<?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">
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<pb facs="00058016_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSDE<lb/>
Coffeep. 3<lb/>
Bye Bye Birdiep. 9<lb/>
Health threatp. 6<lb/>
Globetrotters p. 12<lb/>
Vd. 53, No. 18<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina.<lb/>
Progress pleases Laupus<lb/>
By STUART MORGAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Medical School has<lb/>
made astonishing progress and<lb/>
has moved along rather fast,<lb/>
according to Dr. William E.<lb/>
Laupus.<lb/>
Dr. Laupus, dean of the Med<lb/>
School, said the major thrust is<lb/>
being directed towards the clin-<lb/>
ical departments, such as, family<lb/>
practice, internal medicine,<lb/>
obstectrics, pediatrics, psychia-<lb/>
try, and surgery.<lb/>
All the departments have<lb/>
full-time chairpersons and they<lb/>
are adding new members to their<lb/>
departments.<lb/>
Dr. Laupus said he expects<lb/>
the med school to have between<lb/>
25 and 30 full-time faculty<lb/>
members by June 30, 1978.<lb/>
The faculty will also include a<lb/>
number of practicing physicians<lb/>
from this area who will be<lb/>
employed on a part-time bas's.<lb/>
Dr. Laupus said, concerning<lb/>
construction, that major portions<lb/>
of the additions to Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital have been<lb/>
completed, the clinical faculty is<lb/>
being moved from Ragsdale to its<lb/>
new offices there.<lb/>
"The medical students are<lb/>
now half way through their first<lb/>
semester and the faculty has been<lb/>
pleased with their progress<lb/>
said Dr. Laupus.<lb/>
"The curriculum is going well<lb/>
and particularly, the early expos-<lb/>
ure of students to dinical situa-<lb/>
tions concerning primary care and<lb/>
family practice, which is part of<lb/>
every Friday afternoon's<lb/>
activity<lb/>
The med school expects to<lb/>
secure permission from the Board<lb/>
of Governors to continue the<lb/>
pre-planning process for develop-<lb/>
ment of the pre-doctoral prog-<lb/>
rams here in anatomy, biochem-<lb/>
istry, microbiology, pharmaco-<lb/>
logy, and physiology, according<lb/>
to Dr. Laupus.<lb/>
He further said these pre-<lb/>
doctoral programs will be the first<lb/>
terminal degree programs of the<lb/>
Phd. level at ECU.<lb/>
"This is an accomplishment<lb/>
which is extraordinarily impor-<lb/>
tant to the continuing full deve-<lb/>
lopment of ECU as a whole<lb/>
Ten new faculty members will<lb/>
be added to the medical school<lb/>
faculty within the next few<lb/>
months.<lb/>
Dr. Laupus also said that the<lb/>
animal care fadltiy behind Rags-<lb/>
dale will be completed by Dec 1,<lb/>
1977. He said that the construc-<lb/>
tion of the medical education<lb/>
building is at the planning stage<lb/>
and isexpected togo up for bid in<lb/>
either February or March of next<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The building will be nine<lb/>
stories tall, 480,000 square feet,<lb/>
and will cost approximately $24<lb/>
million. Right now, the building is<lb/>
being scheduled fa completion in<lb/>
mid-summer of 1980, according to<lb/>
Dr. Laupus.<lb/>
The building will be built on<lb/>
the Health Centa campus of ECU<lb/>
north of the new Pitt County<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
DR. WILL!AM E. LAUPUS, dean of Medical School<lb/>
Student fees help pay construction debt<lb/>
By BILL HARRINGTON<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Of the $81 paid by each<lb/>
student per semester fa "other<lb/>
required fees $40.50 goes to<lb/>
retire debts on various campus<lb/>
buildings, according to figures<lb/>
released by the ECU Business<lb/>
Office.<lb/>
Business Manager Julian<lb/>
Vainright cited figures showing<lb/>
that the old Student Union<lb/>
building (Wright Auditaium) is<lb/>
allocated $6 from each student's<lb/>
fees per semester, Minges<lb/>
$10.50, the stadium fund (light-<lb/>
ing) $7.50and Mendenhall $16.50<lb/>
According to Vainright, the<lb/>
$16.50 figure fa Mendenhall also<lb/>
finances the physical operation of<lb/>
the building including mainten-<lb/>
ance and utilities.<lb/>
Of the remaining $40.50 per<lb/>
student per semester, $12.75<lb/>
goes to the SGA fa their<lb/>
appropriations, $13.50 for<lb/>
athletics, $8.25 fa special funds<lb/>
and $6 fa the Student Union<lb/>
Program, said Vainright.<lb/>
According to Vainright, the<lb/>
money earmarked fa "special<lb/>
funds" goes largely to support<lb/>
various intra-mural activities.<lb/>
A  relatively rnina amount<lb/>
approximatelv -50 from this<lb/>
special fund goes to support<lb/>
campus cultural activities, said<lb/>
Vainright.<lb/>
Vainright said that student<lb/>
fees are increased "when needs<lb/>
arrive<lb/>
He cited the improvement of<lb/>
the intramural department as an<lb/>
example of a needed program<lb/>
funded by a recent fee increase.<lb/>
Funding bills debated<lb/>
By STEVE WILSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Three organizational funding<lb/>
bills were debated during the<lb/>
Monday night legislative session.<lb/>
Most debate concerned the<lb/>
proposed budget fa FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD. One proposed amend-<lb/>
ment to the bill was to cut out<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Ad Managers'<lb/>
commission on his ad sales. The<lb/>
amendment was defeated. After a<lb/>
one and a half hour debate, the<lb/>
bill was sent back to the Appro-<lb/>
priations Committee fa reconsid-<lb/>
er at iai.<lb/>
EBONY HERALD, minaity<lb/>
newspaper, received its request-<lb/>
ed $4,115. Legislata Phil Barbee<lb/>
questioned whether the EBONY<lb/>
HERALD had considered consoli-<lb/>
dation with FOUNTAINHEAD fa<lb/>
reasons of cost efficiency, and<lb/>
also pointed out that funding fa<lb/>
this minaity publication is drawn<lb/>
from the SGA, which represents<lb/>
all of the student body. The<lb/>
funding bill passed, 24 to 15.<lb/>
The BUCCANEER received<lb/>
its approximate request of<lb/>
$46,000. The proposed two dollar<lb/>
student fee fa the yearbook was<lb/>
deleted. The students may obtain<lb/>
a yearbook free of charge, as was<lb/>
called fa in previous years.<lb/>
English professor sells novel;<lb/>
to be published in spring<lb/>
TERRY DAVIS. ASSISTANT English professor.<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Assistant NewsEdita<lb/>
Terry Davis, Assistant Eng-<lb/>
lish Professa at ECU, has sold<lb/>
his first novel, Visionquest to<lb/>
Bantam Publishers. The book is<lb/>
expected to be released around<lb/>
May, acoording to Davis.<lb/>
"The book is about a high<lb/>
school wrestler living in the<lb/>
basement of his Dad's house with<lb/>
his girlfriend, preparing fa the<lb/>
biggest match of his high school<lb/>
career said Davis.<lb/>
"The wrestler. Loudon Swain,<lb/>
is also trying to graduate a year<lb/>
early in ader to stop being a child<lb/>
and help his father, who lost his<lb/>
job earlier in the book.<lb/>
"The title comes from a rite<lb/>
the Rains Indians used to per-<lb/>
fam. A "visionquest" was a<lb/>
ritual involving fasting and soli-<lb/>
tude in ader to get your head<lb/>
straight on whatever was bother-<lb/>
ing you said Davis.<lb/>
"I first started writing serious-<lb/>
ly in 1973, when I decided to stop<lb/>
trying to be Hemingway and try<lb/>
to tell staies about people I knew<lb/>
in my own way said Davis.<lb/>
Davis said his main interest is<lb/>
fiction, but that he is also very<lb/>
interested in non-fiction.<lb/>
"I am not interested in<lb/>
interviewing famous people. I<lb/>
have very selfish interests when it<lb/>
comes to writing; I would rather<lb/>
write an essay on a personal<lb/>
experience or a story about<lb/>
people I know said Davia<lb/>
Davis, a native of Washington<lb/>
state, has taught in Washington<lb/>
Rio de Janiero, Brazil; Oakland,<lb/>
Califania; Dijon, France; and<lb/>
Iowa befae coming to ECU last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The idea fa Visionquest came<lb/>
from experiences Davis had had<lb/>
with tough people and the aigin<lb/>
of a tough person, along with<lb/>
some memaiesof a girl he loved<lb/>
and some friends who have died,<lb/>
according to Davis.<lb/>
"Even though the book was<lb/>
rejected 14 times, several editas<lb/>
wanted to buy it, but their<lb/>
marketing departments said that<lb/>
no one would buy a book that<lb/>
positive about life said Davis.<lb/>
Davis spent approximately a<lb/>
year writing the book, including a<lb/>
rewrite adered by his publisher.<lb/>
"I wrote the first 50 pages<lb/>
while I was in Rio and sent it to<lb/>
Stanfad University. On the basis<lb/>
of that start, I was awarded a<lb/>
fellowship to finish the book<lb/>
said Davis.<lb/>
"After Bantam accepted it,<lb/>
they asked me to rewrite certain<lb/>
parts of the book, and I'm glad<lb/>
they did, because it made the<lb/>
book better said Davis.<lb/>
Davis has previously publish-<lb/>
ed in small college magazines and<lb/>
Sports Illustrated magazine.<lb/>
"I have another novel in the<lb/>
waks, but I don't expect to finish<lb/>
it befae I leave ECU year after<lb/>
next said Davis.<lb/>
"There are so many good<lb/>
writers at this school, and I enjoy<lb/>
teaching writing so much, that I<lb/>
wouldn't be able to teach and<lb/>
write still as much as I want to<lb/>
said Davis.<lb/>
Davis teaches Introduction to<lb/>
Fiction and Introduction to Non-<lb/>
Fiction Writing, Advanced Non-<lb/>
Fiction Writing, and Major<lb/>
American Writers, in addition to<lb/>
occasional work as a semi-<lb/>
professional actor in dinner<lb/>
theatre productions.<lb/>
-iqtgmwFg�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAO 25 October 1977<lb/>
CPR<lb/>
Beta lota SCEC<lb/>
Vaccine<lb/>
Comic<lb/>
ECU Comic Book Club. All<lb/>
persons interested in the reading<lb/>
and collecting of comic books,<lb/>
science fiction, anda fantasy are<lb/>
invited to join the ECU Comic<lb/>
Book Club. The next meeting will<lb/>
be held at Mendenhall, room 248<lb/>
Tues Nov. 1 at 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
through 9:30 p.m. For more<lb/>
information call 752-0156 or 752-<lb/>
6389.<lb/>
Chi Beta<lb/>
Now is the time to become a<lb/>
part of the only national organiz-<lb/>
ation on campus that brings all<lb/>
honor science students together-<lb/>
Chi Beta Phi. The last chance this<lb/>
year to pledge our society is<lb/>
Wed Oct. 26, at 730 p.m. in<lb/>
biology N-102. Qualifications:<lb/>
2.75 or better overall, at least<lb/>
30qh in the sciences (includes<lb/>
chem biology, physics, math,<lb/>
psychology, geology), and a 3.0 or<lb/>
better in these science courses.<lb/>
Feel free to attend this meeting or<lb/>
call Bob Dough at 756-5128 for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
Full Gospel<lb/>
Oct. 26, the Full Gospel<lb/>
Student Fellowship will not have<lb/>
its regular meeting at 730. We<lb/>
will meet in the lobby of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center at<lb/>
630 and then go to the Ramada<lb/>
Inn to hear a fellow worker of<lb/>
Brother Andrew talk about his<lb/>
experiences smuggling Bibles<lb/>
across the Iron Curtain. Everyone<lb/>
is invited to attend<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
The Student Health Service is<lb/>
giving flu vaccine to full-time<lb/>
students during the months of<lb/>
October and November. It is<lb/>
strongly recommended that<lb/>
students with asthma, diabetes,<lb/>
chronic bronchitis, emphysema,<lb/>
heart disease, and paralytics<lb/>
receive the vaccine at an early<lb/>
date. The vaccine will be given<lb/>
Monday through Friday from 8<lb/>
a.m. to4 p.m. and the charge will<lb/>
be $1.50.<lb/>
Halloween<lb/>
Come dressed as your favorite<lb/>
monster for the Halloween Party<lb/>
for underprivileged children.<lb/>
There will be goblin games,<lb/>
freaky food, and monster music.<lb/>
It all happens at 4 p.m. Thurs. in<lb/>
the Clement dorm lobby.<lb/>
King Youth<lb/>
The King Youth Fellowship is<lb/>
a full Gospel campus organization<lb/>
fa all ECU students. We enoou-<lb/>
rage you to join us for fun,<lb/>
fellowship, and enlightment con-<lb/>
cerning God's Wad. Time: 7<lb/>
p.m Oct. 25: place : 308<lb/>
Flanagan: topic. 'The Roman<lb/>
Road to Salvation centered<lb/>
around chapters 6 &amp; 10 of<lb/>
Romans.<lb/>
There will be SGA Executive<lb/>
Council meeting Thurs, Oct. 27<lb/>
3 ffl. All dass presidents and<lb/>
persons who have signed up fa<lb/>
the hona council must be pre-<lb/>
sent. Hona council screenings<lb/>
will be held. This meetino is<lb/>
mandatay.<lb/>
Phi Beta<lb/>
A Phi Beta Lambda meeting<lb/>
will be held Wed Oct. 26 at 4<lb/>
p.m. in Rawl 130. If you have not<lb/>
paid your dues, please do so at<lb/>
this meeting. We're asking all<lb/>
members to please be present!<lb/>
DECA<lb/>
The ECU Collegiate DECA<lb/>
Chapter is sponsaing a Career<lb/>
Orientation Workshop Thurs<lb/>
Oct. 27 for all Distributive<lb/>
Education high school students.<lb/>
Featured speakers will speak on<lb/>
the following topics: Apparel and<lb/>
Accessories, Petroleum, Food<lb/>
Services, Food Marketing and DE<lb/>
Coadinata. The wakshop will<lb/>
aient the high school students to<lb/>
the many careers available in<lb/>
these areas.<lb/>
BSU<lb/>
A well advertised secret series<lb/>
of celebrations begins Tues. Oct.<lb/>
25 at 5 p.m. at the Baptist Student<lb/>
Union, 511 E. 10th St. If you know<lb/>
what it is, whisper it everywhere.<lb/>
PRC<lb/>
There will be a RRC Club<lb/>
meeting Tues Oct. 25 in room<lb/>
221 Mendenhall at 7 p.m. All<lb/>
members and potential members<lb/>
are encouraged to bring their<lb/>
membership fees of $2.50.<lb/>
There will also be a PRC Club<lb/>
Keg party Thurs Oct. 27 at<lb/>
Barbara Hutts house. Fa direct-<lb/>
ions to the party, look on the PRC<lb/>
Club's bulletin board located in<lb/>
the PRC building.<lb/>
PeaceCorps<lb/>
Graduate students who are<lb/>
famer Peace Caps Volunteers<lb/>
are requested to oontact Dr. Floyd<lb/>
E. Mattheis in the Science<lb/>
Education Department at ECU.<lb/>
Phone him at 757-6736 as soon as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
Cardiopulmonary Resuscita-<lb/>
tion (CPR) is a combination of<lb/>
artificial circulation and artificial<lb/>
respiration, which should be<lb/>
started immediately as an emer-<lb/>
gency procedure when cardiac<lb/>
arrest occurs, by those properly<lb/>
trained to do so. It has been used<lb/>
widely and successfully fa sane<lb/>
time now recommended that as<lb/>
many members of the general<lb/>
public as possible be trained in<lb/>
this technique.<lb/>
If you are interested in<lb/>
enrolling in the dass, call 757-<lb/>
6280 and infam the seaetary<lb/>
there of your interest. Also be<lb/>
sure and give her your name and<lb/>
your telephone number and lor<lb/>
your address. The dass will be 12<lb/>
hours long and will be conduded<lb/>
on Nov. 2, 7, 9, and 14 between<lb/>
the hours of 630 p.m. and 930<lb/>
p.m. The dass will be taught in<lb/>
Minges 144: please be prompt.<lb/>
The instruda can oily accept 14<lb/>
students but don't wary if you<lb/>
can't make the first dass, there<lb/>
will be ahers taught if there is a<lb/>
demand.<lb/>
This course is approved by the<lb/>
American National Red Cross and<lb/>
The American Heart Association.<lb/>
If you have any questions con-<lb/>
cerning the class, you may<lb/>
contact the instructor, Chuch<lb/>
Owens at 758-7948. The cost of<lb/>
the text is only .50! See you in<lb/>
dass!<lb/>
Phi Sigma<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi will hold its<lb/>
monthly dinner meeting at<lb/>
Parker's Barbecue Wed. Od. 26<lb/>
at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Minority<lb/>
There will be a Minaity Arts<lb/>
meeting Wed Od. 26, at 4:30 in<lb/>
room 236, Mendenhall. All<lb/>
members are to be present.<lb/>
Sabbath<lb/>
Jewish students: Cong. Bayt<lb/>
Shalom of Greenville invites you<lb/>
to attend Sabbath services Friday<lb/>
evenings at 8 p.m. at the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center. Each<lb/>
service is followed by an Oneg<lb/>
Shabbat.<lb/>
Hillel<lb/>
There will be a LOX BAGEL<lb/>
Brunch Sun Od. 30 at 1130<lb/>
a.m. at the Den behind Menden-<lb/>
hall fa HILLEL members.<lb/>
The Beta lota chapter of<lb/>
Gamma Theta Upsilon, the Na-<lb/>
tional Geography Hona Sodety<lb/>
is looking fa members to join<lb/>
during the '7778 school year.<lb/>
There are two categories 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 adivities are being<lb/>
planned, induding trips to Geo-<lb/>
graphy conventiois. Anyone who<lb/>
has ideas to share and would like<lb/>
to apply fa membership should<lb/>
see Dr. Birchard, Brewster A-232<lb/>
fa an application fam.<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
The Rebel, ECU'S literary-arts<lb/>
magazine, is now accepting sub-<lb/>
missions in poetry, fidion, es-<lb/>
says, art work, and phdography.<lb/>
Submit your material to the Rebel<lb/>
office a mail it to the Rebel,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Please make sure to keep a copy<lb/>
of each wak of literature fa<lb/>
yourself, and indude your name,<lb/>
address, and phone number on all<lb/>
