<lb/>
everyone must start somewhere. I<lb/>
have confidence in both Jimmy<lb/>
Southerland and Leander Green.<lb/>
Thev are nip-and-tuck and it will<lb/>
go right down to starting time<lb/>
befae we know who will be the<lb/>
first team quarterback. We may<lb/>
even alternate throughout the<lb/>
State game. I think we will be<lb/>
able to do mae things this year<lb/>
with our offense due to the people<lb/>
we have. Terry Gallaher at split<lb/>
end and Willie Hawkins and<lb/>
Eddie Hicks at running back are<lb/>
excellent skill people. Half our<lb/>
line is back but half is new. I think<lb/>
we can be better up front.<lb/>
A oonoern of Coach Dye this<lb/>
year has been the defense. Last<lb/>
year the Pirates had the third best<lb/>
defensive team in the nation.<lb/>
Dye teams so far at ECU have<lb/>
been naed fa their fine defen-<lb/>
sive play. Still, even with six of<lb/>
last years starters back, Coach<lb/>
Dye is a bit waried<lb/>
"I'm real concerned about<lb/>
defensive line going into the State<lb/>
game said Dye. "State has big<lb/>
people on their offensive line and<lb/>
we just aren't that big defensive-<lb/>
ly. If we do na play good<lb/>
technique, then we are in trouble<lb/>
there. Our linebackers are solid,<lb/>
the best position on the squad.<lb/>
"As fa the secondary, we<lb/>
have the ability but na the<lb/>
experience. There is no substitute<lb/>
fa either, but I'd much rather<lb/>
have ability with no experience<lb/>
than no ability and no experience<lb/>
together<lb/>
JOHNNY EVANS<lb/>
See EVANS, page 14<lb/>
Dye announces seven Pirate<lb/>
. waikons to serve as captains<lb/>
East Carolina coach Pat Dye<lb/>
has put special emphasis on his<lb/>
waikons this season. And Satur-<lb/>
day night at N.C. State, Dye will<lb/>
dimax that emphasis by making a<lb/>
dream come true fa the senia<lb/>
walkais.<lb/>
Seven young men that aigi-<lb/>
nally entered East Carolina with-<lb/>
out aid to play football will serve<lb/>
as captains fa the opening game.<lb/>
Those seven are: Junior<lb/>
Creech, kicker from Smithfield,<lb/>
N.C; Rickie Holliday, center<lb/>
from Williamston, N.C Barry<lb/>
Johnson, tight end from Farm-<lb/>
ville, N.C; Eddie Murphy, nose-<lb/>
guard from RaJeigh, N.C; Larry<lb/>
Paul, linebacker from Raleigh,<lb/>
N.C Harold Randolph, lineback-<lb/>
er from Greenville, N.C; and<lb/>
Jimmy Southerland, quarterback<lb/>
from Wilmington, N.C.<lb/>
 These four young men came<lb/>
here four years ago with nahing<lb/>
except a promise to play and try<lb/>
and make the team said Dye.<lb/>
"Each of these four has stuck it<lb/>
out fa the four years and made<lb/>
contributions in many ways. I<lb/>
think fa them to be captains<lb/>
Saturday night is just great<lb/>
Five d the seven have earned<lb/>
scholarships since joining the<lb/>
team and five of the seven are<lb/>
likely starters against the Wdf-<lb/>
paok, Creech, Holliday, Johnson,<lb/>
Randolph and Southerland are<lb/>
expected to start.<lb/>
"It's almost unheard of to<lb/>
have four starters and five senias<lb/>
ai scholarship that were aigi-<lb/>
nally walkais added Dye.<lb/>
"That's great<lb/>
Eddie Murphy, termed by Dye<lb/>
as "the best scout team and team<lb/>
man I've had at East Carolina<lb/>
noted, "Being selected a game<lb/>
captain isagreat hona. It's just a<lb/>
tremendous thrill<lb/>
Jimmy Southerland added,<lb/>
"The first year I get here I was<lb/>
the 11th team quarterback. You<lb/>
can't get discouraoed that first<lb/>
year. Being selected as a captain,<lb/>
I feel, is a reward fa four years of<lb/>
hard wak<lb/>
And perhaps Rickie Holliday<lb/>
sums up the feeling of the entire<lb/>
group the best.<lb/>
"It was tough coming as a<lb/>
walkon said Holliday, "Really<lb/>
tough. During my freshman year,<lb/>
