<?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="00058025_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity fa ever 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSDE<lb/>
Nazi hunterp. 3<lb/>
WNCTp. 7<lb/>
Star Warsp.10<lb/>
Pirates vs. UNC-Wp. 12<lb/>
Vol. 53 No. 25 t<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina.<lb/>
1 December 1977<lb/>
Chancellor search still on<lb/>
TROY W. PATE, chairperson of the ECU Chancellor Search<lb/>
By BILL HARRINGTON<lb/>
Assistant News Edita<lb/>
Over 200 applications fa the<lb/>
Chancellorship at ECU were<lb/>
received by the November 30<lb/>
deadline, accading to Troy W.<lb/>
Pate, Chairperson of both the<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustees and the<lb/>
Chancella Selection Committee.<lb/>
Pate would not release any of<lb/>
the candidates' names saying that<lb/>
the committee is forced "to<lb/>
operate under very strict confi-<lb/>
dentiality<lb/>
According to Pate, if the<lb/>
names of some of the candidates<lb/>
under consideration were made<lb/>
public, they would almost certain-<lb/>
ly ask to be withdrawn from<lb/>
consideration.<lb/>
The search fa a new Chancel-<lb/>
la is definitely not limited to the<lb/>
state of North Carolina, accading<lb/>
to Pate.<lb/>
Pate said the Chancellor<lb/>
Selection Committee had adver-<lb/>
tised the availability of the<lb/>
position in newspapers and edu-<lb/>
cational publications nationwide.<lb/>
The committee has written<lb/>
letters "to presidents of colleges<lb/>
and univasities across the na-<lb/>
tion said Pate, "and some of<lb/>
them have made nominations<lb/>
Accading to Pate, in most<lb/>
cases the Chancella Selection<lb/>
Committee is submitted a nomi-<lb/>
nation and then the person<lb/>
nominated is contacted "to see if<lb/>
they would allow us to consider<lb/>
them as a candidate<lb/>
When asked what qualifica-<lb/>
tions the committee is looking fa<lb/>
in a new Chancella, Pate said,<lb/>
"We're looking fa the best<lb/>
qualified person we can find to fill<lb/>
the Chancel la's position at<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Pate said that since  so many<lb/>
people with varied backgrounds<lb/>
and aiteria are being consider-<lb/>
ed, "it'svay ticklish" to attempt<lb/>
to narrow down the exact qualifi-<lb/>
cations being looked fa in a<lb/>
candidate.<lb/>
The board of trustees Selec-<lb/>
tion Committee is to submit two<lb/>
names from the 200 candidates to<lb/>
the President of the Consolidated<lb/>
U:C System, William Friday,<lb/>
accading to Pate.<lb/>
These two names will then be<lb/>
submitted to the UNC Board of<lb/>
Govanas, who will give their<lb/>
final approval to one of the names<lb/>
sometime in March 1978, Pate<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Pate said he is aware of the<lb/>
student body's concern about who<lb/>
will replace Dr. Leo Jenkins, and<lb/>
asked that they "have faith in the<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Sessoms vetoes<lb/>
marching band bill<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
SGA President Neil Sessoms<lb/>
vetoed the Marching Pirates bill<lb/>
Tuesday after the legislature<lb/>
passed it during the November 21<lb/>
session. The bill was fa $7,706.<lb/>
The SGA usually appropriates<lb/>
the band approximately $8,000,<lb/>
and the athletic department<lb/>
usually gives $8,000 also, accad-<lb/>
ing to Sessoms, but this year, the<lb/>
athletic department gave the<lb/>
band approximately $15,000.<lb/>
Sessoms said money is needed<lb/>
in ader to improve band equip-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"This is not a good year to ask<lb/>
the SGA fa maiey fa improve-<lb/>
ment said Sessoms. "If the<lb/>
band is having financial difficul-<lb/>
ties, I will consider a much<lb/>
smaller bill.<lb/>
"In ader to appropriate that<lb/>
much money, we would have to<lb/>
use summer school fees. I'm<lb/>
trying to avoid that<lb/>
Sessoms said he wholeheart-<lb/>
edly supports the band, but due<lb/>
to the financial situation of the<lb/>
See BAND page5<lb/>
School of Art dean<lb/>
dies of heart attack<lb/>
THE LATE DR.<lb/>
Gray<lb/>
Wellington B.<lb/>
By SCOTT BARNES<lb/>
Staff Writa<lb/>
Dr. Wellington B. Gray, dean<lb/>
of ECU'S School of Art, died of a<lb/>
heart attack at 2 p.m. Tuesday af-<lb/>
ter being admitted to Pitt County<lb/>
Memaial Hospital Monday fa<lb/>
chest pains.<lb/>
Gray, 58, came to ECU in 1956<lb/>
as chairman of the art department<lb/>
which consisted of approximately<lb/>
50 students. At that time the art<lb/>
department was located in the old<lb/>
Austin building which stood<lb/>
where the new Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Centa is now.<lb/>
With Gray's dedicated lead-<lb/>
ership, the three room art depart-<lb/>
ment, with sculpture and cera-<lb/>
mics in the basement, grew into a<lb/>
school of art with nine depart-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
A native of Albany, N.Y<lb/>
Gray earned his B.S. degree from<lb/>
Kutztown State College in Penn-<lb/>
sylvania, lata receiving his M.S.<lb/>
and Ed.D. degrees from New<lb/>
Yak University.<lb/>
He taught at New Yak<lb/>
University and at Edinboro and<lb/>
Alliance Colleges in Pennsylvania<lb/>
before caning to ECU.<lb/>
See GRAY, page 6.)<lb/>
Dr. Robert Gowen receives R.L. Jones Award<lb/>
Editor's Note: Dr. Robert J.<lb/>
Gowen, with Dr. Hal Daniel, won<lb/>
the Outstanding Professor contest<lb/>
held last spring. FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD received information that<lb/>
Dr. Daniel was the sole winner.<lb/>
We apologize to Dr. Gowen.<lb/>
ByMARENA WRIGHT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"Hurry up, I can't hold this<lb/>
oanyposefaever And indeed,<lb/>
the pose is cany.<lb/>
The professa stands, pens<lb/>
protruding from his pockets,<lb/>
hands hovering and his face<lb/>
ponderous with the sincerity that<lb/>
proclaims his deep respect fa the<lb/>
subject he is lecturing ai.<lb/>
The students help participate<lb/>
in the 'Shenanigans' by running<lb/>
to fill up the empty front seats.<lb/>
All quickly and quietly adopt<lb/>
serene, inspired faces, owed by<lb/>
the enlightenment of receiving<lb/>
the Sermon-on-the-Mount of class<lb/>
lectures.<lb/>
The camera clicks. The whole<lb/>
reverent scene errupts into laugh-<lb/>
ter and chaos.<lb/>
It is becoming an unusual<lb/>
class period fa Dr. Robert J.<lb/>
Gowen of the History dept. It is<lb/>
not everyday that pictures are<lb/>
taken a your class observed fa<lb/>
reference. Yet, this is happening<lb/>
because Dr. Gowen reoeived the<lb/>
R.L. Jones Award - he is also an<lb/>
Outstanding Professa.<lb/>
The students reluctantly<lb/>
return to their seats having<lb/>
thaouqhly enjoyed the charade.<lb/>
Dr. Gowen, hands shoved in<lb/>
pockets, gazes absently.<lb/>
"Ahalmost like Socrates<lb/>
and his disciples he murmers<lb/>
wistfully.<lb/>
A couple of students snicka<lb/>
and Dr. Gowen searches half-<lb/>
heartedly fa the guilty culprits.<lb/>
"Alright gang, so what we<lb/>
have is theaetical equality versus<lb/>
elitism. What about it? Is it fact<lb/>
versus theay?"<lb/>
The class is caught back up in<lb/>
the high-energy forcefield of<lb/>
knowledge. The students become<lb/>
students again, but they are<lb/>
unusually alert and prepared with<lb/>
a string of answers.<lb/>
They have absabed the know-<lb/>
ledge that Dr. Gowen has the<lb/>
ability to transfer and it is to his<lb/>
aedit that they prove themselves<lb/>
to be a bright class. It is this<lb/>
ability among others which the<lb/>
R.L. Jones Award recognizes.<lb/>
The award honas him as<lb/>
being an Outstanding Professa<lb/>
with a high degree of teaching<lb/>
excellence. It is one of two annual<lb/>
awards given in this field by the<lb/>
ECU Alumni Association.<lb/>
Dr. Gowen'steaching status is<lb/>
also suppated by the fact he<lb/>
holds a B.A. in histay fran the<lb/>
University of Alberto, Canada<lb/>
and a Ph.D in Asian Histay fran<lb/>
the Univasity of Chicago.<lb/>
His publications include<lb/>
several articles and historical<lb/>
material on Asian International<lb/>
relations. He holds 10 years of<lb/>
teaching to his credit at ECU,<lb/>
three years of teaching at the<lb/>
University of Alberta, and three<lb/>
years at the University of Toledo.<lb/>
Dr. Gowen seemed excited<lb/>
about the award but surprised as<lb/>
he laughed and gave his initial<lb/>
reaction upon learning that he<lb/>
was a recipient.<lb/>
"YeahI was surprised!<lb/>
See PROFESSOR page 7<lb/>
OUTSTANDING HISTORY PROFESSOR Dr Robert J. Gowen<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0002"/><lb/>
ynt w Ff<lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 t-OUNTAINHEAD 1 December 1977<lb/>
ILO Party Dance<lb/>
Social<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma will have a<lb/>
Christmas social Dec. 7 at<lb/>
Mendenhall in room 244. The<lb/>
social will start at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Members are urged to attend and<lb/>
bring guests. White gifts (canned<lb/>
food items for the Xmas prqect)<lb/>
may be brought to the party.<lb/>
After the social everyone is<lb/>
invited to go Christmas Caroling.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
Inter-Varsity Christian Fel-<lb/>
lowship will meet this Sunday<lb/>
night at the Afro-American Cul-<lb/>
tural Center, at 8 p.m. Also, do<lb/>
not forget the piayer meeting that<lb/>
will be at 4 p.m. at the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center, this Thursday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
Surfing<lb/>
Get juiced Surfing Club is<lb/>
having a Happy Hour &amp; Old<lb/>
Movie at Pantana Bob's Dec. 6<lb/>
Tuesday 25 cent sat the door from<lb/>
7-11 Come get Rowdy<lb/>
Food Drive<lb/>
Get into the Christmas spirit<lb/>
and help a needy family. Bring<lb/>
canned or non-perishable food<lb/>
items to either the lobby of<lb/>
Mendenhall or a girl's dorm<lb/>
lobby. Sponsored by the Salvation<lb/>
Army.<lb/>
O.T.<lb/>
Attention all prospective O.T.<lb/>
students. Join us for dinner and<lb/>
dub meeting Thurs Dec. 1 at<lb/>
c,30 p.m. in the O.T. Lab: bring<lb/>
along your favorite salad bar<lb/>
ingredient. Looking forward to<lb/>
seeing you!<lb/>
FG<lb/>
The Forever Generation will<lb/>
now be meeting on Monday<lb/>
nights, if you've been wanting to<lb/>
come to an FG meeting, but are<lb/>
away on weekends, now's your<lb/>
chance Our new meeting time is<lb/>
9 p.m. and our new place is<lb/>
Brewster C-304. So, for a good<lb/>
time of Christian fellowship and<lb/>
Bible study, why not plan on<lb/>
being there?<lb/>
Crusade<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ is<lb/>
sponsoring Don Hartlaub who is<lb/>
speaking on Creations vs. Evolu-<lb/>
tions Thurs Dec. 1 in Brewster<lb/>
D-202 at 7 a.m. Come and check<lb/>
out the facts.<lb/>
Psi Chi<lb/>
The Dec. 6 meeting of Psi Chi<lb/>
which was to be held at 7 p.m. has<lb/>
been canceled due to upcoming<lb/>
exams and busy schedules<lb/>
FGSF<lb/>
The Full Gospel Student<lb/>
Fellowship will have a meeting<lb/>
Fn Dec. 2at 7:30 p.m in room<lb/>
221 of Mendenhall. The speaker<lb/>
will be Pastor Jim Oborne from<lb/>
Rock Church in Tarboro. Every-<lb/>
one is invited to come and<lb/>
experience this time of fellow-<lb/>
ship. The FGSF is a group of<lb/>
Christian students at ECU who<lb/>
believe and know that Jesus<lb/>
Christ is very concerned about.<lb/>
every person and is the answer to<lb/>
all their problems. From now on,<lb/>
meeting will be held every<lb/>
Monday and continue to go street<lb/>
witnessing Friday. At the Dec. 5<lb/>
meeting, some of the students<lb/>
will share what Jesus has meant<lb/>
in their lives here at ECU. Fa<lb/>
more information call John Crowe<lb/>
at 758-9538.<lb/>
Meeting<lb/>
The Gamma beta Hhi Society<lb/>
will meet Thurs Dec. 1 in room<lb/>
244, Mendenhall. The meeting<lb/>
will begin promptly at 7 p.m. All<lb/>
members should plan to attend.<lb/>
This is the last meeting of the<lb/>
Semester.<lb/>
Party<lb/>
A.H.E.A. and Phi U are<lb/>
having a Christmas party with a<lb/>
decoration demonstration. Bring<lb/>
your own decoration ideas. Wear<lb/>
your holiday dress and come<lb/>
prepared to have a good time.<lb/>
December 5 at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Vanlandingham Room.<lb/>
On Sat Dec. 3 at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center in room 244 at 9<lb/>
p.m. the International Language<lb/>
Organization will be sponsoring<lb/>
the annual International Christ-<lb/>
mas Party fa the Department oi<lb/>
Faeign Languages and Litera-<lb/>
tures. Aloig with inviting every-<lb/>
oie, the ILO gives a special<lb/>
invitation to language majas,<lb/>
minas and all the International<lb/>
students at ECU.<lb/>
There will be a selection oi<lb/>
international foods served. All<lb/>
ILO members are asked to bring a<lb/>
soft drink and some type of snack,<lb/>
such as, can chips, mints a nuts.<lb/>
Since a wine punch is being<lb/>
served, the following state and<lb/>
ECU regulations concerning<lb/>
alcoholic beverages should be<lb/>
kept in mind: "The sponsaing<lb/>
aganizatiai shall assume ALL<lb/>
respoisibility fa serving alco-<lb/>
holic beveragesAll alcoholic<lb/>
beverages shall be purchased by<lb/>
the sponsaing aganizatiaiand<lb/>
shall be served oily within the<lb/>
oonfines of that functionand is<lb/>
limited to persons eighteen (18)<lb/>
years of age a older In other<lb/>
wads, no BYOB of any kind, and<lb/>
NO ONE under 18 ALLOWED.<lb/>
Toy Drive<lb/>
Psi Chi and the ChildFamily<lb/>
Association are co-sponsaing a<lb/>
Christmas toy and book drive fa<lb/>
the less fatunate children in the<lb/>
