<?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="00058014_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity fa over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Vol. 53, No. 14<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina.<lb/>
17<lb/>
1977<lb/>
ON THE INSDE<lb/>
"laissez-fairep. 6<lb/>
Baton twirlerp. 7<lb/>
Baker publishesp. 8<lb/>
Mackp. 14<lb/>
Legislature pressed for careful spending<lb/>
By BILL HARRINGTON<lb/>
Assistant NewsEdita<lb/>
The SGA Legislature has<lb/>
$43,000 less to appropriate this<lb/>
year than last year's legislature<lb/>
appropriated, according to SGA<lb/>
President Neil Seasons.<lb/>
Last year's legislature appro-<lb/>
priated $293,000. This year's<lb/>
legislature has approximately<lb/>
$250,000 to appropriate.<lb/>
Sessoms said an additional<lb/>
$46,000 fa the funding of the<lb/>
Buccaneer tor this year should be<lb/>
added to the $43,000 figure to<lb/>
accurately measure the difference<lb/>
in the appropriation potential of<lb/>
this year's SGA when compared<lb/>
with last year'a<lb/>
Funding fa last year's Bucca-<lb/>
neer was vetoed by last year's<lb/>
SGA president, Tim Sullivan.<lb/>
According to Sessoms, this<lb/>
year's smaller legislative appro-<lb/>
priation has faced funding cut-<lb/>
Advisor<lb/>
discusses<lb/>
cops' duties<lb/>
By SCOTT BARNES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. David B. Stevens, advisa<lb/>
for the ECU campus police,<lb/>
discussed the responsibilities and<lb/>
the legal liabilities of campus<lb/>
police officers last Wednesday in<lb/>
a symposium sponsaed by the<lb/>
League of Scholars.<lb/>
Campus cops must protect the<lb/>
faculty, administration, and stu-<lb/>
dents of the university, a3 well as<lb/>
protect the univasity grounds.<lb/>
Dr. Stevens said a police officer<lb/>
should be recognized as a person<lb/>
who is a member of the commun-<lb/>
ity as a citizen; but because law<lb/>
enfacement officers are human<lb/>
too, they carry a big responsibility<lb/>
which is to protect and serve the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
If a campus oop aaks fa a<lb/>
student ID card, it is to the<lb/>
benefit of the student to show it to<lb/>
him rather than to refuse. An<lb/>
officer, whether investigating a<lb/>
crime or not, may at any time ask<lb/>
to see an ID. Immediate,suspicion<lb/>
may result if a student refuses an<lb/>
investigating officer's request to<lb/>
see an ID card.<lb/>
backs a curtailments in all SGA<lb/>
funded aganizationa<lb/>
The money fa the SGA<lb/>
budget canes fran a percentage<lb/>
of student fees appropriated to<lb/>
the SGA by the ECU Board of<lb/>
Trusteea Ooaaomo said.<lb/>
The board of trustees decides<lb/>
what percentage of student fees<lb/>
the SGA can spend, said Ses-<lb/>
soms, but allocates this percen-<lb/>
tage In a lump sum to be<lb/>
budgeted In whatever way the<lb/>
SGA feels appropriate.<lb/>
THOUGH KENT STATE students protested the building of a<lb/>
gymnasium on the site where four students were slain by National<lb/>
Guardsmen in 1970 in an anti-war demonstration, the construction<lb/>
of the building has recently begun.<lb/>
Photo by LNS<lb/>
Task Force to study<lb/>
alcohol use, abuse<lb/>
Dr. Robert Holt, Vice<lb/>
Chancellor fa Administration<lb/>
and Planning, has appointed a<lb/>
Task Face Committee to study<lb/>
the use and abuse of alcoholic<lb/>
beverages on campus. Dr. Marty<lb/>
Zusman, Associate Professor in<lb/>
the Sociology and Anthropology<lb/>
Department, is the chairman of<lb/>
the committee.<lb/>
Students on the committee<lb/>
Election results<lb/>
ByJOEBALLANCE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Kevin McCourt defeated<lb/>
Charles Sune for Sophomae<lb/>
Qass President, and David Den-<lb/>
ning defeated Ronnie Rose fa<lb/>
Graduate School President in a<lb/>
runoff election held last Thurs-<lb/>
Jay, according to Elections Chair-<lb/>
aerson Chuck New.<lb/>
McCourt won by a 24 to 20<lb/>
margin, and Denning won by a<lb/>
nine to seven margin, according<lb/>
to New.<lb/>
An opinion poll also on the<lb/>
ballot pertained to the limiting of<lb/>
elegibiiity fa SGA President to a<lb/>
one-year term, and to the funding<lb/>
of publications with student fees,<lb/>
but independent of SGA control<lb/>
There were 882 "yes" votes<lb/>
and 491 "no" fa the limiting of<lb/>
the SGA president to a one-year<lb/>
term, and 850 "yes" and 453<lb/>
"no" votes concerning indepen-<lb/>
dent publications.<lb/>
presently include Gini Ingram,<lb/>
Jennifer King, Marlene Stain-<lb/>
back, Kirk Edgerton, Bonnie<lb/>
Brockwell, Donnie Hall, Tommy<lb/>
Payne, Leon Schaffer, Regina<lb/>
Thompson and Pam Weaver.<lb/>
Representing the faculty are,<lb/>
besides Dr. Zusman, Dr. Wilbart<lb/>
Ball, Dr. Robert Barnes, Ms.<lb/>
Patricia Garten, Mrs. Virginia<lb/>
Payne and Mr. Jerry Lotterhos.<lb/>
Representing other elements<lb/>
of the University are Ma Nancy<lb/>
Smith, Miss Laura Ward, Mr. Jor<lb/>
Rcgersand Mr. Robert Uasery.<lb/>
Anyone else in the University<lb/>
community, especially,students,<lb/>
who are interested and wish to<lb/>
become involved in the commit-<lb/>
tee's activities should contact<lb/>
Dean Nancy Smith at the Office of<lb/>
the Associate Dean of Student<lb/>
Affairs, Room 214 Whichard<lb/>
Building. Her phone number is<lb/>
757-6772.<lb/>
The first meeting of the full<lb/>
committee will be held Tues<lb/>
Oct. 18, at 3 p.m. in Room 248<lb/>
MendenhaJI Student Center.<lb/>
The $250,000 figure set by the<lb/>
legislature fa this year consists<lb/>
of money presently in an SGA<lb/>
savings account, revenue from<lb/>
fail fees, and estimated revenue<lb/>
from spring fees, said Sessorna<lb/>
Last year's legislature appro-<lb/>
priated $293,000, Seasons said.<lb/>
According to Sessoms, tighter<lb/>
spending controls are necessary<lb/>
this year primarily because the<lb/>
SGA has a smaller amount of<lb/>
money to appropriate, and more<lb/>
organizations are dependent upon<lb/>
SGA funding.<lb/>
The SGA funds no profit-<lb/>
making enterprises, according to<lb/>
Sessorna<lb/>
 Everyting the SGA funds is a<lb/>
break-even proposition a a flat<lb/>
out give away said Sessorna<lb/>
"And since we're using stu-<lb/>
dent fees that's the way it should<lb/>
be.<lb/>
Sessoms cited bait tightening<lb/>
in several SGA funded aganiza-<lb/>
tions as examples of cooperation<lb/>
in meeting the proposed tighter<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
He said the proposed executive<lb/>
budget (which includes executive<lb/>
salaries, office equipment, and<lb/>
legal fees) has been cut from last<lb/>
year's $31,400 to $27,600.<lb/>
Proposed funding fa Foun-<lb/>
tainhead has been cut from last<lb/>
year's $61,000 to $51,000, said<lb/>
Sessoms.<lb/>
The Photo Lab, which is<lb/>
responsible fa all pictures in all<lb/>
campus publications, was cut<lb/>
from a $7,900 to $7,800.<lb/>
The Ebony Herald's total<lb/>
appropriation last year was<lb/>
$5,500 white this year' a proposed<lb/>
budget is $4,100, according to<lb/>
Seasons.<lb/>
According to WECU station<lb/>
manager Robert Maxon, last<lb/>
year's SGA appropriation fa<lb/>
WECU was approximately<lb/>
$19,500.<lb/>
This year's proposed request<lb/>
is fa $20,500.<lb/>
Rebel Edfta Luke Whisnant<lb/>
said last year's Rebel was appro-<lb/>
priated $12,062, while proposed<lb/>
funding fa this year totals<lb/>
$10,952.<lb/>
Though the transit system is<lb/>
offering two new services, a night<lb/>
route and a van fa handicapped<lb/>
students, their proposed budget<lb/>
has also been cut, said Sessorna<lb/>
Last year's initial transit bud-<lb/>
get was $59,000, said Sessoms,<lb/>
while proposed funding fa this<lb/>
year is $49,000.<lb/>
"Transit has cut their budget<lb/>
drastically while increasing ser-<lb/>
vices commented Sesaoms.<lb/>
"It's definitely one of our stron-<lb/>
gest programs "<lb/>
Sessoms said he hopes the<lb/>
SGA funding of programs asso-<lb/>
ciated with the athletic depart-<lb/>
ment will be stopped.<lb/>
Three ECU groups<lb/>
receive SGA money<lb/>
By STEVE WILSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The SGA Legislature appro-<lb/>
priated over $40,000 to various<lb/>
campus groups at its third<lb/>
legislative session Monday night.<lb/>
The ECU Playhouse was ap-<lb/>
propriated $30,000 of its estima-<lb/>
ted $40,000 operating budget,<lb/>
with the diffoence to come from<lb/>
box offioe revenue. Preston Sisk,<lb/>
Playhouse general manager who<lb/>
spoke on behalf of the group's<lb/>
interests, said the proposed bud-<lb/>
get had been kept ot a minimum,<lb/>
and that the estimated box office<lb/>
revenue of $10,000 was optimis-<lb/>
tically conservative.<lb/>
The Photo Lab received an<lb/>
appropriation slightly leas than<lb/>
the $7,891 requested. The differ-<lb/>
ence resulted from an amend-<lb/>
ment made by the legislature to<lb/>
cut the amount of appropriation<lb/>
by the equivalent of the yearly<lb/>
salary of one photographer.<lb/>
Pete Podeszwa, head photo-<lb/>
grapher, said it would be hard fa<lb/>
the Photo Lab to operate efficient-<lb/>
ly with one less photographer,<lb/>
and pointed out that the photo-<lb/>
graphers, were having to use<lb/>
their own equipment to compen-<lb/>
sate fa the $4500 worth of<lb/>
equipment stolen from the Photo<lb/>
Lab last year.<lb/>
The AFROTC Drill team was<lb/>
appropriated $300, which will be<lb/>
used to buy new helmets, accord-<lb/>
ing to an AFROTC spokesman.<lb/>
The SGA passed a resolution<lb/>
to send their approval and<lb/>
recommendation of a particular<lb/>
calendar schedule to the Faculty<lb/>
Senate, which will vote on a<lb/>
calendar selection at its next<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Among new bills submitted<lb/>
was one concerning re-evaluation<lb/>
and restatement of SGA election<lb/>
policy. The debate concerning<lb/>
current election policy and proce-<lb/>
dure was a result of the recent<lb/>
SGA elections, particularly the<lb/>
run-off election fa sophomae<lb/>
class president held last Thurs-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Treasurer Craig Hales remin-<lb/>
ded the legislature of its severely<lb/>
limited operating budget fa this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
'B YE B YE BIRDIE'<lb/>
tonight through Sat.<lb/>
ECU students free<lb/>
<pb facs="00058014_0002"/><lb/>
Sg �� ��? � , <lb/>
�<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUfMTAINHEAD 17 October 1977<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
Tickets are now on sale fa the<lb/>
FIREFALLoonoert in Mendenhali<lb/>
Student Center. Ticket prices are<lb/>
$3 for students and $5 for the<lb/>
public. The conoert will be Sun .<lb/>
Nov 6th at 8 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. FIREFAtL is another<lb/>
in a series of concerts brought to<lb/>
you by the Popular Entertainment<lb/>
Committee of the Student Union.<lb/>
Alpha Delta<lb/>
Applications will be taken fa<lb/>
the Theta Chapter of Alpha Delta<lb/>
Mu National Soaal Wak Haia<lb/>
Society from October 10 through<lb/>
October 31. An overall 3.3<lb/>
average with at least 7 hours of<lb/>
social work course credit is<lb/>
required Those interested may<lb/>
pick up applications at the<lb/>
Department of Soaal Wak and<lb/>
Carections(Ms. Lewis, Dr. Kle-<lb/>
daras) a fran Walter Cooper,<lb/>
Pam Albertson a Kathy Burgess.<lb/>
Applications must be returned by<lb/>
October 31.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
I<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 could be your lucky<lb/>
day<lb/>
Beta lota<lb/>
The beta lota chapter of<lb/>
Gamma Theta Upsilon, the<lb/>
National Geography Honor<lb/>
Soaety, is looking fa members to<lb/>
join during the '7778 school<lb/>
year There are two categaies of<lb/>
membership: Associate, which<lb/>
requires a minimum of one oourse<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/>
3ee Dr. Birchard, Brewster A-232<lb/>
fa an application fam.<lb/>
Aerospace<lb/>
The Department of Aerospace<lb/>
Studies will administw the Air<lb/>
Force Officer Qualifying Test<lb/>
(AFOQT) on the dates listed<lb/>
below. See Captain Lane in room<lb/>
204 a Captain Tinkham in room<lb/>
209 of Wright Annex a call<lb/>
757-6597 to make an appointment<lb/>
fa the test. This test must be<lb/>
completed if you wish to apply fa<lb/>
the two year AFROTC program.<lb/>
Oct 19<lb/>
Nov. 1<lb/>
Nov 16<lb/>
Nov 19<lb/>
Registers<lb/>
Freshman Registers may be<lb/>
picked up in room 229, the<lb/>
vioe-president's office, in Men-<lb/>
denhali Student Center.<lb/>
FG<lb/>
The Fa ever Generatiai 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 the routine and join us then!<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 oopy<lb/>
of each wak of literature fa<lb/>
yourself, and include your name,<lb/>
address, and phone number on all<lb/>
wak.<lb/>
Smokey<lb/>
around,<lb/>
town<lb/>
Faculty<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 12.00-1 00 p.m. in<lb/>
Memaial Gym. All those interes-<lb/>
ted in jogging, exercising, basket-<lb/>
ball, swimming, etc. should re-<lb/>
port to the gymnastics room on<lb/>
the first floa of Memaial Gym<lb/>
any Monday, Wednesday, or<lb/>
Friday at 12.00.<lb/>
"No more joking<lb/>
Smokey Ewing is in<lb/>
Smokey Ewing and group, a top<lb/>
semi-professional act will perfam<lb/>
at ECU Coffeehouse Thurs. &amp;<lb/>
Fri Oct. 20 and 21. Shows start<lb/>
at 9 p.m. each night.<lb/>
Smokey and group will per-<lb/>
fam a variety of styles, along<lb/>
with some very amusing aiginals<lb/>
Cone oie, oone all and have a<lb/>
ball. Only .50 a head will allow<lb/>
you to eat, drink and hear a top<lb/>
professional act. Rm. 15 Mend-<lb/>
enhali.<lb/>
BSD<lb/>
Announcing<lb/>
vertised secret,<lb/>
to YOUR local<lb/>
Union. Celebrate!<lb/>
a very well ad-<lb/>
It's ooming scon<lb/>
Baptist Student<lb/>
Comic Club Experience<lb/>
Like to spend your rainy<lb/>
afternoons reading Superman<lb/>
mae than Hemingway? Then<lb/>
cone to the ECU Comic Club<lb/>
Tuesday, October<lb/>
