<?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="00058013_0001"/>
Serving the campus cpnv<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSDE<lb/>
Diet class p. 3<lb/>
Greenville postp. 3<lb/>
Buffettp. 8<lb/>
Gillmanp. 12<lb/>
Vol. 53 No. 13<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
13<lb/>
1?77<lb/>
McGinnis needs<lb/>
funds for repairs<lb/>
ByJUUEEVERETTE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Plans have been drawn up to<lb/>
renovate the drama and speech<lb/>
building if a funding bill is<lb/>
proposed and approved by the<lb/>
General Assembly in the spring,<lb/>
according to Edgar Loessin,<lb/>
chairman of the drama depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
According to Loessin,<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium will be<lb/>
completely renovated, new heat-<lb/>
ing and air conditioning systems<lb/>
will be put in the building, and<lb/>
the wiring and plumbing will be<lb/>
restored.<lb/>
"We were granted $80,000 by<lb/>
the state several years ago to plan<lb/>
renovations for the building<lb/>
Loessin said. However, the pro-<lb/>
posed bill was vetoed.<lb/>
"We will need $2.6 million<lb/>
dollars to renovate the building<lb/>
"We hope to get the majority<lb/>
of funds from the state Loessin<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We are also interested in<lb/>
getting private donations in which<lb/>
case we will consider renaming<lb/>
the building<lb/>
According to Cliff Moore, Vioe<lb/>
Chancellor of Business Affairs, a<lb/>
bill for funding capital improve-<lb/>
ment projects for several univer-<lb/>
sities needs to be proposed and<lb/>
approved in 1978 before money is<lb/>
received for renovations.<lb/>
According to Loessin,<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium is in need<lb/>
of many repairs.<lb/>
"The auditorium is in very<lb/>
poor oondition said Loessin.<lb/>
"We need new dance floors in<lb/>
the studios<lb/>
"The present floors are con-<lb/>
crete which is extremely danger-<lb/>
ous.<lb/>
"The wiring in the building,<lb/>
although not hazardous, causes<lb/>
inconvenience and discomfort<lb/>
Loessin said the drama and<lb/>
speech building was top priority<lb/>
on the university list of future<lb/>
renovations.<lb/>
The building was originally<lb/>
built as a training school for<lb/>
elementary school teachers, ac-<lb/>
cording to Loessin.<lb/>
It became the drama depart-<lb/>
ment four years ago.<lb/>
???<lb/>
COLD, RAINY WEATHER brings out the umbrellasand the sniffles.<lb/>
Calder: adequate parking<lb/>
exists on campus for all<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Plenty of parking spaces exist<lb/>
on campus for everybody, ao-<lb/>
REAL crisis offers services to<lb/>
students, county residents<lb/>
ByMIKEJOSEMANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Real Crisis Intervention Inc.<lb/>
offers several services to resi-<lb/>
dents of Pitt County.<lb/>
Real offers a HELP line 24<lb/>
hours daily, a team service for<lb/>
teenagers between the ages of 13<lb/>
and 19 who are looking for jobs<lb/>
within the community (758-1976),<lb/>
and a rape victim companion<lb/>
program, according to Mary<lb/>
Larew, program coordinator.<lb/>
The companion to a rape<lb/>
victim assists her with court<lb/>
procedures, police, and costs.<lb/>
One expanding program is<lb/>
Youth Services, which helps<lb/>
teenagers with problems with<lb/>
parents, school, and jobs.<lb/>
Plans fa a Woman's Aid<lb/>
service is currently underway,<lb/>
which will help battered wives.<lb/>
Last year's SGA appropriated<lb/>
Real $3,000 which was used for<lb/>
painting, remodeling, pamphlets,<lb/>
research books, office supplies,<lb/>
phone bill and light payments.<lb/>
Phone bills were estimated to be<lb/>
$1800 fa last year. The bills<lb/>
average approximately $150 a<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Real's services are available<lb/>
to everybody. Out of state callers<lb/>
will be directed to a service<lb/>
assistance program in their local<lb/>
area.<lb/>
Fifty people wak at Real<lb/>
during the day hours, and three<lb/>
people wak at night.<lb/>
oading to Joe Calder, Directa of<lb/>
Security and Traffic<lb/>
"There is adequate parking<lb/>
space to take care of ail our needs<lb/>
at all times said Calder.<lb/>
"We don't have a parking<lb/>
problem, we have an educational<lb/>
problem<lb/>
Several parking lots are lo-<lb/>
cated behind Joyner Library fa<lb/>
university registered vehicles,<lb/>
said Calder.<lb/>
"The wase time fa parking<lb/>
is 10 a 11 a.m and there are<lb/>
always more cars en rainy days<lb/>
Calder said da students<lb/>
should not arrive on campus five<lb/>
a ten minutes befae the hour of<lb/>
their class because the may have<lb/>
to walk funher than they like to<lb/>
get to the building.<lb/>
Calcter said women students<lb/>
fron Clement dam have to walk<lb/>
aaoss campus to get to their<lb/>
classes, and sometimes they walk<lb/>
that distance two a three times a<lb/>
day.<lb/>
There is a parking la fa<lb/>
university registered vehicles at<lb/>
the intasection of Ninth and<lb/>
Cotanche Streets which is very<lb/>
rarely used, according to Calder.<lb/>
Calder said he parked his car<lb/>
on the Irt of Ninth and Grtanche<lb/>
and walked to the music building.<lb/>
"It took me seven minutes<lb/>
he said, "and I'm an old man<lb/>
A parking lot was built this<lb/>
summer in front of the drama<lb/>
building and spaces are rented<lb/>
$90 yearly.<lb/>
Calder said it will take four<lb/>
years to pay ott the cost, and that<lb/>
revenue thaeafter will be used<lb/>
fa constructing aha las.<lb/>
Nicotine research<lb/>
REAL MOVED FROM this house to one on South Evans Street in 1974.<lb/>
By JOE YAEGEfi<lb/>
Staff Writa<lb/>
Research is uncterway in the<lb/>
ECU Medical School to determine<lb/>
the effects of nicotine on reprod-<lb/>
uction.<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Louis recently<lb/>
received a $22,000 grant from the<lb/>
March of Dimes Foundation to<lb/>
continue research en nicotine.<lb/>
The March of Dimes is an<lb/>
aganizatioi primarily concerned<lb/>
with pre-natal care and birth<lb/>
defects.<lb/>
The research is conducted on<lb/>
both guinea pigs and maras, a<lb/>
relative of the guinea pig, which<lb/>
weighs between 30 and 40<lb/>
pounds.<lb/>
"These animals were chosen<lb/>
because the placenta! develop-<lb/>
ment is very similar to that in<lb/>
humans Louis said. "What we<lb/>
are looking fa are changes in<lb/>
reproduction, such as in preg-<lb/>
nancy j hamones, birth, and<lb/>
embryology (fetal develop-<lb/>
ment)<lb/>
Louis stressed that the<lb/>
research is concerned solely with<lb/>
the effects of nicotine, and rxx<lb/>
with smoking in genaal.<lb/>
The animals are innoculated<lb/>
with niortine and then monitaed<lb/>
fa changes in reproductive pro-<lb/>
cesses, according to Louis. He<lb/>
said research has been underway<lb/>
fa about a year so far, and he<lb/>
expects wak to continue fa<lb/>
anaha year to 18 months.<lb/>
"It's too soon into the wak to<lb/>
have any substantial results<lb/>
Louis said. "And I couldn't<lb/>
divulge anything until reports<lb/>
have been made<lb/>
Reports will be made on a<lb/>
semi-annual basis to the March of<lb/>
Dimes Foundation, and the final<lb/>
results will be repated in scient-<lb/>
ific journals and to meetings on<lb/>
reproduction and obstetrics,<lb/>
according to Louis.<lb/>
Related studies on nicotine's<lb/>
effects are being conducted at the<lb/>
Harvard Medical School which is<lb/>
using rats fa subjects, according<lb/>
toLouia<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0002"/><lb/>
rv - -? r ?  SSgwf<lb/>
. ? m -<lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 13 October 1977<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
Coffeehouse Faculty<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
Prospective teachers who plan<lb/>
to take the National Teachers<lb/>
Examinations Nov. 12,1977 at<lb/>
ECU are reminded that they have<lb/>
less than two weeks to register<lb/>
with Educational Testing Service<lb/>
(ETS) of Princeton, NJ. Those<lb/>
taking the Common Examinations<lb/>
will report at 830 a.m. and finish<lb/>
at atxxrt 12'30 p.m. Area Exam-<lb/>
inations are scheduled from 1 30<lb/>
p.m. to about 415 p.m.<lb/>
Nurses<lb/>
Student Nurses Association<lb/>
come one come all. Freshman<lb/>
through Senior nursing majors<lb/>
Men Oct. 17 in Nursing Bldg.<lb/>
rm. 101.<lb/>
Inter-Varsity<lb/>
Inter-Varsity will meet this<lb/>
Sun. night at 8 p.m in the<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural Center.<lb/>
Beta lota<lb/>
The Beta lota chapter of<lb/>
Gamma Theta Upsilon, the<lb/>
National Geography Honor<lb/>
Society, is looking for members to<lb/>
join during the '7778 school<lb/>
year. There are two categories of<lb/>
membership: Associate, which<lb/>
requires a minimum of oie course<lb/>
in Geography, and regular, which<lb/>
requires a minimum of three<lb/>
Geography courses with an over-<lb/>
all B average in all Geography<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
Several activities are being<lb/>
planned, including trips to Geo-<lb/>
graphy conventions. Anyone who<lb/>
has ideas to share and would like<lb/>
to apply fa membership should<lb/>
see Dr. Birchard, Brewster A-232<lb/>
fa an application fam.<lb/>
Karate<lb/>
Ticketsarenowon sale fa the<lb/>
FIRE FALL concert in Mendenhali<lb/>
Student Center. Ticket prices are:<lb/>
$3 fa students and $5 fa the<lb/>
public. The concert will be Sun<lb/>
Nov. 6th at 8 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. FIREFALL is another<lb/>
in a series of concerts brought to<lb/>
you by the Popular Entertainment<lb/>
Committee of the Student Union.<lb/>
Panhellenic<lb/>
The ECU Panhellenic Council<lb/>
will be having a Happy Hour at<lb/>
BlimpiesThurs Oct. 13, 9 p.m.<lb/>
until. There will be a .25<lb/>
admission.<lb/>
A Japanese Karate Club (JKA<lb/>
style) is being famed. Those who<lb/>
have trained JKA previously a<lb/>
those who are interested in this<lb/>
style call 756-3767 and leave<lb/>
name and number.<lb/>
TKE<lb/>
Trip<lb/>
Trip fees for the trip to<lb/>
Snowshoe, W. Va. over Thanks-<lb/>
giving must be paid in full Thurs.<lb/>
at 4 p.m downstairs in MemaiaJ<lb/>
Gym 109. if you do not pay at this<lb/>
time, you will not be eligible to<lb/>
go. Once again, it is $52.00 with<lb/>
own equipment and $74 with<lb/>
rental. If there is no snow, your<lb/>
money will be refunded.<lb/>
The TKE little sisters are<lb/>
having a car wash Sat Oct. 15,<lb/>
from 10 til 3, at Pitt Plaza Gulf.<lb/>
The price is only $1.50 per car.<lb/>
Come get your car cleaned up fa<lb/>
the game that night.<lb/>
Hot Dogs<lb/>
If you're hungry and want to<lb/>
satisfy your tummy, then come to<lb/>
Fleming lobby on Wed. Oct. 19<lb/>
from 11 til 1 fa sane good ole hot<lb/>
dogs with all the fixins Reason-<lb/>
able prices. First come, first<lb/>
serve. Hope to see ya'll there.<lb/>
Art<lb/>
Umstead is having its first<lb/>
annual art exhibition Oct. 17 in<lb/>
the lobby of Umstead dam - all<lb/>
day fran 8-5. Cane, browse, buy,<lb/>
a just enjoy.<lb/>
Spaisaed by the cultural arts<lb/>
canmittee.<lb/>
BSU<lb/>
Announcing a very well ad-<lb/>
vertised seaet. It's coming soon<lb/>
to YOUR local Baptist Student<lb/>
Union. Celebrate!<lb/>
Dance-A-Thon<lb/>
Last call to oome on out and<lb/>
"Dance the Night Away Rem-<lb/>
ember, "you can't stop dancing<lb/>
just because the music stopped<lb/>
2nd annual dance-a-thon for<lb/>
Eastern Lung Association - this<lb/>
Fri. and Sat. - Oct. 14-15, 8 p.m. -<lb/>
8 a.m Wright Auditaium. Grab<lb/>
those pledge sheets and infom-<lb/>
atiai pages fron the Student<lb/>
Stae Check Approval Counter a<lb/>
the counter beside the Menden-<lb/>
hali Infamatioi Desk. Put oi<lb/>
your dancing shoes and come on<lb/>
out Friday night - refreshments<lb/>
and food will be provided fa<lb/>
those who dance. If YOU can't<lb/>
dance, come cheer on those WHO<lb/>
WILL! Sponsored by Gamma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Service Saaity.<lb/>
Nappy Hour<lb/>
Doi't miss "HAPPY HOUR"<lb/>
at Mendenhali Student Center.<lb/>
Prices are Vi off on billiards, table<lb/>
tennte, and bowling. The time is 3<lb/>
p.m. until 6 p.m. every Monday.<lb/>
Don't miss it!<lb/>
Basketball<lb/>
Walk-on basketball try-outs<lb/>
will be held Sat Oct. 15 at 7:45<lb/>
a.m. in Minges.<lb/>
"The Adventures of Sherlock<lb/>
Holmes' Smarter Bra her Oct.<lb/>
14, 7 p.m. &amp; 9 p.m. Oct. 15, 2<lb/>
p.m. Mendenhali Student Center<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
A slapstick comedy full of<lb/>
affection and generous feelings<lb/>
fa the genre it's having fun with.<lb/>
Gene Wilder makes an impres-<lb/>
sive debut as a comedy directa.<lb/>
Thisfilm isa Holmesian pastiche,<lb/>
a comedy of wit and imagination.<lb/>
"Smarter Brother" is marked by<lb/>
subtleties and controlled intelli-<lb/>
gence.<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Thomas H. Barrett, chemistry<lb/>
graduate student, will present a<lb/>
seminar on "Fourier Transfam<lb/>
NMR" Oct. 14, 1977 at 2 p.m. in<lb/>
room 201 Flanagan Building.<lb/>
Fourier Transfam NMR is<lb/>
rapidly gaining acceptance as an<lb/>
excellent replacement fa conven-<lb/>
tional NRM in research and<lb/>
common applications. In this<lb/>
seminar the electromagnetic<lb/>
theay, advantages of, and instru-<lb/>
mentation of Fourier Transfam<lb/>
NRM will be covered.<lb/>
Model U.N.<lb/>
Model United Nations meet-<lb/>
ing this Thurs at 7 p.m. Oct. 13<lb/>
in Brewster Owing 105. All new<lb/>
members weloome. Mock Secur-<lb/>
ity Council will be held at 1 p.m.<lb/>
Sun Oct. 16 in Brewster C-wing<lb/>
104.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Red Pin Bowling is back! At<lb/>
the Mendenhali Student Center<lb/>
Bowling Center you can have a<lb/>
chance to win one (1) free game<lb/>