Greenville area. The toys should<lb/>
be functional and the books<lb/>
should be in good condition.<lb/>
Please wrap all donatiois and<lb/>
mark with appropriate sexage. A<lb/>
large receiving box fa daiatiais<lb/>
is located in the Psychology<lb/>
departmental office and the Child<lb/>
Development and Family Rela-<lb/>
tions office (Home-Economics<lb/>
building( till Dec. 16. Your<lb/>
donation will be very much<lb/>
appreciated.<lb/>
Yard Sale Fencing<lb/>
Pi Lambda Phi located on 410<lb/>
Elizabeth St. will be having a yard<lb/>
sale including clothing, Xmas<lb/>
items and aher household goods.<lb/>
Saturday Dec. 3 all day. Rain date<lb/>
is Dec. 10.<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Mike Thompson will perfam<lb/>
Dec. 2 at 9 p.m. in rm. 15<lb/>
Mendenhall. Mike will entertain<lb/>
you with some classical, ragtime,<lb/>
goodtime and some good ole<lb/>
traditional music. He will accom-<lb/>
pany himself on guitar and banjo.<lb/>
Public invited. Admission only<lb/>
.50. Free refreshments.<lb/>
Ski Trip<lb/>
Fees fa the ski trip Jan. 2<lb/>
through 6 may be paid Thurs<lb/>
Dec. 1 to JoSaundersa at the Ski<lb/>
Club meeting at 4 p.m. Ski Club<lb/>
members will receive i even mae<lb/>
reduced rates than those discus-<lb/>
sed at the last meeting if they<lb/>
compete. This is the last chance<lb/>
for those of you who want to go on<lb/>
the trip.<lb/>
The new Fencing Club meets<lb/>
every Monday evening at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in the balcony of Minges. Anyone<lb/>
who would like to learn or<lb/>
participate in this "Classy" spat<lb/>
is welcome. If a ride, a further<lb/>
infamation is needed please call<lb/>
Bev. a Blake at 758-4357.<lb/>
Playhouse<lb/>
The secoid maja production<lb/>
at the ECU Playhouse will be<lb/>
performed Thurs Fri Sat<lb/>
Mon. and Tues. at 8:15 in<lb/>
McGinnisAuditaium. THE SKIN<lb/>
OF OUR TEETH follows the<lb/>
labas of the Antrobus family<lb/>
'hrough the last ice age, the greet<lb/>
flood and the war, finding them<lb/>
coming through each of man's<lb/>
tribulations "by the skin of our<lb/>
teeth<lb/>
Tickets are $2.50 fa faculty<lb/>
and the general public and free to<lb/>
ECU students on the student<lb/>
activity card. Patrons are urged to<lb/>
pick up tickets in advance from<lb/>
the box office in the lobby of<lb/>
McGinnis Auditaium, to insure<lb/>
the best seating. The box office is<lb/>
open from 10 to 4 Monday<lb/>
through Friday<lb/>
The MRC and WRC are<lb/>
sponsaing a Christmas dance<lb/>
featuring the ETHICS, from 9 till<lb/>
1 Dec. 7 at the Greenville Moose<lb/>
Lodge. Tickets are $5 per couple<lb/>
and can be purchased from any<lb/>
MRC a WRC member with ID<lb/>
and MRCWRC card. Brown<lb/>
bagging is permitted, and free<lb/>
set-ups and mixer will be avai-<lb/>
lable. Come by fa one last bash<lb/>
befae exams<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Everyoie is invited to attend a<lb/>
three-night teaching seminar<lb/>
Dec. 7,8,9 at 7:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
American Legion building here in<lb/>
Greenville. The Rev. Rodney<lb/>
Lloyd will be teaching the Wad<lb/>
of God each night. He is a<lb/>
graduate from Rhema Bible<lb/>
College and isa pasta in Johnson<lb/>
City, Tenn. He also has a radio<lb/>
program on a local station WBZQ<lb/>
which can be heard at 7:15 a.m.<lb/>
Civitan<lb/>
The Civitan Club of Greenville<lb/>
wants to sponsa a Collegiate<lb/>
Civitan Club of ECU. Famer<lb/>
junia civitan members and other<lb/>
interested students are invited to<lb/>
attend a preliminary aganiza-<lb/>
tional meeting In Brewster B-103<lb/>
on Mon Dec. 5 at 330 p.m. If<lb/>
you are interested but unable to<lb/>
oone to the meeting contact<lb/>
Professa Richard Stephenson in<lb/>
the ECU Geography Department<lb/>
a call him at 757-6230.<lb/>
Collegiate Civitan is a service<lb/>
club fa college men and women.<lb/>
TableTennis<lb/>
The Table Tennis Club is now<lb/>
meeting on Tuesdays at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. All<lb/>
players, no matter how skillful,<lb/>
are invited to come and compete<lb/>
in the new "ladder" ranking<lb/>
system that was developed espe-<lb/>
cially fa table tennis club partici-<lb/>
pants.<lb/>
Pi Sigma Beta Kappa<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi meeting Thurs.<lb/>
Dec. 1 at 5 p.m. in Austin 132.<lb/>
Film<lb/>
The film "Hiding Place' with<lb/>
Cane Ten Boom will be shown at<lb/>
theBSU Dec. 5 at 6:30 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
This is a stay of a Christian<lb/>
woman who aided the Jewish<lb/>
people in Germany during Wald<lb/>
War II. Cost will be $1 in advance<lb/>
and $1.25 at the doa. Plan to<lb/>
bring a group. Parking is avail-<lb/>
able in the lot behind the Center<lb/>
on 9th Street.<lb/>
Tutoring<lb/>
Start preparation for final<lb/>
examinations now. Minority<lb/>
and a educationally disadvant-<lb/>
aged (regardless of race) students<lb/>
in the prehealth professions pro-<lb/>
grams (General College and<lb/>
College of Arts and Sciences),<lb/>
Allied Health, Medicine, and<lb/>
Nursing are invited to register fa<lb/>
free tutaial services in areas of<lb/>
academic weakness anda read-<lb/>
ing and study skills deficiencies.<lb/>
Applications fa partiapatiai can<lb/>
be obtained from the Center fa<lb/>
Student Oppatunities, rm 208,<lb/>
Ragsdale Hall, 757-6122.<lb/>
There will be a meeting of<lb/>
Beta Kappa Alpha, National<lb/>
Banking Fraternity Mon Dec. 5<lb/>
at 4 p.m. This meeting will be<lb/>
held in room 248 Mendenhall. A<lb/>
speaker will be present to talk<lb/>
about savings and loan associa-<lb/>
tions. All persons are welcome.<lb/>
This will be the last meeting<lb/>
befae the Dinner Banquet Jan.<lb/>
16. 1978.<lb/>
Chemistry<lb/>
William R. Moae, (Ppofessa<lb/>
of Chemistry at West Virginia<lb/>
University, will present a seminar<lb/>
on Chemistry of Some Highly<lb/>
Strained Small Ring Systems<lb/>
Dec. 2 at 2 p.m. in rm. 201<lb/>
Flanagan bldg. Refreshments will<lb/>
be served in the conference roan.<lb/>
PRC<lb/>
The next meeting fa PRC<lb/>
members will be Tues Dec. 6 at<lb/>
7 p.m. in room 221 Mendenhall.<lb/>
At this meeting two films which<lb/>
deal with all the Outward Bounds<lb/>
Schools in Nath Carolina will be<lb/>
shown. The films together will<lb/>
last about one hour. Everyone is<lb/>
invited to view these films.<lb/>
Law<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Due to the present<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD editor gradu-<lb/>
ating this semester, the Com-<lb/>
munications Board is now accept-<lb/>
ing applications fa this position<lb/>
fa Spring semester. Applications<lb/>
must be in the SGA office no later<lb/>
than Dec. 5, 5 p.m.<lb/>
The Communications Board<lb/>
will meet to screen applicants fa<lb/>
edita of FOUNTAINHEAD Dec.<lb/>
7 at 5 p.m. All members please be<lb/>
present.<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/>
Corso<lb/>
A Caso meeting will be held<lb/>
Dec. 5 at 5 p.m. in the Allied<lb/>
Health bldg. All persons interest-<lb/>
ed in Soaal Work a Carectiais<lb/>
are invited to attend<lb/>
l<lb/>
Tue;<lb/>
clain<lb/>
Gerr<lb/>
trial<lb/>
H<lb/>
10 y<lb/>
11 Nc<lb/>
own<lb/>
c<lb/>
Stud<lb/>
and<lb/>
K<lb/>
knov<lb/>
BEA1<lb/>
4<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0003"/><lb/>
ft�a .sVT9rS<lb/>
1 December 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Nazi hunter Beate Klarsf eld speaks at MSC<lb/>
fl. nO Mmflf : .u. i.o . .   . , � into ui ni i�.<lb/>
By LORI MOORE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Approximately 150 persons<lb/>
Tuesday heard Beate Klarsf eld<lb/>
claim that World War II Nazis in<lb/>
Germany shouid be brought to<lb/>
trial for war crimes.<lb/>
Klarsfeld, 39, has spent about<lb/>
10 years documenting World War<lb/>
11 Nazi criminals, according to her<lb/>
own accounts.<lb/>
She spoke in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center to both students<lb/>
and Greenville residents.<lb/>
Klarsfeld said she lacks<lb/>
knowledge of the Nazi movement<lb/>
��� ���<lb/>
in the U.S but claimed it is<lb/>
necessary to bring former Nazis<lb/>
to trial in Germany.<lb/>
"By bringing these criminals<lb/>
to the public's attention, we are<lb/>
not merely fulfilling a moral<lb/>
imperative obliged by the murder<lb/>
of six million Jews said Klars-<lb/>
feld.<lb/>
"More importantly, we are<lb/>
ensuring that the triple menace of<lb/>
Nazism, genocide, and anti-Semi-<lb/>
tism will never again threaten to<lb/>
destroy the Jewish people<lb/>
Klarsfeld's career began by<lb/>
publicly slapping the Chancellor<lb/>
of West Germany, Kurt Kiesing-<lb/>
BEATE KLARSFELD, NAZI hunter<lb/>
er, in 1968. His Nazi background<lb/>
was then brought to the world's<lb/>
attention.<lb/>
Klarsfelds anti-Nazi cam-<lb/>
paign bore fruit as Kiesinger lost<lb/>
the election in 1969 to Willy<lb/>
Brandt.<lb/>
She ated Kurt Lishka, head of<lb/>
the anti-Jewish service of the<lb/>
Gestapo in Berlin before the war,<lb/>
asaprominent living Nazi. Lishka<lb/>
was also head of the Gestapo in<lb/>
France and was responsible fa<lb/>
the deportation of 80,000 Jews to<lb/>
death camps.<lb/>
Herbert Hagen was the politi-<lb/>
cal head of the SS in France from<lb/>
1937 until Wald War II and was a<lb/>
bureauaatic assassin, accading<lb/>
to Klarsfeld.<lb/>
A film aew waking with<lb/>
Klarsfeldatcecaifraited Hagen.<lb/>
You have no right to cane to<lb/>
my street and film me said<lb/>
Hagen, caught off guard by the<lb/>
Klarsfeld filming a few years ago.<lb/>
 No one asked you to oome to<lb/>
France and do more harible<lb/>
things to Jews than film them<lb/>
replied Klarsfeld'scameraman to<lb/>
Hagen.<lb/>
Prominent judges, lawyers<lb/>
and a maya have been unmasked<lb/>
by revealing Nazi recads, accad-<lb/>
ing to Klarsfeld.<lb/>
In 1975, the German Parlia-<lb/>
ment ratified the Franco-German<lb/>
accad fa the trial of Nazi war<lb/>
aiminals in Germany.<lb/>
This action was faced be-<lb/>
cause of Klarsfelds research,<lb/>
protests and demoist rat ions.<lb/>
Although the accad makes<lb/>
such trials legal in Germany, it<lb/>
provides no stipulation that these<lb/>
trials will ever take place.<lb/>
Klarsfeld and her husband,<lb/>
Serge, have given extensive files<lb/>
on 23 Nazis to French and<lb/>
German authaities in hopes of<lb/>
aeating the right political climate<lb/>
fa the German government to<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN<lb/>
will feature a luncheon special on Number 1.<lb/>
Saturday, December 3, 11:00-4:00<lb/>
EAST10THST.<lb/>
8 oz. of Sirloin steak with baked potato<lb/>
or French fries Cr Texas toast.<lb/>
ALL FOR<lb/>
$2.29<lb/>
call fa a trial.<lb/>
German society does not<lb/>
consider them aiminals because<lb/>
they have been living quietly<lb/>
since 1945. The rehabilitation of<lb/>
these aiminals can only disgrace<lb/>
Germany said Klarsfeld<lb/>
"German society must be<lb/>
forced into self-examination,<lb/>
however painful that may be<lb/>
These men stand fa princi-<lb/>
ples and actions that must be<lb/>
opposed at all costs while there is<lb/>
still time<lb/>
In 1977, in appreciation of her<lb/>
activities, Israel nominated Klars-<lb/>
feld fa the Nobel Peace Prize.<lb/>
The Klarsfelds have written<lb/>
and published these books in<lb/>
ader to inaease the pressure on<lb/>
Germany.<lb/>
This beautiful, soft, supple leather coat<lb/>
that reverses on one side to corduroy is<lb/>
tailored especially for us by GIPSY in<lb/>
Italy. This coat is a must for ony young<lb/>
wardrobe &amp;$M<lb/>
1l S mens wear<lb/>
On The Moll<lb/>
� Downtown GREENVILLE,<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 December 1977<lb/>
Hard to believe<lb/>
SGA Pres. Neil Sessorns Tuesday vetoed a bill<lb/>
passed by the Legislature which would appropriate<lb/>
an additional $7,706 to the ECU band, the Marching<lb/>
Pirates. But this veto should not have been<lb/>
necessary. The Legislature should never have passed<lb/>
the bill in the first place.<lb/>
Several weeks ago, FOUNTAINHEAD advocated<lb/>
SGA funding for the Marching Pirates because, at<lb/>
that time, the Athletic Dept. said the band would<lb/>
receive no more funding from it than the usual<lb/>
$8,000. (In past years, the Athletic Dept. and SGA<lb/>
gave the band $8,000 each.)<lb/>
But after Pres. Sessorns so strongly recommen-<lb/>
ded the Legislature give no funds to the band<lb/>
considering the SGA financial situation, and because<lb/>
the band only serves athletics, the Athletic Dept. did<lb/>
appropriate $15,000 to the Marching Pirates. As a<lb/>
result, the SGA appropriated an additional $1,200<lb/>
which was $200 more than necessary even then.<lb/>
Now the band has returned and asked the SGA for<lb/>
$7,706 more. This money would be used for<lb/>
"improvements" and would come out of "anticipa-<lb/>
ted summer school revenue i.e money the SGA<lb/>
does not have now and can only guess at for the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Perhaps the Marching Pirates should not be<lb/>
blamed for trying to squeeze every penny they can<lb/>
out of a legislature which has already been $200 more<lb/>
generous than it should have. But after SGA<lb/>
Treasurer Craig Hales has reported at every meeting<lb/>
of the Legislature on the critical state of SGA<lb/>
finances this year and has asked-no, begged the<lb/>
members to be rational and make cuts in spending<lb/>
wherever they possibly could, it is nothing short of<lb/>
astounding that the Legislature would even consider<lb/>
this bill, much less pass it.<lb/>
Whenever other organizations have gone before<lb/>
the Legislature this year for funds, the Appropria-<lb/>