in room 248 of<lb/>
meeting this<lb/>
18, 7 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhali.<lb/>
Bridge<lb/>
The Bridge Club meets each<lb/>
Thursday evening at 7 30 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center. All<lb/>
persons interested in playing<lb/>
bridge are invited to attend.<lb/>
Anatomy<lb/>
Miss Anatomy Contest at Elbo<lb/>
Room Wed Oct. 1S at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Will judge on legs, bikini, bunns.<lb/>
Winner gets $25 cash prize.<lb/>
Sponsaed by Alpha Phi Big<lb/>
Brahers.<lb/>
Interested in publication ex-<lb/>
perience? In writing a lay out<lb/>
wak? The FOUNTAINHEAD is<lb/>
the place to find skills that will be<lb/>
marketable in the future.<lb/>
Chi Beta Phi<lb/>
Don't faget the pledge Chi<lb/>
Beta Phi meeting this Wed. at<lb/>
7 30 p.m. In room N102 of the<lb/>
Biology building. Open to stud-<lb/>
ents with an overall g.p.a. of 2.75<lb/>
a better who have oompleted at<lb/>
least 30 q.h. of science with a 3.0<lb/>
or better. Dr. Nicklaus Geagalis<lb/>
will speak oi the philosophies of<lb/>
saence. Fa mae infamatiai<lb/>
caitact Bob Dough at 756-5128.<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
OT<lb/>
On Wed , Oct 19 at 7 p.m<lb/>
there will be a chance fa all<lb/>
prospective cocupatiaial therapy<lb/>
students (guys and gals) to ask<lb/>
questions and learn mae about<lb/>
occupational therapy. The meet-<lb/>
ing will be held in OT lab at Allied<lb/>
Health in room 203. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served and all<lb/>
interested students are WEL-<lb/>
COME'<lb/>
Poet<lb/>
Gerda Nichan, internationally<lb/>
known Greenville poet will<lb/>
autograph her newly published<lb/>
book Red Sky in the Night in the<lb/>
ECU Student Supply Stae fran<lb/>
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Wed Oct 19.<lb/>
Help is a desperate wad<lb/>
Intended fa desperate people<lb/>
But few are able to use this<lb/>
plea<lb/>
And the pain mounts to an<lb/>
awful degree<lb/>
"HELP when saeamed<lb/>
draws a chill through every bone<lb/>
But how many people will<lb/>
answer a silent saeam?<lb/>
They know something is<lb/>
wrong<lb/>
But there's nothing they can<lb/>
do, it seems.<lb/>
YOU CAN HELP. There is an<lb/>
organization on campus, the<lb/>
Student Council Fa Exceptional<lb/>
Children, (SCEC), that recognizes<lb/>
this plea fa help fran retarded<lb/>
children. Our goals are to suppat<lb/>
and initiate programs and activi-<lb/>
ties fa retarded citizens. All<lb/>
students are invited to our<lb/>
meetings the first Wednesday of<lb/>
every month in Speight 129 at<lb/>
730 p.m. Please show that you<lb/>
care. Be an exceptional person;<lb/>
support exceptional children!<lb/>
Minority Arts<lb/>
There will be a Minaity Arts<lb/>
meeting Thurs Get. 20 at 4 p.m<lb/>
in the Student Unioi Lounge. All<lb/>
members are to be present.<lb/>
Hot Dogs<lb/>
If you're hungry and want to<lb/>
satisfy your tummy, then come to<lb/>
Fleming lobby on Thurs. Oct. 20<lb/>
from 11 til 1 fa sane good ole hot<lb/>
dogs with all the fixins Reason-<lb/>
able prioes. First oome, first<lb/>
serve. Hope to see ya'll there.<lb/>
Socio-Anthro<lb/>
Attention: The Sociology-<lb/>
Anthropology Club will hold a<lb/>
meeting Oct. 19at 730 in BD302.<lb/>
Present business will be discus-<lb/>
sed as well as future plans<lb/>
concerning the club. Everyone is<lb/>
invited! Bring your friends too.<lb/>
Ski Trip<lb/>
Vacation Ski Trip to Beech<lb/>
Mountain Jan. 2-6. You may still<lb/>
sign up togo:PHYE 1000, PHYE<lb/>
1105, a Non-Credit. Call Jo<lb/>
Saunders, 757-6000 Memorial<lb/>
Gym. First meeting is Nov. 1 in<lb/>
room 108 at 4 p.m.<lb/>
Housing Dept.<lb/>
Departmental meeting for<lb/>
Housing and Management<lb/>
majasWed Oct. 19 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
the Van Landingham Room in the<lb/>
School of Home Eoonanics. Two<lb/>
local speakers are scheduled to<lb/>
talk about skills needed on-the-<lb/>
job in the field of home furnish-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
Aocading to Dr. Patnaa G.<lb/>
Hurley, Chairperson. Miss<lb/>
Durene Shat and Mrs. Blake<lb/>
Acai Armistead will speak to<lb/>
about 75 majas at 7O0 p.m.<lb/>
Wed Oct. 19, in the Van Lan-<lb/>
dingham Rcom in the School of<lb/>
Home Economics. Miss Shat,<lb/>
recently from Raleigh, is now<lb/>
associated with International<lb/>
Carpets. Mrs. Armistead isassoc-<lb/>
iated with Fuqua's Carpet and<lb/>
Iterias.<lb/>
Cosmotology<lb/>
Cosmaologist from.Glenda's<lb/>
Beauty Salon and Boutique will<lb/>
be styling six Clement residents<lb/>
hair tonight at 7 30. They will be<lb/>
sharing tips on hair care and<lb/>
answering any questions. Come<lb/>
to see the authentic "befae and<lb/>
after" possibilities at Clement<lb/>
Hall this evening.<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
The Law Society will meet<lb/>
tonight at 730 in Mendenhali<lb/>
Multipurpose room. All students<lb/>
interested in law are welcome to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
Sig-Ep Happy Hour at Blimpies<lb/>
Tues Oct 18 from 6 til 10 D.m.<lb/>
Bucket Chugging Contest at 9 CO.<lb/>
The winner gets a case of beer<lb/>
$2 00 entry fee. Come on down!<lb/>
Surfing Club<lb/>
There will be another surfing<lb/>
club meeting this Wed. at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in room 105 in Memaial Gym<lb/>
There will be many things<lb/>
decided at this meeting so try to<lb/>
be there. Anyoie interested in<lb/>
joining ust to go on surfing trips<lb/>
can join also.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Drink all your frustrations and<lb/>
sorrows away Wed. night at<lb/>
Blimpies. The brothers and<lb/>
pledges of Pi Kappa Phi are<lb/>
having a Happy Hour from 8 p.m.<lb/>
until. Admission is only .25 and<lb/>
there will be plenty of prizes<lb/>
given away. Greek a nai-Greek,<lb/>
everyaie is invited to attend.<lb/>
Karate<lb/>
A Japanese Karate Club (JKA<lb/>
style) is being famed. Those who<lb/>
have trained JKA previously a<lb/>
ihose who are interested in this<lb/>
style call 756-3767 and leave<lb/>
name and number.<lb/>
Blood Drive<lb/>
ECU Air Face ROTC, Detach-<lb/>
ment 600 will be sponsaing 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 at the ECU campus.<lb/>
The hours will be Tuesday<lb/>
October 23rd from 11 to 5O0,<lb/>
Wednesday October 26 from 10 to<lb/>
4O0 and Thursday October 27<lb/>
from 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/>
ACU-I<lb/>
All students interested in<lb/>
partiapating in the ACU-I reaea-<lb/>
tioial tournaments this semester<lb/>
should pick up necessary infama-<lb/>
tiai 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 sponsaed 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/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
Don't miss "HAPPY HOUR"<lb/>
at Mendenhali Student Center.<lb/>
Prices are Vt off on billiards, table<lb/>
tennis, and bowling. Thetimeis3<lb/>
p.m. until 6 p.m every Monday<lb/>
Don't miss it!<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/>
'�ss than two weeks to register<lb/>
with Educational Testing Service<lb/>
(ETS) of Princeton, NJ. Those<lb/>
taking the Common Examinations<lb/>
willrepatat830a.m and finish<lb/>
at about 1230 p.m. Area Exam-<lb/>
inations are scheduled from 1 30<lb/>
p.m. to about 415 p.m.<lb/>
To<lb/>
Tr<lb/>
Schoc<lb/>
aopoi<lb/>
u<lb/>
H<lb/>
Dr<lb/>
of the<lb/>
in the<lb/>
anna<lb/>
Mr.<lb/>
Relati<lb/>
will p<lb/>
and st<lb/>
Nath<lb/>
problf<lb/>
regati<lb/>
<pb facs="00058014_0003"/><lb/>
To ravtow N.C. Heart Assoc. grant applications<lb/>
17 QciatMr 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD P�g� 3<lb/>
Three med profs named to subcommittee<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Three professors at the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine have been<lb/>
aopotnted to the Research Review director of the Association<lb/>
Subcommittee of the N.C. Heart<lb/>
Associations Medical and Con<lb/>
�nunity Programs (MCP), accord-<lb/>
ing to Dr. Robert E. Thurber, a<lb/>
They are Dr. Jon Tingelstad,<lb/>
vice-chairman of the Department<lb/>
of Pediatrics; Dr. William<lb/>
Waugh, Department of Medicine,<lb/>
and Dr. Edward Lieberman,<lb/>
Larece Hunt appointed as<lb/>
Human Relations Specialist<lb/>
Dr. Clinton Downing, Director<lb/>
of the General Assistance Center<lb/>
in the School of Education at ECU<lb/>
announces the appointment of<lb/>
Mr. Larece Hunt as Human<lb/>
Relations Specialist. Mr. Hunt<lb/>
will provide technical assistance<lb/>
and staff development services to<lb/>
North Carolina school districts on<lb/>
problems related to school deseg-<lb/>
regation.<lb/>
His primary duty as Human<lb/>
Relations Specialist is to respond<lb/>
to requests from school districts<lb/>
for assistance in alleviating<lb/>
human relations problems inci-<lb/>
dent to desegregation.<lb/>
Hunt, a Lumbee Indian,<lb/>
completed his B.S. degree in<lb/>
Elementary Education from<lb/>
Pembroke State University and<lb/>
obtained a master's degree in<lb/>
Guidance and Counseling from<lb/>
Applachian State University. He<lb/>
has taught seventh and eight<lb/>
grades at Green Grove Elemen-<lb/>
tary School in Robeson County.<lb/>
While counselor at Fairgrove<lb/>
High School in Robeson County,<lb/>
he counseled children of three<lb/>
major ethnic groups in America-<lb/>
Blacks, Caucasians, and Indians.<lb/>
Recently, Mr Hunt was<lb/>
employed as a professional<lb/>
education counselor in the<lb/>
General Educational Develop-<lb/>
ment Progam at Fort Bragg. He<lb/>
was in charge of guiding military<lb/>
personnel toward developing and<lb/>
achieving career goals.<lb/>
He is a member of the<lb/>
American Personnel and Guid-<lb/>
ance Association, and the North<lb/>
Carolina Association of Educa-<lb/>
tors. In 1973, he was named an<lb/>
Outstanding Educator in<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Department of Physiology.<lb/>
SUBCOMMITTEE<lb/>
The subcommittee reviews<lb/>
applications for the N.C Heart<lb/>
Association research grants and<lb/>
fellowships and recommends<lb/>
funding priorities to the Medical<lb/>
and Community Programs Com-<lb/>
mittee for presentation to the<lb/>
Board of Directors.<lb/>
Dr. Thurber, who chairs the<lb/>
MCP Committee, said the ap-<lb/>
pointments, made possible with<lb/>
accreditation of the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine, represent a new part-<lb/>
nership between ECU and the<lb/>
Heart Association, which is ded-<lb/>
icated to the reduction and<lb/>
eventual elimination of premature<lb/>
death and disability from heart<lb/>
and biood vessel disease<lb/>
Dr. Thurber is aiso professor<lb/>
and chairman of the Department<lb/>
of Physiology at the School of<lb/>
Mediane and heads the Pitt<lb/>
County Heart Assoaation.<lb/>
LARECE HUNT<lb/>
Tuesday Night is Tuesday Night<lb/>
at Pantana Bob's<lb/>
It's a Jungle out There!<lb/>
Open 4:00 Daily<lb/>
A gift for that<lb/>
special day,<lb/>
ready in just<lb/>
a few days.<lb/>
If It Don't Tick Tock To U<lb/>
Better than carving<lb/>
your<lb/>
initials<lb/>
in a tree.<lb/>
SR-40<lb/>
X OFF 0fc<lb/>
TAKE THE GUESSWORK OUT<lb/>
USE A TEXAS INSTRUMENTS CALCULATOR<lb/>
TO SOLVE YOUR PROBLEMS<lb/>
We have many other models to choose from<lb/>
We also have a full line of Tl accessories<lb/>
INV sin cos tan DRG<lb/>
Students Supply Store<lb/>
STO RCL SUM EXC78 �<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
0<lb/>
Your on campus calculator center<lb/>
Wright Building Mon-Fri 830-5:00 8:00 5:00 Sat 9:00 12:00<lb/>
�s �<lb/>
<pb facs="00058014_0004"/><lb/>
WU<lb/>
 " � �"��� �'��<lb/>
I<lb/>
11<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 October 1977<lb/>
Consider the results<lb/>
In perhaps no other situation is a school more on<lb/>
display than at its sports events. The teams, the band<lb/>
and the students are there as representatives of their<lb/>
university. An overwhelming display of school spirit<lb/>
and pride is certainly admirable. But when the fans<lb/>
act more I ike Or well's animals than college students,<lb/>
the opposing teams, students, faculties and<lb/>
administrations lose all respect for that school.<lb/>
In 1974, Playboy magazine made a survey of the<lb/>
United States' colleges and universities to determine<lb/>
which were the " biggest party schools in the nation"<lb/>
ECU was ranked second only to UCLA! In the<lb/>
meantime, UNC at Chapel Hill was becoming<lb/>
well-known for its School of Journalism, Duke for its<lb/>
School of Medicine and Wake Forest for its Law<lb/>
School.<lb/>
This year, at least the ECU football team and<lb/>
 Marching Pirates are making the nation sit up and<lb/>
take notice. But how disasterous it will be if the<lb/>
spats fans' conduct obliterates this growing respect<lb/>
fa ECU, especially when this school is trying<lb/>
desperately to join the ACC-the very conference<lb/>
from which these complaints are coming, and which<lb/>
school's are being ranked fa their respectability in<lb/>
areas other than their continuous parties.<lb/>
If ECU cannot, at present, match up to other<lb/>
universities in its academic excellence, the least it<lb/>
can do is un-do a destructive reputation. It is no<lb/>
matter of pride to be known as a pain in the neck to<lb/>
other schools at spats events a when other students<lb/>
oome to Greenville to visit.<lb/>
A letter appeared in FOUNTAINHEAD this year<lb/>
in which a woman from Raleigh was looking fa an<lb/>
ECU man who hit her husband in the head with a<lb/>
liqua bottle during the State-ECU football game.<lb/>
The woman also said she was well-aware of the<lb/>
reputation ECU fans have fa being unruly and<lb/>
obnoxious at games.<lb/>
This was not, by any means, the first such letter<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD has received from opponent<lb/>
teams' fans. And in a time when ECU is struggling to<lb/>
gain respect among the other maja universities in<lb/>
Nath Carolina and the nation, this "reputation "<lb/>
