<?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="00058021_0001"/>
<lb/>
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/>
Vd. 53, No. 21<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
10 November 1977<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Elect ions p. 3<lb/>
Bakkecasep. 6<lb/>
Booksp. 12<lb/>
Oyster Bowlp. 13<lb/>
SGA to consider funding certain retreats<lb/>
By BILL HARRINGTON<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The SGA will oonsider funding<lb/>
retreats for campus organizations<lb/>
only when the survival of a<lb/>
reputable, established organiza-<lb/>
tion is in jeopardy, according to<lb/>
SGA President Neil Sessoms.<lb/>
According to Sessoms, some<lb/>
examples of organizations fitting<lb/>
these criteria are music ensem-<lb/>
bles and the Model UN.<lb/>
"Music ensembles, Model<lb/>
UNthat'swhat they're all about;<lb/>
going to conferences and holding<lb/>
conferences here said Sessoms.<lb/>
"Even the travel in these<lb/>
budgets will be subject to extre-<lb/>
mely close scrutiny said Ses-<lb/>
soms.<lb/>
SGA Treasurer Craig Hales<lb/>
said that he hopes the SGA will<lb/>
"find enough money to fund<lb/>
Health Assn<lb/>
sponsors<lb/>
car clinic<lb/>
ByANNTHARRINGTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Student National<lb/>
Environmental Health Associa-<lb/>
tion sponsored a free car emission<lb/>
clinic last Saturday at the Pitt<lb/>
Plaza Shopping Center.<lb/>
Dr. Y.J. Lao, associate profes-<lb/>
sor of Environmental Health and<lb/>
faculty advisor to the club, said<lb/>
the turnout was a success.<lb/>
"We had 117 cars participa-<lb/>
ting in the clinic said Lao.<lb/>
"This is the third time the<lb/>
club has sponsored a clinic and<lb/>
we had about 40 more cars<lb/>
involved<lb/>
Besides providing a valuable<lb/>
learning experience for the stu-<lb/>
dents, the clinic worked to serve<lb/>
the public, Lao said. The car<lb/>
owner can save gas by correcting<lb/>
problems found by the test.<lb/>
The purpose of the clinic was<lb/>
to determine the level of carbon<lb/>
monoxide and hydrocarbons In<lb/>
the exhaust, according to Lao.<lb/>
The infra-red exhaust emis-<lb/>
sion tester, which indicates how<lb/>
well an engine is running, was<lb/>
lent to the club by the Sun<lb/>
Electric Co. in Charlotte.<lb/>
Lao said that a sample is<lb/>
drawn through a hose placed in<lb/>
the vehicle's tailpipe to test an<lb/>
emission.<lb/>
Hydrocarbons are unburned<lb/>
gasoline, and carbon monoxide is<lb/>
a gas produced during combus-<lb/>
tion. The HC meter reads out in<lb/>
parts-per-million (PPM) of hydro-<lb/>
carbons. The CO meter reads out<lb/>
the percentage of carbon mon-<lb/>
oxide.<lb/>
The efficiency of the motor<lb/>
can be determined from these<lb/>
readings, said Lao.<lb/>
See CLINIC p. 3<lb/>
some (retreats) that we have in<lb/>
the past<lb/>
Hales said he hates to see<lb/>
funding fa retreats stopped, but<lb/>
feels that "it's a good idea to<lb/>
really tighten down on it.<lb/>
"I'm not totally against re-<lb/>
treats-not some kinds of retreats-<lb/>
if the money is available said<lb/>
Hales.<lb/>
"I'mnot in favor of retreats as<lb/>
they've been done in the past, the<lb/>
reason being we just don't have<lb/>
enough money<lb/>
Sessoms noted that no sub-<lb/>
stantial funds have been freed to<lb/>
alter the SGA's current financial<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
"As far as I'm conoerned<lb/>
there's been no alteration in our<lb/>
original proposal to eliminate<lb/>
sweeping areas of SGA funded<lb/>
travel he said.<lb/>
Hales mentioned a proposal,<lb/>
not yet officially considered, that<lb/>
would call for setting aside a<lb/>
small amount of the budget 50lely<lb/>
for the financing of retreats.<lb/>
This plan would award some<lb/>
of the money for a retreat to the<lb/>
department that could show the<lb/>
greatest potential service to the<lb/>
most students, according to<lb/>
Hales.<lb/>
Even under this plan "we still<lb/>
wouldn't put up as much money<lb/>
as we did last year said Hales.<lb/>
"It's not a question of whe-<lb/>
ther I agree or not anymore, said<lb/>
Sessoms of the unofficial propo-<lb/>
sal.<lb/>
"We're fast approaching the<lb/>
point where we don't have the<lb/>
money at all.<lb/>
"I haven't changed my<lb/>
mind he said. "I'm still against<lb/>
retreats. I just don't see where<lb/>
the money is going to come<lb/>
from<lb/>
X<lb/>
SGA PRESIDENT Neil See- SGA TREASURER Craig<lb/>
soms. Hales.<lb/>
Follow regulations<lb/>
or risk tow charge<lb/>
JOSEPH H. CALDER, Director of Security. Photo by Pete<lb/>
Podeszwa<lb/>
By STUART MORGAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
About 10 cars are being towed<lb/>
from campus each week because<lb/>
their owners disobey parking<lb/>
regulations, according to Joseph<lb/>
H. Calder, Director of Security.<lb/>
"The students here at ECU<lb/>
should be aware of the parking<lb/>
regulations and of the towing<lb/>
policy said Calder.<lb/>
"The parking regulations are<lb/>
given in the school catalogue and<lb/>
various other pamphlets distribu-<lb/>
ted each school year<lb/>
Calder said there are signs<lb/>
throughout campus which ade-<lb/>
quately warn students that towing<lb/>
is enforced.<lb/>
Calder said that the sopho-<lb/>
mores, juniors, and seniors initia-<lb/>
ted the towing policy in Jan<lb/>
1972.<lb/>
At that time, the upperclass-<lb/>
men complained about the lack of<lb/>
available parking spaces.<lb/>
Also, they suggested that<lb/>
freshmen should not be allowed<lb/>
to park cars on campus and that<lb/>
all illegally parked cars should be<lb/>
Speakers attend Careers Day<lb/>
By CHRIS MISENHEIMER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Personnel representing instit-<lb/>
utions from North Carolina,<lb/>
Virginia, South Carolina, and<lb/>
Florida will be here Wednesday<lb/>
fa the annual Health Careers<lb/>
Day.<lb/>
The representatives will be in<lb/>
Mendenhall's multi-purpose<lb/>
room November 16 from 10 a.m.<lb/>
to 1 p.m.<lb/>
"This is an excellent oppa-<lb/>
tunity fa students in allied health<lb/>
fields to get an idea of what jobs<lb/>
are available said Furney K.<lb/>
James, directa of the Career<lb/>
Planning and Placement Service.<lb/>
Seniors will have a good<lb/>
chance of obtaining many of these<lb/>
jobs through follow up interviews,<lb/>
James said.<lb/>
Careers Day will be a good<lb/>
opportunity fa underclassmen to<lb/>
become more'informal about<lb/>
future jot possibilities.<lb/>
He emphasized that Health<lb/>
Careers Day i' not limited to just<lb/>
Allied Health students.<lb/>
Home Economic students con-<lb/>
centrating in nutritkn will be able<lb/>
to learn about jobs available in<lb/>
the area of dietetics.<lb/>
Students concentrating in<lb/>
social wak may wish to talk to<lb/>
representatives from the mental<lb/>
health centers.<lb/>
Some of the 40 participating<lb/>
institutions include Charlotte<lb/>
Memorial Hospital, Neuse<lb/>
Mental Health Center, the<lb/>
Medical College of Virginia, Duke<lb/>
Medical Center, the Veterans<lb/>
Administration Hospital in<lb/>
Fayetteville, and several other<lb/>
See CAREERS p. 5<lb/>
towed away at the owner's<lb/>
expense.<lb/>
"Those two suggestions were<lb/>
approved by the ECU Board of<lb/>
Trustees, along with all other<lb/>
traffic and parking regulations,<lb/>
and then sent to Raleigh where<lb/>
they became North Carolina<lb/>
law said Mr. Calder.<lb/>
Each of the Greenville wreck-<lb/>
ing services charge $25 fa every<lb/>
car towed. But, only half of that<lb/>
has to be paid if the owner shows<lb/>
up at the time the wrecker<lb/>
arrives.<lb/>
"The funds fa the traffic<lb/>
department on campus are deri-<lb/>
ved only from tickets, parking<lb/>
registration, and student fees.<lb/>
Not one cent of that money is kept<lb/>
by the school he said.<lb/>
"Parking registration only<lb/>
costs $5 each year and that's far<lb/>
cbeapa than the $72 required<lb/>
yearly at Chapel Hill said<lb/>
Calder.<lb/>
Calder mentioned that all<lb/>
unregistered vehicles in the vicin-<lb/>
ity of the men's and women's<lb/>
residence halls between 12 mid-<lb/>
night and 7 am. are subject to<lb/>
being towed.<lb/>
"That's for the student's<lb/>
praection also he added<lb/>
He also said that a person who<lb/>
collects three a more tickets but<lb/>
fails to pay them is subject to<lb/>
having his car towed.<lb/>
Also, if a car blocks another<lb/>
car from moving, parks in front of<lb/>
a fire hydrant a exit, that car is<lb/>
also subject to being towed.<lb/>
Calder said, "The campus<lb/>
pohce do not read notes left on<lb/>
cars. Only the supervisor on duty<lb/>
at the traffic office can verify<lb/>
those extenuating drcumstanoae<lb/>
which prevent the car from being<lb/>
moved<lb/>
In such cases, those cars will<lb/>
not be towed.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058021_0002"/><lb/>
sp '<lb/>
'm v � '<lb/>
�<lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 November 1977<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Bong Show SNEA<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
The Graduate Record Exam-<lb/>
inations will be offered at ECU<lb/>
Sat Dec. 10,1977. It istoolateto<lb/>
officially register for this test, but<lb/>
there is the possibility of a walk-in<lb/>
on this date for the Aptitude<lb/>
portion of the test only. Walk-in<lb/>
candidates should complete an<lb/>
application and bring it with them<lb/>
on the day of the test. Applica-<lb/>
tions may be obtained from the<lb/>
Testing Center, Room 105-<lb/>
Speight Building, ECU, Green-<lb/>
ville, N.C. 27834. Walk-in candi-<lb/>
dates are handled on first-come-<lb/>
first-serve basis as long as there<lb/>
are available tests. For further<lb/>
information, you should contact<lb/>
the ECU Testing Center-tele-<lb/>
phone 757-6811.<lb/>
Fashion<lb/>
The rehearsals for SOULS<lb/>
Fashion show will be Mondays<lb/>
and Tuesdays at 6 p.m. in the<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural Center.<lb/>
For more information, call Arah<lb/>
Venable. 758-8120.<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
The Omen, Nov. 11 and 12 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre. Shows at 7 p.m. and 9<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The Omen fills the screen with<lb/>
the most finely-crafted scenes of<lb/>
horror in recent years. The<lb/>
couple's true son has died at<lb/>
birth, and another baby has been<lb/>
substituted at the hospital by the<lb/>
father, who feared the baby's<lb/>
death would traumatize his wife.<lb/>
A bizarre trail of deaths follow the<lb/>
boy. The photographic effects are<lb/>
spectalar. This film stars Gregory<lb/>
Peck and Lee Remick.<lb/>
FG<lb/>
Hey! Getting tired of the same<lb/>
old routine? Take a break this<lb/>
Friday night and oome to the<lb/>
Forever Generation! We'll be<lb/>
having a warm time of fellowship,<lb/>
a great time of singing and fun,<lb/>
and a meaningful Bible study.<lb/>
Whatsmore, our guest speaker is<lb/>
Dan Coutcher, the National<lb/>
Assistant Director of the FG. So,<lb/>
why not plan on being there?<lb/>
Friday at 7 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
B-103.<lb/>
Fencing<lb/>
The first organizational meet-<lb/>
ing of the new Fencing Club will<lb/>
je held Mon Nov. 14 in the<lb/>
library on the third floor of<lb/>
Wright Annex (door next to the<lb/>
bookstore) at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Anyone interested in joining<lb/>
us to learn and enjoy the art and<lb/>
sport of fencing is encouraged to<lb/>
attend. The proapects for an<lb/>
activedub look good! If you cant<lb/>
come andor would like further<lb/>
information, please call Blake a<lb/>
Beu at 758-4357.<lb/>
Law<lb/>
The Law School Admission<lb/>
Test will be offered at ECU Sat<lb/>
Dec. 3, 1977. Application blanks<lb/>
are to be completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Service, Box<lb/>
966-R, Princeton, N.J. 08540.<lb/>
Applications are available at the<lb/>
Testing Center, Room-105,<lb/>
Speight Building, ECU.<lb/>
Programs<lb/>
Students who are majoring in<lb/>
programs at the Schools of Allied<lb/>
Health and Social Professions,<lb/>
Medicine Nursing, and related<lb/>
areas are invited to apply for<lb/>
part-time employment as peer<lb/>
oounselorstutors in the sciences,<lb/>
mathematics, and other courses.<lb/>
Call 757-6122 a visit the Center<lb/>
for Student Opportunities, 208<lb/>
Ragsdale Hall for application<lb/>
during Monday through Friday<lb/>
between 8 and 5. Deadline is<lb/>
November 23, 1977.<lb/>
PT Club<lb/>
All interested pre-physical<lb/>
therapy majors are invited to a<lb/>
meeting of the PT Club for an<lb/>
informal chance to have questions<lb/>
answered - advioe, bribes, etc.<lb/>
Refreshments. Wed Nov. 9 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in room 205 at the<lb/>
Allied Health building.<lb/>
CFA<lb/>
The Child Family Association<lb/>
will meet Tues Nov 15 in the<lb/>
Vanlanding room at 5:30 p.m. All<lb/>
graduate and undergraduate<lb/>
Child Development and Family<lb/>
Relations majors and minors are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Singing<lb/>
Fa all those interested in<lb/>
participating in a singing group, a<lb/>
meeting will be held at 7 p.m. this<lb/>
Sunday. The regular meeting will<lb/>
still be at 8 p.m. Both meetings<lb/>
will be at the Afro-American<lb/>
Cultural Center.<lb/>
Alpha<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Delta, the<lb/>
Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental<lb/>
Society of ECU will hold a<lb/>
meeting Tues Nov. 15 at 730<lb/>
p.m. in Flanagan F-307. Tues-<lb/>
day's meeting will be the begin-<lb/>
ning lecture in a lecture series on<lb/>
"Alternatives to Medicine All<lb/>
members and interested persons<lb/>
are urged to attend.<lb/>
Comic Book<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
ECU Comic Book Club Tues Nov<lb/>
15 at 7 p.m. in room 248<lb/>
Mendenhall. All interested<lb/>
persons are invited.<lb/>
All SGA Student Watchers<lb/>
whohelpedout Sat. night, Oct. 29<lb/>
are asked to oome by the SGA<lb/>
office in Mendenhall as soon as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Everyone get involved Nov.<lb/>
10! The most exciting country,<lb/>
blues, ragtime, pop, folk, original<lb/>
&amp; bluegrass guitarist will enter-<lb/>
tain you and your friends. Keith<lb/>
Craig invites everyone out MBfg<lb/>
along with him. Joe Collins 9M<lb/>
thrill your soul with a well-<lb/>
rounded guitar-picking and foot-<lb/>
stomping night. Free refresh-<lb/>
ments, .50 admission, Rm. 15<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Ski Club<lb/>
There will be a mandatory<lb/>
meeting of the ECU Ski pub Nov.<lb/>
17 at 4 p.m. in the bottom of<lb/>
Memorial Gym. Everyone who<lb/>
has not paid dues, please bring it<lb/>
to the meeting.<lb/>
Exhibit<lb/>
The French Press exhibit in<lb/>
Joyner Library will be open from<lb/>
1 p.m. to 5 p.m. everyday except<lb/>
Fri. and Sat. Evening hours are<lb/>