with every game bowled. If the<lb/>
red pin is the head pin and you<lb/>
make a strike, you win. Every<lb/>
Thursday evening, from 8 p.m.<lb/>
until 11 p.m oould be your lucky<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
The Rebel, ECU's literary-arts<lb/>
magazine, is now accepting sub-<lb/>
missions in poetry, fiction, es-<lb/>
says, art wak, and photography.<lb/>
Submit your material to the Rebel<lb/>
office a mail it to the Rebel,<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center.<lb/>
Please make sure to keep a copy<lb/>
of each wak of literature fa<lb/>
yourself, and include your name,<lb/>
address, and phone number on all<lb/>
wak.<lb/>
Bowling Clinic<lb/>
Professional bowler, Vesma<lb/>
Grinfelds, will conduct a shat<lb/>
bowling clinic at the Mendenhali<lb/>
Student Center Bowling Center<lb/>
Mon Oct. 17, fron6 p.m. until 8<lb/>
p.m. Co-sponsaed by Menden-<lb/>
hali Student Center and the<lb/>
Department of Health, Physical<lb/>
Education, Reaeation and Safety<lb/>
in conjunction with the Nationl<lb/>
Bowling Council, the program is<lb/>
open to all interested students at<lb/>
no charge. Don't miss this rare<lb/>
oppatunity to learn from a true<lb/>
professional in the spat.<lb/>
Relax your mind after all of<lb/>
the heavy thinking &amp; studying<lb/>
you have put in fa mid term<lb/>
exams, at ECU Coffeehouse.<lb/>
Thurs &amp; Fri Oct. 13-14. Teresa<lb/>
Guilles will ease all of your pain<lb/>
with some folk, aiginal, and<lb/>
many many mae favaite tunes.<lb/>
Alaig with Teresa will be the<lb/>
sensatioial, "Ed and Mark<lb/>
playing their most delightful<lb/>
tunes, along with getting you to<lb/>
really flow easy. Coffeehouse<lb/>
room 15 Mendenhali Student<lb/>
Center. 50 cents admission, free<lb/>
refreshment.<lb/>
I.V.<lb/>
Due to the Fall conference,<lb/>
I.V. will not meet this Sunday<lb/>
night. However, we will meet the<lb/>
following Sunday.<lb/>
Social<lb/>
Attention Jewish students.<lb/>
There will be an introductay<lb/>
social Fri Oct. 14at 7 p.m. at the<lb/>
DEN, (behind Mendenhali). Plen-<lb/>
ty to eat and drink. Fa infama-<lb/>
tioi call : Caey Duber 756-1518 a<lb/>
Dr. Resnich 756-5640.<lb/>
ACU-I<lb/>
All students interested in<lb/>
participating in the ACU-I reaea-<lb/>
tioial tournaments this semester<lb/>
should pick up necessary infama-<lb/>
tioi at the Billiards and Bowling<lb/>
Centers at Mendenhali. Day<lb/>
students and dam student preli-<lb/>
minary tournaments will be held<lb/>
to select the participants to<lb/>
compete in the All-Campus Tour-<lb/>
naments sponsoed by Menden-<lb/>
hali. Winners of the final tourna-<lb/>
ments will be sent to the regional<lb/>
tournaments in Blacksburg, Va.<lb/>
The competition will involve<lb/>
billiards, bowling, table tennis,<lb/>
and chess. Register today!<lb/>
Bridge<lb/>
The Bridge Club meets each<lb/>
Thursday evening at 730 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center. All<lb/>
persons interested in playing<lb/>
bridge are invited to attend.<lb/>
Registers<lb/>
Freshman Registers may be<lb/>
picked up in room 229, the<lb/>
vice-president's office, in Men-<lb/>
denhali Student Center.<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
f<lb/>
The Intramural Detriment<lb/>
would like to remind everyone<lb/>
that the following activities begin<lb/>
registration this month: Track<lb/>
and Field, Oct. 10-11; Sccoer?<lb/>
Oct. 10-13; Team Handball, Oct<lb/>
17-20; Archery, Oct. 17-20.<lb/>
The following co-reaeational<lb/>
activities are also offered: Two-on<lb/>
two basketball, Oct. 10-13; Bowl-<lb/>
ing, Oct. 17-20. Sign up in the<lb/>
Intramural office 204 MemaiaJ<lb/>
Gym.<lb/>
All faculty-staff members are<lb/>
invited to participate in the<lb/>
faculty fitness program which is<lb/>
being held Monday, Wednesday,<lb/>
and Friday at 1200-1 00 p.m. in<lb/>
Memaial Gym. All those interes-<lb/>
ted in jogging, exercising, basket-<lb/>
ball, swimming, etc. should re-<lb/>
pot to the gymnastics rcom oi<lb/>
the first flax of Memaial Gym<lb/>
any Monday, Wednesday, or<lb/>
Friday at 12:00.<lb/>
Blood Drive<lb/>
ECU Air Face ROTC, Detach-<lb/>
ment 600 will be spoisoing a<lb/>
blood drive. It will run from the 25<lb/>
of October through the 27 of<lb/>
October. It will be held in Wright<lb/>
Auditaium ai the ECU campus.<lb/>
The hours will be Tuesday<lb/>
October 23rd from 11 to 5 CO,<lb/>
Wednesday October 26 from 10 to<lb/>
4 00 and Thursday October 27<lb/>
fron 10 to 4.00. The goal this year<lb/>
is 1,000 pints. Please show your<lb/>
suppat and GIVE A PINT-SAVE<lb/>
A LIFE.<lb/>
Pi Sigma<lb/>
A meeting fa Pi Sigma Alpha<lb/>
members and current eligible<lb/>
members will be held on Thurs-<lb/>
day, Oct. 13, at 7.00 p.m. in<lb/>
BD-108. The business fa this<lb/>
meeting includes voting new<lb/>
eligibles to membership, discus-<lb/>
sing membership dues, and plan-<lb/>
ning chapter activities fa the<lb/>
upcoming year. All members are<lb/>
strongly urged to attend. Refresh-<lb/>
ments and an informal get-<lb/>
together of old and new members<lb/>
will follow the business session of<lb/>
this meeting. Fa further infama-<lb/>
tioi call Lynne Yow at 758-1346.<lb/>
Comic Club<lb/>
Like to spend your ramy<lb/>
afternoons reading Superman<lb/>
mae than Hemmingway? Then<lb/>
come to the ECU Comic Club<lb/>
meeting this Tuesday, October<lb/>
18, 7 p.m. in room 248 of<lb/>
Mendenhali.<lb/>
FG<lb/>
The Foever Generatioi is a<lb/>
campus Christian fellowship<lb/>
group. We encourage you to join<lb/>
us fa a meaningful study in<lb/>
God's Wad, as well as a time of<lb/>
infamal fellowship! The time is<lb/>
7:30 Friday nights-the place is<lb/>
Brewster B-103. Take a break<lb/>
from frmoutine and join us then!<lb/>
Alpha Delta<lb/>
Appliaatoons will be taken fa<lb/>
the Th?a Chapter of Alpha Delta<lb/>
lu Natioial Social Wok Hoia<lb/>
Soaetysjpsm October 10 through<lb/>
PflMr 31. An overall 3.3<lb/>
average with at least 7 hours of<lb/>
SOcifM?rk course credit is<lb/>
requirWThose interested may<lb/>
Pick up applications at the<lb/>
Department of Social Wok and<lb/>
Correcticns(Ms. Lewis, Dr. Kle-<lb/>
daras) o fron Walter Cooper,<lb/>
Pam Albert son o Kathy Burgess.<lb/>
Applications must be returned by<lb/>
October 31.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0003"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Internationally known<lb/>
13 October 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Green ville poet to read original poetry<lb/>
Gerda Nischan. international- rwinin?i cnniich ?,? c?1i ?  ? ,<lb/>
Gerda Nischan, international<lb/>
ly known Greenville poet, will<lb/>
read some of her original poetry<lb/>
in the Biology Auditorium (103<lb/>
Biology) at 8 p.m. Thurs Oct.<lb/>
20. Some of her selections will<lb/>
come from her recently published<lb/>
book Red Sky in the Night.<lb/>
There is no admission charge<lb/>
and the public is cordially invited<lb/>
to attend this reading.<lb/>
Gerda Nischan's success has<lb/>
been phenomenal. Even though<lb/>
she began writing poetry in<lb/>
English just three years ago,<lb/>
more than 80 of her poems in<lb/>
English have been published or<lb/>
accepted by more than 40 mag-<lb/>
azines in the United States,<lb/>
England, Germany, and<lb/>
Australia.<lb/>
Five poems from her first<lb/>
book, Red Sky in the Night, were<lb/>
reoently published in both the War II.<lb/>
original English version and<lb/>
German translations in a German<lb/>
magazine with a circulation of<lb/>
more than four million.<lb/>
Gerda has already read at<lb/>
colleges and in various com-<lb/>
munities under the sponsorship of<lb/>
arts oouncils in several states and<lb/>
has had several readings in<lb/>
Germany.<lb/>
She will read at the Folger<lb/>
Shakespeare Library in Washing-<lb/>
ton, DC Dec. 1, and for 1978<lb/>
she has booked readings at the<lb/>
Whitman International Poetry<lb/>
Center at Rutgers University, at<lb/>
the University of California at<lb/>
Berkley, and the San Francisco<lb/>
City Center.<lb/>
Gerda was born in Frankent-<lb/>
hal, Germany, in 1940. Many of<lb/>
her poems are based on her<lb/>
childhood memories of World<lb/>
After the war, Gerda finished<lb/>
her public schooling in Germany<lb/>
and became a secretary. She went<lb/>
to Switzerland, where she worked<lb/>
as a translator and wrote poetry in<lb/>
German.<lb/>
From Switzerland she went to<lb/>
England and studied English in<lb/>
Bournemouth, where she pub-<lb/>
lished her first short stay in<lb/>
English and became edita of the<lb/>
college magazine. She holds the<lb/>
Lower Cambridge Certificate ir,<lb/>
English Literature.<lb/>
In 1967 Gerda came to the<lb/>
United States as a staff member<lb/>
of the German Embassv.<lb/>
Besides being a poet, Gerda is<lb/>
now a Greenville housewife and<lb/>
mother, married to Dr. Bodo<lb/>
Nischan of the ECU department<lb/>
of histay.<lb/>
SU Travel Committee<lb/>
regrets trip cost increase<lb/>
ECU offers weight<lb/>
control, diet class<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
"Exercise, Diet and Weight<lb/>
Control a non-credit evening<lb/>
oourse fa persons at least 15 per<lb/>
cent overweight, is being offered<lb/>
by ECU.<lb/>
Classes meet Thurs Oct. 13<lb/>
and 20 from 7 to 9 p.m. and<lb/>
ThursOct.27-Dec. 15 from 7 to<lb/>
8:30 p.m.<lb/>
The course involves develop-<lb/>
ment of individual programs fa<lb/>
diet oontrol, a study of exercise<lb/>
and health, and change of eating<lb/>
and exercise behavia.<lb/>
Instructa is Dr. Valaie Nybo<lb/>
of the ECU Dept. of Health,<lb/>
Physical Education, Recreation<lb/>
and Safety, whose professional<lb/>
background includes six years of<lb/>
developing effective weight<lb/>
control techniques.<lb/>
Further infamatioi about this<lb/>
and aher fall evening oourses is<lb/>
available from the Office of<lb/>
Non-Credit Programs, Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
The Student Union Travel<lb/>
Committee regrets to infam you<lb/>
that the oost of the Bahamas<lb/>
Cruise has inaeased from $289 to<lb/>
$325.<lb/>
The $36 inaease will not<lb/>
affect trip participants who regis-<lb/>
tered before Oct. 1. Anyone<lb/>
registering after Oct. 1 will pay<lb/>
the additional fee.<lb/>
The price inaease is because<lb/>
of a 27 inaease in passenger<lb/>
rates by the shipping line. The<lb/>
Travel Committee did not antici-<lb/>
pate such an increase when<lb/>
planning its budget last spring.<lb/>
They became aware of the<lb/>
inaease when the shipping line<lb/>
contract came in last week.<lb/>
Remember that the inaease is<lb/>
oily $36. The price of $325 is still<lb/>
an excellent one fa a auise of<lb/>
this type.<lb/>
The Bahamas Cruise is fa a<lb/>
total of six days. Trip participants<lb/>
will depart from Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center March 5, 1978.<lb/>
The group will travel to Miami,<lb/>
Flaida via Carolina Trailways<lb/>
buses.<lb/>
In Miami, the group will board<lb/>
the luxurious T.S. Leonardo da<lb/>
Vinci auise ship. Trip partici-<lb/>
pants will be aboard ship fa four<lb/>
nights and three days. Ports of<lb/>
call are Nassau and Freeport.<lb/>
Departure from Miami fa<lb/>
return to Greenville is Fri March<lb/>
10. Again, the Committee expres-<lb/>
ses its regret, but reminds<lb/>
everyone that the trip is still an<lb/>
excellent buy.<lb/>
The committee is also spon-<lb/>
saing trips to New Yak City,<lb/>
during the Thanksgiving holi-<lb/>
days, and Hawaii, during Christ-<lb/>
mas vacation.<lb/>
The cost of the New Yak trip<lb/>
is $65, and the oost of the Hawaii<lb/>
tirp is $489. Bah prices include<lb/>
bus a plane fare and lodging<lb/>
expenses.<lb/>
The deadline fa these trips<lb/>
has been extended until Wed<lb/>
Oct. 19. Tickets may be purchas-<lb/>
ed at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Thursday Nite is Thursday Nite<lb/>
at Pantana Bob's<lb/>
Be Somebody!<lb/>
Open 4:00 Daily<lb/>
COME GET SOME<lb/>
Jome<lb/>
Cooki<lb/>
PIT KROGER SAVON'S DELI RESTAURANT!<lb/>
(MONDAY)<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
CHOW MEIN<lb/>
(TUESDAY)<lb/>
BEEF STEW QQ<lb/>
With Rolls &amp; ButterJJ<lb/>
(WEDNESDAY)<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
with small Salad &amp; Bread<lb/>
ITtf<lb/>
(THURSDAY)<lb/>
3 TACOS<lb/>
a<lb/>
SMALL DRINK<lb/>
FOOD<lb/>
DIVUG<lb/>
(FRIDAY)<lb/>
FRIED FISH<lb/>
with Slaw<lb/>
and French Fries<lb/>
SPECIALS SERVED<lb/>
NIGHTLY, BEGINNING<lb/>
AT 5:00 P.M<lb/>
OPEN:<lb/>
7 A.M. toMIDNITE<lb/>
MONSAT.<lb/>
9 A.M. to8P.M<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
nmnra<lb/>
? .  ??'??.?: ? .? .<lb/>
mS '<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0004"/><lb/>
I VSKf t<lb/>
?<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAiNHEAD 13 October 1977<lb/>
Tuition swindle<lb/>
Student X came to ECU in 1971. He was looking<lb/>
for quality education in his field and heard ECU had<lb/>
it. So he came all the way from New York to get a<lb/>
B.F.A. from this North Carolina university.<lb/>
Student X has lived here since 1971 without<lb/>
leaving except for vacations. He is a registered voter<lb/>
in Pitt County and pays North Carolina state taxes.<lb/>
He has been out of school at different intervals over<lb/>
the last seven years, amounting to over 12 months.<lb/>
He applied for in-state resident status for tuition<lb/>
purposes. He was refused.<lb/>
Student X is now out of school again. With one<lb/>
semester left before he graduates, he simply cannot<lb/>
afford the $1,120 that out-ot-stateday students must<lb/>
pay fa one semester, and certainly not $1,336 to live<lb/>
in a dorm.<lb/>
'Student Xs" at this university, as well as most<lb/>
North Carolina oolleges, must suffer the consequen-<lb/>
oesof the money-grabbing business known as higher<lb/>
education.<lb/>
According to N.C. General Statute 116-143.1, a<lb/>
person must (a) establish legal residence in North<lb/>
Carolina and maintain that residence for at least 12<lb/>