there were several times I consi-<lb/>
dered quitting. I never thought<lb/>
I'd play here. But with wak, I<lb/>
found myself playing a lot my<lb/>
sophomae and junia years. To<lb/>
walkon and stay with it, you just<lb/>
have to love the game. Being<lb/>
captain is a great feeling. If s one<lb/>
of the greatest feelings I've had<lb/>
since I've been here. I have no<lb/>
regrets at all being a walkon<lb/>
When the seven original<lb/>
senia walkais step to midfield<lb/>
Saturday night with helmets<lb/>
under arm at 658 p.m. fa the<lb/>
ooin toss, yet andher dream will<lb/>
have come true fa walkais at<lb/>
East Carolina University.<lb/>
SEVEN SENIOR PIRA TE waikons will be the team<lb/>
captains for Saturday night's dash with N. C. State.<lb/>
They are from left to righi Eddie Murphy NGl<lb/>
Barry Johnson TE, Rickie Holliday C, Larry Paul<lb/>
LB, Jimmy Southerland QB, Harold Randolph<lb/>
LB and Junior Creech KPhoto by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
<pb facs="00058003_0012"/><lb/>
MMBHi<lb/>
99 LiHtv-r<lb/>
�VBHH HHi<lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD September 1,1977<lb/>
I<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058003_0013"/><lb/>
September 1,1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
Bolt returns for fourth year as a starter<lb/>
In the wishbone offense, the<lb/>
guard block is usually the key to<lb/>
the inside running game. With<lb/>
Pirate fullbacks having lost yard-<lb/>
age on only two plays out of over<lb/>
170 last season, the guards were<lb/>
doing their job admirably. Wayne<lb/>
Bolt, senior all-American cand-<lb/>
idate, was the top grader on the<lb/>
Pirates' offensive line last season<lb/>
and returns fa his fourth year as<lb/>
a starter.<lb/>
Bolt graded out at 68 peroent<lb/>
for the year, which in the Pirates'<lb/>
grading system is very high. As<lb/>
he approaches the ooming season<lb/>
he will be the key man on the<lb/>
Pirates' fine offensive line. He is<lb/>
also the key pulling guard that<lb/>
springs running backs like Eddie<lb/>
Hicksand Willie Hawkins for long<lb/>
gainers.<lb/>
"I really like the pulling<lb/>
game Bolt said. "You can get<lb/>
out there and just sustain your<lb/>
block for a second and Hicks a<lb/>
Hawkins have already blasted by.<lb/>
Also, it's every guard's dream to<lb/>
be able to get a one-on-one block<lb/>
against one of those 180-pound<lb/>
defensive backs<lb/>
The 6-1, 265-pound native of<lb/>
Augusta, Ga would outweigh<lb/>
that back by 50 percent, but does<lb/>
not lack the speed. His 5.0 in the<lb/>
40 is considered good fa his size.<lb/>
Bolt and Matt Mulholland,<lb/>
starters on the right side center,<lb/>
ECU-State Tickets<lb/>
Today at 200 pm. 750 tickets will go on sale fa the ECU NCSU<lb/>
game. These were extra tickets that were not picked up at State.<lb/>
There will be 350 student tickets and 400 General admission.<lb/>
If you do not have a ticket this will be your last chance to get one.<lb/>
are the only returning starters on<lb/>
the line, but Bolt has confidence<lb/>
in all the starters fa this seasai.<lb/>
"We could be better on the<lb/>
line this year than last season<lb/>
Bolt added. "We will be much<lb/>
bigger. Rickie Holliday has in-<lb/>
creased has bench (press)<lb/>
tremendously, as has Nelson<lb/>
Smith. Mitchell Smith and Barry<lb/>
Johnson have both played a lot in<lb/>
the past and are like starters<lb/>
already<lb/>
Na being heavily reauited in<lb/>
high school, Bdt's high school<lb/>
ooach told Pirate head coach Pat<lb/>
Dye that he knew Bolt could play<lb/>
ooilege ball. Dye took the wad<lb/>
and Bolt has been starting since<lb/>
the middle of his freshman vear.<lb/>
"I feel this made me a much<lb/>
better player, na being reauited<lb/>