from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. everyday<lb/>
except Sat.<lb/>
SociAnth<lb/>
The Sociology-Anthropology<lb/>
Club will present its first guest<lb/>
speaker Thurs Nov. 10 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. Dr. Peter Frica will speak<lb/>
after a short business meeting.<lb/>
All members and interested<lb/>
persons are urged to attend.<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
The Rebel deadline for litera-<lb/>
ture is Dec. 16. All poetry, fiction,<lb/>
essays and plays MUST be<lb/>
received by the deadline to be<lb/>
considered for publication in the<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
All artwork for the magazine<lb/>
must appear in the Third Annual<lb/>
Rebel Art Show in the Menden-<lb/>
hall Gallery Jan. 29-Feb. 5.<lb/>
Artwork can be entered in the<lb/>
show by registering each piece at<lb/>
the Rebel office or at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Information Desk.<lb/>
All artwork MUST be registered<lb/>
by 4 p.m. Jan. 8 or it will not be<lb/>
included in the show. For further<lb/>
details, oontact the Rebel office at<lb/>
757-6502.<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
There will be a SOULS<lb/>
meeting Thurs Nov. 10 at the<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural Center at<lb/>
7 p.m. Please plan to attend and<lb/>
to be PROMPT.<lb/>
SLAP<lb/>
The SLAP Department is<lb/>
sponsoring a Bake sale Thurs<lb/>
Nov. 10 from 8a.m. till. It will be<lb/>
located at the Allied Health (Belk)<lb/>
bigd. in the lobby Please oome<lb/>
and support the SLAP Dept!<lb/>
ECU Student Union Coffee-<lb/>
house Committee will hold its<lb/>
first annual bong show Fri Nov.<lb/>
18. Anyone with an act can<lb/>
participate. All types of acts will<lb/>
be accepted. Prizes and door<lb/>
prizes will be awarded. Come by<lb/>
R. 234 and sign up and list your<lb/>
act, name and phone number.<lb/>
The public is cordially invited to<lb/>
attend and win some door prizes.<lb/>
Free refreshments. Rm 15<lb/>
Mendenhall. Admission only .50.<lb/>
Kappa Delta<lb/>
Kappa Delta Pledges are<lb/>
having a happy hour at Chapter X<lb/>
Men Nov. 14 from 830 to 10<lb/>
p.m. Beer is .50 and admission is<lb/>
also .50.<lb/>
Pi Sigma<lb/>
Pi Sigma Alpha, the, honorary<lb/>
Political Science Society, will hold<lb/>
adinner meeting Thurs Nov. 17,<lb/>
beginning at 6 p.m. at Parkers<lb/>
B-B-Q Restaurant located on<lb/>
South Memorial Drive.<lb/>
The guest speaker fa the<lb/>
evening will be Mr. Charles<lb/>
Gaskins, Chairperson of the Pitt<lb/>
County Board of Commissioners.<lb/>
Following dinner, Mr.<lb/>
Gaskins will address the group<lb/>
concerning such topics as his<lb/>
job s responsibilities and the<lb/>
relationship between the Pitt<lb/>
County Board of Commissioners<lb/>
and the Greenville City Council.<lb/>
A quest ionanswer session<lb/>
with an open discussion period<lb/>
will follow Mr. Gaskin's present-<lb/>
ation. All members are strongly<lb/>
advised to attend. Guests are<lb/>
welcome! Dinner will be served<lb/>
family style at a cost of $3.75 per<lb/>
person.<lb/>
It is recommended that all<lb/>
members who have not paid<lb/>
chapter and national dues to do so<lb/>
at this meeting.<lb/>
National dues will rise, effect-<lb/>
ive Dec. 1, 1977, and in order to<lb/>
avoid payng escalated fees, it is<lb/>
necessary to pay all dues to the<lb/>
Nov. 17 meeting.<lb/>
For further information, call<lb/>
Lynne Yow at 758-1346 a Jim<lb/>
Teal at 756-0916.<lb/>
The Student National Educa-<lb/>
tion Association will hold it's<lb/>
monthly meeting Monday, Nov.<lb/>
14 at 4:30 p.m room 101, in the<lb/>
Nursing Building. Dean Jones<lb/>
will be the guest speaker at this<lb/>
meeting, in celebration of Nation-<lb/>
al Education Week, Nov. 14-19.<lb/>
We cordially invite all students<lb/>
interested in an Education Career<lb/>
to attend this meeting. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served.<lb/>
The ECU chapter of the SNEA<lb/>
is your student professional or-<lb/>
ganization, and is part of the<lb/>
largest student membership or-<lb/>
ganization in the world. Fa more<lb/>
infamatiai please call Bill Bryan,<lb/>
Vice President, at 756-0017.<lb/>
Trick Shots<lb/>
Paul Germ, pocket billiard<lb/>
trick shot champion, will be<lb/>
perfaming at Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center in the Multi-Purpose<lb/>
Room at 8 p.m. Mon Nov. 14.<lb/>
With one stroke of the cue, Germ<lb/>
will amaze you by knocking 12<lb/>
balls in six different pockets.<lb/>
Audience participation will en-<lb/>
hance his trick sha presentation<lb/>
and make it an event you won t<lb/>
want to miss. This free exhibition<lb/>
is presented by Mendenhall S'j-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
Chess<lb/>
All students interested in<lb/>
playing chess should attend the<lb/>
Chess Club meetings each Tues-<lb/>
day at 7:30 p.m. in the Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center Coffeehouse<lb/>
located on the- ground floor.<lb/>
Competition is at all levels.<lb/>
Bahais<lb/>
Come to room 238 Mendenhall<lb/>
every Thursday evening at 7 30 to<lb/>
learn about how the wald can<lb/>
becone a planet of racial, educa-<lb/>
tional, lingual, economic and<lb/>
familial unity in our lifetimes.<lb/>
There will be bahais there to<lb/>
chat, to show films, and to give<lb/>
reading material so that you may<lb/>
exercise your independent inves-<lb/>
tigations of truth. Everyone is<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
Flu Vaccine Bridge Club<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 stu-<lb/>
dents 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. aid the charge will<lb/>
be $1.50.<lb/>
Food Drive<lb/>
The Alpha Phi Alprja Annual<lb/>
Canned Food Drive will start this<lb/>
week 11-7-77 through 11-22-77.<lb/>
Help us to make this a Happy<lb/>
Thanksgiving fa sane underpriv-<lb/>
ileged families. Give a can!<lb/>
Check this paper fa a listing<lb/>
of drop sights. Donations of<lb/>
non-perishable goods only<lb/>
The Bridge Club meets each<lb/>
Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. All<lb/>
persons interested in playing<lb/>
bridge are invited to attend.<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
Happy Hour at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center is every Monday.<lb/>
The time is 3 p.m. until 6 p.m. in<lb/>
Billiards and 1 p.m. until 4 p.m.<lb/>
in Bowling. Prices are Va off in<lb/>
billiards, table tennis, and bowl-<lb/>
ing. Don't miss it.<lb/>
Table Tennis<lb/>
The Table Tennis Club meets<lb/>
each Thursday at 8 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Table<lb/>
Tennis Rooms. All persons inter-<lb/>
ested in playing table tennis are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058021_0003"/><lb/>
WFkMpfmm<lb/>
nHBnHiHnnBHBBHHI<lb/>
10 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Voter turnout above normal in Tuesday's election<lb/>
ByKENTYNDALL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Voter turnout was above<lb/>
normal in Tuesday's municipal<lb/>
elections here as the four city<lb/>
council seats were filled by three<lb/>
incumbents and a political new-<lb/>
comer.<lb/>
Approximately 40 per cent of<lb/>
the registered voters in the nine<lb/>
Greenville precincts elected John<lb/>
L Howard, Mildred T. (Millie)<lb/>
McGrath, Clarence Gray, and<lb/>
new political spirant Judy<lb/>
Greene, according to Margaret<lb/>
Register, Pitt County supervisor<lb/>
of elections.<lb/>
Howard was not one of the top<lb/>
six vote receivers in the October<lb/>
municipal elections, but he was<lb/>
the top winner in Tuesday's<lb/>
runoff election, said Register.<lb/>
Register said the state elec-<lb/>
tions had an impact on the voter<lb/>
turnout.<lb/>
Register over 4,890 persons of<lb/>
the eligible 10,923 persons voted<lb/>
Tuesday, which is approximately<lb/>
40 per cent.<lb/>
In the October 11 municipal<lb/>
elections, 4,188 of an eligible<lb/>
10,910 persons (38.1 per cent)<lb/>
voted, said Register.<lb/>
Howard, McGrath, Gray and<lb/>
Greene, will join Joe Taft and<lb/>
Charles Vincent on the city<lb/>
council. Taft and Vincent re-<lb/>
ceived clear majorities in the<lb/>
October municipal elections, ac-<lb/>
cording to Register.<lb/>
The unofficial vote totals are<lb/>
as follows: John Howard, 2,156;<lb/>
Millie McGrath, 2,138; Judy<lb/>
Greene, 2,037; Clarence Gray,<lb/>
2,026.<lb/>
Other candidates receiving<lb/>
votes are as follows: William J.<lb/>
Hadden, Jr 1,936; Harry E.<lb/>
Hagerty, 1,850; Delia P. Day-<lb/>
son, 1,516; John Bizzell, 1,410.<lb/>
The official canvas will be<lb/>
Thursday at 11:00 a.m. in the<lb/>
district courtroom in the court-<lb/>
CLINIC<lb/>
Continued from p. 1)<lb/>
Lao said 60 of the cars in<lb/>
this country are not operating<lb/>
efficiently.<lb/>
The pollution problem could<lb/>
be reduced by 40 by correcting<lb/>
the mechanical problems in the<lb/>
engines, according to Lao.<lb/>
Although many people are<lb/>
aware that the basic health<lb/>
hazard of pollution is lung<lb/>
disease, they often fail to recog-<lb/>
nize other hazards.<lb/>
Lao cited deterioration of<lb/>
paint, fabric, vegetation and<lb/>
crops, and animal health as other<lb/>
problems oonnected with pollu-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"Hydrocarbons from exhaust<lb/>
systems may have a chemical<lb/>
reaction in the atmosphere form-<lb/>
ing harmful oxidents Lao said.<lb/>
ECU student and dub Trea-<lb/>
surer Dawn Gaboon said mem-<lb/>
bers were working for public<lb/>
awareness of the problems.<lb/>
"Most people are interested'<lb/>
in finding out what they can do to<lb/>
cut down on pollution Cahoon<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Members of the ECU SNEHA<lb/>
who worked at the clinic were<lb/>
Glenn Martin, Paul Gower, Doug<lb/>
Jensen, Dawn Cahoon, Mike<lb/>
Kamf iski, Jeff Pridgen, and<lb/>
John Myers.<lb/>
The dub is planning future<lb/>
dinics, according to Lao, and<lb/>
urges support from the public.<lb/>
The Pilot Mechanical Pencil:<lb/>
teed against physical<lb/>
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The last time your mechanical pen<lb/>
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Of course, it's easy to guarantee<lb/>
a mechanical pencil that's so<lb/>
well-made. Because our patented<lb/>
brass and copper chuck and our<lb/>
all-metal self feed mechanism<lb/>
makes it virtually indestructable<lb/>
Pilot's Mechanical Pencils come<lb/>
m a wide choice of attractive barrel<lb/>
colors and designs, in extra-fine,<lb/>
fine and regular models.<lb/>
Pilot also makes super lead!<lb/>
Strong stuff that won't crack under<lb/>
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house, and is open to the public,<lb/>
according to Register.<lb/>
If no oonflicts are found in the<lb/>
canvas, the four candidates will<lb/>
be sworn in in the first council<lb/>
meeting in December.<lb/>
Also, Register said election<lb/>
procedures in Pitt County went<lb/>
smoothly, with very few setbacks.<lb/>
Register said the mayor pro-<lb/>
tern is chosen from the new city<lb/>
council, usually from the highest<lb/>
vote-getter. However, the top<lb/>
vote receiver in the October<lb/>
municipal elections was Vincent,<lb/>
with 2,010 votes, and the top vote<lb/>
receiver in Tuesday's balloting<lb/>
was Howard, with 2,156 votes.<lb/>
y2 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. 23<lb/>
 lb. T-BONE<lb/>
STEAK DINNER<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
4<lb/>
Reg Price S3 99 (ONLY S3.25!)<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/>
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void Nov. 23<lb/>
CHOPPED SIRLOIN<lb/>
STEAK DINNER<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
40<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 Roli and Butter and<lb/>
FREE SALAD BAR<lb/>
void Nov. 23<lb/>
Vi lb. RIB EYE<lb/>
STEAK DINNER<lb/>
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SAVE<lb/>
60<lb/>
Reg Price $2 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. 23<lb/>
HURRY! Coupon offer ends Nov 23,1977<lb/>
 M llii<lb/>
I' W MIV<lb/>
JACKS<lb/>
I STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
And<lb/>
2207 eue Bld.<lb/>
New Brrn<lb/>
<pb facs="00058021_0004"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
f<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 November 1977<lb/>
NC mo ves ahead<lb/>
The amendment for succession fa the North<lb/>
Carolina governor and lieutenant governor was<lb/>
leading Wednesday morning 95,992 in favor to<lb/>
86,254 against. Chances are this trend will continue.<lb/>
If so, the people of North Carolina are finally saying<lb/>
they are ready to take at least one set of blinders off<lb/>
and progress along with the rest of the country.<lb/>
For several years this state has been one out of a<lb/>
mere seven states which restrict their governors to<lb/>
one term. Naturally, it has taken N.C. 10 long months<lb/>
since Gov. James Hunt first asked the General<lb/>
Assembly to pass the amendment and submit it for<lb/>
ratification to the voters before a vote was even held.<lb/>
N.C. has a depressing history of clinging to old,<lb/>
worn-out traditions like a thick vine clings to a tree:<lb/>
only a storm of some sort can budge it.<lb/>
Unfortunately, it has taken a Republican governor<lb/>
to produce thisl' storm This is unfortunate because<lb/>
it only proves that the democratic majority has been<lb/>
perfectly satisfied over all these years to allow its<lb/>
governor to be a " lame duck after his first two years<lb/>
in office, which has always reduced the chances of his<lb/>
programs passing in the second biennium of his term<lb/>
greatly, leaving the notorious N.C. legislature in<lb/>
almost complete control of state policy.<lb/>
By limiting the governor to one term, the people<lb/>
of N.C. have also kept this high state official from<lb/>
having to answer to the people he serves at election<lb/>
time. The governor has not needed to worry about<lb/>
the popularity of his policies and programs. He could<lb/>
use his elected power almost any way he saw fit and<lb/>
ignore the needs and desires of the citizenry.<lb/>
But if this amendment does in fact pass, North<lb/>
Carolina will finally be stepping onto the<lb/>
progressive bandwagon and saying that it sees more<lb/>
value in moving ahead with the rest of the country<lb/>
than adhering stoically to old, tired traditions of a<lb/>
small, southern state.<lb/>
x InZTpque<lb/>
Congratulations<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
on the success of the<lb/>
first two Major<lb/>
A ttractions concerts!<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor over titty years.<lb/>
Senior EditorKim J. Devins<lb/>
Production Manager Bob Glover<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert Swaim<lb/>
News EditorCindy Broome<lb/>
Trends EditorDavid W. Trevino<lb/>
Sports EditorChris Holloman<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association of<lb/>