months prior to his or her residence classification for<lb/>
tuition, (b) must prove that his or her residence<lb/>
establishment was for the purpose of obtaining a<lb/>
"bona fide domicile" and not just for tuition<lb/>
purposes, and (c) must provide "such evidence<lb/>
related to legal residence and its duration as may be<lb/>
required by officials of the institution of higher<lb/>
education from which the individual seeks the<lb/>
in-state tuition rate<lb/>
To begin with, the requirement fa 12 consecutive<lb/>
months out of school is inequitable. With the cost of<lb/>
living the way it is, a man a wanan cannot affad to<lb/>
waste a year, thus graduating a year late and being<lb/>
one more year into the difficulty of getting a job.<lb/>
Employment is hard enough to find now. One year<lb/>
later, who knows? Many students have to stay out of<lb/>
school from time to time to save money fa tuition<lb/>
anyway, but that doesn't matter. It must be 12<lb/>
months back to back. Twenty-seven months spaced<lb/>
out between quarters, a semesters, won't do! So<lb/>
here a student is faced with either paying the<lb/>
outrageous amount of out-of-state tuition a delaying<lb/>
graduating by a full year.<lb/>
O.K. Say a student does do this and is out of<lb/>
school fa a full twelve moiths. Then he is going to<lb/>
have to prove that he did this because he wanted to<lb/>
make his home here and not because he's trying to<lb/>
get in-state tuition. Huh? Why would anyone in his<lb/>
right mind stay out of school fa a year just to beoome<lb/>
a resident of Nath Carolina? This is a nice state,<lb/>
sure. But if someone wants to live here after<lb/>
graduation, they simply will. The state doesn't<lb/>
require 12 waking maiths, out of school, befae a<lb/>
persoi has to pay state taxes! Besides, how oould<lb/>
anyone actually prove his intentions in not going to<lb/>
school fa 12 maiths? It's absurd.<lb/>
But supposing a student does somehow manage<lb/>
to fulfill the first two requirements, then what?<lb/>
Accading to this statute, he will then have to supply<lb/>
his particular university with any "such evidence"<lb/>
related to his residency that those particular officials<lb/>
want. Good luck! This gives the "officials"<lb/>
unobstructed leeway to come up with the most<lb/>
preposterous requirements they can think of within<lb/>
their shag-carpeted , gold-plated offices. Just how<lb/>
objective a solicitous are "judges" going to be when<lb/>
there is a difference of at least $860 involved?<lb/>
If a student is going to have to fund ion as a Nath<lb/>
Carolina resident in every other way-including taxes<lb/>
and voting-he should function as the same in the<lb/>
university system. The statue as it is now is unfair<lb/>
and impenetrabla It serves no use but to pad the<lb/>
pockets of the university system and it makes a<lb/>
mockery of the very purpose fa an institution of<lb/>
higher education.<lb/>
,m?is.us!siiim<lb/>
<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
intersection chaotic, dangerous<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Tenth Street is one of the<lb/>
busiest four-lane roads in the City<lb/>
of Greenville. Much controversy<lb/>
concerns the proposed overpass<lb/>
at the Tenth Street and College<lb/>
Hill Drive intersection, but<lb/>
hazards exist all along the street.<lb/>
The intersection of Tenth and<lb/>
Cotanche is extremely congested,<lb/>
especially during the lunch hour.<lb/>
Last year, McDonald's opened at<lb/>
this intersection. Roy Rogers<lb/>
restaurant has opened this year.<lb/>
The intersection does not have<lb/>
"left turn only" lanes, which<lb/>
would serve tremendously to<lb/>
eliminate at least some of the<lb/>
traffic congestion. Left turn only<lb/>
lanes work very well at other<lb/>
intersections.<lb/>
Although more cars pass<lb/>
through this intersection than<lb/>
WECU thanked for commercials<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I would like to thank WECU<lb/>
for their support in broadcasting<lb/>
the Student Union Travel Com-<lb/>
mittee commercials. I would like<lb/>
to thank Ellen Schrader and<lb/>
Jessica Scaranjella for their creat-<lb/>
ivity in making the commercials.<lb/>
If any of the student body has not<lb/>
heard them, tune in to WECU.<lb/>
The deadline for the New York<lb/>
Assist<lb/>
refugees<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The Greenville Peace<lb/>
Committee and a group of friends<lb/>
are sponsoring the settlement of a<lb/>
family of political refugees in<lb/>
Greenville. Mr.Jenare Melgarejo<lb/>
Riffe, his wife GeMa Ehsana Riffe<lb/>
and their two children - ages two<lb/>
and four- will arrive in Greenville<lb/>
within twenty to fifty days. Mr.<lb/>
Riffe was an agriculture teacher<lb/>
See HELP, p. 5<lb/>
Trip is October 14th and deadline<lb/>
for Hawaii is October 17th.<lb/>
Thanks from the Travel Co.<lb/>
Bill Martin<lb/>
pedestrians, there is always a<lb/>
chance that someone will be hit.<lb/>
And there is the ever-present<lb/>
problem of fender-benders.<lb/>
With four restaurants at this<lb/>
intersection, traffic jams are<lb/>
inevitable. Lunch hour and late<lb/>
afternoon are the worst times to<lb/>
drive through. Aocidents are just<lb/>
waiting to happen.<lb/>
Greenville grows more every<lb/>
year as more students oome to<lb/>
ECU and more families move<lb/>
here. The Greenville City Plan-<lb/>
ning Commission should take<lb/>
note of this growing problem and<lb/>
take necessary steps to ensure<lb/>
better safety at this intersection.<lb/>
Cindy Broome<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community lor over fifty years.<lb/>
Senia EditorKim j Devins<lb/>
Production ManagerBob Glover<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert Smim<lb/>
News EditaCindy Broome<lb/>
Trends EditorMichael Futch<lb/>
ae<lb/>
sic<lb/>
n<lb/>
en<lb/>
ga<lb/>
wi<lb/>
Fk<lb/>
wil<lb/>
Sports Edita<lb/>
.Anne Hogge<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Cardina<lb/>
Pr.rJ!iySPT90red the audent nrnen Association of<lb/>
ECyjnd l? J?rtbutd 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="00058013_0005"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
13 October 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Committee member urges looking for self-funding<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
There has been consider-<lb/>
able publicity recently about the<lb/>
tremendous cash shortage that<lb/>
our student government is facing<lb/>
this year that merits the attention<lb/>
of all student aganizations.<lb/>
It is time fa everyone to begin<lb/>
looking to themselves fa their<lb/>
own suppat. Fa too long now<lb/>
SGA has been a welfare state,<lb/>
dishing out money to any and all<lb/>
oomers.<lb/>
I am sure many of us can<lb/>
remember in high school when<lb/>
the students themselves raised<lb/>
their own funds to suppat their<lb/>
clubs and aganizatiais through<lb/>
candy sales and other such<lb/>
projects. The Greeks have set a<lb/>
good example over the years fa<lb/>
everyaie to follow by raising their<lb/>
own money at car washes and<lb/>
bake sales.<lb/>
Has college made us lazy?<lb/>
Everybody needs to wak and<lb/>
hustle a little mae to raise their<lb/>
own money, just like they did in<lb/>
high school.<lb/>
If large sums of money are<lb/>
needed and can't be raised<lb/>
through traditional fund raising<lb/>
projects then they should turn to<lb/>
alternate souroes. There is plenty<lb/>
of money available from outside<lb/>
the SGA, fa example the alumni,<lb/>
state government, federal gov-<lb/>
ernment, and private industry.<lb/>
Academics should definitely<lb/>
look to the state fa their rroney.<lb/>
The various academic depart-<lb/>
ments that are now panhandling<lb/>
in the legislature must realize<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
Continued from p. 4<lb/>
and a member of the Socialist<lb/>
party. He was imprisoned by the<lb/>
Pinochet government, tatured,<lb/>
fired fran his positiai, exiled<lb/>
internally and eventually migrat-<lb/>
ed to Argentina. He holds a<lb/>
tempaary residency permit In<lb/>
Argentina and was declared a<lb/>
political refugee and permitted to<lb/>
come to the United States under<lb/>
the government quota fa Chile-<lb/>
ans.<lb/>
We ask your help a the help<lb/>
of any clubs a aganizatiais in<lb/>
settling this family in our town.<lb/>
We need:<lb/>
1. Money to help with expenses;<lb/>
$150.00 per month fa six maiths.<lb/>
2. Help with transpatatiai;<lb/>
people who oould take the family<lb/>
to the stae, the docta, in search<lb/>
of a job, etc.<lb/>
3. Someone to help instruct the<lb/>
family in English; they speak only<lb/>
Spanish.<lb/>
4. Help in getting employment;<lb/>
temporary employment would<lb/>
help: i.e tocut grass, to paint, to<lb/>
WIN $250.00<lb/>
garden, etc.<lb/>
If you can contribute yajr time<lb/>
or money for this deserving<lb/>
family, it would be a great help.<lb/>
Fa mae infamatio), call a<lb/>
write: St. Gabriel's Church, 1120<lb/>
West 5th St Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834. Phoie 758-1504. Checks<lb/>
may be made out to: St. Gabriel's<lb/>
Refugee Fund. sncerely,<lb/>
H.C. Mulholland<lb/>
FICKLEN STADIUM - ECUFOOTHALL GAMES -OCT. 15 &amp; OCT. 23, 19?7<lb/>
Blount-Ball RealtyBeef Barn<lb/>
Phelps ChevroletBig Value Discount Drugs<lb/>
Planters National BankH.L. Hodges<lb/>
Proctor's Wickes Ltd. Lumber<lb/>
BaW Auto PartsAzalea Mobile Homes<lb/>
Kentucky<lb/>
Fried<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Ramada<lb/>
Inn<lb/>
ECU Pirate<lb/>
Club<lb/>
WRQR FM<lb/>
Redi<lb/>
Supply, Inc.<lb/>
Alfa<lb/>
Aviation<lb/>
University<lb/>
Book<lb/>
Exchange<lb/>
Quixote<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
Harris<lb/>
Super-<lb/>
markets<lb/>
Glenda's<lb/>
Beauty Salon<lb/>
and<lb/>
Boutique<lb/>
Air Force<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
News writers<lb/>
are needed.<lb/>
Call 757-6366<lb/>
or come by<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
that they are not the responsibil-<lb/>
ity of student government.<lb/>
Many faculty members are<lb/>
behind the panhandling move-<lb/>
ment that last year took a big<lb/>
chunk of the SGA budget and<lb/>
threatens to do so this year.<lb/>
The deans of two of the largest<lb/>
schools on campus have been<lb/>
heavily involved in lobbying fa<lb/>
the tremendous and outlandish<lb/>
budgets submitted to the legisla-<lb/>
ture fa their individual schools.<lb/>
The SGA's first responsibility<lb/>
is to the transit system, free legal<lb/>
service, publications and a few<lb/>
other student organizations.<lb/>
SGA's money is fa the benefit of<lb/>
everyaie, not just one particular<lb/>
club, society, a academic depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
It would be nioe if SGA could<lb/>
fund retreats, conventiois, cheer-<lb/>
leaders and the band but there<lb/>
simply is na enough money to go<lb/>
around. "You can't get blood<lb/>
from a turnip<lb/>
In light of the tight financial<lb/>
situation the SGA is in, it is<lb/>
advisable fa all student aganiza-<lb/>
tiais to look elsewhere fa the<lb/>
money, 'cause we ain't ga it.<lb/>
Respectfully,<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
SGA Appropriations Conmittee<lb/>
MM<lb/>
Crrr?t,H, , f<lb/>
The Daily Fuqua's<lb/>
Reflector Carpets and<lb/>
Interiors<lb/>
Clow Drug WNCT TV-9<lb/>
Happy Times at the Rathskeller<lb/>
Weds. 5-7 pm<lb/>
Thurs. ladies night 9-11 pm<lb/>
Fri. 4-6 pm<lb/>
Discount Beverage<lb/>
air condition comfort<lb/>
'Sky Bingo'ballgames<lb/>
"Sky Bingo" is an electronic<lb/>
aerial sign attached to the under-<lb/>
side of an airplane that flashes a<lb/>
message aaoss in lights. At the<lb/>
end of each quarter of a football<lb/>
game the "Sky Bingo" airplane<lb/>
will make four passes aaoss<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium.On each pass, it<lb/>
will flash aaoss a group of the<lb/>
above sponsas ru-nes alaig with<lb/>
a number fa each. If the five<lb/>
sponsa's numbers ai your card<lb/>
match those flashed across the<lb/>
aerial sign, you win $250. Present<lb/>
your winning card to the Pirate<lb/>
Club building immediately for<lb/>
verification and to claim the $250<lb/>
jackpot. Cash must be claimed by<lb/>
1030 p.m. the night of the game.<lb/>
WATERBEDS<lb/>
Retail<lb/>
Bags $52.00<lb/>
Frames $70.00<lb/>
Our Price<lb/>
$37.00<lb/>
$35.00<lb/>
L<lb/>
Mattress &amp; Foundation<lb/>
( 2 piece set $87.00<lb/>
MATTRESS MART<lb/>
Wholesale to Everyone<lb/>
1302 N Greene St. Ph. - 758-1101<lb/>
U.S. Marines Corps Flight<lb/>
Orientation Program<lb/>
will be held October 18 and 19.<lb/>
Students come fly<lb/>
with the Marines.<lb/>
For further information<lb/>
contact the Marine representative in the<lb/>
lobby of the old CU October 17-20. 9:30-3:00<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0006"/><lb/>
fm&amp;$i: ;<lb/>
fSNPinMlM :<lb/>
HHHHHRI<lb/>
fW.H<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 13 October 1977<lb/>
ECU SENIOR LAURIE Johnson of Jacksonville<lb/>
accepts 1977 Southern Business Education Associa-<lb/>
tion scholarship award from Dr.<lb/>
and Dr. John Swope,<lb/>
William Durham,<lb/>
Business student<lb/>
wins scholarship<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Laurie Johnson of Jackson-<lb/>
ville, senior student in the ECU<lb/>
School of Technology, is North<lb/>
Carolina's winner of the 1977<lb/>
Southern Business Education<lb/>
Association Scholarship.<lb/>
She is majoring in basic<lb/>
business and distributive educa-<lb/>
tion at ECU.<lb/>
A regional organization ded-<lb/>
icated to the improvement of<lb/>
business education in public<lb/>
schools, the Southern Business<lb/>
Education Association is a div-<lb/>
ision of the National Business<lb/>
Education Association.<lb/>
The SBEA recognizes one<lb/>
student from each southern state<lb/>