oould prove to be exceedingly damaging.<lb/>
A faculty member of UNC at Chapel Hill wrote<lb/>
last year saying he oould not watch the ECU-UNC<lb/>
game a listen to the announcer because he<lb/>
happened to get a seat on the ECU side and drunken<lb/>
students continuously stumbled across him or<lb/>
persisted in shouting obscentities at each other,<lb/>
oblivious in their stupor to what was happening on<lb/>
the field.<lb/>
The students can help.<lb/>
Fcxjrtainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor war titty years.<lb/>
Senior EditorKim J. Devins<lb/>
Production Manager Bob Glover<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert Swaim<lb/>
News EditaCindy Broome<lb/>
Trends EditorMichael Futch<lb/>
sports EditaAnne Hogge<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association of<lb/>
ECU and is distributed each Wednesday during the summer,<lb/>
and twice weekly during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Bulking, Greenville. N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Editorial offices. 757-6386, 757-6367, 757-6300.<lb/>
Subscriptions. $10.00 annually.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Reader disagrees with editorial<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I would like to express an<lb/>
opinion oonoarning your editorial<lb/>
"Tuition Swindle" on 101377.<lb/>
My first point is that higher<lb/>
education is not a "money<lb/>
grabbing business" in North<lb/>
Carolina. The UNC system of<lb/>
universities has rather low tuition<lb/>
rates (both in and out-of-state)<lb/>
compared to a majority of other<lb/>
states. A maja portion of this<lb/>
money does not come from<lb/>
students' pockets, but state and<lb/>
federal aid. Every university in<lb/>
the system constantly seeks more<lb/>
money to upgrade facilities which<lb/>
students use and to upgrade the<lb/>
academic environment which<lb/>
could enhance students' job op-<lb/>
portunities. In a national survey<lb/>
of colleges and universities,<lb/>
North Carolina's state-supported<lb/>
institutions rated a D (on a scale<lb/>
of A to F) on the salaries of<lb/>
professors and instructor Fin-<lb/>
ally the actual cost of educating<lb/>
an individual at a North Carolina<lb/>
university is approximately<lb/>
$5,000 or more, certainly more<lb/>
than even an out-of-state student<lb/>
is required to pay.<lb/>
Secondly, state universities in<lb/>
North Carolina were founded fa<lb/>
the express purpose of educating<lb/>
North Carolina residents. It is<lb/>
certainly a privilege fa out-of-<lb/>
state students to be accepted and<lb/>
to attend state schools. The<lb/>
majaity of the money allocated<lb/>
fa East Carolina Univasity and<lb/>
otha state schools comes fron<lb/>
state government which in reality<lb/>
Outraged with SGA prez<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I protest! Where does Neil<lb/>
Sessoms get off saying he's going<lb/>
to veto SGA funding of oonfa-<lb/>
ences and convent ions? If Ses-<lb/>
soms wants to make budget cuts,<lb/>
let him make them in an area that<lb/>
is not going to affect the quality of<lb/>
education at ECU.<lb/>
Confaenoes and convent iais<lb/>
take up whae instruotas and<lb/>
textbooks leave off. At conferen-<lb/>
ces students have the chance to<lb/>
meet the trend setters and greats<lb/>
in their respective fields. They<lb/>
of fa the chance to question and<lb/>
speak with the people who write<lb/>
the books and who know what is<lb/>
going on out in the real world<lb/>
This veto threat of Seasons'<lb/>
1<lb/>
reeks of educational disaimina-<lb/>
tion based on financial status.<lb/>
Without funding from the SGA<lb/>
the financially disadvantaged stu-<lb/>
dents eitha suffa real hardship<lb/>
to attend conventions a can't go<lb/>
at all, while their mae affluent<lb/>
classmates do, leaving the famer<lb/>
waidaing whae their Student<lb/>
Activity Fees money is being<lb/>
spent.<lb/>
If Sessoms does carry out his<lb/>
veto threat he's going to have to<lb/>
explain to alot of students what's<lb/>
mae impatant than spending<lb/>
their matey ai real student-<lb/>
orientated activities like oonfa-<lb/>
enoes and conventions!<lb/>
Outraged,<lb/>
JimKleinut.Jr.<lb/>
means Nath Carolina taxpayers.<lb/>
Twenty-seven months of inconsis-<lb/>
tent residence does not make any<lb/>
person a legal resident fa tuition<lb/>
purposes regardless of their<lb/>
intentions. It was noted in your<lb/>
editorial that student X lived here<lb/>
year round except fa vacations.<lb/>
At ECU Christmas vacation is one<lb/>
month and summer vacation is<lb/>
three and one-half months. If<lb/>
these are spent out-of-state al-<lb/>
most half a year would be spent<lb/>
out of North Carolina.<lb/>
Furthamae, it is vay fair of<lb/>
the N.C. legislature to design<lb/>
requirements fa in-state tuitiot.<lb/>
Rememba, this body also deta-<lb/>
mines the residency requirements<lb/>
fa divacesand voting privileges<lb/>
which are also set arbitrarily. By<lb/>
the way, Nath Carolina regista-<lb/>
wd votas do have access to<lb/>
legislators to voice their com-<lb/>
plaints and aocelaate any chan-<lb/>
ges. The purpose of the legisla-<lb/>
ture's including a "purpose of<lb/>
residency" clause is to prevent<lb/>
students from claiming residency<lb/>
during college and then taking<lb/>
off, leaving the state to pay fa<lb/>
the remainda of their education.<lb/>
In conclusion, thae are no<lb/>
"shag-carpeted, gold-plated offi-<lb/>
ces" among univasity officials.<lb/>
Surprisingly enough, many<lb/>
"nice" office decorations are<lb/>
financed by private money. If a<lb/>
pason feels he has been discrim-<lb/>
inated against concerning tuition<lb/>
bills, he can always protest<lb/>
through university channels,<lb/>
state legislators, and the judicial<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Angela Collins<lb/>
<pb facs="00058014_0005"/><lb/>
Forum<lb/>
17 OOobw 1977 FOUNTMNHEAO Pig 5<lb/>
Concerned reader discusses Price War in record shops<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
As a record consumer in<lb/>
Greenville, I have a few thoughts<lb/>
I would like to share concerning a<lb/>
"price war" raging among the<lb/>
city's three major record stores.<lb/>
Since the entrance of a new<lb/>
Steering Comm.<lb/>
congratulated<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD: ,<lb/>
I would like to thank and<lb/>
congratulate the Homecoming<lb/>
Steering Committee for their<lb/>
excellent planning and effort in<lb/>
organizing the recent Homecom-<lb/>
ing festivites. Theeventexhibited<lb/>
the school spirit ECU has been<lb/>
accused of lacking. Kirk Edger-<lb/>
ton, iFC President, deserves<lb/>
special thanks for planning and<lb/>
administrating our most success-<lb/>
ful Homecoming parade. The<lb/>
event was a fitting tribute to Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins' service and accomplish-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Neil Sessoms<lb/>
SGA President<lb/>
Queen election<lb/>
called 'farce'<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I would like to express my<lb/>
opinion and perhaps convey a<lb/>
thought to the Homecoming<lb/>
Steering Committee on the matter<lb/>
of "Homecoming Queen<lb/>
FARCE<lb/>
It is not the contestants<lb/>
themselves that I object to but<lb/>
rather the criteria on which they<lb/>
are selected. To give a young lady<lb/>
such an honor as Homecoming<lb/>
Queen based totally on her<lb/>
physical assets is not only shallow<lb/>
and narrow-minded but quite<lb/>
unfair. Simply because a girl isn't<lb/>
a raving beauty (which most of<lb/>
the previous contestants haven't<lb/>
been) doesn't mean she is less of<lb/>
a person or any less worthy of<lb/>
recognition.<lb/>
In major universities the nom-<lb/>
inees are selected on the basis of<lb/>
their scholastic achievements,<lb/>
extra-curricular activities, contri-<lb/>
butions to the school, and last but<lb/>
not least, her physical appear-<lb/>
ance. Thus, the title of Homecom-<lb/>
ing Queen is an honor presented<lb/>
for excellence attained in areas<lb/>
other than "beauty<lb/>
Students can still participate<lb/>
in selecting their Homecoming<lb/>
Queen. They nominate their<lb/>
choice based on her success in the<lb/>
aforementioned categories. She<lb/>
would then be interviewed by a<lb/>
committee comprised of students,<lb/>
faculty, and administrators that<lb/>
also judges the other nominees.<lb/>
My final argument is this:<lb/>
what woman wouldn't rather<lb/>
receive an honor that takes into<lb/>
account all her assets va one that<lb/>
judges her on God's given gift of<lb/>
physical attractiveness?<lb/>
Sherrie Reese<lb/>
discount store downtown which<lb/>
prices its albums at a $3.90<lb/>
discount fa a $6.96 list price, the<lb/>
city's other two stores have<lb/>
obviously been affected. The<lb/>
discount store's nearest competi-<lb/>
tor, a locally owned independent<lb/>
store also downtown, originally<lb/>
announced that "The War Is On"<lb/>
as their prices dropped down to<lb/>
match those of the new stae.<lb/>
Recently, I discovered Green-<lb/>
ville's largest record stae at a<lb/>
local shopping center occasionally<lb/>
lowers its prices to join the price<lb/>
war. I was disturbed at first<lb/>
because I naturally favor the<lb/>
"undadog" (a shall I say, the<lb/>
smallest stae:). But, that is not<lb/>
the way of free enterprise, so I<lb/>
had to accept the fact that the<lb/>
price war, as it is, is fair to<lb/>
evayone ooncerned. Or, so I<lb/>
thought. I was further disturbed<lb/>
when I asked one of the daks at<lb/>
this largest of the three staes<lb/>
exactly how long they would carry<lb/>
their low prices, to which she<lb/>
infamed me, "Until we beat the<lb/>
competition out<lb/>
My understanding is that the<lb/>
new discount record stae is part<lb/>
of a chain that has featured the<lb/>
same low price of $3.99 fa<lb/>
several years very successfully in<lb/>
Chapel Hill and Raleigh. This<lb/>
gives me some satisfaction that<lb/>
their low prices are not just a<lb/>
tempaary sales gimmick.<lb/>
The problem stems from the<lb/>
fact that one of these two larger<lb/>
staes has openly admitted they<lb/>
are trying to stifle their competi-<lb/>
tion with the same low prices only<lb/>
to return to their aiginal prices<lb/>
when the discount stae no longer<lb/>
exists. The consumer may notice<lb/>
hae that he is the one destined to<lb/>
suffer the consequences of this<lb/>
price war. True, the oonsuma<lb/>
may find the two larger staes are<lb/>
a better place to shop because of<lb/>
their volume and selection, and,<lb/>
at the moment, their prices are as<lb/>
low as the discount stae. Sadly,<lb/>
though, once the discount stae<lb/>
has been closed by its competi-<lb/>
tion, the consumer will find he<lb/>
may once again have to suffa the<lb/>
aiginal prices of $5.98 and $6.96<lb/>
pa album.<lb/>
I am not suggesting the<lb/>
consumer stop shopping at the<lb/>
two larga staes and consequent-<lb/>
ly do without a recad he wants<lb/>
because it is not stocked at the<lb/>
new stae. I am suggesting,<lb/>
however, that the consumer pat-<lb/>
ronize a place of business which<lb/>
has proven a premise dl low<lb/>
aioes fa sevaal years and which<lb/>
is trying to offa the same low<lb/>
aices to Greenville recad buy-<lb/>
as.<lb/>
Thank you,<lb/>
James Edwards<lb/>
OCTOBER<lb/>
Festival of H its<lb/>
ii ill �lljuiw<lb/>
Unkuslndl<lb/>
Simple Dreams<lb/>
$3.99p.$4.99<lb/>
Tape<lb/>
$4.99lp.$5.99<lb/>
Tape<lb/>
Muy (lollins<lb/>
?c<lb/>
So KtiHy InThr Spring<lb/>
TIm hirst It) Yars<lb/>
$6.99p.$6.99<lb/>
Tape<lb/>
$7.99n.$7.99<lb/>
Tape<lb/>
On Sale October 14-20<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
<pb facs="00058014_0006"/><lb/>
qBSSWHgg - ; SSBRSSiS<lb/>
PskSSps<lb/>
P�g�� FOUHTAWHEAD 17QotoUr1977<lb/>
I r<lb/>
l<lb/>
I<lb/>
i'<lb/>
I<lb/>
Educational laissez faire' -<lb/>
letting teachers teach what they<lb/>
like and students learn what they<lb/>
please - has proven seriously<lb/>
deficient in higher education, 12<lb/>
prominent scholars at Stanford<lb/>
University declare.<lb/>
The scholars' position paper<lb/>
coincides with the start of Faculty<lb/>
Senate discussion of creating a<lb/>
new Western culture requirement<lb/>
fa Stanford undergraduates.<lb/>
Of all the problems facing<lb/>
undergraduate education since<lb/>
World War II, they note "the<lb/>
continued, multiplication of<lb/>
specialism with spreading em-<lb/>
phasis on the importance to the<lb/>
student of developing marketable<lb/>
skills, at a high level of sophisti-<lb/>
cation has proven perhaps the<lb/>
most intractable.<lb/>
If it were recognizable that the<lb/>
Chief function of college educa-<lb/>
tion is to develop the human<lb/>
potential of the student without<lb/>
regard to the particular job he or<lb/>
ial laissez-<lb/>
she might eventually hold<lb/>
success or failure in the job<lb/>
market would not be considered<lb/>
so crucial<lb/>
"Under present conditions<lb/>
the position paper contends,<lb/>
"there is no genuine community<lb/>
of teachers or students in any<lb/>
college or university, but rather<lb/>
an aggregate of specialists and<lb/>
students, each pursuing his or her<lb/>
own separate interest in geo-<lb/>
graphical proximity, with little or<lb/>
no basis for cross-disciplinary<lb/>
communication or understanding.<lb/>
"Most scholars feel more<lb/>
affinity with, and more respect<lb/>
for, their professional colleagues<lb/>
in other universities than for<lb/>
members of other departments in<lb/>
their own. And there is no longer<lb/>
any unity of knowledge, but only<lb/>
a cdocation of separate know-<lb/>
ledges. Such a situation may,<lb/>
perhaps, be defended: certainly it<lb/>
is preferable to an ideological<lb/>
uniformity arbitrarily imposed.<lb/>
But surely there is a middle<lb/>
ground between these extremes.<lb/>
"Recommendations for<lb/>
achieving the aims of liberal<lb/>
education generally envisage<lb/>
imposed requirements covering,<lb/>
in addition to courses in English<lb/>
and in a foreign langauge, a<lb/>