ECU and is distr I led each Wednesday during the summer,<lb/>
and twice weekly during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 75Z-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually. <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
A<lb/>
'a<lb/>
'<lb/>
'4<lb/>
<lb/>
2<lb/>
w<lb/>
J<lb/>
L<lb/>
we "finally thnk we mz smart<lb/>
ENOUGH TD HANDLE THE RESPONSIBILITY i<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Editorial on retreats 'distressing'<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Your editorial on retreats was<lb/>
distressing since you seem to<lb/>
misunderstand the nature of<lb/>
retreats. If retreats were simply<lb/>
SGA sponsored beer busts, then<lb/>
they should be ended. However, I<lb/>
believe that any department<lb/>
whose retreats turn into mere<lb/>
beer busts will not have another<lb/>
retreat. After all, the faculty do<lb/>
Help 'Mellow Radio'<lb/>
Tq FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
"There's not one good radio<lb/>
station within seventy miles of<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Why do ALL the radio<lb/>
stations in eastern North Carolina<lb/>
have to play Top 40?"<lb/>
"Why doesn't eastern North<lb/>
Carolina have an FM station as<lb/>
good as K-94, WQDR or WROQ?<lb/>
Aren't we as good as Elizabeth<lb/>
City or Raleigh or Charlotte?"<lb/>
Have you said something<lb/>
similar to the above statements?<lb/>
Have you heard others express<lb/>
similar comments? Probably. I've<lb/>
heard oomments such as these so<lb/>
many times I've quit counting<lb/>
them. I am just sick of the<lb/>
garbage we are being handed by<lb/>
Eastern Carolina radio stations as<lb/>
you are and I'm trying to do<lb/>
something about it.<lb/>
MELLOW RADIO, a new<lb/>
alternative radio concept has<lb/>
been developed and oould be on<lb/>
the air in Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
soon. MELLOW RADIO will play<lb/>
GOOD music by GOOD artists,<lb/>
not just the " big hits MELLOW<lb/>
RADIO will he a station you will<lb/>
WANT to listen to and will try to<lb/>
be North Carolina's best radio<lb/>
station.<lb/>
If you really want decent,<lb/>
intelligent radio in Eastern<lb/>
Carolina, PLEASE HELP! Write a<lb/>
short note (twoor three lines is all<lb/>
that's needed) saying in effect:<lb/>
"I'm sick of Top 40 radio. Please<lb/>
put a good station on the air in<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina. Please<lb/>
be sincere and don't use profan-<lb/>
ity. Sign your name. Include your<lb/>
address andor ID number.<lb/>
(Phone number also if you'd like<lb/>
to help more.) Get your friends to<lb/>
write. If you can get someone<lb/>
over 25 or 30 to write, do if. Mail<lb/>
it ot the address below or take it<lb/>
to: APPLE RECORDS. THE<lb/>
ATTIC or THE TREE HOUSE.<lb/>
If you care, DO IT I It won't<lb/>
cost more than .15 oents or take<lb/>
more than five minutes. Don't be<lb/>
apathetic, please. Help get an<lb/>
alternative to Top 40 garbage<lb/>
going in Eastern North Carol ma.<lb/>
Thank you,<lb/>
Dannv Milinr<lb/>
Remember!<lb/>
Letters to the Editor must adhere to Forum Policy as posted outside<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD's office door or they will not be printed. Please<lb/>
re-check letters with the policy before submitting them.<lb/>
not get paid for weekend work,<lb/>
and we do not need SGA's<lb/>
approval to have a party. This is<lb/>
not to say that parties are not a<lb/>
part of retreats, they are. At the<lb/>
SCOANTH retreat, we always<lb/>
have a big party AFTER<lb/>
DINNER. Before dinner we work.<lb/>
We have discussed various issues<lb/>
that the students think are<lb/>
important. These discussions<lb/>
have resulted in real changes in<lb/>
our department. The annual<lb/>
retreat is the most effective<lb/>
mechanism for student input into<lb/>
departmental affairs that I have<lb/>
ever encountered. The faculty<lb/>
also spends time planning a<lb/>
retreat so that it will help<lb/>
students better understand our<lb/>
professions. Part of being a<lb/>
professional is knowing when to<lb/>
work and when to party. We do<lb/>
both on our retreat, but it is<lb/>
seeing the work pay-off in terms<lb/>
of a better department and in<lb/>
terms of student growth that<lb/>
keeps us coming back.<lb/>
My point is not who gets what<lb/>
money. That is an issue for<lb/>
students to decide. Rather, I am<lb/>
concerned that retreats have been<lb/>
wrongly characterized : as mere<lb/>
beer-busts. They support John<lb/>
Maiolo's statement that our<lb/>
department will have a retreat<lb/>
this year, and I hope that<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD and the pres-<lb/>
ident of the SGA will find the time<lb/>
to drop by before dinner and see<lb/>
what we are doing.<lb/>
Yourstruly,<lb/>
Kenneth Wilson<lb/>
Assistant Professor<lb/>
SOCIANTH<lb/>
<pb facs="00058021_0005"/><lb/>
D<lb/>
����<lb/>
10 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAO Page 5<lb/>
Women steelworkers seek court action<lb/>
(LNS)The United Steelwor-<lb/>
kers of America (USW) local at<lb/>
Bethlehem Steel's Burns Harbor,<lb/>
Indiana plant filed a massive class<lb/>
action suit in federal court on<lb/>
October 10 against that com-<lb/>
pany's discriminatory maternity<lb/>
leave policies.<lb/>
The suit, which was filed in<lb/>
behalf of the plant's 500 women<lb/>
steelworkers, asks fa back pay<lb/>
compensation and in addition<lb/>
punitive damages of $20 million.<lb/>
"Whenever they found out<lb/>
you were pregnant, say around<lb/>
two a three months, you were out<lb/>
the doa said Diane Gumulau-<lb/>
ski, chairpersai of the local's<lb/>
I nsurance and Waker' s Compen-<lb/>
satiai Committee and co-chair-<lb/>
person of the district's Women's<lb/>
Caucus.<lb/>
"Not only that, they'd cut off<lb/>
your Blue Cross benefits too<lb/>
The Indiana Employment Se-<lb/>
curity Division is also named in<lb/>
the suit because it refused to pay<lb/>
unemployment oanpensatiai to<lb/>
the women who were faced to<lb/>
take maternity leaves during the<lb/>
early months of their pregnan-<lb/>
cies.<lb/>
"Since most women are able<lb/>
to work until at least the seventh<lb/>
month of their pregnancy, it is<lb/>
obvious that any policy that would<lb/>
face them ai leave early in their<lb/>
pregnancy would result in several<lb/>
months lost income said Diane<lb/>
Gumualski.<lb/>
French press exhibit on display<lb/>
By JEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The "French Press in Per-<lb/>
spective an exhibit sponsaed<lb/>
by the ECU Department of<lb/>
Faeign Languages, is currently<lb/>
oi display in Joyner Library,<lb/>
room 104, fron 6 to 8 p.m. until<lb/>
November 14.<lb/>
Ira Baker of the ECU journal-<lb/>
ism department discussed several<lb/>
maja differences between the<lb/>
French and American newspa-<lb/>
pers of today.<lb/>
Baker said most European<lb/>
newspapers are partisan and<lb/>
biased and that the French are no<lb/>
different.<lb/>
Group<lb/>
concerned<lb/>
over creek<lb/>
By JO ELLEN Rl VENBA RK<lb/>
Staff Writa<lb/>
The question of howjDadly<lb/>
channelization will damage Uhi-<lb/>
cod Creek, one of the prettiest<lb/>
fishing and canoeing streams in<lb/>
Pitt County, is the subject of the<lb/>
Cypress Group's Noverriber 14<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
The Cypress Group isttae local<lb/>
division of the Sierra Glub, a<lb/>
national aganizatioi concerned<lb/>
with environmental conservatioi.<lb/>
Channelizatioi is oie of the<lb/>
biggest ooiservation problems,<lb/>
according to Dr. Robert B.<lb/>
Graham, a professa in the ECU<lb/>
Psychology Department.<lb/>
"Most people see Eastern<lb/>
Nath Carolina only from the<lb/>
road, and they don't know what<lb/>
beautiful rivers we've got back<lb/>
there said Graham.<lb/>
Graham said that unless peo-<lb/>
ple become members of a group<lb/>
like the Sierra Club, which can<lb/>
get early warning of environmen-<lb/>
tal hazards such as channeliza-<lb/>
tion, they will find their favaite<lb/>
reaeatiaial areas disappearing.<lb/>
One of the big issues now is<lb/>
preservation of the Appalachian<lb/>
Trail, said Graham.<lb/>
Locally, the Sierra Club is<lb/>
involved in establishing a wilder-<lb/>
ness area in Pooosin, an upland<lb/>
swamp area near New Bern, and<lb/>
in investigating effects of drain-<lb/>
age in the peninsula areas on the<lb/>
coast of Nath Carolina.<lb/>
The Club has also been<lb/>
instrumental in establishing na-<lb/>
tional seashaes such as Cape<lb/>
Hatteras and maintaining the<lb/>
Neusiok Trail in the Croatan<lb/>
National Faest.<lb/>
"We are uniquely objective<lb/>
he said of the American press.<lb/>
 Typography and make-up of<lb/>
most French newspapers are<lb/>
harible said Baker. "They're<lb/>
haJge-podge and circus. They<lb/>
seem not to care<lb/>
"To me, it counteracts the<lb/>
subjectivity<lb/>
Baker considers oie of the<lb/>
best objectively-written French<lb/>
newspapers to be Le Monde, a<lb/>
Paris daily.<lb/>
The exhibit offers a chance to<lb/>
view a wide variety of French<lb/>
newspapers and magazines in one<lb/>
place at one time.<lb/>
CAREERS<lb/>
Continued from p. 1<lb/>
institutions.<lb/>
James expects several hun-<lb/>
dred students to take advantage<lb/>
of the program.<lb/>
The Job Placement Service<lb/>
offers a variety of placement<lb/>
opportunities throughout the year<lb/>
fa students and alumni.<lb/>
Every week several reauiters<lb/>
fron various aganizatiois and<lb/>
businesses cone to campus to<lb/>
interview potential employees.<lb/>
To be eligible for these<lb/>
interviews, a student must first<lb/>
register with the Career Planning<lb/>
and Placement Service in the<lb/>
Mamie Jenkins Building.<lb/>
Now is the best time fa<lb/>
senias to do this in ader to take<lb/>
advantage of these excellent job<lb/>
opportunities, according to<lb/>
James.<lb/>
"With the cost of living being<lb/>
what it is, we all know what the<lb/>
loss of income can mean to the<lb/>
typical waking class family<lb/>
Union spokespeople said that<lb/>
Bethlehem Steel's policy not only<lb/>
meant lost income, but faced<lb/>
several women to terminate their<lb/>
pregnancies rather than suffer<lb/>
the financial loss from early<lb/>
maternity leave.<lb/>
The class action was only the<lb/>
beginning of what will be a series<lb/>
of lawsuits against Bethlehem<lb/>
Steel in Burns Harba, the uniai<lb/>
spokespeople add.<lb/>
Next, women who suffered<lb/>
special damages by being faced<lb/>
into early pregnancy leave will<lb/>
file individual suits.<lb/>
"BiiC coneer MOTES 1 � 2<lb/>
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TWMMWtWltltltlwntlWOMIWWytwnnirtfrftrifinMflKiiii 'MilHWWlHJtwmiim<lb/>
A long ome ago<lb/>
in a galaxy jar, jar away<lb/>
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PG I 0CkB1 SYSTEM <lb/>
Shows Daily<lb/>
2:00-4:30<lb/>
7-00-9:30<lb/>
Special Thursday only<lb/>
ECU Student Night<lb/>
All seats $1.50<lb/>
with student I.D.<lb/>
 at Buccaneer 1 a 2.<lb/>
HOME TO WAR!<lb/>
ROLLING<lb/>
(HONDO<lb/>
WILLIAM DEVANE rsi<lb/>
TOMMY LEE JONES ffl<lb/>
 1 :OQ 3.00 5:00 7:00 9:00 ,<lb/>
YOU HAVE SEEN<lb/>
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YOU ARE ABOUT TO LIVE ON<lb/>
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More than a movie<lb/>
An adventure you'll never forget.<lb/>
JAN-MICHAEL VINCENT � GEORGE PEPRARD- DOMINIQUE SANDA<lb/>
PAUL WINFIELD- JACKIE EARLE HALEY �ilSg5SSl<lb/>
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Fran The Creata of Star Wars<lb/>
The Most Fantastic Movie Adventure Stay Of Our Time.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058021_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 November 1977<lb/>
i<lb/>
�<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Bakke case reveals more questionable admissions<lb/>
the facts in the<lb/>
Bakke case become better and<lb/>
belatedly- known, questions are<lb/>
being raised about the University<lb/>
of California at Davis's admission<lb/>
policy for applicants from influen-<lb/>
tial families.<lb/>
According toa recent article in<lb/>
the East Bay Voice, the same year<lb/>
Bakke applied to the medical<lb/>
school. 1973, the dean intervened<lb/>
in the admissions process on<lb/>
behalf of five well-connected<lb/>
white applicants in order to put<lb/>
then' ahead of other white<lb/>
applicants with initially higher<lb/>
Allen Bakke, a 35 year-old<lb/>
white engineer, issuing Davis on<lb/>
the ground that he was denied<lb/>
admission as a result of the<lb/>
schools' special admission pro-<lb/>
gi am which reserved 16 out of 100<lb/>
places for "underprivileged mi-<lb/>
norities<lb/>
The dean's preferential ad-<lb/>
missions were a routine practice<lb/>
until 1976 when articles written in<lb/>
a campus paper exposing the<lb/>
puMice prompted the president<lb/>
to order that they be stopped.<lb/>
George Sutherland, a former<lb/>
� medical student who has<lb/>
thoroughly researched the<lb/>
school's admissions policies<lb/>
found that the administration<lb/>
directed the admissions commit-<lb/>
tee to save five spaces for<lb/>
students selected by the dean<lb/>
This information has been<lb/>
confirmed by former assistant<lb/>
dean Peter Storandt.<lb/>
Sutherland's research reveal-<lb/>
ed one instance when the dean<lb/>
directed that a student who had<lb/>
not even filed an application be<lb/>
admitted.<lb/>
The student was the son of a<lb/>
reek forum<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity<lb/>
is continuing to roll along on the<lb/>
ECU campus. This weekend the<lb/>
Phi Taus will be riding a bus to<lb/>
see ECU play their last regular<lb/>
season game in the Oyster Bowl<lb/>
in Norfolk. Va.<lb/>
After the game, they will take<lb/>
their dates to Virginia Beach for a<lb/>
small cocktail party at ,an alum-<lb/>
nus' home.<lb/>
The Phi Taus would like to<lb/>
thank all the girls who attended<lb/>
the little sister rush The rush was<lb/>
a great success. Although only a<lb/>
ted number were selected,<lb/>
the girls who attended are always<lb/>
welcome at the Phi Tau house.<lb/>
On November 15, they will<lb/>
sponsor a spaghetti dinner. Tic-<lb/>
kets will be $2 for this fund<lb/>
raising activity and everyone is<lb/>
cordially invited. Also on Tues-<lb/>
day, the Phi Tau associate<lb/>
members are having a happy hour<lb/>
at Chapter X WRQR of Farmville<lb/>
will be having a live remote.<lb/>
Advanced tickets can be obtained<lb/>
from any Phi Tau. Many prizes<lb/>
will be given away.<lb/>
Phi Tau will be having a social<lb/>
with the Alpha Phi sorority Nov.<lb/>
16.<lb/>
On the athletic front, the Phi<lb/>
Taus are oontinumg their athletic<lb/>
success by having an overall<lb/>
record of 3-0 in team handball,<lb/>
and a 2-1 record in soccer.<lb/>
There will be a Co-Greek<lb/>
meeting Mon. Nov. 21, at the<lb/>
same location.<lb/>
Any Greek organization who<lb/>
wishes to oontnbute to the Greek<lb/>
Forum, call Anne Thompson at<lb/>
the Alphi Phi house or Jay<lb/>
Chambers at the IFC office.<lb/>