heavily Bolt said. "I was<lb/>
probably a la hungrier than a<lb/>
player that was a big star. I know<lb/>
I have to play a la.<lb/>
Bolt also said he liked the<lb/>
closeness of the team, at ECU.<lb/>
Since most of the players were na<lb/>
heavily reauited out of high<lb/>
school, he said, they always drove<lb/>
towards improvement. This, he<lb/>
says, has brought the team into a<lb/>
closely knitted group.<lb/>
The tough schedule lined up<lb/>
fa the Pirates this seasai also<lb/>
has Bolt excited.<lb/>
"Every team we play will be<lb/>
better than last year he stated.<lb/>
"State is going to be mighty<lb/>
tough and improved. They'll be<lb/>
shoaing for us since we beat<lb/>
them last year<lb/>
WAYNE BOLT<lb/>
Dye show rescheduled<lb/>
This week the Pat Dye show will be seen on Sunday at 6.00 p m It<lb/>
will feature highlights of the East Carolina-N.C. State game<lb/>
Again this year the show will be hosted by "The voice of the<lb/>
Pirates, Jim Woods.<lb/>
The show will be aired on channel 9 Greenville.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
for sale @<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. $380.00 but will<lb/>
Negotiate. Call 752-6713.<lb/>
FOR SALE Olivetti adding mac. 6<lb/>
months old, 80.00, 120.00 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 channel-$300.00<lb/>
for the pair. Call 746-4898.<lb/>
1973 FORD TORINO. 4 deer 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/>
loave<lb/>
STEREO axnplete with built in<lb/>
turntable, reel to reel, cassette<lb/>
unit and speakers. 150.00 Sharp<lb/>
System. Call Elm Villa 752-4349.<lb/>
COMPACT REFRIGERATOR<lb/>
freezer stainless steel top w2<lb/>
burners. Call Vicki 758-6227.<lb/>
PANASONIC STEREO- Reel to<lb/>
Reel tape deck, auto reversing.<lb/>
Excellent cond. $150.00. Call<lb/>
752-6042.<lb/>
BOOKTRADER located, caner of<lb/>
Evans &amp; 11th. Trade your paper-<lb/>
backs, buy used paperbacks also<lb/>
comic book-Tues. thru Sat. 9-4<lb/>
FOR SALE: AKC Basset Hound<lb/>
females, tri-ooJaed, 10 mos &amp; 4<lb/>
yr. All shas &amp; housebroken.<lb/>
$100.00 firm fa each female. Do<lb/>
na fit into my breeding program.<lb/>
Bandits Bassets 447-2872.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pair of ladies ice<lb/>
skates size 8. If interested call<lb/>
"Jo" at 752-0411.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Maey Boogie Surf-<lb/>
board '77 $50.00. Twin fins,<lb/>
excellent conditioi. 758-9655.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Honda 360<lb/>
excellent cond. under 8,000 miles<lb/>
new tire and battery, elec. star,<lb/>
only 600.00 Call 752-9600 a carte<lb/>
by 211C Scott Dorm.<lb/>
ART STUDENTS- Exhibit and sell<lb/>
your work oi ansignment 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/>
<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 Compoient 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-1Q5 8-track<lb/>
Deck. Large Advent Speakers<lb/>
with utility cabnet. Approximate<lb/>
Saleprioe $650.00 Buzz Chip at<lb/>
758-1437.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Leather tae bag<lb/>
(dance bag) Brand new. 50.00 on<lb/>
best offer. Call 758-8724.<lb/>
BUNDY TRUMPET and music<lb/>
stand and case- take best offer<lb/>
call John Rouse 753-2091.<lb/>
torrent<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Wanted<lb/>
to share rent, $145.00 &amp; utilities,<lb/>
in a one-bedroom apartment<lb/>
located at 12th &amp; Cotanche.<lb/>
752-2476.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE needed to<lb/>
share 2 bedrm. apt. at Tar River,<lb/>
205 Apt8, Elm St<lb/>
personal (�<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Village<lb/>
Green Apts. Call Carroll at<lb/>
752-4161, days 746-6112, nights.<lb/>