tions Committee has made it crystal clear that they<lb/>
could not have or ask for anything new which would<lb/>
require more money than usual. For example, Pete<lb/>
Podeszwa, head SGA photographer, was practically<lb/>
kicked out the door fa wanting an additional<lb/>
photographer on his staff. And now the Legislature<lb/>
wants to give $7,706 more to an organization it<lb/>
shouldn't be funding at all?<lb/>
During Spring Semester and summer school the<lb/>
SGA will know exactly how it stands financially for<lb/>
those terms and may be able to throw out more cash<lb/>
to whomever desires it. Perhaps the Marching<lb/>
Pirates can get new instruments or whatever<lb/>
"improvements" they need then. But now, since<lb/>
football season is over and the SGA still doesn't have<lb/>
any more money than it did four months ago-as a<lb/>
matter of fact, only less-this veto must stand.<lb/>
The ECU Marching Pirates are certainly a vital<lb/>
asset to this university. They have been a fine<lb/>
reflection on ECU .throughout the football season and<lb/>
should instill nothing but pride in the students they<lb/>
represent, not to mention the football team they<lb/>
support so well. They deserve the best in everything,<lb/>
including instruments, so they can maintain the<lb/>
quality in their performances that they have<lb/>
demonstrated this year.<lb/>
But Pres. Sessorns' veto on this particular bill is<lb/>
merely his way of doing his part to keep the SGA out<lb/>
of the red. Fortunately, the Athletic Dept. has helped<lb/>
by giving the band $1,500. The state of financial<lb/>
affairs in the SGA may be unfortunate but,<lb/>
nevertheless, it is fact. Now, hopefully, the<lb/>
Legislature will not repeat this incredible blunder<lb/>
and ECU'S student government will, indeed, stay<lb/>
financially afloat.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
3 Ui(7J:XN "77I<lb/>
<lb/>
(M�)U)H<lb/>
I JUST DON'T UNDERSTAND HOW SflJ COilD<lb/>
PftSS fl BILL TD &amp;11E THE BAND gjQRE flfWFV J<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Another epilogue for the old WRQR<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Some things just boggle<lb/>
the mind. A case in point: Why<lb/>
would an FM station heralded by<lb/>
the entire campus community fa<lb/>
its album format, its community<lb/>
service (Halloween riot discus-<lb/>
sions), and its believable (real<lb/>
human) sounding announcers,<lb/>
suddenly decide to switch to, hey<lb/>
More to pay<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I'm a Senior and about to<lb/>
graduate this semester. God only<lb/>
knows how much money I've<lb/>
forked over to this university<lb/>
during the past four years be-<lb/>
tween tuition, books, dam rent,<lb/>
etc etc. I would hate to figure it<lb/>
up because I'm sure it would be<lb/>
extremely depressing.<lb/>
So here I am, about to<lb/>
graduate, and l find out, of all<lb/>
things, I'm going to have to give<lb/>
this school $10 more before<lb/>
they'll let me out!<lb/>
I do no understand this in the<lb/>
least. What would happen if<lb/>
someone didn't pay the $10?<lb/>
Would that person nrt be allowed<lb/>
to graduate to be locked in the<lb/>
Math Lab fa etanity?<lb/>
Well, I've paid my $10-l'm<lb/>
allergic to math anyway-and<lb/>
they're going to let me out. But<lb/>
I'm quite oertain that I wouldn't<lb/>
get mae than oie dollar at most<lb/>
fa the wath of that pretty piece<lb/>
of paper they' re gang to send me<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Broke<lb/>
man, Disco Top 40?!<lb/>
Is it money? It doesn't seem<lb/>
like that oould be the cause. After<lb/>
all, if you change to a famat that<lb/>
no one any longa listens to, it<lb/>
doesn't seem as if the station<lb/>
oould charge mae fa advertising<lb/>
time, now does it?<lb/>
Somebody messed up bad.<lb/>
From its inception until this<lb/>
summer (a slick time to change,<lb/>
since the majaity of the student<lb/>
body wasn't here to raise hell<lb/>
over the decision) WRQR wai the<lb/>
station to listen to at ECU. From<lb/>
dam windows, cars, and stereos<lb/>
throughout their broadcast range,<lb/>
WRQR rained fath and reigned<lb/>
supreme. But alas, all that is ova<lb/>
now. Leon Russell and Little Feat<lb/>
have been replaced by Staircase<lb/>
and the Sylvas. The human<lb/>
sounding announcers we used to<lb/>
all love have been replaced (with<lb/>
one exception) by a bunch of<lb/>
Steve Martin imitatas. But, c'est<lb/>
la vie. We'll all livebut na<lb/>
quite as pleasurably as when the<lb/>
good old WRQR was around.<lb/>
Now when I drive around in<lb/>
my car, rather than listen to some<lb/>
discoaap I singand sing pretty<lb/>
badly too I might add. But on my<lb/>
wast day I sound infinitely better<lb/>
than "Disco Duck<lb/>
Harold Billington<lb/>
I<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years.<lb/>
SeniorEditorKimJ.Devins<lb/>
Production ManagerQh QqbM<lb/>
Advertising Manager . .Robert g<lb/>
NewsEditorandyBroome<lb/>
Trends EditorDavld w Trevno<lb/>
SportsEditorChris Holloman<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD i, the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
WJ �� Sludent Government Association of<lb/>
 tw IfLf ��� ring the summer,<lb/>
and twice weekly during the school year<lb/>
cJ9?"61 �ld Scuih Bui,dln0- Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Ed.ta.al offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0005"/><lb/>
1977 FOUNTAINHEAO<lb/>
Candidate for Senate to speak here in Jan.<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Luther Hodges, Jr Democra-<lb/>
tic candidate for the U.S. Senate,<lb/>
will arrive on campus January 16<lb/>
to discuss topical issues as part of<lb/>
his campaign for office. His<lb/>
appearance wiil be sponsored by<lb/>
Beta Kappa Alpha.<lb/>
"This will give students an<lb/>
opportunity to mrt with Hodges,<lb/>
to ask questions, and to get<lb/>
involved with the political pro-<lb/>
cess said Butch Patrick, an<lb/>
ECU student representative for<lb/>
Hodges.<lb/>
Hodges has chosen Greenville<lb/>
attorney Charles "Sonny"<lb/>
McLawhorn, an ECU graduate, as<lb/>
hiscampaign manager for District<lb/>
One, the largest district in the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
"ECU has the only student<lb/>
banking fraternity in the United<lb/>
States said McLawhorn. "And<lb/>
they (Beta Kappa Alpha) have<lb/>
asked Hodges to speak on the<lb/>
social responsibility of bankers. I<lb/>
think he plans to relate to the<lb/>
students as a young person<lb/>
himself<lb/>
Hodges, 40, resigned as chair-<lb/>
person of the board of the N.C.<lb/>
National Bank, the largest bank in<lb/>
the Southeast, last June to run for<lb/>
the Senate. His father, the late<lb/>
Luther H. Hodges, was governor<lb/>
here from 1953 to 1960. He also<lb/>
was Secretary of Commerce<lb/>
under former President John<lb/>
Kennedy.<lb/>
'Volunteer Greenville' records<lb/>
texts for blind students at Pitt<lb/>
ByRICKIGLIARMIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Volunteer Greenville is tape-<lb/>
reoording academic textbooks this<lb/>
semester for blind students at Pitt<lb/>
Technical Institute in a project<lb/>
designed to help the students<lb/>
keep up with their classmates,<lb/>
according to Nancy Harrington,<lb/>
director of Volunteer Greenville.<lb/>
A master tape is made of each<lb/>
chapter of a textbook. From this<lb/>
tape, the students make their own<lb/>
recordings.<lb/>
The blind students stay a few<lb/>
chapters ahead of the class in<lb/>
order to have adequate time to<lb/>
prepare their work.<lb/>
The recording program is<lb/>
receiving good response from<lb/>
Greenville citizens and ECU<lb/>
students, according to<lb/>
Harrington.<lb/>
Another program being start-<lb/>
ed by Harrington is a skills bank.<lb/>
Harrington said she got the<lb/>
idea of the skills bank from the<lb/>
organization's slogan, "Turn<lb/>
spare time into share time-<lb/>
volunteer<lb/>
She said, because of the<lb/>
slogan, too many people think of<lb/>
volunteer work as work for<lb/>
housewives who have nothing<lb/>
else to do.<lb/>
The skills bank, however, is a<lb/>
file of names of people with<lb/>
certain skills. These people must<lb/>
be willing to use their skills to<lb/>
help others.<lb/>
"I hope to be able to reach<lb/>
retired and working people<lb/>
through the skills bank<lb/>
Harrington said.<lb/>
The development of Volunteer<lb/>
Greenville was influenced by<lb/>
VISTA (Volunteers In Service To<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
SGA, now is not the time to ask<lb/>
for money for improvements.<lb/>
"Sinoe the season is already<lb/>
over, and considering how broke<lb/>
the SGA is, it's obvious that many<lb/>
of the bill supporters are using it<lb/>
as a political ploy to appeal to a<lb/>
large segment of voters Ses-<lb/>
soms said.<lb/>
The athletic department origi-<lb/>
nally appropriated the band<lb/>
$7,700, this year according to<lb/>
SGA Vioe-President Reed Warren<lb/>
and then gave an additional<lb/>
$8,000 which came from money<lb/>
obtained by television ooverage.<lb/>
"Mr. Cain said the athletic<lb/>
department next year would give<lb/>
at most $1,000 more than it gave<lb/>
this year said Warren.<lb/>
"We're broke said Warren.<lb/>
' We' re in no position this year to<lb/>
help with improvements<lb/>
Warren said he hopes a<lb/>
smaller bill can be worked out.<lb/>
Find Your Future in<lb/>
�<lb/>
a<lb/>
G�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
,t�<lb/>
G<lb/>
�<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
V'<lb/>
-Opportunity for a challenging job<lb/>
with exoellent starting salary of<lb/>
$11,700.<lb/>
-Many full scholarships available<lb/>
that pay full tuition and all fees<lb/>
plus $100 a month tax-free.<lb/>
-Financial assistance of $2000<lb/>
while at ECU for non-scholarship<lb/>
cadets in last two years of<lb/>
AFROTC.<lb/>
-AFROTC courses receive full<lb/>
academic credit.<lb/>
-No military obligation for the<lb/>
first two years.<lb/>
Fa further information oontact:<lb/>
Captain Ashely H. Lane<lb/>
ECU Wright Annex, Room 206<lb/>
Phone 757-6597<lb/>
AIR FORCE ROTC-<lb/>
GATEWAY TO A GREAT WAY OF LIFE<lb/>
America) and was started in<lb/>
October, 1975, through funding<lb/>
by a federal grant.<lb/>
When the grant expired, the<lb/>
program was taken over by the<lb/>
City of Greenville with the help of<lb/>
the citizens.<lb/>
"Basically, things are going<lb/>
real well fa us she said. "But<lb/>
we want to see it grow<lb/>
"We're rrxxe interested in<lb/>
quality rather than quantity<lb/>
said Harrington when asked<lb/>
about the number of volunteers.<lb/>
According to McLawhorn,<lb/>
Hodges plans to talk to students<lb/>
about jobs, energy, and inflation.<lb/>
Since Republican Senator<lb/>
Jesse Helms is already a favaite<lb/>
with many students, McLawhan<lb/>
considers Hodges' toughest ob-<lb/>
jectives to be the youth vote and<lb/>
the tobacco vae.<lb/>
"I think young people are<lb/>
drawn to politicians who are<lb/>
sensitive, intelligent, and well-<lb/>
spoken said McLawhan.<lb/>
 Luther Hedges is sensitive to<lb/>
the point that he doesn't feel easy<lb/>
answers to justice to difficult<lb/>
questions.<lb/>
"Hodges is an educated man,<lb/>
but he is far from being an elitist.<lb/>
An elitist attitude once hurt<lb/>
McCarthy who, I think, said that<lb/>
all the college graduates were<lb/>
going to vote for him<lb/>
and all those who didn't finish<lb/>
high school were going to vote fa<lb/>
Bobby Kennedy. That didn't help<lb/>
hiscampaign any<lb/>
McLawhan said the personnel<lb/>
involved with Hodges will run a<lb/>
positive campaign and that there<lb/>
will be no mudslinging.<lb/>
"Any candidate who picks on<lb/>
the incumbent will begin drawing<lb/>
fire said McLawhan. "And I<lb/>
think the Democats look faward<lb/>
to unifying the party after the<lb/>
primaries in May. Historically,<lb/>
our party has reached out and<lb/>
drawn in the oommon man to<lb/>
form a party of uncommon<lb/>
leaders<lb/>
With four aher Demoaats in<lb/>
the running, and one more (Insur-<lb/>
ance Commissioner John Ingram)<lb/>
on the way, party unity seems like<lb/>
a distant prospect.<lb/>
McLawhan said he feels that<lb/>
Ingram would certainly pose the<lb/>
biggest threat to Hodges' in the<lb/>
primaries and Ingram's political<lb/>
ooadinates are daily making it<lb/>
more evident that he will run.<lb/>
"Ingram will try to run a<lb/>
populist campaign said<lb/>
McLawhan.<lb/>
RiGGAIS<lb/>
SHOESHOP<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER OOODS<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
tn We 4th 9<lb/>
"M�.<lb/>
BONANZA<lb/>
CHRISTMAS<lb/>
COMES EARLY<lb/>
BANQUET FACILITIES<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
DECEMBER 2,3 and 4<lb/>
TryUsi<lb/>
264 ByPass<lb/>
520 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
DINNERS INCLUDE texas toast,<lb/>
large baked potato, and at you<lb/>
can eat from our SUPER salad bar<lb/>
T-BONE<lb/>
reg A09<lb/>
now<lb/>
$1.50<lb/>
plus tax<lb/>
RIBEYE<lb/>
$1.30<lb/>
plus tax<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0006"/><lb/>
�R<lb/>
r � . ' BMB<lb/>
HHHHBBIBI1111b<lb/>
IB<lb/>
Page6 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 December 1977<lb/>
Greek forum<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau finished<lb/>
first in team handball in the<lb/>
fraternity division and third on<lb/>
campus. Also, the Phi Tau's<lb/>
finished first in soccer in the<lb/>
fraternity division and seoond in<lb/>
the Campus Championships. Last<lb/>
week, David Wright, the pres-<lb/>
ident of Phi Kappa Tau, was<lb/>
selected for Who's Who Among<lb/>
American Colleges and Univer-<lb/>