wak.<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 1200-1 00 p.m. in<lb/>
Merrxxial Gym. All those interes-<lb/>
ted in jogging, exercising, basket-<lb/>
ball, swimming, etc. should re-<lb/>
pat to the gymnastics room on<lb/>
the first flax of Memaial Gym<lb/>
any Monday, Wednesday, or<lb/>
Friday at 12DO.<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
Tickets are now on sale fa the<lb/>
FIREFALLcaicert in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Ticket prices are:<lb/>
$3 fa students and $5 fa the<lb/>
public. The concert will be Sun<lb/>
Nov. 6th at 8 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. FIREFALL is andher<lb/>
in a series of oonoerts brought to<lb/>
you by the Popular Entertainment<lb/>
Committee of the Student Union.<lb/>
Bridge<lb/>
The Bridge Club meets each<lb/>
Thursday evening at 730 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Stude.it Center. All<lb/>
persons interested in playing<lb/>
bridge are invited to attend.<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 screamed<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 Coundl 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 adivi-<lb/>
ties fa retarded dtizens. All<lb/>
students are invited to our<lb/>
meetings the first Wednesday of<lb/>
every month in Speight 129 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. Please show that you<lb/>
care. Be an exceptional person;<lb/>
support exceptional children!<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Red Pin Bowling is back! At<lb/>
the Mendenhall 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/>
Ski Trip<lb/>
Vacation Ski Trip to Beech<lb/>
Mountain Jan. 2-6. You may still<lb/>
sign up to go: PHYE 1000, PHYE<lb/>
1105, or 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/>
Karate<lb/>
A Japanese Karate Club (JK A<lb/>
style) is being famed. Those who<lb/>
have trained JKA previously a<lb/>
those who are interested in this<lb/>
style call 756-3767 and leave<lb/>
name and number.<lb/>
Blimpie's<lb/>
Halloween Party Wed Od.<lb/>
26 7-12 midnight at Blimpies.<lb/>
Sponsaed by the American So-<lb/>
dety of Interia Design. At 10<lb/>
p.m best carved pumpkin an-<lb/>
nounced, 11 p.m. best costume<lb/>
announoed. Cash prizes &amp; fun!<lb/>
Don't come "undressed Ad-<lb/>
mission charge .25.<lb/>
Fellowship Aerospace Interpersonal Research<lb/>
Wednesday, Od. 21 at 730<lb/>
p.m. in the Baptist Student<lb/>
Union, there will be the fellow-<lb/>
ship and praise service to the<lb/>
Glory of Jesus. Everyone is<lb/>
welcome, come and Praise the<lb/>
Lad!<lb/>
Freshmen<lb/>
Saeening fa Freshman Class<lb/>
Vice-President will be Wed Od.<lb/>
26 at 4 p.m. Sign up at the SGA<lb/>
office in Mendenhall immediate-<lb/>
ly-<lb/>
The Department of Aerospace<lb/>
Studies will administer the Air<lb/>
Force Officer Qualifying Test<lb/>
(AFOOT) on the dates listed<lb/>
below. See Captain Lane in roan<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/>
Nov. 1<lb/>
Nov. 16<lb/>
Nov. 19<lb/>
Unmarried undergracates between the ages of 18 and 24 are<lb/>
invited to partidpate in a research projed oomparing several methods<lb/>
intended to promote less self consciousness in heterosexual<lb/>
interpersonal situations.<lb/>
If one is bothered by self consdousness and lack of confidence<lb/>
around members of the opposite sex, his partidpation will be greatly<lb/>
appredated.<lb/>
Partidpation will improve your understanding of the methods by<lb/>
which college people might learn to be more natural, less tense jnd<lb/>
less inhibited around members of the oppoarte sex<lb/>
If interested in partidpating in this project, and will be in the<lb/>
Greenville area this fall, please leave your name, address, and phone<lb/>
ZoZ Mar�US' DePar,ment Psychdogy, ECU, Greenville,<lb/>
ycSJ' �r Ph�ne i0 ,he above in,orma,i� to the department at<lb/>
757-6800.<lb/>
The project requires abour one hour oer week fa ax weeks<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0003"/><lb/>
25 October 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
IM.C. factory-lead danger? T�oforeignlang.<lb/>
� profs attend meet<lb/>
(LNS) � The federal gover-<lb/>
nment's National Center for<lb/>
Disease Control has reported that<lb/>
54 children of employees at an<lb/>
unidentified battery factory in<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. have excessive<lb/>
levels of lead in their Wood.<lb/>
Scientists believe such high<lb/>
blood levels can lead to kidney<lb/>
disease, diseases of the nervous<lb/>
system and reproductive dysfun-<lb/>
ction including increased risk of<lb/>
spontaneous abortion and miscar-<lb/>
riage.<lb/>
Children are also known to<lb/>
suffer from retardation. Approx-<lb/>
imately 1.3 million workers in the<lb/>
U.S. are exposed to lead in their<lb/>
workplaces.<lb/>
The Center said that this was the<lb/>
third report in two years to<lb/>
involve lead absorption in child-<lb/>
ren of workers. Lead dust carried<lb/>
home on contaminated work<lb/>
clothing is the apparent source of<lb/>
the exposure.<lb/>
The United States Department<lb/>
of Labor claims it is in the process<lb/>
of revising its standards for<lb/>
occupational lead exposure to<lb/>
provide specific regulations pro-<lb/>
hibiting the wearing of contamin-<lb/>
ated clothing.<lb/>
Two faculty members of the<lb/>
ECU Department of Foreign<lb/>
Languages and Literatures part-<lb/>
icipated in the program of the<lb/>
recent Mountain Interstate<lb/>
Foreign Language Conference<lb/>
meeting at Johnson City, Tenn.<lb/>
Helga N. Hill, assistant pro-<lb/>
fessor of Spanish, spoke on<lb/>
"Novelsof Protest by Magdalena<lb/>
Mondragon Aguirre" before the<lb/>
Spanish-American Literature IX<lb/>
section.<lb/>
Dr. Michae' F. Bassman<lb/>
associate professor of French,<lb/>
chaired the section on Eastern<lb/>
European Langages and Litera-<lb/>
tures of which he is organizer,<lb/>
and presented a paper on �Char-<lb/>
acteristics of Yiddish English"<lb/>
before the Linguistics section of<lb/>
the conference.<lb/>
Mrs. Hill holds degrees from<lb/>
the University of the Americas<lb/>
and the University of South-<lb/>
western Louisana and letught at<lb/>
the Foreign Language Institute,<lb/>
Gainesville, Fla before joining<lb/>
the ECU faculty.<lb/>
Dr. Bassman is an alumnus of<lb/>
Brooklyn College and holds ad-<lb/>
vanced degrees from Brown<lb/>
University and the University of<lb/>
Connecticut.<lb/>
He has also studied at the<lb/>
Universities of Toulouse and<lb/>
Rouen in France and the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Bucharest in Romania.<lb/>
His studies m the Romanian<lb/>
language have been supported by<lb/>
the Fad Foundation. During the<lb/>
summer of 1973, he was visiting<lb/>
professor in Romance languages<lb/>
and philology at the University of<lb/>
Auckland, New Zealand.<lb/>
Teacher plans Spain trip<lb/>
AFTER LAST YEAR'S harsh winter, this coed gets prepared.<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
By aNDY BROOKE<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
A Washington High School<lb/>
Spanish teacher is taking a group<lb/>
of Spanish students to Spain this<lb/>
summer, and any ECU student<lb/>
interested in going is welcome.<lb/>
The group will depart<lb/>
Kennedy Airport June 23, accord-<lb/>
ing to Mrs. Rachel Woodard,<lb/>
Spanish teacher, and will return<lb/>
July 1. The cost of the trip is $869,<lb/>
which includes round-trip plane<lb/>
fare, tours, meals, and room.<lb/>
An application must be filled<lb/>
out by November 2, said Mrs.<lb/>
Woodard, and must be accomp-<lb/>
anied by a $150 deposit. Students<lb/>
may obtain applications from<lb/>
Mrs. Woodard.<lb/>
"There is an optional trip to<lb/>
Tangiers, Africa said Woodard.<lb/>
She said the cost would be<lb/>
approximately $209.<lb/>
Each student may take a<lb/>
medium-sized suitcase, weighing<lb/>
no more than 44 pounds.<lb/>
"Don't take too much<lb/>
advised Woodard, "because<lb/>
prices are cheaper there and<lb/>
you II need room to bring things<lb/>
back<lb/>
Applications for passports<lb/>
must be filled out at the Pitt<lb/>
County Courthouse. The students<lb/>
need two passport pictures and<lb/>
the original birth certificate.<lb/>
Passports cost $13.<lb/>
The trip is sponsored by the<lb/>
American Institute fa Foreign<lb/>
Study.<lb/>
Anyone requesting further<lb/>
information may call Mrs.<lb/>
Woodard at 946-6666.<lb/>
TWO DAYS ONLY<lb/>
WEDS &amp;THURS<lb/>
Special Introductory Price On<lb/>
Men's Traditional Siladium Ring<lb/>
Only $59.95<lb/>
Regularly $82.00<lb/>
ORDER NOW FOR PRE-XMAS<lb/>
DELIVERY - LAST RING DAYS<lb/>
BEFORE GOLD PRICE INCREASE.<lb/>
7IRK7IRVED<lb/>
RING DAY FRIDAY<lb/>
That's when the ArtCarved representative will be here to help you select your custom-<lb/>
made college jewelry. It's also the day you can charge your ArtCarved college<lb/>
jewelry on Master Charge or BankAmericard.<lb/>
place: time:<lb/>
WRIGHT UNION BUILDING LOBBY 10 AM UNTIL 3 PM<lb/>
WEDNESDAY b THURSDAY<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 25 October 1977<lb/>
Photo Lab needs 4<lb/>
In last Monday's SGA Legislature meeting, the<lb/>
request for a fourth photographer for the Photo Lab<lb/>
was defeated for the most part because Legislator<lb/>
Ricky Price pointed out that three or four years ago<lb/>
there was only one SGA photographer, the following<lb/>
year only two and last year three.<lb/>
Yesterday Podeszwa asked the Legislature to<lb/>
reconsider his request in light of the whole truth he<lb/>
found behind Price's statement. He plans to present<lb/>
this bill formally at the next meeting. His case is<lb/>
sound and deserves another chance.<lb/>
To begin with, Podeszwa said he could not<lb/>
imagine one photographer being able to handle all<lb/>
the work for which the Photo Lab is responsible after<lb/>
he heard Price's argument. He then investigated<lb/>
and found out that, yes, tnree or four years ago there<lb/>
was only one photographer for the SGA. He also<lb/>
discovered that this one photographer was getting<lb/>
paid $400 per month, which would mean $3600 if he<lb/>
only worked nine months. Besides that he found out<lb/>
that the one photographer did not do all the work. In<lb/>
fact, he had numerous "student helpers" whose<lb/>
salaries put the SGA photography expenses on<lb/>
salaries close to $4600 for nine months.<lb/>
The following year, Podeszwa said, the SGA<lb/>
okayed two photographers fa the yearbook, the<lb/>
BUCCANEER, who were paid $100 per month. It also<lb/>
okayed one FOUNTAINHEAD photographer at $160<lb/>
per month. These three photographers had several<lb/>
"student helpers" which, again, put the expenses<lb/>
for photography over $4000.<lb/>
Podeszwa added that these facts were difficult to<lb/>
find since the appropriations for photography were<lb/>
listed separately under SGA photography, the BUC,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, the Publications Board and<lb/>
Student Help.<lb/>
After Podeszwa presented these new findings,<lb/>
Price pointed out that the reason all photography was<lb/>
recently reorganized under one head, SGA Photo<lb/>
Lab, was because of this aoss-referendng and to<lb/>
save the SGA money.<lb/>
Nevertheless, the fact remains that Podeszwa<lb/>
asked fa less maiey to spend on four photographers<lb/>
than was spent on three last year, not to mention<lb/>
even the one years ago. Last year, the SGA<lb/>
appropriated approximately $3600 to the Photo Lab.<lb/>
Podeszwa is asking fa approximately $3300 fa four<lb/>
photographers.<lb/>
It simply does not make sense fa the SGA to deny<lb/>
Podeszwa and the student body of an additional<lb/>
photographer when the salaries fa four photograph-<lb/>
ers will be less than last year's with only three.<lb/>
Podeszwa is merely trying to aganize a mae<lb/>
productive and efficient Photo Lab fa serving ECU.<lb/>
Fbuntainhead<lb/>
Serving the Earn Carolina community tor over fifty years.<lb/>
Senior Ed"� .Kim J. Devins<lb/>
Production Manager Bob Glover<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert Swaim<lb/>
News Editaandy Broome<lb/>
Trends EditorMichael Futch<lb/>
 EditorAnne Hogge<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD it the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association of<lb/>
ECU and ia distributed each Wednesday during the summer,<lb/>
and betas weekly during the school year.<lb/>
MaJHng address: Old South Bidding, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Editorial offloss: 757-6386, 757-6367, 757-6300.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually.<lb/>
���VflUfi IJ). 0fil�flS LICENSE NW8ER. L0LRL<lb/>
RDDMS3 BLOQD 1VP�, Mb A 250 UDRD<lb/>
ESSW ON UHV UE SHOULD G-UE VOU VQ? mi0.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
WECU requests student support<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD: ,<lb/>
For the past year, WECU-<lb/>
Campus Radio has been on a<lb/>
campaign to better serve the ECU<lb/>
student body. Our campaign has<lb/>
included playing various types of<lb/>
music and providing alternative<lb/>
programs. Since neither of these<lb/>
methods has brought about any<lb/>
student feedback, we feel that a<lb/>
basic change in our programming<lb/>
is necessary. Rather than use the<lb/>
triaJ-and-error method as we have<lb/>
in the past, WECU has decided to<lb/>
poll the students to find out their<lb/>
wants and needs. Since WECU is<lb/>
operated by a student staff and is<lb/>
funded by the SGA. our primary<lb/>
interest is with the STUDENTS If<lb/>
WECU can determine what the<lb/>
students want, and program our<lb/>
station accordingly, we feel that<lb/>
we will be providing a much<lb/>
needed service to the ECU<lb/>
community.<lb/>
Another problem that has<lb/>
plagued WECU from the very<lb/>
beginning is the one poor recep-<lb/>
tion In the dorms. We now use a<lb/>
close-circuit (Carrier-Current)<lb/>
system of broadcasting. This<lb/>
method is somewhat outdated<lb/>
and relatively expensive to main-<lb/>
tain. Also, it does not provide the<lb/>
dear, crisp sound of a convention-<lb/>
al radio signal. Overall, the<lb/>
Carrier-Current system is ineffic-<lb/>
ient and dees not provide good<lb/>
reception to the dorms. An<lb/>
alternative to the dosed-drcuit<lb/>
method would be FM broadcast-<lb/>
ing. If WECU converted to FM,<lb/>
not only would the sound be much<lb/>
much dearer, but Day Students<lb/>
would also be able to pick up<lb/>
0 mpus Radio. WECU is now<lb/>
seriously considering the switch<lb/>
to FM. It is well within our reach<lb/>
IF we have the support of the<lb/>
students and the SGA. We must<lb/>
act quickly though if WECU is to<lb/>
go FM, because the airwaves are<lb/>
getting more crowded by the day.<lb/>
Please support WECU-<lb/>
Campus Radio by doing two<lb/>
things: Let your SGA legislator<lb/>
know how you feel about the<lb/>
future of Campus Radio, and<lb/>
complete the Student Survey<lb/>
Form that appears in this issue of<lb/>
the FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
WECU is your radio station<lb/>
take an interest'<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Bob Bass<lb/>
Promotions Dir.WECU<lb/>
Send letters overseas<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
With Christmas again rapidly<lb/>
approaching, we at Military Over-<lb/>
seas Mail are concerned about the<lb/>
many thousands of our military<lb/>
personnel who will be away from<lb/>
their homes and families during<lb/>
the holiday season. Fa many of<lb/>
these young men and women this<lb/>
will be the first Christmas away<lb/>
from home.<lb/>
Readers of the FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD can help make this holiday<lb/>
season a little less lonely and a<lb/>
little more enjoyable fa many of<lb/>
these young people by joining in<lb/>
the oolledion of Christmas mail<lb/>
sponsored by Military Overseas<lb/>
Mail. This is an ideal project fa<lb/>
school dasses, dubs, and aha<lb/>
groups as well as individuals and<lb/>
families.<lb/>
Fa mae infamatlai, please<lb/>
send a stamped, self-addressed<lb/>
envelope to Military Ova seas<lb/>
Mail, Box 4330 Arlington,<lb/>
Virginia 22204, and mention that<lb/>
you read about MOM. in the<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Fountainbead. Thank You.<lb/>
Sinoerely,<lb/>
Lee Spencer<lb/>
Coadinata<lb/>
Against funding the BUC<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The funding of the BUC-<lb/>
CANEER again this year at the<lb/>
expenditure of $50-60,000 while<lb/>
depriving students of access to<lb/>
present and future channels of<lb/>
growth and opportunity is appal-<lb/>
ling!<lb/>
The mae thought of shelving<lb/>
all conventions, oonfaenoes, and<lb/>
trips where students have the<lb/>
oppotunity to meet top national<lb/>
and international specialists, in<lb/>
their fields, and receive input, as<lb/>
well as give output, on a national<lb/>
and intanational scale in ex-<lb/>
change fa "full funding of the<lb/>
BUCCANEER' lies somewhae<lb/>
between irrespaisibility and nos-<lb/>
talgic and sentimental regression.<lb/>
The Legislature should stand fa<lb/>
responsible progression.<lb/>
indignantly yours,<lb/>
Charles Love<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0005"/><lb/>
