<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058019_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for ever 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Winter Carnivalp. 3<lb/>
The pillp. 6<lb/>
Devil Worshipp. 9<lb/>
ECU-vs-ASUp. 13<lb/>
Vol. 53 No. 19<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
3 November 1977<lb/>
Handicapped use new services<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
Over the last two years ECU<lb/>
has implemented several new<lb/>
programs and services to meet<lb/>
the needs of handicapped stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
ECU was working toward a<lb/>
barrier-free campus before being<lb/>
required to do so by the federal<lb/>
government, according to Dr.<lb/>
David B. Stevens, University<lb/>
attorney.<lb/>
"We were working on this<lb/>
three years before HEW required<lb/>
it said Stevens.<lb/>
In 1973 the U.S. Congress<lb/>
passed the Rehabilitation Act<lb/>
which requires any university<lb/>
receiving federal funds to make<lb/>
HANDICAPPED STUDENTS NOW have an on campus office for information and assistance.<lb/>
Hearing impaired students<lb/>
enroll here for the first time<lb/>
By SCOTT BARNES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This fall semester is the first<lb/>
semester for ECU'S special<lb/>
program fro hearing impaired<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The program, backed by ECU<lb/>
and fundings from outside vocat-<lb/>
ions rehabilitation organizations,<lb/>
consists of seven students and<lb/>
part-time interpreters who attend<lb/>
class with deaf students.<lb/>
The interpreter usually pos-<lb/>
itions himself between the in-<lb/>
structor and the student, and by<lb/>
manual communication (sign<lb/>
language), the interpreter tells<lb/>
the student what the teacher is<lb/>
saying, according to Michael<lb/>
Ernest, program director and<lb/>
interpreter.<lb/>
However, the student must<lb/>
still watch the instructor in order<lb/>
to see the facial expressions and<lb/>
body movements which are<lb/>
essential fa correct understand-<lb/>
ings of phrases.<lb/>
There are six full-time hearing<lb/>
impaired students here at ECU,<lb/>
according to Ernest. Five use an<lb/>
interpreter and one used a<lb/>
hearing aid.<lb/>
Most students are freshmen in<lb/>
their first semester of ooilege,<lb/>
and are from the North Carolina<lb/>
School for the Deaf. Up until now,<lb/>
hearing impaired students had to<lb/>
attend college at Gallaudet<lb/>
college in Washington, DC.<lb/>
Bucause Gallaudet is so far<lb/>
away, deaf students were prev-<lb/>
iously discouraged from less than<lb/>
10 universities in the United<lb/>
States that are equally equipped<lb/>
with a complete service for<lb/>
hearing impaired students,<lb/>
according to Ernest.<lb/>
Although the program is<lb/>
steadily improving, Ernest is<lb/>
concerned with the student's<lb/>
preparation fa ooilege.<lb/>
"We have found two basic<lb/>
problems so far said. Ernest.<lb/>
"The education that the deaf<lb/>
students received in high school<lb/>
does not adequately preparetnern<lb/>
fa higha education. Instead, the<lb/>
schools train the students fa<lb/>
beginning work or vocational<lb/>
tasks.<lb/>
"The second problem is that<lb/>
apparently their wak in high<lb/>
school was not as demanding as<lb/>
average high school wak. This<lb/>
has been a big deal and a big<lb/>
adjustment fa the students who<lb/>
wae used to doing a half an hours<lb/>
wak pa night and now have to<lb/>
wak fa three hours<lb/>
However, Ernest said no<lb/>
students are having serious<lb/>
academic trouble.<lb/>
The students found in the<lb/>
beginning much academic frust-<lb/>
ration, said Ernest, but they have<lb/>
had no problems with social<lb/>
acceptance.<lb/>
The service is expanding, and<lb/>
students are looking faward to<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
Training courses are schedul-<lb/>
ed fa intapretas, using people<lb/>
who already know manual com-<lb/>
munication.<lb/>
"We are constantly finding<lb/>
new things about this problem<lb/>
said Ernest.<lb/>
"We're just finding our way<lb/>
and making changes as we go<lb/>
along<lb/>
all of its programs and facilities<lb/>
available to handicapped stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
Section 504 of the Rehabilita-<lb/>
tion Act states: No otherwise<lb/>
qualified handicapped individual<lb/>
in the U .S as defined in section 7<lb/>
(6), shall, solely by reason of his<lb/>
handicap be excluded from parti-<lb/>
cipation in, be denied the benefits<lb/>
of a be subjected to discrimina-<lb/>
tion under any programs a<lb/>
activity receiving federal financial<lb/>
assistance.<lb/>
The main purpose of section<lb/>
504 is to integrate the handicap-<lb/>
ped student into the mainstream<lb/>
of campus life so they can enjoy<lb/>
the entire spectrum of student<lb/>
activities and programs as all<lb/>
aha students at ECU, accading<lb/>
to Stevens.<lb/>
"The law expects institutions<lb/>
of higha education to respond to<lb/>
the special needs of the handicap-<lb/>
ped so they may indeed be given<lb/>
the opportunity to develop their<lb/>
fullest paential said Stevena<lb/>
Aocading to Stevens, a task<lb/>
faoe of top administratas, facul-<lb/>
ty, and students and 25 sub-<lb/>
committees are waking ai the<lb/>
implementatiai of the handicap-<lb/>
ped program.<lb/>
One of the first maja steps<lb/>
taken to meet the academic needs<lb/>
of handicapped students was the<lb/>
creation of the Central Infama-<lb/>
tioi and Assistance Centa fa<lb/>
Handicapped Students (CIACHS)<lb/>
accading to C.C. Rowe, ooadi-<lb/>
nata of handicapped student<lb/>
services.<lb/>
The centa is an off ice located<lb/>
on the first floa of Caten Dam.<lb/>
The purpose of the centa is to<lb/>
make services available to handi-<lb/>
capped students that they can't<lb/>
reach on their own, such as<lb/>
registration, drop-add, and job<lb/>
placement, accading to Rowe.<lb/>
One vital service provided by<lb/>
CIACHS is the reada refaraJ<lb/>
service, which is available to<lb/>
Foreign Lang. Dept.<lb/>
French press exhibit<lb/>
The Department of Faeign<lb/>
Langauges and Literatures is<lb/>
sponsoring an exhibit, "The<lb/>
French Press in Perspective<lb/>
featuring ova 300 newspapas<lb/>
and magazines depicting French<lb/>
attitudes and opinions on a wide<lb/>
variety of subjects. The exhibit<lb/>
will be on display from 6 to 8 p.m.<lb/>
until Novemba 14 in room 104<lb/>
Joyna liaary.<lb/>
The exhibit was officially<lb/>
opened in Nath Carolina when it<lb/>
was shown fa the first time at<lb/>
FIREFALL<lb/>
concert is not sold out!<lb/>
Tickets are $3 at<lb/>
the ticket office until<lb/>
4 p.m. Friday.<lb/>
Tickets bought at<lb/>
the door are $5.<lb/>
visually impaired students.<lb/>
Individuals in Greenville,<lb/>
many of them retired profesaas,<lb/>
voluntea to read a textbook and<lb/>
record their reading on cassette<lb/>
tapes, accading to Rowe. These<lb/>
tapes are then made available to<lb/>
the student.<lb/>
"They read on their own time<lb/>
at their pleasure as long as the<lb/>
tape is in on time fa the student<lb/>
to oamplete his assignment<lb/>
said Rowe.<lb/>
"Right now I've got six<lb/>
students using this service said<lb/>
Rowe.<lb/>
Anaha refaral service avail-<lb/>
able through CIACHS is an<lb/>
attendant referral service fa<lb/>
wheelchair students.<lb/>
Attendants assist handicap-<lb/>
ped students in bathing, dressing<lb/>
for class, eating, and other<lb/>
pasonal functions.<lb/>
Students apply fa positions as<lb/>
attendants through the handicap-<lb/>
ped services program, accading<lb/>
to Rowe.<lb/>
Rowe said that when a handi-<lb/>
capped student asks fa an<lb/>
attendant he is refared to one of<lb/>
the applicants.<lb/>
"The state pays fa this, the<lb/>
school has no responsibility fa<lb/>
payment said Rowe.<lb/>
One of the most important<lb/>
services available to handicapped<lb/>
students is the scheduling of<lb/>
classes so that all classes are<lb/>
located in accessible buildings on<lb/>
accessible fleas.<lb/>
Accading to the supplemen-<lb/>
tal handbook prepared fa handi-<lb/>
capped students, of the 56<lb/>
buildings on campus 34 are<lb/>
accessible to wheelchairs, 13 have<lb/>
elevatas, and 27 have modified<lb/>
toilet locations.<lb/>
Rowe said that when a handi-<lb/>
capped student is assigned to a<lb/>
class on an inaccessible floa,<lb/>
then the administratiai will move<lb/>
the class to an accessible floa a<lb/>
See SERVICES P- 5<lb/>
sponsors<lb/>
in Joyner<lb/>
Nath Carolina Central Univasity<lb/>
on October 9.<lb/>
Dr. Maria Malby, associate<lb/>
professa d Gaman and Russian,<lb/>
bus Acevez, assistant professa<lb/>
of Spanish and Marguaite Pary,<lb/>
Chairpason of the department,<lb/>
attended opening ceremonies at<lb/>
which Monsieur Roland Husson,<lb/>
French Cultural Attache, spoke<lb/>
representing the French Embassy<lb/>
in Washington.<lb/>
The exhibit is shown by<lb/>
arrangement with the Union fa<lb/>
the Expansiai of the French<lb/>
Press in the Wald and Le Haut<lb/>
Comite de la Langue Francaise.<lb/>
Dr. Malby, Mile. Marie-<lb/>
Noelle Connil, a scholarship<lb/>
student assistant from France,<lb/>
and Kent Johnsoi, student pres-<lb/>
ident a the ECU International<lb/>
Langauge Organization assist lib-<lb/>
rarians Daothy Brockman and<lb/>
Ralph Soott with the display.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058019_0002"/><lb/>
w<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNtAINHEAD 3 November 1977<lb/>
Real Estate Bridge Club FIREFALL<lb/>
Pie Throw Alpha Beta<lb/>
The Tri-Sigma's annual Pie<lb/>
throw is set for Nov. 7 at Chapter<lb/>
X from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Come<lb/>
throw a pie at the Sigma of your<lb/>
choice. Tickets are .26 from any<lb/>
Sigma or at the door.<lb/>
Bahai Faith<lb/>
Discussion of the Bahai Faith,<lb/>
the newest chapter in the Book of<lb/>
Religion, occurs each Thursday<lb/>
evening at 730 in room 238<lb/>
Mendenhall. Anyone interested<lb/>
in the oneness of religions,<lb/>
oneness of God and oneness of<lb/>
man is invited.<lb/>
Alpha Beta Alpha, national<lb/>
library sdence honor fraternity,<lb/>
will meet Tues Nov. 8, at 4 p.m.<lb/>
in the LIBS student lounge. All<lb/>
members please attend.<lb/>
Phi Eta<lb/>
FG<lb/>
The Fcxtver Generation will<lb/>
meet this Friday night at 7:30 in<lb/>
Brewster B-103. We invite you to<lb/>
join us for a profitable and<lb/>
enjoyable time of Christian<lb/>
fellowship.<lb/>
Auroras<lb/>
Party down with the Auroras of<lb/>
Sigma Gamma RhoSat Nov. 5 at<lb/>
the AACC from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m.<lb/>
Admission will be .50 for ECU<lb/>
students and .75 for all others.<lb/>
Review<lb/>
Those students who would like<lb/>
to apply for a position on the SGA<lb/>
Review Board are asked to fill out<lb/>
a form in room 228 Mendenhall<lb/>
by noon next Wednesday. The<lb/>
Review Board hears appeal cases<lb/>
from other judidal bodies on<lb/>
campus and also hears all con-<lb/>
stitutional questions. Applicants<lb/>
will be notified as to when the<lb/>