LOST: Ring, yellow-gold, black<lb/>
onyx stone, reward. Call 757-6055<lb/>
ask fa Dr. Long.<lb/>
LOST: Dog, white with black<lb/>
spas, looks like a bird dog. His<lb/>
name is Oreo and he'll oome if<lb/>
you call him that. He has a flea<lb/>
collar with Arkansas tag. About 6<lb/>
months old. Last seen on campus<lb/>
and the aher side of 5th street. If<lb/>
found please call 752-1696 a<lb/>
cane by 402 Biltmae St. and ask<lb/>
fa Denny. There is a reward.<lb/>
LEARN TO BELLY,DANCE<lb/>
authentic dance lessens by a<lb/>
professional fa the maith of<lb/>
Sept. ONLY 25.00! This offer will<lb/>
na be repeated. Course will be<lb/>
offered aaoss the street from<lb/>
Kappa Sigma house within walk-<lb/>
ing distance of campus on Tues.<lb/>
and Thurs. nites from 7.00-8.00<lb/>
P.M. Call 752-5214 fa mae info<lb/>
a come Sept. 1 at 700. 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/>
WANT TO BUY: 120 mm a<lb/>
35mm camera. Call Linda, 752-<lb/>
0385, after 3 p.m.<lb/>
YOGA LESSONS Turn tension<lb/>
into energy. Senderize your body<lb/>
as you renew the elasticity of your<lb/>
skin and musdes. The oldest<lb/>
science for a youthful body.<lb/>
Special introduaion to each area<lb/>
of your body during the month of<lb/>
Sept. only 25.00! Within walking<lb/>
distanoe of campus. Tues and<lb/>
Thurs. nite 8-9 aaoss from Kappa<lb/>
Sigma house. Classes begin Sept.<lb/>
1 Call 752-5214 fa mae info.<lb/>
Antique Show &amp; Flea Mkt.<lb/>
Greenville Collect as Club's 6th<lb/>
annual-Sun Sept. 4, 12-� PM-<lb/>
at Wcodside Antiques, U.S. 264<lb/>
West. Info, call 752-3456.<lb/>
KITTENS to good home call<lb/>
Rebecca after 5O0 at 752-0102.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Wet suit, good<lb/>
design fa waterskiing, exoellent<lb/>
oondition. 758-9655.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Twin bed (mattress,<lb/>
springs, head &amp; feet boards, the<lb/>
waks!) Like new. One brown arm<lb/>
chair. Come by 402 Biltmae St.<lb/>
and ask fa Jim.<lb/>
72 RED TRIUMPH SPITFIRE<lb/>
752-8799 ask for Robin.<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/>
NEEDED: 1 female roommate, 1<lb/>
bedroom apt. 3 blocks from<lb/>
campus. $60 and half utilities.<lb/>
Call Chariateat 758-7821.<lb/>
ROOMATE NEEDED (ECU<lb/>
STUDENT PREFERRED( FOR<lb/>
TRAILER. Colonial Trailer Park<lb/>
after 5O0 La 39.Located at<lb/>
caner of Hwy 11 and 264 ByPass.<lb/>
ARE YOU WORKING YOUR<lb/>
WAY THROUGH COLLEGE? Get<lb/>
ready fa tuition selling wald<lb/>
famous Avon Produas. High!<lb/>
Flexible hours. Call 752-7006.<lb/>
WANTED: A Junior or Sen-<lb/>
IOR MALE MAJORING IN Mer-<lb/>
chandizing to work part-time<lb/>
salesperson. Call 752-9265.<lb/>
CRAFT CLASSES- Maaame and<lb/>
weaving dasses, $10.004 weeks.<lb/>
Sign up now at the Silver Thread,<lb/>
218-A E 5th St. 752-3601.<lb/>
Anyone intaested ip faming<lb/>
a Film Society to make films<lb/>
generally na seer in this area<lb/>
available to the , ublic, contact<lb/>
Charles Lawrence at 752-6388<lb/>
after 7 p.m. a write to Box 27,<lb/>
Falkland, N.C. 27827.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058003_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD September 1.1977<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
m<lb/>
�<lb/>
Quarterback decision goes down to wire<lb/>
As the East Carolina Pirates<lb/>
prepare to open their 1977<lb/>
football season Saturday night in<lb/>
Carter Stadium against the Wolf-<lb/>
pack of North Carolina State, one<lb/>
question still remains unanswer-<lb/>
edWho will be the number one<lb/>
signal caller for the Pirates?<lb/>
The battle is being waged by<lb/>
two contenders with about equal<lb/>
ability, Jimmy Southerland from<lb/>
Wilmington, N.C and Leander<lb/>