- � <lb/>
Forum<lb/>
25 October 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Inmate questions amount of justice in federal prison system<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I am a federal prisoner at<lb/>
the federal prison in Springfield<lb/>
Mo. I am doing a six year Y.C.A.<lb/>
sentence fa stealing a car. I see a<lb/>
lot of people doing less than six<lb/>
years for crimes such as murder<lb/>
and bank robbery. What I am<lb/>
getting at is this: what kind of<lb/>
justice is there in the federal<lb/>
system?<lb/>
Just because a man is convic-<lb/>
ted of a crime, he should not lose<lb/>
all of his constitutional rights,<lb/>
such as the right to call his<lb/>
attorney, the right to exhaust his<lb/>
appeals within the institution.<lb/>
Just because a man is convic-<lb/>
ted by a court does not make him<lb/>
an animal or, does it?<lb/>
BUC editor supports Pres. Sessoms<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The SGA is in quite a<lb/>
financial bind this year, as is by<lb/>
now common knowledge on this<lb/>
campus. In order to ease the<lb/>
strain, Pres. Sessoms met with<lb/>
the SGA executives and some<lb/>
legislators to discuss the prob-<lb/>
lem. As I see it, their plan is<lb/>
logical when you look into the<lb/>
core and don't just glance around<lb/>
the edge?<lb/>
In essence, the plan is to fund<lb/>
organizat ions and activities which<lb/>
benefit ALL students, not just a<lb/>
select group. Every student is<lb/>
entitled to the FOUNTAINHEAD,<lb/>
EBONY HERALD, REBEL, BUC-<lb/>
CANEER, legal aid, bus service,<lb/>
ECU Playhouse, etcFREE!<lb/>
Reader<lb/>
supports<lb/>
funding trips<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I feel that the proposed<lb/>
priority system of the Neil<lb/>
Sessoms administration to be for<lb/>
the most part fair and well<lb/>
thought out, but I do take issue on<lb/>
two priorities: (1) Departmental<lb/>
Conferences and Conventions,<lb/>
which Sessoms has proposed to<lb/>
eliminate from SGA funding, and<lb/>
(2) a yearbook.<lb/>
I was really aghast at how an<lb/>
individual in a real university<lb/>
situation oould possibly think of<lb/>
eliminating conferences and con-<lb/>
ventions of an academic, instruc-<lb/>
tional nature, and seemingly<lb/>
substitute in their place a year-<lb/>
book which, if published at all,<lb/>
should be based on an ad and<lb/>
subscription basis paying for<lb/>
itself.<lb/>
The logic loses me as to how<lb/>
one oould justify discarding a<lb/>
valuable tool for understanding<lb/>
current trends and ideas to fund<lb/>
with our student activity fees a<lb/>
social carry-over from high<lb/>
school, an annual. Personally, I<lb/>
thought I was paying for student<lb/>
activity and not student nostalgia.<lb/>
One of the determining factors<lb/>
in my choosing to oome to ECU in<lb/>
the first place was my meeting<lb/>
some ECU students at a confer-<lb/>
ence at the University of Georgia,<lb/>
Athens. Their enthusiasm and<lb/>
what they said of ECU vividly<lb/>
influenced my choice to further<lb/>
my education here. Conferences<lb/>
take up where textbooks and<lb/>
teaching aids are usually at least<lb/>
five years behind what is actually<lb/>
happening in any field one would<lb/>
care to study. With conferences<lb/>
and field trips one is exposed to<lb/>
what is happening right now in<lb/>
one's chosen field.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
David A. Devine<lb/>
These services are fa the student<lb/>
body as a whole, unlike depart-<lb/>
mental and assodational retreats<lb/>
and conventions. I, too, would like<lb/>
the oppatunity to become invol-<lb/>
ved in these out-of-town trips.<lb/>
However, funds do not permit<lb/>
unnecessary travel even when<lb/>
this travel offers much learning<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
Perhaps everyone should sit<lb/>
down and try to find ways to raise<lb/>
money fa these retreats. I' m sure<lb/>
all of usdid it in high school and it<lb/>
wouldn't hurt anyone to do it<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Don't be narrow-minded.<lb/>
Look at the situation objectively.<lb/>
You may see a distant light at the<lb/>
end of the tunnel.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Susan L. Rogerson, Edita<lb/>
1978 BUCCANEER<lb/>
I have been in the system fa<lb/>
over two years and I do not see<lb/>
any justice whatsoever. But may-<lb/>
be I don't know what society calls<lb/>
justice. I know I was wrong in<lb/>
comitting a aime, but I also feel<lb/>
there should be some kind of<lb/>
justice in the system.<lb/>
I also thought that when a<lb/>
man is sentenced to prison it is<lb/>
suppose to be to rehabilitate him<lb/>
na treat him as a dog. But there<lb/>
is no way a man can be rehabili-<lb/>
tated by just being looked in a cell<lb/>
and fagotten. That is not rehabi-<lb/>
litating him. I know that all the<lb/>
rehabilitating I have received is<lb/>
what I have done fa myself. I<lb/>
have about 22 more months left<lb/>
and then I will be a free man<lb/>
again. I know where I made my<lb/>
wrong turn and I will not make it<lb/>
again. But I learned it on my own<lb/>
from being locked away from the<lb/>
ones I love, and losing the ones<lb/>
that I loved.<lb/>
All I hope is that they get<lb/>
some justioe in the future and<lb/>
some rehabilitation that will<lb/>
really help young people. I just<lb/>
want to speak out to aher people<lb/>
on the pnson soene.<lb/>
I wish to write to any one who<lb/>
is interested, o. any one who just<lb/>
wants to get to know me and<lb/>
become friends. If you are like me<lb/>
and just dig people, please write.<lb/>
I will answer all letters.<lb/>
In Struggle<lb/>
K urt Douglas Raymer 30093-120<lb/>
P.O. Be 400010 c<lb/>
Springfield Missouri 65802<lb/>
YOU DESERVE SOME CREDIT<lb/>
.YOU'VE EARNED IT.<lb/>
4i<lb/>
it i<lb/>
<lb/>
���<lb/>
in<lb/>
Hiii<lb/>
,<lb/>
f i<lb/>
r si<lb/>
kJ<lb/>
Once you've earned a college<lb/>
degree, Ford Motor Credit<lb/>
Company thinks you've earned<lb/>
the opportunity to have credit<lb/>
too. That's why we developed<lb/>
a finance plan that gives<lb/>
special consideration to college<lb/>
graduates and seniors within<lb/>
four months of graduating. <lb/>
If you presently have a job<lb/>
or cm supply proof of future<lb/>
employment, you may be eligible<lb/>
for financing on any new Ford<lb/>
or Lincoln-Mercury product. And<lb/>
this financing can be tailored to fit your<lb/>
own personal budget�from delaying your<lb/>
first payment for up to three months, to a plan where<lb/>
your monthly payments start out small and gradually<lb/>
increase each year�even 48 month financing, if needed.<lb/>
If you don't have a job lined up just yet, keep Ford Credit in mind, because you<lb/>
can still take advantage of this special plan for up to one year after you graduate.<lb/>
Ford Credit wants to give you the credit you deserve. Ask for us at any Ford or<lb/>
Lincoln-Mercury dealer.<lb/>
 Where permitted by law.<lb/>
"For example, contract dated December 15, 1977, Cash Price $5,300.00; Total Down Payment<lb/>
$800 00; Amount Financed $4,500.00; FINANCE CHARGE $1,806.09; ANNUAL PERCENTAGE<lb/>
RATE 14.35; Deterred Payment Price $7,406 09<lb/>
Payment schedule: first payment due March 15, 1978; 45 payments consisting ot: first 9 monthly<lb/>
payments ot $117.40; next 9 monthly payments of $130.85; next 9 monthly payments of $145.84;<lb/>
next 9 monthly payments ot $162.55; and 9 monthly payments ot $177.37.<lb/>
���<lb/>
Ford Motor<lb/>
Credit<lb/>
Company<lb/>
��  "  - -  �<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0006"/><lb/>
Ptm � FOUWTAMHEAD 25 Octotof 1977<lb/>
N.C. plant poses health hazards to workers<lb/>
Next time you open a bag of<lb/>
Fritos or a pack of cigarettes,<lb/>
think about Marvin Gaddy.<lb/>
Marvin hat worked in Olin<lb/>
Corporation's Film Division for<lb/>
over 20 years making cellophane<lb/>
wrapping He can't see as well as<lb/>
he used to and still gets night-<lb/>
mares onoe in a while.<lb/>
He's watched the lives of<lb/>
many men change after they<lb/>
came off mat second floor. Some<lb/>
got eaten up with tumors and<lb/>
cancer.<lb/>
For some, it became so bad<lb/>
they took their own lives. Others<lb/>
were luckier and got out with only<lb/>
minor nerve problems to remind<lb/>
them of what it was like.<lb/>
The second floor is in the<lb/>
Chemical Building at CMin's Film<lb/>
Division near Brevard, N.C, on<lb/>
the edge of the Pisgah National<lb/>
Forest. The Film Division pro-<lb/>
duces viscose which is extruded,<lb/>
solidified and dried to form<lb/>
cellophane.<lb/>
Twelve masatve vats are kept<lb/>
in constant rotation, each mixing<lb/>
together 700-800 pounds of ripe-<lb/>
ned alkali cellulose (raw wood<lb/>
pulp and 16 per cent caustic acid).<lb/>
Marvin used to add carbon<lb/>
disutfide to the rotating vats, to<lb/>
quicken the process of breaking<lb/>
down raw wood pulp into a liquid<lb/>
celioohane-like mixture.<lb/>
Nobody ever told Marvin and<lb/>
his fellow workers that the CS2<lb/>
could harm them. But they finally<lb/>
found out. Only then, it was too<lb/>
late.<lb/>
'A lot of people would leave,<lb/>
says Marvin. "The younger ones<lb/>
would come in there and work a<lb/>
few days, and then they'd Invar-<lb/>
iably get a big whiff of CSC.<lb/>
"People would act real un-<lb/>
usual, get headaches and think<lb/>
they were getting the flu. After a<lb/>
few overdoses the nightmares<lb/>
would start ooming on them.<lb/>
We' d go in and teH the oompany,<lb/>
Damnit you'd better do some-<lb/>
thing about this CSS stuff<lb/>
"They'd tell us to get the hell<lb/>
out - we don't need you. If you<lb/>
don't enjoy your job, then go<lb/>
home Course we didn't have a<lb/>
union back then. And we didn't<lb/>
have Jimmy Reese rummaging<lb/>
through their trash cans and filing<lb/>
all those grievances and comp-<lb/>
laints<lb/>
James Reese is a maintenance<lb/>
man at the Olin plant and<lb/>
chairman of the union safety<lb/>
committee fa Load 1971 of the<lb/>
United Paperworks Inter-<lb/>
national Union (UPIU).<lb/>
Olin workers had to stand up<lb/>
and fight for more than 30 years<lb/>
before they got the union in at<lb/>
Olin. The battle left a trail of<lb/>
beaten-up organizers, fired union<lb/>
sympathizers, and heart-<lb/>
breaking, one-vote Labor Board<lb/>
election defeats.<lb/>
Finally, in 1971, the union<lb/>
won a contract which included a<lb/>
safety committee of company and<lb/>
union representatives.<lb/>
Fa the past five years, the<lb/>
oommittee has investigated num-<lb/>
erous toxic substances: asbestos,<lb/>
carbon disulfide, formaldehyde,<lb/>
tetrahydrofuran, flax dust, noise,<lb/>
radiation, methyl bromide.<lb/>
"I had learned the OSHA<lb/>
standards even before we got our<lb/>
union aganized, til I almost had<lb/>
them memaized recalls James<lb/>
Reese.<lb/>
" I was just kind of interested.<lb/>
It represented a kind of challenge<lb/>
to me because I've seen some of<lb/>
the conditions up there and I've<lb/>
been hurt on the job myself<lb/>
" Im not sure what set me off.<lb/>
I think it's just the fact that I'm<lb/>
kind of a militant type character<lb/>
and this way, fa once, I had<lb/>
something that they had to listen<lb/>
to. I finally had 3 law to back me<lb/>
up<lb/>
NEWS DESK meeting Thursday<lb/>
at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
All news writers and other interested persons<lb/>
be there!<lb/>
Brochure for women helps in<lb/>
male dominated job markets<lb/>
A new brochure with a special<lb/>
intrcductay offa fa 12 self-<lb/>
guidance and career publicatiais<lb/>
fa undergraduate women has<lb/>
been released to colleges and<lb/>
universities by Catalyst.<lb/>
The booklets enable young<lb/>
women to oonslda fields that, at<lb/>
managerial and professional<lb/>
levels, have been traditionally<lb/>
male-dominated.<lb/>
The series includes two seJf-<lb/>
guidance workbooks, "Planning<lb/>
for Career Options" and<lb/>
"Launching Your Career" and 10<lb/>
in-depth career infamatioi book-<lb/>
lets, "Have You Considered<lb/>
government and politics, indust-<lb/>
rial management, finance, engin-<lb/>
eering, retail management, ac-<lb/>
counting, sales, restaurant man-<lb/>
agement, insurance and banking.<lb/>
The self-guidance wakbooks<lb/>
help undergraduate women<lb/>
evaluate their abilities and inter-<lb/>
ests in relation to the career and<lb/>
lifestyle options open to them and<lb/>
provides important pointas on<lb/>
resume writing successful inter-<lb/>
view techniques, on campus job<lb/>
recruitment and job sources.<lb/>
The career booklets cover the<lb/>
spectrum of postiions within<lb/>
specific professional fields, educ-<lb/>
ational preparation, the employ-<lb/>
ment outlook fa the next decade<lb/>
and case histaies of successful<lb/>
women.<lb/>
The brochure was directed to<lb/>
35,000 college and university<lb/>
students and career counselas,<lb/>
placement officers, presidents,<lb/>
deans, administratas, "women's<lb/>
studies" faculty, and managers to<lb/>
libraries and bookstores. The<lb/>
mailing was also sent to junia<lb/>
and community colleges, and<lb/>
public and capaate libraries.<lb/>
Catalyst isanatirjnaJ noiprofit<lb/>
aganization that helps women<lb/>
choose, launch and advance their<lb/>
careers.<lb/>
Booklets are available to<lb/>
students at $1.95 each.<lb/>
Fa further infamatioi, write:<lb/>
Catalyst, 14 East 60th Street,<lb/>
New Yak, New Yak 10022.<lb/>
EAST - WEST PRODUCTIONS<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
THE 2ND ANNUAL OUTDOOR<lb/>
HALLOWEEN MUSIC FESTIVAL<lb/>
and<lb/>
CARNIVAL<lb/>
SATURDAY - OCT. 29<lb/>
PITT COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
�<lb/>
FEA TURING<lb/>
ZORRO and th� BLUE FOOTBALLS<lb/>
10TH AVENUE<lb/>
SUPERGRIT<lb/>
TENNESSEE HAT BAND<lb/>
SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
GRINDERSWITCH<lb/>
"MR. FIDDLE"<lb/>
VASSAR CLEMMENTS<lb/>
and<lb/>
BAUD<lb/>
In the event of rain: RAIN DATE � OCT. 30<lb/>
JUDGING FOR BEST HALLOWEEN COSTUMES<lb/>
PRIZES AWARDED - $100, $60, $25<lb/>
Cans and Plastic Containers Only - No Glass Bottles<lb/>
ADMISSION; Advance $5.00 Gate $6.00 ��N rick i Beik Do� - �� �.hii studeni o�<lb/>
Gates Open 11 A.M. - Until Slan ,2:0� Nwn - � Winute shuttle Trip<lb/>
6:00 l�M and from 10:00 VM - 12:00 Midnight<lb/>
ter<lb/>
Ticket available at the Central Ticket Office, Mende nlinll.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0007"/><lb/>
25 Octobf 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Pay 7<lb/>
Boycotting coffee efforts may be in vain<lb/>
By FRANCEINE PERRY<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Have you, the price-conscious<lb/>
oonsumer, boycotted coffee at the<lb/>
supermarket to help bring prices<lb/>
down?<lb/>
If so, your sacrifice may have<lb/>
been in vain, says an ECU<lb/>
economist; the coffee supply is<lb/>
carefully controlled by producing<lb/>
countries.<lb/>
Dr. Oscar K. Moore, professor<lb/>
of economics at ECU and noted<lb/>
expert on world trends in coffee<lb/>
production and pricing, has com-<lb/>
pleted a detailed study of the<lb/>
coffee market, and contends that<lb/>
prices don't depend upon con-<lb/>
sumption, production, govern-<lb/>
ment control or any other single<lb/>
factor.<lb/>
 World exportable coffee pro-<lb/>
duction is highly variable from<lb/>
year to year, mostly because the<lb/>
coffee production rate of Brazil,<lb/>
the largest supplier, fluctuates<lb/>
sharply he said.<lb/>
"Brazil's variable production<lb/>
rates are due to heavy crops<lb/>
followed by light and to periodic<lb/>
droughts and frosts which harm<lb/>
the coffee trees and make predict-<lb/>
ing the Brazilian crop difficult<lb/>
Brazil leads the world as a<lb/>
producer of coffee, though other<lb/>
Central and South American and<lb/>
African rations-Colombia,<lb/>
Mexico, El Salvador, Ecuador,<lb/>
Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda and the<lb/>
Malagasy Republic-are increas-<lb/>
ing their production.<lb/>
A short year for Brazilian<lb/>
coffee still means a short year for<lb/>
the world supply.<lb/>
The recent record-high<lb/>
coffee prices have followed the<lb/>
most severe Brazilian freeze of<lb/>
modern times, that of July,<lb/>
1975 said Moore.<lb/>
"As a consequence of that<lb/>
freeze, 230 million coffee trees<lb/>
were uprooted and removed<lb/>
The Brazilian government's<lb/>
policy of protectiveness toward its<lb/>
coffee crop resulted in a signifi-<lb/>
cant recovery program for coffee<lb/>
Jerry Lewis speaks to campus<lb/>
leaders about muscular illness<lb/>
"I will never be satisfied until<lb/>
we get the job done Jerry<lb/>
Lewis, National chairman of the<lb/>
Muscular Dystrophy Association<lb/>
told more than 300 college and<lb/>
high school leaders from across<lb/>
the country attending MDA's<lb/>
second National Youth Leader-<lb/>
ship Conference October 15-16 at<lb/>
the Diplomat Hotel in Hollywood,<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
The purpose of the biennial<lb/>
youth meeting was to provide<lb/>
participants with a forum fa the<lb/>
exchange of ideas on ways in<lb/>
which they can further their<lb/>
involvement in the fight against<lb/>