Senior Panhellenic reoeived<lb/>
an award of commendation from<lb/>
its Area Advisor, Mrs. R.M.<lb/>
Pain id<lb/>
This award was given because<lb/>
of its publications and, activities<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
Senior Panhellenic is compos-<lb/>
ed of three members from nine<lb/>
sororities on campus. Senior<lb/>
Panhellenic is involved with the<lb/>
community and campus through<lb/>
various projects.<lb/>
The group also takes part in<lb/>
many philanthropic projects as<lb/>
well as aiding the administration.<lb/>
The Alpha Phi'swill be selling<lb/>
Christmas tree ornaments in the<lb/>
CU the week of Nov. 21, for their<lb/>
philanthropy project. All money<lb/>
received will go towards the<lb/>
Heart Projects. Support them-<lb/>
give a heart!<lb/>
THE CROATAN<lb/>
HAS A SPECIAL<lb/>
INTRODUCTORY OFFER<lb/>
Purchase a 20 oz. Coke, Pepsi,<lb/>
DR. Pepper, Mountain Dew, or Diet<lb/>
Pepsi and an ECU imprinted glass<lb/>
for 59c<lb/>
Offer good only<lb/>
while supply lasts<lb/>
Croatan Hours AA-F 7:30 AAA- 9p PAA<lb/>
Sat. 8:30 AAA 12 noon<lb/>
state assembly member. In 1975<lb/>
the dean requeued that his<lb/>
assistant add six points to a<lb/>
student interviewer's rating of an<lb/>
applicant-just enough to qualify<lb/>
the applicant fa admission<lb/>
Many other schools share this<lb/>
policy of admitting at least a<lb/>
specified number of wealthy<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Syndicated columnist Carl<lb/>
Rowan recently wrote about pro-<lb/>
fessional schools' policies for<lb/>
"selling admissions to children<lb/>
of powerful state legislators,<lb/>
trustees, influential alumni, and<lb/>
citizens whose positions and bank<lb/>
accounts looked promisirg to<lb/>
college offi ials<lb/>
Row.in quoted from a reporl<lb/>
i in Emission policies which stat<lb/>
ed In 1973, the Chicago Medi<lb/>
ai School collected an average of<lb/>
$50,000 in contributions from<lb/>
relativesand friendsof 77 of its91<lb/>
first yeai students.<lb/>
Frank Ochoa, one of the 13<lb/>
lawyers who prepare) the Nation-<lb/>
al Urban I eague s brief m<lb/>
opposition to Bakke for the<lb/>
Supreme Court contends that the<lb/>
University's initial arguments in<lb/>
the cas- were flabby "because<lb/>
they did not want to go into<lb/>
admissions records<lb/>
COLD WEA THER MA Y make bicycling rather unpleasant to some,<lb/>
but these cyclists dress accordingly Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
<pb facs="00058021_0007"/><lb/>
10 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Quartet invites ECU affiliates to join chapter<lb/>
The Greenville chapter of the<lb/>
Society for the Preservation and<lb/>
Encouragement of Barber Shop<lb/>
Quartet Singing in America in-<lb/>
vites ECU student and faculty<lb/>
men who enjoy singing and<lb/>
harmonizing to join the local<lb/>
chapter.<lb/>
Founded in 1938, the SPEB-<lb/>
SQSA now numbers 38,000 mem-<lb/>
bers in 700 chapters throughout<lb/>
the U.S. and Canada. Its chief<lb/>
purposes are "to perpetuate the<lb/>
old American institution, the<lb/>
Barber Shop Quartet" and "to<lb/>
promote and encourage vocal<lb/>
harmony and good fellowship<lb/>
among its members<lb/>
Its repertoire consists of many<lb/>
beloved old songs, such as "My<lb/>
Wild Irish Rose "Wait 'til the<lb/>
Sun Shines, Nellie" and "My Old<lb/>
Kentucky Home<lb/>
Besides the fellowship and fun<lb/>
each member derives from their<lb/>
weekly meetings, Barbershop-<lb/>
pers throughout North America<lb/>
perform to raise funds for worth-<lb/>
while oommunity projects, and for<lb/>
the Institute of Logopedics in<lb/>
Wichita, Kansas, a center to aid<lb/>
persons with speech handicaps.<lb/>
Since SPEBSQSA adopted the<lb/>
Institute as its unified service<lb/>
project in 1964, nearly $2 million<lb/>
in contributions have been raised<lb/>
by Barber shoppers through<lb/>
donations, benefit shows and<lb/>
memorial gifts. Involvement with<lb/>
the Institute has given SPEBSQS-<lb/>
A its motto: "We Sing Thai They<lb/>
Shall Speak<lb/>
Greenville Barbershoppers<lb/>
meet each Monday evening at<lb/>
7.30 p.m. at Our Redeemer<lb/>
Lutheran Church, 1800 South Elm<lb/>
St. No audition is required to join<lb/>
the group.<lb/>
are Donald Lawler, president Ai<lb/>
Ingenito, vice president; Bill<lb/>
Weir, seaetary and Don Demp-<lb/>
sey, treasurer.<lb/>
Lawler and Dempsey are also<lb/>
members of the chapter's core<lb/>
group, a quartet known as the<lb/>
Fortune Hunters, which has<lb/>
performed for sever ai avic organ-<lb/>
izations and made its local debut<lb/>
at a Greenville Sunday in the<lb/>
Park program last summer<lb/>
Other quartet members are Char-<lb/>
les Entsminger and Graham<lb/>
Nahouse<lb/>
Officers of the local chapter<lb/>
Former Presidential guard<lb/>
member found to be Nazi<lb/>
(LNS)-A former member oh<lb/>
the Presidential honor guard has<lb/>
turned out to be a member of the<lb/>
American Nazi Party, according<lb/>
to an article in the Washington<lb/>
Post<lb/>
Frederick T. Verduin, a<lb/>
member of the third United States<lb/>
Infantry at F. Myer in Arlington,<lb/>
Va. was dismissed fromlhe honor<lb/>
�"MWU -<lb/>
guard about eight months ago<lb/>
when Army offiaals discovered<lb/>
he was a member of the National<lb/>
Socialist White Peoples Party,<lb/>
formerly known as the American<lb/>
Nazi Party<lb/>
Members of the presidential<lb/>
honor guard perfam at parades<lb/>
and White House functions.<lb/>
Verduin has remained in the<lb/>
Armed Forces, however And it<lb/>
was only recently  when he was<lb/>
arrested in Nazi uniform after<lb/>
assaulting a black off-duty poJioe<lb/>
officer and the officer s white<lb/>
wife, that his Nazi membership<lb/>
became public.<lb/>
Asa result, he was sentenced<lb/>
to 10 days in jail and a $100 fine<lb/>
for each of the two assuait counts.<lb/>
The army has not decided<lb/>
whether it will take disciplinary<lb/>
action against Verdiun fa the<lb/>
assault, but his 20 days in jail will<lb/>
be counted as unexcused leave<lb/>
REBEL accepts<lb/>
works for art show<lb/>
THE PIRATES WILL play their last game of the weekend, so get out there, fans, and support them<lb/>
season at the Oyster Bowl in Norfolk, Va. this I Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
At<lb/>
BONANZA<lb/>
We Care<lb/>
520 W. Greenville Blvd 264 By Pass<lb/>
M�,n-Fri 11:00 am �3pm eh op teak $1.49<lb/>
all da lues Ribeve SI.79<lb/>
Fri Sal ?mn 8oz . T-Bone $2.79<lb/>
The Third Annual Rebel Art<lb/>
Show has been scheduled fa the<lb/>
week of Jan. 29 through Feb. 5.<lb/>
The show will be held in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery.<lb/>
Last year's show included<lb/>
over 120 pieces of art by ECU<lb/>
students, according to Luke<lb/>
Whisnant. REBEL edita Art<lb/>
that appeared in the 1977 REBEL<lb/>
was selected from the show.<lb/>
"Because of the limited space<lb/>
involved, we're asking students<lb/>
to submit only two pieces to the<lb/>
show this year said Whisnant.<lb/>
Bill Bass, head of the<lb/>
ILLUMINA committee, feels that<lb/>
this limit is necessary to insure<lb/>
that a few prolific artists don't<lb/>
dominate the show, and to keep<lb/>
the size of the show reasonable.<lb/>
Whisnant said the limit on<lb/>
entries simply meant that stu-<lb/>
dents would have to be mae<lb/>
selective about what they submit-<lb/>
ted to the show<lb/>
Kay Parks. REBEL art editor.<lb/>
said the show was a good<lb/>
oppatunity fa students to have<lb/>
their wak exhibited. Parks stres-<lb/>
sed that the show is open to any<lb/>
ECU student-not just art majas.<lb/>
Wak entered in the show<lb/>
must be registered at the REBEL<lb/>
office a the Mendenhall Informa-<lb/>
tion Desk by Jan. 18 fa insurance<lb/>
purposes. The show is open to all<lb/>
media-painting, prints, drawing,<lb/>
photography, sculpture, cera-<lb/>
mics, mixed media, and "any<lb/>
other visual art form<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/>
$235<lb/>
14 Karat gold takes<lb/>
shape for Christmas wrap these up!<lb/>
a. Butterfly stick pin in 14 karat gold. $30<lb/>
b. Fly stick pin in 14 karat gold. $22.50<lb/>
C. Apple pendant genuine ruby in 14 karat gold. $50<lb/>
d Genuine opal pendant in 14 karat gold $42.50<lb/>
Charge it!<lb/>
Open a Zales account or use one of five national credit plans.<lb/>
ZALES<lb/>
The Diamond Store<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
756-0141<lb/>
illustrations anlarged<lb/>
Open 10AM-9.00PM<lb/>
Monday thru Saturday<lb/>
HajajMBBHH<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058021_0008"/><lb/>
W � ' ' ?<lb/>
HH<lb/>
Page 8 FCXJNTAINHEAO 10 November 1977<lb/>
AAP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
CHUCK ROAST<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised<lb/>
items is required to be<lb/>
readily available for sale at<lb/>
or below the advertised price in each A&amp;P<lb/>
Store, except as specifically noted in this ad.<lb/>
paicm iFFicrivf TMdu at mov � at AiP in Greenville<lb/>
USDA inspected Fresh<lb/>
Whole Fryers<lb/>
2 in a bag limit 2 bags<lb/>
36' lb<lb/>
AAP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
5lb chub pack<lb/>
59Mb<lb/>
fe5?D0G<lb/>
ALLGOOD BRAND<lb/>
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12 OZ.<lb/>
PKGS.<lb/>
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Glassware<lb/>
This Weeks Feature<lb/>
TABLE TUMBLER<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
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4<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
1000 BUND<lb/>
DRESSING<lb/>
OR � CREAMY ITALIAN � CREAMY CUCUMBER<lb/>
COLE SLAW � GREEN ONION<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL OEALEPS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
WASHINGTON STATE RED OR GOLDEN<lb/>
DELICIOUS APPLES<lb/>
SAVE UP TO 16c LB.<lb/>
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100<lb/>
FLORIDA GROWN<lb/>
GRAPEFRUIT<lb/>
RED OR WHITE<lb/>
Golden Ripe<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
Dibs only<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
PIUSBURY PLUS<lb/>
CAKE MIXES<lb/>
BUTTER RECIPE<lb/>
DEVILS FOOD<lb/>
YELLOW<lb/>
$1000 cash honanxa<lb/>
QAMES PMIZEI<lb/>
2 Ml<lb/>
l '��<lb/>
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oi �!��� ill rti<lb/>
EXCITING NEWS!<lb/>
ALL NEW SERIES<lb/>
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STARTS SUNDAYlNOV. 13th<lb/>
Prizes For Old Series Musi Be<lb/>
Claimed By Sat. Nov. 19th<lb/>
J10O0 WINNER<lb/>
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ELIZABETH DAUTFRman WILLIS MAE JONES<lb/>
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WDnnwcatMi . , . �. �� . it v �' . . .� �awM�Oy hmimi <lb/>
�w. i  - -rt - . . . I�iiiWRj� f ' j . . .<lb/>
DCLMONTE<lb/>
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4 100<lb/>
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DEL MONTE JR. STYLE OR WH KERNEL<lb/>
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LIMIT ONE<lb/>
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good thru sat. nov 12 iNGreenville.<lb/>
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LIMIT TWO ROLLS WITH<lb/>
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7 SO ORDER<lb/>
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good thru sat. nov. ii iNGreenviiie<lb/>
5<lb/>
lb bag<lb/>
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Ice Cream<lb/>
limit one withm this coupon<lb/>
and additional 7.50 order<lb/>
59 ' go'<lb/>
good through Sat. Nov 12<lb/>
nrmrc<lb/>
tiCZ<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00058021_0009"/><lb/>
BSmmm f<lb/>
10 November 1977 FOUNTAINHFAD<lb/>
"Poetry a new column in<lb/>
the Fountainhead Trends section,<lb/>
will debut in this issue. The<lb/>
oolumn will consist of poems from<lb/>
the files of The Rebel, ECU'S<lb/>
award-winning literary and art<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
"Hundreds of ECU students<lb/>
write poetry, and we simply don't<lb/>
have space to publish everyone<lb/>
said Allison Thompson, associate<lb/>
editor of The Rebel. "At the same<lb/>
time, we feel an obligation to the<lb/>
student writer who is struggling<lb/>
to get published. That's why<lb/>
we've started the Fountainhead<lb/>
oolumn<lb/>
Thompson explained that<lb/>
poems submitted to The Rebel<lb/>
would be used for the oolumn.<lb/>
"Almost 300 poems have already<lb/>
been submitted to the magazine<lb/>
this year, and we have a lot of<lb/>
poetry sitting around the offioe<lb/>
that should be shared with the<lb/>
student body<lb/>
Poems submitted to The Rebel<lb/>
are first considered fa publica-<lb/>
tion in the magazine, and then<lb/>
they are eligible fa the Foun-<lb/>
tainhead.  Of course, we save the<lb/>
best poems fa The Rebel:1 said<lb/>
Thompson. "But there will be<lb/>
aone excellent poetry appearing<lb/>
in the newspaper<lb/>
ALL RAIN FALL<lb/>
By Karen Brock<lb/>
Umbrellas bobbing<lb/>
dating the grey landscape with<lb/>
circles ot color<lb/>
Droplets streak the window<lb/>
racing, running, stopping to<lb/>
puddle on the sill<lb/>
My marigolds<lb/>
droop under the weight of<lb/>
heavy drops<lb/>
This rain<lb/>
is different from spring rain-<lb/>
the wald is turning brown<lb/>
After the rain<lb/>
the sun still<lb/>
will na acme out<lb/>
Karen Brock is an English major<lb/>
from Jacksonville, N.C<lb/>
THIS SUNDAY AFTERNOON the East Carolina University Symphony Orchestra will perform their<lb/>
only concert of the semester. The 3:15 p.m. performance will be held at Wright Auditorium and<lb/>
is open free of charge to all students, faculty, and others interested. Under the direction of Mr. Robert<lb/>
Hause, the orchestra will perform Mozart's Symphony No. 39 and Tcaikovsky's Fourth<lb/>
Symphony.<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
Original choreography<lb/>
Berman presents 'An Evening of Dance'<lb/>
By SUE ELLEN MCLEOD<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
"An Evening of Dance a '<lb/>
dance wakshop, will be present-<lb/>
ed November 17, 18, and 19 by<lb/>
teaching fellow Sara-Jo Berman<lb/>
in partial fulfillment of degree<lb/>
requirements. Beginning at 8:15<lb/>
in Studio Theatre, the dance<lb/>
wakshop will feature chaeo-<lb/>
graphy by Sara-Jo Berman and<lb/>
will include two pieces by faculty<lb/>
chaeographers, Mark Rose and<lb/>
Pat Pertalion.<lb/>
Sara-Jo Berman will present<lb/>
three aiginal pieces of varying<lb/>
themes. The first dance piece,<lb/>
entitled Prime Moves center<lb/>
on an African' maif. Based on the<lb/>
energiesand faces that surround<lb/>
our lives, the second piece,<lb/>
"Evocations, features the prin-<lb/>
cipal characters of youth, purity,<lb/>
wisdom, and temptation. "Evoca-<lb/>
tions will be preformed to<lb/>
Pictures at an Exhibition by<lb/>
Moussagsky. "Celebration fa<lb/>
Dance Berman's final piece will<lb/>
be perfamed in waltz style to<lb/>
Strauss Blue Danube.<lb/>
The faculty pieces will deal<lb/>
with dramatic ballet, based on the<lb/>
novel, The Brothers Karmazkov,<lb/>