each year for superior academic<lb/>
achievement and potential for<lb/>
enhancing the profession of bus-<lb/>
iness education.<lb/>
Laurie Johnson is the<lb/>
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John A.<lb/>
Johnson of 4 West Donna Court,<lb/>
Jacksonville, and a 1975 graduate<lb/>
of White Oak High School.<lb/>
HEW grants Med<lb/>
school $104,838<lb/>
The Center of Student Oppor-<lb/>
tunities of the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine has received $104,838<lb/>
Elbo Room<lb/>
This week at the Elbo Room<lb/>
Fri 10th Ave<lb/>
Tonite The Showmen<lb/>
"With your 39-21-46"<lb/>
Sat Clearsmoke<lb/>
Don't forget Fri 3-7<lb/>
Sun is ladies nite<lb/>
$100 REWARD<lb/>
FOR RETURN OF KIERA<lb/>
(No Questions Asked)<lb/>
Male German Shepherd<lb/>
4 Months Old, 40 Lbs. Mostly Black<lb/>
Was Wearing Only Flea Collar<lb/>
Disappeared Sat. Oct. 8<lb/>
Near Grimesland Drawbridge<lb/>
Please If You Have a Any Information<lb/>
CALL EILEEN BROWN<lb/>
758-0367 or 758-5590 anytime<lb/>
grant from the U.S. Dept. of<lb/>
Health, Education and Welfare<lb/>
(HEW) to support recruitment<lb/>
and retention of disadvantaged<lb/>
and minority students until grad-<lb/>
uation in the Schools of Medicine,<lb/>
Nursing and Allied Heath.<lb/>
The grant is renewable for the<lb/>
same amount each year over a<lb/>
three-year period for a total of<lb/>
$342,514, according to Dr. Zubie<lb/>
W. Metcalf, Jr Center director.<lb/>
Fa retention, the Center is<lb/>
sponsoring diagnostic testing for<lb/>
107 pre-health professional<lb/>
students to determine their<lb/>
strength and weaknesses in read-<lb/>
ing, writing and learning skills,<lb/>
Dr. Metcalf said<lb/>
The Educational Development<lb/>
and Evaluation Center of the<lb/>
School of Medicine is conducting<lb/>
the testing of these students.<lb/>
-ftV<lb/>
out 9<lb/>
A Stv<lb/>
?<lb/>
?.<lb/>
V<lb/>
9o<lb/>
?<lb/>
S'Off<lb/>
QMfiM' (-Vf.i fJome Tiist <lb/>
Weekend Special Thurs Fri Sat All Day<lb/>
6" mini cheese &amp; small drink<lb/>
only $1.00<lb/>
v<lb/>
Stuff a pizza<lb/>
 Phone 752 6)30 Q<lb/>
PHONE IN ORDERS FOR PICK-UP<lb/>
Stuff a pizza<lb/>
521 COTANCHESTREFT<lb/>
IN GEORGETOWN SHOPr<lb/>
rr N-MonWed. 11:00to 1:00 a.m.<lb/>
Thurs Fri. &amp; Sat. 11 to2a.m3un. 12 to 12<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0007"/><lb/>
13 October 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
JSS<lb/>
iv-<lb/>
SS<lb/>
ne<lb/>
tte<lb/>
lie<lb/>
ex<lb/>
is-<lb/>
ie<lb/>
?t,<lb/>
te<lb/>
HOWDY PIRATE FANS<lb/>
Take Roy's Famous<lb/>
Western Fried Chicken<lb/>
With You To The Game!<lb/>
of<lb/>
re<lb/>
nt<lb/>
3d<lb/>
d-<lb/>
e,<lb/>
le<lb/>
a<lb/>
of<lb/>
ie<lb/>
r.<lb/>
is<lb/>
X<lb/>
31<lb/>
ir<lb/>
j-<lb/>
s,<lb/>
it<lb/>
ie<lb/>
g<lb/>
The best<lb/>
of the fresh<lb/>
waitin' in convenient carry-<lb/>
out paks of 8 and 12. There's<lb/>
a big 20pc. pak too for under<lb/>
$10.00. The whole gang can<lb/>
enjoy if<lb/>
8pc. pak-93.90<lb/>
12pc. pak-$5.75<lb/>
20pc. pak- $8.95<lb/>
10 discount<lb/>
on any chicken<lb/>
purchase<lb/>
of $10.00<lb/>
or more.<lb/>
You've got my word<lb/>
on it, par drier<lb/>
Don't forget to include some<lb/>
helpin's Sf our crisp, Texas<lb/>
Tatars an' fresh cole slaw, too.<lb/>
So, c'mon in and carry-out<lb/>
our famous fried chicken to<lb/>
the ballgame or wherever<lb/>
you go!<lb/>
Save TimeCall Ahead Now<lb/>
To Reserve Your Order,<lb/>
For Saturdays Game.<lb/>
752-1401<lb/>
ALSO<lb/>
ELEBRATE AT ROY'S AFTER THE GAME<lb/>
Bring your game ticket for 50 off<lb/>
the purchase of any platter.<lb/>
GOOD LUCK PIRATES, ROY'S RANCH HANDS WILL BE<lb/>
PULLING FOR YOU.<lb/>
(Yes Pirates. We Now Have Breakfast, Also!)<lb/>
Breakfast Hours: MonSat. 6:30a.m10:30a.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0008"/><lb/>
PageB FOUNTAINHEAD 13 October 1977<lb/>
Communique'<lb/>
by Luke Whisnant<lb/>
An Ocracoke weekend<lb/>
Everybody who has ever been there loves Oaaooke Island because<lb/>
it's beautiful and unspoiled and uncrowded. "Uncrowded" is the<lb/>
operative word here. People in love with Ocracoke tend to be secretive<lb/>
about the island-they don't want anyone else to know about it. I'll<lb/>
probably get a few threatening phone calls fa writing this column, but<lb/>
I don't feel guilty. First of all, Oaaooke has already been exposed-in<lb/>
Sports Illustrated fa its superb surf fishing, and in Rolling Stone for<lb/>
having oie of the ten best nude beaches in the U.S. And seoondly,<lb/>
saeaming, hell-raising gangs of ECU students are not going to<lb/>
descend oi Oaaooke like the Mongol Hade; in fact, they'll avoid it fa<lb/>
ate a mae of the following reasons:<lb/>
1. There is no ABC stae ai the island. Until last year there wasn't<lb/>
even any beer.<lb/>
2. There are no nightclubs. Na is there a movie theatre.<lb/>
3. The mosquitos are harendous. Na the wast in the wald, but<lb/>
they are beyoid belief. (The wast in the wald are reputed to reside<lb/>
just aaossOaaooke Inlet on deserted Patsmouth Island. Local legend<lb/>
has it that these mosquitos recently hospitalized three insolent New<lb/>
Yak tourists who'd been asking fa it anyway.)<lb/>
4. During hurricane season, you may wake up one maning with<lb/>
your hotel room under water. Almost all of the island has been known<lb/>
to flood in times of rough weather.<lb/>
5. You have to wait until low tide to flush the toilet.<lb/>
Who wants to drive all day to get to the beach, anyway? There are<lb/>
lots of well-developed, progressive, popular beaches just a few hours<lb/>
from Greenville. They have pavi I ions and nightclubs where you can be<lb/>
reasonably certain of making a pick-up, and plenty of facilities fa<lb/>
getting wrecked. Canpared to Atlan' ? n ch, a<lb/>
Carolina Beach, Oaaooke is dun<lb/>
So you really don't war<lb/>
Oaaooke Island is a U ' ?torth<lb/>
Carolina outer banks system, . '? -( rrorn<lb/>
Pamlico Sound. Except fa the town iumm, .i?c.e island is a<lb/>
gcvernment-protected, wilderness-intad National Seashae. Unlike<lb/>
Hatters Island, there is no bridge connecting Oaaooke to the<lb/>
mainland. The only way to get there is by air a sea.<lb/>
We came over on the state-owned ferry from Hatters. During the<lb/>
45-minute ride my sister Liz found out that seagulls like Pringles so<lb/>
much they will take them out of your hand. There were probably 200<lb/>
gulls following the fary when we ran out of Pringles.<lb/>
Oaacoke' s nickname is " Poiy I sland a fact I once learned in 4th<lb/>
grade N.C Histay and pronptly fagot. The wild paiies of Oaaooke<lb/>
are considered the purest breed of hase in the wald-they've been<lb/>
isolated fa over 300 years. Most evidence indicates the ponies have<lb/>
descended from 18th century Spanish stallions who swam asbae fran<lb/>
a grounded supply ship bound fa the Virginia oolonies. At one time the<lb/>
herd numbered in the hundreds; then dog food companies started<lb/>
taking advantage of the free meat. Today there are 10 ponies left. Fa<lb/>
their own protection, they live in a large fenced-in pasture near the<lb/>
center of the island; tourists are allowed to watch from a distance at<lb/>
feeding time.<lb/>
Friday night we rented a small but beautiful house fa the weekend.<lb/>
We ate at the Poiy Island restaurant, where Vz pound fresh steamed<lb/>
shrimp, hushpuppies, and two vegetables cost only $4.00. There was a<lb/>
huge mounted fish hanging on the wall near our table; it had been<lb/>
caught in the surf and it weighed 60 pounds. I have always fought the<lb/>
fear of shark attack by telling myself that big fish never come near<lb/>
shae. Now I'll have to think up another lie to believe.<lb/>
Saturday maning I stood in surf over my shoulders, mae than a<lb/>
little paranoid about dasal fins and gaping jaws, struggling to keep my<lb/>
feet on the botton. There were signs all ever the beach warning of<lb/>
dangerous riptides. Oaacoke riptides run parallel to the beach,<lb/>
perpendicular to incoming waves, and even Mark Spitz would have<lb/>
trouble against that kind of current. I couldn't even stay in one place<lb/>
unless I was standing up, and then the seven-foot waves kept knocking<lb/>
me down. But I enjoyed it, in a masochistic sort of way.<lb/>
NATIVES CONSUME PIGS<lb/>
The community of Oaacoke must be the friendliest place in North<lb/>
Carolina. There's none of the typical nativetourist rift so commoi in<lb/>
most resat towns. Maybe that's because a large percentage of<lb/>
the natives are often drunk.Somebody must make regular runs to the<lb/>
ABC stae ai Hatters. Even the little old ladies drink vodka and aange<lb/>
juice?in public, no less.<lb/>
The islanders have an accent that has to be heard to be appreciated.<lb/>
Centuries of isolation has kept the native pronunciation almost<lb/>
unchanged from Elizabethean English. It sounds like a very thick<lb/>
British accent with just a touch of Irish? German? Something I can't<lb/>
place The younger islanders are developing a mae neutral accent,<lb/>
due to tourists and TV, but the older people have retained their<lb/>
traditional speech.<lb/>
Saturday night the locals held a pig-pickin' In the parking lot of the<lb/>
Pony Island Inn. At least 300 people attended, and although they ran<lb/>
out of hushpuppies and cole slaw, there was plenty of barbeque left fa<lb/>
See OCRACOKE ISLAND, p. 10<lb/>
Buffett concert<lb/>
proves satisfying<lb/>
JIMMY BUFFETT APPEARED in<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
By MICHAEL FUJCH<lb/>
Trends Edita<lb/>
The Jesse Winchester 'Jimmy<lb/>
Buffett concert, held in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum Wednesday night, Oct.<lb/>
5, proved to be a quite satisfying,<lb/>
if not unique, musical experience.<lb/>
Satisfying in that both<lb/>
performers, along with their<lb/>
back-up band's, gave the aud-<lb/>
ience its moneys worth. Tickets<lb/>
were somewhat expensive, but<lb/>
the show was of expensive<lb/>
caliber.<lb/>
Unique in that technically, the<lb/>
show was one of the f inest-with-<lb/>
out an excess of flaw?this review-<lb/>
er has seen at ECU in the pastfour<lb/>
years. The sound system manag-<lb/>
ed to perfam superbly through-<lb/>
out the concert; the light show<lb/>
was of extremely good taste,<lb/>
while not overdoing it, but<lb/>
displaying a professional re-<lb/>
straint.<lb/>
Winchester and Midnight Bus<lb/>
opened the show and perfamed<lb/>
concert Oct. 5, in Minges<lb/>
Photo by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
fa about 45 minutes. Opening<lb/>
with a basic band of two electric<lb/>
guitars, electric bass, steel guitar<lb/>
and drums, the band kept a<lb/>
steady and solid rhythm back-up<lb/>
fa frait man Winchester.<lb/>
Winchester, alternating be-<lb/>
tween Gibson hollow body guitar<lb/>
and acoustic piano, was in oontrol<lb/>
of the audience throughout the<lb/>
show. His guitar lead work<lb/>
lacking, Winchester seemed mae<lb/>
at hone on keyboards, his music<lb/>
draws its basic influences from<lb/>
country, 12-bar blues, and folk<lb/>
forms. There was very little<lb/>
improvision, but an emphasis on<lb/>
shat tight numbers, as if trying<lb/>
to aeate a studio sound, live.<lb/>
Vocally, Winchester peaked<lb/>
on "Yankee Lady a soft slow<lb/>
ballad based on the 12-bar blues<lb/>
fam with sane exceptionally nice<lb/>
steel guitar fills. Other note-<lb/>
worthy numbers included the title<lb/>
track from his recent LP, "Noth-<lb/>
ing But a Breeze "It Seems<lb/>
Like It Was Only Yesterday and<lb/>
an uptempo funky version of<lb/>
Hank Williams' classic<lb/>
"Jambalaya<lb/>
Winchester and Midnight Bus<lb/>
are a fine back-up touring band -<lb/>
it is where they belong. This<lb/>
being the first American tour,<lb/>
Winchester displayed a confid-<lb/>
ence that has developed over<lb/>
years of club engagements. He<lb/>
may never follow in the promo-<lb/>
tional successof a Frampton, but<lb/>
undoubtedly will continue as a<lb/>
prolific studio musician and con-<lb/>
sistent live performer on a<lb/>
smaller seating hall circuit.<lb/>
Jimmy Buffett and the Caal<lb/>
Reefer Band opened their 18-song<lb/>
show with the title track from the<lb/>
recent CHANGES IN<lb/>
LATITUDES-CHANGES IN<lb/>
ATTITUDES album. Denning a<lb/>
number 87 Wasingtoi Redshins<lb/>
football jersey, Buffett displayed<lb/>
that he was mae than a simple<lb/>
country-fried musician.<lb/>
Buffett was an entertainer as<lb/>
he was a musical perfamer. His<lb/>
rapport with the 4,000-some<lb/>
Minges aowd was exceptionally<lb/>
close - an immediacy rarely<lb/>
shown on a maja attraction scale,<lb/>
but mae in tune with a coffee-<lb/>
house approach.<lb/>
Buffett's back-up band, as<lb/>
Winchester's, was oomfatably<lb/>
tight in its perfamane. The band<lb/>
consisted of: Tim Creckle, electric<lb/>
guitar; Harry Daily, bass; Fin-<lb/>
gers Tayla, mouth harp and<lb/>
electric piano; Jay Spell, acoustic<lb/>
and electric piano; and Kenneth<lb/>
See BUFFETT, p. 11<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
Playhouse prepares for opener<lb/>
ECU'S McGinnis Auditaium<lb/>
is buzzing with activity as directa<lb/>
Edgar Loessin prepares his cast<lb/>
and aews fa Bye, Bye, Birdie,<lb/>
the seasai's opener fa the East<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse.<lb/>
The curtain will rise at 815<lb/>
Wed Oct. 19, fa the first<lb/>
perfamance.<lb/>
Cast in the role of Conrad<lb/>
Birdie, the rock-and-roll singer<lb/>
who is drafted into the armed<lb/>
services, is Lucien Hutcherson of<lb/>
Ahoskie.<lb/>
Birdie's publicity manager<lb/>
Albert Peterson, played by<lb/>
another Ahoskian, Bill Vann, and<lb/>
his secretary Rosie Alvarez,<lb/>
played by Janice Vertucci<lb/>
Schreiberof Newfoundland, N.J<lb/>
dreamed up the scheme of<lb/>
selecting an "All-American Girl"<lb/>
to receive Birdie's one last kiss"<lb/>
as a civilian.<lb/>
The girl is Kim McAfee of<lb/>
Sweet Apple, Ohio, played by<lb/>
