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<pb facs="00058026_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 20 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
0NTHEIN9DE<lb/>
Candidatespgs. 3&amp; 5<lb/>
Plant infestationp. 6<lb/>
Skinp. 9<lb/>
Pirates defeat Appap. 18<lb/>
Vol. 53 No. 26<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
6 December 1977<lb/>
would benefit Student Union, SGA<lb/>
Maxon: FM broadcasting<lb/>
would prove beneficial<lb/>
By JOYCE EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Since ECU is constantly grow-<lb/>
ing, an FM educational broadcast<lb/>
station would be highly beneficial<lb/>
to the campus, according to<lb/>
Robert Maxon, general manager<lb/>
of WECU.<lb/>
Maxon said the campus<lb/>
should have a media to broadcast<lb/>
information about the campus<lb/>
and campus activities.<lb/>
"It (FM) would benefit the<lb/>
Student Union and the SGA to<lb/>
disseminate their news said<lb/>
Maxon.<lb/>
FM would also provide a good<lb/>
educational broadcast outlet for a<lb/>
cultural program, according to<lb/>
Maxon. He said this would be<lb/>
alternative broadcasting to the<lb/>
area's commercial stations.<lb/>
Despite a recent decrease in<lb/>
WECU's budget, efforts are still<lb/>
being made to go to FM.<lb/>
Maxon said they are in the<lb/>
process of finding ways to raise<lb/>
funds and getting the figures on<lb/>
exactly how much everything will<lb/>
cost.<lb/>
The estimated cost for a 10<lb/>
watts FM educational station is<lb/>
$17,000, according to Maxon.<lb/>
He said the equipment inclu-<lb/>
ding transmitter tower and labor<lb/>
cost is $12,000. The remaining<lb/>
$5,000 is for engineer's fee and<lb/>
lawyer's fee.<lb/>
These figures do not include<lb/>
buying new equipment for the<lb/>
radio station itself. Maxon said<lb/>
they will probably have to use the<lb/>
equipment they have now.<lb/>
To get an educational license,<lb/>
the school must have guaranteed<lb/>
funding for three years.<lb/>
The usual period of waiting is<lb/>
two months to a year after<lb/>
applying fa the license, acoord-<lb/>
ing to Maxon.<lb/>
After getting an FM license<lb/>
and setting up to broadcast,<lb/>
operating costs would be less,<lb/>
taking into account that WECU<lb/>
would not pay salaries for air<lb/>
shifts, according to Maxon.<lb/>
"audent interest would in-<lb/>
crease with an FM license and<lb/>
there wouldn't be any problem<lb/>
getting students to work said<lb/>
Maxon.<lb/>
With FM broadcasting the<lb/>
students would be getting expo-<lb/>
sure to the mass media and that<lb/>
would be beneficial to them, said<lb/>
Maxon.<lb/>
ROB MAXON, WECU Genera Manager. Photo by Brian Stctter<lb/>
To become effective January 1,1978<lb/>
Law to require special license for motorcyclists<lb/>
By ANN THARRINQTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A new state law requiring a<lb/>
special license to operate motor-<lb/>
cycles in North Carolina will go<lb/>
into effect Jan. 1, 1978.<lb/>
At the present time, if one has<lb/>
a regular driver's lioense he is<lb/>
automatically allowed to drive a<lb/>
motorcycle.<lb/>
On Jan. 1, this law will<lb/>
change.<lb/>
Preregistered<lb/>
students may pick<lb/>
up class schedules<lb/>
ByKENTYNDALL<lb/>
Saff Writer<lb/>
Approximately 10,000 out of<lb/>
12,000 students preregistered fa<lb/>
Spring Semester and are now<lb/>
eligible to pick up their class<lb/>
schedules Dec. 8 through Jan. 6.<lb/>
The new registration plan for<lb/>
the semester system has worked<lb/>
very well, according to Julian<lb/>
Vainright, business manager.<lb/>
"We are tickled with the way<lb/>
it has turned out said<lb/>
Vainright.<lb/>
"We want to emphasize two<lb/>
things said Vainright. "We<lb/>
want to emphasize that all<lb/>
students pay their fees before<lb/>
Christmas, and that ail financial<lb/>
aid studentsoome by and endorse<lb/>
their checks between Dec. 8 and<lb/>
15<lb/>
It is very important that<lb/>
financial aid students endorse<lb/>
their checks between Dec. 8 and<lb/>
15, said Robert Boudreaux, fin-<lb/>
ancial aid officer.<lb/>
'The financial aid students<lb/>
can still use their checks to pay<lb/>
their fees after Dec. 15, but they<lb/>
cannot pick up their refund<lb/>
checks on schedule unless they<lb/>
pay before Dec. 15 said<lb/>
Boudreaux.<lb/>
Financial aid students who<lb/>
pay before Dec. 15 may pick up<lb/>
their refund checks Jan. 10, said<lb/>
Boudreaux.<lb/>
The U.S. Office of Education<lb/>
will not permit financial aid<lb/>
students to receive refund checks<lb/>
until registration day, said<lb/>
Boudreaux.<lb/>
Refund checks are used fa<lb/>
books, food, and supplies, accad-<lb/>
ing to Boudreaux.<lb/>
"About 30 per cent of the<lb/>
students get some type of fin-<lb/>
ancial assistance said<lb/>
Boudreaux.<lb/>
Boudreaux said he is pleased<lb/>
with the number of students who<lb/>
have preregistwed.<lb/>
"The cashia's office is in the<lb/>
best shape it has ever been In<lb/>
several years said Vainright.<lb/>
After this date, a motacyclist<lb/>
will be required to obtain a<lb/>
special license a encasement<lb/>
that states he is qualified to<lb/>
operate a motacyde, accading<lb/>
to J.S. Woodley, Assistant<lb/>
Supervisa of District A Drivers'<lb/>
Services.<lb/>
Aocading to Woodley, a new<lb/>
driver will then be required to<lb/>
take two sets of tests. He must<lb/>
first take the regular written and<lb/>
road tests.<lb/>
Then, if he wishes to operate a<lb/>
motacyde, he must pass special<lb/>
written and road tests designed<lb/>
solely fa rrotacyde drivas.<lb/>
Drivers who operate their<lb/>
motacydes now with a regular<lb/>
driver's license will not be<lb/>
affeded by the change, until they<lb/>
go to renew their licenses at the<lb/>
usual time, accading to<lb/>
Woodley.<lb/>
"When a driver renews his<lb/>
license, he will no be required to<lb/>
take the motacyde tests if he has<lb/>
already been operating a mota-<lb/>
cyde fa two years befae the<lb/>
law said Woodley.<lb/>
However, he will need a<lb/>
signed and ntfaized affidavit<lb/>
stating that he has been operating<lb/>
a motacyde fa two years befae<lb/>
the date of the renewal.<lb/>
Woodley said thae is "no<lb/>
charge' fa this lioense at the<lb/>
renewal time.<lb/>
Handbooks on motorcycle<lb/>
safety may be picked up at the<lb/>
license examiner's office on<lb/>
Tenth Street.<lb/>
Woodley also said the N.C.<lb/>
law still requires that all mota-<lb/>
cydists wear helmets and burn<lb/>
their headlights at ail times.<lb/>
Campus police will, begin to<lb/>
stridly enface laws regarding<lb/>
the registration and parking of<lb/>
maacydesai campus beginning<lb/>
in January.<lb/>
Joseph H. Calder, direda of<lb/>
security, said all unregistaed<lb/>
motacydes will be impounded.<lb/>
 I have a spedal trailer which<lb/>
will permit me to impound two a<lb/>
three motacydes at a time<lb/>
accading to Calder.<lb/>
A $15 towing fee must be paid<lb/>
befae a motorcycle can be<lb/>
redaimed, accacing to Calder.<lb/>
Calder also said the mota-<lb/>
cydes parked on the grass and<lb/>
otha illegal areae will be towed.<lb/>
" We have na been towing the<lb/>
motorcycles behind Graham<lb/>
Bldg. which are parked on the<lb/>
grass because of the oonstrudion<lb/>
in the area Calder said.<lb/>
"But when the students<lb/>
return after Christmas, these<lb/>
laws will be stridly enfaced<lb/>
Marching Pirates to receive $7,706<lb/>
Legislature overrides<lb/>
President Sessoms' veto<lb/>
By STEVE WILSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The SGA Legislature last night<lb/>
overrode President Neil Sessoms'<lb/>
veto of the Marching Pirates bill.<lb/>
Sessoms vetoed the bill last week,<lb/>
which was fa $7,706.<lb/>
SGA Treasurer Craig Hales<lb/>
endased the overriding of the<lb/>
veto in view of the fad that the<lb/>
SGA General Fund contains<lb/>
approximately $22,000, roughly<lb/>
$13,000 of which is antidpated<lb/>
Summer School revenue.<lb/>
Hales said the SGA could<lb/>
appropriate the Marching Pirates<lb/>
the $7,706, leaving "a oornforta-<lb/>
ble margin" fa future appropria-<lb/>
tions this year.<lb/>
The bill received the neces-<lb/>
sary two-thirds majaity vote to<lb/>
override the veto.<lb/>
A resolution was proposed to<lb/>
consider the addition of two new<lb/>
parking levels on the<lb/>
ECU campus. Funding fa these<lb/>
parking levels would come<lb/>
through an inaease in both<lb/>
student and faculty parking deceJ<lb/>
tees, which Secretary of audent<lb/>
Welfare Ed Beane said were<lb/>
considerably lees than parking<lb/>
decal fees at other UNC schools.<lb/>
A resolution was passed<lb/>
honoing Dr. Wellington B. Gray,<lb/>
who died last week of a heart<lb/>
attack. Dr. Gray was the Dean of<lb/>
the School of Art and had been<lb/>
with the School since 1966.<lb/>
Trippy Homes was appointed<lb/>
by the Screenings and Appoint-<lb/>
ments Committee to fill the Day<lb/>
Legistato poaKion vacated by<lb/>
Randy Bailey.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 December 1977<lb/>
Auditions Positions Lambda Chi<lb/>
Hawaii<lb/>
Reduced fee for Hawaii trip.<lb/>
Two places available at a reduc-<lb/>
tion of $50 per place. Were $489<lb/>
each, now $439. Contact Central<lb/>
Ticket Office at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center immediately.<lb/>
Anyone who would.be inter-<lb/>
ested in going on the Hawaii trip<lb/>
please contact Kirk Edgerton at<lb/>
752-1897 between 6 and 8 p.m<lb/>
Toy Drive<lb/>
Psi Chi and the ChildFamily<lb/>
Association are co-sponsoring a<lb/>
Christmas toy and book drive for<lb/>
the less fortunate 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 donations and<lb/>
mark with appropriate sexage. A<lb/>
large receiving box for donations<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/>
Yokefellow<lb/>
Volunteers needed. Come<lb/>
Thurs Dec. 8 to the Yokefellow<lb/>
Christmas Party at Maury Cor-<lb/>
rectional Camp. Rides are avail-<lb/>
able and everyone is welcome.<lb/>
We also need any baked goods or<lb/>
a large quantity of gifts (pens,<lb/>
pencils, etc.) for the men. Make<lb/>
Christmas a happy one for some<lb/>
lonely folks. For more informa-<lb/>
tion, contact Father Charles<lb/>
Mulholland. Newman Chaplin at<lb/>
758-1504 or oome to St. Gabriel's<lb/>
Church, 1120 W. 5th St. at 6:30<lb/>
p.m. Thurs.<lb/>
Choir<lb/>
Here's your chance to get into<lb/>
some early Christmas celebrating<lb/>
(before finals) and to experience<lb/>
the true meaning of Christmas<lb/>
plus a lot of fun.<lb/>
The SCEC is hosting the choir<lb/>
from Caswell Center. Everyone is<lb/>
invited to oome and share in the<lb/>
food, fun, and song.<lb/>
The performance by the choir,<lb/>
which is becoming an annual<lb/>
event at ECU, always holds<lb/>
something special for everyone<lb/>
involved. So, oome on out for an<lb/>
unforgetable evening. , See you<lb/>
there!<lb/>
Induction<lb/>
The fall induction of new<lb/>
members into the Gamma<lb/>
Chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma<lb/>
will be held at 4 p.m Wed Dec;<lb/>
7 in Mendenhall Center, room<lb/>
221.<lb/>
Student and faculty members<lb/>
of Beta Gamma Sigma and<lb/>
pareTits, spouses, and friends of<lb/>
members to be inducted are<lb/>
invited to attend. Light refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served after the<lb/>
induction ceremony.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
The SGA has two openings for<lb/>
dorm legislators. One seat is open<lb/>
in Fletcher and one in Belk.<lb/>
Applications are being taken in<lb/>
the SGA office on the second floor<lb/>
of Mendenhall. Screenings will be<lb/>
held Wed Dec. 7 at 4 p.m.<lb/>
AHP Test<lb/>
The Allied Health Professions<lb/>
Admission Test will be offered at<lb/>
ECU Sat Jan. 21, 1978. Applic-<lb/>
ation blanks are to be oompleted<lb/>
and mailed to the Psychological<lb/>
Corporation, P.O. Box 3540,<lb/>
Grand Central Station New Yak,<lb/>
New York 10017 to arrive by Dec.<lb/>
24, 1977. Applications may be<lb/>
obtained from the Testing Center,<lb/>
Room-105, Speight BIdg ECU.<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
The Graduate Record Exam-<lb/>
ination will be offered at ECU<lb/>
Sat Jan. 14, 1978. Application<lb/>
blanks are to be oompleted and<lb/>
mailed to Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, Box 966-R, Princeton,<lb/>
N.J. 08540 to arrive by Dec. 13,<lb/>
1977. Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the Testing Center,<lb/>
Room 105, Speight BIdgECU.<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Frank and Mike, two of a kind,<lb/>
demonstrate their talent by ap-<lb/>
pearing Dec. 8 and 9 at ECU's<lb/>
Coffeehouse. Shows begin at 9<lb/>
p.m. and 10 p.m. Public invited,<lb/>
only .50. Free refreshments<lb/>
Frank and Mike will perform<lb/>
classic, now, original and a great<lb/>
variety of Seals &amp; Croft.<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
The rehearsal for SOUlS<lb/>
fashion show Tues. will be in the<lb/>
Biology Auditorium, rm. 102,<lb/>
from 6 to 8. For additional<lb/>
information contact A rah<lb/>
Venable, 302 Clement Hall, 758-<lb/>
8120.<lb/>
King Youth<lb/>
The King Youth Fellowship<lb/>
will have a Christmas dinner<lb/>
Tues Dec. 6, at 6 p.m. at<lb/>
Parkers BBQ Resturant. This will<lb/>
be a Dutch dinner and all those<lb/>
interested in the KYF are invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
GMA<lb/>
The Graduate Management<lb/>
Admissions Test will be offered at<lb/>
ECU Sat Jan. 28, 1978. Applica-<lb/>
tion blanks are to be completed<lb/>
and mailed to Educational Test-<lb/>
ing Services, Box 966-R, Prince-<lb/>
ton, N.J. 08540 to arrive by<lb/>
January 6, 1978. Applications are<lb/>
also available at the Testing<lb/>
Center, Speight BIdg Room-105,<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Auditions for the third produc-<lb/>
tion in the current season of the<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse, Peter<lb/>
NichoTs The National Health, will<lb/>
be held on Dec. 8 and Dec. 12<lb/>
from 730 to 10:00 p.m. in the<lb/>
Drama Department's Studio<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Under the direction of Edgar<lb/>
R. Loessin, the play which -is<lb/>
being dedicated to ECU'S new<lb/>
Medical School is part satire and<lb/>
part life study of illness and the<lb/>
hospital routine. One critic has<lb/>
said it "leaves the audience half<lb/>
in tears and half slain with<lb/>
laughter<lb/>
The large cast involves 16 men<lb/>
and seven women. Loessin is<lb/>
urging both students and non-<lb/>
students to attend the auditions,<lb/>
especially since there are several<lb/>
excellent roles for mature males.<lb/>
Scripts for the play are on reserve<lb/>
in Joyner Library for study prior<lb/>
to auditioning. The play will run<lb/>
Feburary 25 through March 1 in<lb/>
the Studio Theatre.<lb/>
SociAnth<lb/>
The SociologyAnthropology<lb/>
club will sponsor a lecture Wed.<lb/>
night. Speaking will be Bill<lb/>
Brooks on his life in the French<lb/>
Foreign Legion. Afterwards, a<lb/>
Christmas Party will be held in<lb/>
the same room. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend this meeting.<lb/>
The meeting will be held in<lb/>
Brewster D-302 at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Again, all members, faculty and<lb/>
interested persons are urged to<lb/>
attend. Refreshments will be<lb/>
served at the party.<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
The Rebel literature deadline<lb/>
has been changed to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Thurs Dec. 15. All poetry,<lb/>
fiction, essays, and plays must be<lb/>
received by this deadline to be<lb/>
considered for publication in the<lb/>
magazine. Manuscripts may be<lb/>
mailed to The Rebel, Mendenhall<lb/>
ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834, or<lb/>
brought by the office in the<lb/>
publications center.<lb/>
Artwork for the Third Annual<lb/>
Rebel Art Show can be entered by<lb/>
registering each piece at The<lb/>
Rebel office or at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Information Desk. All artwork<lb/>
must be registered by 4 p.m. Jan.<lb/>
18 or it cannot be included in the<lb/>
show. For further details, call The<lb/>
Rebel office at 757-6502.<lb/>
Quilting<lb/>
The Quilting Club will meet at<lb/>
7:30 this Wed. evening, Dec. 7 in<lb/>
Brewster B-205. Come with ideas<lb/>
for more trips<lb/>
REAL<lb/>
REAL Crisis Center is begin-<lb/>
ning a course in crisis counseling<lb/>
this week. This is the course<lb/>
required for all REAL volunteer<lb/>
counselors but it is open to<lb/>
anyone wanting to take it. Con-<lb/>
tinuing education credit is award-<lb/>
ed through Pitt Tech. Come learn<lb/>
how to be of REAL help to people<lb/>
in need. For further information,<lb/>
call Mark Larew at REAL 758-<lb/>
HELP.<lb/>
There will be positions avail-<lb/>
able on the student residence hall<lb/>
staff for Spring Semester. These<lb/>
are for hall advisors, assistant<lb/>
residence advisors, and residence<lb/>
advisors.<lb/>
Any students who wishes to<lb/>
apply fa any of these positions,<lb/>
a fa FALL SEMESTER 1978,<lb/>
should oomplete an application as<lb/>
soon as possible. These can be<lb/>
obtained from your Residence<lb/>
Hall Administrata a the Office<lb/>
of the Associate Dean of Student<lb/>
Affairs, 214 Whichard Building.<lb/>
Requirements are full time enrol-<lb/>
lment, interest in and time fa the<lb/>
wak, and a minimum of a 2.5<lb/>
quality point average at the time<lb/>
you begin wak.<lb/>
You may apply fa wak in any<lb/>
female a ooed residence hall on<lb/>
campus. Applications fa Spring<lb/>
Semester should be completed<lb/>
and submitted by Dec. 9<lb/>
IMCSL<lb/>
The Nath Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature will meet Wed Dec.<lb/>
7 at 5 p.m. in room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall. This will be the last<lb/>
meeting before Christmas.<lb/>
Psi Chi<lb/>
The December 6 meeting of<lb/>
Psi Chi which was to be held at 7<lb/>
p.m. has been canceled due to<lb/>
upcoming exams and busy sched-<lb/>
ules.<lb/>
BSU<lb/>
Tues Dec. 6 at 5:30 p.m<lb/>
Christmas Dinner and Christmas<lb/>
music by BSU choir. At Baptist<lb/>
Student Union, 511 E. 10th St.<lb/>
(Dinner $1.50).<lb/>
AED<lb/>
An AED Pledge Meeting fa<lb/>
prospective members will be held<lb/>
Thurs Dec. 8, at 6 p.m. in room<lb/>
307 of the Chemistry BIdg. All<lb/>
Pre-med students interested are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Ski Trip<lb/>
Attention: Christmas Ski<lb/>
Group. All persons going to<lb/>
Beech Mountain must meet<lb/>
Thurs Dec. 8 at 7 p.m. fa final<lb/>
arrangements in room 105,<lb/>
Memaial Gym.<lb/>
Phi Beta<lb/>
There will be a Phi Beta<lb/>
Lambda meeting Wed Dec. 7 at<lb/>
4 p.m. All tickets must be at this<lb/>
meeting. We are encouraging all<lb/>
members to attend.<lb/>
Fencing<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/>
The Lambda Chi Alpha frater-<lb/>
nity will dribble a basketball<lb/>
between Greenville and Raleigh<lb/>
Dec. 16 and 17 the date of the<lb/>
ECU-N.C. State basketball game.<lb/>
The "dribble on" is the support<lb/>
of the rejuvenated Pirate basket-<lb/>
ball program. A washtub will be<lb/>
pulled along to accept contribu-<lb/>
tions to the ECU basketball<lb/>
program. Fa further infamatiai,<lb/>
contact Bruce Whitten a Bob<lb/>
Clark at the Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
fraternity house.<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Everyone 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 is a pasta in Johnson<lb/>
City, Term. He also has a radio<lb/>
program on a local station WBZQ<lb/>
which can be heard at 7.15 a.m.<lb/>
Tutoring<lb/>
Start preparation for final<lb/>
examinations now. Minority<lb/>
and a educationally disadvant-<lb/>
aged (regardlessof 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 for<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/>
Food Drive<lb/>
Get into the Christmas spirit<lb/>
and help a needy family. Bring<lb/>
canned a nai-perishable food<lb/>
items to either the lobby of<lb/>
Mendenhall a a girl's dam<lb/>
lobby. Spaisaed by the Salvation<lb/>
Army.<lb/>
FG<lb/>
The Faever Generatiai will<lb/>
now be meeting on Monday<lb/>
nights, if you've been wanting to<lb/>
oome 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, fa a good<lb/>
time of Christian fellowship and<lb/>
Bible study, why na plan on<lb/>
being there?<lb/>
Santa Claus<lb/>
Santa Claus will be at<lb/>
Mendenhall Snack Bar Wed. from<lb/>
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Everyone is<lb/>
invited to oome see Santa. Free<lb/>
Dr. Pepper patches will be given<lb/>
away.<lb/>
Sierra Club<lb/>
The Sierra Club will meet Dec.<lb/>
12 in the basement of the First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church at 8 p.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0003"/><lb/>
�MMHBUHBHnHBmiHHBHBI<lb/>
�i�an<lb/>
6D<lb/>
1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
N.C. Congressional Club honors Senator Helms<lb/>
Page<lb/>
By ROBERT SWA.IM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
Last Thursday night<lb/>
thousands of North Carolinians<lb/>
gathered at the Soott Pavillion on<lb/>
the N.C. state fairgrounds to<lb/>
honor U.S. Senator Jesse Helms<lb/>
at a dinner sponsored by the N.C.<lb/>
Conaressional Club, a bi-oartisan<lb/>
conservative organization.<lb/>
Many prominent North<lb/>
Carolinians were present, among<lb/>
them former N.C. State football<lb/>
coach Lou Holtz.<lb/>
 I came here to tell you I have<lb/>
the greatest respect for Senator<lb/>
Helms said Holtz.<lb/>
Holtz expressed his dissatis-<lb/>
faction with the federal govern-<lb/>
ment on several issues, one being<lb/>
prayer in the public schools.<lb/>
"I can't understand why the<lb/>
Senate starts out with a prayer<lb/>
but my children can't pray in<lb/>
school said Holtz.<lb/>
Holtz said he believes in a<lb/>
strong national defense, free<lb/>
enterprise, and honesty in gov-<lb/>
CIRCLE K CLUB rockathon was held on Evans<lb/>
Street Mall from 2 p.m. Fri Dec. 2 to 7p.m. Sat<lb/>
Dec. 3; $365.61 was raised and donated to the<lb/>
University United Fund Drive Chairperson Paul<lb/>
Breitman. (Left to right) Beth Goelz, Glenn Brock,<lb/>
Paul Breitman, Mike Bumgarner, Gregg Boykin<lb/>
(vicepresident of club) and Debbie Ooodson. Photo<lb/>
by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
ernment.<lb/>
A recent editonaJ in the<lb/>
Raleigh News and Observer crit-<lb/>
icized Holtz for this support of<lb/>
Helms. Responding to the editor-<lb/>
ial Holtz brought a oopy of the<lb/>
N&amp;O to the podium and ripped it<lb/>
to shreds to show his dissatisfac-<lb/>
tion with the newspaper.<lb/>
Senator Helms followed Holtz<lb/>
to the podium amidst much<lb/>
applause and a standing ovation.<lb/>
"The best thing I can tell you<lb/>
about the Senate is that if snot in<lb/>
session, so your liberties are safe<lb/>
fa the time being he said.<lb/>
Helms expressed dissatisfac-<lb/>
tion with the federal govern-<lb/>
ment's spending policies.<lb/>
"You'd better put your hand<lb/>
on your wallet when the Senate<lb/>
starts talking about reforming<lb/>
something said Helms.<lb/>
Helms was also critical of the<lb/>
national media.<lb/>
"The media worships at the<lb/>
shrine of those who vote for<lb/>
massive federal spending, said<lb/>
Helms.<lb/>
Helms said he supports a<lb/>
strong national defense second to<lb/>
none.<lb/>
"Strength istheonly thing the<lb/>
oommunist tyrants understand<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Helms commented on the<lb/>
Panama Canal Treaty and expres-<lb/>
sed his opposition to it.<lb/>
"I'm not going to give away<lb/>
the Panama Canal to a tin-horn<lb/>
Marxist dictator said Helms.<lb/>
"We bought it, we paid for it, and<lb/>
we're gang to keep it<lb/>
Helms said that weltare pay-<lb/>
ments should be limited to those<lb/>
who are physically unable to<lb/>
work.<lb/>
"If we get the loafers off of<lb/>
welfare then we can help the truly<lb/>
needy said Helms. "It's time<lb/>
we started thinking about the<lb/>
workers<lb/>
Helms also said he opposes<lb/>
foroed busing.<lb/>
"I'm against the foroed bus-<lb/>
ing of innocent children just to<lb/>
satisfy the whim of some federal<lb/>
bureaucrat said Helms. "I'm a<lb/>
North Carolinian who was tapped<lb/>
to go to Washington to represent<lb/>
some principles<lb/>
U.S. SENATOR JESSE Helms<lb/>
(R-NQ<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
Support The People Who Support You<lb/>
OVERTOILS: Gave To The ECU Foundation<lb/>
Gave $5,000 To Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
 Expansion<lb/>
ECU DOLLAR .00 i Are Members Of Pirate Club<lb/>
Supports ECU Athletics<lb/>
211<lb/>
Jarvis<lb/>
One Dollar Discount<lb/>
On $20.00 Food Order<lb/>
Name<lb/>
ID No.<lb/>
Limit One Per Customer<lb/>
Offers Expires Dec. 16<lb/>
50<lb/>
ECU HALF DOLLAR<lb/>
50<lb/>
211 Jarvis<lb/>
50 Discount On $10.00 Food Order<lb/>
Name<lb/>
ID No.<lb/>
Limit One Per Customer<lb/>
Offer Expires Dec. 16<lb/>
� Fresh Lean Ground Beef Patties<lb/>
99Vlb.<lb/>
� Pepsi-Colas 16 oz. Cartons of 8<lb/>
99 Plus Bottle Deposit<lb/>
Morrell<lb/>
T-Bone and Sirloin Steaks<lb/>
$1.49lb.<lb/>
� Oven Gold Bread 3 Long Loaves<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
i�MH<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0004"/><lb/>
I i<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 December 1977<lb/>
Thanks for the help<lb/>
By Spring Semester part of the visitation policy<lb/>
for ECU dormitories will be changed thanks to<lb/>
several concerned university administrators. These<lb/>
administrators derserve the student body's thanks<lb/>
for working so hard to keep students from drawing<lb/>
criminal records fa merely violating visitation hours.<lb/>
The present policy states that men and women<lb/>
found in each other's dorms during non-visitation<lb/>
hours will be charged with "trespassing The<lb/>
resident of the room in which the "trespasser" is<lb/>
found will be charged with "aiding and abetting<lb/>
These are criminal charges for which students are<lb/>
arrested by the Greenville city police, taken to jail,<lb/>
placed under bond and brought before court.<lb/>
The injustice in these policies lies in the fact that<lb/>
visitation policy for a university is a university<lb/>
problem and should be dealt with by the university.<lb/>
There is no reason why off-campus sources stiould be<lb/>
dragged into it and why students should have to carry<lb/>
a criminal record with them for the rest of their lives<lb/>
just because thev were caught in a dorm after<lb/>
visitation hours, if the person being visited doesn't<lb/>
mind the "violator" being there.<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum, Dean of Women and one of the<lb/>
administrators involved in changing this policy,<lb/>
recently said she, too, feels such violations should be<lb/>
handled by the university, not the Greenville pdioe.<lb/>
She also said that her main concern lies in unescorted<lb/>
men in the women's dorms, not those men who are<lb/>
invited into a woman's room during non-visitation<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
James Mallory, Dean of Men, agrees with<lb/>
Fulghum. He said he has been hoping this arrest<lb/>
system would be changed and anticipates that it will<lb/>
be.<lb/>
Dr. David Stevens, the university attorney, is<lb/>
spearheading the policy change, accompanied by Dr.<lb/>
Jjuiico lucker, Dean of Student Affairs, Joseph<lb/>
Calder, head of Campus Security, C.C. Row,<lb/>
assistant to the Dean of Men and Dean Fulghum.<lb/>
Mcourumy to Stevens, he and the others are<lb/>
working with the district attorney's office in order to<lb/>
find a reasonable compromise which will result in a<lb/>
change of policy. He said they will decide which<lb/>
specific cases should be handled by the university<lb/>
and which should be handled by the d.a's office.<lb/>
Again, the ECU administration deserves much<lb/>
thanks for showing such concern in the welfare of the<lb/>
student body.<lb/>
See FOUNTAINHEAD Thursday for the new<lb/>
visitation policy. <lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor war tUty ears.<lb/>
Senior Editor .Kjm J. Devins<lb/>
Production ManagerLeigh Coakley<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRo sn,<lb/>
�"� EditorCindy Broome<lb/>
Trends EditorDavid W. Trevino<lb/>
X)rts EtarChris Hdloman<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association of<lb/>
ECU and is distributed each Wednesday during the summer,<lb/>
and twice weekly during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
ECU graduation fee a bargain<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Having heard much grief<lb/>
concerning the ten dollar grad-<lb/>
uation fee, I took it upon myself to<lb/>
research this. After talking with<lb/>
ECU'S business manager, Mr.<lb/>
Julian Vainright, I am convinced<lb/>
that this fee is a bargain when it is<lb/>
compared with the cost of grad-<lb/>
uation at other schools.<lb/>
Most schools have what Mr.<lb/>
Vainright called a hidden fee. A<lb/>
hidden fee is exactly what the<lb/>
A tribute to Dr. Gray<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
As a former student of ECU, I<lb/>
would like to express my deepest<lb/>
sympathies to Mrs. Wellington<lb/>
Gray, the Art Dept Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins, the students, and art<lb/>
patrons, not only of Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, but of the state, nation,<lb/>
and world for the loss of Dr.<lb/>
Wellington B. Gray.<lb/>
It is indeed a great sorrow to<lb/>
hear of the death of such a great<lb/>
artist. This will affect the art of<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina as well as<lb/>
that of the world.<lb/>
I hope we can all recover in his<lb/>
memory and continue to create<lb/>
great things - be they in his<lb/>
manner, his intellect, his speech,<lb/>
his art, and most important, his<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Thank you for allowing me to<lb/>
pay tribute to such a great<lb/>
maestro<lb/>
With his hopes for the future<lb/>
I sign myself-Benevolently<lb/>
TimMcLecd<lb/>
Illiterate campus police?<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Just a word of caution - it<lb/>
appears that we have some<lb/>
illiterate campus police. One<lb/>
night a few weeks ago I received a<lb/>
parking ticket fa using my Day<lb/>
student sticker in an area marked<lb/>
"Staff Only, 8-8 I thought the<lb/>
sign said "8-5" but I paid the<lb/>
ticket anyway. Today I noticed<lb/>
that I was indeed correct - but it's<lb/>
now too late. No record is kept of<lb/>
the tickets so there is no chance<lb/>
for a refund.<lb/>
Please note that I have made<lb/>
no overt reference to "dishon-<lb/>
esty" or "maliciousness Just<lb/>
remember that these guys have<lb/>
been giving out tickets so long<lb/>
that it has become a habit that's<lb/>
too hard to break. At any rate -<lb/>
check your ticket before you pay<lb/>
because the cashier at the traffic<lb/>
office has informed me that there<lb/>
have been a whole lot of<lb/>
complaints along the same line.<lb/>
R.L.D.<lb/>
term implies. Each semester<lb/>
when students pay their fees, a<lb/>
portion of the graduation fee is<lb/>
hidden in with the oost of tuition.<lb/>
Students who go to schools who<lb/>
use a hidden fee end up paying<lb/>
some of their fees for graduation<lb/>