Green, a native of Jacksonville,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
When watching the two on the<lb/>
field, it is hard to pick a dear<lb/>
victor of the contest. tBoth are<lb/>
excellent runners, both pass the<lb/>
ball well, and both are very<lb/>
familiar with the famed wishbone<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
How do these two competitors<lb/>
view the struggle for supremacy?<lb/>
"I think both of us can do the<lb/>
job says Southerland, the<lb/>
senior signal caller.<lb/>
"We've both prepared to<lb/>
run the dub fa a long time, and I<lb/>
know that whichever one of us<lb/>
gets the nod, he'll do the job<lb/>
LEANDER GREEN<lb/>
JIMMY SOUTHERLAND<lb/>
EVANS<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
In talking about NC State,<lb/>
Coach Dye is quick to point out<lb/>
that State will present the Pirates<lb/>
with quite a problem. With<lb/>
quarterback Johnny Evans and<lb/>
running back Ted Brown, the<lb/>
Pirates will face a formitable foe.<lb/>
" I f we were as experienced as<lb/>
last year, then it would be okay<lb/>
Dye said. "I'd rather have<lb/>
someone to open with this year<lb/>
that we were supposed to beat,<lb/>
with so much inexperience. But<lb/>
then we've got to start with<lb/>
someone and there is a mighty<lb/>
good motivational fador with a<lb/>
game like this<lb/>
I know one thing We will<lb/>
have to be at our very best to beat<lb/>
State. They are going to be a<lb/>
much improved football team.<lb/>
And if there is a psychological<lb/>
edge, then it must go to State due<lb/>
to their losing to us last year.<lb/>
"I've got to think they will be<lb/>
much improved. We will probably<lb/>
face the most skilled people we've<lb/>
ever played against. Both their<lb/>
wideouts run a 4.4. Ted Brown is<lb/>
a super running back and Johnny<lb/>
Evans is a dangerous young man.<lb/>
They feel they have the best<lb/>
center they've ever had. While<lb/>
their line is young, it's big and<lb/>
has lots of ability.<lb/>
"On defense State has more<lb/>
speed than ever before. They are<lb/>
experienced at three secondary<lb/>
positions and have good exper-<lb/>
ienced people at linebacker and<lb/>
across the front line. The soph-<lb/>
mores they plan to pJay Have<lb/>
outstanding ability and speed<lb/>
The State-ECU game this year<lb/>
is not just another game or just an<lb/>
opening game, this game oould<lb/>
chart a course fa the whole<lb/>
season fa both teams. A loss fa<lb/>
either team would have to hurt<lb/>
maal, but a win would be a great<lb/>
start which would carry over into<lb/>
the entire seaseon.<lb/>
Another sellout aowd will be<lb/>
on hand to see what will no doubt<lb/>
be one of the great games of the<lb/>
season from two teams that want<lb/>
to start out the year winning.<lb/>
special late show<lb/>
Fri. CrSat. nite<lb/>
11" pm<lb/>
GODARD<lb/>
Sympathy forthe Devil (Kl)<lb/>
"A movie experience<lb/>
of major importance<lb/>
-Canby, NY TIMES<lb/>
In Ecttmancolor and Englith<lb/>
Cttpld Product on from New Lin Cmiini<lb/>
all seats $2.00 (r)<lb/>
(ireen echoed that statement,<lb/>
but added that starting was not<lb/>
that important to him.<lb/>
"It won't bother me at all if I<lb/>
don't start the Jacksonville<lb/>
sophomae stated. "I know that<lb/>
I'm going to play a lot no matter<lb/>
what, and that is what is<lb/>
impatant<lb/>
Both candidates agree that<lb/>
they are about equal in terms of<lb/>
ability, but Southerland feels that<lb/>
he has one advantage over his<lb/>
younger rival.<lb/>
"I feel like I do have more<lb/>
game experience he said.<lb/>
"When I came here my freshman<lb/>
year I was about the 11th team<lb/>
quarterback, but I soon found<lb/>
myself at number two. My<lb/>
sophomae year I played in every<lb/>
gam and I played in a few<lb/>