required course or oourses in<lb/>
Western culture of the history of<lb/>
ideas.<lb/>
Nobody lives, thinks, or talks<lb/>
in a cultural void. Hence the<lb/>
peculiar importance of a general<lb/>
requirement that students sys-<lb/>
tematically examine the cultural<lb/>
background which they all share.<lb/>
A newly famed system of<lb/>
distribution requirements for<lb/>
undergraduates, started here last<lb/>
fall, "does not coherently and<lb/>
directly address the fundamental<lb/>
inadequacies of the present cur-<lb/>
ricular program.<lb/>
It is a system that is too<lb/>
diffuse and too loosely monitored<lb/>
to be able to do so. Only by a<lb/>
program that is more coherently<lb/>
structures can the intellectual life<lb/>
of the student be made more<lb/>
challenging<lb/>
The Committee on Under-<lb/>
graduate Studies, after reviewing<lb/>
this report, said studies in<lb/>
Western culture should be a part<lb/>
of evay undergraduate's educa-<lb/>
tion, but not a famal require-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The Associated Students<lb/>
Council of Presidents said most<lb/>
students would benefit from<lb/>
courses in Westan culture, but<lb/>
strongly defended their "right to<lb/>
choose fa themselves a course of<lb/>
study<lb/>
Course offers<lb/>
parents guidance<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
"Systematic Training for<lb/>
Effective Parenting a non-<lb/>
aedit evening oourse fa parents<lb/>
who seek guidance in child-<lb/>
rearing, will be offered at ECU<lb/>
Tuesdays, Oct.18- Nov. 29 from 7<lb/>
to 9 p.m.<lb/>
Reasons fa children's mis-<lb/>
behavia at hone and in public<lb/>
I �<lb/>
ampax tampons<lb/>
an applicator that is flushable<lb/>
and biodegradable<lb/>
Plastic applicators are not made<lb/>
to be flushed away.They are not<lb/>
biodegradable and contribute to<lb/>
the pollution of the environment.<lb/>
TheTampax tampon paper appli-<lb/>
cator comes apart in water and can<lb/>
be flushed away. It is biodegradable<lb/>
and environmentally sound.<lb/>
The applicator on the led is plastic and its<lb/>
manufacturer clearly warns "do not lush!<lb/>
You can throw it into a waste tec eptacle, but no<lb/>
matter how you dispose of a plastic applicator,<lb/>
it remains hard, non-biodegradable material<lb/>
indefinitely. I hat is why plastic applicators<lb/>
pollute our land, rivers, lakes and beaches<lb/>
1 he lampax tampon container -applicator<lb/>
like the tampon itself is completely disposable<lb/>
and biodegradable. It is made of spirally wound<lb/>
strips of paper that quickly begin to delaminate<lb/>
and unwind when they come in contact with<lb/>
water. (See the illustration above at the right.)<lb/>
The paper strips are as easy to dispose of as a<lb/>
few sheets o" bathroom or facial tissue.<lb/>
What s more, the hygienic lampax<lb/>
tampon applicator is designed to make insertion<lb/>
easy and comfortable. Slim, smooth and pre-<lb/>
lubricated, it guides the tampon into the propet<lb/>
position togive you reliable protection.Your<lb/>
fingers nevei have to touch die tampon In use,<lb/>
the lampax tampon expandsgendy in all three<lb/>
directions lengdi.breadth and width<lb/>
so diere is little c hance of leakage or bypass.<lb/>
lampax tampons off ei you hygienic<lb/>
menstrual protection without the worry of<lb/>
environmental pollution. I his is one ot<lb/>
the reasons why they are the 1 c hok e of mote<lb/>
women than all other tampons combined<lb/>
TAMPAX.<lb/>
tompond<lb/>
MAO I �H.V BT TAHMX INCORPORATED, PAI �u, ma<lb/>
The internal protection more women trust<lb/>
which leaves parents weary,<lb/>
resentful and distraught, will be<lb/>
analyzed, and parents will be<lb/>
assisted in effectively relating to<lb/>
their children in order to promote<lb/>
a more harmonious home atmos-<lb/>
phere.<lb/>
The oourse will also cover<lb/>
procedures for dealing with<lb/>
general misbehavior and such<lb/>
specific problems as unooopera-<lb/>
tiveness, "picky eating thumb-<lb/>
sucking, bickering and fighting,<lb/>
temper tantrums and resisting<lb/>
bedtime.<lb/>
Child care for participants will<lb/>
be provided during each session<lb/>
for a small fee.<lb/>
Class instructor is Dr. Mel<lb/>
Markowski of the ECU School of<lb/>
Home Eoonomics, an experienced<lb/>
marriage and family counselor.<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
parenting oourse is available from<lb/>
the Office of Non-Credit Pro-<lb/>
grams, Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education, ECU. Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
telephone 757-6143.<lb/>
  of M I<lb/>
4- 4 '�� Uwd<lb/>
If Red Cross hadn't trained<lb/>
young Lars Alecksen in<lb/>
lifesavinq techniques, last<lb/>
summer Adam Gauthier<lb/>
just might have ended up<lb/>
one more drowning statis-<lb/>
tic. (Adams alive and well<lb/>
today, thank you. and in<lb/>
the first grade in Man-<lb/>
itowoc. Wisconsin )<lb/>
We re not asking for<lb/>
medals (Lars is the one<lb/>
who deserves those) But<lb/>
we do need your con-<lb/>
tinued support. Help us.<lb/>
Because the things we do<lb/>
really help In your own<lb/>
neighborhood And<lb/>
across America And the<lb/>
world<lb/>
Adam<lb/>
Gauthier<lb/>
counted<lb/>
onus.<lb/>
it<lb/>
WfeYe<lb/>
counting on<lb/>
you.<lb/>
R� Crou. The Good Neighbor<lb/>
News writers<lb/>
Call<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
<pb facs="00058014_0007"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
�.<lb/>
ECU holds<lb/>
30th history<lb/>
symposium<lb/>
ECU NfcWS BUREAU<lb/>
The 30th annual ECU<lb/>
Symposium on History and the<lb/>
Social Studies will be held Fri<lb/>
Oct. 28, at Hope Plantation near<lb/>
Windsor, N.C.<lb/>
This year's symposium topic<lb/>
is "Site-Seeing: Historic Sites as<lb/>
Resources for Teaching History<lb/>
The symposium is sponsored<lb/>
for teachers of history and the<lb/>
social studies by the ECU Depart-<lb/>
ment of History. Dr. Hugh<lb/>
Wease, associate professor of<lb/>
history, is symposium coordina-<lb/>
tor.<lb/>
Hope Plantation, home of<lb/>
former N.C. Gov. David S. Stone,<lb/>
(1770-1818) was recently restored<lb/>
with funds raised by local groups<lb/>
and individuals.<lb/>
Hope is located on N.C. 308,<lb/>
four miles west of U.S. 13 and 17<lb/>
at Windsor.<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
Sherwin-Williams<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
17 October 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Religious crusader<lb/>
emerges into<lb/>
political movement<lb/>
DP. JENKINS PRESENTS a plaque and trophy to Lynn Willitord,<lb/>
1978 DMA Majorette Queen of America. Ms. Wllliford was cited for<lb/>
outstanding service to ECU in her third year as featured twiner with<lb/>
the marching band.<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotler)<lb/>
ByGARYMacECHN<lb/>
Pacific News Service<lb/>
Europe's crusty Archbishop<lb/>
Marcel Lefebvre, now touring<lb/>
Latin America after a brief visit to<lb/>
Texas, has suddenly emerged<lb/>
from a relatively obscure religious<lb/>
storm into the limelight of an<lb/>
international political movement<lb/>
where his supporters see him<lb/>
fighting at the right hand of God.<lb/>
Lefebvre's long religious cru-<lb/>
sade against liberal Vatican re-<lb/>
forms has threatened the first<lb/>
major schism in the Catholic<lb/>
Church in a century. But more<lb/>
important, it has made him a<lb/>
symbol fa a powerful wave of<lb/>
ultra-right-wing political faces in<lb/>
Europe�and perhaps North and<lb/>
South America.<lb/>
"In his confrontation with the<lb/>
Pope, Lefebvre has become a<lb/>
symbol bringing the challenge not<lb/>
of nostalgia (fa the pre-Vatican<lb/>
Council church) but of ail the<lb/>
thrusts of a revolt from the<lb/>
right said Rome's leading<lb/>
daily, Corrierre de la Sera.<lb/>
While the 72-year-old ex-mis-<lb/>
sionary bishop failed to generate<lb/>
much enthusiasm during a Texas<lb/>
speech (only 600 attended), in<lb/>
Europe he has become the<lb/>
ms IEVER A COVER CHARGE<lb/>
aftsMfr<lb/>
I09 E. FIFTH ST.<lb/>
Appearing Sat Oct 22 Jasmine<lb/>
The debut of a special Band<lb/>
Featuring Fresh Concepts in<lb/>
Jazz Music<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 758-6590 anytime<lb/>
undisputed leader of conservative<lb/>
Catholics, called "traditional-<lb/>
ists who refuse to accept the<lb/>
reforms of the Second Vatican<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
The looming split in Catholi-<lb/>
cism is considered ironic because<lb/>
Pope John XXIII's overriding<lb/>
concern in convening the Council<lb/>
15 years ago was to promote a<lb/>
broad-based unity of the Roman<lb/>
Catholic Protestant and Ortho-<lb/>
dox churches to solve the world's<lb/>
pressing social problems.<lb/>
Instead of unity, however, the<lb/>
Council produced a realignment<lb/>
of Christian forces worldwide.<lb/>
Progressive Catholics joined with<lb/>
like-minded Reformed Protes-<lb/>
tants in a search fa a new social<lb/>
and economic order, as well as<lb/>
religious reform. Meanwhile,<lb/>
conservatives from both camps<lb/>
joined to preserve the old order.<lb/>
But despite warnings from the<lb/>
traditionalists that rupture in the<lb/>
unity of Catholic faith would come<lb/>
from the progressives dissatisfied<lb/>
with the pace of Council reforms,<lb/>
the schism, already formalized by<lb/>
Lefebvre in France and threaten-<lb/>
ing to spread in Europe and<lb/>
possibly to the United States, is<lb/>
the work of the ultra-right.<lb/>
To European observers, what<lb/>
is most striking about Lefebvre's<lb/>
movement is not his open de-<lb/>
fiance of Vatican authority. The<lb/>
French-born prelate has a long<lb/>
history of ultra-conservatism<lb/>
stretching back to his seminary<lb/>
days. The surprising element has<lb/>
been the popular support he has<lb/>
received from a combination of<lb/>
conservative religious and right-<lb/>
wing poiitcal sources.<lb/>
Lefebvre's June visit to Rome,<lb/>
for example, was sponsored by<lb/>
the politically conservative Italian<lb/>
nobility, linked by marriage and<lb/>
possessions with the aristocracy<lb/>
of France and Spain and ties<lb/>
stretching back to the old Austro-<lb/>
Hungarian Empire.<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/>
BUFFET<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/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
ON SUNDAYS<lb/>
11:30 am<lb/>
- 7:30 pm<lb/>
! I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058014_0008"/><lb/>
� E jfcfc&amp;E ��-<lb/>
iMl<lb/>
Pag 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 October 1977<lb/>
i<lb/>
�<lb/>
Cinemascope<lb/>
by Steve Bachner<lb/>
'Audrey Ross'<lb/>
"Suppose a stranger told you your daughter was his daughter in<lb/>
another life? reads the come-on for this movie. "Suppose you began<lb/>
to believe him? Suppose it was true?" Suppose we skip this whole<lb/>
thing, stay home, and watch the World Series.<lb/>
Any doubts you may have had about the possibility that there is life<lb/>
after death on this earth, as somebody else, are sure to be oonf irmed by<lb/>
viewing the Joe WiseFrank De Felitta production of AUDREY ROSE.<lb/>
Whatever credibility co-producer De Felitta may f ve given to his<lb/>
best-selling novel of the same name is lost in his first attempt at a<lb/>
screenplay. The script offers far too much talk about reincarnation and<lb/>
far too little cinematic proof.<lb/>
Director Robert Wise has forgotten the first rule of filmmaking:<lb/>
One makes his point, no matter how trite, visually.<lb/>
The plot of "Audrey Rose" is certainly fartetched, but then that's<lb/>
to be expected in a movie like this.<lb/>
The Templetons (John Beck, "The Other Side of Midnight and<lb/>
Marsha Mason, "anderellaUberty" as the respective Mr. and Mrs.)<lb/>
are in a state of confusion over a mysterious middle-aged man who has<lb/>
been tailing their daughter Ivy (12-year old Susan Swift in her first<lb/>
movie role). The man looms around the entrance to her school at the<lb/>
end of the day and makes numerous phone calls inquiring about her<lb/>
well-being at night.<lb/>
When this ominous figure finally confronts the girl's family, he<lb/>
introduces himself as Elliot Hoover (played by veteran Anthony<lb/>
Hopkins), a widower whose wife and daughter were killed in an<lb/>
automobile accident some seven years earlier Hoover tells the<lb/>
Templetons he is certain that their Ivy is his reincarnated<lb/>
daughterAudrey Rose.<lb/>
After a good deal of interaction between the four, a major conflict<lb/>
arises, but is rjever fully developed, within Mrs. Templeton as to<lb/>
whether or not Hoover speaks the truth. The case goes to court after<lb/>
Hoover is accused of kidnapping the girl he believes is rightfully his<lb/>
FOUR-FLUSHER DE FEUTTA<lb/>
The defense that screenwriter De Felitta provides his protagonist is<lb/>
pure conjecture. The contrived and inaccurate background information<lb/>
given cHthe religion of India, and spoken by a maharishi no less, is<lb/>
played off against random stock footage of India-it is a very<lb/>
unconvincing foundation that is laid in defense of reincarnation but no<lb/>
less believable than the ridiculous goingson featured in the rest of<lb/>
the film.<lb/>
Thesillyscriptisfullofdichesand old standards In one scene, Ivy<lb/>
awakens from a terrifying nightmare of her" previous life" to have an<lb/>
immediate oolloquy with her mother:<lb/>
"Oh mom it was awful<lb/>
"What was awful<lb/>
"I don't know<lb/>
Not very clever.<lb/>
But compared to the direction, the dialogue is extremely<lb/>
imaginative. Robert Wise does it by the numbers. The film, shot in<lb/>
studio style by Victor Kemper (" Dog Day Afternoon), is comprised of<lb/>
a formula that should be very familiar to fans of the genre.<lb/>
Thunder is still being used for emphasis when something<lb/>
supposedly shuddery occurs. In fact, it rains, at intervals, throughout<lb/>
the entire movie. The rain motif is necessary, as De Felitta sees it, if<lb/>