sities.<lb/>
The Delta Sigs are winding up<lb/>
a successful rush with the results<lb/>
being an excellent pledge class.<lb/>
The annual Christmas party for<lb/>
the Boy's Club will be December<lb/>
7.<lb/>
The National Convention was<lb/>
held over the Thanksgiving<lb/>
Holidays in Orlando, Fla. The<lb/>
brothers attending hajl � great<lb/>
time and a tremendous amount of<lb/>
work was accomplished on the<lb/>
National Level. There are plans to<lb/>
implement some of the new ideas<lb/>
brought back from the conven-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The Little Sisters recently held<lb/>
elections for the year 1978.<lb/>
Newly, elected officers are Sara<lb/>
McKeithan, president; Bebe<lb/>
Jones, vice president; Lynn<lb/>
Mallison, secretary; Debbie<lb/>
Stauffer, treasurer; Delia Brown,<lb/>
parlimentarian; Vicky Callian,<lb/>
historian; Mae McDowell, pledge<lb/>
trainer.<lb/>
The Little Sisters are planning<lb/>
the annual gag gift party which<lb/>
will be held December 11.<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma, the new<lb/>
fraternity at ECU is alive and do-<lb/>
ing well these days. Last week the<lb/>
brother's initiated 27 little sisters<lb/>
into the Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
The gasoline donation is still<lb/>
going strong. Tickets are only $1<lb/>
M<lb/>
and the first place prize is 50<lb/>
gallons of gas, and there will be<lb/>
two second place prizes of 25<lb/>
gallons each.<lb/>
Any prospective brothers in-<lb/>
terested in Sig Tau are invited to<lb/>
come to a meeting at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday in Brewster B-102.<lb/>
The Kappa Sigmas are dom-<lb/>
inating among the fraternities in<lb/>
intramural sand are leading in the<lb/>
President cup. In volleyball, the<lb/>
Kappa Sigs won the fraternity<lb/>
and campus championship.<lb/>
They also, took seoond place<lb/>
in the fraternity division in<lb/>
soccer. In other sports activities,<lb/>
Mike Nicholson lead the Kappa<lb/>
Sigma Mafia into the Co-Rec<lb/>
Bowling playoffs by rolling the<lb/>
high game.<lb/>
Congratulations are extended<lb/>
to Bobby Harrell and Chuck<lb/>
Freedman for being selected into<lb/>
Who's Who in American Colleges<lb/>
arid Universities.<lb/>
In other news, Dalton Denson<lb/>
was selected as the IFC secretary.<lb/>
Also, Leigh Coakley, a little sister<lb/>
has been promoted to the pro-<lb/>
duction manager of the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD. .<lb/>
The Kappa Sigma's entertain-<lb/>
ed IFC and Coach LarryGillman<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon concerning<lb/>
the upcoming basketball season.<lb/>
There will be "Clear Smoke"<lb/>
entertaining the brothers and<lb/>
their dates at the Candlewick Inn<lb/>
for their Founder's Day formal<lb/>
December 3.<lb/>
Under the leadership of Eric<lb/>
Laster and Rob Higginbotham,<lb/>
the Kappa Sigs have opened up a<lb/>
new kitchen. It provides a great<lb/>
meal plan and all the Kappa<lb/>
Sigma's would like to thank them<lb/>
fa their tremendous effort.<lb/>
The sororities of ECU would<lb/>
like to invite everyone to attend<lb/>
the Fourth Annual Nine Days of<lb/>
Christmas, sponsored by the<lb/>
Panhellenic Association.<lb/>
On each day a house is<lb/>
designated so that you can come<lb/>
over and look around and meet all<lb/>
the girls. This is the day we would<lb/>
like to show our house to you.<lb/>
The dates are: Monday, Nov.<lb/>
28-Chi Omega, 1501 E. 5th St<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov. 29  Alpha<lb/>
Omicron Pi, 805 Johnston St<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 30 - Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta, 508 11th St Thursday,<lb/>
Dec. 1 - Sigma Sigma Sigma, 803<lb/>
E. 5th St Friday, Dec. 2-AKA,<lb/>
Panhellenic Office, Monday, Dec.<lb/>
5 - Alpha Phi, 950 E. 10th St<lb/>
Tuesday, Dec. 6 - Alpha Delta Pi,<lb/>
1407 E. 5th St Wednesday, Dec.<lb/>
7 - Kappa Zeta, 801 E. 5th St<lb/>
Thursday, Dec. 8 - Delta Zeta,<lb/>
801 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Hours of Open House are from<lb/>
10 to 4.<lb/>
The Alpha Phi fall pledges<lb/>
had a lock-out last Friday night.<lb/>
The pledges had this opportunity<lb/>
to have the house all to them-<lb/>
selves fa one night without any<lb/>
sisters around. Sisters were we-<lb/>
comed back to the house Sat-<lb/>
urday maning with doughnuts<lb/>
and coffee.<lb/>
Cheri Cousins, a fall pledge,<lb/>
will represent ECU in the<lb/>
National Ping Pong Champion-<lb/>
ships, coning up soon.<lb/>
Kappa Delta Saaity is proud<lb/>
to announce that they won, fa the<lb/>
third consecutive year, the<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha Clothing<lb/>
Drive. By winning this they are<lb/>
now able to retire the trophy to<lb/>
the house.<lb/>
In volleyball, this fall, they<lb/>
came in first in the saaity<lb/>
divisiai. On November 3, they<lb/>
inducted six big brothers.<lb/>
The fall pledges held a Happy<lb/>
Hour November 14 and are<lb/>
having another Happy Hour<lb/>
December 1 and they would like<lb/>
to see everyone there after the<lb/>
basketball game.<lb/>
The 1977-78 school year<lb/>
promises to be another good one<lb/>
for the Alpha Omiaon Pi<lb/>
saaity. it began with the initia-<lb/>
tion of four new sisters October 2.<lb/>
Since then AO Pi has acquired<lb/>
nine new pledges.<lb/>
GRAY<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Gray is the author of A<lb/>
Student Teaching in Art, a<lb/>
textbook widely used in art<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
The art gallery of the Jenkins<lb/>
Fine Arts Center was dedicated to<lb/>
Gray befae his death.<lb/>
Gray was desaibed by Bill<lb/>
Hoi ley, a professa of art, as a<lb/>
helpful man who never held a<lb/>
grudge.<lb/>
He was so hel pf ul, in fact, that<lb/>
�he once bought clothes fa a<lb/>
1TL<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;�&amp;<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
f�<lb/>
QMpM' Qfrj (low TtAst <lb/>
Weekend Special Thurs Fri Sat AU Day<lb/>
6" mini cheese &amp; small drink<lb/>
ONLY $1.00<lb/>
 Phone 752-6130 <lb/>
PHONE IN ORDERS FOR PICK-UP<lb/>
Stuff a pizza<lb/>
521 COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
IN GEORGETOWN SHOPfFS<lb/>
Stuff a pizza<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0007"/><lb/>
1 December 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Pay 7<lb/>
Dept. gets approval to test local water supplies<lb/>
By JIM BURKE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Environmental<lb/>
Health Laboratory has been gran-<lb/>
ted interim approval by the<lb/>
federal government to test local<lb/>
water supplies for contamination.<lb/>
Under the direction of Dr.<lb/>
Barney Kane, the laboratory<lb/>
serves both as a testing center for<lb/>
water and a training ground fa-<lb/>
students in the ECU school of<lb/>
environmental health.<lb/>
According to Dr. Kane,<lb/>
Greenville has its own system for<lb/>
monitoring the water supply in<lb/>
the oommunity, and the testing<lb/>
done by the Environmental<lb/>
Health Lab is mostly for water<lb/>
sources outside Greenville.<lb/>
"We look for small organisms<lb/>
called ooliformswhich get intothe<lb/>
water through human and animal<lb/>
waste said Kane explaining the<lb/>
testing procedures.<lb/>
"The ooliforms themselves<lb/>
are not neoessarily harmful, but if<lb/>
they are present, we can assume<lb/>
the water is contaminated said<lb/>
Kane.<lb/>
The water sources, such as<lb/>
wells for individual homes, are<lb/>
usually inspected by the county<lb/>
health department to see if they<lb/>
are adequate and properly con-<lb/>
structed. Then, samples of the<lb/>
water are sent to the lab fa-<lb/>
analysis, if necessary.<lb/>
Kane said that, although<lb/>
students are involved in.the work,<lb/>
they canna officially conduct the<lb/>
tests. However, they do learn the<lb/>
techniques invaved.<lb/>
The analysis is done accading<lb/>
to the National Interim Primary<lb/>
Drinking Water Regulations.<lb/>
Kane said the regulations are<lb/>
a set of guidelines proposed a<lb/>
WNCT changes format<lb/>
ByLYNNMALADOWITZ<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
WNCT-TV (Channel 9, Green-<lb/>
ville) is currently in the initial<lb/>
phases of a multi-million dollar<lb/>
expansion project, accading to<lb/>
Blake Lewis, station vice pres-<lb/>
ident.<lb/>
Effects of the project can be<lb/>
recognized in the new "Nine<lb/>
Alive" news famat.<lb/>
The new news famat is only a<lb/>
part of the project which began a<lb/>
month ago. It includes a new<lb/>
"Nine Live" music theme, and a<lb/>
live approach to news.<lb/>
Lewis said the project is the<lb/>
means for a new television<lb/>
concept.<lb/>
"The purpose of "Nine<lb/>
Alive" isaoonoept, an exciting,<lb/>
young way to convey our image-a<lb/>
quality image-to the people<lb/>
said Lewis, who became station<lb/>
manager late last summer.<lb/>
In ader to reach more people,<lb/>
WNCT petitioned the Federal<lb/>
Communicatiois Commission fa<lb/>
permission to build a 2,000 foa<lb/>
transmission tower in Grifton.<lb/>
The present transmission<lb/>
tower is 850 feet and is in<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
The tower would increase<lb/>
WNCT's coverage area�y 50 per<lb/>
cent and would sharpen the<lb/>
existing signal.<lb/>
Lewis said it would be a year<lb/>
befae the tower is buijt, if it is<lb/>
approved by the FCC.<lb/>
PROFESSOR<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
Honestly, I thought someone was<lb/>
pulling a practical joke on me<lb/>
when I gtf it<lb/>
"I don't knowMy honest<lb/>
reaction when I thought about it a<lb/>
little bit was that I think maybe in<lb/>
times past I might have earned<lb/>
something like that. I have a<lb/>
feeling that I was a whole lot<lb/>
better teacher befae than I am<lb/>
now. It was nice to get it,<lb/>
though<lb/>
The award being fa teaching<lb/>
excellence, Dr. Gowen was asked<lb/>
to explain his teaching phil-<lb/>
osophy.<lb/>
' That's easy fa me to answer<lb/>
because I don't have oie as such.<lb/>
I think if I ever ga to the pant<lb/>
that Id start to phi'oscphize<lb/>
about my approcah to teaching,<lb/>
I'd probably be hurting.<lb/>
"It's one of these things that's<lb/>
instinctive matter. When you stop<lb/>
and begin to meditate and refine,<lb/>
you know -1 am this and I am that<lb/>
- you're probably really living on<lb/>
past things. So, I just take it day<lb/>
by day.<lb/>
 Some days you win and some<lb/>
days you don't. I guess I'd like to<lb/>
say after 13 years of teaching that<lb/>
if you do give a bummer lecture,<lb/>
it still bothers me<lb/>
"You can't win 'em all, but<lb/>
you have to stay in there plugging<lb/>
I try to fo the most professional<lb/>
job I can, but that varies from<lb/>
class to class<lb/>
Dr. Gowen was asked what it<lb/>
was like to work (as the award<lb/>
indicates) as a professional at<lb/>
ECU and hoe the University<lb/>
atmosphere affects his teaching.<lb/>
"I think there are a la of<lb/>
advantages at ECU. Sure, I've<lb/>
heard the students talk about the<lb/>
party image but there are two<lb/>
things you can say about it<lb/>
"First, the ECU students<lb/>
themselves are really great. They<lb/>
are a nice student body. They will<lb/>
meet you mae than halfway if<lb/>
you have a bum class, and they<lb/>
don't try to sharp-shoot you and<lb/>
really don't give you grief<lb/>
"If I had to work up a mato<lb/>
I'd say Thank God for the<lb/>
students<lb/>
"Second said Dr. Gowen, this<lb/>
school and the administration as<lb/>
far as I've been able to judge,<lb/>
have really tried, with slender<lb/>
resources to promote teaching. It<lb/>
has really struck me. This school<lb/>
isn't Harvard. It'sna Yale<lb/>
"It doesn't have the money a<lb/>
endowments of state schools. It<lb/>
operates under restrictions, but<lb/>
they still enoourage you. I like<lb/>
that part of ECU.<lb/>
"In terms of students and the<lb/>
atmosphere the school tries to<lb/>
create it is good<lb/>
Dr. Gowen took the $500 that<lb/>
he received as a stipend with the<lb/>
award and gave two parties to<lb/>
which the faculty and his<lb/>
students were invited to show his<lb/>
appreciation fa the award.<lb/>
Bhnq in this coupon<lb/>
�for l0 o�f ov<lb/>
Plant Hanqers ?(jllharwinqs<lb/>
(except Jconsianment)J J<lb/>
�18-A 8 F4,tk<lb/>
A1 Imports GreenvMe Square Shopping Center<lb/>
let A 2.00 Discount<lb/>
on any Purcl<lb/>
worth 10.00 or mort<lb/>
when you bri<lb/>
P0RTS<lb/>
SaSonSXV<lb/>
Offer Good Thru Dec. 10th<lb/>
This AD.<lb/>
The expansioi project also<lb/>
includes new production equip-<lb/>
ment, mobile product ion units,<lb/>
and electronic news gathering<lb/>
equipment.<lb/>
Accading to Lewis, remodel-<lb/>
ing and expansion of the studios<lb/>
are also parts of the new concept.<lb/>
couple of years ago by the<lb/>
Environmental Protection Agen-<lb/>
cy.<lb/>
"These regulations are con-<lb/>
stantly being reviewed and chan-<lb/>
ged by the federal government as<lb/>
new evidence accumulates, and<lb/>
they are called interim until a<lb/>
definite set of standards is<lb/>
finalized<lb/>
Kane explaine-1 that there are<lb/>
no federal funds involved in the<lb/>
project.<lb/>
PLAKTJQU<lb/>
Whiteware-Ready To Paint<lb/>
Downtown Evans Street Mall<lb/>
Open Evenings<lb/>
752-0761<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0008"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 December 1977<lb/>
Shakespeare thrice on Sunday<lb/>
Poetry<lb/>
BEYOND THE MERRY-GO-ROUND<lb/>
By DENISE ANDREWS<lb/>
I am the woman<lb/>
who collected half-dead flowers<lb/>
and broken glass.<lb/>
The woman who ate the flowers<lb/>