screenings will be held.<lb/>
There will be a Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
meeting Wed Nov. 9at7p.m. in<lb/>
room 221 Mendenhall. Plans fa<lb/>
projects and activities will be<lb/>
presented. Refreshments will be<lb/>
served. All members should note<lb/>
on their calenders that the second<lb/>
Wednesday of each month is our<lb/>
regular meeting night.<lb/>
Inter-Varsity<lb/>
Inter-Varsity will meet this<lb/>
Sunday at 4 p.m. at the Afro-<lb/>
American Cultural Center, to play<lb/>
volleyball and have pizza after-<lb/>
wards. Please bring $1 to help<lb/>
cover cost of the pizzas.<lb/>
Omnicron Pi<lb/>
Alpha Omnioorn Pi invites<lb/>
eveiyonedown toBlimpiesMon<lb/>
Nov. 7 from 6:30 on for a "truly<lb/>
oonvivial time Door prizes &amp;<lb/>
contests.<lb/>
Officials<lb/>
The Greenville Officials<lb/>
Association will hold its first<lb/>
meeting of the season in Elm<lb/>
Street Gym Wed Nov. 9 at 730<lb/>
p.m. Anyone interested in offida-<lb/>
ting jr. high and recreation<lb/>
basketball please attend. For<lb/>
further information, call 752-5214<lb/>
Car Wash King Youth<lb/>
The N.C. Student National<lb/>
Environmental Health Assndation<lb/>
is having a car wash Sat Nov. 5<lb/>
from 10a.m. to4p.m. at the Shell<lb/>
Station near Kings on the 264<lb/>
by-pass. It oosts only $1.25.<lb/>
Butyou can get .25 off if you<lb/>
attend the car emissions dinic at<lb/>
Pitt Plaza - Free and only takes<lb/>
three minutes.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
The Student Union Coffee-<lb/>
house Committee will present<lb/>
Mike Wells this Thursday and<lb/>
Friday nights at 9 and 10 p.m.<lb/>
Mike plays acoustic blues with a<lb/>
little folk music thrown in for<lb/>
good measure. Come on down<lb/>
and have a slice of raisin bread<lb/>
while listening to Mike. Admis-<lb/>
sion, as always, is just .50, which<lb/>
indudes all the goodies you can<lb/>
eat.<lb/>
The King Youth Fellowship is<lb/>
a full gospel campus organization<lb/>
for all ECU students and faculty.<lb/>
We encourage you to join us fa-<lb/>
fun, fellowship and enlighten-<lb/>
ment concerning God's Word.<lb/>
The meeting w'l be in rm. 308<lb/>
Flanagan Tues Nov. 8 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
We will hear a lecture this week<lb/>
on " How to win Souls for Christ<lb/>
Crusade<lb/>
Training Leadership Class<lb/>
sponsored by Campus Crusade<lb/>
for Christ is free, fun, and<lb/>
intellectually stimulating. Come<lb/>
and oonsider the historical evid-<lb/>
ence supporting the life of Jesus<lb/>
Christ. Classes for skeptics and<lb/>
Christians. Join us every Thurs.<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in Brewster D-202 fa<lb/>
good music and a good time.<lb/>
There will be a Rho Epsilon<lb/>
Real Estate Fraternity meeting on<lb/>
Wed Nov. 9, in Rm. 221<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. The<lb/>
guest speaker will be the new<lb/>
president of the Greenville-Pitt rrmrrmt<lb/>
County Board of Realtas. All REBEL<lb/>
members are urges to attend.<lb/>
The Bridge Club meets each<lb/>
Thurs. evening at 730 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. All<lb/>
persons interested in playing<lb/>
bridge are invited to attend.<lb/>
O.T. Club<lb/>
O.T. Club meeting 5 p.m.<lb/>
Thurs. In the O.T. lab, Allied<lb/>
Health building. All prospective<lb/>
students welcome<lb/>
Workshop<lb/>
A School and Community<lb/>
Health Majas workshop on job<lb/>
opportunities will be held Nov. 7<lb/>
from 7-9 p.m. in room 206 Allied<lb/>
Health. All members COHE<lb/>
majas and interested persons are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Peace Corps<lb/>
Graduate students who are<lb/>
famer Peaoe Caps Volunteers<lb/>
are requested tooontad Dr. Floyd<lb/>
E. Mattheis in the Science<lb/>
Education Department at ECU.<lb/>
Phone him at 757-6736 as scon as<lb/>
possible.<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/>
Film Society<lb/>
All persons interested in<lb/>
joining the Eastern Carolina Film<lb/>
Society, an aganization designed<lb/>
to allow members to choose the<lb/>
motion pidures thev wish to see,<lb/>
please call 758-5253. Ifthereisno<lb/>
answer, phone.752-6389 a write<lb/>
Box 27 Falkland, N.C. 27827.<lb/>
Fencing<lb/>
A group of students interested<lb/>
in the art and spat of fendng are<lb/>
trying to aganize into a dub. If<lb/>
you are interested in learning to<lb/>
fence, have fenced befae, a<lb/>
know of any untapped resources<lb/>
that might help us, please call<lb/>
Bev a Blake at 758-4357.<lb/>
Flu Vaccine<lb/>
The Student Health Service is<lb/>
giving flu vacdne 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 vacdne at an early<lb/>
date. The vacdne will be given<lb/>
Monday through Friday from 8<lb/>
a.m. to4 p.m. and the charge will<lb/>
be $1.50.<lb/>
The Rebel, ECU'S literary-arts<lb/>
magazine, is now aooepting sub-<lb/>
missions in poetry, fidion, es-<lb/>
says, art wak, and photography.<lb/>
Submit your material to the Rebel<lb/>
office or 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/>
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 until 11<lb/>
oould be your lucky day.<lb/>
Pom Pom<lb/>
The ECU Pom Pom girls will<lb/>
be having a "fun time" at<lb/>
Blimpie'sThurs Nov. 3 from 7to<lb/>
11 p.m. Everyone come oi down<lb/>
and drink your blues away.<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
Don't miss Happy Hour at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
prioes are V3 off on billiards,<lb/>
table tennis, and bowling. The<lb/>
time is3 until 6every Mon. Don't<lb/>
miss it!<lb/>
Eta Psi<lb/>
The Eta Psi Chapter of the<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity is<lb/>
sponsaing an All-Campus Talent<lb/>
Show. The event is scheduled to<lb/>
be held Tues Nov. 15 from 7<lb/>
p.m. until 10 p.m. in the<lb/>
Multi-purpose room at Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center. Part id pants<lb/>
will be rewarded by a panel of<lb/>
judges on a point system with 30<lb/>
pts. being the most any partid-<lb/>
pant can be awarded. Prizes<lb/>
ranging from $25 first place,<lb/>
a plaque of recognition to the<lb/>
second runner up, as well as<lb/>
certificates fa all those partidpa-<lb/>
ting will be presented. A dress<lb/>
rehearsal will take place Ma<lb/>
Nov. 14 at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Multi-purpose room and if neces-<lb/>
sary, an audition date will be set.<lb/>
If interested in partidpating,<lb/>
contact Kirk Hdston at 209-A<lb/>
Scott Dam (phone 752-8766), a<lb/>
Zack Smith at 251 Jones Dam<lb/>
(phaie 752-9882) a Willie Battle<lb/>
at 304-C Scott Dorm (phone<lb/>
752-5942) fa an application<lb/>
blank. All entries must be submit-<lb/>
ted befae Mai Nov. 7. Admis-<lb/>
sion will be .50. Proceeds will go<lb/>
to the Kappa Alpha Psi Student<lb/>
Revdving Loan<lb/>
Ticketsarenowon sale fa the<lb/>
FIREFALL conoert in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Ticket prices are:<lb/>
$3 fa students and $5 fa the<lb/>
public. The conoert will be Sun<lb/>
Nov. 6th at 8 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. FIREFALL is another<lb/>
in a series of concerts brought to<lb/>
you by the Popular Entatainment<lb/>
Committee of the Student Union.<lb/>
4-H Club<lb/>
The ECU Collegiate 4-H Club<lb/>
will meet Thurs Nov. 3 at 6 p.m.<lb/>
They will meet at Peppi' s Pizza on<lb/>
264 by-pass. Come and join us!<lb/>
Pool<lb/>
Paul Gerni, pocket billiard<lb/>
trick shot champion, will be<lb/>
perfaming at Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center in the Multi-Purpose<lb/>
Room at 8 Mon Nov. 14. With<lb/>
one stroke of the cue, Gerni will<lb/>
amaze you by knocking 12 balls in<lb/>
six different pockets. Audience<lb/>
participation will enhance his<lb/>
trick shot presentation and make<lb/>
it an event you won't want to<lb/>
miss. This free exhibition is<lb/>
presented by Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Suicide<lb/>
Alpha Delta Mu invites any-<lb/>
one interested to the Nov. 10<lb/>
dinner meeting to be held at<lb/>
Bonanza, Thurs at 5:30. Follow-<lb/>
ing dinner, Cheryl Coppedge,<lb/>
Director of Adult Out-Patient<lb/>
Services at Edgecomb Nash<lb/>
MHC, will speak on "Assessing<lb/>
Suicide Potential Remember,<lb/>
you need not be a member to<lb/>
come to this meeting. Anyone<lb/>
interested is encouraged to at-<lb/>
tend.<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 tf) p.m. in<lb/>
Memaial Gym. All those interes-<lb/>
ted in jogging, exerdsng, basket-<lb/>
ball, swimming, etc should re-<lb/>
pat to the gymnastics room oi<lb/>
the first floa of Memaial Gym<lb/>
any Monday, Wednesday, or<lb/>
Friday at 12 CO.<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/>
NCSL<lb/>
The Nath Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature (NCSL) will meet<lb/>
Wed Nov. 9 at 7 p.m. All<lb/>
members are strongly urged to<lb/>
attend. Constitutional changes<lb/>
will be considered.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058019_0003"/><lb/>
HHMBHHBHHBI<lb/>
3 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Carnival festivities to begin Nov. 5<lb/>
Winter carnival to feature 'Mister Mogul Magic'<lb/>
The 1977 Winter Carnival,<lb/>
sponsored by the Tennis &amp; Ski<lb/>
Shop, Inc. will glide into full<lb/>
swing at 9 a.m. Nov. 5 and<lb/>
festivities will continue until 6<lb/>
p.m. Sat. and begin at 12 noon<lb/>
and continue until 6 p.m. Sun<lb/>
Nov. 6.<lb/>
The Winter Carnival, held on<lb/>
the premises of the Tennis &amp; Ski<lb/>
Shop at 3814 Monroe Road, will<lb/>
feature internationally known Jim<lb/>
"Steel" Stelling, presently<lb/>
manager of the K2 Ski Team.<lb/>
Steeling was dubbed "Mister<lb/>
Mogul Magic" for hm feats in<lb/>
winning the nationally televised<lb/>
Moguls Contest at Stowe,<lb/>
Vermont in 1975.<lb/>
Stelling, who resides in Sun<lb/>
Valley, Idaho, also has starred in<lb/>
five ski films, including award<lb/>
winning "Assignment K2" and<lb/>
his latest, "The High Cost of a<lb/>
Free Ride Stelling directs<lb/>
summer training camps and<lb/>
recruits promisong young skiers.<lb/>
He began his far ranging career<lb/>
as a member of the first Demo<lb/>
Team in 1970.<lb/>
Greek forum<lb/>
Greeks have been very busy<lb/>
during the month of October.<lb/>
Panhellenic helped work the<lb/>
E-N-T Corporation's during<lb/>
family and employee's day.<lb/>
Carved out oranges filled with<lb/>
candy were also distributed by<lb/>
the Panhellenics to nursing<lb/>
homes and mentally retarded<lb/>
children for Halloween.<lb/>
The Alpha Phi's celebrated<lb/>
Founder's Day on October 10th<lb/>
by collecting pennies for each<lb/>
year that they have been in<lb/>
existence.<lb/>
On Tuesday, October 25th the<lb/>
Phi s had a cookout with their big<lb/>
brothers. Pumpkins were carved<lb/>
out and delivered to the different<lb/>
fraternity and sorority houses<lb/>
after the meal.<lb/>
Kappa Deltas initiated three<lb/>
new sisters on October 10th. The<lb/>
week prior to their initiation was<lb/>
White Rose Week.<lb/>
Founder s Day was celebrated<lb/>
October 23rd with many alumni<lb/>
returning fa this special day.<lb/>