the audience is to draw the connection between the dead Audrey Rose,<lb/>
who was killed in an accident in the rain, and the living Ivy Templeton.<lb/>
When Wise isn't exercising his semi-documentary style in<lb/>
courtroom sequences and psychiatric skull sessions, he is cutting to<lb/>
doseups of confused onlookers or the gothic statue outside the<lb/>
See ROSE, p. 11)<lb/>
First female newspaper editor<lb/>
is subject of published article<lb/>
IRA BAKER,<lb/>
HEAD of<lb/>
the ECU<lb/>
Journalism Dept.<lb/>
By FRANONE PERRY<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Elizabeth Timothy (died,<lb/>
1757), America's first woman<lb/>
newspaper editor, is the subject<lb/>
of a recently-published artide by<lb/>
Ira Baker of the ECU journalism<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
The Baker article, which<lb/>
appears in the current issue of<lb/>
"Journalism Quarterly traces<lb/>
the life of Elizabeth Timothy from<lb/>
her emigration from Holland with<lb/>
her husband Lewis Timothy to her<lb/>
death in Charleston, S.C and<lb/>
discusses in detail her seven<lb/>
years as editor and publisher of<lb/>
"The South Carolina Gazette<lb/>
Elizabeth Timothy succeeded<lb/>
her husband, who died in 1738<lb/>
after several years as an estab-<lb/>
lished printer in Philadelphia and<lb/>
 Charleston, during which time he<lb/>
was a business partner of<lb/>
Benjamin Franklin.<lb/>
Elizabeth announced that she<lb/>
would assume the printing and<lb/>
editing operation in a January,<lb/>
1739, number of the "Gazette<lb/>
"Whereas the late Printer of<lb/>
this Gazette hath been deprived<lb/>
of his lifeI take this opportunity<lb/>
of informing the public, that I<lb/>
shall contain the said,paper as<lb/>
usual; and hopeto make it as<lb/>
entertaining and correct as may<lb/>
be reasonably expected<lb/>
She begs the "Gazette's"<lb/>
readers to continue their sub-<lb/>
scriptions and support, referring<lb/>
to herself as "this poor afflicted<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
given<lb/>
soon<lb/>
Susan Swift goes into a deep nightmarish trance and regresses to the<lb/>
time of her horrifying death. Scene is from "Audrey Rose Robert<lb/>
Wise Production for United Artists release.<lb/>
t<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
National Teacher Examina-<lb/>
tions (NTE) will be given at East<lb/>
Carolina University Nov. 12.<lb/>
Scores'from the examinations<lb/>
are used by states fa certification<lb/>
of teachers, by school systems for<lb/>
selection and identification of<lb/>
leadership qualities, and by col-<lb/>
leges as part of their graduation<lb/>
requirements.<lb/>
According to the Educational<lb/>
Testing Service, which prepares<lb/>
and administers the tests, they<lb/>
are designed to measure know-<lb/>
ledge gained from professional<lb/>
and general education and in 26<lb/>
subject-matter fields<lb/>
Bulletins describing registra-<lb/>
tion procedures and containing<lb/>
registration forms are available<lb/>
from the Testing Center, East<lb/>
Carolina University, Speight Buil-<lb/>
ding-105, Greenville, N.C (919)<lb/>
757-6811, or directly from the<lb/>
National Teacher Examinations,<lb/>
Educational Testing Service, Box<lb/>
911, Princeton, N.J. 08640.<lb/>
Deadline for regular registra-<lb/>
tion is October 20. On-the-spot<lb/>
registration is not permitted.<lb/>
widow" left with "six small<lb/>
children and another hourly ex-<lb/>
pected<lb/>
The "poor afflicted widow"<lb/>
proved to be a capable manager<lb/>
and competent editor. Baker<lb/>
quotes from Benjamin Franklin,<lb/>
who commented that Mrs.<lb/>
Timothy operated the business<lb/>
"with the greatest regularity and<lb/>
exactitude" and ultimately was<lb/>
able to purchase his share and<lb/>
leave the entire business intact<lb/>
for her eldest son.<lb/>
Franklin attributed the<lb/>
widow's business acumen to her<lb/>
having been "born and bred in<lb/>
Holland, where, as I have been<lb/>
informed, the knowledge of<lb/>
accounts makes a part of female<lb/>
education<lb/>
Baker notes that like most<lb/>
early American editors, Elizabeth<lb/>
Timothy had to fill her columns<lb/>
with much purely, literary<lb/>
material  poetry, drama,<lb/>
eulogies of deceased prominent<lb/>
citizens, satiric verse and essays<lb/>
reprinted from English period-<lb/>
icals.<lb/>
Local news in the sparsely-<lb/>
settled colonies was scarce, and<lb/>
most news in the continent was at<lb/>
least six months old when it<lb/>
reached the colonial shores.<lb/>
The "Gazette" was a major<lb/>
literary influence upon its provin-<lb/>
cial readership, and the quality of<lb/>
its material was such that even<lb/>
sophisticated British publica-<lb/>
tions, among them the "London<lb/>
Magazine reprinted items from<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Fa most of Mrs Timothy's<lb/>
years as editor, the paper's<lb/>
two-oolumn famat remained the<lb/>
same, although it was modified to<lb/>
three columns in 1745. Early in<lb/>
ha editaship, woodcut illustra-<lb/>
tions began to appear in greater<lb/>
numba and were regularly inta-<lb/>
spased amaig the "Gazette's"<lb/>
columns of print.<lb/>
Elizabeth gave up ha publish-<lb/>
ing and editing carea when ha<lb/>
son Peter reached the age of 21.<lb/>
Ha ranaining yeas wae divided<lb/>
between Philadelphia and<lb/>
Charleston, and her activities<lb/>
included managing ha properties<lb/>
in the two cities and opaating a<lb/>
Chaleston book and stationay<lb/>
shop.<lb/>
The article concludes by citing<lb/>
indisputable proof of Elizabeth<lb/>
Timothy's "shrewd .business<lb/>
ingenuity"�a will which divided<lb/>
ha estate among children and<lb/>
grandchildren, with bequests of<lb/>
sevaal houses and slaves as well<lb/>
as the printing business.<lb/>
Elizabeth Timothy's printing<lb/>
venture not only signifies a<lb/>
"first says Baka, but also the<lb/>
beginning of a trend; that of otha<lb/>
widows of newspapa printas<lb/>
assuming responsibilities for<lb/>
their deceased husband's pub-<lb/>
lications.<lb/>
Later women editors and<lb/>
publishers include Catherine<lb/>
Zenga (New Yak "Weekly"),<lb/>
Ann Franklin (New Port<lb/>
"Mercury") and Clementine<lb/>
Rind ("Virginia Gazette").<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
Goings On<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
Theatre Arts presents" Cabaret in Wright Aud 8p.m. $2.00<lb/>
adm. fa ECU students, $3.00 fa ECU faculty and staff, $5.00 fa<lb/>
public.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Thae will be a Children's Concert, with the ECU Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra, in Wright Aud 1 p.m.<lb/>
ECU Playhouse presents "Bye, Bye, Birdie to be held in<lb/>
McGinnis Aud 8.15 p.m. Tickets fa students are available by<lb/>
presenting ECU ID and Activity Cad; $3.50 fa public<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
A Saiia Recital, Freddie McLean, bassoon, will be held in the<lb/>
A.J. Fletcha Music Centa Recital Hall, 730 p.m.<lb/>
ECU Playhouse presents "Bye, Bye, Birdie to be held in<lb/>
McGinnis Aud 8.15 p.m.<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Student Unioi film, "One Flew Ova the Cuckoo's Nest with<lb/>
Jack Nicholson, to be shown in Menctenhall Studoit Union Cotta 7<lb/>
and 9.15 p.m. Adm. ECU ID and Activity Cad.<lb/>
ECU Playhouse presents "Bye, Bye, Birdie in McGinnis Aud<lb/>
815 p.m.<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
Student Union film, "One Flew Ova the Cuckoo's Nest " to be<lb/>
shown in Menoenhall Studoit Corta, 7 and 9.15 p.m Adm ECU ID<lb/>
and Activity Cad. "<lb/>
ECU-vs-The Citadel, in Chaleston, S.C 7pm<lb/>
ECU Playhouse presents "Bye, Bye, Birdie In McGinnis Aud<lb/>
815 p.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058014_0009"/><lb/>
Pendulum swings back<lb/>
17 October 1977 FOUWTAINHEAP Page 9<lb/>
1<lb/>
Acoustic music makes popular comeback<lb/>
By ED COLLEVECCHIO<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The effects of change are felt<lb/>
everywhere in our oountry.<lb/>
Because of change, we now<lb/>
light our homes with the aid of<lb/>
electricity, we can cross the<lb/>
Atlantic Ocean in six hours, and<lb/>
Best<lb/>
Sellers'<lb/>
FICTION<lb/>
The SUmarillion by J.R.R. Tolkien<lb/>
The Thorn Birds by Colleen<lb/>
McCul lough<lb/>
Illusions by Richard Bach<lb/>
Delta of Venus by Anais Nin<lb/>
Dynasty by Robert a Elegant<lb/>
Daniel Martin by John Fowles<lb/>
The Honourable Schoolboy by<lb/>
John le Carre<lb/>
Coma by Robin Cook<lb/>
The Second Deadly Sin<lb/>
Lawrence Sanders<lb/>
The Crash of '79 by Paul<lb/>
Erdmar<lb/>
NONRCTION<lb/>
by<lb/>
E.<lb/>
we can calculate our way through<lb/>
almost any mathematics problem.<lb/>
These changes are the products of<lb/>
invention which is said to be born<lb/>
of necessity. Other changes are<lb/>
the result of axial attitudes.<lb/>
These changes are most read-<lb/>
ily seen, in the areas of fashion,<lb/>
art and music Let's focus on<lb/>
music.<lb/>
American music has been<lb/>
influenced through the years by a<lb/>
multitude of social and individual<lb/>
events. Black slaves sang to take<lb/>
their minds off their situation.<lb/>
Irish, Spanish and other immi-<lb/>
grants tried to preserve their<lb/>
culture through song and dance.<lb/>
Eventually, our influences have<lb/>
aided in creating such music<lb/>
styles as blues, biuegraas, and<lb/>
many others.<lb/>
Popular music is constantly<lb/>
undergoing change. Consider<lb/>
those in this century- big bands,<lb/>
jazz, rock and rdl, etc Rock and<lb/>
All Things Wise and Wonderful<lb/>
by James Herriot<lb/>
Looking Out for Number One by<lb/>
Robert J. Ringer<lb/>
The Book of Lists by David<lb/>
Wallechinsky<lb/>
The Dragons of Eden by Carl<lb/>
Sagan<lb/>
The Camera Never Blinks by Dan<lb/>
Rather<lb/>
Your Erroneous Zones by Wayne<lb/>
W. Dyer<lb/>
Vivien Leigh by Anne Edwards<lb/>
The Path Between the Seas by<lb/>
David McCul lough<lb/>
It Didn't Start With Watergate by<lb/>
Victor Laaky<lb/>
'according to New York Times<lb/>
3ook Reveiw<lb/>
roll itself can be broken down into<lb/>
a number of areas.<lb/>
There is hard rook, glitter<lb/>
rock, daseically-influenoBd rock,<lb/>
jazz-influenced rock, country-<lb/>
rock, disco, soul, and folk-rock.<lb/>
Since the origin of rock, each<lb/>
form has had Its turn of special<lb/>
popularity which has created a<lb/>
kind of cyde. At the present time,<lb/>
softer, more acoustically oriented<lb/>
music is making a comeback.<lb/>
It has been called folk-rock,<lb/>
soft-rock, or sometimes just<lb/>
"easy listening In any case, its<lb/>
Influences were many: the cow-<lb/>
boy by the campfire, the travel-<lb/>
ling minstrel, and several differ-<lb/>
ent ethnic groups.<lb/>
Traditionally, this rock and<lb/>
roll is of a gentler nature than the<lb/>
rest of its family and the lyrics of<lb/>
its composers generally contain<lb/>
some kind of message. It is not<lb/>
forceful; rather it guides the<lb/>
listener.<lb/>
Remember when<lb/>
outrageous prices<lb/>
you paid those<lb/>
on records? Never<lb/>
again , Thank you E.C.U.<lb/>
School Kids Records<lb/>
is here to give you the reputation of<lb/>
our famous 3.99 IpThats Right al 6.98<lb/>
list Albums are always 3.99<lb/>
Compare these prices closely if you're<lb/>
paying more your paying to much do<lb/>
not be misled by conceled higher prices<lb/>
School Kd Records<lb/>
218 E 5th St 752-0647<lb/>
Downtown University Arcade<lb/>
visit our other stores Raleigh<lb/>
Chapel Hill Greensboro Boone<lb/>
Wilmington<lb/>
ECU CIRCLE K CLUB<lb/>
Reactivation of ECU circle K<lb/>
Club will be sponsored and financially<lb/>
supported by the Kiwanis Club of<lb/>
Greenville. This is an international<lb/>
service club for college level students<lb/>
throughtout the U.S Canada and other<lb/>
foreign countries.<lb/>
All former high school Key<lb/>
Club members or any other students<lb/>
interested in helping to reactivate the<lb/>
ECU Circle K Club please contact Dr.<lb/>
David B. Stevens, Ph. 757-6940 or come<lb/>
by 214 Wright Annex.<lb/>
P. O. BOX 1821<lb/>
ORBFNV1LLB, NORTH CAROLINA 27834<lb/>
Take for example the songs of<lb/>
Bob Dylan, James Taylor, or<lb/>
Jackson Brown. They ask ques-<lb/>
tions, offer answers, and inspire<lb/>
thought.<lb/>
Unfortunately, most night-<lb/>
spots specializing in entertain-<lb/>
ment of this sort are located in or<lb/>
around larger cities than Green-<lb/>
ville. However, there are a few<lb/>
places here whose managers or<lb/>
owners recognize this trend back<lb/>
to softer music.<lb/>
Their efforts make possible<lb/>
the exposure of otherwise unno-<lb/>
ticed local as well as regional<lb/>
musicians. They are catering to<lb/>
larger and more attentive crowds<lb/>
as an indication of this recent<lb/>
re-Interest in soft music. The<lb/>
atmosphere in these dubs is<lb/>
generally relaxed and offers a<lb/>
change of pace to those who<lb/>
frequent downtown.<lb/>
So, as you can see, the two<lb/>
kinds of change are not com-<lb/>
pletely different. Social attitudes<lb/>
involve a basic need-variety.<lb/>
Always count on change as long<lb/>
as man has this need.<lb/>
TRENDS<lb/>
MEETING<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
at 3 p.m.<lb/>
For a warm smile and hot food<lb/>
to get you through the cold<lb/>
days ahead, come see Bernice<lb/>
at the<lb/>
GALLEY ROOM<lb/>
Specials daily Mon-Fri<lb/>
8:00am-2:30pm<lb/>
Wfe'vegot<lb/>
what you want?<lb/>
I<lb/>
One Day Only!<lb/>
Trunk Showing Of<lb/>
Fashion Stone Rings<lb/>
And More.<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
October 19th.<lb/>
Get set to see all the excitement when we<lb/>
bring you an outstanding trunk show of precious stone nngs,<lb/>
fashion pendants and earrings<lb/>
Mr Sidney Baker of International Jewelry will be in our store<lb/>
just one day only to show you one of the<lb/>
largest selections ever brought to town More than a trunk<lb/>
show an opportunity to purchase advance<lb/>
styles in Fall fashions at sale paces'<lb/>
30 Off On 5ur Selection If<lb/>
You Bring This Ad Withbu.<lb/>