slow-<lb/>
ly<lb/>
one, then a-<lb/>
nother.<lb/>
The woman who made a necklace<lb/>
of broken glass.<lb/>
I am the woman<lb/>
who moves ever so slow-<lb/>
ly<lb/>
On Sunday, December 4th,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center will<lb/>
present three film adaptations of<lb/>
Shakespeare's plays. "Mac-<lb/>
beth directed by Roman Polan-<lb/>
ski, will be the first movie shown<lb/>
at 4 o'clock.<lb/>
Kathleen Carroll, of the New<lb/>
York Daily News says, "Macbeth<lb/>
is Shakespeare translated the way<lb/>
he would have liked it, in bold,<lb/>
virile terms! It is unusually<lb/>
cinematicRoman Polanski has<lb/>
created an altogether perfect<lb/>
setting In this movie, about the<lb/>
dangers of over-ambition, Polan-<lb/>
ski does not hesitate to show<lb/>
visually all the gore that Shake-<lb/>
speare so vividly describes in<lb/>
dialogue.<lb/>
Elizabeth T; ylor and Richard<lb/>
Burton star in The Taming of the<lb/>
Shrew, directed by Franco Zeffir-<lb/>
elli, who also directed the tender<lb/>
and beautiful film adaptation of<lb/>
Romeo and Juliet. This movie will<lb/>
be shown second at 625. Cyrul<lb/>
Cusack, Michael Hordern, Alfred<lb/>
Lynch and Alan Webb complete<lb/>
the list of major characters in the<lb/>
film.<lb/>
Of Tony Richardson's Hamlet<lb/>
Frances Herridge of The New<lb/>
York Post says "A splendid film!<lb/>
Niool Williamson's remarkably<lb/>
fresh interpretation of Hamlet has<lb/>
been skillful'y transferred to the<lb/>
screen! Exciting action, jumping<lb/>
instantly from one scene to the<lb/>
next!<lb/>
These films will be shown free<lb/>
of charge to East Carolina Stu-<lb/>
dents with a valid I.D.<lb/>
TRENQS STf R�EPORT<lb/>
a stomach full<lb/>
of half-dead flowers<lb/>
slit<lb/>
a vein always on the edge<lb/>
of being<lb/>
0-<lb/>
pen.<lb/>
Denise Andrews is an English<lb/>
maor from Goldsboro.<lb/>
RICHARD BURTON AND Elizabeth Taylor appear<lb/>
together in a film version of Shakespeare's "The<lb/>
Taming of the Shrew to appear in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Theatre Sunday, December 4 at 6:25<lb/>
p.m. Admission is free to ECU students with ID and<lb/>
activity cards.<lb/>
Lawler co-edits book on Kurt Vonnegut<lb/>
By SHARON NASH<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
Six or seven years ago, Dr.<lb/>
Donald Lawler of ECU's English<lb/>
Department had never read any-<lb/>
thing by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.<lb/>
Today, he is the oo-editor of a new<lb/>
book entitled Vonnegut in Amer-<lb/>
ca.<lb/>
When asked how he chose<lb/>
Vonnegut from the mass of<lb/>
current writers, Lawler replied,<lb/>
"I didn't, my students did He<lb/>
went on to explain that his<lb/>
students were so enthusiastic<lb/>
about Vonnegut that he decided<lb/>
to read some of his works. He first<lb/>
read Slaughter House Five, which<lb/>
he described as "an interesting<lb/>
experience He explained that<lb/>
Vonnegut took some getting used<lb/>
to because he breaks so many of<lb/>
the literary conventions. "The<lb/>
reader must accept Vonnegut on<lb/>
his own terms<lb/>
Once he began studying Von-<lb/>
negut, he discovered that he is a<lb/>
satirist of the caliber of Twain and<lb/>
Rabais of our modern society.<lb/>
He describes Vonnegut as "a<lb/>
major moralist, who will probably<lb/>
be remembered for the profound<lb/>
things he has to say<lb/>
Lawler explained how Vonne-<lb/>
gut forces us to think in  univer-<lb/>
sal terms such as we aren't all<lb/>
beautiful and some of us are<lb/>
stupid. He also goes on to ask,<lb/>
what should be done with the ugly<lb/>
and the stupid<lb/>
As he Decame interested in<lb/>
Vonnegut's works, Lawler began<lb/>
reading articles on Vonnegut's<lb/>
works which upset him. Lawler<lb/>
believes that Vonnegut needs to<lb/>
be taken seriously because "he<lb/>
has something to tell us about<lb/>
ourselves. He is not a fad<lb/>
As a result of his interest in<lb/>
Vonnegut and the types of<lb/>
reviews Vonnegut's works were<lb/>
getting, Lawler organized and<lb/>
chaired a MLA seminar on<lb/>
Vonnegut in 1975. The purpose of<lb/>
this seminar was to raise the level<lb/>
of criticism performance on a<lb/>
writer Lawler thought deserving.<lb/>
When asked when he first got<lb/>
the idea of the book, Lawler<lb/>
replied, "Five minutes after the<lb/>
seminar was over! The seminar<lb/>
was so good it took me by<lb/>
surprise. They all (the papers)<lb/>
seemed to fit together<lb/>
Jerome Klinkowitz, Professor<lb/>
of English at the University of<lb/>
Northern Iowa, who was a<lb/>
panelist at the seminar and<lb/>
Lawler got together to plan their<lb/>
book, and in less than a year<lb/>
Vonnegut in America, Lawler's<lb/>
first book was finished.<lb/>
The book is a collection of the<lb/>
papers written by the seminar's<lb/>
panelists plus a transcript of the<lb/>
seminar discussion and related<lb/>
essays. The book also features an<lb/>
excellent section of photographs<lb/>
by Jill Krementz, a close friend of<lb/>
this one.<lb/>
He does, however, have ano-<lb/>
ther book ooming out in January,<lb/>
entitled Approaches to Science<lb/>
fiction, this book will be the first<lb/>
of its kind. A genre study, the<lb/>
book attempts to define the field<lb/>
of science fiction.<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
For the seminar, the panelists<lb/>
wrote essays dealing with Vonne-<lb/>
gut's inspiration, techniques, and<lb/>
his writing career. In the seminar<lb/>
the papers were discussed.<lb/>
Vonnegut's.<lb/>
At the end of December,<lb/>
Lawler will chair another seminar<lb/>
on Vonnegut, but he does not<lb/>
intend to try to make a book out of<lb/>
DR. DONALD LAWLER on Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.<lb/>
moralist<lb/>
a major<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0009"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
is<lb/>
School<lb/>
recital<lb/>
Dec. 1<lb/>
Dec. 2<lb/>
Dec. 4<lb/>
Dec. 5<lb/>
Dec. 5<lb/>
Dec. 6<lb/>
Dec. 7<lb/>
Dec. 8<lb/>
Dec. 9<lb/>
Dec. 11<lb/>
Dec. 13<lb/>
Wright Auditorium, 4:00<lb/>
voice<lb/>
7:30<lb/>
piano<lb/>
voice<lb/>
8:15<lb/>
of Music<lb/>
schedule<lb/>
JANE ORRELL, .<lb/>
Senior Recital, .<lb/>
GAY BOWMAN, .<lb/>
CYNTHIA STALEY,<lb/>
Senior Recital, .<lb/>
GEORGE BROUSSARD, .trombone<lb/>
Faculty Recital, . 8:15<lb/>
SIGMA ALPHA IOTA and<lb/>
PHI MU ALPHA Recital, 630<lb/>
MEN'S GLEE CLUB and<lb/>
UNIVERSITY CHORALE, 8:15<lb/>
JACKIE RILEY, . piano<lb/>
Senior Recital, . 9:00<lb/>
MICHAEL LOPEZ, trombone<lb/>
Senior Recital,<lb/>
BUTCH HOLLAND,<lb/>
MICHAEL ALVEY<lb/>
Senior Recital, .<lb/>
1 December 1977 FOUNTAINHPAn<lb/>
7:30<lb/>
trombone<lb/>
piano<lb/>
7:30<lb/>
ROLANDA<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
BAROQUE<lb/>
ALLISON, violin<lb/>
Recital, 7:30<lb/>
ENSEMBLE, 3:00<lb/>
ANNUAL CHRISTMAS PROGRAM<lb/>
Wright Auditorium, 4:00<lb/>
Jane Orrell gives<lb/>
recital tonight<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
GREENVILLE-Soprano Row-<lb/>
ena Jane Orrell, 9enior voice<lb/>
student in the East Carolina<lb/>
University School of Music, will<lb/>
perform in recital Thursday, Dec.<lb/>
1. at 7:30 p.m. in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
Her program will include an<lb/>
aria from the J.S. Bach Cantata<lb/>
No. 89; four Brahms songs;<lb/>
'Dondelieta" from Pucani's"La<lb/>
Boheme" ; the Poulenc "Airs<lb/>
Chantes" ; and three selections<lb/>
appropriate to the Christmas<lb/>
season: "My Soul doth magnify<lb/>
the Lad" from Virgil Thompson's<lb/>
"The Nativity According to St<lb/>
Luke Charles Ives's "A Christ-<lb/>
mas Carol" and Lambert's "A<lb/>
Song Cycle on the Birth of<lb/>
Christ<lb/>
She will be accompanied by<lb/>
pianist Alisa Wetherington and<lb/>
assisted by Paula Scarangella,<lb/>
harpist, on the Lambert cycle and<lb/>
by oboist Eric Haas and organist<lb/>
Marshall Foster on the Bach aria.<lb/>
Ms. Orrell is a candidate for<lb/>
the Bachelor of Music degree in<lb/>
vocal pedagogy and a student of<lb/>
Gladys White of the ECU voice<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
During her study at ECU, she<lb/>
has appeared in several produc-<lb/>
tions of the ECU Opera Theatre.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Cs No. 3 Night Club<lb/>
NIGHTSHIFT<lb/>
Fri.&amp;Sat. Dec. 4&amp;5<lb/>
Former members of Heertwood<lb/>
Southwing end Bro-T- Holla<lb/>
Wednesday Night is<lb/>
ECU night<lb/>
FREE admission till 10:30<lb/>
Drama dept. presents 'Skin<lb/>
TRENDS ST A FF REPORT<lb/>
"The Skin of Our Teeth" by<lb/>
Thorton Wilder will be presented<lb/>
by the East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
December 1,2, 3, 5, 6, at 8.15<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Ella Gerber of the East<lb/>
Carolina Drama Department will<lb/>
direct a multi-media interpreta-<lb/>
tion of the 35-year-old play using<lb/>
aspects of film, sound, and stage<lb/>
to create a breath-taking total<lb/>
effect The Pulitzer Prize winning<lb/>
fantasy traces the lives of the<lb/>
Antrobvs family from the Iceaoe<lb/>
exploraton of the survival of<lb/>
mankind, whom Wilder finds<lb/>
coming through by the skin of our<lb/>
teeth<lb/>
"The Skin of Our Teeth" will<lb/>
be presented in MoGirjnis Audi-<lb/>
torium. For Faculty and the<lb/>
general public reserved seats<lb/>
are $2.50. audents may reserve<lb/>
free seats with valid activity and<lb/>
ID cards.<lb/>
Prompt reservation will insure<lb/>
the best possible seating. Tickets<lb/>
are available at the Playtiouse<lb/>
Box Offioe between 10 and 4<lb/>
Monday through Friday. The Box<lb/>
Offioe is located in the lobby of<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
ELLA GERBER OF the ECU Drama Department is directing The<lb/>
Skin of Our Teeth" to be performed at 8:15 in McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium, Dec. 1,2, 3, 5, and 6.<lb/>
Iron Horse Trading Co.<lb/>
Merchants and Craftman in<lb/>
Fine Jewelry<lb/>
On the Mall<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
1<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA PLAYHOUSE<lb/>
presents<lb/>
McGINNIS AUDITORIUM<lb/>
December 1,2,3,5,6 8:15 P.M.<lb/>
Reeeerved SMts: $2.50 - Faculty and Ganaral Public<lb/>
Students Free With Activity end LD. Cards<lb/>
"Reserve your tickets now to get<lb/>
the best seating. Come to the<lb/>
Playhouse Box Offioe betwjen 10<lb/>
and 4 Monday through Friday and<lb/>
bring an ID and an Activity Card<lb/>
for each ticket you want. The Box<lb/>
Office is in the lobby of McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0010"/><lb/>
Pag� 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 Docemtof 1977<lb/>
MARIANNE FAITHFUL AND Nicol Williamson give fresh interpretations of Ophelia and Hamlet in the motion picture version of the Shakespeare dassic to be seen in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Theatre Sunday, December 4 at 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
'Starship Invasions spin-off of Star Wars<lb/>
By DAVID W. TREVINO<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
The enormous .financial<lb/>
success of Star Wars made the<lb/>
production of a lackluster retinue<lb/>
of spin-offs an unfortunate inevi-<lb/>
tability. Like so much flotsom,<lb/>
Starship Invasions has washed up<lb/>
in Greenville.<lb/>
The plot involves a struggle<lb/>
3T<lb/>
<lb/>
GJ<lb/>
Christmas at Zales!<lb/>
for planet earth between a race of<lb/>
evil space rapists in black leotards<lb/>
led by Captain Ramses (Christo-<lb/>
pher Lee) and the benevolent<lb/>
aliens who live in a pyramidical<lb/>
bordello on the ocean's floor. The<lb/>
good aliens are aided in their<lb/>
efforts by a oourageous astrono-<lb/>
mer, Professor Duncan (Robert<lb/>
Vaughn) who believes in UFO's<lb/>
and his skeptical friend, the<lb/>
computer expert.<lb/>
The issue of whether or not<lb/>
mankind will be killed off by the<lb/>
terrible "extermination device"<lb/>
Ramses is using to cause the<lb/>
earth's people to oommit murder<lb/>
and suicide is finally resolved in a<lb/>
battle in deep space in which the<lb/>
special effects are only marginally<lb/>
superior to those in Godzilla on<lb/>
Monster Island. The aliens kill<lb/>
each other with flashbulbs atta-<lb/>
ched to their fingers that go off<lb/>
and cause their foes to fall down.<lb/>
Disregarding the aash of a metal<lb/>
bowl into an erecter set the most<lb/>
spectacular visual effect created<lb/>
in Starship Invasions is the<lb/>
glowing plastic with which the<lb/>
aliens control their space ships,<lb/>
decorated their pyramid and do<lb/>
almost everything else with.<lb/>
Even more ridiculous is the<lb/>
way the aliens communicate by<lb/>
telepathy. While a voice over tells<lb/>
their thoughts, the aliens' faces<lb/>
are varied In expression by an<lb/>
alternating pattern of oontortions<lb/>
and twitches. Much of this<lb/>
inability to act can be rationalized<lb/>
by the day bulbs some of the<lb/>
aliens wore as heads, however<lb/>
The robots are no more than<lb/>
men in silver jump suits with<lb/>
mittens. They wear helmets with<lb/>
a glowing plastic bar at the eyes<lb/>
and walk with their legs stiffened.<lb/>
It's offensive in its absurdity.<lb/>
0 '<lb/>
I v l J<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
ft FAST<lb/>
Give her one of the<lb/>
greatest fashion statements around .<lb/>
an opal ring!<lb/>
a. 1 Genuine opal, 8 genuine garnets<lb/>
in 14 karat gold, $85<lb/>
b. Butterfly ring, 2 diamonds,<lb/>
4 genuine opals in 14 karat gold, $135<lb/>
c. 2 Qiamonds, 1 genuine opal in<lb/>
14karat gold, $115<lb/>
Elegant gift wrap at no extra charge<lb/>
Charge it!<lb/>
Open a Zales account or use<lb/>
one 6t five national credit plans<lb/>