October 26th Kay Dees held a<lb/>
Halloween Rush Party. This<lb/>
proved to be a lot of fun for<lb/>
everyone involved.<lb/>
On October 21st the Delta<lb/>
Zetascelebrated their 75th anniv-<lb/>
ersary by sharing a Founder's<lb/>
Day Formal with Delta Zetas from<lb/>
Atlantic Christian College in<lb/>
Wilson. Delta Zetas are also<lb/>
starting a Big Brother program<lb/>
this year. Inductions will be held<lb/>
Tues. night Nov. 1st. About 15<lb/>
guys will be inducted.<lb/>
The Delta Zetas are sponsor-<lb/>
ing a needy family for a Thanks-<lb/>
giving dinner with all the trim-<lb/>
mings.<lb/>
A rush party will be held on<lb/>
November 3rd. Cookies will be<lb/>
decorated and given to the<lb/>
Children's Ward at Pitt Memorial<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
In the past week the Phi<lb/>
Kappa Tau Fraternity has kept<lb/>
itself busy on campus. Last<lb/>
Saturday, the Phi Tau-KRBK keg<lb/>
party was a great success. There<lb/>
was a crowd of almost 1,000<lb/>
people as the K-101 sponsors and<lb/>
the ECU cheerleaders held con-<lb/>
tests and distributed prizes.<lb/>
The Phi Taus Sunday again<lb/>
showed their spirit by capturing<lb/>
five first place victories out of<lb/>
eight events to win the annual<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha field day. The<lb/>
Phi Taus would like to congratu-<lb/>
late the Lambda Chi s for doing a<lb/>
super job in organizing their field<lb/>
day.<lb/>
As fa future events to bo held<lb/>
at the Phi Tau house, the brothers<lb/>
are planning a fund raising<lb/>
spaghetti dinner Nov. 15. The<lb/>
brothers are also chartering a bus<lb/>
to the Oyster Bowl in Nafolk, Va.<lb/>
Nov. 12, to help suppat the<lb/>
Pirates against the Indians of<lb/>
William and Mary.<lb/>
GORDON FULP<lb/>
PRO SHOP<lb/>
Located at<lb/>
Greenville Golf and Country Club<lb/>
off of Memorial Dr.<lb/>
Phone 756-0504<lb/>
I Following Tennis Rachets This Week:<lb/>
Yonex Dunlop<lb/>
Wilson Head 25 off<lb/>
'ractice Golf Balls- 10 each<lb/>
Lined Westwind ECU Logo Jackets-<lb/>
Purple and Gold<lb/>
Regular '19.50 now 14.00<lb/>
All Sizes Available-<lb/>
Children's 4 - Men's Extra-Large<lb/>
 All New Izod V-Neck Cardigan<lb/>
Sweaters Just Arrived<lb/>
All Sizes Available<lb/>
Large Selection Ski Sweaters<lb/>
and Appareil Men and Women<lb/>
Festivities will include re-<lb/>
presentatives from major ski<lb/>
equipment manufacturers offer-<lb/>
ing advice on proper ski equip-<lb/>
ment and attire as well as special<lb/>
demonstrations in maintenance<lb/>
including filing, waxing and<lb/>
proper P-tex application, which<lb/>
will be of interest to ail skiers.<lb/>
Travel experts and resort<lb/>
representatives will be available<lb/>
to assist in winter vacation<lb/>
planning.<lb/>
The Charlotte Ski Bee Swap<lb/>
Shop will hold its annual meet on<lb/>
the premises of the Tennis &amp; Ski<lb/>
Shop with many items fa ex-<lb/>
change.<lb/>
Free prizes, including a Fab-<lb/>
ulous Weekend fa Two at Beech<lb/>
Mountain, a new pair of skis and<lb/>
many ahers will be awarded.<lb/>
Admission is FREE.<lb/>
V� lb. RIB EYE<lb/>
STEAK DINNER<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
60e<lb/>
Reg Price S2 99 (ONLY $2.39!)<lb/>
SAVE 60C with this coupon. Jack s Rib<lb/>
Eye Dinner with choice of Large Baked<lb/>
Potato or French Fries. Fresh Baked<lb/>
Roll and Butter and FREE SALAD BAR<lb/>
void Nov. 18<lb/>
12 lb. N.Y. STRIP<lb/>
STEAK DINNER<lb/>
SAVE 60�<lb/>
Reg Price $2 99 (ONLY $2.39!)<lb/>
SAVE 60C with this coupon Jack s<lb/>
N Y Strip Steak Dinner includes Large<lb/>
Baked Potato or French Fries. French<lb/>
Baked Roll and Butter and FREE<lb/>
SALAD BAR<lb/>
void Nov. 18<lb/>
34 lb. T-BONE<lb/>
STEAK DINNER<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
Reg Price S3 99 (ONLY $3.25!)<lb/>
SAVE 74C with this coupon<lb/>
T-Bone Steak Dinner includes<lb/>
Large Baked Potato or French<lb/>
Fries. Fresh Baked Roll and Butter<lb/>
and FREE SALAD BAR<lb/>
void Nov. 18<lb/>
CHOPPED SIRLOIN<lb/>
STEAK DINNER<lb/>
Reg Price $1 99 (ONLY $1.59!)<lb/>
SAVE 40C with this coupon Jack s<lb/>
Chopped Sirloin Dinner with choice of<lb/>
Large Baked Potato or French Fries.<lb/>
Fresh Baked Roll and Butter and<lb/>
FREE SALAD BAR<lb/>
void Nov. 18<lb/>
HURRY! Coupon offer ends Nov. 18, 1977<lb/>
4 IW <lb/>
mm<lb/>
ilMH i" ,1<lb/>
JACK'S<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
And<lb/>
2207 Nense Blvd.<lb/>
r Bern<lb/>
Dinners Include FREE Salad Bar'<lb/>
<pb facs="00058019_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 November 1977<lb/>
SGA forced to help<lb/>
According to Craig Hales, SGA treasurer, the<lb/>
Marching Pirates have been refused any funding by<lb/>
the Athletic Dept. even after SGA President Neil<lb/>
Sessoms asked the Legislature not to fund anything<lb/>
connected with athletics.<lb/>
Although the band serves athletics almost solely,<lb/>
the SGA is now going to have to fund it, at least in<lb/>
part, if ECU is to continue having the fine,<lb/>
prestegious band it now has.<lb/>
The fault, of course, lies in the unreasonable<lb/>
refusal of the Athletic Dept. to fund a band that has<lb/>
brought only pride to its football team this season.<lb/>
Consequently, the SGA Legislature should allocate<lb/>
some funding to the band so that the rest of ECU can<lb/>
appreciate the Marching Pirates if the Athletic Dept.<lb/>
does not.<lb/>
BUC should be free<lb/>
The SGA Legislature Monday voted to rescind the<lb/>
amendment passed last week eliminating a pick-up<lb/>
fee for the ECU yearbook, the BUCCANEER.<lb/>
Students will now have to pay $2 to pick up their<lb/>
BUCs. But actually, they will by paying close to $10<lb/>
per book even though the student handbook says<lb/>
yearbooks are to be free to all students.<lb/>
As David Cartwright, chairperson of the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee said, this is not fair.<lb/>
Students should not be required to pay for their<lb/>
yearbooks twice, especially since the handbook says<lb/>
they are free.<lb/>
When the money appropriated to the BUC is<lb/>
divided by the number of books to be printed-over<lb/>
$49,000 divided by 5,000-students are paying<lb/>
approximately $8 out of their activity fees for their<lb/>
yearbook.<lb/>
Because of this, students are not going to expect<lb/>
to have to pay an additional $2. Last year an attempt<lb/>
was made to sell subscriptions for the BUC with no<lb/>
success. Students expected to get the book free as<lb/>
the handbook said. It was a form of protest.<lb/>
This could very well happen again, which would<lb/>
mean, almost certain death for the 1978-79 BUC<lb/>
There are a number of legislators who would like<lb/>
to see the BUC die so its funds could be given to the<lb/>
special interest groups they represent. But the<lb/>
yearbook is for the entire student body, and the only<lb/>
way to keep these interest groups from killing it is for<lb/>
the students to go ahead this year and pay the $2 to<lb/>
prove they do value the book. Perhaps next year the<lb/>
Legislature would see how important the books are to<lb/>
ECU and return to making them free fa the students<lb/>
as they should be.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years.<lb/>
Senior Editor �Kim J. Devins<lb/>
Production ManagerBob Glover<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert 9waim<lb/>
News EditorCindy Broome<lb/>
Trends EditorDavid W. Trevino<lb/>
Sports EditorChris Hdloman<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association of<lb/>
ECU and is distributed each Wednesday during the summer,<lb/>
and twice weekly during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: ad South Building, Greenville, N.C 27834.<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions. $10.00 annually. <lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Reader praises ECU Marching Pirates<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I would like to say how<lb/>
impressive the East Carolina<lb/>
Marching Pirates are to me. The<lb/>
Marching Pirates work very hard<lb/>
and they add so much to the<lb/>
football games. It would really be<lb/>
sad to see such a good band go<lb/>
under because of lack of funds.<lb/>
Other students and myself<lb/>
feel it is important that the<lb/>
Marching Pirates be funded by<lb/>
the SGA because they are not<lb/>
totally an athletic organization.<lb/>
They serve the entire student<lb/>
body.<lb/>
The Marching Pirates, like the<lb/>
Drama Department, provide<lb/>
entertainment fa all. The March-<lb/>
ing Pirates manned the election<lb/>
polls in the first set of truly clean<lb/>
elections. They should not be<lb/>
totally under the mercy of the<lb/>
Athletic Department because<lb/>
they are so fickle .<lb/>
It is our SGA and we, the<lb/>
student body, deserve to see<lb/>
some money spent fa us.<lb/>
Esther Snyder<lb/>
A thetics, intramurals are different<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I would like to make a few<lb/>
comments regarding the subject<lb/>
of allocation of student fees.<lb/>
Kim Devins made a statement<lb/>
in the editaial Oct. 27 that close<lb/>
to 50 per cent of each student's<lb/>
fees is given to Athletics, and part<lb/>
of that 50 per cent ($7.55) is given<lb/>
to Intramurals. Even though<lb/>
cooperation exists between Intra-<lb/>
murals and Athletics, since they<lb/>
share some of the same facilities<lb/>
(Mingesgymnasium, pool, tennis<lb/>
courts, etc.), they are two inde-<lb/>
pendent departments with sepa-<lb/>
rate budgets, purposes and con-<lb/>
tributions to the student body.<lb/>
ECU Athletics gives the above<lb/>
average athlete the oppatunity to<lb/>
participate on an interoollegiate<lb/>
baas, and the rest of the student<lb/>
body the oppatunity to suppat<lb/>
the teams as spectatas during<lb/>
their contests. That is fine.<lb/>
Intramurals, on the other hand,<lb/>
allows every full-time student no<lb/>
matter how athletically inclined<lb/>
the opportunity to participate in a<lb/>
number of sports and reaeational<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
The intramural and reaea-<lb/>
tioial programs are funded solely<lb/>
by the money received from<lb/>
student fees. These funds are not<lb/>
only used fo the oanpetitive<lb/>
program and maintenance of<lb/>
fields and facilities, but also to<lb/>
suppat spats clubs, reaeatioial<lb/>
swimming and free play. In<lb/>
addition, Intramurals maintain<lb/>
the nets fa all 16 tennis courts,<lb/>
maintains the equipment in both<lb/>
weight rooms and purchases and<lb/>
maintains all of the equipment<lb/>
available fa student use through<lb/>
the reaeatioial equipment check-<lb/>
out service. Approximately 40 per<lb/>
cent of the Intramural budget is<lb/>
used to pay STUDENT wakers<lb/>
hired in such capacities as<lb/>
scoekeepers and timers, equip-<lb/>
ment room managers, gymna-<lb/>
sium supervisos, lifeguards and<lb/>
officials.<lb/>
Last year 57.7 per cent of<lb/>
full-time male enrollment and<lb/>
25.1 per oent of full-time female<lb/>
enrollment participated in one a<lb/>
mae phases of the competitive<lb/>
intramural spots program. The<lb/>