FREE BOTTLE OF FINE JEWELRY CLEANER<lb/>
WHEN YOU PRESENT THIS AD.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058014_0010"/><lb/>
HN<lb/>
mvi<lb/>
� �� i iipsi &amp; i<lb/>
��- C Vi<lb/>
�<lb/>
Pay 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 October 1977<lb/>
I<lb/>
New wave of immigrants<lb/>
Ex- Red Guards pursue American dream<lb/>
By TODD CARROLL<lb/>
Pacific News Service<lb/>
Since 1970 hundreds, perhaps<lb/>
thousands, of China's most<lb/>
radical youth from the Cultural<lb/>
Revolution have been streaming<lb/>
into the United States, driven by<lb/>
political disaffection with the<lb/>
Peking government and inspired<lb/>
by the American constitutional<lb/>
guarantees of freedom and indiv-<lb/>
idualism.<lb/>
They have swum the shark-<lb/>
infested waters of the South<lb/>
China seas, lived by their<lb/>
muscles and wits on the streets of<lb/>
Hong Kong and scrambled fa<lb/>
coolie wages in the soup kitchens<lb/>
of San Francisco's Chinatown<lb/>
more than a decade ago in China.<lb/>
These Red Guards in pursuit<lb/>
of the American dream are<lb/>
perhaps the most paradoxical of<lb/>
all the waves of immigrants to<lb/>
penetrate the United States.<lb/>
To the China watchers of the<lb/>
West, the Red Guards were a<lb/>
bizarre and confusing lot. Follow-<lb/>
ing Mao's instructions, the Red<lb/>
Guards were students released<lb/>
from school to rove the country-<lb/>
side organizing massive demonst-<lb/>
rations against the entrenched<lb/>
bureaucracy of the Communist<lb/>
Party and the government.<lb/>
"He wished to produce a<lb/>
generation that would throw off<lb/>
the habits of obedience fostered<lb/>
by both traditional and Com-<lb/>
munist Chinese society says<lb/>
author Nancy Milton, who taught<lb/>
at the Peking Language Institute<lb/>
in the 1960s and whose three<lb/>
children were Red Guards.<lb/>
"Mao wanted a generation<lb/>
who would challenge those in<lb/>
authority and make their own<lb/>
political analyses�or according to<lb/>
Mao's own aphorism, 'learn by<lb/>
swimming "<lb/>
One of those who learned to<lb/>
swim in the choppy waters of the<lb/>
Cultural Revolution is Henry Lee.<lb/>
He is 28. He rents an 8x10-foot<lb/>
room in an old brick Chinatown<lb/>
roominghouse. He has a single<lb/>
bed, a suitcase, several cardboard<lb/>
boxes, a rack of clothes. Canned<lb/>
food and tea fill th shelves he<lb/>
built over the door. His most<lb/>
expensive possession is a new<lb/>
stereo that sits on a metal rack<lb/>
next to a few bookshelves and a<lb/>
small desk.<lb/>
He takes home $60 each week,<lb/>
pays his bills, saves a little and<lb/>
wires the rest to his family in<lb/>
China. By day he studies English<lb/>
at an adult school, and he works<lb/>
at night in a Chinese restaurant.<lb/>
In China, Henry Lee led<lb/>
another kind of life.<lb/>
In 1966, he and his high school<lb/>
classmates from Canton formed a<lb/>
Red Guard brigade and began a<lb/>
two-year trek that took them<lb/>
throughout the densely populated<lb/>
eastern provinces of China. They<lb/>
were part of the "link-up a<lb/>
national movement that encour-<lb/>
aged millions of Chinese youth to<lb/>
journey around the nation and<lb/>
experience the ways of the<lb/>
Chinese revolution.<lb/>
Many of the young rebels,<lb/>
said Henry, fancied themselves<lb/>
as the vanguard of China's<lb/>
continuing revolution. To save the<lb/>
fruits of the revolution, they<lb/>
attacked persons they deemed too<lb/>
bourgeois in thought and deed.<lb/>
Their targets were mostly middle-<lb/>
aged persons, teachers and local<lb/>
party officials, and they subjected<lb/>
them to harsh criticism and<lb/>
physical abuse.<lb/>
But in the fall of 1968, when<lb/>
they returned to Canton, about<lb/>
half of the Red Guards were sent<lb/>
to work clearing rocks, hoeing<lb/>
fields and installing irrigation<lb/>
pumps in rural communes.<lb/>
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Lee's frustration over being<lb/>
sent to the oounrtyside was<lb/>
shared by thousands of young<lb/>
Red Guards, says Nancy Milton,<lb/>
who now teaches several of them<lb/>
in San Francisco.<lb/>
"As this generation sees it,<lb/>
the students were used as polit-<lb/>
ical shock troops, and when the<lb/>
movement became very messy,<lb/>
factional and violent, they were<lb/>
shipped off to the countryside.<lb/>
They saw their fate as political<lb/>
punishment-and they were also<lb/>
removed from their educational<lb/>
track, forever in most cases<lb/>
Ironically, their emigration to<lb/>
the U.S. may also have been a<lb/>
product of the intense radicalism<lb/>
they fostered in China.<lb/>
"Roaming about the oountry-<lb/>
side during the Cultural Revolu-<lb/>
tion, they learned self-reliance<lb/>
rather than obedience, and an<lb/>
exhilarating sense of control over<lb/>
their own lives says Milton.<lb/>
"These young Chinese are suc-<lb/>
cessful products of Mao's attempt<lb/>
to create a modern, sdentifio-<lb/>
minded, questioning people<lb/>
Life has not been easy for the<lb/>
young men and women who left<lb/>
China and settled in San Fran-<lb/>
cisco, but fa the first time, many<lb/>
say, they are working fa them-<lb/>
selves.<lb/>
FASHION WORLD<lb/>
SPECIAL DISCOUNT<lb/>
FOR ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
15 OFF PURCHASE<lb/>
OF<lb/>
 Dresses<lb/>
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Present your Student ID<lb/>
and this ad.<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 I.D.<lb/>
AND ACTIVITY CARD<lb/>
Reserve your tickets now to get the best seeting. 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="00058014_0011"/><lb/>
Sidney PoMer discusses new fUck<lb/>
17 0otob�rH77 FOUWTAINHEAO PtQt 11<lb/>
Accomplished film actor sets new goals<lb/>
Sidney Poitier is ooe of the<lb/>
premier actors in the film<lb/>
industry. He is also a producer,<lb/>
with his own company, Verdon<lb/>
Productions, and he is acutely<lb/>
aware of his potential and future<lb/>
as a director.<lb/>
He has both acted in and<lb/>
directed films such as "Buck and<lb/>
the Preacher "A Warm Dec-<lb/>
ember "Uptown Saturday<lb/>
Night "Let's Do It Again and<lb/>
his current release, "A Piece of<lb/>
the Action<lb/>
The following interview took<lb/>
place at Verdon Productions,<lb/>
which occupies a series of offices<lb/>
at MGM studios:<lb/>
You are one of the few major<lb/>
actors who has beoome both a<lb/>
producer and a director as well.<lb/>
How do you define your present<lb/>
approach to filmmaking?<lb/>
" think flimmaking is an<lb/>
expression of the values held by<lb/>
the individual engaged in film-<lb/>
making. For me it is an extension<lb/>
of how I feel about various and<lb/>
sundry things, particularly how I<lb/>
deal in life with other human<lb/>
beings, and how I deal with my<lb/>
own life. I think all of that is<lb/>
revealed. A t least one can discern<lb/>
my values in these areas by<lb/>
watching my films, which are an<lb/>
expression of me<lb/>
Do you see major transitions<lb/>
in your attitude and techniques,<lb/>
moving from your first experience<lb/>
as a director in "Buck and the<lb/>
Preacher to your present<lb/>
release A Piece of the Action?<lb/>
 Yes, there are transitions, I<lb/>
think, as well as significant<lb/>
departures, moving from 'Buck<lb/>
and the Preacher' to the picture I<lb/>
am presently engaged in. I think<lb/>
that Buck and the Preacher'<lb/>
represented a turning point for<lb/>
me, enabling me to become<lb/>
involved with directing and pro-<lb/>
ducing. It enhanced the collecting<lb/>
of my own film experiences, and<lb/>
now that I'm five movies into<lb/>
directing, I have seen a dimen-<lb/>
sionalizmg of my attitudes, my<lb/>
knowledge, and of my technique.<lb/>
This period has definitely been<lb/>
one of growth and expansion for<lb/>
me<lb/>
One<lb/>
Tues. - Lotus<lb/>
Thurs. Preservation Jazz Co.<lb/>
BYOL<lb/>
AT.TIC<lb/>
I<lb/>
Wed. "Ease"<lb/>
Thurs. "Ease"<lb/>
(Wet T-Shirt Contest)<lb/>
SIDNEY POITIER-ACCOM Pi ISHED actor and promising director.<lb/>
"A Piece of the Action" has<lb/>
some unique and surprisingly<lb/>
emotional sequences following<lb/>
two films, "Uptown Saturday<lb/>
Night" and "Let's Do It Again<lb/>
which were done as broad come-<lb/>
dies. What was your reasoning<lb/>
behind the shift in emphasis?<lb/>
"I do not believe that my life<lb/>
as a film artist should be spent in<lb/>
repetition. I did two successful<lb/>
films that were comedically<lb/>
based, for the most part, and they<lb/>
were well received. Now, to<lb/>
pursue a third in the same genre<lb/>
would not only be repetitious, but<lb/>
to my mind, a waste of my time<lb/>
and certainly a waste of time to<lb/>
the audience I would be preparing<lb/>
it for. If I cannot ask them to come<lb/>
and visit with me artistically and<lb/>
expect something that is better,<lb/>
that is deeper, that is more<lb/>
revealing, more illuminating and<lb/>
hopefully more entertaining, then<lb/>
I ought not to ask them to come<lb/>
and visit with me at all. That's<lb/>
how I feel<lb/>
Do you see this as part of your<lb/>
growth as a director?<lb/>
"It has to be. I've learned so<lb/>
many things about directing that I<lb/>
need a wider, a more important, a<lb/>
more realistic and a more useful<lb/>
vehicle to house the things I feel I<lb/>
have to offer<lb/>
Why do you think your last<lb/>
two films had such tremendous<lb/>
appeal to such a wide and diverse<lb/>
audience?<lb/>
IWE PHOT BALL LINER: A MAGNIFKSHT<lb/>
STEP BACKWARD IN WRITING &amp;<lb/>
"I haven't the faintest idea,<lb/>
but I like to think that its because<lb/>
my view of life is such that it has a<lb/>
particular kind of interest for<lb/>
people. After all, a film artist is<lb/>
one who asks people to see the<lb/>
world as he sees the world and<lb/>
therefore I have to presuppose<lb/>
that the way I see the world is of<lb/>
some interest, however mini-<lb/>
scule, to some people some-<lb/>
where<lb/>
Do you think "A Piece of the<lb/>
Action" will follow this trend?<lb/>
" sincerely hope so, but 'A<lb/>
Piece of the Action' is consider-<lb/>
ably different from the other two<lb/>
films. It's a comedy, an adven-<lb/>
ture and a love story, but it is<lb/>
also more than these things. It's<lb/>
poignant and there are tears and<lb/>
there is laughter and a number of<lb/>
interesting and diverse situations<lb/>
are created.<lb/>
"Again, it's my view of the<lb/>
world, in a way, and I hope that it<lb/>
holds true that the people who<lb/>
enjoyed my films when I made<lb/>
comedies will enjoy this one<lb/>
Do you see your production<lb/>
company continuing to make<lb/>
films of this nature?<lb/>
 Yes, but I want the next one,<lb/>
even if it is in the same genre as<lb/>
'A Piece of the Action to be part<lb/>
of an onward movement rather<lb/>
than another exploration of the<lb/>
same ground we've already cov-<lb/>
ered.<lb/>
"I've been in films a great<lb/>
number of years and I am not<lb/>
interested in more involvement<lb/>
on a physical level. My interest is<lb/>
mostly in the quality of the<lb/>
involvement and my conception of<lb/>
artistic growth. I" m just looking to<lb/>
do better work, particularly as a<lb/>
director, because a project like A<lb/>
Piece of the Action' challenges<lb/>
me more and it gives me a bigger<lb/>
reach<lb/>
ROSE<lb/>
Continued from p. 8<lb/>
Templeton's apartment building<lb/>
(the statue nearly steals the<lb/>
movie).<lb/>
With the exception of a couple<lb/>
of impressive scenes-especially<lb/>
one in which Kemper moves his<lb/>
camera from window to window to<lb/>
follow the screaming Ivy from<lb/>
outside the apartment-glass is<lb/>
still shown breaking in slow<lb/>
motion and the freeze-frame is<lb/>
used to aid the movie in its<lb/>
cop-out ending.<lb/>
A good cast, save for Beck<lb/>
who gives his usual wooden<lb/>
performance, is wasted in a movie<lb/>
that takes itself far too seriously.<lb/>
If the staff of "Audrey Rose" had<lb/>
treated their material with the<lb/>
same tongue-in-oheek lightheart-<lb/>
edness that De Palrna displayed<lb/>
in "Carrie and this kind of<lb/>
subject matter deserves it, they<lb/>
might have come up with s ime-<lb/>
thing. Instead, they will ha e to<lb/>
settle fa a half-baked rehc iing<lb/>
of an area in filmmaking the has<lb/>
been given more time th i it<lb/>
warrants.<lb/>
College<lb/>
Graduates<lb/>
BECOME A LAWYERS ASSISTANT.<lb/>
� Program approved by American Bar Association<lb/>
� Day and Evening classes<lb/>
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to meet interested students. For more information contact the<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058014_0012"/><lb/>
12 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 Octobar 1977<lb/>
Pirates pound Richmond 35-14<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
In a game that was even more<lb/>
unusual than the ECU-Riohmond<lb/>
clash the year before, East<lb/>
Carolina was able to defeat the<lb/>
Spiders 35-14 Saturday night.<lb/>
Both offensive and defensive<lb/>
fireworks provided the crowd of<lb/>
19,010 with some of the wildest<lb/>
football of the year.<lb/>
Upon winning the coin toss,<lb/>
ECU elected to receive. Willie<lb/>
Hawkins caught the kickoff, fum-<lb/>
bled it, and then returned it to the<lb/>
16-yard line for a return of 6<lb/>
yards. Then in a move that<lb/>
suprised everyone, Jimmy South-<lb/>
erland went back to pass on the<lb/>
first play of the game. The pass<lb/>
was to Terry GaJlaher for a<lb/>
35-vard gain. After a pitohout to<lb/>
Eddie Hicks gained nothing, Sou-<lb/>
therland got loose on a 49-yard<lb/>
touchdown run around the left<lb/>
end. The Junior Creech kick was<lb/>
good, and the Pirates went ahead<lb/>
7-0.<lb/>
Richmond, however, was not<lb/>
to be outdone by the "big-play"<lb/>
Pirates. After a Vern Davenport<lb/>
kickoff, Spider Demetri Kornegay<lb/>
grabbed the ball and, after some<lb/>
good blocks, went down the<lb/>
sidelines for a 94-yard kickoff<lb/>
return. The PAT was good, and<lb/>
after just 1 34 the score was tied<lb/>