games last year as well, so if<lb/>
there is any advantage fa me at<lb/>
all, it's got to be game exper-<lb/>
ience<lb/>
Even with the competition<lb/>
that has been taking place<lb/>
between these two athletes, nei-<lb/>
ther one says that it has affeded<lb/>
their relationship off the field.<lb/>
"When you're competing<lb/>
against someone said Souther-<lb/>
land, "it's hard to be good<lb/>
friends. But in this case, Leander<lb/>
and I are pretty good friends. We<lb/>
talked about this a lot befae<lb/>
pradice started and we agreed<lb/>
then that we would not let this<lb/>
whole thing affed our friend-<lb/>
ship<lb/>
"When we get off the field<lb/>
and back at the dam a even ai<lb/>
campus adds Green, "wedoi't<lb/>
really spend much time talking<lb/>
about football. I can honestly say<lb/>
that going head to head against<lb/>
Jimmy has not affected us<lb/>
negatively in any way<lb/>
At the start of spring pradice,<lb/>
Southerland was listed as the top<lb/>
candidate fa the quarterback<lb/>
spot, but an injury faced him to<lb/>
miss all but a oouple of days of<lb/>
pradice. Meanwhile, Green was<lb/>
gaining valuable experience.<lb/>
"I was pretty discouraged<lb/>
about missing the spring said<lb/>
Southerland. "Ever since I came<lb/>
here I have thought about what it<lb/>
would be like to be the number<lb/>
one quarterback on the team.<lb/>
When I was injured, I was afraid<lb/>
that chance had been lost fa<lb/>
good<lb/>
In oontrast, Green feels that<lb/>
the spring gave him the chance to<lb/>
show his wares, and moved him<lb/>
into the position he now shares.<lb/>
However, both players agree<lb/>
that starting, although nice and<lb/>
somewhat prestigious, is not the<lb/>
basis of success.<lb/>
"We both know we're going<lb/>
to play said Green. "It all boils<lb/>
down to who does the better job<lb/>
on the field<lb/>
"Right now, we're both num-<lb/>
ber one added Southerland,<lb/>
"and our job is to see that our<lb/>
team ends up that way<lb/>
Qmt<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
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slacks 20 off<lb/>
15 off on all golf clubs and golf<lb/>
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THE TREE HOUSE RESTAURANT<lb/>
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Ladies Night-Tues. 9-12p.m.<lb/>
Happy Hour - Wed. Night 8-10p.m.<lb/>
Free Delivery Service Hours 5-12p.m.<lb/>
$1.50 Min. for Campus<lb/>
$3.00 Min. for City<lb/>
<pb facs="00058003_0015"/><lb/>
September 1,1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
Field hockey team young but promising<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In the midst of all the<lb/>
preseason excitment surrounding<lb/>
the Pirates football program,<lb/>
there's another head coach on<lb/>
campus who's just as exoited as<lb/>
Pat Dye about her upcoming<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The irrepressible Laurie Ar-<lb/>
rants, head coach of the women's<lb/>
field hockey team, is out on the<lb/>
field every morning at 650 with<lb/>
her team to conduct practice<lb/>
sessions. Arrants and the rest of<lb/>
her squad are eagerly anticipa-<lb/>
ting their season opener Septem-<lb/>
ber 24, when the Pirates host the<lb/>
Clemson Tigers.<lb/>
"I'm really excited about this<lb/>
year's team said Arrants, now<lb/>
entering her third season as head<lb/>
coach. "The girls we've got out<lb/>
here have made up their minds<lb/>
t they' re going to be ready. They<lb/>
' have shown a tremendous amount<lb/>
of enthusiasm and I'm expecting<lb/>
much improvement from this<lb/>
team despite their youth<lb/>
Last year the Pirates posted a<lb/>
7-7-2 overall record. Seven start-<lb/>
ers are returning from that squad.<lb/>
Arrants indicated that this<lb/>