Kim 'Woolen from Newport.<lb/>
Alternating in the role of her little<lb/>
brother are Vandy Behr and Tim<lb/>
Shank, both of Greenville.<lb/>
The delightful conflicts which<lb/>
ensue make the musical an event<lb/>
not to be missed.<lb/>
Other members of the cast<lb/>
include veteran Playhouse actress<lb/>
Anita Brehm in the role of an<lb/>
eccentric mother; Cary Page of<lb/>
Greenville, as banbshell Glaia<lb/>
Rasputin; McCall Thompson of<lb/>
Emerald Isle as bar owner<lb/>
Charles F. Maude; and Myron<lb/>
Carter of Kinston as the town<lb/>
policeman.<lb/>
The maya and his wife will be<lb/>
portrayed by John Jeter of<lb/>
Wilmington and Charlotte<lb/>
Cheatham of Henderson. Round-<lb/>
ing out the cast are Ed Gaines of<lb/>
Greenville as Mr. Johnson and<lb/>
Sharon Wood of Salisbury, Md<lb/>
as Mrs. Merkle.<lb/>
Chaus are Aleoia Baucom of<lb/>
Monroe, Jennifer Brandt of<lb/>
Atlantic, B.J. Denny of Conoad,<lb/>
Hdley Jerome of Johnson City,<lb/>
Tenn Anita Lancaster, Valeria<lb/>
Segraves and Denny Wright of<lb/>
Jacksonville, Herbert Gregory<lb/>
Woolard of Washington, Aubrey<lb/>
Thomas Simpsoi of Ruffin, Jeff<lb/>
Krantz and Kim Shipley of<lb/>
Charlotte, Steve Williford of<lb/>
Windsa, Tina Padilla of Fayet-<lb/>
ville, Lisa Clark of Greenville,Lisa<lb/>
Flack of Fairfax, Va. and Phyllis<lb/>
White of Kinston.<lb/>
Production chaeographer is<lb/>
Frank Wagner, and Barry Shank<lb/>
conducts the achestra. Stage<lb/>
manager is Sybil Thanton of<lb/>
Henderson.<lb/>
Tickets fa Bye, Bye, Birdie<lb/>
will be available at the East<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse Box Office<lb/>
in McGinnis Auditaium begin-<lb/>
ning Oct. 12.<lb/>
Reservations may be made by<lb/>
phoiing 757-6390<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0009"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
After performance on Oct. S<lb/>
13 October 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Pag 9<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD talks with Winchester<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Singer-songwriter Jesse Winchester occupies a unique niche in<lb/>
popular music, being the only performer to gain a strong following<lb/>
while exiled in Canada. Winchester fled to Canada in 1967 to avoid<lb/>
being drafted for the Vietnam War.<lb/>
While in Canada, Winchester developed a strong dub following,<lb/>
eventually recording five albums. Through these albums, he developed<lb/>
a cult in the United States, a remarkable feat since he was unable to<lb/>
tour and promote his albums.<lb/>
Not until President Carter's amnesty program was Winchester able<lb/>
to return to his former home, proving, to many, that all the<lb/>
demonstrations, peach marches, and protest songs were not in vain,<lb/>
that the United States government was at last admitting to the folly of<lb/>
the Vietnam War.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD spoke to Winchester while on his first North<lb/>
American tour after his performance at Minges Coliseum on Wed<lb/>
Oct. 5. Our reporter described Winchester as a shy, soft-spoken, very<lb/>
polite individual with a southern accent as sweet as magnolia<lb/>
blossoms. The interview that follows was culled from this conversation:<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: How has the response been sinoe you got back<lb/>
from Canada?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "It'sbeen fine<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Did.you ever expect to come back as, well, a star?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "Are you implying by that , that I have?"<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: That you are a star now? Yes.<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "Well, I didn't really know what to expect. I just,<lb/>
really had no idea of what it'd be like<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: A lot of people look to you asa hero of the sixties of<lb/>
some sort. How do you deal with that status? Has it affected your<lb/>
songwriting or your personal life?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "No, ,l don't know anybody who's known me for<lb/>
longer than 15 or 20 minutes that still manage to maintain any heroic<lb/>
perceptions, so I'd say no. I meet a lot of fans, well, you know, uh, it's<lb/>
difficult to explain. It's pretty standard<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: You've been quoted as saying that you're not<lb/>
returning to live in America, that you will continue to live in Canada.<lb/>
Is that correct?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "Right<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: What affected your decision to remain in Canada?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "I have a family there, my wife and children, my<lb/>
friends live there, working colleagues, etc<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: You come from a family with a pretty strong<lb/>
military tradition, right?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "Well, I suppose; not really, we were more lawyers<lb/>
and clerics, preachers<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Did that create a family schism when you left fa-<lb/>
Canada?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "Yeah, it did with some members of my family- my<lb/>
grandfather - who was sprt of the patriarch of the family, the founder of<lb/>
all our traditions. He was really disappointed in me, and other<lb/>
members of my family felt the same way, to a greater or lesser degree,<lb/>
and I think there were some who agreed with me and approved of what<lb/>
I did<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Hoyv do they feel now, with the tour and<lb/>
everything?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "The ones who disapproved, I suppose some of them<lb/>
have changed their minds, and some haven't. They all welcomed me<lb/>
back and were glad to see me home, and they still love me, as they all<lb/>
did, throughout. I'm rot interested in going back and rummaging<lb/>
around in that stuff and figuring out who was right and wrong. I'd<lb/>
rather just go on from here<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Did you ever have any formal musical training?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "Yes, I had piano lessons<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: When you left, were you playing in taverns,<lb/>
coffeehouses, that sort of scene?<lb/>
WINCHESTERWhen,l left, I was playing in a nightclub at home, a<lb/>
dub, or bar, and I was working at a cotton company in the daytime. I<lb/>
was a tagger at a cotton plant, just sorta treadin" water 'till the draft<lb/>
notice came<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Had you planned long before the draft notice came<lb/>
that you would go to Canada?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "No, I hadn't even known that was an option "till<lb/>
about a week before the draft notice came when I read a feature article<lb/>
in the Memphis paper about there being some group in Canada that<lb/>
was helping people, and that's the first I'd heard of Canada. And after<lb/>
I got the draft notice, I suppose I took another two weeks before I<lb/>
actually left. I guess it was three weeks or a month that I had known of<lb/>
that possibility. I had been wondering what I was gonna do when the<lb/>
notice did come<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Today's music is largely apolitical; it's mostly<lb/>
concerned with personal relationships and such, nothing in the line of<lb/>
volunteers a revolution. Do you think that's a sign of disillusionment<lb/>
with the experience of the Sixties or just a maturing of the audience?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "Well, I think that politics, on the grandest scale, is<lb/>
included in things like ethics and morality and religion, so, I think<lb/>
people have become interested in things as basic as the Ten<lb/>
Commandments, in so far as politics, good politics, proceed from the<lb/>
Ten Commandments, then, at least I hope that's the way tnings are<lb/>
 was mainly<lb/>
moved by Elvis.<lb/>
gan .<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Were you ever, especially right at first, bitter<lb/>
about the war?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "About the war?"<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Bitter that people your age were being forced to go<lb/>
over and fight?<lb/>
See WINCHESTER, p. 11<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058013_0010"/><lb/>
Pis espaslgP<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Page 10 FQUNTAINHEAD 13 October 1977<lb/>
ECU professor<lb/>
publishes book<lb/>
Monsoon season<lb/>
??<lb/>
A new book on contemporary<lb/>
novelist Kurt Vonnegut oo-edited<lb/>
by Donald Lawler of the ECU<lb/>
Department of English is being<lb/>
released this month in hardcover<lb/>
and paperback editions.<lb/>
"Vonnegut in America a<lb/>
collection of essays on<lb/>
Vonnegut's life and work, is<lb/>
published in hardcover by<lb/>
Delacorte PressSeymour<lb/>
Lawrence of New York and in<lb/>
paperback by Delta.<lb/>
Dr. Lawler's co-editor is<lb/>
Jerome Klinkowitz, professor of<lb/>
English at the University of<lb/>
Northern Iowa, and author of<lb/>
several studies of fiction and of<lb/>
"The Vonnegut Statement<lb/>
The Lawler-Klinkowitz book<lb/>
grew out of the 1975 Modern<lb/>
Language Seminar on the writing<lb/>
of Vonnegut, chaired by Prof.<lb/>
Lawler in San Francisco.<lb/>
The essays in the book present<lb/>
an evaluation of Vonnegut's life<lb/>
career as a writer and impact<lb/>
upon the life and thought of<lb/>
America in the sixties and<lb/>
seventies. Included are essays by<lb/>
Vonnegut scholars on all phases<lb/>
of his literary output, from the<lb/>
early short stories and the first<lb/>
novel, "Slapstick" (1976).<lb/>
Vonnegut is considered from<lb/>
many critical angles, as a science<lb/>
fiction writer, a humorist, a<lb/>
satirist, a surrealist, an innovator<lb/>
and a moralist.<lb/>
The book includes a<lb/>
"Vonnegut photo album" with<lb/>
later photos by Jill Krementz, a<lb/>
complete bibliography and a<lb/>
chronology of Vonnegut's life.<lb/>
The book has attracted several<lb/>
notable critical comments. "A<lb/>
meaty and informative collection,<lb/>
said "Publishers Weekly Other<lb/>
not ices have appeared in "Kirkus<lb/>
Reviews" and in "The New York<lb/>
Times Book Review<lb/>
UMBRELLA WEATHER drenches Greenville.<lb/>
KIDS<lb/>
Take a Pickle To School.<lb/>
A Genuine<lb/>
Mt.Olive Pickle"T -Shirt.<lb/>
Send $50.00 and five dozen labels (Mt. Olive Pickles)<lb/>
or send $2.00 and no labels. And we'll send you a super<lb/>
white, green and yellow T-shirt. Please specify sizes:<lb/>
Adult, S, M, L, or XL or children sizes S, M, or L.<lb/>
Send your money and your name,<lb/>
address, and ip code to:<lb/>
Mt. Olive Pickle Company<lb/>
Cucumber &amp; Vine<lb/>
Mt. Olive North Carolina 28365<lb/>
'jiiii<lb/>
???<lb/>
i<lb/>
Paperback<lb/>
Best<lb/>
Sellers<lb/>
Trinity by Leon Uris<lb/>
Passages by Gail Sheehy<lb/>
The Grass is Always Greener<lb/>
Over the Spetic Tank by Erma<lb/>
Bom beck<lb/>
Elvis: What Happenedby Steve<lb/>
Dunleavy<lb/>
Star Wars by George Lucas<lb/>
Sleeping Murder by Agatha<lb/>
Christie<lb/>
Love's Wildest Fires by Christina<lb/>
Savage<lb/>
7oucr? Not the Cat by Mary<lb/>
Stewart<lb/>
Captive Bride by Johanna Lind-<lb/>
sey<lb/>
Mystic Rose by Patricia Gallagher<lb/>
Savage Surrender by Natasha<lb/>
Peters<lb/>
Blind A mbition by John Dean<lb/>
"according to New York Times<lb/>
Book Review<lb/>
OCRACOKE<lb/>
Continued from p. 8<lb/>
the mosquitos. Proceeds from the<lb/>
pig-piokin' went to Ocraooke's<lb/>
Fire Department. They can pro-<lb/>
bably use the money. When<lb/>
Ben's Waterfront Restaurant<lb/>
burned down last summer, the<lb/>
firetruck wouldn't start; they had<lb/>
to tow it to the fire.<lb/>
After the pig-piokin' there was<lb/>
a dance with live music provided<lb/>
by Ocraooke's Graveyard Band.<lb/>
Everybody danced, including old<lb/>
folks. It was as much fun as any<lb/>
party I've every been to. People<lb/>
were drinking from half-gallon<lb/>
Jack Daniels bottles and tripping<lb/>
over guitars and speaker cads.<lb/>
We got back to the house at 3<lb/>
a.m. Everybody stood around the<lb/>
commode and watched as I<lb/>
flushed it. The tide was out.<lb/>
rh;(,a!s<lb/>
shoe shop<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER GOODS<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0011"/><lb/>
13 October 1977 FOUTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Buf f ett proves to be complete entertainer<lb/>
Continued from p. 8<lb/>
Buttrey, drums and oongas.<lb/>
The band supplied plenty of<lb/>
power while moving irom<lb/>
Buffett's brand of Jamaican-<lb/>
spioed country, to boogie-woogie,<lb/>
to folk, to pure rock and roll.<lb/>
Buffett trancends mere country,<lb/>
and fits comfortably into any style<lb/>
he attempts. His fluctuating<lb/>
vocals are distinctive, with a soft<lb/>
nasal country quality that<lb/>
separates him from his "outlaw"<lb/>
contemporaries.<lb/>
Buffett mixed his show well,<lb/>
making good transition from his<lb/>
uptempo numbers, to the slower<lb/>
tunes, to his 'John Hartfordish'<lb/>
lyrical humor songs. After an<lb/>
electric set with the band, in-<lb/>
cluding "Wish I Had a Pencil<lb/>
Winchester talks<lb/>
Continued from p. 9<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "Oh, I sure was. Yeah. I don't think I let it poison my<lb/>
life by any means, and I didn't become bitter against the people who<lb/>
were doing it. I didn't think there was anything to be gained by calling<lb/>
Lyndon Johnson a pig. I thought probably a better approach would be<lb/>