at seven apiece.<lb/>
The Pirates took over the next<lb/>
possession at the 23-yard line and<lb/>
used the big play once again. On<lb/>
second and nine the hand-off<lb/>
went to Theo Sutton up the<lb/>
middle. After shaking one Rich-<lb/>
mond defender, the fleet fullback<lb/>
ran fa 59 yards before being<lb/>
dragged down. From there, after<lb/>
gains of five yards by Vince<lb/>
Kolanko and a seven yard burst<lb/>
by Sutton, Eddie Hicks took a<lb/>
pitohout and went in for the score.<lb/>
The kick was good and the Pirates<lb/>
retook the lead 14-7.<lb/>
There was no more scoring by<lb/>
either team in the first quarter as<lb/>
a defensive struggle began be-<lb/>
tween the two teams.<lb/>
In the second quarter, after an<lb/>
exchange of possessions, the<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Pirate big-play offense went to<lb/>
work again. After a gain of nine<lb/>
yards by Sutton, Southerland<lb/>
dropped back and unleashed a<lb/>
71-yard touchdown bomb into the<lb/>
waiting hands of Terry Gallher.<lb/>
The PAT was good once again by<lb/>
Creech and the score stood 21 -7 in<lb/>
favor of the Pirates.<lb/>
After the Pirate defense held<lb/>
the Spiders to just three plays,<lb/>
ECU again put some points on the<lb/>
board. The Spiders punted to<lb/>
Gerald Hall who took the ball,<lb/>
broke through a wall of would-be<lb/>
tacklers and went all the way for a<lb/>
touchdown return of 80 yards.<lb/>
The Creech kick was good and the<lb/>
score was ECU 28-Richmond 7.<lb/>
Surprised by the Pirates pow-<lb/>
erful showing, the stubborn Spi-<lb/>
ders drove downfield for a<lb/>
touchdown in a twelve-play 63-<lb/>
See SPIDERS, p. 12<lb/>
HA ROLD ' � TOO SMA LL Randolph (92) snows Richmonds Buster<lb/>
Jackson what the danangs all about. (Photo by Bnan <lb/>
EAST CAROLINA QUARTERBACK Jimmy South-<lb/>
erland barks off an audible to his teammates just<lb/>
before the 5'9" senior from Wilmington threw a 71<lb/>
yard touchdown bomb to Terry Gallaher.<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
Quarterbacks perfect 'big pla y'<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
With quarterbacks Jimmy<lb/>
Southerland and Leander Green<lb/>
operating the Pirates "big play"<lb/>
offense to perfection, it took just<lb/>
one half for East Carolina to<lb/>
dispose of the hapless Richmond<lb/>
Spiders here Saturday night.<lb/>
Whether it was the gutsy<lb/>
Southerland or the lightning<lb/>
quick Green, time and time again<lb/>
the two ECU signal callers ignited<lb/>
scoring plays with their superb<lb/>
running and passing.<lb/>
Before the 35-14 rout was all<lb/>
over, Southerland totaled 223<lb/>
yards on offense, running seven<lb/>
times for 62 yards and one<lb/>
touchdown, and completed 6 of 8<lb/>
passes fa 161 yards and ana her<lb/>
soae<lb/>
And his oohat Green was just<lb/>
as impressive, carrying the ball<lb/>
eight times fa 90 yards, includ-<lb/>
ing a spectacular 60-yard run fa<lb/>
the Pirates oily soae in the<lb/>
second half<lb/>
 I think the offense finally put<lb/>
it all together tonight said<lb/>
Southerland, a senior from<lb/>
Wilmington, N.C The offensive<lb/>
line came off the ball real well.<lb/>
We finally played the type game<lb/>
offensively we're capable of play-<lb/>
ing all the time<lb/>
On the first play from saim-<lb/>
mage in the game, Southerland<lb/>
unloaded a 35 yard bomb to his<lb/>
favaite receiver Terry Gallaher,<lb/>
and. one play later, went down<lb/>
the right side 49 yards fa ECU's<lb/>
first touchdown.<lb/>
Then early in the second<lb/>
quarter, Southerland hit Gallaher<lb/>
again, down the right side fa 71<lb/>
yards and anaher Pirate touch-<lb/>
down.<lb/>
 We put tht I play in just this<lb/>
week explained Southerland.<lb/>
"Terry's ga tremendous speed<lb/>
and he's improved so much since<lb/>
he was a sophomae. I don't know<lb/>
how he does it, but he seems to<lb/>
get open everytime<lb/>
East Carolina head coach Pat<lb/>
Dye felt the offense showed<lb/>
considerable improvement,<lb/>
especially the offensive line. "I'm<lb/>
tickled to death with what we did<lb/>
offensively said Dye. "Jimmy<lb/>
Southerland's play early and our<lb/>
passing had to hurt Richmond, I<lb/>
have to think our offensive line<lb/>
came off the football well with the<lb/>
way our fullbacks got yardage in<lb/>
the middle<lb/>
Leander Green's 60-yard run<lb/>
fa a touchdown in the third<lb/>
quarter was simply inaedible. It<lb/>
will have to receive top billing in<lb/>
next year's "Collegiate Football<lb/>
Follies<lb/>
On third and five, Green<lb/>
See GREEN, p. 15<lb/>
WILLIE HAWKINS (33) eludes a group of<lb/>
Richmond tacklers during a 23 yard kickoff return.<lb/>
The "Hawk" was a key player in the 35-14 win over<lb/>
the Richmond Spiders. Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
<pb facs="00058014_0013"/><lb/>
17 October 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
Spiders unable to hold offense<lb/>
Continued from p. 12<lb/>
yard drive. The two key plays in<lb/>
the drive were a reverse to<lb/>
William's for 10 yards and the<lb/>
touchdown play off a fake tailback<lb/>
reverse. Buster Jaokson went the<lb/>
22 yards along the sideline for the<lb/>
touchdown. The PAT was good<lb/>
but ECU still led 28-14.<lb/>
There was an exchange of<lb/>
punts after the half before the<lb/>
Pirates were in oontroi of the ball<lb/>
again. This time Leander Green,<lb/>
the superfast quarterback from<lb/>
Jacksonville, made what has to be<lb/>
remembered as one of the most<lb/>
unusual plays in Pirate history.<lb/>
The Pirates, facing a third and<lb/>
five situation, needed something.<lb/>
Green had the answer but didn't<lb/>
know it until he was in the<lb/>
endzone. Green ran to the left<lb/>
side and tried to pitchout to one of<lb/>
his backs. The only problem was<lb/>
the back wasn't there and the ball<lb/>
bounced on the 20-yard line as a<lb/>
fumble. Green, realizing what<lb/>
had happened, ran back and<lb/>
grabbed the ball, slid through a<lb/>
host of Richmond tacklers and<lb/>
turned the fumble into a 60-yard<lb/>
run for a touchdown. The run was<lb/>
actually 80 yards, but is consider-<lb/>
High Point<lb/>
defeats<lb/>
hockey ,1 -0<lb/>
High Point College pushed<lb/>
across a goal late in the second<lb/>
half to defeat East Carolina 1-0 in<lb/>
a women's field hockey game<lb/>
here Saturday afternoon.<lb/>
The goal, which came with<lb/>
just 12:00 remaining in the game,<lb/>
left the Pirates with a 3-7 overall<lb/>
record for the season<lb/>
"We played very hard and it<lb/>
was quite a physical game for<lb/>
us said head coach Laurie<lb/>
Arrants. "We're just not playing<lb/>
well offensively and we've got to<lb/>
make some changes defensively<lb/>
before our next game<lb/>
The Pirates missed seven<lb/>
close shots on goal in the second<lb/>
half.<lb/>
East Carolina returns to action<lb/>
this Friday when the Pirates<lb/>
travel to Winston Salem to face an<lb/>
improved Wake Forest team.<lb/>
ed only from the line of scrim-<lb/>
mage. The PAT was good and the<lb/>
score stood ECU 35-Richmond 14.<lb/>
After this, the defenses of<lb/>
both teams controlled the game.<lb/>
The Pirates had a few chances to<lb/>
score but penalties halted drives,<lb/>
leaving the final score ECU<lb/>
35-Richmond 14.<lb/>
East Carolina's defense was<lb/>
led by Harold Randolph. Other<lb/>
standouts on defense were Steve<lb/>
Hale, Gerald Hall, Thomas Mo<lb/>
Laurin, and Mike Brewington.<lb/>
On offense the standouts were<lb/>
quarterbacks Jimmy Southerland,<lb/>
and Leander Green, guard Wayne<lb/>
Bolt, and runningbaoks Eddie<lb/>
Hicks, Theo Sutton, Sam Harrell<lb/>
and Willie Hawkins.<lb/>
Also playing an outstanding<lb/>
game on offense were Terry<lb/>
Gallaher and Barry Johnson.<lb/>
The win Saturday night gives<lb/>
the Pirates a 6-1 record, which<lb/>
ties a school record for winning<lb/>
seasons set from 1960 to 1965.<lb/>
The win also keeps the Pirates<lb/>
bowl hopes alive for this year.<lb/>
The Pirates will be in Charles-<lb/>
ton, South Carolina next Saturday<lb/>
to take on former Southern<lb/>
Conferenoe rival The Citadel in a<lb/>
night dash.<lb/>
WA YNE BOLT (68) and Mitchel Smith (77) make<lb/>
a key block to enable fullback Theodore Sutton (36)<lb/>
After the clash with The<lb/>
Citadel the Pirates will be home<lb/>
for the last time this year against<lb/>
the powerful Ragan Cajuns of<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana. The Ca-<lb/>
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juns sport a 5-1-1 record and lead<lb/>
the Southland Conferenoe stan-<lb/>
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The Pirates then travel to<lb/>
Appalachian State for the twenty-<lb/>
seventh renewal of that Intrastate<lb/>
rivalr<lb/>
to break loose on a 58 yard burst up the middle.<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotler)<lb/>
The final game of the season<lb/>
will be against the Indians of<lb/>
William and Mary. The game will<lb/>
be played in Norfolk Va. in the<lb/>
Oyster Bowl Classic. William and<lb/>
Mary is now 3-3 on the year.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058014_0014"/><lb/>
mnp<lb/>
14 FOUNTAINNCAO 17<lb/>
1�T7<lb/>
Mack pre-season ail-American<lb/>
By CHRIS HOLLOMAN<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
New head basketball coach<lb/>
Larry Gillman is really looking<lb/>
forward to this year's basketball<lb/>
season with his usual optimism.<lb/>
This year, however, every student<lb/>
at East Carolina should also look<lb/>
forward to a great season because<lb/>
of Junior College transfer Oliver<lb/>
Mack.<lb/>
Oliver Mack is East Carolina's<lb/>
first oonsensus all-America in<lb/>
basketball and comes to Green-<lb/>
ville as one of the best athletes<lb/>
ever to wear the purple and gold.<lb/>
To understand just how gifted a<lb/>
person Mack is, it is important to<lb/>
know something about his past.<lb/>
Oliver Mack was a high school<lb/>
all-America and was considered<lb/>
at that time one of the top<lb/>
prospects in the country. Later, at<lb/>
San Jacinto Junior College in<lb/>
Pasadena, Texas, Mack became a<lb/>
superstar. Oliver led histeam to a<lb/>
30-6 record last year and a<lb/>
runner-up finish in the national<lb/>
tournament. He was named first<lb/>
team all-America Junior College.<lb/>
He was the leading scorer fa the<lb/>
second year in a row in the<lb/>
national tournament. He averag-<lb/>
ed 25 points a game fa two years<lb/>
along with nine rebounds and six<lb/>
assists per game. He was twice<lb/>
named ail-tournament in the San<lb/>
Jacinto Classic, the Lee Classic,<lb/>
and the Thanksgiving Classic. In<lb/>
October Oliver was named to<lb/>
Playboy's all-America team and<lb/>
by Gamepian Magazine.<lb/>
During last summer Mack<lb/>
was invited to attend the Wald<lb/>
University Games Camp in Louis-<lb/>
ville, Kentucky.<lb/>
After a list of such honors as<lb/>
this, coach Gillman is pleased to<lb/>
say the least to have a player the<lb/>
calibre of Mack here at East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
"Mack is probably one of the<lb/>
most exciting players in the<lb/>
nation right now Gillman said.<lb/>
"He has tremendous leaping<lb/>
ability and high-jumped seven<lb/>
feet in high school as a sopho-<lb/>
more. He is not oily a great<lb/>
OLIVER MACK<lb/>
Giant 60th Anniversary Sale<lb/>
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60th Anniversary Sale continues Mon. - Sat.<lb/>
Puma Hardcourt Aca (Man's leather tennis)<lb/>
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so come by and Register Everyday.<lb/>
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iismc dy rvrn run i<lb/>
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basketball player but a great<lb/>
individual as well. He is also a<lb/>
very unselfish player and I think<lb/>
that both of these factors go a<lb/>
long way in saying what a quality<lb/>
athlete Oliver is. His style is<lb/>
similar to Otis Birdsong of<lb/>
Houston and now of the Kansas<lb/>
City Kings. I just think the<lb/>
students and alumni of East<lb/>
Carolina have the good fortune of<lb/>
See MACK, p. 15<lb/>
1977-78 EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY BASKETBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
Nov. 26<lb/>
Dec.1<lb/>
Dec. 5<lb/>
Dec. 7<lb/>
Dec.9<lb/>
Dec 10<lb/>
Dec. 17<lb/>
Jan. 4<lb/>
Jan. 7<lb/>
Jan.10<lb/>
Jan. 12<lb/>
Jan. 17<lb/>
Jan. 19<lb/>
Jan. 21<lb/>
Jan. 23<lb/>
Jan. 25<lb/>
Jan. 28<lb/>
Jan. 31<lb/>
Feb. 4<lb/>
Feb. 6<lb/>
Feb. 9<lb/>
Feb. 11<lb/>
Feb. 14<lb/>
Feb. 20<lb/>
Feb. 25<lb/>
Mar.1<lb/>
'Exhibition game<lb/>
All home games start<lb/>
Indiana University<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
Alder son-Broaddus<lb/>
University of Maryland<lb/>
First Union Invit. Tour.<lb/>
(UNC-CH, Boston Col,<lb/>
LaSalleCd.<lb/>
N.C.S.U.<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
St. PetersCollege<lb/>
Athletes in Action<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
I ona College<lb/>
UNC-Asheviile<lb/>
Tenn. at Chattanooga<lb/>
Georgia Southern Col.<lb/>
Duke University<lb/>
Old Dominion<lb/>
Univ. of Richmond<lb/>
Tenn. at Chattanooga<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
USC.Aiken<lb/>
Old Dominion<lb/>
Georgia Southern Col.<lb/>
Mercer Univeristy<lb/>
Virginia Tech.<lb/>
at 730 p.m.<lb/>
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520 W. Greenville Blvd 264 By Pass<lb/>
<pb facs="00058014_0015"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
17 October 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
Lady Pirates lose to State<lb/>
BvSAM ROGERS M alu  u,u . <lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
After dropping a 3-1 match to<lb/>
arch-rival N.C. State last Thurs-<lb/>
day Alita Dillon and her volleyball<lb/>
team return to action this after-<lb/>
noon when the Pirates travel to<lb/>
High Point to face High Point<lb/>
College and Lenoir Rhyne.<lb/>
The Wolfpack, who the<lb/>
Pirates defeated earlier in the<lb/>
year, won the first two games<lb/>