statistics do not include students<lb/>
who used the pools, gymnasiums<lb/>
during free play, tennis oourts,<lb/>
weight roans a those who took<lb/>
advantage of the equipment<lb/>
check-out service. This figure<lb/>
does reflect an increase of<lb/>
approximately eight per cent and<lb/>
4.5 per cent respectively over the<lb/>
year befae. Goitrary to what was<lb/>
stated in the editaial Oct. 21 the<lb/>
Intramural Department only re-<lb/>
ceives $7.50 per student per<lb/>
semester from student fees. This<lb/>
is the same amount that has been<lb/>
alloted the program fa the past<lb/>
three years. Therefoe, it is not<lb/>
accurate to state that student fees<lb/>
were inaeased to upgrade the<lb/>
Intramural program.<lb/>
I do not contend that either<lb/>
Intramurals o Athletics is mae<lb/>
important than the other, justthat<lb/>
they serve different purposes and<lb/>
therefoe it is unfair to both to<lb/>
lump them together as one.<lb/>
Candy S. Wedemeyer<lb/>
ECU Intramurals<lb/>
<pb facs="00058019_0005"/><lb/>
9<lb/>
mnBHMRBHSBHHIVVHSIHHHflHHInHBnnflHHnEnHHHl<lb/>
3 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Med student plans family practice clinic<lb/>
William Edward Perry of<lb/>
Kinston, senior medical student<lb/>
at the University Medical School<lb/>
at Chapel Hill, will be graduated<lb/>
early in December and plans<lb/>
eventually to locate in a family<lb/>
practice clinic in this area. He<lb/>
received his educational start at<lb/>
Lenoir Community College and is<lb/>
one of the first Lenoir Community<lb/>
College(LCC) alumni to complete<lb/>
training for a medical career.<lb/>
Perry completed a month's<lb/>
practice at the Mount Olive Clinic<lb/>
this past week. He was associated<lb/>
with Dr. Robert Shackleford, Dr.<lb/>
H.B. Kornegay and Dr. Bob<lb/>
Meyers in the Mount Olive<lb/>
Family Medicine Center there.<lb/>
The Mount Olive doctors have<lb/>
two nurse practitioners, a phys-<lb/>
ician's assistant, a first year<lb/>
family practitioner from Duke<lb/>
Medical School and a fourth year<lb/>
medical student from UNC. Perry<lb/>
was that student for October.<lb/>
Others will rotate from month to<lb/>
month during their senoir year,<lb/>
Perry stated.<lb/>
Perry iscurrently interviewing<lb/>
communities in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina and throughout the<lb/>
country for his choice of a place to<lb/>
do three-year residency in family<lb/>
medical practice. He will be in<lb/>
contact with a total of 15 different<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
Continued from p. 1<lb/>
to another building if necessary<lb/>
so the handicapped student can<lb/>
reach the class.<lb/>
According to Buzzy Pierce,<lb/>
a handicapped student, more<lb/>
elevators are needed but it is<lb/>
doubtful the university could<lb/>
afford them.<lb/>
"One elevator will run in the<lb/>
neighborhood of $70,000, and<lb/>
that is totally out of the ques-<lb/>
tion said Pierce.<lb/>
The construction of ramps has<lb/>
made most campus buildings<lb/>
accessible to wheelchairs, how-<lb/>
ever, there remains some room<lb/>
for improvement, according to<lb/>
Pierce.<lb/>
"They have a temporary ramp<lb/>
at the bookstore that needs to be<lb/>
modified said Pierce. "There<lb/>
are ramps that need to be<lb/>
redone<lb/>
According to James Lowry,<lb/>
director of plant operations at<lb/>
ECU, "in excess of $100,000" has<lb/>
been spent in the removal of<lb/>
barriers and construction of<lb/>
ramps.<lb/>
Pierce said that over the last<lb/>
year he has seen improvements in<lb/>
ramps.<lb/>
Unlike wheelchair students,<lb/>
visually impaired students must<lb/>
be oriented to the campus so they<lb/>
become familiar with the location<lb/>
of buildings, streets and side-<lb/>
walks.<lb/>
Blind students are oriented to<lb/>
the campus by a representative of<lb/>
the N.C. Commission of the<lb/>
Blind.<lb/>
I he orientation places specific<lb/>
emphasis on routes to classes,<lb/>
including auditory and tactile<lb/>
landmarks.<lb/>
According to Pierce, the ECU<lb/>
administration is "pretty good"<lb/>
about providing services to the<lb/>
handicapped.<lb/>
Panel discusses existentialism<lb/>
ByCANDI LaPRADE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Existentialism will be the<lb/>
subject of a panel discussion<lb/>
Mon Nov. 7 at 8 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Coffeehouse featur-<lb/>
ing two English professors and<lb/>
two Philosophy professors spon-<lb/>
sored by Sigma Tau Delta, the<lb/>
English honor society. ,<lb/>
The purpose of the panel<lb/>
discussion is to enable students to<lb/>
better understand the philosophy<lb/>
of existentialism and its implica-<lb/>
tions in literature.<lb/>
Ernest Marshall will represent<lb/>
?he Philosophy Department.<lb/>
Representing the English<lb/>
Department will be Dr. David<lb/>
Sanders and Dr. Norman Rosen-<lb/>
feld.<lb/>
All interested persons are<lb/>
communities before he chooses<lb/>
his spot for the residency.<lb/>
He pointed out that the Area<lb/>
Health Education Center program<lb/>
at East Carolina University has<lb/>
been a major factor in the<lb/>
encouragement of family practice<lb/>
clinics in North Carolina in recent<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The Eastern Health Education<lb/>
Center at ECU has worked closely<lb/>
with the family practice centers at<lb/>
Mount Olive and in Greene<lb/>
County and other places, Perry<lb/>
noted.<lb/>
Since Perry's three-year res-<lb/>
idency will not begin until early<lb/>
summer in 1978, he has several<lb/>
months to enjoy his practice on<lb/>
the Indian Reservation in Utah.<lb/>
He will be located at Roosevelt,<lb/>
Utah, a community of about 6,000<lb/>
persons, during the first half of<lb/>
1978.<lb/>
Perry's educational back-<lb/>
ground makes him a firm booster<lb/>
of LCC and the community<lb/>
college system in North Carolina.<lb/>
He lacked motivation at the<lb/>
conclusion of his high school<lb/>
career in Kinston and failed to<lb/>
make satisfactory grades at N.C.<lb/>
State College or at LCC.<lb/>
He finally enlisted in the Navy<lb/>
in December 1967 and served as a<lb/>
medic until his release in Feb-<lb/>
ruary 1972. Because of his college<lb/>
grades, he had to re-enter college<lb/>
on a probationary basis.<lb/>
The only place that would<lb/>
admit him even on this basis was<lb/>
LCC. He had made up his mind to<lb/>
become a family doctor and he no<lb/>
longer lacked motivation. He<lb/>
studied hard and was able to<lb/>
transfer to ECU for his under-<lb/>
graduate degree. He was grad-<lb/>
uated with honors in 1974 and<lb/>
admitted immediately at UNC<lb/>
Medical School.<lb/>
His work there has been<lb/>
completed ahead of schedule and<lb/>
he is now anxiously awaiting the<lb/>
start-up of his residency and his<lb/>
final plans to locate permanently<lb/>
in a family style clinic somewhere<lb/>
ip the Kinston area.<lb/>
It is good to be this far along<lb/>
on my goal, but what comes next<lb/>
is even more important he said.<lb/>
None of this would have been<lb/>
possible had Lenoir Community<lb/>
College not been willing to give<lb/>
me a second chance at higher<lb/>
education. will always be<lb/>
grateful fa itsoonfidenceinme<lb/>
Dr. James Smith and Dr. invited to attend.<lb/>
Psyc prof co-authors article<lb/>
By BILL HARRINGTON<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Psychology professor Dr.<lb/>
Rosina C. Lao is oo-author of an<lb/>
article appearing in a recent issue<lb/>
of the Journal of Cross-Cultural<lb/>
Psychology<lb/>
The article is based on a joint<lb/>
research project involving 517<lb/>
Chinese students presently living<lb/>
in Taiwan.<lb/>
The resultant research show-<lb/>
ed that these students precep-<lb/>
tions concerning the amount of<lb/>
internal and external control over<lb/>
their lives is comparable to<lb/>
studies of students in other more<lb/>
industrialized countries.<lb/>
According to Dr. Lao and the<lb/>
other co-authors of the article, the<lb/>
Chinese emphasis on family clan,<lb/>
and country has been somewhat<lb/>
minimized by the students ex-<lb/>
posure to the modernization<lb/>
presently taking place in Taiwan.<lb/>
The study shows that cont-<lb/>
emporary Chinese students,<lb/>
along with their European and<lb/>
American counterparts, rely most<lb/>
heavily upon themselves in their<lb/>
search for success.<lb/>
The results of the project were<lb/>
presented at the 84th annual<lb/>
convention of the American Psyc-<lb/>
hological Association in<lb/>
Washington, D.C. last year by<lb/>
Dr. Lao and her co-authors.<lb/>
Dr. Lao received her PhD<lb/>
degree horn the University of<lb/>
Michigan.<lb/>
��������<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is looking for another oompugraphic<lb/>
typist to begin spring semester. Pays minimum wage<lb/>
by the hour. Applicants must already have speed<lb/>
and accuracy in regular typing and be available to work<lb/>
long hours on Monday and Wednesday nights.<lb/>
Compugra phic typing is a valuable skill to learn so apply<lb/>
at the FOUNTAINHEAD office NOW.<lb/>
The Pro Shop<lb/>
Of Greenville, Inc.<lb/>
(Adjacent to King &amp; Queen Restaurant)<lb/>
� WARM-UP SUITS<lb/>
Complete Shipment of Beautiful<lb/>
White Stag Has Just Arrived<lb/>
For Men, Ladies, &amp; Children<lb/>
COME IN AND SEE THEM!<lb/>
(Open Till 8:00pm Mon Fri.<lb/>
Till 600 on Sat.)<lb/>
752-1526<lb/>
Give her one of the greatest fashion statements<lb/>
around  an opal ring!<lb/>
a. Butterfly ring, 2 diamonds, 4 genuine opals<lb/>
in 14 karat gold, $135<lb/>
b. 6 Diamonds, 1 genuine opal, 6 genuine<lb/>
sapphires in 14 karat gold, $200<lb/>
Charge it!<lb/>
Open a Zales account or use one of five national credit plans.<lb/>
ZALES<lb/>
The Diamond Store<lb/>
Illustrations enlarged<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
756-0141<lb/>
Open 10AM 9:00PM Monday thru Saturday<lb/>
<pb facs="00058019_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 November 1977<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I �<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Lesbian mothers discuss child custody rights<lb/>
UNC group sponsors newly released film Nov. 10<lb/>
A newly released film about<lb/>
lesbian mothers and child custody<lb/>
"In the Best Interests of the<lb/>
Children will be shown Thurs.<lb/>
Nov. 10 at 7:30 p.m. at the Law<lb/>
School building on the UNC<lb/>
campus m Chapel Hill. There will<lb/>
be no admission charge and the<lb/>
public is invited.<lb/>
Two of the filmmal ers, Frances<lb/>
Reid and Elizabeth Stevens, will<lb/>
be present for discussion. Child-<lb/>
care will be provided, although<lb/>
children are welcome.<lb/>
The film, made in 1976-77, is a<lb/>
presentation of eight lesbian<lb/>
mothers talking about their ex-<lb/>
periences as lesbian mothers.<lb/>
Also presented are an attor-<lb/>
ney and a clinical social worker,<lb/>
both of whom have done exten-<lb/>
sive work with lesbian mothers.<lb/>
They offer their professional<lb/>
opinions around the issue Of<lb/>
lesbians' rights to maintain<lb/>
custody of their children.<lb/>
Two mothers who have been<lb/>