Zales Revolving Charge � Zales Custom Charge<lb/>
V IA � Master Charge � American Express<lb/>
Miners Club � Carle Blanche � Lavaway<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
Pizza Mike<lb/>
ZALES<lb/>
The Diamond Store<lb/>
Illustrations enlarged<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
756-0141<lb/>
Offers You Free Delivery<lb/>
to your Home, Office ,<lb/>
or School<lb/>
Abo Sit-in or Pick-up<lb/>
Call 758-6500<lb/>
hours MonThurs 4pm-1am<lb/>
Fri. 8- Sat. 4pm 2am<lb/>
Sun 4pm-12-00 pm<lb/>
most are not so encumbered.<lb/>
With the visual effects such an<lb/>
abject failure there is a great deal<lb/>
of emphasis on sex and violence<lb/>
in a vain attempt to maintain<lb/>
interest past the initial five<lb/>
minutes. Ramses and his crew<lb/>
abduct and have sex with a<lb/>
farmer and a family of three.<lb/>
Even the good aliens run an<lb/>
inter-galactic cathouse in a pyra-<lb/>
mid on the ocean bottom. And the<lb/>
interest taken by Professor Dun-<lb/>
can in UFO's has rendered him<lb/>
uninterested in his frustrated<lb/>
wife.<lb/>
The "extermination device"<lb/>
causes humans to be driven to kill<lb/>
themselves and occasionally<lb/>
others in conventional, earthling<lb/>
ways: by stabbings, slashing<lb/>
wrists, with guns, in auto acci-<lb/>
dents<lb/>
The Earth finally wins out and<lb/>
all the right people are saved in<lb/>
the end. Starship Invasions may<lb/>
be entertainment for the fanatical<lb/>
science fiction buff, but most will<lb/>
find it little more than distasteful<lb/>
swamp gas.<lb/>
Shim In Shoe Shop<lb/>
113 Grande Ave. at<lb/>
(lollege View<lb/>
Cleaners<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0011"/><lb/>
1 December 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Poetry.<lb/>
THE BOARD<lb/>
By SAMUEL LOFTON, III<lb/>
Together they showed me,<lb/>
how to write my name and achieve knowledge<lb/>
That stab of white chalk against that black surface<lb/>
Black and white, together to make a constructed result<lb/>
Uniting with ease, they hardly ever clash<lb/>
For they know their purpose is pre-established<lb/>
But man (black and white) doesn't realize his purpose<lb/>
For he is like the blackboard<lb/>
Before it's united with the white chalk<lb/>
�Empty with no purpose.<lb/>
Samuel Lofton, III is a Business Administration<lb/>
major from Gofdsboro.<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
UNDER NEW<lb/>
MANAGEMENT<lb/>
located behind THE ATTIC<lb/>
Thur Dec 1st<lb/>
OPEN HOUSE<lb/>
Be the managements guest!<lb/>
Specials on all beverages 9-10:30<lb/>
Fri Dec 2nd<lb/>
JT� The man and his guitar<lb/>
SconMo<lb/>
f HY<lb/>
YPNOTISTMAGICIAN<lb/>
Arthur O'Connell stars in  The Hiding Place" to<lb/>
be shown at the Baptist Student Union located at 511<lb/>
E. 10th Street on December 5 at 6:30p.m. and 9X)<lb/>
p.m. The film is based on Corrie ten Boom's<lb/>
best-selling book of the same title which relates the<lb/>
story of Miss ten Boom, a Dutch Christian who<lb/>
organized and led an underground movement to<lb/>
assist Jews in escaping capture by Nazi forces<lb/>
during the Second World War. Tickets are $1.25 at<lb/>
the door and $1.00 in advance.<lb/>
Music<lb/>
student<lb/>
wins<lb/>
award<lb/>
Michael Gibson Regan of<lb/>
Richmond, Va junior student in<lb/>
the East Carolina University<lb/>
School of Music, is the 1977<lb/>
collegiate winner of a statewide<lb/>
organ competition sponsored by<lb/>
the N.C. Music Teachers Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Regan received the award at<lb/>
the Association's recent conven-<lb/>
tion at Mars Hill College.<lb/>
A candidate fa Bachelor of<lb/>
Music degrees in church music<lb/>
and music education, Regan is a<lb/>
student of Dr. Robert Irwin of the<lb/>
ECU School of Music organ<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
As winner of the state award,<lb/>
he is eligible to participate in a<lb/>
regional competition in Louisville,<lb/>
Ky. next February.<lb/>
His parents are Dr. and Mrs.<lb/>
W.W Regan of 516 Ridge Top<lb/>
Road, Richmond, Va.<lb/>
TakeOff<lb/>
The Student Government Of<lb/>
Atlantic Christian College<lb/>
and Variety Artist<lb/>
Proudly Present<lb/>
THE OZARK<lb/>
MOUNTAIN<lb/>
DAREDEVILS<lb/>
in concert<lb/>
Friday , Dec. 2 at 8pm-<lb/>
Wilson Gym on the AC-Campus<lb/>
Advance Tickets-$5<lb/>
Admission at door-$6<lb/>
Tickets Available at<lb/>
Apple Records. Greenville,<lb/>
Hit Sounds and Music<lb/>
Farmville,<lb/>
Leder's, Super Hits,<lb/>
AC Student Center Wilson<lb/>
Come on out and get loose<lb/>
BECOME<lb/>
A PILOT<lb/>
It Makes Life<lb/>
More Interesting.<lb/>
Becoming a p� tots you<lb/>
00 more ol the things you<lb/>
like to do Mr Jiang<lb/>
Becoming a pilot is not only<lb/>
a matter of learning to fly an<lb/>
airplane. With that skill comes<lb/>
the freedom to go more places<lb/>
and do more things. In the process, you can make<lb/>
your life a lot more interesting. Becoming a pilot<lb/>
means that every day can be a new adventure.<lb/>
It moves back the boundanes of your life. It opens<lb/>
up the entire world.<lb/>
Come out and let us show you how quickly and<lb/>
economically you can become a pilot. Details<lb/>
available at:<lb/>
hVIATION<lb/>
located at Pitt-Greenville Airport <lb/>
Greenville, N.C. (919) 752-0655<lb/>
SSis sgflBWpBH<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0012"/><lb/>
�MHMH<lb/>
BBBIBgliggiBlfl �� 'sJaMlilMUi<lb/>
12 FOUNTAINHEAD 1<lb/>
Intro murals<lb/>
Seahawks tonight<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Cross country meet held<lb/>
East Carolina's annual crosscountry race was held last Monday and<lb/>
there was a turnout of 101 runners for the event.<lb/>
The cross country event was run fa the first time over the new ECU<lb/>
intramural marathon course through campus and the contestants<lb/>
showed a great deal of stamina in their efforts. The men's course<lb/>
measured 2.8 miles and the women's course measured 1.6 miles.<lb/>
The winning time fa the men's course was turned in by Allen Vail.<lb/>
Running as an independent, Vail toured the 2.8 mileoourse in a time of<lb/>
14:13.3, outdistancing runnerup Jim Joffe of Lambda Chi Alpha. Mike<lb/>
Aaee of Jones Dam finished third and teammate Jeff Mitchell<lb/>
finished fourth.<lb/>
Spurred by the efforts of Aaee and Mitchell, Jones took the team<lb/>
title with 45 points. Scott Dam was runnerup in the team competition<lb/>
with 79 points. Belk Dam was third and Aycock Dam was fourth, with<lb/>
Stuart Wagoner pacing his team with a fifth-place finish. Lambda Chi<lb/>
Alpha had the best finish of any fraternity group with a fifth-place team<lb/>
finish and a taal of 156 points. Sigma Nu was next among the<lb/>
fraternities, finishing seventh just ahead of Kappa Sigma. A total of 13<lb/>
teams and 75 runners competed.<lb/>
In women's competition Donna Daggs of Fleming Dam led the<lb/>
field with a time of 11 04.5. Daggs' teammates finished third and<lb/>
fourth in the three-women team competition. Jarvis Dam finished<lb/>
seoaid and the Independents wound up third. Alpha Xi Delta led the<lb/>
saaity entries wiht a fourth place finish, entering nine of the<lb/>
18-women field.<lb/>
Two special categaies were held fa faculty women and faculty<lb/>
men. Carol Own ran as the only women faculty member and had a time<lb/>
of 12.07.6 while Mr. Whitehead won the men's faculty division in<lb/>
17:34.5. Eight men competed in the faculty division.<lb/>
This year's field was much larger than last year's and the new<lb/>
route seemed to help the perfamance of the runner.<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Spats Edita<lb/>
This Thursday night the Pi-<lb/>
rates of East Carolina open their<lb/>
1977-78 home basketball schedule<lb/>
against the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Wilmington. Then<lb/>
this Monday the Pirates will host<lb/>
the Battlers of Alder son Broaddus<lb/>
The women's volleyball finals finished last Tuesday night and<lb/>
Hypertension won in straight sets over a strong Alpha Xi Delta squad.<lb/>
Hypertension defeated the Alpha Xis in two sets, 15-9 and 15-13. In the<lb/>
damitay champiaiship decided separately from the all-campus<lb/>
aown, Jarvis Dam defeated Fleming Dam, 15-9. The oanpetition<lb/>
ended anaher season of intramural volleyball.<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau and the Aycock Giants met last night in one<lb/>
semifinal match and the Belk Embalmersand Tau Kappa Epsilon met<lb/>
in anaher semifinal match to decide who would meet tonight at 7:30<lb/>
fa the Intramural Team Handball men's title and the right to represent<lb/>
East Carolina against Appalachian State in a two-day Handball<lb/>
tournament to be held here on Thursday, December 1 and Friday,<lb/>
December 2. The ECU champs will meet the ASU champs in two<lb/>
matches. The first match will take place at 5 p.m. on Thursday and the<lb/>
second will be played at 3 p.m. on Friday. Btfh games will be in<lb/>
Memaial Gym.<lb/>
In quarterfinal play in the Intramural Handball tourney, the Giants<lb/>
beat the Belk X's and O's 21-18 as Bob Pear scaed 10 points fa the<lb/>
winners and Gene Smith led the losers with seven points.<lb/>
In the aher quarterfinal games the Embalmers dropped the<lb/>
Time-Ins 17-15 in anaher dose match asChastain led the victas with<lb/>
nine points and Dennis Belammy led the losers with eight points; Teke<lb/>
beat the Scat Time OUts by a similarly dose 17-15 scae; and the Phi<lb/>
Taus whipped Kappa Alpha in the oily easy match, 14-8. Bill Bugbee<lb/>
led the Phi Taus with seven points.<lb/>
The Rugby Mules will reign as the intramural men's soccer<lb/>
champions fa this seasai, after downing Phi Kappa Tau 2-0 in the<lb/>
finals. Jack Simonean was named the game's Outstanding player.<lb/>
In the women's finals, the Fleming Foxes won the all-campus aown<lb/>
over the Tri Sigma saaity as Sylvia Jones scaed both goals in a 2-1<lb/>
win and was voted the Most Outstanding Player in the championship<lb/>
games.<lb/>
ECU'S Karate Club won the Southeastern championships held this<lb/>
weekend of November 19-20 in Atlanta, Ga. Al Fiae led the viday<lb/>
with his fifth straight viday in the Black Belt division Other winners<lb/>
were Steve Daughtridge, Willie Everett, Richard Oxendine, Jan Dixon,<lb/>
Mary Burnett and Daethea Blunt. The Karate Club is coached by Bill<lb/>
McDonald, a fifth degree Black Belt.<lb/>
See INTRAMURALS page 13<lb/>
HERB GRA Y IN last years ECU vs UNC-W game.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
GREG CORNELIUS GRABS rebound from UNC-W<lb/>
College from Philippi, West Vir-<lb/>
ginia. Both games will start at<lb/>
800.<lb/>
The game with UNCW looms<lb/>
as anaher tough test fa a young<lb/>
Pirate team. To many students<lb/>
and alumni the game with the<lb/>
Seahawks looked like a break<lb/>
after the Indiana game but by no<lb/>
means is this true. In fad the<lb/>
Pirates will play a team that is<lb/>
probably every bit as tough as the<lb/>
Hoosiers were.<lb/>
In games thus far this season<lb/>
the Seahawks have made them-<lb/>
selves known. First of all last<lb/>
Saturday UNCW dedicated their<lb/>
new 6,100 seat Trask Coliseum<lb/>
losing a dose game to Wake<lb/>
Faest University. The final scae<lb/>
was 83-79 but it was apparent that<lb/>
Wilmingtoi Dominated their ACC<lb/>
visita throughout the game. In<lb/>
fad Rod Griffin who was na<lb/>
expeded to play at all had to<lb/>
come into the game to save the<lb/>
sagging 17th ranked Deacons<lb/>
from defeat.<lb/>
On Monday night UNCW<lb/>
played a highly regarded Gea-<lb/>
gia Tech team and almost pulled<lb/>
off an upset. Once again the<lb/>
Seahawks dominated most of the<lb/>
game until Tech was able to pull<lb/>
the game out of the fire in the last<lb/>
two minutes. This game has<lb/>
added significants in that it was<lb/>
played on Geagia Tech hone<lb/>
court.<lb/>
The Seahawks have only been<lb/>
in the NCAA's Division 1 fa two<lb/>
years but have made a fast<lb/>
transition from their famer affil-<lb/>
iatioi with NAIA'sdistrid 29. In<lb/>
fad last year Wilmingtoi finished<lb/>
with a 16-10 recad. One of those<lb/>
10 losses came at the hands of<lb/>
East Carolina last year in a dose<lb/>
56-54 setback in Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum.<lb/>
The Seahawks of course would<lb/>
like to make up fa that heart-<lb/>
breaking loss last year and<lb/>
certainly they have the fire power<lb/>
to do so. The standouts fa<lb/>
UNCW are their twin guards Billy<lb/>
and Bobby Martin. Bah are6'1"<lb/>
and bah are very quick. In fad,<lb/>
against Wake Faest, theMartins<lb/>
had a field day stealing the ball<lb/>
fron the Deacon guards. Probab-<lb/>
ly the biagest irony of all is that<lb/>
much of their defensive skills<lb/>
were gained in high school when<lb/>
their head coach was Pirate<lb/>
assistant coach Billy Lee. Coach<lb/>
Lee is very familiar with the twins<lb/>
style of play and knows that they<lb/>
have great talent.<lb/>
"Bah Billy and Bobby were<lb/>
excellent basketball players at<lb/>
New Bern High Lee said.<lb/>
"They play great defense and are<lb/>
consistantly good scaers. They<lb/>
will be tough to play against and<lb/>
even tougher to beat<lb/>
Other standouts fa the Sea-<lb/>
hawks are Denny Fields a 6-8"<lb/>
anta, Lainie Paytai a 6-3"<lb/>
guard and freshman Jimmy Den-<lb/>
ton a 6'6" fa ward.<lb/>
UNCW is coached by famer<lb/>
Western Carolina star Mel Gib-<lb/>
son. His assistant is Rick Holdt<lb/>
who played on N.C. States' 1973<lb/>
27-0 dub.<lb/>
Monday the Pirates will be<lb/>
home again to face Alderscn<lb/>
Broaddus.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0013"/><lb/>