and a vignette, in three move-<lb/>
ments in the style of Isadaa<lb/>
Duncan. The entire perfamance<lb/>
will include well over forty<lb/>
participants, all of whom are<lb/>
students in East Carolina's<lb/>
Drama Department.<lb/>
As a teaching fellow with the<lb/>
Drama Department, Sara-Jo<lb/>
Berman's duties include teaching<lb/>
one section of beginning ballet<lb/>
and one of beginning jazz. While<lb/>
teaching these two classes, she<lb/>
also attends classes to oomplete<lb/>
her degree. Berman is the only<lb/>
undergraduate teaching assistant<lb/>
on campus, but her professional<lb/>
background easily qualifies her<lb/>
fa the position.<lb/>
Although a native of New<lb/>
Yak, Sara-Jo Berman was raised<lb/>
in Florida where she began<lb/>
famai dance instruction at the<lb/>
age of nine. She began dancing<lb/>
fa charities and club circuits at<lb/>
the age of eleven with a group<lb/>
called ' Mervyn's Dancers and<lb/>
became a member of the "Civic<lb/>
Dance Company which is xxi-<lb/>
saed by the New Yak City<lb/>
Ballet.<lb/>
Upon completion of high<lb/>
school requirements, Berman left<lb/>
fa New Yak. She did na,<lb/>
however, meet with the hard,<lb/>
jobless days which many aspiring<lb/>
dancers encounter in the big city.<lb/>
Within two weeksof her arrival in<lb/>
New Yak, she had gained a<lb/>
membership in the union and was<lb/>
cast in a show, "The Wonderful<lb/>
World of Burlesque which<lb/>
subsequently toured New<lb/>
England.<lb/>
The next few years found<lb/>
Sara-Jo Berman waking with<lb/>
such dance masters as Flobert<lb/>
Geoffry and Ballanchinc,<lb/>
perfaming at the famed Cocanut<lb/>
Grove in Miami, and waking in<lb/>
Universais Theatre's Actors<lb/>
Wakshop in Califania.<lb/>
Interested in all elements of<lb/>
theatre, Berman has also per-<lb/>
famed acting roles and waked in<lb/>
technical aspects ot theatre. She<lb/>
held the position of Assistant<lb/>
Stage Manager in a Equity<lb/>
Dinner Theatre in Flaida fa two<lb/>
years, befae caning to Nath<lb/>
Carama's Lost Colony as stage<lb/>
manager in 1973.<lb/>
That same year, Berman came<lb/>
to East Carolina to perfam in the<lb/>
first college production of<lb/>
Leonard Bernstein's "Mass as<lb/>
the featured acolyte. Returning to<lb/>
The Lost Colony as Production-<lb/>
Stage Manager, Berman suffered<lb/>
a dance accident which docta's<lb/>
stated would end her dancing<lb/>
career. During a rehearsal, she<lb/>
achilies tendon snapped, and she<lb/>
wasoonfined to a wheel chair. Na<lb/>
only was Sara-Jo Berman deter-<lb/>
mined to dance again, but she<lb/>
even began waking during her<lb/>
recovery period.<lb/>
By the following spring, in a<lb/>
walking cast, she co-directed the<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse product-<lb/>
ion of "An Italian Straw Hat"<lb/>
with Don Bien. When Fall<lb/>
arrived, she perfamed, using<lb/>
only a cane, as a cast member ot<lb/>
the East Carolina production "A<lb/>
Scent of Flowers.<lb/>
When all obstacles seemed<lb/>
overcome, fate stepped in, as her<lb/>
achilies tendon snapped once<lb/>
again. Afta this second defeat, it<lb/>
would seem only a true dancer<lb/>
could persevere. Sara-Jo Berman<lb/>
is a true dancer. After two<lb/>
operations, and as a result of<lb/>
determination in the two years<lb/>
since her accident, not only is she<lb/>
dancing, but she has almost<lb/>
reached the same level of<lb/>
accomplishment she had attained<lb/>
pria to her accident.<lb/>
Sara-Jo Berman's talent, pro-<lb/>
fessional background, and<lb/>
commitment to her art make her a<lb/>
well qualified dance instructa,<lb/>
and a aedit to the Drama and<lb/>
Danoe Department.<lb/>
SARA JO BERMANinstructs members ot the danoe workshop to be presented Nov. 17, 18, 79.<lb/>
Photo by Kirk Kingsbyy<lb/>
<pb facs="00058021_0010"/><lb/>
HHHIHHflHHHHBHHHHHH<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 November ifl77<lb/>
I<lb/>
Decline of Afro-American Culture Center<lb/>
By MICHAEL TAYLOR<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
The Afro-American Cultural<lb/>
Center has subtly subjugated<lb/>
itself in programming and via-<lb/>
bility to a level of clique division<lb/>
and administrative neglect.<lb/>
It seems particularly injurious<lb/>
that the potential of the Center<lb/>
has been thwarted by the instabil-<lb/>
ity in political structure of<lb/>
S.O.U.L.S deliberate renounce-<lb/>
ment by the Black student (Until a<lb/>
social is posted.) and an inability<lb/>
of the administrative forces (SGA,<lb/>
Student Affairs and the Student<lb/>
Union) on campus to realize the<lb/>
relevance of the Black cultural<lb/>
facility.<lb/>
When the smoke of optimism<lb/>
had disappeared and diligence,<lb/>
persistence and coalition were<lb/>
needed, the AACC was deferred<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
CUSTOMERS<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
SEIKO WATCHES<lb/>
TIMEX<lb/>
HAMILTON<lb/>
JULES<lb/>
JUR6EMSER<lb/>
ELGIN<lb/>
WALTHAM<lb/>
ULKUWKMt<lb/>
J.D.DAWS0NC0.<lb/>
CATALK<lb/>
SHOWROOMS<lb/>
Belh�rn Greenvflh-<lb/>
Colonial Aright).<lb/>
to negativity and passive "do<lb/>
nothingism" by blacks and policy<lb/>
makers.<lb/>
Progressive people unite for<lb/>
the betterment of the self through<lb/>
the fulfillment of the Afro-Ameri-<lb/>
can Cultural Center's original<lb/>
objectives.<lb/>
Initially, the objectives were a<lb/>
positive, idealized opportunity for<lb/>
black students to have a cultural-<lb/>
educational input in a "rigid"<lb/>
system. Among the proposed<lb/>
purposes fa the AACC were an<lb/>
educational and tutorial service<lb/>
for university students and some<lb/>
students in Greenville, black<lb/>
cultural enrichment programs<lb/>
spearheaded by the Center for the<lb/>
enlightenment of the University<lb/>
as well as the local community,<lb/>
group discussions of the issues<lb/>
and concerns of the minority<lb/>
student.<lb/>
I contend that if these objec-<lb/>
tives are antiquated new progres-<lb/>
sive, alternative objectives should<lb/>
be formulated rather than a<lb/>
perpetuation of the present inac-<lb/>
tive state.<lb/>
Black cultural events through<lb/>
the AACC would enhance our<lb/>
present "liberalized" racial atti-<lb/>
tudes and integrate a distinct<lb/>
black perspective in culture (art,<lb/>
music, drama and intellect) with-<lb/>
in this university community.<lb/>
One would wonder what the<lb/>
oonoerns are, the issues, the<lb/>
incentives to mobilize in the name<lb/>
of progressive people and pro-<lb/>
grams. The discrepancies are<lb/>
obvious for those who give a<lb/>
damn about anything beyond<lb/>
frivolity. Yes, I'm cognizant of the<lb/>
scarcity of time and money, but<lb/>
both time and money seem<lb/>
available fa lesser oonoerns. Or<lb/>
does it require the "projected<lb/>
inevitability of HEW guidelines"<lb/>
befae everyone realizes that a<lb/>
progressive concept has been<lb/>
deleted.<lb/>
The sectors of influence and<lb/>
opinion have an aganizatiaial<lb/>
structure and netwaks of com-<lb/>
munication to positively inject the<lb/>
exigency of positive action to<lb/>
present the Afro-American Cul-<lb/>
tural Centa a foothold in a rigid<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Dun bar presents<lb/>
compositions<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
RECITAL REHEARSAL-<lb/>
COMPOSER Gerald Dunbar<lb/>
(0, a member of the East<lb/>
OLD TOWN INN<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
Features:<lb/>
29 hem Salad Bar<lb/>
for only $1.50 plus tax<lb/>
Roast Turkc &amp; Draining On Sutidtn<lb/>
THE BEST IN TOWN<lb/>
i "rrtiTjfr firs ��roarr? -<lb/>
volina music theory faculty,<lb/>
rehearses with student clarine-<lb/>
tist Teresa Mangieri and pian-<lb/>
ist Nelms McKevain, who will<lb/>
assist in performances, Nov<lb/>
13, at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
This Sunday at 8.15 p.m<lb/>
oomposer Gerald S. Dunbar will<lb/>
present his own compositions in<lb/>
recital. The November 13th per<lb/>
-famanoe will be held in A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall and is open<lb/>
toall interested public, admission<lb/>
free.<lb/>
Dunbar joined the East<lb/>
Carolina School of Music faculty<lb/>
this year as a teacher of theay,<lb/>
composition and music apprecia-<lb/>
tion. The 25 year old oomposer<lb/>
received a Bachela of Music<lb/>
degree in TheoryComposition<lb/>
from Southwestern Louisiana<lb/>
University. He is presently wak-<lb/>
ing to oomplete his dissertation in<lb/>
ader to earn a doctaate at<lb/>
Flaida State.<lb/>
Dunbar'sprogram will feature<lb/>
faculty and student perfamers<lb/>
accompanied by himself on piano.<lb/>
Teresa Mangieri will open the<lb/>
perfamanos with "Two Pieces<lb/>
fa Clarinet and Piano Dr. Paul<lb/>
Topper of the ECU faculty will<lb/>
perfam the "Sonata fa Violin<lb/>
and Piano<lb/>
The first half of the program<lb/>
will conclude with Dunbar's<lb/>
"Fantasy for Brass Quintet,<lb/>
Piano, and Tympani featuring<lb/>
faculty members Andrew<lb/>
Farnham, tuba, Harold Jones,<lb/>
tympani, Barry Shank, oonducta,<lb/>
Bucket<lb/>
�Bargains<lb/>
where everything is two for the price of one<lb/>
514 E. 14 th St. Phone No. 752-4911<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Ultra Ban<lb/>
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7oz.size 2,1.59<lb/>
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lOoz size 21.79<lb/>
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For �l.OO Off<lb/>
Any �S.OO Purchase<lb/>
Laundry Baskets<lb/>
298e<lb/>
Outdoor Mats<lb/>
299e<lb/>
Silk Screen<lb/>
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2 for the price of 1<lb/>
and students Bill Frazier and<lb/>
Scott Carter on trumpet, Robert<lb/>
Bur fad ai French nan, and<lb/>
Benny Fergusoi on tronbone. As<lb/>
in the ether pieces, the oomposer<lb/>
will perfam the piano soae.<lb/>
The second half will open with<lb/>
"The Sights of Autumn a song<lb/>
cycle fa soprano and piano.<lb/>
Dunbar wrote both the text and<lb/>
the music fa this oollection of<lb/>
autumn images. He combines<lb/>
traditional meters and lyric<lb/>
melodies with imaginative text<lb/>
painting to capture the varied .<lb/>
moods of the season. The cycle<lb/>
features Antonia Dalapas of the<lb/>
ECU faculty as soprano soloist.<lb/>
The closing work, "Varia-<lb/>
tions, Aria, and Finale fa Two<lb/>
Pianos will feature faculty<lb/>
members Nelms McKelvain and<lb/>
Gerald Dunbar.<lb/>
Dunbar describes himself as a<lb/>
"classic contempaary" compos-<lb/>
er, one who uses traditional fams<lb/>
of expression as opposed to the<lb/>
present abstract school that ap-<lb/>
peals mainly to an intellectual<lb/>
music public.<lb/>
In contrast, Dunbar believes<lb/>
in music as "an expression of the<lb/>
inner self following the tradi-<lb/>
tion of Brahms.<lb/>
Communication, rather than<lb/>
an academic exercise, will be the<lb/>
aim of the compositions to be<lb/>
perfamed ai Sunday night.<lb/>
COLLEGE SKI WEEK<lb/>
CARNIVAL AT<lb/>
KILLINGTON,<lb/>
VERMONT<lb/>
January 2-6, 1978<lb/>
� Five Day Lilt Ticket<lb/>
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� Dance to Live Bands<lb/>
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to $139.50<lb/>
To receive all the details on this<lb/>
great trip, send this ad with your<lb/>
address to United Intercoltegtete<lb/>
mEI.Ai"talton. 4040 South<lb/>
fBth  Arlington, Va. 22206<lb/>
(703) 578-3322 (No colltci<lb/>
pleas)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058021_0011"/><lb/>
Panamanian nationalism rjy<lb/>
10 Nwember 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
The Panama Canal Treaty and national pride<lb/>
By RUSSELL PE TERSON<lb/>
Special to the Trends Section<lb/>
While Americans are only<lb/>
recently beginning to discover the<lb/>
history of the U.S. involvement 'n<lb/>
Panama, Panamanians are much<lb/>
oetter acquainted with it. After<lb/>
all, Panamanians live with the<lb/>
results of that history every day.<lb/>
It must be infuriating for them<lb/>
to know that the 640 square mile<lb/>
zone through the middle of their<lb/>
territory came under U.S. control<lb/>
15 days after a revolution,<lb/>
indirectly aided by the United<lb/>
States, created the brand-new<lb/>
nation of Panama in 1903.<lb/>
l-urthermore, it was a self-<lb/>
seeking French citizen who sign-<lb/>
ed the canal treaty fa Panama.<lb/>
Negotiations to replace that<lb/>
shameful treaty began under<lb/>
Lyndon Johnson. It would not be<lb/>
surprising if Panamanians now<lb/>
were a bit impatient about having<lb/>
their independence as a nation<lb/>
finally accepted in fact as well as<lb/>
in theory.<lb/>
Fa a while there may have<lb/>
been little Panamanian nationa-<lb/>
lism when the artificial nation of<lb/>
Panama was created, there s<lb/>
Panamanian nationalism aplenty<lb/>
today. Their national pride has<lb/>
been hurt because another<lb/>
country controls their main<lb/>
natural resource, their geograph-<lb/>
ic position at a cassroads of<lb/>
waid trade.<lb/>
It s harder to understand why<lb/>
national pride, a something akin<lb/>
to it. has generated so much<lb/>
negative emotion among so many<lb/>
Americans on the subject of<lb/>
Panama<lb/>
Newspaper columnist Carl<lb/>
Howan put the question very<lb/>
sharply as he focused on some of<lb/>
the older men now whipoing up<lb/>
this react ion: "I watch the escala-<lb/>
tion of the anger and emotional-<lb/>
ism of the debate over the<lb/>
Panama Canal and I ask myself:<lb/>
Why? Why? Why is it the old<lb/>
William Moore<lb/>
appears at MSC<lb/>
By RENEE DIXQN<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
Pianist William Moore will<lb/>
appear this Saturday evening at<lb/>
8:15 p.m. in A.J. Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall. The program will include<lb/>
waksby Chopin, Mozart, Debus-<lb/>
sy, Rachmaninoff, Liszt, and<lb/>
Szymanowski.<lb/>
This recital tour is Mr.<lb/>
Moore's first series of performan-<lb/>
ces in the United States since<lb/>
1967. At present, he is an<lb/>
Associate Professor of Music at<lb/>
the University of Regina in the<lb/>
province of Sasketchewan, Can-<lb/>
ada.<lb/>
Mr. Moae has received de-<lb/>
grees from the Eastman School of<lb/>
Music and the Julliard School in<lb/>
New Yak where he earned his<lb/>
reputation as an outstanding<lb/>
performer. He has studied piano<lb/>
with Ceale Genhart and the late<lb/>
Mme Rosina Lhevinne.<lb/>
Since moving to Canada in<lb/>
1969, Mr. Moae has beoone a<lb/>
distinguished solo artist and<lb/>
teacher. His students are prize-<lb/>
winning national and internation-<lb/>
al competitas and many of them<lb/>
have received degrees from pro-<lb/>
minent music schools in the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
In addition to his accomplish-<lb/>
ments as an excellent perfamer<lb/>
and teacher, Mr. Moae is also<lb/>
gaining respect as a oomposer.<lb/>
He has studied twentieth century<lb/>
composition with Luciano Berio.<lb/>
Recently, CBC Communica-<lb/>
tions in Taoito asked Mr. Moae<lb/>
to record a full program of<lb/>