to, you know, have a beer in the back seat of his Cadillac, and talk it<lb/>
over. So, I wasn't, I don't think, bitter against the people involved; I<lb/>
probably said some ugly things about them, I must admit, but I didn't<lb/>
make a career out of it by any means<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: What type of music did you grow up with, and what<lb/>
would you label as your musical influences?<lb/>
WINCHESTER listened to all kinds of music. As I mentioned, my<lb/>
classical education, and I was mainly moved by Elvis and the stuff that<lb/>
happened in Memphis where I was growing up in the middle '50's,<lb/>
Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Parkins, and I listened to a lot of Gospel music,<lb/>
and church music, and of course a lot of Country and Western music,<lb/>
and then I listened for a long time to an awful lot of rhythm and blues,<lb/>
Bobby Blan, Ted Taylor, Little Junior Parker, and all those people fa a<lb/>
long time, and now I've pretty much settled intooountry and western,<lb/>
which I listen to pretty much now<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: You mentioned Elvis as an influence; did his death<lb/>
hit you pretty hard?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "Well, I suppose it did. It was like seeing part of my<lb/>
youthElvis was very strongly identified with that period of time, I<lb/>
think in an awful lot of people's lives, and certainly mine. Elvis was the<lb/>
mid-1960's to me, and when he died, it just sorta dosed the book on<lb/>
that period of time. It was sort of a shock, yeah<lb/>
FOUNTAI NHEAD: Where do you see your career headed now; you've<lb/>
comeback, you've got five albums out, a successful tour underway. Do<lb/>
you see it just getting bigger?<lb/>
WINCHESTER: "No, I see it, strangely enough, getting smaller, at<lb/>
least in physical size. I'm sorta feeling the water in the entertainment<lb/>
business, and I think I would prefer to work in smaller concert halls<lb/>
with higher quality equipment, more musicians, just a higher quality<lb/>
show with a comedian and some more acts, some pretty girls, and so<lb/>
forth.<lb/>
Thin Moustache the vocally<lb/>
superb "Wonder Why We Ever<lb/>
Go Home" with Buffett on<lb/>
acoustic guitar (he constantly<lb/>
shifted from electric to acoustic),<lb/>
"Down to the Banana Republic"<lb/>
as well as a few numbers, like<lb/>
"Please Don't Say Manana If you<lb/>
Don't Mean It Buffett played it<lb/>
solo fa awhile.<lb/>
Accading to Buffett, it was<lb/>
time to give the boys a geritol<lb/>
break. This shat solo aooustic set<lb/>
emphasized his brand to satiric<lb/>
huma and the aowd loved it. His<lb/>
strong voioe was especially notio-<lb/>
able here. The sets included<lb/>
"God's Own Drunk" and a half<lb/>
written number, "We Are the<lb/>
People Our Parents Warned Us<lb/>
About<lb/>
This short electric break<lb/>
warmed the audience fa the<lb/>
return of the Caal Reefer Band.<lb/>
They quickly broke into a rendi-<lb/>
tion of "Margaritaville" - it<lb/>
sounds much better live - with<lb/>
Jay Spell laying a solid foundation<lb/>
on agan. it gave the number an<lb/>
Al Kooperish (the predominating<lb/>
simplistic agan sound on HIGH-<lb/>
WAY 61 REVISITED) texture.<lb/>
Fingers Tayla, along with<lb/>
Buffett ai acoustic guitar, sed-<lb/>
uctively opened "Pirate Looks at<lb/>
Faty Tayla ga the spotlight<lb/>
a great deal, and it was he that<lb/>
especially gave Buffett a rock and<lb/>
roll inclination. His mouth harp<lb/>
versitility was equal to that of<lb/>
Magic Dick, harmonica player fa<lb/>
J. Geils.<lb/>
The set also inducted "Come<lb/>
Monday "Why Don't We Get<lb/>
Drunk (And Screw) "I've Got a<lb/>
Carribean Soul I Can Barely<lb/>
Control and Jesse Winchester's<lb/>
 Biloxi The band refused to let<lb/>
up throughout the snow, con-<lb/>
stantly filling in at the right place<lb/>
- all were sheer professional sand<lb/>
canna be said about them. Jay<lb/>
Spell is an extremely talented<lb/>
boogie-woogie pianist, often ad-<lb/>
ding influences of ragtime and<lb/>
gospel. Spell has played with<lb/>
John Mayall in the past; it can be<lb/>
also noted his home is Spivey's<lb/>
Caner, N.C. Buttrey, the drum-<lb/>
mer, has toured previously with<lb/>
Neil Young, and isoonsidered one<lb/>
of the three best drummers in<lb/>
Nashville.<lb/>
Creckly, on rhythm and lead,<lb/>
was a solid guitarist and the bass<lb/>
player, Harry Daily, was instru-<lb/>
mental in laying the rhythm that<lb/>
prevailed throughout the show.<lb/>
Buffett and the Caal Reefer<lb/>
Band returned fa two enoaes,<lb/>
continuing in the steady vein that<lb/>
had already been produced. All<lb/>
members were allowed shat tight<lb/>
solos fa the finaly.<lb/>
Buffett came across as a<lb/>
musidan who not only had a job<lb/>
to do, but a musidan who enjoyed<lb/>
his job. It was easy to perceive<lb/>
that the man had fun at what he is<lb/>
best at. This is a rarity in a<lb/>
plastic-coated business where<lb/>
money is the main goal. Buffett<lb/>
was sincere, funny, and a com-<lb/>
petent musidan. The result was<lb/>
an extremely enjoyable even-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Fonda to appear<lb/>
The North Carolina State<lb/>
University Student Center will<lb/>
present Miss Jane Fonda (now<lb/>
starring in Lillian Hellman's<lb/>
"Julia") in ledure, Wed Od.<lb/>
19, 1977 at 8W p.m. in Stewart<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Fa tickets and information,<lb/>
call 737-3104 a come by the Box<lb/>
Office on the second flea of the<lb/>
University Student Center.<lb/>
GERDA NISCHAN<lb/>
Internationally Known<lb/>
Greenville Poet<lb/>
Will Be In The<lb/>
ECU STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
Wednesday, October 19,1977<lb/>
10:00 am To 2:00 pm<lb/>
Autograph Copies Of Her New Book<lb/>
RED SKY<lb/>
IN THE NIGHT<lb/>
$3.00 Paperback $5.00 Clothback<lb/>
Gerda Has Published Poetry<lb/>
In Magazines On Three Continents<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
presents<lb/>
BYE BYE BIRDIE<lb/>
directed by Edgar R. Loessin<lb/>
Wednesday through Saturday<lb/>
October 19-22 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium<lb/>
Reserved Seats, $3.50<lb/>
STUDENTS ADMITTED FREE, WITH<lb/>
AND ACTIVITY CARD<lb/>
I.D<lb/>
Reserve your tickets now to get the best seating. Come to the Playhouse Box Office<lb/>
between 10 and 4 Monday through Friday and bring an I.D. and an Activity Card for each<lb/>
ticket you want. The Box Office is in the lobby of McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0012"/><lb/>
HBHHH<lb/>
mammm<lb/>
?HBBBMB<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 13 October 1977<lb/>
1<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
r<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
?by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Women's tennis finals<lb/>
MCVEIGH REPBA TSIN WOMEN'S TENNISSINGLES<lb/>
Janioe McVeigh repeated as the women's intramural tennis<lb/>
champion, beating Janet Hoeppel for the second year in a row with a<lb/>
2-6, 7-6, 6-3 win.<lb/>
McVeigh and Hoeppel met in last year's finals and McVeigh took a<lb/>
relatively easy 6-4, 6-1 win for the title. In this year's rematch the same<lb/>
type of final was expected, but Ms. Hoeppel showed up with much<lb/>
more tire in her game than last year.<lb/>
Battling McVeigh with both a strong serve and a good ground<lb/>
game, Hoeppel broke McVeigh's service three times in the first set and<lb/>
grabbed a 6-2 first set win, putting the defending champion in the<lb/>
unaccustomed position of having to come back.<lb/>
McVeigh fought back, though, and in the second set she played a<lb/>
better caliber of tennis against her inspired opponent. The result<lb/>
carried the two girls into a 6-6 tie and McVeigh won the tie-breaker<lb/>
game for a 7-6 win that evened the match.<lb/>
With the air chilling and sky growing darker, McVeigh took the<lb/>
upper hand in the deciding set and began wearing out Hoeppel with<lb/>
well-placed shots and patience. Her efforts seemed to work and she<lb/>
came through with a hard-earned 6-3 win that gave her the three-set<lb/>
victory and the championship trophy fa the second year in a row.<lb/>
Hoeppel settled for second place for the second year in a row but, as<lb/>
the caliber of play indicated, there wasn't much difference between the<lb/>
champion and runner-up. Both women played excellent tennis.<lb/>
The women weren't the only ones playing tennis last Thursday.<lb/>
While the men's singles title hasn't been decided yet, the men's<lb/>
doubles competition was winding down with the championship match<lb/>
between the teams of John Irby and Mike Davis and Bill MoGee and<lb/>
Tom Cunningham.<lb/>
McGee and Cunningham had been slight favorites going into the<lb/>
final, but it was the team of Irby and Davis that came away with the<lb/>
doubles trophies.<lb/>
Both matches were dose as the teams both displayed well-learned<lb/>
teamwork, but Irby and Davis took a two-set, straight set win with 7-5,<lb/>
6-4 victories.<lb/>
Last Tuesday night, the injury-plagued KA's were upset by the<lb/>
Sigma Nu's, 20-16. The KA's had been the last unbeaten fraternity<lb/>
team. The Sigma Nus, who weren't good enough through the entire<lb/>
season to finish in the top four, and thus won't play in the playoffs, just<lb/>
put it all together for one game.<lb/>
The loss dropped the KA's back to 6-1 and left them bunched at the<lb/>
top of the fraternity heap with Kappa Sigma, Tau Kappa Epsilon and<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha. The four teams qualified for the playoffs in the<lb/>
fraternity division, sporting a combined record of 22-6.<lb/>
The Time-Outs broke-their own all-time intramural single game<lb/>
scoring record in a98-20 win over the Jones' Junkmen. The Time Outs<lb/>
set the old record last season, when they scored 90 points.<lb/>
An interesting sidelight to that game is that Jones Dorms' teams<lb/>
haven't received mention in this newsletter this season. Well,<lb/>
congratulations are in order to the Junkmen fa putting Jones Dam<lb/>
back in the annals of Intramural flag foot ball's great moments. Oh, by<lb/>
the way, last year's 90 point Time Out perfamanoe also was scaed<lb/>
against a Jones Dam team.<lb/>
In other games last week, the Time Outs ripped another Jaies<lb/>
Dam team, the Raiders, 54-16. They even had seafood fa dinner aie<lb/>
day, baling the Belk Crabs, 44-20.<lb/>
In one of the longest-awaited games of the intramural season, the<lb/>
Rugby Leathernuts and Rugby Ruggers met Thursday. Bah teams<lb/>
were unbeaten and they were vying na only fa first-place in the club<lb/>
division, but also fa "bragging rights" among the Rugby Club<lb/>
members.<lb/>
The Sadaharu Ohs dosed their season with a pair of easy wins;<lb/>
beating the Follies, 58-28, and the Stop Nads, 40-24. The Albanians<lb/>
dosed their season with a narrow 38-32 win over the Locals, while the<lb/>
Time-Ins slipped past the Follies, 28-20.<lb/>
The women begin their campus playoffs Tuesday and the Gotten<lb/>
Bunnies stay on top of the pack with a 7-0 mark. Only one aher team,<lb/>
the fourth-ranked Tri Sigma team at 5-0, remained unbeaten.<lb/>
The Bunnies won't have the title oonceded to them, though, as the<lb/>
second-ranked Tylermites and third-ranked Green Steam would like to<lb/>
see to it that the Bunnies don't get out of the divisional playoffs. The<lb/>
Bunnies beat both teams during the regular season and revenge could<lb/>
be sweet in the playoffs.<lb/>
Bucs battle Spiders<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Assistant Spats Edita<lb/>
When a team oones into your<lb/>
home stadium seating a ate and<lb/>
four reoad, and the same team<lb/>
has shut out 'hreetimesthisyear,<lb/>
it would seem that the home team<lb/>
should have an easy win on their<lb/>
hands. This may a may na be<lb/>
true, but in the case of the<lb/>
Richmond Spiders it can be a<lb/>
terrible mistake.<lb/>
The Spiders, it seems, can be<lb/>
either great a na so great and<lb/>
still come in and give East<lb/>
Carolina all the tough football<lb/>
that it wants. In fad, during the<lb/>
Pat Dye era, the Spiders have<lb/>
won two of the three games<lb/>
played thus far. During that time<lb/>
Richmond broke East Carolina's<lb/>
undefeated string of home games<lb/>
at Ficklen Stadium with a 17-14<lb/>
upset in 1975.<lb/>
In 1974 the Spiders defeated<lb/>
East Carolina in their home<lb/>
stadium 28-20. Last year, in one<lb/>
of the most unusual college<lb/>
games of the year, the Pirates<lb/>
won a 20-10 victory at City<lb/>
Stadium in Richmond in which<lb/>
there was a total of eleven<lb/>
fumbles by bah teams.<lb/>
Now in 1977 Richmond, a 25-0<lb/>
loser last week at the hands of<lb/>
VMI, invades Ficklen Stadium fa<lb/>
what will no doubt be a struggle<lb/>
fa the Pirates It seems that<lb/>
ooach Jim Tait always has the<lb/>
Spiders ready to do battle with<lb/>
the Pirates, so the game will<lb/>
probably be a la tougher than<lb/>
anyone oould believe.<lb/>
The Pirates were involved in a<lb/>
shutout themselves last week in a<lb/>
33-0 rout over Southern Illinois<lb/>
befae a reoad Ficklen crowd. It is<lb/>
hoped that the improvement on<lb/>
the part of the offense and the<lb/>
tough defense will continue this<lb/>
Saturday. In a drive fa a bowl<lb/>
bid, every game is impatant and<lb/>
anaher loss this season would<lb/>
mean that a bowl will be out fa<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
The game with Richmond<lb/>
looms as a tough game fa the<lb/>
Pirates fa a la of reasons. The<lb/>
biggest problem fa the Pirates is<lb/>
maivatioi against the Spiders.<lb/>
The Spiders, oi the aher hand,<lb/>
Basketball<lb/>
East Carolina vs Richmond<lb/>
Saturday, Odober 15, 700 p.m.<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
 Estimated attendance: 20,000<lb/>