muscular dystrophy and related<lb/>
neuromuscular diseases.<lb/>
Conference workshops and<lb/>
panel discussions were led by<lb/>
members of MDA's National<lb/>
Youth Committee, which included<lb/>
MDA's patient and community<lb/>
services program, neuromuscular<lb/>
diseases and their effects on the<lb/>
patient and the patient's family,<lb/>
organizing dance marathons and<lb/>
MDA fund raising events and<lb/>
methods of informing the public<lb/>
of MDA youth activities.<lb/>
MDA national youth commit-<lb/>
tee chairman Jay Dardene, who<lb/>
presided over the two-day confer-<lb/>
ence spoke for all of the campus<lb/>
leaders who attended when he<lb/>
said: "We're going home and<lb/>
spread the word, we're going to<lb/>
share what we learned with those<lb/>
that share our concern for<lb/>
Jerry's kids<lb/>
Dardene, a law student and<lb/>
Student Body President at Louis-<lb/>
iana State University at Baton<lb/>
Rouge, added that it is a "great<lb/>
source of pride fa all of us to<lb/>
know that we have been a part of<lb/>
this meeting which will raise<lb/>
youth participation in the fight<lb/>
against Muscular Dystrophy to<lb/>
At<lb/>
BONANZA<lb/>
i<lb/>
520 W. Greenville Blvd 264 By Pass<lb/>
We Care<lb/>
Mon-Fri 11:00 am �3pm chops teak $1.49<lb/>
all day Tues Ribeye $1.79<lb/>
Fri Sat Sun 8oz . T-Bone $2.79<lb/>
with this coupon, you can get a<lb/>
Rib-eye dinner with texas toast,<lb/>
large baked potato<lb/>
can eat from our SUPER salad bar<lb/>
and to top it off, a FREE dessert<lb/>
of your choice. <lb/>
$2.35<lb/>
new heights<lb/>
Representing 300 colleges and<lb/>
high schools, students appeared<lb/>
on the telethon to present Lewis<lb/>
with over $1.3 million raised in<lb/>
dance marathons during the<lb/>
1976-77 school year.<lb/>
MDA, the National Voluntary<lb/>
Health Agency that funds a<lb/>
worldwide research program<lb/>
seeking the causes of and cures<lb/>
for Muscular Dystrophy and<lb/>
related neuromuscular disorders,<lb/>
also provides a wide range of<lb/>
medical services�free of charge-<lb/>
to victims of 35 muscle diseases<lb/>
through a nationwide network of<lb/>
182 hospital-affiliated MDA<lb/>
clinics.<lb/>
growers, who received govern-<lb/>
ment subsidies fa each new<lb/>
coffee seedling they planted.<lb/>
 During the 1976-77,crop year,<lb/>
the Brazilian Coffee Institute<lb/>
financed the planting of 375<lb/>
million new trees said Dr.<lb/>
Moore.<lb/>
"This program should bring<lb/>
about an increase in numbers of<lb/>
Brazilian coffee trees until they<lb/>
total 3.1 billion by the end of the<lb/>
1977-78 crop year.<lb/>
"If this goal is reached, Brazil<lb/>
would have a net gain of some 300<lb/>
million trees since the frost-yield-<lb/>
ing Caturra and Mundo Nova<lb/>
types<lb/>
Brazil does not limit its<lb/>
intervention to frosting increased<lb/>
crop yields, however.<lb/>
"For more than 70 years the<lb/>
Brazilian government has control-<lb/>
led the flow of coffee to ports, a<lb/>
policy now followed by other<lb/>
coffee-producing nations.<lb/>
"What this means is that if<lb/>
the world coffee price is too low,<lb/>
the coffee nations set quotas to<lb/>
limit the supply to each port.<lb/>
Supplies of coffee can be held for<lb/>
years in warehouses at oool, dry,<lb/>
high-altitude locations.<lb/>
"So there is no such thing as<lb/>
free market' coffee pricing<lb/>
Moore explained that the<lb/>
government of Brazil has gone so<lb/>
far in its regulation of coffee<lb/>
prices as to purchase vast quanti-<lb/>
ties of coffee until a suitable price<lb/>
increase occurs and then sell "at<lb/>
a substantial profit<lb/>
The United States is the<lb/>
world's largest consumer of<lb/>
coffee; about half the world's<lb/>
exportable coffee is consumed in<lb/>
this country.<lb/>
The brew in its various<lb/>
forms�perked and dripped,<lb/>
freeze-dried and instant-has be-<lb/>
come our national beverage.<lb/>
But coffee consumption here<lb/>
has gradually decreased in recent<lb/>
years, with a sharp decline during<lb/>
the past several months.<lb/>
In 1960, the average American<lb/>
consumed almost 23 pounds of<lb/>
oof fee. This year, that per capita<lb/>
figure has dropped to nearly half,<lb/>
11.80 pounds, according to a U.S.<lb/>
Dept. of Agriculture estimate.<lb/>
However, coffee prices con-<lb/>
tinued to trend upward, despite a<lb/>
lessening of demand, until they<lb/>
turned downward at wholesale<lb/>
some six months ago.<lb/>
Moore said he believes that<lb/>
any further drop in consumption<lb/>
would have little effect upon<lb/>
wholesale or retail market prices,<lb/>
so regulated is the supply.<lb/>
Will coffee prices lower in the<lb/>
future?<lb/>
Moore seems optimistic that<lb/>
they will ease downward, unless<lb/>
Brazil suffers another frost-<lb/>
induced catastrophic production<lb/>
year.<lb/>
 However, there seems to be<lb/>
little relation between production<lb/>
and prices because of the tight<lb/>
regulation exercised over coffee<lb/>
supplies by the major producing<lb/>
$$ CASH $$<lb/>
FOR YOUR<lb/>
TEXTBOOKS!<lb/>
SELL EARLY<lb/>
We now have Spring Semester Book<lb/>
Information and are paying<lb/>
top dollar for used Books.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
BOOK<lb/>
EXCHANGE<lb/>
Downtown in Greenville<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0008"/><lb/>
Pf � FOWfTAMHEAD 25 Ortobf 1977<lb/>
i<lb/>
�<lb/>
N.C. plant poses health hazards to workers<lb/>
Nktvt lima u�i nm . tJ IIA I i Ji.  . . � <lb/>
Next timt you open a bag of<lb/>
Fritos or a pack of cigarettes,<lb/>
think about Marvin Qaddy.<lb/>
Marvin has worked in Olin<lb/>
Corporation's Film Division fa<lb/>
over 20 years making cellophane<lb/>
wrapping. He can't see as well as<lb/>
he used to and still gets night-<lb/>
mares once in a while.<lb/>
He's watched the lives of<lb/>
many men change after they<lb/>
came off that second floor. Some<lb/>
got eaten up with tumors and<lb/>
cancer.<lb/>
For some, it became so bad<lb/>
they took their own lives. Others<lb/>
were luckier and got out with only<lb/>
minor nerve problems to remind<lb/>
them of what it was like.<lb/>
The second floor is in the<lb/>
Chemical Building at CXin's Film<lb/>
Division near Brevard, N.C, on<lb/>
the edge of the Pisgah National<lb/>
Forest. The Film Division pro-<lb/>
duces viscose which is extruded,<lb/>
solidified and dried to form<lb/>
cellophane.<lb/>
Twelve massive vats are kept<lb/>
in constant rotation, each mixing<lb/>
together 700-800 pounds of ripe-<lb/>
ned alkali osllutose (raw wood<lb/>
pulp and 16 per cent caustic acid).<lb/>
Marvin used to add carbon<lb/>
disuifide to the rotating vats, to<lb/>
quicken the process of breaking<lb/>
down raw wood pulp into a liquid<lb/>
ceiloDhane-like mixture.<lb/>
Nobody ever told Marvin and<lb/>
his fellow workers that the CS2<lb/>
oould harm them. But they finally<lb/>
found out. Only then, it was too<lb/>
late.<lb/>
'A lot of people would leave,<lb/>
says Marvin. "The younger ones<lb/>
would oome in there and work a<lb/>
few days, and then they'd invar<lb/>
labiy get a big whiff of CS2<lb/>
"People would act real un-<lb/>
usual, get headaches and think<lb/>
they were getting the flu. After a<lb/>
few overdoses the nightmares<lb/>
would start ooming on them.<lb/>
We'd go in and tell the company,<lb/>
'Damnit you'd better do some-<lb/>
thing about this CS2 stuff<lb/>
"They'd tell us to get the hell<lb/>
out - 'we don't need you. If you<lb/>
don't enjoy your job, then go<lb/>
home 'Course we didn't have a<lb/>
union back then. And we didn't<lb/>
have Jimmy Reese rummaging<lb/>
through their trash cans and filing<lb/>
all those grievances and comp-<lb/>
laints<lb/>
James Reese is a maintenance<lb/>
man at the Olin plant and<lb/>
chairman of the union safety<lb/>
committee for Load 1971 of the<lb/>
United Paperworks Inter-<lb/>
national Union (UPIU).<lb/>
Olin workers had to stand up<lb/>
and fight for more than 30 years<lb/>
before they got the union in at<lb/>
Olin. The battle left a trail of<lb/>
beaten-up organizers, fired union<lb/>
sympathizers, and heart-<lb/>
breaking, one-vote Labor Board<lb/>
election defeats.<lb/>
Finally, in 1971, the union<lb/>
won a contract which included a<lb/>
safety committee of company and<lb/>
union representatives.<lb/>
For the past five years, the<lb/>
committee has investigated num-<lb/>
erous toxic substances: asbestos,<lb/>
carbon disuifide, formaldehyde,<lb/>
tetrahydrofuran, flax duet, noise,<lb/>
radiation, methyl bromide.<lb/>
"I had learned the OSHA<lb/>
standards even before we got our<lb/>
union organized, til I almost had<lb/>
them memorized recalls James<lb/>
Reese.<lb/>
"I was just kind of interested<lb/>
It represented a kind of challenge<lb/>
to me because I've seen some of<lb/>
the conditions up there and I've<lb/>
been hurt on the job myself<lb/>
"I'm not sure what set me off.<lb/>
I think it's just the fact that I'm<lb/>
kind of a militant type character<lb/>
and this way, fa once, I had<lb/>
something that they had to listen<lb/>
to. I finally had a law to back me<lb/>
up<lb/>
NEWS DESK meeting Thursday<lb/>
at 4:00 pan.<lb/>
All news writers and other interested persons<lb/>
be there!<lb/>
Brochure for women helps in<lb/>
male dominated job markets<lb/>
A new brochure with a special<lb/>
introductay of fa fa 12 self-<lb/>
guidance and carea publications<lb/>
fa unctergraduate wonen has<lb/>
been released to colleges and<lb/>
universities by Catalyst.<lb/>
The booklets enable young<lb/>
women to oonsicter fields that, at<lb/>
managerial and professional<lb/>
levels, have been traditionally<lb/>
male-dominated.<lb/>
The series includes two self-<lb/>
guidance workbooks, "Planning<lb/>
for Career Options" and<lb/>
"Launching Your Career" and 10<lb/>
in-depth carea infamatiai book-<lb/>
lets, "Have You Considaed<lb/>
govanment and politics, indust-<lb/>
rial management, finance, engin-<lb/>
eaing, retail management, ac-<lb/>
counting, sales, restaurant man-<lb/>
agement, insurance and banking.<lb/>
The self-guidanoe wakbcoks<lb/>
help undergraduate women<lb/>
evaluate their abilities and inter-<lb/>
ests in relation to the career and<lb/>
lifestyle options open to them and<lb/>
provides important pointas on<lb/>
resume writing, successful inter-<lb/>
view techniques, on campus job<lb/>
reauitment and job sources.<lb/>
The carea booklets oova the<lb/>
spectrum of postiions within<lb/>
specific professional fields, educ-<lb/>
ational preparation, the employ-<lb/>
ment outlook fa the next decade<lb/>
and case histaies of successful<lb/>
women.<lb/>
The brochure was directed to<lb/>
35,000 college and university<lb/>
students and carea oounseias,<lb/>
placement officers, presidents,<lb/>
deans, administrators, "women's<lb/>
studies" faculty, and managasto<lb/>
libraries and bookstores. The<lb/>
mailing was also sent to junia<lb/>
and community colleges, and<lb/>
public and oapaate libraries.<lb/>
Catalyst is a national nonprofit<lb/>
aganization that helps women<lb/>
choose, launch and advance their<lb/>
careas.<lb/>
Booklets are available to<lb/>
students at $1.95 each.<lb/>
Fa furtha infamatiai, write:<lb/>
Catalyst, 14 East 60th Street,<lb/>
New Yak, New Yak 10022.<lb/>
EAST - WEST PRODUCTIONS<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
THE 2ND ANNUAL OUTDOOR<lb/>
HALLOWEEN MUSIC FESTIVAL<lb/>
and<lb/>
CARNIVAL<lb/>
SATURDAY - OCT. 29<lb/>
PITT COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
FEA TURING<lb/>
ZORRO and the BLUE FOOTBALLS<lb/>
10TH AVENUE<lb/>
SUPERGRIT<lb/>
TENNESSEE HAT BAND<lb/>
SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
GRINDERSWITCH<lb/>
"MR. FIDDLE"<lb/>
VASSAR CLEMMENTS<lb/>
and<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
In the event of rain: RAIN DATE - OCT. 30<lb/>
JUDGING FOR BEST HALLOWEEN COSTUMES<lb/>
PRIZES AWARDED - $100, $60, $25<lb/>
Cans and Plastic Containers Only - No Glass Bottles<lb/>
ADMISSION; Advance $5.00 Gate $6.00 Bu Pick Up: Belk Dorm - MendenhaU Student Center<lb/>
Gates Open 11 A.M. - Until Sllirts l2:0� Noon - � Minute Shimle Trip<lb/>
6:00 I'M and from 10:00 I'M - 12:00 Midnight<lb/>
Ticket! available at the Central Ticket Office, Mendenhall.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0009"/><lb/>
25 OcuJmt 1977 FOUMTAINHEAD<lb/>
�Sli<lb/>
Boycotting coffee efforts may be in vain<lb/>
ByFRANCEINEPERRY<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Have you, the prioeoonscious<lb/>
consumer, boycotted coffee at the<lb/>
supermarket to help bring prices<lb/>
down?<lb/>
If so, your sacrifice may have<lb/>
been in vain, says an ECU<lb/>
economist; the coffee supply is<lb/>
carefully controlled by producing<lb/>
countries.<lb/>
Dr. Oscar K. Moore, professor<lb/>
of economics at ECU and noted<lb/>
expert on world trends in ooffee<lb/>
production and pricing, has com-<lb/>
pleted a detailed study of the<lb/>
ooffee market, and oontends that<lb/>
prices don't depend upon con-<lb/>
sumption, production, govern-<lb/>
ment control or any other single<lb/>
factor.<lb/>
 World exportable oo'fee pro-<lb/>
duction is highly variable from<lb/>
year to year, mostly because the<lb/>
ooffee production rate of Brazil,<lb/>
the largest supplier, fluctuates<lb/>
sharply he said.<lb/>
"Brazil's variable production<lb/>
rates are due to heavy aops<lb/>
followed by light and to periodic<lb/>
droughts and frosts which harm<lb/>
the coffee trees and make predict-<lb/>
ing the Brazilian crop difficult<lb/>
Brazil leads the world as a<lb/>
producer of coffee, though other<lb/>
Central and South American and<lb/>
African rations-Colombia,<lb/>
Mexioo, El Salvador, Ecuador,<lb/>
Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda and the<lb/>
Malagasy Republio-are increas-<lb/>
ing their production.<lb/>
A short year for Brazilian<lb/>
ooffee still means a short year for<lb/>
the world supply.<lb/>
"The recent record-high<lb/>
coffee prices have followed the<lb/>
most severe Brazilian freeze of<lb/>
modern times, that of July,<lb/>
1975 said Moore.<lb/>
"As a consequence of that<lb/>
freeze, 230 million ooffee trees<lb/>
were uprooted and removed<lb/>
The Brazilian government's<lb/>
policy of protectiveness toward its<lb/>
coffee crop resulted in a signifi-<lb/>
cant recovery program for ooffee<lb/>
Jerry Lewis speaks to campus<lb/>
leaders about muscular illness<lb/>
"I will never be satisfied until<lb/>
we get the job done Jerry<lb/>
Lewis, National chairman of the<lb/>
Muscular Dystrophy Association<lb/>
told more than 300 college and<lb/>
high school leaders from across<lb/>
the country attending MDA's<lb/>
second National Youth Leader-<lb/>
ship Conference October 15-16 at<lb/>
the Diplomat Hotel in Hollywood,<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
The purpose of the biennial<lb/>
youth meeting was to provide<lb/>
participants with a forum for the<lb/>
exchange of ideas on ways in<lb/>
which they can further their<lb/>
involvement in the fight against<lb/>
muscular dystrophy and related<lb/>
neuromuscular diseases.<lb/>
Conference workshops and<lb/>
panel discussions were led by<lb/>
members of MDA's National<lb/>
Youth Committee, which included<lb/>
MDA's patient and community<lb/>
services program, neuromuscular<lb/>
diseases and their effects on the<lb/>
patient and the patient's family,<lb/>
organizing dance marathons and<lb/>
MDA fund raising events and<lb/>
methods of informing the public<lb/>
of MDA youth activities.<lb/>
MDA national youth oommit-<lb/>
tee chairman Jay Dardene, who<lb/>
presided over the two-day confer-<lb/>
ence spoke fa all of the campus<lb/>
leaders who attended when he<lb/>
said: "We're going home and<lb/>
spread the wad, we're going to<lb/>
share what we learned with those<lb/>
that share our concern for<lb/>
Jerry's kids<lb/>
Dardene, a law student and<lb/>
Student Body President at Louis-<lb/>
iana State University at Baton<lb/>
Rouge, added that it is a "great<lb/>
source of pride fa all of us to<lb/>
know that we have been a part of<lb/>
this meeting which will raise<lb/>
youth participation in the fight<lb/>
against Muscular Dystrophy to<lb/>
At<lb/>
BONANZA<lb/>
I<lb/>
520 W. Greenville Blvd 264 By Pass<lb/>
We Care<lb/>
Mon-Fri 11:00 am -3pm chopsieak 1.49<lb/>
all day Tues Ribeye $1.79<lb/>
Fri Sat Sun 8oz . T-Bone $2.79<lb/>
with this coupon, you can get a<lb/>
Rib-eye dinner with texas toast,<lb/>
large baked potato<lb/>
can eat from our SUPER salad bar<lb/>
and to top it off, a FREE dessert<lb/>
of your choice. -fc-<lb/>
$2.35<lb/>
new heights<lb/>
Represent i ng 300 col I eges and<lb/>
high schools, students appeared<lb/>
on the telethon to present Lewis<lb/>
with over $1.3 million raised in<lb/>
dance marathons during the<lb/>
1976-77 school year.<lb/>
MDA, the National Vauntary<lb/>
Health Agency that funds a<lb/>
worldwide research program<lb/>
seeking the causes of and cures<lb/>
for Muscular Dystrophy and<lb/>
related neuromuscular disaders,<lb/>
also provides a wide range of<lb/>
medical services�free of charge-<lb/>
to victims of 35 muscle diseases<lb/>
through a nationwide netwak of<lb/>
182 hospital-affiliated MDA<lb/>
clinics.<lb/>
growers, who received govern-<lb/>
ment subsidies fa each new<lb/>
coffee seedling they planted.<lb/>
 During the 1976-77,aop year,<lb/>
the Brazilian Coffee Institute<lb/>