along<lb/>
of a five game match.<lb/>
Despite the loss, the Pirates<lb/>
still boast a fine 12-6 overall<lb/>
record this season including an<lb/>
impressive third place showing in<lb/>
the South Carolina Invitational<lb/>
Tournament in September.<lb/>
"Kim Clayton has been play-<lb/>
ing with a strained back said<lb/>
ECU coach Alita Dillon. "That<lb/>
was really the difference in the<lb/>
match against N.C. State. We<lb/>
Booters now 2-6<lb/>
The Pirate booters lowered<lb/>
their overall record to a 2-6<lb/>
Saturday as ECU lost to UNC-W<lb/>
3-0. The match was played in<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
UNC-W scored two of their<lb/>
points in the first half and their<lb/>
third in the second half. Natur-<lb/>
ally, Coach Brad Smith was<lb/>
disappointed with the loss, but<lb/>
felt left wing Ric Browning was<lb/>
the team's one bright spot.<lb/>
Smith blamed a lack of<lb/>
communication for the loss. "We<lb/>
just weren't playing as a team<lb/>
said Smith. "There was no<lb/>
helping each other out on switch-<lb/>
es. And we're still not going to<lb/>
the ball.<lb/>
"The strange thing, is we're<lb/>
letting people beat us physically,<lb/>
which has never happened at<lb/>
ECU before. In the past, East<lb/>
Carolina has been known for<lb/>
tough physical teams, but we are<lb/>
the exception<lb/>
"We have also been having<lb/>
disciplinary problems, and one<lb/>
GREEN<lb/>
Continued from p. 12<lb/>
rolled right on an option and<lb/>
made a poor pitch which was<lb/>
batted backwards by a Richmond<lb/>
defender. The ball rolled all the<lb/>
way back to the 20 yard line<lb/>
where he picked the ball up in<lb/>
front of a host of Spider players,<lb/>
turned around and scampered all<lb/>
the way down the right aide line<lb/>
for the score. Needless to say,<lb/>
Green's jersey was ripped away<lb/>
in the process.<lb/>
 No other player in America<lb/>
could have made the play that<lb/>
Leander Green made said Dye.<lb/>
1' The second half got sloppy, but<lb/>
we had some big, big plays<lb/>
Defensively, the Pirates play-<lb/>
ed poorly In the first half, but<lb/>
came back to shut out the Spiders<lb/>
in the second half. Richmond now<lb/>
1-5 for the year, has not scored<lb/>
one point in the second half this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
I just don't think we played<lb/>
well defensively in the first half<lb/>
said Dye. "Those little old backs<lb/>
running around out there weren't<lb/>
that good. We just weren't<lb/>
getting anyone around the foot-<lb/>
ball<lb/>
Dye added, "If this team<lb/>
keeps going like they are going,<lb/>
they're gonna' be. something<lb/>
special<lb/>
s��<lb/>
srfo<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER QOOOS<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
player has been dropped from<lb/>
the team<lb/>
The Pirates next match is this<lb/>
afternoon at 4:00 against State.<lb/>
"We plan to make some defen-<lb/>
sive changes said Smith in<lb/>
reference to the game. "They<lb/>
have a good team which has<lb/>
beaten most of the people that<lb/>
have beaten us. Hopefully we can<lb/>
turn things around against<lb/>
them<lb/>
It is the Pirate's final home<lb/>
match of the season, so come out<lb/>
and support ECU soccer.<lb/>
the serve and were not doing a<lb/>
good job setting the ball up for<lb/>
her. Consequently she had to do a<lb/>
lot of moving around which gave<lb/>
her back even more problems<lb/>
"Overall, we've played well<lb/>
so far this season, although we've<lb/>
had our usual up and downs<lb/>
explained Dillon. "But all the<lb/>
girls have shown steady im-<lb/>
provement and have really been<lb/>
excited about winning.<lb/>
MACK<lb/>
Continued from p. 14<lb/>
having an athlete that will rank<lb/>
with Phil Ford and Butch Lee as<lb/>
the top three guards in the nation<lb/>
this year<lb/>
After all the honors and the<lb/>
past glory it must be wondered<lb/>
why a player as good as Oliver<lb/>
Mack would turn down offers by<lb/>
such schools as Houston, South-<lb/>
ern California, Georgia Tech<lb/>
San Frandsoo and Arizona State,<lb/>
to oome to East Carolina. Oliver<lb/>
was not hesitant to answer such a<lb/>
question.<lb/>
"Coach Dillon (ECU assistant<lb/>
teams seem to be the only nemisis<lb/>
the Pirates have had problems<lb/>
overcoming. North Carolina,<lb/>
Wake Forest, and N.C. State have<lb/>
all topped East Carolina at least<lb/>
once in regular season play, with<lb/>
the other three setbacks coming<lb/>
against opponents in the South<lb/>
Carolina Invitational tournament.<lb/>
"Debbie Freeman and Gail<lb/>
Kerbaugh have been our most<lb/>
consistent power hitters added<lb/>
coach) and I had known each<lb/>
other for a long time and I felt this<lb/>
would help in a good player-coach<lb/>
relationship Mack said. "I also<lb/>
liked the school very much and<lb/>
felt it would be a nice place to<lb/>
finish my college education. I<lb/>
heard about East Carolina from<lb/>
Mike Gail of the San Antonio<lb/>
Spurs of the NBA. He attended<lb/>
Elizabeth Qty State University<lb/>
and was familiar with this part of<lb/>
the state. I'm really looking<lb/>
Thompson has<lb/>
done a brilliant job blocking and<lb/>
is truly a finesse player<lb/>
After the match against High<lb/>
Point and Lenoir Rhyne the<lb/>
Pirates return home the following<lb/>
Tuesday, October 25 to face ACC<lb/>
foe Duke, one of the top women's<lb/>
teams in the oountry.<lb/>
In upooming weeks, the Pirate<lb/>
volleyball team will meet Chowan<lb/>
and Peace and compete in the<lb/>
Appalachian Tournament.<lb/>
forward to playing basketball<lb/>
here for the next two years and I<lb/>
feel that we will have a fun team<lb/>
to watch<lb/>
So with the basketball season<lb/>
just a month and a half away<lb/>
everyone is anxious to start the<lb/>
season. It is a season that<lb/>
promises to be exciting and one<lb/>
which will likely give the Pirate<lb/>
basketball program it's first all-<lb/>
America in basketball.<lb/>
Grand Opening<lb/>
at Fifth Street News Stand<lb/>
Oct 20th,21stf22nd<lb/>
We are giving Free Popcorn<lb/>
with each purchase<lb/>
we carry a variety of<lb/>
Books 8- magazines<lb/>
Including :<lb/>
Graduate Management Admission Test<lb/>
.Law School Admission Test<lb/>
.College-Level Examination Program<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058014_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNT AINHEAD 17 October 1977<lb/>
makes<lb/>
Do you really<lb/>
know what<lb/>
happens when<lb/>
business<lb/>
� 111 V<lb/>
r<lb/>
business? Labor?<lb/>
nvestors? Government?<lb/>
we don't understand<lb/>
who makes our system<lb/>
vork, and how, we'll<lb/>
lever be able to improve<lb/>
t. That's why we've pre-<lb/>
pared this special booklet.<lb/>
t's free. Every American<lb/>
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omic System, how can<lb/>
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Every American ought<lb/>
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For a free copy, write:<lb/>
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Call till you get me. 752-5214.<lb/>
FOR SALE: SX737 Receiver 35<lb/>
watts per channel B.I.C. 920<lb/>
turntable with littlo use. Both in<lb/>
excellent cond. Must sell befae<lb/>
leaving this month. 758-7670.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Texas Instruments<lb/>
SR-52. 224 step programable<lb/>
Also card programable Complete<lb/>
with math, stat games, and<lb/>
basic Libraries. Ova $300 new,<lb/>
15 mos. old. Best offa. 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 motacycle 40 h.p.<lb/>
Chromed faks (1976). Asking<lb/>
1200.00. Call 746-3271 late afta-<lb/>
noon and evenings ask fa Danny.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Leatha jacket, excel-<lb/>
lent cond must be seen to be<lb/>
apaedated. Call Lee at 758-5965<lb/>
a cane by 308 C. Scott. ARE<lb/>
YOU TIRED OF THE HIGH<lb/>
PRICE OF CLOTHES? Have<lb/>
them made at less than Vi the<lb/>
cost of what you would buy them<lb/>
at. Fa all your sewing needs call<lb/>
7566393 after 200.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 12 string guitar<lb/>
whard shell case, excellent copy<lb/>
of a Martin. New cost 285.00<lb/>
Need money bad so will sell fa<lb/>
125.00 Call 752-5692.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Tascam Model 3<lb/>
recadlng mixer. Four months<lb/>
old. 8 chanet sub mixer. In and 4<lb/>
bus. lines out wfth Peak reading<lb/>
metas690. Must sell, 752-5692.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New ladies ice<lb/>
skates, size 8. Reasonable prices.<lb/>
If intaested call 752-0411 �<lb/>
FOR SALE: '71 VW convertible<lb/>
bug. 80,000 miles, mostly hi-way.<lb/>
Needs some wak. Must sell.<lb/>
758-7670.<lb/>
FORSALE:Peugot10spd. men's<lb/>
bike 24 inch with rack. 1 month<lb/>
old. Must sell. Call 758-7670.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1968 VW Van 3 yr.<lb/>
old. Rebuilt engine. Good cond.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 72 Honda CB175 -<lb/>
Good cond. $250 946-1230.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 69 Chev. Van<lb/>
Paneled and carpet. 307 V8<lb/>
engine &amp; 3 speed auto. 1500.00 a<lb/>
best reasonable offa may trade.<lb/>
7569909.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Epiphone accoustic<lb/>
guitar. Good Cond. Best Offa.<lb/>
Call Mike 758-1693 a cane by<lb/>
805-East 3rd St.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Used Bundy clarinet.<lb/>
Excellent cond. 100.00 a best<lb/>
offa. 758-9385.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 350 Honda.<lb/>
Excellent cond. 350.00 Call<lb/>
7560893.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Registaed Pointa<lb/>
pups. White Knights Button<lb/>
Blood lines. 756-5368 afta 600<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
BUY NOW: 1967 V.W. Station-<lb/>
wagot. 300.00. Art student needs<lb/>
to sell car fa food money. See at<lb/>
510 E. 1st a. Apt. 6, afta 5p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Mdntosh C-28 pre-<lb/>
amp, 8 men. dd. Need money<lb/>
fast Best offa ova 360.00. CaJI<lb/>
752-5692 anytime afta 700-until<lb/>
wTIBriGVOr.<lb/>
FOR SALE: "72 Opel GT. Contact<lb/>
Steve at 752-3267.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Full size Sears<lb/>
Cddspot frostfree refrigaata.<lb/>
Very dean-looks like new. Must<lb/>
be add by Novemba. $100. Call<lb/>
753-2468 anytime. We can<lb/>
arrange delivery.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 'bo VW Classic with<lb/>
sun roof, capet, excellent trans-<lb/>
axle, body not rusty, partially<lb/>
restaed , Cdledas item. CaJI<lb/>
758-7434 Sao�e Coeecsn.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 10 piece silver<lb/>
sparkling set of Ludwig drums.<lb/>
Good cond. Call 752-8687 a cane<lb/>
by room 212-C Scott.<lb/>
r-UH SALE: 5 piece drum net<lb/>
SIinaerlandLudwig combination.<lb/>
Call 758-7434.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 25 watt JVC receiva-<lb/>
amplifier- with turntable.<lb/>
Pioneer cassette deck. Magnatex<lb/>
speakers. Call 756-0146.<lb/>
fbr rent (fj<lb/>
WANTED TO RENT: House<lb/>
within walking distance of<lb/>
campus 'a married couple with<lb/>
no kids. No later than Dec. Must<lb/>
have wakahop a garage (around<lb/>
100.00) Call Mel at 757-6462.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Needed<lb/>
to share 2 bedroom api. in<lb/>
Eastbrook. Prefa someone inta-<lb/>
ested in study-oriented enviro-<lb/>
nment. Rent is $46.25 plus 14<lb/>
utilities. Call 752-0354.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Room, Private bath<lb/>
fa rent at 19P6 E. Eighth a.<lb/>
Linen inducted $60. 752-6965.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: 1 female<lb/>
roommate wanted to share new 2<lb/>
bedroom traila, with washa,<lb/>
drya, central heat, and air, also<lb/>
completely furnished. Fa more<lb/>
info, call 752-9265 between 10<lb/>
and 630 p.m afta 630 call<lb/>
7520872.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
To share 2 bedroom apt. Univa-<lb/>
sity Cond. Fully furnished Call<lb/>
758-4005 accme by Apt. 27.<lb/>
personal�!<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Fall things too<lb/>
big, too long? Call Kathy<lb/>
752-8444 a 752-8642.<lb/>
LOST: Black sweata in library,<lb/>
left on chair. Please return as I<lb/>
am emotionally attached to it.<lb/>
Just return to English office<lb/>
please. Austin 122. Reward Offa-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
LOST: Blue cowhide leather<lb/>
wallet with the lettas B.B.D. on<lb/>
the coin 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. CaJI Pam at 757-6852<lb/>
(day), and 7560211 (night).<lb/>
ARABIC DANCE: the Roots" of<lb/>
Belly Dancing taught in its<lb/>
authentidty by teacher and pa-<lb/>
former "Sunshine" spedalizing<lb/>
in finga cymbals, veil wak, flea<lb/>
wak, cane balandng. "The fem-<lb/>
inine exadse that shapes you<lb/>
naturally Call me till, you get<lb/>
me. 752-5214 (4p.m7p.m.)<lb/>
FOUND: 2 mo. dd black female<lb/>
puppy in the vidnity of Jones a<lb/>
Call 752-7032.<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY: '16 to '19<lb/>
V-hull boat fa a 100 hasepowa<lb/>
outboard engine I already have.<lb/>
Call 752-4434.<lb/>
FOUND: Set of oar keys found in<lb/>
back parking la of Beik Bidg. last<lb/>
week. Can be daJmed at Rm. 300<lb/>
Belk.<lb/>
HATHA YOGA: Body and breath<lb/>
calms, slims, enagizes, renews,<lb/>
revitalizes. Medidnai. Call Lili<lb/>
752-5214 from 4 til 7.<lb/>
CRAFTS: ceramics, candles,<lb/>
weaving, leatha, batik, sewing,<lb/>
etc all at Banyan Crafts-1016<lb/>
Myrtle Ave<lb/>
FREE RESEARCH SERVICE:<lb/>
with Britannia 3. Ova 20<lb/>
discount fa students. Finandng<lb/>
for employed upperclass and<lb/>
graduate students. Fa free des-<lb/>
aiptive booklet, call 756-0417.<lb/>
NEED A RIDE; to Boone, N.C.<lb/>
This wee! end. Will share expen-<lb/>
ses. CaJI David 758-1312 a if no<lb/>
answer, 752-8538.<lb/>
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