BHMlMligplgjBHEi<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
Continued from page t?)<lb/>
Four teams meet in the semifinalsof Co-Rec Bowling this afternoon<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center. At 4 p.m. on lanes 1 and 2 S.S.S. will<lb/>
meet the winner of yesterday's match between Rose's Tearri and the<lb/>
Kappa Sigma Mafia, while at 4 p.m. on Lanes 3 and 4 tha Gutter<lb/>
Dusters will meet the winner of yesterday's Match betwe. fthe<lb/>
Lemons and the Alley Cats.<lb/>
The S.S.S. and Gutter Dusters team earned first round byes by<lb/>
winning regular season titles. The Gutter Dusters finished with a 26-3<lb/>
record and a six-game margin over the Lemons and Rose's Team, who<lb/>
finished tied for second at 19-9.<lb/>
In the other division, S.S.S. finished with the league's best record<lb/>
of 23-1, but won by only four games over the Splits. The Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Mafia was third with a record of 13-11 and the Alley Cats finished<lb/>
fourth at 12-12.<lb/>
The finals of all campus championship will be held on Thursday,<lb/>
December 1 at 4 p.m. on Lanes 1 and 2.<lb/>
In the lasUteek of regular season bowling the following games and<lb/>
sets of notes ware recorded: Ron Potter of the Lemons rolled a 184<lb/>
game, Gaylan Hoyle of the Alleycats bowled a 195 game and a 5-1 set,<lb/>
Denny Vieheller bowled a game of 193, J.R. Merritt of the Gutter<lb/>
Dusters bowled a 184 game and Candy Wedemeyer of the Lemons<lb/>
bowled her season high of 166 with a 441 average.<lb/>
1 Daoambar 1977 FOUWTAINHEAD Papa 13<lb/>
Martin honored<lb/>
Registration began yesterday, November 29, fa men's and<lb/>
women's intramural basketball teams interested in playing in the ECU<lb/>
Intramural leagues. Registration runs through Thursday, December 1<lb/>
and play will begin on Tuesday, December 6. Two weeks of games will<lb/>
be played before semester break and the league will be continued<lb/>
following break and through most of spring semester. Sign your team<lb/>
up in Room 204 Memorial Gym, the Intramural Office.<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
defeat<lb/>
Campbell<lb/>
69-67<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The women's basketball sea-<lb/>
son opened their season last night<lb/>
with a win over the Campbell<lb/>
College Camels, 69-67.<lb/>
Rosie Thompson, a 5'9"<lb/>
junior from Blounts Creek,<lb/>
N.C. led soaring with 23 points<lb/>
followed by freshman Lydia<lb/>
Rountree of Elm City with 18.<lb/>
Coach Catherine Bolton was<lb/>
particularly impressed with Roun-<lb/>
tree and fellow freshman Marsha<lb/>
Girven. Girven led the board play<lb/>
with 12 rebounds. "They were<lb/>
very good in their first game,<lb/>
as freshman added. Bolton,<lb/>
"They will get even better during<lb/>
the year<lb/>
Debbie Freeman, senior all-<lb/>
America candidate, was held to<lb/>
10 points and coach Bolton<lb/>
expects a much more productive<lb/>
game Saturday against Duke.<lb/>
The Pirates led 40-32 at the<lb/>
half before the Camels fought<lb/>
back to the final 2 point deficit.<lb/>
The Pirates next home game<lb/>
is Saturday against Dulfe,<lb/>
"We have two big conference<lb/>
home games this Saturday and<lb/>
Monday and we could use some<lb/>
fan support said Bolton.<lb/>
The Duke game is at 7.00<lb/>
while Monday's game is the<lb/>
opening game of a doubleheader<lb/>
with the men starting at 6.00.<lb/>
GREENVILLE N.CA year<lb/>
ago, the soccer program at East<lb/>
Carolina was in trouble. There<lb/>
were suggestions made to drop<lb/>
the sport, but a decision was<lb/>
made to give it another chance.<lb/>
Although the team finished<lb/>
with a disappointing 3-10 mark,<lb/>
the season recently developed a<lb/>
bright side to it, as sophomore<lb/>
forward Phil Martin was named<lb/>
honorable mention all-state by<lb/>
the Greensboro Daily News.<lb/>
The Pirate standout finished<lb/>
the season as the team's leading<lb/>
scorer, collecting nine goals and<lb/>
three assists fa a total of 21<lb/>
points. His nine goals were<lb/>
exactly half the team total.<lb/>
"Phil was our offense sta-<lb/>
ted ECU head coach Brad Smith.<lb/>
 We depended on him to run the<lb/>
offense fa us, and he did. He<lb/>
displayed a great deal of maturity<lb/>
in carrying our offense like he<lb/>
did.<lb/>
"I would have to say<lb/>
continued Smith, "that if Phil<lb/>
continues to improve as he did<lb/>
this season, he will have a good<lb/>
Bucket<lb/>
�'Bargains<lb/>
514 E. 14 th St. Phone No. 752-4911<lb/>
Greenville. N.C. 27834<lb/>
Certs Breath Mints<lb/>
2l5c<lb/>
Fruit of the Loom<lb/>
panty ho�e<lb/>
269c<lb/>
Baby Magic<lb/>
Baby Powder<lb/>
4 oz. size 250<lb/>
Albums<lb/>
.25 e�ch<lb/>
Sunglasses<lb/>
$1.00 per pair<lb/>
Coupon Good for<lb/>
$1.00 off<lb/>
any $5.00<lb/>
purchase<lb/>
chance of being East Carolina's<lb/>
first all-South player<lb/>
Fa the Greensbao native,<lb/>
Martin, the selection marked the<lb/>
highest honor he had ever<lb/>
received in soccer.<lb/>
"I was the MVP of my high<lb/>
school team (Page High) my<lb/>
senia year Martin noted, "but<lb/>
this is the highest hona I've eva<lb/>
received.<lb/>
<lb/>
PHIL MARTIN<lb/>
it my<lb/>
Get into the<lb/>
Christmas<lb/>
Spirit!<lb/>
Bring canned or non-perishable<lb/>
food items to the Lobby of Menden-<lb/>
hall or any Girl's Dorm Lobby.<lb/>
Help a needy family this Christmas.<lb/>
sponsored by the Salvation Army<lb/>
We have a complete line of<lb/>
ski equipment for sale and<lb/>
rental<lb/>
good place to shop for golf<lb/>
ski, and tennis equipment<lb/>
We have special<lb/>
prices in 90 day<lb/>
terms for<lb/>
 students<lb/>
 � Located at Greenville Goff &amp; Country Oub<lb/>
IU COUNTRY CLUB DRIVE<lb/>
PJ"�" �� o�ee�ville. m.c.<lb/>
OW 7 DAYS A WEEK TIL DARK<lb/>
GORDON FULP<lb/>
POO SHOP<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0014"/><lb/>
BrasSES<lb/>
P�ge 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 Daombar 1977<lb/>
Pirate swimmers in Penn State Relays<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Quite a few number of chan-<lb/>
ges will certainly be evident on<lb/>
the East Carolina Swimming team<lb/>
Saturday when the Pirates open<lb/>
their 1977-78 season at University<lb/>
Park in Penn State relays.<lb/>
From a positive poinjt of view,<lb/>
the Pirates return 14 lettermen<lb/>
from last year's team including<lb/>
four Southern Conference champ-<lb/>
ions. Ross Bohlken who was<lb/>
named the Outstanding Swimmer<lb/>
in the 1976 Southern Conference<lb/>
Championships returns after a<lb/>
year's absence and will be back<lb/>
for his final season. Six highly<lb/>
touted freshmen will add plenty<lb/>
of depth in the Pirates lineup this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
However, from a negative<lb/>
standpoint of view, the Pirates<lb/>
lost txeastroker and oo-captain<lb/>
David Kirkman along with Steve<lb/>
Reudlinger through graduation.<lb/>
Also gone are Tomas Palmgren<lb/>
who decided to give up his final<lb/>
year of eligibility, along with<lb/>
versatile Stewart Mann and Sou-<lb/>
thern Conference butterfly cham-<lb/>
pion Keith Wade who both quit<lb/>
the team. Plus the fact, East<lb/>
Carolina will have no Southern<lb/>
Conference Championship to<lb/>
to peak for since the Pirates<lb/>
abandoned the conference last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
But overcoming problems and<lb/>
frustrations is nothing new for<lb/>
head coach Ray Scharf, now in his<lb/>
11th season at the helm of the<lb/>
Pirate swimming program. The<lb/>
Newark, N.J. native has guided<lb/>
the Pirates to ten oonsecutive<lb/>
Southern Conference Champion-<lb/>
la<lb/>
It<lb/>
RAZZ MA TAZZ<lb/>
Ton it e AT<lb/>
The ELBO ROOM<lb/>
THE TAMS'<lb/>
Fri. Nite<lb/>
Hey Girl Don't Bother Me<lb/>
Fri. from 3:30 to 500 Check It Out<lb/>
Sun Ladies Nite With Tenth Ave.<lb/>
MATTRESS MART<lb/>
Wholesale to Everyone<lb/>
Retail<lb/>
WATERBEDS $52.00<lb/>
FRAMES $70.00<lb/>
MAT TRESS �r iaq nn<lb/>
FOUNDATION m9'��<lb/>
Our Price<lb/>
$37.00<lb/>
$35.00<lb/>
$87.00<lb/>
1302 N. Greene St. 758-1101<lb/>
I (fend opemnq j<lb/>
-open ii-g  dec. 3<lb/>
 4<lb/>
(MNVAWCRlfT<lb/>
co-operative<lb/>
leafher<lb/>
cuedving<lb/>
seeing<lb/>
candles<lb/>
ceranics<lb/>
bafiheJc.<lb/>
refreshments<lb/>
free gifts<lb/>
0)(o<lb/>
 MYRTLE VE.<lb/>
bring d f-hiH- for free .screening<lb/>
mui<lb/>
ships and has an impressive 68-39<lb/>
dual meet reoord during that<lb/>
time.<lb/>
"We lost some quality perfor-<lb/>
mers last year says Scharf,<lb/>
"but we've got a talented group<lb/>
of individuals returning and some<lb/>
freshmen who should help us<lb/>
before the end of the season.<lb/>
We've got an extremely tough<lb/>
schedule, but we will certainly be<lb/>
competitive in every tournament<lb/>
and dual meet we swim in this<lb/>
season<lb/>
Saturday's Penn State Relays<lb/>
will provide a warm-up test for<lb/>
the Pirates before they return<lb/>
home next Tuesday to face the<lb/>
University of North Carolina in a<lb/>
dual meet. Last year ECU finish-<lb/>
ed in eighth place, its worst finish<lb/>
ever in the Penn State event.<lb/>
"We look at the Penn State<lb/>
relays as a fun meet said<lb/>
Scharf. "It gives us a chance to<lb/>
look at a lot of people and gives us<lb/>
an insight into the coming<lb/>
season<lb/>
Heading the list of the Pirates<lb/>
top performers from last season is<lb/>
sophomore Ted Nieman. Last<lb/>
year as a freshman the Winter<lb/>
Park, Fla. native won the 200,500,<lb/>
and 1660 freestyle events in the<lb/>
Southern Conference Champion-<lb/>
ships and was named the outstan-<lb/>
ding swimmer in the tournament.<lb/>
Nieman set ECU varsity records<lb/>
in the 200,500, 1000, and 1650<lb/>
freestyle yard events and quali-<lb/>
fied for the NCAA Champion-<lb/>
ships in the 200 yard freestyle. He<lb/>
also swam on the 400 and 800<lb/>
yard relay teams in the nationals.<lb/>
Also returning are freestylers<lb/>
John McCauley and Billy Thorne<lb/>
along with medley specialist John<lb/>
1977-78 EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY SWIMMING &amp; DIVING<lb/>
ROSTER<lb/>
MEN<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
EAR PIERCING<lb/>
No Appointment Necessary<lb/>
(C AC includes plain studs<lb/>
17 QC includes birthstones<lb/>
J.D. DAWS0N CO.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Colonial Heights<lb/>
NAMECLASSSTROKEHOMETOWN<lb/>
Bell, ThomasFreshmanDiverBaltimore, Md.<lb/>
Bohlken, RossSeniorFreestyleGreensboro, N.C.<lb/>
Bolton, BryanJuniorBackstrokeBaltimore, Mc<lb/>
Bowers, GeorgeFreshmanButterflyLargo, Fla.<lb/>
Brindley, DougJunior Freestyle<lb/>
Brindley, DougJuniorFreestyleKill Devil Hill,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Clowar, JackSophomoreInd. MedlyCherry HUI, N.J.<lb/>
Clowar, SteveFreshmanFreestyleCherry HUI, N.J.<lb/>
Coomes MikeSophomoreFreestyleGreensboro, N.C.<lb/>
Fehling, BillJuniorFreestyleReading, Pa.<lb/>
Lovette, MarkSophomoreButterfly.Greensboro, N.C.<lb/>
McCarthy, Barry SeniorFreestyleWinter Park, Fla.<lb/>
McCauley, JohnSeniorFreestyleCharlotte, N.C.<lb/>
Meisel, KevinFreshmanFreestyleOrlando, Fla.<lb/>
Moodie, DavidJuniorBackstrokeOntario, Canada<lb/>
Murtagh, Joseph FreshmanFreestyleFarmingdale,<lb/>
N.Y.<lb/>
Newhaller, DanFreshmanBreast strokeMaitland Fla.<lb/>
Nieman, TedSophomoreFreestyleWinter Park, Fla.<lb/>
O'Neil, PhillipFreshmanDiverAkron, Ohio<lb/>
Ouellet, PierreSophomoreFreestyleGardner, Mass.<lb/>
Schnell, RonaldSeniorButterflyWilmington, N.C.<lb/>
Skurla, RobertFreshmanBreast rokeCharlotte. N.C.<lb/>
Sox, LundJuniorDiverRaleigh, N.C.<lb/>
Spencer, Richard FreshmanBreast rokePfafftown, N.C.<lb/>
Thorne, BillySeniorFreestyleGreensboro, N.C.<lb/>
Tudor, JohnJuniorFreestyleGreensboro, N.C.<lb/>
Permanent Removal Of<lb/>
Unwanted Hair<lb/>
NO NEEDLES,<lb/>
NO PAIN<lb/>
NO HAIR<lb/>
NO SCARS<lb/>
NO INFECTIONS<lb/>
(REMOVATRON)<lb/>
uses the electronic tweezer that<lb/>
does not even touch your skin. In<lb/>
seconds, it seems to sliie tte hair<lb/>
right out. It's safe, effective, and<lb/>
painless even on sensitive parts<lb/>
of the body. See for yourself.<lb/>
Come in for a complimentary<lb/>
private consultation.<lb/>
GLENDA'S<lb/>
BEAUTYSALON<lb/>
Tudor.<lb/>
McCauley, a three year letter-<lb/>
men from Charlotte, N.C. won the<lb/>
50 yard freestyle in the Southern<lb/>
Conference last year and quali-<lb/>
fied fa the nationals in the 50<lb/>
freestyle and also swam on the<lb/>
400 and 800 yard relay teams in<lb/>
the nationals. He also holds the<lb/>
school record in the 50 freestyle<lb/>
with a time of 20.85.<lb/>
Thane, a senia fran Greens-<lb/>
boro, was the conference champ-<lb/>
ion in the 100 yard freestyle and<lb/>
also swam on the Pirates 400 and<lb/>
800 yard relay teams in the<lb/>
nationals.<lb/>
Last year Tuda captured the<lb/>
conference 200 and 400 individual<lb/>
backstroke and the 200 individual<lb/>
medley events.<lb/>
"We'll be extremely strong in<lb/>
all the freestyle events said<lb/>
Scharf. "I'm confident with just<lb/>
about any lineup we use and I'm<lb/>
sure we will qualify fa the<lb/>
nationals again this year in<lb/>
several of the freestyle events<lb/>
Scharf will also use Ross<lb/>
Bohlken, Doug Brindley, Joe<lb/>
Kushy, Barry McCarthy, and<lb/>
Pierre Ouellet in the freestyle<lb/>
events<lb/>
Mark Lovette and Ronnie<lb/>
Schnell along with highly touted<lb/>
freshmen Geage Bowers and Joe<lb/>
Murtaugh will be used in the<lb/>
butterfly. Bowers was a two-time<lb/>
state champion at Clearwater<lb/>
High School in Largo, Flaida<lb/>
while Murtaugh prepped at Hain-<lb/>
view High in Long Island N.Y<lb/>
See SWIMMERS page 15<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0015"/><lb/>