aiginal compositions to be broad-<lb/>
cast nationally. He is already a<lb/>
regular guest lecturer and perfa-<lb/>
mer fa CBC radio and television.<lb/>
Mr. Moae is also an accom-<lb/>
plished vocal accompanist. He<lb/>
has toured Canada and the United<lb/>
States with vocalists Irene Salem-<lb/>
ka of the Munich and Covent<lb/>
Garden Opera Companies, and<lb/>
Emile Beloourt of Sadler's Wells<lb/>
Opera in London, England.<lb/>
<lb/>
'THE EMBERS<lb/>
THURS. NITE<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
REMEMBER FRI. 3 to 7<lb/>
SUN. IS LADIES NITE<lb/>
menthe octogenarians of<lb/>
Congress, the white-haired<lb/>
jingoistsof a Veterans of Faeign<lb/>
Wars convention, the geriatric<lb/>
gallants of the American Legion-<lb/>
who throw out macho talk about<lb/>
going to war to retain U.S. control<lb/>
over the canal?<lb/>
Memaies of a debacle in<lb/>
Southeast Asia have not died<lb/>
away- mostly because the young<lb/>
men who fought and suffered<lb/>
theio are still screaming about<lb/>
how this society has betrayed<lb/>
them- yet a bunch of old men<lb/>
now want to send the same young<lb/>
men to Latin America to fight to<lb/>
defend this country's worst<lb/>
example of colonialism and<lb/>
racism.<lb/>
But it's na just some older<lb/>
men who believe that U.S. control<lb/>
over the canal zone is an essential<lb/>
ingredient of our national pride.<lb/>
Io them we will have to say: It<lb/>
should be a souroe of pride fa a<lb/>
great nation to recognize an<lb/>
unfair situation and to oooperate<lb/>
in ending that situation befae it<lb/>
causes any more pain to a people<lb/>
who endured it fa 74 years.<lb/>
And if that is not enough,<lb/>
perhaps those opposing the treaty<lb/>
will be brought to their senses by<lb/>
the strong statement of our Joint<lb/>
Chiefs of Staff that the security of<lb/>
the canal itself would be seriously<lb/>
threatened by our failure to ratify<lb/>
the treaty.<lb/>
Paul Gerni to show 'trick<lb/>
shot ability' November 14<lb/>
By LYNN HUGHES<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
If you re a billiards nut, a<lb/>
casual partiapant, a even if you<lb/>
don t know a thing about the<lb/>
game, Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center has a show scheduled fa<lb/>
November 14 that you won't want<lb/>
to miss. Paul Germ, 1974 Trick<lb/>
Shot Champion, 1975 European<lb/>
champion and 1975, 1976 Wald<lb/>
Trick and Fancy Shot Champion<lb/>
will be demonstrating his skill in a<lb/>
free exhibition.<lb/>
At age 23, Germ has already<lb/>
made a name fa himself as a<lb/>
veteran of the game and as a<lb/>
certified professional instructa.<lb/>
Germ is also a member of<lb/>
Billiards Congress of America<lb/>
and the American Billiard Assoc-<lb/>
iation.<lb/>
Besides his tournament comp-<lb/>
etition, Germ perfams regularly<lb/>
at colleges and shopping malls<lb/>
throughout the country and is<lb/>
frequently called upon to make<lb/>
talk show appearances.<lb/>
He has also filmed trick shas<lb/>
fa several televisioi commercials<lb/>
during his career as a billiards<lb/>
champ.<lb/>
Germ offers an entertaining<lb/>
show with audience participation<lb/>
and Hghthearted wit and huma.<lb/>
His exhibitiais are a fast-moving<lb/>
panaama of the pocket billiard<lb/>
strategy that has gained him<lb/>
acclaim as one of the world's top<lb/>
irick sha masters.<lb/>
Everyone is encouraged to<lb/>
attend this inaedible show at<lb/>
8.00, Nov. 14 in Mendenhall's<lb/>
Multi-Purpose Room. It's some-<lb/>
thing you have to see to believe.<lb/>
ARMYNAVY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
Pe coatv fM flifltn. bomber<lb/>
snorkel tnk�r i�ck�tt R�nw��r<lb/>
parfcM. cemMati. warn cton-s-r.<lb/>
3sftei. '� JCi t. Evans Str&amp;r Opart<lb/>
II JO S �<lb/>
Iron Hase Trading Co.<lb/>
merchant &amp; Craftsman on<lb/>
Fine Gold &amp; Silver Jewelry<lb/>
on the mall First State Bank<lb/>
Building Hours 10-6<lb/>
Handcrafted Jewelry by LES<lb/>
RIGCAIS<lb/>
SHOESHOP<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER QOOOS<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
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For Gentle People<lb/>
318 Evans a Mall<lb/>
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J. D. DAWSON CO.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058021_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 November 1977<lb/>
Powers fails to amuse with epistolary novel<lb/>
Dear God:<lb/>
I didn tgoto mass last Sunday<lb/>
morning.<lb/>
Signed: Conroy<lb/>
Conroy:<lb/>
Don't worry about it. It was a<lb/>
nice day. I don't know who built<lb/>
the church but I made the<lb/>
sunshine.<lb/>
Signed: God<lb/>
John R. Powers can write very<lb/>
amusing letters. His new novel,<lb/>
The Unoriginal Sinner and the<lb/>
Ice-Cream God, is filled with the<lb/>
correspondence between a Irish<lb/>
Catholic boy trying to grow into<lb/>
manhood in the Chicago of the<lb/>
1960s and the owner of a<lb/>
neighborhood gas station who<lb/>
provides him with answers the<lb/>
boy's religion do not.<lb/>
Some of the letters the boy,<lb/>
Tim Conroy and his god, Caepan<lb/>
exchange under the door of the<lb/>
gas station are touching crea-<lb/>
tions. In these letters Powers<lb/>
creates a sensitive record of a<lb/>
young man's coming to grips with<lb/>
the real world beyond his child-<lb/>
hood fantasy of becoming a<lb/>
baseball star.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the prose nar-<lb/>
rative in which Powers' letters are<lb/>
placed fails miserably by compar-<lb/>
ison. Whatever sensitivity exhibi-<lb/>
ted in the correspondence is lost<lb/>
JOHN H. POWERS laughs, but his latest novel isn't that fumy.<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
and<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Dm<lb/>
"Juju<lb/>
a<lb/>
Sat. "Lotus"<lb/>
and Saturday<lb/>
BYOL Ni9ht Live<lb/>
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Good Nov. 10 � 17<lb/>
r�<lb/>
Roy Rogers<lb/>
is Now Open<lb/>
For Breakfast<lb/>
Ml an-10:30 am MonSat<lb/>
w � t t 4 TWa COUPON MOO PM w�<lb/>
tXZuU 25� OFF<lb/>
in the psuedo-existentialist world<lb/>
of American Graff itti Goes to<lb/>
Chicago Powers labors with in the<lb/>
body of the work.<lb/>
Conroy is a young man trying<lb/>
to "grow up" in a working class<lb/>
neighborhood in Chicago. The<lb/>
adult world faces he and his<lb/>
friends like a mysterious disease<lb/>
to be dealt with, sort of like The<lb/>
i Plague. And the incomprehen-<lb/>
sible war in Viet Nam casts a<lb/>
shadow of irrevocability over all<lb/>
their experiences.<lb/>
Conroy trys to escape ever<lb/>
making a decision about life.<lb/>
Until he enters college, Conroy<lb/>
plans to be a professional base-<lb/>
ball player. When his religion<lb/>
starts failing to satisfactorily<lb/>
answer the problems of his life,<lb/>
Conroy finds Caepan, the owner<lb/>
of a newly opened gas station, to<lb/>
replace Catholicism with more<lb/>
personal answers to his letters<lb/>
addressed to God.<lb/>
Conroy avoids the draft by<lb/>
going to college. But unlike<lb/>
Leonard Cohen who went to an<lb/>
ivy covered fraternity house at the<lb/>
University of Illinois on a debate<lb/>
scholarship, he goes to a conver-<lb/>
ted hotel which serves as a<lb/>
commuter college fa the city.<lb/>
Leonard's life had been all<lb/>
planned out by his parents before<lb/>
he was born. He would be a<lb/>
doctor. The first doctor, the first<lb/>
professional man in the Cohen<lb/>
family. Leonard eventually be-<lb/>
comes a doctor, but only after<lb/>
rejecting his parents reasons as<lb/>
well as those of his fiance. While<lb/>
Leonard's father saw becoming a<lb/>
doctor as becoming a respected<lb/>
member of the community, Bar-<lb/>
bara, his fiance, thought of<lb/>
doctors as the most important<lb/>
members of society because any<lb/>
time Ann Landers cannot answer<lb/>
a question die always advises to<lb/>
consult an M.D.<lb/>
Only when Caepan dies of a<lb/>
heart attack does Conroy ever<lb/>
look within himself for the answer<lb/>
to a problem (Whether or not to<lb/>
commit himself to an involvement<lb/>
with a woman he couldn't decide<lb/>
if he loved or not.). By this time<lb/>
he has only four more years left to<lb/>
live (You discover he has cancer<lb/>
in the last chapter.) and everyone<lb/>
is just happy the book is finally<lb/>
over.<lb/>
Powers attempts to end al-<lb/>
most every paragraph in the first<lb/>
thirty pages with a punch line. In<lb/>
the rest of the book, though, he<lb/>
is satisfied with settling with just<lb/>
the majority. As a general rule, it<lb/>
sounds like sanitized George<lb/>
Carlin. A commitment by Powers<lb/>
to either adequately treat the<lb/>
existentialist question of assert-<lb/>
ing personal values as valid in life<lb/>
or just writing a really funny book<lb/>
would have helped, tremendous-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
-DAVID W. TREVINO<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
books<lb/>
Second Deadly Sin: 'tired'<lb/>
Lawrence Sanders combines<lb/>
the elements of genius, material-<lb/>
ism, corruption, and innocence in<lb/>
a tired mystery. Despite believ-<lb/>
able characters and a workable<lb/>
plot, the novel fails to realize its<lb/>
potential possibilities. Sanders'<lb/>
day to day actions seem ordinary<lb/>
and repetitive, lacking the spon-<lb/>
taneity of dialogue and event<lb/>
necessary to make the mystery<lb/>
exciting as well as realistic.<lb/>
While Sanders' murder sus-<lb/>
pects are interesting and lively,<lb/>
his policemen seem like machines<lb/>
programmed to do their duty.<lb/>
Sergeant Boone is supposed to<lb/>
have a drinking problem; halfway<lb/>
through the novel, however, it<lb/>
disappears, along with all other<lb/>
indications of Boone's personal<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Ex-police chief Edward X.<lb/>
Delaney seems motivated by<lb/>
crime. He responds to the occa-<lb/>
sion whenever it warrants police<lb/>
action. He methodically looks up<lb/>
his house every night, and he<lb/>
goes on a rampage when his own<lb/>
home is ransacked. Yet, as<lb/>
fiercely as he protects his person-<lb/>
al rights and possessions, he<lb/>
shows no regard for the rights<lb/>
and possessions of other people.<lb/>
He conforms to standards only<lb/>
when necessary, and that is<lb/>
rarely.<lb/>
Delaney has little sympathy<lb/>
for Boone s drinking and even<lb/>
less fa the suspects on his list.<lb/>
He methodically recads all the<lb/>
facts in his notebook and reviews<lb/>
them at the end of each day.<lb/>
When Delaney finally isolates his<lb/>
murderer, he moves in fa the<lb/>
kill, no holds barred. Delaney's<lb/>
Wednesday Nite is Wednesday Nite<lb/>
AT PANTANA BOB'S<lb/>
OH WOW!<lb/>
Get Pantanasized<lb/>
Open 4:00 Daily<lb/>
open at 1:00 sat. &amp; sun.<lb/>
for ncaa &amp; nfl football<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse presents<lb/>
Ihe East Carolina Dance Theatre in<lb/>
AN EVENING OF DANCE, NOV. 17-19<lb/>
at 8:15 p. m. at Studio theatre.<lb/>
Students free, Public M.50<lb/>
Tickets available at<lb/>
AAcGinnis Auditorium ticket office.<lb/>
family and co-wakers are totally<lb/>
unaware of his predatory<lb/>
instincts. Outwardly he appears<lb/>
the smooth, calm and efficient<lb/>
ex-police chief, but in reality<lb/>
Delaney plays by his own set of<lb/>
rules.<lb/>
Aside from this delicious<lb/>
characterization of Delaney, aptly<lb/>
hidden until the end, the murder<lb/>
progresses on a routine schedule.<lb/>
A neat inheritance scam and an<lb/>
upper class madam's previous<lb/>
murder trial are the only interest-<lb/>
ing touches to an otherwise<lb/>
adinary murder mystery. The<lb/>
plot is soundly constructed, but<lb/>
obviously so, resulting in a mere<lb/>
contrivance of events. TheSecond<lb/>
Deadly Sin is far from except-<lb/>
ional.<lb/>
-SUE ELLEN MCLEOD<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058021_0013"/><lb/>
�HiBBHHH<lb/>
!ntramurals<lb/>
10 November 1977 FOgNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
ECU vs. W&amp;M<lb/>
Back again!<lb/>
Oh, was last week one of those weeks!<lb/>
First we were left short of information for last week's newsletter, so<lb/>
we came out with a woefully weak product last week.<lb/>
Then our weekly column in the student newpaper gets overlooked.<lb/>
And at last, to open this week, I received an anonymous note in my<lb/>
mailbox concerning men's volleyball. In regards to that note I will<lb/>
apologize to Tau Kappa Epsilon and admit that the Tekes, not Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi are the defending fraternity volleyball champions. I can<lb/>
assume that it was a belligerent Teke that brought it to my attention<lb/>
and I hope that making the correction here helps ease the pain of my<lb/>
misinformation.<lb/>
VOLLE YBA LL ST A NDINGS<lb/>
That brings us to this week's volleyball roundup. With the playoffs<lb/>
approaching next week, races in the men's divisions are hot and heavy.<lb/>
The playoffs will start on Thursday. With the top two teams and ties<lb/>
from each division qualifying for the playoffs.<lb/>
In men's play last week's top ten, the Spacial Specials dropped to<lb/>
second as the Scott Kids took over first place in the top ten. Pardon me<lb/>
Tekes, but Pi Kappa Phi remains third and leads the fraternity<lb/>
division, with the fifth-ranked Dappa Sigmas and sixth-ranked Tekes<lb/>
close behind.<lb/>
Scott Dorm seems to have a bevy of excellent volleyball teams. Four<lb/>
of the eleven teams in the ratings hail from Scott.<lb/>
Besides the top-ranked Scott Kids, the Scott Pick ups are tied with<lb/>
the Aycock Giants for fourth. The Scott PhilinthebJanks are ninth and<lb/>
the Scott Impossibles are tenth.<lb/>
Teams in the seventh spot are the Hatchets, an independent, and<lb/>
the Spikes, another independent team.<lb/>
In women's play, the Greene Machine and Hypertension are<lb/>
head-to-head at the top. The Greene Machine is number one and<lb/>
Hypertension is number two. The ROTC Spikes are third.<lb/>
Dorm teams and Sergrity teams make up the remaining seven<lb/>
teams in the top ten. Kappa Delta, Alpha Xi Delta and Chi Omega<lb/>
represent the Greek ladies, wnile the Garrett Yardapes, the Fleming<lb/>
Foxes, the Jarvis Jailbirds, and the Fleming Floozies represent the<lb/>
dormitory leaders.<lb/>
The top two scorers in intramural Handball came face-to-face last<lb/>
week when Dennis Belamy's Time-Ins met Jones Fives and Phil Greer.<lb/>
Although Greer outscored Belamy, 13-10, in the individual faceoff,<lb/>
Belamy's Time-Ins won 20-17. The game's results gave Greer the<lb/>
Team Handball scoring lead with 36 points and Belamy is second with<lb/>
29 points. Jim Chastain of the Embaimers is third with 26 points.<lb/>
In the closest and most exciting games of the week, the Belk X's<lb/>
and O's were upset by the Time Ins, 20-19, without the services of the<lb/>
high scorer Wade Hinkel, Kappa Sigma beat Kappa Alpha, 20-16.<lb/>