whether or not they graduate<lb/>
from that school. UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill has a hidden fee to oover<lb/>
graduation expenses and each<lb/>
student who graduates after<lb/>
going there four years ends up<lb/>
paying about $40.00 for grad-<lb/>
uation.<lb/>
The graduation fee has been<lb/>
ten dollars at ECU at least for the<lb/>
past 24 years. These fees are used<lb/>
to purchase caps and gowns,<lb/>
diplomas, and flowers. Other<lb/>
expenses include bringing in<lb/>
dignitaries to speak and to pay<lb/>
for the labor involved in setting<lb/>
up and running the ceremonies.<lb/>
The labor includes parking<lb/>
attendants, police used for traffic<lb/>
control, people to set-up the band<lb/>
shell, chairs, and people to set-up<lb/>
and run the sound system. The<lb/>
graduation band isalsc oaid. The<lb/>
1977 graduation cerenx lies cost<lb/>
$12,860.06.<lb/>
I hope this letter hasanswered<lb/>
some of the questions concerning<lb/>
the graduation fee. Incidently,<lb/>
graduating seniors who haven't<lb/>
paid the graduation fee or haven't<lb/>
completed their senior summary<lb/>
sheets need to do so in order to<lb/>
graduate. The deadline to do this<lb/>
is near.<lb/>
Mark A. Snyder<lb/>
President, Senior Class<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0005"/><lb/>
b December 1977 FOUKTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Senatorial candidate Hodges to speak here today<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
United States Senate Candi-<lb/>
date Luther Hodges Jr. will<lb/>
attend an informal reception at<lb/>
530 this afternoon in Greenville's<lb/>
Ramada Inn. The reception will<lb/>
be open to the public and all<lb/>
interested persons are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Hodges is scheduled to appear<lb/>
on the ECU campus Jan. 16 to<lb/>
meet with students and speak to<lb/>
various student organizations.<lb/>
Hodges will spend the entire day<lb/>
in Greenville as part of his<lb/>
campaign fa office.<lb/>
Hodges, 40, was born in<lb/>
Leaksville (now Eden), North<lb/>
Carolina on November 19.<lb/>
His father, the late Luther H.<lb/>
Hodges, was governor here from<lb/>
1953 to 1960, and Secretary of<lb/>
Commeroe during the Kennedy<lb/>
administration.<lb/>
A graduate of UNC at Chapel<lb/>
Hill, Hodges was a regional<lb/>
finalist for a Rhodes Scholarship.<lb/>
After college, he went on<lb/>
active duty as a lieutenant in the<lb/>
U.S Naval Reserve.<lb/>
Hodges then joined the faculty<lb/>
of the UNC School of Business<lb/>
Administration. One year later,<lb/>
he began his career with North<lb/>
Carolina National Bank.<lb/>
He became a chairman of<lb/>
the board of the bank in 1974, at<lb/>
the age of 37. NCNB is the largest<lb/>
financial institution in the South-<lb/>
east.<lb/>
Scholarship to be<lb/>
awarded to eligible<lb/>
junior English major<lb/>
By RICHY SMITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Russell Christman<lb/>
Memorial Scholarship will be<lb/>
awarded to an eligible junior<lb/>
English major next semester by<lb/>
the English Department at ECU.<lb/>
Applicatior and reccomend-<lb/>
ationsfor the j nolarship are now<lb/>
being receive by the English<lb/>
Department, xxxding to Dr.<lb/>
Erwin Hester, chairperson of the<lb/>
department.<lb/>
The scholarship was establish-<lb/>
ed in memory of Russell<lb/>
Christman, an instructor at ECU<lb/>
who died in a single-car accident<lb/>
two years ago<lb/>
The fund was established<lb/>
almost immediately after the<lb/>
death of Christman in 1976,<lb/>
according to Dr. Hester.<lb/>
"The scholarship is derived<lb/>
mainly from funds of friends,<lb/>
family, and faculty at ECU Dr.<lb/>
Hester said.<lb/>
Other criteria for selecting the<lb/>
recipient are academic achieve-<lb/>
ment, potential in the field of<lb/>
English, and involvement in<lb/>
extracurricular activities.<lb/>
A committee of Dr. Erwin<lb/>
Hester, Dr. David Sanders, and<lb/>
Larry O'Keefe will make the<lb/>
selection.<lb/>
The scholarship is for one<lb/>
academic year and is for an<lb/>
undetermined amount of money.<lb/>
The interest on the scholarship<lb/>
fund provides the money for the<lb/>
award.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
N. Cs No. 3 Night Club<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
voted Atlanta's<lb/>
No. 1 Band<lb/>
(1976-1977)<lb/>
LUTHER HODGES JR can-<lb/>
didate fa the U.S. Senate.<lb/>
Wed. &amp; Thurs.<lb/>
Dec. 7 &amp; 8<lb/>
We Buy<lb/>
Diamonds<lb/>
and<lb/>
Old Gold.<lb/>
Pnone: 758-2452<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson Jeweler<lb/>
Downtown QreenvIHe<lb/>
an the mall<lb/>
From Cinn.f Ohio SPI KE<lb/>
FriSatSun.<lb/>
Dec. 9,10,11<lb/>
PLEASE HELP INSURE THE<lb/>
CONTINUATION OF THE<lb/>
YEARBOOK TRADITION AT ECU!<lb/>
 'Jlllllk BUC office<lb/>
A photographer will be here<lb/>
from Tuesday, February 14th<lb/>
through Friday, February 24th<lb/>
from 9:00-5:00 in the BUC office.<lb/>
It doesn't cost you a cent to have<lb/>
your picture taken<lb/>
there's NO SITTING FEEI<lb/>
There will be no wait if you'll<lb/>
make an APPOINTMENT-EARLYI<lb/>
Cafl Now! Don't delay.<lb/>
Group pictures will also be taken<lb/>
at the same time. If your group<lb/>
doesn't receive an information<lb/>
sheet by January 15th call the<lb/>
BUC office.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 December 1977<lb/>
ECU students investigate serious plant infestation<lb/>
By DAVID CHRISMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Five ECU students are<lb/>
currently investigating a serious<lb/>
plant infestation in eastern N.C.<lb/>
waters, according to Dr. Graham<lb/>
Davis, ECU biology professor.<lb/>
Davis, local director of the<lb/>
project, said the students are<lb/>
investigating an infestation of<lb/>
coastal waters by eurasjan water<lb/>
The project's study area is<lb/>
Currituok Sound.<lb/>
"Milfoil is a nuisance in a<lb/>
number of ways Davis said.<lb/>
"The plant's tough stems foul �<lb/>
boat propellers making areas of<lb/>
heavy infestation unsuitable for<lb/>
fishing or waterskiing<lb/>
"Storms break the weeds up<lb/>
and huge mats of milfoil wash up<lb/>
on beaches. These mats decay<lb/>
and spoil swimming and access to<lb/>
Art &amp; Camera Shop<lb/>
526 SOUTH COTANCHE STREET GREENVILLE, N. C. 27834<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
12 Exp. Color Film<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
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$2.49<lb/>
Not Included<lb/>
VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
I MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER I<lb/>
piers.<lb/>
"People in other states have<lb/>
been drowned, apparently when<lb/>
they got tangled up in the<lb/>
plants he said.<lb/>
Eurasian watermilfoil, native<lb/>
to Europe and Asia, was released<lb/>
in this country in the 1880's. It<lb/>
spread south from New Jersey to<lb/>
the Potomac in 1933 and upper<lb/>
Chesapeake Bay in the early<lb/>
1950s.<lb/>
CURRITUCK SOUND<lb/>
Small patches of the weed<lb/>
were first noticed in Currituck<lb/>
Sound In 1964. Today 60 per cent<lb/>
of the Sound's 100,000 acres is<lb/>
infested.<lb/>
Previous studies have shown<lb/>
that milfoil can be controlled bythe<lb/>
herbicide 2,4D.<lb/>
Funded under a five part N.C.<lb/>
Sea Grant, the ECU team is<lb/>
helping to find alternatives to the<lb/>
use of chemicals.<lb/>
Donald Gray, graduate<lb/>
student explained the project.<lb/>
"If we can prove milfoil to be<lb/>
useful in some way, then we can<lb/>
control it economically by mech-<lb/>
anical mowing and harvesting<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
"That way the control method<lb/>
would pay for itself Carey said.<lb/>
Other teams funded by the<lb/>
grant are investigating the effect<lb/>
of milfoil on fish and insects, the<lb/>
impact of the weed on local<lb/>
economics and its potential as a<lb/>
livestock feed or fertilizer.<lb/>
The work of the ECU group is<lb/>
laying the foundation for all of<lb/>
these areas, accordina to Davis.<lb/>
"In a sense we're involved in<lb/>
everything said Davis. "We<lb/>
want to find out how much milfoil<lb/>
there is in the sound, how fast it<lb/>
grows back after cutting, and<lb/>
what the nutritional value is<lb/>
Other students involved be-<lb/>
sides Carey are Ron Garner, a<lb/>
graduate student, Ray Jones,<lb/>
Kathy Crew, and Kirk Sydor.<lb/>
Commissioners vote not to<lb/>
approve proposed ordinance<lb/>
)UPON<lb/>
20 Exp. Color Film<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
� Kodacoior<lb/>
� OAF<lb/>
� Fugi<lb/>
(Foreign Film<lb/>
Not Included<lb/>
$3.49<lb/>
VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER'<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
MOVIE OR SLIDE<lb/>
Ektachrome or Kodachrome Processing<lb/>
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Slidee<lb/>
110.<lb/>
126 or<lb/>
135<lb/>
VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
I MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER1<lb/>
ByTHOMASKEENE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Pitt County Board of<lb/>
Commissioners last week voted<lb/>
not to approve a proposed solid<lb/>
waste ordinance that would have<lb/>
granted exclusive franchises to<lb/>
area haulers.<lb/>
According to Larry Hurlocker,<lb/>
county planner, there was no<lb/>
argument in favor of the proposed<lb/>
ordinance which was voted down<lb/>
unaminously Monday, Nov. 28.<lb/>
Hurlocker said the County<lb/>
Commissioners have decided to<lb/>
go with a system of solid waste<lb/>
disposal that involves the placing<lb/>
of 40 cubic-yard metal containers<lb/>
throughout the county.<lb/>
The Commissioners directed<lb/>
me to go ahead with the implem-<lb/>
entation of the metal container<lb/>
system" said Hurlocker.<lb/>
The proposed ordinance which<lb/>
was voted down would have<lb/>
divided the county into 10 sub-<lb/>
divisions with each being served<lb/>
by an independent hauler.<lb/>
The proposed ordinance met<lb/>
heavy opposition when it was<lb/>
presented to the public during an<lb/>
open hearing November 15.<lb/>
Most of the opposition came<lb/>
from residents of subdivisions<lb/>
who are content with the services<lb/>
they are now receiving.<lb/>
Of ambulatory pediatric medicine<lb/>
Dillard new assoc. director<lb/>
PLAZA CAMERA<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Dr. Robert P. Dillard has been<lb/>
appointed associate director of<lb/>
Ambulatory Pediatric Medicine in<lb/>
the ECU School of Medicine,<lb/>
according to Dr. Jon B.<lb/>
Tingelstad, chairman of Pedia-<lb/>
trics.<lb/>
Dr. Dillard will assist in the<lb/>
development of the pediatric<lb/>
ambulatory care program and will<lb/>
also teach pediatrics to residents<lb/>
and medical students. His<lb/>
primary interests are nutrition,<lb/>
growth and development, and<lb/>
endocrine disorders.<lb/>
Dr. Dillard, 36, currently in<lb/>
private practice in Tampa, Fla<lb/>
will assume his position with the<lb/>
School of Medicine December 1.<lb/>
Dr. Dillard received his under-<lb/>
graduate degree from Trans-<lb/>
ylavania University. Lexington,<lb/>
Ky and his MD fom the<lb/>
fc�<lb/>
�&amp;<lb/>
Western Sizzlin<lb/>
Steak House<lb/>
� The Family Steak House<lb/>
U.S. Choice Beef Cut Fresh Daily!<lb/>
Wednesday December 7<lb/>
Lunch &amp; Dinner Special<lb/>
11 oz. Sirloin Steak<lb/>
University of Kentucky College of<lb/>
Mediane.<lb/>
Dr. Dillard received his under-<lb/>
graduate degree from Trans-<lb/>
ylvania Univensty, Lexington,<lb/>
Ky and his MD from the<lb/>
University of Kentucky College of<lb/>
Mediane.<lb/>
He took his residency in<lb/>
pediatrics at the University of<lb/>
Oklahoma Medical Center in<lb/>
Oklahoma City. Following a two-<lb/>
year tour of duty in the Navy, he<lb/>
established his practice in<lb/>
Tampa.<lb/>
Dr. Dillard is an associate<lb/>
clinical professor of pediatrics at<lb/>
the University of South Florida<lb/>
College of Medicine and a<lb/>
diplomat of the American Board<lb/>
of Pediatrics.<lb/>
SHOESHOP<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER G0006<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 WM�hSt<lb/>
m&amp;<lb/>
Served With<lb/>
Idaho King Baked Potato<lb/>
or French Fries &amp; Texas Toast.<lb/>
$3.29<lb/>
Iron Horse Trading Co.<lb/>
Merchants and Craftman in<lb/>
Fine Jewelry<lb/>
On the Mall<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
All For<lb/>
For Take Out Call 758-2712<lb/>
PLAKTieu<lb/>
Whiteware-Ready To Paint<lb/>
Downtown Evans Street Mall<lb/>
Open Evenings<lb/>
752-0761<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0007"/><lb/>
������������������iHlHIMHIMBBi<lb/>
6 December 1977 FOUNTAINHEAP Page 7<lb/>
Dr. Wiggers named consultant to Med School<lb/>
By GEORGETTE HEDRICK<lb/>
ECU Medical Writer<lb/>
When Dr. Harold C. Wiggers<lb/>
came to Greenville to have<lb/>
Thanksgiving dinner with his<lb/>
daughter's family in 1974, he was<lb/>
dean of the Albany Medical<lb/>
College.<lb/>
When he returned to New<lb/>
York, he had another title to add<lb/>
to his long list of academic<lb/>
distinctions - consultant to the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine, a<lb/>
position that two months later<lb/>
turned into an offer to serve as<lb/>
acting dean for ECU'S new<lb/>
four-year medical program.<lb/>
Dr. Wiggers ended his two-<lb/>
and-a-half-year affiliation with<lb/>
the school this fall. It was an<lb/>
association that saw him first as a<lb/>
consultant, then as acting dean<lb/>
and finally as a senior consultant<lb/>
to the present dean, Dr. William<lb/>
E. Laupus.<lb/>
The distinguished medical ad-<lb/>
mmistrator first became interest-<lb/>
ed in the budding ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine through his daughter,<lb/>
Mrs. Janet Woodworth, wife of<lb/>
Greenville physician, Dr. Al<lb/>
Woodworth.<lb/>
It was during a memorable<lb/>
Thanksgiving vacation with them<lb/>
three years ago that Dr. Wiggers<lb/>
was introduced to Dr. Edwin W.<lb/>
Monroe, Vice-Chancellor for<lb/>
Health Affairs at ECU. Monroe<lb/>
asked Wiggers to serve as a<lb/>
consultant for the school.<lb/>
In January Dr. Monroe<lb/>
amended the request on behalf of<lb/>
the university and invited Dr.<lb/>
Wiggers to be acting dean.<lb/>
In that role Wiggers assisted<lb/>
in recruiting Dr. Laupus as the<lb/>
permanent dean for the School of<lb/>
Medicine. He also had a strong<lb/>
Unionism too<lb/>
controversial<lb/>
for KTVT<lb/>
(LNS)-Apparently unionism<lb/>
is still too controversial an issue<lb/>
for television station KTVT in<lb/>
Fort Worth, Texas.<lb/>
The station-a subsidary of the<lb/>
Oklahoma City's Publishing<lb/>
Company, which in turn owns<lb/>
Oklahoma City's arch-conserva-<lb/>
tive Daily Oklahoman-recenUy<lb/>
refused to sell 30 seconds of air<lb/>
time to the AFL-C10 fa a Labor,<lb/>
Day spot detailing the achieve-<lb/>
ments of working people.<lb/>
Thirty-two Texas stations did<lb/>
run the ad-but KTVT sales<lb/>
staffer, told the agency that his<lb/>
firm's legal department would not<lb/>
approve the broadcasting of a<lb/>
spot that opened.<lb/>
"Fa over half a century,<lb/>
union laba has been making life<lb/>
easier fa people in Texas<lb/>
"It seems that AT&amp;T can<lb/>
assert on television that its<lb/>
system is the solution noted a<lb/>
repater fa the Texas Observer<lb/>
an alternative newspaper in<lb/>
Austin, "And Pepsioo that it's<lb/>
product tastes like love but<lb/>
KTVT was na about to let the<lb/>
AFL-CIO make such a controver-<lb/>
sial statement unless it could be<lb/>
suppated by facts<lb/>
role in the selection of the<lb/>
school's department chairmen,<lb/>
always key positions in a growing<lb/>
medical school.<lb/>