1 December 1977 FOUNTAINHEAO Ppe 15<lb/>
Mack to leap over tall building ?<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Can Oliver Mack move with<lb/>
the smoothness of Phil Ford? Can<lb/>
Herb Gray improve on last week's<lb/>
24 point performance against<lb/>
Indiana? Will Greg Cornelius and<lb/>
Roger Carr dominate the boards?<lb/>
And will Larry Gillman keep up<lb/>
his career average of ope techni-<lb/>
cal foul per game?<lb/>
Find out the answer to these<lb/>
questions and more as the Pirates<lb/>
face UNC-Wilmington in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum tonight at 730.<lb/>
Coach Larry Gillman boasts<lb/>
the most exciting team in East<lb/>
Carolina Basketball history and<lb/>
hints they will be glad to oome<lb/>
home to Minges. As he said<lb/>
earlier in the year, "This team is<lb/>
anxious to prove they are better<lb/>
than last yeans performance<lb/>
A new pep band has been<lb/>
formed for the game and a large<lb/>
turnout is expected to give a loud<lb/>
welcome to Gillman and his crew<lb/>
Thisgameand Monday's stint<lb/>
with Alderson-Broaddus are bill-<lb/>
ed as warm-ups to the December<lb/>
7 game at Maryland but Gillman<lb/>
insists this won't be the case,<lb/>
 They have a pair of twins at the<lb/>
Swimmers<lb/>
show<lb/>
promise<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
John Tudor, David Moodie,<lb/>
and Barry McCarthy will be the<lb/>
Pirates top performers in the<lb/>
backstroke.<lb/>
Freshmen Dan Newhaller<lb/>
from Maitland, Florida and<lb/>
Robert Skurla from Charlotte,<lb/>
N.C. will be counted upon to<lb/>
replace graduated David Kirkman<lb/>
in the breastroke.<lb/>
Junior Lund Sox and freshman<lb/>
Thomas Bell will provide Dlentv of<lb/>
depth and experience in the one<lb/>
and three yard diving, an event<lb/>
the Pirates have been extremely<lb/>
weak in since the departure of<lb/>
Jack Morrow. Rick Bright is the<lb/>
new diving coach.<lb/>
"Overall we'll be rather weak<lb/>
in the backstroke and breastroke<lb/>
events and the medley relays<lb/>
noted Scharf. "But our tremen-<lb/>
dous strength in the freestyle<lb/>
events is a real plus. We've got<lb/>
quite a schedule in front of us,<lb/>
and I think we'll improve as the<lb/>
season moves along.<lb/>
Bell, a native of Rookville,<lb/>
Maryland was a prep school<lb/>
All-American and prepschool<lb/>
champion last year at Lyoia.<lb/>
East Carolina will faoe ACC<lb/>
powers N.C. State, North Caro-<lb/>
lina, Duke and Maryland along<lb/>
with nationally ranked Alabama<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
BEG YOUR PARDON!<lb/>
In the Nov. 29 issue of FOUNTAINHEAD there appesred<lb/>
an ad for A-1 Imports. The ad read "Get a '2.00 discount<lb/>
on any purchase of 1.00 or more this was a mistake.<lb/>
The ad should have read, "Get a '2.00 discount on any<lb/>
purchase worth '10.00 or more FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
regrets this mistake and apologizes to the merchant<lb/>
and any students who were inconvenienced by our mistake.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
guard position that are quick, and<lb/>
the team was 2 in the nation in<lb/>
field goal percentage last year<lb/>
Gillman expects few changes<lb/>
in Thursday's line-up except that<lb/>
Herb Krusen should play more.<lb/>
Krusen did not play in the opener<lb/>
at Indiana which Gillman said was<lb/>
dictated " by the type of team we<lb/>
played Krusen scored over 30<lb/>
points in two Pirate exhibition<lb/>
games.<lb/>
An interesting contest may take<lb/>
place between UNC-W's 68"<lb/>
center Denny Fields and the<lb/>
Pirates 69" junior Greg Cornei-<lb/>
ius. Fields averaged 22 points a<lb/>
game last year and Cornelius<lb/>
played a strong rebounding game<lb/>
at Indiana Roger Carr a 66<lb/>
230 pound freshman may also<lb/>
contribute to the Pirate cause.<lb/>
ROXY MUSIC ARTS 6 CRAFTS CENTER<lb/>
presents<lb/>
THE 2ND ANNUAL<lb/>
GREEN GRASS CLOGGERS<lb/>
DAY CELEBRATION<lb/>
SATURDAY. DECEMBER 3. 1977<lb/>
10 AM. to 12 P.M.<lb/>
WRIGHT AUDITORIUM on the ECU CAMPUS<lb/>
E 5TH STREET GREENVILLE. N.C<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
THI St tt MYt I STV MUWMrtof UM M � utui IX<lb/>
�OLD �vilis �ai t "W<lb/>
IHIhlMlTI UMIIIH fMW1 llMiruiM IwiMM<lb/>
PI ASH ftOAD'Ttlll. KSbi .1M� V<lb/>
THI MNIVI lHrt)rfllM�iM.aMiM. �)������ T<lb/>
IHI (I I Mil 1 MH.1,1 t- - �<lb/>
THI HKJTI IMAILUC4.t-ftft - ��<lb/>
THI f I .TUSIMKIUH1. MMMr t�W UM rf N�<lb/>
' VK �HMH4M<lb/>
I ! 'W.i.INt, WOSHOP<lb/>
APfAl 4(NIA DANl�0�AltOP<lb/>
General admission all day $4.00<lb/>
Roxy members $3.00<lb/>
workshop only $2.00 10a.m5p.m.<lb/>
concert only $3.00 8p.m12p.m.<lb/>
For information call 752 2791 or 758 0620 or write tie ROXY<lb/>
CHILDREN WELCOME<lb/>
(�Hi<lb/>
FOP SALE: 150 albums in new<lb/>
�ond- $2.50 each. Wide variety to<lb/>
choose from. 218 E. 10th, 752-<lb/>
8155. Sat. Dec. 3.<lb/>
MUST SELL: Pioneer SX-737<lb/>
receiver, Technics SL-1500 direct<lb/>
drive turntable wcartridge,<lb/>
Jensen 22 speakers. 1550.00 or<lb/>
best offer, will split up. 758-4004.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Violin, bow. and hard<lb/>
case. Excellent cond. 3 yrs. old.<lb/>
Call 752-2819 after 5.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 69 Firebird in good<lb/>
cond. Good price. Drive it, you'll<lb/>
I'ke it. Call 758-8416 after 4.<lb/>
FOR SALE: White gold, wedding<lb/>
ring and band with 14 carat<lb/>
diamond. $125 or best offer. Call<lb/>
Dorothy 758-8452.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 195cm K2 Winter<lb/>
heats. Look bindings like new<lb/>
$100.00. Contact Mark O'Ravitz<lb/>
at 752-8657.<lb/>
MUST SELL: Les Pauj Deluxe.<lb/>
Natural finish, hard shell case,<lb/>
excellent cond. Make an offer I'm<lb/>
broke. 752-2819.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Tennis racket<lb/>
(Garcia) 240 wood, 4112 medium.<lb/>
New. Strung $31.50. Contact Alex<lb/>
Cuningham room 324 Slay Dorm<lb/>
758-8989.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pre-amp. with 5 band<lb/>
equalizer, SAE Mark IX - $180.00<lb/>
Call 752-7759 after 530 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 Double bed (good<lb/>
shape mattress &amp; springs), 1<lb/>
kitchen table w4 chairs, small<lb/>
wooden dresser. Call 752-7797.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 pair BIC Formula 4<lb/>
speakers, 1 BIC 940 turntable, 1<lb/>
Pi lot 360 4 channel stereo receiver<lb/>
rates 60 watts at stereo 30 at<lb/>
quad. Will sell together or<lb/>
seperately. 1 yr. old. Must sell.<lb/>
Call 756-6094.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Craig 5502 series<lb/>
5000 deluxe intergrates reciever.<lb/>
25 watts per channel. AMFM<lb/>
stereo. Excellent cond. $200.00<lb/>
Call 823042 after 6.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '72 Datsun 240-Z<lb/>
AC, AM-FM , low mi. 30-35<lb/>
m.p.g. Asking 3700.00. Excellent<lb/>
cond. Excellent shape. Call 758-<lb/>
0468.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Whirlpool washer<lb/>
and dryer - less than 1 yr. old.<lb/>
$400.0074 Vega Estate<lb/>
Stationwagon - AM-FM, AC,<lb/>
good tires. Dependable transport-<lb/>
ation. Call 758-0925 after 530<lb/>
p.m. or see Linda Keel, ECU<lb/>
News Bureau.<lb/>
FOR SALE: World engines 5<lb/>
channel radio control set up with<lb/>
servos, charger, Etc. Excellent<lb/>
cond. Ready to fly. $150.00 call<lb/>
758-7434 ask for Raymond.<lb/>
CARPET FOR SALE: .Excellent<lb/>
cond. used 2 mos. Rust colored,<lb/>
short shagged $50 carpet for only<lb/>
$30. Cut to fit Aycock or Jones.<lb/>
Must sell before Xmas. Call<lb/>
Carlton or Mickey at 752-7730 or<lb/>
drop 490 Aycock.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Immed-<lb/>
iately !55.00mo. plus 12 of<lb/>
utilities. Dickinson Ave. Huge<lb/>
bedrooms. Call 758-7670.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom mobile<lb/>
homes at Colonial Park. $125 to<lb/>
$135 monthly. One has washer.<lb/>
Call after 530 758-5712.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: wanted<lb/>
for large semi-private room 2<lb/>
blocks from campus in fully<lb/>
furnished house. $55 mo. and 1 5<lb/>
utilities. Call Dorothy 758-8452.<lb/>
f�AM Ryj<lb/>
Itorwnr JS<lb/>
WANT TO BUY: Used cassette<lb/>
tape recorder in good cond.<lb/>
Please call Donna at 752-9985<lb/>
after 6.<lb/>
LOST: Brown leather King James<lb/>
Bible in front of Joyner Library,<lb/>
name in front, Debora Thaxton.<lb/>
Pfcase call 752-5422.<lb/>
LOST: On the bus from the New<lb/>
York City trip, a brown paper bag<lb/>
containing toys. Contact 225<lb/>
Aycock, MRH.<lb/>
LOST Call stone necklace; in<lb/>
mason jar of formaldenyde. Last<lb/>
seen on bar at Elbo Room.<lb/>
Reward offered (sentimental<lb/>
value). Call Igor after midnight on<lb/>
nights of a full moon. 758-8397.<lb/>
FOUND: On the bus from the<lb/>
New York City trip, a brown<lb/>
paper bag. Identify oontents and<lb/>
it's yours. Write 225 Aycock,<lb/>
MRH.<lb/>
LOST ECU dassring '76. white<lb/>
gold wblue stone. Initials DGW.<lb/>
Lost in the vicinity of Elbow<lb/>
Room. Reward offered. Please<lb/>
call 752-5028 after 5.<lb/>
LOST: Gold keychain initialed F<lb/>
containing room key no. 259 and 3<lb/>
other keys. If found contact<lb/>
Ellory 752-4239.<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Winter things<lb/>
too big, too long? Call Kathy<lb/>
752-8444 or 752-8642.<lb/>
LOST: Ladies medium sized<lb/>
wallet, rust color, suede texture.<lb/>
Noor IDs (except 1) in it. If<lb/>
found please call 752-0411<lb/>
Thanks.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 December 1977<lb/>
THE DEAN OF BEER'S<lb/>
yeast really responsible<lb/>
Roman<lb/>
As your Dean of Beer, it is my scholarly<lb/>
opinion that just knowing the one word for<lb/>
beer is not enough. You must also know the<lb/>
reasons why. Because only then will I,<lb/>
Siglinda Steinfuller, be satisfied that you have<lb/>
graduated from Remedial Beer Drinking.<lb/>
QUESTIONS:<lb/>
Q: 1. The best water for beer comes from:<lb/>
a) Big Duck Mountain.<lb/>
b) Underground from Tijuana.<lb/>
c) A small store in Macon, Ga.<lb/>
d) None of the above<lb/>
A: (d) No matter what you hear about<lb/>
"naturally pure" waters, virtually all<lb/>
brewers filter and further purify their<lb/>
water. But Schlitz doesn't stop there. They<lb/>
filter their water and then filter it again.<lb/>
So when they're through, it's purer than<lb/>
the purest springwater.<lb/>
Q: 2. Klages and Firlbeck HI are:<lb/>
a) Composers of famous beer drinking<lb/>
songs like "1 Left My Shoes in Heidelberg<lb/>
b) Owners of the world's largest unknown<lb/>
brewery.<lb/>
c) Serving time in Sonoma, Calif for<lb/>
impersonating Arnold the Wonder Seal.<lb/>
d) More expensive barleys.<lb/>
A: (d) Schlitz blends Klages and Firlbeck III<lb/>
barleys with the standard variety most<lb/>
brewers use because they believe it gives<lb/>
&amp; eir beer superior flavor.<lb/>
Siglinda Steinfuller<lb/>
Dean of Beer<lb/>
Q: 3. Hops are notorious for:<lb/>
a) Their lack of intelligence.<lb/>
b) Always getting to work late.<lb/>
c) Losing their keys.<lb/>
d) Being difficult to keep fresh.<lb/>
A: (d) The freshest hops make the best beer.<lb/>
That's why Schlitz vacuum-packs and<lb/>
refrigerates their hops. So they're as fresh<lb/>
at brewing time as they are at harvest time.<lb/>
Q: 4. The best adjunct to beer is:<lb/>
a) Rice.<lb/>
b) Corn.<lb/>
c) Either rice or corn.<lb/>
d) What's an adjunct?<lb/>
A: (c) Every American brewer uses rice or<lb/>
corn to lighten the flavor of their beer.<lb/>
This is called an adjunct. But Schlitz<lb/>
knows how to use either grain inter-<lb/>
changeably. So they're never at the mercy<lb/>
of an unfavorable crop. And neither is the<lb/>
taste of their beer.<lb/>
�S�<lb/>
Q: 5. The biggest misconception about yeast<lb/>
is:<lb/>
a) Carrying some in your pocket is good<lb/>
luck.<lb/>
b) It is good for hernias.<lb/>
c) It was responsible for the fall of the<lb/>
Roman Empire.<lb/>
d) To ferment beer, all you have to do is<lb/>
drop it in the vat.<lb/>
A: (d) To make beer taste right consistently,<lb/>
Schlitz believes the yeast has to be evenly<lb/>
distributed during fermentation. That's<lb/>
why Schlitz gently stirs in their yeast. It's<lb/>
part of their Balanced Fermentation<lb/>
Crocess. And they're the only American<lb/>
rewer who does it.<lb/>
Q: 6. Chill-Lagering is:<lb/>
a) A popular German country and western<lb/>
singer.<lb/>
b) A Scandinavian winter sport played<lb/>
without clothes.<lb/>
c) A new ethnic TV comedy about the<lb/>
owner of an ice cube factory.<lb/>
d) The right way to age beer.<lb/>
A: (d) When Schlitz ages beer, they age it<lb/>
cold-very cold-down to 29.5 degrees.<lb/>
It's called Chill-Lagering. And it's what<lb/>
makes Schlitz crisp, clean and bright.<lb/>
Q: 7. A mini-brewery is:<lb/>
a) Hidden in a basement somewhere in<lb/>
Greektown.<lb/>
b) The result of trying to make Broken<lb/>
Toe, Idaho, the beer capital of the world.<lb/>
c) The right way to pretest beer<lb/>
ingredients.<lb/>
d) Both (a) and (c)<lb/>
A: (c) Schlitz has a mini-brewery where they<lb/>
test-brew the quality of the ingredients<lb/>
that go into Schlitz - before they go into<lb/>
Schlitz.<lb/>
SPECIAL BONUS QUESTION:<lb/>
Q: True or false, the one word for beer is<lb/>
Duffelbrau.<lb/>
A: False. There is no beer called Duffelbrau.<lb/>
Just as there is no beer like Schlitz. If you<lb/>
answered this question true, perhaps you<lb/>
should look into turkey ranching.<lb/>
IF YOU DOfTT HAVE SCHLITZ,<lb/>
YOU DON'T HAVE GUSTO.<lb/>
�?<lb/>
�<lb/>
Mil WAI<lb/>
<pb facs="00058025_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>