through custody fights talk of<lb/>
those experiences. Other mothers<lb/>
discuss what being a lesbian<lb/>
means to their children, how they<lb/>
have talked about lesbianism, how<lb/>
it has affected their friendships.<lb/>
What the film says, ultimately<lb/>
is yes, lesbians, are good<lb/>
mothers, and yes, lesbian<lb/>
mothers do have problems but<lb/>
those problems stem from<lb/>
society's and the courts attitudes<lb/>
toward them.<lb/>
The solution to these prob-<lb/>
lems is not to take children away<lb/>
from lesbians, but to change<lb/>
those attitudes. The film is a<lb/>
direct challenge to the prevailing<lb/>
myth about the lesbian as a<lb/>
mother.<lb/>
Iris Films, who produced the<lb/>
film, is a feminist and is<lb/>
oommitted to presenting films<lb/>
and discussion geared towards<lb/>
organizing women and showing<lb/>
their struggles and strength.<lb/>
Because of the expensive<lb/>
research done for the film, the<lb/>
produoers are prepared to speak<lb/>
both about the making of the film<lb/>
as well as the situation for lesbian<lb/>
mothers facing child custody<lb/>
battles.<lb/>
In addition to showing this<lb/>
film, they will also be showing<lb/>
one other short film selected from<lb/>
several that they are distributing.<lb/>
Women in Law, an organiza-<lb/>
tion of women law students<lb/>
is sponsoring this presentation.<lb/>
For science teachers<lb/>
ECU hosts annual conference<lb/>
Science teachers from North<lb/>
Carolina schools will gather at<lb/>
ECU for the annual oonferenoe of<lb/>
the N.C. Science Teachers Assoc-<lb/>
iation Nov. 18-19.<lb/>
Host fa the event is the ECU<lb/>
Department of Science Educa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Keynote speaker for the oon-<lb/>
ferenoe is Dr. Uri Haber-Schaim,<lb/>
Director of the Institute for<lb/>
Curriculum Development in<lb/>
Science and Mathematics at<lb/>
Boston University.<lb/>
His topic will be The<lb/>
Challenge to Science Education in<lb/>
Today's World<lb/>
Dr. Carl Adler of the ECU<lb/>
physics faculty, will address the<lb/>
group on "The Leaning Tower<lb/>
Revisited<lb/>
Other conference events<lb/>
include several concurrent ses-<lb/>
sions and research reports on<lb/>
topics in biology, chemistry,<lb/>
geology and physics; conducted<lb/>
field trips and displays of current<lb/>
science educational materials.<lb/>
Your<lb/>
Each<lb/>
challenge is to spell a word, or words, using the letters shown below,<lb/>
word must contain the letter the indicated number of times.<lb/>
When there's a challenge,<lb/>
quality makes the difference.<lb/>
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.<lb/>
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer in<lb/>
Milwaukee, beer capital of the world.<lb/>
That's why we have the confidence to issue<lb/>
another challenge�the Pabst challenge. Taste and<lb/>
compare Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium<lb/>
beer. You'll like Pabst because Blue Ribbon quality<lb/>
means the best-tasting beer you can get.<lb/>
Since 1844 it always has.<lb/>
PABST Since 1844.The quality has always come through.<lb/>
PABST BREWING COMPANY, Milwaukee, Wis . Peoria He.ghts, III , Newark, N.J . Los Angeles, Call) . Pabsl, Gi ori<lb/>
snoniinwni snoindmisun S woojiooqas 'ujoojuooq 0O)tOoi joojdOOj <lb/>
jix1f�a(89q 'eouapuodapjeiui eDU83�BAJ93 c BjqspeoBjqy iiqisiAipu i j�Mtuy<lb/>
A barbecue dinner and square<lb/>
dance has been scheduled fa<lb/>
Friday evening at the American<lb/>
Legion Post here.<lb/>
Organized in 1969, the N.C.<lb/>
Science Teachers Association<lb/>
includes persons actively engag-<lb/>
ed or interested in the teaching of<lb/>
science in public or private<lb/>
schools at all levels, from kinder-<lb/>
garden through university.<lb/>
Pitt causes<lb/>
higher<lb/>
death rate<lb/>
(LNS)-A recent study of the<lb/>
effects or oral contraceptives on<lb/>
women sponsored by the British<lb/>
Royal College of General Practi-<lb/>
tionershasoondudedthat women<lb/>
who take the pill have a 40 per<lb/>
cent higher death rate than<lb/>
women of the same age who<lb/>
never used the pill.<lb/>
This most comprehensive<lb/>
study to date of pill-related<lb/>
deaths was based on an analysis<lb/>
of 101 deaths that occurred<lb/>
among 46,000 women involved in<lb/>
the study sinoe 1968 Half of the<lb/>
women used in the study had<lb/>
never taken the pill.<lb/>
The study attributes the in-<lb/>
creased death rate to circulatory<lb/>
diseases, including heart attacks<lb/>
and other heart ailments, high<lb/>
blood pressure, blood dots, stro-<lb/>
kes and brain hemorrhages.<lb/>
The new findings also suggest<lb/>
that the risk of death associated<lb/>
with the pill may increase with<lb/>
the length of time a woman takes<lb/>
the pill and that this risk may<lb/>
remain elevated for some years<lb/>
after pill use is discontinued.<lb/>
Combined with cigarette smo-<lb/>
king, the dangers of pill use were<lb/>
said to escalate further.<lb/>
The study has prompted Bri-<lb/>
tish medical authorities to recom-<lb/>
mend tha women over 35 stop<lb/>
using the pill.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Th<lb/>
i la Iki imi<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
Good Humor<lb/>
Sun. Super (rit<lb/>
Dm<lb/>
ThurK. &amp; Fri.<lb/>
TBA<lb/>
Sat. LOUIS<lb/>
BYOL<lb/>
<pb facs="00058019_0007"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
������fflHnraiiBBMHHiainiBnHnHBBBHnn<lb/>
3 Novembgr 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
MMHHHI'Mfa, SERVE YOUR FAMILY THE VERY BEST AT A&amp;P's "BEST" LOW PRICES!<lb/>
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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. NOV i IN<lb/>
ANN PAGE BRAND<lb/>
SLICED BACON<lb/>
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3 8oy. Vans $1.00<lb/>
Del Mor.ie<lb/>
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3 8 OI i an-<lb/>
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Del Monte slicec<lb/>
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3 8V4 07<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058019_0008"/><lb/>
p<lb/>
Page8 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 November 1977<lb/>
MENDENHALL MOGUL CONTEMPLATES events coming to ECU campus.<lb/>
������-�-�-��-� This Sunday's Firefall concert and next week's<lb/>
1 Y&amp; m fl Dinner Theatre fill the thoughts of Dean Rudolph<lb/>
Alexander of the Student Center.<lb/>
Ferguson bombs with dentist office disco<lb/>
� A<lb/>
MA NARDFERGUSON<lb/>
�-GE<lb/>
i'<lb/>
.<lb/>
ilbum is called<lb/>
New Vintage it s bouquet is<lb/>
3. This<lb/>
jurn is another rw rgu-<lb/>
or seems more<lb/>
' erned with making music<lb/>
�hat will sell than with hitting any<lb/>
The arrar<lb/>
m- - 3 part si<lb/>
ling th<lb/>
mi. i n wvrfwn<lb/>
gly for -Ajt a<lb/>
i<lb/>
 - ,tit.<lb/>
Another<lb/>
sparse, the<lb/>
�ids best at two a.m.<lb/>
.1 our favorite<lb/>
mixture. One of the better songs<lb/>
is ' old<lb/>
Bernstein's West<lb/>
rhissong h<lb/>
performed by a<lb/>
favoi ite fi<lb/>
Side St or ,<lb/>
ged and<lb/>
number of<lb/>
mdodically effective playing<lb/>
MA fNARD i f RGUSON S be appeared last<lb/>
in a i Arnjht Auditorium<lb/>
to by Pete I<lb/>
i<lb/>
io)<lb/>
- - oa (� in order<lb/>
I erguson does a<lb/>
I<lb/>
'<lb/>
i trumpet, t<lb/>
fuiiy in ha<lb/>
ing i rl does lil fa<lb/>
;i. ire a supei fu<lb/>
� by Bobby Milite<lb/>
part a this numbei<lb/>
In addition lo Maynard i- ergu-<lb/>
i on trumpet otha soloist! <lb/>
the album are Mike Mitli �<lb/>
sax. guita and Jay<lb/>
Chattaway on trumpet<lb/>
By fat the be<lb/>
album is the fas) paced Aire<lb/>
gin, only four minutes -<lb/>
the jazi oompoeei Sonny Rollins<lb/>
rhe band plays -lit!<lb/>
il bri i nedf speed<lb/>
while i ergusa trumpet sii<lb/>
ile album<lb/>
sn I this good M yon �<lb/>
.<lb/>
by Mike Aberx<lb/>
� Ih the price ol<lb/>
urn<lb/>
<pb facs="00058019_0009"/><lb/>
3 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Student writes of encounter with Satanism<lb/>
LUKE WHISNANT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Everything seemed pretty<lb/>
mal It was just another<lb/>
Halloween: kids throwing eggs<lb/>
and rolling yards; parents siicing<lb/>
apples to check fa<lb/>
blades; thousands of church-<lb/>
group haunted houses raking in<lb/>
the money and thousands of high<lb/>
school carnivals burning life-sized<lb/>
paper-mache witches under the;<lb/>
almost full moon. There may have<lb/>
been a few legitimate witches<lb/>
standing around those bonfires<lb/>
Monday night, watching their<lb/>
symbolic alter-egos transmute<lb/>
tshes, but more than likely<lb/>
-vre busy with their own<lb/>
xi-after all, Hallow<lb/>
� holiest night of the year to<lb/>
onm people<lb/>
We're all familiar with it by<lb/>
now-the Black Mass with all its<lb/>
darkest ritua "ars at<lb/>
� i on TV. usually in<lb/>
ide-for-l �<lb/>
movii The Devil s�h&amp;<lb/>
ders ot Satan s Daughter. Some<lb/>
of thi - -phcit<lb/>
remonies are only hinted<lb/>
at during prime-time�you have to<lb/>
k out the orgys at your local<lb/>
� rback bookshelf Something<lb/>
it rv exposure, though,<lb/>
makes the whole ngamarole of<lb/>
Satanism seem silly and a I'ttle<lb/>
pathetic, and I'm not quite sure<lb/>
we should feel<lb/>
it it There are more people<lb/>
, into Satanism than we<lb/>
One blistering August day this<lb/>
tting around<lb/>
 'd at the edge of a cornfield<lb/>
with three friends of mine. The<lb/>
oorn had been scorched to death<lb/>
weeks ago, and even the crickets<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
i<lb/>
som . lo<lb/>
At mute, Tim<lb/>
elf u i one elbow and<lb/>
)id i ever tell ya'li about<lb/>
und out here one<lb/>
said Jeff<lb/>
"I was hunting out here one<lb/>
and the dogs had jumped a<lb/>
rabb � a mile down the<lb/>
o I just started walking<lb/>
around until they could run him<lb/>
back tome. All of a sudden I came<lb/>
(o a clearing in the woods and<lb/>
huge pyramid-pur-<lb/>
ple, too, with a plexiglass eye on<lb/>
top<lb/>
You were stoned, right9'<lb/>
n<lb/>
W' � -<lb/>
�<lb/>
David<lb/>
main highway and tl<lb/>
Tim took us l bumpy<lb/>
' I sss and less<lb/>
navigable and eventually turned<lb/>
sun-baked mud<lb/>
ruts.<lb/>
W' out and walked<lb/>
Walked past an orange mailbox<lb/>
with the word HOME painte<lb/>
i te, up a little hill into a wall<lb/>
of pines which hid the pyramid<lb/>
from sight<lb/>
It was purple. It stood about<lb/>
20 feet tall, and it was big enough<lb/>
inside to parallel park two Cadil-<lb/>
 t fioot<lb/>
i<lb/>
�<lb/>
-<lb/>
jdes<lb/>
picture this<lb/>
left-hand<lb/>
Outsjo<lb/>
campfire pil brie<lb/>
Arou' s of<lb/>
charred bones. I was q.�<lb/>
� ng out until Tim informed<lb/>
hat they Aere cow bones<lb/>
tee SATANISM p. 10)<lb/>
Iron Horse Trading Co<lb/>
Merchants and Craftsmen<lb/>
In Fine Gold and Silver Jewelry<lb/>
Crystal Jewelry<lb/>
from VuHtria<lb/>
10 OFF<lb/>
�<lb/>
Located: 301 S. Evans Mall Hours: MonThurs. 10-6<lb/>
First State Bank Building 6 Sat 10-6<lb/>
AROUND THE P'J were dozens ot small bones<lb/>
BLOOD<lb/>
DONOR<lb/>
CoKqftatutons<lb/>
Or<lb/>
Students ijacullttj 2taj<lb/>
�fj<lb/>