He assisted greatly in initiat-<lb/>
ing the affiliationbetween the Pitt<lb/>
County Memaial Hospital and<lb/>
the School of Medicine. He also<lb/>
accelerated preliminary activities<lb/>
fa the accreditation which was<lb/>
granted the school last April.<lb/>
When Dr. Laupus assumed<lb/>
leadership in July, 1975, Wiggers<lb/>
became his senia consultant. He<lb/>
ooadinated the Center fa hduca-<lb/>
tional Development and Evalua-<lb/>
tion and the Center fa Student<lb/>
Oppatunities, suppat units fa<lb/>
disadvantaged medical school<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"My experience here has<lb/>
been wonderful says Wiggers.<lb/>
"I often thought it would be a<lb/>
privilege to be dean of a new<lb/>
medical school, an exciting ad-<lb/>
venture with fascinating and<lb/>
far-reaching possibilities<lb/>
"ECU offered an ideal situa-<lb/>
tion fa building a program which<lb/>
will have a profound influence not<lb/>
only on the quality and diversity<lb/>
of available medical services, but<lb/>
also on the economy and life style<lb/>
of the people in Pitt County and<lb/>
Eastern Carolina<lb/>
Dr. Wiggers, a physiologist,<lb/>
has been "a PhD in a wald of<lb/>
MD's" and thinks of himself<lb/>
primarily as a medical educata.<lb/>
He was dean of Albany<lb/>
Medical College fa 21 years and<lb/>
served as the chairman of the<lb/>
school's Department of Physio-<lb/>
logy and Pharmacology fa eight<lb/>
years. He also taught at Case<lb/>
Western Reserve University, the<lb/>
University of Illinois and<lb/>
Columbia University.<lb/>
"Nowa part of me will always<lb/>
be at ECU, and I look faward to<lb/>
seeing the school develop into a<lb/>
medical center providing<lb/>
primary, secondary and tertiary<lb/>
care<lb/>
When Dr. Wiggers and his<lb/>
wife, Virginia, retire to Flaida.<lb/>
he plansto write his philosophy of<lb/>
medical education.<lb/>
Dr. Wiggers has enjoyed<lb/>
living in Greenville.<lb/>
"Thefriendly and progressive<lb/>
tone of the city influences my<lb/>
decision to join the medical school<lb/>
team, and I found it an easy city<lb/>
to sell to visiting profesaas when<lb/>
I was recruiting prospective<lb/>
faculty members<lb/>
Dr. Wiggers isn't pleased,<lb/>
however, with the timing of his<lb/>
move from Greenville because he<lb/>
will miss the Pirate basketball<lb/>
season.<lb/>
But he has already planned a<lb/>
month-long visit in Greenville<lb/>
next fall to catch some Pirate<lb/>
football action.<lb/>
U<lb/>
1<lb/>
little (jimtmi'isgftfnimjfunices<lb/>
During the Christmas Season, we'd like to give you two big beautiful<lb/>
Roast Beef Sandwiches for a dollar. Slow cooked, sliced thin, piled high and<lb/>
juicy, with your choice of three tangy sauces.<lb/>
Take this coupon to any participating Hardees and try two delicious<lb/>
Roast Beef Sandwiches for a dollar. Its Hardees way of saying Merry Christmas.<lb/>
z terry Qristmas!<lb/>
When youhqtwoastefndwiclie<lb/>
you pay only $1.<lb/>
Good at all participating Hardees.<lb/>
One coupon per customer, please. Customer must pay<lb/>
any sales tax. This coupon is not good in<lb/>
combination with anv other offers.<lb/>
t� Hardees Food Systems. Inc 1977<lb/>
Vfocdeex<lb/>
Coupon expire<lb/>
Dec.<lb/>
Haideex<lb/>
T<lb/>
msmmsm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0008"/><lb/>
Hm FOUWTAiNHEAD 6 December 1977<lb/>
Four examinations to be offered every month<lb/>
Dental auxiliary exams to be held at Speight<lb/>
ECU announced last week that<lb/>
four new examinations in the field<lb/>
of dental auxiliary education will<lb/>
be administered as part of the<lb/>
College-Level Examination Pro-<lb/>
gram (CLEP) during the third<lb/>
week of every month at the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight Building,<lb/>
room 105.<lb/>
The 45-minute examinations<lb/>
in oral radiography-head, neck,<lb/>
and oral anatomy - tooth morpho-<lb/>
logy and function, and dental<lb/>
materials are the newest series of<lb/>
examination in CLEP. the nation-<lb/>
al program sponsored by the<lb/>
College Entrance Examination<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
People who have learned<lb/>
on their own-on the job. through<lb/>
military training, in non-credit<lb/>
courses, at home�may take CLEP<lb/>
examinations in 47 professional<lb/>
and college subjects and 5 CLEP<lb/>
General Examinations in the<lb/>
basic liberal arts.<lb/>
ECU isone of more than 1,800<lb/>
colleges and universities that<lb/>
accept CLEP credit today. The<lb/>
cost to the student is $20 for one<lb/>
exam, $30 for two, and $40 fa<lb/>
three or more.<lb/>
The new dental examinations<lb/>
like the other CLEP examinations<lb/>
can help students advance more<lb/>
rapidly through a dental auxiliary<lb/>
curriculum and become certified<lb/>
or licensed m the dental field<lb/>
without duplication of training.<lb/>
Jane, for example, has worked as<lb/>
a dental assistant for several<lb/>
years, but plans to go back to<lb/>
school to learn new knowledge<lb/>
and skills to advance further in<lb/>
her profession.<lb/>
Rather than repeat courses in<lb/>
subjects that she already knows a<lb/>
great deal about from years of<lb/>
experience in the dental office,<lb/>
Jane can demonstrate her know-<lb/>
ledge on the CLEP examinations<lb/>
and move on to new and advanced<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
The test will be valuable to<lb/>
people who have acquired skills<lb/>
and knowledge in dental labor-<lb/>
atory technology and dental<lb/>
hygiene, as well as in dental<lb/>
assisting.<lb/>
The new tests were developed<lb/>
under the joint auspices of the<lb/>
American Dental Association's<lb/>
Council on Dental Education, the<lb/>
College Entrance Examination<lb/>
Board, and the Educational Test-<lb/>
ing Service with funds from the<lb/>
W.K. Kellogg Foundation of<lb/>
Battle Creek, Michigan.<lb/>
'Karen Silkwood Day' sees<lb/>
activists protesting findings<lb/>
(LNS)-November 1ji narked<lb/>
the third year since the death of<lb/>
Karen Silkwood, a worker at an<lb/>
Oklahoma plutomium factory who<lb/>
was killed in a suspicious car<lb/>
accident after she had investi-<lb/>
gated the plant's safety condi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
At a "Karen Silkwood Day"<lb/>
rally in New York City, 40<lb/>
activists gathered to protest what<lb/>
they considered to be inconclu-<lb/>
sive findings of a Congressional<lb/>
investigation of Silkwood's death.<lb/>
Speakers discussed the dan-<lb/>
gers posed by safety violations in<lb/>
the plant's production of radio-<lb/>
active materials.<lb/>
Before her death, Silkwood, a<lb/>
union organizer, had charged that<lb/>
the Kerr-McGee plutonium pro-<lb/>
cessing plant she worked at in<lb/>
Crescent, Oklahoma had strayed<lb/>
so far from federal regulations on<lb/>
plant safety that it posed a danger<lb/>
to its workers and the public.<lb/>
" TJ<lb/>
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Construct the mystery word in the boxes be-<lb/>
low. To do this you must fill in the correct miss-<lb/>
ing letter in each of the words listed in the<lb/>
columns. Then transfer the missing letters to<lb/>
the corresponding numbered boxes. Keep<lb/>
an eraser handy�it s not as easy as it looks!<lb/>
1 CAE 5 PAL<lb/>
2 BET 6 BAE<lb/>
3 CAL<lb/>
4 BA<lb/>
7 BAS<lb/>
8 FAE<lb/>
9 WAN<lb/>
10. FA<lb/>
11 TRAI<lb/>
When there's a challenge,<lb/>
quality makes the difference.<lb/>
We hope you have some fun with the challenge<lb/>
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee,<lb/>
beer capital of the world<lb/>
That s why wed like to offer you another challenge<lb/>
�the Pabst challenge Taste and compare Pabst Blue<lb/>
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because Blue Ribbon quality means the best-tasting beer<lb/>
you can get Since 1844 it always has.<lb/>
Blue Ribbon<lb/>
PABST Since 1844.The quality has always come through.<lb/>
Plutonium, a deadly radio-<lb/>
active material, is known to cause<lb/>
cancer, even in minute amounts.<lb/>
On the evening of the fatal car<lb/>
accident, Slkwood was driving to<lb/>
meet New York Times reporter<lb/>
David Burnham and a representa-<lb/>
tive of the Oil, Chemical and<lb/>
Atomic Workers International<lb/>
(OCAW), bringing with her docu-<lb/>
ments on the lax safety precau-<lb/>
tions for handling plutonium at<lb/>
Kerr-McGee.<lb/>
The documents, which a co-<lb/>
worker saw Silkwood take with<lb/>
her, disappeared in the crash and<lb/>
have never been recovered.<lb/>
Kerr-McGee officials were the<lb/>
first to arrive on the scene after<lb/>
the accident.<lb/>
The Oklahoma Highway Pa-<lb/>
trol called the crash "an acci-<lb/>
dent stating that Silkwood had<lb/>
"fallen asleep at the wheel<lb/>
However, an investigation<lb/>
conducted by OCAW disputed<lb/>
police officials' claim. OCAW's<lb/>
investigation concluded that ano-<lb/>
ther car deliberately faced her<lb/>
off the road.<lb/>
Recently, Silkwood's allega-<lb/>
tions were confirmed by two<lb/>
former department heads at<lb/>
Kerr-McGee. In the October 20<lb/>
issue of Rotting Stone, Jim Smith<lb/>
and Jerry Cooper described the<lb/>
company's "devil may care"<lb/>
attitude toward nuclear safety,<lb/>
before and after the death of<lb/>
Silkwood.<lb/>
"We were told to operate or<lb/>
else Smith declared. "We<lb/>
didn't have a choioe<lb/>
Cooper had worked with the<lb/>
company for eleven years before<lb/>
he was transferred to the pluto-<lb/>
nium plant-a month after Silk-<lb/>
wood's death-m an attempt to<lb/>
improve safety conditions.<lb/>
He said that he was surprised<lb/>
by Kerr McGee's lack of commit-<lb/>
ment to specialized handling of<lb/>
the radioactive substance.<lb/>
"They thought of plutonium<lb/>
as if it were no different than oil<lb/>
The whole place was one big<lb/>
leak Smith added. "Every time<lb/>
you turned around there was<lb/>
another leak<lb/>
Smith and Cooper also spoke<lb/>
about the plant's haphazard<lb/>
handling outside the plant, when<lb/>
disposing of left-over liquid plu-<lb/>
tonium.<lb/>
They had a hell of a<lb/>
problem Cooper said, referring<lb/>
to the transporting of the liquid.<lb/>
"It 5ometimes leaked out of<lb/>
the barrels before the truck pulled<lb/>
out of the plant<lb/>
Truck drivers dumping the<lb/>
Plutonium sometimes had to race<lb/>
the entire 300 miles to the<lb/>
delivery site in Kentucky before<lb/>
holes in the barrels started to<lb/>
spotit.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0009"/><lb/>
Multi-media effects have little relevance<lb/>
6 December 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
The Skin of Our Teeth proves mediocre<lb/>
By SUE ELLEN MclEOD<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
Thornton Wilder's play, The<lb/>
Skin of Our Teeth, supposedly<lb/>
t races the journey of the Antrobus<lb/>
family throughout history. An<lb/>
interesting thought, unfortun-<lb/>
ately, Wilder'sideaof tracing the<lb/>
family consists of naming<lb/>
members of the family Cain and<lb/>
A be I (deceased), and including<lb/>
walk on characters such as tM<lb/>
judge Moses, and a blind poet,<lb/>
Homer. A Pulitzer prize winning<lb/>
play, The Skin of Our Teeth is<lb/>
unfortunately dates in the sense<lb/>
that what was once novelty is no<lb/>
longer, making the play a poor<lb/>
choice for production.<lb/>
The multi-media effect failed<lb/>
to make any great addition to the<lb/>
play itself. The opening film<lb/>
sequences did acquaint the aud-<lb/>
ience with the main characters,<lb/>
but the feather-duster scene,<lb/>
which began the play proper,<lb/>
provided the same information.<lb/>
There was little interdependence<lb/>
between the film sequences and<lb/>
the script and stage movements,<lb/>
which tended to make the film<lb/>
sequences appear : superfluous<lb/>
rather than serviceable- The<lb/>
insertion of slides and dialogue<lb/>
concerning Greenville was equal-<lb/>
ly unnecessary.<lb/>
Another failing of the film<lb/>
sequences concerned their<lb/>
manner of projection. Two of the<lb/>
screens were blocked by railing<lb/>
from the set, forcing the audience<lb/>
to view the film through the set.<lb/>
This obstruction was totally un-<lb/>
necessary as the film was small<lb/>
enough in size to be raised a few<lb/>
inches and still be visible from the<lb/>
audience. Also, the three project-<lb/>
ors were not synchronized. When<lb/>
sildes were used, the changes<lb/>
occured arbitrarily instead of in a<lb/>
particular order. At one point the<lb/>
slides seemed to be fading out<lb/>
one by one, but the final slide<lb/>
remained. The effect created was<lb/>
very erratic and haphazard.<lb/>
Two completely detailed sets<lb/>
were used in the play, which<lb/>
required a good twenty minutes<lb/>
to be switched. The time involved<lb/>
seems unnecessary. Aside from<lb/>
greatly lengthening the play, the<lb/>
scene changes revealed all areas<lb/>
of the stage including barren<lb/>
used as a final effect on the<lb/>
boardwalk set was oommendable.<lb/>
The weather light on stage,<lb/>
however, was another situation.<lb/>
Only one light worked where four<lb/>
were needed.<lb/>
Ella Gerber's attempt to up-<lb/>
date Wilder's play by the use of<lb/>
major role of mind and audienoe<lb/>
confidante. A tremendous<lb/>
amount of work is apparent in<lb/>
Holmes' performance. An actress<lb/>
with great promise, her character<lb/>
work is almost undone by her<lb/>
conaous efforts to emote.<lb/>
Gladys, played by Holly<lb/>
Playhouse production of Thorton<lb/>
walls and fly ropes. While<lb/>
Edward Harnes' sets were work-<lb/>
able and pleasing once in place, it<lb/>
seems that the long set changes<lb/>
could have been avoided with the<lb/>
sets which could move more easily<lb/>
within the space McGinnis has to<lb/>
offer. It isoften necessary to work<lb/>
most efficiently with what is<lb/>
available than to attempt a goal<lb/>
without the basic elements need-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
The electricians seemed to<lb/>
have problems themselves. The<lb/>
basic lighting for the sets was<lb/>
sufficient, although a special flair<lb/>
Wilder's "The<lb/>
Skin of Our Teeth" will start tonight at 8:15 in<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium. Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
multi-media effects failed to make<lb/>
the desired results because of<lb/>
weak connections between the<lb/>
film sequences and the play itself.<lb/>
Gerber's direction of movement,<lb/>
however, was beautiful. The<lb/>
animal movements were delight-<lb/>
ful. The illusion of their existence<lb/>
was enhanced by the costumes of<lb/>
Maria Jurlanis, which were creat-<lb/>
ive, diverse, and serviceable<lb/>
throughout the play. Gerber's<lb/>
direction of movement and action<lb/>
concerning the children was also<lb/>
ingenious when put to use. A few<lb/>
problems in direction appeared in<lb/>
movements which blocked the<lb/>
speaker and with a scene which<lb/>
took place behind furniture,<lb/>
blocking the actors from the<lb/>
audience's view.<lb/>
Sabrina, played by Shauna<lb/>
Holmes, carried the play in the<lb/>
Jereme, was a delightful child in<lb/>
thought, action, and movement.<lb/>
Her transition from a girl in<lb/>
crinolines to a woman with a baby<lb/>
was remarkably well done.<lb/>
The parents of the Ant robus<lb/>
family, Maggie, portrayed by<lb/>
Hazel Stapelton, and George,<lb/>
John Ribbons, were well-versed<lb/>
in their respective roles of<lb/>
motherhood and progressive pro-<lb/>
vider.<lb/>
Gary Carter portrayed Henry,<lb/>
whose perpetual scowl must have<lb/>
been as tiring physically as it was<lb/>
mentally. He seemed unable to<lb/>
maintain a believable character-<lb/>
ization throughout.<lb/>
The third act suffered from<lb/>
botched lines in almost every<lb/>