financed the planting of 375<lb/>
million new trees said Dr.<lb/>
Moae.<lb/>
"This program should bring<lb/>
about an inaease in numbers of<lb/>
Brazilian ooffee trees until they<lb/>
total 3.1 billion by the end of the<lb/>
1977-78 aop year.<lb/>
"If this goal is reached, Brazil<lb/>
would have a net gain of sane 300<lb/>
milliai trees since the frost-yield-<lb/>
ing Caturra and Mundo Nova<lb/>
types<lb/>
Brazil does not limit its<lb/>
intervention to frosting inaeased<lb/>
aop yields, however.<lb/>
"Fa more than 70 years the<lb/>
Brazilian government has control-<lb/>
led the flow of ooffee to pats, a<lb/>
policy now followed by rther<lb/>
ooffee-produang nations.<lb/>
"What this means is that if<lb/>
the wald ooffee prioe is too low,<lb/>
the coffee nations set quaas to<lb/>
limit the supply to each pat.<lb/>
Supplies of ooffee can be held fa<lb/>
years in warehouses at oool, dry,<lb/>
high-altitude locations.<lb/>
"So there is no such thing as<lb/>
free market' ooffee pricing<lb/>
Moore explained that the<lb/>
government of Brazil has gone so<lb/>
far in its regulation of ooffee<lb/>
prices as to purchase vast quanti-<lb/>
ties of ooffee until a suitable prioe<lb/>
inaease occurs and then sell "at<lb/>
a substantial profit<lb/>
The United States is the<lb/>
world's largest consumer of<lb/>
ooffee; about half the wald's<lb/>
expatable ooffee is consumed in<lb/>
this oountry.<lb/>
The brew in its various<lb/>
forms-perked and dripped,<lb/>
freeze-dned and instant-has be-<lb/>
cone our national beverage.<lb/>
But ooffee consumption here<lb/>
has gradually deaeased in recent<lb/>
years, with a sharp dedine during<lb/>
the past several months.<lb/>
In 1960, the average American<lb/>
consumed almost 23 pounds of<lb/>
ooffee. This year, that per capita<lb/>
figure has dropped to nearly half,<lb/>
11.80 pounds, accading to a U.S.<lb/>
Dept. of Agriculture estimate.<lb/>
However, ooffee prices con-<lb/>
tinued to trend upward, despite a<lb/>
lessening of demand, until they<lb/>
turned downward at wholesale<lb/>
some six months ago<lb/>
Moae said he believes that<lb/>
any further drop in consumption<lb/>
would have little effect upon<lb/>
whaesale a retail market prices,<lb/>
so regulated is the supply.<lb/>
Will ooffee prices lower in the<lb/>
future?<lb/>
Moae seems optimistic that<lb/>
they will ease downward, unless<lb/>
Brazil suffers another frost-<lb/>
induced catastrophic production<lb/>
year.<lb/>
However, there seems to be<lb/>
little relation between production<lb/>
and prices because of the tight<lb/>
regulation exercised over coffee<lb/>
supplies by the maja producing<lb/>
$$ CASH $$<lb/>
FOR YOUR<lb/>
TEXTBOOKS!<lb/>
SELL EARLY<lb/>
We now have Spring Semester Book<lb/>
Information and are paying<lb/>
top dollar for used Books.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
BOOK<lb/>
EXCHANGE<lb/>
Downtown in Greenville<lb/>
i�S4�5i�jtf�,� I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0010"/><lb/>
�HBHHMMIIIHMBBi<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 25 October 1977<lb/>
Cinema,<lb/>
by Steve Bachner<lb/>
Glossy ghetto<lb/>
Sidney's Poitiers fifth film as a director is a giant stepin the<lb/>
wrong direction.<lb/>
After two huge box-office successes, "Uptown Saturday Night"<lb/>
and "Let's Do It Again one would have thought that black film's first<lb/>
real superstar was ready to tackle a more diversified vehicle than<lb/>
A PIECE OF THE ACTJON, his current release which opened at the<lb/>
Buccaneer Theatres here in Greenville Friday.<lb/>
Whatever social commentary Charles Blackwell wrote into his<lb/>
screenplay is lost on film. The movie vacillates from slick detective<lb/>
thriller�and indeed one of Poitiers major strengths as a director is a<lb/>
talent for choreographing action sequences-to overly sentimental<lb/>
classroom drama.<lb/>
REPETITION<lb/>
Poitier has said, "I do not believe my life as a film artist should be<lb/>
spent in repetition (See the October 17 issue of the Fountainhead).<lb/>
But repetition is all Poitier has to offer. The corny classroom sequences<lb/>
are a throwback to those "To Sir with Love" days when the critics<lb/>
lambasted Poitier, calling him the ebony saint He resented this<lb/>
treatment claiming that producers were type-casting him in these kinds<lb/>
of roles. However, Poitier doesn't seem to mind the role as much today<lb/>
as he has in the past In fact, he has a field day hamming it up in front<lb/>
of the class, turning ghettothugsintocivilized membersof society (Oh.<lb/>
does that ring familiar.).<lb/>
His students in this movie are volunteers on a job training program<lb/>
at a local youth center. He and sidekick Bill Cosby, who gives a fine<lb/>
comic performance, are blackmailed into devoting their time to the<lb/>
center by retired detective James Earl Jones who has learned of their<lb/>
involvement in some rather original crimes. Denise Nicholas, who<lb/>
costarred in television's "Room 22 and Tracy Reed play the<lb/>
romantic interests.<lb/>
UNCONVINCING<lb/>
Where most movies suffer from the opposite problem, "A Piece of<lb/>
the Action" has too big a budget. Street details are so carefully<lb/>
arranged that even the garbage that makes up the background<lb/>
composition of one scene looks expensive, well thought out, and<lb/>
unreal. The students are too carefully dressed in ghetto garb;<lb/>
impeccable in their sartorial splendor. The hip street dialogue is<lb/>
contrived: "Hey momma what's happenin some turkey mess over<lb/>
ya And the raw language spoken by the ghetto kids sounds like<lb/>
poetry with some filthy wads thrown in fa good measure.<lb/>
If you can stomach the pat answers provided, the shiny street<lb/>
scenes, and the overall glossiness of this movie, then "A Piece of the<lb/>
Action" may be your escapist cup of tea. If not, go to New Yak and see<lb/>
what a real city is like.<lb/>
JAMES EARL JONES listens while Sidney Poitier and Bill Cosby<lb/>
pour their hearts out in a scene from "A Piece of the Action<lb/>
Suspiria'<lb/>
Could SUSPIRIA be one of the new wave of hara films aafted in<lb/>
the Hitchcock tradition?<lb/>
Jessica Harper, th� hauntingly attractive actress who is best<lb/>
remembered fa her portrayal of the character Phoenix in De Palma's<lb/>
Phantom of the Paradise plays Susan Banyon, a girl who will<lb/>
experience the evil tremas of a coven of witches in a remote ballet<lb/>
academy in Freiburg, Germany.<lb/>
In the opening sequence, a young student is tortured; stabbed to<lb/>
death in a series of brutal dose-ups, and then thrown through a<lb/>
skylight in the roof. In ensuing scenes, thousands of warns invade the<lb/>
dam rooms at the academy; the school's blind pianist is ripped to<lb/>
shreds by his own dog; a friend of Susan's is chased through the<lb/>
academy, falls into a giant Sinky, and is mutilated with a dagger;<lb/>
finally, in the movie's denouement, our protagonist is chased by a dead<lb/>
body that spurts blood from the mouth befae she can kill the haribly<lb/>
See'SUSPIRIA p. 11)<lb/>
Playhouse production<lb/>
proves to be entertaining<lb/>
N<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
NewsEdita<lb/>
The ECU Playhouse produo<lb/>
tion of "Bye Bye Birdie" which<lb/>
ran last Wednesday through<lb/>
Saturday was well produced,<lb/>
although some of the ading was<lb/>
less than professional.<lb/>
Bill Vann did a good job<lb/>
overall in his patraya! of Albert<lb/>
Peterson, but the vitality of the<lb/>
charader did not oome through to<lb/>
the audience. Vann knew his lines<lb/>
well, but did not seem to face<lb/>
himself into the adual role of<lb/>
Albert.<lb/>
Janice Vertucct Schreiber did<lb/>
an excellent job as Rosie Alvarez.<lb/>
Her combined talent of singing<lb/>
and ading made her an audience<lb/>
favaite. It is seldom that an<lb/>
audience is treated to this superb<lb/>
combinatioi of ading and singing<lb/>
ability.<lb/>
Sally Nell Coldfelter and<lb/>
Dave Massengill gave outstand-<lb/>
ing perfamances as Unsula, and<lb/>
Hugo Peabody. Coldfelter was<lb/>
one of the few who managed to<lb/>
maintain her charader not only<lb/>
by her singing, movement, and<lb/>
speech, but also by her fadal<lb/>
expressions. Other adas seemed<lb/>
to fade occasionally out of charao<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
Massengill played the charao<lb/>
ter of the class drip superbly, and<lb/>
through his timing, the comic<lb/>
nature of-his charader was well<lb/>
received by the audience.<lb/>
A good ading perfamance by<lb/>
Kim Woolen as Kim Macafee was<lb/>
weakened by her inability of<lb/>
being able to projed her vocal<lb/>
seledions throughout the theatre.<lb/>
The unconcerned ading of<lb/>
Luden Hutcherson in his charao<lb/>
terization as Conrad Birdie came<lb/>
aaoss as a weak combination of<lb/>
T<lb/>
will<lb/>
Nar<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
CONRAD BIRDIE NOT only thrills<lb/>
Mom and Dad.<lb/>
the Fonz and Elvis.<lb/>
The aew did an excellent job<lb/>
of changing the sets quickly and<lb/>
aderly.<lb/>
The sets were realistic, and<lb/>
the students who oonstruded and<lb/>
painted them are to be oommen-<lb/>
rted fa their long hours and hard<lb/>
work.<lb/>
young girls, but also turns on<lb/>
Photo by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
The lighting aew handled its<lb/>
job with ease, due mainly to the<lb/>
lighting designed by David Down-<lb/>
ing. Theeffedsof lighting set the<lb/>
overall mood fa the play.<lb/>
Overall, the play was excel lent<lb/>
and provided fa a entertaining<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
NOR<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
i)<lb/>
Fonda stars in Zinnemann film<lb/>
Lillian Hellman's book "Pen-<lb/>
timento" was published in 1974<lb/>
and contained an inddent detail-<lb/>
ing a profound, lifelong friend-<lb/>
ship between Lillian and Julia,<lb/>
two young women who, after<lb/>
drifting apart, were reunited by a<lb/>
tense and dangerous journey<lb/>
through Germany on the brink of<lb/>
Wald War II.<lb/>
This stay is now a motion<lb/>
pidure, as Twentieth Century-<lb/>
Fox presents "Julia a Richard<lb/>
Roth presentation of a Fred<lb/>
.Zinnemann Film starring Jane<lb/>
Fonda and Vanessa Redgrave.<lb/>
Also starring are Jason Robards,<lb/>
Hal Holbrook, Rosemary Murphy<lb/>
and Maximilian Schell as Johann.<lb/>
"Julia" was direded by Fred<lb/>
Zinnemann and produced by<lb/>
Richard Roth.<lb/>
Two Academy Awardsfor<lb/>
 From Here to Eternity and  A<lb/>
Man Fa All Seasonsacknow-<lb/>
ledge Fred Zinnemann as an<lb/>
outstandingly gifted filmmaker<lb/>
whose work has i consistency<lb/>
which few rthei diredas can<lb/>
match. A master of the visual<lb/>
expression, Zinnemann's wak is<lb/>
always stimulating and provokes<lb/>
O<lb/>
JANE FONDA AND Vanessa Redgrave in a scene from -Julia<lb/>
passion in the viewer: the aisis of<lb/>
conscience patrayed in "A Man<lb/>
Fa All Seasonsthe dilemma<lb/>
of the hero in "High Noonthe<lb/>
oonflid reflected in "The Nun's<lb/>
Staythe tension of "The Day<lb/>
of the Jackal<lb/>
Jane Fonda, who plays the<lb/>
Lillian Hellman charader, has<lb/>
been assodated with the projed<lb/>
since its early stages. When she<lb/>
heard that the film rights had<lb/>
been acquired, she approached<lb/>
Roth and told him of her interest<lb/>
in playing in the film. "She<lb/>
agreed to do it without seeing a<lb/>
saipt and was most suppative<lb/>
during the period of putting it all<lb/>
together says the producer.<lb/>
After Fred Zinnemann and<lb/>
Twentieth Century-Fox had seen<lb/>
Alvin Sargent's first draft saeen-<lb/>
play, Vanessa Redgrave was<lb/>
See REDGRAVE, p. 11)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0011"/><lb/>
Norman Blake to perform<lb/>
25 October 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD pag� 9<lb/>
The Roxy to present bluegrass musician<lb/>
ByMICHALLFUTCH<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
The Roxy Fall Concert Series<lb/>
will present bluegrass musician<lb/>
Norman Blake on Oct. 29, at 8:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
A reserved seating only per-<lb/>
formance, the show will be held at<lb/>
the Roxy, 629 Albemarle Ave<lb/>
nue, Greenville.<lb/>
"We're using advanoed seat-<lb/>
ing to insure everyone a seat<lb/>
said Bill "Shep" Shepherd, Roxy<lb/>
coordinator. "We've got about<lb/>
100 tickets left<lb/>
The Norman Blake concert is<lb/>
on a larger scale than the average<lb/>
show held at the Roxy. But<lb/>
according to Shepherd, if this<lb/>
concert succeeds the Roxv oould<lb/>
NORMAN AND NANCY Blake will appear at the Roxy, Oct. 29.<lb/>
SENIORS, JUNIORS, SOPHOMORES<lb/>
Aviation Opportunities- Set your goal in the sky.<lb/>
Start with a Naval Officer's Commission and $300.00<lb/>
worth of Flight Training.<lb/>
NO OBLIGATION until completion of training. Salaries start<lb/>
at over SI2.000.<lb/>
DON'T WAIT- Training slots are limited. Apply now and<lb/>
avoid the spring joh search. You can wear<lb/>
as a Naval Flight Officer.<lb/>
ORIENTATION FLIGHTS available for those who qualify on<lb/>
Officer Selection Test.<lb/>
SEE THE NAVAL OFFICER SELECTION TEAM<lb/>
or<lb/>
vail toll free 1-8000662-7568 for more information.<lb/>
book more popular performers in<lb/>
the line of Blake.<lb/>
"We want to book, shows like<lb/>
Norman Blake every month<lb/>
said Shepherd. ' The Roxy is able<lb/>
to provide a more personal<lb/>
intimacy between the audience<lb/>
and the performer<lb/>
Blake's music is definitely in<lb/>
tune with the smaller seating<lb/>
arrangement at the Roxy (400<lb/>
seat limit). Blake will appear with<lb/>
his wife Nancy, on Saturday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
His music has been categor-<lb/>
ized as "not oommercial country,<lb/>
not quite bluegrass-simple, sour,<lb/>
applejack sweet, mournful and<lb/>
remote<lb/>
Blake was born in Chatta-<lb/>
nooga, Tenn on March 10, 1938.<lb/>
At the age of 16 he quit school to<lb/>
play mandolin in a band called the<lb/>
Dixie Drifters.<lb/>
After a lengthy musical<lb/>
career. Blake moved to Nashville<lb/>
in 1969 to do the Johnny Cash<lb/>
television show, in which he<lb/>
played guitar and dobro as a<lb/>
member of Cash's group. Along<lb/>
with country and western ses-<lb/>
sions, Blake wound up recording<lb/>
with Bob Dylan on "Nashville<lb/>
Skyline<lb/>
He was a member of Kris<lb/>
Knstofferson's first road group,<lb/>
playing guitar and dobro. and did<lb/>
a seasonal tour with Joan Baez,<lb/>
playing mandolin, guitar and<lb/>
dobro. Blake also recorded with<lb/>
both performers.<lb/>
Blake left Knstofferson to join<lb/>
and record with John Hartford s<lb/>
Aeroplane band. After that band<lb/>
dissolved, he toured with Hart-<lb/>
fad as his accompanist for a year<lb/>
and a half, during which time he<lb/>
recorded his first solo album.<lb/>
Home in Sulphur Springs He<lb/>
also recorded with Nitty Gritty<lb/>
Dirt Band on the "Will the Circle<lb/>
be Unbroken album.<lb/>
Since then Blake has toured<lb/>
and recorded on his own. He has<lb/>
recorded six more albums sinoe<lb/>
his solo departure<lb/>
Blake writes at least 50 of<lb/>
the material that he performs on<lb/>
the guitar, mandolin, and fiddle,<lb/>
the rest adaptation of traditional<lb/>
songs ana fiddle tunes.<lb/>
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Open 11am - 2pm 4:45pm - 8pm<lb/>
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We are serving fresh oysters dailv<lb/>
BGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
ATHLETIC SUPPORTS,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058016_0012"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
10 FOUNTAINHEAO 25 October 1977<lb/>
The Camera Never Blinks'<lb/>
Quick witted Rather authors new book<lb/>
By PA TSY PRIDGEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Most Americans know Dan<lb/>
Rather as the co-editor of the<lb/>
popular television "muckrake<lb/>
news show, "60 Minutes<lb/>
Thinking a little harder, many<lb/>
may also remember that he was<lb/>
the reporter who, in a 1974<lb/>
presidential press conference,<lb/>
answered Richard Nixon's quip,<lb/>
"Are you running for<lb/>
something?" with "No, sir, Mr.<lb/>
r-esident, are you?"<lb/>
This incident, daims Rather in<lb/>
his chatty notes of his news<lb/>
career, The Camera Never Blinks,<lb/>
assured his place as the reporter<lb/>
the White House hates a<lb/>
reputation he daims he nuver<lb/>
meant to earn.<lb/>
Although Rather in his book<lb/>
covers his entire journalistic<lb/>
career-as well as bits and pieces<lb/>
of his undergraduate days at the<lb/>
unpretentious Sam Houston State<lb/>
Teachers College-he spends a<lb/>
great deal of time talking about<lb/>
his journalistic encounters with<lb/>
the Nixon White House. Perhaps<lb/>
a flaw in his otherwise lively<lb/>
autobiography results from his<lb/>
subtle preoccupation with this<lb/>
portion of his career, a preoccup-<lb/>
ation which leads him, time and<lb/>
again, to attempt to justify his<lb/>
adions as a Nixon White House<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Tues. Cct. 25<lb/>
In Concert<lb/>
Capital Recording Artist<lb/>
WEpic Recording Artist<lb/>
�Blackfoot Also Ariel"<lb/>