year the team will switch to a<lb/>
 systems type game cm the field<lb/>
instead of the "Traditional" style<lb/>
which the Pirates have used<lb/>
during the last two season.<lb/>
"The traditional style of play<lb/>
was simply using designated<lb/>
players in designated areas on the<lb/>
field explained Arrants. "The<lb/>
systems strategy works much like<lb/>
basketball with several different<lb/>
patterns and formations we can<lb/>
switch to during the game. It will<lb/>
open up the game and provide a<lb/>
faster paced game for us<lb/>
Sophomore Kathy Zwigard<lb/>
and senior Linda Christian are the<lb/>
Pirates top two otrensive piayets<lb/>
back from last year. Zwigard, a<lb/>
RI(,(,A<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER GOODS<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
1<lb/>
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1-51 11 49.95<lb/>
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PC-100A 164.95<lb/>
m MOWM UBHC1 TOAVAUHnm<lb/>
SHIPPED FREE<lb/>
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ilM��ff W Ml<lb/>
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P 0 BOX W 104 � CHAlhAM STRH1<lb/>
VM NORTH CWLM 750<lb/>
�)'  "000<lb/>
THIS AD IS SELDOM RUN PLEASE,<lb/>
cuprofifuruRf reeerence j<lb/>
native of Lawrenoeville, N.J. was<lb/>
the team's leading scorer with ten<lb/>
goals while Christian, from War-<lb/>
ren, N.J scored three goals from<lb/>
her winq position.<lb/>
" Kathy's an extremely ag-<lb/>
gressive player with excellent<lb/>
quickness said Arrants. "Linda<lb/>
matured into a very steady player<lb/>
last year and I'm counting on her<lb/>
to assume a lot of responsibility<lb/>
on the field this yea Since both<lb/>
of them play on the same side of<lb/>
the field they really oompliment<lb/>
each other. They'll be the key to<lb/>
our offense<lb/>
Susan Saltzer. a soohomore<lb/>
from Cherry Hill, N.J returns to<lb/>
the team after sitting out last<lb/>
season because of personal prob-<lb/>
lems. She was a top offensive<lb/>
performer during her freshman<lb/>
year and will be playing at either<lb/>
wing or halfback.<lb/>
Defensively, the Pirates will<lb/>
look to senior Beth Beam, who<lb/>
will be at the centerback position.<lb/>
Beam, a native of Springfield,<lb/>
Pa made the Deep South<lb/>
All-Star 3rd team in last year's<lb/>
Deep South tournament and will<lb/>
be calling the signals on defense<lb/>
for the Pirates.<lb/>
She'll get help from junior<lb/>
halfback Montine Swain, labeled<lb/>
by Arrants as one of the "tough-<lb/>
est" players on the team, along<lb/>
with junior halfback Sally Burch,<lb/>
who was the goalkeeper last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The all important goalkeeper<lb/>
position will be manned by Leigh<lb/>
Sumner, a freshman from Newton<lb/>
Grove, N.C. who has never<lb/>
played field hockey until last<lb/>
spring. She attended a field<lb/>
hockey camp this summer at<lb/>
Appalachian State where instruc-<lb/>
tors were simply amazed at her<lb/>
natural ability. Arrants feels<lb/>
Sumner "has everything it takes<lb/>
to beoome a tough goalie<lb/>
Sue Jones is another top<lb/>
ACADEMIC<lb/>
RESEARCH<lb/>
ALL SUBJECTS<lb/>
Fast, professional, and proven<lb/>
quality Choose from our library of<lb/>
7.000 topics Send $1.00 for the<lb/>
current edition of our 220 page<lb/>
mail order catalog<lb/>
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE<lb/>
11322 IDAHO AVE No. 206-E<lb/>
LOS ANGELES. CALIF 90025<lb/>
(213) 477-8474<lb/>
Our research papers are sold for<lb/>
research purposes only.<lb/>
Please rush my catalog<lb/>
Enclosed is $l.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
City <lb/>
State <lb/>
Zip<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD REGRETS THAT THE<lb/>