corner. The fact that the program<lb/>
listed neither seperate acts nor<lb/>
intermissions, made it a toss-up<lb/>
among audienoe members as to<lb/>
whether they should leave or stay<lb/>
after the end of the world scene in<lb/>
act two. Most made the decision<lb/>
to stay when the stage-crew<lb/>
began moving sets again, indica-<lb/>
ting there was more to come. The<lb/>
general manager of the theatre,<lb/>
whose name was also absent from<lb/>
the program, could have con-<lb/>
sidered the audienoe when com-<lb/>
piling the program fa their use.<lb/>
A valiant effort was made by<lb/>
the cast and crew of The Skin of<lb/>
Our Teeth to produce a pleasng<lb/>
production. However, the fact<lb/>
that multi media effects failed<lb/>
due to weak connections with the<lb/>
script; that brilliant sets were<lb/>
troubled by lengthy changes, and<lb/>
that problems with lines and<lb/>
continuity hampered the actors<lb/>
and actresses, resulted in a<lb/>
mediocre production.<lb/>
As one audience member<lb/>
remarked, "It was cute Exact-<lb/>
ly, and it should have been good.<lb/>
ELLA GERBER'S DIRECTION of the animal movements was<lb/>
designed by Maria Jurlanis.<lb/>
simplified by the delightful costumes<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
HOLLY JEREMES PORTRAYAL of the transition of Gladys<lb/>
Antrobus from child to mother was "remarkably well done<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0010"/><lb/>
10 FOUNTAINHEAD 6<lb/>
The Great American BeHy Dance<lb/>
Feminist Great Earth Mother worshipped<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
"To be primitive in this society<lb/>
you have to be awfully sophisti-<lb/>
cated<lb/>
DelilaDandi<lb/>
This book could only have<lb/>
been written in America. Dorissa<lb/>
Femfunelli, slightly overweight<lb/>
divoroee, decides while she is on<lb/>
the brink of suicide that she will<lb/>
give her life new direction b<lb/>
enrolling in a belly dancing<lb/>
course. She does, and finds<lb/>
through belly dancing a commun-<lb/>
ion with the Great Earth Mother<lb/>
and a subsequent earthly spirit-<lb/>
uality that she in her narrow<lb/>
bourgeois life had never known<lb/>
before. Sound zany? It is.<lb/>
Dorissa regards belly dancing<lb/>
as an ancient female sacrament.<lb/>
Originally belly dancing was a<lb/>
fertility right, a noble expression<lb/>
and mine of the act of giving<lb/>
birth. Indeed, it was a form of<lb/>
worship for the Great Earth<lb/>
Mother herself when the matriar-<lb/>
chies ruled the world. Dorissa<lb/>
wants to lift belly dancing from<lb/>
it's devoluted position as burles-<lb/>
que, blue-cafe entertainment and<lb/>
make it symbolize the new<lb/>
woman: free from sexual repres-<lb/>
sion and masculine domination.<lb/>
Ms. Gioseffi takes her charac-<lb/>
ter, Dorissa, through nearly the<lb/>
entire gamut of yesterday's<lb/>
avant-garde idealisms. The book<lb/>
is saved, though, by its humorous<lb/>
attitude toward everything it<lb/>
treats. For instance, after aban-<lb/>
doning her teaching position at a<lb/>
Catholic elementary school and<lb/>
devoting her life to belly dancing,<lb/>
Dorissa decides that she will try<lb/>
to make money by dancing in<lb/>
front of women's groups and<lb/>
other groups who would be<lb/>
receptive to her message. She<lb/>
applies at a talent agency and<lb/>
meets Pat Campley, who is<lb/>
nothing less than a lesbianic<lb/>
transvestite; male by gender,<lb/>
woman by nature, and lesbian by<lb/>
sexual persuasion. How terribly<lb/>
kinky. As one can tell, Ms.<lb/>
Gioseffi leaves her pastels in the<lb/>
tube.<lb/>
Already bored with her new<lb/>
lover, Noah, who is too much the<lb/>
phlegmatic academe to contain<lb/>
the desires of the belly dancing<lb/>
veluptuary, Dorissa responds to<lb/>
an advertisement for "Narcissa<lb/>
Tittle's Body-consciousness-<lb/>
DANIELA GIOSEFFI, herself a belly dancer, is author of<lb/>
"The Great American Belly Dance<lb/>
expanding Workshop This<lb/>
Workshop consists of about<lb/>
twelve naked women reclining on<lb/>
bean-bag chairs with vibrators in<lb/>
hand, all trying to masturbate<lb/>
simultaneously. A woman next to<lb/>
her begins to giggle and whisper-<lb/>
ing they confess to each other that<lb/>
"automaticauto-eroticism" is too<lb/>
redundant for their taste. They<lb/>
leave the workshop and Delila<lb/>
Dandi, the woman with Dorissa,<lb/>
eventually becomes Dorissa's les-<lb/>
bian lover and business manager.<lb/>
Delila introduces Dorissa to<lb/>
the ecstasies of the clitoral<lb/>
orgasm. Delila argues that most<lb/>
women have been "clitorectc-<lb/>
mized" by the understandably<lb/>
male preccupation with penis-<lb/>
vaginal gratification. Dorissa ex-<lb/>
plains to her indulgent lover,<lb/>
Noah, that she is made to feel<lb/>
more nearly ultimately a woman<lb/>
by having sex with another<lb/>
woman.<lb/>
In addition to her bisexual<lb/>
affairs, Dorissa carries on a<lb/>
platonic relationship with her<lb/>
Avocado Tree. She dances fa it,<lb/>
waters it, and when she is happy<lb/>
the Tree "smiles deeply in its<lb/>
roots<lb/>
Dorissa, Delila and Pat Camp-<lb/>
ley decide that they could get<lb/>
needed media exposure for Doris-<lb/>
sa by having her belly dance at<lb/>
the great Woodstock Rock Festi-<lb/>
val. She has her body painted in<lb/>
an ancient floral design by the<lb/>
Sino-American body painter with<lb/>
the subtle name of Chin Lo<lb/>
Slung, and it is at Woodstock that<lb/>
she meets a sound technician<lb/>
named Stanislaus. He is a bril-<lb/>
liant technical innovator who is<lb/>
subsequently hired by Femfunelli<lb/>
Inc. (which is the name of her<lb/>
enterprise now that she is acquir-<lb/>
ing acclaim) to give Dorissa and<lb/>
oompany rub-downs in his aura-<lb/>
increasing pyramidal energizer.<lb/>
Stanislaus invents an electron-<lb/>
ic system by which Dorissa<lb/>
(through a mechanism inserted<lb/>
into her womb) can transmit<lb/>
electrical impulses to her Avoca-<lb/>
do Tree while she danoes, and the<lb/>
Tree can transmit to her vibra-<lb/>
tions from the Great Earth<lb/>
Mother to Dorissa. Consequently<lb/>
she can be in True Communion<lb/>
with the Earth Mother while she<lb/>
belly dances. Stanislaus also<lb/>
constructs a tap-in to the national<lb/>
emergency radio transmitter in<lb/>
the Pentagon and through this<lb/>
sends Dorissa's literal spiritual<lb/>
orgasmic ecstasies throughout<lb/>
the entire United States. Or, as<lb/>
Ms. Gioseffi describes the hap-<lb/>
pening, "Radiant Earth felt like<lb/>
an amoeba having a cosmic<lb/>
orgasm in the water of her own<lb/>
space<lb/>
Ms. Gioseffi's prose is pur-<lb/>
plish to indigo but such blaringly<lb/>
overstated style enhances the<lb/>
humor found in the story and<lb/>
characters. The book is most<lb/>
winning when it is most .facetious.<lb/>
The search for the attainment<lb/>
of "total womanhood" is a theme<lb/>
that has been beaten to a pulp by<lb/>
the pummeling of many feminist<lb/>
novelsand poetry. This genre has<lb/>
developed ooncomitantly with the<lb/>
developing awareness of women<lb/>
toward their new potential in a<lb/>
still man-dominated world. But<lb/>
this book survives because the<lb/>
lightest material doesn't need<lb/>
much to float.<lb/>
Dorissa's Great Earth Mother<lb/>
quasi-religion never even ap-<lb/>
proaches (nor was it meant to)<lb/>
becoming a viable alternate belief<lb/>
to run one's life by. But in the<lb/>
fundamental human values it<lb/>
holds; namely love and emotional<lb/>
freedom, the Earth Mother Cult is<lb/>
an affirmation of what is unselfish<lb/>
in life as opposed to the increas-<lb/>
ing me-firstnessof modern sensi-<lb/>
bilities.<lb/>
Meet The Challenge Of Air Force Nursing<lb/>
And Here Are The Facts:<lb/>
-Opportunity for a chal longing" Jd6<lb/>
with excellent starting salary of<lb/>
over $11,700<lb/>
-Special promotion and travel<lb/>
opportunities<lb/>
-Full scholarships available that<lb/>
pay full tuition, books and all fees<lb/>
Dlus $100 a month tax-free<lb/>
-Financial assistance of $2000.000<lb/>
while at ECU for non-scholarship<lb/>
cadets in last two years of<lb/>
AFROTC<lb/>
-AFROTC credit courses taken in<lb/>
conjunction with nursing curricu-<lb/>
lum<lb/>
For Further Information Contact:<lb/>
Captain Ashley H Lane<lb/>
ECU, Wright Annex, 208<lb/>
Phone: 757-6607<lb/>
AIR FORCE ROTO GATEWAY<lb/>
TO A GREAT WAY OF UFE<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0011"/><lb/>
HHIMnHHBBMHnnMHiHMnj<lb/>
Motes on Love and Courage<lb/>
6 DtOBfflbf 1877 FOUKTAJNHEAD Pag 11<lb/>
Latest from Prather's 'cotton candy' diary<lb/>
by DAVID W. TREVINO<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
Hugh Prather is an author<lb/>
whose previous books, Notes To<lb/>
Myself and Touched The Earth,<lb/>
The Earth Touches Me, have sold<lb/>
a million and half copies as<lb/>
paperback originals and hundreds<lb/>
of thousands more in mass<lb/>
market reprinted editions. Like<lb/>
his previous financial successes<lb/>
Notes On Love and Courage is an<lb/>
excerpt from Prather's diary.<lb/>
It comes from a time when<lb/>
Prather discovered for certain<lb/>
that he was going to die. Notes<lb/>
On Love and Courage is Prather's<lb/>
summoning up of strength to<lb/>
carry on in the face of his own<lb/>
mortality. It is Prather's personal<lb/>
renewal of the spirit. Beyond the<lb/>
books<lb/>
psychiatric value to its author<lb/>
who finds himself at one with the<lb/>
beauty of the sunset at the end of<lb/>
160 pages of anecdotes, questions<lb/>
left unanswered, one-liners, re-<lb/>
flections and fifty simple, little<lb/>
black and white drawings by<lb/>
Gene Smith, Notes On Love And<lb/>
Courage is no more than so much<lb/>
fluffy cotton candy, appealing<lb/>
without substance.<lb/>
Prather offers up generaliza-<lb/>
tions, cliches and half baked<lb/>
insights in such number that the<lb/>
occasional entry in which he<lb/>
actually gives up something dose<lb/>
to heart and is moving with his<lb/>
sincerity of emotion is swallowed<lb/>
in a morass of mediocrity. Notes<lb/>
LEA VES A TOP A grating evoke thought from the "deep" ones here on campus.<lb/>
' Ipryland 78, with 13 fully staged musical productions feai tring ovet 350 singers, dancers. and other<lb/>
artists ' iitunitles ti aspmng young talent Some of our ivrfuniHTs have won solo qsots<lb/>
in network al IV productions originating from Opiyiand Oprylan I talent has traveled afs<lb/>
vents, including the CanaoWt National I �<lb/>
N.ition.i) Assa lation oi Broad astei ton in Washington. D Severs ha<lb/>
record I there'sgoodn � Itingworkwid .tarl exposure)<lb/>
count GreenevUle auditions wffl be held Monday January 16 1978 from 12:00-5.00p.n<lb/>
,n.i University McGinnls Auditorium A piano accompanist, record playei tape at<lb/>
table for performers. rsleaden inagers, lighting technicians, sdund ei<lb/>
. I follow spot opi lould report with type nterviev.<lb/>
Home of American Music<lb/>
More Information is available from:<lb/>
Live hntertainment Department, Opryland USA<lb/>
P.O. Box 2138. Nashville. Tennessee 37214<lb/>
Phone:(615)889-6600<lb/>
()pryiand USA is an entertaintneni property of<lb/>
Flie National I Ife and Ao Idem Insurant eompany<lb/>
On Love and Courage says so<lb/>
many different things about so<lb/>
many different topics that any-<lb/>
one, no matter what his system of<lb/>
values, can find something in it<lb/>
with which he agrees.<lb/>
In achieving this universal<lb/>
appeal Prather's book disregards<lb/>
any idea of continuity or develop-<lb/>
ment of oonoeps. Solitary state-<lb/>
ments of cosmic truth like,<lb/>
"There is a time to let things<lb/>
happen and a time to make things<lb/>
happen are scattered through-<lb/>
out, unadorned by explanation<lb/>
and unattached with the sur-<lb/>
rounding text.<lb/>
The feelings and ideas Prather<lb/>
attempts to evoke are often so<lb/>
ill-developed asto render much of<lb/>
Notes On Love and Courage no<lb/>
more than a mundane list of<lb/>
human emotion. In explaining<lb/>
this book Prather responds with a<lb/>
list of things that "it's about" ; a<lb/>
second look at life, love, friend-<lb/>
ship, sexual relationships,<lb/>
courage to take a stand, oourage<lb/>
in the face of old age and death,<lb/>
marriage, relationships with<lb/>
strangers, oourage to change,<lb/>
love of self and love of God. Even<lb/>
with fifty dull drawings of leaves<lb/>
it still only adds up to an<lb/>
elaborate record of some indul-<lb/>
gent personal graffitti.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0012"/><lb/>
12 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 December 1977<lb/>
NORMAN KELLER IS an East Carolina faculty<lb/>
member whose work was recently exhibited at the<lb/>
Including ECU faculty<lb/>
G. Walker Gallery Invitational.<lb/>
Area artists in SC exhibit<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Eleven Greenville area artists,<lb/>
including several faculty mem-<lb/>
bers of the East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity School of Art. were represen-<lb/>
ted in the recent G. Walker<lb/>
Gallery Invitational: Multiples<lb/>
exhibition in Columbia. S.C.<lb/>
Local artists whose work ap-<lb/>
peared in the show were Annette<lb/>
Williams Brooks, Fred Brooks,<lb/>
Ray Elmore. Marilyn Gordley,<lb/>
Tran Gordley, Art Haney, Gail<lb/>
Haney, Paul Hartley, Norman<lb/>
Keller. Elizabeth Ross and Henry<lb/>
Stindt.<lb/>
The show ran from Nov. 2 to<lb/>
Dec. 5 in the South Carolina<lb/>
gallery, and is to be exhibited at<lb/>
the Harold Decker Gallery in<lb/>
Virginia Beach, Va. during the<lb/>
next several weeks.<lb/>
Fifty southeastern artists are<lb/>
represented in the show, which<lb/>
includes art in several two- and<lb/>
three-dimensional media.<lb/>
Among the exhibiting artists<lb/>
are several former ECU art<lb/>
students: Walter Commander,<lb/>
Gene Ayscue, Rock Kershaw, Jan<lb/>
Welborn and Charlotte Belote.<lb/>
The Qaebo would like to wish you a merry<lb/>
Christmas and invite you to enter our world of<lb/>
truly unique and personal gifts for this Christ-<lb/>
mas season.<lb/>
THE (joAZEBO<lb/>
fifth andCotanche<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
'Orphic Voice'<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Poet Elizabeth Sewell, author<lb/>
of "The Orphic Voice" and<lb/>
"Signs and Cities will be<lb/>
featured in a reading of her<lb/>
poetry Tuesday, Dec. 6, at 8 p.m.<lb/>
at the East Carolina University<lb/>
Methodist Student Center.<lb/>
The Sewell reading is spon-<lb/>
sored by the Campus Ministers<lb/>
Association. Following the read-<lb/>
ing will be a discussion period<lb/>
and a reception at which refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served.<lb/>
Elizabeth Sewell has most<lb/>
recently been the Rosepthal Pro-<lb/>
fessor of Humanities in the<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro Religious Stu-<lb/>
dies Department. Her previous<lb/>
teaching experience includes<lb/>
positions at Vassar College, Hun-<lb/>
ter College of the City University<lb/>
of New York, Ohio State Univer-<lb/>
sity, Prinoeton University, UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte and Bennett College.<lb/>
She was born in India of<lb/>
British parents and was a civil<lb/>
servant with the British Ministry<lb/>
of Education during World War<lb/>
II. She graduated with first class<lb/>
honors in modern languages from<lb/>
Cambridge University and later<lb/>
received MA and PhD degrees<lb/>
from Cambridge. St. Peter's<lb/>
College in New Jersey and<lb/>
Fordham University have award-<lb/>
ed her honorary doctorates.<lb/>
In addition to her volumes of<lb/>
poetry, Ms. Sewell is noted for<lb/>
her literary criticism and for three<lb/>
novels, which include "The Div-<lb/>