OFFENSES: EastCarolina- Wishbone<lb/>
Richmond-Pro-I<lb/>
DEFENSES: East Carolina-5-2<lb/>
Richmond-5-2<lb/>
I RECORDS: East Carolina-5-1<lb/>
Richmond-1-4<lb/>
SERIES: Richmoid leads 11-7<lb/>
PROVABLE STARTING LINEUPS<lb/>
OFFENSEDEFENSE<lb/>
East Carolina PiratesRichmond Spiders<lb/>
SE Terry Gallaher(Sr 174)LE Ray Chase (Jr 215)<lb/>
LT Mitchell Smith (Jr 236)LT Billy Cheshire (Jr 250)<lb/>
LG Nelson Smith (Jr 238)MGKenGilliam(So225)<lb/>
CRickieHolliday(Sr193)RT Greg Mitchell (So245<lb/>
RG Wayne Bdt(Sr 257)RE Jim Coppola (So 215) .<lb/>
RT JoeGodette(So224)LB Ray Kelly (Jr 200)<lb/>
TE Barry Johnson (Sr 225)LB Orlandus Branch (Sr 230)<lb/>
QB Jimmy Southerland (Sr 170)LCB Rickey Crawfad (Jr 195)<lb/>
FB Theodae Sutton (So 200)SS Rubin Turner (Fr 180)<lb/>
RB Willie Hawkins(Sr 188)FSJeff Nixai(Sr195)<lb/>
RB Eddie Hicks(Jr 201)RCB Dave Haney(Jr 185)<lb/>
OFFENSEDEFENSE<lb/>
RichmondEast Carolina<lb/>
TE JimSpriggs(Fr220)SE Fred Chavis(Jr 200)<lb/>
QT Jesse M core (Fr 270)LTWoodrow Stevenson (So 230) i<lb/>
QG Cubby Pritchard (Sr 235)NG Oliver Felton(Jr 207)<lb/>
CJoe Kroger (So230)RT Noah Clark (So 225)<lb/>
SGLouBonato(Sr240)WE Zack Valentine (Jr 218)<lb/>
ST Farest Paulsai (So230)SLB Harold Randolph (Sr .195)<lb/>
SE Mike Huddlestai (Sr 195)WLB Harold Fat (Sr 193)<lb/>
QB Jeff Smith (So 180)LCB Charlie Carter (So 173).<lb/>
FBTimThacker(So200)SS Gerald Hall (Jr 184)<lb/>
RB Buster Jackson (Sr 175)FS Steve Hale (Sr 177)<lb/>
FL Ken Tweedy (Fr 185)RCBWilleHdleySo176)<lb/>
Placekicker: Steve Adanps-Placekicker: Junia Creech<lb/>
Punter: Bruce AllenPunter: Rodney Allen<lb/>
consider East Cardina a big rival<lb/>
and would love nahing better<lb/>
than to be a spoiler fa the year.<lb/>
All that can be said is that<lb/>
Richmoid will be ready to play<lb/>
tough with East Carolina, and the<lb/>
Pirates just better faget the<lb/>
Spiders previous perfamanoes.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Gillman begins practice<lb/>
See INTRAMURALS, p 13 I<lb/>
First year head ooech Larry<lb/>
Gillman will put his basketball<lb/>
team through its first wakouts ai<lb/>
Saturday maning as the 1977-78<lb/>
Pirates open pradice fa the<lb/>
caning year.<lb/>
Gillman, hired in the spring,<lb/>
was an assistant coach last year<lb/>
with the University of San Fran-<lb/>
dsoo, the nationally ranked team<lb/>
that finished 29-2 fa the year.<lb/>
This marks his first try as a head<lb/>
ooach ever.<lb/>
"My whde outlook on life is<lb/>
optimistic naed Gillman, "My<lb/>
optimism is very, very strong and<lb/>
I have a Id of confidence in<lb/>
myself and the people around me.<lb/>
My ambition has brought me this<lb/>
far at this age and I don't see any<lb/>
reason why this should stop here,<lb/>
look faward to this season<lb/>
A junia odlege all-America,<lb/>
Oliver Mack, is one of the prime<lb/>
reasons fa Gillman's optimism.<lb/>
A two-time Junia Cdlege Na-<lb/>
tional All-Tournament pick, Mack<lb/>
has already made pre-season<lb/>
all-America lists of Playboy and<lb/>
GamePlan magazines. The 6-3<lb/>
junia guard is being tabbed by<lb/>
Gillman as aie of the top three<lb/>
guards in the nation this year,<lb/>
along with Phil Fad of North<lb/>
Cardina and Butch Lee of Mar-<lb/>
quette.<lb/>
Top returnees indude Herb<lb/>
Gray, a 6-7V2 faward; 6-3 guard<lb/>
Jim Ramsey; and 6-9 oento Greg<lb/>
Cornelius. Gray was leading<lb/>
scoer last year as a freshman<lb/>
with 11.5 points per game, while<lb/>
Ramsey was just behind at 11.3<lb/>
points per game, also as a<lb/>
freshman. Cornelius is the lead-<lb/>
ing returning rebounder with 6.8<lb/>
per game last year.<lb/>
Kyle Powers, Hob Krusen<lb/>
and Wake Henkel all have game<lb/>
experience and should provide<lb/>
strong depth. Powosand Krusen<lb/>
are bah sophomaes, while Hen-<lb/>
kel is a junio that did nd play<lb/>
last year due to a hand injury.<lb/>
Freshmen indude 6-2 guard<lb/>
Walto Moseley, a strong candi-<lb/>
date to start, Bernard Hill and<lb/>
Roger Carr, both towards.<lb/>
A fifth signee, Dan Roberts of<lb/>
Indiana, has dropped out of<lb/>
schod due to personal reasais<lb/>
and returned to his home.<lb/>
"The tough thing about wait-<lb/>
ing fa pradioe to start this year<lb/>
See PRACTICE p. 14)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0013"/><lb/>
IHBiHBniSHHHi<lb/>
13 October 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
Gillman hopes to upgrade ECU basketball<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Even though it is the middle of<lb/>
the football season, basketball<lb/>
season is just around the corner.<lb/>
In fact, for new head coach Larry<lb/>
Gillman, the season will start<lb/>
Saturday as he opens practice for<lb/>
the coming year. Coach Gillman<lb/>
is as anxious as anyone to start<lb/>
the season because of the excit-<lb/>
ment he feels the team is going to<lb/>
generate fa not only the student<lb/>
body but the city of Greenville as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
One of the reasons fa his<lb/>
excitement is Oliver Mack, a 6'3"<lb/>
guard from Queens, New Yak.<lb/>
He has been hsted on several<lb/>
All-America squads and is East<lb/>
Carolina's first All-American<lb/>
candidate in basketball. Don't<lb/>
think fa a minute, though, that<lb/>
Mack will be the only talent on<lb/>
the team this year. Walt Mosley,<lb/>
LARRY GILLMAN<lb/>
Roger Carr, and Bernard Hill are<lb/>
all highly reauited and talented<lb/>
players who coach Gillman feels<lb/>
will be exciting to watch and,<lb/>
mae impatant, can win in the<lb/>
process.<lb/>
"We will run a fast tempo<lb/>
which will be very exciting to<lb/>
INTRAMURALS<lb/>
Continued from p. 12<lb/>
In the independent division, Hypertension wound up at 6-2 and the<lb/>
Day Demons could tie fa the regular-seasai title if they win their game<lb/>
Moiday.<lb/>
The Sigmas are almost without equal amoig the saaity teams, but<lb/>
if there is a team with an upset chance of winning it could be Delta<lb/>
Zeta, who would like nahing mae than to upset their fifth street<lb/>
neighbas.<lb/>
In last week's action:<lb/>
The Fleming Flames beat the Penthouse Players 26-8;<lb/>
Hypertension shutout the Fleming Floozies, 36-0, Alpha Omiaon Pi<lb/>
beat Kappa Delta, 20-12; Sigma remained unbeaten with a 14-0<lb/>
shutout win against Chi Omega; the Gotten Bunnies rolled to a<lb/>
32-6 win over the Fleming Foxes; Fletcher's Fasties beat the Floozies,<lb/>
24-20; Hypertension swamped the Flames, 42-6; Delta Zeta dropped<lb/>
AOPM4-0; the Tylermites nipped the Day Demons, 24-12; and Chi<lb/>
Omega upset Alpha Xi Delta, 16-12.<lb/>
The biggest upset of the year, though, came on Tuesday. The<lb/>
winless Penthouse Players, cellar dweller in the Foot League, played<lb/>
up to their name fa ate game and upset the third-ranked and<lb/>
previously unbeaten, Greene Steam, by a scae of 14-6. Debra Smith<lb/>
scaed all 14 points fa the players in the biggest upset of the<lb/>
intramural season.<lb/>
The Pro Shop<lb/>
Of Greenville, Inc.<lb/>
(Adjacent to King &amp; Queen Restaurant)<lb/>
2c Complete GolfTennis Equipment<lb/>
and Apparrel For Men and Women<lb/>
 New Fall Sweaters, Warm-ups<lb/>
and Clothing Arriving Daily<lb/>
 Faded Glory Fashion Jeans and<lb/>
Coordinates-One Pair at Reg. Price,<lb/>
The 2nd Pair cpcc I<lb/>
(Open Till 8:00pm Mon Fri.<lb/>
Till 6:00 on Sat.)<lb/>
752-1526<lb/>
watch Gillman said. "The<lb/>
speed such players as Mack and<lb/>
Mosley posses will make fa not<lb/>
only an exciting team but one<lb/>
which I feel will be competitive<lb/>
with any team on our schedule,<lb/>
Ruggers<lb/>
upset<lb/>
Greensboro<lb/>
The ECU Rugby Club slashed<lb/>
their way to an upset victay<lb/>
Sunday over the Greensboro<lb/>
Rugby Club &amp;-8.<lb/>
The diehard fans who atten-<lb/>
ded watched the ball pop, drop<lb/>
and bounoe off just about every<lb/>
player, due to the downpour of<lb/>
rain. Greensboro opened the<lb/>
scaing with a ten-yard run by<lb/>
Steve Dailey.<lb/>
ECU answered with Geage<lb/>
Baity faking two opponents fa a<lb/>
60 meter scae. Baity then kicked<lb/>
the point after making it 4-6.<lb/>
Befae the ball became too<lb/>
waterlogged the clubs exchanged<lb/>
tries on openfield runs by Bill<lb/>
Bradley of Greensboro and Rob-<lb/>
bie Robertson of ECU.<lb/>
The big play of the game was<lb/>
on an alert play by Rhett Rayna,<lb/>
who blocked an extra point that<lb/>
would have given Greensbao the<lb/>
match.<lb/>
"They seem to improve mae<lb/>
and mae as the weeks go by<lb/>
said ECU Coach Goulder. "If we<lb/>
oould get mae people out fa the<lb/>
club then they could scrimmage,<lb/>
which is where they need the<lb/>
wak most<lb/>
including the ACC. In fact,<lb/>
anyone in the ACC would love to<lb/>
have the talented new players<lb/>
that we now have Fa the student<lb/>
body, our main goal is to be as<lb/>
exciting as possoble, win as many<lb/>
games as possible and most<lb/>
impatant to make the students<lb/>
proud of their basketball<lb/>
program. Of course I realize the<lb/>
programs that have been here at<lb/>
ECU in the past have been a big<lb/>
letdown to the student body, but I<lb/>
pledge to the students that they<lb/>
enjoy watching ECU Basketball<lb/>
this year and in years to oome.<lb/>
We want to make basketball fun<lb/>
at ECU and excitement and<lb/>
winning is fun<lb/>
Coach Gillman realizes, of<lb/>
course, that in ader to make a<lb/>
post-season tournament as a<lb/>
major independent, a certain<lb/>
number of games must be won to<lb/>
See GILLMAN, p. 14<lb/>
?JiiUxri JZAjJUbina,InTtowV CP<lb/>
? Afiu't jytMJ rums oUAtfvuu C&amp;tritAs<lb/>
tovuM Jsnj CjiAMifn(H CutnjkaJu,<lb/>
r<lb/>
Rick's Guitar Shop<lb/>
announces its<lb/>
Gigantic Fall Sale<lb/>
Friday and Saturday Oct 14th &amp;15th<lb/>
Vz price on<lb/>
guitars<lb/>
Martin and Alvarez guitars 40 off<lb/>
All books ft off<lb/>
All strings and accessories 40 off<lb/>
Everything in the store is reduced<lb/>
Live music and Big Savings<lb/>
In the Georgetowne Shoppes<lb/>
752-2509<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 13 October 1977<lb/>
Motivation necessary for Pirate victory<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Wins have oome few and far<lb/>
between fa opponents in Fioklen<lb/>
Stadium during the last six years.<lb/>
The Pirates have won 28 of<lb/>
their last 29 home games over<lb/>
that period, with their last defeat<lb/>
dating back to the middle of the<lb/>
1975 season when the Richmond<lb/>
Spiders topped ECU 17-14.<lb/>
 Our players don't seem to be<lb/>
real excited said Dye Wednes-<lb/>
day at his weekly press luncheon.<lb/>
"It's frustrating to me. They've<lb/>
done everything we've asked, but<lb/>
we're doing too much pushing<lb/>
and pulling out there on the<lb/>
practice field. I seem to be the<lb/>
only one excited about this team<lb/>
right now<lb/>
Excited or not, the Pirates still<lb/>
came through with their fifth<lb/>
victory of the season last week,<lb/>
demolishing Southern Illinois<lb/>
ECU-Duke series<lb/>
Duke University actirg athletic director Tom Butters and East<lb/>
Carolina University athletic director Bill Cain recently announced<lb/>
the signing of a three-year contract for football games in 1979, 1980<lb/>
and 1981. All games will be played in Durham and Wallace Wade<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
"The addition of East Carolina to our football schedule fa<lb/>
1979-80-81 is of significance to our program. It allows state-wide<lb/>
interest and that is essential to both our interootlegiate program and<lb/>
our university. Consideration of scheduling between the two<lb/>
universities fa additional games beyaid these three will be given at<lb/>
the appropriate time said Butters.<lb/>
Cain added, "The scheduling of Duke University represents the<lb/>
policy of East Carolina University to continually improve its athletic<lb/>
programs. Duke University is one of the nation's most respected<lb/>
universities. They have a well known tradition of outstanding athletic<lb/>
programs as well as academic excellence<lb/>
The Blue Devils and Pirates met fa the first time this seasai in<lb/>
Wade Stadium befae a crowd of 38,200, the largest opening day home<lb/>
aowd in Duke histay. The Pirates wot that game 17-16.<lb/>
The dates of the future games are September 15, 1979; September<lb/>
6, 1980; and October 3, 1981. The 1979 and 1980 games will be the<lb/>
season openers fa the Blue Devils.<lb/>
Iron Horse Trading Co<lb/>
Merchants and Craftsmen<lb/>
In Fine Gold and Silver Jewelry<lb/>
20 OFF<lb/>
14 Karat Gold<lb/>
Hours: MonThurs. 10-6<lb/>
Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-6<lb/>
Downtown on the Mall.<lb/>
In the First State Bank Bldg.<lb/>
I<lb/>
IIL HODGES<lb/>
i<lb/>
Sweat Shirts $7.95<lb/>
Pull Over And Zipper<lb/>
j Lettered free with this coupon<lb/>
4 Greek letters<lb/>
or any other initals<lb/>
"Loop" bottom<lb/>
33-0, which was the first ECU<lb/>
shutout this season.<lb/>
"I may be expecting too much<lb/>
offensively explained Dye,<lb/>
"but if we can just get physical,<lb/>
we gonna' have some braggin<lb/>
rights. By the end of the Southern<lb/>
Illinois game, we got to where we<lb/>
Attendance rises<lb/>
Remarkable attendance continues fa the East Carolina University<lb/>
football team. Overall, the Pirates have played befae 2.7 over total<lb/>
capacity of the stadiums played in thus far this year. Consider the<lb/>
following:<lb/>
East Carolina has already broken the road attendance reoad in<lb/>
just four games away from home of the total seven road games this<lb/>
year. The Pirates have played befae 152,340 fans on the road (38,085<lb/>
average), while the school reoad was set in 1975 with 150,687 fans in<lb/>
six games (25,115 average).<lb/>
"East Carolina needs to average but 19,930, less than capacity, in<lb/>
its last two home games to break the Ficklen Stadium season reoad set<lb/>
last year. The reoad is 88,691 in five games (17,738 average). This<lb/>