reporter.<lb/>
For example, speaking of his<lb/>
famous answer to Nixon's "Are<lb/>
you running for something?<lb/>
Rather insists in the prologue of<lb/>
his book, "I didn't feel then that<lb/>
my words were disrespectful.<lb/>
And I don't now<lb/>
In his chapter, "The Unmak-<lb/>
ing of a President he tells of<lb/>
Bob Haldeman and John Ehrlich-<lb/>
man accusing him of being<lb/>
"inaccurate and unfair<lb/>
Rather's response to the two (and<lb/>
now to the reader): " Of course it<lb/>
may be easy for you, being on the<lb/>
inside, to spot things that are off<lb/>
in terms of tone. Outright mis-<lb/>
takes. And I accept my share of<lb/>
the responsibility. But you have<lb/>
to accept yours, Mr. Haldeman<lb/>
and Mr. Ehrlichman, because you<lb/>
don't tell us a great deal about<lb/>
what goes on in here<lb/>
And again, in his chapter<lb/>
"Where Watergate Led he<lb/>
attempts to vindicate his Nixon<lb/>
White House adions: "I went to<lb/>
my job every day determined to<lb/>
be as fair and as accurate as<lb/>
humanly possible. At the end of<lb/>
each day I didn't ask myself, do<lb/>
they like me, or do they like what<lb/>
I did? I asked myself, did I meet<lb/>
my own standards for this day?"<lb/>
Despite Rather's somewhat<lb/>
overbearing defense of his report-<lb/>
ing during the traumatic Water-<lb/>
gate years, The Camera Never<lb/>
Blinks is still an intriguing piece<lb/>
of work. In the book Rather<lb/>
relates some very revealing<lb/>
anecdotes concerning various<lb/>
V.I.Ps whom he has encounter-<lb/>
ed in the course of his career.<lb/>
SCIENCEMATH MAJORS:<lb/>
The leading operator of Nuclear<lb/>
Reactors is currently seeking<lb/>
young men with backgrouds in<lb/>
Science or Math for its Nuclear<lb/>
Energy Program. A minimum of<lb/>
One year of college physics<lb/>
and math through integral calculus<lb/>
with a "B" average or better is<lb/>
required. Successful applicants<lb/>
will be paid over $600 monthly<lb/>
during senior year in college.<lb/>
Upon graduation and commissioning<lb/>
receive one year of graduate<lb/>
level education in Nuclear<lb/>
Engineering. $3000 bonus upon<lb/>
completion of training, $20,000<lb/>
bonus upon completion of 4 years.<lb/>
Nuclear qualified officers will<lb/>
be challenged by the entire<lb/>
spectrum of management and<lb/>
engineering.<lb/>
For additional<lb/>
information see NAVY OFFICER<lb/>
INFORMATION TEAM, Lobby Bookstore<lb/>
25-27 October<lb/>
Rather tells, for example, of a<lb/>
Martin Luther King who "from<lb/>
the outset believed himself to<lb/>
be a target of the F.B.I He tells<lb/>
of a Lyndon Johnson  who flirted<lb/>
too openly to be very adive<lb/>
privately of a Richard Nixon<lb/>
who "identified with the under-<lb/>
dog winners of sports, coming<lb/>
from behind, dinging to that<lb/>
winners-never-quit doctrine of<lb/>
the locker room<lb/>
And then there are the<lb/>
oomments on fellow newspeople.<lb/>
Rather speaks reverently of such<lb/>
CBS cohorts as Walter Cronkite<lb/>
and Eric Sevareid-a little less<lb/>
enthusiastically concerning<lb/>
ABC's Barbara Walters.<lb/>
Cronkite is hailed as the man<lb/>
who "pradically invented the<lb/>
Evening News a man who<lb/>
"refuses to adorn a story<lb/>
Sevareid ispiduredas "a man of<lb/>
dass and inherent shyness<lb/>
Walters, on the other hand,<lb/>
receives so much laurels. Rather<lb/>
implies (with perhaps a hint of<lb/>
male chauvinism and "sour<lb/>
grapes") that Barbara's million-<lb/>
dollar bonanza was a matter of<lb/>
"being the right person, in the<lb/>
right place, at the right time,<lb/>
doing the right thing, with the<lb/>
right people watching<lb/>
Woven throughout his<lb/>
comments on personalities are<lb/>
accounts of the "big" stories<lb/>
covered by Rather during the<lb/>
sixties and early seventies. From<lb/>
Bull Connor's Birmingham to<lb/>
Dallas, 1963, to Da Nang, late<lb/>
1965, to Richard Nixon's White<lb/>
House-the reader is carried<lb/>
through a turbulent decade of<lb/>
reporting, a decade which saw a<lb/>
Texan reporter named Dan<lb/>
Rather rise to national promin-<lb/>
ence, although with a degree of<lb/>
notoriety attached to his name.<lb/>
Perhaps now Rather's notor-<lb/>
iety is as last serving him well.<lb/>
For The Camera Never Blinks:<lb/>
Adventures of a TV Journalist will<lb/>
attrad many buyers, no doubt,<lb/>
simply because that naughty Dan<lb/>
Rather is the author.<lb/>
A NA TURA L A BSTRA CT-a screened window and a brittle Oct. sun<lb/>
diffuse the remnants of a fading summer. Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
Roy Rogers<lb/>
is Now Open<lb/>
For Breakfast<lb/>
6:30 am-1030 am Mori.<lb/>
Sat<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058016_0013"/><lb/>
Goings On<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Student Union film, "The Valachi Papers will be shown in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Theater, 8 p.m. Adm. ECU ID and Activity<lb/>
Card.<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
A Senior Redtai, Karen Burke, piano, will be hekj in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Muaic Center Redtai Hall 7 30 p.m.<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Student Union film, "Bound for Glory with David Carradine, will<lb/>
be shown in the Mendenhall Student Center Theater, 7 and 930 p.m.<lb/>
Adm. ECU ID and Activity Card.<lb/>
A Senior Redtai, Beth Smith, piano, will be held in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Music Center Redtai Hall, 815 p.m.<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
Student Union film, "Bound for Glory will be shown in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Theater, 2 p.m. Adm. ECU ID and Adivity<lb/>
Card.<lb/>
ECU-vs-Southwestern Louisiana at Ficklen Stadium, 7 p.m.<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
There will be an ECU Wind Ensemble concert in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium, 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
Halloween<lb/>
Student Union film, "Creature From the Black Lagoon will be<lb/>
shown in 3-D in Wright Auditorium, 11 p.m.<lb/>
'Suspiria' - New Wave?<lb/>
Continued from p. 8<lb/>
disfigured head witch who is responsible for all of this.<lb/>
Diredor Ciaudio Argento, who has had a Id of pradice at this sort<lb/>
of thing, claims he is a student of Hitchcock. He comes off as more of<lb/>
an advocate of Brian DePalma, who has also had a Id of pradice at this<lb/>
sort of thing. Argento lays the Wood on thick but lacks De Palma's<lb/>
unique diredorial style and gift for ravishing imagery.<lb/>
Nope, nothing new here.<lb/>
THE WHITE BUFFALO (Plaza) Leftover sets from the new "King<lb/>
Kong" are sprinkled with powdered sugar to simulate the great white<lb/>
buffalo's stomping grounds. Charles Bronson and Will Sampson<lb/>
compete for the huge paper mache monster's hide in this silly<lb/>
horror-western from the dead dog files of Dino De Laurentiis. Is there<lb/>
any doubt who'll win? Stuart Whitman, Kim Novak.<lb/>
THE LINCOLN CONSPIRACY (Buccaneer) Conspiracy is right! This<lb/>
attempt to jump on the band wagon with "Executive Ad ion" and "The<lb/>
Passover Plot' is pure conjedure. Speculation on 100 -year dd lore is<lb/>
clumsily strewn together and backed-up with vague sources. Are we<lb/>
supposed to take this seriously? Bradford Dillman stars.<lb/>
KINGDOM OF THE SPIDERS (Park) One can of Raid and there would<lb/>
have been no movie. The spiders aren' t very threatening-most of them<lb/>
try to run away when they' re approached. William Shatner looks more<lb/>
embarrassed then terrified. Tiffany Bdling co-stars.<lb/>
THE STING (Pitt) Winner of the Best Pidure award in 1973, "The<lb/>
Sting" is your best bet for entertainment this week in Greenville. Paul<lb/>
Newman and Robert Rediord play a pair of daring con men in the<lb/>
1930s. An excellent produdion and fine cast make this one worth<lb/>
seeing over and over again. Robert Shaw, Charles Durning, Ray<lb/>
Walston, et. al.<lb/>
A PIECE OF THE ACTION (Buccaneer) Sidney Pdtier and Bill Cosby<lb/>
star<lb/>
SUSPIRIA (Plaza) Jessica Harper and Joan Bennett star.<lb/>
Iron Horse Trading Co<lb/>
Merchants and Craftsmen<lb/>
In Fine Gold and Silver Jewelry<lb/>
Scrimshaw Etched<lb/>
on Ivory 20 Off.<lb/>
Hours: MonThurs. 10-6<lb/>
Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-6<lb/>
Downtown on the Mall,<lb/>
Top of First State Bank Bldg.<lb/>
REDGRAVE<lb/>
Contintued from p. 8<lb/>
signed for the title rde.<lb/>
Although the stay is set in<lb/>
1937 Europe against the back-<lb/>
ground of the rise of Naziism, it is<lb/>
essentially a penetrating account<lb/>
of the affinity between Lillian and<lb/>
Julia, while induding Lillian's<lb/>
close relationship with Dashiell<lb/>
Hammett-the American author<lb/>
and- scriptwriter, played in the<lb/>
film by Jason Robards.<lb/>
The story-an excellent vehide<lb/>
for the outstanding talents of two<lb/>
of the screen's most gifted<lb/>
adresses-spans a period of over<lb/>
forty years in its telling: from<lb/>
when the girls first meet at schod<lb/>
in 1918 to when Lillian reminisces<lb/>
in 1962 about bdh Julia and<lb/>
Hammed.<lb/>
This time gap created several<lb/>
problems for diredor Zinnemann<lb/>
and his crew during the prepara-<lb/>
tion period of the produdion.<lb/>
Fashions and hairstyles changed<lb/>
radically during those four de-<lb/>
cades and there are at least four<lb/>
distind variations of fashion<lb/>
throughout the film.<lb/>
It also necessitated the casting<lb/>
of two young adesses to play<lb/>
Lillian and Julia as achodgirls.<lb/>
Zinnemann was fortunate, during<lb/>
one d his preparatory trips to<lb/>
America, to find Susan Jones to<lb/>
play the young Lillian, and Lisa<lb/>
Pelikan was chosen to play the<lb/>
young Julia.<lb/>
25 Qctofaf 1977 FOUNTMHHEAD Page 11<lb/>
WilJie B. Nimble<lb/>
m back Thurw Fri, Fri 3-7<lb/>
 Sat at The<lb/>
R90M<lb/>
Don't mim the Hottest Funk Rock Band<lb/>
on the East Coast R em amber Fri. 3-7<lb/>
Sun in Ladie ite<lb/>
OLD TOWN INN<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
Features:<lb/>
.u<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
Sherwin-Williams<lb/>
113 Grande Ave,<lb/>
758 1228<lb/>
29 ITEM SALAD BAR<lb/>
for only<lb/>
1.50 plus tax.<lb/>
THE BEST IN TOWN<lb/>
STUDENTS SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
SPECIAL SALE CONTINUES<lb/>
On Discontinued Styles of<lb/>
Adult and Children's T-shirts<lb/>
and Jerseys 40-50 OFF<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
Special Group T-shirts 99c Were $4.75<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0014"/><lb/>
ftge 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 25 October 1977<lb/>
Pirates squeak by The Citadel<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
In what turned out to be a<lb/>
tougher game than the score<lb/>
indicated, East Carolina defeated<lb/>
The Citadel, 34-16. The game,<lb/>
played before a crowd of 13,520,<lb/>
was won by a fourth quarter<lb/>
Pirate comeback lead by quarter-<lb/>
back Jimmy Southerland. South-<lb/>
erland was not expected to play<lb/>
due to a stomach ailment but did<lb/>
log some time throughout the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The game at first looked like it<lb/>
was going to be a rout by East<lb/>
Carolina during the first quarter<lb/>
as the Pirates piled up a 15-0<lb/>
score. On the first ECU posses-<lb/>
sion the Pirates moved 77 yards in<lb/>
seven plays with a Leander Green<lb/>
39-yard run scoring the touch-<lb/>
down. Green bobbled the snap on<lb/>
the extra point attempt and<lb/>
decided to try for two points,<lb/>
which he got on a pass to Barry<lb/>
Johnson.<lb/>
After a minute more of play<lb/>
Fayetteville freshman Chuck<lb/>
Jackson blocked a Kenny Cald-<lb/>
well punt. Defensive tackle<lb/>
Woodrow Stephenson chased the<lb/>
ball, grabbed it and ran eight<lb/>
yards for the score. This made the<lb/>
score 1S0 ECU.<lb/>
In the second quarter The<lb/>
Citadel came to life after ECU<lb/>
WOODROW STEVENSON<lb/>
fullback Vince Kolanko fumbled<lb/>
the ball at the Pirate 23 yard line.<lb/>
After an 18-yard pass from<lb/>
Citadel quarterback Marty Cros-<lb/>
by to Mike Riley put the Bulldogs<lb/>
on the five, The Citadel got a five<lb/>
yard penalty for illegal procedure.<lb/>
From here The Citadel scored off<lb/>
a 10tyard run by fullback Sam<lb/>
Scadlock. The PAT was good<lb/>
making the score 15-7 ECU.<lb/>
Later inr the second quarter<lb/>
Kenny Caldwell made up for his<lb/>
blocked puht� by punting the<lb/>
Pirates back to their one foot line.<lb/>
After the backs were almost<lb/>
thrown for safeties, Rodney Allen<lb/>
hit a booming punt. The Citadel<lb/>
returned the punt all the way to<lb/>
the Pirate 37. The Citadel's drive<lb/>
bogged down and the Bulldogs<lb/>
kicked a 24-yard field goal. That<lb/>
made the score 15-10 ECU.<lb/>
In the third quarter the fumble<lb/>
monster hit the Pirates once<lb/>
again. Willie Holley fumbled a<lb/>
punt and The Citadel recovered at<lb/>
the ECU 27. Quarterback Marty<lb/>
Crosby then took The Citadel<lb/>
downfield on an eight-play drive<lb/>
for the score. The touchdown was<lb/>
made on a one-yard run by<lb/>
Lyvonia Mitchell. An attempted<lb/>
two point conversion failed, but<lb/>
the score put the Bulldogs on top<lb/>
16-15.<lb/>
Meadowark Lemon<lb/>
Trotters visit ECU<lb/>
How does it feel to be the<lb/>
world's most popular American<lb/>
athlete?<lb/>
If you want the answer, don't<lb/>
go to Tom Seaver, Lou Brock,<lb/>
O.J. Simpson or Phil Esposito.<lb/>
Don't go to them, because<lb/>
their popularity on the streets of<lb/>
New York. Los Angeles or<lb/>
Chicago. wouldn't draw a<lb/>
crowd in Munich, London, Tokyo<lb/>
or Geneva.<lb/>
But Meadowlark Lemon<lb/>
would.<lb/>
Lemon, the famed star of the<lb/>
Harlem Globetrotters and known<lb/>
as the "Clown Prince of Basket-<lb/>
ball will lead the Magicians of<lb/>
Basketball when they come to<lb/>
ECU on November 3rd.<lb/>
Lemon, who was born in South<lb/>
Carolina, is often considered the<lb/>
world's most popular basketball<lb/>
player. He was all-state in<lb/>
basketball and football while<lb/>
attending Williston High in Wil-<lb/>
mington.<lb/>
Lemon is popular in the 94<lb/>
foreign countries he has played as<lb/>
he is in the more than 1,500 North<lb/>
American cities he and the<lb/>
Trotters have visited.<lb/>
"When we play in Europe, I<lb/>
can't even walk out of the hotel<lb/>
without being mobbed by kids<lb/>
and adults says Lemon. "But<lb/>
don't get me wrong, I love the<lb/>
crowd reaction<lb/>
Last season the Trotters play-<lb/>
ed more games before more<lb/>
people in Europe than ever in<lb/>
their history, but one game<lb/>
almost didn't get played.<lb/>
 We were catching a plane on<lb/>
our way to Switzerland, and the<lb/>
crowd was so heavy they wouldn' t<lb/>
let me a the team get out of the<lb/>
airport says Lemon who is also<lb/>
the Trotter s player-coach.<lb/>
"Luckily, they held up the<lb/>
plane for us<lb/>
The Harlem Globetrotters, who will be coming to ECU on<lb/>
November 3rd, have a following which spans three generations of<lb/>
Americans.<lb/>
The Harlem Globetrotters are an American institution. Yet, at a<lb/>
time when it is in vogue to knock tradition, the Harlem Globetrotters<lb/>
continue to grow in popularity and appeal. It is as if they possess a<lb/>
secret formula which enables them to transcend the generation gap,<lb/>
the energy crisis, or time itself.<lb/>
This is not to say that things have not changed since those early<lb/>
days in the late 1920's. The Trotters have grown with the times. But<lb/>
the smiles and iaughter are the same today as they were fifty years<lb/>
ago. This is the Trotter's undying formula. For what is more timeless<lb/>
than the laughter of a child?<lb/>
Known as "The World's Greatest Family Entertainment the<lb/>
Harlem Globetrotters have maintained a "G" rating in what is fast<lb/>
becoming an "R" rated world. There are no gimmicks. Just a universal<lb/>
appeal that has endeared the Magicians of Basketball to millions, for<lb/>
ovei half a century.<lb/>
In the fourth quarter the<lb/>
Pirates, lead by Jimmy Souther-<lb/>
land, came alive once again. On<lb/>
first and 10 from The Citadel 35,<lb/>
Southerland faked to a running<lb/>
back, then hit Terry Gallaher,<lb/>
TERRY GALLA HER<lb/>
who made a driving catch in the<lb/>
end zone. The catch by Gallaher<lb/>
tied a school record for touch-<lb/>
down catches with eleven. A two<lb/>
point conversion failed, the score<lb/>
now ECU 21-Citadel 16.<lb/>
A few minutes later, ECU<lb/>
defensive back Charlie Carter<lb/>
picked a Crosby pass. Once again<lb/>
Southerland hit Gallaher with a<lb/>
pass, this time fa 29 yards. Two<lb/>
plays later the Pirates scored on a<lb/>
two-yard run by Willie Hawkins.<lb/>
Near the end of the game<lb/>
linebacker Harold Randolph pick-<lb/>
ed off another Crosby pass.<lb/>
Leander Green then came in and<lb/>
made another great run fa 32<lb/>
yards. The Pirates scored two<lb/>
plays later on a one-yard dive by<lb/>
junia Sam Harrell. The Creech<lb/>
kick was good and the final soae<lb/>
was ECU 34-Citadel 16.<lb/>
Coach Pat Dye was very proud<lb/>