Sigma Nu beat Pi Kappa Phi, 13-11, Phi Kappa Tau beat Tau Kappa<lb/>
Epsilon, 16-15 and Kappa Alpha beat Sigma Nu, 12-11.<lb/>
SPORTS TROPH Y ST A NDINGS<lb/>
It should be no surprise to intramural fansthat two teams from Scott<lb/>
Dam are leading in both the volleyball and team handball top ten.<lb/>
The teams from Scott have had a very good year in the short season<lb/>
that has taken place so far. They have combined fa 226 points to lead<lb/>
the Damitay division, ahead of Aycock with 199.6 points and Belk<lb/>
with 199.3 points. Jones stands fourth with 178.6 points.<lb/>
In the men's fraternity standings Lambda Chi Alpha leads with 226<lb/>
points. Kappa Alpha is dose behind with 22.5 points and the Tekes<lb/>
stand third with 217.<lb/>
In the independent division, the Sadaharu Oh's have a three-point<lb/>
lead over the Albanians, 160-157. The dub division leader is the Rugby<lb/>
Club with 198 points.<lb/>
SOCCER PLA Y CONTINUES<lb/>
In soccer adion last week the Kappa Sigmas upset Kappa Alpha,<lb/>
1-0, to drop the KAs from the unbeaten ranks and remain unbeaten<lb/>
themselves. In another exdting game, Pi Kappa Phi dropped Delta<lb/>
Sigma Phi, 1-0, in overtime.<lb/>
In the men s division, the leaders remained in front with a triad of<lb/>
shutouts. The Kamikazes beat Phi Epsilon Kappa, 3-0, Scott's<lb/>
Leatherballs beat the Jones Booters, 2-0; and Belk's Bay Booters<lb/>
dropped the Rugby Mules, 1-0.<lb/>
See CO-REC p. 16)<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Edita<lb/>
This weekends game with the<lb/>
Indians of William and Mary just<lb/>
oould turn out to be the biggest<lb/>
game in recent East Carolina<lb/>
history. The Pirates have drawn<lb/>
quite a bit of interest from some<lb/>
bowlsthis week and a chance of a<lb/>
bid of some kind seems very<lb/>
possible. Some of the bowls<lb/>
interested indude, The Indepen-<lb/>
dence Bowl, Hall of Fame Bowl<lb/>
and Peach Bowl. The Indepen-<lb/>
dence Bowl is expeded to have a<lb/>
scout at the game this weekend<lb/>
and the Peach Bowl might also.<lb/>
All of this sounds very good<lb/>
but there is a problem to be taken<lb/>
care of befae the Pirates can<lb/>
even dream of a bowl bid,<lb/>
William and Mary.<lb/>
Fa the Pirate football team to<lb/>
overlook the Indians this year<lb/>
would be oertain disaster. The<lb/>
Bucs almost did that last year and<lb/>
the Indians did everything but<lb/>
take their scalps in fadby rights<lb/>
all the Indians feel that they won<lb/>
that game last year in Williams-<lb/>
burg and the stats except fa the<lb/>
final scae prove them right. The<lb/>
Indians had 333 yards total<lb/>
offense as compared to just 278<lb/>
fa the Pirates. They also had 22<lb/>
first downs to 14 fa the ECU<lb/>
offense. A pass intaosption by<lb/>
Ernest Madison stopped what<lb/>
would have been the winning<lb/>
touchdown drive.<lb/>
This year the Indians are very<lb/>
anxious to make amends fa<lb/>
that heartbreaking loss and would<lb/>
love nothing better than to spoil<lb/>
the Pirates bowl chances. The<lb/>
reason this is such a big game<lb/>
from William and Marys stand-<lb/>
point is na just because of last<lb/>
year howeva. This yea has been<lb/>
a big letdown to the Indian fans<lb/>
who with nineteen startas back<lb/>
from a 7-4 year, in 76 expeded an<lb/>
almost perfed season. What they<lb/>
have received is quite different<lb/>
however.<lb/>
It started all when the Indians<lb/>
took on Division II foe Nafolk<lb/>
State. Nafolk State was a heavy<lb/>
underdog and many expeded<lb/>
them to be blown out of Cary<lb/>
Field in Williamsburg. What<lb/>
happened was William and Mary<lb/>
struggled to a 27-12 win which<lb/>
was less than impressive. The<lb/>
next week the Indians lost to VMI<lb/>
23-13. That game plus a tough<lb/>
schedule has haunted the Indians<lb/>
all year even though they have<lb/>
been able to win four games<lb/>
interspaced within five defeats.<lb/>
Though William and,Mary has<lb/>
na played to their capabilities<lb/>
this year the talent is there and<lb/>
this is what waries coach Pat Dye<lb/>
the most.<lb/>
"Last year I feel like William<lb/>
and Mary outplayed us and the<lb/>
statistics prove me right said<lb/>
Dye. "It was our lowest total<lb/>
offensive game fa the year and<lb/>
the most yardage we gave up to<lb/>
an opposing team all year also. At<lb/>
this point I am waried fa two<lb/>
reasons. First of all we have na<lb/>
pradiced good at all this week<lb/>
and I have always felt that it is<lb/>
what you do on the pradioe field<lb/>
East Carolina vs William &amp; Mary<lb/>
Oyster Bowl Pre-game fad sheet<lb/>
DATE: Saturday,November 12, 1977<lb/>
TIME: 1 30 p.m.<lb/>
SITE: Faeman Field Nafolk, Va.<lb/>
ESTIMATED ATTENDANCE: 25,000<lb/>
OFFENSES: East Carolina-wishbone<lb/>
William &amp; Mary-I<lb/>
DEFENSES: East Cardina-5-2<lb/>
William &amp; Mary-Fifty<lb/>
1 ECU CAPTAINS. All senias<lb/>
OFFENSEDEFENSE<lb/>
East CarolinaWilliam &amp; Mary<lb/>
SE Terry Gallaher(Sr 174)LERdfeCarawan(Sr225)<lb/>
LT Mitchell Smith (Jr 236)LT Dan Burnick(So265)<lb/>
LG Nelson Smith (Jr 23Q)MG Dave O'Neill (Sr 220)<lb/>
CRickieHdliday(Sr193)RT Pete Griffin (Jr 240)<lb/>
RG Wayne Bolt (Sr 254)RE Melvin Martin (Jr 215)<lb/>
RT Joe Godette (So 224)LLBEdAmos(Sr205)<lb/>
TE Barry Johnson (Sr 225)RLB Steve Shull (So 205i<lb/>
RLB Steve Shull (So 205)LCB Ken Smith (Sr 180)<lb/>
QB Jimmy Southerland (Sr 170)SS Scott Hays (Sr 200)<lb/>
FB Thecdae Sutton (So 200)FSJoeAgee(Sr195)<lb/>
RBWilliw Hawkins (Sr 188)RCB Keith Pdts(So 190)<lb/>
I RB Eddie Hicks (Jr 201)<lb/>
DEFENSEOFFENSE<lb/>
SE John Maris(So 195)SEJoeMandefield(Jr180)<lb/>
LT Wayne Pcde (Jr 240)LT Bill Scott (So235)<lb/>
NG Oliver Felton(Jr 240)LG Allen Goode(Sr 245)<lb/>
 RT Noah Clark (So 225)C HankZ.mmerman (Sr 235)<lb/>
I WE Zack Valentine (Jr 218)RG Steve Kuhn(Sr 230)<lb/>
j SLB Harold Rando)ph(sr: 195)RT Dudley Johnson (Jr 265)<lb/>
WLB Tommy Summer (Jr 205)TE Rob Muscaius(Jr 245L<lb/>
LCB Charlie Carter (So 173)QB Tom Rozantz (Jr 190)<lb/>
SSGerald Hall (Jr 184)FBCraig Cook (Sr 200)<lb/>
FS Steve Hale (Sr 177)TBJimKruis(SM85)<lb/>
i RCB Willie Hdley (So 176)SB Gray Oliver (Sr 190)<lb/>
I Placekicker: Junia CreechPlacekicka: Steve Libassi<lb/>
Punter: Rodney AllenPunter: Joe Agee<lb/>
that determines how you play on<lb/>
Saturday. The second thing that<lb/>
waries me is that with almost<lb/>
everybody back from last year<lb/>
that William and Mary will give<lb/>
us a big challenge that we must<lb/>
meet on the pradioe field and at<lb/>
the game Saturday. William and<lb/>
Mary is a physical team and has<lb/>
great size and talent. Tom<lb/>
Rozantz, (quarterback), is pro-<lb/>
bably one of the best anywhere in<lb/>
the country and is a big play man.<lb/>
I know that because he threw two<lb/>
touchdown passes against us last<lb/>
year. They have one of the<lb/>
biggest secondaries I have ever<lb/>
seen with Scott Hays their strong<lb/>
safety weighing around 200<lb/>
See PIRATES p. 16<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
WILLIAM AND MARY head coach Jim Root looks<lb/>
towards Saturday's game against the Pirates.<lb/>
����Mi<lb/>
<pb facs="00058021_0014"/><lb/>
SsSfllifimS<lb/>
mi<lb/>
EffiBBHnUPS. � Sip!? �<lb/>
HHHHBi<lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 November 1977<lb/>
ECU grapplers enter new era<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A wrestling dynasty at East<lb/>
Carolina finally ended after ten<lb/>
years last season when John<lb/>
Wei born resigned to assume<lb/>
duties as assistant athletic direc-<lb/>
tor.<lb/>
A new era will unfold this<lb/>
weekend in Norfolk, Va. when<lb/>
new head coach Bill Hill and his<lb/>
yourg Pirate grapplers open their<lb/>
season in the Monarch Classic<lb/>
which will run Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Hill, ECU'S only wrestling<lb/>
Ail-American, inherits six start-<lb/>
ers from last year's squad which<lb/>
finished with an impressive 8-4<lb/>
dual record and a second place<lb/>
finish in the Southern Conference<lb/>
Championships.<lb/>
Nevertheless, it will be a very<lb/>
young team, yet one Hill feels<lb/>
"will surprise a lot of people<lb/>
"I'm really looking forward to<lb/>
this season said Hill, a four-<lb/>
time Southern Conference cham-<lb/>
pion in the 177 weight class. "It's<lb/>
going to be a tremendous chal-<lb/>
lenge trying to succeed Coach<lb/>
Wei born, but we've looked good<lb/>
in practice and have avoided any<lb/>
serious injuries so far. We've got<lb/>
a tough schedule, but one that's<lb/>
gang to bring a lot of our fans out<lb/>
to see us<lb/>
The Pirates will compete in<lb/>
the Carolina Invitational later this<lb/>
month and the WilkesOpen along<lb/>
with twelve dual matches, six<lb/>
which will be played in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
The strength of the Pirate's<lb/>
lineup this year will again be in<lb/>
the middle and upper weight<lb/>
classes where Frank Schaede the<lb/>
Southern Conference champion at<lb/>
150 ret urns along with Jay Dever.<lb/>
Steve Goode, and D.T. Joyner.<lb/>
Schaede finished the season<lb/>
with an impressive 19-9 record<lb/>
and was named to the Amateur<lb/>
Wrestling News third team all-<lb/>
freshman squad.<lb/>
Dever, who wrestles in the 177<lb/>
weight class, posted a fine 15-9<lb/>
recad while sophomae Steve<lb/>
Goode had a 11-10 overall slate.<lb/>
D.T. Joyner will join the team<lb/>
as soon as the football season is<lb/>
over. Last season, Joyner was9-7<lb/>
and placed second in the South-<lb/>
ern Conference heavyweight divi-<lb/>
sion for the second straight<lb/>
season in a row.<lb/>
Although Hill admits the<lb/>
Pirates will be weak in most of<lb/>
the lower weight classes, Paul<lb/>
Osman at 134 rates as one of the<lb/>
top perfamers in the nation. The<lb/>
senia from McLean, Virginia is a<lb/>
two-time Southern Conference<lb/>
Champion and NCAA participant<lb/>
and finished the 1976-77 season<lb/>
with a 24-4-1 record. Osman has a<lb/>
three year record of 67-22-2 and is<lb/>
a bonafide candidate fa All-<lb/>
American hcnas this season.<lb/>
"Osman'sgoing to be our<lb/>
leader this year says Hill.<lb/>
" He's very strong and is capable<lb/>
of beating everybody he will face<lb/>
this year. We won't have any-<lb/>
thing to wary about in his<lb/>
weight class<lb/>
Hill landed some very talented<lb/>
prep prospects and is oounting on<lb/>
several freshmen to start this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Bob Passino, a Virginia State<lb/>
champion at 112 last year and a<lb/>
four time District champ will<lb/>
probably be the number one<lb/>
prospect in the 118 weight class<lb/>
and will get plenty of competition<lb/>
from Charlie Fine, a Nafdk, Va.<lb/>
product who finished his prep<lb/>
career at Naview High School.<lb/>
Other freshmen prospects in<lb/>
the lower weight classes include<lb/>
Scott Easton, a sectional and<lb/>
district champion at 142 from<lb/>
Grove City, Pa. and James<lb/>
Matney from Stone, Kentucky in<lb/>
the 126 weight class who was a<lb/>
three time MVP at Belfry High<lb/>
School and won 112 matches<lb/>
during his prep career.<lb/>
Other promising perfamers<lb/>
in the upper weight classes are<lb/>
Vic Nathrup at 167, a two time<lb/>
sectional champion from Waver-<lb/>
ly, N.Y Soloman Revils at<lb/>
177-190 a two-time Virginia State<lb/>
champion at 177, and junior<lb/>
transfer Bobby Williams at 177-<lb/>
190 who finished second in the<lb/>
Pennsylvania State Champion-<lb/>
ships during his senia year with<lb/>
a brilliant 63-6 reoad.<lb/>
Bolt on looks for improvement<lb/>
By DAVID MERRIAM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Speed, quickness, and depth,<lb/>
those are the key wads to this<lb/>
years' Lady Pirates basketball<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"We will be greatly improved<lb/>
and I fully expect to be in the<lb/>
battle fa top honas in the<lb/>
state Coach Bolton said. "We<lb/>
have all of our starters from last<lb/>
year returning and an excellent<lb/>
Classic by Gant.<lb/>
The Traditional Dress Shirt<lb/>
The authentic button-down shirt by Gant in 65<lb/>
DUPONT DACRONT Polyester35 Cotton<lb/>
Oxford. Available in our Classic Fit in a choice<lb/>
of Blue, Cream, Maize, Pink and White.<lb/>
Attention to correct fashion and quality<lb/>
is always part of<lb/>
The Gant Attitude.<lb/>
Cfltfe<lb/>
i<lb/>
MEMS WEAR<lb/>
on the Man Downtown brwenvilie<lb/>
group of recruits<lb/>
Debbie Freeman, the state's<lb/>
leading scaer and rebounder last<lb/>
year, with twenty points and 12.7<lb/>
rebounds per game, should again<lb/>
be in consideration fa Ail-Ameri-<lb/>
can honors. Freeman almost<lb/>
single-handedly carried the team<lb/>
through a dismal 6-1 � season.<lb/>
"This season, with added depth<lb/>
to the team, Debbie will not have<lb/>
quite the burden she is use to<lb/>
carrying commented Bolton.<lb/>
The return of junia Rosie<lb/>
Thompson should add quite a bit<lb/>
to the team. After having a 19.8<lb/>
scaing average her freshman<lb/>
year, Bolton looked faward to the<lb/>
development of her talent. A<lb/>
serious leg injury, however, ruin-<lb/>
ed her sophomae season. "This<lb/>
is a fresh season fa Rosie<lb/>
oommented Bolton, "and I antici-<lb/>
pate great things from her<lb/>
Junior Gale Kerbaugh is<lb/>
expected to contribute greatly<lb/>
toward the overall team improve-<lb/>
ment. Asascohomae, Kerbaugh<lb/>
was named to the all-state team<lb/>
and as all-A.I.A.W. Tournament<lb/>
team in Nath Carolina. Her<lb/>
outside shooting, defensive abil-<lb/>
ity and quick moves have resulted<lb/>
in a very complete guard.<lb/>
Others who started over 50<lb/>
percent of the season last year<lb/>
include, guard April Ross and<lb/>
Kathy Suggs. Each is expected to<lb/>
be greatly improved, and with a<lb/>
big year of experience behind<lb/>
them, more consistent, erraless<lb/>
play is expected.<lb/>
Two incoming freshmen<lb/>
should lend immediate help and<lb/>
put pressure on the veterans fa a<lb/>
starting berth. Guard Lydia<lb/>
Roundtree of Elm City, N.C<lb/>
ranks as one of the finest in the<lb/>
state. She was named high school<lb/>
all-American by Joe Namath's<lb/>
National Prep Repat, aie of 32 to<lb/>
be honaed, and the oily Nath<lb/>
Carolina player to be named.<lb/>
The center position should<lb/>
receive a helping hand with the<lb/>
addition of freshman Marcia<lb/>
Girven. This six footer adds the<lb/>
dimension fa straig rebounding<lb/>
and a powerful inside defense.<lb/>
Two other freshmen, Lynne<lb/>
Emerson and Kim Versprille<lb/>
round out the freshmen recruits.<lb/>
. . cdstbruoK Ave<lb/>
Adjacent to<lb/>
King &amp; Queen Restaurant<lb/>
The Pro Shop<lb/>
Of GreenvHle, Inc.<lb/>
TWO DAY SPECIAL<lb/>
10 OFF SPEARY Top-Sider Shoe<lb/>
Thin Friday and Saturday<lb/>
Nov. 11&amp;12<lb/>
Open Till 8:00 pm MonFri.<lb/>
Till 6:00 on Sat.<lb/>
752-1525<lb/>
"Lynne has come along real<lb/>
well inside, and I'm na oounting<lb/>
her out fa a starting position<lb/>
said Bolton, "at this point, any<lb/>
number of people could start<lb/>