iding of Time "The Singular<lb/>
Hope" and "Now Bless Thyself<lb/>
TRAN GORDLEY IS a local artist whose work was featured at the G.<lb/>
Walker Gallery Invitational.<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
is a good time to sell<lb/>
your texts for<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
University Book<lb/>
Exchange<lb/>
downtown<lb/>
in Greenville<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0013"/><lb/>
���������nanBBnmnnnnBHH<lb/>
HRHttiH!<lb/>
Ken Russet's<lb/>
' is anything but subtle<lb/>
6 Deoefnbar 1977 FOUNTAINMEAD fps<lb/>
13<lb/>
' Not even a pas de deux can last for two hours'<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
In the Hollywood Babylon of<lb/>
the '20's, an actor was looked<lb/>
upon as a oommodity and he was<lb/>
bought and sold as such. By<lb/>
1921, Rudolph Valentino was one<lb/>
of the most sellable commodities<lb/>
of all time.<lb/>
When the young Italian actor<lb/>
came on the scene in 1918 he was<lb/>
glanced over and oonsigned to the<lb/>
bad-guy department, a decidely<lb/>
un-American type. After a stretch<lb/>
of "B"films he got his first real<lb/>
break in the movie version of<lb/>
Blasco Ibanez's famous antiwar<lb/>
novel, "The Four Horsemen of<lb/>
the Apocalypse Following his<lb/>
success in that film, he worked<lb/>
with the brilliant Russian actress<lb/>
Nazimova in "Camille and<lb/>
went on to play the now legendary<lb/>
character of "The Sheik<lb/>
The exotic matinee, idol was<lb/>
more a novelty than a genuine<lb/>
sensation. His physical beauty<lb/>
and grace as a dancer, he had<lb/>
once been a gigolo at New York<lb/>
cabarets and Maxims, were play-<lb/>
ed to the hilt in all of his films.<lb/>
With his olive skin and oiled hair<lb/>
he quickly became the model for<lb/>
the new breed of Latin lover that<lb/>
was to sweep Hollywood.<lb/>
By 1926, Valentino was dead<lb/>
of peritonitis. His success in the<lb/>
movies wasn't in keeping with his<lb/>
private life off-screen. In fact, his<lb/>
Hollywood image oouldn't have<lb/>
been any further from the truth.<lb/>
Lauded as "greatest lover<lb/>
Valentino's first marriage ended<lb/>
in divorce and second wife<lb/>
Natasha Rambova deserted him<lb/>
to make her own films. Fa poor<lb/>
Valentino it was the beginning of<lb/>
the end. Dead after an unhappy<lb/>
five years and five months of<lb/>
fame, journalist H.L. Mencken<lb/>
wrote a suitable epitath: "A man<lb/>
of relatively civilized feelings<lb/>
thrown into a situation of intoler-<lb/>
able vulgarity<lb/>
Such is the case fifty-one<lb/>
years later in Ken Russell's<lb/>
VALENTINO.<lb/>
This blasphemous rendering<lb/>
of his life is enough to send poor<lb/>
Rudy revolving in his grave. But<lb/>
then, when has Ken Russell ever<lb/>
been interested in faithful bio-<lb/>
graphy. And even if he was,<lb/>
would he be able to relate the<lb/>
script in such a way that we<lb/>
wouldn't be examining our Cokes<lb/>
to make sure nobody had slipped<lb/>
us a hallucinogen.<lb/>
Russell made frankfurters and<lb/>
sauerkraut out of the life of<lb/>
composer Franz Liszt and indeed<lb/>
there are times when "Valen-<lb/>
tino" looks like out-takes from his<lb/>
outrageous "Lisztomania And<lb/>
the harsh mingling of rock stars<lb/>
and real actors rang discordantly<lb/>
in "Tommy<lb/>
At least Russell has an<lb/>
ace-in the-hole in "Valentino.<lb/>
The casting of Russian dancer<lb/>
Rudolph Nureyev in the part of<lb/>
Valentino provides for some<lb/>
brilliant footworkbeyond a<lb/>
RUDOLPH NUREYEVTALENT as the "world's greatest dancer" fails to save his performance as VALENTINO.<lb/>
doubt the most entertaining stuff<lb/>
in the film. However, not even<lb/>
Russell can make a pas de deux<lb/>
last two hours. The "world's<lb/>
greatest dancer" has a rough<lb/>
time of it playing the "world's<lb/>
greatest lover If Nureyev oould<lb/>
have honed his dramatic timing<lb/>
the way he did his dancing he<lb/>
might have come up with some-<lb/>
body. But alas, he cannot act.<lb/>
He is in good company with<lb/>
Michelle Phillips and Leslie<lb/>
Caron. Nureyev is a foreigner<lb/>
having difficulty with the English<lb/>
language; Michelle Phillips is an<lb/>
American having difficulty with<lb/>
the English language. Leslie<lb/>
Caron turns in a horribly over-<lb/>
done performance. She is excus-<lb/>
ed, for it is a horribly overdone<lb/>
movie.<lb/>
Exquisitely photographed<lb/>
sequences are too often vehicles<lb/>
fa Russell's blatant symbolism.<lb/>
In the film's climactic boxing<lb/>
spectacle, Valentino quells<lb/>
rumas of his homosexuality by<lb/>
clobbering Peter Vaughan ala<lb/>
Rocky. The scene is a throwback<lb/>
to the 1926 "puff" scandal in<lb/>
which a repater fa the Chicago<lb/>
Tribune called Valentino a pink<lb/>
powder puff and suggested that<lb/>
puff dispensers be installed in<lb/>
men's rooms as part of the vogue.<lb/>
Valentino challenged the reporter<lb/>
to a fist fight but died befae<lb/>
anything oould oome of it. Ken<lb/>
Russell hastaken histay aie step<lb/>
further to show us Valentino<lb/>
winning a hollow victay ever the<lb/>
press.<lb/>
In another scene, Alia Nazi-<lb/>
mova (Leslie Caron), a flamboy-<lb/>
ant publicity grabber, struts to<lb/>
the dead Valentino'scoff in made-<lb/>
up in passionate purple replete<lb/>
with eye shadow and lipstick. On<lb/>
either side of her are hand<lb/>
maidens veiled also in purple.<lb/>
Russell is anything but subtle.<lb/>
There is a great deal of<lb/>
speculation about the love-God's<lb/>
true motivation in life. As the<lb/>
directa sees it, Valentino would<lb/>
have rather grown aanges ra a<lb/>
living. This is implied throughout<lb/>
the film and is most obvious in the<lb/>
death scene when the camera<lb/>
focuses on the aange that has<lb/>
just rolled from Valentino's out-<lb/>
stretched hand.<lb/>
We inevitably learn less about<lb/>
Valentino himself than the dis-<lb/>
turbed Ken Russell. How much<lb/>
more do we need to know.<lb/>
Super Thurs.<lb/>
'Tenth Ave<lb/>
and<lb/>
'The Platters"<lb/>
This Week At The<lb/>
R94M<lb/>
Tues. 4th Annual X-Mas<lb/>
Party With Santa,<lb/>
Contests, and Prizes<lb/>
Wed. Tenth Ave.<lb/>
Fri Sat and Sun. Tenth Ave.<lb/>
Fri. 3:30-5:00 Check It Out Sun. is Ladies Nite<lb/>
,VVAV�AWVAMM�WrtV.V<lb/>
�f�n'�w�m<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0014"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
14 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 December 1977<lb/>
OTTO HENRY OF the ECU School of Music is the winner of the<lb/>
Hmda Honigman Gold Cup for original composition.<lb/>
Baroque Ensemble performs<lb/>
rii i .il.rx inoiri ir4nr Danio I<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
The eleven- member East<lb/>
Carolina University Baroque En-<lb/>
semble will perform in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall Sunday,<lb/>
Dec. 11, at 3 p.m. The concert is<lb/>
free and open to the public.<lb/>
Works to be included in the<lb/>
program are the Sonata in B flat<lb/>
fa Recorder, Oboe, Violin and<lb/>
Basso Continuo by Johann Fried-<lb/>
rich Fasch; the Telemann Quartet<lb/>
in G fa Flute, Oboe, Violin, Cello<lb/>
and Klavier; and the J.S. Bach<lb/>
Brandenburg Concerto No. 4.<lb/>
Featured soloists infthe Bach<lb/>
concerto will be violinist Linda<lb/>
Hanson and recordists John<lb/>
NcLellan and Eric Haas.<lb/>
The ensemble, directed by<lb/>
ECU cello instructa Daniel Mel-<lb/>
lado, includes advanced student<lb/>
instrumentalists in the ECU<lb/>
School of Music.<lb/>
Other members are Marilyn<lb/>
Herrmann, Larry Lyles and Blair<lb/>
Nesbit, violin; Kren Coupe and<lb/>
Glenn Davis, viola; Andrea<lb/>
Smith, cello; Janet Reeve, bass;<lb/>
and Carroll Ridenhour, harpsi-<lb/>
chad.<lb/>
Award for original competition<lb/>
Otto Henry wins award<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Dr. Otto Henry, associate<lb/>
professa of ethnomu si oology and<lb/>
electronic music in the East<lb/>
Carolina University School of<lb/>
Music, is the winner of a<lb/>
statewide award for original<lb/>
composition.<lb/>
Henry was given the Hinda<lb/>
Honigman Gold Cup after win-<lb/>
ning a competition fa oomposers<lb/>
sponsaed by the N.C. Federation<lb/>
of Music Clubs. He famally<lb/>
accepted the award at a recent<lb/>
Music Day dinner in Raleigh.<lb/>
The winning compositioi, an<lb/>
avant-garde chaal wak entitled<lb/>
"Sanctus involves the perform-<lb/>
ers' own selection of pitches, with<lb/>
durations cued by the conducta<lb/>
The wak was commissioned<lb/>
in 1973 by Mars Hill College and<lb/>
published earlier this year by<lb/>
Hinshaw Music, Inc. as part of<lb/>
the Mars Hill College Chaal<lb/>
Series.<lb/>
Dr. Henry received his bache-<lb/>
lor's and master's degrees fron<lb/>
Boston University, and holds the<lb/>
PhD degree from Tulane Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
Their music is saucy and enjoyable<lb/>
'Nightshift' combines RErB with jazz and ballads<lb/>
 . .   � ir-m tho c-ioii chrv-korl rorkprq linht 777 anrl ballar ds. ThftV mil<lb/>
By A. WILLIAMS<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
It has been a while since a new<lb/>
band has come down the pike to<lb/>
Poetry�<lb/>
joyfully stimulate the ears of<lb/>
Greenvilles night revelers, but<lb/>
this past weekend heralded the<lb/>
coming of such a group. NIGHT-<lb/>
SHIFT of Chapel Hill, perfamed<lb/>
Friday and Saturday nights at a<lb/>
A BULLET'S MEMORY OF A FRIEND<lb/>
By Sharon K. Joies<lb/>
I lay here in this braized athlete,<lb/>
The am-pro whose sets were unmatched,<lb/>
The figure whose good looks were 30-love<lb/>
YetI lay here,<lb/>
The result of a hand,<lb/>
Very steady on the grips of a Wilson racket;<lb/>
Shockingly unsteady on the trigger of a gun.<lb/>
My only memay is<lb/>
Why, Woody, Why?<lb/>
Sharon Jones is an English major from Elizabeth City.<lb/>
local bistro and it was definitely a<lb/>
treat!<lb/>
NIGHTSHIFT is new, but the<lb/>
players are familiar faces to those<lb/>
who remember and enjoyed<lb/>
HEARTWOOD, SOUTHWING,<lb/>
BRO T HOLLA, and<lb/>
LAGNIAPPE.<lb/>
The personel are; Ed<lb/>
Ibarguen, paramount guitarist<lb/>
from SOUTHWING, on lead<lb/>
guitar; Tim Hildebrandt, founder<lb/>
of HEARTWOOD, on guitar and<lb/>
vocals; Jim Mitchel, drummer<lb/>
from BRO T HOLLA sharing lead<lb/>
vocals with Carter Lamon mina,<lb/>
formerly of HEARTWOOD<lb/>
LAGNIAPPE; Joe DeLuca, from<lb/>
the performance "Diamond<lb/>
Studs" and Gravy Boat on<lb/>
fretless bass; and former<lb/>
HEARTWOOD keyboard man Bill<lb/>
Butler.<lb/>
There were some oomplaints<lb/>
from the shell shocked rockers<lb/>
that NIGHTSHIFT "wasn't loud<lb/>
enough" which I can only attri-<lb/>
bute to poa taste. Technically<lb/>
NIGHTSHIFT'Ssound is superr-<lb/>
not soft, but commanding, delib-<lb/>
erate, without being brash.<lb/>
Their stage show is almost<lb/>
non-existent, disappointing fa<lb/>
sane, since their sound is so<lb/>
professional. This was due in part<lb/>
to the newness of the group,<lb/>
limited stage area and a serious<lb/>
preoccupation with the SOUND of<lb/>
the perfamance. The lack of<lb/>
theatrical posturing did not<lb/>
dampen the enthusiasm of the<lb/>
audience who, on Saturday, call-<lb/>
ed for and were given two<lb/>
encaes<lb/>
NIGHTSHIFT'S music is<lb/>
saucy and enjoyable, powerful<lb/>
and quite danceable, combining a<lb/>
tasty brand of funky R&amp;B with<lb/>
ight jazz and ballafds. They min-<lb/>
gle their numerous aiginals with<lb/>
(FM) canerctally popular tunes to<lb/>
suit the most discerning musical<lb/>
palate. A brief sampling would<lb/>
be- Little Feat, War, Bonnie Rait,<lb/>
O'Leans, Boz Scaggs. Stevie<lb/>
Wonder and Jeff Beck (not to<lb/>
mention Joan Armatrading)<lb/>
Fa NIGHTSHIFT, the em-<lb/>
phasis is oi precision and taste.<lb/>
As bassist Joe DeLuca aptly<lb/>
stated, its what you leave out<lb/>
that makes a truely great band<lb/>
NIGHTSHIFT definitely seems to<lb/>
have the knack fa tasteful omiss-<lb/>
ion. The individual musicianship<lb/>
is awesome and time will tell just<lb/>
how great they will be.<lb/>
In the meantimethis review-<lb/>
er gives them four stars and<lb/>
is looking faward to their return<lb/>
in early February. Don't miss<lb/>
NIGHTSHIFT<lb/>
Brakes Checked<lb/>
HHiiHilri h<lb/>
Phone 756-5244<lb/>
320 W. HWY. 264 BY-PASS<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
4 POINT BRAKE SERVICE<lb/>
1. Poll Front Wheels, Inspect Linings and Drums.<lb/>
2. Check Grease Seals, Wheel Cylinders for Leakage.<lb/>
3. Clean, Inspect and Repack Front Wheel Bearings.<lb/>
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r OG 9J. f Braking.<lb/>
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16 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 December 1977<lb/>
PRESSBOX<lb/>
UNCW routs Bucs<lb/>
Pirates to face Maryland<lb/>
First-year head basketball coach Larry Gillman must be wondering<lb/>
if the sun really shines in eastern North Carolina. Hisciub saddled with<lb/>
two losses In two games is bad enough, but to think of facing the<lb/>
University of Maryland in Cole Field House Wednesday, and then, to<lb/>
face LaSalle riege on Friday night in Charlotte in the First Union<lb/>
Invitational, with UNC Charlotte a Boston College fa Saturday night,<lb/>
it couldn't look much gloomier.<lb/>
"It's going to be a tough week said Gillman, 'but it oouldalsobe<lb/>
a very good week. I think our club feels after the horrible game last<lb/>
Thursday night against UNC-Wilmington that they have a lot to prove.<lb/>
Playing clubs like Maryland and LaSalle won't be easy, but then it<lb/>
gives us an opportunity to bounoe back against super competition<lb/>
Both Maryland and, LaSalle were unbeaten entering this week.<lb/>
Maryland has no games until East Carolina, while LaSalle plays Rhode<lb/>
Island on Wednesday. The Pirates faoed Alderson-Broaddus on<lb/>
Monday night in Greenville.<lb/>
I thought our first two games altered what we wanted to do<lb/>
continued Gillman. "We hope to get back to what we want to do and<lb/>
that's getting the ball out and moving it fast. We don't want to set up<lb/>
that much as we've been doing.<lb/>
"But if you don't get the ball off the boards, you can't run. And our<lb/>
rebounding is definitely a conoern. We've given up far too many<lb/>
offensive rebounds. But then I knew what would be a problem this year<lb/>
because we have perimeter forwards and not big, physical forwards<lb/>
While many, many Jhings can be pointed to as reasons for East<lb/>
Carolina's poor start, Gillman has one major thought on the subject.<lb/>
It's the lack of aggressiveness that concerns me most he said.<lb/>
We're content to take ,15-20 footers on offense instead of taking it to<lb/>
the basket and we're much to passive in rebounding and on defense.<lb/>
That's all got to change<lb/>
With four games in six days, three of those on the road, it may take<lb/>
more than just aggressive play fa Gillman to see the sun again.<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Spats Edita<lb/>
In a game that the Pirates<lb/>
never held a lead, the Seahawks<lb/>
of University of Nath Carolina<lb/>
Wilmington totally embarrassed<lb/>
their freethrows in the half to<lb/>
60 fa Wilmingtai.<lb/>
In the second half the Sea-<lb/>
hawks after a brief scare by the<lb/>
Pirates ran off 19 straight points<lb/>
to ditch the Pirate comeback.<lb/>
Notes and Quaes on ECU Basketball<lb/>
Many have questioned the perfamances thus far of pre-season<lb/>
all-America candidate Oliver Mack. He's 10 of34 from the floa and has<lb/>
not been the player expected. Coach Larry Gillman explains: "I think<lb/>
Oliver istryingtofind his identity with thisteam. He could be taking 25<lb/>
shots a game but that's not his personality. The type of game we're<lb/>