of his Pirates after the game<lb/>
despite the three fumbles and<lb/>
allowing The Citadel to oome<lb/>
back;<lb/>
"I'm just as proud as if we<lb/>
had won by 100 points Dye said<lb/>
after the game. "We were clearly<lb/>
outplayed in the first half, and I<lb/>
was very ooncerned about our<lb/>
people at the half. They showed<lb/>
some class in the second half.<lb/>
After we got those two quick<lb/>
soores, some of the pressure was<lb/>
off<lb/>
See FOOTBALL, p. 15<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Cotton Bunnies<lb/>
top Tyler mites<lb/>
MEADOWLARK LEMON<lb/>
ByJOHNEVAtyS-<lb/>
Special to the Fountainhead<lb/>
The Cotten Bunnies met the<lb/>
Tylermites fa the third time this<lb/>
season. This time it was fa the<lb/>
women's intramural football<lb/>
championship and, fa the third<lb/>
fime this season, the Bunnies won<lb/>
30-12.<lb/>
The two teams had met dur.ng<lb/>
the regular season and in the<lb/>
damitay title game, which was<lb/>
wco by the Bunnies 28-14.<lb/>
Leading the way for the<lb/>
Bunnies was the talented Lillian<lb/>
Barnes. Barnes quarterbacked<lb/>
the Bunnies' offense and scaed<lb/>
28 of her side's pointa Fa her<lb/>
effats she was named the Most<lb/>
Valuable Player of the playoffs.<lb/>
During the season, Barnes scaed<lb/>
all of her team's points except<lb/>
four, including two points in the<lb/>
finals.<lb/>
And although the final scae<lb/>
made the game seem like a<lb/>
one-sided affair, the contest was<lb/>
actually much closer. Tyler led<lb/>
twice in the first half, 6-0 and<lb/>
12-8, befae Cotten reeled off the<lb/>
rest of the scaing.<lb/>
The scaing was only half the<lb/>
action. There were several cont-<lb/>
roversial plays in the game, which<lb/>
resulted in four players being<lb/>
thrown out of the game. Th� Tyler<lb/>
ooach was also banished from the<lb/>
sidelines.<lb/>
Tyler took the game's early<lb/>
lead when Minnie McPatter took<lb/>
a scoring pass from Lori<lb/>
Washington threw to Mary Bryan<lb/>
Carlyle fa another touchdown.<lb/>
The Tylermites missadon this<lb/>
conversion attempt, toq, and led<lb/>
12-8. Barnes brought Cotton back<lb/>
in a matter of seconds when she<lb/>
took off on a flashy 45-yard jaunt<lb/>
through the Tyler team fa the<lb/>
soae that put her club ahead to<lb/>
stay at 14-12.<lb/>
The half want over as Tyler<lb/>
came all the way down the field<lb/>
and moved to the one-yard line on<lb/>
a reverse run by Donna<lb/>
LaVictoire, who passes to<lb/>
McPhatter at the one. Tyler failed<lb/>
to soae as a fourth down pass fell<lb/>
incomplete.<lb/>
It was still an even game at<lb/>
the half, but Cotten quickly<lb/>
changed all that in the second<lb/>
half. But two controversial penal-<lb/>
ties palyed a big part in both of<lb/>
Cotten's second half soae. The<lb/>
same plays seemed to spell the<lb/>
turning point in the game as two<lb/>
Tyler players and a coach were<lb/>
banished from the field in ensu-<lb/>
ing altercations. The Tylermites<lb/>
seemed set to stop the Bunnies at<lb/>
the 25 when Barnes rolled out on<lb/>
fourth down and scaed on a great<lb/>
run fa a 20-12 lead. On the extra<lb/>
point try there was a penalty and<lb/>
that caused a great deal of<lb/>
displeasure from the Tyler ooach,<lb/>
who was booted out by the<lb/>
referees. On the aeoond extra<lb/>
point try Cotten oonverted fa a<lb/>
22-12 lead.<lb/>
That wasn't anything oompar-<lb/>
ed to what happened the next<lb/>
time the Bunnies got the ball.<lb/>
With nine minutes left, Cottan<lb/>
See BUNNIES, p. 14)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0015"/><lb/>
25 October 1977 FOUNTAINHEAO Page 13<lb/>
Button adds to running game<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Staff Writa<lb/>
A flash through the offensive<lb/>
line and would-be tacklers<lb/>
sprawled all over the defensive<lb/>
back field are sure signs that<lb/>
Theodore Sutton has run the<lb/>
football for East Carolina.<lb/>
The 5'9 200-pound<lb/>
sophomore is from Kinston, N.C.<lb/>
"I like to think I have helped the<lb/>
inside game here said Sutton.<lb/>
And help he has. In this years<lb/>
first seven games Sutton has<lb/>
gained nearly 500 yaroa to add a<lb/>
new dimension to the Pirate<lb/>
offensive backfield, "Toad" as he<lb/>
is called by the coaches, surprised<lb/>
the 49,000 at N.C. State early in<lb/>
the season with his quick bursts<lb/>
up the middle. Sutton just<lb/>
recently introduced himself to the<lb/>
University of Richmond defensive<lb/>
backfield to the tune of 100 yards<lb/>
on just seven carries.<lb/>
Booters lose to<lb/>
UNC, NC Wesleyan<lb/>
The Pirate booters lowered<lb/>
their overall record to 2-9 with<lb/>
two losses last week. ECU lost 2-0<lb/>
to N.C. Wesleyan Thursday and<lb/>
was defeated 5-0 by UNC Satur-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Wesleyan scored their first<lb/>
point on a fluke when ECU'S<lb/>
goalie, after blocking Wesleyan's<lb/>
shot, dropped the ball in the net.<lb/>
Their second point was scored on<lb/>
a penalty kick.<lb/>
Commenting on ECfJ's first-<lb/>
ever loss to Wesleyan, coach Brad<lb/>
Smith felt his team wasn't playing<lb/>
up to par. "Our seniors were just<lb/>
completely out of play said<lb/>
Smith. "We just aren't getting<lb/>
any senior leadership, we're play-<lb/>
ing more aggressively, but still<lb/>
getting beat physically<lb/>
ECU started out good in the<lb/>
first half of the UNC match,<lb/>
playing what coach Smith felt was<lb/>
the best soccer his team has<lb/>
played during the season. The<lb/>
Pirates suffered some bad defen-<lb/>
sive breakdowns in the second<lb/>
half, with UNC scoring on two<lb/>
easy goals. After that, it was<lb/>
downhill all the way, as senior<lb/>
fullback Tom Long suffered a<lb/>
shoulder separation. Long will be<lb/>
out for the rest of the season.<lb/>
W. Forest<lb/>
defeats<lb/>
netters<lb/>
Wake Forest swept all six<lb/>
singles matches along with the<lb/>
doubles to post an impressive 9-0<lb/>
victory over East Carolina here<lb/>
Thursday afternoon.<lb/>
The Deacons, one of the top<lb/>
ranked teams in the south,<lb/>
allowed the Pirates to win only<lb/>
one set in the entire match.<lb/>
The loss dropped the Pirates<lb/>
to 2-6 fa the season. ECU hosts<lb/>
Peace College today at 220.<lb/>
RESULTS<lb/>
Singles: Cindy Corey def. Louise<lb/>
Snyder, 6-2, 6-4; Jeannie El-<lb/>
dridge def. Debbie Spinazzoia,<lb/>
6-3, 6-2; Ann Phefps def. Dorcas<lb/>
Sunkei, 6-2, 60; Donna Snipes<lb/>
def. Diance Keough, 6-1, 6-0;<lb/>
Mary Chapman def. Susan Hel-<lb/>
mer 6-1, 6-0; Julie Darracott def.<lb/>
Claire Baker, 6-0, 6-1. Doubles:<lb/>
Chapman, Eldridge del. Spinaz-<lb/>
zoia, Sunkei, 2-6, 6-2, 6-2; Corey,<lb/>
Phelpsdef. Snyder, Keough, 6-4,<lb/>
6-3; Snipes, Ketcham def. Hel-<lb/>
met, Gainey, 6-1, 6-1.<lb/>
The Pirates will be at Pem-<lb/>
broke Wednesday, a team ECU<lb/>
has never lost to.<lb/>
THEO SUTTON<lb/>
When asked about the low<lb/>
production of Pirate half-backs,<lb/>
Sutton replied, "We just take<lb/>
what the defense will give us<lb/>
"They can't atop one area without<lb/>
opening another<lb/>
One of the fastest members of<lb/>
the team (running a 4.4 forty),<lb/>
Sutton has praise for his offensive<lb/>
line, especially guard Wayne Bolt<lb/>
and roommate Joe Godette. "All I<lb/>
have to do is look for the holes<lb/>
and keep my legs moving<lb/>
Roommate Godette thinks<lb/>
"Toad" oould have even more<lb/>
energy if he didn' t snore so much.<lb/>
"He snores so loud he almost<lb/>
chokes said Godette.<lb/>
"T came here to ECU because<lb/>
:he system here is very similar to<lb/>
he one I had in high school. I<lb/>
talked to some of the ooaches up<lb/>
here and I liked the school<lb/>
stated Sutton. Obviously, the<lb/>
coaching staff and fans are happy<lb/>
for the decision.<lb/>
As Sutton the football player<lb/>
matures, so does Sutton the<lb/>
student. A member of the<lb/>
Dean's list last spring quarter,<lb/>
Theodore has great respect fa his<lb/>
motha, who encouraged him to<lb/>
walk-on his freshman year.<lb/>
"She'sgroat he replied.<lb/>
A vay team-aiented player,<lb/>
Sutton shares the TEAM goal of<lb/>
going 10-1 and receiving a bowl<lb/>
bid Pasonal goals are nioe, but<lb/>
useless unless the team wins<lb/>
said Sutton.<lb/>
A flash of purrle, a muscular<lb/>
fullback. Pirate fans will surely<lb/>
hear more from 36, Theodae<lb/>
Sutton.<lb/>
Autumn Arrivals<lb/>
On Sale October 21-27<lb/>
BILLY JOEL<lb/>
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including:<lb/>
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M. i �ftH<lb/>
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We've lowered our prices<lb/>
on 100's of records!<lb/>
4.99lps $5.99T�pss<lb/>
PUoeie Shcuu<lb/>
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Love Makes A Woman<lb/>
Something So RightRide The Elevator<lb/>
Majesty Of LifeWe re Children<lb/>
inn����t nur <lb/>
THE JACKSONS 'JOIN' PLACES<lb/>
including:<lb/>
Goin Places<lb/>
Do What You Wanna Differ ent Kind Of Lady<lb/>
Find Me A GirlHeaven Knows I Love You. Girl<lb/>
<lb/>
�-L<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
10-9 Monday-Saturday<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0016"/><lb/>
pay 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 2S Octafcer 1977<lb/>
Barnes leads Bunnies to win<lb/>
Continued from p. 12<lb/>
drove deep into Tyler's territory,<lb/>
where Barnes missed on a fourth<lb/>
down pass. But the officials' rules<lb/>
the play as interference on Tyler<lb/>
and all hell broke loose. The<lb/>
penalty was called on Minnie<lb/>
McPhatter and it gave the<lb/>
Bunniesa first down at the one. It<lb/>
didn't sit too well with the Mites<lb/>
and Washington was ejected from<lb/>
the game after saying a few words<lb/>
the official didn't like. On the<lb/>
next play Barnes scored. She also<lb/>
added the conversion fa a 30-12<lb/>
Gotten lead.<lb/>
Now it was obvious tempers<lb/>
were getting out of hand and<lb/>
when Eason and Barnes inter-<lb/>
cepted passes on Tyler's next two<lb/>
drives, the Tyler representatives<lb/>
became more and more frustrat-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
The real fireworks came at the<lb/>
very end, though. With time<lb/>
running out and the ball at Tyler's<lb/>
10. Barnes took the ball and<lb/>
began running around to run<lb/>
down the time and perhaps trying<lb/>
to add insult to injury. Tired of<lb/>
chasing after Barnes, Tyler's<lb/>
IILLIAS 3ARNES ($11) soared 26 of Cottons 30 points in their<lb/>
victory o r Tyler. Barnes was named the game's MVP.<lb/>
ULUAN BA RNES(tcp row, 3rd from left) led the Cotton Bunnies to<lb/>
their 30-12 win over the Tyler Mites.<lb/>
Carlyle f oily grabbed the<lb/>
Gotten sta and wrestled her to<lb/>
the grounc, clearing the benches<lb/>
and sending both players to the<lb/>
sideline to cool off their tempers.<lb/>
Soon after that the game ended.<lb/>
The win ended Cotten's<lb/>
season with an unblemished 12-0<lb/>
mark. The Bunnies reached the<lb/>
finals with a 22-8 win over<lb/>
Hypertension. Tyler finished with<lb/>
a 9-3 mark, all three losses<lb/>
coming to the Bunnies. The<lb/>
Tylermites reached the playoffs<lb/>
with a 24-0 win over the Pent-<lb/>
house Players.<lb/>
Field hockey win third victory<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A teilar defensive effort by<lb/>
goalie Leigh Summer along with<lb/>
the rest of the Pirates propelled<lb/>
the East Carolina field hockey<lb/>
team to a 3-1 victory over Wake<lb/>
Forest Friday afternoon.<lb/>
Summer was credited with<lb/>
four saves against the Deacons<lb/>
and held Wake Forest scoreless in<lb/>
the second half as the Pirates<lb/>
captured its third victory of the<lb/>
season. It was also ECU'S seoond<lb/>
win of the season against an<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference foe and<lb/>
gave the Pirates a 4-5 overall<lb/>
record.<lb/>
"It was a total team effort<lb/>
both offensively and defensive-<lb/>
ly said ECU head coach Laurie<lb/>
Arrants. "We only allowed them<lb/>
nine shots on goal in the game.<lb/>
Linda Christian played very well<lb/>
on defense while Leigh Summer<lb/>
made some great saves against<lb/>
some real tough shots"<lb/>
Once again freshman sensa-<lb/>
tion Sue Jones paced the Pirates<lb/>
offensive attack, scoring two<lb/>
goals, one in the first half and one<lb/>
in the second period. Kathy<lb/>
Zwigard was credited with two<lb/>
assists while Linda Christian<lb/>
scored the Pirates other goal.<lb/>
The Deacons got on the<lb/>
scoreboard with 10O0 remaining<lb/>
in the first half, but with 803 left<lb/>
Sue Jonee came right back with a<lb/>
goal fa the Pirates to knot the<lb/>
score at 1-1 at the end of the half.<lb/>
Sue Jones put the Pirates<lb/>
ahead to stay just 3Vi minutes<lb/>
into the second half with her<lb/>
second goal of the game on an<lb/>
assist from Kathy Zwigard.<lb/>
Linda Christian concluded the<lb/>
scoring on a goal with 1512<lb/>
minutes left in the game on<lb/>
another assist from Zwigard.<lb/>
"We had a lot of good shots<lb/>
on goal and didn't waste as many<lb/>
as we have in previous games<lb/>
noted Arrants "We changed our<lb/>
defensive scheme against Wake<lb/>
Forest and apparently it worked.<lb/>
We just played a perfect game<lb/>
With her two goals against<lb/>
Wake Forest, Sue Jones now has<lb/>
nine goals for the season while<lb/>
Kathy Zwigard has five assists<lb/>
along with three goals<lb/>
East Carolina travels to Nor-<lb/>
folk, Va. Friday to face ad<lb/>
Dominion in a rescheduled con-<lb/>
test<lb/>
SCORE BY HALVES<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
WFU<lb/>
1<lb/>
�1<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
-3<lb/>
-1<lb/>
Scoring-ECU-Jones 2, Christian.<lb/>
Assists-ECU-Zwigard 2, Holmes.<lb/>
Records: ECU 4-5, Wake Forest<lb/>
3-6.<lb/>
Volleyball vs. Duke tonight<lb/>
L<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House<lb/>
and Oyater Bar<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
MON - TUES - WED<lb/>
. ISH .99<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw and Hushpuppies<lb/>
 LB. HAMBURGER99<lb/>
French Fries. Slaw and Rolls<lb/>
CRAB CAKES150<lb/>
French Fries, Slew and Huthpuppies<lb/>
WASHINGTON HIGHWAY (N. C. 33 Ext.)<lb/>
PHON<lb/>
Uii<lb/>
3172<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Bionic Arm will make a<lb/>
personal appearance on the ECU<lb/>
campus this evening when East<lb/>
Carolina volleyball team squares<lb/>
off against Duke University in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. The match will<lb/>
start at 7:00.<lb/>
Leslie Lewis, otherwise known<lb/>
as the "Bionic Arm is recogniz-<lb/>
ed as one of the top volleyball<lb/>
players in the oountry, primarily<lb/>
for her incredible spiking ability.<lb/>
She stands 5' 10" and played on a<lb/>
THE PRO SHOP<lb/>
OF GREENVILLE, INC.<lb/>
111 Eastbrook Drive<lb/>
Greenville, N, C. 27834<lb/>
� Sporrv Top Sider Rain Slicker and<lb/>
Shoes<lb/>
 Complete Assortment of Izod and Drfini<lb/>
Sweaters for Men &amp; Ladies<lb/>
� Casual Slacks for Men by T.K.G.<lb/>
 Fantastic Assortment of Faded Glory;<lb/>
Jeans, Corduroy, Khakis and Coordinates.<lb/>
Hours: MonFri. 10 A.M8 P.M.<lb/>
Sat. 10A.M6P.M.<lb/>
United States national touring<lb/>
team last summer.<lb/>
"She's definitely of the All<lb/>
American type caliber said<lb/>
ECU head coach Alitia Dillon.<lb/>
"It's extremely tough to block her<lb/>
shots. All we can do is keep the<lb/>
ball away from her all the time,<lb/>
especially when she'son the front<lb/>
line<lb/>
Unfortunately, when the rest<lb/>
of the Blue Devil team has a<lb/>
subpar performance, Duke<lb/>
usually loses. The Blue Devils<lb/>
carry a 20-7 record into tonights<lb/>
oontest.<lb/>
East Carolina has already<lb/>
topped the Blue Devils once this<lb/>
season and have an impressive<lb/>
See VOLLEYBALL, p. 15<lb/>
Dnfi<lb/>
Tues. " LOTUS"<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
"UP FRONT<lb/>
QUARTET"<lb/>
BYOL<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0017"/><lb/>
tto<lb/>
, The<lb/>
layoffs<lb/>
Pent-<lb/>
) Nor-<lb/>
j ad<lb/>
1 con-<lb/>
istian.<lb/>
jlmes.<lb/>
corest<lb/>
if<lb/>
luring<lb/>
e All<lb/>
said<lb/>
lillon.<lb/>
:k her<lb/>
p the<lb/>
time,<lb/>
front<lb/>
s rest<lb/>
las a<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
evils<lb/>
ights<lb/>
eady<lb/>
! this<lb/>
ssive<lb/>
o. 15<lb/>
25 Odotar 1977 FOUNTAINHEAO Pip 15<lb/>
Spark Plug Road Racing Classic<lb/>
Oct. 28, 29, and 30 are three<lb/>
action packed days at Road<lb/>
Atlanta. For the eighth consecu-<lb/>
tive year, this nationally acclaim-<lb/>
ed circuit hosts the Champion<lb/>
Spark Rug Road Radng Classic.<lb/>
500 of the nation's best sports<lb/>
car drivers will converge on this<lb/>
twisting 2.52 mile course with a<lb/>
singular purpose. Each one will<lb/>
come seeking a national daas title<lb/>
and will have only one chance to<lb/>
win it this year. The run for<lb/>
honors will last 18 laps for each of<lb/>
24 dasses of cars, and the winner<lb/>
of each is crowned as Sports Car<lb/>
Club of America National Class<lb/>
Champion.<lb/>
Of the 500 plus raae-drivers<lb/>
that will meet at Road Atlanta at<lb/>
contest 24 national daas titles,<lb/>