On the other hand Kim<lb/>
Versprille will have to be counted<lb/>
out fa a starting berth. She has<lb/>
been sidelined with a case of<lb/>
mononudeosis, and retained from<lb/>
practice. "I don't expect her back<lb/>
100 until after Christmas<lb/>
"We doit want to rush her,<lb/>
because I want her back healthy.<lb/>
She has a lot of spirit and can<lb/>
contribute a great deal to the<lb/>
team concluded Bolton.<lb/>
Walk-ons can also turn up to<lb/>
be surprising, one in particular is<lb/>
Shannon Staples, a 6'2" Chapel<lb/>
Hill native who has surprised<lb/>
many people.<lb/>
"She is a very serious player,<lb/>
I am pleased with her improve-<lb/>
ment said Bolton. "I'm sure<lb/>
she will contribute to the team<lb/>
"We had a terrible season last<lb/>
year, and with the speed, quick-<lb/>
ness, and depth of this year, I am<lb/>
very optimistic said Bolton, "I<lb/>
look faward to getting back on<lb/>
the winning track<lb/>
The opening game is Novem-<lb/>
ber 30, against a much improved<lb/>
Campbell College team, here at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
On a final note Coach Bolton<lb/>
said, "AITI can say is I can't wait<lb/>
fa this season to start, the team<lb/>
is starting to jell together, and<lb/>
we're going to be tough<lb/>
ACCOUNTING AND<lb/>
FINANCE MAJORS<lb/>
LET US HELP YOU PLAN<lb/>
AHEAD TO BECOME A CPA<lb/>
IEW<lb/>
OUR SUCCESSFUL STUDENTS REPRESENT<lb/>
13 �f USA<lb/>
<pb facs="00058021_0015"/><lb/>
��������MBHHHBIHHHmDHMHM<lb/>
10 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
Souther land starts fast game for Pirates<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Writer<lb/>
To see Jimmy Southerland on<lb/>
the street one would not envision<lb/>
1,106 total offense wrapped in<lb/>
that (5'9") frame.<lb/>
game<lb/>
tonite<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Tonight's Purple-Gold game<lb/>
has several purposes fa men's<lb/>
head basketball ooach Larry Gill-<lb/>
man. "Not only is this game for<lb/>
experienoe, but we would also<lb/>
like toexpose the areas outside of<lb/>
the campus to East Carolina<lb/>
basketball said Gillman.<lb/>
To follow up after tonight's<lb/>
game at D.H. Conley, Gillman<lb/>
has scheduled another game at<lb/>
Washington High School next<lb/>
Tuesday Nov. 15. "People who<lb/>
might not normally drive to<lb/>
Greenville will get a chance to see<lb/>
our team; and when they do I<lb/>
think they will want to 9ee more<lb/>
added Gillman.<lb/>
In other basketball news,<lb/>
Coach Gillman will start a weekly<lb/>
television program this Saturday,<lb/>
November 12th on channel 9 with<lb/>
Jim Woods. Though future air-<lb/>
times are tentative this week's<lb/>
program will be at 4 00 p.m. With<lb/>
this program Gillman hopes to<lb/>
reach out even further to Eastern<lb/>
N.C. to demonstrate basketball<lb/>
techniques and show highlightsof<lb/>
ECU games. A radio show on<lb/>
WOOW 1300 in Greenville will<lb/>
also begin Sunday Nov. 20, at<lb/>
7 O0. This show will be hosted by<lb/>
Henry Hinton.<lb/>
With the season nearing,<lb/>
coach Gillman encourages frater-<lb/>
nities and student organizations<lb/>
to start planning to sponsor<lb/>
buses to away games, and added,<lb/>
"If I can help in any way just stop<lb/>
by; we want to get this show on<lb/>
the road<lb/>
And so the Pirates take<lb/>
another step towards the season<lb/>
opener at Indiana, November<lb/>
26th.<lb/>
Southerland, going into Satur-<lb/>
day's game at William &amp; Mary,<lb/>
has been a 57 percent passer and<lb/>
has matured equally as a runner.<lb/>
"I just kept working towards my<lb/>
senior year said the Wilming-<lb/>
ton native. He added, "I worked<lb/>
this summer and went from 4.9 to<lb/>
4.7 in the forty<lb/>
Southerland pairs with Lean-<lb/>
der Green to form one of the most<lb/>
potent quarterback situations<lb/>
ever here at ECU. "I like being<lb/>
able to rest up, you always need<lb/>
to go all out "when you're in<lb/>
Coach Dye's system,at mixing<lb/>
up the passing and running game<lb/>
suits Jimmy fine and admits he<lb/>
has been mildly surprised at his<lb/>
passing suocess this year. "Coach<lb/>
Kincaid has helped a lot with my<lb/>
technique the past couple of<lb/>
years<lb/>
Jimmy, a walk-on his fresh-<lb/>
man year, won a scholarship his<lb/>
sophomore year and played in<lb/>
every game. "I was disappoin-<lb/>
ted at not playing so much last<lb/>
year, but I am very pleased with<lb/>
everything this year<lb/>
"Everyone has really worked<lb/>
this year; the offensive line has<lb/>
done a tremendous job and we'd<lb/>
really like to go to a bowl<lb/>
Before that goal can be<lb/>
considered the Pirates must play<lb/>
William and Mary. "They have a<lb/>
big secondary but we have good<lb/>
receivers he , said.<lb/>
JIMMY SOUTHERLAND<lb/>
"It's great to know Terry<lb/>
Gallaher is out there. He's<lb/>
dependable for everything<lb/>
Jimmy looks at Saturday's<lb/>
game kind of sadly but added, "I<lb/>
am really happy the way this year<lb/>
has turned out<lb/>
Southerland will visit his<lb/>
mother in Germany after gradua-<lb/>
tion and hopes to travel after-<lb/>
wards. It is evident that Pirate<lb/>
fans are glad he traveled to<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058021_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 November 1977<lb/>
Pirates fight to land bowl bid<lb/>
Continued from p. 13<lb/>
pounds. AM I can say is that they<lb/>
want us some kind of bad and<lb/>
they will be ready for us on<lb/>
Saturday. I just hope we are ready<lb/>
for them<lb/>
From the other side of the<lb/>
picture is coach Jim Root and the<lb/>
Indians. Coach Root is from<lb/>
M iami Ohio known as the  cradle<lb/>
of coaches" with the likes of<lb/>
INTRAMURALS<lb/>
Continued from p. 13<lb/>
CO-REC BOWLING<lb/>
Through last Friday, the S.S.S. and the Gutter Dusters led i�c.<lb/>
respective leads in Co-rec Bowling. The Dusters remained without a<lb/>
loss at 8-0, while S.S.S. held a 15-1 mark.<lb/>
In the "A" league, S.S.Ss 15-1 record, two games ahead of the<lb/>
Splits 11-1 mark. Roses Team stands second behind the Gutter<lb/>
Dusters in the  B" league with a 10-2 record.<lb/>
The leading bowler so far is Julius "J.R Merritt of the Gutter<lb/>
Dusters with a 180 average. Mike "Moose" Sidelinger and Doug<lb/>
Boyette of S.S.S. bowl to 170 averages, as has Lee Huggms of the<lb/>
Kappa Sigma Mafia. Kappa Sigs Mike Nicholson averages 173.<lb/>
Cam Dudley of the Big Four rolled a 220 last week, but had a bad<lb/>
day earlier to keep a J50 average. Denny Viercheller of the Teke<lb/>
Molesters bowled a 193 last week.<lb/>
Members of the first-place teams are Doug Boyette, Sidelinger,<lb/>
Pam Warren and Donna Wilkie on the S.S.S. team and Kathy Gattis,<lb/>
Sandy Lamm, Merritt and Gail Roberts bowl fa the Gutter Dusters.<lb/>
TWO-ON-TWO BASKETBALL<lb/>
Darius Mans and Sheila Bowe are scheduled to play fa the<lb/>
championship in two-on-two basketball. They will play one of three<lb/>
teams, Time Se.tz and Linda Christian, Al McCrimmon and Gwen<lb/>
Scott, a Debby Newby and Geage Kreidel.<lb/>
FORMERINTRAMURALSTARSMAKE VARSITY<lb/>
We couldn't help but notice this past week that two famer<lb/>
intramural basketball standouts, Fton Stumpo and Gary Kerr, have<lb/>
made the ECU varsity team as walkons. Stumpo 'ed the Kappa Sigmas<lb/>
in soaing last week and was fourth overall while Kerr has reached the<lb/>
finals of the men's one-oi-oie play three times. Congratulations to<lb/>
each of these athletes.<lb/>
EQUIPMENT ROOM HOURS<lb/>
Intramural Equipment Manager Pat Cox wanted me to run the<lb/>
hours that the equipment rooms are open in Minges and Memorial, so<lb/>
we'll do so now.<lb/>
In Minges, the equipment room hours run from 7:45 a.m. to 11:15<lb/>
p.m. on Friday, 10a.m. to9;15 p.m. on Saturday and 1 p.m. to9:15 on<lb/>
Sundays. Memaials' equipment room opens at 7:45 during the week,<lb/>
closing at 10 p.m. to 9 p.m. and Sundays hours are 2 a.m. to 9 a.m.<lb/>
Full-time students may check our equipment. I.D. and activity<lb/>
cards must be presented. The equipment rooms close fa special events<lb/>
that use Minges Coliseum facilities<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
tots �<lb/>
FOR SALE: Stereo-Marantz 4230.<lb/>
Phillips 212, Jensen 5's $1200<lb/>
value. Will sell fa $600 a less.<lb/>
Call 758-0519 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Les Paul Deluxe,<lb/>
natural finish, whard shell case<lb/>
$450. Also violin whard shell<lb/>
case $100. Both in excellent cond.<lb/>
Prices negotiable. Call 752-2819<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Old 45 oollection<lb/>
appraised at approx. $300.00.<lb/>
Will sell fa $150.00. Also fa sale<lb/>
8 track tapes, 1 album cabinet<lb/>
$15.00, 1 ladies hair dryer,<lb/>
$15.00. Call 946-8980 after 330<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE 75 Green Saab 99LE<lb/>
standard transmission, 27,000<lb/>
miles. AMFM stereo cassette<lb/>
deck, AC. Must sell to meet<lb/>
expenses. Best offer 7586513<lb/>
befae 2:30 p.m.<lb/>
BEN HOGAN Irons "Producers"<lb/>
practically new. $220.00. Cull<lb/>
758-0961.<lb/>
FOR SALE: CH EAP Cola TV 21"<lb/>
Magnavox. Less than 1 yr. old.<lb/>
$300, will negotiate. Call Jim at<lb/>
752-7395 a Bob at 756-3951.<lb/>
FOR SALE 73 Honda SL 350 K2.<lb/>
Excellent dual-purpose bike.<lb/>
Good cond. Complete manual<lb/>
included. Call David 758-4395.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Weightlifting equip.<lb/>
3 bars. Metal weights, bencpress<lb/>
apparatus. All for $65. Call<lb/>
758-0045.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Conn trombone.<lb/>
Good cond. $75. Call 758-0445.<lb/>
FOR SALE: One Allied Stereo<lb/>
Reciever 2600, one Layfayette<lb/>
Amp One BSR 6500 turntable in<lb/>
good oond. $55.00 Call Greg<lb/>
752-6635.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '72 Datsun 2402.<lb/>
Excellent cond. Runs real good.<lb/>
New paint. $3700. Call 758-0468.<lb/>
Wooay Hayes either having<lb/>
coached there a graduated fran<lb/>
there. Rcot took over after Lou<lb/>
Hdtz (NC State-NY. Jets Arkan-<lb/>
sas) left fa Raleigh to guide the<lb/>
Wolfpaek. Coach Root had a<lb/>
tough act to follow but has done it<lb/>
quite well. So well in fact that the<lb/>
Pirates must take the game last<lb/>
year as a warning of what he has<lb/>
done and what William and Mary<lb/>
is able to do this year.<lb/>
Jim Root of course knows he<lb/>
will be up against a tough team<lb/>
also and has quite a few good<lb/>
things to say about the Pirates.<lb/>
"I was wondering how East<lb/>
Carolina could be any better this<lb/>
year than they have been in the<lb/>
past and after watching the films<lb/>
on them, gosh, they are Root<lb/>
said. "They have a great football<lb/>
team, and one that can play with<lb/>
any team in the country. All your<lb/>
good teams have great athletes in<lb/>
the skilled positions; and in<lb/>
evaluating ECU'S personnel, I<lb/>
would have to say they have them<lb/>
all over the field. We haven't<lb/>
beaten East Carolina sinoe I've<lb/>
been here and I know the players<lb/>
and staff are anxious to get into<lb/>
the win column against them. If<lb/>
we are to win we are going to<lb/>
have to put more points on the<lb/>
board against them than we have<lb/>
been lately. Their offense is as<lb/>
explosive as any we've faced this<lb/>
season, and from our standpoint,<lb/>
we have to score mae than a<lb/>
couple of times because I doubt<lb/>
we can shut them down. Defen-<lb/>
sively they have the horses too.<lb/>
Harold Randolph is an amazing<lb/>
player who covers every inch of<lb/>
the field and the other ten folks<lb/>
with him are equally impressive.<lb/>
We must have our best game of<lb/>
the season offensively and defen-<lb/>
sively. I mean itthey are that<lb/>
good<lb/>
So it looks like a super game in<lb/>
the Oyster Bowl this weekend<lb/>
with two teams that have some-<lb/>
thing to win fa. Fa the Indians it<lb/>
isa possible winning season and a<lb/>
victay over the Pirates fa the<lb/>
first time sinoe 1971. Fa the<lb/>
Pirates it's a chance at a dream<lb/>
that they have wanted to come<lb/>
true fa twelve long yearsa<lb/>
bowl bid and bowl game.<lb/>
WILL!AM AND MARY will provide a stiff challenge as Pirates vie tor a possible bowl bid this weekend<lb/>
MUST SELL: Man's 10-speed<lb/>
bike, and Wilson golf clubs and<lb/>
bag. Call Marty at 7560680.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer 737 receiver,<lb/>
13 mon. old. 35 watts per<lb/>
channel. Two BOSE 501 speak-<lb/>
ers. Call Art 752-5543 $400.00<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 BIC 940 belt-drive<lb/>
turntable, 1 pr. BIC famula 4<lb/>
speakers, 1 Pilot 360 4 channel<lb/>
stereo receiver and amp. rates at<lb/>
60 watts at stereo and 30 watts at<lb/>
quad. Will sell as individual a as<lb/>
system. Must sell, call 7566094.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Gibson elec. guitar<lb/>
with case, hollow body, 2 pick-up,<lb/>
Model 335, excellent cond<lb/>
$550 call 752-2956 after 6O0.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '76 Datsun 280-Z.<lb/>
Excellent cond. and low mileage.<lb/>
Call 7561573 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE; Nikka 200 mm f4.0<lb/>
telephoto lens $150.00. Nikka 28<lb/>
mm f3.5 wide angle $100.00.<lb/>
Call 7561906.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Full size refrig. It is<lb/>
old, but it waks. $30. 758-7675.<lb/>
ANTIQUE COLLECTON: fa sale.<lb/>
Blown glass pitcher and 19th<lb/>
century bottles. Dresser ward-<lb/>
robe T by 3 2 mansaws. Cast<lb/>
iron coal stove and other novel-<lb/>
ties. Am moving, must sell. No<lb/>
reasonable offers refused. Call<lb/>
758-5149 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
Dcrsondl<lb/>
toricrt (&amp;l<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED: 1 a 2<lb/>
fa Apt. at River Bluff. 1 3 rent<lb/>
and utilities - By Dec. 1. Call<lb/>
Yvonne a Carolyn at 758-5758.<lb/>
WANTED :1 bedroom apt. by Jan<lb/>
1. Needs to be furnished. Call<lb/>
758-8452 and ask fa Michelle D.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Needed,<lb/>
must furnish own bedroom, rent<lb/>
$50 monthly, plus utilities. Col-<lb/>
lege Hill Apts. Call Linda at<lb/>
752-6963.<lb/>
FREE KITTENS: Long haired and<lb/>
shat haired. 7 wks. old. Cute,<lb/>
friendly, litter trained, likeable<lb/>
kittens. Call Judy 758-6085.<lb/>
CUSTOM DESIGNED: and made<lb/>
clothes by Pro. Appointments<lb/>
only. Free consultation. Special<lb/>
prices between now and Dec. 5.<lb/>
Call 758-0468.<lb/>
BABYSITTER NEEDED: fa oc-<lb/>
casional evenings on weekends.<lb/>
Call 756-0680.<lb/>
FOUND: Three packs of<lb/>
"unusual" negatives near SU. If<lb/>
yours, call 752-7572.<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Fall things too<lb/>
big, too long? Call Kathy 752-<lb/>
8444 a 752-8642.<lb/>
LOST: "D" initial ring. Please<lb/>
call 752-9312. Reward.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058021_0017"/>
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