playing is hurting his shooting. He doesn't move without the ball as<lb/>
well in the type offense we played against UNC-Wilmington. But the<lb/>
people will see the real Oliver Mack befae too long. When we get back<lb/>
to running he'll be himself<lb/>
The Pirates face a demanding week with four games in six days and<lb/>
a six-day road trip. East Carolina played Alderson-Broaddus at home<lb/>
on Monday, then travel to Maryland fa a Wednesday game and on to<lb/>
Chariate fa the First Union Invitational oi Friday and Saturday.<lb/>
Travel plans were to leave Tuesday nxxning fa College Park and not<lb/>
return to Greenville until Sunday after the tournament in Charlotte. "It<lb/>
will be a tough week said Gillman, " but I think the team is looking<lb/>
faward to this. It will give them a chance to prove something that they<lb/>
feel they must. And if we do well, it oould be a fine week<lb/>
About the 4-0 Maryland Terrapins, Gillman says. "Lefty probably<lb/>
nas nis finest team since the McMillen era. They have as much talent<lb/>
as anyone in the country. His club is so very strong up front with the<lb/>
fawarri<lb/>
About the 2-0 LaSalle Explaers, Gillman says, "They always have<lb/>
afineteam. Coach Paul Westheaddoesagood job year in and year out<lb/>
with his dubs as part of the Big Five. Michael Brooks, an all-America<lb/>
candidate, will be as tough a faward as we' II face this year. He's 6-6,<lb/>
215<lb/>
Notes and Quotes on the Lady Pirates<lb/>
The ECU women's basketball team starts one of its biggest weeks<lb/>
of the season. Monday night, the Lady Pirates face Appalachian State<lb/>
at home. Wednesday, they travel to Raleigh to face N.C. State, the<lb/>
team that was ranked number one nationally in pre-season by Sports<lb/>
Illustrated. Saturday, Greensbao will be the site of a matchup between<lb/>
East Carolina and Western Carolina.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates enter the week with a 2-0 recad. They defeated<lb/>
Campbell 69-67 in the season opener, and downed Duke 80-53 this past<lb/>
Saturday night.<lb/>
The start of the 1977-78 season has been a lot better than the start<lb/>
of the 1976-77 campaign fa Coach Catherine Baton. Last year, the<lb/>
Lady Pirates dropped their first ten games.<lb/>
A year ago, Appalachian downed the Lady Pirates three times, as<lb/>
did N.C. State. Western Carolina beat the Lady Pirates in their only<lb/>
meeting of the season, 75-70.<lb/>
See PRESSBOX page W<lb/>
OLIVER MACK AGAINST UNC-W Photo by Brian Stotler)<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
the home team with a 92-66 rout.<lb/>
The Seahawks were expected<lb/>
to be rather tough after two close<lb/>
losses to Wake Forest and<lb/>
Geagia Tech, but the largest<lb/>
aowd in Minges Coliseum in<lb/>
three years expected the Pirates<lb/>
to oome away with a victay.<lb/>
What happened though was quite<lb/>
a shock and could rank as the<lb/>
most embarrassing loss in Pirate<lb/>
basketball histay.<lb/>
The Seahawks paced by twin<lb/>
guards Billy and Bobby Martin<lb/>
set a fast pace early in the game<lb/>
by grabbing the lead and neva<lb/>
losing it. The Pirates were able to<lb/>
stay in the game in the first half<lb/>
on the shooting of Herb Krusen<lb/>
and the defensive play of Greg<lb/>
Canelius. Krusen was the only<lb/>
Pirate that seemed to have any<lb/>
consistency throughout the first<lb/>
half of the game except fa Oliver<lb/>
Mack who put in eight points to<lb/>
lead the Pirate first half effort.<lb/>
At one time in the first half of<lb/>
the game UNCW led as many as<lb/>
twelve points but the Bucs were<lb/>
able to cut the margin down to<lb/>
nine by the half giving the<lb/>
Seahawks a 37-28 lead.<lb/>
In the first half the Pirates<lb/>
were out shot in fieldgoal percen-<lb/>
tage by a 51.5 to 40 margin.<lb/>
The Pirates also hit only 36 of<lb/>
The Pirates, on the shooting of<lb/>
Herb Gray and Herb Krusen,<lb/>
were able to cut an eleven point<lb/>
difference down to only five. At<lb/>
this point w'tn the 5B8E fans<lb/>
screaming as loud as they oould it<lb/>
appeared East Carolina was going<lb/>
to make a comeback. It was at this<lb/>
point however that the Martin<lb/>
twins and Delaney Jones ran off<lb/>
the nineteen points that broke the<lb/>
Pirate oomeback effort.<lb/>
After Wilmington grabbed the<lb/>
lead it expanded to as much as 31<lb/>
points as the Seahawks used their<lb/>
bench to finish off the Bucs.<lb/>
The final scae was UNCW 92<lb/>
ECU 66.<lb/>
High scaer in the game fa<lb/>
the Pirates was Herb Krusen with<lb/>
22 points, next came Herb Gray<lb/>
with 13 and Oliver Mack with 8.<lb/>
Top scaers fa Wilmingtai<lb/>
were Bobby Martin who finished<lb/>
with the game high 27 points. He<lb/>
was followed by Denny Fields<lb/>
with 19 points, Dave Wolff put in<lb/>
16 and Billy Martin canned 12.<lb/>
UNCW ended by hitting<lb/>
55.4 of their Jxrts to East<lb/>
Carolina's 43.<lb/>
After his second loss of the<lb/>
season, head coach Larry Gillman<lb/>
was bitterly disappointed and took<lb/>
the blame fa the loss on himselt.<lb/>
"UNC Wilmington played an<lb/>
exoellent game Gillman said.<lb/>
"A la of that had to do with how<lb/>
poaly we played<lb/>
"I'm definitely going to see<lb/>
Navell (Neve) supervisa of the<lb/>
officials after the game. No<lb/>
matter how good a bad they were<lb/>
I doit want them back in our gym<lb/>
again. Kids could have gotten<lb/>
hurt out there tonight with the<lb/>
way they called it. But they didn't<lb/>
lose the game<lb/>
"We are young and have<lb/>
quality players, but tonight I was<lb/>
not pleased with anyone and their<lb/>
perfamance. Mack didn't look<lb/>
like all High School tonight<lb/>
"I think we need some team<lb/>
unity. We ga our head too big<lb/>
after going to Indiana and they<lb/>
stepped in our gym tonight and<lb/>
asked what kind of team UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington was. We sat on our<lb/>
laurels and ga our butts kicked<lb/>
"Krusen did hit some but he<lb/>
missed a lot too and he still has no<lb/>
rebounds<lb/>
"I think we're in good oondi-<lb/>
tion but we had mental lapses,<lb/>
youthful mistakes. We are going<lb/>
to take off tomarow. I think the<lb/>
kids need to think about it. The<lb/>
coaches are going to meet and<lb/>
reevaluate some situations<lb/>
"Mack only got the ball once<lb/>
in the second half due to Moseley<lb/>
and Ramsey throwing the ball all<lb/>
over the gym. Mack is in the same<lb/>
group with Phil Fad and Butch<lb/>
Lee abilitywise, but nrt in poise<lb/>
and maturity<lb/>
"I take the fault. Larry<lb/>
Gillman did not have them<lb/>
prepared to play tonight. But they<lb/>
did nahing we didn't expect<lb/>
them to<lb/>
"My team doesn't have the<lb/>
patience and intensity to play<lb/>
man fa man against that type<lb/>
of motion offense. !t was na so<lb/>
much our defense tonight as it<lb/>
was the poa floa balance on<lb/>
offense at guards. It,was ter-<lb/>
rible<lb/>
While things were gloomy in<lb/>
the Pirate locker room the scene<lb/>
was quite different in,the Sea-<lb/>
hawks dressing room. Coach Mel<lb/>
Gibson was elated in his teams<lb/>
perfamance and was just pleased<lb/>
to finally beat East Carolina.<lb/>
"I couldn't be mae pleased<lb/>
with this team's perfamance<lb/>
tonight. We ran our bceak well,<lb/>
we played aggressively on the<lb/>
defense and we finally got the<lb/>
effort on the boards that we have<lb/>
lacked thus far<lb/>
"Honestly I expected a differ-<lb/>
ent type of game. ECU surprised<lb/>
us with the zone, but we have<lb/>
some pretty good outside shoot-<lb/>
ers and they did the job fa us<lb/>
tonight. Bobby Martin, Billy<lb/>
Martin, and Lonnie Payton all<lb/>
handled the ball well against their<lb/>
zone helping us to get the ball to<lb/>
the open man<lb/>
"We may have awaken a<lb/>
sleeping giant tonight though. I<lb/>
know ECU is a much better<lb/>
balldub than this. I saw them<lb/>
earlier in one of their scrimmages<lb/>
and was most impressed. We did<lb/>
a good job shutting off Mack and<lb/>
that definitely seemed to upset<lb/>
their offense. But they'll oome<lb/>
back, I know<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0017"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
�MMIBHBHHHRmniBM<lb/>
Hal<lb/>
��i j'Tr -�� vjH�� � i i j.L<lb/>
 I ��� � . ��<lb/>
6 December 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Pag� 17<lb/>
Pirate tankers host UNC-Ch<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Ray Scharf could probably fill<lb/>
a massive filing cabinet with a list<lb/>
of accomplishments he's achieved<lb/>
at East Carolina since .assuming<lb/>
duties as head swimming coach<lb/>
ten years ago.<lb/>
However, one elusive goal for<lb/>
Scharf and his Pirate swimming<lb/>
teams over the past ten seasons<lb/>
has been a victory over in-state<lb/>
rival North Carolina. Scharf s<lb/>
teams have some very dose on<lb/>
many different oocassions, but<lb/>
have yet to sneak away with a<lb/>
treasured victory over the Tar<lb/>
Heels.<lb/>
East Carolina will get another<lb/>
chance to upset the favored Tar<lb/>
Heelstonight when the two teams<lb/>
square off against each other in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. The meet<lb/>
starts at 730.<lb/>
Last year, the Pirates dropped<lb/>
a relatively cloee 65-4C decision<lb/>
up in Chapel Hill, but the Heels<lb/>
are a much improved team from<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
Frank Comfort from Johns<lb/>
Hopkins College is the new head<lb/>
coach at North Carolina. And like<lb/>
Scharf, Comfort is recognized as<lb/>
one of the top swimming coaches<lb/>
in the country today. Last season,<lb/>
Comfort guided Johns Hopkins to<lb/>
the NCAA Division Three Swim-<lb/>
ming Championship.<lb/>
And just last weekend,<lb/>
Comfort took his first UNC team<lb/>
to a tournament and came away<lb/>
with the championship trophy.<lb/>
The Tar Heels nosed out an<lb/>
excellent Pittsburgh team for first<lb/>
place in the Penn State Relays in<lb/>
University Park, Pa.<lb/>
East Carolina finished in fifth<lb/>
place with 192 points in the Penn<lb/>
State Relays only eight points<lb/>
behind Columbia with 200. Mary-<lb/>
land took third place with 212<lb/>
points.<lb/>
"I thought we did a very<lb/>
commendable job in the Penn<lb/>
Relays praised Scharf, "Our<lb/>
times were much improved over<lb/>
last year's performance and I<lb/>
think we have made a lot of<lb/>
progress during the pre-season<lb/>
practice<lb/>
John McCauley, Bill Thorne,<lb/>
Ted Nieman, John Tudor and Bill<lb/>
Fehling captured first place in the<lb/>
500 crecendo relay with a time of<lb/>
14:00:91. The Pirates effort in<lb/>
that event set a new ECU varsity<lb/>
record and a new pool record.<lb/>
East Carolina took a second in<lb/>
the 2000 freestyle relay and the<lb/>
400 freestyle relay. Doug<lb/>
Brindley, Kevin Meisel along<lb/>
with Tudor and Nieman set a new<lb/>
school record in the 2000 freestyle<lb/>
relay with a time of 19.1364.<lb/>
McCauley, Thorne, Fehling<lb/>
and Nieman were members of the<lb/>
400 freestyle relay team which<lb/>
took second with a time of<lb/>
31038.<lb/>
The Pirates also placed fifth in<lb/>
the 200 medley relay, ninth in the<lb/>
400 backstroke relay and 11th in<lb/>
the one meter diving competition.<lb/>
Nevertheless, it will probably<lb/>
take a superhuman effort for the<lb/>
Pirates to top North Carolina and<lb/>
Scharf will be the first to admit it.<lb/>
"We'll have our hands full, that's<lb/>
for sure said Scharf. "But when<lb/>
you look at the fact they put<lb/>
probably three times as much<lb/>
money into their program as we<lb/>
do it's easy to see why.<lb/>
Pirates win first<lb/>
SWEATERS<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
"It was like pulling teeth<lb/>
said coach Larry Gillman of his<lb/>
Pirates initial victory of the<lb/>
season, 102-95 over Aiderson-<lb/>
Broddus College.<lb/>
The big stay was the emer-<lb/>
gence of Oliver Mack and a<lb/>
scrappy offense which fought<lb/>
back from a 52-50 halftime<lb/>
deficit.<lb/>
Mack helped the Pirates to an<lb/>
early 31-21 lead displaying some<lb/>
of the quick moves and smooth<lb/>
shots that make him an all-<lb/>
America candidate.<lb/>
However, the Battlers, once<lb/>
called the only sure victory on the<lb/>
Pirate schedule, gave the BUCS<lb/>
all they wanted behind the<lb/>
hustling play of Carl Heyward<lb/>
and Gary Washington. But then,<lb/>
the Pirates did some hustling too.<lb/>
Led by Roger Carr and Herb<lb/>
Gray, the Pirates outscored the<lb/>
Battlers 11-2 with 437 remaining<lb/>
in the game to take the lead 91 -82<lb/>
after Carr hit on both ends of a<lb/>
one and one.<lb/>
Carr had 10 second half<lb/>
rebounds as he spelled Greg<lb/>
Cornelius.<lb/>
The Pirates moved the ball<lb/>
inside well behind the passing of<lb/>
Don Whitaker as the Bucs<lb/>
regained what coach Gillman<lb/>
described as "a mental together-<lb/>
ness He added, "We were<lb/>
looking for the open shot and<lb/>
seeing each other better<lb/>
Mack finished with a game<lb/>
high 36 points while Gray added<lb/>
19, Krusen 12 and Cornelius 10.<lb/>
Gray had 16 rebounds while<lb/>
freshman Carr pulled down 12.<lb/>
The Pirates will need a lot of<lb/>
this "mental togetherness" this<lb/>
Wednesday night as they take on<lb/>
the Terripansof the University of<lb/>
Maryland in Cole Field House in<lb/>
College Park Maryland.<lb/>
The Terripans feature 6-8<lb/>
junior center Larry Gibson who<lb/>
will try to doee the lane to Mack<lb/>
and the rest of the Bucs. The<lb/>
Maryland record is 4-0 despite an<lb/>
exhibition loss to Athletes in<lb/>
Action over the weekend.<lb/>
The Pirates threw a scare into<lb/>
Lefty Driseil with a 80-69 loss<lb/>
last year that was even doser<lb/>
than the score indicated and<lb/>
coach Gillman expeds much of<lb/>
the same effort Wednesday night.<lb/>
"I think we're ready to play<lb/>
anyone who wants to play us<lb/>
now he added, "We're just<lb/>
looking forward to going to<lb/>
Maryland and then on to Char-<lb/>
lotte this weekend.<lb/>
Gillman discovered some<lb/>
things in last nights game that he<lb/>
will count on later in the season.<lb/>
One was the dutch ball handling<lb/>
of Don Whitaker.<lb/>
"Whitaker showed a lot of<lb/>
poise and guts he continued, "I<lb/>
will depend on him in tough<lb/>
situations after his poise tonight;<lb/>
he did a good job<lb/>
So the Pirates pack this win<lb/>
under their belt and head to<lb/>
Maryland to invade the Terps and<lb/>
hopefully to even their record at<lb/>
2-2.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058026_0018"/><lb/>
Page 18 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 December 1977<lb/>
PRESSBOX: Lady Pirates have height<lb/>
Continued from page 16<lb/>
One of the problems the Lady Pirates faced last year was a lack or<lb/>
height on the team. The 1976-77 roster had none listed 6-0 tall a<lb/>
better. The roster this year lists three girlsMaroia Girven, Lynne<lb/>
Emerson and Shannon Staplesall 6-0 or taller.<lb/>
Another problem the Lady Pirates seem to have solved is with<lb/>
turnovers. A year ago, the ECU women's basketball team tallied 70<lb/>
turnovers through two games. This year, the total has been cut nearly<lb/>
in half, to 38 through two games. On the other hand, opponents<lb/>
turnovers are up from 25 at this point a year ago, to 44 this year.<lb/>
Catherine Bolton gives credit to her defense fa creating more<lb/>
turnovers. "The girls are waking hard on defense she said. "They<lb/>
do a good job of keeping pressure on the opposition, and facing the<lb/>
turnovers, which result in mae easy shots on offense<lb/>
East Carolina University will carry 12 wrestlers to Bethlehem, Pa<lb/>