their makeup is as diverse as the<lb/>
cars they drive. It's a commonly<lb/>
known fad that driving a race car<lb/>
requires skill, nerve, and keen<lb/>
judgement. It is also an establish-<lb/>
ed fact that to earn an invitation<lb/>
to the prestigious Champion<lb/>
Spark Rug Road Radng Classic,<lb/>
one must be accompanied in the<lb/>
art of handling 1500-3500 pounds<lb/>
of vehide at top speeds of 120-185<lb/>
m.p.h.<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
Continued from p. 14<lb/>
13-7 record going into tonight's<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Last week, the Pirates split a<lb/>
couple of matches, defeating<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne 2-0 while losing to<lb/>
High Point College 2-0.<lb/>
"We were pitiful against High<lb/>
Point explained Dillon. We lost<lb/>
the first game 15-1 and the<lb/>
second game 15-5, so there's<lb/>
really not too much you can say.<lb/>
We just piddled around in the<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
Continued from p. 12<lb/>
The leading rusher in the<lb/>
game was Leander Green with 77<lb/>
yards on 7 carries. Jimmy South-<lb/>
erland was 3-6-1 in passing for 89<lb/>
yards. Terry Gallaher caught four<lb/>
passes for 89 yards in another<lb/>
great effort. The defense held<lb/>
The Citadel to just 100 yards<lb/>
rushing.<lb/>
The Pirates will play their<lb/>
final home game of the season as<lb/>
they take on the powerful Rajun<lb/>
Cajunsof Southwestern Louisiana<lb/>
Saturday night.<lb/>
next two games against High<lb/>
Point. We did a lot of switching<lb/>
around but we still won, although<lb/>
the second game was rather<lb/>
dose The Pirates won the first<lb/>
game 15-6 and the second game<lb/>
15-13.<lb/>
In the first meeting this<lb/>
season between the Pirates and<lb/>
Duke, the Blue Devils took the<lb/>
first game 15-10, but East<lb/>
Carolina came back in the second<lb/>
game to win 15-6 and dinched the<lb/>
match in the third game with a<lb/>
dose 15-13 dedsion.<lb/>
"They're not that strong a<lb/>
team said Dillon. "But when<lb/>
the rest of the team plays well and<lb/>
sets up Lewis they re really tough<lb/>
to beat. We've just togoout there<lb/>
and play tough<lb/>
After the match against Duke,<lb/>
the Rrates travel to Bcone to<lb/>
participate in the Appalachian<lb/>
State Invitational this Friday and<lb/>
Saturday. Wake Forest, Peace,<lb/>
Guilford, Western Carolina,<lb/>
Louisburg, and Winthrop among<lb/>
the teams which will compete in<lb/>
the two day tournament.<lb/>
GALLEY<lb/>
ROOM<lb/>
OPEN DAILY<lb/>
�. MON-FRI<lb/>
BREAKFAST, LUNCH,<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
Daily Specials 8:a.m. - 7:00p.m.<lb/>
1) Fill out the survey &amp;, slogan contest<lb/>
2) Drop both in WECU Survey Box at one of these places:<lb/>
1. Lobby of the Old C.U.<lb/>
2. Apple Records, 5th StDowntown<lb/>
3. Information desk-Mendenhall<lb/>
4. Mam entrance of Croatan<lb/>
Note: Survey answers will not be used to judge slogan entries<lb/>
1. Have you listened-Do you listen to WECU? Y�s No<lb/>
2. What hours do you listen to the radio?<lb/>
6-10A 10A-2P 2-6P 6P-12M 12M-6A<lb/>
3. Is reception of WECU reasonably dear, in your dam room? (57 am)<lb/>
Yes No<lb/>
4. What kind of music would you like to hear on Campus Radio?<lb/>
( )Rcck Albums<lb/>
( )TofM0 Disco<lb/>
OSoul<lb/>
OJazz<lb/>
( Easy Listening<lb/>
( )CountryWeatern<lb/>
( )Othw<lb/>
5. WECU would like to change to FM in the near future. When the<lb/>
funds are obtained, WECU could secure an FM license and begin<lb/>
broadcasting off-campus as wail as providing FM dorm reception.<lb/>
Would you like to have WECU-FM funded by Student SQA Funds?<lb/>
Yea No <lb/>
SLOGAN CONTEST<lb/>
Give 57am, WECU an original slogan in seven (7) words or k<lb/>
Winner of Slogan Contest Wins a 25.00 gift certificate to Apple<lb/>
Records in Downtown Greenville.<lb/>
Note: "WECU "ECU "57 &amp; "AM" will count as one slogan<lb/>
word.<lb/>
No limit to number of entries.<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
LOCAL ADDRESS-<lb/>
SLOGAN<lb/>
ID.<lb/>
�Ph-<lb/>
Sports Car Club's of America<lb/>
annual championship races gives<lb/>
the top competitors from across<lb/>
the oountry one - only one -<lb/>
chance to prove just who is the<lb/>
best.<lb/>
This year's edition will see<lb/>
some of the best road radng<lb/>
action in the world, and will<lb/>
provide more of it than any other<lb/>
radng event in history. Forty-two<lb/>
states and two Canadian prov-<lb/>
inces will be represented during<lb/>
the 3 day program of 24 races.<lb/>
TICKET INFORMATION:<lb/>
General admission (All Week)<lb/>
$150.00 (Sun only) $10.00<lb/>
Paddock (All Week) $20.00 (Sun<lb/>
only) $15.00 Grandstand Seating<lb/>
$25.00<lb/>
RIGCAN<lb/>
SHOESHOP<lb/>
REPAIR A!l<lb/>
LEATHER OOOOS<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
111W�SL�ha.<lb/>
Tuesday Nite is Tuesday Nite<lb/>
At PANTANA BOB'S<lb/>
It's A Jungle Out There!<lb/>
Open Daily At 4:00<lb/>
DAMSEL REDFORD MORRISE<lb/>
GABRIEL RAGALIA<lb/>
YZMtfC<lb/>
SYMBOLS OF LOVE<lb/>
A Keepsake diamond ring<lb/>
says it all, reflecting your love<lb/>
in its brilliance and beauty.<lb/>
The Keepsake guarantee<lb/>
assures a perfect diamond of<lb/>
fine white color and precise cut.<lb/>
There is no finer diamond ring.<lb/>
Keepsake<lb/>
Registered Diamond Ring?<lb/>
p������ �������� � � ��"<lb/>
I How to Plan Your Engagement and Wedding <lb/>
FREE! Beautiful 20-page booklet for planning your engagement and<lb/>
wedding plus color brochure on vital diamond facts and latest ring<lb/>
styles. Special bonus coupon saves you SO on Keepsake Bride's Book,<lb/>
your complete wedding record. Send 25C for postage and handling.<lb/>
j Name<lb/>
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let<lb/>
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Z,p<lb/>
I Keepsake Diamond Rings, Box 90, Syracuse, New York 13201<lb/>
; Find your Keepsake dealer under Jewelers in the Yellow Pages<lb/>
or call toll free SOO-24J-6100. In Connecticut �00-�82-65OO.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058016_0018"/><lb/>
J2e<lb/>
M FOUNTAINHEAO 25 Octctar 1�77<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
sote �<lb/>
FOR .SALE. AMPEQ<lb/>
rocket II amp. 90 W. rev. and<lb/>
trem. Exc. oond. 90.00 Mike,<lb/>
756-9874 or ext. 9390.<lb/>
dtli OR TRADE: '66 Volvo 122s.<lb/>
Would trade for pickup truck. Car<lb/>
needs some repair. Call 752-1026<lb/>
after 6 XX) p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1977 Chevy Van. Leas<lb/>
than 9,000 mitos. Coat new 99535.<lb/>
Power steering, AMFM radio.<lb/>
Will swiftot for $5,000. CHI<lb/>
752-0412.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Audi IDOLS<lb/>
Air, AM FM. Good Oond. British<lb/>
Raring Green.<lb/>
FOR SALE :Nikormat SCR 35mm<lb/>
camera and lens, Vivitar exten-<lb/>
sion tubes, leather carrying case,<lb/>
other accessories. Must sell $250.<lb/>
7580619 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '77 Beige Chev.<lb/>
Monza sports ooupe. 4 speed.<lb/>
Just take over payments. $900<lb/>
already paid off. Has 9000 miles,<lb/>
only driven for 3 months. 29 miles<lb/>
hwy, 26 city. Must sell. Student<lb/>
returning to school. Call Met<lb/>
757-6462.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 75 Toyota Csiica, 5<lb/>
apssd, AMFM Stereo. Air, two<lb/>
new steei betted radial tires. Call<lb/>
759-1024 after 9 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '69 VW bus. Shag<lb/>
carpet, new brakes, points and<lb/>
plugs, turn signals $200 worth of<lb/>
work just to get "Van-Ilia ready<lb/>
to sell. Low mileage $900 firm!<lb/>
Call till you get me. 752-5214.<lb/>
FOR SALE: SX737 Receiver 35<lb/>
watts per channel B.I.C. 920<lb/>
turntable with little use. Both in<lb/>
excellent oond. Must sell before<lb/>
leaving this month. 758-7670.<lb/>
FOR SALE73 Honda 3b0. Good<lb/>
Cond. $360.00. Call 7580693.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Everything in my<lb/>
doset at real good bargain prices.<lb/>
Every piece is in wearable shape<lb/>
now. Winter and summer dothes,<lb/>
(babies) and shoes. Sizes: 9 and<lb/>
11 junior 10 and 12 misses shoes:<lb/>
7V2-8 med. Village Green Apt.<lb/>
laundry room 800 Heath St.<lb/>
Fri-Sun 10-5. Help me get rid of<lb/>
this stuff so I can start over<lb/>
FOR SALE: Texas Instruments<lb/>
SR-62. 224 step gogramabto<lb/>
Also card programabie Complete<lb/>
with math, stat games, and<lb/>
basic Libraries. Over $300 new,<lb/>
15 mos. old. Beat offer. Contact<lb/>
Tony Bennett Room 401 Jonas.<lb/>
SELL OR TRADE: 1996 Volvo.<lb/>
Needs some repair. Write Ted<lb/>
P.O. Box 404 Bsil Arthur, 27811.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 3 wheeler VW<lb/>
powered motorcycle 40 h.p.<lb/>
Chromed forks (1976). AaWng<lb/>
1200.00. Call 7483271 late tUv-<lb/>
.loon and evenings ask for Danny.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Leather jacket, excel-<lb/>
lent oond must be seen to be<lb/>
appreciated. Call Lea at 7586985<lb/>
or corns by 308 C Snott. ARE<lb/>
YOU TIRED OF THE HIGH<lb/>
PRICE OF CLOTHES? Have<lb/>
them made at less than Vi the<lb/>
coat of what you would buy them<lb/>
at. For all your sawing needs call<lb/>
7588393 after 200.<lb/>
FCH SALE: 12 string guitar<lb/>
whard shell case, excellent copy<lb/>
of a Martin. New cost 285.00<lb/>
Need money bad so will sail for<lb/>
125.00 Call 752-5892.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Tascam Modal 3<lb/>
recording mixer. Four months<lb/>
old. 8 Chanel sub mixer. In and 4<lb/>
bus. lines out wfth Peak reading<lb/>
meters690. Must sail, 752-5892.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New ladies ios<lb/>
skates, atasfc nsasnnahla prices.<lb/>
If interested caH 750411 �<lb/>
FOR SALE: '71 VW convertible<lb/>
bug. 80,000 miles, mostly hi-way.<lb/>
Needs some work. Must sell.<lb/>
758-7670.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Peugot 10 spd. men's<lb/>
bike 24 Inch with rack. 1 month<lb/>
dd. Must sell. Call 758-7670.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1988 VW Van 3 yr.<lb/>
dd. Rebuilt engine. Good oond.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '72 Honda CB175 -<lb/>
Good oond. $250 946-1230.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Texas Instruments<lb/>
SR-52. 224 step programmable.<lb/>
Also card programmable. Comp-<lb/>
lete with math, stat games, and<lb/>
basic libraries. Over $300 new, 5,<lb/>
mos. dd. Best offer. Contad<lb/>
Tony Bennet Room 401 Jones.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 83 inch long sofa,<lb/>
brown with dark green throw<lb/>
cover. Good price - 50.00. Call<lb/>
946-7404 after 6:00 p.m. Will<lb/>
deliver in the Greenville area.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 99 Chev. Van<lb/>
Paneled and carpet. 307 V8<lb/>
engine 8 3 apeedeuto. 1900.00a<lb/>
bast reasonable offer may trade.<lb/>
FOR SALE:25 watt JVC reosfver-<lb/>
amplifier' with turntable,<lb/>
aesstte deck. Magnate<lb/>
Call 7980148.<lb/>
Offer,<lb/>
by<lb/>
FOR SALE: Epiphone<lb/>
gutter. Good Oond<lb/>
Call Mike 799-1993 or<lb/>
805-Eaat 3rd St.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Used Bundy clarinet.<lb/>
Excellent oond. 100.00 a best<lb/>
offer. 759365.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 390 Honda.<lb/>
Excellent oond. 380.00 Call<lb/>
7580893.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Registered Pointer<lb/>
pups. White Knights Button<lb/>
Blood lines. 7588396 after 6fl0<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
BUY NOW: 1997 V.W. Statton-<lb/>
vwgon. 300.00. Art student needs<lb/>
to sell car for food money. See at<lb/>
510 E. 1st St. Apt. 9, after 5p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Mdntosh C-28 pre-<lb/>
amp, 8 mon. old. Need money<lb/>
fast II! Beet offer over 350.00. Call<lb/>
752-6892 anytime after 700-until<lb/>
W11WWW.<lb/>
FOR SALE72 Opel GT. Contact<lb/>
Steve at 752-3287.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 'tx VW Classic with<lb/>
sun roof, carpet, excellent trans-<lb/>
axle, body not rusty, partially<lb/>
restored , Cdlectors item. Call<lb/>
758-7434 Sorone Cosecan.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 10 piece silver<lb/>
sparkling set of Ludwig drums.<lb/>
Good oond. CaJI 752-8687 or come<lb/>
by room 212-C Scott.<lb/>
RjH SALE: 5 piece drum set<lb/>
3ingerlandLudwig combination.<lb/>
Call 758-7434.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Brand new blue<lb/>
Raleigh Grand Prix. Perfed oond.<lb/>
Willing to sell fa $140 or highest<lb/>
offer before 28 Od. Call 758-5275.<lb/>
MUST SELL: Kenwood Reoeiva<lb/>
120 watts pa channel. Best offa.<lb/>
Call Mike 758-1693.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Conn F-20 acoustic<lb/>
guita and strap $150. Excellent<lb/>
oond. CaJI 758-8493.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Nice-oontempaary<lb/>
red laughahyde sofa. Seats three.<lb/>
Very good cond. Paid $250.00 will<lb/>
sell fa $125.00. Call 758-0956<lb/>
afta 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '67 Chevy Impala<lb/>
4-dcor. Air cond heat, radio,<lb/>
only 51,000 miles on it. Great<lb/>
intaia cond good engine $250.<lb/>
Call Addie 752-6146<lb/>
LOST: Blue cowhide leather<lb/>
wallet with the letters B.B.D. on<lb/>
the odn purse has disappeared<lb/>
from my room. If found please<lb/>
return it-no questions-reward.<lb/>
Lynn Martin rm 291 Fleming<lb/>
dorm.<lb/>
WANTED TO RENT: House<lb/>
within walking distance of<lb/>
campus a married couple wfth<lb/>
no kids. No later then Dec Must<lb/>
have wofkshop a garage (around<lb/>
100.00) Call Mel at 757-6482.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Needed<lb/>
to share 2 bedroom apt. in<lb/>
taaiaooK. rreia someone wta-<lb/>
ested in study-oriented snviro-<lb/>
ment. Rent is $48.25 plus 14<lb/>
utilities. Cell 7520954.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Room, Private bath<lb/>
for rent at 19T6 E. Eighth a.<lb/>
Linen included 999. 752-8985.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED 1 female<lb/>
roommate wanted to share new 2<lb/>
bedroom traitor, wfth washa,<lb/>
Ova, 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. Univer-<lb/>
sity Cond. Fully furnished CaJI<lb/>
7584005 aoome by Apt. 27.<lb/>
WANTED TO RENT: Grad<lb/>
student needs co-renter fa apart-<lb/>
ment. Only 1 block from campus -<lb/>
furnished, two baths, fully carpet-<lb/>
ed, cda TV and central air and<lb/>
heat. $100 pa month and 12<lb/>
utilities. CaJI 7588096.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
to share 2 bedroom apt. at<lb/>
Greenway Apts. Call 756-2486.<lb/>
BLACK FEMALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
needed to share 2 bedroom apt. at<lb/>
2321 Cdlege View Apts. Rent is<lb/>
$50 plus 112 utilities. Call 758-<lb/>
1076 ask fa Joyce Gibbs a<lb/>
contad at above address.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: at<lb/>
Geagetown Apts. Call 758-7715.<lb/>
TYPING: .75 to $1.00.<lb/>
service. Call Pern at 757-8992<lb/>
(day), and 7980211 (night).<lb/>
perconoKS)<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Fall things too<lb/>
big, too long? Csll Kathy<lb/>
752-8444 or 752-8842.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Uniquer�<lb/>
ant and tavern opening soon on<lb/>
the waterfront in Beaufort. Em-<lb/>
ployment positions open. Attitude<lb/>
and willingness to work valued<lb/>
ova expaience. Contad Mr. a<lb/>
Mrs. Rogersat 1-728-2133a P.O.<lb/>
Box 149, Beeufat, N.C.<lb/>
me. 752-5214 (4p.m7p.m.)<lb/>
FOUND: 2 ma dd black female<lb/>
puppy in the vldnlty d Jones Si<lb/>
CaJI 752-7032.<lb/>
LOST: Eyeglasses (bifocal) in<lb/>
brown case with Dr. Sam White,<lb/>
Optometrist on outside of case.<lb/>
Please contad William N. Still,<lb/>
Dept. of History (757-6587).<lb/>
FOUND: Sat of car keys found in<lb/>
back parking tot d BsJk Btdg. last<lb/>
week. Can be daJmed at Rm. 300<lb/>
Balk<lb/>
FOUND: One tan tabby cat in<lb/>
vicinity of Mendenhall and<lb/>
McDonalds on Sun Od. 16. CaJI<lb/>
Cindi a Susan, 752-9713.<lb/>
CRAFTS: ceramics, candles,<lb/>
weaving, leather, batik, sawing,<lb/>
etc. all at Banyan Orafta-1016<lb/>
Myrtle Ave<lb/>
FREE RESEARCH SERVICE:<lb/>
wfth Britannia 3. Ova 20<lb/>
discount fa students. Finandng<lb/>
fa employed upperdass and<lb/>
graduate students. For free des-<lb/>
criptive booklet, eel! 7580417.<lb/>
NEED A RIDE; to Boone, N.C.<lb/>
This weekend. Will share expen-<lb/>
ses. CaJI David 758-1312 a if no<lb/>
answa, 752-8538.<lb/>
REWARD: $25 offered for<lb/>
infamatiai leading to the recov-<lb/>
ery of aman'slight blue suit of<lb/>
ddhing taken from the 3rd floa<lb/>
of the music big. Thurs. night,<lb/>
Oct. 6th. Contact Michael<lb/>
McDonald 758-3334.<lb/>
GREG MOLLIcPORTRAITS:<lb/>
finished drawings: $10 if pose,<lb/>
$15 from photo. Patrait painting<lb/>
is $50. CaJI 752-2604. I'm an<lb/>
exdting realist.<lb/>
Deadlines for Flashes and Classified Ads: For<lb/>
Tuesday Editions, Flashes and Classifieds must be<lb/>
in the FOUNT'A IN HEAD office by the preceeding<lb/>
Friday. For Thursday editions, they must be in on<lb/>
the preceeding Tuesday.<lb/>
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