fiast Carina Qinuet$ity<lb/>
Qjou Went Qm xjk 9bpl!<lb/>
1.033 9mts Donated On<lb/>
October 25fi 26tfc 8 2.<lb/>
On Bd4 �i 9T� Patterns Qjou'w<lb/>
helped 0(s Sttw. Ue Slant 3Jo�.<lb/>
'xJidemtQh Qeg tonal!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058019_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 November 1977<lb/>
Satanism<lb/>
Continued from p. 9<lb/>
Standing a little way off from the<lb/>
firepit was a marble sundiah with<lb/>
these wads inscribed on the face:<lb/>
 Before Light Comes Darkness<lb/>
Jeff kicked the sundial over. "I<lb/>
know what this is now he<lb/>
hollared. "These people are<lb/>
dev i I- worshi ppers<lb/>
Tim politely told Jeff to shut<lb/>
up and stop destroying other<lb/>
people's property.<lb/>
There was no door on the<lb/>
pyramid, just an entrancway<lb/>
with large black hexagrams pain-<lb/>
ted over it. "Don't you know what<lb/>
these are?" Jeff exclaimed.<lb/>
"These are witches' symbols<lb/>
"Ya'll go on'in if you want<lb/>
to said Tim, "but I'm staying<lb/>
out here<lb/>
In the corner stood a make-<lb/>
shift spice rack and an old iron<lb/>
kettle. The spices were stored in<lb/>
babyfood jars. At first we thought<lb/>
we had found someone's stash,<lb/>
but on closer inspection we were<lb/>
unable to indentify any of the<lb/>
herbs.<lb/>
David and I went in. Dead<lb/>
center of the dirt floor was a well<lb/>
which Tim swore hadn't been<lb/>
there before. We dropped a rock<lb/>
down the shaft and counted two<lb/>
seconds before it hit bottom.<lb/>
"Let's see-32 feet per second<lb/>
squared David whistled.<lb/>
"Man, that thing's more than 90<lb/>
feet deep<lb/>
"How in hell do you suppose<lb/>
they dug that?" The sides were<lb/>
perfectly smooth. "No way they<lb/>
could have gotten well-digging<lb/>
equipment in here<lb/>
I spent this past Monday night<lb/>
in a barren room here in<lb/>
Greenville, just as I have spent<lb/>
the two previous Halloweens.<lb/>
Trick-or-treaters kept banging on<lb/>
the door and after we'd run out of<lb/>
apples, I turned off the lights and<lb/>
locked up, hoping they'd leave us<lb/>
alone. Then it got very quiet.<lb/>
Maybe I should have gone<lb/>
downtown or hit a oouple of<lb/>
parties. Instead, I sat around and<lb/>
thought about what might be<lb/>
happening 200 miles away at the<lb/>
purple pyramid. Part of me was<lb/>
glad I was here, safe and warm<lb/>
and unterrified. My dark side<lb/>
wanted to be there.<lb/>
RIGGAIS<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER GOODS<lb/>
Dowttown Greenville<lb/>
"MY DARK SIDE wanted to be there.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
T<lb/>
Bring this ad with<lb/>
Your<lb/>
Fire fall Ticket<lb/>
to Super Grit<lb/>
Sunday Night for a<lb/>
Free Beverage<lb/>
FROM DEA TH COMES new lifePhoto by Brian Stotlei �<lb/>
Bucket ("Bargains where everything is two for the price of one 514 E. 13th St. Phone !No. 752-4911 Greenville, IN.C. 27834<lb/>
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Lemon Up Shampoo lOoz size 2$1.79Laundry Baskets 298c<lb/>
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9:A.M. to 8:P.M.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058019_0011"/><lb/>
�nm<lb/>
3 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Hawkins to appear in Idaho, Glenn on campus<lb/>
Music faculty in weekend performances<lb/>
By RENEE DIXQN<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
Two members of the East<lb/>
Carolina University School of<lb/>
Music will be performing this<lb/>
weekend. David R. Hawkins, an<lb/>
instructor of oboe in his first year<lb/>
on the faculty here, will be<lb/>
appearing as a soloist with the<lb/>
Idaho Falls Symphony Orchestra<lb/>
in Idaho Falls, Idaho on Saturday<lb/>
the fifth of November. On Sunday,<lb/>
November 6, at 8:15 p.m. in the<lb/>
A.J. Fletcher Music Center<lb/>
Recital Hall here in Greenville<lb/>
Edward Glern, bass baritone will<lb/>
perform in recitaJ.<lb/>
Glenn is a member of the East<lb/>
Carolina School of Music voice<lb/>
faculty and has perfamed in solo<lb/>
recital and with opera companies<lb/>
and symphony orchestras in<lb/>
Washington, D.C. and the<lb/>
Carol inas.<lb/>
His program will include<lb/>
Mozart's "Mentre ti Lasrio<lb/>
K.513; Brahm's "Vier Ernste<lb/>
Gesange Opus 121; "Nemico<lb/>
della patria" from Giordano's<lb/>
"Andrea Chenier "Ave<lb/>
Signor" from Boito's "Mefisto-<lb/>
fele "Songs of Travel<lb/>
Glenn will be accompanied by<lb/>
Dr. Charles Bath of the ECU<lb/>
keyboard faculty. The recital is<lb/>
free and open to the public.<lb/>
An alumnus of Converse<lb/>
College, Glenn received the<lb/>
Master of Music Degree in voice<lb/>
permanence from Catholic<lb/>
University and did additional<lb/>
voice study in New York. He has<lb/>
been baritone soloist with the<lb/>
United States Navy Band in<lb/>
Washington, D.C. and also per-<lb/>
formed w'th the Washington<lb/>
Opera Society, the Washington<lb/>
Civic Opera at with the National<lb/>
Symphony Orchestra.<lb/>
His operatic performances<lb/>
Area artists to participate<lb/>
Piedmont Crafts Fair<lb/>
ByJIM HANES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This weekend, November 4-6,<lb/>
the Piedmont Craftsman will have<lb/>
a show and sale in Winston-<lb/>
Salem, North Carolina.<lb/>
There will be 135 artists<lb/>
exhibiting in this year's show.<lb/>
Some are residents of Greenville.<lb/>
The work of Chuck Chamber-<lb/>
lain will be on exhibit at the 14th<lb/>
annual show. Chuck is an instruc-<lb/>
tor in ceramics at ECU School of<lb/>
Art.<lb/>
Area artists invited to exhibit<lb/>
works at the Piedmont Crafts Fair<lb/>
include potters Betsy Markowski<lb/>
and Eddie Smith and jeweler<lb/>
Myra Sexauer.<lb/>
The craftsmen and artists<lb/>
gained the privilege of showing in<lb/>
the upcoming show by being<lb/>
talented enough to pass jury.<lb/>
A juried show eliminates<lb/>
works either not in keeping with<lb/>
the tone of the exhibition or those<lb/>
of inferior quality. This safe<lb/>
guard serves to insure the unified<lb/>
continuity of a particular show.<lb/>
Areas of work to be exhibited<lb/>
include pottery, weaving, glass,<lb/>
wood, jewelry, photography,<lb/>
print making, macrame, batik,<lb/>
' iron work, leather, stitchery, book<lb/>
binding, quilting, enameling and<lb/>
basket weaving.<lb/>
Suggestions for next years<lb/>
attractions include Tatoo Art and<lb/>
Van painting fa those who feel<lb/>
this other stuff is a bit tame.<lb/>
One good feature of a show<lb/>
like this is that it gives the patron<lb/>
who purchases an art wak an<lb/>
oppatunity to meet that piece's<lb/>
aeata. Another is that it also<lb/>
allows ten artist to sell his wak<lb/>
directly to the public without<lb/>
having to pay a gallery commis-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
In addition toall this projected<lb/>
visual stimulation live entertain-<lb/>
ment is planned as well as<lb/>
demonstrations by master aafts-<lb/>
men and educational exhibits. A<lb/>
sidewalk cafe is also planned.<lb/>
But who needs distracting<lb/>
entertainment when it is possible<lb/>
to watch an artist midwifing a<lb/>
piece into existence.<lb/>
The 14th Annual Piedmont<lb/>
Crafts Fair will be held in<lb/>
MemaiaJ Coliseum in Winston-<lb/>
Salem.<lb/>
CLYDE GOBBLE OF Winston-Salem throws a pot for the 14th<lb/>
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Winston-Salem Coliseum.<lb/>
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opera appearances in Brevard,<lb/>
Uuiiowhee and Spartanburg,<lb/>
South Carolina as well as the<lb/>
Chariate Opera Association.<lb/>
Prior to coming to East<lb/>
Carolina, Mr. Glenn was head of<lb/>
Vocal Music at Nathern Virginia<lb/>
Community College. This is Mr.<lb/>
Glenn's second year with the<lb/>
ECU School of Music. He is also<lb/>
the directa of the Greenville<lb/>
Community Chaus.<lb/>
In Idaho Fallson Saturday Mr.<lb/>
Hawkins will be perfaming the<lb/>
"Symphonie Concertante" for<lb/>
oboe and achestra by Jacques<lb/>
Ibert.<lb/>
Hawkins, an hcnas graduate<lb/>
of the New England Coiservatay<lb/>
of Music, has perfamed with<lb/>
chamber ensembles in Carnegie<lb/>
Recital Hall and the Concert Hall<lb/>
of the Kennedy Centa fa the<lb/>
Perfaming Arts.<lb/>
Before coming to ECU,<lb/>
Hawkins taught at Washington<lb/>
State University and perfamed<lb/>
fa two years with the Spokane<lb/>
Symphony Orchestra.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058019_0013"/><lb/>
3 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
PRESSBOX<lb/>
by CHRIS HOLLOM AN<lb/>
The oldest continuing series in East Carolina University football<lb/>
will be renewed this weekend in Boone, N.C when the Pirates face<lb/>
in-state rival Appalachian State. These two teams first met in 1932, the<lb/>
first year that East Carolina University fielded a football team. The<lb/>
Apps were 21-0 winners in that first game and have dominated the<lb/>
Series 19-7-0. The series has been played in three parts, the first being<lb/>
1932-1939, with ASU winning all eight games. The second part was<lb/>
1960-1962, again Appalachian on top with 13 wins to ECU'S four. The<lb/>
third part has been 1972 to the present, with East Carolina leading that<lb/>
modern day stretch 3-2. Last season, the Pirates overwhelmed<lb/>
Appalachian in Ficklen Stadium 35-7 to take the Southern Conference<lb/>
championship before a regional ABC-TV audience on Thanksgiving<lb/>
Night.<lb/>
East Carolina set a new season attendance record with 18,354 on<lb/>
hand Saturday night in Ficklen Stadium. The Pirates have drawn<lb/>
262,056 fans thus far, breaking the old season record of 237,191 of last<lb/>
year, set in 11 games. ECU still has two games remaining this year.<lb/>
The Pirates missed setting a Ficklen Stadium record for a single season<lb/>
by only 2,225. However, only four games were played in Ficklen this<lb/>
year, while the record was set in five games last season. Already, with<lb/>
two road games remaining, the Pirates have set a new road attendance<lb/>
mark by over 15,000.<lb/>
The Pirates of East Carolina have played before three over capacity<lb/>
crowd thus far, and are assured of the same this weekend in Boone.<lb/>
Some 13,000 are expected for the East Carolina-Appalachian State<lb/>
clash, while capacity is listed as only 9,500 fa Conrad Stadium.<lb/>
Through nine games, the Pirates have drawn 252,056 fans, with<lb/>
total stadium capacity in the nine games of 259,584. This means the<lb/>
Pirates have drawn fans to the rate of 97.1 of stadium capacity when<lb/>
all ninegamesareoornbined.Topswas126.3vsSouthern Illinois in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium, while the low was 60.1 vs The Citadel in<lb/>
Charleston, S.C.<lb/>
Senia quarterback Jimmy Southerland became the seventh leading<lb/>
passer in East Carolina histay against Southwestern Louisiana with<lb/>
but 20 yards in the game, his lowest output of the year. But it did up<lb/>
Southerland's career total to 821 yards, one mae yard than Neal<lb/>
Hughes (1965-67). The Wilmington. N.C native needs 108 yards to<lb/>
move to sixth.<lb/>