fa this weekend's quadrangular meet involving host Lehigh, Oregon<lb/>
State and East Stroudsburg State.<lb/>
The Pirates will take a very young team to the quad to face two of<lb/>
the NCAA'stop ten teams fa last year, Lehigh and Oregon State. The<lb/>
Engineers were seventh last seasoi while the Beavers were fifth.<lb/>
Oregai State returns five all-Americas.<lb/>
Paul Osman, the oily two-time NCAA participant on ECU'S squad,<lb/>
is also the only senia. He will wrestle at 134 and is 5-1 on the season<lb/>
with a third place finish at the Monarch Wrestling Classic. He was<lb/>
injured pria to the Carolina Invitational and oould not wrestle.<lb/>
Heavyweight D.T. Joyner is one of two junias traveling to<lb/>
Bethlehem. He won the unlimited championship at Carolina with only<lb/>
one day of practice, due to a late start because of football. He did not<lb/>
allow a point in winning his three matches at Carolina.<lb/>
James Kirby, the other junia, will wak at 142 along with freshman<lb/>
Scott Eaton. Kirby is 7-3 on the season with a third place showing at<lb/>
Carolina. Eaton is 4-4, but has failed to place in either of the Pirates'<lb/>
early tournaments.<lb/>
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Greenville<lb/>
Colonial Heights<lb/>
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Pirate Athletic Events Upcoming:<lb/>
Men's Basketball: Alderson-<lb/>
Broaddus Monday, Dec. 5,8:30 in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum; University of<lb/>
Maryland Wednesday, Dec. 7,<lb/>
8:00 in College Park, Maryland;<lb/>
First-Union Invitational Tourna-<lb/>
ment Friday &amp; Saturday, Dec.<lb/>
9-10, 7O0 &amp; 9:00 in Charlotte at<lb/>
the Coliseumfirst round oppo-<lb/>
nent is LaSalle College at 700 on<lb/>
Friday. (Radio: WOOW, Green-<lb/>
ville; WRMT, Rocky Mount;<lb/>
WHIT, New Bern; airtime 15<lb/>
minutes pria to tipoff)<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
smack<lb/>
Apps<lb/>
90-75<lb/>
By DAVID MERRIAM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Opening the season with two<lb/>
big wins over Campbell College<lb/>
and rival Duke University, the<lb/>
Lady Pirates continued their<lb/>
winning ways last night defeating<lb/>
Appalachian State University.<lb/>
The Lady Pirate basketball<lb/>
team of ooach Catherine Bolton<lb/>
ran their record to 3-0 after<lb/>
thrashing Duke 80-53 Saturday<lb/>
night and a convincing win over<lb/>
Appalachian State last night,<lb/>
90-75.<lb/>
Appalachian has always had a<lb/>
very tough girls basketball team<lb/>
and the Pirates can definitely<lb/>
boast of a big win.<lb/>
Against the Mountaineers,<lb/>
Rosie Thompson scored an incre-<lb/>
dible 39 points as she continually<lb/>
hit jumpers in the 15-20 foot<lb/>
range.<lb/>
The Pirates were also aided by<lb/>
the slick ball handling of junior<lb/>
Gail Kerbaugh as she threaded<lb/>
the Appalachian full court press<lb/>
to feed Thompson and senia<lb/>
Debbie Freeman. Freeman finish-<lb/>
ed with 14 points and contributed<lb/>
greatly to the rebounding game<lb/>
along with Marsha Girven.<lb/>
The game started off as coach<lb/>
Bolton expected, dose with a lot<lb/>
of running. However the Pirates<lb/>
scaed 16 unanswered points to<lb/>
Appalachian's 4 and the Bucs<lb/>
took a 53-39 lead to the locker<lb/>
room much to the dismay of<lb/>
Mountaineer followers.<lb/>
With the coming of the second<lb/>
half the Mountaineers made an<lb/>
attempt at a comeback, but were<lb/>
subdued by the sure-shooting<lb/>
Thompson. Appalachian came<lb/>
within four at one point, but the<lb/>
well conditioned Pirates out ran<lb/>
and out played the Lady Moun-<lb/>
taineers. The final soae was<lb/>
90-75. and a big win fa ECU.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates play 1<lb/>
ranked N.C. State in Raleigh this<lb/>
Wednesday. Hopefully the girls<lb/>
can continue their success.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0019"/><lb/>
�"�"�������������I<lb/>
mnran<lb/>
BHBB<lb/>
6 December 1977 FCXJNTAINHEAD Page 19<lb/>
Pirate team looks great at VMI<lb/>
Bv JIM DILL<lb/>
Special to Fountainhead Sports<lb/>
The East Carolina Indoor<lb/>
Track Team opened up its season<lb/>
Saturday at the VMI Invitational<lb/>
in Lexington, Va. This was an<lb/>
early season, non-sooring meet,<lb/>
although the way the running<lb/>
Pirates went after each event one<lb/>
would have thought it was for a<lb/>
championship. Assistant Coach<lb/>
Curt Fry best summed up the<lb/>
teams efforts, "We were very<lb/>
successful. The old and new track<lb/>
men joined in for a super effort<lb/>
Characterizing the meet were<lb/>
the performances of certain re-<lb/>
turning trackmen who in the past<lb/>
have been overshadowed by their<lb/>
teammates, and superb perfor-<lb/>
mances of freshmen making their<lb/>
place on the team.<lb/>
An example of this was the<lb/>
opening event, the 440 relay.<lb/>
Donnie Mack, a junior from<lb/>
Laurinburg, and James Rankins<lb/>
of Bertie, two of ECU'S best 100<lb/>
yard dash men who are usually<lb/>
overshadowed by the likes of<lb/>
Calvin Alston and Carter Suggs,<lb/>
teamed up with freshmen Dwain<lb/>
Bailey of Jacksonville and James<lb/>
Fields of New Bern fa a winning<lb/>
effat. Mack, the lead off runner<lb/>
opened up a quick lead with a<lb/>
superb start. The all important<lb/>
handoff to Bailey, the second man<lb/>
was near perfect with another<lb/>
good hand off between Bailey and<lb/>
Rankins. By the time Fields took<lb/>
the baton, ECU had an easy<lb/>
victay with a final docking of<lb/>
44.00 seconds. This was a great<lb/>
time fa the early season and tight<lb/>
curves of the indcor track.<lb/>
The highlight of the meet,<lb/>
which ironically was the last<lb/>
event, had to be the high jumping<lb/>
of Curt Dowdy. Late in the<lb/>
competition with only 3 men left,<lb/>
Curt took oontrol hitting 6'8" on<lb/>
his first try. It took the other two<lb/>
lumpers (Terry from ASU and<lb/>
Robinson from VMI) their 2nd try<lb/>
to make 6'8 Dowdy then<lb/>
applied the pressure clearing<lb/>
610" with room to spare and also<lb/>
getting an East Carolina School<lb/>
Recad. The other two jumpers<lb/>
then failed on their third attempt,<lb/>
giving Dowdy the overall title.<lb/>
The bar was then set at 7'10<lb/>
which would qualify him fa the<lb/>
nationals, but with the recad, the<lb/>
win and no one to push him the<lb/>
junia trackman couldn't dear it.<lb/>
The East Carolina junia is a<lb/>
real stay of dedication. After<lb/>
taking a yard off from competition<lb/>
and school, he came back with<lb/>
some really big goals. Curt<lb/>
commented after the meet, "I<lb/>
knew I had the recad, but I<lb/>
wanted T10 I feet if there had<lb/>
been someone to push me I could<lb/>
have gotten it. I've got the recad<lb/>
now, (the old recad was 6'8"<lb/>
by Al MoCrimmons) so I would<lb/>
like to get T10" and place in the<lb/>
Nationals<lb/>
Other highlights came from<lb/>
Charlie Powell in the 3 mile run<lb/>
and Ray McDaniels in the 1000<lb/>
yard dash. Powell, a scphonae<lb/>
fron. Whiteville, N.C. led the race<lb/>
from the start to the 2 mile mark<lb/>
where Kenyan internationalist<lb/>
Hillary Tuwei of Richmond took<lb/>
over the pace. Powell hung on<lb/>
and finished 3rd with a fine time<lb/>
of 14 min. 42 sec. in what can only<lb/>
be described as a "gutty"<lb/>
perfamance. McDaniels, a high-<lb/>
ly sought after high school reauit<lb/>
from Virginia Beach, proved his<lb/>
ability by taking second in the<lb/>
1000 yard dash. After leading the<lb/>
first half mile of the race, he was<lb/>
passed by All American Ed<lb/>
Perkins of Richmond who out-<lb/>
dashed him to the finish.<lb/>
McDaniels commented, "I didn't<lb/>
run a smart race, he just<lb/>
surprised me. I was looking fa a<lb/>
big upset today<lb/>
Other track highlights: Donnie<lb/>
Mack once again proved his<lb/>
determination and speed by tak-<lb/>
ing 2nd to Jesse Williams of<lb/>
Richmond in the 60 yard dash.<lb/>
Williams was timed in 5.9 se-<lb/>
oonds which ties the wald recad<lb/>
(hand timed reoads are unofti-<lb/>
dal) while Mack who leaned out<lb/>
teammates James Rankins and<lb/>
Carter Suggs fa 2nd were all<lb/>
timed in 6.2 seoonds. ECU'S All<lb/>
American Calvin Alston tied fa<lb/>
first with Terry Perry in the 440<lb/>
yard dash with a fine time of 50.9.<lb/>
Alston said, "I feel I oould have<lb/>
broken 50. if I had been in Terry's<lb/>
heat Ben Duckenfield placed a<lb/>
dose 3rd with freshman Lamont<lb/>
Byrd taking 5th. Freshman Tim<lb/>
Jones of Nqfolk placed 3rd in the<lb/>
880 with James McCollough and<lb/>
Mel Duckenfield tieing fa 4th.<lb/>
Geage Jackson placed 3rd in the<lb/>
triple jump while Ray Moae took<lb/>
6th in the mile run. Marvin<lb/>
Rankins was his usual self taking<lb/>
an easy win in the 60 yard high<lb/>
hurdles. Sophomae Bobby Phil-<lb/>
lips was dose in 4th.<lb/>
The next meet will be the CYO<lb/>
meet at the University of Mary-<lb/>
land on January the 1;<lb/>
k<lb/>
MATTRESS MART<lb/>
Wholesale to Everyone<lb/>
RetailOur Price<lb/>
WATERBEDS $52.00$37.00<lb/>
FRAMES $70.00$35.00<lb/>
MATTRESS &amp; $149.00 FOUNDATION$87.00<lb/>
1302 N. Greene St.758-1101<lb/>
Golf, Ski, and<lb/>
Tennis. We<lb/>
4 Have It<lb/>
GORDON FULP<lb/>
PRO SHOP<lb/>
<lb/>
Located at Greenville Golf &amp; Country aub<lb/>
JU COUNTRY CLUB DRIVE<lb/>
PHONE 7S4-M04 GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK TIL DARK<lb/>
WHEN DO JOURNALISM<lb/>
MAJORS SAY BUDWEISER ?<lb/>
�m<lb/>
Budwnmet.<lb/>
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rAWKI6HT! I'VE GOT TWO 6Y-UNES �-<lb/>
AND A FRONTPAGE FEATURE vfjft<lb/>
IN TODAYS PAPBR<lb/>
ITHINK I'LL CALLSUZY,<lb/>
ATTRACTIVE BRUNETTE, 2,<lb/>
AND SHARE A PITCHER<lb/>
OF COLD BUD -OVER. AT MARTYS,<lb/>
POPULAR CAMPUS<lb/>
HANGOUT, 4-2 AND VAAN. <lb/>
k<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058026_0020"/><lb/>
Page 20 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 December 1977<lb/>
Jim Ramsey looks for comeback<lb/>
By DAVID MERRIAM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
After three games, only one of<lb/>
which was a win Jim Ramsey is<lb/>
not satisfied with the teams'<lb/>
record.<lb/>
"We have the talent, we have<lb/>
the potential, its just a matter of<lb/>
the two combinina to form a<lb/>
winning combination. We've got-<lb/>
ten a taste of the season, and I<lb/>
think its about time we started to<lb/>
play better oommented Jim.<lb/>
 I think we might have been a<lb/>
littleover-oonfident against UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington, we weren't playing<lb/>
with the intensity we are capable<lb/>
of, but the team is starting to jell,<lb/>
we'll get our stuff together.<lb/>
This is Jim's second season<lb/>
playing fa the Pirates.<lb/>
Last year although the team<lb/>
wasn't at its best, Ramsey was<lb/>
starting as a freshman, he<lb/>
averaged 11.3 points per game,<lb/>
the third highest average on the<lb/>
team, and lead the team in<lb/>
assists. An impressive set of<lb/>
credentials fa a freshman, but<lb/>
the honas didn't stop there. He<lb/>
was named to the All-Rookie team<lb/>
in the Southern Conference,<lb/>
Honaable mentioi to the South-<lb/>
ern Conference Tourney, and was<lb/>
selected fa the secaid team<lb/>
All-Southern Conference. Those<lb/>
Self-discipline seems to be<lb/>
Jim's best asset, aside from his<lb/>
keen eye fa the basket, but he<lb/>
remains on the side.<lb/>
"I'm na waiting to play<lb/>
because someone did something<lb/>
wrong, I'm waiting to play<lb/>
because I've done somethino<lb/>
right.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
torfde<lb/>
FOR SALE: 72 Yamaha 250mx &amp;<lb/>
trailer. $400.00. Call 757-6955 a<lb/>
after 530 752-6152.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 Sansui 5050<lb/>
receiver and 1 pr. Koss K6lc<lb/>
stereophones with 6 ft. extension<lb/>
cad $225.00. Also 1 Saiy TC-<lb/>
1865D Stereo Cassette deck with<lb/>
ddby system, $150.00. All under<lb/>
1 year old and in excellent cond.<lb/>
Call 752-9778.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New (only used 3<lb/>
mos.) Kenmae (Sears) 6.0 cu. ft.<lb/>
refngerata after Dec. 14. One<lb/>
year warranty, can see in room<lb/>
625, Tyler dam a call 736-1866<lb/>
and ask fa Donna.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Roger Drums full set.<lb/>
Less than 1 yr. old. $1150 call<lb/>
752-9693.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Akai AA-8500 stereo<lb/>
receiver, 85 watts per channel,<lb/>
$200.00 a best offer. 758-8394.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sears-Pioneer Mini<lb/>
8-track tape player 6 x 41� x 2<lb/>
inches. Excellent cond. 4 watts at<lb/>
8 ohms. 1 yr. old. and hardly<lb/>
used. Bracket and owners manual<lb/>
included. Cost 60.00 new will sell<lb/>
fa 35.00. Call 752-0191.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Lafayette Amplifier<lb/>
37 watts per channel rms, $70.00<lb/>
Lafayette tuner, $60.00. Garrard<lb/>
42M recad changer $3500. Buy<lb/>
now fa taal system $120.00 Call<lb/>
752-0191 and ask fa Tan.<lb/>
TIRES: 2 Goodyear bias tires,<lb/>
6.00 x 15, aand new, mounted on<lb/>
VW rims and balanced. $60 fa<lb/>
both. ALso '68 VW fastback, less<lb/>
mota, fa parts. Free, if you buy<lb/>
both tires. Call Mike, 756-6674 a<lb/>
campus ext. 6360.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Beautiful AKC regis-<lb/>
tered Irish Setter puppies, ready<lb/>
to go Dec. 7-15. Call 758-7187 6-7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Marantz Model 1060<lb/>
console stereo amplifier, Hitachi<lb/>
ST-3411 AMFM stereo cassette,<lb/>
Pioneer PL12-D laboratory<lb/>
series turntable (Manual), large<lb/>
Advent speakers (utility cabinet),<lb/>
Symphonic HS1239 8-track deck.<lb/>
Prefer to sell as whole, but will<lb/>
consider breaking up system.<lb/>
$650 negaiable. Chip 758-1437.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sony STR tt00<lb/>
AMFM stereo receiver, Garrard<lb/>
770 turntable, Infinity speakers.<lb/>
Used only 5 mos. Good cond.<lb/>
Good price. Call 756-6092 nights.<lb/>
POTTERY SALE: East of Ayden.<lb/>
Christmas sale Dec. 10 and 11.<lb/>
Handmade stoneware and pace-<lb/>
lain, on Hwy 102. Call. 746-6919<lb/>
fa info.<lb/>
torrent 5<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
desperately fa Spring Semester.<lb/>
Kings Row Apts. Split rent and<lb/>
utilities 3 ways. Call 752-8444.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
to share room in lovely new<lb/>
apartment overlooking the river.<lb/>
$67 plus utilities. Come by 40<lb/>
Langston Park Apts. anytime<lb/>
after 3 at the end of Meade St.<lb/>
next to Tar River Apts.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: Carriage<lb/>
House Apts. Need male to share<lb/>
1 3 rent and Utilities. Call after 6<lb/>
p.m. 756-9029.<lb/>
r-tMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
1 a 2 fa apt. at River Bluff. Pay<lb/>
13 rent and utilities. Call 758-<lb/>
5758.<lb/>
NEED IMMEDIATELY: to rent<lb/>
3-4 bedroom house fa reasaiable<lb/>
amount in a near Washington<lb/>
The children are grown. Call<lb/>
758 8203 after 530.<lb/>
WANTED: Small house a apt.<lb/>
fa couple. Must be able to have<lb/>
pets. 758-4176.<lb/>
NEEDED: A ride to Ft. Lauder-<lb/>
dale South Flaida area. Will<lb/>
drive and share gas expense.<lb/>
Dec. 15 to 20th. Call Jeff,<lb/>
758-0534.<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Winter things<lb/>
too big, too long? Call Kathy<lb/>
752-8444 a 752-8642.<lb/>
LOST: A brown &amp; black, left hand<lb/>
man's glove in a around Brews-<lb/>
ter, D wing, 8 a.m. on Nov. 30.<lb/>
Please call 752-1871 if found.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058026_0021"/>
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