AI) FOR CLIFF'S SEAFOOD WHICH<lb/>
APPEARED IN THE AUGUST 30 ISSUE<lb/>
WAS IN ERROR. THE AD LISTED<lb/>
CRABCAKES AT 99 IT SHOULD HAVE<lb/>
READ "crabcakes91JMT.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD APOLOGIZES TO<lb/>
CLIFF'S AND THOSE STUDENTS WHO<lb/>
WERE INCONVENIENCED BY THE<lb/>
MISTAKE.<lb/>
freshman prospect who could<lb/>
break into the starting lineup. She<lb/>
scored eight goals last season for<lb/>
her Bayside High School team<lb/>
and was highly recruited by other<lb/>
college teams.<lb/>
"We're facing another highly<lb/>
competitive schedule this year<lb/>
said Arrants. "We've got Duke,<lb/>
Carolina, Wake Forest, and High<lb/>
Point on our schedule along with<lb/>
some stiff competition in tourna-<lb/>
ments. We've got to continue to<lb/>
improve fundamentally and ma-<lb/>
ture quickly to be competitive this<lb/>
season<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY 1977 FIELD HOCKEY SCHEDULE<lb/>
10:00 a.m.<lb/>
4:00 pm<lb/>
10:00 am<lb/>
330 pm<lb/>
All Day<lb/>
130 pm<lb/>
400 pm<lb/>
lOflOam<lb/>
330 pm.<lb/>
TBA<lb/>
Sept. 24Clemson Univ.Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Sept. 29Duke UniversityGreenville, N.C.<lb/>
Oct.1UNC-GreensboroGreensboro, N.C<lb/>
Oct.4UNC-Chapel HillGreenville, N.C.<lb/>
Oct.8Winthroplnvita.Rock Hill, S.C.<lb/>
Oct.9Davidson CollegeDavidson, N.C.<lb/>
Oct. 13Old Dominion U.Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
Oct.15High Point Col.Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Oct.21Wake Forest U.Winston-Sal em<lb/>
Nov. 4-6Deep South Tour.Greenville, S.C. (FurmanUniv.)<lb/>
Tonight Thru Sunday<lb/>
At The Elbo Room<lb/>
'DAZZLE4<lb/>
Fri. 3-7 Beat State Pep Rally<lb/>
with Dazzle<lb/>
Every Sun. is ladies night<lb/>
HI HODGES<lb/>
Free ECU T-Shirt<lb/>
with any shoe purchase<lb/>
r �<lb/>
j-<lb/>
K<lb/>
KB<lb/>
�H<lb/>
to<lb/>
'�'�� . -�<lb/>
.<lb/>
All swimming supplies<lb/>
and Official<lb/>
ECU P.E. uniforms<lb/>
available<lb/>
Pat's Hats still available<lb/>
210 East 5th St. 752-4156<lb/>
<pb facs="00058003_0016"/><lb/>
16 FOUNTAINHEAD September 1, 1977<lb/>
Roger's Family Restaui<lb/>
; now in Pirate Country<lb/>
Come on in and try<lb/>
our delicious Western<lb/>
Fried Chicken. It's<lb/>
great to carry out to<lb/>
the ballgame!<lb/>
"The best<lb/>
of the fresh<lb/>
waitin' in convenient carry-<lb/>
out paks of 8 and 10. There's<lb/>
a big 20pc. pak too for under<lb/>
SI0.00. The whole gang can<lb/>
enjoy it<lb/>
8pc. pak-$3.90<lb/>
12pc. pak-$5.75<lb/>
20pc. pak- $8.95<lb/>
You've got my word<lb/>
on it, pardner.<lb/>
Don't forget to include some<lb/>
helpin's of our crisp, western<lb/>
fries an' fresh cole slaw, too.<lb/>
So, c'mon in and carry-out<lb/>
our famous fried chicken to<lb/>
Wolfpack Country this<lb/>
week-end.<lb/>
10 discount on any<lb/>
chicken purchase<lb/>
of SI0.00<lb/>
or more.<lb/>
Yes Pirates,<lb/>
We Now Have Breakfast, Also!<lb/>
THIS COUPON GOOD FOR<lb/>
gj 25� OFF<lb/>
t ON ANY BREAKFAST ITEM LISTED BELOW<lb/>
Blueberry Waffle Scrambled Eggs and Sausage<lb/>
Waffle and Sausage Creamed Chipped Beef<lb/>
FAMILY<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
MonSat. 630 A.M1030 A.M.<lb/>
jZfa<lb/>
Bteal&amp;ai Htm<lb/>
LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER<lb/>
��; v�Av� l0W'<lb/>
. Mii 1jij: 9t:vj.yjw<lb/>
�; VJ'WJ �.�� �<lb/>
25<lb/>
v<lb/>
<lb/>
e TimeCall Ahead and Reserve Your Order<lb/>
752-1401 E. Tenth St. Greenville<lb/>
Your order will be weitin' for youl<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
stop in at any of our Raleigh Locations Hillsborough St. 832-4256<lb/>
Western Blvd. 833-7898<lb/>
� . �  - �  ��:�� .<lb/>
<pb facs="00058003_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>