Senia split end Terry Gallaher continues to lift his way towards the<lb/>
career reoad at East Carolina fa reception yardage. Gallaher added<lb/>
only 15 yards against Southwestern Louisiana, but needs only 96 yards<lb/>
in the final twogamestotop that first place total of 1,193 yards by Tim<lb/>
Dameron (1970-72). Gallaher has 1.098 yards. Further. Gallaher needs<lb/>
but three receptions to become the seventh leading receiver in number<lb/>
of receptions.<lb/>
Junia running back Eddie Hicks moved into a tie fa tenth on the<lb/>
career rushing list with 41 yards against Southwestern Louisiana.Hicks<lb/>
has 1408 yards to tie BH1 Cline (1962-64). The Henderson native leeds<lb/>
but 46 yards to move to the ninth spot.<lb/>
The score was 0-0 at half time Saturday night, marking the first time<lb/>
since September 13, 1975. that East Carolina had not scored pants in<lb/>
the first half of a game. The last time was in Boone vs this week s<lb/>
opponent , Appalachian State, where the Pirates trailed by three<lb/>
scores at the half. Further, the 00 score was the first non-soaing half<lb/>
fa either team since East Cara.na's battle with Furman on September<lb/>
29, 1973, a game the Pirates won in the seond half 14-3.<lb/>
The Southwestern Louisana game was the first time in 25 games<lb/>
that East Carolina had not scaed at least 10 pants in a gameThe<lb/>
Pirates had ranked second in the nation, tied with Texas Teen, and just<lb/>
behind Notre Dame, in soaing 10 a mae pants in consecutive games.<lb/>
Notre Dame kept its streak alive at 26, while Texas Tech also fell off the<lb/>
list with a 25-0 shutout to Texas.<lb/>
Despite two consecutive subpar games, junior all-America<lb/>
candidate Gerald Hall ranks number one in the nation in punt returns.<lb/>
Hall has had but three returns fa seven yards in the last two games<lb/>
although still averaging 16.1 yards per return fa the season Last<lb/>
weeks leader, Jimmy Cefalo of Penn State, dropped to second place<lb/>
Mountaineers vs. ECU<lb/>
By CHRIS HOLLOM AN<lb/>
Spats Edita<lb/>
This weekend the oldest con-<lb/>
tinuing series in East Carolina<lb/>
football will be renewed as the<lb/>
Pirates take on the Appalachian<lb/>
State Mountaineers in Boone<lb/>
N.C. The Pirates will come into<lb/>
Conrad Stadium with a 7- reoad<lb/>
after last weeks loss to South-<lb/>
western Louisiana. Appalachian<lb/>
on the other hand comes into the<lb/>
game with a 2-6 reoad and off of<lb/>
a loss also. The loss to Ball State<lb/>
was just another frustration fa<lb/>
the Apps as they were routed<lb/>
38-7.<lb/>
It has been difficult fa ASU to<lb/>
explain its problems so far this<lb/>
year although Mountaineer coach<lb/>
Jim Brakefield confirms that<lb/>
those who picked ASU as the<lb/>
favaite fa the Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence title in the pre-season<lb/>
probably did not have an accurate<lb/>
guage of the team's talent.<lb/>
In spots (backfield, center,<lb/>
defensive end, linebacker) the<lb/>
Apps have some of the best<lb/>
personnel to be found anywhere,<lb/>
but that simply hasn't been<lb/>
enough to carry what is otherwise<lb/>
a very young team.<lb/>
Coach Jim Brakefield, in his<lb/>
seventh year at Appalachian, says<lb/>
the Pi rates are probably "30 a 40<lb/>
points" better than the Apps<lb/>
right now. "We just aren't a very<lb/>
good football team he says.<lb/>
One thing that will never be<lb/>
fagotten was the stomping the<lb/>
Apps put on East Carolina the last<lb/>
time they were in Boone. The<lb/>
41-25 scae was no indication of<lb/>
how bad the Mountaineers routed<lb/>
the Pirates. Coach Dye feels that<lb/>
this game was one of his most<lb/>
embarrassing moments and<lb/>
doesn't want to see it happen<lb/>
again.<lb/>
"Nomatter how long I coach,<lb/>
I wili never faget the embarrass-<lb/>
ment Appalachian put our team<lb/>
through up there in Boone Dye<lb/>
said. "They rushed fa 394 yards<lb/>
and had about 546 yards total<lb/>
offense. At one time the scae<lb/>
was 41-7 so they really whipped<lb/>
us in every way. I just hope we<lb/>
are ready fa ASU this time<lb/>
because they really play tough<lb/>
when they meet us. I think that a<lb/>
win over us would help to turn<lb/>
around their season so I know that<lb/>
they want to beat us mae than<lb/>
anything else. It will simply be a<lb/>
great game and we hope we're<lb/>
ready fa the challenge<lb/>
The challenge that coach Dye<lb/>
is talking about is trying to shut<lb/>
down the ASU offense. The<lb/>
Mountaineer offense was nation-<lb/>
ally ranked last week and is<lb/>
virtually the same group that ran<lb/>
all over the Pirate defense in<lb/>
1975. The big guns in the<lb/>
Mountaineer offense are Robby<lb/>
Pnoe and halfback Emmitt Hamil-<lb/>
ton. Price is a do it all type of<lb/>
quarterback who can pass as well<lb/>
as run the ball. He always has a<lb/>
way of giving the Pirate defense a<lb/>
fit with his quick pitch-outs to the<lb/>
halfbacks. Hamilton by the way is<lb/>
the receiver of most of those<lb/>
pitchoutsand hand offs. As of last<lb/>
week the NCAA statistical service<lb/>
rated Hamilton as the 12 rusher<lb/>
in the nation. He is averaging<lb/>
143.3 yards a game and already<lb/>
See MOUNTAINEERS, p. 15)<lb/>
East Carolina vs Appalachian State<lb/>
DATE: Saturday, November 5, 1977<lb/>
Pre-game fact sheet<lb/>
TIME: 130 p.m.<lb/>
LOCATION: Conrad Stadium Boone, N.C.<lb/>
ESTIMATED ATTENDANCE: 13,000<lb/>
OFFENSES: East Carolina-wish bone<lb/>
AppalachianSt ate-wishbone<lb/>
DEFENSES: East Carolina-5-2<lb/>
AppalachianState-5-2<lb/>
EAST CAROLINAAPPALACHIAN STATE<lb/>
SE Terry Gallaher (Sr 174)LE Jay McDonald (Sr205<lb/>
LT Mitchell Smith (Jr 236)LT Eddie High (Jr 250) -<lb/>
LG Wayne Bolt (Sr 254)NG Ernie Henderson (So250)<lb/>
CRickieHolliday(Sr193)RT Eric Elkin(Fr 210)<lb/>
RG Wayne Inman (So 240)RESami Killman(So207). .<lb/>
 RTJoeGodette(So224)LB David Bowman (Jr 215)<lb/>
TE Barry Johnson (Sr 225)LBPatMurphy(Jr220) .<lb/>
QB Jimmy Southerland (Sr 170)LBPatMurphy(Jr220) -<lb/>
FB Theodae Sutton (So 200)SSJeff Vincent (Fr 180) . .<lb/>
RB Eddie Hicks (Jr 201)FSRickBeasley(Fr.155).<lb/>
RB Willie Hawkins(Sr 188)RCBGaryFalden(So200 .<lb/>
SE Fred Chavis(Jr 200)SEPatSwisher(Sr170) .<lb/>
LT Woodrow Stevenson (So 230)LT Roy Thompson (Sr 230)<lb/>
NG Oliver Felton(Jr 207)LG Russell Wilson (Jr 240)<lb/>
RT Noah Clark (So225)C Gil Beck (Sr 240)<lb/>
WE Zack Valentine (Jr 218)RG Steve Parrish (So240).<lb/>
 SLB Harold Randolph (Sr 195)RT Robert Mullen (So240)<lb/>
 WLBMikeBrewmgton(So225)RE Michael Peterson (Jr 165)<lb/>
LCB Charlle Carter (So 173)QB Robby Price (Sr 165) . .<lb/>
SSGerald Hall (Jr 184)RB Scott McConnell (Jr 190)<lb/>
FSSteveHale(Sr177)RB Emmitt Hamilton (Sr 195)<lb/>
RCB Willie Holley (So 176)FB Eddie Estes(So 220) .<lb/>
Placekicker: Junia Creech<lb/>
Punter: Rodney Allen<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
ASU QUARTERBACK ROBIE Price will lead the Mountaineer<lb/>
wishbone against the Pirate defense Saturday afternoon<lb/>
<pb facs="00058019_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 November 1977<lb/>
Gill man aims to please students<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
"As long as I am the<lb/>
basketball coach here my 'irst<lb/>
two concerns are to win games<lb/>
and to please the students says<lb/>
East Carolina's new roundball<lb/>
coach, Larry Gillman.<lb/>
Armed with confidence and a<lb/>
team bursting with enthusiasm,<lb/>
CoachGi 11 man has on I y one aspect<lb/>
of recruiting left this season. Says<lb/>
Gillman, 'The one player that<lb/>
can turn it all around is the<lb/>
student body. They are worth 10<lb/>
to 15 pants a game every home<lb/>
game; and I know they can do it if<lb/>
they want to<lb/>
To aooomodate Gillman's op-<lb/>
timism one entire side of the gym<lb/>
has been reserved fa students.<lb/>
"I want Minges Coliseum to be a<lb/>
place where no opposing team<lb/>
will ever want to return smiled<lb/>
Gillman.<lb/>
"All the players and ooaches<lb/>
believe that whenever we step on<lb/>
the floor with any team in the<lb/>
country, we can win<lb/>
Such optimism is not unwar-<lb/>
ranted as the Pirates will intro-<lb/>
duce some exciting recruits and a<lb/>
group of hungry returnees anx-<lb/>
ious to redeem themselves from<lb/>
last year's disappointing season.<lb/>
Leading the charge is junia<lb/>
?5I<lb/>
HERB GRAY foreground) vs. N.C. State<lb/>
Photo by John Banks) GREG CORNELIUS (27) vs. N.C.<lb/>
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college transfer Oliver Mack. A<lb/>
sure starter Mack is joined at<lb/>
guard by Walter Mosely, Jim<lb/>
Ramsey, senior, Don Whitaker,<lb/>
Greg Cornel ious, and walk ons<lb/>
Scott Nelson and Ron Stumpo.<lb/>
"Don Whitaker has been a<lb/>
pleasant surprise and Ron Stum-<lb/>
po has added a lot of personality<lb/>
to the team he added, "I am<lb/>
pleased with our overall guard<lb/>
situation<lb/>
Last year's second leading<lb/>
scorer Herb Gray is joined at<lb/>
toward by Herb Krusen, Kyle<lb/>
Powers, Bernard Hill, Roger Carr<lb/>
and Gary Kurr. Hill and Carr are<lb/>
highly regarded freshmen while<lb/>
Kurr made the team as a walk on.<lb/>
Sane towards will be alternating<lb/>
at center.<lb/>
"I expect to play about 9 or<lb/>
ten players a game said Gill-<lb/>
man. "There will always be a lot<lb/>
of running and I think that's what<lb/>
students want to see<lb/>
Gillman further stressed the<lb/>
importance of student body back-<lb/>
ing at not only home games but<lb/>
away games. "I would like to see<lb/>
the SGA sponsor some buses to<lb/>
the tournament December 9th<lb/>
and 10th in Charlotte he said,<lb/>
"There will be some exciting<lb/>
teams there which should make a<lb/>
great weekend of basketball<lb/>
State. Photo by John Banks<lb/>
Gillman also pointed out the<lb/>
game at N.C. State December<lb/>
17th. "A big crowd in Raleigh<lb/>
would really help the players<lb/>
As for the next two weeks<lb/>
practice will still be open to<lb/>
students and November 10th the<lb/>
Purple-Gold game will be played<lb/>
at D.H. Conely High School at<lb/>
7:30.<lb/>
Coach Gillman invites anyone<lb/>
who is interested to come out to<lb/>
see practice and ask him any<lb/>
questions that come to mind.<lb/>
"We want to get the students<lb/>
involved in East Carolina Basket-<lb/>
ball One thing is for certain for<lb/>
those who talk to coach Gillman,<lb/>
they'll be made to believe.<lb/>
OLD TOWN INN<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
Features:<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058019_0015"/><lb/>
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3 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAO Page 15<lb/>
Dorcus Sunkel's play boosts tennis team<lb/>
Last season when East Caro-<lb/>
lina's Lady Pirate tennis team<lb/>
was playing an admittedly weak<lb/>
schedule, Dorcus Sunkel strug-<lb/>
gled through a 6-7 year at number<lb/>
one singles even though the Lady<lb/>
Pirates had a 10-3 team won-loes<lb/>
mark. But, this season, with the<lb/>
Lady Pirates playing a much<lb/>
tougher schedule, Sunkel has<lb/>
come through with a 9-3 mark,<lb/>