year in two games, attendance has reached 48,832 (24,416 average),<lb/>
leaving the Pirates only 39,859 (19,930 average) fans away from the<lb/>
recad. Should the Pirates break the reoad, it would be done in only<lb/>
four home games.<lb/>
"East Carolina should break its all-time yearly attendance mark<lb/>
against The Citadel in two weeks, based on current weekly draws. The<lb/>
11-game reoad is 237,191 set last year (21,563 average), while this<lb/>
year already 201,172 fans have watched the Pirates (33,528 average).<lb/>
This leaves East Carolina only 36,019 away from a new reoad with five<lb/>
games to play.<lb/>
"East Carolina has played befae the largest aowd in histay with<lb/>
52,813 at South Carolina and the third largest in histay with 49,000 at<lb/>
N.C State.<lb/>
"East Carolina has drawn its top two home aowds ever with<lb/>
25,251 against Southern Illinois Saturday and 23,581 against VMI two<lb/>
weeks ago.<lb/>
OPPONENTATTENDANCECAPACITY OF<lb/>
CAPACITY<lb/>
N.C. State(A)49,20044,000111.8<lb/>
Duke(A)38,20040,17895.1 ?<lb/>
Toledo (A)12,12718,50065.6 ?<lb/>
VMI(H)23,58120,000117.4.<lb/>
South Carolina A 52,81354,40697.1 .<lb/>
Southern III. (H)25,25120,000126.3<lb/>
TOTALS201,172197,084102.7.<lb/>
PRACTICE<lb/>
Continued from p. 12<lb/>
nas been trying to remain pa-<lb/>
tient added Gillman. "I'm very<lb/>
eager and ambitious and the<lb/>
entire team is showing great<lb/>
enthusiasm. While I know there<lb/>
will be upsand downs, I think we<lb/>
can have mae ups and provide<lb/>
lots of excitement<lb/>
The Pirates will wak toward<lb/>
their season opener against the<lb/>
University of Indiana on Nov. 26,<lb/>
at Bloomingtoi, Ind. The Hoo-<lb/>
siers were NCAA champions in<lb/>
1975.<lb/>
Treot Yourself To<lb/>
UNiTEDFIGURE<lb/>
SALON<lb/>
Tele. 756-2920<lb/>
We Offer:<lb/>
? Unlimited visits<lb/>
? Teamtime exercises wit<lb/>
an instructor.<lb/>
? Use of exercise equipment<lb/>
anytime. 10 A.M. til 9 P.M.<lb/>
? Sauna Baths<lb/>
? Diet Consultation<lb/>
? For ladies only<lb/>
? Affordable program<lb/>
? Leotards and tights for sale.<lb/>
? Locally owned with salons in New<lb/>
Bern and Wilson<lb/>
address:<lb/>
Red Oaks Shopping<lb/>
Center 264-By Pass<lb/>
GET SUM<lb/>
Exclusively<lb/>
for women<lb/>
$6.00 discount coupon for 4 months<lb/>
name<lb/>
address<lb/>
tele.<lb/>
could do what we wanted offen-<lb/>
sively. That's a sign of physically<lb/>
whipping a team and that's the<lb/>
only sure way to win.<lb/>
Dye cited center Ricky Holi-<lb/>
day, guard Wayne Bolt, safety<lb/>
Drew Fish, along with quarter-<lb/>
backs Leander Green and Jimmy<lb/>
Southerland fa their play against<lb/>
Southern Illinois. He also praised<lb/>
safety Gerald Hall, who set up<lb/>
two touchdowns with long punt<lb/>
returns against the Salukis.<lb/>
GILLMAN<lb/>
Continued from p. 13<lb/>
get a bid. In other wads, the<lb/>
Pirates must try to land an<lb/>
outside berth in the NCAA a a<lb/>
post-season tournament such as<lb/>
the NIT in New Yak.<lb/>
"For the outside media<lb/>
Gillman said, "we have a goal of<lb/>
winning as many games as it<lb/>
takes to make a post-season<lb/>
tournament. With the tough<lb/>
schedule we have this year I know<lb/>
it will be a challenge, but it is a<lb/>
goal I feel we will meet<lb/>
In speaking specificly of the<lb/>
schedule this year and in coming<lb/>
years, Gillman feels the Pirate<lb/>
fans will see their team up against<lb/>
some of the best teams in the<lb/>
country. Some of those teams will<lb/>
becoming toMingesColiseum in<lb/>
the future.<lb/>
"I feel that the schedule this<lb/>
year will be tough and challeng-<lb/>
ing, but if we are to build a<lb/>
reputation in basketball, we must<lb/>
play people with a national<lb/>
reputation. This year we will be<lb/>
opening at Indiana, the 1976<lb/>
NCAA champions. We will also<lb/>
be playing against such teams as<lb/>
NC State, Maryland, Duke, South<lb/>
Carolina and Virginia Tech. In<lb/>
December we will be competing<lb/>
against Boston College, LaSallp<lb/>
and UNCC in the Charlotte<lb/>
Invitational. This year at home<lb/>
we will be playing William and<lb/>
Mary, a two point loser to UCLA<lb/>
last year, and the University of<lb/>
Richmond to name a few. In the<lb/>
78-79 season we will have a great<lb/>
home schedule which includes<lb/>
Virginia Tech, Detroit, and South<lb/>
Carolina. We also play Notre<lb/>
Dame and Tennessee on the road<lb/>
that year<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
BRICE<lb/>
STREET<lb/>
RUBY<lb/>
STARR Oct. 25<lb/>
UnsL<lb/>
Thurs. &amp; Fri.<lb/>
'Southern Energy'<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
World Series<lb/>
&amp; Saturday<lb/>
Night Live<lb/>
c<lb/>
it<lb/>
FOf<lb/>
rod1<lb/>
tren<lb/>
756<lb/>
FOf<lb/>
bod<lb/>
red,<lb/>
756<lb/>
FOI<lb/>
thai<lb/>
Pov<lb/>
Wil<lb/>
752<lb/>
FO<lb/>
Air<lb/>
Rat<lb/>
ML<lb/>
FM<lb/>
Co-<lb/>
Mit<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Mon;<lb/>
Just<lb/>
alrea<lb/>
only<lb/>
hwy,<lb/>
retur<lb/>
757-(<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
speei<lb/>
new<lb/>
756-1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0015"/><lb/>
13 October 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
All too often, when the party<lb/>
ends, the trouble begins.<lb/>
People who shouldn't be<lb/>
doing anything more active than<lb/>
going to sleep are driving a car.<lb/>
Speeding and weaving their way<lb/>
to death.<lb/>
Before any of your friends<lb/>
drive home from your party, make<lb/>
sure they aren't drunk.<lb/>
Don't be fooled because they<lb/>
drank only beer or wine. Beer and<lb/>
wine can be just as intoxicating as<lb/>
mixed drinks.<lb/>
And don't kid yourself<lb/>
because they may have had some<lb/>
black coffee. Black coffee can't<lb/>
sober them up well enough to drive.<lb/>
If someone gets too drunk to<lb/>
drive, drive him yourself. Or call a<lb/>
cab. Or offer to let him sleep over.<lb/>
Maybe your friend won't be<lb/>
feeling so good on the morning after,<lb/>
but you're going to feel terrific.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
for sale<lb/>
FOR SALE: AM PEG Revabe-<lb/>
rocket II amp. 50 W. rev. and<lb/>
trem. Exc. oond. 60.00 Mike,<lb/>
756-6674 or ext. 6360.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Harmony hollow-<lb/>
body 6-string electric. 2 pickups,<lb/>
red, v. good oond. 40.00 Mike,<lb/>
756-6674 or ext. 6360.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1977 Chevy Van. Less<lb/>
than 6,000 miles. Cost new $6535.<lb/>
Power steering, AMFM radio.<lb/>
Will sacrifice for $5,000. Call<lb/>
752-0412.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Audi IDOLS.<lb/>
Air, AMFM. Good Cond. British<lb/>
Racing Green.<lb/>
MUST SELL: Craig Power play<lb/>
FM and cassette. Plus Powerplay<lb/>
Co-axel speakers. Best offer. Call<lb/>
Mike 756-1693.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '77 Beige Chev.<lb/>
Monza sports coupe. 4 speed.<lb/>
Just take over payments. $900<lb/>
already paid off. Has 6000 miles,<lb/>
only driven for 3 months. 29 miles<lb/>
hwy, 26 city. Must sell. Student<lb/>
returning to school. Call Mel<lb/>
757-6462.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 75 Toyota Celica, 5<lb/>
speed, AMFM Stereo, Air, two<lb/>
new steel belted radial tires. Call<lb/>
756-1024 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Texas Instruments<lb/>
SR-52. 224 step programable.<lb/>
Alsocard programable Complete<lb/>
with math, stat games, and<lb/>
basic Libraries. Over $300 new,<lb/>
15 mos. old. Best offer. Contact<lb/>
Tony Bennett Room 401 Jones.<lb/>
SELL OR TRADE: 1966 Volvo.<lb/>
Needs some repair. Write Ted<lb/>
P.O. Box 494 Bell Arthur, 27811.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 3 wheeler VW<lb/>
powered motorcycle 40 h.p.<lb/>
Chromed forks (1976). Asking<lb/>
1200.00. Call 746-3271 late after-<lb/>
noon and evenings ask for Danny.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Leather jacket, excel-<lb/>
lent oond must be seen to be<lb/>
appreciated. Call Lee at 758-5965<lb/>
or come by 308 C. Scott. ARE<lb/>
YOU TIRED OF THE HIGH<lb/>
PRICE OF CLOTHES Have<lb/>
them made at less than V? the<lb/>
cost of what you would buy them<lb/>
at. Fa all your sewing needs call<lb/>
758-6393 after 2300.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 12 string guitar<lb/>
whard shell case, excellent copy<lb/>
of a Martin. New oost 285.00<lb/>
Need money bad so will sell for<lb/>
125.00 Call 752-5692.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Tascam Model 3<lb/>
recording mixer. Four months<lb/>
old. 8 Chanel sub mixer. In and 4<lb/>
bus. lines out with Peak reading<lb/>
meters 690. Must sell, 752-5692.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New ladies ice<lb/>
skates, size 8. Reasonable prioes.<lb/>
If interested call 752-0411 <lb/>
FOR SALE: 69 Chev. Van<lb/>
Panneled and carpet. 307 V8<lb/>
engine &amp; 3 speed auto. 1500.00 or<lb/>
best reasona We offer may trade.<lb/>
758-9909.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Epiphone aocoustic<lb/>
guitar. Good Cond. Best Offer.<lb/>
Call Mike 758-1693 a come by<lb/>
805-East 3rd St.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Used Bundy darinet.<lb/>
Excellent cond. 100.00 a best<lb/>
offer. 758-9385.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 350 Honda.<lb/>
Excellent cond. 350.00 Call<lb/>
758-0693.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Registered Pointer<lb/>
pups. White Knights Button<lb/>
Blood lines. 756-5368 after 600<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
BUY NOW: 1967 V.W. Station-<lb/>
wagon. 300.00. Art student needs<lb/>
to sell car fa food money. See at<lb/>
510 E. 1st St. Apt. 6, afta 5p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Mclntosh C-28 pre-<lb/>
amp, 8 mon. old. Need money<lb/>
fast Best offa ova 350.00. Call<lb/>
752-5692 anytime afta 7X)0-until<lb/>
wheneva.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '72 Opel GT. Contact<lb/>
Steve at 752-3267.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Full size Sears<lb/>
Coldsopt frostfree refrigaata.<lb/>
Vay clean-looks like new. Must<lb/>
be sold by Novemba. $100. Call<lb/>
753-2468 anytime. We can<lb/>
arrange delivay.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 25 watt JVC receiva-<lb/>
ampliphier with turntable.<lb/>
Pionea cassette deck. Magnatex<lb/>
speakas. Call 756-0146.<lb/>
Ifor rent<lb/>
WANTED TO RENT: House<lb/>
within walking distance of<lb/>
campus 'a married couple with<lb/>
no kids. No lata than Dec. Must<lb/>
have wakshop a garage (around<lb/>
100.00) Call Mel at 757-6462.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Needed<lb/>
to share 2 bedroom api. in<lb/>
Eastbrook. Prefer someone inta-<lb/>
ested in study-aiented enviro-<lb/>
ment. Rent is $46.25 plus 14<lb/>
utilities. Call 752-0354.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Room, Private bath<lb/>
fa rait at 1905 E. Eighth St.<lb/>
Linoi included $60. 752-6985.<lb/>
WANTED TO RENT: House a<lb/>
apt. within walking dis. of<lb/>
campus fa couple wno kids.<lb/>
Must have eitha wakroom, a<lb/>
garage a extra bedroom. Need<lb/>
by Dec. PrefaaWy 100.00 range.<lb/>
Call Mel 8-5X30 757-6462.<lb/>
pgrsondl<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Fail things too<lb/>
big. too long? Call Kathy<lb/>
752-8444 a 752-8642.<lb/>
LOST: Blue cowhide leather<lb/>
wallet with the lettas B.B.D. ai<lb/>
the ooin purse has disappeared<lb/>
from my room. If found please<lb/>
return it-no questions-reward.<lb/>
Lynn Martin rm 291 Fleming<lb/>
dam.<lb/>
TYPING: .75 to $1.00. Excellent<lb/>
service. Call Pam at 757-6852<lb/>
(day), and 756-0211 (night).<lb/>
PORTRAITS BY MOLL: Finished<lb/>
drawings 16" x20" 10.00 of pose,<lb/>
15.00 from photo. Oil paintings,<lb/>
18"x24" are 50.00. Call 752-2604<lb/>
and ask fa Greg.<lb/>
LOST: Car keys in an Aigna key<lb/>
case. It istriangular in shape with<lb/>
5 keys en the ring. Please contact<lb/>
Holly Jaeme at 758-4204.<lb/>
FOUND: 2 mo. old black female<lb/>
puppy in the vicinity of Jones a.<lb/>
Call 752-7032.<lb/>
FREE KITTENS: Males and<lb/>
Females. Call 746-2462 afta 600<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FOUND: Set of car keys found In<lb/>
back parking lot of Beik Bldg last<lb/>
week. Can be claimed ? Rm. 300<lb/>
Beik.<lb/>
LOST: Black cat with flea collar<lb/>
and bell around Library &amp; 4th St.<lb/>
Call 758-7854. Reward.<lb/>
CRAFTS: ceramics, candles,<lb/>
weaving, leatha, batik, sewing,<lb/>
etc. all at Banyan Crafts-1016<lb/>
Myrtle Ave.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 13 October 1977<lb/>
THE GREENVILLE JAYCEES<lb/>
PROUDLY PRESENT<lb/>
THE FIRST ANNUAL PUMPKIN<lb/>
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL<lb/>
PITT COUNTY<lb/>
FAIRGROUNDS<lb/>
HWY. 13 MOUTH - GREENVILLE<lb/>
RAIN OR SHINE - RAIN SITE AVAILARLE<lb/>
Featuring:<lb/>
THE BLUEGRASS EXPERIENCE<lb/>
ROSY HUFFMAN S THE BLUEGRASS CUT-UPS<lb/>
NEW DIXIE GRASS<lb/>
CORE CREEK CORN COMMISSION<lb/>
SITTER CREEK STRING SAND<lb/>
and SPECIAL Guest<lb/>
THE GREEN GRASS CLOGGERS<lb/>
SIN. OCT. 1G<lb/>
NOON TIL DARK<lb/>
GATES OPEN 10 AM<lb/>
T1<lb/>
m<lb/>
GATES OPEN 10 AM<lb/>
ARTS &amp; CRAFTS DISPLAYS<lb/>
CONCESSIONS BY PEPSI COLA<lb/>
PEPSI<lb/>
GATE ADMISSION: $3.00<lb/>
Children under 12 FREE<lb/>
when accompanied by adult<lb/>
ADVANCE TICKETS: ADULTS $2.50 - Available at: Apple Records, Rick's Guitar Shop, Plaza Gulf<lb/>
and Mendenhall Student Center, E.C.U. Also from Greenville Jaycees, P.O. Box 258, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Bring blankets &amp; hwn chairs and come on out and enjoy a full day of musk and<lb/>
fun. Proceeds support the many chari.able protects of the Greenville Jaycees.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058013_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>