including a 7-2 dual match record.<lb/>
"There's just not as much<lb/>
pressure on me this year, playing<lb/>
number three Sunkel said.<lb/>
"There are no psychological<lb/>
burdens on me. The competition<lb/>
is as good a better because we' re<lb/>
playing much tougher teams.<lb/>
We're playing with people now<lb/>
that play in the nationals<lb/>
Last week, Sunkel led the<lb/>
Lady Pirates to a 6-3 win over<lb/>
Peace College of Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
Peace had placed second at the<lb/>
National Junior College Tennis<lb/>
Championships last season and<lb/>
were ranked number one in the<lb/>
nation fa junior colleges this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
A native of Baltimore, Md<lb/>
Sunkel has benefited from the<lb/>
influx of two newcomers to the<lb/>
Lady Pirates this season. Debbie<lb/>
Spinazzola and Louise Snyder<lb/>
were both ranked high in their<lb/>
regions of the country when they<lb/>
came to East Carolina.<lb/>
"Debbie and Louise have<lb/>
added a lot of depth to our squad<lb/>
this season the therapeutic<lb/>
recreation major said. "They<lb/>
have given us a strong lineup<lb/>
throughout. They have inspired<lb/>
the rest of us to trv to continue<lb/>
improving our game<lb/>
A strong serve and a lot of<lb/>
hustle best characterizes Sunkel'�<lb/>
game. Good short angle shots<lb/>
seem to be strong with Sunkel,<lb/>
while the backhand is giving her<lb/>
the most trouble.<lb/>
 Dorcus is really a hustler out<lb/>
there on the court said tennis<lb/>
coach Cynthia Averett. "She is<lb/>
really gutsy. She goes after a lot<lb/>
of balls that most players would<lb/>
let go. She is also very consistent<lb/>
with her ground strokes. She can<lb/>
play the baseline all day.<lb/>
"But probably the best thing<lb/>
about Dorcus Averett contin-<lb/>
ued, "is her attitude. She just<lb/>
doesn't know when to give up<lb/>
As a preoster at Patapsko<lb/>
High in Baltimore, Sunkel played<lb/>
number one two years and was<lb/>
undefeated both years in the<lb/>
oounty league. She was also the<lb/>
oounty champion in the open<lb/>
division after her senior season.<lb/>
Sunkel is also a very good<lb/>
doubles Dlaver. teamming with<lb/>
!<lb/>
i<lb/>
Spinazzola at number one.<lb/>
"I like playing doubles as<lb/>
much as singles Sunkel said.<lb/>
"Debbie is just great at the net,<lb/>
while my best game comes at the<lb/>
baseline. We're a very compati-<lb/>
ble team fa doubles<lb/>
"With Dorcus' consistency<lb/>
and Debbie's power game<lb/>
Coach Averett said, "they are<lb/>
really a good team. They wak<lb/>
together real well and both have<lb/>
strong serves. And in doubles,<lb/>
you have to have a hustler like<lb/>
Dacus at the baseline<lb/>
With Sunkel playing well all<lb/>
season, the Lady Pirates have<lb/>
improved their mark to 6-8 after a<lb/>
harendous1-7 start.<lb/>
Even though the Lady Pirates<lb/>
have played much tougher com-<lb/>
petition this season and have<lb/>
taken a few lumos as a team, no<lb/>
one had to wary about number<lb/>
three singles, because Dacus<lb/>
Sunkel has taken real good care of<lb/>
that class.<lb/>
MOUNTAINEERS<lb/>
Continued from p. 13<lb/>
has 1003 yards fa the year.<lb/>
The problem fa the Moun-<lb/>
taineers this year has been a<lb/>
young defense which is being<lb/>
burned fa an average of 407.4<lb/>
yards a game. Last week against<lb/>
Ball State fa example the Apps<lb/>
gave up 580 yards total offense.<lb/>
This may make things seem easy<lb/>
fa the Pirates but there is oie<lb/>
factor that could make the<lb/>
Appalachian team tough to cope<lb/>
with. This is the fact that ASU<lb/>
runs the "wishbone" also and<lb/>
will have plenty of experienced<lb/>
scouting team personnel fo teach<lb/>
the defense to stop the bone. In<lb/>
shat the Pirates will be easy to<lb/>
prepare fa because ASU is very<lb/>
familiar with our offense thus the<lb/>
defense will probably play the<lb/>
Pirates tougher.<lb/>
Appalachian isn't the only<lb/>
school involved that has personet<lb/>
ranked in the NCAA stats. Safety<lb/>
Gerald Hall is the number one<lb/>
punt returner in the nation this<lb/>
week followed by Peon States<lb/>
Jimmy Cefalo.<lb/>
The game this Saturday after-<lb/>
noon shapes up as another tough<lb/>
rivalry game between ECU and<lb/>
ASU. Coach Dye wants to prevent<lb/>
the trouble he had in Boone the<lb/>
last time he was there, but the<lb/>
M ountaineers are sure to give the<lb/>
Pirates their usual tough recep-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
r<lb/>
I<lb/>
A<lb/>
ASU HEAD COACH Jim Brakeheld<lb/>
TERRY GALLAHER IN 76 ECU ASU game.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
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Have 68 Fstbck breaking fa<lb/>
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FOR SALE: AKC Great Dane<lb/>
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FOR SALE: '73 Honda 500 four,<lb/>
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see next to Pollards Grocery<lb/>
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auto - rebuilt engine. Good oond.<lb/>
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FOR SALE: 14k. white gold<lb/>
diamond engagement ring and<lb/>
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FOR SALE: Texas Instruments<lb/>
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Also card programable. Complete<lb/>
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FOR SALE: '76 Mustang II<lb/>
fast back, A.C 4-speed. Low<lb/>
mileage - 27 mpg. Exoelient oond.<lb/>
$2,800 a bargain. Call 758-0458.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sears self cleaning<lb/>
toaster-broiler oven. Used once<lb/>
jost $44 sell $30 excellent fa<lb/>
hone a dam. 752-5499.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Recad your own<lb/>
tapes and savewith an Akai<lb/>
8-track recaderplayback unit.<lb/>
Features include 2vu metas, fast<lb/>
faward, and channel repeat. $90<lb/>
negotiable. Contact Ralph at<lb/>
752-1082.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Amplifier, Sansui<lb/>
Au-5900, 45 watts per ch. RMS,<lb/>
20-20,000 Hz wno more than<lb/>
o.1 V2 harmonic distatioi. Im-<lb/>
maculate cond. $220.00 Call Cain<lb/>
758-9789 M-Th (2:00-2:30 &amp;<lb/>
6tt6:30) p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4.3 cubic foot refrig.<lb/>
Perfect fa dam use. $115. If<lb/>
interested call 756-6951 after 5<lb/>
p.m. M-F.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sony reel to reel tape<lb/>
deck; good oond oomes with 2<lb/>
mikes. $150 752-3739 after 9 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE. 8 dubs, golt bag, golf<lb/>
cart. Call 753-3624 after 6 o.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE71 BMW Motacycle<lb/>
' Best road machine in the wald<lb/>
low mileage - $1295.00 a best<lb/>
reasonable offer. May accept<lb/>
partial trade. Call 7&amp; 7059 from 5<lb/>
to 10 p.m.<lb/>
fcxrertjj<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
pay V3 of rent and utilities.<lb/>
Greenway Apts. Call 756-7888<lb/>
NEEDED: One female roommate<lb/>
by Nov. 16, 1977 at College View<lb/>
Apts E. 10th St. Call Linda at<lb/>
752-6963.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE; needed<lb/>
by the end of Nov. Tar River<lb/>
Apts. Call 752-4984 Ask fa<lb/>
Bobbie.<lb/>
WANTED TO RENT; 3-bdrm<lb/>
house in country within 10 miles<lb/>
of Greenville. Reward upon<lb/>
rental. Call 752-0982<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
$65 plus 13 utilities, 2 stay, 2<lb/>
bedroom, 2 bath 758-6617.<lb/>
persondOa<lb/>
FILM SOCIETY: All persons<lb/>
interested in joining Eastern<lb/>
Carolina Film Society call at<lb/>
758-5253. If no answer phone<lb/>
752-6389 or write Box 27<lb/>
Falkland, N.C. 27827<lb/>
TO BUY: FM Signal generata<lb/>
(used) must have 140-170 MgHz<lb/>
bandwidth capacity. Call 752-<lb/>
0982.<lb/>
ID. a passpat Pictures. At<lb/>
Rudy's Photography 1025 Evans<lb/>
St 752-5167.<lb/>
WANTED: Silver ooins, dimes,<lb/>
quarters, halfdollars dates 1964<lb/>
a pria. Will pay three times face<lb/>
value. Call 756-3466 - 9 a.m. - 9<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: to Boone, N.C.<lb/>
fa ASU - ECU game. Wants to<lb/>
leave Fri. and return Sun. even-<lb/>
ing or early Mon. maning.<lb/>
Please call 758-1636.<lb/>
NEED TYPING? Fa efficient,<lb/>
fast service Call 756-3815 after<lb/>
5.15 p.m. Reasonable rates IBM<lb/>
Carbon type used.<lb/>
MUSICIANS: Newly faming soul<lb/>
band looking fa singers, lead<lb/>
guitarist, and keyboard player.<lb/>
Call LB. 758-8310.<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Fall things too<lb/>
big, too long? Call Kathy.<lb/>
752-8444 a 752-8642.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: to Miami<lb/>
anytime after Dec. 13, 1977. Call<lb/>
Marie-Noelle Connil 758-9229<lb/>
FOUND: Rings. Contact Depart-<lb/>
ment of Psychology 757-6800.<lb/>
WANTED: Used BlackWhite<lb/>
T.V. in good oond. Will pay<lb/>
reasonable price. Call 758-8452<lb/>
after 5 p.m ask fa Michelle D.<lb/>
LOST: 1 Female Malmute and<lb/>
Sheep dog. Black and white, need<lb/>
medicine. Call Bill 752-8862.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058019_0016"/><lb/>
16 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 November 1977<lb/>
DO YOU NEED A T-SHIRT<lb/>
FROM THE DEAN OF BEER?<lb/>
(DID THE TITANK NEED LIFEBOATS?)<lb/>
Stglinda fteinWIIer<lb/>
Dean of Beer<lb/>
Mm<lb/>
 .<lb/>
-Hfiie" f-SMrt. Yellov; with<lb/>
turr&amp;rf the-century Schtez<lb/>
design in full cokw. 5Qcotton,<lb/>
50�lyesteT. SUes: &amp;H L<lb/>
"tan ��r" Uisar SWrt.<lb/>
Ventilated mesh football style<lb/>
shirt for men or women.<lb/>
Numerals on shoulder and back<lb/>
100 stretch in Sizes:<lb/>
S.M,UXL$l4T"<lb/>
fffEOEAN<lb/>
' 3<lb/>
k��<lb/>
&amp;&amp;&amp;<lb/>
IjtfP<lb/>
m<lb/>
ScMHi 'PatteriT T- Shirt. Wl lite<lb/>
with colorful pattern of Schlitz<lb/>
trademarks Sizes S. M. L. XL<lb/>
$3 50<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
-Ort oi SdHtar f-SMrt.<lb/>
Blend of cotton and polyester.<lb/>
Gray color Sizes S. M. L. XL.<lb/>
$3.50<lb/>
QUAN<lb/>
Dl S KIPTIQN<lb/>
SII<lb/>
UNIT<lb/>
PRICE TOTAL<lb/>
<lb/>
TOTALS<lb/>
? My order is over $25<lb/>
Please send me my surprise gift worth b (X)<lb/>
Send order with check or money order payable tr<lb/>
Schlitz Dean of Beer<lb/>
Post Office Box 9373<lb/>
St Paul, MN 55193<lb/>
Allow 4 weeks for shipment Void where prohibited by law Offer<lb/>
expires December 31. 1977 Prices include shipping and handling<lb/>
costs<lb/>
SHIP TO<lb/>
Name.<lb/>
Address-<lb/>
 City<lb/>
State<lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
�1977 Jos Srhlil Brewing Co Miluauhe Wk<lb/>
V �1977.<lb/>
y<lb/>
Dean o ���r T-SMrf. F<lb/>
deserve to wear the title. Je<lb/>
sleeves and Dean of Beer<lb/>
cotton Sizes: S, M, L XL<lb/>
lose of you who reafty<lb/>
style with gold M length<lb/>
Jn full color 100<lb/>
$4.50<lb/>
Schlitz is a trademark of Jos. Schlitz .Brewing Co, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202<lb/>
K f' '� '�'<lb/>
<pb facs="00058019_0017"/>
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